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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-29 - Orange Coast Pilot... Cllll H8 -- ".' ',II • ,, \ ' '' ' I ' .. , II .' ') 1 •l ~I I ()I~ A ~~ ', f ( . {) I j , 4 ' , , f. . I I ) ' ' j ,. • ' : •• ------ DA to investigate 5 boat deat Criminal charges possible in crash of speedboat in Anaheim Bay Sunday By ROBERT BARltER &ad STEVE MARBLE OfllleDlllr ......... The investigation of a speedboat crash that killed five persons and injured four others in one of Orange Coast We asked Coast folks what question they'd llke to put to Walter Mondale If they could./ A3 Photos of 5 and 10 kilo- meter Heart and Sole race In lrvlne./ A3 California Girl with heart Of baboon reported 'healthy' by · doctors./ A5 Nation The Washington Post, among other papers, has endorsed Walter Mon- dale for President./ AS Meanwhile, presldentlal ads continue to Inundate the televlslon tube./ A4 Scientists meeting this week figure there'll be a permanent moon station early In the next century. /AA World Divers fall to f!nd body of Polish pro-SoHdarlty priest In rlver./A4 Greenpeace crew boards Russian whaling vessel In high-seas protest./ A5 Feature Playwright Luls'Va,dez, visiting at UC Irvine, "eonnectsthetwo hur- ricanes" of Hispanic and Anglo experiences./ A7 Sports County's worst boating disasters will be turned over to the district at- torney's office for possible criminal prosecution., officials said today. The 20.foot fibefllass boat. the Whiskey Runner, smashed head-on into a concrete and steel Navy mooring buoy at the entrance of Anaheim Bay outside of Huntington Harbour about 3: 15 a.m. Sunday. JudJing from the damage to the boat, 1nves1iptors said the boat may have been traveling at 20 mph. The speed limit in the channel which links Huntington 'Harbour and Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station with the sea i 5 mph. · The dead were identified u Kathy Weaver, 24:... of Laguna Beach; John BakQS, 22, Konalcf Aem M~. 22, and Anthony Wayne Sutton, 27, all of Sc.al Beach and Patl'icia Hulings, 20, of Downey. The survivors were identified as the boat's pilot Virl !Earles of Seal Beadl, Stephen Brennan of West- min tcr,Carol Kcmblcofl..agunaand Earnest Chavez of Bakersfield. It's Big Game week for Fountain Valley and Edison high school foot- ball teams,/81 LafaDa '• Hel4l lliller hopea to market heryotmtacrou the country. The LA Rams found the goJng pretty darned tough Sunday-to the tune of 33-0./81 Lakers have problems In Texas./83 . ·:::::!:~~:~:~:·:~:~=~·:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:·:·:·:·:~·:·~·:·:·:·:· Entertainment Costa Mesa's South Coast Repertory Is dust- ing off the holly for Its fifth ''Christmas Carol."/ Al Bualneu Reuben E. Lee celebrates 20 yelrs on Newport Harbor JM INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board BullnMI Cllltfomla News CleMltled Comlel CrOllWOtd Death Notl<* F.aturea Horoeoc>Pe Ann L.:lndeF9 Mutual Funds Nattonel News Opinion Paparazzi PobL~ Puble NotloH Spodt Stock Marketa TeleYttk>n ThHt .. W•ther WortdNewa A10 AS 84 A4 87-10 A10 89 88 A7~ B8 A8 84 A4 A8 A7 AS Be 81-3 85 AS A9 A2 A4 She pumps iron, as well as product Laguna bodybuilding champ Heidi Miller hopes to-market health food nationally -- 'You don't want to call Heidi Maller a 98-pound weaklina. Now, it's true the blonde, brown- eyed businesswoman weighs in at two pounds less than the century marlc. But don't even think: of1'ic5'1n& sand in her face. You don't need that kind of trouble. Heidi, you sec, is a body builder. She pumps iron six days a week. She bench pl"C$SCS 160 pounds. Not onoe. mind you. Heidi pu hes l60 pounds otT her chest 40 times each session -Mondays. Wednesdays and Fridays. On Tuesdays, Thur.;days and Saturdays. she works on her teas. back and anns. Thafs probably why she can beat men half apin her weight at arm wrestling. She jogs a dozen miles a week in tlit hills surroundin& her home in Laguna and ride a stationary bike4S minut~ each day. As a ~sult, she•s won enoujh bodY buildina titles to make the lncrcdiblC Hulk green with envy. But lately. Miller hi been dividin.s her time between body building -and 'Ghostbuste~s .' n haunting experience STm M1tCH£ll PEOPLE IN THE NEWS busine buildina. She and partner Brian PBllas. a former marketing director for the Queen Mary and national sale$ manaacr for the Disneyland Hotel, have embarked on an enterprise they hope will result in the bigcst frottn yogun busine 1n the countty. Sort of a fermentation franchise, if you will, featuri!lf f rozcn cUlturc rather than fried ch1ckcn. And from the response they've had from folks interested in operatina their own Heidi's FrQgCn Yozun Shoppe (her dad came up with the (Pleue Me LAGtmAJIC/ A2) 9fficuaJs ad the sroµp apparently ·h3d been at the Red Oruon restaurant a6d bar ID Huntington Harbour-until 2 a.m. and t~ took a c:nute the Queen Mary. The crash occum<f on the return trap to the boat's berth in Sunset Aquatics Part ID Huntington Harbour. Authontics y the eDuan~ 10 the harbor IS well lighted although there we~ no lights on the buoy. It was not known 1f tbc boat 1 li&bt1 were CM!:. , OraDJC County S6erifr1 Lt. llOD Kemm1 Aid all four IUf'VWOrl. including the opcralOf of' tbt ...... bolt WttC given alcobol blood 1Ct8 but 1ts were not completed. ·s no andicauon that an,_ ~Y mtoxicatctt" Kemm Although be pve no :indi~ (Pleue .eeBOAT,/~ Oops council candidate gets 90 extra words Most other Mesa hopefuls understandl By TONY SAA VEDllA Of .. DlllJ ......... Wost Costa Mesa Cily C.Ou I candida1es are taking in stride a mistake that pve incumbent Eric Johnson an extra 90 words to promote his candidacy in sam~e ballots mailed to rqistcrcd voters. The error by City Clerk Eileen Prunncy's office aDOwed Johnson to surpass the 2QO.word limit on 1he candidate statements printed within the pamphlets sent earlier this month to Costa Mesa's 48,SOS regis~ voters. While most candidates were under- standing, Doug Yates, one of the 10 contenders for three open council scats, said he .. hit the roor· when he ' ' received Phinney°s letia- ... lf I had IODC ID witb a ~word ~~ 1 ·womcrhne-:bem--sbol down .. Yates said- Bui othcn, thousb diSJllealed with the mixup, were more foqivias. .. we·rc all human bcinll aDd we m~~ mistakes," said Plaan•~ m1SS1oner and candidate reacc Clarke ... Probably nObocly 'but :die candidatcS realized me~ ... Council bOJ>Cful Mary Hornbuckle said, "It's urifornmaie, but it won' give him ~~ore of an edee. People make mis ... Phinney 9CDt lencn to the can-. didatel Wcdnesda notifyina lbenl that her office i::lvcrtendy ICDI u (Pleue 1ee CAlllDIDATS/AS Fish spotters join selUCIJ for znissJng Newport JDen By ROBEl\T HYNDMAN ot•Dlllr ....... The search for two Ncwpon Beach men lost at sea since Oct. 20 strctchN into its 10th day 'Wi&h ·pro-~ lbla~ ...... ** for ofthcboatan&t me mea. lbe pouers., who Oy over e coastal waters each day in rdl of . Sdlools offish for commercial fishiDJ boats; will pick up the hunt for Steve Bailey and Nonn Sagc:>na today as other volunteers have temporarily discontinued &heir rescue efforts. Bob Black, manager of C..talina Passenger Service, the Balboa ferry service that employs the two men. said notices have been left in mannas all along the Southern c.alifomia coastline asking if anyone has seen signs of the men. the 00,! or its contents. Because the 12-foot boat. its teat cushions and other supplies bave not yet ~ f ou.nd, tcareberS remain hopeful that Baile) and ~ arc lllh-c and still board the Whi\C-oh~ ikil[ . 'llllCl .. abo ........ ..,na•··~-----..­out for the missing boaters. BaiJey. 2S. and ~ ~ ~ last seen leaving Catalina Island vq, 20. for the return trip to NewpQrt; They ran into rough seas about I 7 miles cast of Avafon HarbOc' aft« follo..-ing in the wake of a fisbinj boaL ' ~ A 31/:-day search by the Coast Guard. foUowcd by a volunteer .air sCarcb that ran through Sunday, tilit.!Cd up no · of the boat; F:riCnds and co-workers of the two men ha'·e cOUected more tbu SI0,000 in donatioa.s to pay for me fuel volunteers arc usio& iD their ·r search. Suspect cleared in Laura kidnap investigators of Huntington Beach girl's abduction tum attention to San Diego By STEVE MARBLE Of .. DlllJ ......... A Chino man detained for ques- tioning this weekend in the apparent kidnapping .. of a 3-ycar-old Hunt- ington Bcadl girl bas been cleared of suspicion, a San Bernardino hcrifrs spokesman said today: Spokcunan Jim Bryant "d the man. -..-anted on a SS0,000 child olestation warrant. v.•as taken into custod_y late Friday in Lona Beach. The man was a .. ciubon copy" of a batdina.; gray-baircd man bcina soUght m the apparent kidnapping of little Laura Btadbury, Br}-ant said. "He was a perfect match but it W&5D•t our guy," said Bryant. who said tbe man was am:sted on the outstandin warrant as wdl as two child molestation charaes out of Ontario. Meanwhile, the t 2-day an::h for theg1rl has now taken investigators to San Diego County wbcrc a aroup of known sex offcndcn were to t>e intcnicwed toda). Invcstiptorscon- tinue to scardl in San Bernardino and Orange counties. The small blond sirl vanished Oci. I from ber parcnt•s campsite t J hua Trtt ational OD\l!Deal. near Twentynine Palms and a 120milcs from Orange County. It is bclie''Cd the lifl was~ b a tidna~. possibly a pay-baireCt' n in • 50s dn •dark blue v_. with distincti\'C ba)' windows an the rear. 8r)"&Dt satd tbitt separate Wll• n -, however, A.id they w the Ii.rt 1tra\-clina v.ith an older woman Fut week in the south Ontano area. .. We believe uon&Jy that She's still alive imJ)ly because we haven-, ound her.~ .&,nuna1d. . •Id a metal railing may ba•e aa•ed tc•e WataOn '•life by pre•entlng the truck'• cab from bdna cruhed. The truck wu carry· iDC lnaerii for Tuaday'• ed.ltton of the e .... paper, the spokesman Mid. Wat.on, of Tuflin, wu treated at Fou.ntaJn Valley Community Boepltal trauma center. ragnet out for gem bandits lnvestigatOI") are hoping a state-' ~ wi~e dispatch describing the gun· totmg man and woman who grabbed $405.000 in jewels and cash from a ncosta Mesa jewelry store Saturday will turn up some new leads. police id this morning. Lt. Jack Calnon said a teletype has been sent to other law-enforcement nci~ to determine whether the 1 couple. described as a male Hi panic with black wavy hair and a female Oriental with a black page-boy hair· cut. might have been involved in other heists. The male robber was funher de· scribed as 5-7 and 150 pounds: whde the woman was described as bcina 5-3 and 120 pound . Calnon said the descriptions are about the only clues that police have. Police reponed the duo was brows- ing through the shop, looking at rings around 4:30 p.m. at Winston's New- port Jewelers, 1761 Newpon Blvd. The man suddenly pulled out a small caliber handgun. He held two cus-. tomers as well as four emplo)ees and owners at bay while the woman cleaned out the display cases. Calnon sa1d an "excessive" amount of money was also taken from the pocketsofone of the owners. He was unable to repon how much money was stolen from the man, but he ~id the combined loss in cash and jewelry was $405,000. CANDIDATE GETS 90 EXTRA WORDS ••• edited version of Johnson's cam- ian statement to the printers. It is a routine practice for Phinney o review the statements by counting ·each word. Statements surpassing the :oo.word limit set by the City 1 Council are returned to the can· 1 did.ates for editing. t• Phinney said this momin& that r Johnson's statement was initially 290 • words long. but he edited it to 197. : "He handed in the two sheets. the . . second one was the one to be published," Phinney said. However, both sheets were mistakenly sent to the printers in August. Phinnej didn•t discover the mis- take unti the sample ballots were mailed this month. She said it didn't seem practical to recaJI the pamphlets. However, she collected the 200 rcmainina sample ballots at the county registrar•s office and marked out the extra verbiage in Johnson''$ statement. Those pamphlets arc usually distributed by request at City Hall. "I did the only thing l thought I could do,"· said the chagrined city clerk. Incumbent Johnson maintained it was an honest error. "For a mistake to come out of (Phinney's) department is as unusual as the sun. not coming up in the summer." Johnson said. . ~cosTUME RUN DRAWS CROWDS ••• :From Al • :l:oast HiJ}lway to Ba>s1de Drive. and • ck~m. :_~--="Mens winner Bruce Johnson of ~uiguna Beach co"ered the course in 7:09. Kathleen Burke of Newport Beach, a triathlon competitor. was e first woman to cross the finish e. Then it was back to Hogue's home or a well-earned bruach and camping front of the telev1s1on to watch. at else, the New York Marathon. Hogue said the idea for the "Ghostbusters lOK·• started last )car when be and some friends were ·running through Laguna Beach's Heisler Park. "It was in the morning and there had apparently been a big party there the night before. because there was crepe paper and trash all over the place," he said. "Someone just picked up some of it and wrapped it around himself and kept running. Pretty soon everyone was running throutth OAT CRASH KILLS 5 ... From Al t boat dnver Earles. 28, might face criminal charges. Kemmis said bis '9epartment's report on the mishap would be given to the district attorney ,.for consideration. The speedboat 1s registered to lloben Sharp of Anaheim, Kemmis said. But investigators have not • 4,kterrnmed 1f Sharp loaned the boat , \o the group Two survivors -Earles and pass- " 1.mger Brennan, 24. -were in serious oondition today m the intensive care •, ~nit at Los Alamitos Medical Center. Earles suffered several fractures and a ruptured intestine. He had .~urgery Sunday according to hospital supervisor Fred Weiss. Two other survivors -Kemble, 25 Chave1, 24, were treated for 1n1uncs and relea~d. - WE ·Rr l1srENINC --~-------- Just Call 642-6086 Two of the dead were found below in the boat's small cabin. authorities sa1d, while three others were found underneath the wreckage, submeraed in 45 feet of water about 125 yards from the entrance to Sunset Harbor Aquatic Park. Sheriffs divers recovered all the bodies about five hours after the 3 a.m. accident. said Lt. Dan Sprau. None oftbe dead was 'A-eanng a life Jacket. Kemmis said. "In terms of the number of dead and injured, it's the worst we've had here in quite a while," U S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Thomas Henke said of the accident. The survivors were thrown clear of the wreckage. Two were found cbng- 10g to a buoy, a thtrd swam ashore for help and the founh remained near the Laguna with crepe paper streaming off them. "It was a lot of fun and we decided we ought to run in costumes for HaJloween." Hogue printed fliers OR oran&e paper providing detail~ of the I 0- kilometcr race and distnbutcd them to fellow runners. That's how traditions get started as Hogue int s to make the "Ghost OK" an annual event. .. buoy with the others. Spratt said. "From the angle of impact and all other indications, "I'd have to sax that no evasive actions were taken ' on the part of the pilot. Kemmis said. "The buoy was pretty much center- punched.' The sleek boat, known as a day cruiser. later was hauled in pieces onto a nearb) dock. None of those aboard was the boat's owner. The 3-foot·high buoy was sur· rounded with rubber flotation de- vices, and had been used by the Navy to tie up ammunition barges, deputies said Spratt said the accident took place 1n relatively calm waters with 'ood weather and 20-mile v1sib1ltty. Autopsy results are pending. Morningfog, lowc 'Oudsahead 'tides TOOAY ,, 65 •Ill 8:o3p"'- TUHOAY ·~·'" 711a.m 1 12."' 8Up111 -IOCSey al 6"03 pm , fllea :T~ •I 8 11•.m.lllldMUllQ&ln9t 6~p.m Mtaltt 37 pm,,.._ Tuacl.ly al 1~ 40 P m end Mtt a(j •I 10 31 P rn Temperatures HI Lo 78 58 ., 31 eo •e »r IS .. 1 .. 14 117 13 86 13 .. 74 70 40 22 Extended eo ., 12 eo 73 4) •2 2t a n .,, 16 u t7 "' 31 .. 3, .,. 5t n " eo 10 11 ~ 74 11 IO 50 10 50 63 2t 0 2t 70 45 33 2i 73 47 am 1·2 1·2 1·2 1 2 1 1·2 ltwdl dlr~llOll _,"-' ' 83 78 .. N .. ., u ea u.,, ,, ., G3 u 67 13 67 60 66 .. 10 63 12 .. 64 21 u 40 18 61 1'I "' .. 1' .. 11 81 a N 13 51 71 11 " 60 M 19 07 44 ae '6 " 76 47 60 31 71 60 15 • ., 12 t7 6' M IO M 12 13 LAGUNAN P-USHING YOGURT ••• From Al tran ~ tttle). you have to figure the busine5$ panners are onto a real SWCCI deal. "We've received more than 250 f ranchisc applications so far." the 30- year!<>ld businesswoman said. Not bad for a corporation that started in the summer of 1982 with a $65,000 investment in a small Irvine shop. The two panners sold their homes to scrape up the cash for their first yogurt shop, then added another $30,000 in improvements the next year. They opened the La'una Beach store nine months ago 10 a former brokerage office on Broadway . And the enterprising pair isn't stopping there, not by a long shot · A 2,000-square-foot corporate of· fice will open in l.a.guna Hills in three weeks and to~ in Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach will open next month. with a store in Fashion Island by February. "We've aot franchises planned in Tustin. Lona Beach, Westwood. Beverly Hills, Mi,sion Viejo, Laguna Ni cl nd Escondido," Heidi ~ys. ey pair'i game plan calls for 195 sto ~·by the end of 1988. Seventy of those will be in Southern California, half owned by the com- pany. the other half franchises. Heidi figures the prQjected national sales for the 195 stores will be more than $35 million by the end of 1988. That's going to keep a lot ofbacteria busy. Not to mention Heidi who puts in a doien hours a day at the office, de•llng Wlth attorneys, potential franchisees, and overseeing the opcr· a ti on of two store . And that doe5n't even count the hours she 4>pcnds concocting new yogun flavors to add to the 60 she's created to date. Ncvenhcless, with the exception of Sundays, not a day $OCS by that healthy Heidi isn't lifting. bending, pulling and 5tretchmg at one of two health clubs to which she belongs. "It's addictive," she says of her athletic avocation. The fonner nationally ranked gym- nast was a nursing student in Sacra· mento, before droppina out, as she says, "about a minute shon of a nursing degree." She was lured away from education to work as a sales rep~ntative for a leotard manufacturer. ln connection with her work. she competed in gymnasucs events until four years ago when the pressure of her job, along with the five or six hours a day of required training, forced her to stop. Not one for the sedentary life. He1d1, later dropped by a gym and startl'J lifting a few barbells. The managt'r of the gym noticed her muscularity and petite form and persuaded berto s body building program in came~. Two months later, she entered and won her first com{>Ctition. She's been winninaeversince. First 10 the Miss Natural America contest in Las V qas in 1982; first in the Miss Natural ·universe in Pennsylvania the same year; first in the Mi4>s Grand Pri>t in Los Angeles the following year and first in the Mi~ Western America ... ORANGE COAST compcuuon last month in Orange Count}. Her phenomenal physique has appeared in dozens of fitness maga· zincs and graced the covers of ome prett) impressive glamour maga- zines. Large posters displaying her flexini form will adorn each of the Heidi yogurt franchises as a not-so-subtle reminder that the frozen yummies she's selling are good for you. The proof, so to speak. is in the yogun. Why. a quick peek back to the color photograph of Heidi on the front Pa&e should show you yogun isn•t fatten· ing. And Heidi is a constant consumer of the cold culture. "I personally eat tv.o 16-ouncc containers of yogurt a day." she sa)s. That and maybe one of her Super Pro protein drinks (that's a blend of apple juice, yogurt. banana, protein powder and egg.) The corporate president pumps up her product a~ enithlliiastica · he pumps1ron. Counting off points on slim finaers, she sa)S her yogurt has less than one gram of fat per ounce and only 17 to 24 calories per ounce; aids in diges- tion: won't clog your arteries; con- tains no sugar -only honey and f ructosc. and is heartily endorsed by weight watcher groups. Who's to argue with an endo~­ ment like that? You better not. Heidi might want to arm wrestle. Clrculatlon 714/642--4333 Dally Piiot Delivery la Guaranteed Daily Pilat Claaalfled advertising 714/642·5871 AJI other departments 642-4321 uonoa, fnoa, " ~ oo not ,,... 'fOt/11 ~ br 5 30 P m u be!Of9 7 p m ""° ·-COP)' .... ~ ~eted S.turca, ano Suno.t, "· y0u oo llOI rece .e yo.. copy 0y 7 1 m c:&~ ocrklte I 0 I m and YoU1 COOy *. bt~ed Clrculatlon TelephonH MO.I O.•no~ COU'l•r ... •• u M2~ I eouna Ntg~I 4-.-00 H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher RoHmery Churchmen Control er Stephen F. Cerezo Production Manager Donald L. Wllllema C1rculat1on Manager MAIN OFFICE 330 W~1 Bar Cclsta M""9 CA '-la "OOt'°" So• I~ Costa !.'f'Sa CA 9:>626 VOL. 77. NO. 303 SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUTIERS Designed, Finished Installed FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MA~KET TODAY. : • AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! c111(714)548-6841 or 548-1717 HElllWOOD MANUFACJOllY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa M a, CA 92627 Scholarship dance slated Th UCI La Raza A soc1auon will bold us seventh annual Scholarship Dance on turday, Nov 3, at 7·30 P!m in the HenlJl&C Room of the Un1vct11tv C.Cnieron the UCJ campus. " La Raza as composed of UCI Chicano and Launo lllft faculty and students. Its purpose as to Qllat UCI 1n !'tlponding to th~ ~~softhe H11~ntecommun11yand to mfc~sc the ~n1c1pat1on of Hispanic P¢0p1e an all a1pect1 o umversuy hfc. The Proceed from th11 fundta1ser ao toward the IUPJ>9n of La Raz.a 's scholarship proaram1 wtuch annually provides awards to undergraduate aradu.ate and medical studcnu. ' Donations for the dance, featunna live mu11c and a JUt•t s~lcer, arc SI 0 per P.Crson or S 18 per couple Ticket m ormauon can be obuuncd by calling Eileen Mane Munoz at 856-6196 or Barbara A)lla at 856-6888. Halloween proaram announced Huntinaton Beach Convalescent Hospital 188 ll Florida St., will present a "Halloween Door-to-Door Adventure" on Wednesday, Oct. 31, from 6 to 8 p.m. The event, to provide local nea~borhhod children with a safe ".trick or treat" program, 1s expttted to draw some 200 children and adults. It is .also to provide the elderly residents with an opponun1ty to ~k~ P!M in a progral)l that would have been a pan of their hfe in the community if they could still be ~t ~~mc .. For more information, call Adriana Morrison, 1Ct1v1taes director, at 847-3S 1 S, Ext. 20. J11nlor Ebella Ht bazaar Walking cla••e• offered Saint Joseph Hospital, 1100 W. Stewan Drive Oranae. will present .. Walking for Health" cla~ bqinnina Saturday, Nov. 3. The three-class sessions arc desianed toward taratt &oats of SO or lOOmilesofwalkinaovera two-week period. fbey will cov~r s~hins, footwear, and techniques to mautc aerobic activity by speed walkina. Cost of the class is.510 and prerqistration is required by callina 771-8040. Garate u.le acheduled Tbe Planned Parenthood Association ol. Oranae County will bold its second annual community-wide prage sale on Saturday" Nov. 3, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the around floor area of the City Centre Complex., 17330 Brook.hunt. Fountain Valley. Included in the sale, to raise funds to pay for medical ,,._ ... -.... -n ... aervices for needy patients, will be furniture, appliances, lrvtae ~:Cf.~1:1~ J:~~.fumiture, lugaae, diSbes, books and Radio sports director With clinics in Santa Ana, Costa Mesa, Stanton, "Did he really want Mission Viejo and San aemente, the aroup provides Geraldme Ferraro for a more than 18,000 medical services each year to county runnina mate or was be residenu. For more information, call Betty Patterson at pressured into il?" 973-1733. Charlty benefit announced Coun Stella Morris No. 1448, Catholic Daughters of America, will spnsor its annual charity event benefit on Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 3 and 4, in St. Joachim Parish Hall, 1964 Oran.se Ave., Costa Mesa. Featured will be needlework, potted plants, religious aniclcs, white elephants, bakery items and more. Houn are from noon to 7 p.m. on Saturday1 and from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sunday. For more information, call S4S.2938. Motivation rum achedaled · An 80-minute film on motivatina children to read will be shown Nov. 6 and 7 in Costa Mesa. The film1 .. Readina Aloud: Motivatina Children to Make Books into Friends, Not Enemies, .. will screen at 7:30 p.m. the first day at Boswell Hall, and 9:30 a.m. the second day at Tewinkle Middle School. CU11ttaa SHa lrvbae Hoasewlfe The film was made by best-aellina author Jim Trcleue, who wrote 0 The Read-Aloud HandboOlc. '' .. If Mondale feels aov· ernment should stay out of a women's choice to have -----an abortion. why then is he for government pa)'ina fo~ them?" Monday, Oct. 29 • I :30 p.m., otaqe Couty Pluala1 CommJulou, Hall of Admmistration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Alia. PoucE Loe m ms Hutbagtoa Beacb Medical u1l1tut "If he got -a wo vice president for her ualifi- cations or just io t the \\Omen's vote." Police seize three teens iii Costa Mesa car bugla Three tcen-acers were arrested early thia momana in Costa Mesa after a car ttcreo and other stolen items were found in the !Vehicle in which they were ndi~ polioc said. Police reported the 1tem1, valued at S l, 19 I, were apparently taken around midni&ht from a car parked in an ~~cot complex at 2700 .Peter10n Accordina to repons, • poboc officer, who saw the trio leave the comJ)lex pulled \hem over at the intttseetlon of Harbor Boulevard and P'oaatlilDV.U., Pohoe arrctted a 19-year-old Santa ~na man for uuult and battery after he lli.<lly shaaCd another man f91&owina a n.Mc«acddent late Fri· day. Martin R. EliU ofTcntb St.reei 1n Santa Ana was booked into Ora• County Jail after alltaedly punchn:aa Henry Andrada of :~ount Darw1n Circle 1n Fountain Valley. ' ndrada said Ehas hit IUm in the floe after be ed E111 for b11 dnwr•1 hccnw folJoWJnt the 11:30 pm. traftk acci- dent Jt l'he ~ntenc.ct1on of Euclid Street anal!dtuptA.venut. A Wluppoo1--nw.,,lill Avenue man 11 out S2.3U in ..-eo equtpment and other nan folloWina • bul'llaY lasl week Wa~ Janten &Ota &iolace 90mcone pned Opt!! ti• kitchen 1ndo • entered h1 home and 1ook l Baker Street. The youths were identified as Kon Kina . 18, and Lay NantbavoqdOU&Dll)', I • bOth of Santa Ana. A 17-year-old ucn.qer from Costa Mesa was also taken anto custody, but his name was witbeld because of his aae. The two men were bo<>ked into Costa Meu city jai~ where they mnaincd th11 morruflt 1n lieu of $10,000 bad apie(e for tnvestapuon of auto buralarY and pc>SleSSIOn of stolen propeny. The manor was taken SltttO cqwpment, • teltVJ11on and some ,jcWelJ)' sometime bctwftn Wednetday momana amt ffidly aftemoon • • • Two 'Fountain Valley ph 1aans rq»O!led three JpretC!1pbOD ped m1111111 ,from iheir oftka. ~bl)' taken by IOmcone With a pass kt) t>Octon Pai and Sam1m1, •hote offices ate at 11 llO Warner A.vtn~ 1uata 16' and 169, llid the pads Mre taken IOIM\ime last wttk othina da ... laUn from either ofticc. lnlM police•id ••• ~l lued at SUB were tekrn f'T'Om I home n mt 18000 block Of Crater Lake ourt Ore100· IWlmaier told Police tools and a milk carrxr wett &attn rtom b 1 open Pl'llt IOrMlllM bctv.uo 2 and S p m unda) while he W&$ at borne ey lrvllle Admlal1tratlve coor41- utor "I'm more concerned with defense of the country -what his reasons are on the defense of the country. Isn't be statin,1. ·we don't need all of this defense.• l feel we do need to continue with our defense pro- arams." Jim Bartale Newport 8-da Ballcler "It would be wby he thinks be could be an cffCC'tive president When be has appeared to be so indecisive in the runnina of bis campaip?'' Huntington clubs planning carnival ~ • The Bo)'S and Girls Oub of Hunti ton V~y. (Huntinaton Bcacb and Fountain Valley) ill praedt a Halloween cami\'al Wednesday ni&ht. The event lill include a carni\"ll. a pumpki.D carvl contest. a costume contest and a drill team performan • The main event. a haunted home. can be touml Monda)', Tuesday and Wednesday for a SI donation. The evenu Will take Plaoc from 7-9 p.m. at 319 Yorktov.'11 A\e. in HuntingtOn Beach. P:roceeds will to vd impro\'CmCnts al the bo and girls club. ' McLouablin. 20, was arrested al market. Springdale and E.dinger. The I l:SO p.m. Saturday on Culver Drive SSO purse contained $10 cash and at the San Diego Freeway. Thomas credit ca.nh. Manuel Cardenos, 36, was arrested at 8:SO p.m. on Fitch at MacAnhur Boulevard. Prudencia Rosales Abunde-. 281 was arrested at IO:lS am. on lr"1ne Boulevard t Yale \Cnue. Cathennc Mercedes Swtet. 24, wasarrt' tcdat 2: lOa.m. on Irvine Center Drh"t t Jeffrey Road. ~n unnamed ju\cnile was arrested at 11:30 p.m. F:riday on Amatfi Drive and Via o-.clla. Robcn Gordon Ian, 4S, serrcsted at • IS p.m on Main Street at Red Hall A\tnue. And Ronnie Richard Bum , 'as a1TC1tedat 7:3S p.m. on Main treetat San Dicao Crttk. • • • The ttrcs ol a car pUktd on lhc dnvewa~ of • pri vcn omc were rcponedl slaShC'd unday nl&ht. . . . :· t • • I • .. ·' Divers still seek Pole priest's body \\A'RSA , Pol nd (.4.P)-Divcrs the lntcnor M1n1stcy have been ve faded to find lhc body of a pro-charged in the bduction. acoordina SOhdantypncstdurin a rchofthe to Interior Mini ter Gen. w Vistul~Rherclo towhcre1hepric t KisLCZDk. Yt'aS abduc&cd on Ocl. 19~ W rsaw Kia.c:zak said the captain' claim Radio reponed today. that he ktllcd Po~57.ko had not An lnten1>r fotlstry communaque lbcen confirmed use 11 three id the rch for the poc t, thc Rev. officersgavcconflictin,gtesumonyoo ;J n) ~p~eluszko, Y< s ®nunu1!'! the fate of the priCSl. th "htgJUy pccializcd equipmcnti' Kiszcz.ak id ntifibd the capiain c state-'nm rndio id. Grzegon. Piotrowski and the lieutcn- Thc lntcnor Mmistry b3 5aid-lhe ants Waldemar Chmielewski and :~est was kidnapped nd P<>$Slbly Uszek Pekala. kJllcd by three o( liu own security Solidarity leader Lech Walesa offiCCfS but that the body has not be urgcdsupponenataMassonSunday found. to avoid being provoked into .. bloody According to the communique._ one revolution" by the kidnapping of of the officers 1d ht killed Popieluszko. Popieluszko and threw his body into Walesa told a crowd in Gdansk, the Vi tuJa near the northern city of where strike$ in 1980 led to the Torun, where the bduction oc-foundina or Solidarity, that the kid- aured. The communique said the napping may have been an attempt to two ~tbcr men .. pointed to 1 bay (on provoke the government's oppo- tbe nver) near Wloclawek." a town Jnents. about 30 miles southeast ofTorun. The labor leader said in a telephone · .. The search conducted with the interview that he told the worshipas: ~n.ici~tion of divcr:t brou~t no "We won't let anybody pull us into results and the victim hasn t been brawls in which we wilJ lose. We A cburcb member ha Warsaw p es f1owen to fence alont1lde photo of Rey. POplelauk abclacted Oct. 19. .found yet," the radio report said. simply cannot let anybody manipu-tbe 1983 Nobel Peace Pnzc. "According to experts at a place late us into any situation. r Church officials estimated that qtentioned by the abductors there are .. If somebody assumed it would be 50,000 people came to another Mass strong currents. which ma.kc the a revolution. I won't give him a on Sunday, at St. Stanislaw Kostka search more difficult." bloody rtvolution. lam for peaceful Church in Warsaw, where _A.....,_ca.;..p_w_·_n_a_n_d_tw....:o_lie_u_te_n_an_u_o_f_e_v_o....:lu_h_·o_o.;.."_w_· d_W_ll_esa.__;;_wi....._n_n_er_of_ Popieluszko's sermon championing DIATE REMIS IUAUllTEED 545-1476 "I've never seen any- ' thing like it." Solidarity would ~larly draw thousands of listeners. The crowd was one of the large5t at a Mass in Warsaw since Pope John Paul II visited his native Poland in l983. .,_ _________ _,__~ RUFFELL'S UPH~LSTERY, llC. f• Tiie ln1 Of , .. lit ltZ2 HAIP aw .. COSTA IUA -541·115' "It's the best thing I've -ever done to myself." t ,. ELIMINATE NAGGING BACK PAIN TONE&FJRM LOOSE, SAGGY MUSCLES IOltlOOAIT m11a1 NV•CM flllAPY :flii~llUTOl..11"1 ... ~--------------~--~--_.. Co1ta Mesa Medlcal Center Hospital Offers ·FREE X-RAY SCREENINGS OF HALLOWEEN TREATS Costa mesa m•dlcal Center Hospital To Th• Community: We ore providing this free service to detect metal in candy or fruit In on effort to protect y9ungsters and their parents. X-ray Deportment personnel will screen the food Items with the use of a radiology fluoroscopy unit similar to those used In airports. Parents should examine their children's Halloween treats for: any signs of tampering. X-rays ore able to detect metals but may not be able to Identify certain other solid objects due to their density. And, there's atways the posslblllty of foul play, with poisons or injected drugs. The parents' watchful eyes can spot certain things mochtnes cannot Identify. We want you to have a safe and Happy Halloween! Tom Richards AC:lmlftlstrator - cm me Costa m•sa m•dlcal Center Hospital 301 Victoria Street • Costa Mesa. CA 92627 • (714) 642·2734 \ stepped up patrols in the the capital, where concen- f police vehicles, includina non, were stationed at at points. Poh leader Gen. Wo]ciecb Jaruzel i was quoted as saying authori s would firmly deal with .. anti-ialist forces" be said·wcre stirrin nrcst and ''tl'}ing to prey on a prov tion." • us rocket ttackers 11 threat • U.S. scientists ~dt~cusslng space station on the moon By~ Auodll P WASHINGTON-Although the United S tcs t only batelyemt>artced on bu1ld1!'j a spaoc station, veial hundred scaenu ;ts and engsnec11 gathered lOday to dascu s~oc prOJCCts to follow -particularly the tabhshment of a pelimanem base on the moon. "I be11e".e h highly likely tha1 before th~ fi~t decade of the next century as out, we will, indeed, return to the moon, said amc .M. • 'tile . head of the· National Aeronautics and SJl!10C Admmlstrauon, m remarks pree rca for tlie openin of the Otree:;&ly conference. ••we will do so:· he ad, .. not only to mine sts oxygcn-nch rocks and other resource , but to cstabHsh an outpo t for further explorauon and expansion of human activities in the aol r system, in particular, on Mars and the near-Earth steroids." The sympo lum, sponsored by NASA, i being held at the Nauonal Academy or Sciences. It i pan of an effon to decide the duccuon of pace exploration after an $8 billion pCnnanent mn~ned sunlon is put an otbil around 1992. The space 6Ultion, declared a nationaJ g I by ~csidenl Reagan, is onl)' in the preliminary design stage now. Shuttle teacl:aer appJlcatlon• to be ta.tea HUN"tSVILLE, Ala. -The teacher chosen to fly aboard the space shuttle in l 986 wa It need at least five yean; of teaching expenencc. low blood pre5sure and good hearing, a NASA official says. Alan LadwiJ. director of NASA's Space Flight Pa11icipation Program, said applications from interested elementary and secondary teachers will be accepted from Dec. l to Feb. J. The winner, chosen from a fttld of l 0 finalists picked on July 4, 1985, will become the first non-astronaut in space. Ladwig, wh~ ~reviewed the rtquirements to a group of 40 teachers at a mock buttle mission at the Alabama Space and Rocket Center on Saturday, said NASA would soon issue the requirements in final form, Girl cooked ln oven AUBURN. Maine -Police who responded to a disturbance at an apartment smelled the "unmistakable" odor of burned human flesh and arresteCI a mother and her live-in boyfriend after discovering a 4-year-old girl's body an an oven. Ooe neighbor who inquired about an odor at the couple's apartment Saturday was told .. Lucifer" was buminJ in the oven, police said. Neighbors said they had heard loud religious music. sounds of fiahting and screams of" Let me out!" before calling police, according to a copyriaht story in the newspaper Sunday of Lewiston and Auburn. When police arrived they found the body of 4-year-old Angela Palmer, police Sgt. William Fournier said Sunday. CALIFORNIA --·--~ ~ ' Bowery Boy• actor dead Lbs ANGELES -Dav3d Gorccy, one of three family members who played roles in the Bowery Boys and Dead End Kids movie and television sencs, died of diabetes, his son said. He was 63. Gorcey's death Tuesday in Van Nuys came durinJ an extended illness, his son, David Gorcey. said Saturday. A memorial service was scheduled today in Van Nuys, with cremation and burial of his ashes to follow at Los Angeles National Cemetery. Goroey started in 1how business as a child, joinini his late father, Bernard Goreey, on the vaudeville circuit in the 1920s. Bcmard Gorcey and bis two sons, David and Leo, all played original roles in the Bowery Boys and Dead End Kids comedies. SprbJg•teea gives to load baa.t LOS ANGELES -Rock sinicr Bruce Springsteen, saying his father was sometimes unemployed with no place to tum for help, donated SI0,000 to a food bank for the needy operated by a steelworkcn; sroup. The donation came after GeorJe Cole, director of the Steelworkers Oldtimers Foundation, presented Springsteen a steelworker's hat before the singer's concen at the Sports Arena on Thursday night. Springsteen, who told Cole his father was periodically jobless and without such a foundation to tum to, donated the S 10,000 and asked the 15,493 fans at the concert to also make donations. Hedgecock ad.a draw fire SAN DIEGO-The AFL-CIO's local labor council has purchased time on two television stations lo run advertisements callini for the re-election of Mayor Roeer Hedgecock, a union official says. ":t'he council has endorsed Mayor Hedgecock and its Committtc on Political Education is buying ads in supponofHcdgecock." said Gabe DcNunzio, cditorfotheSan Die&<>:lmperial Counties Labor Council's newspaper. Existence of ttie COPE ads was revealed Sunday night by HCdgecock's opponent, Dick Carlson, during a debate. Labor unions are prohibited by the city election code from makinB contributions to political candidates. But contributions to a committee workin& independently of a candidate arc permissible under cenain circumstances. • · Barrlcade•uspect~ed LAWNDALE -An an.ist and pan-time accountant fatally ahot one neighbor and wounded another before being killed by a sheriffs deputy despite the fact the man wore a bullet proofvest, authorities said. The man barricaded bimselfin his office, which apparently also served as his~in& quaners, around 8:30 p.m. Saturday, and started firing when dcP.uties vcd to investigate a re~n of an attemp~ed b.uralary in the. same buildin& puty Bob Stoneman said Sunday. pepuues did !lOt immediately release the man's name. Deputica at fint had tnCd to coax him out of the second-story office ... He said he had explosives and he wu not coming out," Stoneman said. "They weren•t aware he had a weapon until he started shooting." Bl Salvador battle claJm• 11 SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -Government troops and leftist rebels wag~ a 30-ho~r battle. ~n the slopes of San Vicente volcano, and at least 11 eold1ers were ktlled, mihtary sources report. An army officer, who spOke on condition of anonymity, said 1ix other soldiers were wounded in the fiahtina that lx"pn Saturday and continued until Sunday afternoon. At least 17 soldien were m1ssina and believed captured by lhe rebels, the officer said. In a Sunday homily in the capital, the Roman Calholic archbishoi> of San Salvador said combat has escalated since the first peace talks between the rebels and government leaders two wccu ago. Second couple dJe Jn JlanUa fire MANILA, PhilipPines -A IC<'ond American couple has becri identified 81 amona the fataliues in a fire that burned down a mountain rcson hotel killini 23 peoJ>le, the U.S. Embassy said today. Embassy pokcsman Mike Anderson said the remains of Charles and Genevieve Dela meter of Vacaville Calif., were ~itivdy identified at the nearby U.S. Clark Air Bate. Earlier the embassy identified Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton M. Cosnahan of Dallas u among the dead. Four other ~mericans arc unaocounted for and presumed dead. an emba sy statement said. P.rmJdent condnae. 6UJV1er •trJJre LA PAZ.Bolivia-President Hcm1nS1lesZuaw, wa&1n1a hunacrstnke to prote t criticism of tiis record in fighting cocaine lraffickers, has been ordered ~by his doctor to stop walking around 1thc prcsidcnua:J :P&laoc to uve his cncray. The OPJ>Osition remained unmoved bf, the 70.~r-old Pl"CSldent•s fut, which entered us founh day today. Dr. Gu11Jcrmo Calderon, ales Zuuo'a pcnonal physician, said Sunday he ordered the president to stop 1trolhn1 around the presidential palace to save his cnclJY, Calderon also &aid that on his orders. the president had been puttmg50me upr m the water he drinkt to keep up hJs strenath. BrltJ•IJ patrol amba.Jaed LONDONDERRY Nonhcm irtlana -Gucmllas am bu tied a BntiSh army patrol In Londonderry early tOday and bombed a car showroom an the border town o(N~, pohce rcponed A pdlioc spoke man, Inspector Alben Matchett. 111d tltc 1n1pen opc:aed up on &he ~trot u ii moved throu&h th c staunchly RomU. C..athohc _Bop1dc dittnct of Lohdt>ndtny No ca1ualti were repone<t. Matchett said the howroom m Newry was badly dam ed by the bomb bla11 PQJ1ce 111<1aputer·by1poncd the bomb out adcth showroom and ralltd an alarm Noone wa hun in the xplo aon. I ... M Post endor In Walter Monda e , Claim candidate 'mistreated. misread;' other papers back President Reagan WASHIN N (AP) -The Wash1naton Po t today endorsed Walter F. Mondale for president. sayina he has. been "maddeningly masread and mistreated•' by political trendmakcrs whale Pre ident Reagan ••has been maddCnin&Jy indulged and pvcrpnuscd:' In an editorial, the Post said Reaaan had improved national dc- feh5C, rejected .. empty sentimensab- ty'' ln foreign policy and cut pointless federal spending. But it said his dministration would have been "an unmitigated disaster'' without the mooerating influence of Democrats. Mondale, .. in contrast to his oppo- nent ... has been serious, stratght-f orward and aenuinely e~gtd in issues that the next president will have to deal with," the Post 58id. "We say this is a senou~. steady, bright, decent, qualified man who wants to be president and should be." Bystander saved life · of pontiff ROME (AP) -The judge who investigated the attempted assassina- tion of Pope John Paul II says an unidentified bystander saved· the -popt' life by-pushing -a Turkish gunman just before he fired what could have been the fatal shot, according to a ncw$paper interview. The pope was seriously wounded by thrcc bullets on May 13, 198 J, but has since recovered. Judge Uario Manella, who on Friday indicted thn:c Bulgarians and four Turks for involvement in the assassination attempt. spoke about the bystander in an interview publish- ed Sunday in Turin's· La Stam pa nt;Wtpapcr. "'Mehmet Ali Agca, who already is serving a life sentence for the shoot- ing. .. was very clear on this point," Martella was quoted as saying. .. 'I would have continued firing.· he told us, 'if someone who was next to me had ootshoved me with force.' " The pontiff was an easy target at the pointA&ca was jostled, the newspaper quoted Martella as saying. One bullet had hit John Paul in the intestine, a second bullet hit him in the arm, and a third hit his finger. The New York Tunes on unday also endorsed Mo~le. 11ying .. most of aU. he would brin& 10 lbe Whitt House the wdl to control nuclear weapons." Mondale also was btCkcd by the Ph1ladelpia Inquirer, the Detroit Free Press, the Minneapolis Star and · Tnbune. the Milwaukee: .Journal and the St. Pe&ersburg Times. Reagan. meanwhile, pkkeq up endorsements Sunday from several newspapers, includin• the Maamt Herald, the Chicqo Tnbu~ the San ~rancisco Examiner, the New York Dady News, the Hartford Courant. the Omaha World-Herald, the Sun- day Oklahoma in Oklfhoma City, the Ponland Oregonian and the Albu- querque .:Journal. ! The San Francisco Examiner praised the economic recover)'. under .Reagan's "magnetic !leaderahip" while tying his opponent to the "double-digit inflation of the Carter· Mondale administration." The Examiner criticized the presi-· dent as "wrong to allow the placing of 'firecracker' mines jn Nacaraguan harbors," but praised his invasion that "rescued Grenada ... against the expansion of Eastern Bloc ·Ghoallng run A cmtamed ~~t ID the anaul Cldld.reA'e Hoepltal Fa.a •11outer Dula pauee at the ~ line In :SO.ton before beadbll oa oat tbree-mlle eoane. Aboat 5,000 coetamed 1111Ulen took put In fa.ndn.leer. totalitarianism." The New York Daily News said that .. by almost all standards, we arc better off than we were four years Greenpeace crew boa1;ds Soviet vessel ago." . ''R • · · f · d t · ABOARD THE SIRIUS,· 1n The himself to the mast. . 67, a colonel in the Soviet Red Ann) dccen~ga~;ri:n ~~~y~g "0~: Mcditemnean (AP) -Anu-whaling~: }l1le two other boarden, who 9.'cre during World War II, read out a ditional values revived spin ts bruised protesters from the GrcenJ)Ca(le ship not idettified, chained themselves to statement in Russian, to the Derzikfs b f d' 1 Sirius today boarded a Soviet vessel deck ra1linp. crew. Soviet Union, Norway ad Ja.,.n IO sign an agreement bann1n1 aD oom-m~rcial whaliq by 1916. 0>'. years 0 •scouragemen over listed as a whale catcher ""' the~ The Sinus' intc ....... eter. Spanish The statement said Grccn.....,,...•s Vjctnam. Watcrpte and the....J.riiL ... , ·it.. r-....-,...._,_:......,~""-'..:--' hostage crisis," tne Omaha World-lnter111tional Whiting Commmion~~itWat veteran Ancnito--Pftei6S0,-1Wo11was't0Jmllt'St thel'efusaJ at Herald said. and chained themselves to the mast But the Philadelphia Inquirer said and railillgS. ~~~c:::f~~ ~~di~~ :.~a,::~.··: ~~r?~!E;a~~~rh~~~ 3 killers face executiOn this wee nourishment of the dignity of all chased the Soviet vessel thro•..o.-the Americans on which the areatness of .. ,... llJ-. A ...___ the United States has been built_ Strait;s of Gibfral~ south of the · • .--11111 .... d.-~ Tuetday In HuntsYlle, Texa. hJ9ed todar IO lllOClllk ... ._1'91 and which is suffering erosion under. Spanish pory 0 T~naa. . Tiltee ConVtcted muri:ler«1 in Mrs. Barfteld, 52, echiduled lo execution .............. ... Reagan's stewardship" The Soviet s~ip, wh~cb. slo\vcd Loulllana, Texae ~ North die Friday lby a.thal ln)eetlOn, Wiii he w unflllrtr •••• . · . ... <town after radio negot1attons be-lC&rota.. flC9 execution tht9 convlctedofpoieolqhwilmnoe deettl bera• Pl'C•Mln . TheDetroitFrecJ>resssaadthat it.· tween Grecnpcacc spok~an Remi ..__..., .._...IAIAA y,_......._ a-.a-a.., -•-lllcln 1978. prlllld a · .... ~lllllld•••lnl ts our behef that the Reagan pros-Pannentier of France and the -·-'V .,.... -,_. wiur ' -• • • •.. ''" perity is the prOSJ?Crity of living on Russian captain, was reportedly Who would become U. first thet m9J ._. ........ • • borrowed m~ney. ' . . headed for whaling grounds in the ~ tixecuted in the lJnlted There tappWed no hOPt tt'9t prilon a.m ..d ._ .. ._. In cndorsmg Reagan, the Mtamt South Atlantic. Stat•ln22~ Kriighton,hlltat.lllPPHlltum-u. of ..... .,...... W HeraJd said, "In any_ president~ The Russian skiJ>pcr ~ to E8111e9t Knlahton, 38, oon-ed down by the U.S. Supreme COftlltlu1lonll AllO. Clow. lllllcl election when the Untted States lS allow some of the Sirius' 22 crew Vlctedlnth919111hootlngdeeth Court and the atate Pardon White Mid he__.... •ai•• prosperous and at . pea~, voters members aboard only after the first of a eervtce 9tatlon attendant Board, would be -ed ~ ----to __. a reasonably may begin with a pre-threcledbyXavierPastor,headofthe --.__, .. -- sumption in favor of retaining an environmental group's Spanish during• robb9ry, w echeduled tlon 'after Gov. Edwin ~•da ,.....,.~ lllr a incumbent of &ood character... chapter. had already jumped onto the to be ~ ~ 8ft9f r9'uMd todaytogrw)t • ....,,...,._ Onlra' ~group. The Sunday Oklahoman endorsed decks of the Soviet ship. mldnlght In An;gola. La. Edwardsh.sgranted Knighton• Reagan, crediting him for the nation's Pastor shinnied up the mast to the 1homM A. larefoot, 39, con-two-ouHlt atay ._. month 10 he During more dwl .. ,... economic recovery and adding. crow's nest to unfurl a Greenpeace vtcted in the 1978 lhoOtlng death could pui'aJe hlS unaacceil8fuil 11PP8811. 8-.eoat"• CW "Once again we are respected by our .flag and a banner reading .. Stop of a Texas pollceman, WU to die llPPMI to the Panton ao.rd. AN19•ed II ..... 11-.-and aJlies." bloody whaling." Then be chained by lethal In~ before daWn ·-'the U.S. ~Court re-wonat.._.four...,._ ·. ANNOUNCING FIRST ANNUAL THIS HAlLOWEEN ~ WED., OCT. 31 ·, · 984, 4~8 PM FEATURING . . l;ILLIPlJT PLAYERS PRESENTING THE CHILDREN'S PLAY "PIED PIPER OF HAMLIN'~ AT 5 PM 1- FREE TRICK OR TREAT CANDY ·PRIZES FOR BEST COSTUME AFTER PLAY. HAUNTED HOUSEi ( at participating ) atorM) 3ACKO' LANTRRN CONTEST, CARVE YOUR PUMPKIN AND BRING IT DOWN FOR A FUN & SAFE HALLOWEEN WITH GHOSTS & GOBLINS FOR CHILDREN 12 YRS AND YOUNGER J RING THE KIDS I p ,. I ( Ats ·· ... the face we are accustomed toseelngln the mirror every momlng I notthesamefacethepubllc ,andcert tnlynotth on t11atthe Two low-budget campaigns bode i~~~~~n~ ~~!!?~~~!~ hou hold name during this general election campaign, and th t spells defeat for them. · Key er is the Democratic candidate for state enator from the 37tb District. She faces the formidable task of running against the popular and experienced Assemblywoman Marian Berg on. Keyser's apparently underfinanced campaign has produced an awarene s level only slightly better than zero - even inside Democratic Party headquarters. "We don't know much about her," a party worker in the Santa Ana HQ said, adding that Kcyser's campaign bas produced no literature and has relied on a lot of "precinct walking." The district's ragged northern boundary stretches from the ocean at the Los Angeles County line to Arizona. It runs south along the coast to Oceanside and veers southeast to Mexico. Feldman is a Laguna Niguel businessman who, like Keyser, is operating on such a low budget that he has been unable to produce any campaign literature. He is running against Republican Gil Ferguson for the 70tb District Assembly scat t \W\a\ t'A~ ~ ~,,,., rtt tfeelsobllgedtoportray. ,. bcinf. vacated by Bergeson. . 'Wecan'tgeta-holdofhimatall;•thepartyworkcrwd. H n I h h t . ,, UMaf~~~~~~~·;hcothcrhand,bcncfitsfromthccxposurcbe ow muc .a p aue soup received during a hotly contested ~epublican primary, from his . affiliationwiththemorepowerfulpartyinthcdistrictandfrom can you d1·gest 1·n th1·s qu1·z? his position as county chairman of the balanced budget campaign. · • Bergeson has compiled an enviable rt:eord in her six years in The leaions of ancieni Rome car- . the Assembly. She is an acknowledged expert on education ried banners inscribed with the in- • issues minority whip in 1983 and a woman whose career has itials,_"SPQR." standi~f for ··Se~ate been founded on pn'nciple The list of her accomplishments and and ~e~ple of Rome. Ever smce . • . · tben, 1nitialsandacronymshavebeen .-:.; !Jonors is~ Ion~ one. She should hav~ the oppo~umty to extend used in all countries. Herewith a new it. The Dady Pilot endorses the election ofManan Bergeson to quiz oo a number of mc>dem acro-the state Senate. · nyms in ccneral use, in different Ferguson is a Ne~~ Beach busincssman~bo promises ~o fi~~~u arc to provide the exact make a strong contnbutt,on to the Orange County ca~cus m meanina of each tenn. A score of half Sacramento. We expect h1m to be elected and we wish him well riiht qualifies you as an acronymic in office. expert. Ferguson distinguished himself as a tough and ruthless 1. What does .. radar" stand f<?r1 •campaigner durin~ the primary. Perhaps too ruthless. As we .. 1~!~ fiscal maners, what is an noted in an cditonal on June 8, Ferguson attempted to damage 3. Medically spcakina. what is a his strongest opponent. Ken Carpenter, with fal5c statements °CAT-scan .. ? • about Carpenter·s father Dcnms, a long-time Republican 4. What is the full mCa.nina of stalwan who is now a Sacramento lobbyist. "Laser"? . · • . It would do no good to repeat the deceptions, but it is worth ca~c~:r.f.5~~.~?Europeanautomobtle remembering that they were made with total disregard for the 6. What is· the official title of truth, which was readily available. "NATO~ We bore FtnPUSOn recognizes that this kind of politicking is 7. In real estate terms.. what does • 0 • • "sor· stand for'? not the stu oflong ~rccrs or go~ repu~ttons and that he will 8. On the diplo~tic front.. Jive the , / not stoop t? su_ch tactics the next time he 1s pressed. · full name of . v At this time, we cannot endorse either Ferguson or "SALT." Feldman. ..._ ___________________ , ANSWERS: SIDIEY H1111s 9. What does the aovemment agency "NASA" rcpfeSCnt? 10. What is the clinical d.e~ption oflhe ailment •·AIDS .. ? 11. In Russian, what does the acronym .. Gula&" stand for1 · l2. Give the full name of the aroup known IS "OPEC." 13. What is the meanina of ··z1P" in'.Zip Code? l '4. can )'OU provide the full title of .. UNESCO-'? IS. In nuclear warfare, what is the mcanina of "MAO-•? 16. What is the scientific term desianated IS ••sonar•? I. Radio Detection and Ranaina. 2. Individual Retirement Account. 3. Computer Axial Tomography. '4. Light Amplification by Stimu- lated Emission of Radiation. S. Italian Automobile Factory, Turin. tio~.North Atla~ntic Treaty Orpniza- 7. Shower ov ub. 8. Strateaic Limitation Talks. 9. National eronautkal Space Administratio I 0. Acquired mm unity Deficiency Syndrome. 11. Main Administration of Cor- rective Labor camps. 12. Orpnization of Petroleum Exportina Countries. ll. Zone lmpro~ement Plan. 14. United Nations Educational, Scientific and OuJtural Orpmzat1on. 15. MutUal Assured Destruction. 16. Sound Naviption and Rana- i'ttuey Harrl1 b a 1yadlcaced colamnl1t. CM cop takes issue witb. letter on ex-officer ... s case Buying later once was cheaper To the Editor: I would hke to reply to W. Downey's letter of Oct 14. I aarec ·, with Mr. Downey that only the people knowina the facts should be allowed to express their opinion in public. Since I WIS directly involved wtth this + case, I would like to give the readers some of the facts about the case Mr. ·: Downey brou~t up. :.: To begin wtth, I was present when •. Mr. Lauchlan was given the op- ;: portunity to give a statement in his •: own defense; however, he chose not ~: to discuss the case with us -which is • his riaht to do so, but it was bJ1 choice. As far as the public bcina in- "' fluenccd by sensational headlines, I submit a sampling of the Daily Pilot's headlines that seem to be in . Lauchlan's behalf: Feb. 25, .. Woman Praises Ousted CM Cop," Feb. 11. .• .. Attome~ RiJ>5 into Assault Characs • Apinst Ex.CM Cop," Feb. 19. "I • have Nothina to Hide," and firully March 17, .. Lauchlan: No Rape Charae." Mr. Downey's attack on the •·so- : called" victims was disausting. The • testimony of one victim was found to • be not credible by Judge Bostrom at ' the preliminary heanna not bec.tusc r she had lied. but because she could not remember every detail of the rape that occurred over a year prior to the case goins to court. It is a shame that rape victam1 must learn about our justice system in tbi1 manner. The tceond case that he was found not 1uilty of involved sexual a ult. The victim or thi crime had filed a lawsuit inst Lauchlan aue to his conduct and after the tri I "One juror id if they h dn't known about the lawsuit. they probably would have found him u11ty." The third case that was di mt involved 1 felony charge of attempted r pc. Dun the ORANGE COAST Dailf Pilat .. prehmmary trial, Judge Bostrom reduced ttus Chl!f,C from a felony to a misdemeanor. Smee the crime oc- curred over a year prior to Lauchlan 's arrest the statute of limitations had expired and the charge had to be dismissed by law. The fourth chargt resulted in conviction. These arc the results of the charaes apinst Lauchlan, not because,ibe victim had lied, but because of our justice 1ystem and the beliefs of 12 men and women. Mr. Downey mentions that Lauchlan voluntarily took a poly- graph test Jiven to him by a pnvate firm , obviously paid for by the defense. As your readers already know, the results of a poly&raph examination cannot be used 10 a court procttding for the prosecution because of the homan clement in- volved in interpretation of the charts. Jn other words, if a pohce examiner gave Mr. Lauchlan a polyaraph test and he showed deception, do . your readers actually think the defense would allow this fact to come out in trial? Mr. Downey mcnuoned that Mr. Lauchlan also lost his home because ofall of this I feel that 1t is ironic that Mr. Lauchlao was employed in a position of lrUSt that helped him afford to live in his home and when he violated that trust. this l~ury was taken away ft'om him. Finally, I ork with over I 00 s<>od men and women that mis.ht ulcc off en to Mr. D0wney"1 1tatemcnt th t .. There but for the graeit of God o J." Ir Mr. Down:y h Mat1y he~ 1n thi quote, perhaps that is why he 1 a FORMER poheit officer and a FORMER proba11on o~r! GEOROE P. WILSON ta M Polu::c Otpanment If, L. Schwartz IU PUbl ! Ftank Zlnl M (Cl; OI What, you've never seen a time when prices of almost cverytbina dropped and dropped apin rcpeated- 1)1 It hasn't happened in SS years. About 80 percent of today's popu- lation has arown up kilowms, what· ever it is you want to buy, it will cost more next year. But the older 20 percent arcw up knowing. if you wait, the price will come down. In market- pl~ce economics. the aeneration pp 1s immense. Was going to quote the astroloay experts as claimina that Gemini people tend to be indecisive Don't know, thouah. Miaht not be lrUe. J'm a Gemini. Ought not say anythina about it. maybe. We'll S(C. Q . Meteoro10jists mark Jan. 31, 1971, IS a unique day in U.S. history. Why? A. It was the first occasion all '48 contiguous states had snow on the around at the same time. You can fiaure a trillion atoms to a Our Chief Prosnostkator thinks arain of salt. most blood tests now done in labora- tories eventually will be done with do-L.M. Boyd I• • 1111dlc•ted it-yourself kits in homes. colomal•t. Memo details treatment accorded whistleblower WASHINGTON -Now and then, a lonely hero appears deep in the compounds of aovernment. He be- come convin'ced that pollution must be seen and smelled to be combated, that corruption hidden is corruption hei&htencd. He convinces himaelf that good will overcome evil if the facts are known. So he becomes a whistle blower. He know , of course, that exposure could cost him his livelihood and lay him open lO harassment. Yet he comes forward and condemns the wronido1ng. Thereafter, the soenano seldom · varies. Th villain in the drama is quickly surrounded by paid ob- fuscaton and is Jiven the (ull prouc- llon of the U.S. aovcrnment. BUl tht hero 11 tsolatCd and indmidakd, harried and ha Jed, h"s almost alway1 :the ame pkt tory; only the cast of characten is different. In this account, the lone· some whtS1 le blower is John H natio, a urity spcdali t for \he Enefl)' Dcpanment. He dated :to dt walh h1 upmor. Rohen O'Brien, o 11 edly had anfonncd tht president lhtl fqUltds It the nation· nuclear weapon plants were adequate. "I wuh I could hare your views on the dequacy of protection ... •• wrote Hnatao, "but m) peneneit and n0\\1cd of lh pn)llim dtcutes oth rws ." w mtftH ttial Hnat o Wat natit and 0 nen ,.'U n.-. Ttus of· fcnited 0 Brien.,,_ Who 11 no.1 the dumor Of lhe umce of fquard and Secunty. He evidently asked a subordinate lO find out how he could get rid of the meddlesome Hnatio. The cmploytt who was asked put it all down in an internal memo, which has been obtained by my associates John Dillon and Indy Badhwar. .. O'Brien requestt'd that I check with penonncl to Ke lfwe could fire (Hnauo);· the memo staia. It then aocs on to tell what the employee learned from the pcnonnel people, who apparently arc skilled at such matters. Accordina to the memo, there were two oPtions. The first was to "rc- assian him u requested." The other wa1 more aininer. "Jr you want to fire him -11art documendna records," the memo 9dvited. It thtn cxp&ained bow lO do th s: .. &1abhlh IC>Od ptrf'ormanoe mn- dank -if &e is nned unacceptable, then he cu be Nlllliped, ck>wn· araded. etc. If he conunun to fall to follow instrucuona. (this) can lead to dismlual -af\tr waminp, teP.n· maildl1 etc.•• The memo dOled with lhe estimate that the "procfts could takt 111 to cigbt months." Hnat10•1 supenors wasted no tame settina mned. He had been summoned 10 Capitol H1ll 10 brief an 1nvcst111tor for Rep John D1n,cll, :O.M1ch • on unty lapta, For d1sclosina the poor sccur- uy It nUdcar. pLaAu, H nauo drew a rt~mand Then a .. wam1naktttr" -SJmilar to ont 11ven 10 alcObol or d!'lll lbutcn -WIS put in Hnallo's me. (His ldd1ct on 1ppucntly, was to tcll1na the truth ) ' J1c1 AIDUSOI Hnatio went to the department's inspector aeneraJ who conducted an invcsJipuon. deared him of any wronaao.ina. ordered the reprimand and wamina letter removed from his file, and uw to it that Hnatio sot a fomw apol~. When 0°Bi'ien learned that Hnatio had found out about.the lncrimlnat· •na memo, he wrote to the Whistle blower lO usu re h m that 1t "re.fleeted only 1 J>C?ttion of my request for ~JAformauon and. by itldf, i1 totally out of conteJn." O'Brien informed Hnatio that he hid "•upponed !)'our requem for reusa,nmcnt and never Liken any ICtion to fire you •• Footnote: My reponcn med for two weeks to obtain O'Bnen'1 com· mcnt As I was 101na to prna, an Encray Dtpanmena spokeswoman called to say 0'8nen would respond only to " pccific quauon1"' sub-mitted ••an wnuna. 0 I will be bapp to Dtint an response walha to make: n· While, 1 H~ anvat•~iont ub-commntee thaired by Dineen will hold heannp on the IHnat o case Jfft A..,._ I• • 11J111Hlf4 cw...,., BILL HUVEJ Finding therlglJ~ costume J h d a most unusu l experience 1be other day. Ann and l art mvitcd to a Halloween party and a masqucmde ball this year. The ball lW nothina to do with Halloween, but in order to be .. with it," we'll have to wear costume . Ann is 1oin1 to the ball as the queen of a smaller, less pretentious monarch {one that doesn't acce~t forcian aid • from the U .), and Im goina 11 • jester. Because most of the people who ncnd one party will also attend the other, we've decided that we'll have to have two separate costum Praise be to the aods of thread, Ann'• an excellent acamstrcs . I don't know ifl'vc mentioned it or ..POt. but Ann is an honest-to-God ·farmer's daughter and her education included not only the complete works of Shakespeare, chamr achoot;- modelina school and some oceano- araphy, but cookina. sewina and several other forms of needfccraft. She's the only person I know who can chum butter and bake a cake startina with plain, ordinary flour. She's an amazma lady. Anyway, back to the unusual expenence. Ann decided that she needed a crown to go with her quttn'1 cos- tume. She considered makina one, but decided to look around to see what's available in ready-made crowns. She, beina the resourceful lady that she is. asked me where she could act a crown. It just so happens that 1 do know where you can act crowns. And a lot of other neat stuff as well. Hollywood Magic. Despite the name, Hollywood Magic is on Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa. I learned of the place scvC18l years ago, when I made the mistake of 1oina to a Halloween party 11 the Jol.Jy Green GianL I bou$bt several sucks of green srease paint there. That my cholce of costumes wu a mistake will be readily attested to by lht hostess of the pany. h took her several weeks to C18dicate the evidence (green) of my pasaina. She claims to have found green puse paint in the attic of her home. I do not rccaU beina in her attic at any time and unless the stuff immiarates by itself. I claim total innocence. ·Anyway, back to Hollywood ~c. We went there on a Saturday. The place was crowded, but bavioa been there many times before, I knew where we wanted to 10. We went and looked at crowns. Ann didn't find exactly what she wanted. so we started to look around the rest of the &tort. That's when I noticed some of the other customers. Let me describe the ~rst lady who came to my attention. She had pink and purple hair that was standina on end as if she had her finger in a liaht socket. I looked for an extension cord, and, findina none, was forced to as ume that she used Elm~r·s Glue for hair spray. She was wean na one green and one oranac lq warmer, alona with a yellow blouse and camouflage Army trouscn. She had no shoes. On the other side of the store was a youna man who had blond hair, but it was cut so that there was a sinaJe clump of it stickina up in the middle of his head, very much like an old- fashioned shav1n1 brush. He was wearin& brown trouaen, very baiaY and with cuff's. He had a red T-shfit that was cut off just below his armpits and had several boles in it. He wore a rhinestone belt several inches below his belt loops and suspendcn. Hi ensemble was finished off with purple boots with gold tassels. These people Y.'Crc lookina for Halloween costumes. I couldn't re ist the urge that came over me. I walked up to the lady in the Army trousers and, 11 ir I wor~ed there, said "Ma~ I help your• ··rm lookina for a co tume to wear to a Halloween party.•• "Do you anyth1n1 that you hkeT' td"~cll, .. an of this tuff is so ... o 1nary. "I see. Well, it's our policy to do ~hatevcr ~ can for our customcn. Since.you don't 1ee anythina here that you like, may I UllCSl another store where you m1pt find 1 methinar· • Oh, pleue do!" "'There's a place in uth Coast ~ called ~c Ma~· Co. They hive· thU\11 there hke sklns and blou1CS and drcues I believe that they may even have pantyhose ana ahOrs, In tht hardware de~ment, tM)' may even hav~ Elm r 1 Glue Remover ... Her race ht up W1lh ua1ement .. Tba1'1 u? That•s it! Oh, thank you .; mu<ib .. And, th that, he ran from the store I'm sure that the folki 1t HolJy. WOod a&iC wouldn't mand that I 1ent a Pf'OS~1 e cu tomer som ~rt else. Af\cr II the) did 'tliave whit ahe WU loo f11 far, Anyway, ru bet ttiat ·, 1111 ,0 the bh orher pan • COl1ma1i1 fJDI Rah !Y 11 a ra"nr flllMI .... &•~. Dignity plays leading ·role Valdez connects two hurricanes bow bleak st seems, when we're mspired, people can move moun· tains. When you lose your spirit, hfe as too big a burden,•· he said. VaJdez' 'troupe' became El Teatro Campesino and members toured the By USA MAHONEY country with their skits to bnng °'..,..,.., l'llot •c.tt nauonal attention to the plight of of experience Playwright Luis Valdez takes a pull Califomi~ farmworkers. . . on a long puro, lidcs hissturdy frame ~tt;ldez talent. for st.aging vibrant, back comfonabty on th c sh· f pohllcaJly meam11gful plays was not . e u ions o lost on the pubhc. VaJdez and El his couch ~nd contemplates the -Teatro Campesino received an Obie ~~ty, diamty -and yes -even Award in 1968 and two i..os Angeles d1vm1ty of ~op~e. Drama Critics Awards. ~aldez, ~1s1t1ng lecturer at UC After 17 years, the troupe still lrvmeandd1rectorofthcfolk musical survives with many of its members ''Corridos,". h.as spent mo~ lhan 20 IQ.. and 15-ycar veterans. ' yea~ exam1mn1 such quahties and Valdez is perhaps best.known asthe placmg them at the heart of his fast· authorof .. Zoot Suit," the first play by paced, turf?ulen~, exuberant _p~ayt. a Chicano playwri&ht to reach Broad4 Frar;ned an stnfe, c_>ften poht1cal and way. Examining the lifestyle of the ~mehm~ domeat1c1 the characters scorned pacbucos-youna Mexican- . m Valdez works are often outcasts. American men who dressed in But into each one, Valdez injects the outsized, baggy clothes -some say goodness he behevcs !s at the core of Valdez &lorHied the phenomenon. everyone ~nd everylh1ng. Valdez disagrees. He says he simply -"There 1s beauty everywhere, and pointed out the good qualities of his _......,.. __ ~tre!'~th and dignity..j(yQu just look prota1onist. qualitics.cY.cn cutthroats for.it.•• th~ 44.ycar-old author said !n and murderers possess ... There is an interview last Thursday. "Even tn something about people that is the midst of what we assume to be a divine," Valdez said. tragooy, there i~ joy." · There are plenty of unsavory Valdez, a Chicano, began his play-chanrcters in "Corridos" which like writing career on the strike lines in the his other plays, focuses on' the fields around Delano. fresh out of Muican-American experience But college, he returned home to lend his Valdez bas added music and ctMtce to tal~nts to <;esar Chavez• farmw~rkers his skits, which he based on stories umo~ dunng the 1965 grape stnke. from traditional Mexkan ballads. _Using farmworkers for actors and Valdez says bis mission and that of with no scnpted lines, Valdez El Teatro Campesino is to ••cross the directed skits to make the strikers bicultural bridge that links the His- 0fcel positive or hopcf ul. No matter panic and Anato worlds." The human PAP ARAZZI I CluUthle and Ke)H,y Petenon •bare plate of treats. 24 carats top party's menu ... 1 Brilliance of Michalis no longer -----------Greek to 'glitterati' of Newport By BETTY PORTER D.., ...... C.mttll • ._ Every elegant woman in Athens has somethin1 ofMichalis' and now elepnt women in Newport Beach may have something ofbis. too. With more than a little assist from friends Dra. lrwlD and Barbara Gellman, Hector Michalis brought a "carousel" ofblindingly rich, fine gem-encrusted I O<arat gold jewelry to the Rex restaurant cellar salon. 0 The Gell mans and J have been friends for~ean (~nee 1970) and when I wascominahere, they asked metobringmyjewelry," Michalisof Athens said in precise Enalish. "Everything Barbara (in silver sequins) has is Michalis." said Irwin (holding up her hand with a five and one-half carat. knock-your-cy~ut diamond solitaire), "Thisappraisesout at four times what we paid ... The Gell mans worJc toaethcr in their own real estate business in Newport Beadi; Barbara 1sa real estate lawyerana her husband authors books, includina "Roosevelt and Batista·· and .. Good Nciahbor Policy.·· Porina over brilliantly lighttdcasesat the invitation-only pany last Sunday were Newport Beach MayorEvelyallart( .. Myhusband is good to buy me a piece of jewelry, usually for Christmas or my binhday .. ) and V erdlae Wblte ( dru mmcr-composcr for Eanh, Wind and Fire) Who told his beautiful andjewcl-l>edecked wafcShelly(wnh SUictly Business, a SbellJ Wblte of StrlctlJ B11•lae••, left, uad laubaad Verdlae Wlalte of Saltb, Wind and Fite ........ laUh wltb Barban ui-lnflD Oellmaa, laoetaOftlae lllcla•H• jew•lrF nftew .PU'*J. .. PlaJWrllht Lula Valda, .Ultlnl lecturer at UCI. passions acted out by the troupe, he says, are "universally understood.'' Valdez is concerned abOut the separation between Hispanic and 16.!'llo QOinm_1.mi1K:s.....1bmll .:tbe nr !EUro,pcan and Spanish heritages have faded to blend. Hisplayspomtoutthe commonahucs of humanity the passions and the appetite for tire, in What Valdez describes as bis auempt .. to connect the two bunicants" of Hispanic and Anglo experience. .. Corridos" has been weU-f'Keived by theater critics and Valdez hopes lhe folk musical will be a commercial success like ••Zoot Suit" Twenty or :JO such successes arc necessary to preserve the genre be has created with ~I Teatro Campesino, Valdez be- heves. "Conidos" marks the end of El Teatro Campcsino·, fon1 touring period. "We'd all pack into a van and •o to hoots. uruv.ers:ities and com· mumty centers," Valdez said. After 15 years, the pace became tiring and the method uneconom1cal, so the troupe has taken a more 'pro- fessional' turn, booking runs of a month or more. "COnidos .. will be at the Old Globe Theatetln San Diego through Nov. 4. The play will open Nov. 29 at the Variety Ans in Los Angeles. Valdez will lecture on the history of El Teatro Campesino at 5 p.m. Tuesday artd Thursday. in the Fine Arts Studio Theatre at UCI. · 0.-,._. ,,._ 111Jr T.,,. lteM Joy Kenworthy acbDJrea pendant on Mary Ami Lon,. "new girl's" music group), "I think you should S1'lywith Timex." Coming and going all evening long were doctors. bankers and corporation prcsideots{and their wives) from throughout Orange County. Discreet iuards stood watch. Obviously having fun were Ncwpon Beach surgeon Dr. Kelsey Petenoa and his wife CbrtstlD.a (a former ·· Miss ,Ne~n Beach" she said). They fed each other from a sin&)e plate, usil)J~hopsticks. The Petersons have bttn married four years, !have two children and still kiss in public. "Kissing works. you •outta' try it." Christine said. pointingto nearby jewelry cases ... I can mak.ea quickget·away ifl need to," replied the doctor ... I have my skate boards m the lobby." h was that kind of pany-with much .. jo~hing" among the stylish, well-heeled crowd, drinking champagne and munching on much-better· ttian,..grocery-shelf caviar, raw yellow fin tuna, smoked salmon, fresh oysters, prawns, and clams, cheese and fruits. A woman "from Lido Isle and J)everly Hills" purchased a $50,000 necklace strung with emeralds and an eight and one-half carat emerald pendant surrounded with half-a."fistf ul of diamonas. ( .. I'm not about to give my,namt," Mrs. Anonymous said. "l'Ne been buraJarized once ~~~~ ~ Mary AU Wells said she received an 18-karatgold charm from her host (as did several other women at the party). Wellsalso received congratulations on her recent appointment (by Supervisor Tom Riley) to thCGommission fortheStatusofWomen. 0 What pcoplewcarisimponant,"5aid VerdllleWklte. The tall, friendly, thin (28-inch \\ai t) musician had "noje"Aclo" and .. clothi that never fit" When he was .. oomina (growing) up." ••f-0rtunately, I won a music scholarship to Roo velt Uni,·crsity (Cbicago)andcameto LosAngeles(at 17),and thingshavcbttn better," the mOdest drummer for the immensely succc ~ful Eanh. Wind and Fire said. Now, White has40custom·made Italian suits, "one-of·a-kind shoes and a collection of antique watches'' (includinaaS l,000 l937"Etema•· he wore). Quingan older woman who had never 5C'Cn his 1roup ptjform. White explained, ••undCntand. I am not a subdu(don sl8ge: I rgold boot (Pl ...... ouan1M> His business prospec s are really up scale San Diegan ls busy ~estortng coln-ope~~ted, weight machines SAN DIEGO (AP) -¥ears , theywerecommon 1ghts at five and dime stores, rugged lookin scales that would give you your eigbt or put a fortune in ;your hand 10 exchange for a penny or niCkel dropped in the machane's slot. Today, hoppers would be hard- pl"Csscd to ftnd any of the Old- fashioned seal at depanmcot stores where the emphasis i on modem day mcrchandi rather than relics from n bygone era. But the sCales are malcing me- thma of a comeback ID the home or Jeff Storck. a 36-year-old co-owner of a towing se:Nice who in his spare tinre' restores, rebuilds and sells the otd maebiner. Storck· bought his first weight machine l\\O years ago at a OCa ma~ket because be thoU&bt "it neat." Since then. he has restored SS of the scales, keeping some, and selling otbers to neighbors, restaurants and stores. Storck has traveled around the country to purchase the scales for anywhere from $25 to $7 SO. He takes pride in restoring rusted. sometimes broken machines 10 their ~n&l Y.Orking order, somcumes lldd qa a colorful coat of paint to bricbtea an otherwise drab pieoe of machinery "Most of them wctc while Ott lilbt blue or a tan cOlot'. I lake lO ~ them up,"' says Stortk, Who Geea applies a coat of)'dlow, ~ "4or blue s-im10 the .cab. Restored scales can fetch as md s $4,000, says Stord.. In the 19- the madlines oost about SSS apeoae. 0 J've never been really :interc•d 1n sci.ling them, but I su)lllMlle would be nKlC to make .,.. .1001r change," be said. StorCk says be has sold several ol the 5dlJcS lO neiahborS Ud n. launnts wiih an antique aeiiJir: Another IS have ba~-c been placied aa stores in the Saa Dielo --. although the threat of vandalam affects sales to mail cstablilbmcau. The 5C8lcs can't be mounted in 'lbt pound aDd cu be ~ owr nther asily. Nevertheless, Stordc says, a IOI ol people are intCT'CSled in purchaiina the machines because of the re- ~oc ofinterest in America·s P9tl dunng the past decade. .,.., ............ .,'--..... UC lrvbie greeta new ftnt lady Suanne Peltuon wu welcomed to UC lrriae at a Udlftrilty Clu lancllecm boned by Dorothy Daala, premdent of 1JCI l"oa.Ddadon. 8oiae •2 womea peeW tlae wlfeofUCI'• mecoudcbaacellor, Jack W .Peltuoa. ltwuan · e•ent AOt 900D tO be forcotten ... Dr. Jamee L. lloOe_,., d.lrectorof center for tMJtemoblolaOof~Dd Memory tan brief talk oa memory With ,a_ ,~ eserdee. Tbe bonoree. top left. Uld boet111 Cbat wltla ._., ~':.1;{~n ~p~:)fu~~·=· Amrm~== LWJ1DU, ~e Of Vice Cbailcellor W= ~,....MIO tbere were MUy Rooeeftlt. l'lw 8cln1m•daier ..a 3eaa Ald.rlda. wife Of fi er Claaacellor Dani.el ~ iding o~ elevators has its ups and.9owns . .. • Nf W?OfH BOCH • • SfJ COAST Pl Al A • fAJlu:M f#C.ll'illff#I ..,.. __ .• Oll'r'"' • °' I IQ " ... tl,UT$UG • ..,,~ft) .. f"-l 7 n tit '1fwf•Wt ... .,...., ..... """7 tf» ,, 1110 7UCU•M "1 IH t SIUI WT• ·m••"ISJ '" llS 6tr~ I • Ii;.~ IHi • . , ... . ..,., . .,. ,,. I'll uo ••• --....,,.,., DEAa PllacorT:u.-.a.e ,..,....,..., .. .._ . .,.",.._... ............... lllll ......... ............. v... •••• IW1CetlileUlllle(M•~."Te .... Q$ ................. W#J ........ • • • DEARA LANDERS lt1tuue lhil ltabtn ftl never lltika I ft the me pllcetWic:e?I ~Y no. Mr. X. •yet. Wbo•a npf?-HAY , KANSAS oeAaKANMI: y .. .,. . .kft,.. ALL SEATS $2.00 AT EDWAIDS MESA, EDWMDS WESTmOOK - • WlSTM!HS TER • • •llJNTING roH Bf ACH • utiii:tOii ..... ,,_ ., .. "''* 'Jl..U•• ,..., .. ... ,...., ''°ti• • GAROf H GROVf • • cosrA Mt:SA • , .... , ••• o .... 0-AllMS .... _.. .. • Ct H>RO • SAOOlll•c.A .... , ,, .. .. ., ~I SUO • MJSSI~ Vl )() • IUJ ""' •• '•• ••h ,..,~. IJO M9t BOlfN'&R·WOOD A candkh&ht ceremony in New- VtJC> JP.Jt pon Bay Otapel tn NCW1'911 Beach '··· .. i. "'ftAtn•• •• .., umled Sharon Louise Wood and Ian ,., (""""'' IJUMO .,."'""'°'" Andrew William BOnner in matri-• Wi> Miu -~... mony. The Rev. Wayne Coleman "...... UM . ...,~ • ..., m ..... L-~-22 . c-o ·-:. l:fe J ft • 20 0 ICllK-U It trR: ;,.;pl. n&n, u 1~ 1010 The bride, rormerty of COlumbu1, WIO MAU ~• Ohio. is the dauahtcr of Mrs. James .. , •·· •• "-_,..• 11:t •• r1 U/ood fH ' --b nd """"'... uo '"" "s •• ..-~ -"' o unt1ftll0il ~ a !ft'11Ll -•• theWe Mr. Wood. SlleWMpVCft tn iii aawww mam1,e by her brother, Jaina E. 1!.::;!, '"/:,-_; f:, Wood, and' wore a iown of Whi&e _., .. ft) ~•ttt chifTon. French tau areliqued with SOUTH COUJ f4S 1u~ ---.a J t . _ _. bod' d . ... "ftJCU•,. ...,. ~ pears nmm~ t e · ice: an "• .... rn ,., fonned a peplum at the waistline. ~ -Ol rn . Judy Alvarado of Anaheim Wat ~ .,,.,.... ...c •mm:u• "> maid" of honor and Judy Ober of t AGlllA ... lS MALI ........ SltlfO ;;;& '0 10~ Newport Beach WU the bridesmaid. u ,., ,. utt ...,._, ... , ,.,.,., •4UU• Mr. and Mr1. W. Alan Bonner or .,,.,..,., " •• •• •• ..... ~ --.uzmn_... •-,.., R •L •· f ... 1U UIJ •• J• If.II> --11~ tn ft.IJI .-n.. Oii arc me parcnu O u1e -~ ,..,. bricksroom. He was attended b)' IACIJNA lllU MAil 111" *"'• liiSrOl -~·., JefTr"" E. c ..... n or Redwood City ... ~· , .. ,. '1~ ~. •' IPI> .,_ • ., ....... -.,..,,.,.,. " " 11'.. 1 1s ... ....,,. ..,... •• a.er belt man and u1hu Abbat Zfff!ll t uo eou ~.1444 10> 1o•u1 Mehdika hi ofHuntinston Beac~ lAWU llUS MMl • ltAU SllJfO •ISTOI .. ~ .. ,,, A wcddinactuise on the yacht "Bay ~t:t.':. ~ rmJ~11~ =:-.,.: .. ,..,.,~,11 Window .. followedtheuremonyand flll .. IMGL ...... _,.._,., • ,..t ,.._,,"-J"l>Mlal"C. . ...... =· ................. ..... (-.e .,..,..,_ .,....,.. liaMU,.2)11t .... 1111 ... .....a.• il,....,,.,. .... , ...... ., .... 1m, 11111 w1•1111ar ... ...,.. .... t7t, .Ublr ....... ,.,. ... lt7111.a.Jq wu-....1a1ntai11aM11wu .,.....lend._ .. ...,,. .. u .. ••m.•~._._. ..-.n--Wllleft 'I 1.leltn ...... u nw. ,,... ......... , ..•. , .... . ........ ,,.....,. ......... .. .,., ... jm .......... .. .................. Jtd., .. .... 10,,. ...... ..,.,.te .. el .... , GUESTS DAZZLED ••• f''I09IA7 and,asamattcroff.ict, I bave1dm.ju1U1kehcn." HeP.C"-ntedioWbion modda.naW•iamaa,weannaallinkybtaekcoclClalldress,cutlowin baCk and sin 1n the slon. Was White bSdms? He winked and laughed upr<*iouiJy. PrOpnetOr and duefcbiper Michalis traced hiscom.-nf •Pf'OIJ e11 from .. , maU Sold sho91n Athens" IO .. maernadonal panicipetion" with srores m Switurtand. BeJ11um. Kuwa11,and at .. idect stores" in the US. Prices for hisall-cuS10m·madejewelry ran~ from S600 aoS2 milhon ··nonmlly," blft "We sold a 78-carat diamond nng forS4.S million to a sheik last week," MjchaJis confided. • OthcnauenchngwereDt.Larry Klelaand WJfeCa.ria;SllartHadleW (daughter of Righteous Brothen' Bebb)' H1UleM);La WaltMI (Advenising);f•I Braer, LUe ind Carol Drew, Veryl and Henna T1ylor,JJmandJ .. yElboJ.ft;S&aaand<;arolM~~·,A.»1J Skba&er1,Joy~wor1ll7(immherowgirthatWJthr111ncstones);8- g,.J1n,FraakandJoaueT~,DavldandJef'l'Jl1PG•rlaM,Plllla, andMartJyabCJoe(NationalLibcnyBank),JadleJ......._.andDai'la Guss. Pap:ua:ai isedit~d by Daily Pilot Style Editor Yida Dean. JOBKSTON·KDfLEY Susan Kinley or Cotta Mesa be· came lhe bride o( Edwin Johnston of Smidc durina Sept. 29 nuptial cer- emonies in the Fir t Unittd MethodiSl Church. Com.Mesa. The bride 1.1 the daughter of Mr. and Mn. Malcolm Kinley of C.osta Mesa. She wore a Jaae iown, fashion- ed with an of'f'·the-shoulder IWCCt· heart neekline and lace tiers fonned her train. She carried white rotCS, , 11ephano1is and babf-s breach. Attcndina as maid of honor was Dawn Conttance, and bridesmaids were Sharon Kinley C a1nona Bryan and Dana Wenric.k. Shannon Kinley was the nower girl. The bridqroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Johnston of Seaside, a&ked Kenneth Johnston co be bis be$1 man. U1hen we~ A. Mkhld, fr:a$Ct and Oco~ Kanley, And nn,----._,,,_ bearer was Andrew Kinley. The newt~ greeted J SO suesu at the Fountain Valley Community f;cnttr. and lhen left on ah~ to New Zealand and Australia. 'They arc restMnts of Seaiide. The bndc is employed by tho Doubletrcc Inn Jn Monterey, and her husband is with the Sardine Factory restaurant, also in Monterey. Leave the scene~ ' face fine, penalty If you are involved in a traffic accident, California law requires th.at you 1top and idcrn· ify yourself 10 the other patty aa the accident tcene. You must &ivc your nam~. current rcsi· <knee address and vehicle reais- trataon snformation. Un~ ~t arcumstanca are you required to identify yourvlf! AJ Only when damage is more than $500. Bl Only ff the accident was your rault . C') Ev~ry time an accident results in death, injury or property damage 0) Only. when you want 10. ·qi~ JO 000' It ~u 01 1ou ~U!J t...ro f!•( -<•un03 ~· Ut au;wuosudun ,(q ;)1qv4S!Und pu1 JOU~W.!W I •! OI op ·01 ;)Jnf!W.:1 . J nu.11 ,. 11Hit ~ 1w wasattcndt.d ~ 5' aucstt. -T---------------------.;;.;.;.;.-...;.... _____________ ...J AftcrawcddmJtrip&oLakeTahoe and San Francisco, the couple are now rnidentt or Costa Mesa. She is an necutive teeretary 11 ComputCT Automation Industrial Product• Division and he is a branch manager (or Mark l.arwood Co, . .,u~ ;co 11 ~"l~w.,q1 .<JtlU• • pua d01111nw ,.,!Ul?d p;:>A(OAU! If' ·~1wtp JO wnow1 ,(ur JO .ilnrui 'qi~ u~ 111n~J ll'fl 1u~!"W WA~ ur 'J~.( AJ;)A~ q~ ~N U! IJU~!~~ U!U-pU1•1!\f 009 ~J;)JIW!lCOJddt;)J8 ~.QqJ. ':) :J3MfUV I Quatloa ud ut"ct provided by tu Newport Bea~ Police Dqartmeas. .. ..,,.. ........ ,..,. c..,.,w...-. ........ •CML10..----.... .... ' That'• tata much Pormer ~ footlNaller QeacoD Jona makee an cmtwr- niiii4 "tiiIJeilii& u ttii butt of a JOb played by fellow a - Uldder Babba Smith OD .. Tra Bloopere and Pn.ct1ca1 Joka" toD1iJat at 8 on l'fBC, Cbannel 4 . · HALLOWEEN PARTY IT . KBMJ RESTAURANT i. SALOON CASH PRIZES FOR BEST COSTUME - 1st Place $100 . 2nd Place $50 3rd Place $25 -Happy Hour 4:30 to 7 :30 pm Complimentary Hors d' oeuvres Buffet live Entertainment & Dancing with the Bob Gulley Bond 14982 Edinger at Redhill Tustin 730-0115 BREWING UP A BATCH OF CASH PRIZES & SURPRISES FOR BEST COSTUMES . COME ONE-COME ALL WITCHES, GOBLINS & GHOSTS TO THE OLD VILLAGE INN FOR A HALLOWEEN TOAST! CONTEST JUDGING STARTS AT 10:00 P.M. 127 MARINE AVE, BALBOA ISLAND 675·8300 /_ Celebrate Halloween at ~..,~lllEllfMJSE RE.TIUR•NT • Oellclous treat• and & spirits •Demon deseerts Entertainment In the haunted Wharf Bar wlth Stretch from 9:00 P.M. MSOV••so Lido VII Newport h 173-4700~~~ 5th 'Christmas Carol'setatSCR Playwright Osborne still hasn't mellowed and id. ··i0u1 lhc ~ s rather dreadful. .. He newt Ines 1n the English oountr)sidc. He rarely isJU London and walks out on most play • Since he can u ually find a goOd e cusc for not wntin a play. he ocx:a ionally turns his hand to Journalism. KIKFM's 4th Annual Hallo"' en Co tame Par•.y hwlter ll•C (doon open ... t 5:00 p.m.) , . ' Jal9dldn1 .. Na meet.\ ,.. boVfl1end. He wa1 the lrlt to warn t. ~ hRl'90ttvone Who oan Kftl9 het NOWPLAYHJ UlllllJIUS lUXUIW WAlK-INS* =J'l.lt.~* .(:ri~ ~Tfl~rlfllJE ::DI) S 113Mj·X·»ail6i '"JKJ.!..C..C-,!, ) f'UIST 80aa CN-1a SHOWS AT hU J !1S l t ll J:U 6 t :U Dla1teK .. toft T .. UTTUI lllW~ •••t. lllJ 12100 2:10 1:00 1.:11 .. 10:00 Hlcll lt .. t• TCACHUmPQ SHOWS AT IJ:H 2 :40 4 tl0 7:00 .. t i t• St .. e M•rtl• AU.CW_.,_, S...,WS AT 12:10 21M J slO I 40 71SO t :20 14i4fiJ1il3;i2)~\':B: ,,,. ) 8111 Murta'J I S.."' S"99AN TMK llAZO•"S a.& ~llY CN) ~·· hews at SHOWS AT 7 :00 6 l tJO 7:00 6 t 1U ·w,._nrca1 IGC. JU, UD 1~ ~GI ' TBE P'AllILY CIRCUS -~--"Hold yp_your hands, Jeffy. t need more fingers to count on." by Brad Anderson "This ls supposed to be a toolshed, not an annex to your doghouse!" GORDO GARFIELD . GARF I~~ THER£'5 A MO<mt. •H TM£' ~£,AHP I 'M J~T 51Ct'\ A0001•T : MOON MULL11'S . BtOOEORGE by Virgil PartchJVIP) . . f ' ~u fl d .. ~ .. .,,1' ··what do you mM"7 thlaJa..Jl..grut_Alay'L- Thl• la MONDAY, manf" DE1'NIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham I I 'I woKr SE FINISHED 8EIN1 FIVE YEARS OLD ru. NEXT YEAR ." by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis by Ferd & Tom Johnson CL.AUD ! GeT OUT FROM B~HIND THf: TV! )' PEANUTS TME BOOK OF JONAM IS MORE TMAN A STORY' ABOUT A 816 FISM ... by Jeff MacNall~ · ~~~~ PUT' VP A SETTE2 Fl~ 1UAH 'TUAT. FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by &:.ynn Johnston He.)',Ml\AE. '/OUGOf ANVToeACCO FM~f1PE? BRIDGE ---- - - Q.1-At South, vulnerable, you hold: •AK.183 V''2 OKtS •IU2 The blddlns hu proceeded: . 8oatJa WHt No~ Eut 1 • Put I NT Put ? What action do you take? A.-Many player• panie because of their w ak doubleton in bea.U and rebid two apades. Don't do it! Part- ner mlsbt have only a tlnrleton apade, anJ probably hat no more than a doubleton. You have a minimum balanCed hand, and the way to thow It Lt to :paN . Q.2-As South, vulnerable, you hold: H0tJJ COME '-/OO NEVER ORE~ UPUKe.A R:IO< 5'¥\R- UKE""IHe ReST OF06? ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ What action do you take? A.-We know players who would re11o:ti have 1 dead minimum openJ Id and partner did not jump · t. Therefore, I should pan." Lorical thlnklnr would be: "Partner has gone out of the way to show a good hand with a singleton heart. If he hu at little u the ace· queen of diamond• and ace of club • we have a tlam." Ute Blackwood to check on whether partner has two o ••• SHARIFF A.-You have a balanced hand wftt; stoppets in the unbid suite and the point count for a jump to two no trump. Howev6r, we would not make that bld. Our pojnte are all prime and, ii partner hat a club fit, we mirht have a slam. For the moment we would rupond two cluba-we can aJwaya aettle in three no trump later. · · Q.e-At South, vulnerable, you hold: CHARLES GOREN •7Z <:>IN 0 87% •AKQ95' The biddins hu proc"ded: acea and, ff he d~•. bid 1b spades. • K 7851 ~AM o a •AU H..U Eaat . 8Mtll Wef't The bidding has proceeded: 1 0 Put 1 • r... . .. Q '.I: ft!;: i.: I hi Sou h N~ £ut 8Mdl Welt z NT PUI 1 •• -nutn vu nera e, at t you I o· p... 1 • p.,. What do you bid now? hold: ~~ J • P.au t A.-You have an excellent alJt tard •AKQU ~Kn OU4 4.le What do you bid now? 1Uit, but If you dloee to rebid thr The blddlnr hat prOCHdtd: A.-Man7 7ear1 aro we atalff the c:lubl you do not gra1p l rundamon· 80tltlt WM& N.,... Eut principle: "An opentnr bid fadnr an tal bJddln1 prJnc:lpt.. A rebld of I • · PUI I O PU1 openlnr bidder who h&aJump ralHd three dubt b7 7ou would 111 your t • P... i • PUI equals •lam!' Slnte partMr mutt bind It uuulted to no trump I O PUI 4 • P... ha~e at fem one ace, jump to ets beaute your Jong auit i• not 101id. 1 apadu. What about a l"lnd 1lam? Here you ar 1 atrong favorite to What action do )'ou take? Unleta partner hu not bid hil hand brlni partn r Ix trkb. Bid thr A. -No, thlt u noh mltt.ake. There correnly, or the two handa art a no trump. it one :1H1ht difference betwHn lhl1 IJl•rk Ill, eeven 1pacMI ahould be hand and the previou1 one-the red onr•mbltlou1. ulta ah nvened. Thi• time your QJ-/u hOld: kln1 11 In th. 1ult where pwtner it South, vuJn rabl , you known tO hive a 1fn1leton. not. In hl1 au(t. Sina It la not 1 worldn1 earcl. •.UQU r:1164 OKI! The bidding hH proc eded1 ..__.. __ :-:;. s..t• w •• , wtll r...t I• Pa11 to ~ ... I• Pa• J • PUI I~ Pa• 4 • , ... 1 .,. QA-Neither YU1Mrablt, u Soutll you heads •Kft OAM Oii •Allll P111•r opens &ht bWdlq with one dlimond. What do -f OP re•pond? ""' .. ,..,.....u.. .... .,... ... ...., ........... ... ........ , .. ..,, ..... ..... 0..-. .............. .. ' 0ti•r•i·w•••·" .. ,. •I &•at -.i ..... ': ... •• P.O.'la Ill, Psb"'1 N.I. • ... ,....,., ..... New.,...,ti ulka. ···~·:: ···~ ... il i~ =::o= Moollng down Butfelo.82. FV vs. E"-ison:County's No. 1 game Second straight win could help Barons get a long-time monkey off their backs By ROGER CARUON fountain Valley, which billed ot .. Delr,..._ as No. I in Orange County in pres:euon rankfo~, i No. S in Fountain Valley Hish•s Barons Oranse U>unty with its S-2 overall rolled to a 33-7 Sun t Leaaue record, while &hson, which was No. 8 conquest of rival Edison a yearaao-oriainally, took over the No. 1 pot ao maybe a monkey hu been re. Oct. IS and has held it 1n~. moved from the Barons· back.s1 Both are 3--0 in leaauc play With Not ncocssarily. The verdict in lopsided verdicts -Fountain Valley 1983 did no more than sli~ Edison•s outscoring three foes by a I J0-28 leadinthcBiaGamessericsto 12-3-1 , marajn, Edison compiling an 86-14 and Friday ni&ht•a duel before an ed anticipated 16,000 features many of &ch shows little or no holes, but the same ingredients that have stan· the aencraJ consensus is that the pme dardized this aarne into Oranae is built on Edison's defense apinst County's No. I prep football attrac-Fountain VaJJey's offense. lion. ..Maybe our defense is undcr-First, it•s for the Sunset Leasue rated... says Barons Coach Mike championship. There's still another Milner. •"This year we really don't pme left. but Friday's winner baa the have the names on defense. Whether Sunset Lea1ue'1 No. I ticket to we arc underrated, J don•t know ... p~offs. Milner 58..)'S bis No. J priority is to Secondly, both · have their blue concentrate on runnin1 the football chips to boast of, and, there•a that successfully ... We have to take com- other r?ard-braging riJhts. mand of the line of scrimmage and be 0 There's always something ridin1 able to rush the ball oo crucial on this one, .. says Fountain Valley downs," savs Milner. ..oantaln Valley'• Mike ~--==C====oec=h Mike ilntt.~)'ou ~Pll'----"'"'CMJ'~its-UsueHn·M>n-----..,,er_{abnc} and E•H9Q!l'•-'"'--..1-.... c.D&loatfora·year. lfyouloseyou're dcfcmeaoddoeiaai'eatjobofsettina BW Worlrman are ·~ kincf of silent for a year. The kid off blocks with tremendous pursuit: their team• for 'l'rlday know each other, it'afriend vs. friend, Edison•s defense is a lot better thao nl.bt'• •bow down at or enemy vs. enemy, however you last year because the defense is Anabel.m Stadium. port.ray the pme." (Pleue eee BAJl01'8/BS) • .,... ................... c..... :Rama• 0eor1e ADclrewa (left) beata aoaer Craig to a fumble. Erle Dlckenon (lmi:t) 1.9 cloee to KOrlng, bat ball poi» lOOH u Riki Elll9oD blta blm. Wild card hopes B.11 that's left for Rams MOntana, 49ers make very short work of Kemp, DiCkerson ... a nd anyone else ByCURTSEEDEN Ot•O.-,........ . One pme past the halfway mark of the NFL season, the Rams sulized Sunday ~have to begin lookina at •. the po ibihty of a wild card berth in the NFC playoff a. They are Jookina in that direction because the San Francisco 49crs came into Anaheim Stadium and made sure the Rams wcrcn•t thinkin1 of overtaking them in the race for the NFC West title . Tile cliff erence: 49ers turned loose BJ CHR MONAHAN ........ C«t11,.-... With Joe Montana completina passes at will and the 49crs sbuttina down the Ram running game, Sao Francisco breezed to a 33-0 victory over the Rams before 6S.48l fans. It marked tbe first time the Rams have been hut out in a ~laMeasoo pme 11nce 1981. It was also the Rams· m01t lopsided rqular-season losssincc 1963. The Rams are now S-4 and still in ond p cc in the NFC West behind the 8-1 49ers; .. I know Washinaton lost today (the Redskins are also S-4) and I till believe we have a 1ood chan~ in the wild card situation," noted Rams Coach John Robinson, who Jeem to be araspsna for something JQC>d. to say about the aoin on at Anaheim Stadium Sunday. ••t don't thank there' any question our team will be back in the upcomina weeks." Robinson added. It will be bard for the Rams to not improve when you consider. •They fumbled five times, losing the bell three times (two ofwhicb led directl~to San f'ranci9Co touch· downs . • • thro~ 119 stt'liabt passes without bein&. iotercc:p&cd.. Ram quartcrt.ck Jeff Krmp was finally ptelccd off (by lhe 49cn" Eric WriJht), and he went o to throw · (Pleue eee RAllS/112) Denver takes · advantage, 22-19 Raider turnovers Ive Broncos chance9 and Karlis o t es AJtlcl CMJ ... ~ ...,,, D4. ..... o · ._ ........... u..e -&Awl,, ... ............... ..... ~ RAMS BLITZED ••• From Bl n tber tntCfCICJ)tlon o er. •Eri 01 k 0 \\ held tO;JU 13 rds ru h1 on 13 m , nd he d bts pra1ned toe wasn't c en bothcnns hlm. .. 1 re laze thDl e cry time I go out lherc I'm nol going to t 100) rd,.," Dickerson id. ··rm confident I'll tX' back. The toe hurt little b t. before the game, but once you ct going thC' adrenaline kind of wipcJ out the pain.'' The 49crs, on the other hand, used their drenahne to wipe out the Rams "They were throwin the b:tll real well, .. conceded Dickerson. ..That'~ how they won this game ... Montana finished the day complet· in& 2 l of 31 passes for 365 yards. Among hi• hoo u~ wei:e a 64-yard strike to Roger Cnug which gave the 49cr.. a l 2.0 l~d an the SC"Cond quarter and. a 44-yard stri~e to wide receiver Dwlght Clark which closed out the sconng at 7:58 of the final quarter. Montana added a 6-yard touch· down P.'\SS to Fm!dic Solomon in the second quarter two pla}s after Kemp was belted by Dwaine Board and fumbled on his own 1 ().yard line. "We knew we could throw the ball against them," said Montana, who completed his last 13 pa~ses of the contest for 263 yards "We know we can throw the ball a~inst any team. We're in a good position now. We're m the second half of the season and feel we can take it all the way." It \\ 1tie mos\ onc-stded lo for lht Rams nee a S2· I defc t by the J Bean 21 y~rs o. The: Rams came mto the 11mc ranked Uurd ID the NFL in the ru hms department. tnit the 49cn held them to 3ust 72 for the game • Kemp, meanwhile, missed for 180 yards, hiuina t4of30. The Rams had two &ood chances to put some points on lhe board. Dickerson fumbled at the San Francisco I-yard line and the ball rolled into the end zone and out of bounds for 1 touchback in the final minute of the first half. And in the final period, the Rams Jsquandertd another scorin,g op. pQrtunity when Georae Andrews rttovered a fumble by San F:ran- ci5C'o's Craig at the 49cf1' 4-yan! line. But a Dickerson run lost one y rd and then Kemp threw three incomplete pas~. "It S«mS like whenever we Sot closethe)'(the49en) responded to the challenge." Robinson said. "They came up with the big plays when they • needed them. "They played a zone all day but we thouJ.llt they miP.1t try to blitz. _Ther, didn t and we still had a rough tame, ' Robinson added. \ a.lr ........... .., ....... 11(...., warmeet o•er by Ram defenden darlng Sunday'• action. Montana also had praise for his defensive teammates: "ll was truly a great defensive pme. It was our best game as a team thi year." ltAM NOT•S -R•ma atrone Mftlv I~ Hanh wfflftd ...,hat was twmed a bedlv ll)f'•lned 1nkle .. ,, In the MCond Qutrtw and wu on crutchM 1fl1r Ille 111me ••• Whtfl a.-er.te cauo111 JM MMtaM'• •·vatd toucnoown NU In the third «1V11rter, It merktd fht flot llme lht ,,.,. had ICOl'ld I louehdDWll In lllel Ntlod ~ w1son ,., TN '9tf1 udled I(..,. five llmft •• • Tile R•l'M' lone brltnl NIOI Sundtv ... Hwv Dal'f., wllo callOf\I lhrW NHft fot' 14 \IM4' , , • The Ramt 111 In SI. Louis ne•I Sultdev to f~ Ille NFC Centrll OM.ion co-leNIN Clfdlnlll. SI LOUll and 01119' ere bottl 6·3. I SPORTS BREAK -----=---=------- Mctlain's trial on racketeering to begin today :f~;:;;~t~~~~~;. Dolphins -w-in ~again beneficiary of events in the Pensacola E:fa --------. OpenandwonarccordsixthPGAPlayerof Marino leads perfect Miami the Year award Sunday. . Watson had clinched a fifth money-win~aog title to ninth straight NFL verdict fnday when Mark O'Mcara and Andy Bean missed the From AP dJ1pa&claes ii 1AMPA -Denny Mclain, major league baseball's last )().game winner, prepared to race fedetal racketeering charaes of loan-sharking, bookmaking, extortion and drug violations. Trial was set to begin today before U.S. District Judge Eliubeth Kovachevich. who in mid-October refused to grant another delay to give the 40-year-0ld ex-Detroit Tiaer star more time to straighten out his defense plans. cut for the last two rounds of the final official event on the 1 ().month PGA tour ~hedule. Even though he chose to compete in Japan rather than play in the final American event, Watson won Player of the Year wnh 56 points on the complicated point list that the PGA uses to determine its award. South African Dcms Watson. tied with Tom for the lead going into the final week of the season, was second with 54 points. Points are awarded for tournament victories, as well as positions on the lists of the lead~ in money- winnings and scoring average, on the basis of 20 for fint. 18 for second and so on down to 2 for I 0th. Proceedings initially had been scheduled to begin Sept. I 0 . but the judge postponed that date Marathoner collapses, dies to a,ive McLain time to settle the question of legal counsel. When NEW YORK -A French runner m his auomC)s asked for more time collapsed and died Sunday while taking on Oct. 15, she said no. part in the New York City Marathon. Mclain was indicted March according to the city's Emergency Medical l6 on charges that between 1978 Service. Jnd I 983 he loaned money at 1 SO Poltoc ~pokcsman Sgt. ~1J>cter Ruane and race percent interest, threatened '1iol-director Fre.d Lebow identified the man as Jacques Mcl•la encc to collect debts, took tllegaJ Busscreau. •8. of Perigueux in southwestern Franct. H' bets on football and basketball games, possessed I 3 was one of about 600 French runne~ an the race. Lebow kilos ofcocaanc and plotted to smuggle 400 kilos more said. • from Colombia. f:.MS spokeswoman Eileen Hen.zberg said the The trial could last six weeks. Assistant US marathoner collapsed at 44th Avenue in Queens near Attorney Ernst Mueller has subpoenaed some 75 the 59th Street Brid&e shortly after 12:30 p.m. The witnesses. There has been no indication from defense bridge marked the halfway point in the 26-mile, 385- attomey Arnold Levine whether McLain himself w1ll ,.yard race. take the st.and. . • "When our unit picked him up, he was in cardiac Mclain was three times an Amencan League alP-arrest "Hertzberg. "He was taken to Elmhurst Hospital star, and twice a Cy Young Award winner. His once-where' he was dedarcd dead." soarin& career peaked an 1968 when he became the first Lebow said the fatality was the first in the 15-}ear pitcher since Dizzy Dean to win 30 games m a season. history of t.bc New Yorlc Marathon. which drew a He was 31-6 that yea~ Dctr~it won the A.L. record field of 18.365 on Sunday. . pennant and beat the St. Lou as Cardinals four games to three in the World Series. In JO major league seasons. Both Ends Burnlftd surprises Mclain compiled a 131-91 record: struck out 1,282 --& batters; walked 548 and h.ad a lifetime earned run average of 3.39 with 29 shutouts. Quote of the clay "I really Ilk• what Jim O'Hara said. Fountain Valley ptaya by the ruies and they play dean. I befleYe Edi.son stretches the rules as much as they can," -Huntington Beach football coach George Peecoe, referring to a recent quote by Westminster High co.c:tt Jim O'Hara. • Simmer spa rks Boston to win Kea Lln1ema.o scored on a t-oo· 1 ri.1 bruk wtUt ClaarUe Simmer with 6:40 gone ' 1n the third penod, lifting Boston to a 6-4 ""at1onaJ Hockey League wm o\·er the New York Rangers Sunday. Sammer was recently traded b> the Kings to Boston. In other NHL action. Mike Ramsey, Ric ~UlaJ and John Tacker all scored second- period goals, leadrng Buffalo to a 6-2 victol')· over Calpry. Dne Andreyd1ak, Mal Davls and Seaa Me~cana also scored for Buffalo . . . Center Ron Frucl1, who scored two goals. touched off a three-goal, ~cond-period outburst to hft Hartford to a 4-1 tnumph over Chicago ... Alu Hawo~'• third goal of the night broke a tic and sparked Washington to a 5-2 victory o"er Vancouver. extending the Canockf losing slreak to ~ven pm~ Wadkins wins golf tourney Veteran Laur Wadklm of thC' United n t.1tes hot a fina round 7-undcr-par 63 Sunday and won the SS00.000 World N11An Championship of volf b)' four strokes over England's Nick Price and Taiwan's Clten Tie-MJa at Nant.a, Japan. Wadkins sank seven birdies without a bogey and finished at 14-under-par 266. Wadkins ~med $81,633 and a sports car ... At Pensacola. Aonda. BW &.raCMrt completed a S-undcr· par 66 with birdies on three of hlS last four hole\, broke a four·)icat llumpand scored a two-ttroke victory 1n the Pensacola Open. Kraucrt, 32. once regarded as one of golrJ n ing younJ ta • scored the fourth \lictory of his recr and bi first since 1980 wuh a 270 total . ARCADIA -Both Ends Burning, a ~ Kentucky-brC'd gelding who rattd in Europe until last summer, surprised at 22-1 odds Sunda) to win the $400,000 Oak Tree · Invitational at Santa Anita. Ridden by Russell Baze. Both Ends Burning surged to the lead heading into the stretch of the I 1h-mile turf race and stood off 1982 Kentucky Derby winner Gato Del Sol and English-bred Raami to win by a length in 2 25 2-5 Seattle, Chargers vie tonight SAN DIEGO -In football talk it's known as an outstanding "g1veaway- takeaway" ratio More simply, it means the Seattle Scahawks wan because they don't [E make as man} mistake~ as the other guys. . Jn eight National Football League games this season, the Suhawks have given away the ball 2 I tames -but they've taken it away from opposin& teams 34 tames. That they are 6-2 and chalten&)ng for the AFC West divi,ion lead should come as no surprise. "We're plus I 3 an takeaways. Th.at has a lot to do wath our suc~ss:· said Seattle Coach Chuck Knox . Televlalon, radi o TnEVl9ION 6 p.m. -PttO FOOD.ALL: Seattfe at San Diego, cnannei 1. I RADK> 8 p m -PflO FOOliaALL: Seattle 1 San ~. KNX (1070}. 8:30 p.m. -PRO HOCKFf; Kfngt 1t Winn peg (deiaY*f), KWVE(108 FM). ALTUNATIVE TO MONDAY NIGHT FOOTIAU. Rustlers win title PRIME RIB DI R PE IA.I,, •&.9 5 Comp1 te dlnrrer Anclud1ng soup or I d, and cho ce of pot to ·- ..... TV vi Ing for football ga~m 801 E Balboa 673-7726 From AP dl1patcbca MIAMI -Dan Marino continued his usault on Miami's team record book Sunday by passing for 282 yards and three touchdowns to lead the unbeaten Dolphins to their ninth straight National Football League victory, a . 38-7 rout of the winless Buffalo Bills. Marino completed 19of28 passes, including scoring tosses coverin& 7 and 65 yards to Mark Clar.ton and 10 yards to Dan Johnson, as Miami hiked its record to 9-0 - the be:i.t start an the NFL since the Minnesota Vikina.s were I ()..0 in I 975. The second-year quarterback shattered Bob Griese's Dolphins -;ingle-season passing yardage mark of 2.•73 yard!> late in the first quarter and finished the day with 2.6 72 yards with ~ven regular season games left in the Gluta n, Recl1klll1 IS: In East Rutherford. NJ., Joe Morris scored on th~ short runs and Phil Simms lofted two touchdown passes as the New York Giants stopped the Washington Redskins on defense and buried them on offense. · The victory was the Giants' first over the Redskins in seven NFL same datina back to I 981 . 1984 campaign. Elsewhere in the NFL Sunday: Packen 41, Liou t: Lynn Dickey picked a~ the Cblefs %4, Baccueen H: Bill Kenney thrcw'for 332 Detroit defense for four touchdown passes, Eddie Lee '-'ards and two touchdowns. lifting host Kansas City to a Ivery rushed for t 16 yards and rookie safety Tom Ayon J intercepted two pa. scs r.s the G~n Bay Packers broke a w100m over Tampa Bay in a game which saw an NFL record seven-same losing streak with an easy triumph over the ~-. u Kenney, a product of Sari Oementc High and vmtanK ons, • . Saddleback College in his second stan of the season, Bean lt, Vlkinp 7: Jim McMahon passed for 180- connccted on 26 of 46 passes. Ken lac} scored two-yardsandonetouchdownandlheChicagoBears'defense, touchdowns and Henry Marshall hauled m a 27-yard ranked No. I in the NFL, registered a club record 11 sacks \Coring stnkc. in a victory over the Minnesota Vik.in~ in Olicago. Archie Mannin&. filling for inJured quarterback Cardloal1 34, Easies 14: Quarterback Neil Lomax Tommy Kramer, was dropped 11 times for losses totaling completed 20 of 26 pa~ses for 286 yards. ahd . two Io I yards. The NFL record for sacks is J 2 held by the touchdown\ and Stump M1tchell en~ IOnJ dnves ~tth a Pittsburgh Steelers and the Baltimore Colts. pair of I -yard scores as the St. Louts Cardinals rallied to defeat the Philadelphia Eagles in Philadelphia. Patrto&1 SO, Jett %0: Jn Foxboro, Mass, Crai& James Lomax 's gamc-winnin& touchdown of 8 yards to Pat ignited New EnsJand with a 25-yard third.quarter Tilley capped a 27-yard second-period drive after St. Louis touchdown burst and quarterback Tony Eason threw five tackle Mark Duda recovered a Wilbert Montgomery yards to Stephen St.atrin& for the go-ahead score as the fumble at the Eagles 27. l>atriots ralhcd from a 17-paint deficit to beat the New . York Jets. Cowboy! U, Colts S: Hot-ban~ Danny Whtt~ Trailinf 20-3 late in the first half and '20-6 at ceteb_rated h,as rctur:n. u Dallas starttng quarterback by intermiuion, the Patriots came back in the third quarter, nddhna Ind1anapohs porous secondary with tw? t~ui::b· scorin' first on Tony Franklin's 47-yard field goal, th.en on down passes and over 200 yards in the Cowbo)"i v1rlory . James 25-yard bursL over the Colts in Irvine, Tex. White, operattna against the second worst pass defense in the NFL, bit Tony Hill with a 38-yard scoring pass and drilled a 5-yarder to tight end Doug Cosbie. Ironically, Hill had been a White detractor, saying he served up "medicine balls" that could get a receiver hurt. Buial• 11, OUen U: Cincinnati's Ken Anderson conducted a passing drill against Houston's secondary, completing 13 in a row at one point, and Larry K.innetmw scored four close-range touchdowns as the Bengals routed the Oilers in Houston. • Steelers H, Falconi 10: Mark Malone threw three touchdown pas~ • two to John Stallworth, and Dwayne Woodruff returned a fumble 65 yards to score on Atlanta's first play as the host Pittsburgh Steelers routed the Falcons. Anderson, who has beaten the Oilers six consecutive times and set an NFL record of 20 consecutive completions in a game in 1982, continued his mastery over the Oilers, hitting 18 of 24 for l 54 yards. Malone. makinuust his second stan at quarterback in three years, nfled scoring passes of 20 and 31 yards to Stallworth and 7 yards to Rich Erenbcrg. whale Frank Pollard ran for 111 yards and scored the Steelers' other Saints 11, Bron1 H: Morten Andersen kicked a 53- yard field goal in driving rain as time expired to a.ave the New Orleanr. Saints a victory. over the host Ocvetand Browns, spailing the NFL debut of new Browns Coach Marty Schottenheimer. touchdown. Italian stuns marathon field Unknown runner earns big u pset; Waitz wins easily Dixon was unable to defend his title. Suffering stomach cramps, just like P121olato did. he dropped out about 100 yards before the 21-mile point. when he wa in fourth pl e. Piuolato's time had to be con· idtrcd rcsptetable, in light of hi physical problemsand the heat which ..reached a high of 74 dqrccs and the 'umidity ~h1ch soircd to 96 percent. Dave Murphy. a native of Britain now living in LOuisvillc, Ky •• finished second in 2: 15:36. He wa' followed hy llerbcn Stcffny of We t Gennany in 2: 16:22. Pal Pc ten.en of Ronkokoma. N.Y., in 2:16:3S, and Gianni ()e.. madonna ofJtaly 1n 2: 17:05. Waiu., whoalsoadmiuOd tohavina stomach cramps early in the race, when he ooca ionally lUJICd at her shorts and raised .ber arms, was clocked in 2:29:30, her slowest finish since winninJ the_ New York City race for the first tame 10 1978, Piuolato. born in the little Italian town of Piovene, some 60 miles from Venice. and now livina near M1lln, wa asked after his startling triumph w~at had been his previous biQtSt tnumph. "The~ wasn't any," be said. He also said that an.tr the aruelhn& race, he felt fine physjcally. despite the diOicultica that had plagued him over the latter staaes of the event. But those: problems added a lot of drama to the race that was devoid of o~tsUlndina marathoners, except for Dixon tmona tbe men and Waitt amona the women. Y ht aub. Redondo Beach, and thttd Bia Apple. co-kippered by Gene Williams and Ernie Johan , Balboa Yacht Oub. wards for daily firsts went to Bia Apple in the first race. Insanity an the 5CC<>nd nd th rd raocs, Jack Bcn7.• PohsPrin , NFL MATIOHAL COH'•"INCE Wt11 San Frencbco "'"" NIWOrlQM Atltnl1 W L T f'ct. Pl' PA • 1 • ..., w lQ 5 4 0 .556 lM 170 4 S O ."4 116 2H ) 6 0 .aJ3 IM Jl, c:.ntNI CllluOO Otlf'Oll T1mpa lav Greenlav Mlnl!no11 6 ) 0 .1 • 0 J ' 0 ' 1 • 2 J 0 "' 194 l~ m1• 221 .3l3 16) 224 .m ,,. 200 m 110 219 •.. , o.ae, • 3 o '" 17t m SI L.ouh 6 3 0 .U1 D.S 213 HY Olanta S 4 O .556 175 116 W11hln11t0ft S 4 0 S56 DD llO Pt!BIOl!ptit. • s o ...,. 111 m AM£JllCANCOHl'IRl..C. I Pfll6l>Ulgll Clilclnnatl CleYlllnd Hout Ion West • 1 0 1 2 0 • 2 0 s • 0 4 • 0 c.... s • 0 3 • 0 I I 0 0 ' 0 ... , ..., laS Ill 771 2U llO JSO no 15' "' 172 176 SIG 221 211 .556 200 llO :m 163 1'7 • Ill 116 1'6 000 116 265 ' 0 0 1000 30S 124 6 3 0 .661 1'S 20t ' 3 0 '67 221 117 3 6 0 .33J 154 221 0 ' 0 .800 143 271 S!MdeY's k41rH S.n Frenclaco 33, Rams o Ptn"" 22, R•ld9rl 19 (of) ClnciM•ll 31, HoµJton 13 01lla1 22, lndlanapofl' 3 C"JQQo 16, Minnesota 1 Hew Or1t1n1 16, Cleveland '4 ' Plll111\11ot1 3S, Al&.nl1 10 New EnoUlnct 30, NV Jtla 20 St. l.ouls 34, Ptlllaoe!Phle 14"' Gr1tn Bev 41, Otlroll 9 K1n1u Cltv 24, Tempe a.y 20 Mleml •• BuffllO , NY Gl1nt1 37, W1V.11191on 13 T ....... 1G..- S..t11t 11 SM Olteo (CllMntf 7 11 •> SUfldilY'• GelMs Rmrns at St. t.oull (Olenn91 2 11 1 o.m.l ~ el Clllca9o o.v.llmcl 11 luffeto GrMn a.v 11 New OrlMna ~a!PIUIMM ~1 Clly at S..tlll NY Glal'lla 11 Della Phllldllohle at Otfrou Sen Oleoo II lnd'll"IPOlls Temoe Bly 11 Mlnnttote ClllclMall 11 Sen Frlndsco Miami 11 Ntw Yont Jiil PMw Enelel'd 11 Oen\ler Mlftdly, Nw. S Game Atleol• 11 W1lfllne1on 49trs 33, Rams o kllr• lly Ou•rfln ' Sen Frtncls<o 3 16 7 7-33 lt1m1 o O O 0-o SF-FG Werachlno .. SF-FG Werscntn; 46 SF-<r•lo '4 PIU from Monl•'ll (PeU f•lllcll SF-Solomon 6 NII from Mont1ne (WtnchinQ kid!) SF-Craig 6 run (W1nct1fng klCk) SF-0.Clefll u NU from Monlene (Wtrsd\1119 kick) A~s.a1 GAME STATlmCs SI' Rams First downs 23 12 Rlnl!H-yarch 39-111 19-n Pusllltl v11ds 361 134 lttlurn yards , • 22 6 Pestet 22·»-0 1..-»-2 Sklu IY S-46 2·1S Punts 3·31 6-«t Fumbln•IOat 2-2 S·J ,,_ltles-vard• 6·41 3·2S Time oi Poueulon 35 26 24:34 lNOtvlDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Sen Francisco, TVllr 13·27, Hennon S•2S, Crt'-~l>-24, lllno 4· 16, Monta111 6·11, Solomon l•I Rerm. Olc'ktrton ll·31, Kemp 4•27, Ellard 1·5, Ridden M PASSING-51n Frtncisco, Montane 21-31-C>·US, Cavanalltlfl H-0-11. Rams, Kemp 14•30-2, Ito ltECEIVING-San Francisco, Solomon 6·94, D.C&.rk •·to, Nthlml1ll 3·41, Coooer 3-'9, Craig 2·13. Tvw 2-11, Frat'lll 2-15. Rems, El1rd 4·94, Hiii •-31, lrown 2-H . Olcllerson 3· 19, Gum1n 1-10. Mt$SEO FIELD GOALS-None. Broncos n.. Rak:Nn 19 SC..llY~ l)lnYlf" 0 6 0 13 )-22 kalders t 3 7 0 0-19 l.A~fafy, Kubllk IKklld In end zone by Mallin l.A-Alllft 36 PIU from WdlOll (Satlr kkll) LA--FG lehr U Ptn-FG Kertis 41 Oen-FG Karhl 24 LA-Allen l run CBal'lr klckl Dln-'K•'r • PISI from l(ul)lalt (NU fen.cl) ~Wilson 12 NSI from Kubl•k (K1rtl1 kick) Oen-FG Ker11s 35 A_,1,020 GAM• STATISTICS Oen &.A Flnl dow11$ 24 20 RUSMS•y11cts 46-1'2 31-122 PllJlllll ylf"dS 111 tl4 RllUl"n vards 13 . 32 Plswa 21-J.t-O 1'·:16-3 5aclls IV 3· 11 4· 21 Punt• ,... 4•'3 Fumtlln·IOsl 4•3 6•4 Penaltfft-yarcn 7-41 s-ss Tima of Ponestlolt :17:3' 37;21 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Otnver, Winder 34-126, Wllll'llle 10-34. Kubllk 2·22. LOI Anoelts, Allen 16-70, Hewklns 10·26, Kin; 1·20, Humm l·t , Wiison J-(mlnus 3). PASSING-Oenve<, Kubiak 21·34·0-106. t.ot Anoelu, Wiison lt-36-3-252. RECEIVING-Oenv11-. Wll$0fl 5·12, Johnson 5-49, WlnOtr 5•'9, Wlltillt 2·14, Stwyer 2· 11, K•Y• 1-4, J.Wrllltlt 1·0. Los AllOtlff, A11911 •·63. lwnwefl •-n. Cl'ltlttenwn 4•SS. WllllttmS 4·S3, Pruitt 1·4 MISSED FIELD GOALS-0.Wtr, Keflls 42 Los Anotlls, Jahr 47, Coltee SATURDAY'S LATS SCC>ttl West Hewell 16, Sen D!IOO Slate 10 HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS S4MMt Leque ...... WLT Ectlaon J 0 O FOUlll•I" Vabtv , 0 0 Merine 2 l O H1111IJDlll011 Buch ' t 0 CXHl'I Vltw 0 3 0 Westminster o l O "'*"• °'""' 0.-1 °""' W &. T 7 1 0 • 2 0 .s 3 0 1 S I I 1 0 , 5 0 Fountalft velltv vi. Edison Cat Anerielm Stedlum) Marina 11 Wntmfns1er OcHll View 11 >iunllnglon lfftn S.. View LNfUt LHIUI W &. T lffwllOf'I HarltOf 4 0 I ~ 401 CorCllll cMI M•r • 1 O Unl"ftrlllY J 2 0 LIOUlll ltld\ I 3 0 Eata~ I .. 0 WOOdOrldOt I 4 0 C111l1 Meta 0 S 0 Orirel W LT • 0 , 1 • ' • 2 0 .... :a s 0 t 6 • I 6 0 0 '1 I TllllrMIV"I..,.,. (71)1) NtWllO'I Hlft!Of YI Llftlytrl fY llt lnllfll) °""' W L 'f s 3 0 :s , I S I I . . , 2 • 0 I 6 I I t I °"""~ THUR50AY AMl!Ut i..ewt SI ~ n Maltt Del (el Sa<lte An1 BoW1) Gardill 0'9W LM.U. S.nllallO 11 Gardeft Grove Rancho AltmllOI -.... Y Qvfnll (II Bohl Grandi) SATURDAY ...... LMtut Plus X "'-5erv'll• 111 ~IVI E11111W &Al9Ue Cvoress n. Ka•fllt l•t l:I Palma Peril) Et Dorldo "' l.M ~-nflo1 (11 W11ttrn) GINlll Gnft l....,. LOf AmlOot 11 lolll G11ndt Ed1Hn•F9Unfllln V ...... Seri.a 19ff-Editon 21, Fountain VelltV 20 1970-EdlMHl 21, Fountain Valley 6 l'7l-Ed11on 20, Fwnta111 Vlllev 6 ltn-:.Edison 26. Foun11I" V111tv 1 1973-Fountaln V1111V 21, Edi.an 74 1'71-Founteln v111tv O, Edison O lt7S-Ealaon 19, Foun111n VelllY • 1976-Edl~ 13, Founllln Velll\I J lffl-Founl1in v1111v •, Ed1'°n 1 1971-EdlJon 10. Fountain Vellev 1 1979-Ecfiaon JS, Fountain Valle¥ 7 1990-Ed•SOll IS, Fountain Valltv 14 1980-Ediaon 1', Founl1ln Veney o• 1911-EdiSon 24, Fountain VtlleY 13 1912-Edi$Oll 17' Founlelll V1U.y 3 l983-f'ount11n Valley 33, Edison 1 Edison leads Wflts, 12•3·1 •denotes CIF Bio Flv• llllt tlrnct EDISON 41 Westlake 6 1' Collon l 9 8annil19 10 u lJ Bosg> '.Id. 33 Noire Dame 7 17 Weslmlll$tlf 7 42 OcMn v" o 27 H II\. Baac:t! 1 N2-f=V (Bio Al N9-Mlrlna IOCCl l'TM. VAt.L•Y 11 Mttv' Otl 13 17 El Toro l4 2• M.. 'llelo " JS S.Olla 16. 19 LB Poly 10 .s2 Ocffn VII# 0 31 Marine 21 17 Westmlft\I• 1 N2-Ed1son ISlg Al Nt-et Hin llldl Hlth 5d*lf stattatlCS LAST WlllK'S t.•AOllRS au-. 1. Dave Swlottl CFounteln V1Utv), 20-17'; 2. Gr111 1tn•m1n (University), 26-16"; 3. Stan Curren (Edl\on), 23·157; 4. ~dam Anlovan IMMll'll), 11·12$; 5 Jim Ml" (Irvine), 11·117; 6. Fritz HoWMr IN~wi>ort HtrbOrl. !2-"112; 7. Shewn Malse'I <Marine), ls-111; I Tr• Anion (Mlllf Del), 23-101; 9. Sieve Frank (lrvlntl, 9•91; 10. Remy Rellrnetutla (lrvlnel. l:HO 'u~ 1. TOdcf Merlnovlctl (Miier OtO, 21-:n-1. 254 veros, 4 TO.; 2. Shane Folev (N-oor1 Harbor), 11-IH. 250 Yllfch, 4 TOS; 3. Tad McMlltn (WHtmlnster), 14·27-2, 130 nrcts. o TO\; 4 Mike Shuclt (C0$1a Mesa!, 9·27·4, 127 \'Weis, I TO, S Jeff Blelmln (EdlSOCI), 7-11>-0, 123 Y1rds, 1 TO; 6. Eric z-<Foun1a111 V111ty), 3·11-2, 110 vards, 2 TDs: 7. Stt1'1 alalldvll <Mar1naJ, 7-17-2, 104 nrds, 1 TD; t K•"" Jerrell lEdisofll, l-l6~. 12 yards, I TD lttc91V111t l Sam Stroidl (Co$1t Mes.I), I • 124, 2. P.U Carci-.s CMlttr DtO, I· 104, 3, Ho Truong (NIW1>0r1 Harb«), 7·147, 4 Jeff Cvrnmlnes <LaoUn• IMdll, S·7S; 5. (llct) SLick Justice CEcflsofll, Mike ktlY !Malet OtO, ~SO. 7. Craig Conte <E1•1nelal. S·C; I. Sl1tv1t Gultv CWestmlnsttrl, S·«l. t Cllltl RWI ~rfna), 4·«1 ~ 1. HO Truono (NIWOO(I Htnlor), 24, 2. Gr111 Btniamln (Univen•IY), II: 3 E1r1 JONS (Sedcflebtctt), 14; 4. (lie) Milli Milehll <Mat« OeJI, WeYM StaflOI (C>cetn View), sun Curren <Edison). Jim Miele (lrvlnel, 12 .. ch NHL CAMPBELL CONFEllENC£ Srnvtflt DMlitn WI. Tl'b 7 0 2 16 7 3 0 " J 2 I 7 0 6 3 3 1 9 0 2 Nen1s OM-. GF GA S3 2S S6 3t 26 24 24 " )0 S7 Clllca9o S 4 O 10 u ll T lf"Ollto 3 S I 7 2S 37 SI, L.ouls 3 S 0 6 JI l2 Delroll 3 s 0 6 3J • Mlnnnot1 2 6 • • 24 33 WALES CONl'ER£NCE ~la NV l&tallOln HYR~ We Ullne'Oll Pltfl&IUrgf\ N-Jtrs.ev Htrlforct Mon tr HI &oston Buffelo Quebec Pttndl OMailfl 6 2 I 13 44 22 530100'3 4J\ ••» 332 13021 341 6232' 3 s 0 ••• Allltns DMMlft ' J I 13 41 3t 521113023 5 40 103434 s 4 0 10 JI 37 3S1 73417 Sundlllr's SC.... &UffalO 6, Cel111rv 2 l°'lon 6, NY Ringers 4 H1Hford 4, Chlca9o I Wa1'1lngton S, V1ncouYll' 2 Tlllltlllt"sGinMS KJll9I 11 WlnniMll Quebec 11 Montreal TuesdaY'I Glmts Oelroil II Pllllbunlf\ NY Reneen ., NY bllnden Cl'llQiio 11 MlnMsote Vane~ at Edmonton New Yortr mara1hon l OrlandO PiUolflo. llalY, 2:14:53 2. Mixr*IY, David, England, 2:153' 3 Hlfbtrl Sleffnv, Fr Gtrmanv, 2:16:22 4 PtltrMn, Ptl, Ronkonllome, NV, 2:16:35 S. Gianni Oemadonnt, lletv, ?:17:05• 6 MICflltl Sl>olllll, Fr Gll'ITllJ1Y, n7:11 7. Anlonl Nt1mc11k, POltnd, 2:17:34 I , Nldt Brawn, Enolancf, 2J7;42 9 Al'l!Mcf M. tsmtll, SomeH,t.-2: 11· 16 10. Z1ll1rle Blrle, T1t'tl1nl4, 2:1~ II. Rvserd M111a1k, Poland, 2:11;29 12. Mehrnel Tent, Turkey, 2:1~12 13, Jukkl Toivola, Fini.ncf, 2:19:11 U, 1.lndllV Robtrlaon, Scotland, 2:20:09 IS. Moi'ltrned ltuttg~. T11111nle, U0·.29 16 Mais Erlxom, Swldl!'I, ?:20'.31 17 David It. C•rk, Scoltand, Ul:<M 11. Johatt GtiMHrt, hlukltn, 2~1· It f(etcl JoMMll, Olnlnlnl, ?:21;16 10 LMrv S .. rllliow, Boston, UU9 21. Ptdr• R04lrlthlt1, Cllelufwa. t.21:52 n AHOftl A Abtflan, Calalunvt, 2 22-01 l3 JimmY Alllwortll. England, U2 1' 2• Lou Suolllo. COlof .oo s.irir.os. nH1 U, Zottan Klu. H.-.rY, 2:22:5' 16. Odis O. Slln6tn, Freeoort, NY, 2232' 21. Edward A Swilltodla, Oallu, Ta, 22346 21 Rollttl M. ScNtu, lile ol Pttma. SC, U3!1 1' Dan T. Rte~, W1rwldl, Ny, l 24-01 lO Otr8 Stevtns. Eft911nd, 234.29 31 Jose J Gomtt, Mnlc:o, J-24.JO n Mlh E. Sand!in, ""''"'· Ma, 2.24:53 3l Mlct!Ml G FeutladO, Ozone Pt..-. NY, 7:7S:il0 )4. .Hin lb•lk Vlholmtn, NofWIY, 2;15 17 35 Jtft RaWllns, Vlfldella. Ot\, 22S.21 U JMo o.Mtta, 8r1111, 125 4l 31 Julio Re s, BruM, ?.26:09 ll Paut J, Cteadl, Franct, UUt It Oom"'9o C.lelln, C1t1b.uwa. 2.16l3 40 Mi..t C. Grtlton, E~. 2:26:·• 41 PIUI Cra'9 trelandLJ-.JU3 42 If.VII 0 Htflntf. 'Jiit ColOIW, Tx, 2~:.W Q, ,._VI ( Nlllltfll, Ho!brOOk, NY, 1:77:05 .-. ltarao OtNOa SDltn, :t:n.lt •$. Kevlft R Moats, Atlenta, 2:27.23 "' "°"' !It~. ,....., ZHlancl.. 2:77~ 41 Geivtan F FMnanc1tz, SMlft, t:21.4' • Still Hln&l\I, JN*\, ntt'2 ., Wf'T Tlotll, c.Moa I 21:ot • Jolt Jami E.c:uNor. t.21 " 11 .10MOr1 ~ ~. :$Mtt0n, Ct, uui G~ Genii, ffalY, 't:2t:!6 13. Ectwll'd I ~. LO\Avllt, KY • ., UH9 $& ~ p O'Mlftlunl ~ t.19:0 "' Clflord p ~IMllW. L.~ ,.. l::n;l9 56. Manlllel It..,_, MeDCO, lt.1Ut S1 Crttt Wllu ...-..v, t.2't.W O.lr TtM <•• s.... ,.,..., SUNDAY'S llSU&.TS (2111 .. 27 ... , ........... metlillel 'IRST RACI. l 11'6 m!fn. &andelllre 041WllY) • 00 • '° , 00 DltllCt (Plntn I 5.20 3'0 C.Oteln OcMillll (GMcll) 5.40 Also r~. Sc\IM Pita.._ Stab0!1ad, Jlmtel. Patttl'IO, Goodt>Vt '1. Y.. G ... Cir Cit, llovat Gleu. Time. 1.43 215 SICOND •ACE. one mlle Llftte MlsllOUt'I IOlhOUHY) •OO 310 2IO Dvnamllt (~rn) UO 6AO Protect Vounetf (Hat!MnJ 11.10 Alto rlCICI Strut MY $luff, ~alMtlN Sun, KlwtrOI), Bronr;no, Hellve Giol' ... Not The ...... TllNl 1:31 11.S. 12 DAILY DOU•&.a t•·I) oald 114.AO. nt•O RACI. 6 Nrtonos Fine Solrlt lMcelnonl 2.IO 2.20 i.21 Olrv\illa (°"9houHIYtl :1.20 JM ~ Encore CMeu) 3.11 • Allo ~ "''" 'N T ... l.ert Of ZMro, FJyfflO Caldl. Tirrw ••.'ll..S. l'C>UaTH RAC•. 6 ~ Joni U laf IOl!Ywts) IUO UO 4..20 Fllll(y I. Q IBIKtlJ MIOO 5A Ms. Vtra ht (VllleNuell) 4AO Allo RC*S Felr Arna, Mtnu11 Mal T91 Roe, Cadle, SOtomlllo. Tme: 1.10 3/S. llWTM RACI. 1 1116 min. Eltllt's Itek (5lblllt l 32 '° n .a •·• S.lf's Rovll Ote.n CC11tanlda) 6• .._. C_. Vlfdcl COtWlousMvej 6.40 AIM rM:tld Euto61vt Twist, Slglo Ditz, LI Verne's litl Mac, £m11 KlllO, o.i.I RldQt, Hal1mo10, NOC>lt Air. Flttl Paul Alison, Sheriff Muir. Time. U3 2/S. IS •XACTA (4·S) 11114 "51.50. MXTI4 ltACS; I 1116 mw Dltlclntl <McCarron> 4 00 3.00 2.IO S.Wfno ~oow <Toro> uo 1.00 Lonelllt Miu (llKkl 1IO At.o rlQcf Otar Carrie, Awl Sec· retaritl, Frenn·e Mtrett, Nllllt a Friend· fy. T1me I '3 41S SSVllNTI4 llACa. Ont mile. Suear Stwr• <Otlvernl 12.00 S.60 4 00 Adl!Pflal !Cntaneclal 2110 JO.JO Nont\ Mtsl (McCAirTOll) 7.00 AllO rec.cl S.••""8fl OWlctr, T runl&., Swttl Ceoade. I Ente, wnom. s-. Time I :31 11 s. '5 EU.CTA (7-ll N~ U..00 lllGHTit RACE. I 112 mills on lur1, 8th Encll lrnlne (kze) 46'9 1UO IM Gelo Ott SOI (01Yl UO 1IO Raemi lP~vl ,._ AIM> faced: GofocSlan, F!v Me, l.I'-Ad, TrClllMmt, SUMr Diamond, ~. L0141 Tiii C-.., Tonarun, PW Of OellCft T1'N 2~ 2 1. 11 f'tCK SIX 16·S-4·7·1-1l paid M0.41Q.00 wllll 12 wmn. tiell.et• (five llonn ). S2 PICK SIX conMllatlon Delct 1670 • with 460 winning lk:Uts (five l'IOfltSI. NINTH RAC•. One mile. nam Two (ShoemlH!e<) 10 20 UO UO No H'rtl (Mta) 4.00 3AO 1..111 Tanoo !Toro) SAO Alto rlCld: Rl9tll On Rid, OOm Orlando, S.m'I Tlble, Too MIKtl For T V. Tlmt. I :36 II S. $S llXACTA (4·1) Plld SI00.50. Alllftdance· 50.tw ,....,,, teu"'*Mnt Cit Htnl IC-) SINlll ....... Andres Gomez (~cuedor) dtf. Tomas Smid ICltcllolloVtlt.\e), •-3. 6•2 (Gomu Willa MO.OIO, SmHf Win& '20.0001. Wtmeft's tourMment (It 11tt111• liflllilM) ...... , ... Svtvla Henlh (West Gtrmitty) dtf. JoAMt Ruutl CU,S.), 6•3, 1-6, 6-2 (Hanike wins 132,000). Mixed dlelbM$ toumam.tt tat Hw1•> "1nlli l1t1y N•Ot!Hn·l uldl Walt• (U.S.) def. Vine• Van P1t1en-K1llly Rlneldl (U.S.1. 6-3, •-6, 6·3, 6-2 (NaQlllMn-Wltta shire SI00,000, Ven Patlen·Rlneldl slllfe ISO.ODO). DAUM W')-Ev. dlol!P 11i1 Dlllmt Mav.icb r 1•1d ID lilllll • .sprdal ... OYlt ... Lal " .... ~ bald COK.la Diet Maaii ... DOt COUDl.iJ!I oa M ..... die IWO teams ma Siuld8y DWM. .. ltboaP&we ... •b•~• M>nilbl... Slid Malla. -Wm oa natM>oal ldevdioD ~ 1it's a t.n boUK and ~Ja. Mllic (Jolwoa) lovrs the bi& .. But the Mavericb W Job9'0ll 10 9 pomts and led by as many as 23 oa the way IO a 107.!96 ViC10rY ~ e Reunion f\rcna ldlout of 17,007. .. 11•1 im~nt to Fl OUI ol the blocks quietly, .. Aid Labn ClOICl9 Pat Riky. ••But~· we ..ae down IS.. l 6 PQinta !9bt from the telf· Fighting uphill 11 IOO much to a6.. The Mav~ Mo war ~2 gajnst the ~ laa yar, arc coming to believe IJw ~ llold a spell over the leam wbidl baa played in the NBA finals t.be lut lbree )'Ql'S. .. I don't know if ;(1usaietUQl119 or them aettina a little bit downt but• really seem 10 pl8y Ml 'P'"• the Lakers." '8id Danal' J•y Vincat, who ICOl'ed 16 apoinas IO IO WJtb EDISON ••• From81 ·seCondary. The secondary doeSD •t have any Mike Newtons as io tbe past. but they play awfully aood football. and th~ have ~ pua nub." As for Edison s secondary, W Olt- man does ack.nowledae its PIOM:SS.. 1'bis is the same ICiCOOdary that took all that Oak last year. 1'bey pve upa whole bunch of cbcap ones lD this game with a few mined rotations. l can still see (Carl) Harry aoi.oa down the middle (Hairy samd oa a 63- yard pas rcceptioo)." W ortcman says bis biaes\ cooc:em a. ma bia .... c:aa "-'iridllDrill ~mcrw:Wli1 1-oowe•re pbying better .tlml 1 thouabt we would. but we're m11dn1 more mistakes and siettina more penalties than I thouaht any team could get. We're playina agressivcJy and that accounts for some of the peJlahies, but others are just lack of experience and not thi~ If we set 200 yards in penalties we re out of there ... In contrast to Mimer's thoulJJts, Worlanan sees it as a low-tCX>rin& game (F.dison has allowed 7.S poi.au per game with Wheclwri&ht and linebacker Doua Bennet very con- spicuous) and he says bis No. l priority is makina ao<>d when the Clwacn have the chance to score. '"'We are losiug two touchdowns a pme (because of peri.alties) and it C05t us the Banningpme. there's no doubt about it. .. As for Fountain Viney, they area complete team. We can't say 'we have to run· or 'we have to pass' became you have to do both," says Wortcma.n. "Fountain Valleyisalittlediffaent than in the ~" continues the Edison coach. "They run more thaD the normal Fountam Valley ~ Wben. in the last five years. have you seen Fountain Valley GOme out and throw just 10 to l3 times in a pmc.? They've thrown that much in l quancr. That's T<'by they can ~t y_ou with the bomb. He (Fountain Valley tailback Dave Swigart) is a peat runnin& back. .. They're aettina the ball to him 2(). odd times a pme and I don•t blame them. .. I know one thing. the tearu Wt doesn't win i.sn 't finished. .. Workinan·s btto th.rouah this rou~ tine as Edison"s bead coach sin~ 1973, and be say aothing's really chan&Cd O\'ct the years.. Anteaters drown foe ~ BARONS ••• Prom B l smaller and qwetcr ... Milner says his team's ~ US a concern IO him. tarticr, bat U tbe season bas prog1ciled be's idi.ae beUCr abouL "We've played well at times beck there. but it is Ul inaperienccd secooda.ry," says Milner ... ,n was oe the otber'lidelba1 put of our pme WOUid IOo1c aanct· ave to me and think it woWd be a vUlnerabk ~'Of our cki: w. 0. ~~~.:i;~eadit." diets a low:tcorial ..--.... ~---··]· c-i 9illlL ............ .... bis~-. ·~ that dwlaes momentum ow or five times.."" says Miliact. • Reprding bis team's ~or ia.st;' with the Cbaraers' offense, it comes· down to eltect1vdy containin,i tailbad Sean Curran. • "'We have to slOp them from ball-'" controUiD& the football," says Milner:: .. And, we hive to put some beat oa· Jarren (F.disoo '• quarterback. :Keith. Jarrett). • .. II they're able to put tosethcr 1~· play. 80-yant drives on us we could be; 10 for a Iona niaht • O&nSiVcly. ~ hi\·'C to dl'ectivdy'", nm tbe football. (Dave) Swip.rt bas io: have a aood game and ~ have l protect our pu1cr (F.ric 2'.a1o );'' It's the usuaJ assignment fOr Barons when tbe meet up with thc:ii nemesis -Fo11Dlain V aDey bas to deaJ with f.disOo•s quiet and ever-• c'.:banaina defensive honts. "'BaSicaUy ifs the same o&n,e." says Milner ... J&lfttt appears io be .. VefY fine athlete. He throws the bell very 9t'dl Not deep. but aoc:unie and he 'bas improved his velocity. ~ he·s a threat on the p<?WCT kciep. He• definiiely poces a problem... , , ~ Edison bas a lot of 'weapom - offensively and defensively-but the sin&le itld.ividual who catches the Fountain Valley coach•s eye is io the secondary-Eric WhedwrigbL .. He's ihe best defensive back in the lequc and E.diloD's No. l defensive. player." D)'I Milner . "Out offensive liM and the nwu p.me is a pat ~of pride for our team. They (center Sieve White.· &UatCls Pauiclc Hcnt&3Jl and Ride: SnoWdon and tlckles Lance Zeno and: Brad~) have done a p>d job m: pus protection and have bccD s>avins: the way for Swipn. .. T'.icteu are on .sale at Fouaiain Valley and Edison hilh doo1s for their SunlCt ~ football shoWd<>Wn at heim S&adium Friday with priocaet S4 for lldu.lts and S2 for ohil<trcn under 12. Ftnacial offices •t both cun- l>UICS •~ open from 7:30 Lm.-1 :30 p.m • udenuwim~~ pwcs ere admitted 10 the pme free of ctwae. 'Vissttn,g FoWlWft Valle)• lt1*ttts can pin ld- mamon for SI with a super Bll'OD pul al the presale only. ' . I COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 85. • ~ ............. Lee...,.. t Tbe lleubea·E. Lee bu fooled man,. di.Den who tlloa,c!at tlle,.werebaTfnCdl.Dneroaareetoredrt•er-t. I 1 Reuben E. Lee celebrates 20th anniversary I 81 ROBERT HYNDMAN founder, wanted an authentictea.fOod more than SOO pages of drawings. at the very top of the Reuben E. Lee. orai....,,.....,. restaurant in Newport Beach and was Foote said. The former office of the restaurant's • One of Newport Harbor's most fond of the riverboats he had ICen on The 190-foot-looc, S2-foot-hi&b, founder can bt nscrved for panics of ~ prominentlandmarb,thcReubenE. hi1 travels, 1ays restaurant ~ton i:ternwheeler repeatedly two to eiaht ind pr-ov1dcl a pan- t Lee, celebrated ita 20th anniversary spokeswoman Valerie Foote. seduces visitors into believing they're oramic view of Newport Harbor. ! tbit wec:kwi1h a luncheon celebration Heinitiallysouaht to restore an old on an authentic Mis1issippi Economic unknown produces too much baseless opinion . By JOHN CUNNIFF ., __ NEW YORK-The economy istl one of those intersec:tions that ap- prats every two or three years, and that means i1 ja the 1ime once again when almost anytbinacan be said and iakcn teriously by somebody. I n1enections, or crossroads as they used to say before there were over· passes. u~scs. cloverleafs and the like. preaifit the possibility of chanac -and nobody knows much about that subject. Oddly, the lack of knowledse results not in less said, as you would expect, but instead In an out~urina or opinion. This year, wtth the intersection coincidina with a ~i· dcntiaJ election. the outpo.urina 1s like that from a burst pipe. The b'a question is this: Will the current JlowdoW'(a in economic a.rowth lead to a soft Landin&. u they say, or will the economy hit hard and di& its note into the around? Always. you may besurcofi!,t there will be thole who seek to be nnt in dcc:larin1 tha.t.1...rccqsion cxisu. But even if 1 new recession ICU in, 1t 1s difficult to name a victor, since some ~n sayina to two yean •So· 'The hi&hly touted toft landina in the economy is tumin1 into a rc- c.ession," says ROSCT Williams of Williams Trend lndicaton, who dccribes himself as a .. noted econom· ist."' On one matter at least he is riaht on the mark. .. The problem with econ· omictuminapoint.1,'' he observes, .. is that we are usually well into them before we realize it -before we've correctly rtad the sianalJ." In years put, most cconomi1ts ac«ptcd the word of tht National Bureau of &anomic Research as 10 when a recession began, and subscribed aJso to the no11on that a downturn wasn't a recession until it persisted tor 1wo quarters. That'• a bit late 10 be ma.king preparation1, or course,, •n4 fnost people who analyze e<:0nom1es., no matter how badly they do, ate pa Kt to foµ:wam . And 10 they look for om em and portents. which they call sianals. Williams, foreumple, oteia weak Stock market and a decline 1n ordert reported by purchasint: man.,ers. All that is needed do a confitm a recession. he says, is a decline 1n indus1rial production. Wnght lnveston' Service, which watches the economy in .thcjnte~sl of its Stock {JOrtfOhOS, IS WltChlnJ many Other SJJfiS o( I Jlowdown 10 r.owth. amona them a diminishing evel of arowth in Vo" national product, a flattcnina m retail sales, anemic arowtb in personal consump- tion spending. a decline in durable aoods spcndin1t and what it feels is a decline in consumer confidence. It is not IO sure, however, that • recession is likely. The possibiJity cannot so easily be made a prof>. ability, it says, observina I.hit "it iJ problematicaL whether the conua<>- tion "'will be of sufficim.t seventy.~ The fact is nobody knows, and that is especially ttue this time around. The cloverleafs are vny complex thinas and nobody really cal\ fi1ure them out. The most direct of these inter· prcu.tion is ·that we "must" be approachina a recession because CVC!)'One knows the economy iJ a cychcal thing that srowt. and con.- tracts, and it should be about time for one oft!)ose contractions. Addina w this feeling is aome fear and auilt over some mattct1 that haven't been attended to, such as the bi& budtet deficit and the bi& bad loans of the bi& bank.I and houtchoJd debt and the imbalance of trade payments. I. antnded by city and restaurant riverboat,butchanacdtUsmindwhen ri verboat, .says restaurant manaaer . officials. he learned an authentic replica couJd Judy Johnston. I The peddlcwbeel restaurant has be created. "They do think it's 11n actual remained afloat since 1964 when the Two more have since been built in riverboat at times and ask iftbeycan \ Once Restaurant Co. commissioned San Dicao and St. Louis, but the see thevarious pans of the boat that ardti~ to dnisn ~ compl~.ly ~"4 NewPort Harbor .riverboa! posed a simply don't ellilt in. a restaurant," 1~w1;._,_ ____________ _ ~lbent.ically detailed M1ssm1PPt \!.niQue cballenae for 1n:h1iuu and Johnston says. "But 1t does Ktually nvetbolt. IU&i&ht from the pqn of a contf"K\On alike. float, and when the wind picks up the Matt Twain novel. The blucpnnu alone tipped \he waves, you can see the chandeliers • John Mcintosh. the company's scales at 6S pounds and required. sway." ~ Movie stars, professional athlete& -· ::Smith International ;:=reports higher sales • Smilh lntcmation.al has announced announced hiaher sales and eamines and counlless others have watched the chandeliers sway over the past 20 years at banquets, brunches, dinners and weddina receptions. The Reuben E. Lee, docked in the Linda l~le channel, serves sea.food on one deck. steak and prime rib on another, and has rooms for business mcctinas and receptions. One of the btsi.kept secrets is the wheelhouse, the small room that sits •for the third quarter and nine months ended Sept. 30. • For lhe quarter, Smith had revenues ofS J 92. 9 million and net income of ------------.•.. $3,,76.000J or 16~.u per share, 1:4?mparcd to revenues of$169 million and a ,. Dtt los1 of;,90.S maJhon, or $4.01, tn tM 1983 third quaner. ,, For.the nine-month period ended Sept. 30, revenues were SS45.2 million and net mcome was $7,46 7,000, or 33 cents, compared 10 revenues ofS,14 1 •' million, and a net loss of$99.9 million, or $4.41 , 1n the prior year period. · • Rcsu.11! for the I 983 quaner ~d nine-month ~riods included a write off or s~s m1lhon, or $3. 74, lO provide for realia.nmcnt of operations and plant ~, clos1nat. The 14 percent improvement in revenues from the 1983 third quarter was ~by a 2~ pe~nt sales pin in Smith's drill bit products. and a 22 percent sales 1ncrcue 1n m1n1na products. ~ Domestic sales were up by IS percent, with intema1ional saJes showtnaa l2 percent increase in 1he quarter. · Speciality Yule stores open at Newport's Fashion Island . Six speciality Christmas stores have opened at Ncwpon Center &thion Island and include The • isinal Christmas Store, Raser's Ori11mas Fantasy Annex, Once ·upon a Chri1tma1. Mail Boxes Etc., a special PICkaae maUin1 scrvicc. The Oriainal Chri1tmai St0rt re----AMLPlllST ,,__ 1135°10 --- ' • """' Ot "'°" :="9'..Jll:M~~ ... 1 ... ~ ..... -ecr.r.,,.,,.. .... ,.... ~ '""' fllllMI"'"' c. '*'fl/ft ........... ,, ..... .,.,.. --. AM. Jltd 1.0. 's ALIO WAH.AILI Oll- (714) 83 .. 5834 i1tf I. ~· Avitnue turns for the third year and features holiday fantasy items. Roaer's Christmas Fantasy Annex i1 a satel· lite of ROlt't'"s Gardens in Newpon Beach an_dlii&hli&htt holiday arranae· men ts and pfants. Remodeling project ts underway Rcmodelina ;, under way on Shcr11on Newport Hotel's multi· million dollar renovation pro,,kct. The Slicraton Newpon it underaoina ex1en1ive. interior rtmodelin_a. C"• ecutcd by Bruclle Dctians of New· port Bw:h. -Sheraton Newport's CieDtral Man· aaer Charin D;Yk.e has announced that the projeci 11 tak.lna place in two lq)lrtte l\lltli the tower addition fint•nd the m11n buiJdinasoon 1ner. All lSO auest rooms ire btina re- modeled with 1 v1ritty of contem· pc>rary co1or teheme1, plut new f'Umiture, 1nd new wall-covcri"l'- The 1tound noor. 1.ncludint con- ference hall1 and meetjna room.1, it brine n:dtsilJ'led wjth alf new color treatmcnu •nd amcnitlel. And a brabd new tine dinln1 teltBUl'lnt. lhe ·''Palm Garden ;• wu lntrochaca:L in m1d·Au1ust. Dividend declared Padfi< Sacn11r.c Co. of i'oahcom hat announced tluil ii• board had dodared • rt&Ular quanerly cuto dl•id<nd of 10 """ • lh1rt, lll)lbie Jao.1.19U1 \0lh1tthoklmofrecord Ott. 21. 19 ... Corbln/Y amafuji gets cont ract for design work CorbinfYamafuji & Partners, headauartcred in Irvine, has been awarded the contract to dcsip New· pon Financial Square in prestiaiou1 Newpon Cenle1'. The owner and deve1opcr of the project is Alben J. Auer le Auociatcs ofNewpon Beath. Preliminary plans for the N~n financial Square, located ii the comer of Avocado and San Joaquin Hills Rd., have already been com· pleted. The square will be comprised of two-sto7 twin buildinp, both featuring I ,7.SO square feet UP S AND Dow~s ""' ICI~/} ~". 101nc-t"' 1.~ •• w:. .... =-..... :V"il: .. -.. _, -_, • • • • .. -------------- OD the , • I NYSE L< . I II u p ' .: ., [I D I ti \ ~~- i:· WHA T Ar.ux Ow ~-------2-~-----·- NEWYOAK (AP)Od.2' TodaJ. ; I AME~ LE4DERS 1,. ----,:0 ---~--- - '! M E ~ ~ L s Q u :n t \ --------- That' anaptde rlpttonofbothbusin ssand bu sine s p ople along the Orange Coast. To keep track of wherecompani ar gotngandwhichpeopleareh lplng them get ther .just watch ·credit Line' -evecy day in the Bu lne s otlon of your new J ' • • • • I • ' •• .. '• • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 500 Pacific View Drive Newporl Beach 644-2700 McCORMtck MORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Road Laguna Beach. Ca 92651 494-9415 HAR80R LAWN· MT.OLIVE Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler A.,. Cosla M ... S.0°555-4 PIERC~E BROTHl!fll ftll ... ADWAY MOR ARY 110 a.ctway Co·--9150 IALTZ BIROlROH SMITH 6 T\ITitllL WllTCL"' CHAPn 427 E. 17ttt St CotlaM_. MB-9371 • ( Piii.JC ll)TIC[ Classy Autos in the D1ily Pilat Call 642-5678 . Put a fe.w words. to work for you . Y-OUR AD IN THIS SECTION IS REACHING 108,777 HOUSEHOLDS 261,064 READERS Orange _ .-- Co••t '" ~ ~ ' ' . & _J COMPARE* OUR CLASSIFIED RATES Daiy 108, 777 25c Plot Cttcul1""1 P'f. thousond Santa Ana Rtlislw Newport Enslen The Pemyuver 49,000 Cu'""""' 52,000 Clrtu1abon 80,000 c.rc.ia1ion 63c soc per thollwid 49c Rat• Based On 3 Llnaa -7 Tlnlaa • I __ ..,.,.. . ..,, ___ ·~ - • - • DAD! Let us help you find your market! Our experienced ad takers can advise you how to "ten al about it" in a low-cost classified ad. CALL ONE Or OUR FRENDLY AD-Vl-SORS TODAY/ CALL CLASSIRED 642-5678 • • • • ( • THE DAltl' PILOT Cl.. IFIED OFF1€E HO Telephone Servic : Monday·frjday 8:00 A.M.·5:30 P.M. Bu in Counter: • Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. I DEADLINES l .iU.ICATIO~ l>E \Dl.l:\E fonday Fri. 4:30 p.m. Tuesdiy ton. 4:30 p.m. Wednesday · Tue1:1. 4:30 p.m. Thursday • Wed. 4:30 p.m. Friday Thurs. 4:30 p.m. · Saturday Fri. 3:00 p.m. Sunday Fri. 3:00 p.m. Ora 642- ;; L • ' • : flf, • L~.•llllt•··. . . .. .. ~-........ ...._. __ ·------· .. 111.11111• I • j • • • - I I ......... "'I" !!8!!!, I •• I -12 VM !XP: I'm • l!JCPll1 W...._..ng In· DMtHllTAA IVI! $2.17 perday ~II:..= ...... ~ S... =-~"'91 .,._~=~~V::-.Ji:''MPI :.:=.:,:::= A~~.r.=:1 ===·:n.=:-.:UtaTOQ.1llO l i~.,.~~:S.~a&b"f~a;;;;•-4~!M~, OoorMJlc. 148 4"° ' 29 '-":.u.~ LTHMJLiii-MOViii pot1un1ty. 71MM1" ALLPMNTINCIMM13i MOIWIWXllCQSliM1NG11~==-11,,,.,.,,I:'"::lll:= n.t'•All~Plffar liHRT&Pil1•.f9lili"I ... 0..1 vnar....-. "°',...,.. 5Mdill'i cpl Int.~ bl t7SO....O AU KINOe. ml!llT. l·Q\iiiCiG;:£. ii!!!!\ SINl.IOdil)'t comm. ...... NlnOd'I I. ~"::r· 14M!l2 to,....,~ 0.0. W-..p.ict;tiMl_,t.ci uctl30Mt 7•7211 d19o.fWl..IJC.#3411711 In ... doora. Jofln 141-04ii 8>' --n. Doorw • )'l't ...... TIM 14Htss Wil lliilll Af/I. M0--70U loo. ,.,. PAN<i!Jii-if!CH '"'""""' PAUl..8 PAP!AHANOIHO K. Funk• &4&-0t" DAlY 1!~!!:1;;;;;;;::1-..,...._...... Ool<&•.llMIOOll =~•a """'"'""'"-·""'• AllWotkG'°'"'-lm1'f!i;=• ; ~ocb-etO •LAWN MAINTlNAHO! AY19N0819 fat OOfttrol ot •. ~7 tAt"°"4 * 10 VAi EXP. 4~?111 ,, Pl.OT Window-~ wd9nlnl clwto;t.4)I we wtM. ""'*......... •IPffnklert A SlyrttJ.CtJtftrry141-4411 doltllllDlw ... 2120 tMrOfdrMngl·Cl9tttftld WINTIAAY£0.W INTfEXT.aCIY..,..bptr, P1-leatfal Attetatlont. HIMd ~ SERVICE 1~c.,.~:,c.,,----1~M ~~~en.1sos 8;;::r~~~ =:r,t,.g;.:m u::::d•.waea 5_~jpo ~ \t;~!;f0i ·:'..r..::O~.,,~ DIECJlllY CLEANJNO """"'"•" lhollilll .::, _.., ......, ._ ""nhl .Z:'f!! £:",f!"1,~ llll'1IU r-. Pllltti/IQ&I . ftylifkll pMhtfMNl!MIAAOA ~. ?I0- 7211 wortt --r.n'!OV9 ,, ... ,'lawn•. N6lltriBJXWAi ocC..lon.(714) 54r!4,,, ~I/tat.he~~ 111VGtW~ .. ,;;r;;g ;;.;;::..c::,,i~KY~l~ld%H~T~l,...,L,......., lndtheMUNTJNGTON C&ljlltl!l!itt =i ' 111-14o1 ll'lrubt, '"" '"'ping, 8!AVIOI!: ·~ 1°ra'ne:'<114)83a'..e111' ~-om tuturlng, QU&lttY QREENHOUSEWll'ldOWI llACHCOMMl'li ~ P91ntlnQ/vlmlllhfno/mMI. ~ comp1 Cleen-upe & rnalnt. olMn "°'*· S40-=0t5t Jlftlai woftt PTobWl'lt-No PfOb-1Mta111tlon-Frw99tlmlt• Wtelu .... ,... 940-aA ftep&lr·Wtttal ·Aliltr9':Cfl· ICiCTAiCAl. MN. a.t 5'6-t287 AboWe The~ -PAINTER fllil!DS wOAKI i.mti 1321114 '°""7831 Tom or Larry 16&-1133 .. _,,_ 1=~·-Relay-I ... -.,..,, L.k= 2»1oa. small/ .... ~ APARTMENT CLEANING •A-1 •••• l"tlbt,, ~ • ...,.,,cab. =:o:: CAU. TOOAYtl __ _ fObt, rte*ra. LMV. IJtlllflOe 1f12· 7HI CLEAN& EXPERT (2t) Ytt allJ')., work ouar. Pl ..... 1 1eJu ~ ......... ,_rm .. c.n1c...... A!SIO/COMM'L/IN 2t c.rpwrtry alntng,_, .. ,. • OY91'25)'Mrt~ OavltPtlntl1'19H4..3"137 .. YOU!'~"°' l~l,·t;:~n.~ouo ~ p;tio;: pa;: yrt. Do my own wonr. l :,: r:.: ~ i~ H~hlan&.:::. & =. Uc.!•118·42~ ?30-!3'3 ' QUALITY PAINTING ~·a:,~1L ~ ~=- leMotO!ttc1ort . etc. Mo Job to ..... 27I041.Al1<41412t 1to-7202PTLM14150 Bondllntrd/1*ftl2'"'"37 ••ABCMOVING•• 25yr1 .... 1no.c.c .. •1DoP1umblngAlg1rt• Lowr•t• r.1.&<42•7351 Jlllpr-tlmtw h111i.lll'till fllilM.Mldc~536-0553 flmltilfilt Quiel( ~I. T138048. torft'M•t.548·3'18 ' Nl-411111t.IM c.omPtfl\le Rlit• tor-" .Houw:IMnlngSYJIU.P« LOAATEB.5152..0CfO QUALITVPAlNTING ORAIN8 C!Mrtd, 11! ... ru ~~~~~~~~1 Clipttli' BulilnW s.vio. CJtul~ hnltt n fyf* of comm. con1t. a =tor ref'I, own tran1P. PLUMBING repall'1 "°1~:::•:.. __ .., __ _ :; ~~·~ HOilii70MCECCEXJt etbln.t ~. F rttJO, ,..,....,. 20 yr1 821or2<41·96&3 ITllmlllU.lll [sA,fRJ~E:;1'::, M.Aefa.PD0831.o5N MEdf. Atwu.tlq 131 ING Good ref'• 9Xplf 911. Call MIK• Ml-207t US*· 761·3682 lie. SCRUS.A·DUB Ail.on· ITIMITl llYlll OI. . . Drllnl..,. lrom 115 115 Y"' .-p. CUltom or ** lfl ** CU1uf J1Ub C.. 0 0Mdyt s.t..OU. . ONE CALL DOES IT ALLI bl9/!11ffatNtfret., My 9L1P-Otat!QtCO. °"filnal 10'1 flMflu. I l.,llr Rtpllr fauo.t1, dllP, .ic. eomm.rellll. 2<41•7038 Comput«lmd Aooountlna 1' o:blfUa.-=-1 we nx n, bfNI( II, bvy It or pll•IJHnn. 848-illlH 81u~~~~:,.1nt2~ Apt,, "-kl., .n !)haw. »c. AnytllM MIM 142-9033 WIUn Cltaala a Tiax s.vtoM. 557·5211 ~ kite ~ Ceatratttn H1nge1--Alpeif-1n1tlll·np-haul n. 5-tWOOI Sharon'• Ci.n1no ave. ~~~ar.rioU..afor• 780-7202 PTL. S<41..a1so Expert 8etvloe a A4IPalr Wil'ldOW JNl\ing ~ e42..oea1 .... al 1111• WOik Qt* 860-5151 ~ For"°"* & ~ng ••a 31 Yfl :fo 11 ~ln .,_ '=.Spec, hcHktl rat• &Mttt../l•••Uat Kt'lcMn ~ m.ano. uanm.w WT. Ld8iq , ,,· owr .,.-REMr_ave .. 1n move-out•:n !l~ Ptl!tlat *•HANG tir,J!.OO"•LRB** ~Uc~'~· ~so~nt• eoo a&1t>o1 a1. e1:U135 ...... .,,,,,.,.,""'""""I ~nllhll'lf,nipelrl.FAQ FWnodll/AlpM'I: OOtnml urn lft, r ' ... N91tn-am .. mROSINOA'S .......... .. Hotld9Y Intro°'*· A.,., .. IUildWWW: s;;:c. kR. ESTS. at ..... a..a..2t03 and l'tllkl. Uo'd, ~. Tllll 963-6415 NORM u:;; In a;; um_.. ~ !Mtom Painting 139-0730 ANYTIME OT ICI • ,. ltort t'IOIM 125; 2 Nth. ofc. rm lldcl, patio lnt.For911:552 ... 142. Topped/f'9tnOY!ld. ~ COileglttuOlntwllQtructl Alta. v_., -.nd&bil 1l)'ftof~cu.tomwe. FARfHINOINTl!AIOR& IMAINT.20VWIUJ*. ~$3&.AJ'•l37~ -=-~ ~11:-SU'm!IJ: MIOT CONIT. Dont up, new ltwM. 761.../M?I low rlt .. Pf::r.· 'T'lMink Cllll Aon '7s.M7ff Uc. 2IOI« .. -&7W313 HANQINQl8TRIPPING BIC POOLS 131-1608 1..1.8 w11\ib0w SERVICE+ . ~oR Cd§ rnoWI IEnllflJl'f lnlurM, CliNn Upe•TrM Trlmmtno )'OU Coun ?ff. 131CdM RAINBOW PAINTINO VISA-MC 473-1512 OtMn-upfHWlng frM elf -~ DryW41! .. P•leh-Repalr lonct.d, llcl8211141 Verd Malnt.•Hal.Mncl Find whit you w1nt In au.lit)' la our polfcy SELL ldl• lt•m1 with • l.aiiTy & Stew 17a.o&ll Amer1clnConet8"-0818 ca.;i.ntey O.W 146-2"0 147""64Ot131·6!16 MIKE aso..3213 Claulfled Ad1 '42-5171 Ollfy Pllol Clualfled1. f50...&Me JEFF lJc Mu s.11 Id'-ltem1 842·5178 Dllty~~Pllo~t~Ct~~IMl~-~Ad~.~~~~~~~~ Ills to OIU.. lntllls ltH 11 Fnd J0M lfl1 Wu... llM 1111 WuW 1111 lolp Wulff Wu... llM ·-5'tDNEY- 0MARR IUn ... 1ffi Xmr, C.U. 866 FOUND Fem bU1 /wht llllTAll. Wlft'llll 1111. Uln HouwtrMMrt <4 or llllUL lllllTUT 1..,=:::.-..,,....,:::.;.1 1q ft trd flt Ofolllhocl/WWI a..oi. rnlx r:em blk t-1...-W Tlllll lo CFO a rMnAOlna oMoer hr1td1y. HB/FV ., ... ~. wttront otc a ,,..,,. Fml Nllmkt, 11Yt In, rltl1 rm, p!lg &2N. 173-2854 8hlhtzu mix. Fn blk/wht -.,.. 91 a Savtno' & LoM $8.00 ht. own traM, wlM tc;rlblng lkHtt. Xlnt....,., ~'=~"".:.ct,:; •CANNERY VILLAO!• Mutrllla.n 81'11pard mix. .... AtloQ. In ff'YIM, M.Jn, 3 lraln ~08 D-15PM • bendl• Ml 1242 - tU llfl-.....-1~50 Numetoue cttalktttw a CodtttM w.n,.... With .,.....:.... ~ 1111111911 11111.L Lfm 1250 IQ" ,-750 'Cl ft.,, I cantt """' b9 pereon-Ital ~ C4lll Carofyn 18.p/hr. N.B. hOmt. rtfa. " )'OUf .... tn'9l'9lted 11'1 '=' c~o,:;,. 2 bt per IC! tt.11M&Oe = ~~x,JuC:~ abtl, w1t1 oroomte1 & ex· tor li'ppf.' tam-5pm, 18 h1'1 pl,.., l<40-0.11t ••rnlng t35,ooo. 10 mo,Wendyl31-tn8 lllNITUIU 8Ntt.r. 125 u .. Dr, ~· Approx. 20 eeo-1111 · m.lllTlllTT IOO,OOO.otmor1lnoom-FumkrwWCondowt~ !~.:J::!o;;.t cam-OM.t+4-H5I 1n,:._,~7f:t,:= mlllllllllLT&IT ~~d0::.0. :'::':::'tt~ & t.,,nl•. IMut loc. Dr 121; IMne. ~ 'ound Or~ tigtf' Kitty, Rd, N•wport Be•oh. P.E. Degrtie, IOok pert, 131~ · IMW" tl"lla: Metrtll LY'IOh 'hesday,Oclebet •• ' MW02I or&M-2513 ::c.mP"'• Von KM!': :: .,~ ~:g1~ (Mort. 10lm--2Pm) ..... ~Commlllton. 1-lty. the rnoet,,,.... ARIES (March 21·April 19): A friendly, special reunion is H.B. EXec hOme Adlml/ rMn, Incl A«AcM, An• IM'llllTllll ~2131 too. (71•! .MllTllW. =:C, mo111n t:wttl featured. Focus on hopes, wish.es, desires and powers of pen!llsion. Bro;::J'vt be..rtft req,111 "'°· Cont Rm a Cotfw, Lo•t 1m~ Poodt1, Full time contrllCt detk 1• Miiiion vi.to ~ Pfepnttne ow::i You'll finish task. burden will be removed and you'U get plaudits long Inc ef'I 3· "2"'328 "400. Ph: 75.2-24&4 ~Alward ~7~:P, exp, sw-. Apply 1n per~ PLIUL Mllllll Stor•. perm.lpatt-tlrM =·rot tM -:!xi Y,_. • overdue. Money picture is briabtcr thal) originally anticipated. Ll'O 21R Blllboe. Pw. -'· 1119Tnl 1WJ11 ton.Mk tor Mr. Netlon, P9rm pt-time .,_ In 111 potltlont avd. = t•t• boom. c.w oP-- TAUBUS(April 20-May 20): You act long-awaited new deal. What t1ep1tobW:t11321 mo. 1 MO FAU RENT ·~ J!!I 2133 Hlfbof BIVCI, Colta ptt .... ot dellgn .. lrvlM =·,~'= ~ foi pottunlUe1 •v•U•bl•. teemed a lost cause will be revi.ved Jnd this will be 10 your advani.aa.e. litilMt, yrty eso-e&lO Lu11ury otflcl nr OC All .. EllllTi/IAW Mw. .-ea. 7"'"'413 hom•m•k•r• · rtur... UoeMlnO training •¥111- . Accent on caieer, prestiae, ability to &et to heart of romance. Avoid MIM prof 21-38 nolHll'tkt port, M ~te'?O ·~ Outo.11ONLY13~ilH CUSTOMER 8ER\ltOE FREE LANCE·WRITEA& Olh•rl 1•eklng 1up; =· MT:.=r: Vlkci: beavrliftina.. impnnt style and e:ir.ude confidence. ehr loll Npt =home. per 1q rt. -7 up. ,._ lndlv. tot bUI. For new uoecell ~ plementll lnoome. Cell Mwrlll Lynch RMltY tt GEMINI (Mavy ; 2 l~June 2~: Sense of direction is restored, family Aw. now~ DllNI FORi LEASE 1100 tci ft Wanted Mm1H oomp1-fonns brok«. 1 Gtrl oto. dn11. a.net' wrttlng ewn-our reafoMt otflcl aft ~8-lls&e or 147,.esoe,1 ll F M• rmmt• ~r orot. otrlol .ult•. H'Oh n1on lor d ~ Paid V.n.d dutlel, & ~kPO· pit. & r..ume to: CA T~ '""· 6'2-e202 membermakesconocssionan you' bcmorcsecurea&rcsult. ocus 2BAlbe.Ml•l4ls' beeirt cetll~1 carpttl, .,..lnVegu.C.llBob 84M351 Migea:ln••· Atten: KELLERMEYEA llTILUlllTllT ·~ also on tnveJ, distance, lan~e, education and long-ranse plans. mlnY amentt1e1. Cllll Joi a1c.AmpMIJ*1'1nQ.Jofln · 548-1944 DECORATEINTERJOA! MICMel Honrrin. 1025 a BUILDINOSERVICES ''lllR Follow throuah on ••inner fee · . " Watch Aquarius! dlUlh. Ject 9734311 WIYM AltPOrt locatlOl'I. COLOA/OEStGN, PT/" Embarc1d1ro, St• A, UIAL llWTAIY ex P• rl• n c • c 0upt1 CANCEi\ (June 21-July 22 . Someone may not be telling entire . Avlll 111111<4. 1!1730. W*lr•ln. n~5'47 Goltta, CA 93117 ~ c.n WIP & pref.rt~. but wHI oon-- truth. Relates to finances. resources ofbusiness partner, close associate Mitu,. PfofeiNional to lhr {714)1M-2404 luilHttl ·-•• --· ltt ~ ...... w111 -~h.., motlY8ted b •·• ed nd bi . .., ••• ""' v..,..,,.. I •·•-•01• 1111.Mlf 111tYD .. _ ~·· . ,... ~-· ~· " or mate. EmotionaJ responses are e,...ten a not DI is apt to condo. 13261mo+12 U1H. Alrpcrt.,... From 700 to II' ""' • P.-ty EQUiptr'lent Rental • llllJtlllltt oonllder tnaro bealnner. twd Ing CCIUPlt wttfl occur in lukewarm fashion. Sa&ittarian plays key role. ~ Gall 141 0830 3300 tf. Ntw omc. btdg, Q c;;:Q_,.!&li, for 8I01'9.. Good drtvtnQ ,._ Non-emok.-, ~6! general ma!Menenoe and ~(July2J...Aug.22):Exa.minelepldocumenll,Chcckrightsand rwty !Of lln!Md oc.... Info 131-31$8 2~ oord Seturday J11qulr9d ........ ..,. LIULI m o~Kllll.Applyfnper. """'i••ions. Some revisions, reviews may be neccs• .. l"V. Focus on M/F 2s-55 9'"pl., 2br 2t>a, CIUPMCY· 11.21/tf gl'Oel. only NO brkra plMMI 'untted A.it-All · • fn1tt I '°" to 727 Yorktown, ...,.............. , . , d -•. 1 •P1 N.8. '325 + ~ ut · Bret.-coop ..... ,,. No··~'"''''''" -•-• Huntington •••ch ~nerihip. pubhc1ty, cooperabve efforts an man.ta status. c.u att••prn.131-3048 751-51111R&H1nve11 bt11tmnt p1;;:;-;;;; ;; :net 1,.....,. ~~s.nd,. 53e-041f trictionsaretcmpo_raryao22d)sGb~ul~~llotca, uscr.ou'IJbeua1discou~ MJF. CMINB .,.... Fpt, OVER 10001/fortWMIOn. ~tlft 4011 IB.nllfPUltl llpPIY. .um. to Hiring Partner.·1...:.:.:..:__k_-Yl1 __ f ___ ' VIRGO (Aug. 2J..Sept. : 1ve ll,l pay to ln!C cct cunos1ty, 38d, 3bll S2IO +ulh. Cotta Merl& 1150+ 1.1111. xm~ . tod,.,.,.forS.turdtylh(M.. """' 11562 MacArthur BIVd, wanted tor 18 mo Old girt, Job gets done if you take penonal hand in completing tas~. ~nt ~n 11VlUtldep e4&.914f Mc:Cardlill Anr. 548-7721 HMllTll Jdityt. ~Ult hive OMV ,.....,., ..,. ... , Sult• 425, 1rv1ne, "2715 PT/FT, ftP htt. Avail dic.t. special services, employment. pets. a!ld co0;1murucat1on Wt th Mid • prof woman tltl *CdM dtxlUlt•. &C. wnol No won: on )IOUI' pWt. Only print-out. 788-'113 4M1 ........... 111 u•1•m• I Wkndl. ... 50 p/hr. Good \hoeei.nr:;1f~nI~~;°~~n\!!~!~~~~~O~. ~nr'°'ac-.:..1n"2 =.'=.':'S:.:t. ~21~"'=·~ == u.1 .... 1111 . N~:.P~f=~t111e :/t.:11~r•n.. Keri, Romance ti f~tu~ you u be ~D~ flattered and dined. SUl"{ITTSC &J:ft Me prMedgll.. pool a SUBLET tttru 12/31185. turtll f7200 tnln .. yr pd PIMNn~ ~ h9Ch llmllAL ..... for ' NURSES AIDE is ••on the way. ' MaJor domes he adJUStment occurs, surround1n,gs wtlJ Jae. *250 mo. 6"5-3 l lO Delwc• ofc '9C· 190 111 •t monthly. arovp Practlol. 4 dey wk+ Per1 tim. 20 hrs p/Wk, h1'1 SUBSTrTUTE Part tlnw l"*\lnQI for be beautified and relationships will be hannoniou.s. NEWPOAT BEACH lhr ~ 11.<40 Ill. Pr•tlgei loc nr ~ n:w:::· an. Set A.M. 64()..1122 fllxlble. 1119 typing, cop)'• UBAAAIANS. ~ lllm fhaltw. In SCORPIO (Oct. 2J...N~v. 21): De~e terms, check property vaJ.ue, BAYFROHT HorM $4 OC Airport Ph: C)'nUW.11 TIRE WIZARD 815-1307 D•ntal/Ortho R•c•pt. 1n9, ..ill Pfoductlon, .,. Mull hlWI on-all n.xlblll-Unt lch. 531-1128 rcfu1e to give up something for noth1n,g. Focus. on safety, ~unty, pk)I utllh• 8"'1-2108 D.V.M 549--1020 e.o.ntt. <4!h Oyt. ·Exp rinds. Ruth, 548-311• ~ to work ~ys • ...,.., reunion with family member. Young penon 11 on your s~de, 1s P.-.on tolhare3bd 3batg unique ottlc• 1p1ce BtlJ Wu... Slii r.q'd. NB IM2·2821 IUU&L IPflll •t. •t tour H.B. to-HIMl 11111" enthusiastic and you'U realize. you have Valuable ally. H.B. ~ W= S3g<>+ M.rlnl Av 8.1.(Nr Brld;.J a;rOfC. Ph, Mfflillrt.r. DENTAL REOPT /SEC Perm/PT 8:30-12. 5 d9)'t =·t~.~ :t. ~ 111.f "Uf SA.Gl1TARJUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Emphasizes willinaness to utH. • 12 l225/mclln.al30 =ng· bkkpg,~ wllnlure.noe ~IOli. p/wtt.,typtng,dlc:taphoM, p11ctt1on1; may M ob- ICCCPt, challenge, resp<?nsibility. Romance is . featu~ relation~p Prof'I fWIP N/ll'nk.r M/F llW c.a..maJ tn. Clttry, ~d'YI 54e.3000 CM ~I N. _a . In• otc. talMd •t and""'"""*' lo ,.. .. an~ tort PM• intens~ficsan~youm~tbeaskedto~m~ordec1s1on.ShQOln,p, ~~~=f:j~:7~k .. tab 1111 UTmWAITll HIYIUWllTll 86191111 ~Y CS':'e'rS: time •xpertenctd, fet.ti1nngrelabve, cotifd 6e part ofscenano. IX ACRE BTORXGE COT &rn 11600, PLUS per 11 ..,.. + prO\llde own,. a.m.ntt'Or N Bt29IO ~ Mllt to CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): You'U haveopl;X>rtunity for new Rlitk.t M9111 n. for°':"' wltn'llll Home fOf..... ..-.-Compenyv.11tr.in. ~ Khcll!itlQlot OC& UWUl.,. ' ' =uce quality ed start in new direction. Light is shed on areas previously dark. You non lmllr/M, rum. br Santa. AM Helgtltl;, h..; Salee J:r"· helpful. Cell LA .,.... • nuc1 ToP LonQ twm t.i.phone NIM Uff11 nm II.DI •. compe a ':C; could locate item that had been lost. missing or stolen. Accent also on 9'>1 C.M. '300 5Al-aH9 good Heurlty t•nc•. 751· .... can Pat 715t·I022 ~W eveM~ 11'1 TI'llM::iri;~:t;2~~W ~~. ~1 10 sentiment, creativity and romance. Aries pla~ ~ey role. . IUl&l1 Wu... BH 12600 mo. 752-259' ,. m IPllATll D.llTmlUI c°:{' 1or: .,..., tlnllhld 1tt. 8eod rwume AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Cvcle tugh, loss ts recovered, Fem G;c to IJiW, ,...., or BUSY NP'T BL CM Part llfN~ I...-lhlft.I Aeeldentlal.131·"415 VICTOR TEMPORARY LIT PD• only I wox :°C of persons who had bocn '"unavaililble" will now be present and definitely hM 111 nr oceen. xtl rlf • Hew9I" .-....!/otflcl ate hlll. 131 1.a SEAVtCES ctMt\ up a dltlvery !or work to: St~ ough, ID your comf er. Yo.u get to ~~ of mattcrs,f th~pularity ,increases and to '900, 144-7071, Ext s 7IO 9'/15115 mo M&-GIM28 ""Tiil UIVlll . *•UL ma-* 7&&..18n ~: ~J~~~ ~Dl=or Pto~.r·P.t~ membeno oppos1tcsexmu.enosecreto e11attrac1Jon. MtnonlfTlkrWMttcondo CANNERYV1LLA E & Kgttt f'9P911'1. Npt. Tl/'9 15 apply tn' .. P~r•-on. lox 1aeo, Cotta MtM. PISCF.S (Feb. 19-March 20): Look behind sc.enes for answen, 1-2br, ~ l$004800, Several olflc. & retail oent• 3000 E P'CH, COM * 1&1.11 * gift wr• HUien.ton 8odv Worka. ee. tH2I follow through on hunch, realize that you can lam through process of H.Boh,C. • ~ ... "**' 97w 177 llANKl1'KJ Oa•••rllll ... ntrlll W"1 Pllll 140 lnCMtMI Wsy, C.M.1~~~~~~~~ teaching. Puzzle pieces fall into place and you'll have view of"complete Cell 213.113951 ...,. .U. llllit s.. our ec1 1n tod•V'• we .,.. • 31 YMr otd ftrm 8uP9f'o1N a coordln•t• 5'1-11513 I: story." Mystery will be solved, you'll be more secure and happier as Find wh11 you w1n1 rn Allf•TllU aa.ifMid und.-AECEP· whotty owned and per· :n~0:,~::!'1 --~,-,.-~1-,3-1-5-1-1--1 -T11171 result. Dalty Pllo1 Clwlftedl. 43C71q ft. Free MatldlnO TION18T. r°"ety °'*"'#.~ w .. :..,,.,.·842""972'. 00. r1JP* ltbOf"w, FUii ~s:.r:or::.. ~ ~M~~1~,N. · •F''' UW =~.Apwt-=Tl&R time. Mon-flrt. 16. = ·~· nt0. Com= • NOTICE Tllo DIJIJ PIJot 'll'llJ DO ........ M - -.. ~ _..meo. ~Ihle taoan...w Iii_..,. ..... rrw.1, a.oo •·•· eo lljjllf30 p.a. Deidll.n• wU1 tie u followe: · II:DITION Moacla7 ............................................................. ,. ,,., •••• Twl4ilclA7 .................................................... Vant•,.~ •:ao p.a. W ... •da7 .................................................. '1'11111 r. ••...-.. Tllat'1da7 ................................................ , •• , .... .... Prlda7 ........................................................ ...,, •iao , ••. latarda7 .................................................... .,,...,. S:OO .... . ..... , ............. : ......................................... J'rllla7, S:OO .. ... llilyPilat .~ rt 1141opt1 rood claa1IOed ! f , ' ' W....,l.T.,..,h, AllJlllW :"~:'~tr= • PIT, .v.e, ~~::~=pany, :~ ~Sr11on: tlllJ ~ branch OI' ~ con-In prnon. 2I02 w. 2470$ °""' Or., 0.. ....... Wu n-&AHIRIU8 trolled b)' othert. On tM co.. Hwy, N.a. Pt., ca. (T..-thnt Sat 5 lallle .,. \fflth ~ ctlent ... to *POt ~t * .. ILUllll S-11or1-"') . -•fllllWUOllll work bayrront 1hop, clllon.. ~ door m.,.. Needed Full &. Ptrt·llm. IUlllTill llPT PART· TIM!, V1r19d ~,. 1000lfCM213-Q5-8371 873-7-438 logMllnt. No Waiting tor m• i flfTllJI. Aexiblti 7MenlWorMnr.o.dto to l=•MMrly AJ! 8wity =~c:..~ hOurs. Stwt SO/Hr. Mutt tM•ordlirs In metf{ltlng =-ble ·~'t:m .. ..... nu IUITY lll&ITllTI In.I P9ople with abfflty b• bond•bl•. Car dept, No -.per '*-" truck, Ytn, 1t1t1on 1806 tq ft NtlW;)&'i Bf\ld G PROGRAM ...... _ antthefrwdomto MCllllty. ~tor .tu-lrJ, ComPtnY Wltl trtln, wtgon) to Witt,....._ Coet. M9111. "'ISO/mo: TRAININ · ~~Mrr'ltOl')'Oftyptl dentLCell414-"'322'"Y" Xlnt 1ncotM WI<! r.pd paper ~ In lrYIM C4lll Ag1. 175-1700 ~~~·Dr~· of property. No latm .,... tlm.. ed\lanctrnent " quellflld .... Mlolllt be dtoen- 21' x 3JO' outMdl jrel'ICICI tMI. P,... cell for Whit a Wonc:lertul WOtkl Mr Banl"lllH. 112·'1843 dtbl•, Contact •r-a MICUl'I W.. tot 0 bOM. « •••W 1n1.,..,...tipp011111oent. ot 8hopplno. right 11 H)'dil='=ltW\lo'""~ RV. 0111 -c-. ..., -_ _...., ....... nan L t1Yu111. '"'" ,_,,., .....,.,,,, M ... -.. ~,.. -•· ..., 10' &6().0181 ~ '* fWO poe-1CMcPflU.8ulttat0 D•lly Piiot Ct111lll•d lhe ~ "buCI' thll w·m·nt'J STORAGE CENTERS OF ltlonltvllllablelnoanttll Ntwport~ Ade. To plac. your Id, Y••r. I yo" l'llYf e --~·.W~2! .. "", 71•/U• -11 c.al 842-$171 and let I Clmplr"tMl'lnotll'fUng Liwt11Ulll AMERICA Storage ..... .......... • ........ CIM•lfted Ad·VllOI' hltp Uled .... It now wtttl. n·1alf111EZ1 IPaolJI ""8119b!e. artiet typ1ne lk'llll Md •blllty to1!~~~~~~~~~""'~·:::::.:J;g"'-~~.,~,..~~Ad~~~~d~c~11~,~·111~,..~-~~.,~._~ .. ~1~a IOcltlon,"' ml from H~ wortc; ._.h numberll. Ex· HOll)llll. 1800 SU&*lor oellent benefttt includlng A..,., CM. 131:3930 Altr rnedlell Ind dent.t In- for Biii or a.tty. wfa'ICe. c.ii ror liPPl· LM11a11Wtl lift A14Mt IMMUll NiXi5iNlii 111 IUHI AcMoeo tn Al ~ I Ft.Ill .,,,_.. boottkeeping ~· 1115 So. Et '°""°" 8¥11 . .,.. • pr-. Cimino Aiill. a-etern. UclkM omoe 10c11«1 1n uctd. <412·72tfl tM OUttklrtt .,... of ~Lm ANSWERS .... ,.,. • l"woh ---VITIAAH 11n't M e ..... wortd --...... hind ti I novloti and • grff thuml» .. 1 VITIMN? ;ouNb lox Turtle. l•lbo• '•"'" '' · -· 1rYiM. Wll M IMYl'G to rM-0... Pt HwOor .... In new lulUrtl. lndlY. """" bl lnl•ll.D• 11, .. ,,......,. ...,.......,..d, llp;lble-I ~ ..... w. on. ... ..., .... ,,.,....... lflOn ... polttt¥9 'IOftdng enwkonmul. "9e•• ... ,...... .. !J.lnglll, 2111 ~ PvNman, ... tlO ...... AM.C... - • • District Managers II )'O\I enjoy worli.lftv with yOU"G bo)'t L oirll ond dtdl )ob• ore not fof yov, con1lci.t o cotaer in th1 l'll'oOPOper clrc\tlo- tion 'H.ld This it o vniqw poMtton witti "'""""'""-' ...... "'· °'-'' ~ °'-l~latit. Apptlcm"9t """" ,...... a wan, lfattotiw a I a ., tNct; W1 otfff • ~ lGloty -...th o borM.1t ......... '"' -·· w. "°""· .. .u ............. pktft that ~ "°""'" ....... i .. s iMuf'Grl(:e, ~ 'W«GllOn ft ,,_,.. . c ......... _.. h .... ...,. to -........... .............. _._. )'OU ... J'6U hol4 hi quot;flcatton., p~ apply In ~'°" to thellllJPllll 330 w. Bay Ctlll Mna, CA 92121 ........................ ,. > • • TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACJtOSI 1 rid 6M~ 10 Seti SUbi 14 Originate 1& Ump'•statton 18 In the kf\OW ·~ 17 °"' 18 Hoatlet 11 Molding 20 Ooedtock 21cnee.. 22 Aoutl cyetee 14 Water bOd 21 Sotlof tand&!l21 21 UN a peavey 21Name 31 Cflppled 3.t~ 358adhum0r M Aulhof Haley 3711 i.., poet 31 loOth 3t o. ... ..,., 40 Blul1«S "41 Chutdl COUndl 42 Caption1 44 Klti:hon Item 45 POl'tlon 17 20 24 • 11 Newsepepet DOWN 1 Unruly kidt 2 ~milted :J Willow 4 Ea9ooM 5 Flaltty I Author H1'1191odi - 1 Walk In water I Amerind tor~ 10 Equlneteet 1 t AblorptlOl't 12 8'1t money t30.1..,..ona ...,,, 21 Auk Of atl 23 Rewr1t1 25 Pinnacle 28l•t••·ttl" 28Smuenan~ 7 2t W0tk l)fel 30Sllottage 31 woocs •trip 32 SOc:c:ui.nt 33 VOlce amplit* 34 MMndef 37 Song Incl -- 34 Btgc1t <40Thong "41 lNvepon 43 Cut caior.., a • 44 Kand IOOI 48 Comforter 47 lnlect ••• 48Entangte 41 Shove ... kin 50 Knife lllrult 51 Nonchalant 52 Roman getb 58NofMmM'• name ~7 Body area KIDS-EARN GREAT TRfS AflJ PRIZES! I ......... For Ad ktian cal a Daly Plot AD-• 642·5671 WE W ...... Bill YATES I VW-PORSCHE 8 J7 · 46 Q Q 4 9 ) . 4 ) I I ' • BUENA PARK • ).NAH.EIM GARDEN GROVE 22 FRWY WESTMINSTER HUNTINGTON BEACH 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porac:he • Audi 441 E. 0.ISI lwJ~ l..,.,t ..... llMIOO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 NABERS CADILLAC® 2100 UllOll ILYI., COSTA IESl (114) 140-1100 (213) 1111-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledf!..BBble Sales People 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA ~ 0 FOUNTAIN VALLEY WARNER EDINGER 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Depb. Competitive Rates On lease & Daily Rentab 20IOl1rhr11H.,Oest1l1U U2-0010 er ..... 1211· 0 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beech Blvd., Huntington Beech (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE Orarce Countys LQnt Yolls•acen/tsut1 De* Wt '#ii frlot Be ~ PARTS Cll'AmlOfl OPEN SATUROl\Y 0 RAY FLADEBOE m • 91 FWY, 22 FRW.Y MAFflNE CORPS AIR STATION ~ EL TORO •• •• ··--. EL LAGUNA HILLS TORO MISSION _VIEJO j ~ .... IJ --"""' SAN . -$ JUAN CAPISTRANO 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 0 BAUER MOTORS 2121 ....... "'.~ .......... over 23 Years S9rvlnq_o~~ County Sales • SeMce • Leulng 541-1200 S,.clll Pllb Uttt 541-MH ·MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -0:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 8 STADiUM PONTIAC ' We're New -W•'r• DH/Ing Y AcrOM from the Bia A on Kateli. Juot Wfft / of the (57) Oronge Freew•J Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises b1ll1i• 22211 E. lllelli 3111.1111 G \BILL YAtES BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU ~ ... --SALES • 8ERV1CE • LEASING Fine 81l1C'tion of Ou111tY llMd VeNdel #1 BUtCK DEALER IN <>RANGE COUNTY 2925 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 979-2500 .0 RAY FL.ADEBOE UIOIUI IUltlY .IAllAI lllZI #11 Allte •• ..., ·~ lnlH In The lrvtne Auto Center 830-7000 .-. G CREVIER BMW ~ #11 a.te 0.lltw ·~ lniH In The Irvine Auto Center VOLKSWAGEN #20 a.te 0.lltw Ir~ lnlH In The Irvine Auto Center / VILltwWi • .. IOIE • PEHUT " SALES • SERVICI! • Ll!ASINQ " "W""'e Proluslonat Attitude Prevails" Ollp,..1111 ... l .. lbrtng lft luropeen D...,,. boelent l1l1clton Of .... Md W9fUIJ ......... Uwl .... afWeys"' stock. 830-7800 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing G ·ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT # 1 I• TH W111 flt' lw IHp s./11 flt' I Yem 0Dtn2e• SALES Loast. sERv1ce ~ _. t•t• ".....,.. 'l"" • LEASING ~.---. COIT•.... • ACCESSORIES DEPT 548-8023 G HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC. • LONG TllM LIASIS • COMPITITM PUIOtASI PIK:IS • HUOl INve.TOIY IT\ dial_ffiER~E DES l'.I) "Cl 213n14137.2333 'CJ ~ext to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester/Beach Blvd. • • • 830-7300 Oran,. C.untys N<west Votksw,,.n Dtller C.mp/11• Sales, Sa"ke & Leasi111 STERLING ~G W SAW -SHllCE -IWllC -PUTS Over..U: Delivery Speciallttl PARTI DEP.,.,,...,. ON:N IATIMOAY MDN•Ult_ BMW -ROLLS FioYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd.' R SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 , ................. o.,htr- 41Ml11 Ul-4IOO . 835-3171 20I w .. 1st St., S•~ Ana Comer Of 8rO.cfwll)'. 1st 81. C 8und9)'I e UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE GJIM SL:.EMONS.IMPORtS HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Costa M... 540-0713 3 Block• So. of 405 Fwy. fllllf OU.II .,. -INW Car L-llon fOOf Quall SL -Ila-°"'"""' @ Wortd'1 L•rllflOI Selctton of 0 Mere«Jea Benz . 833-9300 Newport Beach 840-8444 -...... i..111-hrtl ...... .._,.., • ) . I • ,. Assllied advertising Is your best choice for help in selling the item• you no longer need. tt'a Quick and inexpensive. and the Pilot reaches petenlial buyers who hve in this area. Call today. • Daily Pilat - • c1ass1f1ed ads phone 6•2-56 78 • • -- ' • ' . .: \ 1m11n1• ( J t' ti. N r. f <, (Ju N T ( : ;~ t 1 F rJ k N 1 A ;· '-r_ t: N r ' ·. D~ to.investigate 5 boat death Criminal charges possible In crash of speedboat in Anaheim Bay Sundiiy- By ROBERT BARKER ... STEVE MARBLE °' ... .,.., ........ Th( investigation of a speedboat crash that killed five persons and injured four others in one of Oran,e Cout We asked Coast folks what question they'd llke to put to Walter Mondale lftheycoul~./A3 Photos of 5 and 10 kilo- meter Heart and Sole race In Irvine./ A3 California Girl with heart of baboon 4eported 'healthy' by doctor&./ AS . ·:~-=~·~:-' ... ~:.:·:·:·:.;,:~-:-:-:·:..:·:.:,:-:;:-:'.'!·)!a:.: Nation The Washington Post, among other papers, has endorsed Walter Mon- dale for President./ A5 Meanwhile, presldentlal ads continue to Inundate the television tube./ A4 Scientists meeting this week figure there'll be a permanent moon station early In the next century. /A4 World Diver' fall o find bOdy of Polish pro-Solidarity priest In river./__ A4 Greenpeace crew boards Russian whaling vessel In high-seas protest./ A5 County"s worst boatina disasters will be turned over to the district at· torilcy's office for possible cnminal prosecution. oflicials·said today. The 2~foot fibctJlass boat. the .Whiskey Runner, smashed head-on mto a concrete and steel NaV) mooring buoy at lhe entranet of Anaheim Bay outside of Huntington Harbour about 3: I~• m. Sunday. Judpn,a from the damaae JO the boat, mvestigators said the boat may have been traveling at 20 mph. The speed limit in the channel wbacb links Hunlington Harbour and Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station with the sea is :S mph, The dead were identtfltd as Kath) Weaver, 24, of :Laauna Beach: John Bakos, 22. Ronakf .Flem Myen. 22. andAnthonyWayne utton,27,allof Seal Beach apd Patnaa Huhnp, 20, of Downey. T:he survivors were adcnlifaed as the boafs palot Vul Eartcs of Scat Beaeh, Stq>hcn Brennan of West- minster, Carol Kembleofl.a.&uoa and Eames& Chavez of Bakersfield. Officials said lhe poup apparent}) had been 11 tbe Red Onion res1.1urant aftd bar in Hununaioa Hatbour until 2 am. and the:n took a Cl'lllse to tbe Queen Mary. The ctUh occum:d on the return tn~ to lbe boat"• berth 1n Sunset Aquatta Park in HunttngtOn Harbour. Authorities y &he entrance to the harbor is wcU lighted aJthOUl)t there were no lights on the buoy. Jt was not Suspect cleared in Laura kidnap lnvestl ator-s of Huntington Beach rl's ab<luctton tum attent.ton to San Diego By STEVE MARBU!. °' .. ...., ......... 'A Chino man detained-for ques-- tioning this weekend in the apparent kidnapping ~f a 3-year-ol,d Hunt- ingtOo. Beach girl bas been cleared of "cioo a San Bernardino Sheriffs spokesman said todi~ Spokesman Jim ant said the man, wanted on a S0,000 child molestation warrant, was taken into custody late Friday in Long Beach. Tbe man was a "carbon copy" o( a balding, gray-haired man being sought in the apparent kidna~il of little Laura Bradbury. Bryant · .. He was a perfect match but it wasn't our JUY," said Bryant, who said tbe man was arrested on the outstanding warrant as well as two child molestation charges out of Ontario. Meanwhile, tbe 12-day scan:h for the airl bas now taken invest1p10n • San Diego County where a l'OllP fl known sex Offenders were to k intervaewed U>day. lnveapton cm. tinue to scarCh 1n San Bemaactino _. Orange counues. The mall, blond girl van11bed Oct. l!,rom lier parcnr1 camPijlW 111 Joshua l1rcc National M~ liear Twentynine Palms and aboat 120 nil1cs from o.ra. C.ounty. It is believed the P1 was ........ by a kidnapper. possitJI)' •srr&::;•red man in rus· SOs drivina• dart we with distinctive bay windoM aa 'Ille tt.ar. Bryant said three scpanue Wit- nesses, however. said theysawdtesid travclina with an older woman r.. week in 1he south Ontario area. .. We bdievc stroncJy that w•s still alive sim(?ly because we baven' found her, Bryant said. Fish spotters jobJ search for 11Jlsslng Newport 111ea BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. ...., ........ The search for two Newport Beach men lost at sea since Oct. 20 stretched into its 10th day toda..J .with pro- falional fish spot1Cr$ 01Jerina IO look '°' ..... ~-boat :and ---~ spouc,cs; who fly over the: <:OaitiJ :waters c3cb day ID search of schools offish for commercial li~ing boats,, will pick up the bunt for Sieve Ba.iley and Norm Sasona IOday as other volunteen have temporarily '<IUc<>ntinued their rescue effons. I cusbaons and other supplies have not yet been found. IQJChcn ranain bopefw tbat Baile) and Saaom are alive &nd still board the wbile-bullc:iS skiff. . 8'adt is Ibo ............ ...... •eei••--lll111 = or the •ans boaters. Bailey. 25, .and ·SaaOna. 22. ~ lasi stta lea \ina Catalina Island Ort. 20, for the return trip to Newport. Thev ran into rough seas about J 2 milCs cast of A vafon Harbor afltt followina in the wake of a · fisbin& boat. ---r ~ Bob-Bla« mml~ or·CataJin.a ~..:;.&.~-.:..~~~~~ ....... _...4 Passenger Service, the Balboa ferry A J'h-Oay search by the Coast Guald. followed by a volunteer air search that ran ·through Sunday, turned up no signs of the boaL Playwright Luis Valdez, visiting at UC Irvine, ••connects the two hur- ricanes" of Hispanic and Anglo experiences./ A7 Sporta It's Big Game week for Fountain Valley and Edison high school foot- balf teams./81 The LA Rams found the going pretty darned tough Sunday-to the tune of 33-0./81 Laker& have problems In Texas./83 Entertainment Costa Mesa's South Coast Repertory la dust- ing off the holly for Its fifth •'Christmas Carol.'' I Al Buslneu Reuben E. Lee celebrates 20 years on Newport Harbor./14 A10 A3 lM A4 C7·10 A10 88 ee A74 88 A8 lM A4 A8 A1 A3 ee 81-3 • 85 M At KJ. A4 . service that employs the two men, said notices have been left in marinas all 110111 the Southern California coastline ask.in1 if anyone bas seen siins of the men, the boat or iu contents. Bcausc the 12-foot boat. its scat Frienas and co-woi't.Ci$ oftbe two men have collected more lb.all Sl0,000 in donatioo.s to pay for I.be fuel volunteen are usiaa iJl tbcir air searda. Lap.Da '• BeldJ lllller hopee to market beryoprt acroea tbe COUil by. State help asked ---.. --·jn Mesa holdup She pulnps iron, as. well as product hopes to market health f Ood nationally You don't wantlocall Heidi Miller and Fridays. On Tuesdays, a 98-pound wealclinJ.. Thursdays and Saturdays. she works Now, ifs true the blonde, brown-on her lcp, back and anns: eyed businesswoman wei&hs in at two That's/'robebly why she can beat pounds leu than the century mark. men tial apin her wei&ht at arm But don't evcn"th111k of k.ickina sand wrcstlinJ. in her face. She jop a oozen mild 1 wttk in the You don't need that kind of hillssurroundinaherhomein Laguna trouble. and ridesastationarybike 45 minutes Heidi, you see, is a body builder. each day. She pumps iron six days a week. As a result, she·s won enou&h body She bench presses 160 pc>unds. Not bu1ldina titles to make the lncn:d1ble once, mind you. Heidi pushes 160 . Hulk p-een with envy. pounds off her chest 40 times each But lately, Miller has been dividin& "on -Mondays, Wednesdays her time between body buildina and 'Ghostbuste~s' rum haunting experience IJ llOIUT HYNDMAN ................. h's not evuyday you 1c:e 1 Orlcula. a T1nkerbdl. a ftatlber and aa lndaan runn•"J down Cont Hiahway an upen11ve nannanc lboel. But then, you ml.sin not tno Bob Hope and his ftienda. H~ of Newpon Brach, and 21 of b11 friends ..... &lse Gm '1Ghoet~waen IOK .. ,_ SUndly morna" an Newpon walh ach of the C<Nn""1ton nannhtt in COllumc. "TM mPonte wu Just faniauc. '' 111d Hope. 1 marttt1111 and sales manyer. "Peoole Mre )'Clltna, honk· '"' their horns and wavana 11 us ... Ha,uc and has fiicnd1 tl'lldcd thesr idnltatia a doctoti. arthts. blnktn and bullllCll owners for th0tr of the Halloween vllttt)' for tM 9 a.m. ,aunL .. A tot of thete IU>" are l>ttltY ~~l IO when ')'OU dJtM ...., like a rocauil wastreu for a nan down Coui Hilbway, ~ IOl IO ba"VC some company," Hosue laid. The lfOUP. all .eriout nannen hvana an 1he area, lianed tbe 6.2..mUe coW* at Manner·s Park, ran throqh the Oo er hores tomrnunaty. down ....... coe,...a1.u> StEvE MITCHELL PEOPLE IN THE NEWS business building. She and panner Brian Pallas. a former markctina director for the Queen Mary nd national sales manager for the Disneyland Hotel, have embarked on an cntawisc they hope will result in the biaest froi.en yosurt business in the country. Son ofa fermentation franchise, tf you wtll, featuri!'f frozen culture nther than fried chicken. And (rom the rcsponsc they•vc had from folb interested in operatina their own Heidi's ff'QIOQ Yozun hoppc (her dad came up with the (Pleue._ LAOUNAlf/AI) Man and woman hunted after grabbing $405.000 In gems from jewelry store lnvesuptors arc hopina a state- wide dispatch describing the sun· toting man and woman who crabbed $405,000 in jewels and cash from a Costa Mesa Jewelry store Saturday will tum up some new I ds. ~ice said thi momina. Lt. Jac.k CaJnon id a 1t.1ctype has bttn sent to other law enforcement agencies to determine Whether the couple. described a.s a male Hispanic \\ith blaC wavy hair and a female Oriental with a black bo)' hair- cut. m~t have been mvoh"Cd in othcrhci . The male robber further de- scn'bril a .S-7 and 150 pound 1 \\1ltle thc-'Omanwasdcsctibed bc1111S-3 and 120 pound • Ca1non said the descriptions arc about thconl)' clues that police hue. No one w the robbers ka\'C' th jewelry store; and police do n t know , whether they cxaped on foot or fled to a gcLaway car. Police reported the duo \Jr'U brows- ina through the shop, 1ookina at rincs around 4;JO p.m.at W.inston'.s~ pon Jewelers, 1761 Newport II~ The man suddenly:pulltd out a ...a caliber hand&un. He hdd lWO Qllo- tomer> as ..en as four employees and owners at bay white the woman cleaned out the display cues. CalDon said an ·~xca&1¥e .. amount of moDC'.) 'llllr'IS aho ..._ fromthel>Qf'ketsofoncoftbeowwa. He •'U unable to report how ma mon~· wa tolen from the mu. '9ut he 1d the combined toss an caib aact · cwclry ~-a $405.000. The wuplc herded the VJCUllll, who were not injured dGhftl the robber). mto a back room and aM:a fled. . I I I 1 l I Driver injured /l 80-7ear-old tnu:ll. drt•er for a Santa Ana -per ,... aerloualy lnjarecl early today Yben the tnu:ll. be •u drtYIDC $lipped OD lb .tde OD the Warner AYenlle off -....,P of the lla~o Freeway in Hllll Beach. to the Call· forala ~--y Patrol. A c epolrMDt•D aald a meul nlllne may ba•e aa•ed SteYe 117al90D'o llfe "1 ~enttn& the truck'• cab from belq cnao • Tiie trncll. wu carry• m, bMert8 for Tueoday'o edltlon of the neYOpoper. the opoll.eoman aald. Wal90D, of T1lotln. wu treated at J'oanbln Valley Comm~ty Booplta1 --center. Clouds wil~give way to sunshine By tbe A110dated Prn1 10s in the upper rqions and 80 to 85 1n lower areas. Lows tonight will be in the upper 30s and 40s in the UpPer deserts and 4S to Sl in lov.:er regions. Morning fog, low clouds ahead Coutal Tide. -... _ .. l.J =:.. If lljill.O T\lltOAY ~.C. ""'911W! •Ofa.11' Jl.7 ....._.___WV ,. .. ., 1-111-. Jll .... --· l.ccnf• J.12 1.111 •I g::;::N.C kond""' •np."'' O.:t ~..U ... ... ..,,..., • l:Ot (llllt., ,... ~ T~··11 Ull. _ ... ,.,..... ·c.,.,.1·11C ~ ...... , ~°" .._._ • ..,,,,,,.,,._.y....,.,_ COnccwll.Mli, *' 12:i!O'""·Mll-80Mllll 10:M O...ftWt:W111 •-"'· . ,.._...., ..._ ,,.._ Temperature. = -.:.~=CM ......... -_.., --·-- .. Le EP- 11 .. ---------,, JI . : 1: E:irtended " .. , ... , ... .... " " .. " -·----,.... J.Mty. H9WllOl1 40lll..,_,....,.. 221111 ..... ,.......,,., ----.... .,.._.. w .. -.p.11..a " ., .. " .. ,, .... .. .. " " .. ,, .. " .... "' .. " .. .... .... .... n " " .. -"' ••• "' ' • ' ••• 9wlldlfedon·~ " .. " .. .... .. " .... .. .. ~: " .. .. n .. .. " .. .. . II •1 " .. .. " 7JI ., .... .. " .... .. .. .. .. .. .. • • .. " " .. .. " .... " . .. .. .. 17 .. " " " .... :2 : .. " 71 •7 ' .. ,,. " .. • •1 ' " " .. " .... " " _.._ ------- Momin&cloudsand fog will shroud Southern California Tuciday. but sktes will tum fai~ in the at\crnoon. the National Weather St-rvice said. Ora~ County will have patchy late ni&h1 and ·early morning low ir; c&ouds. Oouds will han1 around BB man held as drunk LAGUNAN P USH ING YOGURT ••• accused of co__p~attack !::'~De); you have to figure franchi1<CS,ando;e,,..,inglheoper--oompelilion • &hrouah mMl..rnom1n111 the beacha., and tfic deserts and mouotatns will • have hiah clouds at timn. ' HiaM will be: in the mid·70s , Tuesday with Jows tonigh1 in the ;..lipper 40s to mid....SOS. "'"' Thebeachcswillhavchi&h1of6810 :;'76 after overnight lows of 45 to SB. • ~ The mercury will range from SB to 'll8 in the mountains. Lows tonight , : will be a chilly 25 to 38. :;:. Deter& 1cmpen111ureswill reach the ••• . . " ~; A Huntin&ton Beach man alltaedly assaulted a fpuntain Valley police officer while in custody on a public drunkeocss charge, pohce said today. Accordina to police reports, OffJCC:r Richard Martinez. 24, went to Erie Evans' jaii cell to escort him 10 a vehicle tha1 would transport Evans to 1he Oranae County Jail about JI a.m. Saturday when Evans attacked him. Evans alleaNly shoved the cell door closed when Martinez opened it. When the police officer opened the · door again, Evans allegedly hit him twice in the face, p0lice reported. Evans WlllS booked at Orange Coun· ty Jail on a charge of a5saulting a police officer in addition to public intoxication and an outstanding mi,.. clemcanor warrant. •• ~COSTUM~ RUN DRAWS CROWDS ••• ~·homAl · · :-: :!.Coas1 Hi~way to Bayside Dnve. and "Ghbstbustcrs IOK"" staned last year La&una with crepe paper s1rcam1n1 ,_back a~1n . when-he and some friends were offthcm. -:,' Men s winner Bruce Johnson of running through Laguna Beach's 1..aguna Beach covered the course 1n Heisler Park. ,..:17:09. Kathleen Burke of Newport •"Beach, a triathlon competitor, was the ftnl woman to cross the finish ne. . Then 1t· was back 'o Hoauc's hOmc . , fora well-ea.med brunch andcamp{n11 ~in front of the 1c~yis1on to waich, 4'hat else, the New Yott Marathon. Hogue said the idea for the "II was in the mornina anti there had apparently been a bi& party there the n1&ht before bccau1t thttc was crepe ~per and trash all over the place: he aid ... Someone just pteked up IOme of it and wra,PJ>C4 it arouod tumselfand kepi runn1n.s-Pretty soon everyone was running through ··it was a lot of fun and we decided we ouaht to run in costumes fo}" Halloween.'' HOJue printed fliers on oranae paper providin& dtt.ai1s of the I().. kilometer race aod disuibuted them to fellow runners, That's how tradition.sac11larted 11 Ho1ue intends to make the "Ghostbusten IOK" an annual event last month in Oran&e the businns pertnen arc onto a real ation of two stores. Coupt..,. sweet deal " And that doesn't even count the · h ~"We've. received ~ore than 2SO houn she spends concocting new Her phenomenal fihys1quc as 'rancti:-apnlications IO far," the 3().. yogurt tlavon to add to the 60 she's appeared in dozens 0 fitness maga· 11 ·-(" zincs and graced the coven of some ycar-okl businesswoman said. created 10 da1e. . . .,1 Not bad for a ~ration that Nevertheless, with the exception of ~~ impressive .,amour mag&· staned in the summer of 1982 with a Sundays, not a day flCS by tha1 S6S 000 inves1mcnt in a small lrviile heahhy Heidi isn't lifting. bending. Large postcrsdisplayincberflexins shoP. The two partners sold their pulJina and stretching at one of two form will adom each of the Heidi homes to scrape up lhe cash for their health clubs to which she belongs. yogurt franchises as a not·so-subtle fint yogurt shop, then added another . ..It's addictive,'"'· she says of her reminder that the frozen yummies $30,000 in improvements the next athletic avocation. she's scllina are good for you. year. Thcfonncrna1ionallyranked1Ym· The proof, so 10 speak, is in the They opened the Lasuna Beach na.~t was a nursing Sl!Jdent in Sacra· yogurt. store nine months aao 1n a former mento, before drOJ?P•na out, as she Why, a quick DCCk. back to the color broke...,e office on Broadway. says, .. about a minute short of a photoa.raph of Heidi on the fron1 paac And the enterprising pair isn't nursing degree." should show you yogurt isn't fatten· stopping there, not by a Iona shot. She was lured away from education ing. A 2,()()0.square.foot corporate of· to work as a sales representative for a And Heidi is a constant consumer fic.e will open in Lq,una Hills in three leotard manufaclurcr. In connection of the cold culture. W«ks and stores in Costa Mesa and with her work, she competed in .. I personally eat two 16-ounce Huntington Beach will open next ·' gymnastics events until fouryeanago containers of yogurt a day,'' she says. month, with a store in Fashion Island when the pressure of her job, along Thal and maybe one of her Super by February. with the five or six houn a day of Pro protein drinks (that's a blend of ''We've aot franchises planned in required training. forced her to stop. apple: juice. yoaurt, banana. protein Tustin, Lona Beach, :Westwood, Not one for 1hc sedentary life, powder and cg.) Beverly Hills, MiHion Viejo, Laguna Heidi later dropped by a &Ym and The corporate president pumps up Ni_1uel and &c<>ndido, .. Heidi 11)'1. started liftin& a few barbells. The her product as enthusiastically as she Th ir'• pme plan calls for I 9S manaaer of the gym noticed her pumpt iron. . Sto he end of 1988. muscularity and pe'ite form and Coun1ingoffpointson slim tinacn. of'tfiose will be in Southern pcnuaded her to start a body buildina she says her ypgurt has less than one· Califa,nia. half owned by the com· program in earnest. gram of fat pcJ" ounce and only 17 to pany, 1hc other half franchises, Two months later, she entered and 24 calorics per ounce; aids in diges... Heidi figures the projected national won her tint comeetition. tion; won't clog your arteries; COD· BOAT CRASH KILLS 5 ••• sales fQr the 195 stores will be more She'sb«nwinn1n1eversince.First tains no sugar -only honey .and than $35 million by the end of 1988. in the Miss Natural America contest fructose. and is heartily endorsed by Tbat!Ein& to kee~ a lot ~.riL in . ..Las-1ie&u in 1982;..fir" in the Min weiJtht watcher groups. J'romAl -iJilly:--Natural Universe in Pennsylvania Who's to argue with an endorse· T of h ti --iOWb · --iih tJie orn--S Not 10 mention Heidi who put1 in a the same-year; first in the Miu Grand ment like tha1t?~__,,~, that boat dnvcr Earles, 28. m1Jht face Jl!"ci'iminal charges. Kemmis said his dcpartmcnl's repon on the mishap ~ouid bcsiven 10 lhe dtStnctattomey for cons1dcra11on. l The speedboat is registered to Robert Sharp of Anaheim. Kemmis said. But ibves11gators ha ve nol determined 1f Sharp loaned the boat 10 the group Two survivors -Earles and pass- ena.er Brennan. 24. -were 1n senous .•condilion today 1n the intensive care -t1n11 at Los Alam itos Medical Center. Earles suffered several fractures and a ruptured intestine. He had suraery Sunday. accordina 10 hospital 5upervisor Fred Weiss. Two other survivors -Kemble, 2S. Chavez, 24, were treated for 1n1urics and released. Just Call 642-6086 • . hwoboat. c deadll web~ ounthd ~l~w u.?Y wit th < ot lefl",f ~n-saidd. -II --<toien-bours a day__at..llhe. .office, Prix..in.1.of.AwleHhe·foUowtns)~ea~1--vy,ou-bmer n0t. Heia1 might want in t c . ts sma ca 1n, au ont1es Fr~m ~ e ~ng e o. impact an a deahna w11h attorneys, po1en1ial and fint in 1be Miss Western America to arm wrestle. said, while three 01hen were found other 1nd1cat1on1. "Id have 10 sar, underneath the wreckage, submerged that no evasive ac1ions were taken ' 1n 4.S feet of water about J 25Yards on the part of the pilot, Kemmis 1aid. rrom the entrance 10 SunK:t Harbor "The bu<?1 was pretty much centcr- Aquat1c Park. punched. Sheriffs divers recovered all the The sleek boat. known as a day bodies about five hours after the 3 cruiser, l.ater was hauled in pieces a.m. acc1dcn1. said Lt. Dan Sprau. onto a nearby dock. None of the dead was weannga life None of those aboard was the 1ackct, Kemmis said. boat's owner. "'In 1erms of the number of dead The J..foo1·hjgh buoy was sur- and injured, it 's the worst we've had rounded with rubber flotation de. berc in quite a while" U.S. Coast vices, and had been ulCd by the Navy Guard Petty Officer Thomas Henke to tie up ammunition barges, deputies said of the accident said. The survivors were thrown clear of Spratt said the accident took place the wreckage. Two were found clin&· in relatively calm waters with food 1n1 to a buoy, a third swam ashore for weather and 20-.mile visibility. hclpafld the fourth remained near the Autopsy resulu arc pending. ) Wlwil do y .. like •boel lbt Delly Pllol1 Whl doo'I ytl lib? C.ll tlwi •Imber al left aM )'"r MffNI• 1!111 M recordell, lrutcrtbt4 11141 tlt.JlverH et lklHr.,,-l11t Hit.or. . Tiie 11.m•l4·1101r auwerllc urvlce may be 11t.4 iO rtffff Jett.en to t•e ·editor oa 117 ••~· CMtttMLii'9 to Mr Letten rol•m• m111 leclde tlletr ume u4 telttHH ••11\Hr for veritlc11lo1. No c:lrctlallo1 ctllt, pit.IN, Tell 11 •'••'• oa yrir mlatl. . •• . . Dolly Piiot Delivery I• Ou•r•ntMd S.l,...dity Md ~~ II 'fGJ 00 llOI r..:-l'O"' ODPJ ti)>" 7 • m c#I tlef()i• 10 •1'11 -l""Jl(OJl'r .... ~-~ Clrcul•llon Tolepllonff ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwortz Ill Publisher ',. Ro1emery Churchm•n · Controller ,.,...._ -Stephen F. Car•zo Production Manager Donold L. Wllllomo Circulation Man~ger Designed, Finished Installed Clrcul•tlon 71•1142""4333 C .. 11lfled 8dY.rtl91ng 714/142·51'71 All other department• M2""'321 MAIN OFFICE 130 w,...1 9't1 Ill eo.a. """-CA Ma.! ldct-811> 15e0 co.i ......... CA 92026 Col!yr'!ll11 llMIJ Or~ CO.. Put.IWllfllf ~ No -A«• ...... _ ~ ....tltl O< .ct4r•- rr.ill .,.,..., ....,. .. ,.~ ~ ~ .,.. ......,.. ol tlOP'r'llll ""'-• VOL. 77, NO. 303 31 'I' ears Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ••. AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICl!SI Call (714) 548-8841 or 548·1717 ./ 1 • • ' I Tl I r ., · , t H ' " , ' 11 1 .. 1 i 1 11 . · , 1 , . 1 - , oat eras . · e e e _n to·cr1m1na_ • Coaat We asked Coast folks what question they'd like to put to Walter Mondale If they could./A3 _ Photos of 5 and 10 kilo- meter Heart and soi, race In Irvine./ A3 Callfomla _ Girl with heart of baboon reported 'healthy' by doctors./ AS . . -X-!-!·~/.~'.•:4:,:.:•X-!·~:,:•!•:·:.~, .. ~·!-:•X.:'.•: Nation ~ The Washington Post, among other papers, has endorsed Walter Mon-4a1e for President./ AS Meanwhile, presldentlal . ads continue to Inundate the television tube./ A4 Scientists meeting this week figure there'll be a permanent moon station early In the next century. JM World Olvera fail to find body of Polish pro:..Solidarity priest In river.I A4 Greenpeace crew boards Russian whaling vessel In high-seas protest./ AS Playwright Luis Valdez, - visiting at UC Irvine, "cQnnects the two hur- rlcatie9" of Hispanic and Anglo experiences./ A7 Sports It's Big Game week for Fountain VaUey and Edison high school foot- ball teams./81 The LA Rams found the going pretty darned tough Sunday-to the tune of 33-0./81 Lakere have problems lri Texas./83 Entertalnment Costa Mesa's South Coast Repertory la dust- ing off the holly for Its fifth "Christmas Carol." I Al Buabieu Reuben E. Lee celebrates 20 years on Newport , Harbor./84 INDEX Bridge Bulletin Soard Bu1lneu caurornla New• Clualfled Comlcl Crouword Death Notl A10 A3 EM A4 C7·10 A10 89 88 F atur .. Horosoope Ann Landera Mutual Funds NatlonalN Opinion Pap rmt Pollol 1.0g , Public Not Sport1 Stodc Mark ta Tetevt11on Thettn Weather Wor1d Newt A7..e Bl A8 B4 A4 ~8 'A7 A3 88 81-3 85 A8 A9 A2 A4 Lafuna'•Beldl lllllerbopea tomarketherJ~acl'099thecoantry. She pilmps iron, as Well as prodµct La una bodybuilding champ Heidi Miller hopes to market health food nationally You don•t want to call Heidi Miller a 98-pound weakling. Now, it's true the blonde, brown- cyed bu inesswoman wci&J)s in at two pounds less than the century mark. But don't even think of kick1n1 sand m her face. You don't need that kind of trouble. Heidi, you ~ is a body b 1ldcr. She pumps iron su. day~ a week. She bench presses 160 pc:mnds. Not once, mind you. Heidi pushes 160 ))9'1nds off her chest 40 limes each session -Monda)s, Wednesdays and Fridays. On Tuesdays, Thundays and Saturdays, she worb on her leas, back and arms. That's,robably why She caJl beat men haJ again her weight at arm wrest I ins. heJop allozcn m1lcn ·week 1n the h1llssurroundina her home in Laguna and ridcsastationary bike4U minutes each day. As a rgult, she's won enough body building tiOes to make the Incredible Hulk arcen with envy. But lately, Miller has been dividing her time between boay building and Goblins and ghouls sca!llper in Newport STEVE MITCHELL P1tJPlt IN IHt Ntw s ------ bu incss bu1ldina.. She and panncr Brian Pallas. a former markct1n1 d1tte1or for the Queen Mary and national saJeS man er for the Di n~land Hotel, have embarked on an cnterpri the) hope will result in the bi t frozen yogun bu tnc 1n the countll. Son of a fermentation francbi , if you will, fcaturi!lf fro1cn culture rather than fried chicken. And. from the respon they•"e had from folk" interested in opcntina their own H idi's Frogcn Yozun hoppc (her dad came up with (~leue Me ~AGUftAft/A2) I Speedboat with nine aboard slams into moonng b.uoy in Anaheim Bay By ROBERT BARKE and STEVE MARBU: CMCl!e~Not.._ The invcs1~gat1on of a ~boat crash that lolled five persons and injured four others in one of Oran County"s worst boatmg disasters "Wtll be &umod o~er to ·the district t- &omcy•s oft"ace for 1possible cnm1nal prmcnitjon, officials aid today. The ~foot fibc:t:glass boat, lhe Whiskey Runner, mwhcd heaCkm into a concrete and tcel avy mooring buoy at the cntrana: of Anaheim Bay outside of Huntington Harbour about 3: I :S a.m. unday. J~n from lhe dam~~to the ooat. mvesttptors wa ilieboit may have.been travelina at speeds of 20 knou an hour. 1bc spCed limit in the channel which hnb Huntington Har- bour and Seal Beaeh Naval Weapons Station with the sea is .S knouanhour. The dead were identified Kathy Weaver. 24. of Laguna Bead}; John Bak°'-22, Ronalc:f Flem Myers, 22, Suspect cleared in Laura kidnap Investigators of Huntington Beach girl's ~bduction turn attention to San Diego • By STEVE MARBLE Of .. Dl!lr ....... A Chino man detained for ques- tioning this weekend in the pparcnt kidnapp1pg of a J.oyear-old H i anglOll Beach 1Jrl bas been dC'ai'ed of susp1aon, a San Bcma.rdiAo ff spokesman id today. Flsh spotters jobJ searcb. for ~issl:ag Newport me:a -Bjl\()BEJlrRYND cw .. DlllJ,... ... · The Search for two Newport Beaeb men lost at sea sincie Oct. 20 smtcbcd into its 10th day today with pro- fessional fish spotters offerina to look for signs of the boat and the men. The spotters. who Oy over the coastal waters each day in search of schools of6sb for commercia.J fishina boats, will pick up the bunt for Steve Bailey and Norm Sagona today as other voJunteen have temporarily discontinued their J'C$C\le efforts.. Bob Black. manqcr of Catalina Pa$SCDger n·1ce. ihC BiibOi f~ ~ice that employs the two men. said noficcsha-.e been left in marinas all alOn the Southern Ollifoma coastline askiag if anyone has teeD sts,ru of the men. lbc boat or its contents. Because tbe 12-foot boat. 1ts seat cushions and other supplies have not yet been found. searchers remain hopeful that ~ and Sagona arc alive and still board the bite-hulled skiff. Black is atso asking that other fiSb (Pleue eee SEARCH/ A2J State help asked in Mesa holdup fn\"esti.pton are hopina a state- wide dispatch describina the gun- toting man and woman who arabbed $405,000 in jewel and c::ash from a Costa Mesa jewel!') l<>l'C Satwday "Will tum up me new leads. pohce .said this morning. Lt. Jack Calnoo said a teletype has btt'n ~nt to other la enforcement agencies to detmnine hethcr the couple, described u a male Hi nrc with bl k wavy hair Ad a male Oriental with a black -bo) hair- cut. might have been 1nYolvcd in other hc1 - The malc robbt-r s funhcr de· scnbcd as 5-7 and 150 pound 1nle the woman-.. dcscnbc<S bca S.3 and J 20 pound . - Driver lajured A SO-year-old track drt•er for a Santa Ana ewapaper wu terlouly injured early today when the track he wu driYing flipped on lta aide on the Warner A•enue · off ramp of the San D~e o Freeway in Bantin n Beach. acco to the Call- fomla lthway Patrol. A C apokeaman aid a metal r&ll.lng may ba•e ••ed 8te.e Wat.on"• life by pre-venting the truck"• cab lrom being cra•hed. The truck wu carry- ing inRl'ts for Taeaday'• edition of ~tbe neW9paper, the •pokeaman uld. Wat80n, of Tuatln, wu treated at Fountain Valley Community Hoepltal trauma center. · SEARCH F OR BOATERS CONTINUES ••• spotters sweeping the area keep an eye out for the nussing boaters. • Bailey, 2S, and Sagona, 22. were .tasuem Jeavin& Catalina ls.la.ndOcL 20, for the return trip to Newport. They ran into rouah seas about 12 .. miles easl of Avalon Harbor after following in the wake of a fishing boat. , A .J~y search b)' the Coast Guard. followed b} a volunteer air search that ran through Sunday, : :=BOAT CRASH KILLS 5 ••• • t:;!P'romAl ••• ! .§ .. There's no indkatton that anyone !'I e was grossJy intoxicated," Kemmis l ·added. .~ Although he p.ve no indication p ~ • that boat driver Earles, 28, might face f• criminal charges, Kemmis said his • departm~nt's repon on the mishap , ._ wouJd be given to the district attorney • for cons1dera1ion. Two survivors -Earles and pass- enger Brennan, 24, -were 10 serious condjtion today in the intensive care ·unit at Los Alamitos Medical Center. Earles suffered several fractures and a ruptured intestine. He had surgery Sunday, according to hospital ~:~KIDNAP S USPE CT FREE •.• : ·: J'romAl • (•little Laura Bradbury, Bryant said. : .. He was a perfect match but it ...asn't our guy," said BryanL Meanwhile. the 12-da) search for the gjrt has now taken mvestiga1ors to San Diqo County where a group of known sc~ off enders were to be interviewed today. lnve\Ugaton con- tinue to !earth in San Bernardrno and nee counties. The small. blond &Jrl vanished Oct. 18 from her parent's campsite in Joshua Tree National Monument, near Twentynine Palms and about 120 miles from Orange County. It is believed the girl was grabbed b) a kidnapper. possibly a gray-haired man in his 50s driving a dark blue van with distinctive bay windOIA-S in the rear. Bryant said three separate wit- nesses. however. sajd they saw the Jirl traveling with an older woman last week in the \Outh Ontario area. He $31d the sightings arc being taken senously. ··we bchcvr mongl) that she's still alive s1mpl)' becauo,e we haven't found her," Bryant said BB man held as drunk -:~accused of cop attack A Huntttlgton Beach man allegedl) assaulted a Fountain Valle) police officer while in custody on a public drunkenesscharge. police said toda). Accordin& to police repons, Officer Richard Maninez. 24. went to Enc Evans' jaiJ cell to escon him to a velucle that would transpon fa ans to the Orange County Jail about 11 a.m. Saturday when Evans attacked him . Evans allegedly shoved the cell door clos.ed when Martinez opened it. When the police officer opened lhe door again. Evans allegedly hit him twice 1n the face, police reooned. Evans was booked at Orange Coun- t~ Jail on a charge of assaulting a police officer. turned up no signs of the boat. Friends and co-workers of the two men have collected more than S 1 o.ooo in...d.Pnations 10 pay for the fuel volunteers are using in their air search. supervisor Fred Weiss. Two other survivors -Kemble, 25, Chavez, 24, were treated for injunes and released. 1 Two of the dead were found below in the boat's small cabin, authorities satd, while three others were found underneath the wreckage, submerged in 4S fec;t of water about 125 yards from the -entrance to Sunset Harbor Aquatic Park. Sheriffs divers recovered all the bodies about five hours after the 3 a. m. accident. said Ll. Dan Spratt. None of the dead was wearin& a life Jacket, Kemmis said . .. In terms of the number of dead and injured, it's the worst we've ba<l here in quite a while," U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Thomas Henke said of the accident. The survivol"5 were thrown clear of the wreckage. Two were found clins- ing to a buoy, a third swam ashore for help and the fourth remained near the buoy with the others, Spratt said. "from the a0£)e of impact and all . other indications. .. I'd have to sar, that no evasive actiorts were taken' on lhe part of the pilot, Kemmis said. "The buoy was pretty much center- punched.' The sleek boat, known as a day cruiser, later was hauled in pi~ onto a nearby dock. None of those aboard was the boat's owner. The 3-foot-high buoy was sur- rounded with rubber flotation de- vices, and had been used by the Navy to tic up ammunitJon barges. deputies said Spratt said the accident took plac.c in relatively calm waters with good weather and 20-mile visibility. Autopsy results are pending. 20 nabbed in bookmaking extortion operation in LA .. Morning fog , low C oud s ahead \.Cit 71 60 .,. Dt ~ 02 ee Miami ., 79 ........... 63 32 ~·"-' " ==-., 06 13 ~ NftVM ,, Hottoll<,". IO 11 OkWtOIM Cir)' 18 "' OmlN 47 $5 QrlWo u u Palm Pt!ftOI 11 61 Ph~ .. 13 ""°"''~ It 11 Pllll~ 1a 6'1 f'Mlll ,.,.. u oe Poni.oo.Or l!I 41 Prov~ 70 u ="City •2 .. 64 2t """° .all 40 Alctwnoncl .. u -~~~:=:~ .... her~ .. ,, St~ 72 46 a1,...fernpa 88 7t ~ ....... flBliet Snow oc~-$1a!JO< ... y ...... Tides 0 ~ .......... ~ "°"" ll6 OH;t .,, c.or.-c. Sall Ulte ca,, 66 4G fODAY "51a.f'll 103p.m TUUOAY 404am '·"'"' 112am , t22p.m u 0 I 17 u •1 03 tun ~ locJa'r 11 I Ga p 111.. tlMI T....o.r11111 am lll'd-. ~ • 6:03pm Moon..., a1 • n P 111. ,... Tllaeclar at '2 ~ pm and Nit llgalr1 11 10 lll p"' • Temperatures .. L• A~ 11 68 Albuql;ar~ ,p, 61 31 M\tll'lllo IO .. AllC.h0rllg9 3' 15 Allwrt• 11 ee At*1UC: Ott; 74 67 Ault in 13 '5 1WllTIOr9 13 ... •"*'O'*n. 74 70 1111nwca 40 22 ... ....... Buftalo ... ~SC ClwWtoll,WV ~.NC c,,.,._. ~ ~ Coluo:Nlla s c ~.Oil Conclord.N H Olilat-fl Worth ~°" 0.-O..Molr.- 0.Wott OUll.ltll EIP- Extended so 4' f'alrt!MU 72 IO f'.,.go 73 4J ~ 42 :rt GrMd~ 13 71 Ot#1 ,.,.. " ·~ 13 67 ..... .. 11 Honolulu .. '2 ~ 74 .. ~ 73 12 ~ ..... IO 10 '**---71 .. ~ 74 11 !<..-Coy IO eo LMVega1 TO 60 U!lla~k 6J 2t 43 26 70 45 33 n n 47 ··It m '° 71 M 27 • M st 10 72 02 "' n 15 72 .... 70 .. 13 02 15 .. :t2 24 •1 ao 73 '7 71 10 SMAtltonlo Seti~ 8ln f rMldeeo 81n"*'.PA SI lteMlrie &.Ille t-,.-,.: lpol!-,,.._ TOf*La TuctOll TUIM w~ WlcNll Wilk.....,. ~.o. I SID 1·2 1·2 1-2 1 2 -1 1·2 a ..... e11rec:tl0fl. 10Ut11W111 11 tt • 68 13 67 .. 11 Ot 2t 50 341 71 17 ... 31 ... 2t 76 •7 50 32 '11 60 06 47 82 17 611 H IO ... 12 13 LAGUNAN PUSHING YOGURT ••• From Al transposed utle), you have to figure franchisee5, and overseeing tbe oper· the business partnen arc onto a real ation of two stores. · sweet deal. And that doesn't even count the ''We've received more than 2SO hours she spends concoctina new franchise &pJ.>tications so far," the 30-yoaurt fllvors to add to the 60 she's competition last month in Orange ~C-0unty. year-old busmesswoman said. created lo date. Not bad for a corporation that Nevertheless, with the exception of started in the summer of 1982 wil.b a Sundays, not a day 'oes by that $65,000 investment in a small Irvine healthy Heidi isn't liftang, bending, shop. The two partners sold their pulling and stretching at one of two Her phenomenal physique has appeared in dozens of fitness maga- zines and graced the covers of some pretty impressive glamour maga- zines. homes to scrape up the cash for their health clubs to which she belongs. · first yoaurt shop, then added another .. It's addictive,'' she says of her Large posters displaying her flex in~ form will adorn each of the Heidi yogurt franchises as a not-so-subtle reminder that the frozen yummies she's selling arc goqd for you. $30,000 in improvements the next athletic avocation. year. The former nationally ranked gym~ ThtW opened the Laeuna Beach nast was a nursins student in Sacra- storc \qjne months aao an a former mento, before dropping out, as she brokerage office on Broadway. says, "about a minute short of a And the cnt"'1"Prising ~r isn't nursing degree." stoppins there, not by a long shoL She wa.S fured away from education The proof, so to speak, is in the yogurt. Why, a quick peek back to the color photograph ofHcidi on the front page should show you yogurt isn't fatten- ing. And Heidi is a constant consumer of the cold culture. "I personally eat two l 6--0uncc containers of yogurt a day," she says. A 2,000-square-foot corporate of-to work as a sales representative for a fice will open in Laguna Hills in three leotard manufacturer. In connection weeks and stores in Costa Mesa and with her work, she competed in Huntington ·Beach will open next gymnasticseventsuntilfouryearsago month. with a store in Fashion Island when the pressure of her job, along by February. with the five or six hours a day of .. We've got franchises planned in required trainins; forced her to nop. • Tustin, Long Beach, WestWOCJtl, Not one for the sedentary lire, Beverly Hills, Mission Viejo, Laauna Heidi later dropped by a gym and Nisuel and EscOndido," Heidi says. started lifting a few barbells. The They pair's pme plan calls (or 195 manaaer of the gym noti.ocd her That and maybe one of her Super Pro protein drinks (that's a blend of apple juice, yogurt, banana. protein powder and cag.) The corporate president pumps up her product as enthusiastically as she pumps iron. stores by the end of 1988. muscularity and petite form and Seven ly of those will be in Southern persuaded her to start a body building CaJjfomia, half owned by the com· pr08f8m in earnest. pany, the other half franchises. Two monthi.later, she entered and Heidi figures the projected national won her first competition. saJes for the 195 stores will be more She's been winninaeversincc. First tban $35 miJlion by the end of 1988. in the Miss Natural America contest That'sgoingtokeepalotofbact.eria in Las Vegas in 1982; fint in the Miss busy Natural Universe in Pennsylvania Not to mention Heidi who puts in a· the same year; first in the Miss Grand dozen hours a day at the office, Prix in Los Angeles the fo~lowina year dealing Wltb attomc~ potential ~dfitstin.the.MissWestem Amcrica Dally PllOt Dell very It Guaranteed ~1 Fro<Mr )4 ~ CIO nol IWl•O yfNI ~ bf !. 30 p m cal brtor• 7 r m llnO yOUI C()(>y wtl tie .,.._ea S.turoay •'Id Suno.r tt you do no1 •-your oce>y try 1 1 m ca• °"'°' t 10 • "' and 'fO'Jll '"PY •• tle.,....90 Clrculatlon TetephonH ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher Rotemary Churchman Controller Stephen F. Carazo Production Manager Donald L. WUllame Circulation Manager Counting off points on slim fingers, she says her yogurt has less than one gram of fat per ounce and only I 1 to 24 calories pef>ouncc; aids in diges- tion; won't clog your arteries; con- tains no sugar -only honey and fructose, and is heartily endorsed by weight watcher groups. Who's to argue with an endorse- ment like that? You better not. Heidi might want to arm wrestle. • Cltcui.tlon 714/842-4333 Clattln.d idvertl1fng 71'/842-5'71 All other departm9nta 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE 330 W « 8ar .,.1 C.0.tt I.I CA Mal NJ. Boo 1~ C.X11 Ues;,. CA 9162ti ~ 1PSJ <>anve eo.11 ~ Comi>1n1 No ,..,.. 61ones. 11uttra1-. edll0t111 ""''lef °' •a.er•~ manta ....,..,, ~ tie rtpocM;«I w lhOul Mle(;ial ~.-~ ol ~ °"'"" • VOL. n, NO. 303 Arrests include cnfercnce "We feel the name 1s appropriate," Gales said of the 1nvestiJ,11t1on'scodc- name. "because organized cnmc as such a hghtweigh1 in Southern Cah- forma." Gates~~authoriti~ra1~dseven ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! bookmaking locations where an esti- mated SI million in waaers were ttandlcd weekly. Eight arrests oc-mob figure, one Orange County man_ LOS ANGELES (AP) - A week- end raid foiled a "Mickey Mou~ Mafia" bid 10 take over Southern Cahfomia bookmaking operations wonh SI mallton a week, and the '• •reputed Lo Angeles mob chieftain ~ was amona 20 arrested, poltce '8y. '· Police Chief Daryl Gates an- : .. , nounced the arrests Sunday al 1he end of a three-month investigation dubbed "Operation li~twcight" •· ''which culminated in raids at 22 Jocations an Los Angeles. Orange. San Oie,o, Riverside and Ventura coun- ties. Amona tho.e art ted 5unday mo~nina was Peter John Milano, ••considered to be !,he head of or- 11n1.zed crime'" in So11thcrn Cah· fomla, Gates said. The 11rrc t warrants charged the 20 ·with conspiracy to commit book- making. The only Orana,e County man arrested wu Robert Benjamin of Anaheim. The invest• tion bct,an in lhc spnng. pul on ho1.d bttaust, of heaV)' police work dunng the um- mer Oltmp1cs, nd re um<111mmcd1- 1tely af\crward. Oat told news Just Call· 642-6086 I He referred to Southern California cnme families as "lhe M1cke)' Mouse Mafia." "The investigation 1dent1fied eiJbt bookmakers who {,.were being squeezed for either money or a percentage of their operation," Gates said. But ~ Yid no violence took place before officers intervened. Milano of Los Angeles appeared 10 be overseeing the operation and those involved rcponcd to him, Octcclive John Motto said. "If organ11cd cnmc exists here in Los Angeles. this fellow would be the bo5s." Motto said A 1978 rcpon by_ the California attorney general's office says Milano is the "~n of a Cleveland Mafia leader and 11consideted byCahfomia law enforcement a,aenc1cs to be close· ly associated with the Southern Californta Mafia." l'hc report says a key aovemment w1tnc "and h1, wife in a I 974 mblana operation trial apinst Milano were "murdered ex- ecution-style" honl~· before they were sch duled to lCSttfy. Also arrc tcd und y was C rmcn M1lnno of Lo n I , Peter's brother ./ . curred at bookmaking joints. In addition to bookmalona ma- terial. police seized three guns, $24,000 cash and a small quantity of narcotics. Gates said $20,000 worth of las Vegas' Dunes Hotel chips were seized from the home of Rocco Zangari in Palm Springs. Gates identified several of those arrested as wociates of crime famil- ies in New York, New Je~. Illinois and Florida but said the effort to take over the bookmaking was not ~on­ trolled by those families. "We have a very disjointed or- gani1cd crime effort in Los Ana,eles. You find them (orpnized crime fiJ.ures) cominJ to~thcr from many different families,' Gates saJd. Gates said the opcrallon was bated on intelligence from "informant1° but refused to say more •bout possible witnesses. He did say tbc '85C was unrelated to rcccnt mob arrnu that followed disclosures by a fotmer Mafia figure in Jtaly. Some of the bookmalen p- pr ched "'wen: 5eared," he 1d. ..The imponnnt thing here 1 that book.in kcrs 1n Southern alifomia re not organii,ed ... We ha\le man· ged to keep orpni.ztd cnme from doi thJlt:• he id. r. t doa•a you llkt'! Call &he , &ran crlbed and d Uv rH Designed, finished Installed 31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters I FINEST QUALITY SHUT f ERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT FACTORY . DIRECT PRIC I c.I {714) &4W841 or 548-1717 HEJllWOOD MUUFACJllY