HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-11-27 - Orange Coast Pilot.....
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LO
FORICAITI OM A2
•
WEDNESDAY•NOVEMBER 27, 1985
NEWSLINE
Coaat Hall still narrowwinner
The family of an 11-year-
old boy barred from
Saddleback Valley
schools because he has
the AIDS virus ls suing the
district./ A3
A school foundation's
fund-raising projec~ falls
short In the Newport-
Me~a district./ A7
California
The Navy Is backing away
from Its earlier opposition
to oil drlllng off the Cali-
fornia coast./ A4
Nation
The man accused as a
Chinese spy was re-
portedly promoted within
that nation's Intelligence
agency./ AS ·
Atlantis' astronauts
deploy a Mexican satel-
lite that won't be used for
four years./ AS
World
Anglican church envoy
Terry Waite briefs Vice
President George Bush
on his talks with Ameri-
can captives' kidnappers
In Beirut./ A7
Egypt Is demanding that
.Malta extradite the hi-
jacker who survived the
storming of Its Egyptalr
jetliner./ AS
Mind&Body
Irvine women run away to
play tennis./ Al
Sports
Area CIF football teams
face rugged tests this
week In second-round
actlon./91
The boys basketball
teams from Edison and
Newport Harborh1ghs
are analyzed./82
No clear-cut favorite In
Sea View League girls
basketball ./83
Entertainment
Round IV In the " Rocky"
series opens today, and
Sylvester Stallone says
he'll retire his gloves./ Al
Buainesa
AST Research Inc. of
Irvine tripled net Income
In 1985 by developing
enhancement products
for 10 million personal
computers./85
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classltled
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Mind and Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log .
Public Notices
Sport1
Televf1fon
Weather
84
A3
85-6
87-8
84
89
89
A9-10
88
A7
A8
A8
A8
A3
89-10
81-3
A7
A2
Recount in Mesa's water district race
sees_ both candidate"Sgaining 7 votes
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Ot-O..,l'lle41Wt
The numbers changed, but the
result was the same Tuesday as Donn
Hall outpolled Costa Mesa activist
Patricia Aynes for a water board seat
in the county's first recount 1n four
years. .
Aynes had asked for 1he recount
after losing to Hall by JUSt seven votes
tn the Nov. 5 election for Costa
Money
will flow
in spite
of strike
No trouble seen in
wake of armored car
work stoppage -yet
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' -DellJ ..... ..,,
Orange Coast bankers and
merchants say th1!1 week's stnke by
guards and dn vcrs at two armored car
companies won't affect cash Oow in
the immediate future.
But jf the strike expands to other
armored car firms serving the South-
land, business people may have
trouble maktngchange for customers.
Employees of Armored Transport
of Caltfom1a and Bnnks Inc. walked
ofTtheJob Monday and Tuesday.
About 1,100 Armored Transport
employees. who arc represented by
Cash and Securities Handlers As-
sociation. walked ofT their JObs Mon-
day afternoon, while some 200 Brinks
workers, represented by Armored
Truck Employees Association
(ATEA), struck at 12:01 a.m. Tues-
day.
Among the issues raised by strikers
are non-negouated wage reductions
and benefits cuts. and Bnnks' failure
to recognize the A TEA.
A TEA President Robert Brodie
said rhntrik"cwill affect thousands of
businesses that use the two com·
panics' services, according to the
Associated Press.
But spot checks of Orange Coast
bankers and busmcssmcn indicate
they aren't concerned -yet.
.. So far. we've been able to handle
1t," satd Dennis Hooper, area adm1n-
1strator for Bank of Amcnca. "We've
contacted other earners. and we·re
workmg with our own ca!.h vault.
• "As far as I know, most of our
branches are all right. Those branches
anticipating a problem have been able
to keep on hand enough cash to satisfy
merchants' needs," Hooper said.
He said if any branch should run
short. merchants will be sent to
nearby BofA branches.
Hooper said another maJor earner.
Mesa's scat on the Orange County
Water Oistnct board.
In this week's hand recount, both
candidates picked up seven votes. At
the conr;lus1on of the two-day recount
at 3: 15 p.m. Tuesday, the results
showed Hall winning. 2,579 to 2,572.
Aynes artd Hall, who 1s a Costa
Mesa city councilman, both viewed
the battle for the water board scat as a
test of strength between supporters of
Costa Mesa's development policies
..
A green Christmas
and those opposed to h1&h~enstt)'
development
Aynes. 34, was supported by the
Mesa Action homeowners group
Two Mesa Action·backed can-
didltes were elected to the Costa
Mesa Ctty Council last November,
and local poltticaJ observers said this
year's water board election could
serve as a harbinger of the coalttton's
chances in next year's cny council
elCC1ions.
''They felt that,beattng Donn Hall
would give them some more cred1-
b1ltty;· HaJI said following the re-
count.
Hall. 56, said the closeness of the
Loomis Annored Car Service Inc.,
has a contraC1 with BOA and can
transport money from the bank's
central vaults.
"If all the earners went out. 1t could
(Pleue .ee AIUIORED/A2)
Mike and Nancy Brunet.ace were beatiDC the Chriatmu ruah
lut weekend when they cboee their Yule tree from among
bundreda at the Peltzer Pines tree farm ln lnlne. The
couple will return before Cbrlatm.u to claim their choice.
Winner of $50,000
in lottery sentenced
to 240 days in jail
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... O.., .........
A 20.ycar~ld man who won
SS0.000 Monday in the state lottery's
Big Spin was jailed Tuesday when a
Mumcipal Coun judae 1n Newport
Beach ordered him to serve 240 days
for buraJary, stolen propeny and drug
possession.
But before being locked up.
Salvador Valencia Rodnguez told
reponers he plans to get on the
straight and narrow and tum his life
around with his winninas.
"I've been wanting to do this. I'm
goina to ch.anae." said Rodngue?
after amv1n1 more than four hours
late for his court appearance.
Rodnguez' mother. who accom·
oanicd him to court. said she ex·
(Pleue ... LOTTDT /A2) Tully Seymoar
City gets tough on ru.n-down buildings
Apartment owners told to brtng untt.S
up to standar or face prosecutlo~
force this yar to attack the j>t"Obkm
and to entendcr a spirit of ~per
ation from owneri. are now talklnt
to\Alh.
1'hey'vc told the 10 ablentee ~·
era to come up with a rebabi.litatioft
plan by Dec. 18 &o briaa the ape.n-
mcnts up to staftdanS or to be ~to flee criminal prolttUtlOn ind fines tor alJetcd tiealth viol-
ations
surrounded by newer and n1~r
condom1n1um' and located JU t ~t
of tht' rtfurb1-.hcd Five Points hop.
ptn Center on Main trttt 'lcarth
arc the Pac1fic.n Ho p1tal and 'W vchflC
(iardens h"h·nsc bu1ld1nas About a year aio. city officials
appeared polled to do somc:lh1n1
decisive to clean up perhaps t.he most
bliahtcd area in Hunllnaton Beach -
the apartments or Commodore Cir·
clc.
There was talk offindina an owner
to conlOlidate ownenh1p of the 20
four-plex apartments just off Main
treet and west of the rtf'urtMabed
Five Point_S lhoppana ctnter. II n1 hoped th.It tome worthy
dcvelopa would buy lM l}.year-old
four·plues and titbu dean them up
or bulldoze them and put up eome-
th1oa more acceptable -perhlPI a
new apartment complex or retire-
ment community.
Unf'onunatcly, financial amnae-
mcntscouldn't be worked out and the
hoped-for improvcmenll didn•t
com• to pus. Meanwhile, lbc •me
P'Qblcms and the ame JUbl\anda.rd
-some say slum -conditions remain
But city official who fonMd a talk
I
Tbc apanmcnts a.re ovn'Cf"O'Wded
with Soutbtaft As&an ~ altd
illctal aHtns &om Mn~ lllCICWdillll
to Rich Barnlrcl, the eoordiMtor Ol
the city's Commodott me '8lk
force. Tbt apenmtnll are an entllve
•
Barnard Mid the my ha rc«1ved a
litany or horror ,,ones that include
rtpons of backed up to1ltts, tn·
operative hcaten, holes 1n .floon.
JUl"Y nlJtd eltct1cal winna and ~hod·
d~ repairs.
The pohrc called him la t
Thankfll"''"*: Barnard u1d. to repon
that all tbt toilets 1n one bu11d1na had
becktd up into balhcu and no~
OUl\ldc,
''The problem c~1ntd about four nr
elcctaon should wak~ up those who
arc satisfied with the poltc1e'i that
Costa Mesa has been following.
"It makes people awar.r of the
problem that there arc people -
mostly newcomers -trying to
change the d1rcc11on Costa Mesa has
been going the past 30 years," he said
"The thing that bothers a lot of us
atx?ut this group 1s they seem to be
trying to polanu the community.
Any opinion 'that's different from
their's makes you a bad perwn," Hall
said.
A}nts said a run for the f11'
Council ne" }tar was "still a J>(.l'>'il·
b1htv"
.. It wu an interesting expcnencc ...
she said. to come w clo~ to v1etory
after spend1n1Ju~t 11 fnscuon of what
her opponent did
.\\nes ~1d she spent about Sl.500
1n the rac~ Hall reportedly spent
more tllan S20.000
Both cand1datei. aireed the resulb
~o~l"d the value of every .,,otc.
vTho!>C who didn't vote now4"Hhu
ho1o1. uyiportant tht'1r vote'i really are."
Hall said
"It'll he important tor next year's
rale for people tu KCl out and vote."
.\~ nc'> \aid
Grocery contract
negotiations
continue today
Un ton ready to talk
thr'!ughout holiday
to e nd labor dispute
By STEVE MARBLE
Oth~,._. • ...,
Violence Oared again Tue'><.la~ on
the Orange Coast in the 24-da~-old
grocery stnkc. Mcanv.h1lc. union
representatives and <iupermarke1
negotiators signaled the} will return
to the bargairung table 1n a renewed
attempt to settle the hitter labor
dispute.
i\ union representall \'l' and a picket
were arrested in lf\1ne la te Tue~a\
on susp1c1on of amt ult with a dead!;
weapon when an tndcpcndent trud.
dnvcr was struck in the C\t~ "'11h a
prOJCCllle
Gerald Flanigan. 34 of (1arden
Grove and John Ne\ 31 ol lnint'
were arrc\tcd alter a truck leaving a
l ucb ·., wart'houst in north Irvine at
!CHS. pm wa\ bombarded with
-;mall proJcll ilt''i poss1bh rock!>.
police \31d
Truck<'r dn,er C1u} Rodgers suf·
fered a laceratt'd cornea His wife.
"'ho wa<. nd1ng 1n the cab of the truck
1o1.a!I un1nJurcd Lt Bob Lennert said
Window\ on hoth \1de'i of1he truck
were c;ma\hed out and Rodger. was
1nJur~d b\ flying glas'i police re-
ported
In Huntington Bcac.h police were
caJkd out ~neral l1m~ M~a.nU
Tue\da) to 11o1.o Von'> locauons where
tire!> on true Ii.' and car\ were '>lashed
( u\tomer\ Jt thc,~on\ on Edinger
.\\enut' at ~pnngda\'P\trc<'t reponed
late T uesda' thn v.en· being har-
ra!>sed and hl1 .... l..ed h' p1c kC't!> '\1 a
\Ion!> grocef\ on .\tlanta -"'enue at
\fagnoha ~trc:et pohct' weft' called
uut thn:<' timl''> Wlth1n 2.i hou~
(Pleue eee GROCERY/ A2-)
Friends scatter
ashes of famed
wen Churchill
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
D.., l"tlol ........ Wtlt•
Owen Churchill 1o1.ho "'on ;.i \illhl·
mg gold medal an the I~\~ Ohmp1v.
1n Los ~ngclc~ took h1'i la\t 'magl·
aboard his 8·me1cr 'aL ht \ngelita
this \\CCK
Two of his sur'-1\lng 11n2 gold
medal crev. memhl.·r., Juhn R1h' Jr
of !'-ewpon Beat h .ind R1thard
Moorc ofDowne' 1o1.t·rc 1rnnt'd h' fiq·
of Churchill's long11mt' \h1pmatt'\ Im
a ceremony Munda\ fi,c mtlr'> oil
Ne...,pon &ach to , .. attt>r h" a\ht'' 111
heavy swells u ndcr dmHh '"it\
C'hurch11l died Jt h" home in
Hancock Park l\o, I~ at tht· age ot
d9 It was his r~QUl''it that tht'r\' 1o1.ould
no fonnal funeral \<r' ttc thJt he t~:
cremated and that lm .t'>he'> l:x·
c;canercd at 'it'a Imm aho.ird tht'
.\ngeltta, v.h1ch had tx't.·n rt.'\tored tor
the 1984 Ol~ mp1n h' l °' •\ngclc'
Ol.,,mp1c Or1tan111n1t c 11mm1t1<'t'
Prt•\ldt n1 flt'tl'r t l·hl'rrnth
.\ 1h11u1th t hurl hill" \ur' ''cd tl\
hi\ '-'llt' 1i,i.n JJughll'r'i and a stt·p-
,!dughtcr h1 Jl,11 hJJ rt.·4uc,ted that
nu v.oml'n tx .1h<)JH.l lhc .\nt?clltJ 1111
the u·rem1•11 ··v. tml·r ,1l1o1.a\\1r a1 'u1hallair ..
.ind I v. ant t h> he ..i hJJ)P\ 11ua.,1on ·
ht' 'tl.J\ 4u1111·d J' \J\ mg
\ h< ,,ird "1th H1h' and ".1oorc "en·
SUlh 'Jdlttng n111able<t J\ ~Ian
\1mk1r' 'taff 111mmndon: of anta
(. ru1 \ at'ht ( lut"I where thc Jeca' ing
·\n1wlltc1 wa' kl pt helurc 11 "'a'
hnu~ht and rt•huilt h\ l d'll.'rruth Bud
< 1Jrdner t-..t.·nn' ~ att ~ Pctcr < on·
JOI Bob Hood .ind \l Rarnand °'' th1• \n~d1ta '-'J'> hrnu[l.ht about
and hcadl·d h.11 1>. l<l'-'ant thl' harh<u
Bib' '>4.<Htcrnl { hur, hill'' a\h1'' nH·r
the \tern anJ ~'l'ral nl tht rr1o1.
to,\t'd "rl•Jth' '" l·r the \Ide a' thn
drank J hJnlfl.l!!!nl· t1l.l't "tn thr
(Pleaae .ee Y ACHTSMAl'f'S/ A2)
Newport lawyer
'named to bench
Tully Seymour erved
as city attorney for
Newport and Laguna
By TEVE MARBLE
Ot ... Delly "-' .....
Tulh Sc\mour .t "l'"'f)\'rt Bc.n.h
anomt')o who once "'il' thl' '"ungt'\t
c11' anome' in Orang<' ( nunt' v.a.,
appointed 'rue\da' to th<' nran(I.<'
Ro1E1T
BAIK£1
NEW S F OLLOWUP
five da)'s obod)' 1hcrt ~nt·"" "'h11 10
contact.·· he ~1d
Roben MtlT)mll\, Onan c < oun·
t)' ·,director of cnv1ronmenuil health
\ltd the Commodott trt lr apan
mcnts ••att proba~ly the mo\t
wl'Ktandard 1n Huntt1l4tOn Beach
Hununaton 8e9t h donn \ dncnt to
ha"c a ptact hltt that I'm loo 1n1
(Pl ..... A.JtAltTIBNT I A2)
(11u111' "fll:nnr <oun h\ <"''
lrenr~t· lk11~mc11~n
.. lhl' "'h•ilt th1n1t,rr<'tt' 'urpn\·
mg \J1l1 °'\t·, m1•ur ·1 \uhm11tcu m\
naml' \t:''Cral 'r.ir' Jgn bur "hen
lightnint1. d1X'\n t 'tnkr \OU -.(ll"I 111
'ilop "''m tnl!, ahout 11 ·
.\ hu\IOt'\\ Jnd rt•al <'\1.tlt' .lttnmr'
\c\ muur rC't en1l\ ha-. httn \pco.il
coun'i<'l 1n \anu. '\na to a hoard nl
appeal<. tha1 re" I<'" s fe'd('\clopmrnt
.ind t1inJrmnat1nn l'i'>UC\ and wa<. .1
(Plea.e 1teeJUDGE/A 2 )
5th floor getawai
from Irvine hote
only delays arrest
By PHIL l'EIOERMAN
OllMO..,Nel..-
\.10\t gu<''t' IC'a' l In inc·\ Rea,i\U)
Hotel throuih the lobb But a
"'oman ~hn all ~h uSC'd a stolen
cmitt card 10 run up a S 1.274 bill ~ho~ a mkter route -the fifth floor
halcon'
Poltcc Y ) the v.oman. 24-year-old
K1mhcrle\ Kaul appercnll) leaped
from one hakon) to anotbrr to
dc~nd to th<' park1nc 1°' Mood.a)'
t Her onh 1n1ury -..u a bNi.aed
t httl. Offittn td
au l'' nca rt ""' \hon .. ,, •td. how-
(Pl ... ._ Ft#TB/ A.2)
I
'
M * 0renge CoMI OAILV PILOT/ Wedneedl!y, Nowmbef 27, 1085
State auto insurance study
def ends residential bias
LOS ANOELES (AP) -A state
study has found "'very Itron& JU,illfi· catiOG .. for auto insutance ~linioa,
or charai"J hiaher rates to customers
who live in what insurers consider
bi&h-n k areas.
lo most cases., said JnsW'IJlCIC
CommiQioner Bruce Bunner, hi&her
premiums for people who live in such
arus as South and Ea.st l.ot-Anacles
are justified because the insurance
companies pay out more in claims in
those areas. The arus are usually
defined by ZIP code.
"We don't sec a ripoff in some of
the territories wbeTC that's been
alleged," said Evcren Brookhan.
chief of consumer affairs for the
Department of Insurance. The study
found "very strongjustification that
territorial rating difTen:ntials are war-
.
ranted," he said.
Lot Anada County SUpcmJOt
Kenneth lfahn., an opponent or
territorial rate-setti~ rcaponded,
"Redlining is an unfatr and unjust
policy." Ke called the s1udy "a sipal
to the inswuce companies that_~ can proceed with business as usual.'
Kahn ~d other opponents of
redlinina 'd rates should be baaed
on the cust mer's driving record. not
on tus addresa.
But insurance companies cont.end
that their industry historically has aet
rates to reflect the risk involved. They
say that no maner bow good a driver
you arc. if you live in an area where
many accidents occur, you have no
choice but to drive in that area, and
the risk of beina involved in an
accident is great.er.
Steven Miller, cha1rman of the
in1urance task force of the c1t1Zccns'
lobbyina aroup Common Cause, said
in1urance companies will ust the
study to defend their Policies.
ln one of two coun challenges to
the pracllcc, the city of Compton bas
sued the state Insurance Commission
aod Farmer's Insurance Co .• allcgina
that terrilOrial rate-scttina is dis-
criminatory.
The study, done by the Californ1a
Department of Insurance in response
to complaints from consumer groups.
found premiums at eiaht to 10
medium-sized insurance companies
were ruihcr than the department
thought they should be. Those com-
panies will .be asked to reduce prices,
Bunner said at a news conference
Tuesday.
LOTTERY WINNER GETS JAIL TERM •••
homAl
pected her son to be taken back into
custody and wasn't surprised when
Judac Christopher Strople ordered
the lottery winner into a prisoner's
dock where a bailiff stripped him of
bis wallet and valuables.
The Santa Ana man was in Ora'-'-e
County Jail last week when has
mother informed him he'd been
picked to spin the jackpot wheel.
With the help of Public Defender
Shari Leingcr and a lottery security
official, Rodriguei was released on
his own recognizance Nov. 19,
though be admitted he did not tell the
tudgc that he was goina to participate
an the Big Spin.
He appeared on television Monday
and won $50,000 in the spin. A check.
minus about $5,000 for taxes, will be
mailed to him this week.
But unless his fate changes.
Rodriguez will not be home to receive
the check. He'll be in the county jail.
Rodriguez was scheduled lO appear
in Harbor Municipal Court Tuesday
on new charges of possessing stolen
property and marijuana. The charges
stem from •an arrest in Irvine on
HalJowcen and follow previous
brushes with the law.
But Rodriguez failed to show up the
first two times his name wa.s called
and Strople said he would issue a
warrant for the lottery winner's arrest
if be missed a third call.
"Nobody ever told me what time to
be here," said Rodri.uc-z after arriv-
ing in court. "They JUSt told me to
come here."
When he did arrive, Rodriguei was
ordered to complete a J SO-day
sentence for burglary and an ad-
ditional 90 days for his latest crimes,
to which he pleaded guilty Tuesday.
"He expected to go to jail," said the
lottery winner's mother after the brief
court hearing. "I think he should
serve his sentence."
Evelia Rodriauc-z said she thinks
her son will tum his life around. She
said be plans to buy a restaurant or
some other business with his win-
nings and live inside the law.
"He's a iood boy," she said. ··1
believe what he tclJs me."
FIFTH FLOOR HOTEL GETAWAY ••.
From A l
ever. At 6a.m . Tuesday, Irvine police
arrested Kaul at her mother's house
in San Juan Capistrano O!l a bench
warrant and for fraudulent use of a
credit card. .
frvine investigator Paul Jessup said
the $250,000 bench warrant had been
issued.. by Orange County .Superior
Court Judge David Carter after Kaul
failed to report to jail in connection
with an earlier forgery case.
Kaul was in Orange County
Women's Jail today, Jessup said.
Police in Newport Beach. Costa
Mesa, Orange, Riverside and San
Luis Obispo also have been seeking
Kaul for questioning in other fraud
and forgery incidents. Jessup said.
Jessup said the woman checked
into the Regjstry Nov. 19, using a
credit card she all~edly had stolen
from a Riverside resident about three
weeks ago.
When hotel employees began pro-
cessing her bill Monday, a "stop"
turned up in the credit card check. A
security guard was sent to the
woman's fifth floor room at 9:30 p.m.
Kaul asked for a moment to make a
phone call, leaving the security auard
outside the room, Jes$up said. A short
time later, the guard entered apd
found the sliding balcony door open,
clothes scattered outside and the
1ucst gone.
"She went down balcony to
balcony, jumping,·· Jessup said.
He said the woman told officers she
hung on to railings and swung to help
assure a safe jump from one balcony
to the next
After reaching the parking lot, Kaul
fled in a 1984 Camaro, rented three
weeks ago with the same stolen credit
card, Jessup said.
Among her possessions, police
found four other stolen credit cards,
checks belonging to another person,
plus clothina and other items that had
apparently been purchased with the
stolen cards and checks, Jeuup said.
Kaul is unemployed, Jessup said.
YACHTSMAN'S ASHES SCATTERED •••
From Al
skipper."
Churchill was known for has sense
of humor. In a recent interview he
recalled sailing the AnJelita in the
1936 yachting Olympics al Klei,
Germany.
"Adolf Hitler and some of has
henchmen were sitting in shorcside
stands as the boats paraded by,"
Churchill said. "If ! ~:...: had a
machine ~un. and had known what I
know now. I could have probably
averted World War II."
In addition to being a premier
yachtsman, Churchill was also
known for inventing the swim fin.
After seeing Marquesas islanders
swim with woven leaves attached to
their feet, Churchill came home and
designed the rubber fin which still
bears his name.
He fint tried out his invention by
swimming a race against his friends
and Olympic swimmers Johnny
Weissmuller and Buster Crabbe.
Wearing the fins, he beat the two
famous swimmers.
During World War II, Churchill's
fins were used by British a nd Ameri-
can frogmen.
In business life he was president of
the Owen H. ChurcbilJ Investment
Co. of Los Angeles which deals in
stocks and real estate.
APARTMENT CLEAN-UP ORDERED •••
From Al
foward to hclpingciiy officials clean at
up."
Merryman said one apartment
owner. identified as Dilip Pankh,
pleaded nolo contendre (no contest)
to 13 health code violations and was
fined SI . I 05 last year. Charges in-
cluded deteriorated bathrooms. ceil-
ings. walls, kitchens. leaking roofs
and other problems.
Foreign residents. many not used
io Arnencan ways and the English
language, cause pan of the problem at
the apartments, Barnard said. ...
Many of them come from Laos, he
said, and residents of one apartment
might include the mother and father
and their children plus grandmothers
and grandfathers and maybe aunts
and uncles.
They may not know they have
property nghts, Barnard said; and if
they do know, they may be afraid they
wilJ get into trouble if they call the
police. Or they may not complain
because their living conditJons arc
stiU better than the ones they arc used
Just Call
642-6086
to. he said.
The problem also is compounded,
he said, by cases of tenants rentin~ an
apartment and then sub-renting n lO
others. In one case, he said, 10 single
men reportedly shared one two-
bedroom apartment.
But the major responsibility rests
with the I 0 landlords, all of whom
rc~rtedly live outside the city. he
said.
Barnard alleges that they arc doing
the minimum while collcctin'-their
rent money, and that they don t want
to invest in improvements unless
their fellow owners do the same. "If
some make improvements in their
buildings and others don 'l, lbey feel
that they're throwing money away."
Barnard said.
That's one obstacle officials an:
hoping to hurdle by seeking to form a
property owners association to coax
the owners into upgrading their
policy.
Officials arc asking the owners to
get serious about reducing over-
crowding, performing regular main-
tenance at the apartments (which is
vinually non-existent, Barnard said)
and having on-site management re~
rescntatives tocolJect rent and to take
care of day-to-<lay problems.
But the main emphasis will be the
physical upgrading of the apartments
-either voluntarily or by coun
action. "I don't care which," Barnard
said.
Barnard said officials plan to throw
in a little added inducement. They've
set aside S4SO,OOO in federal money to
help defray rehabilitation costs if the
developers act serious.
But that proposal was attacked at a
recent City Council meeting by real
estate man Don Troy, an expected
candidate in next April's City Council
election.
Troy said none of the moncx
should tto to any of the owners until
they're in compliance. "I don't think
we should reward lawbreakers," Tro)'.
said. "They shouldn't get one penny 1f
there an: violations."
Wllat do yoa like about tile Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you llkt? Call the
number at left and your me1111e will be recorded, lranscrlbtd and dtllvued
to U.e appropriate editor.
T•e same U -bou answert•g suvtce m•y be astd to record letters to tJ1e
editor oa a.ay topic. Coalrlbaton to Hr Letters colamn mutt Include their
name aad teleplloae namber for verification. No clrcalatlon ('alls, please.
Tell us what's on your miad. '
Clfculatton 714/M2-aJ3
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COAST .... , r•• Cl••lflecl ed"'1telng 714/M2-M71
All other depart"*''' M2-4121
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ARMORED CAR STRIKE ON COAST •.•
P'romA l
be a real problem," be said.
Glenda Moberg. assistant vice
pmident and operations manqer at
Bank of Newport, said it is unaffected
by the strike.
She said the bank is served by two
armored car firms, one of wh1cb is
being struck.
"We'v~ tak~n steps, so we feel at
least for the next week we'll have no
trouble serving our customers,"
Moberg said.
"If the strike drags out we'll need
another plan."
First Interstate has continaency
plans in case of strikes, said Robert
Campbell, a spo~csman at the bank's
Los Angcles headquarters.
"for security reasons, 1 can't tell
you what that plan is, but it (the
strike) isn't affecting us much,"
Campbell said.
He did say First Interstate owns a
helicopter that it uses to transport
money. -
Ma1or arocery store chains, already
embattled by the meat cutters and
T camsters strike, weren't eager to talk
about bow the armored carrier em-
ployees' strike would affect their
operations.
Bill Wade, senior vice president for
-the Alpha Beta Co., issued a terse "no
comment".
Executives at Lucky Supermarkets
general offices weren't ans9t'ering
their phones fuesday afternoon.
A spckeswoman at Southland
Corp., which franchises the 7-Eleven
mini-markets, said only eight local
stores used Brinks armored cars, and
all stores have timed-access safes
from which employees can get cash as
needed.
The timed-access safes are used to
discourage robberies, but the
spokeswoman said "the availability
of cash is no problem."
Although the holiday season will
boo.st sales, bankers said many trans-
actions wall be conducted by check or
credit card, and the availability of
cash won't be a problem.
GROCERY STRIKE TALKS RESUME ••.
From A l
because of tire slashinp. cutters' union aarced to begin a new
Meanwhile, representatives for round ofneJotiations today. It will be
management and the striking meat the third time the two sides have
resumed talks since the walkout-
the strike and lockout won't end until
the employers settle with both the
meat cutters and the Teamsters.
JUDGE •••
From A l
lockout ~n Nov. 4.
--"Nothana Is tOli pined by not
meeting," said Jerry Menapace, a
negotiator for the meat cutters, As-
The strike and lock.out involves
about 12,000 Teamster truck drivers
and warehouse workers and about
I 0,000 meat cutters. The unions are
striking Vons and have been locked
out by Albertsons, Alpha Beta,
Hughes, Lucky, Ralphs and Safeway.
Boys. Food Co., Pioneer and Stater
Bros. have signed interim agreements
with the unions.
hearing officer on a rent control
matter in San Juan Capistrano.
Seymour was city attorney in
Newport Beach for nine years. Kc
resigned in 1971 when be opened a
private practice in Newport Beach
and became a pa.rt-time city attorney
in Laguna Beach, a position be held
three years.
Previously. Seymour was a deputy
district attorney 10 Kern County and
an assistant city attorney in
Bakersfield. He is a I 9S9 snduate of
Standford University Law School
and an Arizona native.
When Seymour was hired as city
attorney for Newport Beach in 1964
he was the youngcst in the county at
29. He drew an annual salary of
SI S,000. •
As a superior court judge, Seymour
will cam $77,129. He replaces retired
Judge James Cook and will be seated
next month.
"I've aspired to be ajuciJe for some
time so this is quite exClting." said
Seymour.
sociated Press reported.
"We'll be ready to negotiate
through Thanksgiving, if necessary,
as Jona as it takes," said union
spokesman Dan Swinton, noting that
'
··City workers on holiday
Orangc Coast city halls will be closed both Thursday and Friday in
observance of the Thanksgivina holiday.
In ~na Beach Dewey's Rubbish will pick up trash one day late.
Thursday s pick up will be on Friday and Friday's pick up will be on
Saturday.
In Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, Rainbow Disposal will
also be one day behind on ill collection schedule ~nnin.g Thursday.
Any pick ups nonnally scheduled for Saturday which collectors miss
will be picked up on Monday.
Trash collections will also be one day late, beganmng Thursday, an
lrvii;ie, Cosla Mesa and Ncwpon Beach.
All area municipal offices will be closed on Thursday and Friday
and will reopen on Monday.
The Daily Pilot will be delivered Thursday morning and resume reaular deliveries Friday.
SHUTTERS SPECIALLY
I I
PRICED
Capture the outdoors
and create comfort
with these custom
moveable shutters
. In the colors,
sizes and
styles you war-ti
• '
Laguna firemen
collecting toys
l he t.aauna Beach I ire ~panment, tn ooopc-r-
auon with the Manne < 'otps Reserve, will be
collecting toys for 1he annual Christmas Toys for
Tot drive 10 be d1\tnhutcd to underprivileged and needy children.
Those able to donate should bring new,
unwrapped t>oy to the three Laguni fire station
collect1,on barrel~. located at 501 Forest Ave .. 285
Agate St, and 2900 Alta Laguna Blvd.
All toys will be collected by the Marines no later than Ot-c 18
Newport llbrarles closlng
The Newpon Beach public hbmncs will be
closed ovcr the Thanksg1v1ng weekend.
All c•I> libraries will close tonight at 5 p.m. and
will rt'opcn Monday at 20 a.m .. library officials announct'd
Chrlstmas market ln NB
-.........:U,c St Mark Alternative Christmas Market
will oltcr shoppers meaningful gifts Sunday from
11 :JO a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on the patio of the church,
2100 Mar V 1sta. Newport Beach.
The event will feature music, balloons, live
animals and food as well as the gifts available for
purchase. Ca ll the St. Mark office at 644-1341 for a~d1uonal information.
Quake semlnar at UCI
A seminar on engineering lessons from the
Mexico City eanhquake will be conducted Tuesday
from 4 to 5:30 pm. in the Atlantis Lounge of the Campu~ Village Multipurpose Building at UC
Irv me.
D~. Robin hepherd and Robcn o Villaverde,
professors of c1v1I engineering, will conduct the
program, which 1s free and open to the public. Call
856-5484 for information and reservations.
Comet lecture announced
NASA scientist Dr. Stephen Maran will speak
about the ph ysical propen1es, h1~tory and ongin of
Halley's Comet Tuesday al the Rancho Capistrano
Community Church. 29251 Camino Capistrano.
San Juan Capistrano.
Tickets for the 7 p.m. seminar are $3 and
reservations may be obtained by calling the box
office at Saddlcback College at 582-4656.
Welght 101111 program set
The Opllfa!>t program OfSan ( 'lcmente General
Hospital will conduct an oncntatton Tuesday on II'\
next clinic to assist men and women resolving to lose
50 pounds or more.
The onentat1on. S<:heduled for 7 p.m. 1n the
hospital's conference room. 1s free and will otTer full
details of the program. Funher information may be
obtained by calling Jane Leo at 66 1-4458.
Hllltop seeks space
Members of the ave Our School committee of
Costa Mesa's Hilltop School, 1259 Victona St .. will
meet next Wednesday from 9 to I I a.m.
The group 1s seeking a new !>Chool locauon 10
lease due to the expansion of the church where the
fac:1hty is presently housed. Cctll-'<164-5148 for more
information.
AAUW meetlng slated
The Laguna Beach branc:h of the American
Association of Univers ity Women will hold a public
meeung next Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at Grat
American Savings. 260 Ocean Ave. Laguna Beach.
The program will focus on Laguna women in
politics and will include City Councilwoman Bobbi
Minkin and Planning ( omm1ss1oners Becky Jones
and Elizabeth Brown. Call Karen Dennis at
494-5378 for additional information.
'Wednesday,Nov.27
No meetings scbedaled
•
Onlnge Coee• OAIL y PILOT/WedMldav. NowmbW 27. 1 .. * Aa
ParamedlC8 work In valo over Aneel Sanaon, 21.
who wa• kWed when be loet control of bl•
O!l9r Nee --..,, motorcycle and •lammed Into a utlllty pole ln
Coeta Meaa Tuaday afternoon.
Mesa cyclist killed in smashup
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of lhel>eMy ...... llafl
A Costa Mesa man wac; lo lled Tuesday
when he lost control of his motorcycle and
plowed into a utility pole on Harhor
Boulevard.
Angel Fidel Sanson, 21. wa" ndmg his
Honda 500 on Harbor southbound at 2·40
p.m. when the accident occurr<'c1
According 10 witnesses. Sanson had
been wa111ng at the traffic signal at Mesa
Verde East. When the light turned green
and Sanson stancd to accelerate. he turned
his attention to something on the bike.
He lost control of the motorcycle and,
about 100 yards from the intersection. the:
motorcyle jumped the cen1er d1v1der and
sl ammed into a light pole He wasn't
weanng a helmet.
"It was strapr,c:d to his bike. nght where
11 shouldn't be.' said officer Ganh Wilson
a1 the scene.
E)'ew1tnesses said Sanson was traveli ng
about 20 to 25 mph when he hit the pole.
I nrne I :iw whn w:i" drivi ng has tow
truck on Ha,.bor, said he saw Sanson hit
1he pole, flip over the han<tlebars and stnke
his heact..P.n the pavement. The bike landed
on the nd'er's legs, Law said.
Law and an off-duty Ncwpon Beach
firefighter administered \PR until para-
medics arrived.
Sanson was rushed to the Fountain
Valley Trauma Center, where he was
pronounced dead at 3:20 p.m
Fred Vo1el•tebJ al10 cootrib•ted 10 1tJ1
11ory.
Public smoking in Irvine may
lead to coughing up a $1 7 fine
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
OllheDellJ,....li."
Lighting a c1garc11c in ce nain publiL
places in Irvine rould lead 10 a warning
from police today -or a $1 7 ci tation in a
few weeks.
Irvine police offac:crs have begun enforc-
ing a new cit y law that rtstncts smoking in
some puhht places. ran~1ng from
res trooms and auditoriums to indoor ban k
Imes and restaurants.
The law doco; not. however, alTect
pnvate workplaces. such as office areas.
The smoking law was approved b) the
Irvine C'll)' Council on Oct 22 and took
effect last Thursday
Sgt Phil Povey c;a1d officers will \l,arn
violators dunng the first month the
ordinance 1s m eOcct. Beginning ~. 20.
c1tat1ons similar to traffic ttclcets \I.Ill be
issued to violators, he said.
Povey said no one will be Jailed for
violat ing the smoking law. but thoJie who
neglect 10 pa y the S 17 fine could face a Jail
term.
Letter'i explaining the smnlong law an·
bein$ mailed to Ir vine businesses.
ln1u all>.' the Ci ty Council considered
workplan· smoking restnc11o ns. but drop-
ped those rules after a 2-1 vote, with
Councilwoman Barbara Wiener dissent-
ing. Three votes were needed for adoption.
Wiener said she favored voluntary
smoking guidelines for private business
areas. But Councilman Larry Agran vowed
10 revive the workplace rules 1n January.
The council did appro\e the following
public guideline\ that Irvine police have
l>egun t'nfo rn ng:
•Smoking 1s proh1b11ed in public
elevators. meeting rooms and restrooms
Also included arc public tran"iporta11 on
ve hicles, such as buses and cabs. wh1lt'
w11hm Ir' 1ne'<; boundanes.
• E 1tcept m specially designated areas
smoking 1s proh1b1ted in public areas of
hospitals and health t are fac1h11 es. mclud-
1ng walling rooms. hallways and lobbies
Health care fac1llt1c<o mu'it ··make e' Cr)
reasonable ctTon ·· to place pa11ents in
rooms according to their smoking or non-
smoking preference. '
•Smoking 1s proh1b1tcd in publicly and
privatel y owned theaters. audatonumsand
other enclosed fac1llt1cs usl'd lor movies.
'itagc shows and athletic cvent'i. Lobbies
an: not included under th1~ provision
•Smoking 1s prohib11ed in indoor lines
1n which more than one person is g1v1ng or
rece1v1ng serv1ce'i of an)' kind.
•Restaurants with 40 or more scats (bar
and outdoor areasexcluded) must set aside
at least one-quaner of the sealing and Ooor
area as a non-smokin~ zone.
•"Conspicuous" signs must be posted
in the no-smokmg areas. but busme~s
owners are not required to make structural
changes to abide by the new smoking law
Sergeant Povey acknowledged that
earlier laws and voluntary measures ha"e
already brought some locations mto line
wtth the Irvine smoking ordinance For
example. smoking is already proh1b11ed in
movie theater audttonums and the city"~
public meeting rooms. In addition. man)
restaurants already offe r no-smoking
areas.
But he said officers may be requ1rt"d to
enforce the new la"' in-indoor sen ices
lines at banks and supermarket<> and at
fast-food restaurants where peopll' art'
wa1ung to order.
Although an officer who spots a '1ola1or
can issue a tkket, Povey acknowledged
that much of the smoking law enforcement
will be prompted b) complaints from the
public
He said restaurants and other busine'ises
that do not designate the non-smoking
areas outlined in the ordinance will be
reponed to the ci ty's bu1ld1nR inspectors
Schoel
suedb
barre
boy,11
Hemophiliac's aunt asks
comparable instruction
in AIDS-related decision
B1 dae A11oda&d Pn11
The famil y of an I I-year-old
hcmoph1hac who was barred from school
because he cames AIDS ant1bod1C$ an hts
blood filed su1t against Saddltback Valley
Umfied School Dmnct.
The Supcnor Coun suit filed T ucsday
by the boy's aunt. who 1s also his guardian.
sa)'s school officials asked that the boy not
enroll after has blood showed antibodies to
1he virus that causes AIDS.
The test shows exposure to the v1rus but
doesn 't mean a person as infected by the
virus or stncken w1th acquired immune
defic1ency syndroroe.
Hemophiliacs are at high nsk to the
AIDS v1ru'> because of their frequent
exposure to blood product!>.
The suit. charging the boy is beana
denied a proper cducauon. asks the coun
to force the school d1striC1 to allow bis
return 10 class or gi ve him a comparable
education
The aunt !Mltd she would be sattsficd 1f
the bo> receives good tutonng.
"It it's going to create a problem m the
communll\' and parents stan packeting
outside th~ school. tht'n maybe 11's better
not to e'po'it' him to that." she said.
The d1stnct began sendmg a tutor three
weeks ago. after two months of research on
the da~ase
"He on1' comes twice a week and hcJuSt
drops otTh.omework for th~· week.·· the bo~
said.
Assistant upenntendent Joseph Platow
said Rancho Canada Elementaf) School
has formed a st11l-unappro"ed policy that
an~ pupil suspcl'ted of ha\1ng .\IDS be
tutored at home
"I don't think 11·., fair at all ·· tht hm said
in an 1n1erv1e-.-. "~me other kids ·go to
school even though the:y ha ' e "'ID ..
The bo~ 's aunt said he was tested for
exposure to the virus because other
hemophiliacs had mt'nt1oned the poss1-
b1hty of exposure
.\ID 1sa disease that cnpples the bod) ·s
immune S)Stem. leaving tht" '1ct1m "ul
nerable 10 1nfecuons and otht·r d1'>t"a~
including cancer~
o\ID 1s most l1kt'.'I) 10 striJ...e homoM'\·
uals. abusers of inJcltabk Jrug' and
hemoph1hals It can nppart"ntl) he .. pread
b) se'ual contact. contam1natt·d m•t·dlc'
and blood tr<1nslus1on'. hut nul tH lJ<>ual
contact
.\\of NO\ I!\ I%~ .\I I>'°) had mud.
1-i.862 peoplt" 1n th<" l n11t·c1 \tate5 and
claimed 7,628 li\C.-\ sinct" I 4~4 according
to the kderal l enter'> for D1r,ca'e ( unlrol
1n ..\1lanta
Moriarty associate sentenced to prison
By tbt Associated Press
.\ one-time aS'i(X 1atc ol former Orange
C ounty firework!> magnate W Patnck
Monan)' was scntcmcd to lour )ears in
pnson and lined $45.000 b} a Judee who
called for a special grand JUr) investigation
into the Monany ca'iC
.S. D1stnct Judge 1 1.'fl) J. Hatter Jr. on
Tuesday sentenced Richard Keith h>
pnson on three counts of tax evasion and
one count ofbankruptC) fraud.
Keith, 47. also received a suspended
two-year c;entc nce for two counts of filing
raise finannal 1nforma11on to tedcrall)
insured bank<, He was placed on three
\Cars probation tor thO!>i.' tount~
· ··Young people arc bc<.'Omang c~n1cal
about pohucs ... Hauer tol d ~ellh .. , ou
cannot be but a danger to "icx1ct> I ha\e
the opportunity to show ~oung people in
this country that poh11cs ~houldn't be run
the wa> you and Mr Monany operate··
Monan>. an Orange County fircworks
manufacturer. last March pleaded guilt~ to
seven mail fraud cha~es that dealt with
making bnbes to Cit)' or Commerce
officials. 1lleµI campa1p.n contnbu11on'i
and kickbacks to banker<; in return tor
loans
Keith and others ha\e atcu~·d \fonan'
of provtdmg prostitutes and illegal cam'.
pa1gn contnbu11ons to numerous pollucal
figures
Hatter urged federal pro~utor'I to
<.'Stablish a special grand JUf) to'"' esugatc
all allcgat1ons that ha H: surlat•ed dunng
the :!11-year probe of Monan) ·,. poliucal
and linanc1aJ dealings 1n C ahforn1a
A federaJ grandJu111s current!\ looking
into the Moriart) ca~
Hauer said he wants 1he special panel to
look into tht• ··w1al11' ·· ul the \1ondn'
mattt'r. adding. ··1 1hin~ th(' .11r '>h11uld 111.
dcarrd
~l·ath pleaded guilt' ll• the "" 1.11unl\
and agreed to •oopcrall' 1A-1th nff11.1al'
tn\t~~t1gat1ng alkiC'd pulilllal 1.orrurt1011
He promised to tt.>1110\e-.11gatur\ about
laundered mone) he allege-di) paid 111
poht1c1ans on Munan) ·\ behalt and ahout
prost1tut1on lf)'>l'i he JrrangeJ purponl·d
I) for Monan) ·, poltt1cal fncnd~. dunn~
their I :!-\.ear a\\(ICHll1on
Polic~ nab drug suspects
with 2 pounds of cocaine
Four hubcap wonh S200 wert
reponed stolen from a Mercedes
240D parked 1n the 1100 block of
West Balboa Boule vard Monday
night • • • Someone rcponcdly did S500 1n
dnmagc to the wood banisters outside
Delaney'\ Markt"t. 2Q20 Ncwpon
Bl vd . Sunda) night
said the thief smashtd a living room
wmdO\I. with a rock to gain cntf) • • • A S'.!57.25 roll of carpet was
rcponC'd stolen from a Laguna Hall\
carpet d1stnbutor at 2350 I I\ vC' dt' la
Carlota. • • • Officials at a Ma) Co. depanmt'nt
(1la!>go\I, rt"JX>rtt'd that h1" mt \N,1\
\hot in tht· tail w11h a BB-gun Sunda)
night He told-pohC'c he 1h1nk' Ont' of
ht~ ne1gh0<1f\ wa~ rc\pons1hk • • • ..\ SYlll 'ndrt• drum -.-.as rt'roned
\tokn frnm tht• µrage of a homc 1n
lh<.' "!(l)(l hl,~k of Ta\lnr funda\
afl<.'moon
By SUSAN HOWLETT
Of lMO.-, .........
A pair of suspected dru' dcalen
were being ht'ld Wedne~y 1n lieu of
SI million b3il each nt lhc Newport
Beach \tty Jail aner they allqedly
sold more than two pounds of cocaine
to an undercovccr offi cer from the
federal Drug Enforcement Adm1n1s-
tration.
Eduardo Perez, 18, of North Holly-
wood and Hol mes Albeno Herrero.
18, of Costa Mesa. wert' arrested at the
Cut.a Mnria parking lot nt I 851 2
MacArthur Blvd. in lninc. They
were amstcd for conspiracy to sell
Fountaln Valley
A sofa. a telephone. a radio. a TV
set and A video caueue recorder,
wonh S8.84S. wert reported 11olen
Tucsdal from a home Ln the IOSOO
blocko Lahla The v1cum lOld pohc:e
he had bttn on a month-Iona va~
cauon pnor to the thef\. ••• Jewelry valued at S4SO and $22 an
cash were rcponcd stolen from a
home in the I 0800 block of Ooldcn·
eye Monday. Pohce "'l'°ns ,.,d lhc
thief broke a lutchcn window to pan
entry. , • ,
A S 1.000 camera. U30 in 1ewclry
cocaine, according to Newpon Beach
Police Sgt Tim Riley
Perei delivered the 2 2 pounds of
the drug to Herrera 1R the Irvine
park1na lot. Riley said He said both
of the suspects attempted to sell the
cocaine to an undercover agent from
the U.S. Dcpanmcnt of Justice. Drug
Enforcement Administration.
The arrests, made shonly before 7
p.m. Tuesday. concluded a combined
month-long investig:uion by the
DEA, the San Clemente Police Dc-
~nment and the Newport Beach
Poltcc Department. Riley said. The
DEA initiated the mvesti14t1on and
and a SJS Oashliahl were reported
stolen from a hQJ])e in lhe I 7900 block
of Los Prados Monday. The thief
broke a window to pin entry. police reports aid.
tmae
A c:-ar stereo won1' betwttn S200
and S400 was reponed eo~n from a
Mcrctdet perked 1n a lot at 179S2
bloc-of k)' Park Blvd. Tuctda)' • • • A blue Schwinn Bcachcn.nK-r
b cycle was reported lolcn from a
tehoot 11 477 I Campus Dn..,c Tue
day. The btlcc was wonh bctWttn SSO
asked for assistance lrom the Orange
County law enforcement agenc1e\,
police said
lnvestlgato~ set the bail al SI
million "due to the amount of
cocaine sc11ed. the background ol
both defendants. und the fact that
both arc ahl·ns from Colombia."
Rik> c;a1d
The high-grade coc:une has an
estimated stret't value ot S 100.000.
Riley said.
Pcre1 and Ht"rrera are cxpttted to
be amignl"d on the charaes Monday
1n Harbor Mun1c1pal Court in New-
port &-ach. Riley said.
and S.200. pohcc reports s.&Jd. • • • Ca h totahna $200 was rcpon~
stolen from an apartment in the I 00
block of Deerfield Avcn~ Tunday ••• A stcrtO wonh more than S<IOO was
rcpOncd "oltn from a home an the
14700 block of DoncHtcr Road
Tut1day
Newport Beach
.\ $600 car lerto and a,n SSS purw
conta1 ru na $240 in cash~ rq>Ortcd ~tolen from a 19 4 BMW Sl31 perltcd
tn a lol at UO Mac nhur Bt\d
turd.ay. • • •
Coeta Meaa
'k1 and surf equ1pmen1 "alucd al
S2 . 750 were reponed stolen Sunda}
from the garage of a home 1n tht" 200
block of Swan. Pohce rcpon~ sn1d tht'
th1d entered through an unlock~
\1de garage door. • • • .\ S215 bicycle was rcpo!"ed \tolen
from a home 1n the I 000 block of
Santa Cruz Saturday • • • .\ 1h1tf rcpone<lly brokt' into 3
home in the 500 block of Windy Lane
eatlv Tuesday momma and ~1olr
SI Joo 1n cash from a lt\ ma room
table. Pohcc: rtpons said the thief
entertd throu1h shdmg kitchen door
8oatb Coanty
C'loth1n1 and makeup. "alucd at
SS9 04. were f't'P()rted stolen from a
M1 s1on V1CJO Gcmco dcpenment
store. 24SOO ho1 Parkway • • • Two men's suits vaJucd at S 150 and
a SSO cable TV coovtncr box wt'rt
f't'POl1cd stok'n from the Ulink of a
vetucle parked in a Mi ion V~o lot
at 2SI04 MalJUttllt Partway last
Thuf'lday • • • A S200 11.atue and~1 0 .-n ,ewclry
were rcponcd stolen ftom a M1n1on
V1e10 home in the 25800 bloclt of Via
Pera la\t Thursday Poh('( reports
•
store reponed last Monday that
sometime sin~ Sept 1 someone stolr
betw«n S 1.400 and S l .SOO from the
27000 Crown Valle} F'arkwa store. • • • Tools \alucd at S 1.365 were rc-
poned "tolen from the garage of a
M 1ss1on V 1eJO home in the :! 000
block of Lucero last I uesda)
Buntincton Beach
'\ resident 1n the ~070<l bllX'k ot
Glencann reported that her \On'\
SI 00 skateboard was stolen off the
front porch of her home • • • The owner of i maroon I '->~4
Chevrolet C'amaro rcponcd that
someone sma hed the dnver''i '1dc
w1ndow while the 1.·ar lo\'ll'I parked
behind the Good Time~ har, 1!1 7MI
Bea h Blvd Tu«day af\emoon • • • o\ resident in the 8500 blo~. ~ ,,f
I
• • • \umconl' fl'f}(lnC"dh brokl in to J
"-:u11rn \\ tlk llohh1c\ 'itore I ti~!L'
<rot hard '°)t 1 UC'\<la\ and \tolt'
SS tlOO 1n radtn lnn1ml hobh\ t'QUlfl·
mcnt • • • '\ th1t'I rt•punc-dh hroJ...c into a
home 1n th<.' :!0000 hltxk of Harh<lr
l\k Tul''><la\ and rl'f'<1nt·<lh 'tole a
700 ~\ n thl.',11C'r . . ..
A S 17'1 f."N' rnntaining a S5U walkt and 40 111 l a'\h ~as rtponed
~tolen from an unlol krd car parked 1n
an open garaae nf a homr 1n th<.' '700
blod ofRagt1mr fur\da' • • • m('one rep<lnedh hroke into a uai. 24 S<'f"\ •t~ ~tat111n. Jl~SO I tkach
Blvd . and !>tole $2,<WJO 1n Cl&h from
the yfo Poht't' report!! said the thief
entered b\ making 11hole1n the side of
the buld1nf..
Suspect held in slaying
LO ANGEL (AP) -.\ man < ount~ 'ht'nfT'\ Temple ( nv 1111
wu arrested for ln\IC$ltpt1on of the Dc:put) ~e Fouclman ,.1d earl)
fatal shooun, of a truck dn' ~ 24 loda) '
houn earlier on lntentate ~. a Edward Watkins Ill. )6. o( n
'henlf s •poknman Mud. Gabnel, an 1ndcpcncknt trucker bAlul·
Rud> Johns, 3S of C ompton was 1na mail f'tom Los 1'nttla to Nonh·
amstcd Tut1da n1Jhl and allqtdlv em ahfom1a. wu shot to diath tair
"made an adn11n1on \l~tcment dur-Monda on the 1nl(Tl\tate nnr
'"' bookin•" at the l o\ .t.ncclc1 Gannan
/ .'
I •
A4 * Oninge co.. CWL y Pt""OT I Wedneeday' November 27' 1985
Justlce suit a:gainst LA derided
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Justice Department
lawswt apinst a ttdislrictina plan fuhjoned to increase
minority reprt$Cntation on the City Council is politically
motivated and licks ltpljustificationJ. ~ty officiaJs say.
"I just find it odd that the t:.a MCC$C Jusucc
Dcpallment ... has taken on the Los AnJeles City
Council's reapponionmcnt when we will have, 1n a matter
of weeks. five minorities on tbe City Council,''
councilman Zcv Yarosla.vslcy sa.id Tuesday of tbc U.S.
District Court suit.
Yaroslavsky said the civil suit -sijlled by Attorney
GcoeraJ Edwin Meese and Assistant Aftomey General ·
William Bradford Reynolds -wu politically motivated. Yaroslavs~ said one oftbe redistricting plan's aoals
was to ensure fai r minority representation.
"We have done cverythina that we p0ss1bly couJd do
short of connecting odds and ends from throughout Los
Angeles into oblong districts," he added.
Other city officiaJs.J.)so were critical of the lawsuit
0 l'm really surpriled and disaPPointcd ... because we
did a very careful and conscientious job with that
reapportionment plan," said council President Pat
Ruuell.
She said several public bearings were held to study aJI
the plans and a number of community groups eventually
sjded with tbe council's choice of redistrictina lines.
City Anomey James K.. Hahn said, "We believe that
our redistrictina was fair and that it complied with the law
and we intend to viaorously defend it•• ·
There was no comment from Mayor :rom Bradley
who was in the Far East on a trade mission, but Depu~
Mayor Tom Houston aaid Bradley shared the lawsuit's
goal of areater Hispanic rc~nntation on the council.
But Houston said be was surprised at the legal action.
"I think that we would fight any attempt to show that
there bas been pu~seful discrimination because I don't
thlnk the record wtll show that there has been purposeful
discrimination by the city," he sajd.
Orienta/ Rug
· Sale!
En hance your beautiful home.
Choose from thousands!
Open 9-6, this week only.
Drilling
offshore
OK with
the Navy
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Navy is
soficnfoa its opposition to offshore
oil expl<?ration and drilling off the
California and GuJf coasts and Will re-
examine much oftbe area deemed ofT
limits because of security reasons.
Deputy Assjstant Navy Secretary
Wayne Amy iold an audience attend-
ing the National Ocean Industries
Association fall confcrcnoc Tuc$day
in Laguna Niguel th~t t.hc Navy is
backing off any montonum on off-
sbore drilling.
Arny said vast tracts off much of
San Dieg6, Orange and Ventura
count!escould be ~eviewed, including
sensitive submanne lane areas off
San Diego Harbor a~d tra~s off the
Point Mugu NavaJ Air Station.
The Navy earlier told the Interior
Depar1ment that it had no problem
with leasing tracts off most of
southern Orange County and near
Camp Pendleton in northern San
Diego County.
Those lands were among wide
areas said to be off limits for military
reasons last summer when Interior
Secretary Donald H~el was. ncg<_>-
tiating an agreement wtlh Cahforn1a
congressmen to open 2 percent of the
state's coastal waters to drilling. A Lucky comes home tentative asrccment reached fell
through. Preeldent Reacan. ht.a doC Lucky In tow. wa•e. OD arrlm at Rep. Dan Lundgren, R-Long
Point llqa Nam Air Station In California OD Tueeday. Beach, said he was pleased military
~ The dot, which reportedly bu become too unruly to keep at officials arc showing their first siJllS
""'""'",,.""J'{'.)~ 2915 Red Hiii, Bldg. 8201 theWhltehoue,labelnCmoftdtoapermanenthomeatthe of Oex1bility on the offshore drilling ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;:;;;:;;;:;:::;:::;:::;:::;::::=::=~.R•e•ac .. an ... ran ... c.h•D•ear ... Sa .. n .. ta .. Ba .. r•ba .. ra .......................... is•su•e• ................... ...
SKI REPORTS
11 :30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m.
On Orange County's
easy
listening
music station
KDCM 1DBJ
Newport Beach FM 5 I ERED
Duke pledges farmers' tax break
MARYSV ILLE (AP) -Gov.
George Deukmejian, while touring
rice-growing areas Tuesday, pledged
his support for a major tax break for
agriculture.
But the Republican governor,
speaking to reporters, ruled out ,a
general tax cut during the 1986
election year.
The tax break for farmers would be
in the fiscal 1986-87 budget he is
preparing for presentation to the
Legislature in January. It would aJlow
growers with losses to deduct them in
future years. Present law requires
losses to be deducted in the tax year in
which they arc incurred.
A bill already stalled in the state
Senate would do that. and a spokes-
man for Dcukmejian said the admin-
istration would work for its enact-
ment next year. The bill has been
endorsed by a long list of legislators
from farm areas.
Dcukmejian, who proposed in
September a "ruraJ rcmussance," told
the reporters, "In the very beginning,
when other farmers were being hit,
California didn't feel it. But now it
has become very apparent that there
have been a number of farm
bankruptcies and foreclosures."
The "ruraJ renaissance" would
involve a $30 miUion fund to finance
public works projects intended to
attract businesses to rural areas.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Tara Lagos
Rc,berr Wlezien
Enc Spraktr
Kirk Waldfogel
Man.u Blumhagen
Daniel) Williams
Best WI~ from:
Dr. W. Ronald Redmonda & Staff
Orthodontics
Kenr Jonr_s
Laura Smith
Oma McKinney
Richard Calderon
Jat0n laley
John Aguirr,.
Phylis Reusch!'
Lance Solomon
Padmaia Naidu
tepharue ~<"ken
Robert Dr1eucn
Chns Coleman
30111 Niguel Road • Laguna Niguel
(714) 495-0800
181 Avemda Vaquero • San Clemente
(714) 412-2141
In a Rotary Club speech in Chico,
Deukmejian said, "As long as I'm
sovemor, the years of neglect and
indifference to rural CalitOrnia arc
over." I
After the address, he told reporters
that if Assembly Speaker Willie
Brown engineers the !~stative defeat
of the administration s toxic waste
plan, it would be for "purely partisan
political reasons" having nothing to
do with the merit of the plan.
Brown, D-San Francisco, is accus-
ing Dculcmejian of exploiting the
toxic waste issue politically. He said
last week that the Legislature might
kill the governor's plan in January.
Sanctuary
resolution
criticized
LOS ANGELES (A P) -Federal
and county officials assailed a resol-
ution declaring this a "city of sanc-
tuary" for CcntraJ American refugees,
and 1mm1gration authoritesaccused a
church group of recruiting illegal
aliens in El Salvador.
"This is a ridicuJous and disastrous
kind of thing for a City Council to do
that has no business being involved in
"::::::::::--::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==================~-----' _J_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!~-1 national policy in the first .place," Harold Ezell, western regional com-
J_.
/1111•1m.1n \iArr U• Hnhm•nn • I;,,.
Bm.11/,.,1~ Bullof'k• ~\1/ihm• Hullum•
If\'"" /:..',inch f•rmt'n \.f.;rt..t'I r J~l't
t1•11in1 •torts in .ill lu•I o ll f•1111t11
( tld•I ll•ch~.i~ #>el~•·"n \4.tt '\t lh11r
.inti f·•"''"'ff'i' Rh d• "' "'~'"''' ,., "ti
' .
Please 101n us for our day
long celebration welcoming
the Holiday Season!
10 a m SANTA'S ARRIVAL
by Train Line up at
the Train Station at
the Information
Center Join Santa
and Mrs Claus
1n 1he1r inaugural
train ride
FREE TRAIN RIDES
UNTIL 3 o 'clock
FREE PHOTOS to all
children under 12
years of age One P"'
child One day only
5 p m .SINC-A-LONC.
CAROLING with
Pat Boone undPr thP
Christmas Tree
h O m ANNUAL TREE-
L/GHTINC FE 1 IV-
/TIES Be part of
our nationally tele-
vised program
Complimentary hot
chocolate and
cookie~ following
the Ceremony
• NEWPORT
CENTER
FASH I LAND
•
missioner of the U.S. Immigration
and Naturalization Service. declared
at a news conference Tuesday.
The largely symbolic resolution
making Los Angeles a sanctuary for
Guatemalan and Salvadoran rcfusccs
fleeing from persecution was sched-
uled for a vote before the City Council
today.
Pair sentenced
in slavery case
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Beverly
Hills businessman and his sister,
aJleacd to have been io a group that
plotted to import slaves from In-
donesia, were sentenced to probation
and fines for violating immigration
law.
Nasim Mussry, 57, and his sister,
Elsa Sinaman, 54, both from In-
donesia, were minor ~layers among
I 0 people initially indicted by a
federal arand ju? tn 1982, said u .s.
District Judac Richard Gadbois, Jr.,
who imposed the sentences Tuesday.
"I know a lot about this case."
Gadbois said. "I know there were
people (in the case) who have never
been in this counroom and should
have been, who seduced people in
Jakarta" into coming to the United
States.
E nglis h -only efforts
rejected by two cities
ALHAMBRA (AP) -Efforts to
declare EnaJish the official lanauaae
in two San Gabriel Valley cities with
growina Asian populations failed
when the Alhambra City Council
rejected a resolution and a petjtion in Monte~ Park was ruled unaccep-
table.
Without takina a vote. the Alham-
bra City Council rejected a resolution
that would have declared EQ&lish the
official lanauaac of tbe city where
about 2~ percent of the 69,200
retidents arc Asian.
Proponantsofa similar measure in
neighborina Monterey Park, where
Asians comprise. 40 percent of the po~lation. resubmitted oo~a of
their petition to the city cleft 1 office
Monday only to have it rejected
apin.
' 1)
Accused spy won
promotion from
Chinese agency
. WASHINGTON (J\P)-:--A federal grand jury says the Chinese thought o hi&hl~ of Larry Wu-ta1 <:;h1n as a spy that they let him meet with a deputy chief ,
orthe1r 1ntelhgence service and then promoted him within that agency In 1981 , a federal indictment ·
allcaes. Chin went to Hong Kong and
Macao and met with agents from the il)teUig~nce se~i~ of the People's R~p~bhc of China, 1.n~luding the vice
m1n1stcr of the M1n1stry of Public
Security. The vice minister was not
identified by name.
The single-count indictment hand-
ed up Tuesday m U.S. Distnct Court
in Ale'.l~ndria. Va., charged Chm with
conspmng to violate the federal ~pionagc statute.
The indktment charged Chin w1th
conspiring with others to deliver to
the Chinese government and its
representatives "documents, photo-
graphs and in~rmauon relattn~ to
the national d nsc of the United
States."
~ bail heanng was scheduled for
Chm today before a federal magis-
trate in Alexandria.
A bail hearing also was to be held
today for Jonathan J. Pollard, 31 , a
Navy civilian countencrrorism
analyst charged last week with selling
secrets to a fo reign power. identified
by sources as Israel.
Pollard's wife, Anne Henderson-
Polrard, 25, was lo lppear at the·
bearing also. She has been charged
with unauthorized possession of
documents relating to the national
defense. .
In Baltimore today, a bail hearing
was scheduled for Ronald William
Pelton, 44. a former analyst with the
super-secret National Security Agen-
cy, who was arrested Monday in
Annapolis, Md., and charged with
espionage and conspiracy to sell U.S.
secrets to the Soviet Union.
The Chin indictment claimed that
in February 1982 he traveled to
Pelting and met with agents of the
Chinese intelligence service, "where
he received a promotion to deputy
bureau chier· of the MPS, the
indictment alleged.
For the most part, the document
I
Code crackers
targeted for
extra scnitiny
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pen-
tagon workers who help make and
break secret codes will soon become
the targets of a special security
craclcdown;a spokesman says.
Bob Sims, the Pentagon's chief'
spokesman, said Tuesday that De-
fense Secretar¥ Caspar W.
Weinberger bad signed a directjve
ordering creation ofa special "crypto-
access" security program.
He said random lie-detector tests
might be administered to the 50,000
to 60,000 peorle who work in the
secret world o communications se-
curity, scrambled messages and code-
breaking.
Sims also said the Pentagon had
launched a special "damage
assessment" study m the wake of
several spy arrests over the past week,
but added no conclusions had yet
been reached.
repeated accusations that bad been
made agajnst Chin earlier in an FBI
criminal complaint.
Chin, 63, is alleged to have rece1 ved
more than S 140.000 from the Chinese
intelligence service for espionage
activities from 1952 until the time of
his arrest last Friday.
The indictment charged Chin with
conspiring to violate the federal
espionage statute by providing Chi-
nese intelligence agents with secret
documents, the djsclosure of which
could. cause Serious damage to U.S.
secunty.
Ocean burn seen
as toxic solution
WASHINGTON (AP) -The En-
vironmental Protection Afency says
a planned "research bum ' of toxic
chemicals in the Atlantic Ocean next
year is a big step toward solving
America's growing problem of dis-
posing of hazardous wastes.
But the environmental group
Greenpeace disagrees, saymg that
much of the toxic waste dumped in
landfills around the nation can't be
handled by the cpmmercial ocean
incineration envisioned by EPA.
"We're still not convinced the
technology is safe, nor arc we con-
vinced that ocean incineration will
take care of the hazardous waste
problem in America," Lisa Bunin, the
group's legislative director, said
Tuesday.
"Most of what we have is sludge
and solid waste, which can't be
burned," she said. "Ocean incinera-
tion deals principally with liquid
waste, and the most burnable waste is
what industry wants to recycle for
energy."
She made the comments after
Larry Jensen. assistant EPA adminis-
trator for water. announced plans to
test-bum PCBs off the New Jersey
coast as a step toward approving
commercial incineration of toxics at
sea.
The test. about 140 miles east of the
mouth of Delaware Bay, is "a very
significant step forward' in managing
the one metric ton of toxic waste
produced for each Amencan every
year, Jensen said at a news con-
ference.
He said EPA plans to issue a pemut
allowing Chemical Waste Manage-
ment of Oak Brook, Ill.. to load its
incinerator ship. Vulcan us II. with up
to 708,958 gallons of hquid waste
contain ing polychlorineatcd
biphenyls.
The ship will sail from Philadel-
phia to the bum site, where under
EPA supervision-rt wall conduct 19
days of tests that wall release an
estimated .013 µlions of residue a
day into the environment.
"This waste residue will be dis-
persed in the incinerator plume pnor
to settling to the sea surface, where tt
wall be further dispersed to concentra-
tion levels well below water quaht}'
cri teria," the EPA said 1n a statement.
Space Shuttle Atlantia bluta off ln the nJcht •ky.
Atlantis off, deploys
satellite for Mexico
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP)-
Atlantis' astronauts, hurled into orbit
1n a dazzling nighttime launch,
deployed a $42 million Mexican
communications satellite today that
for economic reasons and because of
earthquake damage to ground facili-
ues won't be used for four years.
Morelos B is \he first of three
communications payloads the crew
planned to spin out of the space
shuttle in the first two days of Its
mission to clear its cargo bay for two
lengthy space walks lo practice space
station construction methods.
"We got a good deploy," reported
astronaut Sherwood Spring..
Forty-five minutes later, a rocket
motor fired to propel Morelos B
toward a lofty outpost 22.300 miles
h1lh.
ihe posiuoning of the satellue
dictated the bnlhant nighttime liftoff
Tuesday that provided rocket watch-
ers with the most spectacular sound
and hght show in the 35-year history
of more than 2.000 launchings from
Cape Canaveral.
Mexican officials said Morelos B
would be inserted into an orbit that
will allow it to slowly drift, without
usin~ fuel . to its planned stationary
post 1n 1989. They said if they watted
four years to launch, the cost would be
four times the SIO million Mexico is
paying NASA for the delivery service
now.
damaged many of the nauon 's satel-
l1te ground communications facilities
was another factor in the decision to
"park" the second satellite for several
years. It will be some time before
mone~ as available to repair the
facilities.
Astronaut Rodolfo Nen. Mexico's
first astronaut, was aboard to observe
the deployment of his country's
satellite and to conduct se veral ex-
periments for Mexican sc1ent1sls.
The launch onginally was sched-
uled for 7:38 a.m. today. But when
Mexico decided to put Morelos B into
the drifting orb1l. hftolTwas ad vanced
to an after-dark liftoff at 7·29 p.m.
Tuesday.
-. .
..
I
·Egypt asks surviving
hijacker be eztracliteCI
By die Assocla&H Preti
VALLETTA. Malt.a -f.aypt deman~ today that Malt.a extrldiLc the
surviving hijacker of the £.aypt.air ,etlinet and autopsJes were conducted on
scores of people k.ilJed when commandos stormed the plane. Malt.ete
~nvestiptors Questioned pesscngeri and crew who survived the drama. wbicb
beaan Saturday when tcrTorists commandeered the Boeins 737 shortly aft.er it
left Athens, Greece, for Cairo, E".gypt. Fifty-eight people were killed when
£ayptian commandos stormed the Jethner Sunday and the hijackers threw fire
arcnades into the cabin. Ao Amencao woman was shot to death before the ~tian raid. Two other Americans and two lsraclis were also shot by the
hi.Jackers Sunday morning, Maletesc. All survived, but one of the Israeli
women was declared clinically dead Tu~y.
Greek terrorl•ta bomb bu•; cop tilled
A THENS -Pohce satd today a Greek terronst group bas claimed
responsibility for scttinJ off a car bomb that nppcd into a passing police buJ.
lc.ilhng one officer and injunng 14 others. A caJler clajming to reprc$C11t the
"November 17" undergrbund organization phoned the pro-government
Athens daily Eleftberotypia said It was responsible for the Tuesday night
bombm$. according to a pohct spokesman who spoke on condltJon of
anonymity. The gro\Jp has claimed rcspons1b1l11y for at least six pohtJcaJ
assassinauons since 1975. including two U.S. offi c1aJs in Athens. three Greek
police officen and a nghH~1ng Greek newspaper publisher.
Morocco king key peace talk• figare
RABAT. Morocco-Morocco's moderate and pragmatic K.ingHas.san II,
who blew hot and cold this week on direct peace talks with Israel, has long
played an important backstage role an Middle East peace moves. Those
familfar with the style of the 56-year-old monarch are convinced that hisabout-
face on direct talks with Israel was no shp of the tongue but a deliberate trial
balloon. "'H is majesty has his own way of pulling new ideas before public
opinion," one high-ranking Moroccan official said on condition of anonymity.
"This is not the first time he has appeared to change has m10d while planting a
seed that he hoped would grow into a tree ..
Gorbachev raps U.S. arms plan
MOSCOW -Soviet leader M1khaJI S. Gorbachev charged 1oday the
United States 1s trying to gain m1htary supenont} wuh "one-sided" arms plans
and said President Reagan's refusal to halt space weapons research prevented
any arms control agreement at the Geneva summit. But he said the "total
balance" ofh1s meeting with Reagan last week was positive. especially because
1t established a personal dialogue between the leaders of the two superpowers.
Gorbachev. addressing the Supreme Soviet. the nation's parliament, in his first
public assessment here of the summit. said the Reagan admm1strat1on had
poisoned international relauons m the earl~ 1980s and for years 'bowed no
interest in casing U.S.-Sov1et tensions
S. Africa OKs Brltlsh negotlators
JOHANNESBURG -The government agreed today to welcome a
British Commonwealth del~tion seeking ways to encourage an end to wh1te-
m1nority rule in South Afnca, but warned It against "'101ervenuon in the
country's national alTaars." The Commonwealth voted Oct. 20 at its meeting 1n
the Bahamas to send a fact-finding delegation to South Afnca after Bntain
rejected demands by the Commonwealth majOnly to impose JOIOt economic
sanct1onsagajnst South Afnca. The delegation plans its ' 1s1t fo r sometime next
year.
Cathollc blshops seek more power
VATICAN CITY -U.S. and Scandtna\lan prelates proposed at an
extraordinary synod Tuesday that local bishops and their natio nal
orgamzat1ons snare with the pope respons1b1hty for runn10g the Roman
Catholic Church. Bishops from the Third World, addressing1SSucsofthe1rown
region. called for increased church suppon of clencs working for the poor and
oppressed. The proposals came 10 speeches on the second da} of a two-week
synod assessing the reforms of the Second Vaucan Council. also known as
Vaucan 11.
Morelos A, which was launched
from a shuttle m June. 1s providing
first-time telephone and television
service to many remote areas but only
half its capacity is being used. The
recent Mexic~n earthquake which .. -..._. ... ... ... . . .
At Amenc:m Sa\ rngs. · •, i . •
IRS chaos ln tar processlng reported we've been hl'lpmg lal1for ·ft ·!.~~~· .... :,J· 6~~·1.
mans save money for too .lff)'..,:~~.:f;·· 1·~~:
WASHINGTON (AP)-At some
tax-processing centers, taxpayer let-
ters were destroyed , refund checks
were mutilated, some people put in
80-hour weeks, and tax forms were
left in restrooms and on loading
docks, the General Accounting Office
reports.
In reports being distributed on
Capitol Hill this week, the GAO, an
investigating arm of Congress, point-
ed to inadequate staffing and a
changeover to a new computer sys-
tem as primary reasons for what Sen.
John Heinz. R-Pa .. said Tuesday was
We will buy your
china and crystal
for cash
714-241-9973/111-905-6650
• Floor Mott • Cor Co~
• lJceinM Ptot. FrOIMI . "'°'
SHEEPSKIN SLIPPERS
Oothbootd co .... n
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mudt MUCH ...,.1
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"the worst t.ax-fihng season m his-
tory."
More than seven months af\er the
April I 5 federal income tax filing
deadline, the Internal Revenue Ser-
vic.e said Tuesday that I. 9 million tax
returns remajn unprocessed because
of taxpayer or agency error.
Speaking to reporters in Philadel-
phia. Heinz said the GAO report on
problems at the Philadelphia Service
Center "confirms the center was
unprepared, poorly staffed and in-
competently managed.
"The picture drawn is of a quirky.
error-prone. even hopeless high-tech
sweat shop where the choice if you arc
an employee was either to quit or try
to do an 1mposs1ble job ...
The IRS is reviewing the GAO's
findings, said spokesman Ernie
Acosta. "'We worked closely with the
GAO during their investigation so we
are aware of the situations," he sajd,"
"In many cases, we have already
taken corrective action."
Worker turnover and inexperience
were keys to problems in Philadel-
phia and at IRS centers in Fresno.
Cahf .. and Austjn, Texas.
years And now. Ill celehra
tion of our Centenn ial. we\'e
made a pledge to help save
one of our most treasurt>d
natural resources-Yosem1tt>
National Park
SAVE THE WILDLJFE
AND WILDERNE&5.
\\'hat took nature over
JO million years to create.
man ha-. mdangered m les..,
than a cemurv That's wh' r
Amenc~m Savin~· employl'C~
and customers have aJread'
made a substantial contnhu
uon 10 'oSt•tmte's "Return of
Light · campaign
It . a good start . but 'o~t·nHtt•
nt't'd! your support 100
GET MORE THAN
A GOOD FEELING.
To show our appreciallon for
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you with a peoal edition poster
of Yosemite circa 188) when you
donate Sl or more
Wert> rnmm1 ttt•d to sa' in~
fo:-.t.•mi tt' :\:1tHm,1I Park
not with !'1\ dollan.. hut with
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pt>oplt' hkt> 'ourself
Complt•lt' .md return
thl' ~oup1111 10 am of our I ~'i
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\l HJr t,L\ dt't.it11.11hl; don:ttmn
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f r' I t I:' \I \nlt'rtC;Jll \,l\ m~' \!Ill II
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I +Ith II ''"\"""''•'•" j l I re<.'t'1' t' J cop' of '11~ ~ I ~ I 'fosem11t· .ind the I l.W I High Sierra" A 120 pa~. full t olor 1 1
photo history of Yn~m1tr 1 1 WE'LL HELP I ii..,, ~.' > I
I "··· I> ~.. I YOUR DONATION GROW I ~ "' I I tt•~ I • • t. l\lni II \tttf'f"h "' ""+It~ American Savings ha.' of'<,'flt•d .l
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I l 141 Gardtn Grove 81\ d
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gj·, AMERICAN SAVINGS
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. ---
'
Al * Orange Cou1 DAILY PtlOT/ Wed.neaday, NoV9mber 27. 1885
_J GuEsT Eo1 10R1AL
'In this ·season
of Thanksgiving
we are grateful '
Here is the text of President Reagan 's Thanksgiving
proclamation, released by the White House:
Although the time and date of the first American
thanksgiving observance may be uncertain, there is no
question but that this treasured custom derives from our
Judeo-Christian heritage. "Unto Thee, 0 God, do we
give thanks,'' the Psalmist 5a!!J, praising God not onl y
for the "wondrous works" of Hts creation. but for loving
guidance and deliverance from dangers.
A band of settlers arri vini in Maine in 1607 held a
service of thanks for,their safe Journey, and 12 years later
settlers in Virginia set aside a day of thanksgiving fo r
their survival. In 162 1 Governor William Bradford
created the most famous of all such observances at
Plymouth Colony when a bounteous harvest prompted
him to proclaim a special day "to render thanksgiving to
the Almighty God for all His blessings.·· The Spaniards
in California and the Dutch in New Amsterdam also
held services to give public thanks to God.
In 1777, during our War of Independence, the
Continental Congress set aside a day for thanksgiving
and praise for our victory at the battle of Saratoga. It was
the first time aJI the colonies took part in such an event
on the same day. The following year, upon news that
France was coming to our aid, George Washington at
Valley Forge prescribed a special day of thanksgiving.
Later, as our first president, he responded to a
congressional petition by declaring Thursday, Novem-
ber 26, 1789, the first Thanksgiving Day of the United
States of America.
AJthough there were many state and national
thanksgiving days proclaimed in the ensuing years, it
was the tireless crusade of one woman, Sarah Josepha
Hale, that final ly led to the establishment of this
beautiful feast as an annual nationwide observance. Her
editorials so touched the heart of Abraham Lincoln that
in 1863 -even in the midst of the Civil War -he
enjoined hi s countrymen to be mindful of their many
blessings, cautioning them not to forget "the source from
which they come," that they are "the gracious gifts of the
Most High God ... " Who ought to be thanked "with one
heart and one voice by the whole American people."
It is in that spirit that I now invite all Americans to
take part agai n in this beautiful traditio n wi th its roots
deep in our history and deeper still in our hearts. We
manifest our gratitude to God for the many blessings he
has showered upon our land and upon its people.
In this season of Thanksgiving we are grateful for
our abundant harvests and the productivi ty of our
industries; for the discoveries of our laboratories; for the
researches of o ur scientists and scholars; for the
achievements of our artists, musicians, writers, clergy,
teachers, physicians. businessmen, engineers, public
servants, farmers, mechanics, artisans, and workers of
every sort whose honest toil of mind and body in the free
land rewards them and their families and enriches our
entire nation.
Let us thank God for our families, friends, and
neighbors, and for the joy of this very fes tival we
celebrate in His name. Let every house of worship in the
land and every home and every heart be filled with the
spirit of gratitude and praise and love on this
Thanksgiving Day.
Now, therefore. 1, Ronald R.eagan, president of the
United States of America, in ttfe spirit and tradition of
the Pilgrims. the Continental Congress, and past
presidents, do hereby proclaim Thursday, November
28, 1985 , as a day of national Thanksgiving. I call upon
every citi zen of this great nation to gather together in
homes and places of worship and offer prayers of praise
and gratitude fo r the many blessings Almighty God has
bestowed upon our beloved country.
In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand
this fifteenth day of November, in the year of our Lord
nineteen hundred and eighty-fi ve, and of the Indepen-
dence of the U nited States of America the two hundred
and tenth.
RONALD REAGAN
LETTERS
Growth fast turnlng OC
into an urban nlg1it1nare
To the F.d11or
Your cdltonal of Nov 15 was
un~panng ol Laguna Beach for not
cagerl}' embraci ng the idea of a new
free wa}'
Maybe your columnist. Manin
Brower. wrote that ed1tonal. The idea
is that growth•~ beautiful -the faster
1he belier Thi\ may JUSt reflect th e
goals of the big developers. includrng
Th e Irvi ne Co . Mr. Brower's former
emplo"rer
If the Newport Beach Frtedom
Ftghtt'rs. some yean ago. had re·
copuzed what you term '"over·
whelmma real11 y," we would now
ha .. e a frcewty along Coast Highway
OAANGE COAST
DlilyPilat
' and Newpon Center woukl have thc
freeway access it ha\ long needed
l\nd the tC$idents of Newport Beach
would have a handier and more rapid
means of egress from the urban
nightmare this oncc-bca u11ful resi-
dential area is rapidly becoming.
At least you suffer no doubt~ about
the d~sirability of accelerating
growth. I should think a h1tlc balance:
would be classy even though the
prohferation of hotel" and the re\t of
the business and 1ndu~tnal growth
would benefit you as well as the
develope,.,,
PAUL RY C KOFr
Balboa Island
FrMtr Zlnl
fO•llll
Tom Tait
M.,..., lO.t•
Ooft ,9ft .. ,
~'"'°' c, ...... ,,
~(Oollll
·'This Jsn 'tjust a matter of Israeli agents snooping: If true, It means that , ,
the Israelis h ave been brlbtngac least one American c/tlzen tocommlt treason.
-~--
JOSEPH 80BRAI'
col a.au:alat
ANN
WELLS
She gets
no kick
out of
football
My fnend, Molly. sayc; she doesn't
watch baseball on TV because she
1h1nks the uniforms arc dumb. But
she watches football.
Now if you want to discuss dumb
un iforms, let's start with football. The
1eam looks as though it were put
together by a blindfolded committee.
Israel receiving kid glove
treatment over spy charge
The players arc camouflaged in
pants stuffed with pads at th ighs ~nd
hips, and jerseys in ~olor co mb1na-
11ons that make artists tum pale
These jerseys are pulled on over
gargantuan shoulder pads -some·
thing just about right for King Kong.
To' top it off. they wear huge
helmets with cages attached to cover
their faces. And one of them always
has a liule towel hanging from his
wa ist.
To be fair. I'll admit I don't watch
baseball because of the uniforms.
although I thank lhey are understated
and sensible. They're tnm, providing
the player inside is trim. and you
always know which two teams are
playing. The front of the shirts bear
the name of the team - vou don't
have to figure out some weii-d logo on
the headgear as in football.
Yet to see a major
politician calling
for investigation
WASHINGTON -Spy stones
ha\e been making headlines with
such fr<'Quency that they arc getting
routine The story of Jonathan J.
Pollard made a different son of
headline
Mr. Pollard is rcpQrtcd 10.havc sold
our intimate !>ecrets to J.irael. You
might think this would be sensational
news. s1ncr f\rael gets enormous
amounts of lJ S aid and 1s reputed to
be .. our onl } reliable ally m the
Middle East·· You might expect the
people who arc most warmly dis-
posed toward Isra el 10 register the
greatest shock. Well. an the dehghtful-
1)' rude phrase of ~esteryear ... Wise
up. sap ..
\li e have yet to see a maJOr
Pol1t1cian or editonal calling fo r a full
mves11gat1on of the ex ten t of Israeli
spying in the United States. It's an
open secret that sens11i ve infor-
mation in the Defense and State
departments has a way ofw1ndang up
in Israel.
Earlier this year 1t 1ranspired. 1n a
widel y spi ked \tor;. that thc: Israelis
had acquired liming devices for
nuclear weapons that are manufac·
turcd an the United States and banned
for export. You can get the Oavor of
uur cunou!> relations with Israel from
a book called .. They Dare to Speak
Ou1:· b}' former Congressman Paul
Findley.
Ollit 1al \ mencan a path)' on the
sub1ect of Mr Pollard is remarkable.
After all. the Israeli government is 1n
an uproa r It promises a full 1nves11ga-
t1on. ~incc 11·., po!ic;1blc that those
rnnduct1ng the inquiry may ha ve
ON THE RIGHT
JOSEPH
SOBRAN
motives for concealment. we might
do well to have an an vestigation of our
own, if there as any way to catch the
interest of someone on Capitol Hill.
Consider how the Pollard story has
been handled by The New York
Times -our "paper of record." In
reporting the story on its front page.
the Times omitted the word "Israel"
from its headline - as if 1t were
irrelevant that the alleged espionage
was the work not of a comm unist
country, but of :i nation that cease-
lessly professes its fnendsh1p for
Amenca. 1'h1s 1s the angle that makes
the story sensational.
It wasn't that this an$)e didn't occur
to the editors of the Times. The very
next day, in fact. the Times acknowl-
edged its significance. bu t 1n a way
calculated to damp down American
ind1gnat1on toward Israel -even if
the Pollard story turns out to be
absolutely true.
The second Times story. also on the
fron t page, bore the subhead ''Spying
on Allies Common.''.h began: "lfan
American Navy analyst as convicted
of spyi ng for Israel, 11 will be the latest
of many examples of allied in-
telligence services' spymg on each
other." And 1t went on to last several
eumples of Western governments
kcepmg tabs on each other.
Tlus story did delicately acknowl-
edge ihat the Pollard case looks a lmlc
different "because the charges in-
volve th e use of a clandestine agent
ralher than other meth ods of gather-
in$ an formation." Put more bluntly.
this isn 'tJUSt a mauer of Israeli agent!>
snooping: If true. it means that the
Israelis have been bribing at least one
Americ.an ci tizen 10 commit treason.
Ordinarily The New York Times is
among the leading American or~ns
of public indignation . especially
when the subject is corruption in
government. When Richard Nixon
was in trouble, th e Times rejected the
argument that "'it didn't sta11 wi th
Watergate." Yet its reOex1vc rt!oilct1on
to the Pollard case, before the charges
were even proved or disproved. was
to make the same defense. 1n effect,
for rsrae[
Onl y a decade ago. the Times led
the great crusade against im -
proprieties co mmitted by the CIA
and FBI. Its 10ves11gat1ve energy
knew no bounds. and its mouve was
emphatically not to clear Amencan
intelligence services or to minimize
the scnousncss of their nusdccds. But
Israeli mtclligcncc services arc elicit-
ing a very different response from the
Times.
The ironies can be mult1phed. But
the supreme iron y would be 1f lsrae)
turned out to be essenually innoce nt
-after the Times had made excuses
for 11 on the assumption that it's
guilty. That is entirely possible. But
meanwhile, the Times has obliquely
confessed that it fi nds the charge of
Israeli spying altogether plausible. if
not probable.
So in a way n seems that the editors
of the Tames inwardly share the view
of lsrael offered 1n Paul Findley's
book - a book that was panned in
The New York Times Book Review.
They are dcfendinJ Israel not hke a
champion who behevcs tn his cause.
but hke a criminal lawyer who knows
what has client has done.
Jo1~pb Sobru Is • 1yndlc•ted
columnist.
I li ke the game because the sco~ng
1s easy to follow. Football teams can
score one Point, two points. thrc(.•
Points or six Points.
In baseball, a player crosses home
plate and the team gets one rint.
period. There isn't any o thi~
nonsense about getting two pomts if
he hit the fi1'St ball patched 10 him, or
three points 1f he bunted and ad-
vanced a runner.
In baseball when a player gets a
home run or makes a fantastic catch
and saves the game, you can sec the
elation on his face and--On the faces of
his tea mmates.
In football , if a pla yer makes a
touchdown or intercepts a pass, you
don't know if he is looking happy or
stunned. There is no way to sec
through the cage. All we sec 1s him
going through 'iOmc son of spastic
dance 1n the end zone. a covey of
teammates whacking him on the
head. and a lot of fanny-patting.
Basketball scores arc an one-Point
increments too. but they make them
so fast it's ridiculous. Before you have
tim e to cross your fingers and shout.
"Sink it," it's sunk. h's just slam.
dunk, slam. dunk. and two more
Points are chalked up. A game that
ends up 114 to I I 3 can be exhausting
and not a true indication of which
team is better. If the game lasted two
more seconds, there would have been
two more scores.
Tennis is even worse. There is no
way the scoring and terminology in
tennis makes sense. The fi rst "Potnt"
1s actually 15. the s<.-cond point makec;
the score 30, and the th ird pojnt
makes 11 40. No one has tx.·en able to
Cllplaan to me why 11 isn't 45. The}'
also use terms such as deuce, advan-
tage, love. all ....
Summits by their nature
don't prbduce overt result
It isn't enough in tennis to wan a
game. No, you have to try for sets so
you can go for matches. They even
take points away on technicalities.
Try that in baseball and you'll sec
instant mayhem.
This method of scoring tennis was
officially adopted in 1877, obvio usly
by a committee not completely sober.
The only way I can tell who is winning
a tennis game is if McEnroe is playing.
When he slams his racket down and
badmouths the offic ials, J kn ow he 1s
losing wi th his usual aplomb.
John Kennedy thought little of summit
L-. -confere n ces, while Ike loathed them
Tho'IC who express disappQ1nt -
ment at the failure of the summit to
produce anything lOncrcte are wide
of the mark. The \hcet nothingness of
the conference 1s its paramount
achievement
It is most awfullv 1mpQrtan1 to
dnvc that point home. and of course
the prohlcm l'i that the principals
have a vested interest an ~yi ng quite
<.:ontrary thing!., 8!> we saw in the
pre~1dcnt°s speech to tongress.
A Western superst111on. as re-
peatedly pointed out 1n this space. 1s
that when Antaaon1st A meets with
Anta,onist 8 and they ~poon t<>sether
for a ittle bit. before anybody knows
It a little Socratic hahy is born: Once:
again, dialogue ha' fcrtili1cd rcc-
onc1hat1on.
It 1s onl) when our leaders &.et
around to wn11ng their mcrf>irs that
we learn that they hold the5e meet-
ings. ancrcas1ngly melodramatiud by
the press, 1n very low esteem as
enain" of Policy cha nae. It 1s known
from the wm1na.s of those who
chronicled the administration of
John F Kennedy that he thouaht
little of summit conferences.
E:.tsenhower loathed them. thouah 111!>
1ntercst1ng 1n this connection that he
was the fir'il ~umm1tccr ~•net the
d1sastroui mect1na~ an which Roose·
vclt and Truman ,ave permanent bad
namc1 to summit ronferen<'e' at
Y:11ta and rot'<lam
Even \0. the we1Jht of public
op1n1on tended to adv1'1C the need for
a ~umm1t ~u Fi~nhowt"r con~nt-1
to meet with Khrushchev in Geneva.
and 1t was 20 years before the tangled
results of that particular conference
were made plain, when the Nonh
Vietnamese overran Saigon.
So that on the one hand President
Reapn has had to say how useful the
summit conference was. and on the
other hand lo be airy and insubstan-
tial m reciting what wen t on. Those
who are apprehensive on the point
can be reassured that Mr Rea~n did
not aive up his de1errnina11on 10
create a space shield.
But there was also a stran&e
reluctance on the part of Gorbachev
to stress the point. Here was Mr.
Reagan's principal victory: If
Gorbachev had had any reason to
believe that Reagan could be troubled
1n his consu1ncy behi nd the space
shield, he'd ha ve hit the point more
heaV1ly than he did. As things now
stand, whenever Gorbachev feels like
dom& so he can say that he devoted
hours dunng their private talks to try
10 dissuade Reapn from prooced1na
with the Strat.eaac Defense ln1tiat1ve.
But the public point is the m~t
1mpon.ant: As far u the world knows,
noth101 of matqic importance was
•~<>mph hed, and we do not know
whether an)'1h1na of strllCIJC: 1m~rt·
-anoe wu even accosted That 1s, 1f we
remove from scrutiny the obvious
chche~ about the univ~I desire for
peace
One hundred yea,., aao. meet1nas
l"><'twecn chief~ of nate m1&)11 be
1usi1fkd on s:rounds other than those
'tre-1!td 1od1y. Before the nae of the
WILLIAM F.
Bue KLEY
telephone or of electronic pictures.
tho~ chiefs of state who were not
cousms or second eousms really did
not know each other.
At the funeral of Queen Vactona,
and again at the funeral of Edward
VII , chiefs of government actually
met with one another. It is in point
that the First World Wo.r ca me onJy
four years after the death of Edward
Vil. suggesting that familiarity con-
tinues to breed contempt. The First
World War was an internecine quar-
rel between grandchildren 'Of Queen
Victoria.
But back to Moll y-I don't believe
uniforms ha ve anything 10 do w11h
which game she watches. My theory i1;
it goes back to her high school day~
when she had a crush on the football
captain.
Col•mJlJ1t Au W~llt llves ID
La1uaNl111el.
L.M. Bovo
Teetotalers
end upon
skid ro w too
But it can bardlyhun tocont1nucto
have summit conferences. There is One out of every three people on
the sin&lc weakneu in them that 1$ skid row never dnnks !Jeer, wine.
1rrcmedi1blc as the loss of v1rgln1ty is whiskey, anyt hina alcoholic:. Total
irremediable: and that. of course. as abstainer.
the sugestion thll a summit is a mcetina between moral equals. The matinacall ofalhptorssouods
Everyone stands for the Bolshevik so much like cannon fire that even tbe
I al th h d r. aJhptors can't always tell the dif-na ion an cm, even as t cy o ior fertnce. A Pensacola client all udes to "The Star-Spangled Banner.·· E vcry-onc bows and scrapes when the awful this curi osity when he says a 21-.aun
Gorbachev passes by. even as they do \llutc by naval ships has been known
when the democratically elecled 10 tum on a whole S'Wamp.
fnend of hbeny Ronald Reaaan True. doa.t catch mumps from
passes by. The caal itananu1t1on of coW1. But rarely. Very rarely.
1deol0JY that is a pan of the n tuals of Those who colltct the odd bill ~umm1t diplomacy cannot ever be Mme o( cunout. places arc intAJ
undone, \ave by war. on alternative what's known 1, "to ...... nvmy" we rule out. 1m '
Wllll•m B1ckl~1 11 • 1yetllc1llNI L..M. St# 11 • ITMlcatH
e>ol•OJ•l11. ~·~ J
Otange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedn.edey, NoWmber 27, 1986 A7
ORANGE COAST
Waite gives Bush update
on hostage negotiations
ltQW * "OC Clb" (1te3) Mr. T, Mini 8tldwln lm'MOONIM: M LOIT
FAm tM A11oclated Presa
WASHINGTON -AnaJ1can ch.u~h envoy Terry Waite says his
mission .to free the Americans kid·
napped an Lebanon is at a "highly
dangerous" st.age, but he docs not
bclie"'.e t~e U~it~ States must com-
pro.m1se its pnnc1ples in order to gaan
their release.
Wait~ met Tuesday for an hour at
the White House with Vice President
Georae ~ush, who invited the envoy
to W~hangton for the session.
Waite, ~ho 1s the lay assistant to
the archbisho p of Canterbury in
Enaland, had come to New York from
Athens to meet with relatives of the
hostages who include David J~cobscn, 54, of H untington Beach,
duect.ot of tt>t! ~merican University Hosp1~ Beirut, who was kid·
napped May 28.
The envoy has been to Beirut twice
an recent days in the effort to gain the
hostages' release, a nd he indicated
that he•~ wa11i ng for an answer to has
request to meet with officials in
Kuwait.
. Wa11e said he supported the pos-
1t1on of the Reagan administration
not to put pressure on the Kuwaiti
govemmen.t,. which is holding 17
Mosle!'ls Jaale~ for bombings in
Kuwait. "!"he kidnappers have said
the Amencans would be released if
the 17 prisoners were freed.
"I was able to give him a general
briefing on the situation and to in~icate some ways in which I felt that
this matter coutd be resolved," Waite
to.Id reporters following his session
with Bush. "I don't wish to be more
spcci fie ."
The envoy warned that the matter
is at a "highly dangerous" stage, but
Terry Waite
added later the administration "fully
supported" his humanitarian ap-
proach.
He said there must be "no attempt"
on the pa.rt of the United States to
gain the hostages' release by force,
adding quicldy that, "so far as I know.
there's absolutely no intention of the
United States doing that."
Asked whether he believed the
United States must change tts policy
of refusing to negotiate w11h ter-
ron sts. Waite replied:
.. The United States has always
taken a position and maintained the
position that they cannot change
policy as a result of terrorist act a vitv.
... I would support that posl\1on
mysc:lf."
Asked whether he believed the
Americans could be freed even 1f the
United States maintains that policy,
he answered, "Yes. I do beheve that
there ts a way forward which could
bring about their eventual release
without the compromise of prin-
ciple."
Seated with Waite near a blazina
fire in has West Wing office. Bush
praised the envoy for his courage in
the endeavor and thanked ham for has
work. "We're very grateful for his
humanitarian concern,'' the vice
president said.
Waite sajd he was unable to answer
many reporters' questions about his
activities. "Let's take it gently" he
advised, wamin_g that any misstep
could cost lives.
He said the United States has taken
what he called a "correct position ...
"They have remained calm. they
have remained patient and they have
made at possible for an independent
negouator such as myself to pursue an
opportunity to S« some way through
this problem." he said.
The envoy said he planned to meet
with "one or two" more ind1 v1duals
before retumipg ro New York.
Bush and Waite met about six
hours after President Reagan left the
White House fora s1x-<iay Thanksgiv-
ing 'acauon at his California ranch.
Watte became involved in seeking
the hostages' release after four of
them wrote a letter to the Rev. Robert
R unc1e. the arc hbishop of
Canterbury. seeking the envoy's 1n-
1ervent1on on their behalf. Wane has
successfully negotiated the release of
Britons held in Iran and Libya.
Staff honor
presented
Barbara Allred, aa-
80Clate dean of atu-
denta at NatlollII Unt-
v er atty. preaen ta
Steven Groabeck with
a certificate recOfnlz-lnl Illa nomination u
oatatandlng ataff mem-
ber of the quarter.
Groabeck la _..tant
dean of atudenta at the
anlveralty'a Oranfe
County campua n
ln1ne.
•
I TIC TN:. DOUGH
U)Y(IOAT
THl..a.T
WAIHltGTOON
-t.00-
• Cl) MOVIE
H "Airl*N II The SeQuel' (1982)
Rof>ert~. Jullt Hegerty
I L~ THECOllVS
TUMNO ll'OINTS
PMmMl.ON>
MOYIE • '\ * * ' Ctll'llClne I t983t K•t11 •
don. John Stoclcwell
'j)MOVIE
***'"Trading Places'" (19831 Eddie
Murphy, Din A~royd
CZJMOVIE * • * "5111 T rel! Ill The Sear eh For
a Spock" (1984) WIU1am Shalnet 0.-
-, Forest Kelley
-t'.30-
Let's hear it for 'good genes'
of wor Id's adopted children
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am sick
and tared of hcanng people sa) the
minute they hear an adopted kid 1s 1n
trouble. "It's in the genes."
This letter is to the woman who
bore a beautiful son out of wedlock
and made it possible for m y husband
and me to become parents. Our
adopted son will soon graduate from
high school and I want her to know
how wonderful he 1s.
"John .. 1s bnght, antclltgcnt and
kind. He has always been an honor
student and a source of pnde. There
have been so many times when I
wanted to get in touch with you and
say. "Look at what you have g.iven Ull~
Look at the JOY you have brought to
my husband and me, to John's aunts
and uncles, his cousins. his grand·
parent'i and all who know him'"
People are quick to blame the genes
wheo things go wrong. I wonder tf
A11
l.oDEIS
Nine years ago I became involved
with an 18-year-old boy I was 35, the
mother of three children. Like a fool I
was flattered by his attention and he
made me feel young. We thought
nobody knew, but the who le town was
talking.
When m y husband found o ut he
divorced me. I got the kids. the house
and a rotten reputation. As you have
probably guessed the young man
dropped me and eventually mamed
someone his own a~
I have not remamed, and the
future doesn't look very bnghL The
kids are grown and l don·1 sec them
very o ften
I suggest to o ther women who may
find themselves in this s1tuauon to get
psychological help. I wish I had
wntten to )OU then as I am doing now.
I real!) believe I was off my rocker.
I don't care 1f my letter makes the
pa~r. but I feel better for bavmg
wntten tt -SAD AND SORRY IN
NEBRASKA
DEAR S. AND S.: Too bad you laad
to pay Hell a ~lb prtct for yow
fooll1laae11. Th.ak you for takla1 die
time u d trouble to write. It mHt
taave been palaf•J. A.Dy woman Mt
tbt re wbo i• coD1lderill1 sacla u
"adventare" wollld do well to take a
pa1e oat of yoar book.
they th1nkabout~n~whenth1npgo ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~nght.
No one knows for sure to what
extent a child's intelligence. d1 spos1·
uon or temperament 1s inhentcd. but
this boy has certainly turned out well.
He must have had the "nght stuff'
from the very beginning. Thank you
for making that brave decision 18
years ago. -ANONYMOUS.
Fund-raiser falls short
DEAR ANONYMOUS: Genes mat·
ter. E1pedaJJy do ti.ey affect lntelltc·
tHJ capacity u d pltyslcal endow-
meat1. Bat die cllUd wi.o 11 reared
wltb love, 10Ud gaJdellae1 u d a sense
of personal worth laa1 a mucb bener
clluce of becomhlg a joy to all wbo
LUNCH
10:30-3:00
DINNE R
5:00-1 A.M . DAILY
Over 90 Hot or Cold Entrees
Featuring: So Newport-Mesa
Schools Foundation
will s.ell calenda rs
By TONY SAAVEDRA
CMlllllOelrNMIUll -
·· 1his 1s really going to be the glue
that binds the community.'' Nelson
said. "We feel that makingany money
the first time out was a monumental
accomplishment. We did an four
months what most people would take
a year to do."
The 4-ytar-old booster group
found itself peddling S25-to-S5.000
ads to businesses that had never
heard of the foundation. Nelson said.
Moreover. the new calendar had yet
to establish a track record.
l he boo~tcrs have raised more
than $314,000 s1 nee 1982, and issued
more than $30.000 1n grants last year
while sponsonng a new drug aware·
ness program for teachers.
In past years. nearly all the mone}
was raised from the parents. Nelson 1s
leading the campaign to tap the
business world 1n the corporat1on-
nch c1 t1es. •
To be successful, he estimates the
foundation must raise at least
$500.000 a year from parents and
businesses.
know blm.
Your letter ls sure to make many
blr&b motbers very ba ppy. Ti.anks for
writin g. 4 • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS. A whtle
back you said, "'Anyone who read'>
my column over a penod of years is
sure to 'lee himself." Well. I cenaanl}
saw myself not long ago and I cannot
rest until I speak m ) piece.
I hope and pray that the woman
who was obsessed with the teen-age
boy (a fnend of her daughter) takes
your advice and drops that kid at
once
A campaign by the Newport-Mesa
Schools Foundation to tap local
businesses for SI 00.000 by last Sep-
tember fell short of the mark. prompt·
ing fund-raising officials to again pass
the hat among parents.
Foundation members m June
enthusiastically unveiled a plan to
gamer business support by selling
advertising in a new school calendar.
to be printed by the booster group.
Nelson said foundation members.
an their zeal last June. had over-r,:::=============r..1------==========-==rl
Ralph Nelson. business dnvc
chairman, said Mondaythat advertas·
ing is expcctedto yield only about
$50.000 in profits. Meanwhile. the
foundation as askmg for S 10 dona-
tions from the 12.000 families in
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
being sent the stylish calendar this
month.
"We're offering people who say
'Hey. I'd pay money for this thing' a
chance lO do that. Why miss a shot?"
reasoned Nelson, president of the
Dayhill Corp. in Newport Beach.
While the business drive missed its
1oal. foundation officials remain
optimistic the calendar idea will
become a proven moneymaker in the
future.
estimated the group's recognition
among local corporations.
"It was kind of hke the chackcn-
and·the~gg story." he said. explain·
ing that while advert1s1ng was down.
the foundation made some valuable
connections for future vcars.
.. The dollar amount· 1s usually the
meat 1n these kinds of stones. but an
this case the meat as that we increased
awareness levels among businesses -
we're talking major companies,"
Nelson continued.
"It was difficult to go to the
business comrnuntty an the middle of
summer asking them to invest an
somet.~ing that we couldn't show them. ___ -
The foundation as attempting to
help rebuild music. rekd1ng and other
programs left anemic by C\JtS 1n state
educational fundina during the lallt
decade.
offer
good at
this
location
only
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Good Entire Thank~.tvlng ,.._ • ,
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Holiday fashions for both
wearing and giving-all at a
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Ovr holiday colledlon ltdKJes sill<
blov ... , """-'· wool a.,,. ('()-
Or dino'-t, gobot diu•, and wooh,
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Tennis runaways escape the grind
By EVE C. LASH ........ °"' 0 ° 1 Mother of four Lyn Call, 31, of
Irvine ia a runaway. So is ' lrvine
hou1ewife Becky Twitchell, lS.
Tbe police have not been notified.
And, their busbandl aren't worried a
bit. That's becau1e Call and Twitchell
1oin 50 or so other women, about four
times a year, to play tennis, tennis and
more tennis with a seuway group
called "The Runaways."
Tennis pros and sisten Nolie
Howard and Mary AaJe oflrvine take
the groups of women "away from it
all" about eiaht times a year.
Tbc idea was the brain child of
Howard five years ago. One day she
decided that many of her 300 or so
. students (many housewives} needed a
· weekend away for "aood tennis" as a
hcck-of-;J-lot of"wholesome" fun.
· Twitchell says, "I'll always be a
frustrated soro~· t girl. I love getting
away with the · s. And I love all the
tennis. It rca y helps your game
tremendously."
Agle points out the women play 160
pmcs of tennis durina the threeoday
trip, with 40 sames on Friday, 80
pmcs on Saturday and AO on Sunday.
Tbe aroup travels to different areas of
the state. This month the women will
be a<>ina to the Indian Palm Resort
and Country Club in the desert (near
Indio). •
Once there, it's not all business -
tennis business. that is. The tennis
bum take along some fancy clothes
(other than tennis t<>JS) and go out on
the town and 10 a mcc restaurant on
Saturday niaht It's no rabbit (bcaJth)
foods for this group. They do it ill
style, with a good dinner, great
conver!\&t ion..,. swimming and
sunnina. says ull.
"It's just so much fun to get away
from it all, the kids. the husband, the
bou1e and all the chores," says
Twitchell. a "forever" retired teacher
and mother of four children.
And how do the husbands feel
about bcinf abandoned? "He loves it
He thinks it's good for me, my body
-it acts me in great shape and 1t
Anti-cancer vaccine
DJay help fight DJ.ODO
NEW YORK (AP) -An experimental vaccine aimed at two
canccn may prove successful in combetina the virus that causes
monoooclcos1s, and to which maybe 90 percent of Americans have
been exposed, a researcher says.
People who reach their early t.ccns without being exposed to the
Epstein-Barr virus arc at risk for mononucleosis. common among
Americans of college and hi&h school age, said Dr. Gary Holmes.
epidemiologist at the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta.
· However, t.he cancers linked to the virus arc "extremely rare in
the United States," Holmes said.
The cancers were the focus of research reported in the British
journal Nature by scientists who noted "strong links" established
between the virus and two cancers: a blood-cell cancer called
Burlritt's lymphoma and a cancef' of the nasopharynx. which lies
behind the nasal passaaes
Burlrin's is particularly prominent in Africa, and the other
cancer in southern China, southeast Asia, parts of Africa and the
Arctic.
No vaccine is now available for any human cancer.
The scientists reported that an experimental vaccine protected
two cottontop tamanns, a typc"ofmarmosct, against a dose of the
virus that invariably produces cancer in that species. Two
unvaccinated tamarins given the virus dose at the same time
dcvetopcd multiple tumors within three weeks, the scientists said.
The work was reported by Dr. M.A. Epstein and four colleagues,
all of whom were at the University of Bristol Medical School in
England when the work was done. The results "establish a strong case
for determined work" toward a human vaccine, they wrote.
The research in tamarins "is a very important piece of work·
because it shows you can {>revcnt the disease caused by the virus,"
. said Dr. Vincent De Vita, director of the National Cancer Institute. in
' an interview.
In an editorial accompanying the article in the Nov. 21 -27 issue
of Nature, A.J. Beale ofWellcome Biotcchnoloer. Ltd. in Bcckcnham,
England. said the work demonstrates the poss1bility that a vaccine
can work against a herpes.type virus that is linked to tumors in
humans.
Treasures, deals
and 375 people
at charity auction
National Charity League's NB chapter
holds terrific less-than-silent auction
By VIDA DEAN
Get 375 women in one room
and load tables up with treasures
at bargain prices and you have a
lot of activtty.
"You'd never know this was a
silent auction," joked boda
Stanley, president of the Newport
Beach chapter of National Char-
ity League at the organization's
annual silent auction at the Ncw-
porter.
Following a meeting and prior
to lunch, the NCL members and
their guests had the opportunity
to bid on the treasures collected at
the thrift shop plus -special
donated items. (A genuine jade
pendant studded with a genuine
diamond chip was picked up for
only $5!)
"Have you seen those antique
picture frames," asked Mary Au
MJller. "I am also biddinf. on an
autoharp over there. I don t know
what I'll do with it ifl get it." (She
didn't.)
.. I decorate my house at
Christmas with stuffed animaJs,
I've bid on all of these," said
81rt>ara Aue standing guard at a
table of cuddJy "decorations."
Others checkmg out the tables
ofsilver. Gucci bags, brass, baked
aoods, linens, clothina and jew-
elry items were Aue Mb, Jeu
LldlJ, BarMn Fnadt, CbMly
Ann•h'Olllt CedUa Nott, Carol Bludaanl, Martlya BaHmu .
JW L .... J .... Nucy C.rcl, co-
chairman of the event, Mfraa
n.m...-(she loves &inaer JU'S)
and DltleM Mmclark (her
dl\llhter is one of the 24 youn1
women m.akina her debut Satur-
day evenina at the NCLt.11 in the
Westin South Coast .Plaza,) Doinaa land-sljde business was
,.~----
the plant booth. People had
donated baskets and Sae Becker
and her committee had as·
sembled good-looking arrange·
men ts.
Pew R ich, thrift shop chair-
man, was getting a lot of atten-
tion. She was carrying around a
cute Shih Tzu that Russo's Pet
shop had donated. Carole Steele
is now the owner of the silky
haired pup.
It wasn't easy getting the shop-
pers away from the bargain tables
and over to the luncheon tables ..
.but to lure them was an op-
portunity to win more than 50
very nice prizes including a l 4K
heavy gold braided mesh necklace
with l/2 carat of diamonds
donated by Mary Barr of Charles
Barr Jewelers. The lu cky one was
Hayn Maxfield, mom of presi ..
dentS&u.ley.
Othcn there, all past presi·
dents, were Betty Kilmer, Jackie
lt•lta, Boaale Barrln1toa,
Marllya Steele, Nucy Ferda and
Loli Ttaper.
.. Everyone loves a bargain and
knowin& your money is goina to
benefit worthwhile causes makes
it even more special. The purpotc
of the silent auction is not only to
have fun, but to raise funds to
benefit ou r philanthropic
endeavors such as HiJh Hopes,
our Goldentjmcn Senior CiU2CD
Center and our scholanhip fund.
to name a few. Last yev over
$9,000 was raised at this event,"
chairman JHy Harrtqt. said.
The last line of this event is tbe
happy. smanly-dreaed crowd
luag1n1 bi& brown.paper
"treuure-filled'. bl&a down the
hill to to their Mercedes and
Cadtllacs in the parkina lot.
' --
makes me happy," says the very lean body type, AaJe says they all have one
frosted ash blonde. thina in common -good tennis.
Twitchell. also lean and blonde On Sunday trophies and cups are
haired. says her husband thinks it's awarded to the highest rankina play-
.absolutely wonderful. "He's an ath-crs. CaU says the last time she went in
lete, so he believes in fitness." May she placed hi&h and won a cup.
Howard, a former national player She says ... The first time I went the
and New Hampshire state champion, women .seemed so aood. We were
says ~he aroup t>lays round-robin style terrified. The second time, they were
tennis altcmauna partners and oppo-the same, but we seemed so much
nents with women kcepin& track of better. We really did improve."
their individual scores. Clinic style Call, wbo plays approximately 3
lessons along with video taping is days a week, says she also takes
offered. Each woman gets to Vlew lessons with A&le once a week." Mary
their forehand, backhand. volley. has helped me play competition
serve and overhead stroke. tennis. The first time I placed in the
AgJc says the videos are very top playoff group (during.a runaway
instrumental. "Most people don't tnp) Iwasa nervous wreck. I threw up
visualize their play.' Wh~ you sec on the toilet, I was so nervous." A&lc
yourself on film -you sec what sayssbe'~doinaquitcniccly now. tfcr
you're doing wrong and you see how ~trcngth 1s her serve and herwcalcness
to do it right." 1s her back.hand. . .
The sisters agree "We don't want . , Agle (m&ther ofnme children) says
to take apart their 'whole game, just ahhouah it is a l<;>t of work, she has a
assist with one or two areas." lot of fun. Sometimes she even acts to
Agle says, "To be able to play with play when there is an injury.
that many people and that much Overall, throughout the years, she
tennis you learn a great deaJ about say.s, th~~ ~ave nev~r ~n any
court strategy and strokes." senous uuunes. But JUSt an case,
Tbe level of tennis ranges from C ?';Solie and ~C?m~ny Runawa.Ys ~r·
minus to A minus. Groups are nes $1 m1lhon insurance habahty
divided according to levels of play. coverage.
Ages and occupations vary. They Cost for the three-day getaway to
say they get women from 19 to . 60 t~c desert runs $125 including two
years of age. with the average being n!ahts stay at the hotel and two
somewhere from 25 to 50 years old. dinners. . .. . .
Occupations range from doctors, Call sums 1t up, I JUSt lake to play
teachers to housewives. "Some are good tennis ... all in one shot. You
super athletes with wondcrfuJly don't hav~ any ki~s there, no ~us
bcautiful bodies while some arc down bands, no tnterrupuons at all. Basacal-
right flabby.·· ly you can play tennis until you throw
Regardless of occupations, age or up. It's wonderful."
Dllf .... ,......~...._. ......
LJD call. at left, abcnn ber style atone with Becky Twltcbell
and lluy AaJe.
Ten.nla pro 11ary AiJe thtnlra tennla &etawaya are &ood for
her atadenta.
Author says men keep many secrets
but women aren't fooled by facade
A woman has rarely been fooled by
her man's facade of strcnath and
independence. Women are all too
likely to recoanize and accept the not·
»-SCCTCt emotional. dependency of
their husbands and lovers.
However, Dr. Ken Druck issues a
warning. .. The mistake of most
women has been to assume that the
men themselves realize how depen-
dent they arc. But few do." They often
disguise their dependencies well -
even from thcmsewes.
In "Secrets Men Keep" (Double-
day) a new book written primarily for
men who want to free themselves
from the burden of masculine myths,
Dr. Druck and his co-author, James
C. Simmons, list the six secrets that
men have in regard to women.
SECRET I -Many men feel that
"women owe it to men to take care of
them." What they're seeking is
"Mother-love" not "Woman-love."
1.1111
Aa.w1
Perhaps it's because tbey did not get
the mothering they may have needed
as children, or because they became
addicted to what motherin' they djd
get. In any~vcnt. the transition seems
to be the same.
"These men commission women
(includina their daughters) to admin-
ister them a ~ular fix of 'Mother-
love' each day.'
SECRET 2 -The idea of giving
power and responsibility for.his basic
needs over to another person can
panic even the best of men. The
dilemma for most 1s that they want to
be lo"ed and fussed over at the same
time that·they fear being iakcn care of
bya woman.
SE€R£T 3 -Manr men stifle
their romantic feelings and let them
peck forth only on special occasions.
h may even be difficult for these men
to say, "I love you." Instead, they
may rely on alternative gestures.
"Soft.. is a four letter word to be
excluded from a man's vocabulary.
SECRET 4 -Many men felt
.. resentful, disenchanted and trapped
in their 'job' as family provider."
Apparently women aren't the only
ones seck.ina liberation and relief
from obeOle1e role de6Jlit.ioo1.
SECRET S -Sometimes men do
not want sex. Too often they feel
pushed to perform in bed when they
don't want to. Temporary impoten~
can be nothing more than "defiant
rebellion."
SECRET 6 -Women arcn•t the
only ones to fake orgasms. "Men who
fcian orpsmsdoso because they have
decided they arc better off faking one
than having to deal with a wounded
ego."
What is there to do about all this?
.. Secrets Men Keep .. includes a step-
by-step workbook which provides the
necessary exercises to help men
identify the limitations which may
prevent him from being more con-
nected to his male, his family and bis
friends .
Buy your man a present for both of
you. It's available at your local
bookstore.
Dr. AJ1ad la a marrla1e ud family
dleraplat la CGrou del Mar. SM
weleomet you retpetUH. U JM wiu
a reply, please e•cloae a 11Amped,
aelf·addreaaed eavelope. Write to
Lia•a Algul, Pla.D., c/o Daily PUo&,
P.O. Boi ISM, <Asta Meta, tHH.
...........................
-~ oft prt-. are LJ1U1 0-... , left. u4I Kara Roclaadel.
..
Round IV the last for Rocky? .
Stallone vows he ·n h ang up his gloves
after ultimate bout with Soviet c hamp
ttlllt another challente: fiabuna I van at 8C1t Picture of 1977 and collected Oraao. "the athlete of the future1 S90 million in ret1tals (not theater
trained by the mott advan<.leO ar<>U) for United Artists. A sequel had
methods of science and technolotY," already been foreordained.
played by Swediah k.ick-boHr Dolph Stallone acted ln h11 own scnpt for
other. ~tenders to the marketplace, LunciaJ-en. "Rocky," which wasdJrccted by John BJ BOB THOMAS
•1 1· ...... ....., openmt an 1,300 theaters today. On Some critics may view ''Rocky IV" Avilchen.
LOS NG Dec. 20, 700 more screens, mostly in u another Cold Wu preachment by .. Rocky 11," which Stallone A ELES -"Maybe I can't secondary markets, will be added. Stallone. directed, cost almost $9 million and
win. May~ ihe only tbmg I can do is The exhibitors' optimiam is partly "We don't think the film parallels amassed $80 million 1n rentals. The
take everything he's sot and ask for based on the proven eopularit'/ of the 'Rambo' at all," said Robert Cbartoff, third film wu even more suocasfut:
more. But to beat me, he's gonna have "Rocky" films. Also, Stallone ta at the co-producer with Irwin Winkler of all $100 million in rentals with a cost of
to k.ill nfe," ~~ Sr,lveater Stallone as peak ot bis popularit¥ with .. Rambo: four "Rockys." S 13 million.
Rocky Balboa in· Rocky IV." First Blood II," which was 198.S's "The amtude about Russians is Will there be a "Rocky V?''
That's the menacing overtone for biuest grosser until "Back to the entirely differenL I think people will Not accordina to Stallone. who
the fourth comingoflhc Philadclehia Future" came alona. be surprised by how Sly treats the recently said, "This 1s tt for Rocky. I
battler created, nurtured and fashion-The East-West theme of "Rocky subject," be said. don't know where ~ou can go after
ed into a multimillion-dollar IV" also looms u a major factor, "It was never our mtention that you battle with Russia. You have that
enterprise by Stallone. capitalizing on renewed American 'Rocky IV' should be viewed u anti-clash of ideoloa,its and you take on
This time he has provided Rocky patriotism which "Rambo" fully Russian. The film presents two supposedly the greatest fighting ma-
with the greatest challenge of his exP.loited. entirely different personalities, fight-chme ever built, a biochemically
screen life: combatina "a fighting 'Rocky JV" beains eight years after ina as men from different cultural produced Soviet fi&htcr. What can
machine of unequaled size and Balboa's astonishina draw ·with bacqrounds. The challenac is a yo u do after that? Everything subse-
po":er," C~mrade (van Drago of the champion ApoUo Creed in 15 puel-personal one .... They arc two gJadi -qucnt is anti-climactic." Plane.Cr&%J' . '
Soviet Union. ina rounds. After 75 ring battles. aton, aooepti!tf what they do best and Said CbartofT: ··we can't make William Sbatner La the comm&Dder of tlae Alpba Beta lall&t
''Rocky," the Cinderella sleeper of Balboa seems to be content to~ ultimately acb1cvin1 self-rupect and another sequel without him. If he baM and S&Ddalal aer4 -... la bi.e a..t•nt ID .. A.lrplaM D :
1977, cost SI million. "Rocky IV" has at home with bis \\life Adrian (T.alia di~ty." · thinks be has come to the end of the Tile Sequel; ... to .. •"""t :t&;n CBS. Cba.nnel 2 •
a price tag of $32 million, including .S~h:ire~) ~an~d~R~oc~ky~J~r.:_. ~B~ut~be~~~n~o~t _ _:_'R:::oc=ky~·~· w:o::n::tbc=.:.:A::cad=c::m~y~A.:w:.:ar=.:d-;..:r~oa=d:.:,_:tha=t...:.'s..:..it:.:....'_' ______ ........, ________ ....-____________ =======-$I .S million for its writer4ircctor-,...
star. The marketing forces of MGM-
U A have waged a nine--month cam-
paign to assure success for its' invest-ment.
''We started running trailers
(promotional previews) in theaters
with 'A View to a Kill' on Memorial
Day weekend," says Irv Ivers, presi-
dent of worldwide marketing for
MGM-UA. "During lhc summer we
had .S,300 trailers in circulation,
wh ich is an industry record. The TV
ads started last week. The print ads
began last weekend."
All the marketine bases seem to
have been covered, mcluding Rocky
T-shirts. sweat bands, a soundtrack
LP from Columbia Records, a music
video of the single, "Burning Heart,"
with Survivor and cit. s from lhc movie and another sin e, "Living in
America." by James rown. There
also arc tic-ins with Church's Fried
Chicken - buy a chicken, get a Rocky
T-shirt for $2.99 -and Bask.in-
Robbins -Rocky road ice cream.
Most theater operators predict that
"Rocky IV" will be the big winner of
the holiday season. It will beat the
· 'Solonion'
mines box
office gold
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The re-
make of "King Solomon's Mines,"
starring Richard Chamberlain as a
1ongue-in-chcck Indiana Jones-type
adventurer, grossed $.S million to take
the No. I position in the weekly box
office sweepstakes.
Another big screen pewcome.r,
Disney's G-,..tcd "One Mqac
Christmas,'' got off to a good start in
its fint week of release with a $2. 7
million ticket take, enou&h to take the
No. 2 apot in a slugisb box office
weekend.
The new crop of holiday releases,
mcluding the Thanksgiving debuts of
"Rock IV," "Santa Claus -The
Movi/ and the expanded release of
"White Nights," should enliven the
fall movie doldrums.
"Once. Bitten," starring Lauren
Hulton as a sultry vampire, dropped
from the to~ spot !ast .week to No .. 3
with $2.3 m1lhon m ttcket sales this
past weekend.
-70MM .....
SIX· TRACI< CI)I _._ r PRESENTATION
OMHG£ N~r BEACH
C1nedome f.dwaf'ds Newport Clnem<1
534.2553 644 0760
*BREA
M.lnn Brea Pl.Ju
529·5339
*COSTA MESA
Edw¥ds Town C~tef
751-4184
*EL TOAO
EdWards El Toro set 9500
( *PRESENTED IN ---
*GiliDtii GiiOYt *MISSIOtl VIEJO
Edwan:fs Vlllq Ctol'.el' Edwards Vtep Malt
891-0507 4'5' 6Z20
•RUNT1NC1'0N 8ElCR ORANGE
Edwards Charur C•nter Stadium Orr.oe In
841 ·0770 639-8770
• LAMIAAOl
P acillc s L.a Mlro)(ld
994·Z400
., WESTMINSTER
Pacific s H1 W.ry 39
0nve In 891 3693
The courtroom thriller "Jagged Edge" was fourth at $2 million with 1---------------------------;
the summer favorite "Back to the
Future,'' in its 21st week of release,
hauling in another $1. 7 million to
take the No. S spot.
Herc arc the top seven films this
past weekend, with distributor, week-
end gross, number of ~ns. total
gross and number of weeks m release:
I. "King Solomon's Mines," Can·
non, SS million, I, 122 screens, SS
million one week.
2. "One Magjc Christmas," Di~
DC).', $2. 7 million, 824 screens, S2. 7
million, one week.
3. "Once Bitten," Goldwyn, S2.3
million, 1,056 screens, $6.6 million,
two weeks.
4. "Jagged Edge," Columbi.a., $2
million, 92 l screens, $31.4 m1lhon,
eight weeks.
.S. "Back to the Future," Universal,
$I . 7 million. 1,02.S screens, S 180.6
million, 21 weeks. •
6. "Starcba1er." Atla ntic, . ~ 1.6
million, l ,020 screens, $1.6 million,
one week. ,. 1. "To Live and Die in LA ..
MGM-UA. S 1.3 million, 784 screens,
S 12.3 million, four weeks.
Sybll Dana.ma:
FemaleRamlio
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Behind
~ 1uc:cet1ful man there's a woman waiu.na to 1ake his pll<:e, to para-
~ u old ldqc.
In Rambo's eate, h's Sybil O.n-
nina. tbe blonde adventure queen. Or
perhaps even Linda Blair.
Danning stars In "Commando
Squad.'' set to ao into produc;t.ion. in
January for Trans World EnterWn.
ment. She will be armed with "every-thina thort of a neutron bomb, ..
eccordina to a •Poketman. u the ldl out to re1Cue an American bostqe in
a South American country.
"If Stallone Is 'Amcnca's No. l
IMf'o •then say hello to America's No.
I .. ro,'' 111d Oannina. She i1 ...,
hol1e1I of "Sybil Oannil'll'• Adven-
IUR Video" a new tcrics oomina up
tom USA Home Video.
MeaowhUe, Blair 11)'1 the'• •
velopina a pro~t for • female
"Rambo or James ~eJou know, a woman with an ve, actioft imaee. TheR'I I VOi 1n that market.
and l'd hke to fill it.''
"A VISUAL WONDERIAND
TO THRll.L PEOPLE OF All AGES.
A delightfully clewr and hugely
appealing film fantasy:'
-Dennis Cunningham. WCBS.TV. CBS MOANING NEWS
"THIS IS THE ONE TO SEE.
A lively eyeful of a fantasy movie. It's one
big holiday confection with a sense of
humor, adventure and fun:'
-William 'M>lf, GANNETI NEWSPAPERS
~-.u l~ ._ __
l'IMlll
-·
82.00 WEDIESDlY
edwards NEWPORT 644-0760
"l "'PQRT (l"l[A B£TWl( .. JAr,18(,Rfl ' .. Ac AA'H,,lo •T._,.. ...... cmn.r·· ......... n••.,_...,,_ .._, .... ,..
.......... 11
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N(WPORl e, •O A. ' Ou ' 00
pTltlaMI
I .......... , ....
edwards TOWN CENTER 751 ·4184
BA1)'0L & A"TO" ACRO~SHlOM S COAST Pt A/A ' .. ' ' ,, .
. ,~ ..__
~......
........... ,_., . ._.r'.
Ttll, ..
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edwards SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546·2711
BR1STOt & Sull~.OWE l'o COS'AMlSA . .. .. ' . ' . ...
ltmnm9
''Wit .....
IPl-111
.. _ .......
lm"lll ..... , ......
eowaras CINEMA CENTER 979·4141
"ARBOR BOvl E vARO AT AOAlllS IY[SA VERO( CTR COS'UllSA
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edwaras HUNTINGTON 848·0388
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'!THOltOUOHlY INJOYAILI INFllFAINMINF.
KIDS Will HAVI FHIMSllVIS A SALLI"
-Judillt Crill , _, "3 CHllRSI latter fflan 'lalnlto~ lrlfe' and
'The llad< Cauldron' comblnecll" -Mi~t Oark, USA TODAY 'Dynasty' spinoff spins on
.00 ...... .-1•
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rm.••11• M0 1-J•ao .. ,u u I) 1 ' ~ ""..,,, .,. ..
BUENA PARK
UA McMls
~2-4993
NCMI PlAYING
El TORO
EO-dS Saodlecack
541·!>880
LA MIRADA NEWPORT BEACH
Pac:1fk:'s La Mirid1 Edwvos '"-1 Cinema
994-2400 644-0760
I UEJlfA ~ARK COSTA ME&I< HUHTIHOTON HACH MllSION VIEJO ORANGE PK1flc·a Botnl Pant EOwwOI Town Cent.et Ed-OS~ Ctntw EdwWOS Viejo MaM Cmedome
0r-1n 121-4010 1~1 ... 1a. &e1-0no •95-6220 634-2$~
ORANGE Slad1um Drt .. ln 6J9.ano
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OrM ln&l' 9361
OIWtG[
By LYNDA HIRSCH
DALLAS: J.R. le•ms th11 Jack's father
wu a Greek shippina magnate who once
had a rclationsbip with Anaelaca. Jamie
and Cliff decide to have 1 formal wedd1n&
Sue Ellen decides to fiJbt J.R. for custody
of John Ross after telling Du1ty she needs
ume to be on her own. Donna continuei to
&ricve over the loss of her child but is not
certain that Ray isn't relieved about the
miscarriaae. Miss Ellie believes it miah1
help Donna if she tried to become
PreJnant ap1n. J.R. and Mandy con1tnue
their romance but J.R. has an eye for
Aniclica.
Eawiln!S Cuwm.. (Mtotr
9111'1•1
l .nfOOmt •••
634 2553 DYNASTY /DYNASTY IJ: THE COL-
~ '* WESTMINSTd BYS: When Blake conunues to disparage EOw~rdSCu~"" west Jeffs belief that Fallon is alive. Jeff Eaw¥dS ~i.~i.
581 5880 891 J!IJ.5 realizes th.at the car wh ich broua,ht Fallon
to the Carrington mansion belonp to his
cousin Miles 1n Cahfoma. Krystle's
auempts to escape Joel arc thwarted.
Jason's lawyc;r Garrcu's attempts 10 I ,.;';.~~~ ;:0;,,..,) ( • "''u'""o"' J rekindle his lon&·aaoromance with Domi-l ·-·-..,··0 . -00 --.... 1 . nique fail. Dominique calls a European boardin school. In Moldavia, a paralyzed
S'l'rTCtes (flllil)
SHOWS AT
''00 S:OO &. 10:00
l UX URY THfATRIS
TO UVE •DIC ... LA. (It) SHOWS AT
5:20 1:30 &. t :40
FEY£ .. "9TCH CR) THE GODS MUST -S H OWS AT CRAZY .... , S :35 7 :J5 a. 9 :35 5 :40 7:50 &. 10:00
ijl1Ui);Wijij .:.t,,tj 6 J 6l's!~~ll"c"~.·r::~
lltOCltY tv (RI 11 :2 0 1 :30 3:40 S.5o 1 :00 10:10. In 70MM
WHff'E NICKY"S.--la
1 :05 3:50 7 .l$ 10106
In 70MM. No PasMt
THAT WAS THEN._ --TitlS IS NOWIR) 7:3S ONE llA-9 ,5 0 lh lnbow llrlt• (GI CHIUSTllAS le) 1 :00 3·00 a, 5·00 1 30 3:30 5 :30 .7 :)0 t :lO
8ACK TOTHIE
FUTURe rG) 1: 10 3 :30 5 :50 •:o o 10:30
JAGGED EDOIE 111)
1:15 3:25 S :JS 7:4 5 .. 10:00
"HILARIOUS!
A bubbly diversion
hard to resist .··
-t.1•v1n rhom•"· I.OS Al'\<a:1.1.~ Tl;\1t:~
NOW PLAYING
GRIVE -INS :?:~;.
STADlum r;)
lltOCKY tv fR) ~lus Co-H I ,
Recs Soni• (ll'G·l JI
ONE lllA81C CHRISTMAS (Q) fllhn A eturn to Oz (l>G)
KINS SOLOMON'S
lltNE .... U)flllue Em er1fd l'"orest (A)
THAT WAS THEll-TitlS IS NOW (R)
Ph.u St. Elmo'' F ire (R )
~~~~~~~~
COllNllANDO (R) Plus Rambo,
F lral BlooCS II (RI
IREA
UAMovoe<
990 4l1l'J
COSTA MESA
[O•I'~' to"" C.l'l!lt' ·~· 41&1
IAVINl I.A lllllMOA WUTWNSTUI E!i'11D1m1
E o .. ,,o• ur·'"'''Y P1e1tic s G.lte""Y 5 E•#llO. v~ Cen!t< -.-,,, o...
MllA 'AM UAl.4011,..s
~·99·
fl TOflO ca .. l<OS~· S8t !>880
8~J 88•1 S?J 1611 8910567 ~
.... llAlllA OIWMll Wlllmdllll Pxilic s A.~Jn11....,Sowtt AMC 0r¥'QtMll UM.bl ..,._Or,..111
1)91 0633 631~ 893~ 879~ 8 •4™1Acct:Prui10io t ... lllGACKil!!!!)
NOW! THE GRAND OPENING OF TW 0
OF THE MOST SPECTACULAR MOVIE THEATRE
COMPLEXES IN AMERICA!
edwards VILLAGI ClllTIR
BEACH BLVD. 2 BLOCKS NORTH OF
GARDEN GROVE FWY. WESTMINSTER
891-0567
. -
edwards CHARTIR ClllTRI
WARNll AT BEACH BLVD.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
841-0770
--------------------"'-----------------------------------------
ltA•KU IDYllllON
.... ALBDT
STITCHES 111
WID. -~UN. 7:00, 9.00, 10t45
SUN 10:25
ITALLOlll
4 TRACK DOLIY
STERIO
WID. 6130, 1130, 10s30
THURS.· SUNDAY
12130,2130
4:30, 6130, la30, 10.30
(Sun 10.15)
DUDUYMOO•I
4 TRACK DOLIY
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WID. $145, 1.00, 10.15
THURS.·SUN. 1100, 3115, St45
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9100, 1o.40
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WID. 7115, t.ao
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7111, ,,.
Gahn 1' tound by Aleius Fallon and Miles
make love Sable unhappy when Jeff'
amves 1n California. ConstanOt' tell'
Jason 1t'i 11me Sable learned Jason is
dyina. Constance contacu Jeff's mother Fran~sca in Europe hopina she'll rctum,
but a nervous Fraoce5ea says she cannot
come back FALCON Cl\&T: Angela disapproves
of Emma's latest lover, truck driver Dua~e
Cooley. Furiou.sat Lanoc's chan~ of radio
staion formal. Ange.la throws him out of
house. When Melissa tells ~ather
Chnstopher of her attac11on to h1m. he
queS1ions bis priestly calhng. Cassandra
and Richard team up to destroy An~cla.
Terry plans U> tum the cou!ltY supervisor
apinst Angela. Peter con11nues to chase
Angela.
HILL STREET. e·LUES; Bobby Hill's
Cather arrives. claiming health problems.
Funllo refuses to let maJOr drug dealer
plca-barpin, even though he is under
pressure from headquarters to do so.
Addicts desperate for druas go on cnmc
spree after the dru& dealer stops the flow of
drug.s into the area. Furillo and his men
eventually locate the dealer's stash and
dealer 1s arrested. Jablonski manages to
iron out problems between priest and Junk
dealer. Btlkerand Robena argue when she
is bun on duty, Bclkcr fcarin& for the
safety of their unbom child. As Hill's
father is headlng out of town, Hill decides
to talk to him again but reaches bus
terminal too late. • • • KNOTS LANDING: Ben and VaJ marry,
but not before Gary and Val have a chance
to talk and show continuina attraction for
one another Frank Ell101t 1s cltttrocuted
when be starts 1nvcstipuoi the valley
proJect. Cathy moves into Laura'a in order
to protect henclf from Josh. Josh gets
Laura's children to let him into the ho~~
and beas Cathy for anolherch.ancc, tallclng
about his lovele childhood. When Lau,..
orders Josh out of the house. he ~mca
violent. Mac ttts Josh and warns h1"! that
1f be ever touchca anyone ap1n he II be
thrown in JUI. Lily Mac rcaliz.ts tha1 she's
been blind to Josh's faults after she begs
him to seek help and he becomes enraged • • •
ST. ELSEWHERE: Bobby 1s fun.ous
when Victor tells a pauent to reconsider
plastic suraery procedure. Victor oonfidca
to a colleague th.at he's aware that
everyone considers him a Jerk but every
once in a while he tries to do the riahl
thing. An astronaut who believes he 1s
going to rendezvous with God bu NASA
concerned. WestphaH's long·agogirtfriend
1s ordered U> escort the astronaut back to
Bethesda Naval Hospital for further tests.
Phil Chandler has fallen in love and is
looktng towards starting a family. ·John Doe spend mg most of bis hme sJttin& in
front of the tcleviSton, suddenly "re-
members .. who he 1s -Mary Richards.·
When Mr Carhn checks tnto hospital and
becomes John Doe's roommate. John
insists that Carlin is Rhoda. Mary's best
friend. Later, John realizes lhat he's no1
Mary Richards but conttnues to wonder
who be 1s. Ellen heartbroken when Mark
does not bnng Jfftnddaughtcr Barbara
home as he promised. After a rocky start.
Mark and Yvonne's father begin to
understand one another.
'Columbo' fans turned off?
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Peter
Falk, lovable as television's "Col-
umbo," says audiences arc less sym-
pathetic to the foul-mouthed charac-
ter he ponrays in the play "Glengarry
Glen Ross."
After he mutters the first obscenity,
he says, "I can feel the chill coming
back at me. I can feel it."
"I tell people. if you don't like bad
language. don't come. I wouJdn't
want my grandmother to sec this
play."
FaJk plays Shelly Levene, a real
estate salesmao who has lost bis
iRVINE
touch. He and other cast members
open Wednesday for a four-week run
at the Henry Fonda Theater after
moving the play out of San Francisco.
"While you can understand
people's reservations, the fact is, I
know it's iood writing. And I'm
actually very squeamish about
language 1n movies and on the stage. I
think it's very much a pan of the way
these guys talk."
His character may be unsym-
pathetic, but Falk says he's excited
being in the Pulitzer Prize-winning
play by David Mamet.
LAGUNA HIU.S
Edwards Woodbn<Jge
551 0655
Eawarcis/ soca1 s l.dguna
Hills Mall 768·661 t
i:5AAHGE
Ctty Center
634 Z55J
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Pac1ftc's La Mirada
994.2400 Eawards V..,i l'wtn
830-6990
Pacrtlc's Orange
Onve-ln 634 9361
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Edlaon optlmlatlc, Newport h•• hol• to flll In bor• b•kellr•l.112.
See Vl•w League glrla baaketball haa no clear-cut tevortte. R
CanVikesgetNo. lOOforcoach?
Amat poses btg obsfiiCle
for Marina, Thompson
By ROGER CAR~N
ot-.o.., ..... ....,
The road gets steeper this week 1n CIF
playoff action for area prep football teams. For
instance:
•Marina High must contend ~ith an
unbeaten and top-ranked foe.
•Newport Harbor meets a finalist from a
year ago.
•Saddleback 1s up against the state's all-
time leading rusher. .
•And Mater Dci is faced with Ri verside
Poly-killer Westminster.
Herc's a look at those games, all set for
Friday at 7:30:
Bi1bop Amat ( 11-0) v1. Marlaa (7-3-1 ):
Manna High football coach Dave Thompson
been through enough to be considered an expert
-his prep career record at Lynwood High an(!
for the past ei&hts years with the Vikings is just
one shy of I 00 victories.
So when he tells you "It's going to be a
tou&h one," believe it.
Bishop Amat is the Big Five Conference's
No. I-ranked and No. I-rated team and enters
with a running philosophy carried over by new
coach Don Markham, formerly of run-run-run
Colton. ,
"They run the ball," said Thompson,
"nght down your throat. Eric Bieniemy, a
Junior, cames the ball at least 30 times a Ame
and their other runnin~ back, Lee Barrett. is
also very good. They ve got an exocllent
offensive hne led by Jack Montes (6-2. 250) and
a tight end named Pat Patterson (6-4. 250).''
Bicniemy has rushed for 28 touchdowns
and averaged 161 yards a game.
"They play an aggressive defense.
challenging you on tight man-to-man pass
coverage," contincs Thompson. "We're goi ng
to have to play our very, very best football. For
us to win -we'd have to score four or five
times."
Amat and Markham are no strangers to
Thompson. He saw Markham and his Colton
team when coaching at Lynwood and Manna
(1981).
Colton ended Marina's '81 season with a
25-9 win in the playoffs and two years later it
was Bishop Amat which ended Viking hopes
(25-7).
Fnday's sne: Westminster High.
Newport Harbor (9-!) v1. La Mirada (t -t):
Newpon Harbor has been bus)' racking up big
numbers -sconng a school record 360 points
in 11 games. an average of32. 7 per game behind
Sea View League MVP Shane Foley's depen-
dable nght arm.
La Mirada. however. 1s no sconng slouch.
either
The Matadorcs 6fC oach Ray MooshagJan
have rolled up 331 po1nLS. including three
shutout v1ctones. And. they're no strangers to
1hc pla yoffs.
Finalists a year ago. Mooshagian has taken
La Mirada 10 the playoffs fi ve straight years
"We lost a lot ofk1ds from last year," says
Mooshagian. "But I thought we'd be respect-
able."
La Mirada operates out of an I with 5-10.
190-pound Kell)' Brooks keying the anac~ He
has scored 28 touchdowns behind the blocking
of fullback Sean Gerber (6-0. 200) and a hoe
which goe~ from tackle to tackk at
240-210-225-206-200. .
Bryan Webb, a senior. ha s stepped into the QB slot after Enc Brooks went down w11h a
(Pleue eee PUP/B~) Da•e Thompeon
Faust beat Irish to th.e punch
,., ...........
Notre Dame football coach Gerry Fauat. who announced hi•
re.tanation Tueeday, never lived up to upectation•.
Reports say-Holtz
will coach Irish
Notre Dame says
it will announce
new coach today-
SOUTH BEND. Ind. (AP) -The
University of Notre Dame. amid
repons that University of Minnesota
football Coach Lou Holtz wiJJ take
over as coach of the Fighting Irish.
held a news conference this afternoon
to announce a successor to Gerry
Faust.
John Heisler. Notre Dame assis-
tant sports information director, said
a news conference was scheduled at
the Athletic and Convocation Center.
"We will be making a major an-
nouncement and we want to give
people the opportunity to be here,"
Heisler said. "We do expect to
announce a new coach."
Faust announced Tuesday that he
was stcpP,ing down after five years
with the Irish.
This morning. CBS Radio's Brent
Mussbcrger said Holtz would become
coach at Notre Dame. That report
was followed by a similar report from
WUSA-TV in Minneapolis.
WUSA-TV said its report was
based oo confirmation from Gene
Corripn, athletic director at Notre
Dame. But in a telephone interview
later-in the morning with The
Associated Press. Corripn denied
confirming that Hoh,z would be the
new coach.
Holtz couldn't be reached for
comment this morning. His wife told
the Associated Press she couldp't
comment on the situation. but said
she believes "Notre Dame will be
puttin'-out some information later
today.·
Holtz has said the Notre Dame JOb
is the only one that would lure him
from Minnesota. where he's coached
fo r two years.
Spoiled by the records of 105-12-5
by Knute Rockne, 87-11 -9 by Frank
Leahy and 95-1 7-4 b y Ara
Parseghian, Faust neve r measured up
to the expectations he brought in
when he was named coach in Novem-
ber 1980. succeeding another victim
of the Notre Dame pressure. Dan
Devine.
'T vc had other offe rs. but I
wouldn't leave (Cincinnai) Moeller
except for one JOb," Faust said at that
time.
Faust was coach at Moeller since
1963, and his teams posted an
impressive 174-1 7-2 record. His last
season. 1980. Moeller was 13-0.
winning the Ohio Division I high
school championship for the fif\h
time in six years.
But he found out that past success
means nothing at Notre Dame.
The last time Notre Dame took its
coach from the high schol ranks was
in 1954, when the Irish went with
Terry Brennan. Brennan had records
of 9-1 and 8-2 in his first two seasons.
but dipped to 2-8 in 1956 and, like
Faust three decades later. began
feeling the heat.
He lasted two more years before he
was replaced.
Newport advances
LOS ANGELES -Newport
Harbor Hiah has advanced past
the first ro und of the airls C.li·
fomia State Volleyball Cham·
pionshi'PS followina a l s-o. IS· 7.
I S-S decision over host Los
A.~elts Roosevelt Tuesday n1 t.
ewport, the sixth 5eed out of
the eiaht teams in the· tour-
nament, had little trouble with
the LA City J.A champion, with
c!J.ht aces and 21 servcs that were
not retumcd
"We basically served them ofl
the court," said Newport Coach
Mike Neece.
Lara Asper, ill with a 105
temperature earlier in the week. saw limited duty, but Sara Allison
filled in and did a fine JOb scttina
for the Sailon. Middle blocker
Tracy Kn.aqer wu allO sharp for
Newport, aocounllnJ for seven
kills.
Newpon will be ti.ck in a«ion
Saturd&Y. njpt in the l«Ond
round with 1 \CS\ on lbe rOMt
He made decision
to resign before it
was made for him
Nobody came in on the noon
balloon from Saskatoon and asked
me. but ...
•I fGerry Faust told the president
of Notre Dame he was resigning. 11
wasJ ust before the president called
Faust in and told him he had Just
resigned.
•Overtimegamcs in the NFL arc
pretty much reduced toa coin fl ip and
so are wagers involving point spreads.
•The slow movement of free
agents has talent agents accusing
Everyone
chips in
forSCC
Vanguards r eceive
balanced attack
'in 106-65 victory
With everyone in uniform denting
the scoring column. the Southern
CaJiforn1a College basketball team
routed La Verne. 106-65. 1n a non-
conference game at SCC Tuesday
night.
The Vanguards took control early .
putting their running game in gear en
route to a 62-33 halftime advantage.
The balanced attack. which fea-
tured six players in double figures.
was led by Mike Lightfoot wuh 15
points, but five others were close
behind. They incl uded Ken Bardsle>
(14), Ty Myles and Chris Ofelt (12).
and Randy McAllister and Robbie
Lucas ( 10).
The Van~uards' fast-paced attack
was highlighted by-a defense which
forced 24 turnovers. including 18 1n
the first half.
sec also shot 58 percent from the
field and had a total of 37 assists. with
Roben A vi las and Ofelt dishing out
eight apiece.
Now 3-1 . the Vanguards will face a
sti ff test Saturday night when they hit
the road to play Nonhern Anzona.
lo the first game. the Southern
California College women fell to La
Verne. 73-70, despite holding a
halftime edge of 33-29.
In defeat. Connie Brazell scored 25
points for the Vanguards.
baseball own ers ofcollus1on If 111s
true, three cheer'> for the baseball
owners.
•If there rcall) I\ 10 be a per·
manently-mannt.'d space station. the
sports world has some excellent
candidates to hve on 11 ... and Dennis
Murphy will start a couple of pro-
fessionaJ leagues
•Theduck hunters of North
America arc squabbling over whtl h
type of shot to put 1n their guns
lead shot. which po1spns1fndoes nn1
kill, or steel shot wh1l h v.oundsas
often as 1t kjlls. Thcc;e people arc
called "sportsmen,"
•When Bu m PhlllipHes1gnedas
coach of New Orleans the other da}.
he turned the Sa1nt<.OH.'r to h•'> son
Wade ... How's that fora question·
able legac}"'>
.. . ,. '!.tr.I -.
--
...... .. ' . ...
~
... -----"' . ·~-~ . -
""" ~ . ~"' ... w
Buo
TUCKER
~
SPORTS COLUMNIST
•NewSa1nts owner r om Henson
said he would take O\ er the JObs of
general manager. the football oper-
auonsdirector and the director of
pubhcrelat1onswhowcreall fired ..
Do you suppose Sunda) 'sgame v.1th
the Rams might be ofTthe board"
•TenmsbratJohn McEnroe$ot 1n
a fight with a reponer 10 '\ustral1a
Here's spud in your eye
One wonders what they hit each other
with.
•If your daughter comes home and
sa}'s she 1s going to marry a football
official, do not blame yourself.
•The Chicago Bears say they do
not need cheerleaders because they
have The Refngcrator ... What iflhe
Rams fire their cheerleaders and put
the burden on Bill Bain? -A chilling
thought.
•Minnesota Coach Lou Holtz says
he 1s available to take the Notre Dame
JOb but the lnsh need winning
seasons far more desperately than
one-liners.
•Thcthought oftheCrucago Bears
going throu$h the entire NFL season
undefeated 1s preposterous ... but are
you anxious to bet against 1t?
(Pleue eee TUCICER/82)
I
Bouton A•tr08 Coach Yogi Berra. along
with hi• wlf e Carmen and granddaughter
Raebel, •it amon& the many boxes of
potatoea delivered to hi• New Jeney home
Tuesday. Berra had joked there weren·t
enough potatoea ln North Dakota to fill h1a
fr ont yard. Farmera from North Dakota
proved hlm wronc.
Can NFL stay-with
networks?Tune in
Mater Dei
drops CIF
tennis final
League mayhclve to seek other options
like cable or pay TV if USFL has its way
NEW YORK (AP) -Com-
missioner Pete RozelJe said Tuesda)
the National Football League wants
to stay with the thrtt major networks
when its tclcv1S1on contract expire 1n
1987. but a court order or other
circumstances could force it to seek
other OP.lions, like pay or c.ablc.
"While we look at other altema·
uvcs. we'd pl't'fer to stay with the
networks." Rozelle said in response
to a written quest1on from a aroup of
mternattonaJ radio and teleVls1on
executives. "We always plan for an
escape valve. but as of now, the onl)
reason I would say we'd go elsewhere
would be if we wen: f orttd to."
The most compelling reason to ao
elswhere and the one that Rozelle
cited KvcraJ times 1s the United
talcs Football Lcaaue's S 1.32 billton
antitrust suit apinst the NFL
Amona the svit's claims is that tht
NFt monopolil'ts the airwaves bee.
cause its $2.1 billion TV contract is
with all three networks. A.BC. CB.5
and NBC. A.mona the U FL' ck--
ma.acb is thal the co~n order the
lalue off at ._.. one o( thole thtte.
flotelle n:itm\cd hll tu1d that the
NFL ne,er will absorb team" from
the 'oung league. v.h1ch pla)l"d thr~·
season'I 1n the pnng and plan' to
resume 1n the fall of I 9 6 v.1thout a
net~ork tele' 1s1on eontntct
"No. I don't an11c1pate an) torm ot
merger and I don't know ofone IL
owner who'\ 1n fa\or of 1t," hna1d "I
don't think 1t will ever happen ··
He also u1d that when the NFL
"pands b) tour teams 1n th~ ne\I
several \Cir\ that the mo'>t hkd'
markets 'arc USFL c1t1cs h._<' 8alt1-
morc. Oa .. land. Memph1'>. 81rm-
1n&ham and Phocn". But h<' added
"We couldn't consider an) of tho'>t
<'lit(' at tht\ tlmt . It would only add to
the littgat1on ..
In tus speech. Rozelle concentratC'd
on FL plan' to \how the upcr 8ov. I
overseas and its plan\ to hold an
cah1b1uon pme in En.gland nt''t
summer That was follov."td b a sc-ion 1n which he was asked wntten
que tion submitted bcfof'l'h.and.
Hts comments on the telou.1on
contract came 1n rcsposc to a QUC1lJOn
suaeittn&_ that IC\\ money m1Jht ~ avatla~ for the new contract than 1t v.-. "'"en the last contrK1 wu ~111ned
Tc )RRA \i( ~ ,.... The Mater Oct
High girl\ tC'nnis team lost JUSt one
match th1 ~ason. but 11 came at tht
end of1he year in the CIF 3-A finals. a
I \.5 ~tbac._ at the hands of San
Manno Tue'Sda-. at the West End
Tenni" and Racquet Club
The Monarch!I entered the '·A
tourna ment as the top seed b)' virtue
1 ~ unbtaten rt'COrd while n
/\.1ani\o. the Rio Hondo uaguc
champion. was ranked second.
Pete Roselle
1n 19 2 The 'Fl 0
) raun~ onh ha'
tancd ~k up th1 ~aMln al1<'1 thrt"r
\tra11ht ears of dechn<' and ad' <'t1"
1ng revenues continue to ht-dClv.n
Roztllc didn't rc,~nd d1f'C'C'th 10
the quc uon of rtd~ fet" .. and h ('
didn't p«lficall) 1dent1f) th<' othe1
altemauve as pav or cabk But he
~·d "We ha'e a good rclet1onsh1p with
the netv.orb. Wt would hope to
continue our rcl111on hip with the
network and not have to utt an) of
ourC!C'ape valH' We're followina all
trchnotoa1cal developments. but
apan. _,e'd ~(er to sta -.,thin the
ftame"-ork of th<' thrct' ma1or
nerv.or\\ ..
•
And. despue Mater Dc1's first loss
in ~S outings, Monarch Coach Beclcy
.\llec was pleased wllh the pcr-
fonnancc of her team this year.
"I'm not d1sappo1ntcd 1n them.Just
for them," 'he sa.1d "But we went far
hcvond e:itpcctat1ons this season.''
h ne of the ke)'l 1n the Mona.rchs'
lo was their sub-par play •n doubles
v.hcrt San Marino earned c.Pt of
nine po 1ble points.
"We didn't ex pea tt (\eek of SU<Xa.\
1n doubles).'' sa.1d Allee. "And I don't
think they ( n Marino) QpCC\ed n
~1ther 1 know our doubkt rrts our
d1sappou'ltcd 1n themlelv
San Manno alao received an
swtep from it No. 1 11nc1ct IM~.
Linda Ltt. who " nationally raMed
in her ate dtvmon be woa bJ ICOft:I
of 6-0. 6-1 and 6-2 over her MalC1 Del
opponents
\
l
\
Optlmism
at Edison
Chargers have expertenCe,
size, quickness to challeng~
Fourretumana stancr1, good size and quickne s. and
with a shoot inf touch that has their coach satisfied at this
point aives Edison High an obviously promising outlook
as the buketbaJI season nears.
Coach Jon Borchert has 6-S Doug Katona. 6·2 All·
Sunset Leasuc selection Ken Ammann, 6-1 junior Mike Prin~ and 6-2 Chris Cole to mold a challenge to Ocean
View. ·
The record book reflects a 9-12 record last ~son. but
1t should have been 14-7, had the C'hargers not been
forced to forfeit fi ve games because ofon ineligjble player.
"Offensively. for the first time ever, I have a team
that is deep and.can run ond shoot," says Borchert, in his
third year at Edison.
"Katona is our be t re bounder. which makes him our
MVP. He's not a great leaper, bvt he is a g.ceat compc:t1tor.
.. Ammann is a very intelligent player who is being
recruited by several colleges. He's the son of Ken
Ammann, a longtime assistant coach and the head coach
at Newpon Harbor in 1976.
"Cole is our best defensive player and has worked
bard to make himself a fine offensive pla yer," continues
Borcftert.
"But the biggest factor 1n our 'iUccess will be the
weight program that my junior varsity coach, Jeff Bishop,
started last February, the day af\er our season ended. He
and the players ha ve worked two hours a day, four days a
week. Our increased strength was directly responsible for
our 19-2 record in summer league play."
SPORTS BREAK
;,
"' . ......... .
Ken Ammann Chrla Cole
Others who fi~ure prominently: Dave Margulies
(S-10 sr.), Rich m11h (6-2 sr.). Dann>.' HanBn (6-S, sr.)
and Mike Henderson (6-0 Jr.). Rounding out the squad
arc Ri ch Holdaway (6·2). Da ve Ayers (S-11 ) and Scou
Barber (6·3)
Wtd, Dec 1-Ce PO V•lle¥
(he>me)
OK 11 If-al Cabrlllo Tour
"9mefll
Dec 16·70-•r L• Qvlnl•
Tour~~' Sar Oec 11-Lo• AllO\
(l'IOmel
Dec 76·)(1 -Al Oallv Pllol
Coe\I Cl'lrl\lme• Clank Fri, Jen J-L0119 8eecn Potv
(l'IOrne), 8
Wed , Jen II-el Long 8tec11
Wll \on
Fri J11n te>-•Wtslmlnsltr
(l'lomel
Wt<!. Jan lj-•I 'OcH n
11, ...
*
Fri., Jen .,_, 'Hunll1111ton
8HCll
Wtd, J•n n-•Founleln 11•1· tey I l'!Ome l
Fri., Jen., ....... , ·~rl~
Wtd., J•n. ,._.OclMn View
(l'\Ome)
Fri., J•n 31-• •we•lmlnst9f
Wtel., Feb. S-.1 •Fountain Valley
Fri., Feb 7-'Munllngton
!Mech ( llOme)
Wed., Fat>. l2-'M1rln1
(llOme) •
•ci.notes SunHI Le111u1 oeme.
All Hrnet et 7;30 P.m .. unleu no led
Can Sailors
1111 holes?
Graduation has left Parsel
with just 2 returning players ---
Tim Parsel has made the transition from Costa Mesa
High to Newpon Harbor as the Sailors' coach. and he's
hopeful another transition is in proaress -that the
nucleus of Hatbor's JV can move into the &afing
vacancies created by the araduation of virtually alf o the
I 98S Sea View Lea~uc championship squad.
"We've got two sohd players retumina." s:lys Parsel
of Maurice Lee (S-10) and Wes Torell (6-3), "but most
teams 1n this league have two returnin& starters back. at
least."
Lee averaaed 3.S points a game and Torell avcraaed
1.0 points a game -and that's the extent of Hai:bor's
expcncncc from 1ts 24-4 powerhouse, which estabhshcd
the Sailors· all-lime win record.·
"Hopefully we'll be ready to compete for a playoff
spot by · January," says Parse I. "Corona dtl Mar and
Estancia will be very strong.. and Saddle~ck. '.W'ood·
bridge, Laguna Beach and us have a shot. Univc~1ty and
Cost.a Mesa will give people problems. There's JUSt no
easy games."
Parse! predicts Lee's quickness and )Umping ability
wiU be a surprise, and Torell 's board play 1s considered an
asset.
Juniors Mark C'rai$ (6·6) and John Alstrom {6-3)
have shown good potential and Jeff Young {5·8) and John
Richards (S-10) arc strong offensively in the backcourt.
Others include Jim Geerlings (6-2) .and Drew
Sheward {S-11 ), both sophomores, and Soott Craig (6-4),
Steve Kalatchian (S-10) and Paul Richely (6-2).
Wff Torell Maurice Lee
In add111on to 1nexpcnence on the vnrstty level,
Parsel has one other problem: And that's the fact tha1
several of his best are involved in football -and they
may not be rrady for basketball until mid-~mber.
Parsel has a chance to taJte a long look :u .the Sa1l<m
since Newport will not open the season un11l De<:. TO,
participating in the Sonora Tournament
* ... W"'1 HertMr lc:McMe
Dec 10·1 ....... ,
~men'
Sonora Tour C l'IOme I •
Dec 1e-21-s.n Oi.<Jullo Tour
nemenl IS.n O'-l
Dec 2•·21--et Cer.on City
TOVfMIMlll Fri., Jen :>-•woodbrldoe
(l\Ome)
Wtd • Jen. t-•coron1 det ~r
(hOmel
. Fri., Jen. H>-•u nl¥1rlll'f
(llOme)
Wfld., Jan. IS-.t 'E•••ncl• Fri., Jiii 17-'S1ddt1b1c;k
(f'IOme)
Wed.. Jen n-•Laoun1 Buch
Fri , Jen 1-.1 'Co••• MeH
Wfld . Jen ~t 'WOO<lbrk!oe
Fri .. Jen i1-1 ·~oron1 dtl
"""' Mon . Feb 3-1 'UnlYlf'\lly
Wtd , Fttl S--E•l•11CI• ('">fntl
Fri.. Feb. 1-1 'SeddC.be~
Wld.. Feb. 11-el 'L1oun1
Buch Fri., Ftb. l,._'Cost1 Ml••
(l'IOmt)
•<1eno1e. S.e vi.w i.teove
veme.
AN 111me1 el 7·30 P m • unleu
nottd
-lij,Jlliii:-~-----------------
Clark turned out
to be a bargain
for San Francisco
Wilkins' 35 points lift Hawk• 1\ T 1 ,,.,.., "C..I J h1gh~~~~:.~n~~~:.ri.~in~~~~""" 1 ~o. .1 ar riee s Gauchos,
CCI earn
victories SAN FRANCISCO -Fora moment. Ci]
Dwight Clark was Oy1ng through 1hc air 1n •II~
the end zone, both feet ofT 1he ground, his
gloved hands locked around Joe Mon·
tana's perfectly thrown pass.
The 22·yard tou chdown play was the most
dramatic in the San Francisco 49crs' crucial 19-6
victory Monday ni&ht over the Seanle Sea hawks.
Bui when Clar~ came down. cl u1ching the ball, h1!>
first thought was, "It's over. I finally broke it."
Clark, a 10th-round draft choice from Clemson in
1979, had j ust become the 49ers' all-time receiver,
breaking Billy Wilson'c; record of 407 catches set
between 195 1and1960.
Not bad fo r a big. lumbcnng wide receiver chosen
because he looked good the day Bill Walsh went to scout
quarterback Steve Fuller. Fuller needed ~omeone to
throw to, so he asked his roommate, Clark. 10 handle
the tosses.
"h 's not hke Clhe record's) a Pete Rose deal. or
something like that, but 11 was big to me," Clark said. "It
was something I'd talked a lot aboul with Joe, and it's
just been a long time coming."
Oark has made a career of big moments since he
and Montana entered the league toge1her six years ago.
His catch Monday night was reminiscent of the most
dramatic play in 49crs' history. a leaping TD grab
against Dallas that put lhc 49ers in the Super Bowl in
1982. Local papers still call the play "The Catch ...
Clark, 6-4 and 2 10 poum!s, is ne1 th er graceful nor
speedy. But teammate Randy Cross says, "If there's a
guy ~.n our team wh o has a flair for the dramatic. it's
him.
Clark came through at the nght time against the
Seahawks in a game that meant much to both team's
wild-card playoffs hopes. San Francisco 1!> 7-5 and
Seattle is 6-6 with fo ur games left.
San Francisco's defense had shul down Seattle's
offense . which finished with only 252 net yardc;. But the
Seahawks, playing superb defense, 1railed onl y 12.Q in
the founh quarter before th e 49crs began their best
dnve. 80 yards in six plays, capped by Clark's TD that
clinched the victory.
Quote of the day
q uarter outburst, to spark Atlanta to a ~ • Ii 11 0 6 7 104-94 victory over New York in a
Na11onal ~as~et~all Association ga!Y'e Tuesday night. rip 0 n a ' -Most of W1lktns second-quarter points came from the
fo ul hne as he was fouled severaliimcs on drives to the
basket. and he hit on 11 of 12 free throws ... In other
NBA ac11on, ltevla Mcffalt scored 20 points, ei&ht of
them in the final period, as Boston beat Philadelphia,
98-91. The Celtics broke the game
open with 12 straiJht points to
erase an 84-76 deficit and take an
88-84 lead with 5: 31 to play ...
Jola Lo•1 scored 21 potnlS and
five other Detroit players hit
double figures as the Pistons
posted their fourth strai&ht vi c-
tory, a 113-98 triumph over
injury-riddled aeveland . . .
Houston's Aknm Olajawoa
scored 21 points and Lewt1 Lloyd
Wlllllu hit 14 ofh1s 21 points in the third
quarter to lead the Rockets to a 130-108 victory over
Golden State ... Dallas. sparked by the play of newly-
acqu1rcd center Jamea Doaaldsoa, who had a team-high
11 rebounds, defeated Washmgton, 11 2-99 ... George
Gtrvla scored a game-high 27 points and Qalatla
Dalley added 24 as Chicago snapped Denver's nine·
game home winning streak with a I 2S.. l 23 victory over
the Nuggets ... Eddie JollDIOll hit two free throws with
fo ur seconds let\ to assure Sacramento of a 111-107 victory over Phoenix.
Martin to end up in TV booth?
NEW YORK -Billy Manin, deposed iii
as manager but still under contract to the
New York Yankees. could wind up in the
television booth during the American ·
League team's games next season.
Newspaper repons Tuesday said that George
Stei nbrenner, the principal owner of the Yankees, met
Sunday in Tampa. Fla .. with Manin. his attorney.
Judge Eddie Sap1r, and Sap1r's associa1e, Paul Tabary,
to discuss the former manager's future role with the
cl ub.
Steinbrenner said he talked with Manin about two poss~ jotsl: One would be lhe television position.
Another would be an advisory position dealing directly
with Sttmbrcnner.
"There wa s one other possib1hty," Steinbrenner ~td. "Hts la wyer. Eddie Sap1r, said another club has
shown some intercs1 in Bill y as a manager. Those are
the three things we discussed. We agreed we would talk
again after Thanksgi ving."
Daugherty sharp;
other top I 0 teams
post._!opsided wins
From AP dl1patcbe1
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. -Brad
Daugherty set a conference record for
a perfect string officld goals and Steve
Hale scored IS points to lead a
balanced sconng attack as top-ranked
North Carolina crushed Iona. 11()..67,
in college basketball Tuesday night.
Daugherty, who was 13 for 13 from
the field in Sunday's victory over
UCLA. sank his first three attempts
Tuesday to break the Atlantic Coast
Conference consecutive field goal
Three area
soccer players
earn honors
Three area soccer players from C'al
State Dominguez Hills have been
honored on the California Collegiate
Athletic Association all-star team ai;
voted on by the conference coaches.
Earning first -team honors was
senior Dave Trifonovitch from
Kancohc, Hawaii and a product of
Orange Coast College.
He has been the offensi ve leader for
1he Toros the past two years, leading
Cal State Dommgue1 Hills in scoring
both years while tallying 21 goals (I 0
this season) and seven assists.
Trifonovitch moves up from honor·
able mention status last year.
record of I S set in 198 I by Maryland's
Greg Manning.
Jn other actton involving top 10
teams:
Syracaae H , Coreell ti: Veterans
Wendell Alexis and Dwayne Wash·
ington led five Syracuse players in
double fiaures with 16 points each as
the fourth-ranked Orangemen
stampeded Cornell at home.
D•ke 84, WlllJam Ii Mary 11:
Johnny Dawkins fired in 28 points
and Mark Alaric added 17 as No. 6
Duke-evcrpowered William &. Mary
in Williamsburg.
llllDols H, Loyola, Ill. 14: In
Champaign, center Ken Norman
scored 16 points to lead No. 7 Illinois
to a season-opening vi ctory over
Loyola.
Keat•cky It, CILamlaade 57: In
Honolulu, Kenny Walker had 22
points and Ed Davcnder scored 20
points each as I 0th-ranked Kentucky
routed Cham inadc.
In action involving We!lt Coast
teams:
Peppenllff H, Waallla&1oll Stale
71: Levi Middlebrooks scored 21
points and Pepperdinc reeled ofT IS
straight points in the second half en
route to a victory over Washington
State in Malibu.
Staaford 87, Geor1e Waalla.toD
7!: Freshman forward Todd L1chti
came off the bench to score IS points
for Stanford, and t~e Cardinal O~f'!ed its season with a victory over v1s1ting
George Washington.
PacUlc 71, Sacramento State '7: In
Stockton, Rich Anema scored 17
points and collected 11 rebounds to
lead the Tigers, who tr.UJed at
halftime, to victory.
Tua~ Aatotllo It, UC River·
side 58: In San Antonio, Bernard
Brown hit a layup in the clostng
moments as the hosts staved off a
rally by UC Riverside for the win.
Saddleback College made its debut
at home a succcnful one, stopping the
Azusa-Pacific junior vanity, while
Christ College Irvine won for the
fourth time in five outings with a road
victory at Cal Tech in Pasadena.
Herc's what happened:
Saddlt baek tt, A1uaa-Paclflc JV
t!: The Gauchos utilized their run-
nin& game to put away the Azusa.
Pacific junior varsity in Sadd1eback·s
home opener.
The game was close most of the way
until 1hc Gauchos took a 79. 78 lead
w11h 6:SO remaining in the second
half on a 15-foot jumper by Brian
Sulltvan. Saddlcback (2-1) outscored
the Cougars. 18-6, over the next six
minutes to assume a 97-84 lead and
was in control the rest of the way.
Mission Viejo High products Tom
Dcsiano ( 12 potnts, I 0 assists) and
Mike Minier ( 19 points) were two of
the standouts for the balanced
Gauchos. Adding sconn~ punch were
James Taylor (20 pomts), David
Myles ( 19) and Kendall Rodgers ( 12).
Saddleback 1s offunt1I Dec. S when
11 will open compclltion in the Santa
Barbara Tournament. The Gauchos
will play the host school in the
opening round that night.
Clarlat Colltlt lrvlae IS, Cal Teelt
U : The Ea~es beat Cal Tech for the
second stra1g.ht time followi ng Satur·
day's 69~62 victory in the finals of the
CCI Thanksg1v1ng Tournament. I
For Chnst College, Derwin Ap-
pleberry was the lone player to crack
double figures, sconng 24 points and
hauling down nine rebounds. Bnan
Beal was credited with I 0 rebound'I to
lead the Eagles 1n taht deQartmcnt, '
while Dave Tiede d1'lhcd 6\Jt seven
assists.
Dalt Brown, L'iU basketball coach. on the
misadventures of recruiting 7-0 center Tito
Horford: "Tito 1s an example of thi s 111 system we
are in. J looked at my dCCISIOn tO go back on m)'.
word and sign ht m as a C'hnsuan sesturc. But. 1f
he had been fi ve feet tall, I wonder tfl would have
been so Christian."
Steinbrenner has expressed disenchantment with
the Yankees' tele v1s1on and radio announcers and
changes arc eitpected next season. In 1985, Phil
R1nuto, Frank Messer and John Gordon did the radio
broadcasts. while R112uto shared the TV booth with
8111 White and Spencer Ross.
Glen Strachan, a graduate ot
Edison High and OCC. also was
chosen for the first team. He scored
five goals and assisted on three others
from his midfield pos1t1on tn hts first
season with the Toro!..
PREPFOOTBALL. • • I
Calgary tops slumping Quebec Manin is under contract lo the Yankees through
1991
Center Dan QalJlo scored \hort-hand· ~ Pac-10 tabs Walen, Donahue
ed.and on .apower play w11h 1na~panof1wo ' WALNUT CREEK _ UCLA de· EiJ ~mutes in t~c second pcnod Tuesday fensive tackle Mark Walen and Washing-•II•
nig.h t, and Calgary g,oaltcndcr Rejean . · Q ion State runntng back Rueben Mayes were ~melln made 31 sa vc~ as the flame~ beat ()uebc<:. 3-1. named football Players of the Year by the
in a Nallo~al Ho<:kcy League game The loss was the Pacific-I 0 Conference on Tuesday.
r""ord1ques founh 1n a ro w and Quebcl 1s now_)· I 0-1 tn Terry Donahue of conference champion UCLA
its l~st 14 ga mes after starung the \Cason with seven was selected C'oach of the Year, and Arizona State's
stra1g.ht v1ctone\ Elsewhere in the NHL, Benalt John Cooper was runner-up in the voting.
Fe4erko scored 3o.ccond~ into the middle pen~. then Walen was one off our Bruins on the all~nferencc
recorded his SOOth a~d SOI 'It career a\'il'lt\ hy sc111ng u.P fi rst team, also announced Tuesday. The others were
two of Mark Hunter • lh rtc goal'I in helping St. Louis offensive ltneman Mike Hanmeicr, defensive lineman
skate to a 5-1 tnumph over Toronto .. Jobo MacLeu Terry Tumey, and ltnebacker Tommy Taylor.
scored early 1n the third period on a 15-foot s~ap<1hot to Mayes wa\ named ofTcnsi ve player of the year for sn~p a lie and lead Ne w Jc~y to a 4-3 vic tory over lhc 'ICcond con~cut1ve season. The senior from North
W1nn1peg . Bob Marray • powcr-pla> goal_ in the Battlcford, Sa~katchcwan . led the conference in rushing
second pcnod and excellent penalt y killi ng led< hie.ago with 228 carries for 1.236 yards. an avcr31tC of S.4 yards to a S-3 victory over Vancouver per carry
~--=~~~~~~~~~~~~, Aoki win• 4 -man golf match
MJYALAKI, Japan -l~o Aoki of !I
Japan won a $22,000 fo ur-man World
Televlalon, radio
TELEVISION
Super Golf match Tuc\day, dcfcaung Tom 11 p m. -BOWLING: Channel S6.
RADIO Watson. Lee 1 rcvino and Spaniard Scve
Ba.llesteros.
Aolo earned S 11.000 fo r w1nn1ng I() of 18 hob and
oomina closest to the pm on a hole, on the 7.UU-yard.
per-72 M1ya1aki l>hoen11t Country Club cour\C 1n
touthwestern Japan.
7 30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Houston
a1 Clippers, KMPC (7 10).
7:30 p.m. -PRO H~EY: Hanford at
Kini-'. KLAC CS70).
Clippers routed by Sonics, 131-99
EA TTLE (AP) -Sciulc forward
Tom Chambers say~ 1hc SupcrSontl\
baw learMd tbc nccC' 1ty ofhl1111na
die :•JOn . 1n the a11onal ~ Alf0Call10n .. wc·re 11tt•nc eas,. hoops and you
..... to hive ·IMm to win in thl\
......... 08mbm 1&1d
, fie icOf'lid I lalOn·hiah 28 point\ '° ..... e6x SC.«Jc r.-ycrs 1n double lliiii T.-..., niabt in • 111.99
ri:lory O¥Cf' tbe Ndderlcu Lo\ ADl*t Clippcn -the Ciontn '
1,\
I
b1ue 1 victor) of the year Rookie
fonward av1er McDaniel added 19
poin t~ and center Jack 1kma and
auard Gerald ff ender~n cactl had 18
It WU &ht third IOP1tded VIC'tOry 1n a row for the Seattle, followina a 26-
Poi ot lauaher over the Den ver Nua•
ttts and a 19-pmnt bash1n1 of the
Houston Rockets.
Oc1p1tc the ofTcn11ve show,
Chamba1 says better defen~ has
been tht b11 d1fTtten\.C
"Wc'rt star11na 10 control the
boards. and we're aet11n1 our easy
baskets off turnovers. steab and
rebounds." he said
The Sonics lead the ltajue 1n
defense. allowinajust 98.2 potnt~ per
pmc. and have Mid the Oppc>11t1on ~low I 001n nine of their 16 pmes.
Chambers and Ricky Sober&
sparked a second quaner SUf'IC in
whkh the Sorucs ouucored the 01p-
pel'\..2S-8 to take 1 SS-36 lead tile
led 6J....41 II h1IR1me
The S-3 Strachr.n was a key to the
team's early season run of seven
straiJht wins and i1s first national
ranking in more than two years.
Westminster High product l:.d
Sanchez was named to the second
team. The S-6 midfielder, who was
also a second-team selection last year,
scored six goals this year and has 13 in
two seasons with the Toros.
Cal State Domipgucz Hills finished
I 0..8-1 "this season, the fiRh straiJht
year the Toros have fielded a winning
soccer pTogtam. HowcvcT, they fell to
4-6 in CCAA play for a founh-placc
finish.
TUCKER. • • From Bl
•When the LA 01ppers were S-0.
somebody cried, "Break up the C11P-
pcrs." .. but not this bad.
-•FormerWhiteSox CoachJim
Leyland 1ot bad and &ood news las1
week ... The aood nc'NI was that af\cr
20 years tn the majors, Leyland
finallygot a manaaeriaJjob ... The
bad new'I was it was the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
•The Clippers' Benoit Benjamin's
hairdo looks like he i1 wcarinaaskull
cap.
•The newsstorie!I say Gerry Faust
wilt 10 back to hiah IChOOI coeching
but hisupetien~sat Notre Dame
may ~nd him all the way beck 10 the
ande achool level.
•UCLA Coach Terry Donahue
M ys there ls .. no way" the Bruins 101
into the Rote Bowl throua,h the back
door .. Howaboutthe11dedoor'?
•The razorcompeny b11cancelled
oucof ponsorsh1pofbuet.J1'1All-
tarvotin1aoit maybe taken away from the rans fort.be first ume st nee
1969 .. Was 1969theluHtmewe
had ~cal teams tn the All iar classl •
• cEnroedoes this a.nd that,
Toconlinue to prove he 11 lhe brat.
AndwM-n bea~raon the tube,
That a.tU really ~11 a boob.
From Bl
concussion two weeks ago, but
Mooshagian says it's not a critical
area inasmuch as his club is bent on
moving the ball on the ground.
As for the other side -and another
offense -Mooshagian is very much
aware of Foley, the Sailors' 6-1, I 91 -
pound se ni or quarterback.
"We have to be concerned with the
r.ass first," says Mooshagian.
'There's no doubt in my mind he's a
great quanerback, and bis receivers
arc all good. He puts the ball riaht on
the money. And we're aware of how
they like 10 run a mismatch, like with
the 6-6 end (Mark C'rai&) on S· 7
defensive backs. we·vc aot a lot of
those: (S· 7 defenders).''
Fnday's site: La Mirada Hiah.
Valacla (t-l) VI. Se4WleMclr
(lt·I ): Two oflhe belt defenlCS and
offenses square ofl" lo the premier
Central Conference matchup -with
Valencia's Ray Pallares, a runaway
truck for the past three years, keyina
the Titers' pme.
At S-11. f8S pounds, Pallares Jives
~ou the stubby version of a Steve
Bruas (Newpon Harbor, 1982·83). a
power runner with an 8·yard averqe,
seldom breakina for the Iona run,
seldom bcina shut down.
Hia three-yeartotalsarc up to S,263
yards, a st.ate record. Thi• year he has
I , 9 SI yards on 26 5 carries, an a verqc
o( 7 .36 per carry. He hat ICOrcd 23
touchdowns.
All of which. should acrve at a pl
for Saddltbeck's defen.c. a poup
which has prided itaelfin S4 pmnta to
10 opponents outside oh 24-21 lo
10 Ntwport Harbor.
"The one who wins tbts pme wall
have to worry about the next one,"
111d Saddlebeck Hia,h Co.ch Jerry
Witte, ••bccavte theR miP.'t be a
letdown afterward bccau1e 1t'1 auch a
bi& eme. I'm sure they'd qrec. too.
Wed lite to wail another two Wttks
to play this .,me. f think 11•1 the
bianl matchup in the conference
thllweek.
"Pa.llaru? He's just a d&m touah
kid. There's nothing fancy except that ,
he carries the ball 25-30 11mes a game.
And after he gets up off the pile, you
realize he just had another 8·yard
carry. But he does have the speed 1n
order to break the big one.
"Their defense is probably even
better." The Tig.cr.1 have shut Out f
$CVen opponents.
"Our bi& ke y, th ough, is o ur
offense. We have 5Co red a lot of
points this year, averaging 31 a Aame.
bur tn11 J»mc we ve gol to move the
ball ap1nst their defcn~ and ob-
viously, we have to score and keep the
ball away from them. They take ttme
off the clock and they seldom punt."
Fnday's site: Irvine Htal\. . )
Mater Del (l·J> va. Westmlaater
(7 .. ): Mater Dc1 pulled out a 14-1 I
victory over Westminster in non·
leque play, and Westminsler Coach
Jim O'Hara fiaures the task will be
even tou~er tf\ls time around.
"They re a much improved team,"
said O'Hara. "Todd Marinovich hu
a much aofter touch on the ball and i
much cooler in the pocket. The
haven't 1one to the shotgun in the
last pme, but it doesn't mean th
wont.
"The first time we played them
didn't have our quarterback (Stev
Oullcy). and we would ltlu! lo have
belanced attack. Both team•
strona, phrsical feams ...
Mater Dei Coach Chuck Oal
would aarce with O'Hara on tha
count, at least about the Lio
"They'rta black and blue team," u '
OaJlo. "It"• hke the Bears and
Packers, they come out to hit pcopl
You·~ always at a Pl}'Cbol<>11
d1Mdvantqe _.hen you re play1
someone you've already playe<! {a
defeated).
"f remcmberwatch1n1our vtd.eo our bllt .,me and the TV IU>'1 A
th.at Ri~cmde Poly had 1t 1n the bq. •
Westmin11cr atunncd the unbea
Pol18tan. l ... l . Fri~y·s 11te: Or.n C"oalt Collttf.
t
f oR THE RECORD
NPL
NATIONAL eotil'H•NC• ·-· S.11 ~rtnclKO
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1.000 Ht
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NY Glenh • • 0 '47 m '" WHlll1191on I S 0 SI:> 211 n~
PllllaoetJlflle 6 • 0 SOD 200 210
SI LOUlt 4 I 0 .).)3 203 190
AM••ICAN CON,•••MC•
llltlclwl
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K1"'81 Cttv
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HI 206 170
411 2tt J1S
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9.30 e m>
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lt•lden e t Alltnle <Chenl\4H • at I p rn I Stn Frencltco •I Wetl\l1191on
Buffelo •t S.n Olevo
Cltvtltnd et New York Glt llf\
o.rtvw 11 Plllt1>uro11
Houtton el C111<l1111e1I
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'Mlt ml, Fl• , 11 over NOlrt Oeme
•Florid• 4 over FIOrld• Sl•I•
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3 S.0Uthwttttt11 f l·O H •· Oroumon1 ' f·l·O IO s Tell . 7 ... 7'
6 Oleflcltlt f-1-0 SI
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10 LA VtHev 1·2 0 11
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10, COIMIM of Ille OMtrl (7·J), t , Ml S.n
Jeclnlo (6·31, 7, Vt111ur• <•·•>. '
COMMUNITY COLL•G• LOGS OrM9e c .... (2·1·1)
7 GOl<ltft Wttl I
• P:uAtrlon ~ IS Se«lltOKk J1
14 ltlvtrtlOe 21
It S.n Oi.oo Mt.e 16
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.. Sen Dleoo CC 14
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21 Cllrut lS
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l 0re"M COH I -1
1 ltencllO Stnll•oo t
10 Teti )I 42 PHe«Mne 1S
11 Ml St" A111onlo 10
24 LOll9 8tKll CC 7l
71 Cwrllo1 2•
71 Fullerton 11
11 Et Ct m lno 27
J1 ••k•••llt ld ,.
Saddlebecll (10·0)
41 El CtmlllO 14
41 S•n Btrntrdlno 10
27 Ottnot Con • 1\
)l ltlv•nlde 11
34 Sen 01.e<> ~.. 7
)I Soutl\wetltrn 11
4l Sen Oleoo CC I
30 P110mtr 19
3' Cltru\ 1•
39 llencno S•nlleoo l'l Dec: 7-Fulltrlon (Ponv llowt)
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llltl'IOP Amal (11·01 "' MtrlN (1.J.11
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Arlttlt II JJ t i Le Htl>f'e 11·11 S•tur
dev. 1 lO
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El Moden• (10· IJ a l Capl\lrano llelltv
19-1-11
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scnurr 110-11 vt PnedCIN II •I e t
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t i Colltoe o4 Cenvom
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c """ C°""9 El lt9"Cho < 10-11 t i lttmon.e 17 41
NttrWI•"""' ~ C•nYon 111·01 ti Senft Merle 16 SJ
LornPOC 19·21 Nor111 Tor•tnc• 11 o
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Vtrbum O.t <l 1·01 ti AnltlOOt ll•lltv
17·0 Seuhe•"'"' c...,_. Cl\llrl9f' Oek I 10-0) ti Mot\lcte lr 11 l 11
L• Sltrrt (10·11 •' Arrovo (10 ll
Sen Dimes '9· II •' Ctnlrtl 110·0 1l
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ll·ll t i Victor Vtlttv High
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Sen Jeclnlo (l ·l l Y\ \/elltv Cllrl\tle n
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7 )01
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Octltor <~IO«ltl def Devld MecPl\e<\Oft
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(Ftenct), ••), 6• I, AM HtMlc*aMlft (US J
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Evwl U0¥1t IU.S.I Ott lllOMIVll ,.Miik
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(lrl .. lnl "9t. """"1tY Van NMlnfld (U $ I
6•). H , •·2 H• lc:Mtl*" Cff' J•A ,_AU
(It ............ a.. ,.,.,...., .. _,.. ,,, ... .,.. . .....
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l(tre< ... t. • C.urn, .. 1. C.,....e IMOI
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~
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IN'e I y~)
l·A
MnflllW ... La ......
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Cl"" .......................... J
,.IT •ACI. 400 YtrOt
G.l\ello •1tt1tt US. Otrele l UO UO 1 tO IN &atv OM (Cel'OOl•I 4 60 1 eo
Hew Mlttllt Tt (H OetcleJ '-«>
Time 20'4
12 •XACTA I• IOI pel(I \1600
HeotfO •.&C•. 440 verd1
0 •1 Tiit Graoet <P•vllnel 12 . ..0 11 60 UO
Ooc 'or Diamond• <Mulltldl 11 .0 • 60 Mtlor lmoecf <Ottl) , 40
Time n.77
12 •XACTA (6-4) Pt ld \1'1 <Ml
TH•O lllACI. 400 verch e ... , ltttiou.•• (L.c:lltvl 1) oo s .o 3.10
l.llM Niii Nik (Lewi•) 4 10 2 IO
Str .. lo.ln N "ffCllln (EdWt rd•l l 00
Time 20 )1
U •XACTA 11 I I H id Ut 10
"°""TH •Ac•. lSO vero•
Aneull Foret <Ml"''•'ll 11 '° uo '10 Truly A Wrtf\91tf <•ulrl "60 IJ 00 APOiio• Creeo IS.Yll .. l l .IO
Tlmt "I)
~"'™ llAC•. no verdt Mir Clllc ILtwlt J u o ) 00 uo
Old Moon "Iver (Ltellt•I 100 600 Anne lloid <Cu1111l119nt mJ SIO Time 11 OJ
U •XACTA (1·91 l>elO \lO 40
SIXTH llACI. 170 verd• u4 Wtllt. On Air IE Gt rclel 110 HO llug1 Miio ICunnlnvllam) HO , '° $cwncl N Furv IM Gercle l HO
rime 46 04 n •xACTA (S )I P•ld uo.o
s•vtNTH llAC• . .00 verd,
Oerl< lvorv !Herl) 10 70 uo HO llt ck GOid Pit IE Gercle J uo 3 IO
Jell• Ke l lier IWerdl HO Tl.mt 7011
0 IXACTA (7 I ) PtlO U .. 00
•IGHTH RAC•. 400 ytrdt
ltlt Of OrH mt ICror) 1040 HO no
M•k• Mine Cetll (Cerdo111 7IO 7 40 C.et Awn QulO (8r001<1l HO
llm• 1021
NINTH •ACI. l50 ytrclt
Med HOl.ltewlft (CrHOtr) S 40 4 00 HO
ll•nt Cll•f (8r00kt) • 70 S 00
E•erv111lng Nice (Ol<ltrl(kttnt 3 40
Time 1171
U •XACTA (7·101 H id WHO
U DAILY DOU•L• 11· 11 Dt ld stt 70
n ~ICI( SlX (6·1 or •·S-1·1-1) N ld
\I .Sll 70 lo ll wlnnlnv llckelt OI• llO"Hl
'1 'Pio S111 con•Olelloll Pt ld sS7 10 10 701
wlnn1no llcktl1 !five l'\or .. 1>
SI ~ICI( NIN• (6·6-7·6·1 or 6 S·1 1 11
oeld \1,22' 10 10 two winning ll'k"' C11on1
l\Qr .. ,) Toltl ct rrvovtr POOi Sl70,ltt1•
A•ttndt nct l,l91
St! I cOfldttteni
LHltll ~trlr -Cloa.d
a9"91 -I > '"' new, 1 S·lool bttt, patktd POwder. oowder. four c11e1"
0-Siii lbftdl -No rtPOfl
S.-~ -No reoorl
T•hM o.,_.. -No reperl
Nor111 Sl•r -No reoort
iu .. r .. WI P•i IH I ntw, •·6 fool
bttl, oowdtr end oackt<I oowder. """ dOuble clle lrt end ecctn oondOI•
.,..,. ~ 11 lnct>ft new.
711 )·loot bet.t, oecked oowdtr. one lrlPI•
Cha ir four Ooul>lt clltlrt
H-eN -No rtoorl
Sciuew V...., <•·* ft.) -One loot ol ntw, )·fOOI be ... POw(ler, PeCktd POW(ler
groomed, ''~ cer • ....,t!I Cll•ln '--• v-.. 1•.-"·' -CIOM(I Ttf\et Sill llewl -No reoor1
HM......, V.-V -No rtoorl
Slt I lfldlne No 'eoor I
Ml. It--10 •nCM\ new I '>·1 toot oe\t, OO'#CMr a nd groomed Ob\lteltl, one
lrlPlt Cflt lr, ont CIOU~ c lletr
10.. SUmmlt -Nn rtOO<I
'*1'• Sltl lttl!OI -11 tnc;r.,., new. ) 'I
fool bt" oowder t nd groo~. '"'"
Cl\e1r\
Klt1rwMCI Two Ifft nt• l "'t·fool
De\e .. 11n OIHleC .. l \tllen C"91rt
Mt. lttelt No rt POrl
0..,. •ktet No rtPOrl
8edetr ~Ht 70 lnclle\ ntw, OM 1001
bett. oowdtr end Pt~k~ oowdtr. •ovr
cr.elrt lwo wrfect llflt
Memmtfl\ -Two ll'lrH '"' new. '''' 1001 !>Ht. oeck.O oow<ltr end oowd<rr. one
uondOlt , '"'" cne lrt. one writ<• 1111
si.rT• Summit -No r•oor• JllM Mtunt•ln -No reoor1
Ttll .. Nef'dl( -10 lncne• MW 1 1001
oe ... ne eked oowder ... , v ... v 31 lncllH n•w. 7 fool
Oatt. O&<~•d oowCMr
NHL
C.t.M1'81'LL CONP:EltU•CE
\mytM OMwn w L T ~ 0" GA fQmoNon I\ • , J7 103 I)
C•lgsrv " I l 7~ " ,.
Vencuuver • 17 1 10 91 91
Winn.peg I 17 1 II ., '°' KIM\ s 1• 2 11 ti 106
Merrit OIYIU..
St Io"" 9 • ) 11 fl ,.
( rllf A\ffl 9 10 ) 71 •1 9\
M•nnt•o•• 6 10 \ 11 17 .,
Oeiro.t • 17 • 17 •S IOl
roron•o • 14 l II I~ ..
Wot.LU CON~lltlNCIE
l"elrk-OIYl\len
Pn11eottolll• " • 0 :i.. 104 6)
wu11lno10,, 17 • l 11 f7 0
NY l•lan<le" • I 21 77 ,,
NY ll1nu~" 10 10 71 IO " Ntw Jl!•tev ' 10 19 Tl ,.
Pllltburon • 17 ) IS 1S .,
Adtm• OMtMft
8o••on " ' 2• " 17
llull•ln ,, I H 12 M
Outti.< 10 10 71 llO 1S Molllrfff 9 I ,. I I .a H•rlfora • 10 0 II .. ,,
TlliPMH '\ ktrft
Ce'9erv ) OutbK I
,..,.., J••ttv • Wlnruu.Q l
~t LO•JI\ \ Toron10 I
Cr11caoo S Vt ncouver l
TM6tM't G•~
M•rllorcl •' K.,_
8 uff•IO t i 0t1roO
Motltrffl ti WHl\lflOI~
C•1v•r• at N-York ••-• WlnnlPtO el fltht~ie
T oron•o •' Plllttiur"' N•w Yori\ l•ltno.rt .. Mll'lllnOlt
... tl\C OUYtr .. E dmof\HW!
o... .......
OAHA WHAa, -J4 t~ 11 !!ten ,
41 fQfk Cod, 15 ITl'tl0trtl, I Kuloln
OAV•Y'I LOCICI• ,....._, !Medi)
-J1 IM!tf'• IJS Dol\llo 1 coo. to Wl<o ,,. ..
Nl~T LANOffM -12 .,,...,., ll
1cv'9ln, t \allO be\\ I roekfl\11, 11
mec•trtl
-(_ > .
M8A
W•JTlaN GOM"H•NC•
hdlk OMUell w L Jllct. ......,. 1) , .. ,
lilottlel\Ct 10 , -helll• 1 • ..
Goldell $•••• 1 10 411 ~ • • 400
-
G•
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1
1
"'-t>I• , 14 17' """ N!Ww"I OM.-Ot!IYtr II 4 7»
Hout Ion It ~ ,
Ulell ' 7 ~ , ....
Otllu 7 1 500 ,.,,
$811 AlllOlllO I • .., ' S.cn ll'lt!llO s 10 ))l • •AITllllN COH•l••NCI Atleloll( OM.-.
l o11on 11 J H 1
~w Jerwv ' 1 S43 • Pflll9def Piil• • I .,. • Wtthl11tt0fl ' • 400 6 ,,
NtwYorti ) ., 200 .....
Geflfrtl OMAltll
Mllw-.. .. ll s m
o.1r-ou 11 s ..
Alltlllt • • '°° • ClllUoO I 10 417 )
CltYtltnd • 10 l7S • tndltne ] II 71• • T\ltMeV't SQrH
S..lllt 1)1, Cl!Mwt " Allan•• 104. New Yorlio 9'
O.trofl Ill c .. tttend "
loston ... PtllledelO"I• t1
OtllH 111 WHlllnglon "
Houtlon 1)0 Goolden Stele IOI
Cfllc:eoo 121. Ot11Ytf 1n
S.Crt ll'lt!llo 111 Photnl• 101
T..,._.,G_t
Houtton •' C.-•
Ot lroll •' llotton ' P?lilaOtlollle el Ntw Jtr"•
Ntw Vor• ti '"CSl•n·
Alltnlt ti Mllwtu~••
WHlll1191on •• '>•n Antonin ClllGtOO t i Utah
Porlltnd •' PllO<lnl• Denver el C.otd•" \ltlt
Seftlc.a 1JI • oioo.t'• " CLl~•RS ("I -Muwtll S 11 10· IS
10. Wllllt 6· U • • 16. Otnltmln 1·4 I 2 ],
Edwe rdt 1·• 0·0 •. Jollnton 11 It l ·t lO,
llrlooeman >-• 1 7 1 Nl•on 3 10 O·O 6,
Murollv J-1 I· I 1 Ceoe I 7 1 1 •. Tl'>Omtl
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Warriors, CM,
CdM lead pack
But Sea View race
lsn'tconce ed to
any one teai!_l yet
The~. View Leque'111rl1 basket-
ball race doesn't ti.ave a clear-cut
favorite Defendina champion
Woodbridae 11 strona. but could be
challenpd by any te:am.
Costa Mesa. CdM. Newport and
Estancia have shots at the playoffs
Here's a look:
W oodbrtqe
The Wamors arc back stron1-
Althouah Woodbndae (otch Enc
8a~sawfi vcscnion(all who ti '\rt<S
stan1ng duties) p-adualc, he has aood
m .e and strenath on hi• court this
year.
The defending Sea View champion
Wamors may not 10 14--0 this season.
but they will be amon. the top
contenders for the leque title.
"We have a balanced offense."
Banas said, "we have four player\
who could averaac double figur" (tn
sconng)."
Leading the way will be rcturnmf
starter J 111 Daniels. an all-leaauc. S-1
Kn1or forward. Daniels averaged 17
points and IS rebounds per p.mc 1n
sum mer leque.
"She 1s potentially one of the tOP.
two or three players tn thu. lcque. •
Bangs said.
Other starters 1 nclude sen 1or center
Diana Zilko (S-11). ;un1or ut1hl)
player Gilly Powell ( S.11). and S-8
Junior guard Nina Hansen.
Sophomores Kathy M1llat and
Rand« Mahony an: batthn' for the
other opening.
"We re a prcuy consistent team:·
Bangs said. ··This one's a lot youn,rr.
they JUSt d on't have the expenence
We o nly have two Juniors and two
senior. so we're a httlc youna:· he
added.
Co.ta Ilea
The Mustangs finished at .SOO last
year. and hope to do at least that well
th•~ season. They have quahty player'
up from the lea&uc ch;amp1on,h1p JV
team.
Three stan ers arc rcturnina to
Mesa's hneup.
Valene Palmer. a w:n1or point
guard. 1s quick on the run. Suzanne
Cowley ( S-9. senior) 1s expencnccd at
the po~t: and Stephanie ~wan\On ( S-9.
Junior) 1s back at the forward spot
The other Mustangs staners arc
S-11 Junior forward Meg Mitchell.
while Juniors Carol Long and Jen1fTer
Boyett arc halthn& for the other
staning 1uard o;pot
Kahn docsn·1 have a rcaJ power on
the: offensive: side. but \41 )'-. lhe
Mustangs can hold 1heir own 1n
kaaue hccausc o f the1 r defen"'
"Sconn~ 1s not our fone,'' he \a1d
"Defense 1s. We held e veryo ne under
!heir 'iCOnng avcrag~ lut 'year ..
Newport Barbor
The Sallon Ci havt' much
e1tpenence to rely on for 1hc1r uixom·
1ng seaso n. but < o ach Glen
Takemoto wo n't let 1h111 ~tand 1n ttf<"
way.
"We're st.an>ng rnmpletrly over
aaain.'' 1 akcmoto 'I.aid
Harbor lost o;1x ~n1ors to grodu-
a11on, and have onl} one staner
return1na.
"We'rr a brand new team:· he \lld
~ra Andrus. a S-9 Junior forward. 1~ the onlv st.aner back from the 8-il
Harbor club o f a year aao ·
New Sailo" include auards
C'hantel Deford (\Opho more) and
A.rdnh Yamaia (~n1nr) Jt-nn,
Stuckrr a ~-1 1 w phomo rc. will I.Ake
the crntt r pm1t1on, and Lara i\srx-r a '·I I ~n1or, will \lep into th<' forwa rd
\pell
"We ha11C' good '"" up lmnt, '·I I
S-9. S-9." fakcmo tn ..aid "Wr were
quick and we were tnll la\t year I hi\
year WC''rr avrrage
"Our main asset 1\ spc~. wt"rC' a
httle quicker th1'i vrar than la't ··
fhc Sailor! fin1\hed third 1n k agul·
last season at K-6 fakemoto hnJX'' 10
bt at least amona the plavofT con-
tcndcn. out na1 a toush tJme really •Wna up h11 tam. .
"They're so youna nah• now. II'• bard tryina 10 compere lficm Yfttb last
yeat't ttam. They play 11 1 team.
thouah. L.ut year's tam had a lot o(
1ndiv1dual1. They teem tO be real
comfortable with each othn th1.s
year." he wud
Corona del 11.ar
In the xa Kana.~· CAK, n's not so
much who's come up. it's a matter of
who's gonr Fran Wynn. the lea1ue's
most prohlic' ~orcr and MVP 15
pla11n111 Rnanam Youna.
\dM Coach Dave Heffern has
found Wynn touah to replace .
"ThC' te.am·<K>n ofle.ancd o n Fran."
Heffern said "It will be 1otcrest1n1 to
\CC what we can do wtthout her "
Per aame, Wynn scored 23 8
points, brouaht down 10.8 rebounds.
and dished o ut seven au1sts.
The Sc.a Kin.gs have four sta~rs
l't'lurnma. ho wever.
Michelle Willard. a 6-1 all-leaauc
senior. will be back at center K C
Jone\ and Natahc 88 mac1yan return
to the guard spot!>, and JUnior Kath)'
m1rl will return to forward.
Two others arc sull fiahtmg for the
rema1n1ng forward spoh. K1k1
Stovkcn and Megan Dcm pk'y
If HcfTern's s1ar1crs remain
healthy, they'll ht' to ugh inside. The
five would stand. 6-1. S-7. S-8. S-6.
and c1 ther S-~ or S-10.
Sconn1 d()(sn't Sttm to bt too
much o f a problrm but with its
hc1ahth. < orona del Mu has lost
some ,~ed
"We II han& 1n there de fensively"
Heffern said "We don't really have
the speed to pla} man-to-man We'll
try to play o;omc 1o ne and try to do
some d11Terrn1 thm~ ..
Eatancla
fhe Lagle\ have what \O man,
other league team\ don't -t'-'·
pc:nent:c
Lisa McNamcc 1s m her first vear ds
Estanc11'scoach, but the samr cannot
be said of her team
At forwards arc S-11 ~n1or Lcshc
Self and 5-10 ~n1111 Dana Nai.b)
Cimny f orrman and Nancy Has11n~.
both S-8 ~n1or\. will takt the guard
ipots
Three othe~ arc also 'ltanrng
matcnal. Shawna Newbern could \CC
time I\ auard. and Lisa Edgerly and
Brenda Jaqer arc forward matenal
McNamcc has size and expc:nence
but isn't ta.kJng any other team' for
granted
"We've been working since \Chuol
su.ned,'" she wud "We've worlccd
very hard. We play a man-to-man. the
lud\ arc real ag.ress1 vc. we pla' a
denial man-to-man
"Ifs JOIOJ 10 he:> tnlC'ft"\lltljt.'
McNamtt ~rd
u.,una Beach
The Anr<,t<, cena 1nl" arcn'1 loolon~
back at the11 I ''84 <;ea\on 1n whit h
th<'} fi n1..t1ed la\I and d1dn 1 "''n a
t'OnlC\t
t.aeuna fkarh < oa1 h lat t. "t·ml·th
ha' his girl,, man' return•n(! 'ta rter\.
1n shape. and rt·a1h 111 'uq ir1'r tht'1r
lca,,uc foe,
'We were o ut uf our kagur hoth
literall)' and ahil1t\ "'I\('" '\lnnrth
u1d "I had to ltarn J lot. loo ..
H1<, player\ h;nt' l1'.1rnrd II• wort.
oventml" JU'it t11 kC<'fl thnr p1 uk -
but the\ aren't \tonr 1n11 then·
"fhe~·ve reall\ "'nrkcd h.u d ·
Nemeth -.aid 't'\lra h.Hll 1n lllll
d1t1onmg and 'hunting ~ C' r<' hoping
to nut d lilllc more prC'\\ure nn
<kfen'K' ..
The i\rtl\I\ added \ta m.lout 'Ill
lcyh;.ill f)hn n r eltna ( halmcr1o to
their r<hlC'r "\h<''' •• tton<l all a round
3thletc " hl" \JtUI r hr \ t1 )UnttH '4111
1akr onr of 1h1· jtu.ml 'pol\
RC'1 urn1ng .ll lhr 01hn IWMll "
l..aurn Wl"1n~1nt"r :1 \ ',t·n1111 whn·,
"one of th<" fr1'ltnt l(U.trth 111 1h1·
league" alcord 1ng 10 Nrnw1h
.\t center will he:> Hn gelll' l>11tm;rn
a '·I 0 'ICn 1or "~he "a<1 ham pc-rc·tt h,
inJunt'' ond •llnt'\\C\ '\he hac. thC'
htg.ht'\I poten11.il ton thr 11·nm) 10
«.('Ort point' \ht"·, go 1 rral grn KI
mnvt'' wc'l'C' hoping \he u rn con1 ,.n
tratr and produt <' ... Nemeth \aid
College basketball scores
wan '°"',..," C:.et~nt• (one.t 10. I • "'"n. •\ CMl\1 c-..e .,,,, ... ·~ (el ,., .. \,)
,._..,.. t4, WH.hl1'910f' \I 16
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CHIU-'2, 'NNl-111 'I ,, ~,,,·, 11, 5-N ,, •I
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ltOC1C.ICS
,..., ... "· l'MllM. Okie " IOVTMW91T
.... ., Or.i ..... " • L-19 . ., .. ,.,,, jf
N Ttn• SI $1, w"'"'°"' so
Ol\1t1*M St '4 COii OI ttoe Ora"' " TtHt 4&.M lit, Alit.,... St ..
Tent Af'llnttOI\ J'), IW Te .. , SI ..
TCU t7 How•d l'ltYN .. To·M·~ Al'llOfllo ... UC ltl"'"io. SI
Tu1N1t,Ne ~II 11
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COMeCllC.ut IO V•1e 1•
, tt llNll'\ •1 I Ont I\ !encl U ~ "°"'''• U . l rown 71 l..etfl9ilt n K111ttown toO
LAI lelt 7' Monfnoulfl 69
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.. 0ranoe CoMt DAILY ~LOT/ Wedneedrt. Nowmb9r 27, 1985
FUNKY WllfDRBEA.N ,
tf'S l)t.l8El.IE.VA81..E I
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
\\That's how Mommy gets her hair to
stay still."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
' .
l
f
j
I
'
...
by Tom Batluk D001'ESBURY
BIG GEORGE
ALIC!,~Jle~
tM A!l4(J(}IN610/Je 5f,MP
A 616 7HAIJK$6fVN5 PINWR.
J Rl6HT Hl/(£. /N l.Nif~IWll<..
~(,Ali >QI "Tf.l.LIJ$ Ala/TIT7 :--/
I "' .-iftll~;;~.
by Vlrgil Partch (VIP)
.. r
I I PEANUTS
,,_ .~
"I can wait as long as you can."
BLOOM COUNTY
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
,
'I:
by Garry Trudeau
by Jeff MacNally
rziarr ... 1F ~ oozE ~~,
IT SP'RA'<~ '(OU WITH
UOT eofFEE .
r--~--=~~~~---.
by Charles M . Schulz
SOME~OW, SIR.
LEARNING THAT
DOE5M'r REAu.Y
INTEREST ME ..
by Berke Breathed
~
I FfMIP ~ £(,()
INAl'f/P&U6Y
11* TKMH .
!U Jl/$f
MtP rr l.R.
---
,.
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
!He.'{~ l..COK ~
INNOCENi WHEN 1HEV~ SU:EPING./
·) l
"Marmaduke wants you to write a want ad
for a puppy sitter!"
DRABBLE
GARFIELD
• Ruf F &rs HIS ALLOWANcc IN OO<S FOOD."
by Kevin Fagan
~E-·~ \IE.R'{
et.MO·OOl·O~ 5"~1
by Jim Davis
OKAY, TALKING SC.AL£ I ~ow MUCM 00 t Wf.IGH? 00 YOO Mt1"4P IF 1 ASK A P(R!>ONAL QOE5TION f"IR~T?
If J.,
JUDGE PARKER
L.VOIA W ANT& TO TALK WITH
YOU, .Aee&VI 9He·o L.IKE ro MA1<1! ....,.,.ANQeMeNTS TO Ne ~ 1 ,....__, __
177
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
H~Y, T~DDY!
You WEI¥ k'IDDIN~
W~N'TYoo?
by Harold Le Ooux
THAT WC)VL.0 &e FINS I
1 OON'T IN.ANT TO 00
TO TMl!I--HOME I
~
_L -)
I
CAN '-"E Pt.ff{ IN~
Ho0Se,1"11KE.? .,._____,
TUMBLEWEEDS
Wll WINPOUi"'fH~
WMON1MIN1
f~ BRIDGE .
Nor th South vulnerable. South
deals.
WEST
• 784
NORTH + KJ92
<:i KQ3
0 54
• J932
EAST
<:::> 10987'
O AQS
• Q85
~ AJ4
0 J712
• 87 • 854
SOUTH
+A 103
~52
O K 1098
•AK Q 10
Tbe biddlnK:
.. t11i w .. t
1 NT p..,
2 0 PUii
PaH PH•
Nwtlil Eut
2 . , ...
a NT PaH
Openln1 lead: Ten of ~.
We have oftAln 1t.re11ed In thl•
column that, when you have Lo
make a crudal declalon, fl 11 be1t. Lo
poetpone maklnJ It u lonr aa poe
aibJe to ~ what you can learn
about lht opponent•' handa.
Howtvtr, when you are playing
against s hrewd defendere, It can be
fat.al to rtl)' upon what you think
you hav• I arnedl
by Tom K. Ryan
by Pat Brady
BEHIND THE VEIL
When thla hand was dealt in an
international team trials, both sides
reached three no tr ump on the auc
lion shown. Arter South'• no tr ump
• opening bid, North probed for a 4 4
spade flt with two club1. then set·
lied in the no trump game when hia
partner denied four cards in either
o ... ~
SHARIFF !-~i
major ault.
hi" low diamonrl and a good heart.
and ~aat cooperated by discarding
a spade!
Not surprialngly, declarer decld
cd that West was protecting the
queen of apades and that Ea1t htld
the diamonds. Therefore. he c.uhed
the ace of spades and ran the ten. A
CHARLES
GOREN
gnteful East won hl1 now bare
queen of apadea, shifted Lo a dla
mond and, when the 1moke had
cleared. they had collected a two
trick •et and a aubatantlal ~aln on
the deal.
At both t.ablea the opening lead
waa the ten of hearts. Dtclarer
covered with dummy'• queen, then
held up the kins ont round when
Eut won tht ace and continued
with the jack of heart• and anot.htr.
At. one t.tblt declarer cont.I nu d by
runnins the Jack of 1padet. and all Have ye• ~· r ..... 1 .......
waa well when the flneaat 1ucceed ba. treaW.? Let Cltara.1 Gerea hi,
ed. Oetlarer took tlJht trick• In the 1•• ftlNI '"r ••1tlitJ'Ms•111• ....
black tuft.a and lht kfn1 of heart.a. er OOUILE fer ,.aaJUe .... ler
Ai Lhe other table. declarer takeHt. Fer • ce,, ef Ille
decided \0 poetpone playlnf 1pade1 "DO\JIL£8 .. MM.a.t. Me4 11 .11 ..
until ht learned mort about the "GwH#O..W.e," <&rt tf t.Wa ... ..
hands. He flret toolt four rounds <>f ,.,.,,P.O. le. 441t, Ori .... , Pie.
clut». watchln1 c.uefully what the 12802..,...H. Ma .. cllecl11 ,.,.w. ..
oppontnt1 dlttarded. We.t 1lufftd • Ntw.,..~.
I
Enhancing
cO.~puters
profitable
New AST Research products
tripled it's net income in-S5
By JlM HATHCOCK s.n u. Qar•bey
In spite of the slow down 1n the arowth of personal
computer sale\, lrv1ne-.bascd AST Research Inc .. tnplccJ
net income dunng I 98S by developing a variety· of
enhancement products for approximately 10 m11l1on P(
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I he 1ead1n~ independent \uppl1er of enhancement
products for the personal computer\, AS r manufactures
and d1slnbutes muhafuncuon cxpamton boards. m1cro-
to-ma1nfnlme and m1cro-to·m1nicomputer communica-
11ons. local area networks. d1'lk memory subsy,tem'> and
graphics produch wh1t h arc d1.,1nbuted through a
worldwide network of over I, I fXl reuul dealers and 24
foreign d1"nbutors
Founded wath a small number of employees 1n 19KO,
AST Research has grown t<J become a publicly held
corporation with more than 600 employees and a 1985
sales volume of $ 139 m1lhon, said Safi Qurcshey,
president of the corporauon.
Already manufacturing over 30 items to enhance
personal computer ix·rformancc, AST Research con-
tinued to broaden its base in I 9tS5 with the 1ntrodu<.:t1on ol
12 new products in mU'h1func11on, data commun1cat1ons.
local area networks, graphics and add-or. mass storage
devices.
"This 1s a result of our addressing not only the market
created by the new PC's, but the citpanding mstalled base.
There 1s also a con<1ol1dat111n trend in the PC indu5try
which strengthens leading <.:ompanies (which manufac-
ture cnhanccmen1 product') 'luc.h as our.,," <)ureshe}
said.
.. We exceeded even our own ambitious expectations
-1n new product development and an diversifica11on,
including the newer communications and graph1es lines.
1n market penetration and 10 brand name rccogn11111n,"
said Qureshey.
1 he personal rnmputcr ha\ taken 1t'l place as one of
the most useful tool' ir1 modern society. said ()ureshcy
and added that thcr(' appear<; 10 be no end in \1ght tn the
apphcatie>n'i that can he gi ven 1t to further increase 1b
utility.
"For the year ahead. we arc cxpccting morl' of the
~me· more growth, mort• \trcngth nnd l'h'n greater
market penetrat1ori .. ..aid ()urc,hey
20 20 • Hcl>QB t It~ ?0 M.9vPt j" J • P.onH• 11~ 11"° H..,..<IF 14 '> U ....... vnO< 4 ' ''°' Pou •\ 14''> 14"' Hooan • • • M<.C.1rr. i. • )6"' Pc;w•ll 11~ 11 ' Horlrlh l • ) ' McF ., ,, • ,, ' P!\GM ·~ ''" Hyl)(llC 71 • 21" ~,. • '· \ PrHSlv 451'> .... IMS' ll" )I') M<t<IEI ' P1ooro 17 , 37 , 1\C 11>.. 14 t 11 11 t 1t J7 Pb\N( 11'' l.. lnlolh< 11\· 13 • M"om II • 'I • P~IBn 2 "> ''> 1nll1n IS'-. I\>.. In MO\IW ' 12 ' 1} . ~ \o !rt In 6'1'1 1 lnl•I Mlc:llB~ 41 > 4 '• a<lf,
I • I ' 11 '• 71 \n Ml"U>< 411• 4 U ( • i'• U"' lrtEnr h• • Motea,. u ' tt •II'"' '• 1n1.110fl • "' ) MonlCI • 4 , RavrnnQ
• 1nBW"1 •', le MonuC. • • • "'"''C'
a
, ... lweSoU ... ' ., MoouP lf lS ' RHVel 70'<11 JamWlt 14 74''' Mor(\n '-' 11~• R9UtrH
h }9 , J.iM9rt j" 4''> MotC.lt;> 1 il RG<IOSv "' 2 h l••ko 7 \lo J'• Mutu.t 1 2 , Rot>M•• 'W,' 0•1, Jonl(bl • • NtrtpC 4 , RouJe ' ll'lt JOIOll•n .,, '. NO ti• It • 'l"' ~Oll•r 1 4 l4 Jottv11 "' • NMlcrn "' '. afe<;o s""" l I• Kelver 1"' ,,, NlwkS_ J 1 ~ "' tHIC.d 11.\ "° Kernen ' 141.. H' • vlN,kOV , It tPaul 311 .• l2'. KlvS A' 19 40 Niu 8 I) I ).... ...,., iii~ !Ir~ ~r~t>e.~: ~~ ri~·: ati:~· ~·· ~· ~ ~~1~· ij" ~ 1 KIOolG I 1 11 16 I. 1'fw"~S • ' ltflW -. ~ l(naHV •I Nocltl • '-vtMlt<
'• ·, KtUOtt 14 "> II'\ llloctl>?I 111 '°" v''"' ,
> "-ICulCh ii Ill '-~MM< '-' M9o " , t•~' \: 5f:' 41 • •1 ~ wnll I 'lo ·~ e 0 1 • • 11 • 1 ' I kt1• tf)l69~L .. e ~'> I t i• alWI It'" 191> L111Con ~rlP 'f • ll.J wEISv ''~~" t~~· 1"' 4~ ~ iff1• .. ocrn, ~~"~~ ·~~~'
'
1
1 J YTut A ' · •• t• • ij'--''•"' I l'I l ~ f'" • , P-MI U'• ) , ~~V q~ u~ Me.OGE • ~ ~:~.~n' H ·'. • : :i;;."' >.. 'Jo MeH!P• \ • J"' P-E• t • lol ten_.. • MaJA:t ' •· Petrlt• 14 > 14 •• trw(l \
.,, ," AMYILP I PtlHGI " •• " UC>Aru
•
Orangie Cout DAILY Pll0TIW9dneeday, ~ 17. 1118
Factory orders drop
is biggest since July
Slack demand for hardware
by military cau ses 2 .1 % dip
continue' to '>llmulate the economy 1n comma month,,
even thouJh mtcrci.t rates and mflauon may move h1per
In an 1nterv1ew with The AHoc1atcd Preu on
Monday, Spnnkel said that Amcncans will keep buyina
-th1) C hmtm.tt'> ~son and into next year -despite
re<.ord le vels of pcrwnal indebtedness. By MARYBETH NIBLEY
~......_.,_
Slack demand for m1 hlal) hardware c..tu'>Cd l J \
fat.tory orders for durnblc goods 10 foll ~ I ixrtc:nt m
Octot?Cr. the Umd det.11nc 1n lhC' past lot.1r month\ and the
b1gge~l drop \IO(C J UI) the ( ommC'n (' r >t·partmcnt
reported totl3)
Meanwhile . .lnaly\t., said rcpe>rts from U auto-
maker\ 1ha1 \hov.ed domesuc car .ales plun.aina 27 2
percent in mid-November \u&&~" Ammcan~ are shyina
11411) from Lakin& on the burden of monthly car payments
l owcr mortgaae interest rate'> put the housing market
<m a \<>lid foundation last month
lhc Na11 onal Assoc1a11on ol Realtor\ ~ad ~lcs o f
C1.l\t1ng homes ro\t I :? percent an October 10 the \CConcJ
haghc\I IC\ cl 111 the past Sill yea~ Reulcs of smJ!c-famal)'
hou\C'> ran a1 ~n .tnnual rate of 3 4Q million unJls
It \31d 11rckr-. totaled SI 04 4 b1l11on la\t month a S:? 2.
b11l1on dnllnc from \cpac mbcr Th'-' cJrnp fol11,v.ed a O 9
pcr(cnt \c:p1cmber dn lint' and wa~ the largest ..e tback
\•n<'c a 2 1 pcrcenl Jul} fa ll I >.t'>t1n,g wlc'i had reached J S m1ll1on un11~ 1n
.\ugu\t~wh1ch wa~ 1he h1ghe•u annual rale since Octaber
1979 when prev1ou!>I)' owned home\ were sold at an
annual rate of 3 77 malhon unit!.
1 he wt•akne\\ wa\ a11nhu1ed 10 another h1g drop 1n
demand for mil11:u ) equipment !>dense order\ fell 26 6
percent ''"' month after dropping 21 I percen1 1n September Mortgage rate~ have been fallm' almost steadily
\1ntt' reaC'h1ng a peak of 15 2 pcrc.ent in the summer ol
I ~1<4 In the week cndnl la\t Fnda)'. interest on fixed-rate
mortgage' '>tood &I I l M percc.-nt ac.t ord1ng to 3 \urvt:y of
ratn rclca<,t•d b) lht' federal J tome Loan Mortgage< orp
But .1 naly'1' u1u1 11inc·d thc: dl'lcn\C.' l atrgor, ''
volaulc iind future ordcr' will likely fl\t' lxt au\e of 1hc
Reagan adm1nl\lrat111n'\ ctrfcn'>C hu1ld11p
In other c(on11n11~ ne w\, a l1n1vl'f'\1ty of M1t h1g.an
survey fou nd tomumcr\ ha \IC lo\l 'i<ime confidentc but
will spend if thn think 1hn · lan get a good hu\
Dcta1h11fthc l ln1 ver\1I ) ofM1ch1gan surve) which
I\ rnndU< .. ted quarterly h> tht· un1vc r'l1ty's lns111ute for
\ouii l f<t'~arc h, \81d re(cn1 1ntcrc'lt raw reduct10n1>
'Pl·t·1;1I tin..inung iind d 1~ount\ have encouraged \pend·
!Oji.
The \U r\lt'\ rclc.1<,t·d Monday \aid 2S J)('r<t'nl of all
families cxpc:ucd ctonom1t 1m prnvt'mcnt dov. n Imm 1'
percent a )'car c.irlln a nd the all·t1me b1gh of 52 pc:nt·n110
tht· second quartn of 1 'lk'
.\lthough .. umr anJIH I' ha\(' \OICcd concern iihout
th~ high le\ t:l\ of 1 on\umcr ddll \pnnkc:I the chairman
111 thc ( ounul uf Ll11nom1( \1h l'>C'r\, said .. r hc rctord ut
~.,n,uma•,' ah1l11' lfJ hiindlC' tkht 1'\ extrcmelv h11th ••
Bc r)I \pnnkd l'r('\t<knl Reagan·, c:htcl etonom1~
adviser, al\o prnltl lcd lh<•I u 1n\uaner \pcnd1n11 v.111
Pacific Auto staff expands
Lorinda Aab, lleldl Karl, Debbie Sauvageau anJ
Carla Mltroff .ire .i nc·v. team u l alcount c ~l'lul1"n
rc prc..cn11ng Pacific Auto Specialists (Pacifl<' T-Top,
Inc.) ol It un11ngltln Beat h \.111rot1 . v..11h P.tufil A.u111
for fi.,.c )l'.lf\ "a \enwr dll<iunl l'~C<.Ull\l' .\'h h.i \
lx-l·n w11 h l'aultt 1111 ont' )l'a r 14h1lc ">au\agcau .inJ
KMI arc 1wv..I ) .q>1>111111cd 10 1hc1r !')(>\I\
pn·\1dcnt ot Pacifica Ru l Property 1.Dvestmeat1 Corp ..
tht• propen) managcmcnt and <>ynd1cat1on <>ul>!.1d1al)
nl Pacific avlnai Ba.all of C osta Mesa Arnalo\ had
ht·cn '1u: pre,1cJent of La Creal& Pacifica Corp • .tl\C~
Paufil \uh\IJ1an I ht• l..iguna Niguel rt·\1dc:nt hd\
hct>n '-'llh Paulic \a"l"ft' lfank \IOC<' 19M~
• • • • • • Joe E. Garner, prc \ldcnt of the < }rangl' < 11unH Katby Paladino of< 1>\ta Mesa ha~ rcc.cncd a pink
Hu1l k Regal 1n rc<.01tn1t1un ut her lcadcr!lh1p and -.ak~
a<.h1nemcnt\ '-'llh Mary KayC01metlc1, lDc. Palad1nu,
an 1ndcpcnden1 ..ale\ director for the Oalla'>·ha-.cd
lmmelll\ firm, won free uc,e ol 1hc pink car by leading
ht·r \Jlc\ unit he)11nd 'ipc:l'lfic.-d ~.ilc\ lc"el!> during a \IX·
m11n1h qualllicataon pc:nod Paladino ha' ~l'n l4 1th
M Jn "4ty~ince t 9K'
( haplcr No I \2 of Tbe lottroatlooal Society of Real
E1tale Appralsen, iKtcptcd ~ 1.250 in c.a\h award\ on
b<:h<.111 of 1he chapter 1etently I he l'hil ptl'r 14111l 111\I
placc 1n J1 .,.1\10n IV of the \Ol 1el) \ annual t:haptl'r
act1\tl1n iind public. relation\ award progra m lhc
chapter al\o rnt·1.,.cd .1 \pc:ual award tor thc mo'>t
treat1 vc puhht rclat1onH ampa1gn in I 1.JX4-X ~ • • • • • • Tim Saunders. genera l mandgl'I ul Ml11t1ion Pest Arlene C. Toledo ha\ hccn named J1rt•t1<>r of
mdrkct1ng lor Tiie Troy lnvestmeat Fwid ul "'it'.'v.port
tk.il h \hc will head ct team u f markt'.'t1ng p111te\\1onat..
dt the Park Welllnt1tton u 1ndom1n1un1, 111 \.\.nt
t loll) v.ood
Control an Lag una ll1lh .i llcnd('d tlw rl'lt·n1 l(,f(
~-ympo'i1um in l>a ll;.I\ • • • Fred L . Ar~valo1 h.i' hccn prom11tl·d 111 \C.'111tir \ 11 c
BUSINESS NOTES
Leasing agent is selected
I he law lirm ol l<.Jd l\on Pf.1l'11cr
Woodard. ()u1nn .rnd Hcw.1 ha'
~lccted ( annl.'11 & < hallin 111 de<;1gn
and furn1'ih 1t\ Newport Hca(h officc'
1n the M1t'>u1 Manufau urer' Rank
Bu1ld1ng
l he otlitc\ will be d1·<;1gncd 111
\howra~ part of tht· law lirm·.,
extensive u>llec11on of rr111<krn .in
C ann~ll &. C hanin " .a k.iding
1ntcrnat1onal planning. dc~1gn .ind
furn1~h1ng.'> w mpan) Ra..ed 1n 1 II\
Angeles. the firm ha' o flllC\ 1n
Newport Beat h. La Jolla R.imho
"ianta Fe and l>cn"t·r ( olo • • • An1hon) .ind l ..tnglurd \I·\ .1
Huntington Beat h ha..cd .mh1lel
tural firm mark' 11' \\th .in
n1 versaf'). th1\ year
lhc firm. c'tahh\ht·d tn 111'ill h,
arch1terh I on)' "'n1hun' j nd \.\.oath
Langford, ha\ tx·c.·n .in .1v..a1d w1nn11111
dc,11tna in "w,uthl·rn < altlorn1<1 .Ul'd
lor J. n um~r 111 q•af\ •\ward
w1 nn1ng dco;1gn\ 1nl ludc the I a
Mirada CIVI( renter. tht• 1:-1 'x:gundo
< o n11nental Park Pla1a and the PurC\
C o rp hcadquancr\ • • • '-ewpon lkal h· ha\l'd M1d1.icl
~t'\ '"" ( o mmun1cc11111n\ lnl h.1,
hn·n <,t·kllt•d 111 oH'r-.t·l· I ht• Hr11 l4 n
< umpan,·., puhhl rdc1 t111n ,1ltt\1l1t•\ • • • r hr H1·adat hl· .tnd \w1kt· l'rt',en
lion \,\n lttal <'lin1l h.1 \ molcd tu
1'.1ut"1l·:t Vlcdital I uv.cr 111 llunt
111~ton Be.1th
l he· 1 hn1l " thc lir't 111 1l\ Ii.ind 1n
( )rj ngl' ( ounl\ lo tx 11periitt•d h\ ,1
nl"urol11g1\t iind ,, \f'l\."(. ldllll'\ Ill
n1·uml11g1l al mc1h11~" 111 trl'.tt ttl K
'trnkc' dnd hcJd.1l h\'' . . . ~c"f)t•rt < hrm11 ,1I l >t·pe ndcn~\
l11~t1tut<' lnundrd h\ H1111l .\ l t•"'" J
tor mer u•un.,l'fur JI tht· lkll\ I ord
( cnter for Tre.1tmcn1 111 \)u1h11l"11'
.rnJ Chl"m1tal Lkpcndl'n1' h,I\
opc nc<l a '\;t'WJ'l(•n Rea ch 111Ti11·
I<'"'" ..a id ""h1lc nol a mct11l:tl
1rca1men1 lt'ntc1 the 1n\11lutt
pru' 1dc' 111nfidcn1 1.JI toun.,.,·lint1. and
rC'lrrral' I<• 11)d1•Hlu.1l' '-'Ith lhc-m1l.1l
111 Jh 11h11l llc-f"'·ndt·n, \ prohlt•m\
• • • '11rrl\ lkgg\ &. ~1mp,on h.t\\
hcen na ml·1l thl· 1:~<.IU\I\ c lt·.t"nt
agl"nl\ fur '1gucl \hnrt'\ Prt 1k"111nal
llu1ld1ng m I ~una "•gul'I
I hC' hrm with rt7g1nnal 11th~\'' 1n
"'e14port Beach t<. .i lull-~n1u
u immeru •I and indu\tn .tl rl'<•I C'\t.111
'pn ulh<.l
"'1gucl \horn P111lt·\\111n;tl lh11 Id
1ng I\ .1 dc\l·lopr n('nl 111 'I """f
Building < 11r11ora111111 111 I .11tu11.1
lka' h
1:~t111J!litJ,faJ!O -(11llll!l.iuilfiffi----------
,...EW YORK (AP) -Till JoUQWlno 11\I
\l'low' tile New 'l'orll Sloe~ E •cl'lanoe 'toclls a nd wtrrani' tl"la t hevt oooe v o the mo,r end oown the mo\I CHIH<l on percent of c.henge r99ero1en of YOlu1twt
for Tutsd•v No \ecurlllH lredlno t>e•ow i 1 C1•e ln<.1 ·u~ed Nel eno ~rcenttot' <han1.1t\ 1trt •Ile ou erenct ~lwffn tne l>fh Hl•t' clo\lno or ct a no T u t\d1 v ' 7 o rn
0 f I <. t
NEW YOR K t AP! -T~ followtno 11•1 !!~1 \l'low• the Over 11'1<! Countt r ''°'"' and warr11nt\ 11'1111 l't11v4' 110'14' uo
int mo'' and down ""' mo'' t>aH•d on D4tf'(;tf'I 01 cnenot ior l 1t'•<111v NO HC:urlllt\ ·1rad1no o;otow '7 o• t()()O
'"''" art lnt.lu<M<I Ntl a nd ~rcen1a;. C'l't&f\11t'\ "'• '"" Cllfftrence t>elwHn I~ Off'YIO\I\ '"'"'II ,
orict end Tue•d1tv'~lfl' or t>•d or11" ~
NI,,... L U I (l'I~ Prt ~
f'\l(t nltn ' 4 t ~ Uc• p I o
A ICl(M un 11'· I 1 • uo t' ' 1 ~nlltt )-. + ..,, uo 10~ I Hec:ri co JO , + • , uo 11 ~ 1mlnmo II" ' 4 • "' uo 11 110 INAt1CP10.Y I • I • Uo 11 1 I
T ·~ 4'-..,, Uo 16 1 11
V tla nltd l~ i.. Uo 117 I) Nu<l;)\IPfl l 1 1..o l '" Uo 1 I 14 ArttcMl'G "-' UD I 4 1~ ~tenwlck Coro •,. 1 .. uo I O 116 At<ICS. 1 1 111 • \lo Uo 14 6 1
er kllrie Coro 1 '-''• Uo 14 l 11~ er1onVt lv • uo 14
1on1:1 • , uo 14 I
ltllufont } • Uo 1'4 ~:
bcAm ' • "' Uo I' ~19nl$.Ofl ... ' UP at!Mno wl 1 • • UO 1 5 ovlr 1) 1 • uo l 6
"' u., I • Uo 'l Uo ~ uo I Uo
C.ll~ } .
'"' .,, ., .... 1-. I -1·111
'>
1
'• 1-
It ~ 11 •
II I
l t'l II
WIMllAY'l IL-Pl•I
Market surges again
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market I surged upward again today, extending its late-1985 \
rally in active trading.
Analysts said there was nothing spec1a~n the
news to account for the renewed strength of the
market. · They said It appeared to benefit from buying
by traders who have been frustrated in their hopes
for a pullback in stock prices to jJve them an
Opportunity to &et in on the raJly.
WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE DID
NEW YORK IAPI Nov. 27
T1 '
NEW YORK IAPl Nov. 27
AMEX LEADERS
W.on.sdev prl~. Ind Mf Cl\anot. of the 'l'o
m o ' I 1cllvt Amerlcen Stock ExcMnot lnue1, tredlno nat l onellv 11 mo rt ke~ • n V 1!s,, ~
AmExJ>r wt 71 + • ~~r::~~8 s! . ·,·::. 2 7-~ +~-n ~m~rp(lo 3 J-16 + v. 1Ylcttt$ 41,(, ·~A1rco ~lQ~ i 1
1. Ktv rm 1~
H on '-
GoLo QuoTE S
Dow JoNES AvcRAGE S
METAL S Quoa s
famous la b<ils ...
f •
'
CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANG!
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
THE Mr OF mml IS
UHEASY•TIE
DAIYPIOT'S
CLASSIFIED PARS.
"".._'""no•• -·-l' -· ......... ·-~--·
•
'7'1' ... ~ II!! C:.~o~e v1.!'~, ...,.. • ..,. 1111 c..ta ..., MM c..e.... MM ..._ MU ltat•h •• , .. ,. . Condo lu~~ ~:.~~': OCMnlH8nttellt ... 28t 09oof•t0t'Ulome.Un1Urn. •STUNNINOLO t ,2138r PLUSH CONDOS 1lr 2 rm 2 r , 1114 ........ 1 , ... 1111
SU 000 Mull Hiii 2~8a, epec llv rm w/cor; 2BFI, tlr~.e.. Npt Ht1 28a Grdn Apt, POOi $&55, $750 Of Spit M 28f 1150 dlhW9hr, llOV. I • AIDE/F u-.J;; p" Aililt W168WJ;8 moMY for
OwMr 646•1252 flple Mlcto, tkyllte o\14W 1900/mo. 645-1~8 1655 I $725 710 W 18th 1 mo t MC Over 1trume NO PETS 5'5.4855 tNC:Mt In wntchr tew nra TD't s 1o OOO/up. No
... ••-111111 ttalre New crpt, Wb-ter· DELUX! DUPLEX· 3BA 1360. 18r Opbc, 1 1*-.:on, ~ie!~lle wf~a~ltuw~op~~j 'i8drm S600 Refrtg, di.h-Rm+ l300/mo 845-2357 e<edtt..,. t rt0' penelty. C.il
CHICK YOUR AD _,_ 's~-:1oo':' prk~~,~~7 l'r'•ba 112 blk to Channel non-9me>lter only W t7th 12115· No pet• &f9•2..,.7 wuner & ttov. tncluded COM Bey/oc:.n vi.. 38' Oenlaon A.Noc 17S-7J11
,,.. o.T:l.!9'!.t.~'!..1<..., Apb !J,~~ 3b :Jg a 12n~ o pell ·_4_ Nr Udo centerc 500 3elh near Whltt141f 548-3129 _ . _ _ _ __ NO PETS 545--6855 28.t. trplc. get 1500/mo ......._ ..
<• ""' e<c..woo ~--· t< ' 'V • rm, 38r 2Ba. trptc, 2 car gar St S 1250/mo 844-7269 1375 1eFI dplx 1 l*eOO POOL Patio. trplc, X·IQe 1BORM EASTBLUFF 842· t559 °' 75(M)IOI
,., .... o11v .,,.,,°'om.• -.. bath exec twnhme. POOi, $950 Adtte pret'd No · tBr $580 28r Steo 1500 1111 ................. i\ '"' M<• IP• + tennla. Try 10% pell 2218 E p fie A EASTBLUFF 3br 2ba. lg non-emo6(• only. w 17th MC Uni E-llde 55T-284 1 N.., Sh~ c.nter No F to lhf 4BR PIM In Irv w/2 ..... I ,.... 2111 ;,~0t~~.:...::.1:! ~"" .. ~~1 down Of' rent Calf Patrick 759.'1104 or ·a.~8393 ve. yd 11800 mo L .... Of' near Whllllw 6'48-3829 P91• 17 fO. 6'0-1364 other• $330/mo • • 13 FOUNR Tddr.. r+ ~,,.~:1z,;".:,1e:.,·~~-=.;..:= •iiiiiiiii7i60iiii-8i7ii0ii2iiagiiiitiiiiilli ---aale Ownr/agt 760-8778 28drm 18e St• to beh viii 851-0503 mag VIG "'eor"ona del 8::
.... "'""" " .................... I' e:sTSID£N· 1er, ~B· frig Flnally 1tfordable 2bf 2b• "4t!wtrlekt me8tiBJIY Completely remodeled Lag 8ch PIM PV1 bf "" 575-1024 :;:;:0-.. ~•0~;: =• o-.--. II 1 ~~ !3'~ ontyo Se>et550• abode baalc ~ppeal 991Wrlll•ll $850/mo Bi<r 842-3150 bl. full Ml prlv, 1 blk t>en, '-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ''""<•A""'• oo ..... ., '""'" .,,_., ___...... • leleure patto S600 • kid• •• --·-"' $400 '°" 1211 497--6391 11 '"'' "'"'' °" PlllmLA PtllT Credit "" req d 831·2242 539-8191 Beat Rlty coat &IUlWITS 0. ... Ftr l..t 28drm 28.t, ffl)le St• to __ _ __
with ,_ r .. taurant• MW EASTS I DE 1 BR Clean nu ~ ~ PIH 0. I ch L I k e n ew I LAGUNA BCH I/turn 8eh
ll'IOP• and • or eOurM paint Gar yrcs $650 avt Nwpt Cr•ll 3Br 2'h8• 8..uUtul Garden Aptt ~ MITI ·~ ~-· $650/mo Bkr 842-3850 C<>Mo 1tra11 ptOf $495
Ruby's on the pier. 2 now 998-3434.548·3155 ~:.cs~~ 1f~.4~f.~;~· Patto./~t. ape Heat Frp~,;:,~ed celllro% 2 BR t '-'t bl, email patlO, 2 R~ 497-4433. 497-1002
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Bdrm, den and ~ bathe . paid No pell rc . I epa_ 0 pe lty 15 mi(I walk to bGh Ma.le lo ltlll'I Newport ready to move Into & EHtalde 2Br 1B• lg PRIME DUPLEX 38r 2Ba. Bdrm 281 $720 2 Clrm 2"8 a se95 SITS mo 541--2882 ' BeacPI v H th
enjoy Sold complete kllcllen, encl patio w/gar 'h blk lo ocean. Frpk:, Bdrm 2'-\Ba ' Oen $925 2Belrm 2'hBI • Den S500iew644•~7 wi
with fabulous fvrnllhlng1 & yard $750 548-3 tSS patio S 1100 494-7748 98 W Wllaon 631-5583 $925 e&6 w 18th 28r 18e, 1900 mo ~ utll poo4
& decor and terrific view EASTS I DE 2Br 1Ba, .,. · 845-2739 964~ 183 1019 W Bay Ave Acrou M/F rmte to Shr 2Br water·
Security bldg $289 000 d 1 Cl hk g VIiia Belboa, bike lo bch -lffll I •--ir from b•y 873-1674 front Clplx $395 Pref 142-1171
. ' age, yar • n ry upa, HIJOe 1BR lba. Pef'f. for ...... ~.nu tH -f 83 1 2053
new crpt New paint in & exec: couple $650/$900 ~u "9 Waflt 1 Mlectlon of great *Liii ia.i &IT* pro l*IOll · ~~~~~~~~~
IAil\Tl HI HO"' I out $715/mo 387 E 18th tum Agt Judy 64&-717 1 hv1ng? We c:an ofter any-12Br 1 Ba 102 Antlbee Don MI F I hr 2 Br C Cl M FOUND· BICYCLE
llllMI.., lfw:. Street (7 14)432·8670 &1••T1111TI ming from 1 small apt to 675-1244 or 622-8795 lurnlen.d Condo ott PCH Call TO IDENTIFY
AE ALESTATE 8 YltHSllYln -8 4 bdrm hOUM If look-$350/mo 7&0-1008 71 •/""" .. ••73 d-131-1.AOO E'llele lovely otelr 2 r. lba GATED VILLAGE COM ~ ~· FIH 1ng In CM. NB. or HB *Rlf 1111• NB MI F lhr 2br turn .. .,...,_,. -,.
•--------• "P din. rm. huge yd. 2 MUNITY, 28Clrm 2'n8a~ Immaculate la1ge Garden 1hlnk of u1 llrat tor that 1Br 1Ba, 111 blllne, pool, Found Cet young fem car gar. Avt now S 1000 duph<. arep1 10 oc;ean avt mo. 998-3434, 548·3 155 1600 SQ. tt of PURE Apll. Beavtlfulty tanel· cholc;e of Ideal llvlng. Jae Only S500 , .. 8723 1211 ,399 mo 873_5952 calico type tong Plalr .............
Somerset, 5 Br, 3 cat gar
Prlnolpal1 only
$316,000. firm 844-0530
lt41tt4 ,., •nt· ....
Prime Cliff Haven 3 bdrm
home on 95 h frontage,
oversized lot near Cltn
Oflve FWmoeleled. PQOI &
view. Only $305,00<1."'FI ..
Rodgers 631-1266
WM~~
I·• • ' •
LUXURY. Garage SPA In a-c a p • Cl g r o u n Cl s, TSL MGMT 64~· 1603 TfUlllT Ill-IMO F11rvlewl 8•k1r CM Ill& WlllS T/llH master sultee. Dining pQOl/apa. patio/Cleek No ---N/1mkr aPlr 1Qlfv1ne 546-7074, 645-9877
NOW RENTING Near new room, woodburnlng fire-pell. Wetttlde lBClrm, atove. NEWPORT MARINA APT ' Condo $350/mo Mike D
1pacloui 2 & csen, 3 plac., microwave, oven. 1Bdrm $595-$8 t5 refrtg, lndry lac S475 No On the water lu>1url 756-9442, Ev 857·8481 FOUND long CMe'tioldlng
Bdrm• & cs-, both 2'h private p1t10 ELEGANT 2Bdrm 1•1.Ba 1705-$710 pets 646-4382 2Br 2B1 w/O. ID reflector trl pod1. .... v c. o -hk 1 kit--t •~ Spacloua 2Br 2Ba Bay11<1e 84&-1088 be Flreplacea and 2 car LIVING only 15 mlnutas 2250 angu8/CI .,4 ·9626 WESTSIDE 2Br 1 ba. new up, g ... ._,, rp.... -----,----
encloeed gar1gea Near to So. Co. Plata, just eut -----crpt, drps, unfurn. SSIO encl g11 Prvt beh $1895 Of Apt Pvt beh & pool Found· POOdi.-coc:tc~
we11ct1tt Pt a u & Newport Blvd & aouth ot 28drm 1•1.ea $715 mo Gaa/Wlr pd $300 Sorry, no pets Ntamkr $525 760-1966 (black ) Huntington
Martnere Park Sen Otego freeway 2473 151 E 2111 548-2408 Clep 548-2682 •ALSO• StrtlOhl mate to Ill• NB H11b0r a1ea M0-1184
2057 Tullln Ave Orange Ave 631-5439 By -----1Br $1195& 2Br 28a Stlf1· apt 1meni11es Avl 1211 FOUND Samoyed M9M,
Call tor into 852· 1818 appt only Ulll 11&1 &PTS Hait. ltlC-2141 Ing at S t395 7&0-0919 $425/mo Roo 7!19·3419 vcty 20th & Orange __ 1Br. frig, range, laundry • ........., p 1 3BCI 28 I PLUSH CONDOS t8r Ital~ C111t ••trt pool, carport No pets 28r 11.;ea TwnhM. New ,._., en n rm a, Yng ntamkr to shr Irvine 650-5348
S750 or Spit lvl 2Br $950 2111 $550/mo carpett, drapu, bit-Int yrty rntls S l050·S 1200 ~I 2Br 281 $350/mo • FOUN0-·-S_lameM ___ K"""tt-t-.,..-. i mra~l•MC G~ !~::~r~ 2BR Condo nr SC Plaza 931 w 19th St 548-0492 ;~ ~~ .. , ~~ 3~~'~;:'~':;7~~7~ ;;.·~~7.'!~ E8J!8661 ~ M H~3 & Hlfbof'
S.atli II . micro, w/d hkup1 Avl S695/mo Barbara/Uaa IRAID IEW 2BR 2BA, g11, lndry. 4 Flreplau S1050tmo Bkr lt1tah W11tt4 2721 Fou-nct· SltVer gr-. wnilftn
12115 No pell 549-2447 63 l·1266 ple11. au .. t str-. 1 mile 842-3850___ · -1 ,--··• •• bl 1811 I ~~~;· -· Ski ·8irdman of Nwpt' '-"' cat. th<>r1 h.ir Nr Simple economy 2bdmi e · ...... ~B.,.U 10 t>Noh No pe11 S675. Ill ••-11 WT p a 17th CM CtrtU ••I •u 1022 St. l ibaM TwnhM 28r crptd bHk: blllns upper •• • ~-u !'9 Call i C 631-1266 0 n 0-:;'1' c 0 ur11 ~11P11~B;;;'M ~·~.1~2f; 83~~ '
2Ba. llp. lg pat $112.500 $500'1 ktda ok 539·6191 4 1 ~ ~;' DUPlEX-2Br 1b• ea So-937·1891or831-7968 Sett Riiy cost -·--•• &PUTllllTS e • -2Br·2B•·2 lrptc.2 car "-aatrcial LOST black Male Cat
of·PCH $275,000 52t --•-L 1 _ 2111 th Wfl PIH
1
~:.__, encl gar-vaulted <:e'llngs--rtttneatone collar. Balboa
C1rnetlon. By owner ••llilt Bta" 1100 Westclltt area 38r 1Ba .. ata -t•H These attractive new 79 ~ gate gu81Cled communt-LI. Salt/ltal Penln Pl 675-2296
673-024 1 or 673-1541 452 Magnolia S 1050 t lrg Bdrm, ocean vie:. Apts reature pool. spa, ty-1 blk to Fashion ISiand --llEDlW PAii w/grdnr (8 t9)242·9028 frplc. kitchen $895 utus private patlot °' d..,.ks BANBURY CROSS APTS No pets call 844-0509 tor la1ia"1/0ffict Int LSOlbSeTrtanB I kH/uwtknyt n'eeamr QeatrlJ 1002 SPECTACULAR bluff vu of Be fut h""'hly ded pd 3 46 V I C II "" 2 & 38Clrme S650 Up appointment -;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;; Npt Hrbr. Pacllk: ocn & autl 'V upgr1 D1a1 Ptiat 1IU 21 lrginla. 8 garaoe or carport, in 8 16781 Vlewpt Ln 842-8604 DELUXE DUPLEX JBR 2711 Magnall• & Adams. HB • Catalina from this 2011.40 &tddy hm. Lrg collec1 1213)693-4403 beautllully landscaped 968-2421 llvtelln area w1pu11m1n 3 Min. walk to bch. deh< A--rt setting Heal paid SE1Wlll Y-ILUIE w.ba 112 blk to Channel 3000 & 1388 SO FT Ullll YllW fabulous 4br 3ba hm kllch. 2BR 1 ba. Verynlc:. tBR sec Condo, bllns, fl a11t1 1 ~rooms S575 • Nr Udo center 500 31th 1617 WESTCLIFF NB LOST female leatpomt lfllOEI Every rm has 8 vu or ac· encloeed patio. All unit· trig, Jae. pool. lnelry rm. 2 Bedrooms ,.,.Bath $685 DY llTT St. s 1250/mo 644-7269 541·5032 Agt Siamese cat 1na to
Sharp 2 Bdrm condo with ~!r~o~~ d~~~e 0p'tav~~I;~ lzed. Agt 54()..5937 utU pd $595 mo hatral . 2102 121 CllTH Sllln -EA*t~lutt T~hae •pt 38r 400•1000 Sq Ft New Samantha Vic Fores, magnlfk:ent vlewa of the ,. 818/448-6334 .... r _.. " Jambofee & BIM>n, N 8
1 • & Older pines on this lge llHILl&l PUI _ Sunael Beach Bayfront COSTA MESA Live where you have 2Ba: 2 c;ar gar No pets bullellng, floor t.o oelllng 759_7528 Reward
Harbor, ~•n ancs c 1Y parcel provide a senM of Beautlful highly upgraded New 2Br 28a Condo $750 1 Bd rm w I ) a cu z z I (Corner Center/Placenllat •Spectacul8/ apts S950 844-1010 8-5 M-F glasa. ground floor, UM lfllgrehptsl..,.ePa~'J-u'tlltefuttueleck, coutal Monterey living 20x4o Buddy hm. Lrg 1 Clep 1 blk to bch Pool. S850/mo 722·9730 Open Dally 10am-6pm * 1 & 2Br, 1 & 28a suites LIDO VIEW DELUXE •pr ol Ph010 copy. 998-7920 REWARD for LOST VEL·
Cl '""t_; ""'"cs ' 1 Divorce cpl hH re· llv/Clln area w/pultman ap1. tennis 630-6639 1-1JL--1•2· 1•24 •Spacious townhouaes LEASE ,.3501._0" Attractive Ottlcel in All· LOW LAB. , 1 mos. old. ecora""" an even a,r quested IMMED. SALE. -•Flr'""lacea • "" • ~ na N"'uel 493'-847t> conditioned Reduced to kltch 28R 1 ba. Very nlOe Ocean vu 2br ott PCH l I • 'lilt-Sorry, No Pett ,.... 640-7006 po<t erea 400 10 2000 ..._u "' $998.000. Agt.875-2311 enclosed patio. All unit· w/gar & IN optlonal S600 I u ..._ •Private balcon1ea or 111 From S 1 05 0 ,0.. eve1 955-2500 Cly•
$219.500 dya or 675-3311 eves. tzed. A.gt 540-5937 539-6191 Agl cost 29d tb1 2nd llr Furn. CllltOE WTSlll Garden patios Nwpt Hohta 2Bf tBa. poo4 Bkr Coop 836· 1820 Agt Peruaal Stnicu
(714) 673 4400 "--.--l •.a ~~ "--··ti .. ·I dbl Id ~2 0 $795/mo • uUI Joan 36 IE 18TH ST garage, lnelry S725tmo .... ta HI ft ,_.. ...,.... •u we Baat. ltacli 14 476-l006or673-8l59 Untque2BR 1BA Features WIYHT1 16018 15th St 650-8213 CdM Cottage Shr w/2d• ll04
•L--1...a..._ a.---""-1 Nwpt Bch Blcil Bey. Boat are range/oven Cllhwt * 3 Lighted tennta couns --11gnera. 2 en1r1noe1. DI, ._1 ••• ......,.,, ..,.... 1llp poss. Aaaum loan UlfflMT --Unlurn 1BR tBA apt. no wood burning l~ple Pvi •2 Swimming poola SPACIOUS APARTMENT kit on PCH $350 1nct utll TllOl If ....,... :e~ i~~;";, wf~'f~1 000 Low Clown. 661-2004 2Br 2ba. frplc, MCUrlty gar $650/mo 1nct utu1. 041 PVI patio $745/mo •Streams & pond• 1 MILE FROM OCEAN 720·1088 °' 673-3731 I~ Hl-2111
548-6023 :75-891S "--tt '-1 g•. rage Tennie coun s Agent 673-.o62 Manager 646-9794 •Sorry. no pell 842-1357 COM Pr1me office epace
or .,... tl'J -I Ready tor lmmedl1te oc----•Furn1th1ng1 avail Steps 10 OCf\ 2B1 281 565 t1 3 CllVld latleJ11nt l....:-1 l Cl'Jltl 1225 oupancy Call now! Danny la Iha Ptaianla Condo 2Br 2Ba nr SC Plza cs~atrs New ,. .... ,, Ir"' & sqtt/ eu11es 251n tt ..... ,...,,.....,......, ___ _
ITUI -Of Jack (7 t4)842-2000 2117 Pool $695/mo Incl heal & WHY NOT CALL _.. 8o -.. .:: Ull 0 IOel , tq/
l'ACIFIC VIEW Memorlel wat~ No pets 631 -1476 lta.1111 range 'h comp! r..,ec: I NNN Cal4 R<>oer• Realty CW Cart 311'
-LIM llU 1141,111
Located on th• quiet end
of Lido, this dellghllul 3
BR on a large tot. Newly
painted and carpeted,
south sunny p atio,
beamed llvlng room.
brick llreplece.
"4-IOIO
llUT
PllOI
In Campu1 View on 1 Plan
t on fee land with central
air and 11'1 profes1tonalty
landecaped 2 Bdrm, 2
bath $159.900
lnlH Otllt IHlty
18124 Culver Dr, Irv
711-7100
HTllOMHl
Sltulted on th• fairway or
Rancho San Joaquin Goll
CourM Lovely 2 bdrm, 2
bath condo Owner des-
perate win try anything
Asking pr1oe St91 .900
L I 25 .. F (") Lot 30 A F Make It yoursl 2br 2ba Old s;JSO Nice Bachelor. Utlls Drive by 1807 W 811~ 675-23 t 1 -RIEJ-I 0 ,.. v • • town spec111 $500 1 'pd No pets 106 E Bay 1Br 1Ba 1922 Wallace Blvd & call Ba ll, ~ ,.s 161 Vista Clel Mer Section 539·8191 Best Rlty coat Ave. Apanment 9 Ga• relrlg, upstairs No SUWlll YILUIE 751·8650 Mon-Fri 10-4 C.CIM s Dell oH•ce. $595-hve 1n & care tor 7 yr Ol<I Sell minimum of 2. $450 --pets S520 Agt 550-1015 SI tOO incl ut1I AIC ~g. cnlld Laguna Bch ea. (8 19) 292-7836 lm'11 2144 DELUXE 3Br 2B•, frpk:, 15555 Hunlingtoo Village VERSAii.LES CONDOS 1an1t0f 2855 E Cout Call AM-trvn 494-3326 or
WT••lf Lane from San Otego 2B• 28a All amentleS & 675 6900 A t .... • 1 -•1 tr lalt 14 ger · no pets 'n bldck ., Freewa~, north or Beech Hwy · ny ime 1-6PM 675-8090 .,.. *UllFtll• from bay 559.7194 "-•i-w--.11 sec S980Agt831-4960 __ _
WI ••• .. _ITI 2+2+cu1etott. Micro, Cl/w, .------28 -"'cs ... to Mc adden, weet on w-1 -, -, 28R N 8 otfic;e to share •oom .._•ntica 3111 • -~ 11 bill ,750 f 5594 Ca,utraat ltacli r w/lmall en, 1p11 lvl, McFadden tr rn up• 11r1 tor 2 desk• Lido area -40' x 115', good retlden-1 ns ee trplc, wood Cleek, sky· 1'">8A w/Clock 412 38lh S2651mo 675 4705 !;iOUSECLEANERS
tlal lot on a cul-de-nc nlflllf 171-1110 2111 11ghl Country setting Spacioui 3Br 2Ba. secur· St Newport Island l!Orby ma1ntenanc:.
Convent lent locallon 3Br 28• 2 car gar No pets 2 Br I ba OOplex. Close to S755 No pets 180 E 2 111 ~~Con81° b~:::: ,~;;, s 1100 650·2145 t~:~.?~:aech s.!' .. ':' I~~ j 631-5272
close to the freeways. Lse S 1 i5o (818)888·5510 bch. no peta Avail 1211 j 646-4262 or 845•9543 v Ila ~ent~ls 675· 7015 flt HSEllvE fT m,.,.1a1-"' S5501mo HOUSEKEEPER retl~ beach and sPlopa. Smog S600 mo • S600 csep -, 1 ' vu v.,
lree fresh ocean breezes or~ 1~)346-0440 Alt Spm, 240-9252 E/tlele Tnhse 2B• 1 -.ea. lllT IUOl'S FllflT GA TED VILLAGE COM-J&CIU lUl n lady wante<I 10 !Ive In
$64 000 WOODBRIDGE 3BFI 2 -------End Unit Encl gar. lnelry MUNITY. 28Clrrn 2' )88 PllP ll&IAlllEIT •oom t:>oard & salary
711 1, IOl bath lam rm frplc CtrtH •el Mar 2622 rm, pvt patio $695/mo QUIET RESORT LIVING t600 sq tt ol PURE 644-8819 • ' ' ' (818)967-9090 Ive m90 •Sparllllng heated pool LUXURY Garage SPA In 114/lll-l llJ patios. overhang, nloely *IOW YllW* •Court yard view dining l Ci' T tndscpel, $1275/mo, 1Br 1Ba +encl gar + lrplc E·•lele 1Br, warm & cozy •Vignette BBO ar!J41 maste• suites Dining W aterr ~on t O ll1ces TtlC~lrl 4550
A
'
640-1327,ofc720-88.97 All ullls pd Must hurry! w/lot1ot na1wood beam •Twllghtdlne lncourtyrel room. w00dburn1ng tire-e1egan1111 turn Share OAY CAAE ASStST•NT cells etc Super clean plac;e, microwave oven, I Secry1Rec;ep1 o• separ-" ~~~~~~~ LltHI ltac~ 2141 Only S525 Fee 75991 · gazebos pr11111e patio ELEGANT ate ottic~ 646 5055 must love small cMcsren _: '"1 TELERENT 675-8861 S495 No pets 990•2982 •Spacious Apartments LIVING only 15 mlnut.. .,.. 8am-2pm Mon-Frt S3 50
*llllT.U* - -E·stele 2br studio led •Your own pvt patio 10So Co Ptaza.1vsteas1 C.aatrcial Pr1r,r~ P Plr start 645-5122 ltaert Prtr 1511 Studio.encl patio Veryse-BachefOf·lBdrm. utll~tfs'o patio, gar no pell 2 •Gourmet kitchen Newport e 1ve1 & soutPI of TE•CHER 10 co-leac .. in *~Tl El• eluded 1345 fee 4973 ~~tloR share 6~~j015 people $675 642-0461 •New Clove tan crpt San Otego rr-•y 2473 i-----i-..--,.---" " so nUlflT llllHO lie entaJs •Lrg walk·ln CIOlell OrangeAve 631-5439By d SO Sq Ft Irvine Pre-Scnoot lull ASPEN CREEK RE FIT • Wlf a -n E'stele luxury 1n pine tor-•Geted covered prkng appt 001., Aini Mesa v.,,oe ioc 11me 12 ECE units req Chair 15 et your bac:k LUXURY In Laguna BMch -est Lg 1 BR w/ga1age w storeg41 , 5,,.5_4 123 786-7494 °' 786 19cp
orated Steepe 8-10. COY-ocean and mountain S800/mo yrly Fee 7593 water pd $565/mo ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED •Ott1ce1Shop Storage*
door. Profeulonally dee· Breathtaking 360 dg 2Br 2B• frpk:, g11age, d/w dlstowash~ tr1g. gas &
1
Saa Cltatatt 2'7' aves & wt.nos
ered prkng, sauna, apa, view The beach IS just nLDllT 171-lllO adults no pets 848-0864 2 Bdrm 1 ba. '18 paint, 264 !IQ It & up reas c M 1•r1tn1ieaal /
T di . I S 150 per night Dye 1 Pl 1 1 2 __ ___ 1 & 2 Bedroom crpt & cs rps no pets avail C· 2 NICe aree 548 7249 a ..1 • , tr 1'1 S l OO
Yw , •• ll Uft r a b ona 24 t-0292. Ev 651-8514 ~~~o~soms e s ~~:gent Lg 18R baetl. nu crpt E'siele amall 1Br Perteet 2 Bedroom TOWNHOME now $600 mo · $600 ,..a1al1 a lft • ,.... R J t r /paint. utlls pd, $650/mo tor sngl aelll Super clean Furn1Shed & Unfurnished oep 492-6496 240-9252 I a c I a t Pr I' Ir t y
lnSouthCoat Metro11... ea y atala ~hr~r~S~·33~:u• Avallnow675-4488 $465 Nopets990·2962 V1s11our moele1Dllly9-8 BLOCK TO BEACH 28t 27to M·N·GER
2 bdrm, w. bl. ground 6:\ 1-7:\70 14 h C • ••2f IFURN Studio par11a1 k1t 1 Sorry no pets " " floor, glled community, Btaan/Cea•n Quaint 48r 2Ba ocean Htl Ill -son to work 4 AMs in 1' ba new crpts lndry ••-Pl.DIS•
poo4fclubhouH. vac:ant I -view Avl 12115 $1200 1Br IL Upstairs Refrlg. , ~ho tor lo rent/S250 LA OUINTA HERMOSA yar<I kid 0 1< S625 l westst<le Co11a M"' gel Immediate opeo1nq '°' "'"
and well-prlceCI $77,500 QITUI• ~--1J 2102 843-2541 or 645-6412 1981 Maple Ave $430 n-smk F pref 845·2357 162 I I Parkside Ln HB 492-8979 or 97.ot 7225 cono Newly •erurt>•lhed tlrne Olstrtct ~anogttt" I PllijH l I I• ..... \ -... SI M t 550 1015 147 1'41 Roomy ocean view 2BRI 8 • times grou is• .. M • ' 1• ~ VIEW HOME Beautl!ul Jbr 4BR OCEANFRONT. NWpt Ll[aH litatl 21 S2 erra gm • LA MANCHA APTS , • tBA gar lnelry No pell Down 10"~ tine 1v1 Mthly 1 ~~11 0':°1~Y working wlln ReallOfl,575-~ I 2ba, 1<ln~5~ee:3'79•000 Bch. 111 June. $1 475/mo 3 Bdrm 3 Bath Near bch 210-<l•ar 28Clrm 1Bath 1825-$875 lrnat 2'44 $600/mo 493-27 10 spendable Mgmt avail ~et 1 1e E•perienc11t
OCEAN vu apts 2BR Avall Nowl $1175/mo. E'slele 1Br Iba, r'· no gas pd, no pets 642-5073 far 1Ba Cond o lurn It ~La 2111 645-66.ot6 lV Mao I p u
------'-----18A. 1 blk to beh HS Mthly or yrly 780-1108 pets Vacant S 65/mo Large 1 bdrm upstairs No Wshrtdryr, 11r $950/mo al ~aaa I lllTS-STl •ES& we ottef an excellent ben·
let U1 ..... Y11
Sell Y• Pr.,.,trl
Cal ClwtfW,
642-5671
for Information
& surprlslngly
low cost.
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S650/675 I ltacL lit _!58-8557 __ pets Shown by appt. Eveefwknels 551-658 1 1Belrm 1Ba, ocean view -ellt program pa1e1 va -aA.a IULn l!!llrt • x 2BR ,._.,b• Condo. gar. S550tmo 545-3229 L It L _,..1 kllcher'I $695 utll1 pd Can CLOSE THIS YEAR cations & hOl1day1 bonus
PllP llllM•IT FA"!rnrOUS W1terfront pool. Pref adults, no pets. SS65 tmo·S735/mo .. lrg •1•11. IC• .., cOllect 1213)693~403 Agen~ndef 9 • g~~·-6330 Psu'':"1,~·c~ anSC1a1Cla~11P1 I~~
l1./11M17• DecoratOf FURN Condo. $725 mo. Eves 846-2848, beaut 1 & 2 BRs, ell lBR IBA. g1rden area Small Secluded Studio Q ' • S t595/mo 673-0898 days 54e-9341 S875tmo • + PIMM call Fantasltc ooean vu on lg Fii SIU If lttlm. mileage retmoursement
lalka l1laM °1i2blk to beac:h. 2 BR Front apt,2BR 18A,patlo blllnsa~C'~v~~~o'" eves 497-7588 property $500/mo. ulll· 8 Un•I Apt B1csg unelet ,Applicant musl apply in
$995/mo yr1y 633·9161 710 Jame9(818)709-e715 TSl MllT 142·1412 2Br tBa. No and. OCf'I vu, Illes Incl 499-6276 C(llllll now in Sunnymead P9rSOn 11 Dally Piiot. 330 YUILY * ••ll• or 538-9524 9\11 (714)642-1127/650-7743 -nr bch be•m <*It , oar. Ill t I 11 141 r,411 7001 Weal Bly St Costa
-• ,_ 1BR oceanfront hou1e, 2Br 2Ba on V"'tA"a nr -'"5 • • lfflSTHS W ....... " • .-.---nui n-v111 pd $995 494 304~ sc. • • I I . nw I M-· c. •pp~ "·"
ll. "='9 "'"'' "BR B• to ·• • am 0t 2·4 Pm I trcull -.tr I patlcl, yard, garage Yrty, Nwpt Blvd Squeaky • 1 "• PV1 Pll • gar. Studio pvt & Quiet Ocean ..... \1i •706 2 4-PIH" 2Br 28• 2 yrs lion Dept 1 Ill-S975fmo 850-2493 I clean. tots of prkng $595 wfel hkup qu .. t No pets view No pets Utll• pd • new Ast o S41K 1mprv
p'Vt comm on golf courM . No pell 990-2952 Water~·~~ :~mo S600 •sec 497-&297 Roommate !or SBI 2b1 '"I & 85K111ne1 Close-in 651.Hical/Dutal 5115 Yrh E. laJfrtlt... 2BR 2BA condo Chlld. 1•2Br2Ba nr SC Plza, S.A TSL MGMT 842-1603 1"""9 ltlC~ t ~ steps to och. S 173 000 Eac:h See ,_ _______ _
Avaif now 4 bdrm•, 3 pet ok S t295/mo Ben PetlO carport pool 191 $33.4 645--«23 Randy V1oeo • ·Dave Le+gnton ll.RI
bathl , furn°' unturn 844--0 141,878-5738 1s7ooNoPete i 22-e0 11 Lg view Apllnit•ttoPl/lt t BR coiy upper csp111. -27 1~1 Agt ~5880 t0< NewoO<t 8Mch aru
$3000/mo 6 73-4082 ------ -_ 'rplc, v1u1te<1 cetllngt lrg Stove retr1g G.,age lttt !•Nit> l I aiana & f iaaacial Mul1 Pl•ve Medical HP81
LOfl Va~ R••ll<>n ...... YllW* *WT191* 19a Prv1 blk:Ony CIOM 10 bet\ Set ~In u.A IUll I • Oeys hm-Spm must oe
--Lrg 48r 2Ba. 2 car oar • 2 IBMutlfUI 18drm Apt 1625 Newly redecor11ees $575 Dyl 557-3200 mag _ • • l1e111ble ancs •t>te 10 tune
lrptca. lkyflgh1e, bttln1 & Ind moet utlla & pvt gaf Ch!ICI Oii $795 No peta -·-Ji'"tatat tion 1ncsependant1v aaala 2lfl more 1 1350 F .. 6508 2323 ELDEN Ag,, Chuck •855--0e65 * Wkly rent'lls Low ,.,.. "--t . ._ 2ttl ~ome Health Re9ouroe
2
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3Br n!lx 1618 1 i...M,c,. TIUlllT 171-IH 1 sp111er 831-1264 s 1a5 & Uptw1cry Color vy .. r •11·, c....1.-52MN2 .... .,. """' _ MYEll MW TV. ~ Mnlllc:e tre.lcn.rt• Yacht 1oo1t1ng '°' 114 E BALBOA BLVD. *Tll lllffl* •EXQUISITE View of $550/mo tBR 1BA. 111 co,,_, Pleated ;t>ool & 50" Penner Prolttable •ITAL &am"fllf
(8 18)442-0e85 .,.38' StOfY, f,..nty done OONl'l l HB rnte llt• 28r blt1n1 Laundry room. nr ·~ to OCMn K1tcP1 'I .. t•blleMd bulineat Ell-xper fOf bull')' ~
38r 2Ba newly remodeled New paint. crpt Neat & 2'A8e. IPtlC '""rm *tcor; belel\ & 11\opa 1¥911 985 N Cout Hwy oellent th acivanteoe-1 Beach csen1 a1 office
$1275/mo. 305 M«tUlfO clean s1 !00/mo trple Micro, Myl11a OY9f 735 W 18th St Laguna BMc:ti:. •94·52941 C.n aarry &7M4t.ot 64M601
(818) 442-0e85 VOramatlc Trt-IVI, big bay etalrl New crpt, tub-ter-TSL MGMT 842-1603 1111 !!Ir -IL S 38 rMl\MCPfknQ W/oPf\f ----1151 lcL-1 -12•-L--I-•*ti C.... ... view p1c1oua ' $1100 No P91• 5-49-2447 J PAOIFIOI Wllly rent ... now ava11 -• .,.. .._.... .. i·~ea. format dines 1700 • "' ht y11a1 \ rent s t2t.50 wit 6 U9 22741 ·~;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:mliiiiiiiiiiiii:ilil •msT-* lattlll11lh. •M ... Verde 28' 181 TIWllMS ~t81vo.CM 84&-7U5
81ept to bMCI\ Prv1 petto 84G-~5e0 New crpt, d/w, garage Brand MW epeclo\Si t8A I URNISH! 0 or p • fi
+ frpic. l·M ryl Only uoo 3lklrm 2 Bath ~ $650 No "'' 640-2495 ' w/Oln, PV1 deek. poo4. UNf URN15H£ 0 SI& ... LIME I a c 1 1 c
F .. 7597 Sh<>rel Vrty se751mo •IHI_,,* carpor11, 1nory tac Oc· 3021 w P.c Coal H'R.
TIUlllT 11 ...... Vlfl1Aenlalt 875-7015 18dnn 1 a.th,"' U1111 rS~le~OSt~N~~::: m1us ~e..cfl,.10 Travel
OZV 28 A/ 1ba. ''°"' 31A 2'1\BA, 1500 iQ n. & peld, °"'Y IHO fM t752 S&96tmo 831-129' Cl•THS, HHIS. 1125~ wit egl. no def>OW' I
patio. Pet o1t se501m yrty mln 10 bffCh 0u1et a .... TIUMIT 11 ...... 1 cun ~wt• 11 ee• SWttllltK. ,.., • cltl1a I•• t 1I1 Sc boo I Avalt lnwned t 7&-4t&2 cure 11050 964-6686 ---~ IMC~ .. ,., S«Jy, l1U
SPENO CHRISTMAS AT 48' 38a on c~ Wllll 10 ··---··· ·-v•& AGI .. "'' ...... LXROt a; ..., m I THI! HACHI Avtlll now-bCI\ 11850/mo Atlo ter -. ---... ----.,.. ,..., ',,, Pool t&tlte. ~ TV 2
Stunning 3 BR 2ba, ger, 1n88Ma0/mo 722·9730 ..... _._ .... , ~d Pri*=a. = 1• deft tptc, ordnr.,.. cpt -1 ................ 1114) ·-1e lt4M rmo 844-1121 IMut 1>r1nd new 2 r _.
---Condo by NwpC Cntr um,',., Mt Sarotfl \tf1' I\ U..*' .... •U~ .-..
SllJll, 38A, ba y/ocean 11300/mo 7&t-?802 •IN to 11,....,, & So Cont ""• • , on1, . Ir to 111t Ap .. ttm•nh :'5o~::1~:-~ Slf' 2,;BA, bt..tll Wl'Ctt tw.M~ N IS l'\lASI Nt wpnr1 Rt.t<h \o
~Oii9iS.;;n";;;;~;--P6.. pool, 10• ,. l ennta ,_,. • lf6I • ~' -1 11, ,,,, "'•
a 5"" twn off ~ $149Stmo lmtNd IWtlif t?• • -•• ut11a seas ""* c 1eo-11cn ag1 1 -..... ,. •1 • ..
s.3M191 ._.My COit k UFFS Mt 2k '*' uan II I -.1u1 Ml Sii '
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or•b Maln,
na. a. 92701
a.A.'K.l CO(INTY'S 0 LY HIV ATl
i c IEC>fTEO TIAVfl.. M:!"""Y JiCHOOL
JM ~pt, dtpe, petnt, OIW -llAf I llf •HD mL. N••pllrt 8 uch Nu ;:::;:;;;;;~~;;:;;:;:;~=~~:;:~;:::;:~ h.iiiii"ilfi(IPP"";;no:!'!!~;;a~· .. --l t:x>O No peta 1M-Otel ,.,1, 1,. , ,\,,
Ho,_.t 1114-A~ ILUfFS CONDO ~ .. ,_ ?-11 "' , rtw HC)t llc:l'l 3tlf 2t>a ...
u.c>• to oc-.n $326 • \ Plrt ~ Wendy 721 ... M
Call (714) sa-•••
I t Shown _ ttr •oot ""~.~I. elf.-, Ta "Sii I I l ...... 1 Ml·tm b41i 1104
1725fmo 54.Wm t t200, no '*" 1M-OMI 1 -·-------------
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M-ltlM,......."" tM-1'''· .,IY P"onea. n Udliiftn ,.. • c;;en;;;; li&n -.--....... --.• -11--,1-1-1 ·~~,.,hie;" W::,~~ x~ aeo COUCh na. n .. _, ~TSUN ·13 Maxim. 4dt, 91at C19nt .. lfY otflc. ~.Mon-ltt...._ 4 e ~· ..... ti.nee >Ont 0C>PCY Set..,.._Vldeo •Timi .. ,_ EAmcuh • ft d I LY9 Seel US. C.,... tow ml, auntOOf. io.o.d. IOfM ........ ~ 1pm.""90lll46·•U11 ~omt11erclal/lntetlot1' Oflenled Eatn biO SU. 0£NIAA.L H!LP. Per*! --~ "t •1 S20, Vac MO. MW... •••m SHOO. 8'2·7HO or 1ru1•W..lfnumery TTO-Oto2 · Dfl"9 W1tllamll W'l-0021 llTI.. fOt lludenta/~tee IALD·•N11 mectl 1150 ...... 111 "OOf'NI wltfl p/a, bueket IS4·0~ eo.t. ...._ 142.-ol LIGAL ~ • ,.IT, bps 12·1 Dtah !tllertelnmt °"' N&CUtat ~ ,_.. $7&.-7409 ._"9 mao I 14,000 + IOHUSES --... lt Ind tldi.I ,,,... 'II -.a Aa••
OlHTAL"-JbrilON>A pt'flf. W ~, .....,_, Pn ...... •a•r IMWant la OWil'Q and t•llTllll IS -Glri.-Men-Women 18 rne le I• Mii (s.tl2t00) --..... ~ °""° 111ep. pr'1I 4 dtlr AlrPGl1 .... 11 ·M44 Llc'd for :J2 children. U&.11 ILDll now hlrlfl9' or Cootie Del Senta AJ: t 1 yrt pfua Fun Job heloMQ F,.. IO ;a hM &r,.=e .... LIW U 11111• Mon!MITivN8"2~ •H&IW Coate Meu Call~_,,.,.. NII time,..,_ Per.one end SeMi,1, If aurny ~rk,•~:h~~~ young athlete•. Mlk9. llay,...tlfttt,8tn0otd. OAANOICOAST 'HCAX-61
O!NTAL AECPTonM•'AI .......... "11nt office £\IM/Wknda~lll.2 10.,:.,~~n ~ lnl.,..tld ~ wllllng to per~ neo. Mon·P:rJ. "41-17"4 _Hid all MotL ~&!89 Jeep/~eull M 4 DOOR CIVICS
day gd peyt bnftL o.al Jot ~ ttme. Nwport PlllHI• Mwa Statloneri 270 E. IMrn !Ind grow, plMM day S..tpnl, Set. 9· tpm. Publlc Pofl Takert J-•-/fut/lrt 2524 Hll"tlOr Coeta MeM 'M ~~C,?RR:t~~RS
e.xPreq.Nl.f4J•HH lwlh.141 4092 . 171hSt C.M • tlPPfY.225E 17th.CM Noeefflng.ComJ)*1ywm. *11011/P.T. .--., HD 141·1121 lnStock&RMdy ttiL ....
AlllPI t•n Immediate opening lor LM ITMJll f•t train. CalfSaity.M2-5843 . · IM I Atttndourautoi....eem· LJ.1. • No .,,., neowety. light quelllled P«'IO'I· Harrie U&.11 .... ,. Come to " Fornalo Italian •n•m ..... CIMn cut ••hle11C minded m ™ 18' Watdi. Iner ' rec.Ive fr .. mini tor Newport BMcfl .,... Ofc wen. Fton1 Ofio.-. 1800, IMO axper. Mlp. yg 1gr.-V. lndl\I w/lruc:t< Cate & Bak"""" 1<>e'1tld It Full llrM Monet r:ld I lndlvldualt Earn up to S 1200. Tan11n1t• 8'A ct CHEVY '82 S 10, xlnt WOflc port•b'9 vecvum. !Hm• 0eysaam.&pmrotataft• ......-fut. l!acellent eotnpeny • I -~ · -V· r • .,, •10 lh .. 1 S10000.f&0.7316 1tuck. S4UO. 080. 1 . ·e• H d c11 lno-c*1c-' Cktllel. Xlm pw1111e9 a mutt! Hra benertll and working to ~ a Mii fire •••· Fuhlon llland In the MW 7:30am to 4pm. HMvy • . P r t1 .. ng Nf\19yt, • 842-eoo7 P •· v on • v o
-1etY & benefit H M , M·'· 8ob M&.1114 ooncltlona Apply: lnQulahert. High comm Atrium Cou11 W• have pl'lonet Ille typing. Wlll l No Mtllng, Have• good Ptb Aalaala t (A6431). 48 mot. CIOMd ....7ti ~·c.,..~ · · ' wfguer SllYe 842-8973 I lull 1nd pttlme polltlon• tr•lnof')computef SS/Hr time working ~Ith tun ~ DODGE '17 3/4T PU End Comm'I Lae. S119 «, llllPTmlT NA•.._._ 1vallable lor N!QpeOple APPIY In peraon 1\ Book•j people Adorable Whl1• Amtlflcan C/c1b. ve rblt mo1or. per mo + tax. S433 CUh 621-tH2 Immediate opening tor an -• JELlllllETI• & cOOka. (Mu11 •PMk on Tape 729 Farid CM · Etldmo puppy, S moa Old. 29K ml new trana etc On. (hr-#000829) OAC lllm 111811' lndMduel -~*"*' In MIU NUT Engllah). Plea.. cell 548-5525 · · C•11 Mr· Nice Guy· Papera. S350. 760·0485 Pert ln/~t. Ill I>•~ wrk: AU·UYUI LUii
1tPM 10 7.AM, Cet1~ or "-"dllng bu9Y 1Mphone. 330 W. Bay Str..i PllfEUIOULI Noncy at 440-4279 I 1°' appt. 542"7211 OLD Rat Pupa AKC ahott $2450 flrm 442-8815 l1•1Ul· 1Hl
TralnH• Muat be "'ti bene"'*· No typing Coale Meel. Ce. Full tae.ted phone aper-•UYIAYILlll SUlllTI M/F blond/golden ---
malure a lntw•ted In r:lted. APfJ!fY In S*ton or call M2-•S21 atlon. Big doll•.,. for 119111 Ill PIUllll PIT. Col~ Pharmacy.' Ell 4 wkt S225 675-3159 Track1 HU ~
petmM.,,t employment. ~use~. ~hit!, s,':.: ~; ...,.. ~ N~ll ,e:fn•rlence Is ~tl~I . for •40 Fair c • MS.3288 t ~s;'::ft~·:a.~~:11 Parr~t Ce~e. w .1 5' Ford '73 F100. tlt>efg11 i
Meu Verde Conv. Hoap. 17 14125~ ca Pl · • w r · · DELIVERY· Frwy Auto. w/playpen on toP S90 ahell, 6 cyl, ndt work
881 Center St, Coeta 11'::"'1f~ :-:;: • h-ltale1 HIPDlllS MIHlon VleJo. 21242 SUW.STITllllTTIT w.1. Playpen on ~011eri $800Larry2131592-S831
MeN s.4f.5585 B•flt•IT tlcal CM*a and PMT e leler, llSftllll Avery Prkwy. 831· leM Full CH Pan lime. LAGUNA S50. 546-5120 63 I 8025 ht ••H
PITDT m Ugl'll boollliteepfng & eec.-proce11 helpful Wiii • ...... ~11ffh Apply 2·Spm, 3664 So. MIVll/ITlll CHEVRON. 804 S. Coast Timber WOif/Germ Shep Cl i ' -..a •'11 IH •••
Acute care holpltal ..._. retarlaJ dutie.. 848-7181 train. Mond~ 1PM to If>-Cell Jim or Bob 678-5010 Brlatol St. Santa Ana tor bHc:h~ mt F II Hwy, Laguna Bffcl'I pups ivaJI 1214 $100 Ill Cl ~;i Sllver/blacti. le -:,:,
•xpMlenced ln-pat'-'tl llllPT.-Tt•.,..,., PfOX. 8PM, Tue&. I 1AM "FFlll USTllUIT time. C.O.L. No .. ~·. n~. TUYll &lllT obO 6.42-1808 evtiwknds 1650 FORD 2 dr Mdan, warranty. 100:1'36), 1 yr
bllllng reprHenlatlve Anewer pf\Onel. lt typing to approx 7PM. Wednee-Cla•1/lttt111uts In Corona del Mar 891·•611 Monday thru Friday FIT orlj Ilk• new $3500 ' 121,ltl
Succ-:_afut2 appllc1n1 Dec. 21 to ' Jan. e: ~~SA~-:R ~y P1: 5520 now hiring: EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI 8 30-5·30 Sabre exp'd. M11i cal laJlra•tall !6 "7588 CH 848-3512 .Ill IUlllllS
must I w YI'• ~1""1 t· 8. m. s pm M 0 n. Fr I. ll• Ave c M llST /ESS.OAllHEI seoo 00 per too Guaran-ALSO. Outalde Sales llH '66 CORVAIR Turbo Cona IMNITS tlnQ, naurance bn ng, 557-3200 • · · IAl.llA UY llll · · P · Pe<aon. Cell 631-9040 gr11t cond· a clusle ll'IOlor pati«lt 1ieeount· ,..,.. WHERE CARING IS FIT or PIT for 8am-3pm teed ayment. No Ex· IS String Guitar w/cue. 52700 64..._0530 i<>m Quall St N B
Ing •"'*lenoe. Appty· llTll /allPT Carner• perton to wort( THE CUSTOM s~~-1 Louis 640-8381 :'1a~~f~!t:..:; WllEMlll 11111 S75. OBO 55.4-8285 Mi V ~i I 833.93o"0 . 111111 llU1 llllU&. needed tor Coeta MeM Ytr1lcal commtlfcial cam-Fiil 110 ·GIUIEI ' 1tamped envelope FIT. Sh~/Rec. M~ have Piun 0rtHI IC. I• C H MERCEDES '77 .450SL'
...,.., 11111..... ~~r::t nrm. Must . er&. famlllar with PMT Full tlrM, lnci~O--Wknds .. ,.. SS ELAN VITAL ·e03 s~:~ .. ~1:5,~~~:,/~t IHI Go-Cart. exit cond, Uke 82K ml. xlnt cond. -. ..... , ___ ave .,....... man-proeea ••per. pref or ...... 1 ... u. •-• _._ 3418 Enterprlae Rd Ft 5242 Bo · s new. S500 obo 759-t973 S21500 obO 779.-8288 _,, -.-ner. front o tlPPM'· wtll train 5 Oayt plwtC In· '"--•r-m -· ~,....,. Pierce FL 33482 , Isa Ave, ulte Cassio, full keyboard --· ------11111 anoe, atrong lyplng & flt-ctudlng Sat. Apply Pen-Banq~t•. Buasera & Ser-I• "'1i•I tffttt · . #5, HB, Wkdyt 9-3 w/rhylhm S300 857-1429 Aatn l•~rt.. II MERCEDES '80 450SL
I-UY Tlll•ILll ~i:~~· ~n~•::.: nyaaver. 1660 Plaoentla =~t~s for Holidays, all Ptttlry ...... Expantlon Completed WEE I EID lllAIEI Conn organ wl rylhum * * Audi 10. '74. GOOd 60K ml., tan w/brn lrthr
tor Portable X·R• co .. , exper. ,!q. sa1.J negot. Ave, C.M. PIHae call for appt et l.as•H hH• llTillll lllllln unit. bench & Ught. S6000 engine, gr••~ body. Beat otter. 84s-4759
mual have CRf lie. Sendrnume: 234 E. f7th 9am-4pm Mon-Fri Count merehMdlse, gen-11 growing and now hiring. Weekend Manager for new, must sell $2800. s1soo. Tim 549 0206 MERCEDES '84 500SEC 834~2825 St. Suite 209, Coal• PIRM 645-5000 eirt 520 erel office work, record C11hler• and peraona Dally Piiot Newspaper ( Call Laura 720-0928 •VW'IS9 Bug. RblY. looks & w I ce 11 u I a r phone .
;;;n_ L·'/Offl ..... M .... CA 92127. ARC America Corp. In keeping Benefit•. In· lnter~led1 :n w~g ln1 IR v IN E A A EA). Oak Spinet Piano Steiner runs Ilk• new. Cheek 11 out aunroof. xlnt cond,
.. MllC.. " ~ NewportBeachla looklng FHllHYEIS elude paid vacation. our utrton ~llllrt. I 2:30-10.30 A.M. Pickup & Son xlnt cond $895. S1950/oboPP641-1777 $43,500. or assume **'*** ll•ITUY P/T lor a person with good all exper for Morning shift. stock purchase plan, lnteretted and wlll ng lo truck & dependability a • 640•2442 lease. 557-4758
• ..ti &a&/ ... ltt 10·12 Hrt p/wk, 18. p/hr •round printing slcllls for Apply In person 2-4pm medlcal/llfe Ins. $4. p/hr. learn and grow. Please mull. $90. per weekend. LARGE SELECTION OF MERCEDES '85 500SEL
111., ...... , 1tan.Pflf10na1&RealE.a-full time employment Jn Mon-Fri JOLLY ROGER, MissShanteau,494-1141 applyat 225 E.l7lh,C.M. ~~1 642-4321 aall for lic7dt1 IH NEW&USEDBMW'SI blk pearl, dove grey ~~~~=~ ~~~"J~~=l~()I(«. growing In-plant print 203 Marine Ave, Balboa AFTER IOEUl IELPlll ' BMXolamond Beck, exit LM IUOl llW leather, centre whls.
cvatomer ttrvlca. OrMI ll• ••
12
lhop. Minimum 1 year Island Mature respontlble lndl· l•JllJ8t•t W1att4 cond. $ 150. 49-4-1426 VOLUME SALES chrm whl wells, upgraded
growth potential. Full °' .... ~ate-up exper. req. vldual to be right hand 5535 Like new Ladle's bike 3 SERVICE & LEASING stereo, not grey markell
part time, n.x hrt. Mon· llllETUY bl~ w~:;·bur!:: IRVINE RANCH SCHOOL 1>9!,ton1 to otfloed m, •nagef. EX Mgr for a major corp & speed $75. 857-1429 13670 N Cherry Ave. LONG ~Y t~:~:" ~:'"rvtCoupt"y. Fri. Call fC>f appt Debra I 1 t I i I'll M.i room. r Y9< ln<J · BEACH · 'Candy Strlpert Cand';'. amall growing compuler ng o ,. n r g peraon JOBS other assorted dutlet. prev. owne< of Mlg Co. G1111t Slits l(No. Cherry exlt-<405) 496-7650
432·9818 company need• full time Stanlng Nlary s12.ooo FARMERS MARKET C•ll ~-8950 seek• challeglng position -' (l1 .. 1.a•1 lllO MUSTANG '71 MACH I ***** MCfetary. tamlllarlty wtth p/yr. Xlnt benefits pack· w/progesslv Co. 963-3627 ,.,.. • P.C:a preferred. H . age. Call Kerry IM appt. •aa ,..Jtl .. s awalli~lt EARN , Trade-Ins Welcome AIT. AC/PS/PB. 1m/fm •-••-/al'TY p/hr. Some word pro-833-3232 Pref. non· I ,,.._ , __ .,. I Wl•EWll Mtrcl11 .. 1H WIUI ltH~ 1141 OPEN SEVEN DAYS cass. Great lntr. New -_, ,._'""""' -fl' smok« I rww .... ltn Ct paint. Freshty redone en-For lnveetment Banking ~.,,.ant.,...~~. '" · MONEY Opening new salon In Sat AM Nov 9. IBM typ.•
Firm. Legal aecretarlal l~,etc.CAM DATASYS-WllllTDSOYICI MpartlMltftr: C-0111 Mesa. $170/wk ArrllucH 1811 writer. r sofa. stereo ,,-W-W--Tf-1-.-IPUI--g~~-G:e';~~:00~3500 M~~tg:~2~J~;~~ ~41~~41 ~·for ~~~~.Y ProgrestlYeC-0.aeel(um-"!~llE111ELP PRIZES ~~iT:'ryT~.~~m ~ I llY IPPLIUOES china cabinet. wtlk«.etc1DELIVERY DEPARTMENT
bltlou1. hatdW<>f'king per--lnar Included. Opportunl-LES 957-8133 637 Ramona: 494-1738 ! M LAREN'S BMW OLISllllLE
BOOKKEEPER-Full c . um /IUPT sons wtth or W/O up. Can Fall I PIFt ....... ,. • TRIPS ty fO( advance In min· ,,. .. ,.rt&hH c I.WI 11111
Tenac:toua. cheerful. P MU8t be reliable. good earn s25K 10 $3SK/yr Co. tJclm &Yell &,JIJ II agement + t>enefltt. Try *IALEI SALEI* -I M·F tHI 9. S-S 11118 ILISIMILI OllU
Leguna Bcl'I. 497-2500 oppty, 831·2345 =.t~&~;~o; ,.,... . ...t..Utfll ltliflriq ttte us. we ere not • Retrlgetators 5129 & Up I 828$. EucildSt. Fii lltl MWI
IUllOAL TTPllT ad\t. 542-2242 So. Coun· ....... ., IMIJ IAILY Pit.IT franchiM . With us you ashefs $99 & Up Ptwtr hall 7012t Fullerton, CA Good selection of '86
Friendly fest growing pub· Good typing akitla, mature. ty 495--1465 Inn H F ... I.. ltwst.,.r. 12~;~:9~~ C?.¢o~p· 2,~1~ ~rt~~ 13•-'t· Fiberglass Elgin boat ;~;::~~~ Oldsmobile Regency's.
llsher need• person to prev. acrow or 10911 ot-TIRED of Retirement? PIT I ' 11 ou e loo°«I f t Tt.-1•1 I & trailer $300 548 2546 I As low as $299 t ••x per type Mdert, open mall. floe e1tper. helpful bul not PRECISION MACHINEST h 11tl, ltr. I•• 0..rt y "' ng or ex ra ,_ .. rolf t1ro Furnishings" . . • mo, OAC.
and apply eheck•. Mull req. Moo-Fri 12-5. Pleale Flex hrt 646-2900 llt11, ••• ,.rt .. ".. ~r;g1~~a::'~e o~~~ -'AL.~.PPLIANC:~ Sail ..... 70141 lll-UYEH LUSE
have 2 Y'* exper. & type call 645-<t175 · Mountain, Knotts Berry IMMEDIATE • '' 11r11t1-10 ft Oday Sprite, lnclude•1 '>r:ft&l£L l14/U2·1Hl
45WPM Full time. 18.50 nPllT TlllPIUIY llSTISS Farm, or win PrlzM and bHlltlt O..tlttit1 all rigging, Hies & trlr ~ ...... a..f"
pl hr. Cotta Mela full Off TYPISllTll/ Wanted dayllme hos1ess Awards, Call ua now! we OPENINGS UNIQUE FURNITURE $300. 744·7211 Ill D ..... 405 Frwy.Call Robin Accurate •typing at 60 PUTI IP llTIIT Mature person must !Ike have several openings In 1947 s. Main St. ---Yl99 r.:======::i
556-0962 ~=~=~~1 :: people. $51,hr: Call for c. M.. H. B or F. v National company now hlr· Santa Ana Sli11/Dtckl/lttHft
OUllOAL appt 9•m°"'pm Mon-Fri Immediate opening for appt Woody s Wharf 642·4333 Ing 10 people tree 10 Btwn Edinger & Warner on 7022 1111•1
Hiring lmmedlatety, tev· BALBOA BAY CLUB . exper. typeselter. Must Restaurant 675--0474 *IPT llAUIH• travel the entlre.U.S tuch Main St. See the Bearl 36 ft CHRisfCRXH wl451 AIWmye I t emendoU9 CHICK
IVEllSON eral openings. P1rt time 64S.-5000ext520 have heve mark-up lllT/1111111 Youngambltlousco""'eto as Dallas, Miami, Lie IH·l220 N.Bmoorlng.$8500. r
hours IOam-3pm, Mon· WMl---llN exper:, pute-uxp back· ...,. Vegas& New York. Excel· Open 10....e. Sun 12·5 Call 675-0740 Mtec.11ot\ of "9W & Fri. No exper~ nee. ... .. ___ ground helpful. Int ben· Fiii IEIYlll manage 21 un11s in Costa lent earnings after a t car•fully prepared PORSCHE AUDI CHEVROLET~
Htgl'lot Q11e ll111
Selca It S.rvlce
Call Anne. 882_5843 fM 18W office. Newport eflts lndudlng medical & HofaHut la looklng for Mesa. Call 855-0665 week Hpense peld train-3 relrlgeraters, dirt stzes. .40' Side. Ti., Prvt home.Pr ~ .. 90Wl ...... -lld.-BMW In --------1 Beaol'INon tmoker. Send dental lneurance. con-energetic hotl, ho1tesses ASSEMBLERS apply 7am Ing program. No exp nee, exit cond S80-S200. Can Back Bay Area. $360/mo _.. I SEm /l&JllO&L retume to: Hiring Pan· genlal alm<>se>l'l«e. Con· •nd food servers Day & only. MacGregor Yachta. but any prevloue publlc deliver. 957-6194 640-9350 Wkdys OR J1""".
run time poattlon with tine ne<. 5000 Birch St, Suite tact Allua. 642..,.321 ext. night •htfts avall. Apply In 1631 Placentia C.M. contact helpful All trans.-American oak cabinet, 760-8398 Eves/Wknds It doee m8ke a dlf·
reliable NB compeny, 55 2900, Newport Beach, 291 person 2-6pm, 18850 · portatlon paid with return early 1900's, Texas. DOCK FOR RENT· Up to '-enc» whir• you
WPM Typing ablllty, fll· CA 92660 Douglas, Irvine. (off llTI HTllLll guaranteed Mull be Charming. $900 obo. 26 ft power $200/mo, purchaee yow BMW. CHICK
IVE8SON Ing. some 10 key, & o1her T L-I al/T .. HAlll llAST MacAr1hur Blvd. behind Mobile Car Wasl'I & De-slngle. ambitious and French butter churn, 4· 673-2747 or 875-0149 $CJ'eWtR clerical skllla. Retp. drlv· tc-.c r H IAILY Pl.IT Registry Hotel) taller. Exp needed. Good tree to star1 today For tall S 120 obO. 722-1369 ~.,...._.
er w/own cat. fC>f er-SSIS 330 w Bay St eet driving record. Apply In Interview call Ms. Sopher DRY BOAT STORAGE
d Start 18 50 /h Cotti M .... · Ca. r92827 TERRACE GARDEN person, TEXACO, l600 ~dyt 10AM 10 5PM Attention quill collectors: On the water, NewpOrt
U5 £. Co.u1 ftw11
Newpon 8Ach
ran 1 . p r. TIRED of RETIREMENT? DISHWASHER-Laguna Jamboree Rd NB Ask ontyat642-8228 Beeut velvet crazy qullt, Beach.Dollyourtelfboat (114)1111111 ~s 'mY.;:!~1==~ P:-:. ~LECS..2~=EER. 142·U21 Beach, l'lrly wage + for Joel 844.5775 · I good cond 722-1369 yard. Open 7 day• a 20IW ._ .... -..
673-0900
644-5070 Karen x. ra. bonuses 494-9650 lmltll ~SOIPI Watl'ler & Dryer Kenmore. week Call 675-5901 • Cl oilDet.w"t'S
TECH " Exp pref Own White. Good shape Elec. NBP Mooring lor Sele PORSCHE "74 91 lS Taro•
treni. 840-9228 L11 Mag $125/both. 642-5937 w/38° Trawler -Oefever, BMW '81 7331, toededl 5 Many extras. Must teel
IF YMI W Westinghouse Ref rig. 19 Bkr 673-85t1 tpd, ch1tnt red. lthr. 1nrf S12,500 obO. 675--0509
1m111n1 elf SIS Frat/tr. euto ice SLIP: 30 ft on Main Chan-s 14.500 obo 759·6135 PORSCHE '79 928. 5 apd,
II Wllll maker. S225. 873-3456 nel, CdM. $300/mo ~ BMW '83 320I. 1mpec-metallic black, poll11'1ed
"·~m _1 /l!J.Al4 1st/last tlll June 19 cable! See to bellevel alloys. full pwr, looks lii;;;==!;;.iiiiiil'==c=~~~;a~!i~~~ IH,•. t1 I~ •1111tart . .v Call Marcia 673-8232 St2,000 7141652-0428 new. $15.500. 865-5822
tii ~~=-eba~:.:~~. DON'S ELECTRIC DAN SALYER PAINTING o~n~~e 1~11~ to wor: I llf fllllfllE Sllp Avlll ·No live Aboard BMW '84 3181, $12.750 PORSCHE '80 911SC xlnt
addltlont. quallly work 492-5958. Service calls. Maint. clean-up1, mowing, Lie #425924 hard tor It. consider this: .L$8 957·8133 Up to 32' $330 wht, beige Int, air, xlnt 53K ml. Loaded wht/brn $2.17 per day
That's ALL you pay for
3 llnes, 30 day minimum
In the
it477446 Paul 548·8860 dryer outlet• etc, bonded. ~~ J~;:i~::e;.~~~~tesl Call Anyllme 964•2017 Merrlll Lynch Realty Is the 7 •• llke new, llv rm sota. Side tie to 25' $220 cond. 31726 Coast Hwy, Int $21.500 obo 779-8266
E C M ELECTRICIAN most prestigious. most Belgelbrn floral pattern SWALES ANCHORAGE So. Laguna 8 30.5 Mon· PORSCHE '83 91 lSC
)(pert ablnet al<« & HAWAIIAN EXPERTISE GLASGOW PAINTING growth oriented name In $200, 962-8996 Dally 9.5 5-48-1501 day-Friday 499.4503 Cpe, platlnum. loaded.
French 0..ign. Reas .• Llc.#233108· Small/large Tree trim. top, remove, lnt/~xt. 30 yrs exper.. Aeal Et1ate. Prepare MiactlllDM81 BMW '84 5288 12.000 ml . •nrl. Alplne stereo, ADS
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
tree est., ref's. Aft« Spm, Jobe & repairs. 548•5203 clean ups. Stu 549-1696 refs 642-5214 yourself lot the next real Baker Knapp & Tubbs white & tan. Best otter. amp/spier, CllHord alarm.
call Alfred. 722" 1157 ·HALE ELECTRIC INT /EXT. 20 Years Exper. estate boom. Career op-furnlshlngs-112 °1 whole-/ 645..,.759 etc $25,500. 673-7567
KITCHEN CABINET Dependable wlreaa. rates TREES Av«age Room s29+ port unities avelleble. salel Changing decor-M1t1rcycln
REFACING Lie. & lnaured. 54 6-7013 Top....,.tremoved. Clean· Exlerlor Stucco s130+ Licensing training avall-must aellt 873-6496 lcMttn IOll Get GREEN c111'1 ROLLS ROYCE '75
C t 11u .,..... ble T 1 1 11 I tor WHITE ...,.h 1 COANICHE COUPE. exit an tor ree est. ~2-0881 NEW/REPAIR. Quality No up, new lawns. 751-3476 materlals. 642-0442 • · 0 nterv ew ca : DESK oak roll te>p, antlq. VESPA P200 ·e2 Gd shape with 1 Clu~a~ds cond. 57K ml, Calif car.
MASONRY /CARPENTRY Jobs to small. reasonable. Pam, Walt or Biii style handcarved lk $500/obo 722-6784 Cell 642-5678 $35.000 obo. 772· 1021
Very compeUllve. Lie. Free es1., llc'd. 631-2345 TIE UHi SOEIE tttl~~E~~EEDS ~OR~ •• 963-ERRl1L3L1L9YoNrC54H6-R~~88LTY new •. colt $1800. Sec •--------Lawn-Tree-Shrub lnatall. n • ngs. re n ca · _"" ___ ~ $1000 OBO 5~-8265 & lnaured. (714) 499--1604 ltatral Cll Tree Trim and Removal. (26) yrs exp , WOf'k guer.
Ooort-Repalr-Alter•t1on1 •RENT AN ANGEL• Lawn Main & Rototllllng Davia Painting 964-3837 .IURllS Moving. must se11. Aa.-
Remodel·Ptnet-Lock.....ic Sprinkler Install .. Repair. QUALITY PAINTING Resldentlalcleanlng,work· sorted Ibis, din rm set CALL TOOAYll
Cablneta.-Wlndow-Fenoea Personal ' butlnen u-Free estimates. 548-6065 Low Winter Rates-Free Ing foreman. Mon-Fri 8-5 w/chlna cab. S tO-S 100.
Your Dally Piiot 35 yr• e•p wry 642-0567 slttenoe tor 111 events & --estimates John 722-9707 15.50-$6 75 hr. Uae com-Call Laura 72o-0928
Ser111ce Dtrectory · projects 472" 1782 Lttal ltmcn pany van•. min 1 yr exp. MUST SELL Match·g 2
ASI FOi Liii
Representative c~u• Cut ... ~ fllflt tall ll2·IOOI ••rria1 CIHn CUI, bondable. Solas. 1 Chair. solid Oak
142·4'21 td. IOI Mother lov .. babytlttlng. AMERlCAN HAN6'YMAN Allys Parham & Assoc FARTHING INTERIORS fluen~ E~~h&.4~~:4/T Cotlee Tbl, antique --------~c:e~~ ~,,! y~2'~'fl Carpentry, fencing. win· M HANGING/STRIPPING eve. pt . Armolre, leave meaaage
Act11ti cal Ctilia~ dowt, plumblng. marllte, •11•rz VISA-MC 673-1512 HITI111 llSTlllT• 645"3691
Exquisite Acoustlct ~ Cl tHial ltmct tub encl, hauling, etc. LMuy ANOYS WALLCOVERING exper. to glw c1 ..... at Queen Hide-a-bed, loose
eprayed or remove Ory-ROBIN~ CLEANING And Yes Jesua 11 Lord Block weUe, brickwork, lnstallatlon & Removal CdM knit shop 759-3347 plllow back S65 Wing
wall Repairs 847-7901 SERVICE. a throoughty (llc#30405) 636-8244 concrete. Comp patios. Int. painting 548-4013 OIL CO. OFFERS e:x04lllent gc:.1:,1:1~~:~·~~l
A,,liH.ct clean houte 445--9741 •RON 540-9899• ~ra exper 646-4834 Expert Wallcoverlng In opportunity fOf high In· all. 536-0334
Houaecleanlng, carpets & P~r~~";;'~~gklt~~:~ BRICKWORK. Small jobs. stallatlon. Reas. Consult· come, .. curlty, Cllh --------
aradart upholstery, wlndowe. etc. & bath remodel + morel Newport, Costa Mesa, ant Aesignmnt 581 -8590 bonuses, benefit• to o:lT••k Dresser or Buffet
APPLIANCE REPAIR 11.t.. lalit.111·1212 lrvlne. Ref's. 875-3175 , mature perton In Costa · 250. 983-1932
Washer-Dryer-Retrlg-etc C ••J FENCE 0 -alr New & old LYNN HANSEN S Mesll/Newport Beach Sota loveteat chr & toot· ommerclal lnq. welcome ..,..,, · · Mm. II Interior Painting and area. Ranardletl of ex· atoo' i brwn .:hades n~ 722-1737 20 yrs axp. _ Wood, ch1in llnk, patlo'a. _ ""' .... ,._ ---D's Cleaning. Retld/apt, tree eat. Greg. 968·1118 t ••• •YIMt Paper Hanging. 549•9677 perlence. write O.B cond'. Cost $785.' sell Appllance Service Refrlg , For meticulous & detailed -STRIP IT OFF THE WALL. Read, American Lubrl·I $276. 542--0007
washers-dryers-range• cleenlng Sallafac1lon GATE & FENCE REPAIR ~u~c,..~:s~~~i:~4~ Fast. clean. reas. Wall· cants, Box 428, Daylon, --------
dishwashers Lie 240-0717 guar For appt 549-4294 771-42~~~,PIS~lf~:76 112-0• 10 poper removal service. Ohio 45401 1s::i. '~~::~d~h~J' ~~6~
jifk1Jt/Ceacrttt Home & Office cleaning by Sell Storage Experts Lie/bonded. 638--597o TEXAS OIL COMPANY aell $285 952-4254 P~lng Area AePalra l JODI PIMM call IOt free •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. Pl11ttr/Dtywall needs meture pert-On forlWATERBED. S100/obo .. 6
Rea4.irfaoln?i • Roofli & es11mate 842~746 Paint Drywall. Carpentry *1·1 •Y•• thort tripe surrounding d ...-..... tat q·--• etc Gary 646-5277 PTL NEW/REPAIR Q Ut N C •• N rwr .,..,....... ..~·· "' Waterproo Ing• 631 -199 HOUMCleanlnn 14 yrs exp. CLEAN & EXPERT · ua y. 0 osta ... eta/ ewport he t 2131592 2465
Driveways patios. petha. retlable reu iree est own HANDYMAN LARGE Md Over 25 yaen experience Job• lo smal!. teuonable BHch, Contact cus· • a« • evs
e1c. No job too amall tran• Pina,'445.99156 s5m31a1515719poo ITI ALLI Lie T-116,428 730-1353 Freeest.,llcd.631-2345 tom.rt. W1 tr•ln. Wrlt•••lactlluMll IOlS
Reas Mickey 536-0553 JB·1 e•p "'Of. h""·~ • at or ve mag. Pl aM N.G Dtcker1on, PtH.,-..,-._...., ...... _ .......... .... ,,,.._.. HOME REP R C ITUYIM llLLlll 1 •I Southweetern PetrOleum. IC , tool 10 .. Aaphelt-repalr-ptklng IOll l cle1nlng. thofough. quick. Al arpentry Box 789 Ft Worth TX ontr•clOf 1 •:
ept. complex-neavy ro11« reas . rree eat 813-0577 tences & gatea, ir .. 1r1m. ITllllTI ...... a. H lar 0. l ... 1llO 76101 • . • . t~!' .. s1woo~2··~ancsad1·?~m' J 6't~269 7 ~ dump rune. C.M. & N,B. Orange Co. Oflglnal •oooo jObs done r"'ht\' I .,, .. -oe em-....... Newport'a Finest lnt«IOr area. Jim Whyt.e 642-7206 Student Moven lntured .,, OPERATOR/PHONE SEC aaw S850. 011 air com-
PIJTEll OllOlm MalntenanQe The • Lie T 124~6 641-8-427 DRAINS CLEAR From 115 Now hiring fM g.ravey1rd prenor, 8 hp, S750.
. N .. lkeepert 875--7409 ••la• NEW W•rehouse St..,_ F•uceta. 01·~··. H .. ter, tl'llft. Apply In perwn, 833-3222 All typet dealgn• & colors -· -..-...,,,_ '1th Call646-21131orett Ctat11ctn1 ULIN • IN STARVIN0 4WORK. 851·9604M&M722-9088 250 E. I th St. tulte I, DRAPES nearlynew llnen
------Garage & Yard Clnupa Free eatlmate M 1·5060 Expert Servloa & Repair CM .• 8"5• M·F. 44s. 7K 5 blend, ~1rm white,' 4 pr.
Removeaspl'laltdrlvewayt ALL CONSTRUCTION Jon 445--8192 HlAhtechMovertl41528 32 yrsexp.Resld'l/Comm. • .. --. 9G .. x8 t". center pull. repl1ce w /concrete New·RernOdel-Addltlons •~-------'" ..:..-1 brick/block wt\ 539--0345 722-1737 ttc•460839 Construc11on Clean·upt. Patti Oec Lie • 409035 "4...a919 Sev«al opening• tor Mdt< S t8S pr obo. Aleo wood
-Tralh & tree Heullng H I I WEEKEND PLUMBING. takera In Sanla An• of· tr1verff roda. country
Aatt CH BATHROOM & KITCHEN Free est John 645~730 ... , ~ No Overtlmel Call Any flee Mutt be nH1. look S30 .. 722· 1369 REMODELING Free .. t p t b S _,,,. ........... , .... h1ve.......,. 00 AUTO/TRUCK MECH Llcir29888t 567_3049 NPTtCM/LAGUNA. Area ro . •rtendlna by teve Time. 64G-87 t2 ...,...,..,.. ... .., .,_,, A1h tanka. 1 gallon
30 yrs exp. Re11 retea. __ Haullng-cleanup-palnllnv· 44G-1781or8,S.-1421 - -car. Cell George, 1100 wl atand Also 20
frM "1 Adrl111 645-4443 REMODELING moving. 7 d•yt. 494-2341 p--f1yckica M2·5M 4 fOf eppt. g a I I on I\• x S 2 0 • ROOM AOOITION·s arty Help.Maida. Handy--548·7032
.... CH Beech Cltlet Bult , ltaaty man, catering, efrand1, Europeell Paychlc Tarot PUT TIMI ·--------coXsf BOAT sfFIVtCE 673-8122 llc•207•61 Fltanl we do It •11 857-0222 Cerd & Palm Reeder. Put. Newapaper home d•Overy. Give a Jotl(I WI~ T9nnl•
ComJ>letl o.taUlng •REMODELING.--lat1lat Ct PreMnt & Future. 1 rr .. 7 2..SAM. light v•n or pick Club~hlp, c;2~rltt·
Bo11om c ... nlng/P1Jnllng *ACOM ADDITION'S* Of John Caroompll D.C 850·2758 Olene 831·6964 up. MOO fmo. Call btwn m11. • 838-
Hl\il Ovta 893--4465 Beach Cltlet ...__..~t S..Cn. 54a.4021 MlllPUllTI t2noon-pm 642-8015 GrHt Chrlatmaa Gitt.
,_ .. .,..,. Love. c•r• fOf eldetly ll • ·-·-Magic llland Membef· lallana ltntctt 673•8122 11cua2oss 1· St 1 11c 1s1 "~10 ... _..,_. •"Ip •AJV\ bo 54W120 II I 1 e ~ BEST ROOF REPAIR Rapidly growing Cott• .,, ...,.,., o Xcu'r. Word PrOCMa-taltnctin -. BEST Bonded Companion CAN BEAT ANY BIO BY M"• firm ... k •••• MAGIC ISLAND MEM·
Ing • dO m•nUKrlplt, I laiWia1 ,. tar, a.. 11,!: l.'" Aldet a Rat• for eldafly. 60%. 722-7537 petlenced hortlcullurel BERSHIP1 Good valve ••
melllng 11t1. etc 78e-3330 Add' 'ng vone r.,,..t uve In °' ou1 83J..2009 Mrvtoe tecnnlolana fOf In-S 10001972_.t1e
Computlze Bootlk"Plng a TOQ n~.u~~:g't!:";,~I ChelaA/C H .. 11ng Speclel ROOFING '9Cover, r_. ter.lor route .,IT or PIT
t1xH ·SBA lo1n-p1yroll FrM aat LIC 831·2345 'Hour S«v1Ma4nt S30 Care or elderly In llOenM pain, hot lat, lite, rOOI. l4lnefltt 131-4815 SCRIU.L£TS
Guv 78()._1008 llL..--_ 492..U27 it 459283 S>fNat• l'IOrne Horne cootl wood, Ir• •1 76()..15M -----.-·-Ml _, WWII "'""l<Anhy &40-<410• __ ---PlllTm ••wes -r;:J~~'t~~~~~ Entry i Frencn ooora ........ Palatial --...... U.,/Wirit1H Cam«a./f»ieteiroom MM-NW
VERSA TILE MO-Otae 9y Honn.,, TM Doorman ' ......,. ml@ PXfHTIHd a:; RQ;: :=· ~ an:f PV:i ~ =-2!:'1
• _ Oek a Fir 857-DOOR lfd Slnof l&yrt of happy Pini..,......... prooeu '*PfUI. Monday TI4ROAT "UJft_ftt Sod Cteen-~ M81nl cwtomera Lie 290&«. ~ mod9llnO tPM 10 appr~ tPt.A, 'I unde drlwa 1 cab In1 t;p;(C:::pentry rm Sf>rink._.., •c 850-4147 Thenk-Youl M3 ... 1t4 Ou H work1~ Tuee. 11AM to '"'°~ large IMUOpOlltan City ~·AMlod'l·AOdftlona ...... llllfm r,;;;yrtm/~, oomp RAINBOW PAIHTINO 1 ty 758-aota 7PM Fri & s.t. t-5 To him h~ la a
Door...ic 5'1-4HO OuelltyWOflit, "-eat. gerd9nmg Com0911tl"9 Ouellty It our pollcy Af:Y 'ENNY8 AVl!A bectt .... drl¥tr wilh a
BaywlndOft-f'rendldoort 142$5-11~ ---Hf.7~1 prtc. ChUck Mf...7032 ISO.~~ ee.!!_ W 1 Placel'ltl Ave.CM tore THROAT
Fr.nch Sfld•• a More. RfSIDICOMM'L/INO 2t OAROENI MAINT .\pl, A A.A PAINTINO lnllert Are Your Wlodowa Cl.anf Mtllte >'O'lf ahOpp4nQ Ht-iaie-pool--1-ble_\ll_ll_lte-&-~-
Addll!OM a Remodel• ~· Do my own '°'°'k Uc. comm'I, reeld'I, C.M • H 8 LOWEST POii!~ pttoa. 8elbo• Window WMNno .. ~.::::ct"~ Dalty Pl· c:.as '250 Ge,-4~21 Ev
*478 fC>e Don "'4·5949 1278041. Al &48--8129 F V ateu 84-37ff Mlk• 10 Slap~. 88~-323& 803 Belt>oe 81 aTW 135 IOt Ada
Tbaraclay, November U
SYDNEY
0MARR
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Long-distance communication
secures bond with loved one. You"ll reach more people, you'll get credit
long overdue. Scenario highlights reunions and romance. You'll locate
article that had been lost. missinJ or stolen. ·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Study Aries message for valuable
hint. Focus on payments, collections. new starts in different directions.
Be direct, iode~ndent, creative, display courage of convictions.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Cycle continues high, intuition is on
target. Family reunion proves JOytul. Sense of direction and purpose
will be restored. Dilemma is resolved. yo u'll have greater under-
standing of recent events.
CANCER (June 21-J uly 22): Proper inquiries will aid in satisfying
curiosity. What appeared to be deception turns out to be error oT
judgment. Know it, Jive benefit of doubt. Long-distance call relates to
travel. social invitation.
LEO (Ju~ 23-Aut 22): Be ready to rebuild, review. revise and to
set new stand rds. See nano highlightscmot1onal fulfillment.. suc-ecss in
speculation, i tensified romance. Car~r or busmc;ss maneuver works
to your advantage.
VUlGO (Aug. 23·Scpt. 22): Focus on achievement. prestige ambitio~. unique assignment. Get .ideas on paper -and prot«ted:
Emphasis on change, travel and vanety of expencnocs. Another Virgo
helps open new door of opportunity.
UBR.A (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Family member makes concession
see.ks to settle rcocnt differences. Be receptive, amiable, willing to let
byaonesgotheirown way. Focus also on travel.communication. added
lcnowled&c.
SOOllPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Dcfi nc terms, see others in reahsllc
light. K.tc:p resolutions concerning consumption of food and drink.
Key is to have fun while bcina moderate. Family membeT reassures you
of love. Pisces native plays role.
SAOlftAJ\J\JS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Focus on airccmcnts
contracts. coopcrat1veefforts, rights and permissions -and mam•ac'. Nothin~ occurs haJfWay, relationship intensifies. Good news received
concerruna finances.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Emphasis on health. nutriuon
ttlationships with those who rely upon your skills,, intuition and judame~t. You'll rece,ivc pleasure by helpina those lcu fortu~te.
Aries, Libra persons will play ouutandlna roles.
AQUAJU\JS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18l: Scenario highliahts specu.lation
romanoe. charisma.. ldded popularity. focus also on children, cha nae·
travel. variety. Status quo will lbak.e, ranlc ind roll . Get to heart of manen where romance is concerned.
PIJCP..S(Feb. 19-Ma«b 20): Emphasis on sc.ourityconocctc<I with
lona·ranae prospects. famUy member seeks help and de.serves it Act
accordu'IJy. Focu1 on safety measures. rctlnion with loved one. s.hinna
of holiday spirit. Aqu.arian plays role.
IF NOVDIBICB H IS YOUR BIRTH.DAY you are direct. you
aeneraJly speak frankly. you eeldom double-talk, you can appear
dominceri~ you are romantic, intc:n.x:, tcntimentaf and you are an
ori&inal lb.inter. Leo., ~uariu.s penon1.pl.ay imponant roles •n _your
Utt: You are al~ wilbn1 t0 try somcthina MW, to panake ofroods
from fordan ~~ to travel, to write> ~blish a.nd diucmio.at.c
tnfonnatlon. lleumon with loved one haahhahts De<ltmbcr. You will
be more confident. stnsc Qf di~tion and" purpote wtU be i'cnored
I '
•
-.... ..--01 •111'°"9 ........ till ........ fl .. "°"'"' ~ -~ -· ........... -..... HM ATICIH UTATINO.A-w• --•":.:.... .... .._....... •-al'-fWUCMmC( out .......... ._torMoft,.,_ ._,.,..._, ..... ~
-----.Aecoided Ml 14dl , .. , To .. heft. ... llatl .. ~ to that of -lendheiWllllOoWCWllWli. ,._ -·-h""y~ON•••" -Nllf1"'1 ........ -111.•&UIF TOY ·es Cenvy. 4 drv. dlx .. lrwtr No. 1it36 "' credlton Md oon ~•the tame of..-... ~'* _. ._ YOU Mm • WMA. T TI9t a.. *' ~ L ocA t10N or THl ~ ... ""' 1t1e .....,.. er • _ .. -' edn H60 ml •. elc. llUtO 141)1~ t4110f ~Md.,.,.,. lftlMtolllflecerMfft• fW°I' ...... .. __ A __ ,_,,. T..-. .......... 1: WORK. TNWOl1l'°•'*',..... ~ ,. ... .....
CIC. PS, cNmc> =::::,of~~ ::i.·----=t:.'.~~OJ. r:::s=::-,.,_. DA1W•U =--~:::,••et Ref•r•H•• tonned~llioc.teid ..-.,._ ~ ol er .... .. ~lc.lt1,lf0,&3a. 1 ty. Stlld Md of Wit .. LUCtt"Lr"°'_..ol: --~~.:.::: :o·==--~ ~ v.: :c.Gf ~t;;:o:.~c: =·=---~• ..=.~-ICI \IANAGON OL '14 Am/tm ~ !tie fololaolllt MGCARTHY • .._. UJCt ......... , ... 12 of TrMt _ l#lff Oii '° ..Siuell cau ant, rT MAY • ,..,.. .. ULa arid Allon,.,,_,,_., t111e COfttlKt MclM.-n LA..af _. ll\NI",_~ tua, Lo ml IExtrae "'Y: A 1. M A 0 A A M 8 -. ...... -t'8M ,. 10L.D AT A PUaJC ULa. YOU A"i IN DUAUll OUOA!PTION ~ WOM. ~ to"~\lt NIM Uolllef(1V
$10,000 '48--4101aft8 Loc 41ofTrect 11121ft MCICARTHY tat, P9' MIP ,__...II\ dirid!IOllll) drtl Ind •YOU -Ml DkA-UHOER A 0UD M TRUST The WQftl to tie P*'toiftllM of~" D•f•ft•e•tt Wt•N tlty Oleo.t.MeM... A .,...._,,, NI Merl Clook 1M. PIOl9 22. 2S IM "°"' ._. Clll9 .,_. UTIGlf CW THI UTUM DAT£D 4111/t2 UHlUS tflell Include bvt not 1M .._ l'AOJ!OT ADM I HIS• tlt«80M. Mal HOM9
.--------... on I~ '900fded 11'1 bootc by 1.0UTA LA VIGNI In t4 of Mepa, "9oordl of Or· ....... ~ ....... OI' TM "OCllDMIO YOU TAK( ACTtOH TO lltd lO'~ofCoft. TMTlOM'MQI IP'~,... LOANe,eCllll ,_~ 60, Pee-32 IO M ~ Oo11rt of Or ltllt ~. ~ tor OI ... Wllll. ..... and AOAIMIT YOU YOU l'l'C>TtCT YOUA PAOP· cnu,,__wfttl~ 1M to !NII protect P"O' e tlo" AA ell MOMI
" rni9cllllieoue f'llllll, ,. Countr reque1t1no .,,. OCM-ollll """ ~ afleh• Into. 11"0U9fl Of IMOULO CONTACT A ERTY. IT MAY aL SOU>AT lnO s*i.e;r~ ..... 099nln9 bid• 1hall bf .. ~.~,.,.,...,.
OOfda of 0r.nge County, LOLITA LA VIQHI be wtd\~en ~Ill I Tttf\t.:::: ~o:.-==--~. LAW'f'Wl A PUii.iC SALE I ·YOU Pipo F:rerne, Alrcr1'I C... chCMdto. M*tl.cMnO. M-lhlp ~· M · Celltomia. polnl*' .. I*"°'* r ---. 1 ._.of LOI .._.... 10 bOttOfll llldl .-...... ..n1Ca fW NEED AH !XPLANATIOH end s.Nly HMflnO elllllnl Project ~ eotivrvNICC 00., AC. You lt'l In deflUll under a ,...,,..,,.,.lO•dmlolew --_.... ..... .....,.... ,,..,.. Ml.I Of THE NATURf. OF THE COMPl.E'TIOHOf' WON(: MCH145 toma Cor~ MY· dtedofttuet del*' Ju>t 10th ••of 1111 decedlnt. It of .-0 tr.ct *1• etocked Of ctlrectlonallY .... NC.... PAOCE.E.OINGS AGAINST Al WOf1l ta to tie cowlC*"d IV OfllOEA 01 !tit POIHT MOM'~ e C..
ltl t uni.. you t•• eccton TM P41tttlon reque•1 l'nOf9 OOl'MIOltlr ~ ~ ...... ~ end 9'11 YOU. YOU ~o COH-wfthlft. ~ :..= Council of 1M C)ty of imn.. !omit eorpor---. JIU• 10 protect yOIK property, " au1flOrtly 10 admlnl9W M: 841 ~ A~ ...... under end~ Ot TACT A LAWYEA d.yl from the date OATED ~.,., 25. FAe't' LIDM'AH • ., ......
mey be llotd at a public ... Ntate under the lndfC*I-eo-.:. MeM. ~· tOtcl == :: ,:::; = On Oeoernber tt. tte5, et On 12/4/U It 10.00 AM In the Notice to ProcMd tte5 and J!FFf'IY LIDMA~
SOUTH COUNTY
VOLKSWAGEN
#2
IN U.S.A.
• Ill.El
• IRYIOE
• PlllTI
LUSlll •
Afl> TUltG HAltOER
TO BE #1
WGUT IMHlORY
ON M WEST COAST
lftlfmlll ...
CALLIG9AY
lf youneedane~anatlonot dent Admlnla1rilfl0n. of &-.. ~ 11,,PfOPl'1Y ,_ ~ meln4allrl 1111P* 10:00 A.M •• Padtlc Sentlntl FOAECLOSUR6 CONaUlT· AWARO ~CONTRACT Ctn °' ~ •Y d /b/a AAll.I! HOMf
Ille na1U<• of the pn-.Glng , .... Ac1. T of .... Qlllll In._. =· ind ....... • Corpofetton. • Oelffomla ANTS. INC • ttw tMof 11C1-fhe 0--r~ tM NANCY C. L.Aerf, CfTV LOANS: and KN KOVACS ::u:~~ lholMcon-.:~DE~·11, t ~ ~ of Ole Unh.o ' .... Ot "*'-· ~. =-r'~::. :, ::=,,T~c:.o ~=-~r'·t ~ ~=· :~ ~Ollefltd Orange Coeet ~ ~4~cM~
Propetty actd,.H 11 att;30A.M.tno.ot.No.3 St .... on~ min. et the-=:C,~ ~ lO !tie Deed of Aeoord.ct on 4/30/12 • w:! .J tntorlMlft'i In • OlllyPllotNolllmber27 "1•11*1
PIJl"p0f1ed to be; 20IM Na· 700 CMo Cent• OrlYI W•t :;--T;: :~"""bid .M .,:"~ ._ ..-. trust ~ November Documlnt no 92· 150023 of bid. 10 l'Mll• ...,.,. 1n the Olmtlei' 4, 1MS NOnc::m Y• ._. ._
llonel AV!'-· eo.t1 ....... hnla Ma. CA 12702. '° lO be In wrtt' :. It 100 ._. of tO. tMS M lnlWment No. OfllClal "8cofd& In the offtOa lnt«Mt of the ~ end to W·213 ..-, n.--'.., ......
CA t212 r IF YOU OBJECT to l6dll ~ • ::,.:C. Of the lend ._.. ~ tt173 of Of'lldel .. OI the ~ of Orenoe rejeet all OIMr bide nM' ....... ,_ ..... ,._
Herne and addr .. of .. gnwttlnO ol the petition, ~ ~be~ at lneboW daao'ltled .. r• oordl. ~ by Tlmc~ Oounty. Celltomla. eieecuted PROPOSAL GUARANTEE l'\llJC 11>1 tw. ..................... ...
beneficlatY et wtlOM reque9I lhould eltMr 1PPMf at """ :Z OMd if 8oott OleMon. end • .,., by. ALAN J~MES POLITO ANO eoNOS· !.flOI b10 11\911 K•21Mt ........... • ..... ..... ~-~ It being conducted: '-'lno and 11ate y<J4JI Ob-=:n•tti:,: :: pu ~ ~ • ~-Ann a...on. ~ ~ ANO CAROl.E ANN POUT~.: tit accompanied by • ..ones Gf ~ .... ---··' ...... . ..,.,,.,mble S•Ylnga and Loen ISCtlOnl Ot Ille wrltlln ootec-atk>n 6ed ~ 17 Witt ... trult0r9. • HUSBAND ANO WIFE ..... CM'lln.d "' ~· ahedt AU If you WWI to -"" ..
A11oclatlon. f7t11 Von Ilona with the OOUt1 ~ -.oe-:. lthdeyot~ 1e11':c'°'eoott t25TO pao9 lkleof1MCounty f'eCOr<* JOINT TE NANTS WILi. O< by • corporal• lllflty ...,.MJITATIVl'll Yloe ol an •llOtlWY In tNt
Kwman A~. !Nine. CA tN hMrtng YOUI llPPM'· .~ t~ 438 of Of'llclel Aecord.. of Or9nOt County. Statit of SELL AT PUBl.IC AUCTION bond°" tM lonn turnllhed °!r~~ Mallet y01.1 lll'l(Nld 0o eo 92714. ~maybelnl*90flort)y ............. . .. CtMom(a. WILi. SELL AT TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER by Iha 0--••euwanUle pf~ly IO 11\111 yOIK ...,.._ "(If I ttr• llOdrw Of yOIK .. ,omey, Oeefp I. ........ ., Aleo excte>'lnO 1Mt4 om PUILIC AUCTION TO FOR CASH, (pey•ble •t time lhal bldOlr wilt If an .... ct ("'°9Aft cooe ten~ If eny rrw; be
common dHlgnatlon 11 IF YOU AM A CREDfTOR ••;t 'k • h,:: .,S,: = = = ~ HIOH£8T llOOER FOR of Nie In i.wtut money of the 11 made to him 1n aic-""'=, n..o on time · lhollrnabo';ie,nowerrantyle Of. COl'ltlngefll aedltor of Pl I I ... ~ lectemty .. ,. .. .,11.cUnthe CASt4 tP9Yl*•thetllileof United StllH) II THE eotdllnoe with,,,. \WIM of A· --lhel AvteOlu...lhe .......
oMtn•lolt9completenaee IN dec:eaMd. you mutt flte • ...,_, ·The ()olft.. .... In tawfUI lftOfltY Of the COURTYARD AREA BE• hit bid pr~ WQUr• Notleelt.~r·-· 'llMfl-I • ..._.. ..... or co,,eotne11)", The your C1e1m with the coun Of L,.._ G. "1oO. Deed from ~ United Stet•) llt: ouQide TWEEN THE TWO STAIR· wcrt,.,.;,,·a Cornpenutlon \lernon Au .... 11 K~ullent ._.., ...... W, ala -
bentflciety under Mid OMd ~t It to the per9CINll fltiie .. fl..W peny, a COfPOfatlon, ,.._the rear COUl'IY.,.d entrtlftOt WAYS AT THE ALLAN tnaur9nee end ......,., In-ANG,• pettot)tl rept~ .... e -.. U&
of Trwt. by l'WOf'I °' • ,.. ... ,tatt.e appointed~ Publlltled Or-. ~ oorded ~ 17• 1171 "' °' ContlMntel Und '""' 8UlLDIN0 FACING YORBA aurenoe u..:u. •• oontrect atlYloftMwtllt•ofVwnon ,. I ........... .... bre.ct1 Of deteult In the otll-the ooun wttNn four rnonthl DelV Plot~ 2'7, it 8ooll t2510 P-e9 43' of Of• Cotftpeny, 10115 NOt1tl MMI STREET . 1401 t YORBA In tile 0requlred, !Orm end JoM9'I Frtnm AAIO. d• ..,: le ll1t .. _._ ......
o••lon• MOUred IMrl«)y, from in. del• of ,.,.. .... ()eoamber 4• tHI ftolll Aecofdl, • ·~· ~.,,,. Ana. Cell· STMEE'T, TUSTIN, CA t2MO fvrnlah sat11lactOfY bondt ceued. WIK ... I It p<lvll• SI IJllecl 0.... ~ ..
'-•otor••xeouffltl end de-auanceofietteruaprovlded • 'A~ 2: tom1a. ell right, t1ttt and .. right. th .. end Int••• fOf me talthtul P«formence ..... to tile lllghe9t and beat conMjO di un llboptO en
lllleted to the undlQIQjltd a 1n hctlon 700 of th• "8JC ll)TlC( '-•••19 •Mt tol1tl In .,,..,.... conY9)'ed to end ~ to and "°'* held of tile c;ontrect and lof U'9 bidder.~~""°. •t•111Unto. deC>eN~
wntten Dederlltlon of 0.-Ptobllt• Code of ~ ... Mdklfla entttted "Cer• now held by It under M6d by It unoer Mid 0..0 ol paym«11 of ct11m1 of ma-condltlont er men inmedletementt. de "1.•
feult and Demand tor Sale, The time tor ftllng olelfN _. '*' O.. .... 1414"-'111'1 ~19 tor Ow!wt" OMd of Trutt In the property TN81 In tile property tltU1ed 1er111m1n and laborers t~:_!nd tub,::' 10,:o; men.,•, 1u r11puHt• end wrttten NotlOe of bfMdl nol eicp1re pttor to !our ~ .... .... •1·11 end "luppott, s.tttement deea'lbed •: L01 SI of tract In Mid C®nty. Celltornla, thereun<ler Said eheclt or flrm11...,., by 1 IU,..... MGrh&. 11 twy e1gun1. p.Mt
and of .-:tlon to cw the monttle from tt1e dtM of 1M C•:r,•••r ll•f•r•.,••1 lftd EllCtoeet""""t" of of No. 2971, In the City of ct.crltllno the lllnc:l therlin bidder'• bOnd lhell be In en court0•00on A.~.,., tt!: .., f'IOlllreda a liamPO
underalgned to Mii Mkl hMrtno nodce ~-'1 ~• the At1kM enettled "a;.. Collte Mw. • 1t10Wn on • PARCEl t emount of not i.a tnen ten 11 1 · or 1. TO 1'HE OU!:NOANT A property to Ntllfy .-0 otl4I-YOU MAY EXAMtHE .. MOnCa Gf "*1ta" of the Oecleretton of mll9 t,,.,.,. ~<*! In untt 116, .. ltlOWl'I and ( 10) percent of IN amount of within the time allowed by cMI ~Ml'*" flied
gettona, end t'*-"tr the Ille kepi by the cour1. tt you TRUI,_.. ULa 0o¥enenta. CondltloM end 8ook M . PIQM 30, 3 t end deter Ibid In 011 Con· the bid Thi Fllthtu4 Per· law, et the offtce ol Samuel by the plelntlff eoein1t you 11
undet1lgned ceuaed Mid.,. a perton ln..-.cl In YOU ARE IN OE1AVLT ,._.rlctlon1. recorded In 32ofMlecllleneOUIMIPl,ln domlniuf!IPlan recof<*!on lormaoceBondlllellbenol Cul>e1e.an0<neyfor tl'leP«· w11t1tod4ifenel ttlll lew-
notlee o1 bfMCl"I and of '6ec· the lllate. you rney M1W UN~ A DEED Of TROST Boole 1MM. P-e9174 of Of· the offtoe of the County Re-~ t , IN 1 In 8001! 14092 . ._ tnen one hundred I 100) tonal 51repre~ent•tl11•$ui~t = you mutt."""*" *-Y'
tlon to be Aecot<*I August Uf>OI' the eucutOt"' edmln-DA TED 21 tl/82 UHl.ESS ftctel "9cordl (the "Oeder· cor<* of Mid County The page 1159 of ()ftlc;lal Re-peroef'lt of the total amount 8071 ••• --.ue.. • .,,., 1111t IUtMIOfl9 It ..WO
6th ttH U ln11r. No. i.trator, or Uf>OI' the ... YOU TAKE ACTION TO atlon") and any emend· etreet addr.-end 01her cord& of Mid county ot the bid price named In thl 2•S. Hvnllrot: ~· ~: on you. nle wttll ttlle court I
85-290054 of Mid Offlcjll tomey for !tie ueoutor Of PROTECT YOUR PROF· menlt"*-o. commondeelgnatlof\.lf9!'_!· PAACEL 2: c:ontrect flleLat>orand M•· :~:..al~ eatete of the wrlttenrMPOfl .. tOthecom-
2000 Reoordt. .ctmlnlltratOI', end Ne with ERTY IT MAY BE SOLO AT of the r ... property ..,... An undivided one twenty· tenets Bond shall be not .... n., · plaint UNMt you 0o ao.
17,_, 842• Said .... will be made, but the court wltll proof of .... A pUBl.IC SAi.£. IF YOU The etreet ~ = ICflbed abOVI II pul"p0f1ed fourth (I/24th) lnter•t. U I then one llUn<lred (100) per. dleun d. at tile time f' hit your deflallt wlll be entered
without CO¥afllt'lt °' WW· va. a wrttten reque111 ltalt· NE.ED AN EXPlANATION °"* oommon --t · to be: 3092 Wlt'Tlfl i.-. tenant In common In thl fee '*"' o1 tMI total amount of dHtll. tn and 10 ell th• oer on ~Ion o1 tile pleln-renty.••Pf9Mor Implied, r• lnO thllt you dtalrl IPedal Of THE NATURE Of THE " eny, oCthe ,... property Cott• ....... Calfoml•. lnter•t In end to tile the tile bid price named In the t&ln real property. lltuateo tiff end thllcoµrt may "'1411' ~~~;;~~~~~~ gairdlng tit ... po1uuloo, °' notice of the llllnO of.,, In-PROCEEDINGS AGAINST ducrlbed •b011• 11 The 111idel11Qned TNl1M common trN of lot 2 ot contrect Only bonds"**' 11 9168 Columb4ne. In the • ~I agaln9I you for
\IOLV0 '83GlllurboSla. enc:umbfencee, to PIY the ~tOfYendeppr....,_..tof YOU, YOU SHOULD COM-~ed to be: 13 Hill· ~enylfabllltyt0<eny Trect 10484, u per IMP by compenlee wtllch are City of Fountain Valley, Or· !tie,..,_,~ In the
blk/ I I remaining pr1nc:lpel tum of ettete _...Of of ttle ~ TACT A LAWYER. OAASS. IRVIHE, CA 92716· tncorrec:tneM of tile 11reet llled In bOOil 463. Pagel 35 rated '"A" Of "A•'· In the -.County Calttomli CS. c:omptalnt wlllCll could r.-Wgn . 3 J • ?m no the notH MCUred by Mid tloneoreccountsmentloned On 1V 4/85 et 10:00 A.M. The Utldeilllgnect Trwt• edd,... and otMr common to 37 lnc:luslve. or Ml1-··s..1 Rating Guid41' Wiit be scrlbedu follows Loi 57 01 autt 1n g1rn•thment o t :'~·o~a~geC=~ty ~ Deed of Truet, with Inter• lnSectlon taopand l200.60f FORECLOSURE CONSULT· ~eny~t~ = deelgna11on. If Ill';. lhOWn cellaneou• MllP•. recorel• of eccepted Failure to aut>mtt Trect No eoci:~ ~~ wagM. taking ot money°' u In said note l)(Ovlded, ed-the Cetltomla Probet• Code. ANTS IHC • !tie duly ap-lnoorf9CtnMI 0 1 r llereln. said county. u IUCll ttt'm It iw:ceptable bOnd• w\11 be 1 map recor " · property °' other rtlli.f ,...
pty Mustselll 496•7650 11ances. If any under the ltradl!.."l.t Y••••• po1nt9d TMtM under end addtlM::9 W'* CO: Sald .... wlllbemlde,but defl.nedln tlleAt1ICleentttled ceueel0<rejectlonot bl<I ~ :'d 33 0
1fheM! QUNted lnttoec:ompleint
\IW '67 Bug, runs good, terms or Mid 0..0 of Trwl. e ....... ._, ~ ~· lo 0..0 of Tniet. delllgnet • eny, wltl'loUt COVW\1111 Of ..,. "'DeflnlUont" of 11141 Oedar· PREVAILING RATES Of IC)S. In O.led. AUG 2• 1913
orlglnel. NMdS work lees.ctierge1and~ ._, 1111111, ........ Aecor<*I Of\ 2/29/12 M ~ .... wlllbem-"' bYt '"':i:expr .. 0<lmc>lledlon,r• ltlon or Covenenll. Con-WAGES ln eccordanOlwltll 1~,!'~~~tbr~deo LHA.•. ANCH,CLIM, $900 847 5699 of the Tnat• end of tlle c..-°""' ........ Oocurn8"1t no. 82.oee&4& of -• 1>91 ttue. poeMal . Of cSIUons Ind Ael1'111ont r• Ille provlliOnl of s-ctlon ° ' ··..-. •YI. JURA&.. oePUTY . • truett crNted by Mid OMd "8Wport ...._CA -Of11c1e1 Reoord1 In the offtce wltlloU1 ccwenent °' war· "'°""' anoee. to pay tile corded In Boole 14095. ~ 1773 ot tile Ctlltomt• L..at>ot Thia lale It aubiect 10 cur Deiter o. ,,___ A"" vw '72 Bug. new motor. of TNtt. Said .... wll be Publiehed Orenoe C09tll of.,,. Reoord« of Orange a~"''";~·'· remelnlng prtndpel tum of 516 of olflc:lal Rec:orde. (I Code. lllegenetalPfevelling rent tu• COllenanll con-..,_, fOf ............. -.. body & lnl xlntl $2550 held °" TUM<Jey. Oeoember [)elly Plot~ 27. 28. County, Cellfornll.. executtd 09I' tltte, ii on 1 on, Of the notl(t) MC:Ured by Mi<I "!>9't1r1tlon"'), and 1ny rates of per diem wegea and Oltlont, reetnctiOn• r-· ...,._ 9MI.. ..._ -.
494-2552 or 497. 1597 17111 19&5 ., 10:00 Lm. •t Oeoember 4 1185 by: DALE LElrER AN UM-enoum anoee. to pey ,,.,. Deed of Trull. with Int••• amendments thereto llOlldlY Ind 01191'11"'9 wor'lt In v&tiOnl. r\ghl•. right• 0' way. ~ CA ... (714)
I.
tile Ctlepmen Avenue lfl· ' WTh-208 MARRIED MAN WILL SEl.L r9ITlailnlnO ptlndpel -' of theteon. u provided In Nld PARCEL 3 tile locallty In wlllell tile WOf'k ..aementa, end •••ttlng en· S-.....0'
\IW'72 Bug/y.ellow,ne.w trance to tile Civic Center AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO the not• MCUfed by Mid not .. , ad1111nCM, 11 any. Euements u Mt tortll In 11 to be perlcwmed llu been cumt>rances 01 record 1 Published Oranoe Coest
mtr. lk brand new ll'lrU· Bolldlng, 300 Eatl Cftac>man "8JC ll)llC[ THE HIGHEST BIDOEA FOR Deed of TNtt. with 1111.,... under the lenM of Mid Deed Ille Sec11on entltled "Cer1ain ot>telned trom the Olrect0< Tile terrN aNl conell ::!: Oedy Piiot No¥ember 20 27.
out! $2550/obo. dys AYen~ Orenge. CA. CASH (pey•ble ., time of thereon •• provided In Mid of TNtt,...,.... ctlergM aNl ~11 fO< awn.rt" end Oi Ille e>ec>anment of Indus-of .... are cash In 1• Oecember. 11 1985
494·2552, '497· 1597 ev At t"9 time of the Initial C t1M .... tri lewtul money of !tie not•, •dVeneel. If .,..y, IXP8'\W of the Trua1• end "Support, Seuetment and trlet Re1111on1, 1 copy ot money of the United States • W· 1'12
publleatlon or this notice, Mt4tOe fl.... United Ste t11) at THE under !tie l•ml of IN Deed ol the tl\llts Cl'Mted by aald Encroachment" of Ille wtolcll 11 on me in tile office ol of Amerlc• Ten peroeol of vw-:85 Cabrlolet, red/blk
1n1. 51< ml S12,000. Dy
675-7700 ev 637·2243
\IW BUG 1975. Hcellent
condition. new clutch ,
paint and Interior. Runs
great $2,000 673--5028.
VW Convert. Super Beetle,
'76 Excel cond through!
$4300/obo.6e1·8733
Aat11 Deantic 9300 eulcR ·77 Estace Wgn... ail
etec, rigged for towing.
$950. OBO 646-8 102
BUICK '77 Regal. new
landau lop, V·8, pi s, air,
pl b, 1111, cruls PP
$1600. OBO 554 65
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTION
ol lete model. tow ml!Mge
Cadlffact In <>ranvct
County! See ua todayl
&•0-1180
2&00 Herb« Blvd.
COSTA MESA
WllU&UIUIU
USED CARS& TRUCKS
COME IN OR CALL FOR
FREE &PPUISAL
DeULLO
CllPHlO
18211 BEACH BLVD.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
••l-1011;141-1111
FORD ·68 MuStang $500
Gd cond 548-4571 msg ----WE BUY CLEAN,
LOW MILEAGE
DOMESTIC & IMPORT
CARS, TRUCKS & VANS
WEWUTYlll
CLUllSHC&ll See Veno dos Santos
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
20()0 HAii llOA 8l V 0
CO\IA MhA b4'l 0010
FORD ·75 Torino. 2dr,
18,800 orig ml, exll cond.
S 1570 obo 759-1907
FORD '7S Fiesta, mull
sell, needs work, run1 ok.
$1000 obo 548·0113
FOrd LTD '7 1 St W~on.
• Xlnl tires. new brakes.
20K m• on rbll eng
$375/obo, 54S-5469
LINCOLN ·77 V8fsalllea.
town Pwrlltllr. $2099.90
Jim 760-1639. 873-4400
tile totel amount of !tie un· f/11 "9al PNper!y COURTYARD AREA BE· of Trutt, leM. Chel'OM = Deed of TNlt, for Ille Artlcle 1ntltl1d "EtH· ll>e C11Y Cletk of 11\41 City of lhe amoun~ b~ :C:::
paid belence of.,the o011-.............. TWEEN THE TWO STAIR· eJ1P8'1M9oltheTruet•_...., emount reuonatlly ••II· ment1"ofllleOeclaratlon IMneendwlll bl~llllllll-peny tM o !<J 1
11
P\BJC ll)TIC[
tlonMCUredbytheabo'lt Me.Miit-WAYS AT THE ALLAN ofthetNl1t«•tedby.-. mlltldtobe:$133,389.23 PARCEL • 1bleto anytnt..tedperty enc9IObeP oneon •ma· K·21-~bed d-i of INl1 end In the Super1or Court of BUILDING FACING YORBA OMd of Tr1111. to-wit: The BeMl'lc:lwy, 11nder Eaaef'Mnla u Mt forth In upon requesl Thi contrec· lion of 11141 by !hi oourt AOVERTlM•NT
•tlmated COllt. expeneee. tile Stet• of Celltomla. for STREET. 14081 YORBA 1299,1&'4.11· Mid Deed of Truat. 11411'• the Seo11ons enutled "~: tor and 1ny subcontractor Taxee. rent•. ooeratlng:: Not1ee 11t11ree>yglvet1tlle1
• n d • d 11 an c • t I 1 the County of Loa Angelee STR_EET. TUSTIN. CA taeec> TN t>eneftdll'Y under Mid totore did execute end ~ tain Euementt IQ;~· under 111m shall Prf not main~~=:;!. .c-on September 13 1t8S. one
'106,781.95. To determine In the Matt• of !tie &at• all rlgl'l1. title end Int .... Deed of TNtt heretofol'9 .......... to the llftdeltlgoed • end "Support. ~~tlement 111811 Ille apec11\ed ptevaillng "'":'et111 to Ille pu~ 1955 Boeing Vertol M·2 18
the opening bid. you mey of RUTH J. FELIX. 0.-con¥8Y9d to end now held ecuted and ~ to the written Oeder•tlon of 0.-and Encroec:l'lment ot thl rates of wages 10 all work· :"11 be or led 19 of tile Helicopter Veto!Ole ldentlfl-
call (7 14) 863-3030 C*IMCI. DY It under Mid Deed of wrttten Dec>-teutt end Demand for Sale. Artlcl• enllll•d · 'E11•· men emptoyeed In the ex· • pr 1 ca110n No ~238. w .. Dated: Novem1* 7, 1985 NotlOe le hereby otven ttla1 Truet In the property 11111-;::'~;c' 0:,.,... end 0.-end • written NollOe of 0.. menta" of the Oecl1r1tlon of ecullon of tile eontrect date Of r~d!~!'.~:O~ te1Hd • 1t t•3SO Cerner
COl.UMelA P'tMANCtAL the unOtrllQMCI Will Mii at ated tn Mid County Cell· . wrttt fault end Election to Sell. Covenent1, C<wldltlona and LABOR REOIJLATIONS ....,ance lane. l.Mll E~. C-.
COAP<>f'ATIOM, aa Mid Privet• ..... to the lllgNtt fomla. deec:rlt>lng 1~ 111nc:J =fC:. ~ ~ a:;.. TM underllgned ceuMd Restrictions. recorded In The contractO< ll'lall compl'y 11119 rec~n~t! 0:1t.;0~: tornla '°' v\Oletlon of 2 I USC
Tl'uttH •J MarJ V. end be9t bidder tut>tect to tl'lft'lln· rllgnect Mid Notice Of OeflUl1 and Book 14092. ~ 1797 ot with all tile requlremtnll ot veyance, Y 831 Atty ~ 6Mll'li'ICIW
HJdocll ' AMI•••• .... confirmation o1 Mid Su-PARCEL 1: ::'~~The~[); Section to a.II to be ,... Offlclel Records (lhl "Mis-Section 1777 S 1099111411' wit turanoe ix:'~-:;:!':.:,'"" pt-tl'll mailer 11'1 tile Unit·
,...,., ' pencw. Court. on Of •tt.t IM Unit a of Tract No. 9987. fault and Election to Sell 10 COf<*! In tMI county whir• ter Oec1ar1tl0fl"l and any 1111 other 9'Ji)41Cable requlf• •11&::9 or° ofter• are lnvltlel ee1 s1atea Ol1111C* Court tn
Publllhed Orenge COMt tlll dey of December. 1986 aa lhowrl on 1 mac> recorded be ec:orded In !tie county the rMI property Is located. amendmenta 111et110 men ta of the Call1ornla 1 11111 ptoperty al'ld must order to contllSI the pfob-
O<y Piiot Nowmber 13 20 at !tie offtce of Geor99 E. In Book 422 peget 18 to 2 t r reel II o.te: NoY9mber 12. 1985 ExoepUng all Oil Oil rlgllll, LabOr Code Of II be 11>!1 caute IOf thll lelnlre
27 1ta5 • ' Morrow, i..wy., &141e 231. lnc:tuet¥e of• MitcellaMOul =t:O the pfoperty ,ACIFtC llMTIMIL m1nteral1, mln.,al rlgllll, DRAWINGS ANO SPECI· ~ ";;'111~ t~": :.uce r:i mutl file with tl'll Aeik)enl
' W-1~ 221 E..t WalrM.lt Str•I. Mape. recordt of Orenoe · CORPORATION, .. Mid nllurel gu rlgllll and otllel FICATIONS A luH Ml ol c: 11 8 for Agen1 In Cllar99. Drug En·
---------PeHdena, Callfornl•. County c.ittomlL DATE: 1117/85 .,_..., 9J: a-K..,, -hydrocarbon• by whit· drewingl end IC)eClflcst Samuel Cubet•. tttOf~ forcement Admlnle1'111on P\llJC ll)TlC( t1t01, County of I.e. An· ~tint thertltrom .. fOAICLO•URI COM· I•• t II t •'•I•• d • 10111er n1m1 kno•n. 19 ~lltbtl 10< lnte>eCI :-~~-r=·s:=~ P 0 Boa 2946. RN9r9ide.
I(..... gllea. Stat• of Clllforn4e. .. oll oll rlgl'lta mlnenle. min-tULTA•TI, ... c .. •1: •M• ..... LAe ........ geotl'lltmal ateam end all wlt?lOUt c:Nrge •I Ille ottlcc 24S HUflll""'on BMcll Call-Celllorntl 92516 .• claim _.., !tie r1gM, tttle end lnte'9at of .... ri{,trta, netural 9111 rlgl'lta Def11e1 W. OrlMNd, V'9e Cellfor"la HMI (111, productl derived therefrom, ot lhl Olrec1or of Pu ~I '"'' be flleci '<lllltll I nd coel t>onCl of $2,000 00 ~ !!! Mid decnnd at IM time of and ottlet' hydrocetbOM. by '" Idem, (714) n1..-el ....-w1tnou1. l'IO-. t1'141 right WOfk• of the etty of lrvlne the ~ mC:y tile superl0< 1n tile torm of a cunler'• Of
'" _.. dMttl end Ill the right. title wt\&~ name known Publlltled er.,. COMt Pub4llMd Orange Cout 10 drill. mine. ttor•. ·~ ~· llltS of M6d d,_ cert•iled clledl m.o. pey-LUCLLa •Miii and im.-tNt 1M e9t8t• geothetmal ltelfl'I, end a.i Delly Piiot ~ 13, 20, Deity Piiot NoYemblt 20, 27 • and operete througl'l lhl tut· Inga. ~ end tllO :"1..,:' :::' ~~~er;:'. 11>14! to the U S Oepanment
.. -Mtl!CMftf'tOllNlllMMi of Mid • 11 I~ hM ..::· producte derived from wry 27. 1M5 Oecember4, 1M5 90 t-or tile~ 500 ._. docu rnenu nuy bt IOne"Y etanyllmel'191'flrst ofJuS110e Of •PP'OYl<U ur.--TO .. "'•lir-quW'edbyopeiatkll•of'-"' oftlleforlgolna,tlletmaybe W·1&4 W·I tee1oftl'lttul>lur1110tohald purchuedfromthlC>ec>an· bllcatlon or thll noiice ty on o•betore0tlcemt>er 3 --·· '"" lend. u rnerved In D..a ment of Public WOfk•. Cit) pu 11185 An lnel!Qe"CY petltlOn rmuc ll)T1C[ NI.IC ll)TlC( "8JC NOTlC( PtalC ll)TlC( trom The Irvine Compeny .• of ~-17200 JambOrW an~Ofblt~,:,akl~~':: may be llled lf'l lteu ol 1 cost '-=========::.~=;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;:;;~----j~~~~'.:":"::-".:~:"::j':"'::-7.:":7.::'"::=:""::!7.=~:-:::::-;:;::;-i Michigan COf'POl'•llon. r• Road. lrvlne, Callfornla d bid fOfms apply 11 rile t>onCl Ot,,.,...... the prop. 1'i corded December 1, 1980 Ir 92713 A non-f9tul'ldat>le let "' ft'1Y wlll be lldn'lffllllrll~
Cl"'\I IUT'V• Of ORANGE NVIRONM AL MANAnE:ll~ENT AGENCY Book 13855, P-oe 596 of Of· ot S5 00 will be c:Nrged l0t office of Ille attorney for the fort11ted purauenl to 19 ~ : 1 ~ ll<:lel Record• eech Ml ol dooumenta '*"°"" representeUVI , u S C 160a anel wot be di•
Ahlo uoeptlng all wet., Otawlngl. tp«:lflcellone The right 11 r,~ 10 • posed ol acc;ordll'IQ lo •-~CES A rlgllll wtietl'ler IUCh wattt l>td documenll will bl m.iJ. leC1 any ano a boel! 1nte<nleel l>t\rllea may 1111 • r\gllll.lhall be riparian. OllT1'i· ed. upon reoetpt of requetlt Daled Novemt>er 22 I ~t1h0t1 for rem1uJon or
PUBLIC HEARING 1ng, 1pproprlellve. p.,. no later then 10 catend., 19:!,_.,.. C bet• Atl-J m111ge11on 01 torteiturf' with
coletlng. l)(e1Crlptlveorcon· deyt prl0< to the dale Mt r0t , ~ ,..._ . ._.. the Res•Of'nl Aqent 1n
trectual wttlle>ul, llOWe\ltll' opening bldS lor lfl l<I Of' . A-Cnarge pu•suenl lo 19
S •r. Pia /LCP the right of entry for thl •A· e1111on11 cnarge of SS 00 ""· 8071 IMter · u s c 16 t8 11no 2 1 cm South Laguna peel IC n erclM ot IUCfl riglllS. u r• SECURITY FOR COM· •~ltftgtOfl lleech, I t316 7 1-tJ 16 6 t wt1nou1 hi·
9ef've<I 1n Deed lrom Tilt PLETION OF WORI(· Tilt c~ "ue.wtl K.uli-1 ong 8 claim and cost bond
985 lrvlne Company • Mk:nlgan c:ontrect documenll call f0t -.._,....,,.._ o.otge J C11enavett• ()at&: TU89day, OtioartJer 10, 1 corpor1t1on. recorded be-monlhty oraor-paymenu :!°;,~.__Fr-. 111. fllHldent A9ent In
Clmbef 1 1&0 tn BOO!< t>ued upon the eno•-. "'""-r' I Charge Ttrne: 1 :30 or soon thereafter 133SS. page S96 of Ottleil estimate of ,,,. pel'otnlagf dip A:i:~:~:e Coost Ca~ RP-86-000< Records. of wor~ c:ompleled nie Cit) u 27 28 Dale Novemt>e< ' 1985
location·. IDil""'n""*ng Commission Hearing Room Tile "'"' aooress and wlll reteln ten 110) pereenl 01 ~= ~o~~ Put>hSheel O•anQf' Coast rm '" other common designation. eec:ll progress payment et wTh.2 1c oa1ty P1101 No•em~ 13 ~
10 Civic Center Plaza, Senta Ana ~:.'~,,~~~':':-~::~ 5e(;Ullly tor completion 0 1 2' '98~ w 16
P90l'QIAl.1
"91ndelent •o. ~ to the South La1u111 Specific Plen/Loc:al Coa1tal PTogr ..
(LC1) to t11c:OT11orate teatual cb1111e• t o the S~cifl.c Ple11/LCP.
nt• South Leauna Specific: Pla11/LCP ii • compreh•n•iv• de•elo,.ant plln
adopted by th• loard of luperYhore for the unincorporated c_,nlty
of South Lepna. nte Spec:Uic Phn/LCP v11 oriainelly adopted by rhc
ao.rd of Supervi•ora on April 6, 1993. Thie ... act.eat propo••• tec:h11tcal
re flne-nta to the Lend UH a.plat ton• HCt ton and poltc:y l•nauaae
cb&111•• within the h•ource, hv Develor-ent and C-niry De•tp •ad
Land1c:epe C09p011et1t• of ••id plan .
Loca l Coa•t•l Pro1 r -• er• aututorlly eaeapt from C!QA requir ... nh
pur111a11t to Section 21080.9, Dl.viaio11 13 of the Public le1ourc11 Code .
All p•r•ona either favorlna or oppo•tn1 thh propoul arc tn•tted t o
preaent their vi.eve before the Plannina c-inion. It h requeutd
o~t aoy vritt,eo reeponH be •11baitted t o the Pllnnto1 C-lnion •l
lee•t 24 hour• prior t o the heertna date.
1f you chellena• th• (nature of the propoHd e c:tlon) in court, you
-y N Hatted to r e i 1ln1 Otlly thoH l••u•• you or •-otl• •h• relied
ac th• ~blic baa r1aa ie1c:ribed l11 thl.• 11otic•, or ia VTltten
corr1•poo4en.c• 4elt•ertd to the (public eotity conducti111 the beerln1)
e t, or prior to. th• pubttc ~·r•••·
fOT hrt.t.eT lafo~u-. coiita ct r1 ... a., Dl•l•iClll at 1>4·•9S9.
1'11Jer(ualla/Ol•)
Patric:l• Sho..ak1r 111 tbe Projecr
purpo<ted to be. 6 Exetet
•6. Irvine. CA 927 t5
The un<'erslgned Trustee
dltcttlms any ll1blllty tor an)
1ncorrectne55 of tile 1tree11
acldr199 and othtl< commor I de910nat 10n 1f eny snowr
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
her tin Said Nie Wiii t>e made t>vl Wlttoout covenan1 or war· ACROSS
ranty e11preu Of' 1mpljlel r•
gardlnQ 1111• ~ Of encumt>ranoes 10 oay 1ne
rem11mng prlnc1pal sum ot
tile notes secureel by Mid
' Conro<''
6 D•~
10 Poc•mar• ,. sos
Deed ot Trust Wll" nlt'esl • 5 ll&u"
thereon u ptovtded '" sa.o
not" advances •f &.n't
uneler tile term• of tile DeeCl
of TNll. leea cnarge:s aod
~of ltoe TruStee inc
ol Ille trusts creeled !>)' Moel
Deed of Trusl to·w·I
1 133.069 36
Tile 1>er1elic:1ary un<ler satCI I
Deed of Trvat ""'etolOl'e ....
ICUteel ln<I e1e4.,,.eel 10 li"te
unde<Signeel 1 wnnen Dec·
1arauon ol Oet1ull and o..1 mand for Siii Ind • ""'"en
NOlloe ot DeflUlt end Elec·
lion to Sell n~ underliQMd
c;auMO said Mollee of 0.-1
ltull anCl Ei.ctiOn 10 s.t1 to
bl rec:orCleel on lhl count)
'#Mte 11'11 real prCIC)e'ty IS
IOclteCI DATE 11t 7t8S
FOfllfCLOIURE COM·
IUL T ANTI, IMC., 11· o..-1 w C>nMt9'. 'llce ~t. (114) .,,.,...,
PuOlial*S Ofange CoMt
Delly Piiot No119'1'ller I 3 20
•6 Ha '' :>ret
·' qO&SI K'urce ia er~
'9 Stretcne<l
ou1 corcte
l ::>• "'3 '< U"bOU"dt'Cl
14 c a....io1 •"• 26 Pricllled r Coc1o.1a1s
J1 OVI .... ~.
do
32 Ollacheo
33 Euroe>eal'
ree>ul:>ltC
JS Con111ne•
38 Eng115h ·
compo-
39 While aw•'t
•OS~ Lii
4 I Talk oelly
'7 up
&dlllsecl
'3~
... 81ve
45 8 11<:1' m.,_,
4 "1 AC unitJI
27 1985 W·IH 1
P\8.IC ll>TICE
s 1 Eicceo1 tor
S2 Side dis,,
S.4 Crane
S8 lltf'tCle
;g Scotcr-oort
ii 1 Vine var
62 Sett ,1 o11'
t>3 1ac1a snow
64 ~, r.._,..,n
~., S•Q" 011~
Of; Got b'09~
i;-TtM\Slltl•Ot'lf
• S11nge• z s,.,
J Cllddoa.r
Indians
• Malo.e-beh_,,.
S OCl<lt>all
8 WOOCI
1 E 11\dlV
1:>ulfa10
8 OdOl'•tt
9 Play
dll'y 10 Sea animal
11 Couf"leoua
avong .,"Q$
0<1ted \IP
IYOcate
23 Btectc
2 5 Dull peCJOlll
~· °""""$ :'I! .,...,,.,.oc..,
19 CnatQf'<1
e>•rloClfl~
'0 All!:' o· '•''
)•"" .. I' ....
~"t'•e '"O" JS 1n0one~·•"
ptOVtO<'I'
'& 1ns11o•t• r G4ns a•n.1nc
)Q 11\dl(flCI
•0 Fnoiproof
• ;> ""II<"
•3 0<"11"10!!'0
44 ACOf'IVt'OO
•6 B1tel•• t""1
•: Pl,Wl'O cer'ls •e c :>011
•<1 c;sr .. ·o
SO WfllC>fll
!>J Grl'f't•nq
r,• Tr>• 0 011111
•u"•"
">. El« ''""• F.(I '-Andflt n"llC
'] I'\
MERC '72 Coupr, ~
enrf. Utt. p/1, p/b, .W, Gd
tlf•. $750 obO. 842-4317
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. ftalC llmC( ~TYA:.;•1..:~ ~-= ~ ---. 1111 ... ~ • IM tMft In ~ ii'1iiils!M,td,,.. , a 1 U e O co Broad M _....._.=---------fTMIN THI TWO ITAIA-"0.Cl•r•tlon") •net •ny "9MOl6on IMtlled "Cenalft 0--• pmm D '·Of ST\JDLEY Ore nee . Cal u . Meta Ivanoot. Mem Rivera; fOW' lfand· way 642Tt~·
Ii ,...,.., .... MM11 WAYI AT THI ALLAN •MOdfMntt encl ~ ~loro..t"wl =·· ~':n":wnuam Braddock Direc~ by Pierce oria1 111rvk:e 3:00P • .,,,_ -0 1 ~1.o .. -:Di::;;::rec:=ton==·==·=:::::-T,... ......... , IUILDtNO ,ACING YOMA menu.... "lupport, ........... wl .... n-. aecured by Nici Studley Jr A J'fti Broe. Bell BroMlway Sunday. December l , Sh lb R nor..
1 l Ce-r ... r lefere•H ITMIT, 140tt vof'aA llutf411,. .. oll. oll f'IOl'IC;l. lnoroeclunent" ot tlle Deed of rr. Witt! in..... .... _ t' ,..:_ M ~ Mortuary, 642-9100 Ocean Hilb Com-ande 1• 1aynanna J'ry . .,_... ITNIT,TUITIN,CAtaelO ....... Mineral rltjtltt, Article •ntltled "l!aM· ~ -~lnNlcl ,_-nt 0 ~ta esa. munlty Church, De
llOTIC8 Oil .. rtgflt, ...._ w1 ..,..,_ ,.,,., ... ...,. end °"* IW'lta" of IN Oecler"lon. ~ 'tdlfenole 11 en pewd away Novem-Eu.JS 32222 Del 0 Member St. Jo.chlm ~Ml.I OOfl~ IO end now lleld llyctrocerbona by wll•t· PA~L •: vttttei IM.;,.,,. 'Ol 111e ~ her 24, 1983 at the qe Nicolette M, EU.la. :'f; blapo C.thollc Ch h La YOU AM IN DffAUL by It vndet Mid Deed ol 1oev•r name known, f 1-.1te •Mt tonll In of TNtt. .... d\tfw Ind f 86 lCll...\ ed f the 2,.. Wtl ( n...__,... Street, San Juan ....... __ K--.. ~-'w .. 1: UNOEA A oeU> ~ TAUi Truet In IN PtOC*tY &IN-oeotf*l'MI ......,. end .. IN etctionl entttled "Cer· · T ..--0 . ~ ov a r .,, e o uunaw . C.p'8trano UUI--~w• ~ ,..
DA TfD 3J 15112 UNLE Med In Nici Covnty, c... produGta a.Md ............. '8ln fWIMntt to Owfter9" ~~ ::..::-: = of William B. Studley E ll la • 0 f s a n . fa r e F u n d 0 f
YOU TAKE ACTION T~fOmla. detcl1bln8 tM Nind wlf\Ovt, hOweoilet •.... f'lehl end "lklpport, let11emtnt DHd of Trull to wit· m of El Toro· and Clemente CA: ador· FLORES Southern C..Uf.. and PAOT!CT YOUA PAOP tllet'WI· to .,,_, mine, '9tON, eicplote end Encroac:Mlent'' of IN ' • ' R ' Coe g ' 1 , ' f J SoJ Fl EATY tTMAY8ESOlD ~11 PAACtl ,. andoe>«tt•INOVOlltMtur· Ar tlcte intltltd "file· 11'8,t71.30. uth k of Iver-tng mother o esua &ero °""• World War Il Army
A PUBLIC IALE. IF YOU! Unlt3tuillownendtte-taoe0tlNllPC*'800fMtot mentt"oftllt0.CW1tlonof o!:~~':/:.-:CS ton.Ore. Mr. Studley Nathan. 4 mo'1; dead pal9ed away Novem-Veteran. Vl1li.tlon
NEED AN EXPLANATK>HI ecrlbed In Ille CondOmlnlvm IN IUblurltot of Mid i.inct. Cov.nante. Condl1lon1 and ICUt.: and dellYerld tot.: WU a member of St. of cancer November her 24. 1983 In New-Friday Nov. 29, be-
OF THI NATURE OF THE!PIM r.oonMcl on Ootoblr .. ,...,..,lnthlDMdtrom Aeetr1ctlon1, recofcled In undetllgnld 1 wrtti.n Dec· Joachim Catholic 24, 1983, Untvenity port Beach. Beloved =at 12 Noon at PROCEEDINGS AOAINSl' 14, 1111 lflloolt ~4251, The"*" Compeny I Midi-Bo<* 1'°82. P-el 17117 of !Watton of o.flUlt end 0.. Ch h "'-ta M . f ,..._,.., __ ,_ ,_ .. __ father of Jeule Bros. Bell YOU YOU SHOULD OON-i P9 u end ~ ,. lgm'I oorpor9tlon. l'ecGfdtd Offlclal Atcotdl (the "M.... f urc • '-"'9 es.a. 0 ~UI IUll, .u vuaoc:.
TAChLAWYEA. ruery•. ttabytnetrumenl Mly2ti1N11n8o<*1'407t,.., O.CW1tlon") and any =~~~WI'= MaaterM.ari.nen,San In addition t.o her (C.therlne) Flores of Broadw•y Mortuary. ~6f~~A~J~C-L~~~~=c!,,~· :::.. 3tt of Oftldll ,.._ =::0 . end euppie. tlon toSelt. T11tuodef1lgnld Pyed.ro c.alif; andWUmof ~Ullband anded aonb , ahh e San(M Di)ea<>Fl; Richardt Rcury 7:30PM Fri-
ANTS, 1NC ... 111e duly ap-, PARCEL 2: · Aleo excepting .. wet., Tiit ttr• lddr ... and caulld Mid Notice of o.. acht Mast.en, • IS surviv >y er ary ores, o day a nd Ma11 o f
pointed T'NllM under llldo An undivided 1/52nd right•, wtletller lUCh .. ,., ot'*' common detlgnatlon, i.utt end Election to hll to tngtop. Calif. Mau of m o th e r . 0 .en a Cotta Mesa; Loula Christian Burial
purtuS!t to Deed of Trvtt,11n1ereat t111enant In com-flgtlt1111•t>trlolrltn.over· If any, of the,... property~~.!''"' CQUn~ Chriftian Burial will Rehbock ; fathe r , (Rhea) Flores, o f '11AM Saturday Nov.
Aecofded on 3/31182 lltmonlntlltfellntereatlnend lying, ~rOf)tlttlve. I*· dt1crlbed above 11 IOc:atld property be celebrated on Fri-Georae v Ivanoof· Costa Meu· Linda 30 198~ Both t St Document no. 12· 1 1 1951 of 1o the common of Lot e of Colatlng, preacnpt!Ve °'con· putportld to be: t7 OxlOfd · . D • ' Fry Concord• Calif ' · a · OflictatAlcotdlln 111t offlcejTrect 10464, u per maip trec:tuel. wttllout, ~. 130.lrvtne,CAt2715. DATE: 1117185 day November 29, sister . Paule tte; of • ; J oa c him Catholic
of Ille Atcofdtr o1 Or~ n1tc1 In Book 4e3. pegea SS the right Of entry tor tllt ••· Tiit undertlgned Tt111tM .~~::~~:·~:~ c~~: 1983 at lO:OOAM St. brot. h e rs, Victor; brother o f L o uis Church. 1964 Orange
County,Ctlllomit.uecutldlto 37 lndvaM, of Mt. wdleotllUdlrigllttur• dllclWntenylitblll1y tOfeny DMW w ~ v.M J oachim C atholic George· Ton y · and Florea of Pioo Rivera; Ave. Cceta Mesa. ln-
t>y JOSEPH L POYNS, A ~ Mep9. recordl of ** In Deed from The lncofrectntM of the 1trett ' . Ch Or ' Bill • --d Fl f G d SIHGLE MAN WtU SELL A fl llkl ty IUCh tarme Id IMnl ~ 1 Mtdll9tn lddr ... and 01,,., common "" lrlant. {11') 1114Mt urch, 1964 ange Ray; nephews, y MeUn&r ores o t e r m e n t o o
ftAC..CV.W
•MONAL ftAN<
Cemetery • M0t1uary
Chapel • Crematory
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport S.acll
644·2700
HAR80ft LAWN-
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Costa Mesa
5•0-5554
PfERCI 8ROTHERI
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PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE·~uW-Ar1tcteenthlld C<JfJIOttllon. reeordtd May dellQnatlon, If any, lhown Publlthed Orange Coul Ave, Costa Mesa. In-and Nloolaa; grand· Phoenix, Ariz; Joe Shepherd Cemetery,
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1 auon of Cownantl, Con· page 1399 of Otficlll Said Mil wtll be mlde. but · ___ _:W::·_::18::,5L':Se::~u::l::,:ch:.:,:e::r_:Ce:::::me:::..:te:.:rI..'...Ll~v~a.'..::noo=f:...· ...:an::.:.::::d_:A.::u:.:n::ti....:..P.::ar:.:.k::.;--=an:::d:_So=l.::ed:.:a=d:..i....:P~l.::.er~c:;:e__:B:::r..:::o.::•·~B=e:.:l:.:Jl I:..' :::::::===::s::-::::::..:
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WEDNESDAY• NOVEMBEft 27, 1985_
Suits threaten·airport pact
Douglas petitions to bloc agreement;
Irvine appeals on federal suit decision
city of Newport Beach and two
c1ttZCns ~oups. A company spokes-
man sa1d the pact discriminates
against the company and airlines that
purchase its M0.80 jetliner.
wo uld be li mned to SS a day until
I ~ ~ith an increase to 73 average
dally flights after that. But the noisiest
jets would only be allowed 39 f111thts
per day under the agreement. while
the rest of the flights would be d1v1ded ~tween airlines that operate quiet
jets.
the no1S1er MO.SOs, Hanson said,
and the result would be lowered sales
and a loss of JObs at McDonnell
Douglas.
commerctal auiloe acceu plan. is
intended to consolidaie a 111a11 o{
lawsuits apt.Mt the county u oper-
ator of John W,ayne Airport.
By LISA MAHONEY °' ... .,... .........
An aircraft manufacturer and the cit~ of Irvine have gone to court
trying to block the proposed aarce-
men~ o n John Wayne Airport ex-
pansion.
McDonnell Douglas Corp . .:. a Long
Beach-based aircraft manuracturcr,
Coast
NewPQrt attorney Is ap-
pointed to Superior Court
bench./A3
Woman begins third trlal
on charges of murdering
her husband./ A3
Nation
Shuttle lifts off In spec-
tacular show./ A5
Mlnd&Body
lrvlne women run away to
play tennis./ Al
Sports
Area CIF football teams
face rugged tests this
week In second-round
actlon./81
The boys basketball.
teams from Edison and
Newport Harbor highs
are analyzed./82
There la no clear-cut
favorite In Sea Vktw
League. /113
Entertainment
Round IV In the "Rocky"
serle8 open a today, and
Sylvester Stallone says
he'll retire his gloves./ Al
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Clasalfled
Comics
Crosaword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Mind and Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Tefevlslon
Weather
84
A3
85-6
87-8
B4
89
89
A9-10
88
A7
A8
A6
A8
A3
89-10
81-3
A7
A2
HB officials
again talk
toughton
clean-up
About a year aao. city officials
appeared poised to do sometbina
decisive to clean up perhaps the most
bliahted area in Huntinaton Beach -
the apartments of Commodore Cir·
cle.
There wu talk offindina 10 owner
to consolidate ownen.hip of the 20
four-plex 11>9nmeou just off' Main
Street and west of the refurbished
Five Points ahoppina center.
It was hoped that aomc worthy
developer would buy the 23-yur--old
four-plexes and either clean them up
or bulldoze them and put up aome·
thin& more ecceptablc -perbaJ>I a
new apartment complex or retire--
mcnt community.
Unfortunately, floanaal arrante•
men ts couldn't be WOftcd out and the
hoped-for improvements didn't
come to pus. Meanwhile, the ume
1 problems and tbe 11me ~
-eome uy lum -CMditionl
remain. •
But clty offtda.lt. who Awmed a lalt
forct this year to a&t.K:k. Che ]ll'Oblem
and to eaemdet a IC)tnt of~
ation from ownen, an now ta1JD.a1
~·ve told the 10 ablen• ~
I cri to come ue with • rebabtlhatioe
plan by Dec. 11 to brifta the as-n·
)
filed an objeetion Mo nday to a "One of the principal objections we
settlement pending before U.S. Dis.-' had ... was based o n a change from the
trict Court Ju~e Terry Hatter that oriainal set down on the 1990 aircraft
would permit hmitcd expansion at access plan," Don Hanson, company
the airport in return· for noise rcdul -spokesman, said. "The change would
tfoo measures. have made it more restrictive on the
McDonnell Douglas is opposed to airlines who use our M 0.80 aircraft.••
clements of a 12-point settlement Under the settlement pending in
reached between Orange County, the Hatter's coun, commercial flights
Election
recount
puts Hall
on board
7 votes still separate
Mesa councilman,
anti-high-rtseioe
By PAULARCHJPLEY
OfllleD119r .........
The numbers changed, but the
result was the same Tuesday as Donn
Hall outpolled Costa Mesa acti vist
Patricia Aynes for a water board scat
in the county's first recount in four
years. 1
Aynes had asked for the recount
after losing to Hall by just seven votes
in the Nov. S election for Costa
Mesa's scat on the Orange County
Water District board.
In thif week's han·d recount, both
candidates picked up seven votes. At
the conclusion of the two-day recount
at 3: IS p.m. Tuesday, the results
showed Hall winning, 2,S79 to 2,S72.
AynC1 and Hall, who is a Costa
Mesa city councilman, both viewed
the battle for the water board seat as a
test of strength between supporters of
Costa Mesa's development policies
and those opposed. to high-density
development.
Aynes, 34, was supponed by the
Mesa Action homeowners group.
Two Mesa Action-backed can-
didates were elected to the Costa
Mesa City Council last November,
and local political observers said this
year's water board election could
serve as a harbinger of the coalition's
chances in next year's city council
elections.
"They felt that beating Donn Hall
would give them some more credi-
bility." Hall said following the re-
count.
Hall said the closeness of the
election should wake up those who
are satisfied with the policies that
Costa Mesa has been following.
"It makes people aware of the
problem that there are people -
mostly newcomers -trying to
change the direction Costa Mesa has
been going the past 30 years," he said.
A green Chrlatmaa
Under an incentive plan to en-
coµrage quieter Jets, airlines flying a
county-designated Class AA aircraft
could choose a 2-for-1 deal -two
Class AA flights for one Class A.
T hat would penalize airlines using
McDonnell Dou~ 1s a pany to a
pre-emptive lawsuit filed by Orange
County apinst 11rpon expansion
opponents and airlmes now serving
the aupon or on its waiung hst •
The foderal suit, which seeks Hat-
ter's a pproval of a S 190-m ilho n
a1rpon expansion prOJCCt, related
environmental im pact rcpon s, Santa
Ana Heigh ts land-use plan and its
Hatter could schedule a beariaa t.o
consider McDonnell DouaJu Corp.. ·1
obJCCUoo or he could simply approve
the sc1tlement and dismus elemeoU
of the suit tbat pertain to airport
expansion.
In a related matter, the city of
Irvine filed an appeal last week with
the 9th D1stnct Court of Appeal
(Pleue eee AlllPOaT/ A.2)
Luck in lottery
doesn't hold up
at court hearing
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. o.., .........
A 20-year-old man who won
SS0.000 Monday 1n the )late lotter) ·s
Big Spin was 1a1led on Tuesday when
a Mumc1pal Coun Judge 1n Newpon
Beach ordered him to serve 240 days
for burglar). stolen propeny and drug
possession.
But before being locked up.
Salvador Valencia Rodnguez told
reporters he plans to get on the
straight-and-narrow and tum his hfe
around with his wrnnings.
.. I've been wanting to do this I m
going to change," said Rodngue1
after arriving more than four hours
late for his court appearance.
Rodnguez' mother. who accom-
panied him to court. said she ex·
peeled her son to be taken back into
custody and wasn't surpnscd when
Judge Chnstopher Strople ordered
the lo ttery winner into a pnsoner's
dock where a ba1hff stnppcd him of
l\is wallet and valuables.
The Santa Ana man was 1n Orange
Co unty Jail last v.eek when his
mother informed him he'd been
pic ked to spin the Jackpot wht"el
With the help of Pubhc Defender
Shari Lemger and a lotter) sccun ty
official. Rodnguez was released on
his o wn recogn11ance No" IQ
though he admmed be dld nol ldl the
1ud&e that be was ,oing to participate
in the Bt& Spm.
He appeared on tek v1s100 Monday
and woo $50,000 in the spin. A check..
minus abou1 SS.000 for laJ.es, wt.II ~
mailed to him this week.
But unless hts fate change~.
Rodnguez will not be home to rcce1 ve
(Pleue eee LUCK/A2)
Car importer jailed
for fake smog tests
By STEV E MARBLE
Of .... o.lly ""4 llaff
A Newpon &ach man once con·
s1dered the largcc;t 1mponer of '><>-
called "gra) marl et'' luitul') car\ m
the nation drev. a ~l\·momh pnson
term for fa king smog test~ on the
European-made cars
<\lben Mard1k1an. the owner ot
nov.-defunct Trend Imports of ~ev.
pon Beach. also v. as ordered b) t'
D1stn ct Judge Manuel Real Monda)
to perfonn community sef"\ ice work
\Cars m pnson and forced to pay ~'K>.000 in fines. according to W1l-
l1am Selle~. a U S. Jusucc Dcpan-
ment a n omc'
\fard1 loan· considered an 1mpon er
ot ~ailed "gra) market" cars be·
l ause the autos were built 1n Europe
and did not meet L1 .S. em1ss1ons
~tandards. 1s the first person pros-
ecuted under such cond1uon') by tbe
EP.\
"The thing that bothers a lo t of us
about this group is they seem to be
trying to polanze the community.
Any opinion that's different from
their's makes you a bad person," Hall
said.
(Pleue Ne RECOUNT I A2)
Ill.kc and l'fancy Bnmda&e were beat:t.ni the Chrlatmu rush
lut weekend when they aboee their Yale tree from among
bunclreda at the Peltser Pinea tree farm ln lrrine. The
couple wUJ return before Chrlatmaa to claim their choice.
Mard1 loan. 39. pleaded guilt) in
earl) <\ugust to nine count'I of
fals1f)ing em1ss1ons te•m v.1th the
Environmental Protection -\gem.~
and a single count of mail traud
He could ha~ c bttn sen t~nced to 0
The Corona del Mar man was
repre~n ted b~ Howard Wenzman.
the Los o\ngele~ attome) who rep-
resented John Z. De Lorean 1n his
cocaine trafficking tnal
Garo Mard1l1an. a nephew of the
car 1mpon er. was sentenced to 30
da\s 1n 1a1I He pleaded guilty in
~ugust 10 three counts of ma.ii fraud.
ROBERT
BAI KER
N E~s F oltO~U P
ments up to standard or to be
prepared to face criminal prosecution
ind fines for aJlcaed health viol·
at ions.
The apartments arc overcrowded
with Southeast Asian refuaees and
Uleaal aliens from Mexico, according
to R.icb Barnard, the coordinator of
the city's Commodore C ircle task
fo~.
The apartments are an enclave
surround"ed by newer and nicer
condomil\iums and located just west
of the refurbished Five Points Shop-
pina Center on Main Street. Nearby are the Pacifica Hospital and Wycliffe
Gardens hiJh-rite buiJdiqs.
Barnard said t.hedty bu recieived a
Utany of horror l10riel that include
reporu of becked up toilcu. in-
opentive heaten, bola in floors.
jury-filled dcc:t.ical .nrtDa and tbod·
dy repifra.
The p<?lice ca.lied him last
l'huk..aviftlt ........,,. Mid. to report
tbat -.1ru.e toilets in oee buildina bad
bidied up into blltbcubl and nowed
outlide.
041be problem niAed about fOur or
ft~ days. Nobody tbae knew who to
coa1K1. .. be aid.
Robert MCIJYIDU, Ora,. ou.n-ty's 4il'CIC1or of envuonffttncal health,
•id the O>mmodoft Cirde 1pan-
(Pl•11 .. &Oii/ A.I)
\ '
bike at the Mae tlme M accelerated. Re
loet CODUOl of tile bill•.,..,.. tile center
cllTlder and el•••.S lato a IJClat pole, at
liCllL Tile lap.ct ~ .. ARDA ~ tlM
~ ...... nnack ........ _ tlM
,. ..... t. Be .... naaied to P"oaatala ValleJ Tn ... C..tm wM:n aa. wu pro-
aoeaced cle9d of ..-n IMacl aacl cJaeet
t.aJut ...
Moriarty's
partner gets
4-yearterm
LO o\l'C1ELES t .\Pl -Richard
Ra) mond "-.eith. a long·llm<' partner
of former fireworks magnate W.
Patnck Monart}, was ~ntenoed
Tuesda~ to four years m pmon and
fined S45,000 for tax evasio n.
banlcruptC"\ fraud and fihng false
statements.
U.S. Dtstnct Judge Terry J. Haner
Jr. sentenced Keith t0scrve four years
on thrtt counts of tax evasion and
four year" for one count of
bankruptc' fraud. but ordered the
sentences to be served concuncntly.
Keith al'lo received a suspended
1wo-vcar S<'ntence for two counts of filma false finan<'1al information to
ftderalh 1Murcd banks. He was
placed on thrtt years probation for
those counts
Proteeuto~. who cla.Jm KcitJ\ owes
$300,000 m unpaid income tu for
1980-1982, bad SI.Id the •7·~
Oranae County bu11neutQan faced a
maximum of 20 )-can in pritoa.
The ~tenet will demOMUate "'to
youna people 'hu this ila'I tbe
onimal')· way to do bu 1nesa. .. Hat•
wd
Keith pleaded au1h y to lbc m
counts and llf'CCd to cooperate wi1h
offiaal1 mvestJpt1na altqed ~U..
cal COrTUpt1on. •
He prom1tcd to tell invaa.aeon
about lauodered money be al'r91 ill.)'
paid to pobueianl OG ~· behalf and ~bout ptOltltai.oe u,...
(PSeMe .. **1.A.an/Aa)
. .
\,
Aa 0Rnoe COMt DAILY PtlOT/ ~. Nowmber 27, 1815
Anglican envoy brings
Bush no 'special request'
81 ta.e Aaeeclald Preti
WASHINGTON -AftJ)ican
church envoy Terry W&i&.e, who has
been neaotiatina for the release of
kidna{>ped Americans in 1.A:blanon,
met "1th Vice President Oeorae Bosh
Tuesday and said he came to "keep in
touch" with the U.S. aovcrnment.
Waite, who came to the White
Hollse at Bush's 1nvilation, said he
was makina "no special request" of
the adminj tration U part of his effon
to pin the release of the hostaacs and
said the United Slates bas taken the
"corre<:t" position in the affair.
Waite also sajd be believed that
there "is a way throuah the problem."
For his part, Bush praised the
envo)' for bis couraae in the endeavor
and thanked him for his work. "We're
very lflteful for has bumanjtarian
concern." Bush said.
The envoy's visit came after he
traveled to New York to speak with
relatives of the hostages. Waite met
with Bush in the vice president's West
Wing office. both men seated next toa
fire blazing in the hearth.
Asked what the United States
should be doing to hcl~ gain the
captives' release. Wajte said, "I think
the Unjted States has taken ... a
correct position at the moment, they
have remained calm, they have
remained patient and they have made
it possible for an independent nego-
tiator such as myself to punue an
opponunity to sec some way through
this problem."
Asked whether he had any SUBJCS·
tions or proposals for the United
Slates, he said be had come "to keep
in touch with administration. but
that's all for the moment."
Later. he added: .. I'm here to keep
in touch ... to get further clarification
on various questions. and then I shall
~returning to Beirut."
Waite said he bad "no special
request" to make of the adminis-
tration, which has repeatedly said it
was opposed to negotiation with
Terry Watte
terrorists. He said he would meet with
"one or two" other people in Wash-
ington before leaving.
The two men met about six hours
after President Reagan left the White
House for a six~y Thanksgiving
vacation at hls California ranch.
Earlier in New York. Waite said he
wants to speak with Kuwaiti officials
rcprding prisoners whose release the
)cjdnappers demand.
Waite arrived in New York Mon-
day to speak with U.S. officials and
relatives of the hostqes before head-
ing back to resume talks with the
captors.
"All I can say with absolute
certainty is that 8rogress has been
made in the last I days," a rcd<yed
Waite told a news conference two
hours after landing at Kennedy
International Airpon.
Waite said he would like to meet
with Kuwaiti officials about the 17
Moslems jailed for bombings in
Kuwaat. The kidnappers ltave said
the Americans would be released if
the 17 prisoners were freed.
"The Kuwaati aovemmcnt bas
been honorable, to the best of ml
lmowled&e," .. id Waite. "I don t
think it's ri&bt for a aovemmcnt or
indjvidual to preuurc them. and if
my visit ls interpreted that way, I will
not talk to them."
Waite, who anived on a flight from
Athens. Orcec:e. after beiDJ delayed
by factional fift?tina in Beirut for
several days. wd he planned to stay
in the United States for only a few
days before retumina to Lebanon.
Waite said he would consult the
officials in New York and also would
meet relatives of the hostqcs.
Waite bas made two trips to
Lebanon in an effon to free the
Americans. Four of the hostages
wrote a letter to the Rev. Roben
Runcic, 'the archbishop of
Canterbury, see)cjbg Waite's inter-
vention on their behalf.
Waite, a lay to Runcic, has suc.ccss-
fully negotiated the release of Britons
held in Iran and Libya.
He told reponers in Beirut last
week that he had met twice with the
kidnappers. He did not identify them
or say where the meetings took place.
At Monday's news conference,
Waite said he was "quietly op-
timistic" and reported the four
hostages who signed the letter were
alive and well.
"The situation is highly volatile,"
Waite said, choosing his words
carefully. "I'm not being overly
dramatic when 1 say one loose word
misinterpreted can cost lives -of the
hostages or my life."
Islamic Jihad, or Islamic Holy
War, a group of Shiite fundamen-
talists apparently linked to Iran, has
claimed it is holding the hostages.
lslamic Jihad has said it )cjUed a
fifth American U.S. diplomat Wil-
liam Buckley, S7,'of Medford, Mass.
The Slate Dcpanment bas said it has
no evidence that Buckley is dead.
AIRPORT PLAN FACES COURT FIGHT •••
From-Al
askin_lt that panel to ovenurn a
decision by Hatter that prevents the
municipality from becoming a pany
lo the federal suit
Like McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
Irvine has a quarrel with some terms
of the settlement.
The city contends that the agree-
ment opens the door to civilian use of
Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro.
To block the agreement, the city tried
to intervene an the lawsuit, but Hatter
blocked the move, saying it was not
timely and could hun the pending
settlement.
John McDermott, Irvine's at-
torney, said the appeal was filed
because of a 30-day deadline.
If talks with its neil!'borina city are
fruitful, the appeal will be dropped, he
said.
If Hatter approves the settlement
between Onnge County, Newport
Beach , Stop Polluting Out Newport
and the Airpon Working Group, it
will end years of conflict over airport
noise and expansion.
HALL WINS RECOUNT •..
But if Irvine were allowed to
become a party to the federal suit, city
officials could raise the same issues
that Newport Beach did and possibly
f un.Qer delay expansion. -Prom Al
Aynes said a run for the City
Council next year was "still a poss1-
bili .. " .. R was an interesting experience,"
she said, to come so close to victory
after spending just a fraction of what
·her opponent did.
Aynes said she spent about S 1,500
•in the race. Hall reportedly spent
more than $20,000.
Both candidates agreed the results
showed the value of every vote.
"Those who didn't vote now realize
how important their votes really are,"
HaJI said.
"It'll be important for next year's
race for people to get out and vote,"
Aynes said. .
The city could also litigate the
issues in state coun, though city
officials say they will bla satisfied with
the Ncwpon Beach compromise once
they receive guarantees that El Toro
will not be the target ofan alternative
airport study.
A bearing on the appeal is months
away, McDennott said.
:MORIARTY ASSOCIATE GETS 4 YEARS •••
From Al ... _
he arranied. purponedly for Moriar-
ty's politacal friends, during their 12-
ycar association.
An Oct. 14 letter to Hatter from
Keith's attorney. Brian O'Neill,
claimed Keith had implicated more
than 20 of California's elected of-
ficials in political corruption and
financial fraud, including five current
and one former assemblymen. along
with two current Orange County
supervisors.
The elected officials have denied
the charges.
O'Ncill's letter asked Hatter 10
consider Keith's contributions to the
in vestigation when he passed
sentence.
In coun Tuesday. O'Neill said has
client was victimized by Moriany,
former owner of the Anaheim-based
Pyrotronics Corp.. which markets
fireworks under the Red Devil brand.
"Keith distributed funds on behalf
of Moriarty. Keith became Moriar-
ty's business partner," O'Neill said.
"The .crimes to which Keith pleaded
rose out of this pattern of conduct."
But Chief Assistant U.S. Attorney
Richard Drooyan called Keith a "con
man. That's what this case is all
about. That's what he has been doing
for a number of years ...
O'Neill accused prosecutors of
reneging on their agreement. but
Drooyan said Keith exaggerated wild-
,
ly in his accounts of political corrup-
tion and .. much of the information
can't be corroborated."
In March, feder.al prosecutors
a&fCed to drop a wide-ranging in-
vcsti .. tion into Moriarty in exchange
for hts guilty plea to seven charges
and his cooperation in the invC!tiga-
tion of elected officials.
Moriarty pleaded guilty to three
counts involving the licensing of a
City of Commerce card club and four
counts of laundering contributions to
politicians and kickbacks to a banker.
The contributions and alleged
prostitution trysts were made when
Moriarty was lobbying to ban local
laws a.gainst the sale of safe-and-sane
fireworks. investigators say.
LUCK IN LOTTERY DOESN'T HOLD UP •..
From Al
the check. He'll be an the county Jail.
Rodriguez was scheduled to appear
in Harbor Munici pal Coun Tuesday
on new charges of possessing stolen
propeny and mariJuana. The charges
stem from an arrest in Irvine on
HalJowecn and follow previous
brushes with the law.
But Rodriguez failed to show up the
first two times his name was called
and Strople ·said he would issue a
Just Call
642-6086
warrant for the lottery w1 nner's arrest
1fhe missed a third call.
"Nobody ever told me what time to
be here," said Rodri.ucz after arriv-
ina in court. "They 1ust told me to
come here."
When he did arrive, Rodriguez was
ordered to complete a 1 SO-Oay
sentence for bu~ and .•n ad-
ditional 90 days for ht1 lat.est cr mes.
to wbjch he pleaded 1uilty on Tues-
day.
"He expected to go lo jail," said the
loncry winner's mother after the brief
court bearing. "I think he should
serve his senlence."
Evelia Rodriauc-z said she thinks
her son will tum his life around. She
said be plans to buy a restaurant or
some other busineu with his Win-
nings and live inside the law.
"He's a aood boy," she sajd. "I
believe what he tells me."
Wllat do )'M Uke aa..et Ult Dally Pllol? Wlaat doe't yoa lllre? Call tl1t
number 1t left aM )'Mr mnsa1e wlll be recorded, trH1cr1Md ud delivered
10 die 1pproprieM e41ter.
'Mae same U 0a...r HIWt ri•I Hr'VICt may H Hd lo rtcord lttltrl lo lk
editor" H)' totHC· Coatrtbw&ors to oar Letter• col•m• mHt lad•de t~tr
name alMI aea.,....e Hmkr ror verUlc1tloa. No clrcolallon call1,..,1e.a1e.
Tell u wu1'1" you ml•d.
Deity Piiot
Deher,
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f rt•lt>t
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P10duc1too
Manitg r
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M1tltetlng Olfec;tor •
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Con!foller
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\
Hazy sun to burn through fog
Night end inotnlnQ low .._ Ind tog, lnoludlng toc.lly
denN fOG dUrfng the elrty "'°"*'I. _. gtv. way to hay
1ftttnoon 8UMhtne ttw~ the Ofenge co..t.
HIQhe wMI r.ecti the mid to~ eoe. ~ ~' 1owt
wttt d~thl tow to mid SO.. tow doudt end looel foe • ,...,_ Thur9d19Y,
turning pert CtoudY with hlahl renatna from fM to 70.
Virl•btt Noh cbJd• wil •treton tN« mount11n reeort• u
wetl, where owtnlght lowt In the 20e wtn riM to the mid 409 to 50t today and Thur9day.
<@~ :=::.<.~ ...
Show••s Rain '"'"H $1\ow Occ~o ._ :.1a1oun,11 ~ -. ~ w .. .,_. ~"" N<lAA~r.-Z· ~ ., • .....,, t
a.nta Mltll Sant•..,,.
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50 35
Surf Report
Tl dee
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t ·ll!lpm
TMUMDAY
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36
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t:ll 1 Ll'I\,
Newport denies claim of man
who broke neck diving in surf
By SUSAN HOWLETI'
Of .. o.lr ..........
The Newpon Beach City Council
routinely denied a claim Monday by a
Los Angeles man who broke his neck
after divin& into the surfand striking
his head on a sandbar.
The claim, filed earlier this month
bY. Westwood attorney. Howard S.
Silber on behalf of Eric Simpson,
seeks an unspecified amount of
damages for a broken neck which
Simpson said resulted in .. hospital
bills, loss of wages, pajn and suffer-
ing."
The claim now goes to the city's
claims adjuster, who will determine
whether to settle the case or take the
matter to coun.
The incident occurred Oct. 12 at
Corona del Mar Beach at Marguerice
Street, the claim stated. Simpson said
his head hit o n the sandbar when he
dived into the water and he suffered a
broken neck in the accideot.
The claim is not currently sec)cjng a
dollar amount because Simpson has
not yet rccei ved his medical bills "nor
has surgery been ruled out at this
time," Silber said.
Several claims have been filed in
surf-related accidents since the con-
troversial lawsuit in which John
Taylor of Oarcmont was awarded $6
million from the city of Newpon
Beach for a paralyzing neck iajury he
suffered on the beach in 1980. The
city is appealing that case.
Ncwpon Beach was held negligent
in the Taylor case for not warning
beach-goers of the dangers beneath
the ocean's surface. Lan May, I SO
warning sipls were posted along the
seven miles of Newpon Beach's
coastline.
About 30 swimmers suffered spinal
injuries in 1984 in Newpon Beach,
mostly after running and diving into
shallow water. \
Accordina to Marine Safety Chief
Ken Jacobten, six or seven of the
1984 injuries to swimmers in New-
pon waten were broken necks and
varying degrees of paralysis.
SLUM AREA ON HUNTINGTON AGENDA •••
From Al
ments "arc probably the most
substandard in Huntjngton Beach.
Huntington Beach doesn't deserve to
have a place like that. I'm loo)cjn,1
foward to helping city officials clean 1t
up."
Merryman said one apartment
owner, identified u Dilip Parikh,
pleaded nolo contendre (no contest)
to 13 health oode violations and was
fined $1 ,lOS last year. Charps in-
cluded deteriorated bathrooms, ceil-
ings, walls, kitchens, leaking roofs
and other problems.
Foreian residents, many not used
to American ways and the Enalish
language, cause part of the problem at
the apartments, Barnard said.
Many of them come from Laos, he
said, and residents of one apanment
m ight include the mother and father
and their children plus grandmothers
and grandfathers and maybe aunts
and uncles.
They may not know they have
property rights, Barnard said; and if
they do know. they may be afrajd they
will get into trouble if they call the
police. Or they may not complain
because their living conditions ue
still better than the ones they arc used
to, he said.
The problem also is compounded,
he said, by cases of tenants rcntinJ an
apartment and then sub-renting at to
others. In one case, be said. I 0 single
men rcponedly shared one two-
bcdroom apartment.
But the major responsibility rests
with the JO landlords, all of whom
rc~nedly live outside the city, he
said.
Barnard alleges that they arc doing
the minimum while colJectin'-their
rent money, and that they don t want
to invest in improvements unless
their fellow owners do the same. "If
some make improvements in their
buildings nd others don't, they feel
that they're throwing money away,"
Barnard said.
That's one obstacle officials arc
hoping to hurdle by seeking to form a
propeny owners association to cou
the ownen into upgradina their
policy.
Officials arc asking the owners to
get serious about reducing over-
crowding, performing regular main-
tenance at the apartments (which is
vinually non<x1stent, Barnard said)
and having on-site management rep-
resentatives to collect rent and to take
care of day-to-day problems.
But the main emphasis will be the
physical upgrading of the apanmcnts
-either voluntarily or by coun
action. "I don't care which," Barnard
said.
Barnard said officials plan to throw
in a little added inducement. They've
sctasidc$4SO,OOO in federal money to
help defray rehabilitation costs if the
developers act serious.
But that proposal was attacked at a
recent City Council meeting by real
estate man Don Troy, an expected
candidate in next April's City Council
election.
Troy said none of the money
should $0 to any of the owners until
they're m compliance. "l don't thank
we should reward lawbreakers," Tro.>'.
said. "They shouldn't get one penny 1f
there arc violations."
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