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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-11-24 - Orange Coast PilotDeltol ~ten lltJl8lies ca"mpalgn 197 PAUL UClllPUY ....... -... ... \ The emotional canapaip over Meuure A ii beias marnd by diny tricb, ICCOPdint '° propolllftll ud opponents o( the tpedaJ election 1-llot meaautt on the Newport Cncer apansion, which Newpon Beech.voten will coMider Tundly. 80th Iida •Y lheir lien• have been stOlen or de&iced Mt the final days of lhe campeip, and Corona del Mat merthants suppomna the measure riponcdly have been threatened with boycotts. ' · Luvena Hayton. a )6;.ycar rnidtnt of Corona del Mar who opcratn Hayton's Bay Window at 3411 E. Cont Hiabway, laid llllUY of her ncipbor merchants told her that e>pponents of Measure A walked into their stores and demanded the proprieton remove the "Yes On A" r 8JlftVEIUI .. .............. The proP*d QfllMN ol New- port Cenwr-deb111d,~­ dalllkd btf0tt VOWI ........ 1111 tatvatioft or ruittatioe ol Nea,.i lcKh -wtll fi~ be ...... Tunday. The S300 million project II* IO the e*torltc in Nc•pon 8eM:ll • the most expensave ADd lllOll bod)' • araued bellot i11Ue or w clecede 1nc Irvine Co, which owm Ud manaeet Newport Ccnitr, b8I.,... more tlian SS00,000 in campeip costs, includ1na penonahzed ktt.eri fr.om company chairman and owner OonlJd L. Bren. "Newport Center must be more than just a ~nt center lllld bulinns complu; wroce Breo. ·11 should be a special place, with apeci8I -rnean1na for all of us in Newport Bach.'" Other aroupe supportina tht es- pan11on. inclucbna Citizens for a Better New-pon ud the NeWport Harl>Oi' Area ChambcrofCommcrcei. ........ ...,.., .......... have unloaded ten ofthoutandl OI , ........ 8IO .. /A.2) Ba.mper edcken ,.. ..... 111'0 OD A" adorn tbe billboard~ Cltbena for. Better Newport 1lf1lnC appro•al of lleuue A. ( ........ VO'ftU/AS) World Flltpfno Defen9e Minister Juan Ponce Ent1le h• been ou1ted by Preeldent Corazon Aquino./ Al Cout High grade point aver- ages and t"t ecor• wlll only be the first 1tep to admission at UC lrvlne nextyear./A3 Food Give Thankeglvlng teft- over1 an ethnic:: flavor by uetng turkey In n.ct\01, faJttu and pltaa.181 Sporta There are just two area prep football teams tett after the smoke cleared from ~rlday'a flrat round of CIF playoffa./C1 -Reagan :· 'Didn't make mistaKe ' ·X>n Iran dealing~~ Calls top aides to meeting, denies p ansforfirtngs BJ TERENCE BUNT ................. WASHINGTON -President Re· .,.. amid unrelentJna criticism of h1s secret dealings with lran. asstrtcd today "I didn't make a mistake" and declared. "I'm not firina anybody." R~n. durina an Oval Office ceremony. was asked Jhether he was happy with his staff. He replied, tiaht· lipped. "Um Hmm." When a reporter persisted on the question -Of whether there would be a st.a ff shakeup~ Reqan u1d, ''J'm not commenting either way ... Asked whether he would follow the advice of Republicans and Ocmo- tTltl ahke to say his deal with Iran had been a mistake. Reaaan said, .. I'm not ioin& to lie about that I • didn't make a mistake." The president replied to several questions dunna a p1 cture-t.akin1 session in the Oval Office with Gatsha Buthelez1. the chief minister of the KwaZulu Homeland in South Africa. Seated on a couch in front of the president were White House chief of staff Donald T. Regan and Secretary of lite Geol"Je Shuhi .. 1'1on1 with Vice Pre idcnt Georsc Bush. Na· uonal Security Adviser John Po1ndc1uer sat across from them on another' couch. Rcpn, Shultz and Poandelter all have been t.aratts of cnt1cism rn the Iranian affair. Rtapn indicated he was unhappy Wlth wide1pread press accounts of criticism, backstabbina amona his staff and rttommcnda11ons that he fire someone . "You wouldn't like my answer," Rcaaan told a reporter who aslced his opinion of vanous accounts. As rnt1c1sm of the Iran connection mounted, the president summoned Admlnl•lr•l/on N T• lr•n ,,.,. moet of II• •rm• from h~,_t bloc. AT 10P Cabinet offiJn and forcisn policy aides to the White House today to plan future steps the United St.ates should take in the Middle East Announcm1 the meeuna. White House spoke\man Larry Speakes said he had not heard Rcapn "mention anythina pcc1fically about any staff chanac or Cabinet changes, nor have I heard any \Cnior staff member mention anythina." He said he la t talked with Rcapn directly Fnday. A ked if Reapn wauallsfied with his senior advisers. Socakes replied. (Pleue ... UAOAJf/A.2) Priest gets probation for molesti~ boys · BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN ... STEVE MARBLE °' ............... A Roman Catholic priest from Huntinaton Beach who faced SS year5 in prison was sentenced today to five )cars probatJon for molcilJn& four altar bo)"1. The Rev. Andrew · Chn tian Andersen. 34, wiU strvc no Jail lime for the felony en mes bU t waif Ii vc at a residential faality in New Mexico wheTC he wiU receive lrutmcnt, said \lpcrior Court Judae Lu11 Cardena Deputy District Attorney Michael Ko k1 said he was upset with the sentence. but defense lawyer Wilham Monroe said be docs not btlieve a "double standard" wu apphcd to his client because he is a priest. Andcncn asked supponcn for fof'IJ\tencu and sugated that now "1s a time for bcali~" Cardenas. in ~~ntcnce, uid he wa bothered bt ~·s su~ porten who do not believe the pnest as 1u1hy. The jiidle. who aaured supponcrs that Andeneo is l\allty. said he wu particularly saddened bY lbe smaO amount of sym_JJelb)' cbW"Cb members bad shown toward the youna. male victims 1n the tate. Andcncn WIS found:;~ Sept.. 29 (Pl--eee 'f/A2) Coast wea t hers high wi nds, escapes brunt of t h e damage From 1&aff ud wire reportt The austy Santa Ana wands that caused scattered damaac and power outaie in Southern Cahfom1a over the weekend will ~~ followed by milder and cloudier weather that should continue throuah Tbank:scJvma. weather forecasters q1d .• cool and the hurrud1ty level was hiah -two factors wt decrease the pro pect of fire dunna Sant.a Am wind conditions. · Ranae wd no wind-related fires ,,..ett reponed unday. The ational Weather Service predicted fogy Sunday the National Weather Scrv1ct recorded blasu up to 54 mph. But authorities e limited it was an 70 mph JUSt that toppled a half-built, three-story S33S.000 home in the Glendale foothills. • The wind cau d httle damage Ilona the Oran Coast, officiab said. Sint.a Ana wind normally triaacrconctmsabout fire hazards. But Oranae County F"1rc Department spoke woman Patti Ranae said a "Red Flag Alert" was not called this weekend She said the air was relatively mort11nas alona the coa t and OCCUJonal cloudfocss dunna dayume hours throuah Thanitssjvina. The mercury tSupcc~ to peak 1n the low 70sand drop to the low to mid-~ at n1aht. Mo tly clear weather is eitpccted for Thanbcivina Day. The Nauonal Weather Service said the fierce weekend winds were caused by a lar&e hi&)l-prcuurc )'Stem over Nevada. IKDEX Advice and Games Bultetln Board 83 A3 A 10-11 C&-8 EM DA says murder suspect was told her rights Bu .. ness c1 ... mect Comics E'ltertaJnment Food Opinion Pubtlc Notlcee Sporte Tetevtalon Weather A12 85-8 81-2 CS-9 C1-8 812 A2 From 1&aff ud wire reports A woman suspected of partici- patina in the murders of two Oranac Coast women was properly informed of her lqal ri&hts before he led authonties to the arave of a thir'd aJlqrd victim, authonties said. San Bernardino County pros. CC\lton scheduled a preu conference today to clarify publilhed repons that Cynthta Lynn Coffman wa' not properly inform((! of her "Miranda" na,hts to remain silent and have a lawyer.· Coffman. 24. and James Greaory Marlow. 30. have been cbaracd with the kidnap and murder of Connna Novis. 20, of Redlands. whose haJ. low arave Coffman led authorities to 1151 week. They also are suspc<"ts in the kidnap and murder of Lynel Murray, 19, of Huntin1ton Beach and the slayin1 of Sandra Ann Neary, 32, of Costa Mesa. all's Wave of.politic al for ce .. replaces tide of s low gro~h lection def eat of Mesa Action reverses . , . ... position o once-embattle M mayor homeowncn coalition H publl<.' eMmyNo. I. As the aroup'' fnontc tafltt, he IOOft belan to lote h11 ballot bol appeal. The 1own'1 nicknamct "'Goat HUI~~ allO 1ft* to mean H.all.s p&act. on the rounc1I dais. lut he 11 the pt no more. .. We finattyleamC'd to play b then fllel. or ratllet. how to ~ with (--Acdoft) and how to UlK"IJMIC 111 ..,_ .. .W IWI. ''WecMill don't *' the W9) the)' do with ttl the ditiinion and hes." Hth, 7. Ml ltt\'td on the rouncll llftft 1911 Ind WU Chaim I Ont• Deputy District Attornc) Ray· · mond Ha1gb1 Ill q1d a pubh~hed report that Coffman had· not been informed of her n hts an the Nov1s case was fal5e. Haight said his comment to a reporter for the lo\ An clcs Herald f.uminer were m1 under 1ood "There arc some Miranda 1 uc~. and tho will be htipted 1n coun. but the u eccts ccrtainlv h d bttn Mirandiled when the · ara\C wa pointed out Saturday. Haig.ht ,.id TONY SAAVEDRA Focus ON THE NEws The Miranda dec1s1on came in 1966:-'whcn the U S Supreme Coun requ1rtd officers to inform those they am t of their naht 10 remain 1lent and have an auorney prcxnt dunna que uoning. Fulurc to advise Coffman of those nthtS WOYld cloud the adm1 \lhlllly of the &n",.tS•te c}11dcn~ in coun. Redlands poTicc Capt. Lewis Nelton said that both Conman and Marlow '*ere informed of their naht when they' were annted ov. 1• near 811 Bear Lake. · Bui the Herald Examiner reporter who interviewed Haijht earlier said Haaaht was quoted accurately. The Herald Eumincr ttported that Ha1aht said pohce delibeTately did not read Coffman her naht because \he led them to believe NoVls was till ahvc, and he could help them locate her. Reponer hawn Hubler Slld when he talked to Ha1tht Wednodav. the (Pl_.. ... DA/MJ Evacuated families allowed back home t . -• ._. I t . G/. IE l i / t ) :JA 2 .-------- 88 17 32 50 23. 18 76 90 ~-A I YEAl •. .Al fllHT IHI. f CIECI MT Oii UTEST ........... YOI eollt II IEITt ERE All TotAY'I ll•NU. • \ • ~ : .,. Smog Report -116 I ......_ .................... ---~-,,..,_,,. ................... mMlll -..... --·-----·..-_.._... PRIESTGETSPROBATIO ••• ,.,_ EVACUATED FAMU,IES.~ rn-At ~-· A ery pecial hoe Department .. -119 FMhion'"lsland • ewport Beach • 759-1622 • Bullock Wilehire, Wins ·- Holiday festl~ty to open at plaza South Coast Plua will launch ht annual .. Santasfactaon" ettravapn.za for the Christmas stnon saturday at 9:J<r-a.m. when Sinta Cliut amvn rn the Ctro'1sel Court of the Costa Mesa shopp1n1 center. • Strolhna Okktn1 ~rolers .lbt All-American Boys Chorus. a fashion show and the Oran~ County Masttr Chorale will be featured durina the month· Ion~ event, whi'c~ "'!"' throuah Chri1tm11 Eve. A Chnstrnas trtc-haht1n1 ceremony is otanncd for Dec. I at 6:30 p.m. at the pl:ua'1 Town Center .Park. lhe "Holiday Glamor" fashion show is scheduled for Dec. 6 in the Jewel Coun. while the Ma'itcrChoralc will perform .. The Messjah" [)e(; 20 at 7 p.m., also in the Jewel Coun.' A "Santasfaction" btt.akfast will be held at the Carousel Court [)c(. 7 from 8 to 11 a.m. for the benefit of the Providence Speech and Heanna Center an Oran;e. T1cketsare$7.SOforaduJtsandSS for children 12 and under. Call 639-4990 for ticket information. !ld group to meet Dan 'Bcllack, ·~resident of the Busi- nen/Prorcs ional Advertisina Association, will address Wednesday's mectina of the group at~l I :30 a.m: at the Irvine Hilton Hotel, 1,7900 Jamboree Blvd. The CO'it is $18 for members with reservation , -120 for guem with reservations and $22 without reservatons. Call Jean Eastin at SS 1-9422 for reservations and ottrer infor:mation. Me•ls se' for needy Over 1,000 free meals will be served to needy families and individuals at Temple Calvano Church. 2617 W. Sth St., Santa Ana, at noon on Thanksgiving Day. · ~The food donations will be preceded l)y a bihngual Thanksgiving service at 10 a.m. A clown. games and food will be provided to entertain the children. Further information may be obtained by · calling the church office at 834.9331 . , Vlejo ·actlvltles set A children'<; Chnstmas tree dccoratmg pany open to all you ngsters tn M1ss1on Viejo will be held Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. at Santa's Workshop at the comer of La Paz and Chrisanta. Santa Claus wall amve Sunday at 6 p.m. at the First Interstate Bank ~rking lot. also at La Paz and Chns.anta. Call Charlie Ware at 837-6050. ext 2308, for more information. Arts falr In HB An arts and crafls1'alfwm t>e·sponsored b_y the Downtown Huntington Beach Merchants Guild Saturday and Sunday m conJ unct1on with World- wide Artists. Inc. There will be ·approximately 100 booths feat.unngarts. crafts and exotic food from all areas of the world · Fitness walk scheduled -A non-com ft-ave firnc~~ wa11C 111 be t1em- Sunda). beginning at 9 a.m .. at the Talbert Avenue and Golden West Street entrance to Central Park in Hunt1naton Beach. Coach Jim Coots will give a wk on proper flretchan~ techniques prior to th~ event at 8:30 a.m. The publtt' as invited and further information may be obuuned by camng Ahcc Gibson at (213) 320-4754. An Invitation: CAL ENDAR Monday, Nov. 24 • 7 p.m., lrvlne TraD1portatlon CommJ11ton, Cny Council Chambers, 1-1200 Jamboree Road • 7:30 p.m .. Lapu Beach Arts Comml11lon, Ctt} Council Chambers. SOS Forest Ave. Tuesday, Nov. 26 • 6:30 p.m .• Irvine City Council. City Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Road. --. PoucE Lo e " to.g .. intoUCI;· Ht&h vad.e pomt averaatt and~ scores w11l only be the firtt step admission at UC f rviM for many 1 ~ cants to the fall l 987 ~hwl year. ~· U J and UCLA ..arc ti&htenina t applicauon requirement$ because of ovt'rllow ofap1>hca11om the two campu~ receaye annually. • .. Apphcant' will be reviewed on tq utrMurricular activitiei and commuft1 invohement while in hiahS(;hootaswelU their aradei. and test ~. admissi~ admini trato~ said. • · "We're sull tal.kin1 abo1.n UC ch11bilit9 _el_u$, .. '3l0 James E. i)unnma. director oi &\ilm1ss1on5 at U<.I .... But to the extent~ have an opportumty to look at ot cntena we'll certainly ~e adva'btage Q that... --"" '·l ., , ............... '-,.... Vial ton ezamlne Army'• new 8coat bellcOpter at McDonnell DoaClu in Ba.ntlnftOll Beach. . Thi fall, the umvers1ty admitted 2,9QQ fttihrnen whale planninJ to enroll on!l 2 200. Ne~t September. UCI will stick 7 us ce1hng. Dunning said. . .. • J ~ 1... .. Chopper of future dispiSyed· The adman1c.;trator ~1d the change if adm1 s1ons procedures enables the univer· ~It)' tO tmprove the OVCrllf quaJity or I i.tudent body. "It's encouragmg that 1he facuh)' as interested in looktn& at that for the fi~ time an a number of years," Dunning said. "The campus haun opportunity to lookl't its pnont1cs. 1a values and its place in tht community." 'l A U.S. Army Scout helicopter, equipped vision and heat-sensitive cameras to see with a new electronic eye thatalJows pilots Iona distances bolb day and niabt. was to sec better. made its first ap~rance in demonstrated while at McDonnell Orange County Friday when at landed at Douglas. the McDonnell Douglas plant in Hunt· The Mast Mounted Si .... t ~~tern con-inaton Beach. · f h.,..'.,. J ~bo The helicopter and its electronic eye, stSt~ 0 ~ sphere ~re "Y a vc the called the Mast Mounted Sight. wa~ · helicopter,. s rotors. v1de~ screens in the displayed by Mc Donnell Doualas cockpJtandcomputerequapment tn rear of Astronautics Co .• which builds the si&hts the helicopter. for the Army. The Mast Mounted Sight aboard the The sight, which uses telescopic tele-Scout helicopter has been undergomg tests at the McDonnell Ooualas plant jn Monrovia dunna the past two weeks. Alter Friday's demonstration the heli- copter returned to fort Eustis. Va., where it will begin field operatiOniTor the Army. McDonnell Douglas has been producing Mast Mounted St&hts for the Army for more tban two years. Recently the com- pan y received a S 102 million contract to produce a third lot of 39 s1it>ts plus spare parts. About half or the ancominJ freshman class still will be admttted stnctly on tllc basis of its supenor academic achie~­ ments: The rest will showach1evements Jn other areas. ~ ' UCLA al~ will be tumma away '°me of the nation's bri&htest students. "When I taJk to parents about UC.~J& say, 'Yes. n 's true. We turn away stud with 4.0 average$,'" UCLA ,Pi~tor of Foster parents uninformed of Qaby' s test for AIDS expo.sure Admt™OJU Rae 1..ee ~iponfl' said. "l..aJt year we turned down about 500 students with 4.0s 1n the College of Lener$ and Science. When J say that. you can hear~ pin drop. Thell hearts stop bcaung. But what they don't understand and what we keep trying to tell everyone is that • admit plenty of students with less than 4.0$ too Grades arc not the only thmg we loOk , By "e A11oclated Press The foster parents of an infant weren't told by Orange County officials that the 4. week-old boy was being tested for exposure to AIDS, authorities say. ~ --A notation in-the-beby!s--medka! ~hart~ _showing results of an AIDS test were pending was overlooked by a social worker who placed the baby in the Fullerton home. Gene Howaro of the DepartmcntDf Social Services said Fnday. The infant should have been sent to one of three homes in 1 orange County where foster parents are trained to deal with children exposed to acquired immune deficiency syndrome, Howard said. The baby has since been moved to one of those homes. be said. "This should not have happened, .. Howard said. "All our checks fell apart nght down the line. The foster parents involved here were understandably upset and concerned." I The foster family's identity has been kept confidential by county officials. The baby was placed in the foster home Oct. 28 three days after being born at the UCI Medical Center in Orange. Howard said. Whale an mitaal blood test showed the baby had been-exl)OSld10"1tR-AIDS-viTor. a second and more sophisticated test was negauve. indicating the boy w,as free of AIDS antibodies. Or. Jamison Jones said. During preinancy. mother and baby share a blood supply. so antibodies and virus can be passed from an infected mojher to child. Sometimes the baby receives antibodies only. which dissipate shortly after birth. A third blood test will be administCf'Cd when tl1is baby as about 3 months old, said Jones, director of UCI Medical Center's Special N~& Chnac, which cares for babies born \o hi&h·n~k mothers wflo are admitted drug users; prostitutes or who have tested positive tor AIDS antibodies. Jones was confident that a third test would re veal negative results. ' at. "There's no way in the world that baby "In essence. we hltvc decided that 1t ls has the AIDS virus," Jones said "But not faarto use stnctly obJCCt1ve numbers whether the child tested positive or not is select students. ·even at the top of the W k applicant pool." said Thomas E. Ltf'U. moot. c want to ma e sure our system 1s UC'LA 's as.sastant vice chancellor for workinl-and 1n this case 1t didn't." r~g•"ratto _ 1 Howard saa<J tne shp-up occuriea be· Besides ""ore~. students may now be cause a social worker did not noucc Judged on such lhan&S as the content ar.ct mention of the AIDS test m the baby's quaht> of their hi&h school program. medical record. The AJOS notation was Siponn said. . spotted by a pcdiatnctan when his foster "When oneconsjders th.at tc t scores arc mother took btm for a roullne checkup, he correlated most closel y with income and said. the size of one's· family. rather thAn a The system has been revised to prevent a student's pr<»pect for success if\ c.oJJqe. similar mistake. Howard said. Soc1aJ and that m1non~tudenu rarely have the workers now must ask the hospual about same educattonal advantaacs that . AIDS tests pendma. Caucasian students ba~e you bCsJn to Families that accept ctuldrcn possibly understand wh) these d1Wercnccs are not exposed ·to AIDS receive S 1,000 a mO!Uh-. only of httle relevance but quite tntla~­ from the state Department oLt Social matory 1f one were to put much emphast Services, Howard said, compardt with on them,'" S1porin said. $8S8 for foster parents who take an other The new ~)' tem doesn't affect blacks. h1gh-nsk youngsters. Hispanics and ~mcncan Indians who. 1f they meet m1n1mum rcqu1rcmenu, arc automat>call> admitted to UC campuses under state guidelines designed to boost enrollments of certaan d1\advantagcd groups At UC'l. As1anuccounled f9r 37 percent Gridiron guests .,.~ of the freshman class this yeaf. Former Lebanon hoetaces David '1acobsen of Buntlnaton Beach, right. and the Re•. Lawrence Jenco were friendly rival• at the UCLA·Southern Cal football 1ame Saturday at the Rose Bowl. Jacobsen wu lnvtted by UCLA to alt on the Bruin •a bench and USC responded by lnvitin& Jenco. But both men were diplomatic. wear- ing capt for one team &Iona with opponent•• rally button•. Lake whites. Asians w1ll have to undergo the new, more ngorous requirements. Dunning said l!C'l 1s no different from other l l( campusc'i where Asians are over· represented compared to their pe~ntaaes 1n the general populatton. · But he said ifs too soon to know whether the change<; an adm1<;s1on rcqu1rcmcnts will hurt them. "Of the under-represented minont1cs who are ehg1hle 10 be admmed, there's no chance the) ·11 be turned away," Dunnma said. "We won't know what the appltcant pool looks hke for another month.' That's when appltcat1on~ arc due for t'ntrancc to the fall o( 1987. Crash victim~al'"rested for leavi~g the scene in Mesa block of abrt and ~tolr SHO in coin\ a $200 pearl eamna and SI 00in1ew~lry .-.... . A can con1a101n1 pumplun pie m1it wa~ thrown throuah a wmdov. 1n the I CX>O block of Florida and caused S I 00 in damaae. Pohc<' art s1fl1n1 1he can for fingrrpnnts ofthr culpnts • • • SomCQ.D.Lpncd open the doo1 to thr . . . . I\ th1t'f stolr 1 garment bag . .i -.m 111 amount of cash and a J Old .ind d.amor.d bracelet from a Lincoln Towncar parkt'd near the intersection Clf \111n ~trcx-t and Balboa Boulevard The lo'~ n\me 10 $' 700 • • • ;\ SI 500 diamond nng v." 'tnlrn from 1top a drt~r 1n a rtsidcnct' on tht' 2200 hlock of Park Newoon unr had ~lolen 50 pieces of aluminum \pnnkler pipe ti-om hts open field near )la1cr ,\venue-!ml Newhupc Street ~ los\ "'a! cs11matcd at $3.000. • • • \ dmer who hvt's at (amp Pendleton rrponcd \unda> that someone bur- @.hm1ed hi\ \C'llow I Q8 I Toyota p1d.up tru~ ~ "'h1lr I\ Wl\S parked 1n fountain V,1llt'' on 1hc 16200 bloc~ ofS1rm The lo~' irn;ludrd slt'm> equipment v.onh SSH!! AnJ doth1n1 worth S60 Oamasr 10 the •cht('ll' w11\ t'\llmatcd at S400 Pohce arrested a 19-ycar--old Costa ~ Mesa man on su p1cion of felony hit· and·run af\er he reportedly lef\ the scene of an accident Sunday when a motorcycle nder crashed into the back of has car. Costa Mesa police arrested Fredrick Allen Morriwtus momina af\er · recciv1n1 a \ip from an anonymous caller He was be_in1 held at Coua Mesa in lieu ofS 10.000 baiJ. Laeuna Beach A fibcriJn boa& valued at $I, 700 was reported ~1olen Sa1urday on V1ctona Onve. "" -. ..-. A Clm Onvc ~1dtnt tcpontd a buralary undlly with • lo eshmatf'd at SIOO. • • • blue IQ73 f ord PtnlO rtporte:d toltn tutday a!\cm<>on n-om a Laguna ("_a. n)on RCJnd p.rk1n1 lot wu la1tr~ovcf*S ~--byl)Ohoe 1n Hunt1~-8H(----• . . • A. ... 11 t "' reported stolen from an J unlod .cd "'ar par\ed Sunday on San < km<'nte succL • • • • PollCCarrcst dl.ohc PtnlJlay\'s, 38. on ,u,p11.C1on of ltWd rnnJuc& and rcs1sttn& rr ' turda) on < h1qu1ta ttcct at ~onh (.'out tltth"Y· 1"'8• man ~" U)'1n .. .. Mark Stroup, 27, of Costa Mesa was driwina south on Harbor Boulevard at 1:591.m. Sunday when be ran into Morris' car at the interlCCtion of Katbor Boulevard and Wilson Street. S\roup broke bolh his arms. his left lea and received liver 4amqe. . Stroup was taken to Fountain Valley Reaional Trauma Center wf\~re he was listed in serious but stable condition. a hospital spc>kes- man said. According to officer Scott May. there were no witnesses to the wreck. Moms 1mmcd11tcly fled the scene. he said. "You have to ~main at the scene and render aid," said Sat. Tom Wamack. Morris was arrested ot has Costa Mesa home and his car was found in Westminster. police said 1001 \hcd a& home on Woodwind wh1lt • • ·• another man stood ~atch. rour llrcsand IAfhccls wcrutolcn from a • , • ford Bronco parked on thr 2100 block of A Blaupunkt tletto and rar cov" wttt hon Ptrk.,'&y. '10len from an unlodu5d cu parkc-d on 1hc • 16000 block ofC:on tNC11on Circle We~t Huntl ..... on ae&ch . . . .... . The stereo .... ttokn from • Volk Thiev Pri«d open a door at lhe qfo Cabrioltt ptl'lttd on the c tner of Wherchnuw, 16929BtaC'h81vd .and,tol ffcntqc and pnnal\eld · M>O compact d111r albums vatu«l 11 A v1dcoc11 uc·~·rder and tcltvmon S,,600 • • • • wrrutoltnfromaframe toreonlhel800 Four mploycn at Albtrt~n·, 101 14 I of cGaw A~cnuc. dam' A~e chaWd down a thtfl JU!lP«t m_c;~wtlr)' and rash. nlucd tOJcther 11nd m:ovcrciJ hq~~ v:tiicil at'l2Z al SS,OCX,1~ v." tnltn from a h me on Buralan srabbfd a purw con1a1n1na $80 Thunder 1 rt1I • 1n cub from' boppu:-1 ca.tt at the Ip~ A black daam;nd , •i.ck bu:~'Clt wa Beta, Yorlno*" ·~ .~fll ~tolcn from the 4900 blott of Irvine 1'~8' dill O 00!"1dohad~ p111n1 &1.11t~d tran fc.tteJ on '' \A.f\I~ IMf cd t'ft t~ • A. home on the• 14100 block or A1hcl • fount. level oI a parlt1n1 itructu"' 11 Avtnut ..,'H ran tkC'd ind two Vldt<' • Chlner tcn~r. Wam venue and -Uc rttordcrs. me Pl\tU"'S and I 8clch BoUk'\"IN • • •• tnO wnc stokn :fhte cntmd a Mme in tht t•()(){T l nocal ~rvicc \talion al Bol"' Chica and lk1I .\venue and s1olr about SWO Newport Beach .\vandal tO~\Cd a flov.cr pol through lht' tront w~ndow of a rtstdcnCt' on the 4200 Fountain Valley t\'.\"of%o<«r<1I Th•d•m .. rnmrto Viejo man identified Coupleliurt as victim of stabbing insm.ashup fv.o elderly people were scnou,ly injured unday CHntna in a one-car ac 1Jcnt on the San Ole o Frccw-a) in Cosa Mesa. Caltfornia H•shway Patrol Officer Paul "aldv.cll ~·d the era h occurrtd 11 6:30 p m. n"'*r lhc Harbor 8oulc,ard c'1t. Caldwell said the dnver, Robert Rod<t.. 80. of We t· min ter. uffcl"C"d a hcan problem and }04'1 c ntrol of ht\'°''' The vehicle tft the ~d and cam to mt an a drain ditch, he ~tJ. The dmei" w1fi Loui ROdda, 7S.wa aoa n1tT1nthecar1nd also iOJurt'<I. Caldwell sa1'-t . The 1wo wttt takrn to tht the trauma center at I ounuun Valley ommuntty Ho rital h r the bi:1th V."ert reported 1n ~IOU but st blc-concht1on c rl)'1od1 . By LAURA MERK OftMo.ltrNM...,. Police have 1dcnufitd a 4 7.,car-old man who wa\ c.tahhcd to death earl\ Saturday momina in ll"'inc a1, RKh· ard Ctlarlc, Ball of M1 wn VtcJo George W1lham Ku ix I. 21. no addrc' available. wa being held m hcu of S2SO.OOO ~11 ot the cwpc>rt ~ch Jail in connc<'t1on v.ath the en·or Citizens UPPORT MEASURE A ,_ As older adults we care aoout the future of Newport Beach. That is why we support Measure A and the many benefits It will bring to our city: • It will improve traffic throughout Newport Beach , es~lally In Corona del Mar, wbere the re8tdentlal streets are choked with commuter traffic every morn~ ing and evening .. • It will bring shopping to Fashion lsland with prices · that citizens on fixed incomes can a'tford . · • The new Performance Plaza at Fashion lslan~ will . provide entertainment opportunities for local resi- dents ... activities senior citizens can attend and enjoy right here at home. The completion of Newport Center will benefit everxone VOte YES on Measure A James E. Sawyer Ed Williams Edith William s "t- trene B. Sawyer · Chris Arger VoulaAcger Amy Mccollum T. B. Stillings Merle M. Hummel NOVEMBER25 Pearl Armstrong Rude Suikki L. T. Su ikki Lou.ise Stephens Matt Hall Dr. M. Lewis Lota Hilbert Anne True Hugh Lilly Barbara Lilly Eleanore Baldwin John Baldwin ~~ Karl Axtater Clara Axtater Anthony Monte Lois Monte Fern Torrance Dick Sweet Anna-Jean Sweet INS responds to attacks, makes interviews eas~er LOSANGELES(AP)-Thc masses huddle bene th llcepiq blp and blukets.. yeam1~ for their chance to breathe free, but flnt they must watt io line outsadc the downtown ammi.,..tion office known 11 the new Elbs [..__ I INS .,.0rktrs will a ci:pt a pJ>()int· n-.nn1n1 ~. · • • d;• · h ~.. t mthll"tllbcu J1nl ulUOntC>t t:CUrTftlt ment~. a S) ~ _ brrcd ttckct to th<HC an hnc. pra,c11cc hof 1s•~ .. nnuo~n 10 natch the t1c1'ets and stll Thieves ave ~" • • bland. . They hne up as early as 10 p m., even though the doon at the Jmmiaratioo and Naturalization ~rvice don't open untal nine hours later. Up to 1.200 imm1arants apply d&i fOr d tiunship or a ··~n card" worlc prrmat the"!.~~~f1~/b~inc scan be handled an srven 10 JO d "e thank "'c can proces a lot w1ch th1 minutes an .. . INS Nl>f'V ..... ...... •1d htrlty Hickman, an ,u.,,... 1 n1r .. system. ,.. · 1 .... ,1~· .. There ttally I n't a need to get an inc ..... ,. "Under this sy tem, if there arc no ttd.~t ~hen th But c att due next wtek in an effort to appease rntics, o them a conpnsman. Rep. E<iHrd Ro) bal, ().Los A daaibes-the INS as the "most &ct here. they can makr an apeo1ntmcnt. We rt JU t trying . to ghe the people an option The new S)Stcm "''"operate for people who want to re lace lost alien re idencycard . become a U .S ctt•!~n or ch~nae thrir re idency ~talus. Hickman ~1d. Apphcanu must make their apPo•ntments. m person. discourteous depenment in the f~l burcaucrac)'." As a rtsult. imqc-conscious INS officials ha\c announced some ptoceduraJ chanan intended to case the crush of people outside their doon. Cemeteey near cathedi:'aJ Cr!t~cs of opposed.by GG neighbors Fr. S err~ · . ay t1teAJ..a.le4Preu answered Diaina a cemetery at the Crystal Cathedral an Garden Grove would enhance the area, according to an environmental report, but residents fear 11 could doom their property values. "I find at hard to bcheve that the cemet<'1 won't have ~ ncpt1ve impact on the sale of my home," said Jane Pettit o Salemo Street ... , spoke to one ne1ahbor, who is a real e tat<' person. and hr said people don't want to buy homes next to a cemetery, c prc1alfy 1f they haH' '"' a choice." .~ ·-..,. Boy•• tunnel colla,,_a, kUllng them LOS Al.AMOS-Two boys died when their malesh1fi tunnel collapi.ed. burying them m up to sax feet of soft sand, rocks and cj1rt, authonues said Thr namesoftheboys,aaes 7 and 12, werebemg withheld by Santa Bar~Count) authorities. The cave-in was discovered Sunday by one of the bo)'s parent~ .. Two other boys, at lint thought to be buned as well, ~ere found safe at their homes said county Fire Department Capt. Larry Jones. The boys apparently had bCen buried for about 20 minutes, said fire dispatcher Toru Hanton Shenfl's Sat. Kent Doyle said it ap~red they suffocated. FamUy evicted by alr cra•IJ returns CERRITOS - A family that Oed their burnms home less than three months 1l&O after J JCthner crash obhtcrated their netahborhood became the first this weekend to return. "It's ~cat to be back," Wayne Nelson safd during a celebration Saturday at his rebuilt home on Ashwonh Place "We'~~ stan1n1 wi th a brand new house, brand new arass, brand new neighborhood. he said. Anlmal rights group frees 127 turkeys SACRAMENTO-An anunal riahts&roup 1scla1m1n1 at raided a farm 12 miles cast of Sacramento early today, rcleasana 127 turkeys that were due to be butchered for ThankSJiving. The Animal L1berat1on Front. an a ~ntten statement dehvered to the Sacramento bureau of theiAssoc1atcd Pres~. said 1t already had found homes for the turkeys. The group also said It damaged I 6 compounds at the sate by destroyina machinery of vanous kinds. No $9 mllllon winner ln Lotto drawing MONTEREY (AP) -The Roman Catholic 01oct~ of Monterey wa to release a 90-pagr rePon toda> defend- ing Father Junipero Serra. a can· dtdate for sainthood. from Cha!Jt that he helped destroy the Indian culture . .. Father Serra 1 bema blamed f<?r abuses that occurred Iona aner h1 death an 1784," s:a1d the Most Rev. Thaddeus A. Shubsda, Bishop of Monterc) and a maJor supporter of ha' an.g Serra declared a samt Thr diocese's rcPort. to be offic1all . released toda)' on the 27Jfiran-~ "''ersary of the missionary's birth, drcnes "unfounded attack " on Serra's character and challenge\ ~rra·~ "detractor\ to pre cnt documentation of their charges." "If there 1s proof. let's sec 1t," Shubsda said m a \ummary of the rtPon. The matcnal. coni.1i.ting -0f tran- scnpts of mtcn 1rv.\ ..,.,th ei&ht academics and curato~ and one scholar!) an1clc. wai. compiled by Valene 1c1ncr. a media and pubhc relat1on_l spec1ah\t The pan1sh-born Stms was one of the first Europeans to i.eule Cali· forn1a rstabhsh1n1 m1ss1ons bet\\ccn I 76 and 1784 convening Indians to .(nnstantt) and tcach1n1 agriculturt and an'amal husband') to those who h\cd .... ,than the m1ss1on .... alls. No one won the $9 million Jackpot for six of ax correct numbers an last Detractors daim he was the open · week's "Lotto µ9" pme, a CaJifom1a Lottery spokesman said. The numbers an& wedge of a conqa~t that stole ·drawing Saturday n1&ht also produced no winner for the $810.000 ~ond-prlfll! Indian land, destroyed Indian culture Paid for by Business and ¢ommunlty Political Action for five of six plus tfle bonus number.. iipoke.lDlln Joh.n.Schade~Sunc!IA).. 1lnd 1ed 1U 1tie d'1thI oflhoui.and CommltteeoftheNewQQC1.ttacborAreaCbambecolCommer.ce --~---"--' The rive o'fsix catcaorynad 164 wmncrs, each camma $2,735: four of ux ·from European diseases ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1~433win~~s~ca~:~~s~l21,~7~n~~S5ca~. . _ ---·-- MEASURE A I DOWNCOAST CITY •GRIDLOCK• • MEASURE A ADDS: • OVER 15 MILLION MORE CAA TRIPS PEA YEAR • 7 TONS OF CARBON MONOXIDE PEA DAY • 112 TON NITROUS OXIDE PEA DAY Newport Center expansion will pull MORE TRAFFIC through OUR NEIGHBORHOODS: ·, • Pelican Hiiis Road and San Joaquin Hiiia Road Extenalon wlll bring conatructlon of • 2150 hotel rooms (equal to 4 lrvlne Hlltons) • 2593 residential units (equal to more than the total In old Corona del Mar) • Nearly 24 MrLUON more car trips per y~ar • San Joaquin Hllli Tranpaortatlon Corridor will pull REGIONAL traffic through our neighborhoods to Newport Center. • Bonlt1 Canyon Road wlll bring MORE traffic fr.om Jrvine and El Toro through our neighborhoods to Newport Center. • ... ........ ftOl'll Cltt• !lwlrOIWllefltll ""'*' """" .. ' JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT 7 lllETUFFIC: Spy Glala Harbor View Homes Harbor VK!lw Hills TOT AL GRIDLOCK unleu an overpass la built (IT TllPIYDI' EIPllll SAVE OUR IEl&HBORHOODS VOTE ''10''· 011 A GRI DLOCK. All:AN BEEK TREAS. 1945 SHEAINGTON, G-109 NEWPORT BEACH .. t IElllllL TUFFIC HISE, Siii: Spy Glass Harbor View Homes Belcourt lJ 0 . , . ._ . .. BALLRID Me9 M'tioa..:tiecUif Clnidid11et -water bMfd teal blcUd ,...,. .. ~ AwlNill) Dave Wheeler and Mary' Theduetnuemuaharbinettof udPeterldla. Hom buckle. the ""' c:ouftetl tlectlOfl, a tnt o( Mai11n -_. Ot11 oe ..._ti The nut mom1na. Hall. llmOlt It~ between the veteran lfOW\h the llate ~eni1•1•11 ...,... PfOPlktNjally, .. ad thal Wheekr supportt'r and thole wbo .ould roll !:!' ::''I' I.'-!!!~~- WllMlld emmene the eounal n con-' 6Kli development. -· --•·-~ ·-troveny and di*ntion. Tbe fi11at ~drove.., llrl Cell ol =---• ...... Sance then, Wheeler bas been Hairs cams-P. to ro¥1J'tly S20.000 c••~ 1 by lilllrlll pubhcly repnmaoded. by. his council in Whe111 tndationalty a loW·priorj~ TOM lf8)ldenor n.,.... colques for Ul!RI has city bldee to election. He eked out a 1tven-vo1e J .yDdoA Laaoudle . settle a traffic d11pute; for allqrdly victory thal prompied the roun1i,1 Ambuqey aad lufti rode IO a '~eann1 at u~~!{ior Norma fint re<:ount 1n four )1Cal'I. •U'Oftl v~. · Hcn.toa; and for al ly callina two Another benlc lfto&Mrnear lbei. , .. u, •Iii two '"9ekl bdore 1M councir members .. bu.ms." . . Hall said he wi. havana proble'!'• clectMlll I was appttbeuive'. n.. I Ytt Wheeler retau\Cd hit favor rally1n1 t0tcther people who d11-~ confkltnL I knew we WO..kt make amona Mesa Action supporters who IJ1eed wnfi Mesa Action'• conten· 1t," Hall taid. were t?a•k?na in the ~up's pe~?ound uons that larae-teale, sJiuy bU11net1 Many would arp that the c:oun- prom1nence. They n h1nt1n1 at a parks and sboppina centen wouJd be dl'a com pinion ba1n .. t really rtcall auempt on Ha . the death of Cotta Mesa. · cl\aneld. lletiri .. veterans Norma "The touahelt times wtre th~ · "To my supporten, it looked like Henq and ArleDt Schafer were C&!'IY ~ya, t~ fint "~month .··Hall thtnp 'would be all riaht. They •id rcDlllced by peOple o(hke muMl. said There was a trcmcodous the aroup wu a flash in the pan, that However, up until the electioll, cha.nae an philosophjcs, in the lack of they v.ould fade l)Nly,'' Han ... 1d. "I Htrtzot and Schafer were umure councty and lade of rappon amona kept saying the no-sro~1herl were a whetber Maa A.c:lion could make council members .. s1ron1 force that they wOuld con-JOOd on t.beir dlrea&a. Contequeady. The mft&htina was mo t intense .tinue." • they may have wavered over COD- betwcen I-fall and Wheeler. Both As the <kvelopmcnt debate round· troversaal 1niaet for fear of i>c>litic:al councilmen rcprcstnted the extremes ~ ed the comer toward thi' mqntb's repcrcuu1ont. 10 ' t~e IJ:Owth dcbe~e and, ap. election, Hall prepared to be "the lo~ .. No there's a ltlore coofident .propnately~•t1toppol1tecndsoftbe voice an the 111.11dcmess," the only fcelina up ~re." Ha.II said. with council table. · crowth supporter on a council that AmbufltY and Bufl'a ridina the crest Several months after his re·dcctaon ·would soon sport four Mesa Action of an overwhelmina victory. campaip, Hall was still pay1n1 ofThis endonees. Hall said the clectton results S 12,SOO in council dcbtt. But something clicked. marked a turnaround in Costa Mesa Then Mesa Action hit him with "We finally~· toaclher and aot to polit1Cs. one that would more another salvo Patricia Aynes, a work," Hall said. favorable to developers. • memberofthearoup,chalJenacd Hall Hall as well as local developers "Developers were obviously in November 1985 for hi' coun~ ~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ in1e1ea&ed an die r.:e. Af\et the election. it was quite obvious to them that the)' would be able to build somethina on t~r land ... Hall llid. .. Mesa Action had. talked abouJ limitina buiJdinp to two or three stories. That would have been l]or· rible." ArmedrobbenJUt South~· •tore A pair of armed robbers fled with an unknown amount of cash Sunday after holdina up a South Laguna arocery store. The men wore ski masks when they walked into the Alpha Beta at Wesley Road and t>~m C-oast·Hiahway at 9.30 p m • said Oranac County Sheriff.s Lt Russ Elsner. DA SAYS SUSPECT WAS TOLD RIGHTS ••• From Al proKCutor told her, "She (Coffman) wasn't M1randized." The OranJC County District t· torney's office also plans to file char&es ap1nst the couple in conncc- uoo with the slaying of Munay. the Golden West college student ab- ducted from a dry<leanina store and found dead in a nearby motel room. cord rePortcd over the weekend that Marlow drew a map show1na where the Kcntuckj victim's body c-0uld be found, and that the map was 1hen transmitted to authontics in Ken- tucky. Police in Kentucky.wouldo~y say that <hey are an contact wttb Redlands Pohce on the case murder, they .... 11 problbly clear the i-ir in • cue tnvolvina the disap- pearance of a Bullhead City woman. One of the robbeB was carryi 01 a 12..puae shotaun as they walked up lO one of the checkstands, Elsner sajd. / They vabbcd an unknown amount ~ of cash out oflhe rqister and Oed the And Marlow told 1n"es11ptors about the lulhng of a man in Xentuclcy, Redlands police said . .., Oc<er hunters found the remains of a vachm last \\-eek about 10 miles from Whitley City. Ky . which was Marlow's hometown. In another development. the San Bernardino Sun reported that both Coffman and Marlow's finserPrints were found on the Honda CRX bclon11na to the Redlands victim, Com1nna Novis. The paper quoted an unnamed Police offiC1al as uyilff that althou&h the fin1erpnnts seem to link tht' :wspccts directly to the No vis Pamela Simmonds disappeared last Oct. 28 from Bullbad Ctty, and police found her car abandoned several days after heT dtsappcarancc. Bullhead City Pol~ Detective Barry Reichard said that Marlow's and Coff'man's pnnu were compared with those found on Simmonds' car. but they did not appear to match. "Ifs bccominaapparent they prob- ably were not involved in (Sim- monds) d1sapparanfC/' Retcbard store on foot. he added. "' I • I The McCreary County (K> ) Re-said. .,.. _Guaranteed. Not . bank Deats our rates on these cars. ... And we11 give you an an wer the next business day. Whether you're lookina for n car that's forl'ign , domestic, new or used -no leading California banlc offer fixed rate: loans that beat what you can get at Bank of Amt.•rica. W guaruntcc.: 1r." I( you find :'I I · •r annual percentage rate for tt fix d rate car loon published hy .. uriry P K1t1c, Well Fargo/Crocker, or Fi~t lnterst.ite, we11 match it. Ju t stop by ny com nicntly located B ci A branch. Or. you can'lpply hy phon and we'll g1 ~ '° nn ruwcr the next bu~in day. Call ... -523·6278. I ____.....~~~~~-- .. .. Hovlk Abramian Don GnriSteson ·Albert Adams Guy Cla re Bill Adams Ken Clark . ,, June Adams Ralph Clock Lucjle Adams Heten Coffey Don Adkinson George Coffin Biii Agee-Chanes ColesWorthy Anthony Allen Ed Conn Richard Allen · . Paul Connally Hanan Anderson Kev.in Consey Brett Andresen Susan Consey Bruce Andrews Frank Cottle Marco Amch · Mayor John Cox Stm1ey Aubert Bruce Crane Albert Auer John Curci Lorelea Auer Gretdlen Dale Barbara Aune James Dale Betty Bailey Dan Daniels Jun ~ Gary Davidson Paul Balalis Dell DeRevere Paul Bak:Jwin Ed Dean Hancock Banning, II~ Thomas Deemer Mike Banzhaf Phyttrs DemboWsl<1 Jl(\\~r . -i Ann -~~ Sam Barnes Greg'Ory Denk Rudy Baron Judi Detnck Roger BarqutSt Bob Diemer John Barry Dorothy Doan Tom Bay Toni Doane Frank Becker Daniel Donahue Sandra Beige Al Douglas A. N. BeJyea Steve Drummy Edward Beiison Richard Duffy Dave Bent Ronaki Dunning -8JlLBen~~~--~~~-Jack0v.iao~~~~~---~-H Hon Marian Bergeson , Joseph Dwyer Robert Best · Don Edler John Bk>m Ed Egioff B~I Blurock Herman Eichenhofer Ph 1p Bonina Jdhn EUt0tt Harry Bo6n Ray EUiott PM. Boortz Fred Elsworth John Booty Pat Englert Alexander Bowie Karen Evarts Jane Boyd loutSe Ewing Richard Braeger Ficker Famtly Clyda Brenner John Farmer Kay Brown Douglas Fletcher Richard Bruck Paul F rankhn Clrff Buck David Fraser Bob Burbank Elhe Fraser Irving Burg Patti Frey DeAnn Burke Barbara Frost Gary Burrill Richard Frost Bob Burtner Theodore FuUer George Calamaras • Dennis Gage Scott CaJder Jim Gallagher Charles Caldwell Erhne Garn Bob Callahan F~ter Garn Lucyann Cameron .. John Garrett Sandy Cameron Tom Garvey Carol Campbell Amy Gaston Frank Caput Mark Gaughan Robert Carley Walter Gerken Karen Carling Catherine Gervich Anne Car1sen Jane Gessler Gary Car1sen Gordon Glass Barbara Carver , · Norma Glover Frances Carver Donna Godshall Roy Carver. Ill Jack Going Tom -Casey Pamela Goldstein Douglas Cavanaugh MelCeol lrvm Chapman Bonnie Christeson ContiR.ted ... CITIZENS FOR A BET-rER NEWPORT Pllkt For By Clttnns For A Better Newport 't'HOriMenufeA • t Vote • PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT · ----~--··· -~- ,.. 5 _. The people who support "Gridlock" say · Measure A won't really relieve traffic in Newport Beach. -~ ~,. But, they said the same thing~ against building a new Bay Bridge on Pacific Coast Highway. The "Gridlock" folks blocked that traffic improvement for ten years . A decade of traffic misery for everyone in N~wport Beach. Finally, the Bay Bridge got widened. Ten years late. - And Pacific Coast Highway .became a more convenient road for aU of us. More traffic travels through Newport Beach today than before. And it flows smoother on Pacific Coast Highway than ten years ago . A little traffic relief goes a long way . It's time for more relief • We can bring similar traffic relief to Pacific Coast Highway by building the Pelican Hill Bypass. . Pelican Hill Bypass will divert about 16, 000 cars each day off Pacific Coast Highway. ~ It can dramatically cut traffic congestion on Pacific Coast Highway and on MacArthur Boulevard. Immediate traffic felief. If Measure A is approved, The Irvine Company begins construction as soon as road permits are granted. Construction can be complete within. ~o years. By law, no Occupancy Permit can be issued for any ~e~w multi-story offices at Newport Center until The f rvine Company completes the Pelican Hill ·Bypass. We can bring traffic relief now by voting "Yes" on Measure A. •• ) Mo t Iran ar•n WASHINOTON {APJ-Adman. &Stration oft\dals. folloW1na up Prct1· dent Reapn'• a11trtion that U.S arms lhipmcnu didn't tap the balance in Iran'• war with lraq,11ylheTthran aovemmtnt buys more than half of us weap<>nsfromSov1ttalhnandChfoa and the mt from the black and aray market . Details of weapons 1h1pmcnt1 by the Soviet Union.t.. which like the United Statet i1 onKially neutral an the lran·lraql war, arc scanty, one tatc Depertmcnt source ta1d. The informahon that is available, however, shows that for the fim five )'ctn of the war with Iraq, t9ao;.as Iran rttttvcd 20 percent to 30 pcrctnt ofits war needs from North Korea . · Th11 year, Keord101 to the admin- istration souitts who spoke on con- dition of anonymity, China passed North KorH 11 the main supplier of arms to Iran, hippina mo tly infan- . try •-capons, sue~." artillery and small arms mun111ons, llona with -· some anti·ai~f\ and anti-hip ~capons. Additionally, the sourcn said, Syna and Libya are thou&ht to have supphed Iran With a limited number ofSoviet-made AM-2 urface-twir mi siles What Iran hasn't bttn able to obtain from communist countries or the United States, at has S01Af!.\t from weapons manu(adurers walhna to defy the American cmbarao or from arms dealers who operate on the borderline of the law, the so-called aray and black markets, the '°"ron illd, U •• off'1cia11 have 0 publlcly and pnva~ly mtrealed .. Chana, lhe Sov· 1et U naon and other nataon1 to stem to now of 'WaPoftl, but thae eff'oru ma)' be undtmn by disclotum of the accrtt American anna sales., the sourus said. • The Iraqi ambell&dor to Wuhina· ton, Naur Hamdoon, 11id that tlie U.S. shipments io. the lrantans "wall help them to continue the war." -'Any policy that tries to appeate the lranaan aovcrnment is quate danatroua. no matter what the inten· tions behind it were," Hamdoon said in an interview with the New Yotk Times. • The administration sources uid Iran a~n to have intensified us tcxkp1hna of weapons in recent months, in apparent preparation fora lona-awaued .. final offensive" pledJCd by the nation'• spiritual patnarch., the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. · But the onset of the rainy season an the Persian Gulf may further delay the Jraruan offensive, accordina to Pen&a&on and State Oepanment sources. "Remember this has laraely been an infantry war fouabt with llahtly armed foot soldiers,·• 1aid one source, wtlo closely monitors the war. "The Iranian arsenal has been badly dcfleted," lcavina Iraq with about a 4-cdie in tanks and a similar advantage in warplanes. Spe11dl'Wo.a ... ,POMMldat•htodo• .... WASHINGTON (AP),... The nations of tbe wOf1d Aft lpeedi119 Sl.7 million a maalde OD weapon&, a bistonc b.ip, while one edl&lt ln du'llt cunoc t'lld ud write and one in five lives in poverty, eocordina to an annual ttudy. Mil.it.Ill expendiuam in 1986, lbe United Nauoat• lnterna&ionll y., Of Peace, arc neerty S900 billion, about 6 P!lfC!eD& ol lbe world•• 1f011 naaioeal product. ICtOrdll'I to the priva1e report~ by Rutb l4lr Sivarcl Luc year:, military 1prid•na wu estimated at SllO billion, and smce 1960, 11 Sl4 tnllion. The United Stat.es ranks flm in miHtary-eJlpenditures. It ranks teVenlh in life txpecuncy and 10th in 1pendina on JMablic education per iwrson. Tbt Sovaet Union i1 second in weapons spendina. But it ranks ._.th in life expectancy and 41\h in infant monality. Tetrther, the two auperpov.-cn. wttb less than I .l pet'Ceftt of the world'• populat100, Kcourit for 60 percent of the mtlitary exPenditum. lraqm bomb hrolnalAn pan.: JO killed .NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -lru .. id Iraqi aircraft bombed two Iranian pons ioday, killint 10 civiJians and wouDdina 60, and daamed at shelled Iraqi miliW)' and iodulUial ~ itt retaliation'b' ~el attack.I. Tehran Radio 11id the Iraqi bombs hit residential areas of the toutbeastem ports of Sat S,ndar and.Bandar Kbomeini. h said 30 houses were detttoyed and what _it dneri~ u an indusaial unit -as da.masd. Blahdld Radio confirmed the raid on Bandar Khomeini, but aid t!.e t.af1tt1 wcre 1 SIS' f1Ctory, a petrochemical complex and surfacHo..air miuile batteries. The imported v.apons are be-the U.S. shipments were earmarked lieved to have been diltnbuted more for the armed forces. or less ~venly between the armed Despite the U.S. sales, described by forces, which include many officers Pcntaaon sources as includina 2,000 commissioned before the 1979 revol-TOW 'anti-tank missiles and 200 uuon which deposed Sb ah repaircomponentsfor Hawkeyeanu- Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, and the aircraft missiles, Iran apparently has Revolutionary Guards, which consist been unable to obtain spare pans for largely of around forces intensely aircraft 1l needs to overcome the loyal to Khomeini. · •substantial Iraqi advantaat In the Some reporu have .sugested that skies. Rain, melting snow strailifs· study taos 1 000 1;;• -.-s· . 1 thedegrees , Sa.lers ID eatt e are• of boredom GLACIER, Wash (AP)-As many as 1,000 skfcrs v.erc stranded today an thLS hamlet, cut off by rain and meltma snow that swelled more than 1 doz.en rivers tn western Washington and severed the state's main cast-west hnlc. volcano, were cut ofT m Glacier. They were told that a 5CC't1on of road west of town~ shc:d out and they could be stranded unttl-w.edn . About SO volunteers in Bclhn&ham, 33 miles down the hi&hway to the west, pn:pa_rc<i food, blankets and other supplies for helicopter or tractor shipment to the cut-off area that bad enou&h food to last until this afternoon, said Kathy Beftnctt, manascr of the Whatcom County Red Cro s chapter. NEW YORK (AP) -Joe com· plains about hts W'e wbcn he's not ratthn, on about some esoteric thing. asks a ot of quc lions and mumbles "uh-huh" a lot when you wk. f1ref\&htcrs evacuated about 80 families in the town ofSnoquafm1c, about 2.S males southcas( of Seattle. after flood waters invaded at least 200 homes. officials said today. Jack keeps calhn& lhinp "far out," tells you his fcelinas and Just tnes too hard to be nice. Who is more borina? New studies sugcst it's Joe. And a 38-year-old firefighter m the Snohomish County community of Sultan, about 3.S miles nonhwcst of Seattle. was killed Sunday when he was hit by a train whlle help1ns evacuate a flood-threatened nul'Sln& home, authonues said. The arocery 1 section of Graham's Store and Restaurant 1n Glacier was "cleaned ri&ht out ·to the walls, except for soap and other stuff you can't cat," owner Gary Graham wd late Sunday. "The restaurant is still hutnm1n1 along. ... (but) we're down to 10 bottles of beer." The research is amona the first in "interpersonal boredom," a line of study that could lead to help for "chronically and excessively borin& persons." researchers wrote in the November issue of the Journal of Peoonahty and Social Psycholoey. Rainfall continued today 1n the region. where as much as five inches or more fell in 24 hours. Compoundin& the problem was snow that melted Farther south alona the Cascade Mount.ams. Interstate 90, the state's mun cast-west thorouabfare . "We're all bonna sometimes and we're ~JI 1ntcTCSttn& sometimes (but) some people are more bonna than others," said Malk Leary, assistant ps'}choloey professor at Wake Forest University an Winston-Salem. N.C.. who wrote the report with three students . raptdly lll vuy mt.ld ltmpcrature, · -was closed tnrou~ Snoqualmie Pass, a6out "55 miles cast of Seattle, because water covered the westbound lanes and a maJOr shde blocked ealtbound lanes. said Rack Daniels of the it.ate Oepanment ofTransportation. Totals for the 24-hour penod endmaat • a.m. today included .S.3.S inche at tampede Pus. about .SS miles cast of Seattle. 4 0 I inches at Tacoma. 3. 70 inches at Olympta. and 3.20 at Seattle-Tacoma lntcmauonal A1t'p0n. the v.eather service said A few males to the west of Snoqualmie Pass. 18 ~pie were rescued unday from a popular hunttna and hikina aru after a Forest Service road washc:d ouL Abou.t l.000 people. mo t of them.skien who spent uhday on Mount Wash1qton. a I0,77S.foot dormant New silver dollars go,on market today WASHINGTON (AP)-The U .. Mint. which has been swamped by ~old fever for the past month, expects its new Amencan Ea1Je silver dollars to be JUSt as po~ular with the pub he as the its hi&)t-Oying aold coins. The new salver dollars, the first silver bullion coins ever produced in this country, were bctn& put on sale for the first tame today Mint officlalsand coin traders ahlcc predicted a sellout of the 1nittal offcnna or 1.4 mtlhon silver dollan. Just hke the Amcncan EaaJe &old coins, the sliver dollars will be sold for the pncc of their bu I hon content But wuh silver selhn& for a little over S5 an ounce compared with more than S3 0 an ounce for aold, the salver dollan wall be in the ranae of more people's pocketbook ' ' 'Paulve'ueeofpot would show in teat BALTIMORE (AP) - A person who sat 1n a room filled with manJuana smoke but did not use the drug himself could show a Po$itive result in a urine test for drua usage, accordina to a federal study com- mmioned by the Navy. But Navy officials said the findinas confirm their ,po 1uon that anyone who tests above a certain thre •hold wo_u1d have ustd the drua. "Passive inhalation is a myth at the cutoff level we use,.. id Lt. ~ om· mander John Fenton . '• The $Cienll h who conducted the tudy, ho~cvcr. said the find1np hould caution the public and tho5C who test for dru u~. RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTEIY llC. ... ,. ........ .... 1m-aa.mn11»-.... 11w •1·7740 .. 10M•SJ•" .... •• ,.. ..... ca. NOTICE TO AT&T QJSTOMERS Anl:T filed with the Federal Communications Commission on November 17, 1986, for Interstate price changes that atrect our customers. The proposed changes are scheduled to become effective January 11 1987. The price changes being proposed are the result.of cost reductions made possible by decisions of the Federal Communications Commission. The rates affected are listed below. AT&T LONG DISTANCE SERVICE• Domes11e lnientote usoge chotges • Doy pnces reduced by II 6" • ~ pnces reduced by 6 2" • N'ight and~ pnces reduced by 2 796 Reoch 0ut• Amento Pros • Recked from $10.15 to $990 • 8os-c Pion r~ from S8 95 to S8 75 - • Additional hours ""hanged ot $780 . AT&T PRQ• AMERICA .. lnrenrore usage charges •Doy pnces reduced by 116% • E~ pnces ~by 62" •Night and~ pnces reduced by 2.796 Monl+lly teevrting charge •Reduced from $15 to $13 20 AT&T PRQ• AMERICA II lntentof9 usage charges • Reduced by 10.796 Monthly recumng charge • Reduced from $1J5 to $90 AT&T PRQ• AMERICA Ill lntenrote usage ~ges • it.di iced by 1°'6 Mon!Ny t90XMg charge • Reduced rrom ~50 to $365 im.ntot. USog9 chorget • ~ed by_.,. fat MEGACOM and l.'49' for MEGACOM800 Mon!Ny l'KUl'Mg ~· • Reduced from $1200 to $1000 ~ W>DIIIONAI. HOl IDAJS Ofl.~ rotM wl ~IO~ oddilionol J.detol ~They~. • Matlin Luther Ki'lg *. Doy . ,,...., ~ • MemoriQI Doy • CoMribul Day • ':l:af.-or• Doy ... .. • ' AT&T WATS & AT&T 800 SERVICE• Rate~ for WATS and 800 ~tructured en folows: • Group Averoge blMng eliminated • $300 charge for 800 5-lgle Number Service .amnoted • S20 charge per wvice group established • New usoge rote loper structure established -Hourly chorges by rote penod for total usoge per service group -59' and 109' reductions ot the 25 hour and 100 hour loper points for Doy~ rote periods • WATSocceu line rote recked from $50.50 to $36.55 • 800 Servtce occ9Ss lwl9 rote lncreosed from $35.50 to$36.55 • Speciol AGceu ~reduced from $33.25 to $29.60 • Inside Wrre Recovery cho<ge incl'90Md from S•.30 10 $6.20 •~"line instolohOn charges increosed to $156 As o 1-.sJt of these changes, prices ore reduced 0'4fOll by 2.316; customers may expenence o rote increase. o rote decreose, or no change in their' monl+lly billirlQ AT&T INJBtNADONAL LONG DISTANCE M odddionoJ discount IS Introduced for cWecl coling IO 37 countnes AT&T SOFTWARE DEBNED NETWORK • Schec:UM Band C reduced~ by• 2" GIOSS RECWIS TM MCTOR In !he folowtng StQelM, 0 turehorge " added to AKCMf grotS ~ ~ irnJ>o:ted on AT&T by theM stotes n,. AMled ~ scheduled to be effe<M'bn AJly 1. 1987.<nt 6 •~ 10.36• 2.31" 12.•3 901" 1 •6~ t.. J Sam Goldstein EdeGoodwan -~ra Gothard Miles {Barbara Grant Candi Grant Robert Grant Taylor Grant Debbie Gray LE. Gribble ~lly Grrffrth BarryGrosS Bert GulSness Fran Guisness em Hamilton Carolyn Hansen Roger Hardacre Dorothy Hardcastle Harriet Hams Scott Hart M~on Harvey Dennis Harwood Don Haskell John Haskell Dack Hausman Luvena Hayton Jackle Heajher Juqy Hemley ' Rogue Hemley Charles Hester Nora Hester Hank Hdl Ted Hinshaw George Hodges Nancy Hodson Clint Hoose Pat Hoose Frank Hopkins Mary t.ou Hornsby DaVld Horowitz Grant HowaJd lnezHowald Mike Howard Pam Howard Jon Hubbard 8111 Hughes John Hurndale Maralou Ingold Ted.Inouye Paul Iverson Michael Jacques Vte. Jash1nsk1 Gregory Johnson Linda Johnson Ray Johnson RIChard Jonas Vin Jorgensen Ronald Jurgensen David Kagnoff Donn Ketcheson Jean Kiger John Krllef er Martha Krllef er Jerry Krng Virginia Knott Bender Anabel Konwiser John Konwiser Barbara Krueger Lucille Kuehn John Kur1ander Bruce Lambert 8111 Langston Hal Lehman Nora Lehman H.W. Linton Sherry Loofbourrow Bette Lorenz Roger Luh'j Richard Leuhrs .. ' Mrs. Wiliam Lund ~ Bi Lusk General Waham Lyon James Macdonald Gerald Mack Ralph Mack John Macnab Joe Manson Ann Mara Gina Marcuse Edie Marowrtz Richard Marowrtz Doreen Marshall Douglass Marshall Lowell Martindale Jr Craig Mason Char1es Masters Dee Dee Masters Hon. Ph~1p ~rer Bob McCaffrey Robert McCurd.a----. Glenna ....... ~ ........ ., Don McHone John McKerren Rex McKrttnck Josephine Mclain Robert Mclain Priscila McMurtry JR McSunas Suzanne Mel Michael~ Roger M~len Audrey Moe Lawrence Moore r Ph hps Morgart Chns Morns Coalson Morns Jean Morns Jeff Moms SUSI Moms Johan Morrison Randy Sue Momson Donna Morrow Grtta Mueller John Murphy Sue Murphy Gary Myers Pnscdla Myers RIChard Nelson,- Trm Newman Larry Nordstrom Nancy Nordstrom Bruce Nott Cecilia Nott Dennis O'Ned JamesObnen MavtS Obnen Peter Ochs Brent Ogden Don Owen David Paine Laney Paine Karen Parmier Tim Paone James Parker Barbara Peckenpaugh Tom Peckenpaugh Eleanor Petrsol Contirued ... CITIZENS FOR A BEITER NEWPORT .. I • J . Just lmagln JJ tening to=-~ report ~f the future. "We have another slg alert Jn the Newport Beach area. Traffic is at a complete standstill for the third time this week anci it's only Wednesday. I can see emergency · vehicles below me and they can't even get through. --. It looks like some people are just leaving their cars at. the roadside and ·• ~~;;;=:;~r~~ they're walking home:. It's a · real · ... 'c mess. This Is your traffic reporter In ··· the sky over Newport Beach where nothing is moving .~, . . Is that the kind of traffic report you want tb hear in 19907 \ . Well, it could happen. . . Unless we PASS Measure A on November 25. "' ,.. . Newport Beach needs a responsible solution to the traffic problems we encounter on a daily basis. Measure A offers that solution and morel What does Measure A mean? t significant and vital improvements in traffic flow throughout our community -S4 7 million worth, all paid for by the Irvine Company .. t more affordable shopping at Newport Center. t improved facilities for cultural, .social, educa- tio/al, and charitable activities. t a new Teen Center providing complete facili- ties for supervised activitiesJar our children. t responsible and planned growth torr the future. . ..-· 1 , ' ·. --_ .... .......-- This is .the first time that the . -.. Newpoit Harbor-Costa Mesa Board et Realtors has taken a public stand on this kind ~of issue. But we believe Measure A is so important --:-so crucial -to the ~ futur:e of Gblr: c;ommunitY-th __ ~~ we cannot afford A . to sit back. ~ e. r' MEASURE A IS "' THE RESPONSIBLE SOLUTION! 0 These organizations al so support Measure A -The Responsible Solution: Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce Speak-l)p Newport Corona Del Mar Chamber of Commerce Newport Harbor Museum of Art Newport Youth Association Newport Center Association Newport Beach Police Employees Association Newport Beach Fire Fighter Association Newport Beach Restaurant Association Fashion Island Me~chants Association VoteY o n Measure A on Nov. 25 ! As both Realtors .~nd concerned citizens we can- ~ot watch as private prop- erty rights are violated and solutions for our traffic problems are abandoned "'-~ because of tt]i 11ballot box plann~ng" apprpach used by. a tew individuals hop- in to block progress in ewport.Beach. Our FutOreDepends O~ It. :-Paid for by BAC-PAC fTM lusffWH & Community P~tkal Action Commtttff of tht f".wport Harbor Arta Chambfr of Commercel 4 I ID Numb«l21756 : . I" • "" • M~NILA. Pbalipptna (AP) -Pmidenl Coruon A4uii1N>'11Pokff. man aaid today lbaa nearly 200 ptop1e plotted IO~ her ~vernmen1 and that the coup plii?• ~ OQe of 1evetal ~ .. her decisioa 10 rettruelW'f tbe c.abiaet. The IPC)llnman. Teodoro ltnieno 111d a new c.abinct will bt announced in a day or.two. and that two to four members, 1nclud11)1 Dtfentt Min1s-- ter Juan Ponce Ennlc u eaniet= announced. were out. She had uked all membtn to rnian on unday. Ennle's replacement 11 tttit'M Oen. Rafcal lleto1 66, a West Point aradu- ate. He said today an "1nronna1 invettiption•• lhould bt launched into the plot. Benipo 1QdiC*led ~rt would be no ttvert pun11hment for the coup plannen. • Meanwhile, at wu rtpc:>ned that neaotiatort!or the Commumst Party and its New PcOple's Army auerrillas have derMnded that the aovcrnment suspend acceptance of U S. military a1d dunna • proposed tease-fire. Chief 1overnment ne1ot1ltor Teofir.to Guin,ona said the demand, made by Romeo Capttlona as a condition for aarttina to Aquano'i request for a Christmas truce. was unacceptable. Pro-PLO slogan s Interrupt funer al JERUSA LEM {A P) -PalestJntan youths auarcSN by lsraeb troops shouted pro-PLO logans durina a funeral march that turned into a nauonahst demonstratJon in the city's Arab sector today, a day after Jewish demonstrators rampaaed throu&h the area, smashing windows and shouunc .. Death to Arabs!" "With blood and spirit we WJIJ liberate Palestane... the Arab marchers shouted as pallbearers ear- ned the <40ffin of former Jordanian Cabinet minister Anwar Nusseibeb, 74, who died Saturday of cancer. Nusscabeh headed the fast Jerusa- lem Electric Co .• tbe last Palestinian economic bastion an the cny. which Israel has lhrcatent:d to take over titina a finanClal debt His funeral prou s100 ln the Old City became one of the laracst pro- Palcstine liberatton Orpniiataon protests in Jerusalem in }cars • Orenge C0Mt DAILY PILOT /Monday. HovMlbef 24. 1Me * A9 c= I I et ltnllft.O 'laid about 180 plot&m, == ~= ~Y:l~ .~ IVlllte Bow,,,...,,Af'SlaolorloUlf16coa11 m•ti"'Y .mm~ blc!Uoa Enrik...mct Siturday at the home o( AdlOnio • WASHINGTON tAP) ~ Wfittc Route 1 ay ~1ii<f P:lill1P1"ne Can&aorominent Marcouupponcr ffttidnn Corazon Aquino and her armed forces dhitf fot lh6t ··~ witlllinu to Emile. He Mid .the)' ffttionalisn:i .. in foih~ an appart!nt coup attempt u the chairman of a House planned to lake over tht NalioUI f'o~1p1'8ftairs pantl 11id the weekend moves •tttnathcntd Aquino's posmon AMetnbly Ud void che Feb 7 1111n11 communist aMurtents. "The United States suppons the Aq1uno elenioes WOft tw Aquhao '°vemmeiat and Its cffons to restore 1 table political 1tuataon and to _put her Leaden OI '.lhe pro.Man:o. New country on a linn economic footina." White Hou~ spokesman Larry ~kes Society Movement ·Pwb known by uid. Thespokesman added that the admin11tration wa• "hoi>tful now'that all the ICfODym KBL. iteUfJd i statement • parties will focus on the Kt1ous economic and $CCUrity problcm1 f1cina their 11yina tbey bad pthtred at c~·s country and umte bthind qutno·s efforts to wive them:· hOU.e for a .......... puty mtttina. • .. w, never dilcutled nor bad any meet.I .. with military otracen about the coup," lllid the statement. saancd by part, laden. Chic of Staff' Fadel V. Ramot di1CO\'efed the plot thro~ in· filtrator) a.nd "chec~mated• their plans, Beniano said. Accordiftf to official accoun.ts, Ramot deiJIO)ed troops around key tnstaJlations in the capital Saturday n1&ht and the followina day ordered commanders to iantany defense ministry orders ... Later Sunday. Aq no asked alJ Cabinet members re ign and warned s~e w~uld the ''sternest measures apmst o POnents. When asked what action would be Benigno said only two to four taken apinst Ennle. Bcniano said. members of the Cabinet would be ..In the Philippines there are Wl)S of .. afltctcd" v.htn Aquino announc~ Kttlana thinp amicably." Th(re has her new administration. · bttn no public statement from Enrile . "It ~as \'Cry hard for the pre idcnt since Sunday' developments. · to continue leadma a country v.hich T~rtt fact~rs which led . to the was bcina held hostage by 1 VoU9 of Caba net d1sm1ssat. bcnaanosud, were m1htaryQfficers whose interest ,,.as to the recent .sla>mJ of pr~mm~nt labor irab pov.cr," he said. "It's' as 1f he unio_n ch•~( and ,leftist. Rolando. w., able to remove a bone from her Olaha. the kidnapp1n1 of a Japa~se throat... _ busanes man and the weekend coup • . pJot. With the removal of 4isruptivc Leftist arou~ "blamed Olaha·s p-Jhtkal clements, the rema1nm1 murder on Ennli'and staJcd a mass danacrs to be faced were the comm- funeral procession th\ou&h the heart mumst ansuricncy ~nd an ••hna of Manila last week. · economy, Benigno said. Barclays Bank s~lls s. African ~oldlngs An&)oAmericanCo'l) ,111d the mine was calm today after fiP.tma invoJvma acveral hundred men erupted Sunday na&htandleft 11 workersdead. Twomancl'$d1cdinclashes Saturday ni&ht. About S,<X¥>ofVuJ Reefs' 45,000 minen stayed away from woric today whale the black National Union of Mineworkers met with mane ofTicaals to try to cue tensions at the mine, 100 miles southwest of Johanncsbura. Kfopley-Jooes said. JOHANNESBURG. South Africa -Barclays Bank, in the larsest divest ment yet by 1 forcian company, lS selhna its last shares an tts South African subsidiary due to financ1al pressure and 1nt1~1partheid protests, the bank said today. Local bank ex.ccutives told a news conference ttie British parent company wm sell its <40.4 percent stake an Barclays National Bank of South Africa -1he country's biacst commercial bank -to 1 consortium of SoulhAfncancompanacsforS236milhon. Barclays Bank Cllmber shot a top Berlln Wall of Bntaan owned 100 pcrcenT of the bank in 1973, but w sin~ aradually has sold 1ts shares. The sc>vcmor of South · BERLIN -East German border auards_today shot a Afnca 's Reserve Bank, Gerhard de Kock. said the sale ••as person who had chm bed to the top of the Berhn Wan from not expected to eJlcrt any effect nationally or inter-the Communist-ruled eastern sector, West Berlin POiice nationally on the South African benkina system." said. The West German government condemned the However. South Afncan ban ken expressed fears 11 would shootins. In 'a separate incident, border Police in the spark a chaiMact1on of divestment by other Briti,h nonhcm town of Bad Bnmstadt said an East Gennan companies. man escaped to West Germany today by sw1mmin1 out 13 kUled ln mine fight JOHANNESBURG, South Afne1..--Fi&htina be· t"'ccn black miners at the huae VaaJ lt'ccfs Gold Mme over a tavern boycott killed 13 people and injured 20. the company satd today John Krnpley-Jones. spckcsman for into the Baille Sea, where he was ptekcd up by a ship. Police an West Berhn said a wuncss reported hcarioa shouts of. '"Halt, stand still." from the cast side of the Berhn Wall 11 about I ·30 a.m .. followed by 30 to SO shots. A person on top of the wall. who apparently was trying to escape to the West. fell back into East German lemtory, pohce quoted \he Wltness as sayina ASO_ - RESPGNSIBLE PL )Ole of \·Vport Beach ju:,t happened ; the r~t of it wa~ plannt.~ that \\ay. ·The re~ult i an tlttra tive, prn pef'()U!) anJ economically healthy community -a community whose property va lue , quali ty husine ~., and high average famil y incnme nre much envieJ. And the plannmg proc continues. That i }\)Ur C ity Council's principal q.rncem, it tl\'cmdmg m1S! inn. Your cit) government acted on that re p..>nsibility th1~ pa:,t ... ummer by ,1doptmg the ewport C-enter General Plan Amendment, cl plan d~i~111ed to com- plete Newport Center and, cqur1lly important, to Cl)pe with the challenges of inevitahle reg ional growth. Ch1et an~mg theie challenge~ i'-1 traffic, how tu Jeal with it, h Jw to funnd tt in and art)l.lnd our city, anJ how to pay for the road hutlding that needs to be Jone \\.'hen help frl)ffl .,uut 1de urce 1 severely limited. That i" the chL1llcnge, anJ it l" met i.n the Nc\\.-pl>rt Center 1plan, which will he presented to our city':, votcl"5 {{)r their con urrence ~m November 25th. Under th plan -Mca~ure A on the hallot-thc future lim its of Newport Center\ grtl\\.th are defined, and prov1~ion i made for mill1oru, of dollars in traffic c1rcu latton "r"tem imprtl\'cment.,, all l)f which arc to he paid ti. r hy the Irvine Company. The plan was -..hapt...J rhn.">l1gh many mnntra of rudy, elal:xmue environmental impL t and traffic analy~s, public hearing-, and the participatinn of many homeownel'i' assoc iation~ and civic h>Toup:,. It b tl thoughtfully etmce1vL'1 plan, with many benchb for the entire communi ty, anJ mo~t n )tttbly in tern1' of tmfhc. While doing nothing may he the fa\\ red appn.Mch of "i(,m1c, city g l\!emment cannot duck 1t~ re~pomibiltt:v tl) finJ solut101 . And lunnn' ttl our trattK: prohlem!>-wh1ch will grow whether Ne\V{Xlrt Bet h grow or not-arc pruvi ded hy th· Newp(lrt Center plan. ll1e plan re IX nd, tn our tran"rx1natton ncL-ili, hy mandating the widen ing of three exi,ting arterial ro(lds and by adding the first new arteri al nMd -Pd1can Hill R( ad-to t)Ur city' traffic c1rculc\ti n y t~m in SO yc~1n,. • It i'I a plan de ih111eJ f(.)r low growth, envisioning development over the next 10 Ct) 15 ycan,. 111rough T CC>mpnm1t<ie and COntmcntral clgr •cmcnt, the e1 ' 1lln il fl~u ed the plan' <. riginal office ,11locat1 m by ~1nle 30 rcrccnt and pru ~.J it-. con ... tnictton to~ ur > that the roads would be built first Clnd only the controll J dt.•\' ·l )rn ht · } \)lJ hnve appnwcd . · ~ • In summary, w~, th ~ und \rsigned are fim1ly convin lxl th,1t the ~wpon ;enter ~ complc · n plan 1~ n ~ed h our entire community, prc:-ent and future . It ad~ ~iQn,11 traffic con ·en1 , the m,1inr nancc of 1r c onomi w •ti-being, and the tlmmunity'~ desires for rn)11 open "if\l e, retail and cultur.11 <. pportunitt , <1nd other 11 li ~ a~iti . It i a · ind · n<l n ... ;~ n~ibl .. plan, fully deserving }\)ltr ~:n :l( rscmcnt on )\ ·mher 25th . • Ma ·or Philip ~iaurer ommi SklO ·r r J _J Robert Perkins James .. Buzz .. Person James Peters • Mary Petr~ Richard P1anin • • James Pick • Hon Ruthelyn Plummer Deborah Polonsky Gary Pomeroy . Hans Prager SandyPnce Thomas Queen Jr Steven Rabago James Ray Janet Ray D Alan Reece Dana Reed Courtney Reeser Dionne Reeser Don Regan LIZ Reinders Candice Rice Dennis Rice Sue Richardson Walter Richardson Mary Richmond Hon Tom Riley Harry Rinker Btil Ritter Jean Ritter Rachelle Robers Ron Aobtson George Rodda Dan Rogers FW.Rohe Bonnie Rohrer .. James Roosevelt -Bonrne-Ross-- Malcolm Ross ·-laura Aostvold Louis Russo Alan Rypinsk.i Florence Rypinsk1 Ron Sa1enrn Paul S;i1ata Tim Salyer Lee Sammis Patti-Gene Sampson Annette Sanchez Baesef Shirley Schieber Bernie Schnelder Thomas Schriber Edward Schumacher Florence Schum~cher Gregg Schwenk BJOrn Sedlemek JamesSelna Betsy Severance Robert Shackleton Dickson Shafer Francis Shanahan Harrison Sharp Don Shaw John Martin Shea Peter Shea Biii Shryock Michael Shute John Simon Jeffrey Simonds David Srtton Janet Smith ,_ Richard Smith Jam Somers Larry Somers Thomas Sparks Bob Sparr Ann Spencer Lee Spencer George. S~ln Tad Springer Ill Robert Stedman Les Steffensen Carlyn Steiner David Steinmetz Gertrude Stetson ·Richard Stevens . T itnothy Stradef Arthur Strock Myron Sukut Mrs. Ivan Sullivan Tom Sutton • ( D S. Tappan, Jr. Barbara Tate BobTefler Cathryn Tennille Betty Tesman Thomas Testman SM Thompson Delane J Thyen Donald Tippett TemTonUCCI Ph•Tozer PerTrebler RoyaJ Tucker • Hon Clarence "Bus" Turner Dave TWltchell Charles Ullman Mer1e Verburg Skip Vilerot Jane Wallace Ed Warmington Lon Warmington ·· Mdlael Wasmann Bob Watkins Michaet Watkins Gwenda Watson James Watson Elm Weingarden Helena Weingarden Mary Ann Weis Mary Westbrook Char1ey Wheeler · Kate Wheelet PlugWhrte Bob Whiton Tom Wilek Holley W~k1nson George Wdhamson PeterW~son Sh1r1ey Wilson Harriette Witmer Darryl Wokf Mary Wolff Thomas Wolff Jim Wood Jennder Woodward Brll Wren George H Yardley, Ill Linda Yort _ _,.,... Barbara Young Gordon Young Jay Young Paul Zadfen Charles Zuercher CITl·ZENS FUR A BETTER NEWPORT PO ~. ,44 • Pllld Fof By Ctttnna For A Bettef Newpon \IHOnMenur.A - -~ ----- M · . f . NEW IN THE CABARET LOUNGE • Cocktail Dancing Tue·fri. 5-Bpm wlfh live enterlatnment by ''Higear'' • Large screen T. V. for Monday Ntte Football • Comp/Jmentary hors 'd ouevres Mon. ·Fn. • Cabaret Seafood Bar from 7 p.m. If you 're tn a more relaxed mood en1oy the ''NEW" Fltte Deck Cocktail Lounge 18700 MacArthur Bl'ld. Irvine • 833-2770 (Acron from John Wa 111 A· t) -----------~-------------- "IF YOU WANNA WIN, YOU GOTTA PLAY WIN-001" Cllnlt Toi11'1 .N11nh11 011 P111 Al. DailyPilat & TWA FIND OUT HOW GOOD WE REALLY ARE. LAX/ Orange County Connections Vie Golden State Airlines WIN·GO~Hotlln · (71~)642-•333 ,. ,. Formula for merchandising prescribes pharmacy, gifts By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of .. o.lr .......... As nt~Ot ktailt conunor ''lO expand their inventoric , fu5tomcrs no lonacr arc ~urpri\C'd to find foo<J goods in drua stores, firstald ltcms in grattnes and a virtual comuco~ia of mcrchandtSC in discount cmponums, The expanding. cross.-brecd1na chain~ ha\'e forocd the smaller. inde-· pendent entrepreneur to develop innovative marltctina stratCjlei that will enable him to compere _ Bob and Tom Boragno. owners of two Orange Coast tores, have. de- veloped such a strategy. The brothers arc pharmacists who, said Bob Boragno, "had a little retail blood in us." Bob. who make!> his home 1n Coronadel Mar and is thcoldcfofthe pair, opctled Parkview Pharmacr in Irvine I l · years ago. Tom. of Irvine.. JOtned hurt about four years later. .., .............. ~~ Brothen Bob &lid Tom Bor&IJlo find the two departments of their hybrid drac •tore. fee4 off one another. , The pair found themselves sur- rounded by major competitors like Alberison's supermarket, an<t-Sav- On and Thnfty drug&tores. _ .. We thought being a pharmacy ' would be great," said Tom. "But these days you have to be more than that." They decided to survive meant to expand, and they began looking at lbeir op\ions. They considered bcoominl a med i- cal center pharmacy, or following the route of c:rtle big drugstore chains where customers will find everything from dog food to motor oil. ''We didn't have the square footage or Che buying power," Tom said. ln'stead, they began introducing a small line of gif\ items. Their store at 531 l University became P.arkvicw Pharmacy & G1f1s. Oesp1le the seeming disparity m pharmaceuticals and gift items. the -. . Boragnos discove.red they had struck a chord with their customers. .. We found 1hcrc are people who don't hke to go to lhc malls," Tom said. To remain compctnivc, the brothers enlisted the services of a· Michigan~bascd buying group that work$ with 200 to 300 independent retailers across the country. The group buys in volume, ensur- ing discount rates for each buyer. "By buying together we're able to buy just hke the big boys." Tom said. In fact.. he claimed their prices beat the department stores. !They found the two sides of the business "feed off one another." "Once we .started sellinJ &ills and sending catalogs, our prcscri pt1ons went up," Tom said. · • The hybrid store proved so success- Group W Cable pr~sents ... SPEAK UP NEWPORTI NOV. 24th 6 pm to 7:30 pm Group Discussion on Measrue A 714/842-3280 901 W 18th StrMt Newport Beach Early Bird Dinners •7 .SO Featuring Prime RM> or Fresh Fish Complete dinner with choice of Soup or Salad and Dessert •• 4 to 6 PM 7 O.yti Week eo1 £. Bilbol 67l-n26 fut the brothers recently opened their second,. Monarch 83) Pharmacy & Gifts at 7 Monarch Bay Plata in Lagun1 Niguel. At 7,200 MlUare feel, the Monarch Ba) store 1s slightly larger than the 5,00Q..Mlu re-foot Irvine store. The new store celebrated its grand open. mg Wednesday with nearly SOO invited guests. The front of the store resembles the gift depart men\ of an upscale depart- ment store. Merch:rndisc ranjes from fine porcelain and china uems to clothes. greeting cards and gift wrap. The store is al~ady decol'9ted for the Chnstmas holidays and offers tree decoratJons, Yule stock.ings aod seasonal gift items .• In one corner ts a full-line c~ metics department with a full-time cosmetolog.ist. And at the back 1s the pharmaq, run by the Boragno brothers who still believe in the personal ~rvicc. that independent retailers hvc and die by. They greet their customers by name. While they fill prescriptions, customers wander the al\les to study -t~e-ver<ha11ging-mert'hand11r. "I don't think ei ther one would quite make 11 wnhout the other," Tom· Boragno said of their pharmac) and gift departments. They wM'I l't.llc out a ~d store, either. OTC UPs & DowNs NYSE UPS & DOWNS Markets hits l 0-week high EW YORK (AP) -The stock matU1 chmbed 10 a 2'n-monlh h1ih Monday, folio.ins lhrou&h on &ts raJly late last week. Analysts said many traders were tmprcued by the market's quad rebound 1ut ~eek aft.er tti. uutial )<>It it wf'Ccttd -wbcn 11\C sc:anc:bl brott involving tn~C$tor Ivan Boesky. :' w H 4 T AME x DID ----- Ht:W YOftK (AP) NOY, 2A Tl 13 16 1, AMEX LEADERS , GoLo QuorEs ' -~ , METALS Quons ~~-~ ' NYSE LElDER S thiau~or19,nol ... • , 1 I _, ......_ 1~·-,--_.._ 1--ll:i;.,~ • YW•.aRT .. IF=--!"F .~ ......... IMMAZWI • _...._ -flOIW === MTURI CIWICIOIA • ~--WOI ACOllTIBT , ..... --,_THll.ON) 1~ ......_ G.l.D. ... ,,.D. 11:1···-.... 1Jlllft1' ji.;t'!"r:-, -i-.. tC)tDl.a ==--IONM,_.. ... .._,.. . ..,. ,.., .... CMl>IMMI 1-•QLnN ...., ... MM!~....,.. ... ... ,.....~ IMLL..-v HOU.YWOGOIGUA• ===OlllOI ---Mm« .. *~" (1931) FNd M> l ~.E Jr."°'>'',,,_. 1-----lrA'l'H • * ''Tiie = Ot .. JIM" llMmTA , -Glnelr Ragin. 1oa: =----f;:'?:. Oii'' 1•1) Jaflll T,.. _, __ ~)...... • KlillGoi-. llKUUMJNM>UP ..,. . ~--8191....._ • *. '11le ..... ,... A"'*1I ... ....,Miil _,..._ I NOlllllA:-• ..,,.,.,. .. (1116) Til'll Thollllr· I _.,.., .... __ -·--i>.,c:f OMMMON THI UATU. -...... Hunt. .. "-" (ttnl .... .~:7=~ .. HAWGIUNWUTMVll. ~ODDCOUfU ' ... ..... • ..... NOM"IM m.~ M'IGLI~ ~ ------_,,._ ... _.,.._ r----_.._ . =OOflJICIDI 11:,1uAUa 1'HMl'I OOti/l>Nt( 100.000~ •STEVEH SftEJLBEAG'S• "AN AIENCAN T Al." (G) 5:45, 7·30, IM5 . -CHARLIE SHEEN• "THE WIWTH" (PG-131 11 oo. 8·00, 10·00 11ITREETI OF GOl.D" (R) 8:30, 8;30, 10; 10 C::H.l\RTfR CENTRf 8·l 1 0 ;' iO ~ •EXCLUSIVE EHGAGDIENT• "NAME Of THE ROSE" .. MALCOLM" (PG· 13) JAi 1·00, 9·~ 5:30. 7;30, 9.30 ... _~ ___ ;...__.;.m "THE COLOR -CHARLIE SHEEN• 11THE WIWTH" (PG-13) 1.00. e·oo •EXCLUSNE ENGAGEMEHT• .. TRUE ST~I" (PG) 8;00, 8;00, 10-00 •STEVEN SPEILBEAG'S• AN AmllCAN T Al.• <G> 8 oo. 8 oo. t-40 •WALT DISNEY'S• "SONG OF THE SOUTH" 5 35, 1 30. 9; 15 -C THOMAS HOWELL• 0 SOUL MAN" (PG-13) II 15, 8;30, 10.25 •DEXTER GORDON• ••ROUND MIDNIGKr' (R) 7·00, 9'.30 VILLAGE CENTER 841 05b7 f .... , .... OF MONEY" IRI PAUL NEWMAN TOM CRUISE 5:00, 130. 9:45 ('~~! ~.1A L:,; .. .., •A r.1E -:,A ·, lti J 1 U. t\11 ALL llATI ... TMUM •152 PICK·UP" tRl 100 "JUMPIN JACK" (R) e·oo. 10 oo HARBOR TWIN 631 3'.>01 .CHUCK NORRIS• "FIAEWALKER" (PGI 100,. 15 "PEGGY SUE GOT MARRIED" tPG-13) e·oo. 8 15, 10 1s ~ECOLOR "':'---11...,__0£.llENEY" (R) 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO-t-=:;.:.:;:~•P~A~UfEL~~~~=f 1 oo, t 30 "CROCODU DUNDEF' "NOBODY'S FOOL" (PG-131115,3.30. <P0-131 8 oo 5 •s. 8 oo. 10-00 "JUMPIN JACK" (R) .CHARLIE SHEEN• 8 oo 10 oo "THE WIWTtf" "PEGGY SUE (PG-13)1-3-S-1-9 GOT MARRt!D" -CRUISE/NEWMAN• (P0-13> 8 oo. "THE COLOR OF • 15, 10 15 MONEY" (R) 12 15 ''CHILDREN OF A 2:45, 5:00, 1 30, t:45 LEISER GOD" (RI "ITMETI OF OOLD" 1~~~ 5 WILLIAM HURT (R) 12:35, 4;.2S, 8 I .. TROWLl/CtlNA" •CHUCK NORR.IS• 2 25, 8 15, 10:00 (PG-13) "FIREWALKER" (PG) .. PEGGY SUE 11 15' 8:30, 10 30 GOT MARRIED" •STEV~PEILBERG'S• "AN NCANTAI." (()) 5:40. 7 30, 9. 15 •WALT DISNEY'S• "toMG OF THE IOUTif" (G)l.00. l.00. U5 •• .CHARLIE SHEEN• "THE WIWTH" (PG-13) 7.1S, 9 15 ACK" <RI II 15 "IOMETHING WILD" e.o5, 10 <R> -CHUCK NORRIS• "flREWALKER" (PG) 5'.•5. 8:00. 10 00 STEREO -CRUISEJNEWMAN• ""COLOR OF MONEY" (R} 6 15. 1 30, 9 45 •PAUL HOO.AN• "CIOCOOU DUNDEE" cN-131 8 15, 8 30, 10.15 (PG-13) 12:00, 2 15, •:15. 8:15 8.30. 10:20 •WALT DISNEY'S• "IONG OF THE SOUTH" (G) 11:•5, 1.40, 3:35 5 30, 7 4&, 9:30 HUNTINC,TON TWIN H Hi 0388 •C THOMAS HOWELL• ••aouL MAN" (PG-13) e oo. 8:00. 10 oo 11NAMEOF THE ROSE" (RI 7 15. 9 •5 FL TORO ">8 1 9500 IL TCMO AT Tw. "JUMPIN JACK" (RI 8:10, 10-15 1'80METHINQ WILD (R) 8•15 "STREETI Of GOlD" ' TRACK DOLBY STEREO 7 15, 900 (R) •CHUCK NORRIS• "FIAEWALKEA" tPG> 1 00, 9 15 -C THOMAS HOWELL• "SOUL: MAN" (PG-13) e 1s, 8 30, 10 20 118T AND 8Y •" (RI t 15, 10': 15 "TAI PAW' (11')105 .CHAA~ 8"HN• "TMIWMml" (PO· 1311.11 t 11 .. Tt'l£H PUJE..0-8• .• ._.., .... COt • .a. 1-ao. t 15 . . PAUL HOGAN tS 'CROCODILE DUNDEE" (P0-13) 11 15, 11 30, 10·20 NO BARGAIN PRICE eC THOMAS HOWELL• "SOUL MAN" (P0· 13) &:oo. 8 oo. 10·00 Sl.00 TODAY •TOM CRUISE• "TOP GUN" (PG) 7•00, 9•15 S1.00 TODAY WESTBROOK 530 ·l-10, ... ,_.,_AT lllllOOllNUMT TBTmS 1.1 sun sue "QUIET COOL" (R) 8 45, 10 10 "WIRED TO KIU,. (Rl830 "TOP GUN" (PG) 100 .. SOMETHING WILD" (R) 5 •5. 10-00 WOODBRIDGE 55, 065) "PEGOY SUE GOT MARRIED" <PG-13) e.oo. 8 15, 10. 10 "CHILDREN OF A LESSER GOD" (RI 1·00. 9 15 •C THOMAS HOWELL• "SOUL MAN" (PG-131 . 7 30, 9.•5 •WALT DISNEY'S• "'IONG OF THE IOUTlf" (G) 8 00, 8 00, 9 •5 •STEVEN SPEIL8ERG"8• "AN AMERICAN TAIL" (G) 5 •5. 1 30. 9 15 r: ' 1~J v If 1r 1 . ' " I• I l ,, . . ' ' ~ -·-i) -.. "THI COl.O" OF MONIY" IRI 12 15, 2 30 • ''· 7.15, ••• "'NGGYIUI GOTMMMD" (P(M311'15, 3 30 5 •5. I oo. 1000 .. . *~~M•lll*" .. -.. --··11: ... .-b-·-11.r·-~-I Mn Heml, Hln'llon For\1. • (1173) ...._, C.. OMI Hirt· .. • -ftOllALll!a. lmOICMION .~oodllodc" (1t70) Dow- "*'" Q&8 •DlllMTa.L OPMTUD~ ....-r DAYTHI UNMMI ,,,,,_,*MD =TMM&NMlllT: -Af•OM. awlY MTNURC.CIMCl'IWOIU mentaly 1•..mJNI JMalUllCI . "" ...... ®•-aJ).MJ)9f Howie M~nd~l going 'elsewhere' . By JERRY BUCK fllT....._.,... . . LOS ANGFLES -Howie Mandel says the toughest episodes he's ever had to do on "St. Elsewhere" involve his character getting shot and visiting heaven, hell and purgatory. The NBC series devotes ~o episodes to the near tragedy that stnkes Dr. Wayne Fiscus and bnngs him to the bnn~ of death. The shows arc set for Wednesday and Dec. 3. Mnndel said the episodes took four weeks to hoot, including location work 1n Pasadena and in Arizona. Normally the only location shooting 1s in Boston. home of the show's fictional ho pita!, St. Elagius. .. Anzona wns where we filmed hell. but we didn't want to tell the local people that.·• Mandel said. Jn the first hour. an angry .wife follows her injured husband into the emergency room at Boston's St.. Ehgius Hospital to finish him off. Jnstel\d, he shoots Fiscus. ' While the stafT of the hospital works frantically to save his hfe. Fiscus has the out-<>f·body eitperten~ in which he visits heaven, hell and puraatory and meets up with Dr. Peter W,hite. the rapist killed by a nurse in a prcv)OUS episode. •.:T~esc r"°'e~,. the hardest two Cpl OOCS foe acting I've ever dbne," Mandel said "I had to chmb moun- tains en Am ona. Spend the day in freez!ntt water. They flung me about .A big hang-ten, head-rush romp ~a good time.· OM..-.~.s . Thefe's a llttte of him in all of us. PG '>iOA~~:'~: ..... ~eiiit; -~ow,,-.~ ----·~ NOW PLAYING •.u ---·-·---..... ·-----.... , .. ·---.... ·--1 ..... tr11 u.-._,_,._ .. » ·-o-1>6:1111 •Ir---'-.. _ ·------..... ... -----.._,, :~~-· • ...,..-.wn't>t11i1aaa:.-~ 30 f~t up on a sound state in front of a blue screen. It was riaht after lunch. and I almost got' sick. The next day they called and said somethina had gone wrona, and I had to do it apin. I also spent seven days in bed with all thosc·tubes and tapes!' In the second hour, Bill Dana plays Fiscus' father. He's a carpet salesman, Mandel's real-life occupation before he became a comedian and actor. He calls hirnself"a real fan" of"St. Elsewhere." .. My pride in this show is that we're based on reality. It's not predictable." he said. "The approach to this c~isode is real. h's not a fantasy. I didn't approach it as a dream. People "ho'vc had out-<>f-body uperiences describe them as real. I bcheve there's more to life than the body. All that encray can't be destro)cd. It only changes form ... But Mandel, currently appcanng in a comedy special on Home Box Office. is ever the comedian. "l had an out-<>f-body experience once," be said. -1 went shopping. I didn't buy anythinr,. Next lime I'm taking my body with me." · HBO's "The Youna. Gomedians All-Star Reunion," airina this month, also features comedians Robin Wil- liams. Harry Anderson and R1chara Belzer. ··we each introduce a new com- edian from our home town," be said. "I went back to Toronto for Howard BusgartA." .. THE BFBT FlLM OF THE YEAR~ ..... ,.~ ... -............... ,. ....... . -""-. .., --~'="· -·-, __ ,_ .,, .. , cmu-UAC-- ... ,.,...... .... tie .. ....,_ ........ AN i1bl • c.ut TM.• ............... .. __.. .. LAKE\vo D .. (""'"'South U1JllM tnllf-llJ •Ott .,., ....,~ IOUl MAN• ........... , ........ I '°"'mum TOP OUMINl "" ........... , .... ITAND aY Ml• IW.Ml ......... I .. .....,...,., C.._.....Of ALUlla 900• 1WIMtldt1 ... 1•1• ecMA'f ~..-...... CIOCOIMll M...a ...... , ... we,,..,. .. ecMATITlmO IOUL MANIN-•• 1 ............. .. ..... .....,_.. ._,_,.. --~T::'"IOUTM• ~~:..=._ .0.. Of TNI IOUTMlll __. ......................................... m Of TMIT.-• COGI Of l&INCI 111 ORANGE 16.~&..L: --....... ... .., .. mOfTNI,_• --fDDl .. ... ..... ,.... ---....... • Id ,., ........... _,. AN Al •UC.. T•• ..... .WU• . • .,..., "'"" ... _.. ftMelT•• ......... l n HAK._, A ~.· .. -· -.,, ---.... ., .. .. -.. .. . --·····-...... ..w. ... Mandel, whose first feature film was "A Fine Mess" wi.b Ted Danson. bas a movie comina out in Mardi ca)led "Bobo," with Christopher Uoyd and Ooris Leachman. His character lS "abandoned as a child and raised by wolves." he said. "Christopher pla)'S bOth my dad and brother and Clons is my mother. ·It's son of a cross between 'Greystoke' and 'Splash."' • He's also the the host for a series of yideos released by Pararflouru f'eatur- ina young co1T1ed1ans. The fint video comes out in Dec.ember, and the others will be released every other month. ..I've J<>l a new comedy album cahed 'Fus Like a Glove."' he said; "My wife says it's the best comedy album she's ever heard." Mandel and his wife, Terry, who have a 2-year-<>ld dauahter. Jackie, m:tntly took thcll' first tnp to Europe, where Mandel appeared on "The Max Headroom Show" and on "Good Morning Britain... S..,an Lewb comforta Bowie ''When I 1ot to London everybody Mandel on .. St. &leewhere." knew me." he sajd.,.:"~ Elsewhere' is • seen there. We wentlo our hl>tel'lnd---"i"'Old_,,,. turned on the TV. They had televised .! my a~! or pla)ed a CO!D· chess games. They had lawn bQwhng. edian.. he said. ! JUSt played myself. They had dart games. So. it's not hard T~1s 1s the first lime I ve had to a.ct. to be appreciated there. I had a t It 5 been 1 ltammg proc_cu. I m time in London. l'd love to Hve t~. worktna ~th the finest wn_te~ and h's like a cleaner safer New York.'' actors. , Its gnen a crcd1b1hty l • wouldn t have otherwise. P~k who Mandel was a stand up comedian are comedians have a hard lime being until he was c.ast in "St. Elsewhere." ac~pted as actors." .. Turner to play 'Camille' NEW HA VEN, Conn. (AP) - Film star Kathl~n Turner wdl take the stage or a rcaiona) theater for a month 10 portray a courtesan 1n the liilc:a TEOfNICa~• ~ .......... _, __ NOW PLAYING _,,_ VM.L.IT ---wiw --· ..... ._.,.,. ---.,._ -----··-COST•-~-------..,.._. t 41 ., "" -·""" --_, ... IT-_.,..:._ .. ~ ~ ,, ~TllUllll ---·--·•-c...."m- Amcncan premiere of the Bntish play "Camille.· "They'll not ask me to be a femme fatale for my whole hfe. So I'll do it now:· sard Turner, 32, who also has appeared an "Body Heat," "Pnzzi's Honor," ·'Romanetna the Stone."' and "Jewel of the Nale .. Turner, star of the film "PCU} Sue Got Ma med," will play Marguerite Gautier, a mid· I 800s Parisian courtesan whose story was told in the like·named Aleundre Dumas classic and m Verdi's opera .. La Traviata.'' Turner came to the Lona Wharf Theater here from Trieste, Italy, whet( she completed filming "Julia, Julia." She and the "Camille" cast bcain previews Saturday, and open- ing night is Dec. 5. The play runs through Jan. 11. · Patd Pol.1ucal AdvcrtlJCmCnl ol GRJDLOCK (• comnuuec 11•.,ll Mca.sun: •A 1 "The Arriwl of ·An AmerKan Tail' is a 'Tune for Jubilation:' -GcM SWit, "1\t 'WIJ SMw" ..... •COSTAMDA tlWM *LAMllltAOA OfWfOI UA--~c...c.. ( ..... -...... l'lcft I """" f'UCI ~ ·~1 t7MIO $$1~ Nl·ll ll OrM lllN'fltl .......... IL TCNM> LAOUMA9004 ..... ¥1f:IO .............. &we ffiidi lowlll C<liill r......Vllilot1flll ~111121-4070 Ml.._ ••1o1111 ..... ...... 'llWl PCMITMl VAl.U't *LAMA9RA ~ ........ ~ ..... v..., AlllCf_..5-t a..... .a..-.. I .. (1U)lt1tW 1)4~ ·Holiday hype · starts earlier this season Time was when the family gathered ar9und a crackling fire and decorated the tree on Christmas Eve. Now, you had better have a three-month head tart on the yule season, according to the merchandisers. 1t•s ~ginning to look a lot like Christmas -an October. • The 12 days of Christmas have stretched pa t Halloween. Before you know it1 ghosts and gobUns wtll be smgina carols instead of trick or treating. Incredibly, Christmas sales have been going strong for some time n9w. Some bold retailers bad Christmas lay-away sales an September. That's Labor Day for goodness sake. SaQta Claus must be red-faced by ij all Christmas music, so warm when delivered by a group of carolers on the eve, is already growing repitJtious on the shopping centers' recorders. The turkey hasn't even been stuffed and yet Christmas tree lots are springing up on every street comer. On declares. 34 shopping days-"tit Christmas. the ad Even the Datly Pilot is among the guilty. We pubhshed a Christmas gift $Uide Sunday. a full five days before the traditional opening of the gifting season. The cu nog is bound to spoil. The el~es will be demandm' overtime. If this keeps up. we·11 be havmg the after·Christmas sales around the 15th of December. Bah humbug ?n it all. ,,,,..... Mesa City .Council.doesn't have solution to problem To the Edttor: It's perfectly understandable that the one hundred or so people laving alona Monrona Avenue shouldn't ha' e to tolerate cars s~1 na th rough their nc1'11borhood. What IS not understandable ss the Cat) Council's solution. if at can bt ca.lied that Rather than enforce the law and ~he the traffic problem via wadenmg of roads. crcauna alternate rou1es, as "ell a other solutions av11lable to >OU, }OU voted to bamcade Monrovia A venue, Con- uncntaJ A venue and Federal A venue between V 1ctona and 19th Street In aJI fa1rness now. 1fothcr rcs1den· tial areas request s1m1lar con 1der- a11on, the council will no doubt recommend further cement bar- ncades across Costa Mc'3 thorouth- fares. A bad precedent has been established. As Iona as we do not care about the aesthetic uJline s of such bamcadc~ aod as Iona as the Cit) Council solves the problems created by such bamcade pnor to 1nstaJhng them. th as should not unduly con~m the rest of the ell)'. Buttbc City Councd ha not sol"cd the prcv1ousl) ciustins traffic prot>- lcm aloni Victoria and along Placen- tia Avenue Instead they have com pounded 1t '\II thi took place nt the 'September IS. 1986 C•t)' Council Meet.ma. when you, lhc Cit) Fathers voted unanimously in tb1s action. The "ote was opposed b> the Pohcc Department, the fare Department, the trcet and Sanitation Depan- ment. the Planning Depanmcnt and the Traffic En1inccnna Department, for understandable reasons What were the Council's reasons'> The People hvini along Monrovia Av- enue wan led 1t! As a taxpaying Citizen I'm con- cerned for the safety of not only those hvina in the Freedom Homes Trnct, but all of the City's re 1dents and Jndustry. J feel that the Caty's overall ·safety has btcn comprom1 d and to add 10 ult to 10jury. the Caty picked up the tab for the bamcadc~. top sian . detour signs ond their in tall:i- uons. The people hv101 an the Freedom Homes $1\ould be com- mended for brinaina their problem ~ TODAY IN HISTORY -~~~~~~···~·;::;,:~~---- By tlte Attoclattd Preti Today is Monday. Nov. 2.C. 1he 328th day of 1986 There arc :n da)'s tcn an the \Car. I oda> 's h1ahhaht in h1s,ory: Fit\ecnycarsaao.on Nov 24.1971 , __ a hijacker who had 1dcn,ificd himself IS Dan Coopc:r parachuted rrom II Nonhwc ' A1rhnc Bocana 72 7 o"er Wash1n1too 'ate, cam ma Si?00.000 in ransom. The fate of the hi)ac~cr. who ~'I popular!). albeit erroncou I). known a DB Cooper. remain a m)SICt) On th1 date. ORANGE COAST llilyl'illt btfore the Caty Council. but the CQuncil has le' them and the rest of u down with this expedient but hurtful dec1s1on. If the southwe~t side of Co ta Mesa ever faces 1hc need for emergency evacuation due to chemical spill. gas line rupture. fire storm or other major catasll'Opbe aJI of us Mesan's wall be qu11ty of ncghgcnce and the unncccss-. ary jeopardmll£ of propeny and hfe because all or our city ~rvlCC'S wall be hobbled. Cond1t1ons at 8 a.m. have now detenoratcd to near gndlock on V1ctona between the Santa Ana R1"cr and Placentia Avenue and on Plaetn· tsa Avenue from Estancia High School to 19th SUttl. Thas as an unnecessary 1ncon\Cn1ence for 'housands of people coming to work and to school and more imponantly increases the probabtl11y of car and pedestrian accidents near and around Estancta High School plus the two grammar schools. In tcad of bamcadcs. how about 'lpccd bumps. speed traps. top hghts alternate routes. limiting road work to hours after the morning rush. start mg school at cs thcr later or ca rher ~·~rm sort mosft:ltiYens wOUTO rather pa) for a program that im- proves services and relieves the trnOic. rather than one that makes it worse. If the Counul ull bcheH bar- ncades are the answer. why not postpone their snstaUauon until the existing traffic problem as brought under control Thi\ at least would prove to us that our money bt1ng 'pent forTrafficEnganccnnaandCity Planning has not been wa ted. We pay. through our taxes, for professional city manaaement and we expect at. II hould be unnece S3f') to have to show up at the November 3rd Council Meeting to tell you that you are not performing in the best mtcre t of Costa Mc~. anymore than we . hould have to check up on our doctor to 'ICC that he washes has hand btfore ~Uf'ICI)'. ROBERT E. GHI ELI Culton lndustnes C-osta :fc~ ln 17t!4. Zachar) Taylor. 12th president of the United State was born in Orange County, Va In 1859 Bnu h naturalist Charle Oarwm published "On the Onam of p«1e • " a paper an which he e,. plained his theory of evolution throufh natural sdcct1on. In 863. the C'1v1I War battle for l ookout Mountain hcgan an Tcn- ncuce · nion forccc; uccecdcd 1n takm the mountain two da) latc1 Thouaht tor today: "The \OOncr e\:el) party break\ up. the better." - Jane Au,tcn. f:nalt h nO\:Cli t (1775-1817). °"",..., et1r EOttor '"" ClilllM N9WI Oltot K-W'"-P\lbGet* l"MIT81t [dllOf T.,,...._J K--. CltWleuon Olr.ctor .................. ·~Dlfectof ---.CL::.flll.""" [dltof ...... Clel--ld Oi!edor ' l CornucOpia of information aboutfirst Thanksgiving- One of the thmgs required of an)onc writing for a newspaper is rcstarC'h. • A newspaper laves or dies by its crcd1b1hty, and if false information is pas~d on to the reader, cred1b1lity suffers members of the settlement had died dunna the pre"ious winter. At the umc of this first feast , the P1lanmj Bill had been sn Amcnca for less than one )tar. If )Our definition of Thank. givina H•IMlrv includes fea ting. than the first one ""Ill.I was 't-f>2-t. but one of the \Cry first-..••••••••••••• Research can be sheer drudgery. out I enjoy 11 nbne the less. An ama11n1 number of sntcrcsung facts can be learned whale Jookmg for somcthsna el'-C, or even about the subject that you're researching. I vc bccn researching Thanksgsv- sng and teamed wmething interest- ma. not through my own efforts. but from Mary Aitn Hutton at the Central Library an Huntington Beach. All of m> hfc I had been told, and bthevcd, that at the first Thanksgiv- ing. the Pilgrims., bcm$ primanly farmers. had supplied thmgs for the feast hkc potatoc~. com and sqµash as \\Cit as the odd duck or chicken that had been raised by them. The f n- d1ans. be1n1 pnmanl) hunters. had supplied venison and wild turkeys. The thing that intngued me about this first Thanksgiving was the In- dians obody seemed to know the name of the tnbc. I hat all of my reference books. which includes my pndc and JOY. an I 878 cd1t1on of the EnC)clopcdaa Bntannaca Nothing. I dad. however. learn a lot of things For eitample. It ss though! 1hat the first Thanksgivmg wos 1n 1621 . and 1t was, son of. That's when the Pilgrims held a three-day ~~to celebrate the harvest and to give thanks to God. even thou1th nearly half of the Thanksg1' ang obse nanccs an Amcn- ca was on December 4, 1619 when 39 E11ghsh settlers arnved near whans now Charles Cuy. Va The ccl- ebrauon was entirely rchgsous, dad not tn\olvc a fca\t. and was required by the group's charter. 1 also learned that the I 621 feut was a spur-of-the-moment affair, and the first planned Thanksgiving decreed by thcsovcrnorofthccolony, Wilham Bradford. was July 30, 1623. Thanksg.ivmg was a more-or-less informal holiday that was held when- ever people felt the need to gtve thanks. and didn't become a national holiday unlll President Gcorie Wash - ington decreed sn 1789 that o". 26 be namcdadayofnatsonal thank giv- ing. At the same tame. the Protestant Episcopal Church named the first Thursday sn No,embtr as a ~early da) forgi' ing thanks. ··unless another ctiy be appoan1ed by the c1"1l authonues " President Lincol n f1nall} proclaimed that the last Thursda~ in November "ould be Thank il"'"l- and things went alona prett> well unlit 1939 when President Rooseve lt set 1t one week earlier He wanted to help the merchants by making the Chnstmas hopping penod longer. Congress finally ruled an 1941 that the founh Thursda~ of WASHINGTON MERRY -GO-ROUND November would be Thankigl\ln& Day. and would bt a lepl federal hohda)'. I found all ofth1s <ituO to be prctty sntc~stt-ng, but l still didn't know the name of that lndaan tnbc at the f1rst celebration. I called Mary Ann at the library. She dad a little research and said, sort of off-handedly, "That wa the Wampanoaa tnbt. and the) were inhabitants of wuthcast Massachu- scus. The chief was named Squanto .. I ·was delighted. We chatted for a minute or so. and he said "I've also got t~ menu. Would )OU hkc n?" Absolutcl) "The) had com bread, duck, etl. goose, leeks. s~llfish. vcna'°n. ~ater­ercss and wane .. lt occurr"Cd to me that at m1aht be great fun to recreate that first least and ha"c all of the thmis thal the P1lgnms had. rm not crazy about shellfish. unless you consider lobster to be shellfish. and I wasn't al all sure about eel. but the rest of n Sttmed to bt downnght tasty I wa about to broach the subject 10 Ann. hut decided against 11 After all. wbat would Thanksi1v1na be "ithout a turkey" Colom12J1t Bill Harv~y live I.a Hu1211JJglo.1J Bucb. Two former top officials pursued Iran arms deal W'\SHINGTON -Two former toappro'c President Reagan's sale of h1~h-rankmg go"ernmcnt career of-A WAC radar urvesllance pl:ines to fic1als were an integral part of the Saudi Arabia secret arms-hostage nqot1at1ons with mcc McFarlane's depanure as Iran. They arc retired MaJ. -Gen:-nanonal sccunty adviser l:ist )Car. Richard V. Secord and Thomas pnmar) respons1b1hty for the nego- Chncs. a one-lime top man in the t1a11 ons with Iran rested on one man CIA's co,crt operations branch. at the National Sccurll} Council: Lt We were tirst to disclose the secret Col. Oliver L. Nonh. deputy director negotuu1ons with Iron. We reported for pohtacal affairs. early this year that Israel was the Footnote Neither 'iccord nor dcs1gn:ued conduit for the sale of C'hnescould be reached for comment arms to Tehran until the National Their clandestine ml'>s1on ·for 1hc Sccunty Council decided late last While House '""olved nothing 11- )ear to "reguJanze" the weapons legal. of course A National Sccunt) h1pments b> sending them directly Council pokesman would not com· from the Untted tates. ment on ••the a 1inmcnts of tafT " We also reported that fonner (IA C AllfORNI M .\FIA MIFFED and Pentagon offic1als were invohed Donald Rqan's tenure as White 1n the sccrct talks w1th Iran over the House chief of staff has left President ho tagcs and other issues. The Re-RcB.gan·, old-time Cahfornsa hcnch- agan adm1nsstrat1on appealed to us to men grumbling One "eteran Re- ketp secret the details of the m1ss1on :iganaut who has lcft.1.he White House that \\C had learned. and e'en now for another 3JCnC) complained that there arc wmc thing-. we will not the pre idcnt 1s no longer &1"cn a h~t di5Clo~. of policy op\lon to dcc1~ amona. But w~ can say that Secord and Instead, he 1 presented with a )e'i-or- C'hnc • known to have cxctllent no dcc1 ion on a male 'olutson contact an the Maddie East, were worked out by Regan and his 'itaff. dispatched to the rttion to dscl cr lJsuall). the amiable p~-;1dcnt OK\ over the ho tqCs' rclea~. Their the u e tion . The C'ahforn1a vet- m1ss1on had the approval of Robert erans resent what the) sec as a power C. McFarlane. then the president' grob b)' Reaan. and y that the national sccunt) adviser. who later president ha 111'.\a}~ functioned bct- Ocw to lren tum~f to nqottttc---ter by ha van option to choo~ from. Clin es was director of trainin& for TH EO T OF WAR: , 1x 'dt'S clandestine opcr.uson Al the (t't n o. when 1t 1ttncked Iran 1n what_wa • until he li:fl in t 978. He was link.cd to suppo~d to be a quack. '1ctonou renegade C I a ent Edwin Wilson. "a.r. l1'8Q had more than S.lS b1lhon 1n who "as stllina ellplo ivcs to Libya financial re ncs. o the re r'\CS and is now in prison. are aonc and Iraq 1'1 more than $40 .\flcr a lcn&thy arand JUI)' 1n· b1lhon 1n debt to mt rn taon I 'C\tipt1on that directly folio" d a JACK AIDEISOll and DALE VAN A TT A bankers and 1t'\ Persian C ,ult neigh- bor$. Adding to the d1 omlorl ol the Saudis, Kuwa1t1s and other\ who ha"e helped bankroll lra4''> "Ir•~ the certain knowledge that when pc"ace finall) comes. Iraq will be a fierce competitor in the world 011 market Its 011 rc~J'\IM arc surp:i l'd onl) b> the Saudis. MINl-EDITORI · Wa hingtnn 1s trad1t1onall) an al~ran among c1t1es v\ 1ng for national polittlal con"cntions. and we think v.c Imo~ wh~ Th~ affair$ hau bernmc cntsrch fn, olous an ~ent \C:af', :and Washington Just d0csn·1 ha'c the party-town ima e of n Franc 1~0 or the Bia pple We marHI at I d 1uskie's v11orou promouon ot Wasbinaton a a grand. t.lm1l~­ orientcd cit)' of mu\Cum\, monu-ment~ and art gallcnc~. I he k1dd1n1 ' u~I) he's been 10 enou&h Dem<'· ratw ~Aften t k t~t mu~um~ are n t ht h on the dcl · eaatcc;' aOcr·hour a enda We'll \\Cl · come the Democrat ii the' ri•~l v 8'h1naton, of cou • but "'c'll he m1ght1l> ~urpn~d tf the\ o J•ct Altffrsoo Hd Dalt an A tt• ltt •radlc•td tol•••I u . oW.:nej of column we ~rote about a ~~~~~':"~r-d~klar.~n~~ ~.}t;: Pllot welcomes comments Chncswumct11..lro lurtraud. ln 1984, he pkadcd 1u11ty to f1hng falsC 1n\01c.'t l\lth the Oc{cn~ De n · ment and wu fined SI0.000 Gen tnd 1 a • Wc~t Poiru ~Ju11c. a mu h-d orwtc1! com\ t pilot 1nd 1 fonncr Jcpul a ''tant rtt.ar of dctcn • He as lno\\n to .. ha\caoodcontact with 'anous nb o'cmmcnt . and in IQ l Y.'U in· tnamcnlll 1n rc~u din the Senate The Dally Ptk>t welcomes your c;omments on 1 u or 1nte< t to our r ad re. Letters end long rtrctes of comm ntary must be ign d . Th y should be typed or cl rty written and sent to: LETTEAI to the EDITOR, Daly Piiot, 9'»x 15'0, Coete _.. .. , 12128. P a includ your addr ... and t I phone number. If you prefer. you may call your comm nt n to our sp I we•re Utt9nlng tel phon number: 142-tOle. Pl do not call en IOng letters or arttcte Hispariics no-shows a t poll.~~ LOS A 'G lfS -Ont of tlie more 1ntert t1n1 -and in the Iona run, ia,nif'iean1 -developments ilt> .. emerst from \his month's clecttOfts was the eompos1tion of those wno· . \Otcd . AnJJ<>s -non-Hispanic whites - make up less than 1wo-thitds of Cahtom1a'& 1ncreas1ngl)' d1vcrw popula1ion. But 8S l)('rcent of thote who· \.Oted \\CTC An&)os. the state' ltading poll ter, Mervin Field, di,.. CO\ercd 10 elCC'llOn day 6Urvcys. What that mean~. of COUl'$C. is that non-AnaJo Californians pattaapated m this )Car's election 1n dispropor- tionately low numbtr ' That as e pccially true of the state's taraest and fa tnt-growina ethnic minority. H•SJ'.?OI~ More than 20 ~~nt or-ca1ttbm1anJ11Tl""1ti~.--i;,;.-..:111 but only 7 perccrrt cf this month's voter. \\.e~ Hisparuc. Ha pan10 clearly are part of ..,hat Field pungent!) and accu~tcly terms "a ~n of poltt1cal underctass." Nor 1 there an) particulaf l'CtiOn to btlie\.e the PP between the ccneral poplllat1on and the "otin1 population will narro~.apprc('sably a the tatc approaches the 21 t ~tury. Cothputcr stud.Jes of the C~ electorate conclude that e\en whe., An&los a~ a minority in the st.ate - an about 20 )cars-they sllll will be at least two-thirds of the voters. For at least another generation. thcrcfort, the state will be dommll~ politically by a voun& bloc that Is mudfwnllcr, older and moreaffiueot than.the talc asa whole. lfsa major factor in the resurgence of the Rcpubhcan Pany and the commensurate decline of the Dcmo- crauc Party. nd 1t creates a gJgantic dilemma for poht1ctans v.ho must choose between the confl1ctirig de- mands of the general population and th ose of the "otm& population. The paradOJt IS araph1cally evident 1n the pttdomsnan\Jy Hispanic area ca t of downtown Lo Angeles. Ei<it LO~ "nstlo h.u been t>utrclril pohllcally this year b> t~o 1 ucs: a state pmon that the Dcukmejian • admsn1strat1on wants to cortstruC1 oo a former bus factor) ate and JO tl1na o"er H1 panic rcprescntatton on the Los Angeles C'll\ Council The ObJecll\e mcnts of the pnson -;1te not\\<llhstandsng. 1he governor·~ plan drc~ c;harp oppos1t1 on from H1">panscs an the area.. who said th.el! neighborhood alrcad)' had too maoy penal fac1ht1cs. Those complamt1 were strong enoueJi that state Senate leaders ~tancd action on the pnson. But 1n pre sang the pn~n. the go"crnor know~ that he as runnina no apprcc1abk poh11cal risk bccau'.'IC when 11 comes to "oting. East Los .\ngelcs ·~a paper t1g.cr. 1 .• ·~tM .. • ewport can win filht. I ~~ Yml 1!J~iE11~ 1c • •• • ~ t#(Y c;~~~y-oPPos1r10# t lilte Rock Ridge did ~ t) To tbt Ecbtor:· } centers. roads. etc. tool'. • 3000. Fll.0 ":! d,¥£ OoN?il~UT'ol!... '? n the mov~ .. Blazina Saddles." · fvery day there is a new Irvine Co. ~ speculators tried to brochure in my mailbox. The latest over the town of R~k R1dae to bas Mayor Mauer's name in the fh fto'om the forthcom1n1 ra1~road. nomw return addreu location on the homestelMiris and residents front of the envelope and the Irvine tu~ a black lhe!"ff and the Waco Company's return addrc s on the Kid to outfox b~su~~ss shark Hedl~y back. If that isn't· deceitful enouah. Lamarr. who said When !hat ratl~ Mayor Maucr's lctttr is on stationery rj)jd IOH throUgh RC?Ck R1dae that h•ahlilhted by a toao which is la1~d.w1ll be worth mtlltonund I want deceptively similar to the city of at.. Newport ~ach's toao. I our ma)or ,.,llamarr was unwittiqly aided by bc1n1 used? Wt)y is tncky literature '-!Uvernor Le Potomane. who com· ncccssary? After this joint campaifn·' mtnted, ''We've tot to protect our ina. how can the mayor be objcct1v'e phoney, baloney jobs::' when future dcci"ions involve The Jn the end, m1rt di<in't make ri1h1 Irvine Co.? ~ the Roe Ridsc citizens Who v.ill really benefit from this Wfthstood the takeover bid by the nch expansion? The Jrvine Co., of course. ~~d arccdY· Also, other outspoken business As we move the clock forward to people uch as 8111 Hamilton, 8111 1986, we see that a new Rock Rjdao. Ficker. el al. All we htar them talk koown as Newport &ach, 1s cauaht about is money. money and more uet 1n a death struale between the money. Is money 1ak1na-over New· resident sand those wlto want to carve port &ach hke 1t almost dtd Rock · ~ir riches out of Newport Center Ridac'? Have we sold out to bi& • busmcss interests'> Newport Beach l"he Irvine Company's huge war d fi .. i. ba k 1 k b chest bas been unlocked as 11 tne to rtst cnts must .... t c 1 e t e overwhelm the residents of NeWp<>rt cniz.cns of Rock Rtdfc· Don't be Beach with a $500.000 marketing railroaded by big bucks. ~~ campaiio, which includes holdina RICH COBERLY t~·aaers hostage, promise of art Newport Beach __..:.... ._po yourself, Newl!ort Beach -Tche real-gridlock in NB !avor: vote yes on Measure A is Beek, those like him T-0 the Edltor: · DoJou believe it is immoral (and slloul be illepl) to pna·up on a person or business and prevent them fr.om usinf their property 1f their plans don t violate anyone else's naht? If you say yes to this then you ~hould vote yes on Measure A. This country was founded on pnnciples , of freedom and hmtted aovemment. The government's basic role is to protect our perwnal and property nghts and for that protcc· tionwe allow the police to use force. Votes are used to express the people's choices on bow the government's proper activities should be directed. To use the vote and violate the nghts of another person or businc s is an abuse of the American Way and the Consutuuon. Sadly. these pnncaples have been abused and largely for)ottcn over the years. Property nghts. the foundation of a )USt and prosperous society. arc routanely violated in the form of zonm1 laws. rent controls. etc. Property owners find themselves_ bcggin~ the government (and voters) to avoid losing their rights. Vocal minority groups sometimes sponsor misleading campai~s to put their self-centered personal desires into law. For nample. -the ISSUC or traffic dcnsny 1s bcma used m Newport Beach as a reason to vote no on Measure A. This is a phoney com· plainL The road improvements in· eluded in the Irvine Company's plan_ to enlarge Newport Center will result in a decrease m traffic congestion. plus other benefits such as open spaces and tax revenue for the city. Yet a group of "no &rowth" advocate {also called .. I was here first" whiners) falsely distort the facts. and they have no viable plan of their own to decrease coniestaon. Don't be fooled. Don't abuse your votang power. Do yourself and New- port Beach a favor-Vote Yes on A. DA YID REDICK Corona del Mar To the Editor. Will there be more or less traffic conaestion in Newport Beach after The Irvine Company completes the traffic improvements it has a~ to -bwld AND completes the-tCS1dentaal and resort developmem along Pelican Hill Road? -... The lrvme Company says less. Allan Beck says more. Both use as their source the city's official EJR. These are the facts: The EIR and the citfs traffic consultants have clearly said that the combination of the additional square foot.age in Newport Center and tho traffic improvements ~id for by The Irvine Company will produce a reduction m tnffic congestion in Newport Beach. What the consult· ants go on to say in the EIR is that if add1taonal, non-Irvine Company de· velopments m Corona dcl Mar and elsewhere occur, then there will be more con4cst1on in Newport despite the reductions resulting from the plan encompasi.cd in Measure A. At $95, . Peace Of Mind . . Is _ A Bargain! Special Offer On I.ow-Dose Mammography Women's HeaJth Network is offering a complete mammography examination and interpretation for just $95.00~ In other words, what Mr. lkck is saying is, tum down the one project that will help because other, non· Irvine company prOJCCts will create more traffic than they solve. To me, that is not only unfair but counter-productive. Mr. Beck's position 1s clearly counte-r·-product1ve to .salv1na N port Beach's traffic problems. The negotiations the City Council con~ ducted with The Irvine Company rcsult.cd in a plan thatbcntfi.t.sBOTH the company and the city. It hould be held up as a model of how a city and a property owner can work toacther for their mutual benefit and solve prob- lems W"tthin a community. Mr. Beck has not offered any workable idea on how to deal with Newport's traffic problems. The City Council bas The real andlock in Newport IS Mr. Beck and those hk.t htm who oppose everyone else's soluttons and offer none of their own. RAY WATSON Newport Beach I Measure A will bflng pollution To the Edttor. I have seen <;0untless ads extolhna the merits of Measure A. What I have not seen is a mention of how much air pollution the traffic generated by Measure A will produce. 1t .js clearly stated in the city's Environmental Impact Report (Vol. Ill, Appendix E) that the "vehicular emas ions" will amount to over half a ton of nitrous oxide and seven tons of cabon monoxidcpcrday. That1s 180tonsof nitrous oxide and 2,SSS tons of aarbon monoxide per year. Consider· ina that Newport Beach has had the hiJbest acid-fog rcadina of any place an the world, r wonder whether our tunas can bear Measure A. RUTHOREV Newport Beach P-ellean Hill Road won't divert traffl~ from CdM To the Edhor. In all ihe rhetonc over the Newport Centtr eitpan,aon and its a~aatcd promi\('d road and llrttl ampro\IC· mcnt proaram (Measure A), one m~or point has been ov~rlooked. Pelican Hill Road will not -repeat not -really divert traffic around Corona dcl Mar until the Sah Joaqum Transportation Corridor i1 built and Pelican Hill ~n be connected to 1t. Construction of the comd7or is still some years away. Once thcexi1tmaSanJoaquin Kills Road is extended and connected to Pelican Hill. thousands of carJ will travel daily 1n bot,h directions along this route se"ercly impectina five of Corona dcl Mar's fjnest residential communittes. We rcrer specifically to py&lass Hill, SpyaJass R1dae and the northern portions of Harbor View. Hills South, Jasmine Creek and Broadmoor Homes. All of these fine home communities he along San Joaquin Hills Road and all of them are wathin Corona dcl Mar. Picture thCK drivers -from out· of-town mainly south countians, and not particularly concerned wath New· port Center-when they di5COver the extended fast new four-lane San Joaquin Hills Road lo get them through Corona del Mar. Today to avoid the 405 Freeway they pack Coast Hiahway like lemmings. or drive Bayside Drive, or slip through our alley!., or swing along Poppy .or use Margucnte. To connect wath MacArthur and Jamboree they do lha twice a day .. every Sun_day .. and heavily dunng the beach season. Today heavy traffic in old Corona del Mar. Tomorrow heavy traffic in the newer areas of Corona del Mar. Is this the way to solve our traffic problems? That's what that traffic engineer hired by The Irvine Com· pany SllYS in those full·~&C news- paper ads and those slack majlcrs arriving an our maal boxes e suspccnmm 6f1hose 16,000 driven a day The lrvtne .Co. sa.ys will_ be diverted tp Pelican Hill Road will e ect to gcf throulh our city by using San Joaqwn H11fs Road Otherwise they will face two bottfcnccks - Bonita Canyon Road with its garbage trud.s-and what will probab~y..-bc..the­ gndlock of all time -that section of MacArthur between Bonita Canyon and the Freeway 73 entry. ' The ruin of our residential com· munitics bctJns once th as traffic flood is turned loo~ on n Joaquin Hills Road. We do not want the problems of Pacific Coast Hasbway 1n our commun1t1cs We do not want tnc lowered propeny ·values. the noise and fumes or heavy traffic, and the crime (buf'l)ancs and worse) that · spreads both d1rect1ons from a busy highway w1th1n a city. And what about au that Jame bOihnt lhrouah the Crown OIWe/San Joequ1n Hilb • ROid in~tion Where tenaor c1tizen1 taw. bowl and youna athletes pm'orm a facility scheduled for consi.dcrablt expansion? Bia Canyonites ouaht to be con· cerncd, too, They may hive trouble with their two entraocct and ents on their ttttion of San Joequin Hills • Road when MacArthur and Jam· boree can take no more cars. It matters not that ofticen of our communtty 1QOC1Ation1 are suppc>n· ina the o~ninete.ittensaon of San Joaquin Halls ROad aft.er beckroom deals with City Council rncmbcrs and the Irvine Co. Their actions arc ill· advised. !hoy dad not ask us. Their views arc not ours. We wall decide at the polls N.ov. 2S. . . In this city where the ln'me Co. 1s buildin&-evcryw~erc, Caty aovern· mcnt apparently IS already prepenna for the o~nir\arcxtension of .San Joaquil\H1lls Road. Two more road lanes have JUSt been paved, land· scapina the median 1s in proc.rcu and new street h&hts have been inttalltd (they work only intermittently). lt only took 15 years lO act this .done. To our SPYJlass Hills ne1pbon, dtd you know they're aoina to bend San Joaquin Halls Road around your hill so the lrvmc Co. won't have to build an elpensivc bridae? So you're aoanJ to have a busy new four-lane hidlway m your backyard~ "ro City Counc1lmao John Cox. Mayor Phal Maurer, and the rest of the City Councal _m~ority, v.-c say we are not dcstruct1on1sts. or are-we obsuucuonists. We arc not members ofany orpn1zat1on which 1s actively o_pposana Measure A. Rather we are protectionists -protccuna our homes for which we paid the lrvtne Co. and its developer subsidianes a h1lh premium for peace and quiet. • We know the. problems after 16 years of dnv1n1 an Newport Beach and Orange County. A-nd ~ have ilso loo~ at the e"Xtstana current quahty..'of our hfestylc . ...,We wtll be votanaap1nst M~ncfs1milar proposals an the future until the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Cor- r.idor is completed. We hope our netgh.boB and homtownen •!l the five impacted Corona del Mar com· munaties wtll join with us. P.S. Shoufd San Joaquin Htlls Road be opened. city government should ant1c1pate demands from rcsa· dcnt'I for haah sound waJls to be btuh at city CApensc. Or perhaps the Irvine Co -which has promised every· thina but the knchen sink -can be persuaded to build an undcraround tunnel from Marauerite to Pehcan Halls Road. H.R. MILLER Corona del Mar Supporters of Measure A want better Newport Beach To the Echtor. Those of us who support Measure A want ro ~a bener Newport Beach We want a solution to our traffic problems now; we want an expanded art museum and cultural center. we want a teen center. we want more nearby shoppina and we want the ircater tax revenues for the City to pay for mun1c1pal services. Those who are against Mcasu.re A sccrn to want non~ o! these tb.ulp.. Some people want a better Newport Beach and aome people don't want any improvement. If some people had had their way a few years ago. we would .not have the improved and expanded Bay Bridge along the higtl· way. And we all recognize what a traffic improvement that has been. Deang posatiyc &tts you .somelhtn& -bctng nepuve gets you noth1na. BILL RIITER Newport Heiahts Oplnion1 welcome The Dally Pilot welcomet your opfnfons on matt.,. of pub41e lnt••t. lettwt mulf be signed, typed Of dearly wrttten 11nd aent to the EDITOR, o.lty Ptlot, P.O. Box 1580, eo.ta Meea, CA 92626. Pteale kldude your addreat and telephone number IO we cen verify authorahlp. Today, it as essential that eyery woman realiz.e just how important regular breast checkups are. In 1985 alone, some 38,000 American women died from breast cancer. Nearly 12% of those deaths were women under35. lump Siu I • • Intectlon Method MAmmoguphy only KATHY WENT AWAY 10 COUEGE CYEl E AttD CAME HOME Wl1ll A DEmE, A BOYi RIE .. D BUUMIA The good news is that low:.close mim· mography has made brea t cance~ detection 1 • I ,. ' . M;1mmography only Traint'd 1elf · ~amaner or medical )>rofes ional . l" Untrained ~lf-ex;iminer Th11 ch•tl ~ how mammoaraphy un dftttt' t.rntt lwnp 1n llt Hrlint •••an wtnlt •IN nu.ti t\•m1n.t!lc)n ll'l~y not find ll until II rH<~ V, Wh Qt f•rpr For a physician referraJ , or more infor- mation, caJI us at (714) 554-1601, and ask for Barb or Lynn. N E T \V 0 R' K 1 Hulth pr ""'" ~er and.rnore4Ccur.11te c!Nn evc:r be.fote.----~- At Women's Health Network, our Breast S..ni:;~~~~~!is~~ttr Diasnostic Unit features tah:l-of-the-art, S.nt~ Ana, California 92706 low-dose equipment, 'operated by specially· C7J4) ss ... 601 trained female technician . And the Unit itself is designed for women, wath ta teful d«:or and an tmpha is on pri,vacy. • 'J • BULIMIA i.5 a prc>gre$ive illnes.5 charaaeri7.ed by ~ sions with food and OOdyweight, compulsive overeating and purging through the use of cburetic5, laxatives or vomiting. Bulimia has reached epidemic proportions in the Unjted States. 20% of female college stuWlts participate in bulimic rehaviors. At the Medical Treattnent Center for Eating Dis- orders we can help you to recover by ct\alWng the way you think about food and the way_ you think about yourself. ~\?are part of a full service hospital and staffed !J)r profes.sionals who can ~vide you wjth emodonal SUWQrt and medk:al ~ ~offer both an inpatient and outpatient J>ro&ram and are covered by mo.st insuram P,~. FREE MONl1fll' OOMMUNITY ~ Call our 24~hour hotline now bra free ronsultttioo or lecture teseMmorl ~-- 1·800·•· aDIC.U 'n!AW:CIHlll POI IA11NG ---·--- .. I B .. . . , 'biMay, Nnem~r U UBllA (Sep&. 2l·Oct. 22): Be w1lhna to revase. review. rtorpn1u. You·u All~ (March 21·Apr1l 19): Some be 11ked to rebuild o" more 1unable J&ructure. You have valuable ally who people m1•repre1tnt credent1al1 Kttp works behind IClenc . You ctn feel more 1«ure a re ult Tauru" Scorpio play Suard up. proltet your own interests. role • AJl*IWW TO wmJ.Y RJDG& QUIZ Q.1-NtitheT vulnttrable, aa South reputation lnsi.t on ctariOet\Jon of $JH(J SCORPIO (Oct. )3--Nov. 21 ): c:ucumstance~ tau 1udden turn in your 1enn,s. Romance blo som• 'in evcnina. fa vor. Includes career. finance, romance. Powcn of persua11on arc 1ron1 - You JI be complimented on appeara~. 0 you act what }'OU want and also make others happy. TAURU (April 20.May 20): What Ull SAGmA.RIUS (Nov. 22·0ec. 21). You re«1ve unu ual 11n. rep~nt• starts a. a mild ninat1on could become scnuinc token of affection. Individual con idtrcd "very important" t1ke1 mhaorcsenous. Foc:unlsoon achievement, active interest in you. Be diplomatic, but don't abandon ba 1c J)rinciplet c nat. vancty. chaUcnac, ability to meet CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Define terms. look behind acene , rcalt1e deadline. Older individual will lend benefit of expcnence. 'you will be Hkcd to participate in clandestine opcratton. focus on h1ddtn • . Gl1!MINI (May '21·Junc 20): You'll be nd of unncccsur; exl)Cnsc,' resource , •pintUl1 vaJun, communication, pou1ble journey. obbpt1on. Transaction can be completed, could inv"olve land, basic r~arch. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()..:feb 18)' What seemed nebulous will soon become Individual who appeared aloof will now display affection. Anes, Libra figure "sohd .. Emphasis on ccsponsibihty, pressure. 1nitn ified relation hip You'll prominently. .. be a~kcd \O assume added duties. Money picture bri&Jitcm. Cancer pla)s role. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Empham on fresh start, 1cttfo1 to heart of PISCES (Feb. I 9·March 20): Puvfe pieces <All tnt<t P,lace, Empba is on matters. R,elative admits m1 take, reconc1liatton cbuld result. lnd1v1dual you coopcration, lepl mattm. mamaae. You'll be rtltcved of burden, you'll reach respect will return compliment A void heavy hftini. more people, opumism will replace confusion. L.EO(July23·Aua.22) Youarebeinapullcdintwodircctions-d1lcmma • IF NOVEMBER UIS YOUR BIRTHDAY money COmC-$ from urprisc will be resolved. Follow your OW1) instincts, realize fun(ls are available. ~urcc in matter of days. Recent domestic adju tmcnt will p~e beneficial. Spoth&hUI'<> on lepl documents. pos able panicipation in uc1tin1 prOJccl. You ue spiritual, perceptive, J>S)ch1c You maintain aura of 11'1>1'1'ry, irunaue, VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept, 22): Cycle continues Hia)I ·-cmphasiLc aJamor. Ahhou~ many consider you aloof, you con•tan\ly cheer.for the communication, realize )'Ou'll soon be invited to travel Check wardrobe. be undcrdoaand will fi&Jit when cause 1s nS)lt. Pisces, V1rso play 1mponant roles positJve of ncccuary documents Personal honzoos expand, a Gemini helps in your life. You pin added recognition 1n December. you'll aJso be rche"ed of make m..,or decision. burden. January and October will·be memorable for )OU io 1981. • Football f8.nsju$t resting their ey_es As we swina into the season known a.s football, I cannot help but touch upon one of the rare phenomenons of the pme .. the "Slccptator ." Spectators arc a dime a do1cn. They theer. They JUMP up and down. They speak. They cat Their eyes blink. Occa ionall). they move from their chairs. But the lccptator JUSt sits there with his C)C1 closed Has bi'Cathina is deep and starts at the ankJcs and comes out slowly For all purposes, he is somewhere between conK10lH and d~th Were it not for a footba I pme blanna on the TV set. ~ou '1rould think he wa fast asleep. lonoccn~. thy name is woman The moment you reach over tot um off the TV or to chan~ to another station. 'I voice from the lump will snarl, .. Touch that knob and you're history!' • · Even science docsn·1 know how it works. Obviously. lccptators have t~o channels. One 1s when they arc watChina somethinJ they don't want 10 watch and they sHpaway into deep slumber~ The other is when they are sleeping throu&h their favome sport. 11·s hard to tcfl the d1fTefcnce Even' when a Slccptator 1s nonng so har'd Share the time you ha:ve left DEAR ANN LANDERS. This is a pica to ··Eiut 1n Toronto."' the 41- . yttr--Old who ha teamed he ha a terminal case ofliver cancer. EA it has a w1feand two children. He has told no one about the dia&nosis and is determined to keep it a sccrtt in order to pare has family the agony of watchina him wither away day by day. His plan is to leave home, drop out of sipt and die alone. family and aJlow them t<>llve him the love and emotional support so vital dunrra the final day of a terminal illness -\ opened up to me and other members of ouJ' family in a way that I never dreamed possible. 1t 1s wonderful to sec the chanic in Tim. but 11 1s sad. too. that this had to happen before we could achieve this beautiful fechng of oneness. This may sound crazy but we ha\/e never fch closer or a~ prcciaicd each other more. Al• LAllDEIS living alona parallel lanes. our hves never touch me. Now that he has been stncken w11h cancer. every dry is precious Please. Mr Whocvcr·)'Ou-are. don't run awa) ~ta} with }Our fam1I} and share the tame that 1s left It could you hOld •Mn Q?a OAJ1011 ••• The blddint hu pr~: &o.U. W•t Nort.11 !ut 1 ¢ t• t <v' ,... 1 What do you b1d'now? A.-Jr you wert thinkln that we were out w trap you, dtubu younelf of that notion-we art honest, upnght c1uunt. Ju t ~ cau.e "partner rtspondtd an htartt does not mean that he i denylhC a pade suit. So bid naturally-two spadtt is both obvious and correct. Q.3-As South, vulnerable, you hold· +Q7 Q10872 OKQe ~M The bidding has proceeded North Eut South W~at l + Pua INT Pua 2 • Pue 3 • Pue 8 0 Pus 1 What do you bid now? A..-Partner i lOokmg for ~ thing, but you can't be 'lure what However, if you bid three no trump -you &1~¥iewi~our heart holding through rOSt>-colored specta<'les The main feature about your hand of whICll partner is unawar~ Is your high card in hi first Ult Tell him about it by bidding thrtt spades. Q.o&-Both vulnerable, ..., South you hold: •Q3 QJU652 0 7 +K7&4l The bidding has proct'ed~. North Ea.at Sooth Wett 1 • P... 1 Q P ... 1 -+~-Pua ? What do yoo bid now'> 8outla Weet . . . ... I T Pu• 1 What do you bid now? A.-W1th your distributional hand, you hou1d probe for thr~­ card pade support wtth partner. However, 1nce P•rtner limited his hand, a rebid of two diamonds bf you would not ~ forcing. With your fine intermediates and queen ln partner's uit., ¥4Ur hand ia worth a force. Jump to thrff diamonds. Q.6-A~ South, hol~- • )(3 ?)(QJJ.m11&-__.ll.2A.~ita---;1 The b1dd1ng has pr<>ceeded~ West North Eaet Soatla ' 1 • P... 2 • ? Wh1.t do you bad noW'? A.-Ftrst, 1t is 1eldom right. to dou· - ble with a two-~uited hand. Set. ondly we wouldn't want to play m ,, I~ than «&mt' with thtJ hand, even thou~h we won't guaranttt that 1t will mak~. Our choice ls four hearts, and we'll worry 1a~r about what to do hould the opponenta coi:npete further. You told Exit has plan was neither wise, humane nor reahst1c and eaded with him to stay Wlth his If he won't hsten to you. Ann. perhaps he will hsten to me. My husband has had terminal cancer for eight months. "Tim's" illness has brouiJlt our family closer together than 1t eve( Wti before. He wu never a man who coul<tcxp has fcclinis but the realu.auon that his days art numbered has made ham much more accepting of m~ love for him. He has There is a lesson here for all husbands and wives. Please don't wait until some awful tragedy stnkcs before you open up to one another. f im and I wasted 100 many )Cars be Uie best part of)our hfc -VOICE OF EXPERIENCE O\iEWHERE IN T HE MIDDLE WEST DEAR SOMEWHERE: Thull yo. for a buatlful letter. Hue's another one wltla a different slant. TODAY'S CROSSWORD ·puzzLE ARTHRITIS. ••• THE 1986 Do.-..-.-~..--.-.-~ stoP-you. Learn how you can llve • fuller, more comfort.hie and Independent life. ARTHRITIS INFORMATION SERIES ·When: Fourth MHtlng, Tueaday, November 25th, 1988 Time: Where: 7:00:9:00 P.M. - HUMANA WESTMINSTER HO SPIT AL 200 Hoapltal Clrcle, Weatmlnater, CA (l111menl C•tert1) Th• Arthrltl• Information Serl•• Offers: ~ . -... -------. ---a . • Speclel Preaentatlona By Board Certified ·Orthopaedic Surgeon• • lnform•tlon on New. a Proven Arthritis Treatment• • Effects of Nutrition on Arthritis • Queetlon a Anawer Dlacu1alona • FrH lnformetlon a Refreshment• ~ Co-Sponeoted tiy: -tlumMll ...... V1-1b1._.• Catt for "-rvatlon8 a lnfOrrMtlon ! • (714) 898-2554 • • • t DEAR ANN LANDERS I am one of the man) who thought I would never wme but I have a problem I have never seen addressed in your column My_ mother 1s in her early 8<X She ave , 2S miles away Very few family members want to spend any time with her Mother 1s e~tremcly ap101onat.cd and ovcrbcanng -an authont) on e'eryth1ng. rm in m> 40s. I don't ~ork. am happ1l) mamed and very busy w11h m) family M> hu band travels and I have a backbreakma schedule. '\bout four months ago Mother ~tarted calhng me every day. not once but th rec or four limes. I do lo"c her but the problem i getting worse. he repeats the same stones an detail and attempts to keep me on the phone a~ Iona as po sible When I try to hang up she 11nom me and rattles on and on I take her 'ihoppina often and out 10 lunch at least once a week, but 11 doesn't ~t1sfy her he claims he "has to hear my voice every day" to make certain rm OK Help me. please. I'm going bonkers - ANONYMOUS AND NO CITY PLEA I:. DEAR ANON: The fact tbat your mother 11 so dependent lllHHtl tbat the rolea are beLD1 reversed. Vo. arc becomha1 tbe motbu ud 1be 11 becomln1 tlte claJld. . Yow are eot 1ot•1 to-cUDCe--41111 wcunu. 10 you beat bft IJ to protect ACROU 1 EndorM 5 Pool shot 10 Study hard 1• S0<row 15 Daughter o1 Zeua 1tt' Hatt' pref 17 Pa1~lza 18 Timbr91 19 Sweet.op 20 Sedan 1Umm9f 21 Main th9ma 22 Leas1 dangerous 24 Arbltrala 2tl Pttc:h-blacil 21 e.t.ted 28 Sign 1n 31 Monastery 3" Otdn't ~pair 35Groom1 words 36 Decant 37 Rubbernecks 38 Decamps 39 Wahoo 40 Rude hOme 41 tJnmulbl 42 R•buked 44 Rat! unit •5 Post· 14 you ell 11 best yow cu from the frett•CDt lntn1lo11. WlllH 1llle calls, look at lite clO<'k ud 1Jn lier 10 miHtff. Wt.ft lllle tJme II •P 11)', "Mot.Iller, I uve to ru. We'll talk aaalll tomorrow," UIH Ila.•& •P· If •lie 20 caJ11 a HceM time for M appatnt reasoa except to visit Mme more, ta)', "Sorry,Motlter,l'm I• tllle mlcldle 24 of t0mttltla1, 111 taJll to yoe tomo,. row." nn t.aaa •P· U sit• call• tlte tlllrd time -ume rHpoeH. 17 Tllll1 may Ht olve tk problem complet~ly, b•t It wUI 1rely red~ tllle ••mbtr of ._ .. ,. ftelt .. tM ~· , .. .. Christ mu eY*'ltl 48 Large amount 50 Black eye 52 Surf walk 53 Thirsting ~ Su..,.nd 55 Uproar 57 RerMdy 58W~ 59~ 60 "'*'' 81 Uly·Whlta 82 Wind lnstrurT*lll 83 WW-II gun DOWN 1 More axpc>Md 2 P9Mtrating 3 Pnnclpal 4 Per~Oon 5 Communih .. 6 Emanated 7 BrNCh 8 lndlvtdual 9 Commu· ntquaS 10 Irritates 11 M4tm0ry pow. . ... ... IC2-1111 • 12 Iowa erty • 13 Bruma 21 Cloudy 23 Oellroua 25 Jug 28 Slaw off 28 -In: lured 29 Ev.'1 gard9n 30 OptunlSllC 3 t lmltet0< 32 Tr• part 33 EncounlMI 3" Rich folks 37 State VIP 38LasM 40 .,.,.C)(8tlon 41 Pi.c. of fiction 43 Wandated 44 Fruit drlolc• -46 Stationed 41 That is 48 H81angu. 49 HOM fabrte 50 Carpet tYP9 51 Tanoen• 52 ElltenalYe 66 Food fOI the amafter 57 Own9 •••••••••• • by Bii Keane "I'm maiUng you a letter, Graodma. Wanna hear what it says?" MARMADUU by Brad Anderson "If anything Is collectible, he ootlects ltl" .. .. .. PEANUTS 11M 601N6 OVER TO THE BAKERY IN A FEW MINUTES .. GARFIELD YOO 1MIN~ 'TOO MOCM A80Uf FOOP, GARflELP. Y<>U Nf.f:P r--.;.._,--A P~l"AC.TION . TUIQLEWEEDS ...... ..rf 1Mli 1lfAJLtWMP{~1 t,f:"f'S WIN 1HIS ONE: FOR FINIC~'( F'Al..~1 DRABBLE • I ~ R081t 19 ROSE .. .. , \ by Virgil Partch (VIP) {1;~~\\ ~!\ ,./~ ~:_j\ 'I 'Z ~ . {_ 1f;. II·._., 111 watch.ct an old 18508 fllck on the tube laat night that waa ao completely normal I want.ct to retch." ' . DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham '4J•W I ~l 1-" j 1 1 'f up FIVE YEARS (l1) IS A VERY eroo AGE FOR ec:NS . I _ I . .. I HAYE SOME FREE TlME.nu5 AF-TH.NOON _ by Charles M . Schulz HOWASOUT AN ~ouu WDmlOE D006HHVTS? I BLOOM COUNTY aM'ilflllrS. NfX)(Jll 1QW _ ~ IK Olf 1't1 °"" ~ IWl'Y, ~-,Jlf/ \•I \ U.S. ACRES WMAT'5 TMAT ON TM£'90TTOM 0~ TME. WACLEI\? FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~. ffi\}E. '/c!J NOrieeoTHAT 1Re=. DCG-IS . -w~ 1llAT WA~ t F~ 1 ·i.t. a;r QU4LJlY ~ce.. __ I JUDGE PARKER i _J1EGg~11mm~1 OON'T ~ YC*R SOMETIMf!S.ONe L~NS I HUSeAND LIKE YOU /111\()ftE N!!IOJT A F"1!"90N'9 by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan As THE YOUNG 00. MRS. WARNER C~R IN A R-eeT· ~ess .J04NS I-EA~ eur 1-E MUST ee A ING MINUT!! T~ IN A VIGIL AT n-te WONDERFUi... MAN I ANOTHt!I'\ ooes IN A HOSPITAL., THf!Y TALK LIFETIMt!, MA~IL..ee ! AeOUT A MAN ONE HAS K"'IOWN ~R 20 YEARS, TI-e OTHE" ~ "' MATTEI\ OFMl~S' FUNKY WINKERBEAN W\5 40UR k!E.W COMru1ER ..HEJ..PEQ. MllU:i tAll111. ~ ~IVING 1"~KBJ 5At.6 ~ NfT"J N6fM'Y IMAfH. . \ by Jim Davis ~-· _. URGLE URGI.£ -URGLE by Lynn Johnston ·DOONESBURY -by Garry Trudeau by Kevin Fagan • SCJIJil'l:HI I• by Pat Brady . -----~· -~ 1986Beaujolais Nouveauglvei1-mixed revl Wine-lovers fi nd tt spirit ed ; experts say· it's too young to be of re~l con PARIS (AP) -Parisians and wine-loven worldwide quaffed Beaajolais Nouveau, vintaac 1986, and tome found the new wine spirited enouah to match the enthuaium aeneratcd by 1he indus- try's 19-year-:<>ld marketina ploy. At one minute after midnipt Tbunday, the ofl'acial hour of uncorkina. bottles of New Beau- jolais ~ opened around the world. In the sky, Air France ICl"Ved the six-week-old red wme on all its medium-and Iona-haul flipts. ·-••1t•1 a aood year. The clients are happy," said a niter in Le Val d'Or, a wine bar near the Champs Elysees where New Beaujolais was the only wine bein& sold ~t day.· "There is color, a bouquet, •ao<>d after-taste, very smooth," Jeannine . LebonJ-bratltrie owner in Paris, .. --said o( the:Wine. · Experts noted that the euphoria accompanyint the annual u.ncork- ina of New Beaujolais stems as much from the e\'ent as the wine itself, considered too youna to be of real consequence to letious wine I oven. . Gerard C~nard, director o( the Union of Beaujolais Wine Produccn, bu described this ~·s wine .... sublime ind hiah-sPirited, '1ymptthique,' full of.verve witti a v.ery lovely 'robe' varyini from the npest aoosebcrry to the . purest ruby." He also said the New Beaujolai1 i1 .. eminently joyful, has impec- cabae presentation. lovel).' youth. Fresh, fruity and liaht, it wiU be easy to drink." lo 1970. only 17 percent of the BeJujolais was sold under the new label, while the rest was reserved to be aaed sli&htly. Last year, S1 percent of the harvest benefited frqm the 9ddcd hype of beina ~led .. new wine:· • Stnc1ly ~na. trucu carryina the new wane lhould not leave the vineyards until one minute after midnipt. But 11ven the demand, exceptions are made. Air France shipped about 270,000 bottles to the United Stasa and 128,000 to Canada. Six bun.: dred tons of the new wine went to Tokyo. ~. olais was upstaaed this year as tM ant pnmeur. or youna wine, by Lanauedoc-Rouuillon re- aao alona France·s Mediterranean coasfbetween the Rhone and the Spanish border. · With a $300,000 campailJl, Lanauedoc·Rounillon launched itt supermarket table wine as .. new wine" on Oct. 16. Its marketina committee hopes to make the date a national event, similar to New Beaujolais Dav. · Gamay, Touraine and other "new wines" atso have apPeat'Cd in recent yean. WIN AN·AMERICAS CUP TOUR OF AUSTRALIA AND TAHITI WITH YOUR FAVORITE RECIPE! Your favonte recipe may win you two first class roundtnp uckets to Au tuha' And all ~cau e of your ideas on how to use Ve tJTillt in your fa\10t1Le recipes. TC) Vegemite Ul your fa\'Ortl~ h and taste the delicious difference. then end u the recipe You may wan ;a fabulou Aup11 holada for two aero s Ausuaha and Tah1u - TM wmnan~ couple wall depart Friday. January 23. J<}87 for Tah1\I and an 1 land hohda.,, then on to Sydney and aero s Australia to Fremantle where thcyw1ll cheer the Amenc_.n teams from thell pmate )acht. Conunum~ on. the wan~r lu•unate an ~cyle and comfort on the f abulou sunnv Gold Coa5t of Southeast Queen land for three night at the Conrad "Brina hom~ th~ Amttica's Cup with VEGEMITE " lnternauonal H0tel and Jupners Ca mo All fir t cla accomoJauon~ will .he pr0\'1dtd bv Conrad H1hon hotelo;, VE GEMITE ADD S Fl.A VOR TO LOW SODIUM DIETS AvaUJbk at' dw ~ MORS: .. ALB!RTSONS STATER BllO'nlERS W. VONS VEGEMITE J(,....., 1"'11 lk.r\.( A 21~~14 .. ~. Two pain ten in the Montmartre qaaner of Parla nJ8e tout to new Beaajolala. Thanksgiving leftovers ideal for nachos, fajitas and pitas Fewcooksarcata lo sindccidin1 what to serve for Thanksciving dinner. The traditional and ever- popular turkey is on mo t tables acros America on this November holiday. _,.... However, a cook's creativity 1s challenaed by the post-dinner tur- key leftovers. Outside of a cold turkey sandwich, few opuons re- main for this holiday favorite. - With Thanks11vin1 just around the comer, the Consumer Affairs Department at Amana Refngcr- auon Inc., has come to the rescue. Herc arc some deli~tful dishes that are not only delicious but 1mple and fast to make with the help of a microwave oven. • 'lo . TURKEY NACHOS . 1 (10~ once) can jalapeno baa dip 1 (5 ~ once> pacuae tertllla c~ps. ir. e11p dairy ... r cream i C11pt d.ieed ud 11lredded ciokedwtey 1 ~ caps 1ueddet Jack~ !4 Jalapno pepper 1Uce1 Salsa (optleul) Spread I teaspoon bean dip on each tortilla chip. Top with 1h teaspoon sour cream, I tablespoon turkey, 2 teaspoons cheese, and one pepper shce. Place 12 appetizers in a circle on plastic rack or paper plate. Heat on Full Power for I to 2 minutes, or unul cheese is melted. Repeat with rcmainin1 appetizers. Serve warm. Y1eld: 24 appetizers. Note: Nachos may be served with salsa. TURI.EV Pn'AS i caps dlcff, ~ ..U, i llankMkell ..... a:.,,111 t creea ....... elllHI• '·' C1l1 fillety dleet celerJ ~ C1lp dairy..., a.m 1,4, e11p ruell style salM ..,.. 1D1 1 tea1,... fill•~ · •;.tea•,... ..it ~tea.,...,...., • larae wMle wMat ,.._, • 1llcel CM4Mr elleeM Sllre4de4 letblee • : , Combme turkey, egp, oruon&, • and celery in medium bowl. set • aside. Combine sour creaa,n, dress. · ina, dJll weed, salt, and peppC:r in '" tnall bowl. Combine sauce mu-' turc with turkey mixture. Sur. • Cut each pita in half. Cut eacll • (Pleue eee TUaDT /88) ''IJPlll )T TWA FIND OUl HOW GOOD WE REALLY ARE l llice of cheete an half diaaonally. Hit pita with one slice chttse and t~y ma.xture. Repeat with re· ma1n1na puas Place four pita hal" in cir le on ptaper plate. Cover · with waxed paper. Heat. covered. on Full Powtr for 2 to 2 minute 1 or until ~ated throuah. Serve with shttdd~ lettuce. Repeat with rc- mainina pna . Makes 4 servings. CURRIED TURKEY T~ 1 ~ np1 .-Ack eeoklac ·race 1 ~ "fl ~t .. , water t Ct1P1 tUeed, eooked s.rkty 1 ct1f brettOll nowerette1 ~ Np cMpped red or 1reen pepper ¥1 cap c1111.,ed celery ~ ........... , ~ tea1pooapepper ~C91'may..UH . ~ c., ....... dletaey • 1 .... ,... et1rry powder Place water into 2-quart cuserolc. Heat, Covered, on Full Power for 21h to 3'h minutes, or • until boilina. Stir in rice. Cover and 1t• stand for S minute . Add turke), broccoli. red or "1rccn pepper, cdery, salt, and pepper. Set a ide. Combine mayonnaise, chutney, &Qd curry powder tn mall bowl. Pour over rice mixture and stir. Refriacrate before serving. Yield: 6 to 8 servings. GARLIC TURKEY 1 cup 1liced, fresll muallrooma '4 cap clJced celery 7 1arUc cloves, mlaced 1 tablespoon batter or margar· tne • 1 tfftpooa crated 1l91er root 1114"11 ouce)caacll.lckenbroth ! tablespooas cornstar~k. ·~ te11pooa wt ~ teaspoon pepper 3 caps dJced, cooked hlrkey 1 (8-ouce) cu sliced water cbesbaats,drahaed I (f-oance) package frozen peapod1 I carrot Combine mushroom~. cekry._ garlic. butter. and 11nger root in 2- quart casserole. Cook, covered on Full Power for 21/2 to 3V2 minutes. or until vegetables arc tender. Stir -halfway through cooking time. Combine broth. cornstarch, salt. and pepper. Add to vegetable mixture. t1r. Cook, covered, on Full Power for 3 to 4 minute . or until thickened. t1r halfway through cooking time. SLJr turkey. water che tnuts, and peapods into thickened mixture. Heat. covered. on Full Po""er for 41h to 5111 minutes. or untJl heated through. Sur haJfwa)' through coolong time Shred carrot into long stnps Add to mixture. Serve over nee. Yield· 4 to 6 servings. TURKEY FAJITAS 3 cups cooked turkey, cut lnto slrlp1 Ya cap lemon juice I teaspoon 1arllc powder Ya teaspoon oregano Ya teaspoon ult Ya tea1poon pepper •;, teaspoon groand cumin I small onJon, tblnly 1llced l small green pepper. cut Into strip• I small red pepper, cat Into strips (optional) 8 flour tortlll11 Toppln11: Plcante Huce Shredded Clleddar cheese Shredded lettuce Chopped tomato Dairy sour cream Combine turlce). lemon Juice. garlic powder, oregano, salt, pep- per. and cum1~ in plaslJc bag. Seal bag and shake to mix. Marinate in refngerator for at least 6 hours. Place turkey mixture in 2-quart casserole. Add onion . green pepper, and red pepper slices. Heat, cov- ered. on Full Power for 51h to 6'h mmutes, or unlit heated through. Sttr halfway through cooking time. Set aside. Place one tortilla on microwave- safe paper towel. Heat on Full Power for 30 seconds. Tum tortilla over halfway through hcatJn& umc. Spoon turkey onto tortilla u mg 5lotted spoon. Top with onions. peppers, and other toppings. Wrap tortilla around filling. Serve Yield 8 servings. ... Cheesy Potato Bake easy to do Serve this savory side d1 h in- stead of scalloped potatoes. It aocs toecther in minutes, then &Jvcs you time to make a ulad and set the t4ble while it bake . EASY CHEESY POTATO BAltE Otte %4-oace pacuc tH1ee U.11 bro•• po&atoe1 wldl oetoa UMll pe,,ert • OM •~e jar clteete 1pread ~ "'teelt4 ~pieces '•ca, milk In a 12 by 7'h by 2-inch bakjna di$h combmc the potatoes, cheese ,19rcad. bacon pieces ind miJk. Cover with fo1l 1pd bike in a JS().. dqree o~cn for 'JO minuies. Un- cover; tir and bekc I .S lo 20 minutes more or until done. ttr before JCMn&; Makes 6 .ervinp. SI ORE HOURS: MOST STORES OPEN 6 A.M. 'TIL 12 MIDNIGHT MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 7 A.M. 'TIL 11 P.M. sATURDAY g, SUt:ilOAY • ASST \NETE5 NABISCO SNACK CRACKERS .. 19 • 29 az PRINCELLA PUMPKIN 69.~ • ..., -lee J S-t-r-e1 t-c-hfood buc;Iget with has~ .· me 1ntic1pat1on the onginal bird CftJO $, You can make hHh out of leftover turkey and tuffina. plu a link turkey broth, and t·r-<:·t<·h the food b~~t for ull anothrr meal. Everyone know that hash i~ economical. 8ut 1t can nl\o be a tasty dish for family and fnend who will nevtr realiLe they .are eatina a "planned over" meal Combine stuffina with bits o( turkey that art too small to strve and too larae to throw away. Add green pepper, onion and potatoc!l for vqetablc interc t. · Once you serve it. don•t be' surprised if Turkey. Huh gel the TURKEY ffM ff '• tiap ciloppe4 oilUOli a t.ap cltopped 1rten pep,er t table1~11 butter t cap• claopped leftover turkey Willa tkla 1 ~\ cupt turkey broth alt aad pepper to tasce i a,; cup• leftover 1taffln1 i ~ cup• cooked cubed potatoel 'aute onion and green ~ppcr until crittpy tender, dd rcma1n1n& ingredient and mix lightly. Heat thorough!)' and serve immcdiattly. Sen cs 4 to 6. . ALPHA BETA HAS RIVERSJDE BRAND AN ARMOUR BASTED FROZEN CRADE A HEN OR TOM TURKEYS AT THE LOWEST PRICE IN TOWN LOWER THAN ANY MAJOR CHAIN 'S CHAINWIDE NEWSPAPER ADVERTISED PRICE ON ANY FROZEN GRADE A HEN OR TOM TURKEY. • 10 · 22 IJ5 • Lmt one per tniV • wt1le StQJlleS IS! Deborah Molina C<tth, I've hopped <11 three, four other mirk~ts and r ally the P"c are cheaper I t I at Alpha Beta. MORI Mt/ING .. I ....... 4 5! 1 CXI a!' °"9 ., .. IEa ........... J S9 ..... ~ .. , 119! • • 1'!0 a • IOm l CXI 9ll 0111t e.DllJIQ IAITB.l v.s. U'l llt\ ··-cor.IAC ....... . .. ..... llllMD\ 119! . "° •. ....., ,Ill) 911 °"" IRl.lR) "-It ClllllS RECiAl l ... SCOTOI ....... ... ..,..n, 49! em =: ... lillllllll t • MORE INC . 'I r I IAiiHES AND t9C ... GREEN ONIONS ..... MOltf flt\'ICf • • • Variat ___ _ Usetur la lhe West. there are alllldll • ... e ""* or dliJj • ~ aR dWi coob. One reapr Pd· CUbed ...-lm\ead or pound .. ,: one 1nctvdet beu1; Mil another calla for tomatoa 1n 1M pot ThC l'IUment O\let which 11 authentic Jnd which it belt bu r many a teriOUI chili COok• Now you can add your own diltinctive chili vanateon u11na California-srown turkey for a ver- lion that's every bit 11 1picy and delicious. but much lower in fau · and calories, thanks to the use of t~ cubet instead of bed. Oule oon Came. while draw1 • ¥1 C'AO KOBHAGN GOURIET ~ ---· ICE CREAi 29 to IENDSI &om 1111 ftawn el ...... CWllllC, II iall)' • ~ COncoctioa. s. the .. ol CIH- fonli•r.::t., turkey. a aau .. bird orlhe ... fltu• ........ Califonlla Twby Cheli It 10 t!ll)' to mah tha1 you cu eet your.eatft meal on the table 1nJu1t OW".WID hOur. Mott of tht cooluna time ii in the simmenna. .which taka 25 minucn Wh11t the ch1h bUbblet an the poc, make a cn1p .,.een tAIM and .arm j()me com or flour tondlas or pna breads With such a quick, euy and satisfyina dinner1 you're sure to think Chat your Califomaa Turkey Ch1h is the bell an the wnt. •160l • R£Q.lM OR M>C FOLGERS COFFEE 29.! -- Bo Iida" lnco1nplete without 1nince1neat Mincemeat pies have ftlled the winter air with their spicy scent ror ccntunes. bakina in kitchens from "" kinp' castles and crofters' cottaees to toaabinsoftt\c Amenctn West.• So lensthY is the seasonal usocia- uon that mincemeat virtually has come to wtc like holiday . It's as if, in the eatina. one were absorbina the holiday ~p1rit it<JClf. · AccordinJ"tO €ountty Home, the oricins of mincemeat -a rich mixture of mincc4 meat, suet, fruit and spices -arc obscure. But as an drly English wnter said, "He that di covered the new star an Cassiopeia deserves not half so much to be remembered as he that first married meat and raisins." That cutin~ marriaac took: place at the time of the Crusadel when ttlc kni&hts brouabt beek exotic spices f'iom the ·East. Thi mo t famous offsprina of that marria ~ the mince pie -ma) have been born wbcn some darin& coo . prcparina for a holiday fcas\. stirred these unfamiliar spices in with minced meat. driC(l fruits. lemon peel and juice. and swceten-ina. then baked the mixture in a rcctanJular "coffin." '?r qust. hnstmu assoc1ancm--.........-.-- 'lren1fhcned by tore that hfcerted- thc shape of the .pie to Chri f manJCr. and the spices to the exotic ofTennas of the W1se Men. Dunna the 16005; this now wetl- known holiday treat became the subject of controversy between the supporters of Kina Charles I of England. who had Catholic sym- pathies. and the Puritans. who denounced the cxtravapnl pies as example of''popcry '' In 1660 came the downfall of the Puritan and the return of the monarchy. Engli hmen apin re- joiced in eating Chnstmas pie, now served in its familiar round hape. It became the custom in rural communitic to cat one pie a day between Chri tmas and Twelfth iJht, as the) were thouaht to brina goOd luck. In 1770, ir Henry Grey had his housekeeper make a pie 9 feet in diameter. It wci&hed 168 pound and had to be "1hcclcd m on a can. ccordina to rcporu, this monstet mince pie contained 20 pounds of butter. two bushel of flour, four ecsc. two turkeys, two rabbits, four wild duck , two w6odcocks, two • neat's (beet) tonguc-s; six · nipe four panndgc • two curlews, ~ pigeons and seven blackbirds. lthough less lavish in " it mince pie became as popular in the New World as in En&land. The first cookbook produced in America. wnttcn m 1796 by Amelia i~ mon . offered a imple recipe foe mince pie made-with neat's ~l. Suet. apple . rai in . wine. supr and spice were added lo the meat and baked in a double cru t. 1 Adaptab1ht) may have been thf key to mincemeat's astound1n\ ton,evlt). lngrcdi~nt were eastl)'. vaned a tfic llmc and p rtqu1rt'd Chopped· vemson wa a favored dd1hon .,.hen pme · plentiful; beef and cttick~n ~ used when It wa not. Vc1ctanan made .. mock Mintt•• with frull and nut : 19th ntury tectotalc left out all panlS and calkd it Temperance Pie. M M~..,.·-­ Poner tn her cookbook published in 187 l attempted to plea all tier rcadcn by ofTcnna eight different minu~ pie r«1pcs. amona them Rich, Plain, < ountry p.._ and Eu lnc.tc d of Meat. D nn th I 7 great 111n wcrt' m de 1n the field of food pre rvau n. and 11,.. di ovcftd that omc of the ualftd1cnt for min~ me tcould rondcnltdand k d for a long lf hfe. Mine mCjl \Oda tak fat cl w • be ctTon tl acs&. but the I~ JU t &real. l , • .. andwic What better time to crtate a new style sandwich than post Thaqkqi\inJ. a time when your rcfriaerator ' bulaina with good thlnas to e•t'! tart with a dark bread, add leftover turkey and ham, a acncrou amount ofaaood mustard, la)er the ~ond slice of bread with a son spreadable cheese such as a triple creme or cream cheese and top wilh a Granberry Apple Chutney that }OU enher pre~rt from lrl'llm. or is a welcome Than~•Vina lcf .. • tover. ranberry Apple Cliutney can bC • uScd u a sandwich ingttdient or as With Coopon eetow And P\xcnase Of •100-Or More In Groceries Eliciudlog the Pnce of the Turkey Aleoholic ~ages. li:>bac:oo And Oaity Products No~ Ot Cash Aogister Tapes. J ''Boston Bult'' POrk Roast I I ~ -·~~ Fresh Whole Leg Of Lamb Fresh US 0 A Inspected Semi-Boneless SllCecl Bacon Smok·A·Aoma For A OellclOUS Breakfast -·--· -~sis• c ....... -.... Wilson Just Heat And Serve . -Boneless. Butter Basted Frozen .. $169 LIOUOll AND WINI fOR YO. llOLIDAY Gallo Cll-lllls Bla11e • Pink Chablis • AtWle • Red Rose • Vtn AoSi • Hearty Burgundy :.~a··--a·....... . :;; .... =.••ilr!l299 Te•1••r's ~~~~~~.-.....;:~-=-•co kh . 1-Q11d ........ ~ LDw Price ...... ,,....,, AltMltl • . . -.... ..... ........... . ... ... 2 !!_<> '• ....... 16 '•" -• ¥f1lte • Aid Liit i Mrs. S..lth's 10-lnch Pumpkin Pie .... L .... Coo~Whlp Bird's Eye ... L .... 69~ __ ... ...... ,... Ice Cr••• Asaorted FkM:>rs _ ..... 2_s5 -l(iiift .. rM .. " ........ ~ ~$249 Ocean Spray CrMberry JU1Ce Cocktail Regular Or lDw Cal ....._ $179 ---_~"'i· -~ .. ,..l, . ..-~ .,~··~ ~· '"'""" Avoc•clos Smal Calrfomia Salad Siza Zutano Variety 6 .. $1 t I ••l1 .. 1w Cr.Pt1m ~ ~, Waaettrett, lar1e 11em1 ,... ..... Lay bread side-by-side on a t'tean. dry wo~ surface. Spread t_he Dijon mustard cv,nly on one shce of bttad, incluchna edaef. Stack sliced meat on top of bread with mustard, beina 5Urt 10 evenly diatnbute meat to the cdan of bttad. On teeond piece of bread evenly spttad .Oftencd chee9t. Pltcc chutney on top of client and'Cvcnly spend. DistritiuJC t~e waterttCU atop the meat. :t this .. •••r'• ............. • Green Beans • Peas Town House 1 ... a. C.. Large Size ·First Of The Season~ 3 .. 99' \. point, the sandwich cu be ICl'Vecl open.face or auembkd m.d cut into halvC$ or quaners Serve with Cranberry Applt Chu~. Makes I sandwich. Ma.keyour feastlng tasty yet healthful Holiday fcasun' c.an be delicious and still hcan healthy according to lhe an- nual Holidays a la Heart recipe brochure that 1s avail· able f rte from the Oranac County Chapter of the American Heart AS50cia- tion. The brochure lists recipes for everytbtng from ap- petizers and salads to en trees to desserts that will delight the ta.Ste bud , while at the same time maant.aimn.g a healthy heart. All recipes that arc hsted arc low in calories, cholcsteroi and sodium, and e~h dJSb &i ves an exact amount of each of these items. In additton. the recipes have been developed so that they can be used year-round, instead of just during the Thanksgi ving and Christmas seasons. For a f rcc copy of lhis popular brochure.just send a self-addressed stamped envelope to: "Holidays a la Heart,' American Heart As- sociation, P.O. Box 1704, Santa Ana 92702. Creme liqueurs great for gifts Mellow creme liqueurs have caught lhefancyof Amencan diners for afier-<hnner sippina. They're rich enough to take the place of dessenl i( you hkc. This recipe makes enough liqueur for three holiday gifts. MOCHA CREME LIQUEUR 14~ cu 1weetne4 CM· dented mllk (Dot evaporated mUk) t c•PI Upt cream or milk 1 tablespoon lattant ceffee cry1&al1 1 beatn ea yolk 1 cap lrto wkl1key ~ cep coffee liq•e•r S tabletpHll cbcelate· flavored 1ynip In a heavy 2-quart saucepan combine sweetened condensed milk, h&ht cream and coffee crystals. Cook and tir over me- dium heat unul coffee crystals arc dissolved. Gradually stir about half he hot mixture anto cu yolk; return all mixture to aauc:epan. Brina to boihna. Cook and stir over medium heat until bubbly. Cook and itir 2 minutes mo.re. ======~~~;;~-4·Rcmo+c from~. Stttttt wh1tk1 ,.---11 l t. liqueur and syruo. Cool. . Divide amona J decorative COO• wnm with tisht·filtina lic11. St~ tn tefritcrator (or up to 2 months serve on-the-rocks. in coffee or over Kie cream. Makn J (I V..cup) 11ft1. I r .__._......~ ...... .. It' ., .I08Pll IKJDIEV01a playlJll 11 !f1lc onee i)ley II>' a llil; .... ._,.... s • and c.oe.uns lhr ma ofdle ~._, The crowd of Sl,600 looked hkt a in 1v~111 a 6..o Ioli IO die ....._ Don .Una promotion. The cxatc-place Saintt (6-6) t-o weeb llO· ment level or the pme wu beck to an The seintt Md come imo Ible_. old-time low. And the Rams punched •ith a~ ....... __._, lbeir way b9ck into the win column had won five of i.-i1att lb_. .. with C<*b John Robinson•1 time-1n. Tbey bad alto bea1e11 • .._ worn when-in-doubt, annd-11-out wh1k hoklina them widMMll a tod- . pmc plan. • dOwn in their latt two IMetiap. Foreet all this stuff you've been Not thi1 time, howeYer, • die hearina about the Rams drMn1 this Rams dt'fealed the saints for dlC •tty new offt'nte around with some founh cont«utive time at A...._ kid named Jam Everett at the con-Stadium. trols. The Rams ulC'd fi\'e New Ortea•' Ualy i1 in qain -.t Anaheim turnovers, an 1ron-ft11ed ddcme ud sc.dium. And who knows? It may tht runnin1 of Eric DicUnoa IO nrvn leave. off'let their 28th-ranked pe11 o&nte. Af\cr 'lolina a beauty contest the which returned to its old iftf after previous week to New EnaJand in the show1ns 1 hint of competence lat last leCOnds, the Rams JOl back in week. their buJldozers and rolled over the No v.orry. thou&)'t . In the old Ram UJ)'tart New Orleans Saints; 2~ 13, 1ri &ame plan. pas in1 11 way dOwn on front of Sundiy's crowd that made the list. newly-crowned heavywei&ht champ It ,,.-as the dcfen.e which c.ame to Mike T~n look like W'ill Roaers, the rescue for the umpteenth tune by who probably never saw a Rams 11k1n1 the ball from the Samts on quarterback he didn't like. their first thrtt pounsioos of the "It's p'Clt to act back on the third quancr lO blow open the rme. winning trail apin," said Robinson, The got 13 poinu out o the after the Rams (8-4) broke a two-takeawa)'S to Jead 23-6 after nursing a pmelosingstrcakandlr.epttheirbalf· 10-6 halftime lead pme edge over San Francisco in the .Rams safety Nolan CromweO led a NFC West. RnMsecondary that made hfe miler· Any action that was missini on the able for Dave W1lJOn by Pidlna off fietd was more than made up in the four of the Saints quartctback's I stands. At one point 1n the fourth pa scs. Cromwell had two inter- Quartcr. Steve Bartkow kt looked 1JP ceptions and forced a fumble that was into the crowd at several fights that recovcrtd by Rcgie Dou. Two of raged on and on . • thote tumovcn led to 10 poiots in the "I thou&ht what's wrong with all third quarter for a quick 20-6 lead. • ~ peoplc'r' be said . "Has the And afta Rams nicLle back ................. llama defenden Vlace Neww (22), Nolan Croawell (21), qurterback Daft WU9oD OD foartla-uacl·blc .... la tlae flnt Carl &kern (la) and otllen pat tile etop9 to Kew Orleam qaartet. ~8ablt8awa7empty-llandeclatt1ae,_nlne. Santa Ana wind blown in some Mickey Sutton 1nterttptcd another , craziness from tbc desert? It was wild Wi lson pass. the Rams turned that out there. It was safer on the field." into another Mike Lansford field , Thal was due in part to the Rams -· (Pleue ... RAM8/CS) . In defenSe of Rams, it was a: victory l Sunday's NFL scores . •Rams 26, New Orleans 13 Four thefts, Lansford'sfoot - too mucb for New Orleans BJ ED ZINTEL ......... C.:O J a Aaain the Rams proved that the best offense can be a IOOd ddcnse. Or. in thetr case, the onty offtnse is a good &fensc. It happened that way on Sunday u Anaheim Stadium as the Rams intercepted fou_r Dave Wilson i-sses and recovered one fumble 1n tbett 26-J 3 Nataonal Football Ua&ue win ovtt New Orleans The def"ensc directly accounted for three Rams ICOrcs. Nolan CromYftll intercepted two passes and forced a fumble'. Jerry Gray and Mickey Sutton each had an interception. Regie Dou rccovtfed a fumble. The .Cooper sparks Lakers He scores 13 points -----~ --In final qu arter to lead 127-11 7 victory INGLEWOOD (AP) -Normally when the Los Anacin Lakers need points, they go to Kareem Abdul- Jabbar. Or James Worthy. Or Earvin "Mqjc" Johnson. Or Byron Scott. But in the fourth quarter of Sunday ni&ht's pme apinst the Milwaukee Bucks, the Lakcrs went to none of the above. They went to 5'th man Michael Cooper. And Cooper responded, scorin113 of his 20 points in the final 12 minutes as the takers topped Milwaukee 127-1 l 7 and kept Coach Don Nelson of the Bucks from gcttina the SOOth victory of his NBA coachin1 carttr. :ren men have accomplished-the feat. After sayma he believed that de- fense turned the pme around for the La ken in the second half, Cooper had a simple explanation for his offensive htto1cs. "I was lef\ open in the fourth quarter and Jut some outside shots," he said. ''They were trappin.a and the passes c.ame to mt'." • Cooper hasn't foraotten that the favored Lakers were beaten by the Houston Rockets in the Western Conference finals last sprina. "Af\er what happened last year. we .,. ptayint hard every •me and ~ arc 1mprovin1 eath pme," be said. "We nttd point production from our btnch with Mike MC'Gtt tone and that's pert of my 'ob this year." McGee was traded to the Atlanta Hawks durint the summer. The Lakers made I S of their 11 field pl attempts and 1even of their niftt' free throw tries in the founh quarter. defense did everything short of puttina the offense on its collectave back and dfl&llng It to the goal hne. With or Wlthout Jim Everett, the Rams win with defense. How do you think Mike Lansford was able to kick four field 1oats? Because all day the defense pve the Rams &ood field position. In fact on one series followina a Cromwell 1ntercept1on1 the Rams lost i_x_yardson three plays before Lansford kicked a 47°yard fltld goat Don't think the offense was just trya.ng to set the baJI in the middle of the field for Lansford's benefit. Coach John Robmson said he liked Everett's performance Sunday over his previous week's because "he won and the bottom denominator for a quarterback 1s winnil\J;" What he probably meant to say wu "1t doesn't . matter if ifs Jim Everett or Jim Plunkett or Jim Thorpe in there, our defense 1s the bottom denominator." Anyway, Everett's 38 yards pa'SSing hardJy explains Afticr tr1ilin1 6S.S8 at halftnnt, they had outtrored the Buen 30-20 an i · ao .. wan u.as lead , ...... ...__.mm.t~tn~"l~~ftniJflm1nute1.~~~~i;..,.9111L:..--......_ ...... ~~------------'~-.-... ....-:1l'"-e~--~ Cooptt's ICOrins "'"" MtDN the Lakal pull away an the ffnal 12 miltut8. Early 1n the founh quaner. tttn»po1nt field pit b)' Wes M••· tlieWI and CQC>Ptt pve Loi A•ln a 96-17 ttect. and the 8Ucb didft't · thraten afttt thit. 'TM tnumph wa the ninth tualtht for the Laktri 11\cr a l 12· I 02 loll ao Houtton 1n their ason-opener. - 26 poirus. A fivc0 to-two turnover ratio in favor of the Rams does. -S.n Francisco 20, Atlanta 0 •washinston 41 . Dallas t 4 -Seattle 14, Philadelphia 20 •aeveland 37, Pittsbur&h 31 (01) •New York Giants 19, Ocnver 16 •New Eniland 22. Buffalo 19 •cincinnau 24. Minnesota 20 -St. Louis 23. Kansas c:ity 14 •(!lucaao 12. Green Bay IO Detroit 31. rrampe Bay 17 •Houston 31 . lodianapolis 17 Cromwell. whose 35 career interceptions place ham second behind Eddie Meador's 46 oo the Rams all-time list, said the defense pressured W1l90n so much that the interceptions were mCVJtabte. "We (the line) put enouan pressure on Wilson '°that most of the tame be had lO throw the t:.11 up for gra~ ... Crom~eu said. ••1t•s always fun to get turnovers bcCausc you know you usually get points out of those bis plays. ff you look statistically at teams with pos1t1ve-plus turnovers. they're the teams that lead their division. Anr, time you can get turnovers. it has an effect on the offense. • · Whose offenSt' it effects CromweU d1dn•t say but it would a &oOd auess he wu taJklna about the Rams'. ToeJilt'1 Game New York Jets at Miami (ChanncJ 7 at 6) •NFL roundup, page C3. You sec the Rams have thctrdctensc lhtnk1ng like an •Rams tatist1cs, C6. offense. (Pleue eee DltFltN81t/C3) r It's a quick finish for 5of7 Onfy W oodbrtdge, Roadrunners left- tn hunt for CIF title By ROGER CARLSON .°' ... ...., ......... The 1986 prep footbaJJ season became history all too qukkly for most of the Oranac Coast area's representatives as only Woodbridge in the CIF Desert-Mountain Con° fercncc playoffs. and Saddlcback in the Central Conference survived fint-round competat1on. The rest -Sunset Lea,aue cham- pion Manna alona with Edison and Westminster, and University and Laguna Beach, aot their walkma · pa~~e of the coaches had few comments, but others. uch as Uni0 vcrslly H1&h's Mark Cunnafllham, had plenty to say Here's the coache views on la t week: C.u l•pam, U•lver1ity, following a 3S-27 loss to LI Habra in the CIF Central Conference playoffs; .. Our kids played tbc11 heart~ out and we turned an to a really fine football team. We outhit them and we outpla)cd them. "la Habra know 1t aot out damn 0 lucky. The kids really came around." they know they're capable. "We'll have David Licbke at full-I back, Gary marr at halfback and Jcfl I Baiter at quarterback, and we'll be bnngana up Jimmy 'Robenon at wingback. He's really goina to be I good ." ' Roberson led the sophomores to a 9-1 record and ran for O\er 1,000 yards. ~·Also rcturmna: Marko Ropn (6-S, 263 sophomore); All-Jcaaue guard Tim Warady (6-1. 210); and de- fenders Danny Baird and Jerry • Stiscausk). "I've got some real good feelings ::! r ·1 r 1l""J !! .. ~ _!_ \ -~~ • 0 about University football for the next l ., :..J :...J .::.J--J _ _ few )cars ·• said Cunninaham. ii rl' •\j.''J ·r iJ f .. lj\I • '.\ • ·l / r '-' :J ~ Lloyd Cotton, Lapaa Beac•. fol-t lowing the Artists' I~ lo at La <.:unnin&ham said he was di gustt'd tt'rra· "If we had to go out, we went with the officiatina. out wlth our heads high. We played a "Every third and long they had I 1 d fi ball ,. • .,., ~• re ulted in a pa interference on u ," rca so 1 oot pmc .._.nsta 0 ~ _ ... ,.. . .... "Wh solid team. continu~ '-unn1n.,.am. .en ~e "Our go.al wa to be 10 1 posmon an had the ball the) ~erc hol4ing on the middle of the th.ird quartt'r to win every play. The Anaheim coachana it. but our kickina pmc really let u $talThas the film naht now, but I've . down. already been tot~ by them that wh~n I · "'Whether it was·a punt. field aoal. see the films I m aoing to ao nVit kickoffore,..tra point. anythina. itJUll throu_gh the roof:Thcy were taclhns didn't get done. ou.~ ~osc auanl on C\Cl)' play. . "We v.ere founh do..,n at Lht' S- I _II probabh Jl\c the film to the )ardlinctnthe~ondquaner.but~ official~ usoc11t1on to take.a look lt didn't go for the field goal because our It wa~.JU t a VCT) poor!) officiated kackt'rs ~crcn't ma~llJ anythina. I aame d'd · h fid · 0 ·th 1: t ''Th k'd h JUSt 1 n t ave con 1 cnce tn our n e 1u urc: c 1 s wo ave kicldn' amc. _ com in~ bad: arc really hungry. and ... eee COACHS8/C&) Kings can't stop po~~r play Winnipeg scores 3-2 vic tory on MacLean · s s hot WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP)-A hltle help from their pttVH>UM)' anemic pown otay made the daf. ftttnce for the Winn1pq Jets . unday ni&ht. ·'the Jct,,_who entered tht ~me I th in -tM Hl wnti a man IMtvantaee. teared t•1ce whtlc up a man before Paul Ma uan's third· period Pl pve them a l \'iCto over the t:.o. A•lcs Kinas. The win improved W1nn1(1Ct• record to ll·7·1 fot 27 po1nt , ltcd With EdmOft\Oft ror the t 1n tht mj'l_M DiVJMOn: ..,,.._ Mullen and Thoma teen ICOted on t.ht powicr pla • beauna Roland Melanson and helping the Jets improve on their poor howrna They ""°'re 15·for 9 with a man adva.ntagc cntcnna the pme. "They JU t \\Cnt an ton1aht." 1J Mullen. "We've been work.ma the same J)lay . We were Ju t \hoot1n the pU<k a httlc bit mort ton11ht . We got the bouncci and we finally put two away." Rookie goaltendt'f Oan1cl Btnh1aumc topped 29 h t I 1mproveh1 reconho4-I. He held th A.in&ucordcu duri a 1:51 tn the third Pt'flod when they hid 1 t man advantqc. "I wor C'd hard dunna all the rwacticet when 1 didn't pfa ... 1d ftcrth1aumc, tte1n1 h1 ti~t a t1on in five pm . --1 felt h\"C and I ft"ad) f1 r the aam toni ht .. King deftonttman Jay Wcll crtd1• trd Bcnhaaume for h kli Wanm 1n thepme. "1 hear ccptl -- - Chorol Dunco is a winner -and she is stiU in shock. Dunco and husband John ore the 10th week Doily Pilot & TWA Win Go Contest winners. 'I hove been ploying this game since day one," she said, smiling. ' When 11 won ... well, I thought someone was pulling my leg. I mean, I ploy everything but I hove never won a single thing. Actually 11 didn't hit until late that evening." Dunco said her husband was equally shocked when he heard the good news. ''John was really surprised," she said. "At ftrst he didn't believe me -now he is real excited." The Duricos hove lived in Costa Meso for the lost 45 years. Chorol, a homemaker, and John, a self employed maintenance and repair worker, hove four grown children and three grandchildren. Chorol's youngest granddaughter, 20. month old laura, accompanied her lucky grandmother 10 collect the Win-Go bounty at the Doily Pilot. "We began toking the Doily Pilot when 1t was only delivered once a week," she recalled. Dunco said the vocation dest1not1on could be the South Pacific or perhaps Holland. The South Pacific would be nice because the climate is so worm," she said. "But-I hove a nephew stationed m Holland and haven't seen him for a long time ... so that might be a good vocation idea " According to Dunco, she is not a world traveler 'We usually toke one trip a year," she said. "My S!ster and brother-in-law visit us right ofter _.Christmas and we go somewhere together. lost year 11 was Howo11. '' The 'Duricos, who will be morned 39 years in January, may schedule lhejr voction an con1unct1on witli their anniversary ceTebrotlon. I That would be 0 nice anniversary present," she so1d. .. YOU COULD BE OUR NEXT WINNER! ..... Daily Flr!,!JGOOD :E RZ::tvJ1 CALL OUR HOTLINE FOR JNFORMATION, 71 4 6'2·4333. flfGHTS AVAllA~E llOM OIANGl COIJNTY ro /AX KA GOIOfN STATE A#INS .. ... 78en w m,ht .to top Rocbta ..._ 1C10mf 24 pouna and ----------....4ifiil• 8dded 23 at the undtr· muned lohia 76cn. 1111na only F,...AP. ..... tdttt SP RKS, Ne . -The U.S. Ol~mpic Comm1tttt voted oveNihelmmaly Sunday t<> make Anchora~. Alaska. its re~nta· ttve to ho t the 1.994 Winter Olympics. The USOC's 86-membtr Executive Board alto appro\ed Colorado Sprinp. Colo .• as tk sate o( an Olympic Hall of Fame, and alJProved Oklahoma City 11 tht location for the 1989 lJ.S. Olympic festival. USOC Pretidcnt Roben Helmick said the cnain reason for 1upportina Ancho ... as the U.S. bid citf for the 1994 Winter Games was thu other Amttican cities -includina Reno, Nev. -wouldn't have e"®lh tune to make 1n adcq_uate presentation to the lntcmational Olympic Comm11ttt. The lOC 11 expected to make •ts dcci11on on the 1994 Winter Olympics location dunna ·the 1988 SummerGamcsatSeoul,South Korea. All bids must be submitted to the IOC by next April. Helmick's araument of inadequace tjme for oikr U.S. cities tc1 submit bids·wu quesuoncd by Bruce Bopert, head of the Reno-Tahoe Winter Garnes Orpni1ina Commiucc. • . ''1 thmk they should have liven every citt in the U.S. an opportunity to bid 1f they wanted," .,.ert said But he said the Reno-Tatioc area would continue to bid for future Olympic pmcs. Other communities that expressed interest in hostma the Games included Ponland, Ore.; Salt Lake Ci\y; Lake Placid, N.Y., and Denver. . · Anchoraic was chosen over several cjtiC'S in the bMtle for the 1992 U.S. bid, but the IOC last month selected Albertville, France, to host those Games. Rick Mystrom of the Anchorage orpnizin1 commntcc 'for the Games, said the cit)' has spent SJ ma I hon m seeluna the '#'inter Olympics 1and will spend nearly that much over the next two years. Mystrom abo Yid Alaska~ ''Wiii begin a very mten i vc lobbyma process" to icu favorable JOC vote. He said Anchoragt" has a aood chance because It will be the first formal applicant for the l 994 Games. The USOCs support for Colorado Spnnp as host city for the first Olympic Hall of Fame was hailed by Colorado rtprcsentauves who helped to ruse a donation of$20 million in cash and land for the project.. Quote of the day . Gcae Mu~. 6().~car-old manager of the Angel . a ked about his managerial philosophy when he was 36, the age of Bobby Valentine, skipper of the Texas Rangers: "I was born older than that." Navratilova streak reaches 63 I • at1lova, 1986 was a very good year. '· NEW YORK -;:._ For Manina ~ he capped 1t Sunday with a 7-6. 6-J, 6-2 victory over West Germany's Steffi Graf to. ~apturc the $I milhqn Virginia Slims Champ1onsh1ps tennis tournament. "The whole )Car's been great." Navratilova said. "I've won the hms twice and Wimbledon and the U.S. Open. and JOma to Czechoslovakia and winning there and JUSt be1na there. and finding my dog when he got lost ''That's probably the happiest I've been all year ... It also was a typical year. Her late t victory increased her consecutive match winnll\gstreak to SJ -the fourth-lonteststreak behind her record of74. a S(>:.match tring by ("hrisTven l.IB)'d and Na"ratalova's S4 tra1ght: · - "This was SJ. and I'll proballJy briilc Chns' record again. so I'll ha ve the top two SP.Ots.'·il'iCsa1d. Kelly new Twins manager? MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -After 10 wcek.s-w1thout a manaaer, the Minnesota Twins arc on the verge of sigrring interim manager Tom Kelly to the post, it 9.'as reported today. The St. Paul Pionee,r Press and Dispatch quoted unnamed sources close to the Amencao League club as saying Twins manaaement will hold a news conference today to make the announcement. citht p&ayera defHtcd the Houston Rockets l 14-1b41n an National Bukctblll ~stoe1auon Sunday niaht. ClilarlH Banlef • play.ins for the fr:ume "nee I :IOl«n injury aickhncd him Nov. 4, pla~ die MCOnd ~ and ~ost of the founh, coatributint 12 points:'Ptu~lphia lcd by as many. u 16 points late in the KCOnd ptnod, but Houst~n r11Hed to w1th1n, three on a jump shot b) Dave FeUJ. with 19;55 remainina. The 76crs then scored 1tvcn strai&ht ~~S capped by a Barkley dunk, aiv1n1 Philadelphia a advana.te with 8: l 'left. Elsewhere 1n t~ NB~ Sunday, ~ V....., .... tcored 23 poinu, 1nc:lud1~ Iona-ranee bailets durina a foun~~t 1u~ at the Trail Blazers downed lncbaRI tOS.95 to ~_poll the return to Memorial CohteUm of ~I 8~~ ,_. .... ,. Ramuy, wh'o coached the Tr11 ~ .. for 10 yean before he was fired afttt last aeaon. ~ved a 1tandina ovation from the Portland crowd before the pme. Bu t the Blazers. -:fto have won seven o( their &att nine NBA pmn to chmb abo~ ,the .500 mark for the fint time this sca1<>n. wcttrft as k10d to the Pattn. LB State tlpe Norwtelan tum LONG BEACH -~Anthony m· Lanaston and Andre Purry scored 24 poinu apiece Sunday to lead Lona Beach State to a 120-96 victory over the Nc;>r- weaian National Team in an cxh1bJt1on buketblll pm~otlon Wiley and R110 Moore added 22 and 1.5 points, respect1vely, for the 49crs. Laniston led his team in rebounding with eiaht while Waley contnbutcd seven a11ist1. . Haakon Austefjord led the No_rwepan team with 31 points and eiaht rebounds. Anld Beck added 2S point• and five rebounds for Jhe losers. · The No~an team took a 2...0 lead but the 49crs scond the next eaaht points to 10 ahead for aood. It was 49-43 at halftime and Lona Beach steadily pulle<I a~y 1n the second half, ma kin& 69.2 percent of its field aoaJ attempts in the final 20 minutes. Fryar Injured In accident FOXBORO Mass -New England Ell wade receiver l{~1n1 Fryar, in;;: dunng •II• Sunday's National Football. uc pmc with the Buffalo Bills. suffered a con-. cussion in a car accident after lcavani the ~tad1um, a team spokesman Slld. . . ·d ~ Jim Grcenid&e, Patnots' darcctorof pub~aty, Sil Fryar was dnvjn1 around Foxboro, hstcn~na to the pme on the radio, when he lost control of bis car at an intersection and crashed mto • tree. • "He was apparently frustrated that be couldn t help his teammates an a close game," Greenidge said. He said Fryar was alone an the car when he crashed at the intersection of North Street and Payson Road at J:42 p.m. while the game was sull in pr~rcss. "I don't thank he lost consciousness.'' Grccmd~e said of the accident. Boise State coach resigns post BOISE, Idaho -Lyle Setenoch Ci] resigned Sunday u head football coach at c t Boise State University, the day after the Broncos ended the season with a 21-14 loss to the University of Idaho and posted their first losina )Car SJ.DCC 1946. ..It 1s with a JJ'Cll deal of revet that I have resigned my pos1t1on as head football coach at Boise State University," Setenc1ch said ... , feel that my rcsignaoon ts tn the best inteccsL of those ~Jc-wtru hA"e upponed me and those who have not • The Bronco had a S-6 overall record this season, and a J-4 record in the 811 ky. Conference. Crampton acorea big victory DELRAY BEACH. Fla. -Bruce n Crampton capped a rccord·5ellm& week· end by shooting a 4-under-par 68 on Sunday to wan the $200.000 Shcarson Lehman Brothen PGA Senior Oass1c by four strokes. Crampton, who had earlier rounds of 6S and 67, completed three rounds over the par· 72. 6, 75()..yard Olenea&)csCountryClubcourse in 200strokcs. two less than Che S4-hole record th.at was shared by li ve players. Crampton, who leads the senior tour with earnings of S4S4,299, won $30,000 after holding off a mild challcnae by runnerup Butch Baird. Norman captures Auuie title The club will also announce the oamma of former New York Yankees.. Dctro1 t Tigers and Boston Red Sox manaaer Ralph Houk to a part-time front office l)C?Sltion. the paper said .. The 20..ycar ba~ball veteran will ev1Juate players dunnJ tra1n1ng, 1t sa.1d. PERTH, Australia -Au trahan Greg n Al~. Bob Gebhard. a former Twins pitcher and the Norman, shrurJina off lack of mo11vat1on fann director of the Montreal Expos for the st fi.ve and t1rtdness 1n his 29th and final If yean. willbch1rtd t~evaluateplaycrtalentattf:: maJor tournament of the year, won the SIOO.~ lcaJu~_!~y.~l..~~ordinJ.~C?.!~~. ~10!'ccr ~ ~~'1:. -·-West Australian Ooen'bY <Snc \lroltC-Suncliy· · · I kb ,_ ,_ S After an mdifl'ercnt start in the tournament with a B ac aw ... •nap etreaa, -3 72 and 70, a phone call to has wife Laura at Bnsbane CHICAGO -Center Denis Savard Ii) collected his 'llXth career hat tnck, helping ' the Chicago Black.hawks end a seven-game winless treak with a S-J NHL victory over the New Jersey Devils Sunday night. Savard's third goal of the game and 12th of the season came while the Black.hawks were enjoyin4 a nine-minute power-play opponunity in tile third pc nod. Savard also scored on a 12-foot rebound shot in the third period and a five-foot wrist shot in the second penod-partofaquick, thrcc-aoal barraac byChicaao. Ch1caao dealt the Devils only their second loss in their last seven .-mes. fired him up for 1 sparkhna 6-under-par 66 Saturday and a final·round 68 Sunday for a 12-under-par total of 276 over the Lake Kamnyup Country Club course. Televialon, radio , TELEVISION 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTB ALL: New York Jets at Miami. Channel 7. RADIO 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: New York Jets at M11m1, KMPC (710). Area. sports calendar Ple1e, Lent hecll S..W.y C°'-L•e•-...CAA T~"'*.11 .t Aenont llllit•, l61W leitll SUM9y cou.•••-NCAA Townemen1 " 9e1mo11, Piere, LOl'l9 hKll r ~s ... r•-Cl IOI.I. who haCl four on the day, and that WI that. "If we ran ,ct the ball for our , ofTtnJC and aivc the k'am some momentum. we've done our JO~•• said eornerback Jerry C1ray. who had o.ne mticrceruon to push ha\ tC"am· lcad1n1 Iota to IC'YCn An<f rhc Ram& nei<Jed all the heTp they could act, Everett. the rookie quaner~k who wa bcina h tied H the me~siah that would lead the Ram• lo Pasadena after ha" \parkhna dcbul in la t week's 30.28 lo to the Patnou, appeared very monal gaanst the Saints. He completed just 7 ol' 20 • p s for $6 yard., and 1 pair of interceptions But Robinson \11d, "I like Jim Everett more today than I did la t week, in that he has• victory under his belt now, which 1s THE de- nominator for 1 quarterback:· B> Everett tartans the gamei. he became tl\c .Ram\' third tarting quarterback this sea~n and \he $iitth 1.•1 1n Robinson·~ four )ear:s a head c ch. . - That left fl to Dickerson carry the load, h1ch he did w1th his 116 yards ru h1na on 27 cames. one of them a four-yard touchdown run. Everett had a four-yard TO run ' him.elf and Lansford equaled his bigest day by lucking field goals of 32. 47, 29 and 44 yards The Ram were outpmed in net yardaae. 239 to 312. but they had onl> to go 29, manu~·s1x and eight yards on three of their Konng.dn vcs after the1t defense took the ball away. ,., ... , .... Orenge COiie OM. Y N.OT /Men .... Mli1 t 17 ... ,_. ,., .. AP ~ktaes Not even the retum o( Jim McMahon could 1tt the Ch1caao BHn• offense untracked. The swtina quartcrbick for the NFL chamPtons returned lo the tincup after miss1n1 more than 1 month with a shoulder injury. Still, the Bean blrely tQueaked past the 1ast-~cc Green Bay Packen 12-10 1n a vicious renewal· of lheir NFC Central nvatry. • Kevin Butler's 32-yatd field with 2:37 10 play lifted Ch1caao. 10-2. 1n the I 33rd meetina betwttn the teams. McMaho n completed JUSt 12 of 33 _paMCS for 9S y1rds and was inter- cepted three limes as he won his 23rd consecuuve start. He rushed sut ume1 for 64 yards and was replaced an the fourth quarter by Mike Tomczak. PatJiota' LaW"TeDee llcOrft (50)jolta ball from aw.• Jlal Kelly, reea.Jttnc la Nfety. LIOtll H, 811eeueert 17: Joe Ferauson threw for 230 yards and two touchdowns and rookie Chuck Lon~ lofted a 34-~ard touchdown bomb to Ltonard Thompson on his first NFl! pass "If you c"<pcct to win a game ofttus importance ~ou can't make the m1s- lAkes we made," said 3ints Coach Jim Mora. Quarterback Jlm Everett of the Ra.ma 111Da Into the end sone Cor a touchdown dmlDC thlrd quarter action qaln•t the Sal.Dta San- day. The Ram9 rolled"to a 2~1S Ylctory. The Bears fell behind I 0-9 when Ed West beat safety Dave Duenon for a 46-YB:rd touchdown pus from Randy Wn.ght wnh 7: .. 9 rcmarnina. But Duerson r~vcrcd a fumble by Gary EIJerson at the Green Bay 34 and Waltcr)>ayton earned lhree ttmtfi to move Chica&<> to the 14-yard line, settmg up the winnina field goal. F~rauJOn. a 14-year veteran fillina tn for 1n1ure<fquarterback Eric HJ~ pie, completed 14 of21 passes and was intercepted once before ajvin1 way to Lons. the Lions' No. I draft pick. with 2:06 left in the fourtt1 qu.artcr a.nd Detroit ahead 31-17. Ron Brown returned t:ie opening kickoff 49 )lrds and the Rams drove SI yards in ~ven pla)'~ for a 7-0 lead on Dickerson's head first dive into the end lOne. DEFENSE, AS USUAIJ, CARRIES RAMS. • • "I'm glad I didn't miss another F1eldaoalsofJ'land 18yard.,bphe Saints' Morten Ander'ltn made fl 10-6 at half and New Orleans didn't score again until the 5 SS mark of the fourth pcnod on a wven-yard Walson-to-Enc Martin TD pass "It 1A.ould ha"r been nice to keep them from sconn& that touchdown." said Robinson. "That would've meant we would have held them without a touchdown 1n the two µmes 'A-C played them th1\ vcar " The Rams have a bigger chore ahead. traveling travel to the Meado1.11landc; this Sunday to face the New York Jets who currently have the best record Jn the NFL. "This race 1c; ll&ht one... ..aid Lansford "EHT) kick from now on will be a b1a one, but I thank the team From Cl 11 .. and m}sc=lf arc up for the cha engc. Cromwell. 31. a quarterback and hurdler at the University of Kansas, is coM1dertd to have e!lc,cptional ath· let1c ab1hty. In the third quarter unday. he Jumpc:d like a center fielder to puJL tn Wilson's unde_r- thrown pass Yntcnded for Kelvin Edwards at the Saints' 24-yard line 'That 1ntcrcept1on reminded me of the good old da)s," said the 10-year veteranstrona safety. l romwell gives the 1mpress1on that he's on a m1ss1on. He'.s played 1n one Super Bowl an which his team lost I le would hke to get the chance to be on a team that wins one and the Rams. he believes. are as good a team as any to do tt this )car. "I don't care how many yean you play you don't get many chanc~s (at the UJ)CT Bowl) and )OU don't want to blow the good ones:· Cromwell said Cromv.ell's. second interception came in the fourth quarter and apin he was at the right place at lhc right umc. running under a deflection of Mark Jeruc"t tipped pass at the New Orleans 37-yard line. The Rams failed to score but at least New Orleans was detained from sconna.. With the Rams leading 7-0 in the fir t quarter Jerry Gray made the Rams' first mtercept1on to kill a New Orleans dnve at the Rams 43 Everett threw the second of his two 1nterccpt1ons within a minute though to give the Saints the ball back where Gra) took tt away from them. New Orleans moved the ball to DtrlJ""' ..... .,""" ~ Ram• defenel•e ead Gary Jeter ea.cu 8alnta quarterback Da•e Wllaon. Once-rriighty Dolphins,µnderdogs -\ ' one, .. Butler. who had missed his last 1ns1de the Ram one-yard hne but on four field aoal tries. said. 'Tm not fourth down. Wil\On was draaged used to mi.ssina four tn a row ... down behiad the line of saimmaic EJscwhCS'4 in tho NFL unday; Wilson tned to move over ri&ht auard llffsklat 41, Cewboys 14: Jay Chuck Commiskey but the flams left Schroeder threw for 230 yard and side hit ham straight on, bouncing two touchdowns in the first half auhc him into his backfield. Free safety Washt~ton Redskins built a 34-0 Vince Newsome finished him off. lead en route to a victory over lhe "Of the four interceptions. l would Dallas Cowbo)'s. hke to have the first one back," ThcRcdskmsscorcdonsix ofthetr W1l\On said ... That was a temblc read eight first-half posse ions while on my part. "Then when they got limiting the Cowboys to 43 toul ahead. they dropped into a really yaJ"d,. Dallas, which beat Wuh1naton &ood zone· defense and played very 30-6 earhcr this season, bad never aggressively to the ball." before surrendered more than 31 That awess1veness was apparent points m one half. on Sutton s interception which was Browu 37, Steelers ll: Bernie the Rams' fourth Sutton. listed as the Kosar htt rookie Webster Slaughter back-up to Gray who 1s the back-up to Wlth a 36-yard touchdown pa s with ~Roy ll"\ian at nght cornerback. took 8:23 left 1n overtime as lhe Browns a gamble b)' steppma 1n front of wide comP.leted thetr first sweep of the receiver fa1gene Goodlow runnana tcclm since 1969. <Jown the s1deltnc at the Saints 40-Kosar finished with 28 comple- yard lane. If Sutton isn't aggressive uonsan 46attcmptsfor414yardund enough. he masses the pas~ and It's six t"-O touchdowns. surpassin& his ca- poants for the aina. rccr best of 401 yards achieved two But Sutton reached up on the dead weeks earlier apinst Miami. lau&h- run. caught the ball and returned Jt 20 ter. who cauJht ix pe for I ;l' \ards to thr Saint~ 20. That set up yards. streaked down the left 1deltnc i.an~ford's fourth goal and 11 was b}e-and. aided by Kosar's pump fake. 101 b}e \amts ... You have to&•'? their behind the Plltsbuflh defense. He defen~ credit ... s~ud New Orleans caught the ball at the 14 and earned at cornerback DaH Waymer who had into the end zone. an interception h1msdf unday. Patriots u. Bills lt: New England "The} came up wtth the turnovers at ralhed for victory for lhe second the n&ht tune:· consecunvc week and has~on its last Doss. the Rams' 263-pound de-six pmes. Tony Eason's t 3-yard fens1ve end who recovered a fumble touchdown pass to rookie t1&.ht end by New Orleans fullback Buford Gres Baty with I :40 left overcame Jordan at the a ants 22 on the first Buffalo's rally from a I 5-0 deficit pla} of the th1rd quarter. was another The Btlls had taken a 19-15 lead on 01Tens1vc threat for the defense. His Jim Kelly's 31-yard sconna pass to recover) led to the Rams' second Robb R1dd1ck with 2· SO to go. But touchdown. a 4-yard scramble b) Baty's first NFL touchdown capped a E:.vcrctt That made at 17-6 and the five-play. 60-yard dnve snake-bitten Saint~ were scratch1na Glaats It, BroDCOt H: The v1ants their helmets 1A.Ondenng what coutd also~'O?ftareln I game for the second ~o v.rona ne'-t straight wttk. thanks again to \\1th the Rams defcn~. 1t could placck1ckcr Raul Alleve. Wtth m ha"c been JU\t about .m)lhtng. seconds left. Allegre kiclced has fourth * field goal of the pme. a 34-yardcr. ltAMS NOTIS R-v• •u<m"9 11a<1< MMr• Last week. he beat Minncwta 1A.tth a Qvmaft .... , IOtl ~ , .... rema•l'ld« of ,,.. '"'°" field goal in lhe final seconds w "'torn It,,.. oamen11,.. suffered "1t1e '"'' The kick capped an:ti1 t-play. 55-_,,., Teck n ,..,..., left Ille oame wttll ..i ..t-.... _ fj I 55.. J>h·' · . ..,.,,.., ,,,,r~ l'KIOfl-~ 'IM~ tuOT···¥'lr.,,.. • .,....we Ul UK;.. • . u •or 111e Jett°" Suncsav WMn '"'"'end T_.. Simms hit on a 24-)'ard. third-and-21 ~=.:·~:',=:~~":':'~!:: pahss from dPh1l.u.S1mmds to BoPbhb)1 """' tne1 wl'IO w a •••• No " VllKe Jo nson an a -.v-yar toss to 1 ,..,,_ 11e rred •• ''" '91etv In ~• of McConkey that put the ball at the JtMflle J.,_... Wh9ft Hlled wlly lie tnlKle the ()cnvcr 15 Wlth 28 SCC'Ond\ tO play move It•""'' COKI\ J9M It~ seod • e.-ceuH ... , clt(1ded to No o•lltr rHson" JoMIOfl d•d C>lev wllen Ille ltem1 went Into lllt•r olckte Beap11 u, vw.p it: t.anlC') Wilson ran for two touchdowns in • 21-J>c:>ant fint quarter for Cincmnatt, which handed Minnesota iu fourth lo s in five pmes. W1lso1fs run of two and five yards helped the Benpb build a 21-20 halftime lead and Cincinnati's second-half defen blanked the Vikinp. -· The Vikings were without Tommy Kramer, the NFC"s top-ranked pa scr. who was s1dchned by a sprained thumb on h•s throwioa hand. -...,. Oilen 11, Colts 11: Warren Moon threw thrtt touchdown passes fot Houston. kccpina the Colts winless in · 12 pmc . Moon connected on scor• ina pa scs of35 yards to Ray WaUace and ctr.ht yard to Drew Hill an a pan of 3'.42 in the third quarter. The Hou ton defense knocked Colts quarterback Jae Trude.tu from the pme with a bruited should~ S.tc in the third qoancr. _ 4kn H , Palcou t: Jerry Rice made his 13th touchdown catch of the ~ and San Fnmcitco teammate Dw1aht Clark ran his pass reception st~ak to IOOpm~. help1n1the49crs beat the Atlanta. Don Gnffin scored on a 7~yard punt return for the 49crs. who did all their sconna 1n a one-sided first halt and had no sconna threats an the second. Se8'a•kl u . Eagles !O: Seattle! rookie Bobby Joe Edmonds returned · a punt 75 yards fora touchdown wtth 11 second left in the first half and lho Scahawks held on to snap a four..pmo NFL lo ing streak with a victory over the Philadelphia Eagles 1 Edmonds. the lcaauc's lcachna punt returner. scored 62 seconds after Seattle's Kerr) Ju lln blocked a John T'l1sch1k punt. enc Lane recovered the ball on the Ph1ladclphla 12 and ran at an to the end zone'. CardlDa.11 U, Cklefs 14! Neil l omax. back from a two-week benching. passed for three touch- down • to to J T mtth a.nd one to Roy Green Lomax. who was re- .Pl.ac~4 .b.Y (h tr. i9~4J.(Qr. tbt.l•n 1w.o •. -... pmcs htt drecn for a 5-yard scote1 . and connected on 25-and 4-)&.rd p3s5Cs to math in the second half. Kan~s Caty fell to 7-S. severely· dama11n1 au playolT hopes and d•me oenil'O cttfense' The Item' lour :~':'ii':~~::.:~~,~ ~~~ .. "Z:u~~.~:! Eag.1es sad~led wltb sack record cuv On,,,. Item,· uocom•no oame wllll tl>e _ Jets Cle'ft"'lvt end Gerv J..iw Mid. "I've been lool!lllO 10,.werd to 1111\ I went to '" If lhev'rt rH llV es 0000 n their rKOl'd Tl'lev could be • teem we·N '" eoe111 " T11e1·, lf Ille Rem1 end Jtt\ make II 10 Pt'9~ Jen 2S ltl7 s.11111 ru11111119 beck ltlM!beft ~vft, the teecMo roo61it rutl\er In tllt NFC com,,. 11110 SunCS.v'1 oeme with tlO verCI\ eelded 71 rno<e on 20 cemt1 SEATTLE (AP) -lhe P~lladelph1a EaiJe 5Cl a Nauonal Foot~ll ~ague record for sacks allowed an a season when they suffered nine unday 111 a 24-20 loss to the Seattle Sea hawk~ bnngtng the total to 73 The old mark of70 wao; wt by the .\tlanta Falcons in 1968 The nine ~ck~ of quarterback Randall C unnanaham al~ 'let ~ahawks club record Bo79 • Club ba•ketl>ill Rtg1\tr111on " curTCntl> under wa~ 11 the Nrwport Beach 8o)'s· Club for ·the 19 7 intramural ha'kctball tcason S11nups. for bo an lflldc:~ I· . will be held on a tint~~. fint- ~nc hem throuah Sunday. S11nuP'1 arc bt'1n1 held at the f..ast Bluff e~nch localN II 25SS Vt ta Del Oro tn c:~pQn Beach For more 1111l>rmatton, phone 640-6650 \ Marriott bo1d:f Tae.da7 Hunllngton · tk hfquard·tumcd-boxcr John "rm•JO .. ,11 he on Tuc5Cbi)'s card at thr In inc Mamon Hotel. takan on '\\'utmWtcr's Millon Bush 11 160 pound 4'rm1JO. who IS 3-0 I\. pro, I I IJlldUllC of Edison Hiah and v.as an outst1nd1n s1o1.1mmrr thrrc The houl "~hrdulrd fl r 'll rounds Also on the card, Gl'q Pucnlt' .. ,11 battlt' francnco Staura for the -v1can1 stale super fcathcrwe1Jht 1tllc tn a I 2·round bout T1c'kct, ere 1"11lablt' 11 MC"pn's 1n the Irvine HcnUt h pp1na nt r and at a.ll Tad.ct• ma tcr loca11on . Bo-.m1 tqins at 7. 'O W.oodbrldg.e: Slz.e, talentnoproblem- 8W 8baanoa and bl.a Wood- brldee Warrlon rate utile tam to .,_t for Pad.Re Cout ~e honon. Brown closing in on 300wins Fountain Valley's outlOOk bright for coming s eason By ROGER CARL.WN ot--Dlllf,....... . Victory No. 300 will come to Fountain Valley Hi&h ba~etball c .. cb Dave Brown this season - Which is testimony in itself as to the Darons' prospects for tbe I 986-87 campaign. . . Hts previous 17 teams have won shen league champ1onsh1ps and • earned bids to the CIF playoffs 11 times. and on two othe~ occasions rttisscd the playoffs by an eyelash in third-place pla~ofl' games. aniors, wit 6 -8 Keefe. 6-7 Bryan, gure to be among best In the county BJ ROOD CAIU...4'0N f ............... Fora Iona dme they wercJust tryina to aet in the p()91 with the ~t of the JU)'Sr. now the} find themlt'l 'f es &uch a bi& rash, many arc wonderina ho-A anyone else w1ll aet a chance to act wet when Pacific Coast uaauc basketball bclins in January. 8111 Shannon's Woodbridge War· nors. 21·7 a year ago de~pite never brcaking lnto the Oranat County top 10,, figure to be one of the cor· ncr·stones in Orange Count)"s top I 0 · all year and are 1he early, earl) favorites to wm the CIF 2-A cham· p1oosthp. lfall that gives }Ou the lm~rc ion the Warriors arc loaded, )OU re n&ht At 6-7, 225, senior Vine~ Bl)an nas already been 1.-ndcd by Bngham Young Umver it)•. And with 6·8 Junior Adam Keefe. the tram's lrad1na scorer as a w_()homorc ( 18.1). it's a form1dablt pair. Bryan averqtd 11.9 point a &amc as a JUnior. But that's only two of what Shan- non calls his Big Three • Bill York', a two-~ear letterman at 6-4. fiaure · in a tnplc post ~ystcm. with auards David fownscnd and 6-2 Junior lcf\-h <1er Rob Lee lending their 1upport. Townscn<i is a returning starter. but lik:e }a,_year aao. 1$ presently nufi1n1 tome· bump\ and bruise from football . two-year all-league selection in football. he is sllll embro1lee 1n the football playoffs. "Without Townsend we have Ted •Tobiason (S-10 senior) and we'll see about Denick Odum (5-10 junior) an<l~Jay Golden (.S.10 \eDIOr)." d Shannon. 0'C:hn Deibert (6·2 sophomore) i) our fil'\t ub in the front line .. " Mike Juarc1 (S-10 ~n1orl. 6-5 Ooua Sherwood, 6· I Rodnc Su1s1e and Wcstm1n ter transfer Troy Lucas (b-0 senior' round out the squa~. \\oodbndac won't be enJO)ltn& as much ofthc b1& fish 1n hallow watel") .. ituauon throuah IA"<'cmber with entry m the Sonora-Sunny Hill and l~inc 1oumamen1 . a well a!> a hi~· pov.ercd Las Veaa., lnv1 tat1onal. "We felt the more competitive our non-kaaue and tournament ~awn waswouldpayofl'foru io le guc.and hopefullr thc pla,offi ," said Shan· non. "We don't ha-.e any wm-1~ goal" soma 1n10 ltaaue. We ju~t want to make today better than )esterda) pomtin toward our leaauc ~ason," The amol'1' look will be con- s1dcrati y · fferent from a )'Cir ago when Mike Murph ) .(now" .al Redlands University) knded his In all the Barons have won 293, lost I I, for a winning perccntaac of 67.S rcent -and that all adds up to JUSt e thing for current expectations Okpcct another ClF pla)'Ofl' berth. a.nother winmna season, another Da'rid Roblneon etretche. hl• 7-1 frame u Na•al Academy'• field hou.ee. He'• Navy'• ~und and respected quintet. he prepare. for practice ,aelon In the hope for a third etraJcbt trip to the NCA.Ae. Back from a 13-13 squad arc 6-6 1 ~~ ~v~nJu~~~t)~ a(~dl 6-~oR~~. 111 •d h e . . &.• d th ;r;,::·~:::::::::: J.riJ s ipmen .1.Jn e J.6 ~~~~11: .. :~;:dral~~f~~·~~ r.i·g.'JJ t n um beris'• 7 1 pmes; and 6-5 Tom Rochltn .. ~erased 3.4 points a game in 19 e pea ranees. "'Waite was our ~ond leading rebounder at six a game." said Brown. "Ric~ Brand, a 6-2 senior, was our MVP on a I J.11 junior varsity tea m and the JVs finished third in leaaue. "We expect Tom Weaver and Steve Grack. two 6-0 sophomores, to make maJor contributions. Weaver couJd be an excellent point guard before he graduates "Team success will depend on improvement by our big auys inside and consistent shooting by the wing men. And we've got to improve on last year's team shooting. which was Just 37 percent from the field and 52 percent at the ltne." said Brown RObinson ma kes Navy a solid s hot at NCAA playof!s ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -At 7- foot· l , David Robinson 1s too big to fit comfortably in a submanne or a Navff-4 Phannortrlet."bur he's just the nght size for the Naval Academy's basketball program mauer-of-factl y of his basketball talents. At the end of his soph ore year. when there already was k f an NBA career and million-do ar con· tracts. he opted to stay at the academy, commiung himself to five years of military service when he graduates next May. How did the Naval Academy. home of shon hair and short bask.ct- balf pla)'ers. wind up with a man many believe 1s one of the best 1n the nation'> Robinson chose thc Nav>. 11 ct1dn't choose him. Robin~n was entering a growth spun B> the umc his freshman season arrived. RobiMon was 6-9 and still growing. He reached 1 feet last year: ?-1 this year. Robinson's basketball pr.owes grew even more quickly than his height, and as he beglns his last season, he already holds NC AA recordi. for most blocked shots 1n a g?me (14). scai.on (207) and career {372). outi!de touch 1t•s an n y 1llustrauon on how you .. We'\t~ tned to dcv1tc some of· haH~ to be read) every niah t fcruo whcrc the thr« (KCt"fc1 Bryan .. nd, we'll have to be prepared for and York) will end up at d1~nt people "'ho ra1y ho.Id the baJI:. or position ," Sl•d Shahnon ''We're not • coml' 1n with a 11mmtek ddtntt. aoing to anchor anyone. Concerns about four<omer of· "I feel Adam and Vinccarcao•na to fonse and aimmiek defenses-that's ~t a lot of anent ion, but we're not probably the best way to descnbe the aoina to make it easy on the defense. ·Warrior -only the best have such "Whether we stc man or 1one. and problems. • · •• I would suspect we'JI see a lot ohone WMdbtldle Hlttl ~ jn kague, we·rcaoan& with a variation o.c 10 1,_., SOnot• SuMv Hui. 111v1re11o1M11 of. triple po~t. Our trtngth ii our tFlrtl rO\)nct' Vt fffwOO(I Mtrtiof, uo, •t l'z'"" • S-el ' "' O.C IS•l,.._.I lrvl,.. 1nv1t1Uon.I L« may be the ace-in-the-hole for o.c 26-27, 2'·»-et ua "''"' 1nv111110M1 Warr10fi IFlfAI round ... Cen~. us el UNL.V ~Ill) • • S.I Jell )-el NtWOOl'I HtrtlOr A 6-2 Junior. he was the JUn1or • Fri ' Jen ,_.., CorONI dtt w.r . va,..;1ty'\ MVP and led his team in -s.1 : Jen. •~Ml"'°" v1eto.!:?'' every • ca1~ory -from ahootina ~rt°"J J•~,~~~,.... pcrcentagca and a 1 t , to sconna w~ • .111\. 21-ueune H ,. cftOIM> and n:boundine f'rl .. Jell n-or.,,... ll'IOIMI C •-.. Wtd Jen ,......, TratluCO H ... omp .. ~ney wall not be a prob-Fri .. Je" »-LeOuN a.di. enc.me> lem, att0rd1n1 to Shannon. Wtct . Ftfl .-Cost• Mew· 111omt> "All we have to do " look ar our Fri· Fell .,_., Le~ H. • fi bait ••. d h "O Wtd. Fell n-.1 0r..-oot lcam. sa1 annon r-f'rJ Feo 1J-Tr1DUCO H • !llOn'ltl ange (I 23-7 winner) was a real ·-1 .. Pac••it coe11 LMiM""" hocker. and losina to Laguna Hills. J:JO IU non·'"9Ut end laffut ...,,_. Ml'" e\ Philade lphia stocked With good t eams Vi llanova. Temple. St . J oseph ·s. Drexel, Penn, LaSalle loaded By Associated Press With Vill1tnova, Temple.; t Joseph's, La Salle. Penn and Drctel, the city of Philadclpht.a 1s looking at a lot of Division 1 college basketball victories this season. Villanova figures as a ton tender Jn the Bil EasrConfcmta;"'fempte a!T<t St Joe's head the Atlantic I 0, La Salle is a front-runner in the Metro Atlantic Second In a .erle. Athletic Conference, Penn ranks as an Ivy League challenger and Drexel appears the best in 1he East Coast Conference. Temple, with Tim Perry. and defending champion St Joe·,, with Rodney Blake, boast thc best big meo in the Atlantic 10. mak.tng them J>O$Slblc contendc.rs on lhc nau~naJ scene. Perry and Blake ranked 2-3 in nation last season in blod.ed hots behind Navy's David Robinson Temple lost Ed Coe. a 15.6 scorer. from last season's 25-6 team, but has fou r other staners back. John Chaney's Owls have a sohd backcoun in Nate Blackwell and Howard Evans and the league's top rebounder and shot blocker in Perry, a 6-9 j Un1orwho averaged 11.6 points, 9.S rebound . Also up front is 6-10, 260..pound Ramon Rivas. SLJ.oe's.26-6 last stason. has only two starters back -the burly 6-8 Blake and 6-7 forwud Orea Mulltt. But there arc plenty of cxpenenced holders. includina auard Wayne Wal· ham wno 11l 1ry10fill 1hc brnch left b} the departure of A.tlllnt1c 10 Plllyer of the Year Maurice Manin. a 17 8 scorer. Larry Korcu. 13.2 points and 5. t rebounds The Explorers had a b.a loss in Chip Greenberg. a 16.8 scorer. Fairfield which lost a combtncd a 35 5 points and 13 rebounds f~m George and Pat Ycnna. should l)c a contender with a backcoun or Ed Golden and AJ W)ndcr and 64l Jeff Gromos heading the fronth~e. The Big East lost two. would-be seniors to the NBA draft -WaJter Berry or St. John's and Dwayne "'Pearl" Washington of Syracuse - making it a wide-open race. The Btg East coaches picked Georgetown to win the league crown over Pittsburgh, by one vote. Hoyas Coach John Thompwn was surprised by the vote because he has only one rctumini starter. But it'll be no surpnse 1r Villanova. Syracuse or St. John's wins. V11lano\a Coach Rollie Mass1m1no. who lost a key player in Harold Prcssle). has recruits 6-10 Barry Bckkedam and 7-2 Tom Gries to work into the frond1nt with 6-11 W)'all Maker. 6-7 Mark Plansky and 6-6 Ooua We l. The back.court is Kt with senior Harold Jensen and so~homorc Kenn)' Wilson. Reaa1e W11hams. 6-7 senior swinaman. will be asked to do even more tlllS season for Georgetown after a"eragina 17.5 points. 8.2 re- bounds last season. Hts teammates ha\e little expenence. Johnathon Edwards, 6-8 sophomore, takes over at center for Ralph Dalton. Other Jc~ Ho)as who have graduated: David Wingate, Michael Jackson and Horace Broadnax. Guards Dwayne Bryant and Mark. T11lmon.1onva.rds Anthony Allen and Sam Jefferson and 7-1 Ben G1llcry hope to carry on Georgetown's winrun' thldition 10 the next fou r years. Others include seniors Jim Dill (6-6) and Kcvm·s brother. Pat Waite ·· ... ·· · · .. f6-n 1., ·~II u .Joho WaJ~Qtt (6-0). Rick Brand (6-2). Mark M\ kels (6-2> With his graceful layups, soft dunks and awesomcdcfens1vcab1ht1cs-he alone had more blocked shots than any team last year eit~t na11onal cha mpion Lou1sv1lle -·Robinson has pulled the academy's basketball program to heights undreamed offive The son of Ambrose and Freda Robinson of Dale Cny. Va .• Rob- inson grew up in a Navy family. His father was a sonar technician who re11red after 20 years and went 10 work for a defense contractor in the Washington. D C. area. He has a shot 1h1 )Car at becoming the first player in NC AA h1stol) to finish h1scareerw1th more than 2.500 points, 1,400 rebounds and a field- goal shootmg mark of better than 60 percent. He 1s a v1r;tual locl to jOtn Kareem Abdul-Jabbar of UCLA and Pa1nek Ewina of Georgetown as the onl)' players to reach 2,100 points, 1.300 rebounds and a 60 percent average. West Virginia, which JOtncd Tem- ple and S1. Joe's in the NC AA pla>ofl's last season. also should co ntend but won't have 6-6 Chns Brooks, a prep s.tandout who was declared academically inehgiblc. The Moun- taineers. who lost their backcoun of Dale Blaney and Holman Harle). present a veteran frontcourt of Dar- rell Pinckney. Darryl Prue and Wayne Yearwood. Pm's nuckus conststs" of Chatles Smith. a 6-10 junior who ave~ 15 9 points, 8 I rebounds last season and was 1mprcss1ve. in the World Games th1~ summer, and holdovers Dcmetreus Gore, Curtis Alken and Jerome Lane. Pitt Coach Paul Evans, a di~ c1phnanan from Navy, admits he's short on depth since losina four rreshmen to academic problems. . . ·- • and Andrew Tulumello (6-l ) fleutnlfl Vatev H'9tl KMdule Wtd • 0t< J -Comoton lllomel Fri., Ot< S -et Min ion VleiO Ot< 9· 11 -a.ro11 Cleule Ot< 1'·20 -er Arrovo Grenci. ToYrnemenr 0t< 26·77, 2'·30 -at OrttliM TOUU.melll Tuei Jen 6 -11 Ocean vie..,• ":f Wtd • Jen 14 -Huntington luc11• lllomel Fri.. Jen 16 -11 EdllOll' Wed , Jen 11 -Wtilmln"tr' Cllomt) Fri., Jen 2J -11 Merine' Fr1., Jen lO -Ocetn View• (~) Wtd. Ft!> 4 -•t HunfllfOIOn llHCll' Frt. Feb 6 -EdllOll' Cllomt) Wtd Ftt> I 1 -el W11tm1n1rer• Fri. Ftt> IJ -Merine' Chomtl •c1enot1t Sun .. 1 LHllut Otmt All non·1t1oue end lteoue Qtr'llti *'" 11 700 Coast compe tes l a to urnam ent SAN JACINTO -Unbeaten Or- ange Coast College (3-0) faced Palomar toda)' at 4 in 1he opemna round of the eight-team Hemet Rotary Tipofl'T ournament. here. ln other tourney games. Maty· rilount and MiraCosta me1 at 2 Victor Valley face Riverside CCet 6 "d San Bcmardmo tanalcs with host Mt. San Jacinto at 8. )'ears ago. 'fhe M1dd1es are expected to 10 to the NCAA postscason tournament for the third str.ught year aad are nationally ranked 1n various prescason polls. Basketball uckets, which couldn't be given away in the past. arc now a hot item. Media attentton, once reserved for the football team, 1s focused on Robinson and his team· mates. But for the academy. the 21-year· old senior is more than jU4'l a great basketball player. He's a dream come true. ofl' the court as well as on. At a time when athletes are drawing attention for flunking out. Robinson camn a 2. 7 grade-point avera~c in a tou&h math major. and says hes "not really happy about that." Robinson excelled from an early age. He entered a program fo r gifted children in the fir\l vade and auend· ed colleae computer courses when he was 14. Robinson occas1onally played pickup basketball games as a young- ster, but never played compcutively until his senior year m high school. By then, he had already decided he wonted to go to the Naval Academy and applied on his own. Nav y coaches were undoubtedly pleased to learn a 6-foot-7 basketball playerwhoscorcd 1,320on his college board wanted to come to the academy. They thought that. with a lot of work, he would tum into a good forward . . Neither Navy's coaches nor the bia- ttme powers that ignored him knew Nav) 's opponents won't be pleased to hear that he thinks he has improved smce last )ear and wants to be even better. ''I think I've grown a b1t 1n that I'm more confident," he said in a recent 1nterv1ew. "Now. I want to act stronger inside. JO to the basket more aga.ress1vcly. improve my jump shot. I ex~ct a lot more out of myself this year,' he said. "I feel hke I can be the be t. That's my aoal •• • The bia question now concern!> professional basketbalJ. There 1s no doubt he wants a profe 1onal career. "That's prett) UT\portant to me. That's something I'm ~triving for." he said. There arc two new coaches tn t~c Atlantic 10-St Bonaventure ass1s.- tant Ron DeCarh replac-ed Jim O'Brien (now at Boston Collele) and Tom Penders (cit-Fordham took over at Rhode Island in pace of Brendan Malone, now working for the New York Knicks The MAAC lost some aenume stars in Fairfield's Tony George and Holy Cross' Jim McCafTerty and five of at tight coaches. • Bill "Sj)CC<Jy" Morris, who moved from the women's team to &he men· team at br Salle, npects 1mme<h to contribution from 6-6 ·Lionel Sim- mons, a Philly P-roduct. to go along ~1th fourrc1umingst.arters, includtna He's.ho.ping to get his •"erage beck up to 3.0 while playing basketball and carrying a cla s load that mcludes ~~~~~~.°uhr::~~n~~~c:,cx.~::· B k t b 11 Al~ d '.. l l ~tifi~~~~~d~rer!~11~f/~~e~~~~~:,~ a s e a 1 or s on y ov e his answers rui.htnJ out in a torrent or words that contain not • truce of Indiana sen tor is Io n -e returntn..a___ ~~~ pme fi~t nd>1hen learn the fundamen.tals, the ba'\IC arropncc or pride even as he speaks _ -~ndamcntnl of 1t, and then start learning the other ;;;======-=-=-=-=--====:::;;:-=====;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;i fi rst team college All -American things. the an11capat1on factor. be1~ crca_ttve. rcadina PUBLIC ND'ICE _ ~~~cnscs and reading offen~s and th1nas hke this, later BLOOMINGTON. Ind. (AP)-When 'il<"\:tl Alford "8v1 I thtnk the key point to )'Oung ktd 1~ju t to fall• wants a workout he hoot a basketball. When he want'! in love with the game ... lf you don't have 1 cc:nain love Th. Ficker Famlly to rcloit, he shoots a ba ketball. When he want, 10 have for1t,)ou'rcnevcraoin1toachievesucce\ and)ou'renot fun, h shoots a baskttball. really 1oin1 to ~t .the full enjoyment out of play11fl " The game wa hi first love and his be t friend. It still !ford's enjoyment kd to success at every level, alao known a• Angela Ficker Whit e is. confounding the doubters who thought he was too ~mall, -=-'-a S Fi k "I think 1t aoc back to when t wa, )Oung," ~•d too low or rperelv a one-dimen ional shooter. He an uzy c er are lnd1an•'s6-2scorinattadcr.th1 'sonl) roturnina an v.ers~cnuaonthecoun,andhelike provmgthem 0 fi.r Heam All·Amencan. "It ~ems hke ba'\ketball '' v.ron Vehemently -pposed alwaY1 there for me. It' ilwa)' been somethma I've ••rthinkthat'span.maybe,ofmymy uque,"hesaid Cn.JO)Cd aotna. t''" mv"' ~n pushed, ~ d to be .. I like for people to •Y that. TIW• ~id that my frc hman to pu hrd. to play the pmc:· year 1n hiah ~hool, that rd JUSt be another c ch'• son M.alur. A Havana a father "ho 1 a c ch, of course. ha~ thatdidn'umounttoan)th1ng. They 1dlcouldn'tpl1y somethina to do with 1t. 1n high hoot, and 1 ended up be1na Mr. Ba kctball and :rhe yo unger Al1ord. now a n1or with C ch Bob pl:&)1n11n a lot of all· tarp me and in the pOM Fe 11val . • NO VOTE la your wt dl<_!!~ahdetd'• ... aHrool) s1n1er,1\,:car1haewt ~)!.,1e"tba'1"1· .. ~ ':hhooat'm'aydme h1nmd .. nerpcoplcuwmeinthc Jl(>rt\fcstaval,thcy id ........ .. 1~ 11i1~11. • ... I couldn'tplay in th Bia Ten year later, I -Aa in the cha.nee :to prevent your community from happy. Ol)mp1( Game ·• becoming a CO"'p&nY town. " 1y fatherdadn't pn: ure meoran}th1na like this lford, ptay1 n1 for Kn11ht 1984 Olymp t"' squad, ··11 He alwa) had ab II and aoal available to me. and 1f I """the }OUnat t member of-the U. 1otd medal team. palcl for bJ lusy Ficker • eupport.,. of QHdloolti wantal to pick 1t dp thar was mvown choice," Alford said Two )CU~ later, as a Junior at Indiana, he a~cn.atd 22 .S " tan early aae. lth1nk n·· importantto I rn m lo~c point a pmc and wasa first-team II· men n • )racuse Coach Jim Boehtim-hat h11h hopes for freshmen Derrick Coleman, 6-9, and Steve Thompson 6-3, who Join 6-10 center Rony Seikaly and holdovers Howard Triche, Greg Monroe and Sherman Oougla. In addihon to Washinaton, the Orangemen lost Rafael Addison and Wendell Alexis. Guard Mark Jackson, lbe nation 's top J~s1st man last ·1CaS00, will be shoot1na more for St. John's since both Betry and Ron Rowan are aone. The_ ~cCfmen aot a bia boost when the NVAA rescinded its suspension of 6-11 sophomore Marco Baldi over expenses paid by his Italian club Veterans Willie Gius and Shelto~ Jones arc other returnees. while recruits Marcus Broadnax and Elander Lewis wdl help. l MXTH aACI. I Milt Turi Cl\itlll (T0tol SOot11t11 An (VO'-"lU.le) "" v. ( S.t>Ulo' Time 1.lU :uo uo '20 •oo uo uo HOO UO •00 00 JOO "'° 3.0 uo uo .. '° uo S20 AIM llOf\. Ftving ftrOWfl, VWCl'llCO'S °""'• SlrM!iey, SOeflofmoon. ~ Joell, E~. LadY Helclw, CorlMllo Saotel* Vlvro En Pol•, Movtle A l(lu, Plumoetro . ltoc."'61 G lf1, Ant IQUe l.Ko Hoft A· ~ Crvele ~ l'.tlON Olllt'Y No•e a·~~ Jooft ~ Fl'Me ftro.m 00\lly Nvmme UC&. '"'*" ....., ... ~, 21• ., .... Vertotlll~ •to :UQ ~--G4'lll ™9u> Uf Tin-. 1•• AllO Ital! .... T~o. °" IY OIMa. Hot Motet AcrotcflM. NonMrn "9lkv SJ IXACTA 11 .. 1 "'9 tn• 11 PD llX (t+H•I et >-11 ~ tl.NUO w•lfl .. ...,,,..,, (ffwe '*Mtll Ptld U'20 wllfl '·* -~· llolir Mrtetl lleMTM ltACm. 1~ Miiot TU'f ~iallte l~Wl'IUIMftl JUO 17 40 10.40 .,\Mfutdlk• IV .......... ) 14 00 I eo ltetov , .. , • 20 · Tll'M 14' AIW 1to11; IOMO It, Ou<kwllk, T• Cot• M90. OUttl~Y. ltoyol .... ,,, $11Y•ll't. l(r_.,,.,, s.tvo. MAM c-.,. Sctolel>od SIOI C-.0, ,..,._, Mt•tll. • "IXACTA 17·11 Hid uweo U DAILY TalPLI 11 or J •7•7) Nod IOMW ......,.... llACL 1 lill MllH TU(f ltal'l'IPOUf <Ollvwos> 11411 11.61 SM Trtyef (Co,,...) HO l• Av1-IOt CV ...... uelol UO Time .H11 • Alto llM ftuctvote. ~. PH 0o CllOW, hwd .Moofllte, tt·1 Nol NIY JtO, At'ftf~, ·-C.,ftlno, OHi_., SCtolOlocl WOotKlll, lteftlymne .h""911, Too Mucti Fot TV $2 IXACTA <l·41 N>CI tl5UO All~ ~.7C» MullAI Handle '4,M Sl7 Falrplez ·• • SU..OAY'S alSUl.TS 111111 .. »·•· ...... ._..., ,.ST aACL Peco I 114 MJle Creve Ok:llJe IVllllt\OllONml :t 40 140 1.0 Ll.ll'llW Shlco (Jome. LkkOVI 3 20 110 Oem•on (Todd) 1 to Time US 1 A'1o Went PIHi londtt, Notnon Porfl A, Sill-• lnYOder, Strolont Eklnt Sctotctlecl. OuncM!lt Chief. U IXACTA (Ml Hid 11100 MCONO ltACI. Poce 1 Mitt. WiM Ori"" (Andtf'son) SOO )00 UO WOOO HY ~nd) 3 20 2 IO Genhon N (Plo1'01 1 .0 Time· 1:514 AIM Went: CoJ>loln Corrott, .i.u The iroko H Mollbu 8Mcfl Scf•tclltd· Nono U DAN.. Y DOUaLI { M ) Hid S7 .0 12 •XACTA 1 .. 2) Mid l IS .0 THIRD •ACI. Poce 1 m .. Le¥el S..utY (KIU) ~ Troowre (Hvtl'\Oll) Ann .. G Turi* (W1~d) . T1me,.... SOI 210 210 uo ) 00 uo Ano W«ll' S.y Fio-, GY!>iY L«e, ~lre,11111 Saok:tled Felos ~ H It ll'OUlt'hl aau, ,.._. ' #tll!I AMlo •ov ... N ("'9noJ ,. UI ZM $Med 0 CNrlOt (""U) ... 41 a C#eWlflM ,...,...,, uo ':rllN HOJ AIM Wti\I ~ •• lfOW CMlr. llC:fl II lftt ktolC'*'1 ~ Stllittl 11 IXACTA (1•41 Mid ltllO ~ll'TM aACI. Pou I Mllil s~ Mt lll'orllor> uov ~ ( .... !Nft) OllfflOM IWll ll<iieMr) T IN1 J .. 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Poco I Mite It 80 lo ISl'torrtn> ~ I 00 HO Kneoo To Sl11ne (Plollol UO 1 10 lrown 8099ltt'IL.acllrfl 2 10 T"'1t 2 00 Also Wont Am\'laM Ambltr. JOllV Nlonltrty. (Int Of lthYlhm, U &oat. Scrotched NOl'O 11IXACTA 12·4) PO•d 190'° S2 DAil. Y Tlllfl''-1 IM· 21 Pe.Id $3,00f 00 TINTH ltACI. PKt I Mile CoClln ONY lov (LtcktV) "'° ''° 770 tzocil C (SIHtllJ 10-20 7M S..Ci.t Pttor (P..,.Ct l l 40 Time HO> Alto WO!lt VOie.Ono Of M!irwll, N\OlllWOY Mlffft, NvoodY 81Ue N, Cootain Lotd, Ro..o.. CrHI Sctolc.Nd ,.._ '1 OAll.Y DOUtU.a (M l Ot>d ~.O U IX.ACTA (~:ll OOtd 111' 10 AttOlldonct l.017 Mutuol Hofldle 11 ... "3 COACHESTAKEALOOKBACK,AHEAD • • • From Cl 7. ·:We should have been ahead at halftime, 14-7, at worst, ICP. But for the caliber ofk1ds \\e had, they playtd the best they could. We made some Pop Warner mistakes, Jumping off- sides a t the 5, thmas hke that. You don'tdescrve to&O on with those kind of mistakes." On ncllt year. ··1 guarantee I won't be the head coach. There's no amount of money they could pay mr. Not in l.Agunatics. Too many n~t1'1es Not for 10 limes what they paid me. "We return three of our five offcnsa"c linemen. There arc some kry po 1t1ons that need to be fiUed, .Jonathan Todd and Chn Dlckerson wall be real drfficult to replace. Personally I think ndy Myers wtll be the touahest to replace. "He was the auy that made our team a team. Others \\ere out tand· 1ng, but Andy wa a team player. He blocked so well He made some 1ncrcd1ble blocks all )car Iona." C.rt1 R.msey, Marlu, followma his team's 7-0 loss to Loyola 1n the CIF Big Fi"e Conference: "Our defense did a great job. we Just happened to ha"e a couple of more turnovers than they did. 'Scan Magula wasn't 100 perce11.t and their defense did some things 'lo take him away from us. "R-«:ky Vanderraet was banged up. John ims wasn't there (1nJurtd) and Scan wasn't at full speed. That took a lot out.of us..." On the future "We ha .. c a fair amount of juniors coming back and we feel good about a lot of our sophomore We had two with our group. 1ms and Dale Kau. the big defens1 .. e end (6-5, 200) "We're "cry encouraacd. We have to find a quarterback. obviously. JelT Robbins wa the bad.up untJI he was inJured. nd \\e have Chns Craig. That's \\\O Junior backups. ''But we also have two fine f rc\hmen, David Schultz and Chns Boyd at quarterback. "We should be iblCto -come up with two pretty good quat-\erbacks. and the rest will play somewhere -at defensive back, or at receiver, or even as running back. "Among junior starters were John Taylor on the defensive line. and George Ray and Dcmck Watkins in the offensive line, and sevrral others that weren'tstarters, but who pla_>:ed a lot -Paul Periolat, Bob JelTnes. Kevin Magula. Marcus Carles. Rob- bins. Sims:. Mllrc Kalhck' .... Watkans was a first team All-unset ~ague sclccuon by the Daily Pilot. Also back will be the V1kinfS' new defensive S)'Stem -Ramsey s mul· tiP,le 4-4 which always seems to look different -ex(Cpt for the re uhs Of Manna's last six opponents - an fivr Sunset League foes and Loyola an the playoffs, only one could score more than seven points. We tmin ter managed 11 wuh a touchdown. field gbal and two-pomt conversion in a 14-1 l loss. Dave Wlllte, Edison, following the Chargers' 21 ·8 loss to Crespi an the CIF Bag Five playolTs: "Ounng the game I was gettinf upset, I didn't think we were playi ng to our poten- tial. "But themorc I've thought about it, CresPi had a lot to do with 1t. They're really a great football team. We just meta team that was very good and vcrv wdl-coached. ..:·we-\med up against a punt and had two guys on one 1dc. leaving the other side wide open and they completed the pass on the punting sttuauon. Th.at hasn't happened m 11 games It was JUSt a ma take. "We fumbled on the 2-)ard hne. but there's no doubt abo~t it, they were a good football team. I was impressed with Russell While and I was impressed wtth their defense "I thou&ht we had a great )'car. Wr wt'nt 8-lwrth11 lot of mjur1eund the kids d1d a 1ood JOb .. On the future: "To be honest. we're .. - lo ins a lot of quality seniors. We'll have one aJl-leasuer comma back in Kale-aph Carter, but there is a super group of sophomores coming up. I would expect _ 50 percent of our starter1 will be Juniors. "It'll be a good blend. Obviously our foals arc to make the playoffs, and think we can achieve that With hard work. We play some good people It'll sttll bcScrvatc. Mater Dc1. Santa Monaca and El Modena. We rhave to pack up a second game ... Gene Nojl, Woodbridge, followini has team's 14-6 victory over Bcll-JelT, ~ndina the Warriors into the Dc.scrt- Mountain Conference quancrfinals apanst Atascadero: .. We sputtered here and there offensavely. but 1l 'wasn't a mailer of totally not ex~ut· ina. "ft wa s JUSt a one-man .breakdown here and there. and ll makes the "'hole play look bad. We dtd some rtal good things. and we were just a play or two awa)' from opening a few m9re scores. "I thought Bell-Jeff would be better ofTcns1vely. but it's a credtt to our defense. Our defense came ready to play. "Oefen ivel) David Cohen was really cons1 tent. and John Daniels. our other dcfcn ave end, pla}cd vcl') \\ell. J1mm\ Burke did a good job on- bhtzc!I aod' Mike Sorenson played \\Cll at 10s1de backer. "We had 11 sacks. srx for one guy (dcfensa"e end Sam Dehdasht1). The mo t I'd ever 'ittn as a coach for one pla)cr "as five when I wa!I at Long Beach Pol). "OITcns1"el) Eric Brougher pla)'cd "'ell agam. He0!IJUSt a cool customer " Two-taml' allJeague standout Da' ad Townsend strarncd"111s ankle and "as held out for over three quartc~ of the game. His status for t~ \\amors' game -Wlth "' 1t1ng Atascadero Fnda) remains on a day· to-da) basis Ausplclante rallies to W:Jn ln Matriarch INGLEWOOD (AP) -Au.- plciantt1 I l 5· I ~ rallied cto-n the IU'fKh Sunday IO win \bf $200,000 Mat.narch lnvlta· uonaJ Stakes at Hollywood hrk by IV> lenaths ovrr over Abtnatthb. Owned by Jack Kent Cooke. who alM> owns the Walhu11ton Red1Jun1o(the National Footbell t.aaue1 Au1p1C1ank, a S·year-old A,_nttne·brtd mare, earned S 110,000 for her victory. Abcruschka, who ts from Ire· land finished second, one lenatb ahead of Reloy. Ridden b)· Cash Asmunen, who cut hort a visit to Las Vesu to accept the mount, Auspiciantc returntd S32.80, $17.40 and SI0.40 in aoina the !YI m1le1 on Hollywood Park's turf count 1n 1:48. Aberuschka, coupl~n the bettinl with' Solva, pea4.,Sl 4 00 and S .80 while Reloy returned $9.20 to 'how. 8111 Stioernaker put kywina on the ltad quickly while Asmu.ssen rated has mare as far back as njnth place Top Coruac raced in second place and Bonne lie. the second choice in the betting, ran fourth as the field of t 2 headed down the backstretch and into the far tum. In the final stretch drive, Aus- pic1ante and Aberuschka, ridden by Pat Valenzuela, battltd with the former pmina the lead Wlth less than a 100 yards left. Auspiciante now has seven wine, four second-place fi.n~hes and five third-place finishes io 22 hfcnme starts. She boosted her hfettme eammJS to $319.757. Cbrla Ramaey ··1f1 know David:· said No11. "he'll be read~ ·• Jim O'Hara, Westminster, follow· mg a 35. 7 lo to Bishop Amat in the first round of the Btg Five onfercntt pla)offs: "They're pretty aood. The) 're ranked No. I and rm not sure the\ shouldn't be ··we did a lmk bit of self destruc- tion We thought "-C could pas the ball a huk better than "'e did -ThC') rushtd more qgress1vel) than "c c~pccted. and with a t1&ht 6-2 dcfcn~ "h1ch the} had not hown. But "c \hould have bern able to throw more e1Tect1\iely." On the future .. We ha .. e quite a fl'w back and a real fine complement of sophomores. I'm excited about the krds comma up and "'e'll be thrnking No s~rprise in Catskills ·Roc~ets' T rt---"M1kewos1nahomc.thcTryonSchoolforBoys,and Lloyd out yson SU ppo ers were Sure tewart brou&ht him down because he showed an interest f • • 1 h ti I - -1n boxina,'' ;bana&her said 0 J&J is me was com ng-soon "Bobbywa WOrkUl.&OUt With hun,.but l\Wa:SgcttmJ to the poun "'here Bobby \lid he had to be in real good CATSKILL. N.Y (AP)-On a ru.ahl-when-W.year-hape to bt' bollin with Mike And Bobby's wife was old Mike Ty~n made boiuna history by becoming the gcuina nervou • she d1dn'1 \\Int ham to continue." youn_ge r fiahtcr. to ~n the heavyweiaflt championship. .. !though Mike was only 13' 1. he wl!I hclJ on wheels his supporters 1n this C\Cn then." Shanaghcr conunued. .. tewart used to eat sJccpy valla&e -where him alive ... but he had to ~tay 10 shapr to do 1t. So he Tyson tnuns above the brou&ht him to C'us local police station -"Hc(T)\On)wantedtobo\,butevetybodydoes But expected 1t to happen. he kept pestcnna. and tcwart started howina ham But some who thin&\ One night, aficr h&hts were out, he looked an the watched Ty<SOn de troy room and there wu Mike. still practicing the thin.gs that Trevor BCrbiclc 1n less Bobby.sh.owed him. Tbatcon .. mccd.Bobbytlusk1drcally than two round Satur· wanted to learn day niaht at ~ VeP.S. "Make was 5-foot-8 and 186 pound, when he wa 1 l felt the ~p«1aJ n1&ht r hat'!. when Cu~ say to me. do you believe 1t? And I :ud came one year and 18 no. I said h ten. J kno\\ what the~ k1d\arc. They \Cll thcv days too late. auy! that the> 'rt undcraac '°they can go to a home w11h • • Th c n ('us less restriction\ You can't bclil'\C' him. Look at the kid. (D'Amato) wou1d have there's no wa)' he' I l been able to ~ him," "So Cu~ and T went to the Ctt) nnCI got llas b1nh. Aid Richard uthvan, certificate. and he wa tclhn.a the iruth. I wa h()(l.cJ. the supt>rv1\0r of this Nobody bchrvCd ham. Not e"cn (T> on's current trainer) v1Jlqc which Ii~ m the Kevin Rooney. shadow of the Rip Van "But 1f )OU w tum, )Ou wouldn't behcvc 11, Winkle Bndac. "Rut he c pcciall the way he wa ahle to t"kc the bcatina that Ii"" on," &bb\ ll"C ham and ho._ no emotion ·· ~--~-D' mato. the "Hcp1cktd1tup!-Oqu1ckCuua1d,'MyGOd,wcJc.:l trainer who rcsc~ him dov.. n rqularly and we can really do methina v..tth T~'°n from the cyc:k of 111.b"T _. the au •• .. Shanaaher td ''He lcamod bf-cau~ of ht ---cntM-leidl"f to 14"-_!_ ----· 'Alli.Ju dctrrm1nitton ll\YWl\n hta\\ ).r.thi gu ca.n_ 1Utut1onal liv1na and tumrd him into a ti&htC1' v.1th a go the \\h\)IC "ay:· m1 ion. difd ov. 4 198j. • Kevan 8rc n, director of I bor rtlahon 11 ncarh' ••what a hame.'· u1d Donald ShanqhC1', a \ouah-tfenc Count otTCCtmnal F 1ht). met T)'Wn and 11lkina, SS.year-old'°"""" whO utrd to drhc Tyson 10 h1 Roonc' throu&h hanqhcr, 1 Ion lime fn nd. He hk amateurfithtJ "E\:crydayofthe week I wa w11h Cu H 1) n i r more than ht c~plo1t an the nna, alway kncwhcff)son)wa1101nato1othc"-'holewa .He ''KC\111\ Roonc) v. n:s for us a 1 b<)'.\ln tr1ancr;· knew What he Wit do1na.·· Brten sud. •·wc·"c got pmblbl) o. :40 au> 1n the bo~1n Bobby Stewart, a former attonal i<>ldcn GJo,c program He hrin T n do~n all the time. Tpon\ • h~t ha~1aht champ and a countelor at 1 school for aod thl'rc. He talks h> the mmat • It' nice when he & athnquents 1n UJ)'tl\C • cw Yotic, 1n\l'Odu«d thr there He lells the 1nmat , 'I v. a bum, too I wa' an Brookl)'n·bOrn f )aon to O'Amato. hanagher. 1m1hn11t inmate I f'(:nt my 11me 1n the 101nl and look t m • the thouaht of 1t1 n:mcmbcml the time as it 11 welt' .. He ~·JS de tinrd to ''' 1n an tl«"tn \:h 1r >mC' ~ • pl c," Stian htt said "But he ot his bttak\ ht>fC' ... • PHll .\DELPlllA (.\P) -Hous- tQn Rockets auard Lcwrs Llo)d. facma charac of fa1lina to pay $300 a wcck rn child support, was frttd from Jail in tJme to play qainst Phtladel· phia Sunday n1&ht b«auscofaS.S.000 I n from the 76crs' owner. team oflk1als id. LIO)d who attended high school in Ph1ladclph1a. wa freed late turda~ maht on $5.000 ba1I and wa sched· ulcd to appear in court th l week, pohcct.11d. l.lo>d was arre trd aturda) "horJly aner the Rod.ct amved for thcar Sunday pme again t the 76c,.,, When I\ oond man refused to take a check from the Rocket , tn~1 una on sh. Coach Bill Fttch rrowed SS.000 from Harold Katz. team ollicial ad. llo)d. v.ho ol"C'd 16 point in the Rocket· 114·104 lo ~unday. ha que,t1oned v.:hclhcr he ts the 8-car:· old boy'' father. a rord1n1 to a 'poke man ~ r th di tnct attome • om~. ttowcver. ht nam appcart on the h1ld' birth ccn1fic1tc. and he ha rcTu 10 talc i blOOd ' t to help scul the qu 11on. the pok :man ~Id, • ftcr th bo' 's mother was murdcrtd 1n Fth 24. 19 I. ht aunt a•~rn cu tOO) and bcpn tf) rng to t htld ~upf)Ort, the ~pokcsman 1d Fam1h oun J IJ ordered Uo rd CXt. I to tq1n p&) ma s ,00 I TC._ in child up~rtanl.l to pa S 100 a "' ~ rct ttvd for n un· .d1 lo d nod. the pokc$m n q1d ' ,,..0 ilACI. -VordS. """'° n .. F 1 ntf Oldl Cle~ ..,tc.e M 000 I Soc. A .. ln (Gitt) 2 "-ze Groo10 ILklln) l O.l'dY MMY 1#¥11 CCor~ol 4 Sent • ., All .,... (8'00t.I) S Sito On T11ru IT-NI 6 Mol'lttrev Jou lltutz) 7 Miss SQuwe o-(StYilleJ I KIPI Mil' Cot IEd-rda) t Elly• lntOM 1oi.1C111t11) 10 Fty 8onntr (Huntl in m m m 112 117 111 m tn 121 'OUlltTH at.Ca. 400 Vordl ll'IHM t.21600 3 Y1or Olds Clalrntnt Priu I' 080 I Pouuet IProctotl · 2 Fr011V Luke (!dword•I 3 Foirho.red 8oY (l.odlr;) 4 Ono Ludty Stroo.ti (VwtMI S Wooebtock Jot <Word) 6 St-CKtom (Gorae) 7 Go Quldl Mic.ltt'Y CFior.> I Surorltft Slanot CFklutrool f C"""°""° 11'9v Ooy 10..~ton> 10 Ml AtnitO "'-'IT'"""> AM ...... 11 NV UPNr Crust (lll.l'f) F Gene Nojl championship. "We had a chance to work with about half of the so phomore team which was brought up for the final week and 1f we had gone another week in the-playoffs. th~ of them would have played quite a bat." Jerry Witte, Saddleback, following has team's 49·18 rout of Norwalk in the first round of thr CIF Central Conference playoffs. "He reall y makes a d1ffe.ren cr therr's a lot of things \\e can do now ·· Watte was refemng to the return of quanerback Scan Thcncn. who rt· turned to the hneup after a four-"-CCk absence aftergoang out of the nl\Cr- suy game "el') early wnh a broken collarbone. Therien rntercd in the first quarter "' i .. m n• Ill ~~ tt 1 If" 11J 1'9-l 1!2' 12'2 112.1 lit and proceeded to complete 8 of I 0 for 139 )ards and 3 TDs. W1th no 1ntcrcepuons "We were kmd of forced to put Scan in earhrr than we wanted ... co-ntmued Watte ... We wanted to. J)lck • our spot, but Hector Santa Cruz had thrown an interecptton on has first pa and we v.eren't moving the ball "'ell at all on our first two oossess1on "And. v.c \\efe bchmd (6-0). We kept him 1n until the middle of the third quarter. He..had been throwm1 the pa t 10 da)s and looked good He's padded up a httle under the shouldcr pad~. "We ha"e M>me bum.Pi and bruise . but I think v.e'IJ be OK." Saddleback will host unny Halls Fnda) ni&ht at the nta Ana Bowl in the quan.erfinals Golf results - West AustHll Open tot,.._...., "' n·'°"" Greo Nor"*' Tor,..,Gole Pt!or~ Mork O'Nloore "Yndit'Y $IOOl'te!I ... 70 "·71 ~utctl lo.rd tl .000 O\wMoor• Po.no Smiltl T rtoiOI' OOWftlfll Jam"Cro., ~ Roo-rM«uv lt1tllord G . tY Noel It. tcl\tt. O.ii Ta4101 N\ff1l\ll PtnM>ll Malll'IO.,Coot Han KYl·Hla Sanonta11et Tony Pric:e W••"flf(OM OowlKuYtf T 2'1 1'1 2'l 2'S 2M 1'1 •1 ·• JU .. - M1S10·14 1S•11·n 66 16•11 •• " 67 1' 61 II 1171·12 7' 1• 1• n·n 1\.1S•1l•14 '1 1'·10·1' 1·H•·1>-n 1J·1'·n ·1• 7H•·13•11 nnn·n 1S 11-16•1) ,..,,.,. 14 1S 74 1' 7l n ",,, .. n .. 1 •. n:uo 111 ., ,, .. " .... .. ,, ,. '' n ·n n n·n.., .. J m '""" ll.750 C Chi Ito« tutt 1U» -Dov9 ~nde~I 10 000 "¥..O~l•U. JotJm r J '2S C l\O~ 0.tl'\ l , IOI •ooo• N !C !IOI\ l 100 OO!'I JO-'Y l, 100 t4owlt JohntOll 3 MO Al CllOllCl•or ), 100 .. ,11 11J Gor4,,..-O'c1tt11to11 l 100 JI• 11S 11' Dow F lel'•a;e I -I«" Adam& l IOO s • uoo . , .. n n n "" .. NflL NATIOlllALCON,•••NC• .._. 5*' Franclteo ~""°'*"i Atllnle Chkeoo Mtnnet0te Oetroll GrMnlaY TamHBav .... W L T • 4 0 1 • 1 • • 0 S • I ~ 1• 2 • • s 1 , 10 , 10 I Ht 0 0 0 0 0 .WtSl 500 ,,. •17 201 167 159 ,., , .. NV Gltnl• 10 2 0 U3 ?44 We\'1t119ton 10 2 0 133 2IJ O•"-• 1 s o .Sil 291 PlULade Diiie 3 f 0 750 17' SI Louis l ' 0 250 1'1 A.MlltlCAN CONll•lttNC• WMt PA 1'3 17' 193 , .. 140 21• 119 214 )JI 174 110 no 23l in INM. IT~TIITICI 16 SI, Louis N'L LOGS Rem1 <1·4) 16 Sen FrenclKo 2• lnOlanaoottt 20 Pnlledtll>llla 26 Temoe B•v • 3 0 750 297 ' 1') 14 All1nta "' us m ,. o.troll \ No. t 4lallefNJt •Hi k1J1 Nt~I Y\-Na 15 ._ A~n 11 •1rm1"9fllll\. II No 10 Soulritrn Ceillornle (7·3 Ol , .. , to No 41• '" II UCLA •••U Ht•t• '" Notrt 0..-nt 50 • No I I Ark-lf·2 O> llNI Sout~ '° Mtt"41dtll 41·0 7·20·2 No ta Wa.t\11\tlOll lt+ll l)MI Wulll1141lon ,.. ,,,, .... u. 6•17 NO 13 Texas A'M (1•2 01 btat Tue• 1-0 ChWll•9" 1'•10 Neal. at Ttatt 9·41 .Ho. " Ar11one <e·t·Ol ~I No s Aru-Jl 26 Sta te,..,,, NHI, ... No 16 Sttllford II TOkVO 10 13 7 • 34 20 ,, 10 No U AuOurll II t 0) ts l<ltt ~Ill, Vt No t Aleoemt el llrmlMllarn No If Ste~d 0·3 O> io.1 lo Ct hfOf'nlt 11 11 N•at 111. No I• Art1one et TOkvo No. 17 .. Ylor 11-3-0l bffl T .. H II 1l Nt~t Dae. )I "'' C~•OO et ltutDo!WMll aowl. No II UCLA (1•3•1) llHI No 10 $0UIMl't1 Cellfor11ft 45·25 Ne~t Dec. >O 11 Freeoom 9owl Na. It Cltf'MOn (7·2•2) tied $4Mlfll CerOllne 21·21 Nut. O.c t7 "'' No 16 $t111tord et Getor Bow• No 20 Geo<ole 0-3-0l Is l<llt. Ntxt: 111 Gtotole Ttch. 31 tlllno•• 17 BevlOI' COLUGI! LOGS USC (7·3) 20 Wethlll910fl JS °'"°" . • 1• Wathlnpton St 20 ArltOl'I SI 16 14 10 21 ,. 29 -._. W•IKIMD ICO.H Ooldtn Wttf 11 El Clttll/IO 1• ---(1tr11t )6, Ofttllt Coett 6 ~ 2•, lt•llQIO St(lhlOO 14 Cttfltot 21, Mt $tn A"10lllo 1• 'ullWton S2, Pa'*"8 CC 21 5*' Oleto Mew '1, Sen 01"0 CC It tt"'ertlde CC 36, Palomar 2 I SOulllWfllern 39, Groumont '.JS LOIW he<h cc ~I Comolon 2' An~ Valrf n: 1111o Hondo 14 Cnelftv ts. kn e.nardtno Valley 21 Ott¥1 S5, LA HatllOt 41 Vl(tl)t ValltY 2•. Cit T «II • CCM\tre Cotte )7, Vutle 1 CC k" Francisco 14, O.eOlo VelllY 14 Sen JOll CC 141 .Sen Matto t Wasl Vatte.-~ • .L.1nev l1 0. Anze 17, Foottllll i. Gevllen IS, CebrlltD 1 , Hartnell 44, Mont••~ PentMUll 6 80ATING Aiamh& .. V Yacht CMt THANkSGIVINO ltl~ATTA ( NHL. CAMre•LL CON,.ltlNC& WIM•Pft Edtn911IOll Ca'98rv kln9t V•nCOINlf TOl'OlllO St L.ouit DetrOll Chk:e110 Mlnntsote sm.-~ W ,I. T "-ll 1 1 27 IJ I 1 21 11 10 o n • 1( 2 ,. 1 . 1• , 12 0' ~A " u f7 IO 7l '° ... n 62 ... Nwrb DMliM •1•1? .. '5 1 7 •to'6U •• 10 2 lt 57 ... S l2 S IS 70 9' I 6112141'90 WAl..ll COfWIRINCI l'atrldl Dl'<lhMfl Phl&adtte>llle 14 • 2 ~ :: ;i P1tlsDUfllh 13 6 2 NY tsiandtrt 11 • I Nt# Jtf"MV lO 9 2 Weshlneton 7 11 4 NY Renvtrl 6 11 4 n ao 6S n " 9• " 72 '° .. '2 '3 • Adtml QMllOft ,, .. Latitn Seattle fl'ofllen<I Goldtn511te P1101r11• QIHer1 .. Cl. .. ,.s sit .. ,.,, 150 .. .. ~ () , • s 1 • • 0 7 s 0 • 6 0 2 10 0 513 1U 263 14 Atlante .500 223 t39 • 20 Chtceoo 7 17 10 Stanford 20 Ariton• 0 13 PH•F -1. Tiii Ve~r. OoY9 Llldden, SIBYC, 2 8ed Newa, Stan Soren.on ABVC, a. Woosh, Oen Clapp ABY~ Mon Ir Ml QuebK Harll«d eoston Buffa to ,, • J 27 1' 10 • • ,. .. ' 6 l 21 6S 10 Altenll 6:l -. (hlc•QO Ctritrlf , 167 2SO 312 0 N•w Orle1n1 ?I New Enolend 26. New. Orlffnt 6 . 30 13 2t Cet"°'nla 25 UCLA 3 . 4S TOlllNAOO -I lllacll Tio, Sklel EUlott, NHYC; 2 Cllrlsllne, JIY Glaser. NHYC ETCMELLS.-22 -,.' Abrlte, Joro1111on· ' MeMlnoar, A8YC, 1' Humot-. Ed Fto, • 10 ! " 71 " ~81. .. ff Clnclty1ell Clevelelld P1tt~ro11 Houston • • 0 0 0 0 661 29S. 298 .. , ,,. 2'3 Nov 2'--Nolft Oemt • 13 3 11 .. 1• 1nc111ne NY Jtls New Enoiancs Mleml Bvffalo lncflanaootl1 • • • • 3 ' '"' 10 I 0 ' , 0 s 6 0 3 ' 0 0 ., 0 SllfldlV'• SCWM Items 26, New OrleaM ll New En11land ?2, 8ullal0 19 .333 706 251 .JSO 22s rn 90t 303 750 ,,._ •SS 276 2SO 232 000 144 ?03 200 290 '73 312 ,....., York Glenls It, Otllver 16 Derron 3', T eM.,. 8av 17 Chl~CJO 1i, Grffll Bav 10 Mouslon 31, lndleMoolii 11 Clnclnnall 24, Mlnnesore 20 Clevtlend 37. PlltSbur911 31 (Oil Wunlnoton •1, OaffiH 14 San Franclico 20, Atlanta o SI. Louil 23, Kansas Cllv I• Sffllll 2•, Phlledelphle 20 T8'litflf"t ~ •. New York Jell al Miami (Chan"91 7 al 6l TIHlrtfaY' s Ge,,,_s Gl"ffll 8ev et OelrOlt {Channel 2 ef 9 lO 1 m.) Seellle et Dalles (Chinn.I 4 et I o.m ) SVnclav's Ga,,,.. Items II New York Jtts IChenn•I 2 at 10 • m.> Phlladelohle at Reld4tr$ lh1tfal0 •• Kenses Cilv HO\Jlton at Cleveland . New En91enc1 et NtN Orleans Plt1sl>IKClll et ChlceCJO San Oltoo et lndleneootll • Tel'l'IPe Bev e l Minnesota Wuhinoton 11 St Lou•s Atlanta et Miami Cltlcfnne11 at o.nver Mllldlly, Dec. l New Yorlt Giants el San FrenclKO Rams 26, S..ints 1l Sew. "' Oll•rten 0 6 0 7-13 7 J 13 >-2• Ftnt Olull1w Ranw-OIC'llarson • run CLanslora kick), 3.26 s,c4llld Ollal1w NO-FG Andentn 33. ·13 Rem......rG Lan.Jford :n. ll-OS N~FG Anclanen 18. lSOO Tll.k'd Ollertw lllam1-Everell 4 rvn <L.1n\lord klckl. 2" Ram-4'G Len1ford 47, 434 lll1m1-FG lAMford, 29, 10.39 ,81H1h Ov•rttr Rer*>•-FG Lansford, "· S7 N~Mertln 7 Pan from Wll1on IAnd•rsen ._~kl. S:SS A-51-'°° Nov ·»-et New Y«k Jet• Dae 7-0atlu Ote. 14--MJe ml Dae ,.,._., San Fre11Clteo Raiden fl·4) 36 Oenvtr 6 WestMngton 9 New Yol"ll Giant• 17 Sen Dlt9o 2• Kense• Cltv I• SHtlle lO Mleml 2t Houston 10 Denver 11 Dallas 27 Clevtlencl 37 Sen Oltoo loll Nov 3C>-Ptllleaeloll.le Dae. 1-1 Seetllt Dec 1.,_Kenses Cllv Otc 21-llldi1neoot11 Coleee foottMI KhecMe THUtlSDAY'S GAMES E.ast Caroline et Miami !Fie I. n TtXIS A&M al Texu SATURDAY'S GAMES Notre Oema vs USC 11 LA COll~m P1cltlc 11 Lonv 8ffCtl State avu al Sano~ $late. n Wvomln11 el Hewell. n Auburn 11 Alat>em. Florld• at Florid• Stele Georole Tech at o.Dr9le Rice 11 Hou,ton, n Tulane et LSU, n Utah at Ttxu·EI Paso. n Tennes'" et vanaerbllt . SUNDAY'S GAME Stanf«d v• Arltone et TOkvo HOW"'-T'°20~ .at 10 14 13 11 10 2' 17 21 . 13 ,. ll How tne Associated Prt» Too Twenty collallt footbeM tHM• farlld Seturdev No. I Ml•ml, Fla ( HH)-0) Is ldlt. Next: VI E111 Carollna No 2 Penn $Itta 111-0-0) bHJ Plttsbuf"Oh 3•· 14 Nt•I· Jen. 2 vs No I MJ.,.,i et Sunlll11 Flesf1 &owl No 3 Oktenome 110·1·01 bell No 6 Nebraska 20•17. Next. Jan I et Ore11111 Bowl.· No 4 Arl1-Stale 19· HJ '°'' to No. 1• Arltone 34· 17 N .. 1 Jen I 111 No 6 Mldllo111 at Rola &owl No s NabrUkl (9·2·0) IOSI to No 3 Oklah0m1 20·17 Next Jan. t et S1111ar Bowl No 6 Mlch1Qen (10-H» btel No 7 Ohio Stele 26·2• Next Oac 6 el Hawaii No 7 Olllo Slate (9·3·0> Iott to No 6 Mlc11loan 26·24 Next Jen I a t Cotton Bowl No a Loul1lane St11e (8·2·0) beet Notre Dame 21·19 Neat. vs Tulane UCLA (7·1·1) 3· Olllaho\'n• •S Sen OltoO St •I Lon9 8H<:h $1 ' l: 9· Artt-St 32 Arizona 36 Callf«nle S4 W11111t191on $1 '9 OrtOOll SI. n s11n10tc1 17 Wtslllnvton 4S USC cat s .. te Futemn (J.I) 23 .. 25 10 " 0 2' 17 25 12 New Mexico SI. 24 l5 tdahO St 25 17 ldehO 1S 23 UNLV <10 10 Tutsa 20 · 20 Lon11 Steen St JO J3 Utah SI. 0 IS Hewell 26 20 Fresno St. 30 • 2' Sen Jose St .. 39 Pacific :JI Lent ... Ch State U·S) 2• San 01990 St. 27 1• Western Mlchkl•n 13 23 UCLA 41 JO Cal State Fullerton 20 38 New Mexk:o St 7 12 Fresno St 2S t• Uleh State 3 3S Euttrn Wuhlnoton J4 1• Sen JOH St. 3' • Nevada LU Vt11~• 31 Nov 29-f>aclflc, n COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOWLS ,rldav, t>«. s MECHANICS IANk COMMUNfTY IOWL 8ut11 COlle08 <t ·21 vs. Contra COste (S-3), e t Contra Co.ta Coltl9e, 7;30 o.m. , 'I ..... ~-~ Sa ra.v, ~ 6 SOUTHERN CAL CONFERENCE BOWL Colleoe Of 1111 O.s.n (1·21 vs Golden Wtsl (Ml. TBA l'ONY BOWL Rlvtnlae CC (8·1) n Glendale 110-0), at Ofenoe Coast COl1eoe, 1 p.m .. SHltlNI l'OTATO BOWL C..,rHOI 16•2· ll vs. Tell (6·3), et 8ekerlflelo COlleoe Memorlet Sledlum, l:IS o.m. NATIONAL FOOTeALL ,OUNOATtoN eOWL Southwester" (5-3· ll Vl. San Olloo Mesa <S·2-2), at 8alt>oe Stadium, San Ollllo. 7:30 Pm MERCED ELKS BOWL Merctct <t·2) 111 San Jote CC (9·0), et Merced Collelle, 2 o.m. SANTA CRUZ COUNTY-LIONS BOWL Gavllan 17·2) or Cebrllkl (9·0· 11 vs Sllesl1 C7·l), at Cabl'lllO Cotllol, 7~ o.m. ~Community ~coreboard -+-----.+----- BASKETBALL CltV of Jrvlne Mllt'S l.IAGUH ,.,,..,.. c DMtiell """") ~""" ~ 11¥1\•llWY °""""'*' '-'" Fr• 4etntt ... ...,...,, • JPM """''"'9 M<G•w IUC* .. llffd• '4 " Tt•m ,_.,., 1Nt~tetl'I l vOft •.. .,., ... _,,.. . .,. W-Y's l OM\left • .,"''Of' met' Ar1nur Af'Ollr\Ot'I Soerteni C-•&.Gtnt -. .... ~ft9 10 W•t'I lit WO .,....._, W-• OM.-. c-·-· ff\di¥•ctve•1 Pectuc s:-N\et'< •' oc """' .. (l'Nlt T-•Ml•IWtDM<IM "-) Maiten ,,. 009"\ ''-'"' .. .,, Pllo<>to• ~r-twO..+' W"OC.att ~Y'tCOM.- o .... 11•-· Xlder DK,,,..~ "-t.,, .,!Kert Cltv of NewPOrt ... di -N'l 1.laGUas -Y'•C~ 1t•'9ft"'9 '"'" ... SVCll ! ~:. ... • Froi.-. •-• 1 Stam,,,.., ltoanl k-Stem,,,..... 2 Froa.., 11-. 7 SVC!lt " Tilt r..,., l4 I I llt'9••1\0 eucu .. TS. P11,,..• J1 10 0 T-'1"11~ S S Slv• llA411 S ! C..-1» WMe S ! T~,,. ltou J 1 v ...... ., • ' I Old '"' s.o r • .,., ... T ... lollom Liile T--~ltt>dl-ltlCMISQrft S"-,,,,... .. '9 Old lkit Slo W Cu"""'""' WI>••• l'O """""' J6 ~ ...... c OIYbloft Ptctf.C-Muh.toll Third Sit ... f I WMD ~: ~~~~ 1 ·-..,..... • ~':&'~:J~ ~ua1':" '1 T"'<d Strll\O ~. WHldill 12 ,_....,..,llOM.i.t $Nrll• _ .. _. • 2 (r--. Tr-• • 1 -U!I N'C.U!I s ) ....... ,,_ s • -... ) 6 Veflow...:~•11 II-KWfl : ! ~,-,,_,IO llU!I 'N Gun 34 -· -· 10 lunnv-" ~.~.MJll ... 52 Tne louom ....... '°· Touelte iltOH " SOFTBALL CltV ef ... wpert BMctt MIN'S 1.aAGUIS _,,. .. ~ W--Y'• A OMtleft ............... Foot> Villa Ho•I lac•-Ml<' OH.no<• s-.. ·-"'•' Pe• I C£D D•····· ·-KWft E:moo Strllltt e.ctt SIUCllO C .. t II F19M""°40 --Dll'IY Cr-I SI Ylt"' 0.00I 11-<IK ,.....,.,CM_ S.-'l"•CGCOM"*' 1 ) P\-;cl\IC ... ,_. , ) '1IUllltr' 1 > Gkil-St!cU s s Soulll c ... t ) 1 H•--01 I t lacltle> I"~ 11...,K_ Slt;i!flt<'• 7, H-llffd• 0 P\y<Nc N11...-. 6, G~• .... lno S ·~· ljo-$oulh c-· 1 COIO 1.IAGUI I • ,_.,... cc OM.- 2 2 s s 1 1 7 2 900'• 1-Y s ' Whitt Sl'>o• S • TM CUiian 1 I I 1 ' 0 6 2 I • S ttlt,,_, I I ~'"'' 0 I ,.,,. .. Mo!otlnG Tiie Wa• .. s.,lorl softblll 18' ".,.....,_ ~' IOM"911 • s 0 • s 0 1 ' 0 0 ' 0 w"'"'"'''"' I, Senta Alli t Poun11111 Veltv 10. Co"• MtM ' HU!lhntlO<I llffcll 16 Whittle< 0 C·l~ NewPOtl ~ 21, Or•-c ..... 11 , LIK A .. JTtllOS t, HU'l11"9t0ft IMCll l "" ... "· C-•• ,.,,... ' C-1~ Gar,.... ~ove •· Fullll'IOll s Et Monti 11 .W1.-. Vlelo • Cir•-Cont Caren 11. S.et 9-11 7 lt&O Dv"""" 17 .__ Meft 76 !IMO StrtUS a.cl< ,... Stvdio CAt. tt FLAG FOOTBALL ,, ... '"""" n Ott"""• " '"°'' n v •• No•• tt w-...,. .. ~ OMtMol Pe< he. ~wt.,- Tef,.,..."'-" W•r 0."~'I GD ~C ·~-· Water lovt TM COO',.,,.., lt1C«11>'9•n Te...,.11an WW Daw .. 61 s.... ..... ,, ltte~ u Com M.-. 16 G 0 end C SI 1N1t1< lo•• 46 Cltv ef Newpert BMCtl al.CMllHTMY KltOOL LIAGUIS ~ ... , .. ~ ·--Hurrk-II, ,.,,_,,~u ,,...., H•fOO' V-._,. t6 Mlti-. M...-CNU 11 o.c. • l'Nll .,,,,......., HurrfQnft CS-I> .. Harllot V-ta.r• i.·J•I) °""" J·• (~) Hwllot V-lt, ~I IWQfli. • C-ALL 642-5678 IF C4 LLING FROM NORTH ORANGE CO. IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE CO. A8YC • . J·2• -I. Cat S~ahl, 8r1,11:e GOlllOll, ABYC, 2. . Peelllfl. 0•11• Cnepln. SOYC, 3. HOUdlnl, Erle Arndl, S8 YC; • Pe.rt'/ Anlmtl, Greg Lowe, ABYC INTERNATIONAL·l• -l.$te11• TOtfll, St.FYC 2. Kers Claulaft. Richmond YC; 3 Steve Flam, LBYC, •• Tom Edwerdl, ltlChmona YC CONTENOER--1. Jttrv Whitt, sesc. SNIPE -I Jeff L1n111rt, MBYC, , Mlkt SIHl'Oloom. ABYC; 3 Bart Hackworth, St FYC, 4 Steve StrObtl, A8YC; S Jim Grubo., ABYC LASER -I Jim Otlt, /\BYC, 2.. R~rd 8vr011,V~C. 3 Kevin Wolle. &CYC; • Tlm C11'84, NHYC CAL~20 -I. Chrll Marr, A8YC; 2 Ken Hod08'. A8YC; 3 Jonn Mtrchenl, ABYC, 4 Gtor91 Hardie. ABYC, LIDO· i..-1 Tim Mu1111nev. ecvc, 2 Ron LOl!mln, BYC; 3. Gil> Mer~. A8YC; • E Costtr, SIBYC l.ASEl"t -I Jared Mof'ford, BYC Slit SABOT A - 1 Kavin Oumaln, ABYC. 2 E.d ICIMOlll, A8YC. ~, Sr Sebot B -I Tonv Fellon, A8YC. SABOT A -I Randv l.eke. SOYC, 2 $u1en Minton, NHYC. 3. Jonetllon Greeolno. A8YC; • Tom O'Nelll, ovc. s Scott Quan, SOYC. ~A80T 8 - 1 Renee 81H, SWYC, 2 Susie Tnom11, ave, 3. Onld Moodv, ave. SA80T Cl·· 1 Pat 81n9118m, CYC, 2 Roclldlt Merrih, M8YC; 3 Bllt Cowev, LAYC, • Tom Frlw HHYC, s Nicole 8 111, swvc. SABOT C2 -1 Sendra Conde, LSC; 2 Amy eentiev. NHYC, 3 Kevin T•toner. eve. &A.BOT NORTH SERIES -I. R•"f!_Y Lake, SOYC, 2 Jonathon Green1119, A8YC. 3 Susan Minton, NHVC, •. Tom O'NtlU, OYC, s '"' Oavli SOYC f TENNIS Men's tourna"*1t (et "•'"*'' Slftllel FINllJ Sloboden Zl1101lnovlc (Yuoosleviel det Scott Davis CU S l, .. >. 4·' 6-3 IZIVOllnovlc wlni. u~.0001 WOIMft'I tournament (at New Yertrl Sllltln F lnets Merline Navratilova (U $.L def Steffi Grat ewe.I Germenv>. 7·6, 6·3, 6·2 (N1vretflovl wins Sl2S.OOO. Grat wini. $60,000) SllftdeY't kWM • WIM•Olt '3, ~ 2 Cl\~90 s. New JtrMV 3 • TtllMlllt'• CO.met 8o•ton et Toronlo EdmOnton at Cetoerv Jetl J, Kines 2 kll't bV P"*ls LO\ A"oetes I I 0-2 Wlnnt11e9 I t 1-J Fk'tl~- 1 Wlt1nl""· SIHn • (~CLaen, HIWtrC'hUk), •'3S (~). , LOS Alltlllls. Ladvard • (£rl6son. Rob01lllll. 17.23 (PO). Penall1tt-W1tters. Win (hlQh•1tlclll"9), I st, ~via~ LA (trlOPlnQ), s 57, Plevtefr, LA (lnterftr'~tl. 12•1 ••. wt111. LA, mlnor·melor (lllOl'MllCkln9. ltohtlno). 13:32, MeCLNn, Win, mlnor·m•lor c111on·1tl<:klno, ftohti119), 1332, Berrv, Win (hOld•nol, " 11 $8(.tlld .. ~ 3. Los A!lfflel, Eriek~ S (Dionna Welti.). I 26, • Wltwl/090, Mufletl I (Jarv-.u. Ha#erchukl, 14 S4 (pp) Pane1114tt-Tavlor, LA . (trk»P!nol, 3 S7. Bwrv, Wiii (stunlnCIJ. 3 57, Wiltlams, LA, mt.conduct, 1 5', MeCLNn, Win, misconduct, 7~. Kvte. Win (hlQll•,tlcll1119l, 10 •I. l.ukOWich, LA (hlOll·•llckl119J, t4.25, Cer1on, L.A (rOVQhlnol. 11·15; Kvtt, Win Crouoll· Jnol. It IS llllrd , ... '" S Winnlt119, MeCLUll t• (Multan, Hawercllult), 4 41. Penalllft-Bourne, LA thOOltlno). I 29, Wet11n, Win llnttrt.,encel, 7J2. 8e»cnm1n, Win (albowlnvl, 7 41, TevlOr. LA (llloh·tll<:klno>. 937, Kvtt. Win c1119n· 11ickinol. t'37, Ledv1ra, LA. mlsconoucr, 19 "· ICytt, Win, mlKondUCf. 19 ,. ShOtt on ooel-Lot Anoalll IH3·7-31 WIMloeG 14·9•f=-n Powet·ollY ()ppo(tunltia..-Los AnQelet I ot S, Wtl\llJDIO 2 of 4. . c;oetle.-t..o~IH, Melanson 132 snots·?9 1evdt,. WllfnTAG. 8trlh••uml (31·29) A-13,003 Refer-Sob Myers Ltnnmen-W1vne Forsev. sweae Knoll C ..... soccer NCAA hf'..West .l'.Aft81s. (It F,_) FrHM State I, UCLA 0 Scorlno SotelO IFrt1no Stattl NOTICE OF INTENT TO CIRCULATE PETITION Notice Is hereby given of the Intention of the persons whose names appear hereon to circulate within that por11on of the unincorporated County of Orange commonly,.known as Laguna Nlguel, more speclflcally known as the Laguna Nlguel 9ommunl- ty Service District and that portion of Orange County Service Area Number 16 lylng southerly bf Allso Creek, County of Orange. State of California. and among the voters of these areas 8 days after the first publlcatlon of this notice and stalement a. petition to Incorporate the aforementlol)ed ar.ea . l he reasons for the proposed petition are as follows: To allow voters In the described area to be heard In publlc hearings which may be allowed by Local Agency Formation Commission and to subse- quently enable LAFCO to place a Municipal In- corporation Proposition on the ballot In Novem- ber, 1987, If LAFCO to decides. Voter approval of such a Proposition would result In local governmental control of services, land use. and available revenues. EXHIBIT "A" Detroit Cttveland L.Ken 1%7, euc111 l17 MILWAUkll Cll7) -Cumm•nO• ;-IS M 19, Prn1ev 6· IS 0-0 I•. Slkme I·• •·• 6, Moncrief S 12 6·7 17, Pt1rct ,._,. •·4 n, 8tlU« S-9 0·2 10, Revllolcl1 4 I 2·1 12, Br.altv 3·5 0-0 7. Smllll 4·1 0-1 I. MCOOwd 1·2 0-t 7 Tote!• '1·92 IM3 117 · LAKEU (1271 -Rembll J•S l·l J, Wor-tnv 6•10 7·t tf, At>OIJl·Jabb.W t·ll S•6 21. Jonnson S·IO 13-1413. SColl •·16 O·O 12, C-.. 10 2•2 ?O, Mtttlltws S·7 0·0 11, Brlekowikl 2·1 0-0 •. Green J-• I· I 7 TllOmoson 1·2 M 3 Tola•• •1•1' »3' m Sew• bY 0Uer1W'l MllwMH 31 3' 20 32-111 Laker• 2S )) lO 3'-127 ThtH-POlnl ooert-Preuev 2, Revnolds 2, Moncrltf, 6redlev· c-2. Malllllw• Fou.i.d our-None lteooulldl-MflWeuue 46 <Cum· mlnv• fl L.oeu 43 <S<ott fl. At· Hls-MltwaUkff 14 (Moncrief 7), La•atl 3' (Johnson 101 Tot•I IOUJ-MJlweulr.M 29, L•k•n 2S TtcMl<:et.-Leli.tr Coectl lllllev, LA illejlll a.fen .. A-1',7Sl SuncllY'I trantacftoftl ,OOTaALL N•'*"' ,.,.....,.. LH9UI NEW VOit.iC JETS-Acli'flltd Jot Flttdt ~enter Rtlta~ 8 11 aa1n, olftnilva lineman SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Wa1Ylld Dena McLtmorl, corlltl'l'Hlck AC'flvetacl Jeff Full«. ll/llbeCklt. COLLIE GI BOISE STA TE-Announc«t re1'9NllOll of Lvtt StltnelCh. need foolt>el coacn Chier Petitione r•: John Bullell, Pet Bal••· Larry Porter · P,•for..1 [,,,orpol'I> tlVI' 1f Ar'.'\~ t .. 'I/. 2 Yl/ltA·~ ~(JI.in(. 540-1220 411-8800 4 Une11-7 Days -$9.00 No Chenots In copy or cenoellallon SAVINGS The Dotly Pilot hos o new woy to turn your Hidden T reosures into CASH wilh o Clouilted Ad. Private oarttei only No Commercle t, R .. 1 E11111, Automotive. Boellnv or EmPlov· FMlll Ad• Thli'• '' no Price tlmll 10 whet vou cen 1dvtfll1t r.:::::=::;:;~~~~~~~~~ l eal Estate for Salt CLM .. FIED INDEX 642-5671 ..... 1 1002 Ctatral ------------------ 1001 lntral 1112 Ct111 •n• 1024 C..ta M111 1024 !nrrt 1t1e• lOH •nrr• 1tac• lllt .. llfLlll'l lllll..etT . FROM NOflTH.OMNGa co. .....1m Ht11n/Ct1•t1 La11ar 1002 16U Sdlooi HouMf 3.060 sq. 111 BeMment. kttcn.n. bedroomal Polentlatl 1.38 acr .. 1 Only $99,500. --~·, ... .. ":1 • J!J~• CountyJ John Denver AHlty 857-5118 Evet 657-8720 #H218 *USDLIFF1r UllUIUll Ull,111 ieo• wtlltew•t« & main t>Mch view from 48A with den & FR. BMullful 1oaa kltcn.n ......... Lu•k. built. apacloua llOf'Y, 381' + flM rm + formal dining, view lol Room for pool SlnQle own.r amdoual Prloed for quick .... a $335,000 f... HASTINGS & CO ~55e0 Any1l.l'MI ·------· let U1 llelp Ytt Sell y .. ,,.,,,.,1 Cal CllllllW 642-56 71. "' for Information & surprisingly low cost. NEWPORT CONDO Ill ..... •L IAI BROKERS WELCOME llUT am 1111,IOI , .... YllH *'"'"'" ....... , ~~,,:e8~:C,:,ay w~2 llW LllTlll Loaded w I u pg rad H . Condo ~ 2Ba. lrptc, Llka new deelgner 2 bdrm, Model perf~t 1a';" 3 maai• eult... mlrrOfed Pride of ownerahlpl Cua-theee dramatic 2 ttOf)' PoOI. •I · Prlnclpalt only 11A Bath townt\ome In bedroom. 3 bath condo wardrobea, flreplac. & tom built famlty home on hofMI 1tart at 1158 900. 1122,500 C.11 8'42...C8l0 Newport HelghteWfth 2 er w/pool, apaa. aecurlty patio Sectirlty oomple• >Ctra large corner lot Only 7 lel11Agt5-4a-1320 ir"Yiu 1144 gartge. privet• yard with gate, ate ~ more A with pool & apa. Bright & airy living room Ol llJl,IOO -B•tut N ..... _...,.,, _;ss cuttomapa.Specllleleo-bargain at 1240,000. S.19.5 000 831· w/flreplace open• onto .. "'\lln.vuu.-....,......, tfon6ct llo"tlno _. MORE. L~• 2 bdrm:-2 , bi CO°RONA DEL MAR ij)ia0u1 prfvate patio. harming Col1a Me.a 3 38R 2'~8A. hdwd fire. Auume loan. LOW $200,900. An ablOlute CONDO Aoomykttc'*1/br .. lclut bdrm, w~ea. l•ge yard. 119•"500 Call collect DOWN OK A value at apectal . 2 bdrm. 2 bath Ori° the baylront with ., ... 2 bdrm1, 2 beth• Aaaom•blt loen. Vacant. 81~2·8151 • 1129,900. FOf detalla caff onlyl1&9,900tl PATRICK labuloue main channel down. t bdrm, den/ Seller moovatedl Prfncl· LI ,_ PATRICK TENORE T&NORE 831-1288 or vlewa. BHutllully re-•tudy, bath & kitchenette pale only Merllyn IUI 7M 63M2te or 7eo-1702 7~8702 modeled a. upgraded 2 u P ll-ca r Oar a g •. Coombt 63 M268 llLIW mllf Yll.lll bdrm with huge enler· S 1 0 r a g • g • 1 0 r • • St• to beach 8-ltltul I & ......... S485,000 ..... 2•· c ..... 3 WM*~ ta nment 111ea .._... ANNE LENT ,.,. • ~ on....,, yra, $555,000. 87~ '1ptc. I 128K 4ff. 1371 or ' ' . ~Mt HI~()\ I tlOMI., ltK'. R£AL FSfATE ~ "0·82M. By O'wMr. WM~~ . . . ~~~~~~~~~ -111111 .... DREAM HOMES For 8ale 111• -111 BEST PRICE ANO TERMS 631-4007 Deklq almott new 2 Bdrm ROM ~·~·1 Blct condo reduced fOf im-: TRADE nom medl•t• .... •t,,y ttana· Mey9f lc>ha . P Rltre larred owMr. Ptlv•t• S«vlng etl of 01•1'19t Cty aundeelc, flreptece, Mt n. tf LNt hit -..... bit. tf'CIOMCI 2 c:... ear· 60' ofluiy frontege, 144' •"' All bMutiMly de<:· depth. Piobate. lob orated. Now Juel Ceutlln(714)151·71200t 1215.100 $73-0354 1 ( WM~~ '11 :. '" • L,,. " J. LWM&a C " A ' T I taM'P'II " INTO SAVINGS The ..., .... hoa 0 NW WO'( to turn 'f04" ~ Tteasufft ~ CASH ..ith o $9.00 Oouif..d Ad $9 OO wlth .. • prepayme~t 4 Lines-7 D~ts- $CJ .OO ·. od•ertiu . .,_:.- Ii yoiu need 10 ,'OU' coucn <:N»" °' Oft°• !Mfc:nond:ie-' t Oo Pb Oos"fied s10ff °' ~ ~-~..---~1 below Moll to: Doily Pi'°'· 330 W Bay St,. Costa Meta. Co 92626 642-5678 --··------··--------.. ------------ ~1AU __ _ l,, _ lNCLOSEO _ YISA .. lllll C , ..... ,... .,,rw ---- Nl·Hll IN8 Cleft& for ~ Chlro oMce. hp In WOttter1 • ClftlP ..._,, '*'-Ot LIU It 1·111<4°• I llt-lllllw - - , 'IJ \t nt 8J1 \trttf < mt1 M~ C11tforn11 CJ}r.1· AGER I j co LO . I C\I ~ -CO PACIFtC YtEW •MONAL PARK i C«netery • MOftuary~ Chapel • Crematory 3500 Pac.he Vtew Drive ~Buen 644 -2700 HA.MC>A l AWN· MT.OUYE M0ttuary • Cemetefy CfematOfy t825Gr~ Av~ Costa Mesa 540-51\SA .: Ci -~ .. ~ -·-... - 2100 llUlll ILYI., CISTl .W . (11•) l.0·1100 (213) 111-1211 • Best Prices • Conven;ent Locatt0n • Great Location • Super Servtee •Courteous & Knowledgeable SaJe:s People 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS 0 STERLING ·MOTORS· WEST 0 >llth County~~ Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 L O.est hJ., •.,.rt le-' . lll-1111 . Hlgt,est Quality Sales & Service 0 TliEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Th.under bird Retail Dealer Modern Salts. ·Sernce Parts. Body Pi!nt & Tire Depts Competitive Rates On lease & Daily Rtntils 20IO larMr lh4., lesta lhSI 142-0010 tr M0-1211 o 5ADDLEBACll , Sales Leasing Servfce Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-800-831-3377 ~44-380-1200 &i1M CLICK AUDI/RENAULT/JEEP • °'' ~· WE'RE OUT TO BE # l ! IRVINE AUTO CENTER 4 fAuto CenterlYr. rvine 714 951·3144 . 800) 428-7485 °CREVIER ' SALES • SERVICE • LEASING "Where Professional Attitude Prevails" 1,..Ctanilnt In l!UtOPff" OMl"'f· E•c9Mnt htectleft ot New end ceretully prepared UHCI 1MW'1 always in ttoctl ,35-3171 20I W. at St., Sent• An• C0tnet of Broadway & 1tt St Now Open Sundays ' New S¥vl'C4 "QUrt Mon·Fri '7am· 10pm YOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU CAUF"S : 1 a LAJIGLST VOLKSWAGEN ~AUR I NEEO we· SAY MORE" Parts Open M-sat I -5 30 Sat 9 -4' p m SerVIOe m-Fn 7 30 -6 pm 1a'711 •ACM ._VO HUNTINGTON •ACH 7141 142·2000 BUENA PAA!< • PACIFIC OCEAN GSTERllNG SALES -SHYIC( -LUSt•C -PAITS Overseas Oehvery Speelall1t1 IR SALES SERVICE PARTS -OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK LEASING BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 JamborH Rd.. CALL ONE OF THESE Newport Be•ch 840•8444 DEALERS FOR THI lllT IUYS ,. 4D JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1J01 Quall •t. -l#w C•r LouHOn 1001 Ou•ll It. -,._.,,,_ OWfelon 0 World'' L•roest Sel«t1on of fT\ Mt1rced#1 Benr \CJ 133-8300 W.·llllllil ·••~lrill ·Wr• .. o COMMONWEALTH VOLKSWAGEN ~ 'FAMILY STORE SINCE '53' w sa1-. Service • Leaaing l • BRISroL /.'l !DllG!R Ml·OllO · The Best ·car Buys in . Orange County .Are On Tliis Page! •• ~ ~ 4 ... . .. 0 0 BUICK Laius JAGUAR ISUZU \ the PROFESSIONAL APPROACH 0 .. 714-979-2500 2925 Harbor B oulevard - • Costa Mesa. CA • . . G) UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 H•rbor Blvd. Coat. M... 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. 0 808 LONGPRE Or•• County s Ofdest & lArgftt '°"'MK ~rship M 8N<I\ IMI & tn. a.rcWn Gtow 'rffWllY 1714 H2-MSt 17141' .... 2- We ,,.rfonft•tl ~ w.-m1nty wor'k. regarcte.ss of ~)IOU ortglNtty purc,.,.Md )OU' car. ............... ~ .... p ... Q CONNEL L CHEVROLET' - 2121 ........... Cestl .... Over 23 Yeat$>'Setving Orange ~nty Sales • SeMce • Leasing ~12tl s,1eial Parts Lile 541-MM MONOAY-FRtOAY I 30 AM -9 00 PM SATURDAY I 30 AM -I 00 PM ~NOAY \0 00 AM -S 00 PM Make Your Phone Start Rinsing . Advertise on Thi• Page Call for Details 714/ 642-5678 A sk for Larry • a rroJ-o1 a PONTIAC SUBARU • • • scoost SLASHES e PRICES!!• ON ALL 1J'6 MODEtS s T 8l ---·--- SUBARU 24IO twW llwd. Costa Mtu 9'ttrport Buch 714/S49-4300 0 ORAN GE COAST JEEP/RENAULT -1 II Ttf WtJt f tr "9 JH, Slits ftr I ,,., Ontn2e. :At.Es -coa'"St. sERv1cE J.. ,.,. .... -.. ,... • LEASING -5'18023 • ACCESSORtES-OEPl • low Pricet • No G1mm1dtJ • Great Sel ctton • Fri•ndly People • hcetlent S.fv1<e lW5 S.OCl'I &ou .. "°rd Hul'll!f'Oton hod! (714) ••2·7711 (2'3) 592•1463 ~ ExceUence In Sales Service & Leasing ~orange County's No. 1 No Hassle Deal•ll we HAVE OISCOUNTStll (-114) 147-1515 1888 1 Beech Blvd .. Huntington Bch. .... ..: 0... DAILY PILOT/~.~ 24, 19M 'iillflm•Jain our Rrna-.nccl Mttt tome more hWnds __ .._~the fashions or enjoyq the .. 11111• ... •u a few ol our 29 new shops and ICfVlCCs: A • rt Hautt Rodes ... Holiday Memories I JB NI Uomo jacadi '-&.conla Ma Cwsint ....... D Neal~ Cookies ... Qneinal Ovisonas Srott C.C111M'1 Poltax a..I Comft Ports lnremational a.un.. Rkcha D..il. Savannah Grill a Torico onn Sharptt tmaae liuiqa s.locl Tango Club Fortuna• Woman Willccs Sport a.Dery Miya by Willccs Bashford Clmew Wrapper 11 lib yow-own discovery tour through Arn um C.ourt Ind all o( Newport C.cnter Fashion Island, guided by ow new directory to all 120 very spcoal locati<>N. Where ro atartr Our North End, where Phase I of our ~is now complete. Come be impressed- by the new Mediterranean fucadcs, the lush laNkcaping Ind courtyards inviting you to sit, relax, dine outdoors. ·Our ttfurbished parking lo<s now offer lCXX> additional lp9Cel, plus valet service, amtnbuting to a day of strc95-- &er ICm.ic shopping in what is well on us way to he the meet becoming, the most beauoful and unique outdocx- ~ yet. Plan to bri~ your Newport C.cntcr Fashion w.nd Cndit Oard and begin your hollday shopping now. ·' alNmd rite P"" 'fwt ,ears ltas JPO'W ......... _ .. L_~ ~ .. d«lws W. rite ona -~·s.tt -----:i\iDido CJlldi 1-•• •9'klte bt liQce bil jrl.o .......... , 1 1Walhil0...'1wdrobebe .......... mum. Could mey be the ... ilrl IH ~pm on e.Jboa Jalimdl r.N11PcOa1ldect ~OMlle I• iMcllooolaw dtipt rite 1-. n.tt.,.r• ' . . W. arc growing. We arc rcvitahzmg. Expect new discoveries ~th every visit co our 120 diverse and unique shops and services: Depanment &. Women'• Apparel Spedalty Stora ~l~o AmcnWardy Silvcrwoods The Broadway SotiJl« Buffums lahari Bullocks Wilshire ThcTlnf.'O Club J.W. Robinson's Thcodott Nciman1 Marcus j Tripos Women'1 Apparel Wlllc~ Sport Alan Austin I Women'• Specialty ~tasia Angrls & Cherubim Apropos Antoruo Bun:aro At Ease BoudoirU btp rorgott~n Woman Brooks Brothers Forty love Bruesde OalJery Miya Casual Comer Gcncvc (C.0 medcs) Ell Gttat Ammcan Rorucci , Short St°"' Guy Laroche Haute Rocks Jean Ryan M.jacqucs Furrier La Ad:.cr Maya ' l..a.ru Of Cahf onua Mima·~~e I The unutcd -Mochcrhood Maternity Thel.ook Nelly' -The Apparel MondJ Of The Americ Pons International Splash &.. Fl.uh Rlccha =- J A Women-. Shoes ~Wardy Antonio Buttaro Apropos At~ Cathy Jean O.Varese Fanfares Laru Of CalJf orrua Naturaliztt West Serena d'halia Stephane Kelian Wetherby Kayser Jewelry Crystal Fire M ISt Donavan &. SeamaM Macy Jewelry Raff Jewelry Wyndham Leigh Diamonds Ylana1Ylang Men'1 Apparel Al'~ At Ease Bcncttoo Uomo blp Brooks Rrothcn Cl\ar\.in's C\.IZ:Ct\S Elle Rorucd Men11Appanl Ratauranca Food Spedalty Sportina Good., Garys &. Co. Bob Bums The Salad Bar Toys, Hobbia. ixfa Bogjc's Place The S-WCR't:lfe v .,,e &. Peca The look Coco's C.oolde &. Bake Shop Bcnchlcy ~.Ltd. Phelps El Roberto Wane &. lmportcd Forty~ Pol1ox El Torito Grill Bcct~&r Karl's Toys P.O.S.H. Franoscan Room Boob R'*>'I Wondttful ProJ«t Newport (Buffums) 8. Dahan World()(~ Silverwooct.. Udo Buffet Doubleday The Sharper~ The Tan&0 Oub o.w. Robt.Non'•) Gihl. Carda, Candia Sid &. Sports, Inc. Theodore Man Nd.man-Marcus &. Scadooery Servica Wilkes Sport Restaurant Bcnchley Luaa&e. Ltd. Anthony'& Shoe Family &. Children'• Newport Stuffed Roll Cas~ll·Mueey Service ~Grill (Fine;. ToOctrics) By The Stem Shoes Hemphill's Food Specialty ams Undsav OesigJ\s Caroselli's Huggins The Atrium Cafe DmJs (Monoeramnune) Newport Childttn's Bagels, etc. HolJday Memories Ou\slmday~ ~ Cofftt Emponum Tht°'9nal (Flonst) Wetherby l<aYRf Rfth Avenue Franks O uiltmu Store C.lawic:T~ Family &. Children'• 1-kidi's Frogm Yonut S.nndtt'I Hallmark Clown C1nncrs The Ulamatt lnvitadon .... Europe Salon Apparel lee Cream Soda Angel's&.. Cherubim Fountain Wrappcrll Going Places Tra~ At Ease D F-omalo Merv Homef~ Golden Blade Bcbtts LaSalsa A2Z-ThtBat Benetton Maxi OfE~ Ma CWs&nc C.ookq hip Und~ N41T1don: . Besict School Bcoob Brothm ~ Moon O.tr s.1oo ~Childrm OUnete Cafe • BatR«Ofds Nettle Cttdc Sbop Opaca1 Shop()( Forty~ Neal'• Cookies Aapen The Ac Biikerv PicmDNx ,J.cadJ Wrappcril The Red Balloon Poth Pocato Video Concepcs Rocky Mouna.ln OiocOlatr F.ctory OUr story to be continued ... NEWPORT eENTER FA • .. • trick m Proponetsan opponentsofNew rt · Center expansion reJ?Ort st BJ PAUL AACIUPLEY °' ............... The emotional campaaan over ~easure A is.btin&'mamd by dirty tncU. 1CCOrd1na to proponents and opponents of the special election ballot measure on the Newport Cen~r upan11on, which Newport Beach voicn will consider T~y. 6 Both sides uy their sips have bttn. stolen or.defaced in the final days of the campeip, and Corona del Mar merchants 1upportin1 the measure reponedly have; been threatened with sbopj)er boycotts. . . Luvena Hayton, a 36-year rtsident of Corona ckl Mar who operates Hayton's Bay Window at 3411 E. Coast Hiahway, aid many of her nei&hbor ~hants told htt that opponents of Measure A walked into their stores and demanded the propneton remove the 'Yes On A' ip1 from their front windows or face shoppers• bo)icotts. .. There as intimidation on the avenue.'' Hayton said. She said at least two merchant$ heCdcd the waminp and removed their sips. Hayton said she was not ap.. proached. r .. They know where I stand. I'm thl' front yard llsi ~J. transponauon chairman for the Tiw neat morai• lw • were chamber, and l'\lt been tryina to eet .,.c. the Pelican Hall Road for 10 years. Inn Howetl Jeid die .me dUlll "I don't fear. intimidation," she h8DDCned at hct bonW. said. ··~ puulaa up n.....,.""""' Hayton and 01her rniden1 ••d d8y~t. aad ~ 6 9.m. Ibey wrr sips alt0 ~rt removed from front • IOftt, HoWdl 19id. SM put up more lawns at their homes in Corona del on Friday,~ \My-weft aalen. Mar. • "I'm rep&acana ahem u fMus I can. "Wt: had four ians." said resident l'd like to caac6 them ud hit t~m Joanne Mack.·She had put 'up one ·over the ~ with one ... she said. sip, then ,;ven ·the chamber P«-"We think it's Pftlty petty ... mission to place three more in her David Paine, con.Wtant for the Rams defense puts a stop to New 1 0rleans _Aquino fires Eni-ile, Cabinet Senate Republican leader Bob Dole rebukes Secretary of State George Shultz for "not doing anything" to sup- port President Reagan In the Iran arms con- troversy./ AS Callfomla Former proeecutor's al- legations of evidence wtthholdlng throws McMartin Pr•SChool - moae.tation caae Into a tailspin./ Al Woman'• petition to Re- agan gets action against local gang problem./ AS World One Japanense volcano becomes quiet, but another erupts./ Al Sports There's Just two area prep football team left after the smoke cleared from Friday's first round of the CIF playoffs./C1 Chicago Bears are stlll king of the hlll, but wins are getting tougher to get./C3 Entertainment "St. Elsewhere's" Howle Mandel goes on a real trip this week./ A 12 f ' INDEX Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Entertainment Opinion Public Notices ~~~ W~ther B3 A3 A 10-11 C7-9 BA A12 B1-2 ca C1-6 B12 A2 Ra.mi defenden celebrate cner dAtr.M New Orlea.na qaarterback Da•e WU.On after he wu .topped on foa.rth down at the Rama l(oal llne Sanday at Anahellll Stadium. UCirvine tightenin~ admission standard·, to limit enrollment From staff ud Wire reports Hiah srade point averagcs,and test scores will only be the first step to adm1ss1on at UC Irvine for many applicants to the fall 1987 sch90I )ear. UCI and UCLA are tiahtenina their appbcation requ1~ments becau of the overflow of apphcauons the two campuses retttve annually. Applicants will be roviewtd on their utracurricular activities and community involvement while in hi.ab school as well as their arades and le$t ICOrtS, admissions admini - trat01Tsaid. ---"We're still · talkini about UC eliaibilit) plus," said James E Dun- nina, director of admts ions at UCI ,,But to the e1nent we haH an OPP,?rtunity to look at other critcna we II certainly take advantaae of that." This fall, the uni"ersit}' admmed 2, 900 freshmen while planning to enroll only 2,200. Next September. UCI will stick to its ceiling, Dunning said. The administrator said the change in admi ions procedures enables the university lo improve lhe overall quality of its student body. "It's encouraainJ that the faculty is interested an look1na at that for the first time in a number of years," Dunnina said. "The campus has an opportunity to look at its pnoriues. its values and its place 1n the comm unit)-·-·-~--- bout half of the incomina fmhman class still will be admitted trictly on the basts of 1tS superior cAdcmic achicvcmcrus. The_rcst will how achievements in other areas. UCLA also. will be tumina away some of the nation's briahttst stu- (PI ...... UCI/ A2) . -..----Philippine president replaces arch rival after army coup {o'_n_ed~ By RUBEN ALABAS'l'JlO I -•1•,•• P\IW .... MANILA, Philippines -Prcs1- dent Corazon Aquino fired her entire Cabinet, 1nclud1na atC"hnval Defen• Minister Juan Ponce Ennlc, after the armyfoiledacoupattemptSundaybY dissident officers and political fon.. Mrs. Aquino credited army chief oi stafTOen. Ftdel v. Ramos with t&kina "preventative measures apinst the recldesincss of some elements in the .... military." She warned t at "sternest measures" would be taken if anyone . tned to undermine her nine-month- old IO"cmment. The president also aCcu9ed com- munist rebels ..,ho have wqcd a 17- )e&r insursiency of showma no m~t in peace, and said 5he 9'0Uld end nqotiations if a ettse-firc is not rnched this month. Enrile and other critics have accused her of not beina touah eno~ apfost the rebels. Mrs. Aquino poke on-national television. Ramos i ued astatementconfirm- ini that politicians lo)aJ to deposed President Ferchnand E. Marcos, backed by "some clements an the military," had planned to set up a nvaJ government. He said the situ- ation was under control. He did not 1dent1fy the plotters or mention Enrile, who served under · Marcos but helped oust him last February. aeate Dou (71), Molan Cromwell (21), Vince NewMme (221 and thereat of the Rama eqaad had reuon to rejoice u they a•enced a Jou to the Sahata; See Bl. A senior 1o}'ernment official said more than 100 members ofa military faction identified witlf'Ennlc planned to take o"er the National Assembly, reinstate the pro-Marcos Nauonal (Pleue eee AQUINO/A4) Marine fainilies go hollie as gas c~eanup continues By PAUL ARCHIPLEY OflM°""' ......... Emergency crew continued to clean up a 50,000- gallon gasoline spill in Tustin Sunday as about I ,SOO people returned to military housing at the nearby U.S. Marine Corp Helicopter Air Station. ITT C'orp. headed the c\Qnup efTon under the supcrv1s1on of the county Environmental Manage- ment Aacncy with 11 pump trucks suctioning the unleaded gasoline out of the Peters C.anyon ,flood control channel where the fuel pilled from a 10..tnch ruptured pipe, said an Orantc ount) Fare Dc.-pan- ment poke man._ The rupture v. as reponcd Saturday at about 12.30 p.m. with the flammable fuel ptllina out of the San Diq.o Pipeline C'o conduit at Red Hill .\venue and Mouhon Parkway at the 1'9tcofa thousand pllon P« minute. The channel v.as dam~ to prevent psoline from flowing into n Dicao GfeCt and th~ Upptt e9'pon Bly ccotog1cal preserve. M1lital') personnel and their families v.ere evacuated from ba'iC housina on the cast side of the base betwcctl Harvard A venue and San Diego Creek and off-base military housma south of Warner Avenue and east of Harvard. At 8:15 a.m. Sunday, evacuees were allowed to return to their home where odors were no longer detected, said Manne Corps pokcsman S&t. Ron Turner Howe"cr, a strona smell remained an the Peters Canyon area. he said i\bbut 250 of the evacuees tayed an one of three e' acuat1on centers -the bale recreation center, the chapel anne'\ and the Enh J,C.d Men's Club. . Only minor 1njun wt reported for m1lttary police who auarded the evacuated home . The) v.ert a 11ned to one-hour hif\s to ensure the> v.mn't uposcd to excessive amounts ofrumes. e'enhetc , some complained of e)e irritation and head hes, Turner said. The e\'leu&tlon went sm00thl r-. ---- "I ~11 , there and talk.ed to se'eral famili~ ... Turner said. "One fam il) had a 9-~ear-old daughter and 6-~car-old son who thouaht the) v.ere campina out. • ''Their\onaskcd if they could ta) another night," he said Mesa's Hall now on the offensive Murder.suspects were read rights, D.A. maintains Mesa Action's election de verse$ play the Wily they do with all the di\tortion and lie " position of once-e~batt_led city mayor := Hall. 57, ha served on the ci>uncal \IO<.'C 1978 and was cho~n by a one .. 'ate marain O\:. 17 to hi second The current chapter in Costa Mea·s lf'OWlb war could be lilied. "The Fall and Rite of Donn Hall." Halt wu mayor of Costa Mcu when c:ontrovtnial alow..,.owth lf'OUP Maa Aaion catapulted •nto the ~1ucal tpe>tli&bt in 198' and nearly ou ttd Hall :from the City Coundl. With Mesa Acuon's poor "'6wina 1n lh11 month's oounctl diction\ Hall bat retutned to the mayor"'• c:Mer. Durina the t#O-)Wr pp betwcm e~aon , Hall -an outapokm • supportc.i:. ot Ckvelopmcnt -wa term a ma)Or. • . c~ilzed t.y lhc: Mesa ttton The ma)'Oral vote wa 1 ample homiowncn coaht1on as pubhc man~r of mathcmati whoever hu enemy No. I. / ~ the maJOnty arts the pvc1. Wtth the S the IJ'OUp's f&\IOntc tarset, he • rttent cl~t1on of two devctopcr· soon bcilri to &ost hi ballot bO cndoncd candidates the acale tippc(I appeal. 'TM town's nac~name, ''Goat away from two lloW1f(>Wlh council Hill~" UIO Sl'CW to mean ffalrs place mcmbcn and toward Halt on the council dai~. He umcd the post and talked of But bt is the pt no more. tcamw rt. of \l.01t1na the faction of .. We finally learned to Jlf•> h> thctr end1n1 the arotM ft~. Nle:s, or rather, how to cope with The nc t day, he talked of vmd•· {Mesa cttan) and how to 1nt1c1petc 11on. tts. mo\ ,"said Hall ... We ull don't "I alwa~ · rch 1ustk-c would 'IA.In . 1 ~ . 0.. DM.V Pl.OT I Mander, NcMlnMr i4, 1111 -•Al L ON THE OFFEN Ii.cc ....... Wheeler hu been ~ repnmaDCled ~ IHI co&aneil ~for Ulial Ii•~ a1y t.det to traK.c dispute, '°" aUcledJy a& ~~j:•~or Norma MCI for y calUnt two members .. bums." •--~Yet Wa.ter mained llli . favor ona Meta Action &uppor1(B; who wett balm., in thc:.?.p'1 MWfound JtomiMntt. They 1 n hintina at a epll anempe on Hal . t ·•TIM \OUlhnt timet w~ thole !Y days, tfic fint 11x months," Hall d. ..Thm .as a . tremendous nte in philosopl\iet, 1n the lack o( q)urtesy and lack of tappon amona c1>unc1I memben." } The mfi&htana was most intense tween ffall and Wheeler Both ~uncilmen rep~nted the extremes io the arowth debate and, ap- itopriatcJy, sat at opposite ends oftM C$>UJ\Cil table. ~ Several months al\cr his re-election mpa11n. Hall was ~ull payina offrus 2,SOO an council debts. , Then Mesa Action. hit htm wllh another salvo. Patnc1a A)ncs, a '1'em ber of I.he aroup. challenaed Hall 1i November 1985 for hts county \tater board seat. , · • The d.uel was seen as a harbinger of t•c next council election, a test of lrenath between the veteran arowth s&lpporter and those who would roll ~ck development. j The fight abo drove up the cost of naU's campaifJl to roughly $20.000 10 what 1s trad1t1onaJly a low-priority c(cction. He eked out a seven-vote Vlciory that prompted the county's rcrst rtcount tn four years. Another battle. another near loss. Hall said he was havin& problems rallying lOgcthcr people who d1s- ~d wtth Mesa Action's conten· Donn . uons that largc-'tCalc. ahtzy business park.sand shopping centers would be the death of Costa Mesa. "To my supporters, 1t looked like . thtnis would be all right. They said the 1roup was a nash 1n the pan, that they would fade away," Hall said. "I kept saying the no-&rowthers were a strong force. that they would con· unue." • As tbe development debate round- ed the corner toward this month's election. Hall prepart'd to be "the lone voice in the wilderness," the only &rowth supporter on a counctl that would soon sport four Mesa Action cndorsces. But something clicked. "We finally got toacthcr and aot to ... r wort," Hall MJd. Hall as well u k>ca1 developcn becked candidates Orville Ambufley t and Peter Buffa. • Maakn wtft 1n1t out on behalf or the slate. Advertiwrncnts adomed local ~~· Some of the littta· ture attaeked ~Mcu Action u - amona otMr thinp -an under- pound conspiracy hcided by liberal Democrat Tom Haydenor extremist Lyndon LaRoucbe. Ambu~ and Buffa rode to a strona victory. . • "Up until two weeks. before lhe election I was apprehensive. Thel\. I ~t confldent. I knew we would make n, '' Hall said. Many would 111uc that the coun· c1l'1 complexion hasn't really chanted. Reurins veterans Norma Hrruoa and Arlene Schafer wert replaced by people oflikc mind. 'However. up until the clec:t1on, Hertzoa and Schafer were unsure WMtMr Mesa Acuon couJd make aood on their threats. C.onsequentJy. they mar have wave~ over con- trovenia issues for feac. of poUtteal re,ercu ions. · "Now there's a more confident fechna up thcTC," HaJI said, with Amburacy and Buffa rid1n1 the crest of an ovcrwhclmina victory. . Hall said the election results marked a turnaround in Costa Mesa politics, one that would more ra vorable to developers. "Developers were obviously interested an the race. After the election. it was quite obvious to them that they would be able to build somethina on their land." Hall sa_id. "Mesa Action had talked about hmitina buildanp to two or three stories. Jhat would have been hor- nble." UCI TO TIGHTEN STANDARDS ••• From Al denn "When I talk to parents about UCLA. I say. 'Yes. it's true. We turn away students With 4.0 avcraaes, ... -.._ UCLA Director of Adm1 s1ons Rat' < ~nn said "'Last year Yfe -:< turned down about 500 studt'nts with "' 4.0s 1n the College of Leners and --, 1encc. · When I say that, you c.an bear a pin drop. Their hearts stop beating. But what they don't under- stand and what we keep trym& to tell everyone 1s that we admit plenty of students with less than 4.0s too. · Grade arc not the only than& we look at" "In essence, we have dtt1dcd that tl \ 1s not fair to use strictly obJecuvc numbers to select students. even at ---~, ..;:..e;,;_;top oltne apPficant J)ool." said Thomas E. Ltf\a. U< LA's assistant .:__, vice chancellor for rcg1strat1on · Besides score . students ma) now be jud&ed on such things as the content and quality of their high school program. 1porin said. "When one con iders that test scores are correlated most closell wnh mcome and the stze of one s famt~)'. rather than a student's pros- pect for success an college. and that mmonty students rarely have the same educational advantaaes that Caucasian students have, you bqin to understand why these differences are not only of Linlc relevance but quite inflammatory if one were to put much emphasis on them," Siponn said. The new srstem doesn't affect blacks. Hispanics and American 1n- d1ans who, if they meet minimum requirements, arc automatically ad- m 1tted to UC campuses under state gu1dehnes de igned to boost enrol- lments of certain disadvantaged groups. At UCI. Asians accounted for 37 percent of the freshman class th1<s )Car. Like whites, Asians will have to undergo the new, more riaorous reQuiremcnts. Dunnina said UCI is no different from other UC campuses where Asians are o~-teprcgotcd oom· pared to their percentaccs in the general population. But he said it's too soon to know whether the chanacs in admission requirements will hurt them. "Of the under-represented min- orities who arc eligible to be .ad- mitted, there's no chance they'll be turned •way," Dunnin• ~d. "But whether Asians wili be hurt by the chansc I don't think you can know until you look at I.he totar'tpphcant pool. "We won't know what the appli- cant pool loo~ like for another month." That's when apphcations are due for entrance to the fall of 1987. ,. GAME 11 '/ WEEK ~ 11 / DAY 2 ---------. ____ ....... ....__....., .-------.... 88 17 32 50- 23 18 .76 90 .. #-. A YEAH ... AL fiLdf.r HERE. f · CHECK OUT OUR LATEST .. WllllRS 01 II. YOU COULD IE •Exn HERE ARE TODAY'S IUMIERS. Ru! s ond how 10 nlo y the game ore on your gome cord, or, coll our tiOTllNE: 642 -4333 , 9-5 M.f , OS~ for WI .GO mforma.1t0n, - \ Winds to subside ill afternoon . Twr-... v--.viy .. 11 11 .. 2t 5 Surf Forecaat 11 • u II ., ...... • ~ ... lllr. Z-I I W ..,....,_ ,I 2 W ......, 2 ' w : ~tott_..~ ....... ... '"9Nf.-.... . to ... ~--~------~----~ ts : Tide. .. ~ '""""" 41 ,.,. .. .. ....., ....... ... leocwldlCllw .. ,.,......,. • l'lreelow .. lecoM """ : leooftd•• 13 ... .. at Ot = ......... ~•t:M•"' .,. ... • al4. .. Pflll. ... Maort ,... lod9r .. 11 .. ..,.. aftf JI .... ._.,.... tt•P"' MURDER SUSPECTS READ RIGHTS.-~ •• P'romAl ,. Coffman. 24, and James Grqory Marlow, 30, have been charJed Wlth the kidnap and murder of Corinna Novis. 20, of RedlaruU • ..-whose sbal· low &f1lve Coffman fed authorities to last week. They also are suspects in the kidnaf and murder of Lynel Mumy, 19, o Huntinaton Beach and the slayina of Sandra Ann Neary, 32, of Costa Mesa. Deputy District Attorney Ray- mond Hai&ht Ill said a published report was false that Coffman had not been informed of her nahts in the Nov1scase. Haiaht said his comments to a reporter for the Los Anaeles Herald Examiner were m1sundentood. "There arc some M~nda issues, and those will be ht1pted 1n court, but the SUSP,CCts c::ertaJnly bad been M1raJ\dJzed ' when the srave was pointed out Saturday, Haiaht said. The MU11nda decision came an ORANGE , ......... COAST -· r•I 1966 when the U.S. Supreme Court when they were arrested Nov. 14. rcqu{rcd officers to inform those they ;.r But the Los Anscles HcraJd Eum- arrest of their ri&ht to rcmam silenr • aner reporter who interviewed H.aisht and have an attorney present durina carher 111d Haiaht was quoted ~ questionina. , curately. Failure.to advise Coffman of those The Herald Euminerrcported that n&hts would cloud the admJSs1b1hty Haiaht said . pohc::e deliberately did of the &f'llVCSite evidence in court. not read Coffman her riahts because Redlands poltce Capt. Lewis she Jed them tobclieveNoviswustill Nelson said that both Coffman and ali ve, and she could help them locate Marlow were informed of their nahts her. · · Armed m en rob grocery store · A pair of armed robbers fled with an unknown amount of cash Sunday after holding up a South Laauna, arocery stoT'C. · · The men wore SkJ masks when they waJked into the AJpha Beta at WesJey Road and Pacific Coast Hiahway at 9:30 p.m.. wd Oranae County Shenffs Lt. Russ Elsner. One of the robbers was carryina 1 12-aausc shoitun u they walked up to one oflbc checkstands, Elsner said. They arabbcd an UJ\known amount of cash out of the resister and fled the store on foot, he wd. Coc>yr.gl!I 1M3 0.a<lll" CcMSI ~ Company No ,,.... ttoro" -..11ato0nt ec1tt0t,.. matt• Ot aci-1 .. "*'" ,_....,, l'llfY tie 19j)todU<,aO "' l"OVI tp«* pat nwteoon ot coe>y1'11"4 - Justcall 642-6086 What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your messaac will be ~rded, transcribed and de· ljvcrcd to the appropriate editor. Motllley·,,.clay II )'Oii 00 llQI lie-. your ~ by ~)()pm cati.i0<e 7p"' encl '(Oii C(lpp ... De OIWartO SahMdey allCI Sun0ey H ~ 00 not rec-yOY< CO!))' bf 1 a m ~ tlelOfe 10 a m arid ~ CoP'f ... llt-acl 6acOf\d tlaM POtlaQt pat0 at Co.la .,._ C:.1 lor,_ (uPI ,., 8001 Suoectopt.on by t:a<••" 1!) pat pattOd bf ,,,... '1 00 ,_,..., VOL. 71, NO. 328 J The same 24-hour answerioa service may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for vcnficat1on Tells us what's on your mind. Clrcua.tlon Tela~ ..... ()r~Counl, ... ,_ ~ ..... · A Very Special Shoe Dep·artment • #119 Fashion Island • Newport Beach • 759-1622 •Bullocks Wilshire Wi111 •