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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-11-06 - Orange Coast PilotThe prosecution's re-t1 quest t~at jurors be taken ; to see the remote desert raveslt of twQ..Anahelm teen-agers has been de- nled ./ A3 ' . A massage parlor In a famlly shopping center rubs the H.untlngton &each City Council the ¥ff Ong wax. so lt'sdlsap: proved./A3 California An LA reporter was kid- napped by a gunman who threatened to 'blow his head off.' I AS Dixville voters ~Ive R'e- agari a 29:fl 'landslide' · vlctory,shortly after mld- nlQ_ht~olltng./ AS Re-agan and Mondale blitzkrieg the voters with a flurry of last-minute TV advertisements./ AS :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: World Rajlv Gandhi promises compensation for Sikh victims of Hindu rampag- ing./ AS Six black South Africans are killed during latest rioting./ A4 Mi nd&Body Does the U Series medi- cation providat.eUeU~ Down's Syndromevic- tims?/8 1 If you ever need knee surgeiy, ask your doctor about u$lng the arthroscope./81 .;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Sports O~n View Hlgh's Kelly Stovall ls the Daily Pilot's prep foot ball player of the week after leading the Seahawks to a 34-14 win last week./C1 CI F water polo action begins Friday andlfle pairings have defending champion Newport Harbor at home./C1 Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach have drawn home court as- signments ~n the first round of girls volleyball playoffs./C1 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Entertai nment The · 'empty, nest".is re- filled In a new dramatic comedy.-at 1ne West- minster Community Theater .I A 7 ·•·•···•···•··· .... ·•·•·•·•·•·······•···•·•···•·······•···•·• ..... ··---.~·.~ .............. ;,/';.,.,.,,,..•.•.• .. •.•.•.•.•.•.·.· .. ········. Business The biggest election Issue for most Americans Is takehome pay: Jobs, taxes and lnflatlon./C3 ~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::: INDEX Erma Bombeck Bridge Bulletin Board Business California News Cluslfled Comics Crossword Death Notices Help Yoursett Horoscope Ann Lendera Mind end Body Mun.rat Fund• National Newt · Opinion ' Paparazzi Police Log Play Review Publlc Notlcet Sport a Stock Marketa Tetevl9'on ThMtert Weather World Newt , . B2 C6 A3 C4-5 A4 B3-8 C6 B6 B3 B2 85 82 B1-2 C4 Ao4 AS B1 A3 A7 83 C1-2 ce 82 A7 A2 A4 . -• t:-. moderate Oellr ,..._. pttoto 1tJ NcflMd IC- EarJy-mom l ng votera line up at 7 a .m. out.aide the Graham realdence at 1106 Red ding ~ve. In Coeta Mesa. Anchor used in suicide Reg!_strar redicts 'Tow' 74 percent turnoutat _polls By ROBERT HYNDMAN Ol*-0.., ......... Voter turnoul appeared modetli.e throughout Orange County this morning as voters entered pollin' places on l'ietr way to what the cou.nty Registrar of Voters pred1c1cd would be a 74 percent turnout -low for a pres1denual elecuon year. The Registrar's office reported a turnout of about 23 perctnt of the county's reg1Stered voters at J I a.m. this morning. Dunng the 1980 sen-.... eraJ election. the 11 a.m. count wu about 25 percent 111 Orange-<.:ounty; thnmatcvocer turnout that-:year.._.. 78 percent. Locall). a ~teady sJream of votcn chose among candidates and 17 state in111at1ves at polhng stations Lbroup - out the. Orange Coast. (Information on polling stations and voung procedures may be oblained by calling 834-2244). At Uni versity High School in Irvine. elecuon workers reported 23 voters 10 the first 21 minutes. " The drawing card in Irvine and throughout the area seemed to be the pres1den11al race. Said In ine's Randall Paul, who - 'oted for President Reagan, ··1 think he's the man, not only for the nation (Pleue eee COtmTT I A2) Mobley ' coke crew gets long Death prompts off er to proVide crossing guar.ds T t afftc connntssioJ 1 ~af-Get,..J.9.,.----.--.,..-·...,.-­ l The tomm1ss1on 1!> scheduled to c:ons1d er the guard 1!>suc at its meeting Wednesday morning at 8:30 a.m. uba di\ crs in Newp0n Beach found the bod) of a man who apparently killed himself by wrapping a chain and an anchor a un r~~:qmrgnffthr end of the Newpon Pier Monda) jail ter_..._m_s __ ----also to consider ---city-paid position --_.___ 8y TONY SAA VEORA A week after a founh-gradei was killed in a traffic accident while walking home from a Costa Mesa elementary school, the city offered to tram. equip and insure volunteers to serve as crossing guards for the school. While iss uing the invitation, the Ctt y Council on Monday also em- powered the Costa Mesa Traffic Commission to post a c1ty-pa1d crossi ng guard at the 1ntersect1 on of 18th Street and Place ntia A venue. where 9-vear -o Id J oelSayder...w~.b.tt .Irvine 's cat lady pleads no contest By PHIL SNElDERMAN Of , ... 04111y l'llot llafl The auomey for Nahcy Jane Ellis, the Indiana woman who was charged wtth animal oruelry and neglect after she bro\lgJli more than 130 pets 10 Jrvineiif'a Jampacked motor home. ~1d today Iris client hould ha ve fought th.e diarges in coun. Instead. the 37-year-old woman pleaded no .contest Monday before·· Orange County Harbol"-M unic1pal Coun Judge Bnan Can er. One count of animal cruelty wBS dropped. Caner sentenced Ellis to two years informal probation and $340 1n fines on the remaining charge. Informal probation means that City Traffic Engineer Rocle Miller said the council's action MoJ\day was a time-saving step to answer parents' pleas for a guard at the intersection. crossed by many children attending Whittier Elementary School. Miller e>.plaincd the site docs not have enough t1e h1cle traffic to quahf) under state guidelines for the cit) to post a guard. The commission was give n authority last spnng to post crossing guards only in places where pedestrian and veh1c!1 traffic surpassed the lim11s set by the state. However, the commission. with the council's approval. can sidestep those guidelines for locations having "unusual circumstances." _Miller .said Snyder's death wouJd (Pleaee He IRVINE/ Ai~ Nancy Elli• and friend The man was 1dent1fied as '-:--:-:-"-:---------:::::::;::=====~;-11c-nainii1ID 1ltk Henson. 3:!. of nta push the 1ntersccuon of I !Sth Street and Placentia A venue in to that category. ·'rd be awfull} surprised 1f this came out any other way ... said Miller. who will be dehvenng the council's message to the commission Wednes- day Although cit y officials are taking quick steps to answer the parents' "request. Miller said there may still be a few hurdles down the road. He explained the city 1s ha ving problems recruiting applicants to be crossing guards. Only six of the seven crossing guard pos1t1ons appro' ed last May have been filled. Fe Spnngs. according to Newpon Beach Officer Tom L1 ttle. Several witnesses reponed see- ing the man Jump off the pier in the pre-dawn hours Monda) but an in1t1al undef°\.\'atcr search was called off because of poor water v1sibiht). L11tll-~•d The scarth was resumed later 1n the da\ Henson rcponedl~ lr'tt a su1c1de note and a page from the Bible at his parent"s house. police said. The man''\ car wa.., found parked at the ba..e of the nl\ pier Police said the mjn\ mother contac ted "'ev.. port Bcac h (Pleue eee PlER/ A2) By STEVE MARBLE OllN~ ......... .\ dozen members ol Alan Moblcy"s Huntington Beach-based ·,oca1ne nng ~ert given maximum ~ntences Monday and federaJ pros- ccutOP• said the stiff terms should "'ri ng out a messa~ .. to others in the illegal drug hu mess ·· .\n~one out there thmlang of getting into the drug busrness should ta l..e a lool at this case. Therc·s a lot of people here who are gomg to spent a good pan of their It ves in places that aren't very pleasant," Ass1st.ant U.S. .\ttorne) John Kura y said. Moble}. a ~4-year-old graduate of Fullenon High School who once had amb111o ns of being a lawyer, sat in federal court 1n Los Angeles Monday (Pleue llfJe' COD I A2J Water districts report no gripes on ·chloramine Most phone calls so far seek advice on c hemical's effect on fish in ta nks By TONY SAA VE ORA Of llM OellJ l'McK ltelf The stream of questions about chloraminc has tapered. said local water depanment officials this morn- ing, a day aflcf the d1s1nfcctant was added to water d1stnbuted b} the Metropolitan Water D1stnct. Orange Count)' MWDoffic1alssa1d nearl) all the water used on thl' Orane1 Coast. at o ne 11mc or another. comd from the giant water whole- saler. .\ftcr o;pending the past few month\ not1f} ing and educating Orange Coa t customers about the ne". morl' effectt ve d1s1nfcctant. local "a1er depanments said the) had not re- ceived an} complaints on the ta,tc m reports of an \ prnhkm' with thl· water The chlor,1m111c .1 ml\tUrl' nt chlonne and Jrnmcima. "a.., in· trodUCt'd tO thC ~1\\ ()"« \\3lt"I ~upph Monda~ morning to l..l'CJl thl "atl·r free of )U<;;pcded l ancer,.o1u\ln(! agents. Pre' iou'h thl' "atcr "a' punfied "Ith onh lhlonne Before the Wdh h Jn l'\ICn\I \'\' public awarcnc)' .:ampa1~n "·'' launched tn M\\ n .tnd ltKal dqMrt ments, ~aminj 1h.ll 1he chlorJminl' mu!:lt he filtcrn i nul ol ''JH•r 11-.t·d h' k1dnC\. d1al\ .. 1~ JlJllCOI<; and in fl\h tao ks· · Ja, Mnhno"'"' Jn \1\\ n 'fl''"l '- man: said thl' l'On' cf'1 on ''J' runnin~ 'imoothly. "llh tdenhonl' lall' trnm l On1.erned customers fa Iii ng to a tml..lc -\nd in terms complaints of taste c1r tish l..11ls. I'm not a"are ofa single one ·· said Mnhnowsk1. "People are <.1111 l·alling w11h ques11ons. but the In els-ha' c decreased ... John Hampton, Fountain VaJley "ater supcn ii.or. said calls h.avc fjllen to ma\be three or four in the flJ\l loupk '-'eel..'\ "1 he h1gges1 question we're &elltQ& "ahout fish and we·rc l"C('()mmend- tn(! the' 1.ontal t pet stores." H:imrton ~•d He Olltt•J the ut' 's 16.000 cus- tom1.•r., u\uJll) get th.cir btggest sht~ ment ti f MWO v.ater dunng the 'urn mer month\. "llh '1rtually all 1hc.:1r "at.er "4lm1ntt horn loc•I v.ell in 1hc \\tntcr In \ic" rxm Reach. nearh all the \\.atcr no" mg throujl}l the taos of the (Pleaee eee QU1tSTIOlf8/ A2) • • • • ! • • Will bell return 9 _0 m1ll1on .1n U.S. expected Wi th. swallows? to cast t.he1r ballots today Polls predict decisive Rea an victory: prestdenf 'has a shot' at a ll 50 states -.... By DONALD M. ROTHBERG ,,,,........... .. Amcncans voted today after flnal campai&Jl •P~•I~ 1n which Prcs1dcn1 Rcapn a kcd for renewal of h1' conse rva uve mandate. sayina ··our work is no1 fin1 hed," while challenger Walter r. Mondale de- fined the clecuon Bs a rboicr between "d ency" and "sclf-tntcrt'lt.~· Fortta$ts v.crc that more than 90 million people v.ould ca t b:illot'I, and op1n1on pon 'l\crt u~n1mou< 1n prcd1ct1ngthat a ~hd ml\jonty ""'ould 11"c the Republican p~ 1dcnt a second four· car term. # Thett wa rain "' the Nonhv.cst and olona parts of the F.ast Coa t, but the forccu' ""~°" tood hcf... n'uch or the nat1on f.arl~ voter \ t.umout "ti.d nbcd a fairl}' he ") 1n several Mtd~c tern and Southern states Mondak and the vice preiYden11nl candidat~ -Republican George Bu h and ()(mocrat Cicrald1"e er- raro -~ett amon the earlv "oten loda) Req;an ~•' "otang ·later 1n 1hfom11. '1ondf1t and hie. family "-<'l"C up early to "ote Just after the pol111 opened at the North Oaks Rct'ttM1on C'tn1er on a cool, sunngminnc ta momtna. lie mc1Clf la• mom· (PleaM Me V 8/ A2) 4 • . ' .., 6 ... . - Needl e reported in HalloWeen candy Cloudy and cooler along Coast-Police' plan to ·ra)' a double handful of candy. lb" remains of an Irvine &irl's Halloween plunder bc-~·ausc she S3)S she found a ~wmg needle an a cand)' bar. Police took a half-eaten M1l~y Way bar, 11 wrapper and ubout 20 othe1 Pl<'CC'i of candj from th<' 9·><'ar-old a1rl Monday aficr her mother. Su$8n n<' Patafio, reported the child found a needle' embedded an the Milky Wa). CoNTINUE O S10 R1Es lr111nc Lt Al Muir termed the incident a "single episode" and said, other than check.in& the other candy, there 1s not much mo1c the police department can do. Patafio told pohce her daughter had gone tnck-or-treatang 10 1hc neighborhood around her farrugut treet home Halloween night. But the child could not remember where she was given the candy bar, Muir said. "There seems to be wmc pecu- lation G$ to how the n~dle got in there." he S.'ltd. 1 he awl. whose nnnic wa n't re- lea11ed. wa!> not hurt by the needle and had eaten ~veral o ther Milky Way bal'\ lxforc finding a nl·edle 10 thc-ln\t one. M u1r ~1d "Wl·'n: no1 dl\~·ou1H1ng her ~tOI) .ti this point. out we'll probabl) br que'>t1onang her add111unall} •• Coas tal MMlly ttoudy IOftlOlll Ptt11y ~ Wecin.eday C001w c1e, ... in IMO"• as 10 T2 WeCl.-Sa~ lowt IOtMQlll ~2 10 ez ftcwn "°"'I <::onc:41C)lo0n to the .... , '"" Uo<o. 1111<1 out eo 111.... ,,,,_ wel.,1 LIQlll •11114>01e WlnOa lhtOUi/" Wedne.Oay ••C9'l1 aout"--1 to _. ""°'• "'''" a 10 3 •001 ""1\0 w•-Wedneaday WHl .. ly •wetlt 1 lo 3 IMI ,_,,ly ciOudy llltOUQll Weonetd•y 0u1 ... wfl•• we111 to nor11\-1 wlndt t6 lO 26 ~nota IOflloltl ...0 Wednesd•y Combl...O .... 4 10 8 1 .. 1 t~rMt1119 10 6 10 12 1 .. 1 by Wt111- dey P•rUy ,1ovoy • l110e Moc;I< .. •U Loe:r 12 •2 l-lfl H 3• !Hn\llllla .. ., M.wN8Mcll" IO .. ... .,..,_,,.. .. '° H Mpla 51 P...i 40 22 Nlllh-lb M -Of....-11 14 H -York " &3 NOtlOH< V• .. ., Oillthom• Cttt " 41 ~ 62 35 Ofl#ldo 14 H • "•"" $1>'"'11• " ~ Pt11l•Oelpn11 .. Pno.tilll . .. " P1ll1bu1h 67 J9 PQllltn .M• ~ 30 Porlll!lO.Or &1 47 Pro•od~e 81 41 87 0 COKE CREW DRAWS STIFF TERMS •.. =:'3" C11y 56 22 Rine> Ill 40 RlcllmOnC N 46 From Al l'\Cn though h~\ b<'ntern:ing date "as po~tponed. - Moblc) 's sen1enc1ng was dela)ed belause his attome) is 1n,ohed in a inal 1n Te>.as. Prosecutors said 1he) .intil·ipated Moble~ will be sentenced "ithtn thc next two wed.s. Mobley faces 45 year' 111 fedc tal pmon and a special ltfe11me parole l hose Sl'ntenced belonged to what 1s belu.'\Cd 10 be the largc~t cocaine nl'l\\Ork 1n Orange Count' and the rgc'>l cocaine nng C\er pro<.ecuted on the ~est Coa!>t. Monie)·., group moH.'d more 1han .i ton of cocaine 1n10 Orange ( ount) la!>I )t'llr. lcdt'ral drug agen u. said. The nng was smashed an a mass1vt' raid la t spnng. Of the 31 people ind 1cttd after the raid, 12 were ~ntenccd last month. 'two were sentenced durin_g the sum- mer and four remain fugitives. Three of the fug1t1vcs. all of whom are beheved,.to be hading an their native Colombia. arc related to Mobley through marriage. The harshest sentence handed down Monda) wa s to Mark Mcfarlane. 29. of San Clemente. Mcfarlane. a major cocaine dts· tnbutor for Moble}. was gl\ en 15 )Cars 1n federal pnson and a special 40-year parole term. Unhl..e a '.>landard parole term. a repeat otlender on special parole 1s returned to pnson to serve the entire number of) cars specified on parole. "If someone $Cts 40 )ears <;pccrnl parole and hl' violates parol<:; dunng his '9th ~car. he sttll goe!> back lO pri<.on ahd \crvc .. all 40 >cur,:· Kun1y '\atd. "It\ prett} tough." Ga, en I S-)ear pn!>on tl·rm' wi th added '>r>cc1al parole term' "l'rc Wilham McCah1ll. 25. ot Uun1111gton Beach. Ronald Congelher<.·. 'O ol Brea. ( llflord Bruce Ca~ ... of Nl'"- port Beach. Edgar JoSt' Ramm·1 '8. of M1am1 : Lu1\ J. Rcmepo. JO ol Maam1. and John J. Monto>a. 24. of Canoga Park. Tides TOOAY =~ 2~pm 00 80~pm 44 F1r11 low ~l'.DHllDAY 138am I 3 Are:,:::yn 7 S? am p Sec '°"" '34 pm 02 Seeo<1d n1gn 41pm 4 2 Sun ..,,, IOOay 11 4 641 µ "I ,._ W.OneMl•y •I & 1e • m eno Mt• 11g1in al4 55 pm MOOll ,,_al 4 07 O m Mii W.OnM clay e1 • t9 • m An<! ,,_'"II"'" et • a:i, pm Temperatures HI lo AutlNI 8altlff\OI• B..-mingNm a. .... .,c;:1. 8olM Bot1on S..llalo Cupet Ct\611•11on 8 0 CllarlHlon,W II C111r1011e N C Cneyenrte CIWCl!go Clnc:onna11 Cteveteno Columble SC Cotumbu• Oh Concoro NH 0.Uat·Ft WOflll Oey!on o...-Del MOln&I DelrO<I Ou1u1n 73 6l 67 eo 411 511 53 SI 73 80 63 48 •o 57 •8 10 541 541 71 St 57 4~ 48 !12 47 43 38 19 43 51 311 ~ 40 43 30 n 32 38 42 3T 34 42 lt 32 JO JS 18 EtPuo F•••bano Fargo F111g111tt Or•nd Raptd~ Ore11f'•ll• HartlOfd Helen• • Honolulu llOUtlon lncjotnapollt Jet "'°" M• Jac:I< lonVllle Juneau Kantu Clly lHllega1 "" 1(1 )8 68 •s 49 80 49 es 11 !>() 7 I 7J 40 51 13 SllCIAIMMO ea $4 ,, ~°"'' SI Pel .. TiMi)i 55 82 32 $1 6111 l .... C.ly 67 42 San AnlONO 711 41 4J San 0oeoo aa 115 11 S1nfr~ e6 S7 ll S1n Jlllln PR 81 76 j() SI SI• Marie 38 28 37 s ....... 52 4S '.IO Shr..,9PC)lt ,. 42 411 Stou• Faus 54 23 29 SpOliane 411 38 76 SytKUM 56 41 52 Topeu 83 30 28 luCIOfl 88 ~ Jfll:r lul .. 70 38 ~· W11n1ngton ., es 48 39 W~lta 8A 32 32 W1I~• Barre 80 45 SI W1lt!ll1'19IOtl 0e 89 ., OINCTIOH PIER SUICIDE ... Belen Puerta Machado, Mobley 11101hcr·m·law. wassentenn·d 10.Clibl years in federal priso n. Her husband and two sons are amoung the fugt tl\eS Alblny AlbuQUf!fQU4! Amat1llO ~e 65 ~1 43 311 Extended 40 LOCATION Hun11ng1on Beach RI-.r.11y. N-1 40tn StrMI Newport 22nO SlrMI. N1wpor1 Batboa Weoge - Laoun• BeKh llU 1·2 1·2 t·2 t.2 1.2 1·2 1·2 flit PQOtlolaw poor 10 , .. , poor to l•or poor 10 flllr From Al au1hon11es earl) Monda) to report that her son·s su1c1dc note said he intended 10 drown himself at 1he Wedge. a popular body surfing spot at the tip ofrhc Balboa Peninsula ' • 1 he mother said hl·r .,on had hall a lifelong )lrugglc with mental d1s- orde~ but appeared to be in good spmts the da) before the apparent su1c1de. according to L1llll'. ~ Four other\ lrnl..ed 10 Mobln through the ccx·a1ne nng wcrl' gl\ en lesser '4.'ntcnce-. Moble' ·., "-tfc and '>l!>tcr \.\-<.•re <,t.•ntenced lasi month Anchor~ 31 24 All111lt 67 . ' P1tlly clOU<IV wllh cool d1y1 Hight Al"'111C C•ty 72 55 &S to 7:l LOW1 48 10 ~ CONTINUED STORIES I_ -- - -- S111 Clemen1e Wit., lflff>O 62·64 Swell <11rec:11or1 M>ull'l-1 poor poor 9,!!!STIONS ABOUT CHLORAMINE .. JS VOTERS CHOOSE PRESIDENT TODAY ... From Al Ctt ) \ ll.000 customer!> 1s imported from 1hc MWD. '><ltd adman1s1rnt1\.e d'-'>istant Bob Dixon. "We haven't had an} comm1:nt'> or calh )Ct.'' said D1A.on. "ho adllt.'d 1ha1 prior to the change. the ct l} "'a' H'<e1.,. mg questions C\ Cl) da} Karl Kemp, e-xecu11vc director ol the Mesa Consolidated Water Das· tnct. a~reed the concern over chloram1nc had prc·m much died. although 11 had once dominated discussion in the d1stnc1. "We probably had more calls in the last fc" month\ about chloramine than about rate increases:· said Kemp. adu1ng that roughl) half the distnct's water \uppl} is from the MWD. The dl\tnc1 ~rves about 22.000 customer\ 1n Costa Mesa. Newport Beach anll at John Wa)'nc A.1rport Etc Vator!>kt. water superv1!>or for tht.· <.'ll} of Huntington Beach. wa\ uncon<.'erned about th'c Ol'" purifier used b) thl' MWD \\1th the nl) prepanngtod 1ga nc" $335.0<Xl"atei "ell. Vn1oro,l.1 pred1c1ed Huntington Beach "ould n01 hi.' 1mpurt1ng a' mul'h v.ater from the MWD during !>ummcr month!> dS 1n th~ pa~t Trad111onall). the n t} USC'> up tu ~2 percent MWD water in the \umma and almu\I none 1n tht.• v. lnll'r hl' ~aid 1ng to reporters. but son Theodore you on our farm'i. 10 our inner c111c'>. dl·rndc and beyond." dt.·<.·lared . "We've taken an earl> lead or working an oldcr'lndustnes not )C t 1 he president added. "Four years 111 North Oaks:· back on 1hc1r feet." ago.1nt1a11on. taxes. interest rates and Bu'h and his wife. lfarbara. stood Mondak·., clo\lng Jppcal \\a!> in a u1me "ere all going up. Tonight 1n lane for 17 minutes in Houst<>n. five-minute rnmmen:1al. broadcast thl') 'r1: rnming down. Confidence. then \Otcd in a real estate office ··1 11 t1ml''> Monda). an whKh he <>atd. jOb\, 1nH'itmcnt. growth, and did the nght thing:· he told reporter~ 'Td rather Ix· an underdog 1n a achu:,ement in our schools were all later campaign about dt.•ct.·nc~ than to ~ going down. No"'. they· re going up." Ferraro' oted 1n a public school in ah.cad in a campaign onl~ about sclt· The Democrats \llCnt into the ha nc4ghborhood 1n Quecno;. N Y. 1Mere$1:· election "11h control of the House b) "Yes. we're vel) opt1m1s11c." she Mondalt.· campa1gn 01Tic1als said 11 a 266 to 167 margin, with two toll.I reponcrc,. ··w e're gu1ng to pro' e ..., a\ the b1ggc\l l'Omm1:rcial bu~ uf th e \ acanncs. The Republicans took tht.• pollster~ wrong." Shl· fla~hed a <.ampaign but the)' refused 10 d1sdose lontrol of the Senate in ·the Rcag.an thumb., up signal the lO'>I. I he Reagan campaign sail.I land'>ltde of 1980 and their majority Franll. J Fahr<:nkopl Jr the Re-$7511.000 wa., .,pent for the time 10 .,too<l al 55 JO 45. puhlt<.an national chairman. wld a hrualka'>I hi'> U>mmcrual In the I htatcschoosinggovcrnors. hu\1nc.,,men's forum in War.hmgton The tonll'"'" lor onitc~ great and '>l'H~n no" are Republicans. six arc IRVINE CAT LADY IN COURT ... 'From A l Eilts "' 1ll l)tll h<J\l' to repon regular!~ to a probation ollicer <;he faces up to <,I\ months 111 Jail. ho"ncr. 11 '>he breaks an) laws dunng her probation. ...f.Ul5..duln'11llP.w:..ar1,n,thl' Ne"Q.Qrt Beach cuunroom. and thl' no·c0fl1ec;t ' pica w.as .en tcre.d b} Iler auoroc~-C... Thoma!> McDonald. The no-conte)t pica wa!> n changt.· from an earlier pica of innocent. "I thin!. she should ha\.C gonl· 10 tnal .. McDonald said toda' "I 1h1nl \he "as not guilt) of the olTenscs .. But the altorne\ ..aid Elli<. decided against fighting the l'hargC\ because she did not "'ant to lace the '>Ires<; of a trial anll acl'ompan)tng m'"'" c.ov· eragc ··<iht.· JU'>I v.antcd to put 11 behind her:· ~11.Donalll said The a11orne' \aid he doc.-, not knov. .... h1:ther Ellt'> I'> \111111\ mg in Orange Count' Ella!>· legal probkm\ tx·ga n .\ug. 22 when animal rontrol ollicers 1n I n ·inc 10\ est!&:!llO.&_ reports ol a \trongodor. checlccu Tler mo1orlllin1C: "ht.ch ~ parkt!<l al a loc.:aJ .i.hupping center Officer\ M:11cd more than 130 pct dog'>. cats and rabbm that hall been cro"ded into the 'l'h1clc during Ellt\' croc,s-<:oun111 JOUrnl') from Indiana Man\ ol the animals requ1rell treatment for hcalth problem!> ap- parent!) related to thl' d1flirnlt tnp and the cramped quJrtCf\ ')omc later d1cll. The animals "'ere treatl·d and boarlled at the l't t) ·.,animal '>helter and at a pn vatc pct hospital. ln Octoher. when the hoarding l'hargcs C\l'l'l'ded 201100. Cll~ oflln<il\ l'x•g.in ollcnn(! r lits' animals lor .. nle ln1ne animal <,\'nttl''> supt.·nl\ur Carl l'agJno \atd toda) Ellt'> '>1111 O\\e\ thl· l'tl\ about $12.000 tor hoard and ml·ditaT'l:11 l' 1l iwr--anlmal~ He-.,aid he wa<. not cena1n of 1~1c uty'\ plan\ tor colln·1111n Pagan11 \.l1d .1fh·1 ihl' a11em pi.. lo t.,l'll I Ill\. an1m.1l<. ''l'r<.' tnndul.11.·d mort• than !(0 tat'>. \e\en dog\ anll fiH· rahh1t<, rl·m;unl'd un.;old \1nte then hl' said. all of the rl'ma1n1ng dog'> amJ rahhll\ and man) ol the rnl'i ha' l' hcl'll pl:Ked in home\ through lhl' animal \hdter'<, pct adnpt10n. program I-fr \:J1d 'omc ol the remainmg <.'31!> h<l\e hl•cn g1"en to other pt.•t agcnne., for plal·enH~nt. and ahoul IS n·ma1n at 1 hl· I rvinc '>helter. that the Gop·., 1atc~t poll~. n1mpletcd 'mall. trum lhc White HoU'>l' to lxmtll'ra1' Na11onw1dc. J5 of the \.iunda~ n1gh1. c;howed Rl·ag.1n "tth a ru·unt\ tourthousn. cost about SI .~ guH·rnor\ arc Oemocrats and 15 are .!CJ pcrl·cnt lead. h1ll1on anord1ng 10 Herbert .\le\· Rl·nuhltlans ···~l.·\l. gut a '>hot Jl 50' '>la l<.''> he Jnder J l 101\er\ll) of Southern ,,11d. but added that Mondale "wuld C altlornia pol1t1eal sc1encl· proll·,~or . Rl·agan campaign <,pokcsman \~In li\e or,., state'>· lk.d1d 1101 fhe f-edcral f-lcl'tton Comm1ssllln Jame<i Lake said the president's polls n.anu:...ilicm__ . p.utlhc..iabfur1£ckralrac1·s at.lilOI.c.._ ~howt.•d htm with a lcad of 19 to i!O former Prl"\llknt J1mn1\ < aner than $1 b1llton. pc>int'>. R eagans po ster lcnaro \\'il\ arwtlwr t•arlv 'Oll'r 111da\ W l•:tr-Reagan 'J'Cn-l hi\ la5.t l·ampaign lla) Winhlin predi ted Reagan would get 111g JCUlh .and a ttcnim Jach ·i. ( am·r 1n Ca hfornaa. Al the stale Capitol )I.) percent urthe vote. rnlll' a h1nrk to the poll'> 1n Plai n' where he \<.•rvcd eight )Car; as 'ic.,.eral late polls showed Reagan's < '" go\ ernor Reagan o;aid ha~ top pnont) margin narro"'ing. but 11 remained \\ h1k nrx-rh talll.ccJ about a turn· during <l '>l'rnnd tl·rm would tx· lormidabk '\Washington Post-AB( nut of SS J)\'rn·nt ol thc ehgablc \Otero;. ..peace. cJ1sarmamcn1 anll the rcdur-Ne"' poll taken Saturday through lOmpared to 52.6 perl'cnt lour }Cars twn of "orld nuclear weapons:· Monda) 'ct Reagan's margin at 14 ,1go. the ntcnt ol part1opat10n "'on·1 Mondale ofTcred a .-.harpl} con-percentage points. 54-40 with 6 Ill' l.no"n until P<>ll' l'IO'>l' lrom trast1ng view. If Reagan gains a re· percent undc1:1dcd. The margin was l'a~tcrnmo!>t Maine to I fawa11 and election landslide. Mondale told a thc same a~ in ti!> polling taken Fnday \laska Loe; ..\ngelc5t ra lly. "they'll call 11 a through l)unday, which showed a Their la'>t <,pcechec, dl'1111ered. the h1c;toncal mandate. Do you really decline from 18 points in a s1m1lar ' d h d poll concluded last Thursday. prc'>1dcn11a lan idall''> returm·d want tu g111c t cm a man ate to turn Poll!>tcr Louis Harris fou nd an Monda} night to their homcc; -their backs orl those who are suffering Reagan to hi\ < :iltforn1a ranch anll in America')~ cvcn smaller I I-point margin for the \1ondak to hi\ hou\e outc;1de 'it In the dosing day\ ofh1s campaign. presidl·nt. down from 16 points last Paul. Minn. -to' otc a ml then await the Dtimocrattc challenger repeatedly week the returns. dcl\cnbed himself as "a full -employ-•\ poll b} the Roper organi7ation In addition to the prt"itdcn11al race. ment Democrat" and "a people''> put Reagan ahead b)' 10 points this clectton wao; d<.'ll'rmining 33 Democrat." na11on\\1dc. but a New York Times- COUNTY VOTING TERMED MODERATE ... From Al -the "orld 1famonnan un11r the "'orld on the nutlear program he·., the onl' \\hu can do 11 rhc mJn '" hc1nc'>t . hl·'c; v.mk1ng inward a hal- ant1.·d hudgl'I I lttulll go on for W minute\ ... < hm Wh1tlut.k 11f llunt1ngtnn Ht•alh Jgrn•d 11 \\J'> "drfin1td) the prl·~adcntial r3ll' .. that drc" ham to lht• I al.e\lrt•et rm·\1at111n lOlJ'>I hi\ hallot carh todJ\ "I 'ott.·d lor Ronald lh•agan ·· \.\.-h ilhKk \atd .. I tx·he\l' Ill \\.hJI he '>land'> for I lx·hl'\.e hr·., madl' our wuntr} '>lrong I alo,o bdte\.e four morl' )C<H' of hi'> adm1nl\tralt0n could \!art us on a path toward poht1cal <1tabtlity ·· Homer Kreps. elcct1on 1no;pector at the fire sta11on. ":>aid I here wa\ a 'trong earl) turnout at the polling place where 7SO Huntington Reach re\1· dent\ were chg1hlc to vote ".\bout 55 people haH \oled 1n 1hc lirst hour" Krcpc; \aid .. \nd we're \ec1ng a lot of~ oungl·r people 'otrng toda' which plea<ie<. us" In F-crum atn Valle\ l2-,car-11ld John Bo~d hall anoth·n opinion on tht· pre\ldt•n11al ra«e .. Rt•agan " not qualified I le'' not 4u1t·k enou~h on hi\ fctl und h1.··, an JVr~~ L1sTEN1Nc __ Just Call 642-6086 elitist.'' Re>)d \aid ou1s1dl' the \Ot1ng booth\ at Fountain Ho"I Rut he al'>o \a1d he d1dn·t like Mondale and would rather ha \ c .-,cen Ferraro run for pre!.1dent A.I tbe Cm ta Me'>a ( ti ) II all. I h uut of the 97() rcg1<,1ercd 'otcrs 1n the pret:inct had l·a,t th l'tr ballots within half an hour after the ~1a11ons opened lko;1dec, the a1ttnt1on lO lht' prl''>I· dent1al ratc < oc,ta ~esa voter\ aho had strong feeling'> on thl' < tt) ( ounul race which has hecome a fiiht bet"een bustne'>'> mterc'>l'i and some re<,1dents over tht.· future de· \.Clu.pmen1 of the cit) "I thin!. !ht• ran· wa., inlnc~ltng this time. "hat thq ·re going to do with thc future and how thq ·rc going to handle growth .'' \;.11d Kathleen <)urnn. 24 "I \Oted for the land1date'> who "-Ould ltm1t the gro"' 1h 1n ( mta Mc..a and not let 11 hctomc a m1n1·< ·cntun C11".. . In 1 ,1g1111,1 lk.u h "hnt· \oter., .,toprx·d ottat lhl' \outh < oa.,1 k" l'>h C enter on Hroadwa> bcforl' hcJd1ng tor w.ork. a11cnt1on wa'> al\o dircllcd to thl' I h tate an1tiat1 \'C'> on thc ballot Said Jcrn I-rad. a dcpartment c;1on· manager. "T hl· mo't 1mpunant 1n- ' ~nate scats. the entire makeup of the lkforc a llag-wa-.ing. cnthus1ast1c CBS poll said the margin was 21 lltilll\C I thought. "'a) the one dcahng 41~-mcmhcr Hou<,l' and 11 contests crowd in Mason C'it). Towa. Mondale points and a survey for USA Today ~11h ll·appomonment CPropm1t10n lor governor recalled that he gave his first cam· <,a td Reagan led by 25 points. 19l 1 llon't ltll.e the wa) the l>l'mo· One <;enator. J. Bcnncll Johnston. pa1gn '>pecch there alter announcing Republicans were encouraged by crat~ hJ \ c gerl) manderl·d thl' dt!it-D·La . wa'i assured re·-<.:kction when his candidacy forecasts of a big Reagan victOI) to tntt'I. .. he "'on a. non·partt'>an pnmary in Mondelk \a1d ht• returned there on prcdat·t a pack up of the 20 or so House And at 1he Nl'wport < t.·ntl'r BrJn1.h September In the House. 6~ incum-clcct1on cvc because ··1 wanted scat'> ti would take to restore the L1hran \I.here XO \Oler'> of the 471 bents _ 54 Democrat s and 14 o\menca 10 know know where I'm rnn\crvat1ve coalition that gave Re· n!~1s1crcd had cast thcir ballot!> early Republicans_ had no maJtlr opposi· coming from and where I'm gomg. ... agan 111ajon11cs tie nec:dcd for passa~e this morning. the loller~ in111a11' e lion. I want 10 reO crt our values here tn thc llf has ta' and budget programs his Propo\lllnn 17 was d1scuso;cd. In a ll·mtnull' tclc'.-1\10n com-great Midwest." fir'>l t"o )cars tn office. \aid John ~hiclds after '111'"& mercaal broadcast on the three major In ht'> closing commercial. the That coaht1on was broken tn the .. I'm c,1lk of thmc ads that <ia> 11\ Jn network!> Monda} night. Reagan said president 'latd. "I ask for your \Ole for -cc<.c<.s1on·)ear election of 1982 when immoral v.a) tu raise monc~ 1 a\l'\ l\merica had made an "amuing one purpose onl> -to complete the the Democrats picked up 26 seats. arc moral'' Monn 's monc\ fhl'\ comeback.·· Bui. he added. "We stall task we began together four years ago In the Senate, where there were 19 haH· them in Vrrmont and ·a lot ul have much to do -to make our .. We must con11nuc. not only into Rcpublic"n and 14 Democratic scats othl'r \latl·' 'o wh~ not hcrt·''" families morl· secure. to help many of the next four years but into the next being decided this vear. I hroughou 1 th« l·ount}'. l nmpa1gn ~!j!!j!!j!!j!!j!!j!!j!!j!~~~~!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~![!~!i]!~~!!~!!!!!!!!!![!!~ work1:r'> pa"l'd out la<1l·m1nu1c lttr ra-I turc. In I aguna Beach. for 1n.,1anl:c. -.oluntt.·ef\ lor t·ongre'i\lonal 1.·an- d1d1Ml' ( arol Ann Bradlord l'n- ruura!(l'd 1. U\lllml·r" of a rnlkl' o;hop 10 \ Cile .\nd in In 1n1.· R1adford <.·am- pa1gncr' "-CH' holding "gn<. .11 th l· C uht•r Jnd Jamboree ramp<, 10 th e ~an Diego r I CC\\ ;n Do7l'nc; of ac11't'>t., \I.Ith 1h1: '\l- ltant<.' lur ~un t\.al had plannl'd to d1<,pla\ "Sn' along the frt·e"a) a<,k1ng \ ot1:r<> tu 'upport an 1mrnl·d1atl' frel·1e on nuck<sr weapono;. SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUALITY SHUTTERS Designed, Finished Installed _J ==i -----.. I What do you like about the Daily Pilol'' Wbat don't you like" Call tbe number at left and your message will be recorded. transcribe~ and delivered to lhe appropriate editor. The same U·bour answering service may be used to reeord letters to tbt editor on any topic. Contributors to our Lette" rolomn must include their name and tt lf•phone number for verification. No <'lrrulation cnlls, plust. TeU Ulj what's on your mind. • 1111.rit ,£ '• f•' T ClrculellcM 714/842-4333 Dally Pilot Dell very la GuerentHd Daily Pilat CIHalfled edvertlalng 714/642-5,78 All other depertmenta &42-431' MAIN OFFICE ' I '· .... -.. Circulation TelephonH I H. L. Schwartz Ill P\J I> I' .I 1(" RoHmery Churchman r inlr(')Jlf'r Oonatd l. Wllll•m• ( r(' uJ, 1 fl -t.A 1ri.\qP.r • VOL. n , NO. 311 31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Stlutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ..• AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (71~) 548-6841 or 548-1717 HEIRWOOD MANUFACTORY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 ,. ~ .. •1 • ,. Buun1N B oARD 'Gift BaZaar' set Saturday A "Glf\ Bazaar" will be held 1n tbe P-1aZ:Mob1le ~uates Clubhouse, 3101 S. Fairview, S.nta Ana, on aturday. bca.innina at 9 a.m. . Residents of the mobile home park will display a barcty of handcrafts. In addition, there will be home· a cd goods, hot doas and free coffee. For more information, call Mollie KJeln at S49.2694. Art auction 11eheduled· Friday T~c California School PT A will hold an Art fahibiuon and Art Auction at Nei&hborhood Community Center. ll452ark.Avc..-CMta Maa,-on-Frida)";' 8 30A 7:30 p.m. preview will be followed by the auction at : . Tht:re will be complimentary hors d'oeuvres and refreshments. A donation of Sl per person will include door prizes. For more information, call 997-9999. Weir Canyon trek Saturday Mignitory birds and other wildlife, archeology and I nd1an history will be discussed on a Weir Canyon ''Walk- aJona" on Saturday at 8 a:m. • The two-mile walk will beg.in at the end of Hidden Canyon Road in the Anaheim Hills and proceed along tbe western slopes of Weir Canyon. To get to the site, ao east on the Riverside Freeway, so uth on Imperial Highway, let\ on Nohl Ranch Road, left on Scrrrano. and ri&ht on Hidden Canyon Road. Parle at the end of Hidden Canyon Road. Wear comfortable shoes and a hat, and bring water. For more information. call Sea and Sage Audubon at 634-2246. . Sorority to f ete Founder•' Day Alumnae and collegiatesofSigma KapP,il sorority wilJ celebrate the 11 0th Founders' Day on Saturday at the Saddleback Inn, 1660 E. First St.,. Santa Ana. A social hour will begin at 11 a.m .. and lunch will be served at noon. The program wi ll include two ~pcakers: MarilyQ Mitchell, RN, will speak on Alzhejmer's Disease, and Carol Guthrie, a volunteer at Orten School, will speak on Dyslexia. '\. Tickets at SI 0 each are available from Mrs. Larry Graham by calling 963-9935. Toaatmlatreu chapter to meet The Huntington Beach Las Olas Chapter of Toastmistress is having a special membership c<>ffec on Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m., at 9537 Starling, Fountain By JEFF ADLER Of ... 0.-, .......... ~ . An Orange County Susxnor Court Judae Monda) denied a proS«ut1on mouon a k1na thu JUro~ con~1der1na fint-dearce murder charae aaam t former Costa Mesa ~ 1dent Fred Bcrrc Ooualas be liken to view the remote: desert arave ne in which the remains of two Anaheim tc:cn-aic au·1, were found. In den)'ina the motion, Judae Ronald Owen said he thought the jury wouldn't learn that much from visiting tbe grave ite in San Diego County's Anza Borrca.o State ' P;srk. The Judae pointed out chat thert wouldn·t be much more than" nd" at 1hc local.Ion cvcnulhc Lo~phy an the area had remained the same an the more lhan one year since the bodies of 19.year-<>ld Beth Jones and Marprel KrutlC"" 6, wert discovered. Deputy Distract Auorney Ton.Y Rackauckas asked the court to perm11 jurors to view the site as key protceuuon witness Rlchard Hs;mandei, 39, neared the end of hjs testimony. He said the jury wou ld be able to better understand he buned the ll1U afttt they had belCft killed by Dou,Jas. He si id ht rttUl'Ded oa w¥ll'il OC('I ions to make JUtt tht bodia ,. maincd buned DouaJI • who facet· t~ death pmahy a( convLcted, 111«utedoflLLnQ1tbetwo ..... l&Cl'I lO their dealhl by promdint IO .. y tl\cm if they would pose in Lhc dela1 for nude pholOSJ'lphs. H'Cmandet 1f> expect~ to be on die witnen stand •Jn. t~ as l>o\11119~. dtfensc attomc-y, Ocorit f>def'I., oontiaues his extensive crou-eumanatioo. 2-:-~M1a1se for Bren Center · Doctors have rajsed S2.S m1lhon toward c01l$U\ICtioe of the Donild Bren .Events C-el>t.cr at UC Irvine. · The lrvane Co.'s S~.000-Challcnse srant bu beca etceeded by 26 other pnvate donors. accordint IO a un1vers1ty s~kcsman. In addition. lrvane Co. chairman Donald Bren bu contnbuted SI mall ion to the center, which will become the home of the university's antcrc0llqiatc athktlc:I. - The center Wlll cost S 13.S million, $7. 7 million ol which wtlJ be raued by a student rec. Thc-uni~ersil)' will · provide $2 milhon needed to complete consU'UCtiou. UC lrvane Chancellor Jack Peltason predicts cJm.. wath JUSt SI .S m11l1on remaanin& to be raited. aroundbreakang should take place in January. The 5,000-seal center will be the fint on-ca.mpu1 buildmawith '8dcquate capacity to1losl111a'J{)nVen 9 spo~esman said. Funeral held Saturday for Andrew Marushok Funeral services were bcld~t ~for~ Gerald Marushok ofHunungton a retired Mariae Corps heutenan t colonel. who died W ~at Pacifica Hospital an Huntington Beach after a Iona illness. He Wll 64. Valley. Anyone interested in learning how to improve communication and leadership skil.ls. or..Jeaming .more ~--.-..­ about the organization, is invited to attend. There wiJJ be a brief informative program and refreshments will be serve~. For more information, call Velma Bolin at 536-2939, Darlene Chadick at 842-9569, or Pat Polansky Som 1n Plains, Pa., Mr. Marushok was a veteran of three wars who served in Wor1d War II. Kora ud Vietnam. He was awarded the Navy Commendation and the Vietnamese Cros~ of Gallantry. He tS'surv1ved by his wife, Virginia, and son, Mlchid Steven Marushok, both of Huntington Beach. Alto survi ving are his father. Andrew, of Pennsylvania; a sisier, Sophie Wolowich. of New Jersey, and a brother and sister an law, Dale and Joy Holker of Santa Ana. Huntington 'a new queen at 962-3179. Exhibit apace available Kelly Herman, who waa crowned M lH Huntln&ton Beach for 1984-85 Saturday, recelvn congratulatory ldaaea from her parenta, Kathleen and John Herman, f ollowtna her aelectlon at the Huntln&ton Beach Ht.ah School auditorium. Services were conducted 1n the Pierce Brothers BcU Broadway Mortuary Chapel in Costa Mesa. lntennent followed at Inglewood Parle Cemetery The second annual "Holiday Marketplace," featuring Irvine artists and craf\persons. will be held Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 17 and 18: at the Irvine Fine Ans Center. 4601 Walnut Ave., Heritage Park. A The event will be open on Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 4 o=-\., 00-Sunda~.~.m.--~ bC available for exh1buors at a coSt of $25 fhr bolb days. Also featured w1ll be food and all-da> entertainment for the entire family. For more information and to reserve space. call 552-1078 HB . 1 ocagnculturecalled _ ~IXt;S massag~ pa._r_o_r_._dl_sa_s_te __ r last wln.ter . Arthrldsbenefitannouncecl The Oranic County Branch of the Arthritis Foun- dation 1s asking for donation of cars. trucks. vans. motorcycles, or even horses. for a unique "Major Motion Benefit Auction" on Saturday. Nov. 17, in Anaheim. All donations arc tax deductible and the Foundation will gi ve the donor a leuer, describing the vehicle. which the donor may file with his lax return. All proceeds will be used to help in e fight against the nat19n's number one cri ppler: nhritis, through research education and patients ice programs. For more information, calHsabel Rose quist at 547-5591. at family sliopping Center Business owners say some shoppers won 't patronize center with ,adult business· By ROBERT BARKER 01 , ... o ... , ""°' ., ... The relocation of a controversial massage parlor to a .. family shopping center" wa s denied Monday night by th e Huntington Beach City Counc1l:- A n d Cou n c ilm a n Do n a population of 180,000 -a rauo ot 6. I I parlors lo I 00.000 perso ns. according to the repon. l ounnl. claiming that the 1na11al appro' al should stand because there was no appeal or challenge w11h1n 10 days. But the council members. who said they received reports of three law violations against the parlor at its' present site on Beach Boulevard. said the comm1ss1on acted properly by reconsidering its decision at itn Tm meeting. MacAllistcr. who Joined his col- leagu es in the ctnan1mous rejection of the move. av.ened there are too man) ~ parlors an Lhe cJty <dread) and that he "'Ill ..-.ork to reduce the number. The proposed shift of th e pa of Hawaii massage parlor to the shop- ping center at Springdale Stree t and Warner A venue was at tirst approved b) the cit) 's Planning Comm ission 1n September. Howe-.er. the com- mi ssion reversed its deus1on 1n October a lier a public outer} O\ er the~ dec1~1on. Hong is beang forced to vacate her present location b) a 1981 city ordinance that prohibits "adult busi- nesses" from being located ..-.1than 200 feet of residences. 500 feet of a )Chool or church and 10.000 feet of another adult business. E l ection cover age offered Tuesday, Nov. 6 .. We ha' e more massage parlors per cap1ta 1n Hunungton Bc:ich than Los Angeles:· MacAll1 ster said. Residents charged 1ha1 the "adult business" had no place 1n the shop- ping center· that contained an ice cream parlor. farnil> restaurants and businesses. Business people ~aid cus- tomers wo uld refuse 10 '1rn the center 1f the massage parlor were allowed. The shopping cen ter pro' ed to be a lcgall) accepted si te. cnt1cs sa). onl~ because ofloopholes. The) sa) a tlood control ch,nnel barel) separate~ the shopping center from nearb) homes b)' a little more th:in ::!()()feet and that the parlor "'ould have been prohibited btt.ause of the prox1m 1t~ of a school. exC"cpt that the school closed a few year; ago. KSB R 8lS 5 FM Saddleback Colleges radnr station. ~111 pro' 1de ckct1on result coverage begmnang al 8 p.m. Tuesda' • 9:30 a.m., Orange Coonty Board of Supervisors, Hall of Administration. I 0 Ci vic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. • I :30 p.m .. Oruge County PlannlDJ Commission. Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana. • 6 p.m .. Newport Beacla Public LJbrary Board of Tra1tee1. Newport Center Conference Room. Mac~lhster was refem ng to a police de panmcnt survey that show- ed Los ngeles v. ith a total of I 04 massage parlors and a ratio of 3.47 ma~sage parlors to I 00.000 people Huntington Beach ha~ 11 parlors and Tern Wedel and P J Schramel Wlll prov1de coveraee 1ntcr,per\C.'d "'11h Jail music unlll midnight with reports trom the Oran&e Count) Hall of Admin1stra11on in Santa .\na.. ~lu th Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa whe,re the rnunt~ Republican Part) has a VJctOry party scheduled and the from <\ssoc1ated Press. us1e Hong. owner ot 1he spa. appealed the decision 10 1he C'1t) l O\t•rag,t• "'Ill pick up again from 6 a.m to 10 a.m. Wednl's<lJ'.t' Bandits grab $200 in cash· at Huntlngton pizza parlor dozen mobile home owners whose trailcr,s ha 'e been broken into m the pa~t month. • • • Donna Hughes of Allcghen) Street reponed that someone broke into her garage between noon and 8 p.m. Sunda~ takang a motorcross bike. th'e front "'1 ndo"' "'as sma,shed l'arl\ Monda). · • • • Mark Jame' 'ihcldon. · 21. wa~ arrc~ted Mond:I\ on su~p1cion of being intoxicated in puhhc He ~a stopped an an alle) heh1nd I 00 Coast Hwy. Later, Sheldon ~as c11ed for possession oflc~s than an oun ce of Police arc sean;hina for two masked men who rdbbed a Hunt- inaton Beach pizza parlor Monday ni&ht. liuntioatoo ee.ch Lt. Jim Walker said tbe holdup occurred at Little Caesar's Piua, 1992 1 Beach Blvd. He said ..one man wearing a a black stocking mask pointed a handaun at a cashier and ordered him to sit on the floor. A second man, also wearina a stoclcina mask, reached over a counter and grabbed a brown bank Newport Beach Street. The bake was wonh S 150. • • • A 27-year-old Anaheim man was A Ruger handgun worth about arrested on suspicion of pimping and $250 was stolen from the glove box of two women were held on suspicion of a car parked oo the 200 block of 29th prostitution. Patrick J. Anhurs was Street. bcioa held today on $25,000 bail. • • • Arrested on su&~icion of prostation An oulboard motor valued at $980 were Clair Beaulieu, 30. a Fulllcrton was taken (rom a marina toraac area travel aaent; and Mary Anne Arthurs, within the past week, an Anaheim 23. an unemployed escon from man reppncd. Walter Barbour of Anaheim. Both women were held on Vista del Dia told pohec someone cut SS,000 bail. through a chain link fence to get at the • • • motor. Four Potted plants worth $40 were • • • stolen from the front porch of a A vandal cut a t'Wb-foot aa h 1n the re idencc on \he 600 block of convertible tO{> of a car parked on Manaold treet. Lado Park Dnvc between 11 a.m. • • • turday at I a.m. unday. R1chud About S 1.800 worth of 1ewclry was C. lnaold rtponed $9501n dam e to stolen from the bathroom of a has vehicle. rcSJdcnce on Vi~n~~ lrYlne More than SS,Suy wonh of car Police arrested nine moton ts on bag containing restaurant receipts. police reported. The robbers, described as white men an their 20s. fled with about $200. No 1nJunes were reported in the holdup. Fountain Valley maQJuana A "'oman let\ her purse inside her • • • unlocked car when she walked to her Police responded to a di\turoonee home in the 15000 block of Logan on Glcnne)re tr«t <1horth after ~ Court for five minutes. When she a.m. to find a man and "om.in )elhng m the: street. Nadine Junt' ( onnor ~8. returned. she found that her purse. was al'Tt'~ted on su~picion ot pubhC' contaanang $80 an ash and $25 an 1 miscellaneous ttems, had been stolen. mto,1ca11on and batter. on a po ice officer. Thieve m ·h~ndow to a ~ onh Coa'i~ Hi;h~a~ home "'as Bugna. 36. was arrested at I a.m. residence in the ()()()block ofEuchd htt b) t\\O robbers shor11) at\c:r Sunda) on Sycamore Creek. Terry trct't and stole a ladic · n ng. midnight Monday. The "i llm. who Lynn Pierce. 23, was arrested at 2:05 casscues and laee~ v!lued 111 s330. escaped out a back window. descnbcJ a.m. on Harvard Avenue and Ma in. Buf)lars stoic cash. JCWclr) and one of the suspects as a male. 26 to 'O Mark Louis Mc1ntel , 2S. was arrested stereo equipment with a total value of years old. S-foot-1 0. with a hca' > at 11 30 p.m Saturday on Executive $2,52 1 from a residence in thc 16()()() build. wc:anng a "'h1te shin and llgh1 Park and Maan . Francisco Mctal!o block of Mt. Fletcher. blue )tans The other su pcct wa~ Castillo. 21, was arrested at 8:55 p.m. • • • descnbed as a 28-year-old male. S-on Irvine C'enter Drive and Jeffrey Someone smashed a car \lotndow at foot-6. 140 pounds. with dark hair Road. Virginia Lesperance, 4 7. was La Hacienda and note S 1..200 in radio and ~ord. "'canng hi. ck dothC\ arrested ot I :40 a m. on ;.\irpon Way equipment. • • • and the 3n Dicao fiecway. Johtl Thae'c:" stoic a'Ud10 visual equip-Coeta Meu Anthony Bohne. 12. wa~ arrested at ment -.alucd at S 115 from a house: in \ 19-\car-old man \I.a\ arr"ted for l:~O a.m. on MacArthur Boulevard the 9000 blod of Warbler 1n\e 11p11on of bufllan Monda~ and Michel on O"m c n) -Ann · • • • ~f\erpohct matched ht 'h~s to• w t Loebe. 36. wa amsted at .1mborec mcooe tole a 14-canu n na that offootpnnh Jef\ out.,1de a Co to Me and Bmtol it owner lef\ on a counter at a home homev.here $5601n gun, were ~tokn • • • 1n the I SOOO block of La BaMta Pohcc-\: 1d Ste-.c:n ..\urthur C'1don· A petty ca h box -.a tolen from a \venue dunna a Hallowtttn pan' bu~ 29. of ('o<;ta Me\&. wu boo~ed bu11ne at 19762 Mc rthu r Blvd d be\ween 12 and.I f. m. Monda~ ' I---.... n-ch 1n 0 la 1esa CH)' Jail late: Mon I ) lf'I 1 ---llJlllll:'a connection v.1th the burgla1) earlief Kell \' Ham • 2 • wa am ted for Poli~ arrested V1, 11n . Luna that da) an the 1700 bloc\. of R~rs possession of man1uana Monda at trtbtl, 39, on susp1c1on of dn"''"I Platt. C1donbu!)appartnt1, "as i.ttn C'ul\.er Dnve and Deerfield Avenue under the 1nfluenct of alcohol Mon-an front of tfle home befort the 'tnh:n from an apartment Monday in the 800 block of Baker Street. Enlry "'a~ ~incd through a panly open kitchen window. • • • Damage to a glass door at BriJP ( unnangham Auto Museum, 2SO Baker t.. was esumatcd at $200 afttt an apparent act ofmahcious mischief late Mondll)' night. Police ..said 1M burglar alarm at the location was acuvated b) S'Omeone poking a stick through a ma1Jbo, openana an the door The suck knocked over a poMcard rack. tnpp1na the ala.rm. Police amved to find a V-sbaped cracL. on the door. Hunttniton Beacb .\ re ident of the 16300 block of rat~ Lane rtponed Monday that -;omeonc broke a rear window and tore a 5erccen to bufl)anz( her h me. The 1 included slC'rc::o equipment wonh S 1,000 andJewclry worth SI 00. ............ -Pn 1na open a garage door to enter, someone burglanzed a home Mon:. da' on the Q500 blO<'k of H1aht1dc oO\C Thc loss included jewelry "'Ofth S800. tcrco and TV equip. ment wonh $700 and'S140 1n ca h. • • • . r ntenna through an unlocked win- dov. ..omeMe bu11amrd a home Monda on the 9100 block of Delaware trttt The: loss included an U O tcle' 1-.1on \C't • • • .1. rt 1Jcnt of the 200 bloc:l of "' 1 hi ta trttt reported Monda) that someone stole her llaht blue 1973 Volks~aacn Bua from a_ sh pp1na l't'nter lot The lo~ )lr'IS tStamatt!d 1t SI .~ sterto equipmt'nt was stolen from suspmon of dnv1na under the 1n· three autos parked at 2040 Quail t. fluence of alcohol John Geo11~ The crook• broke into the cars by Buchana!\, 4, ..,., ·~trut I":~ ---tffttthlftl Wi~4: ~ MMtai...---a.m. toda)' on t'ulvcr Drive ancf'Maan A classic 1950 .. Roadster" bicycle . trcet. Ronald Charles Adam,, 24. itJtt .Pl • • • dcnLO day af\C'moon 'trtbtl wa \topped bufl)aa; ocxuircd. The 'tctlm is ~n1tr ~~re~ntd11tmus~v·a~i1u"ed~-w~~~~h-~tib~tt~t~.--apmC~1•t1~11~1~~1~l1mu~11~11~n~1~c~nt~h~u~~~a~~~.~~~t~d-~~-m-ro_n_c:~b-ro~~~1n~t-o~a~v~1~eo~p~~~~--~ at more than $400 ~ere tolen from A. • uth C'oa t H1ghwa bu inrs!I po let" ~f)('rt • • • \fond1" at the traw Hat 'Pt1D her home Monda'.-Poh~ 1d Man reported an approx1mue lo'' of \ , 1\ito ca\~ttc f'C'Conkr anJ a te\taurant 1t 10071 .\dam Ave ~ was stolen from an open, unloc\cd was arrested at 2: 15 a m on the n praJC on the 100 block of 4l nd D1cao Froewa). Kenneth Jame C hmt<"n on t\ one of about a haUl S 12.000 followll\aa bur&lllr) m wh1C'h t:lmera. \lo-Orth S9<X.l. "'<.'rt' reported lo\ ~a t1matcd at S200 tn co1ru. \ • . ) 'J Y PILOT/Tuesday, November 8, 118'4 PareD.ts nlull __ 'sale' of.Baby Fae story Hospital reports Nattonal-i:nqulre11 off er of SI 0,000 for exclusive rights to tot's tale LOM LIND (AP) -The oixrat1on on Oct. 16. parent" of 8.aby ~nc. the duld who Tht• ho~p1tal reported curlier that received a trant1planted b: boon heart. the Nnuonal Enquin:r offc1 cd un.· con uJer1ng Ii nun 1111 offeri. from SI 0.000 to anyone who revealed the new organ11~tions and publication~ 1dt·nt1ty of.the par~nts and the bab). to trll their storv. a ho'lpi1al but Enquirer Editor lain Ca ldt•r !>Pol..e~wo.man said. drn~d th e claim. · ht'an w11hou1 sians of rtJ«t1on. Human hean tran plant n.-c181cnt~ often show reJccuon seven to I da)'" nfttr the operation. 8ut doctors hove warned si nce the t\l)l'nmental operation that nothing wa\ t)'p1cnl about Baby Fae's case She 1s the longest·h\cd human rcc1p1· cnt of u heart transplant from another animal. and the first infant to receive such a tron plant. Tht' infant wa Mall covered by a small o~ygen tent while an her ba 1net, but her parttlb u~ allowed to rcmo' e her and hold her for short time . McGill ad. ~!lp1tc the bnb) \ !otub1ht y since the opern11on. doctors have not made any plan for removing her from 1ntcns1vc care. she aid. . The unidcntiftc:d parcnb decided M'·anwhale. nur es Attcnd1na tlw to accept the bid after organ11nt1uns infan t nt the ewnth-day Adve111ii.1 from uround the world l"xprt'ssed an inlititution 60 mllcll cast of Los interest in buying their story. said Angeles reported the tin) patient was Ju)cc McC'hntod., n spokeswoman "!lucking strongly. crying lustily and !~~~mu Linda Unive1"t' Medical cute as a button." said ~pokcswoman South AfriCa protests \. ~'"'' ----11Y~Gfi1. -result in death to-six- "People "ere asking 1f they could The 25.Jav-old infant showed no do this. o the mother "a' rnnsulted signs of reJcct1ng the baboon heart JOHANNESBURG . South Africa v.ith and then we ~~·d 111 tal..e them and conunued to receive Ouids in-(AP)-As least six blacks wert-killed (hadsl from people. · McC'llntod. ~id tra' e ncousl~ "h1le also taking for. today as police tried to break up \.1onda' mula from a bottk. Ms. McGill s:ud. protests an segregated townships near ~ht• stud JI \\llS the parents• dc· Bab~ Fae WU!> still receh ing Johannesburg and Pretoria in the ci\lon not the hosp11~1'<>. to accept qclosponne-A. "h1ch suppresses the second da) of a strike supported b)' fi noncml uffen. although she ~·d bOJ} 's immune ~~ '>tcm. to prevent hundreds of thousands of black hoc;pnal oflictals "ould forward the reJec uon of her new heart. "OJ'kers and students. h1d\ 10 th r parents . McGill said dm.·tors had no Im· Today's clashes brought the \WO· I hl' parents ha' c rl'Jl'Cll'd requests mt•t.Jiate commeni on Baby Fae da) casualty toll to 16 dead. at least IO lor tntl'f\ 1e1NS since the infant's passing into the I I th da) With her new injured and 40 arrested in TransvaaJ l,..•••••111!11iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim pro" in cc. the nation's indust nal center. rubber hullet~ and tear "g3S in nine townships to deter arsonists and stone-throwing crowds of up to 500 people. A number of private cars were burned and street bamcadcs were erected 1n the township~. Jefferson said. The strike marked the first time black worke~. who recentl} formed trade unions. Joined students and ant1-aparthe1d groups an a prott'st. and it was seen as one of South Africa's b1ggeM ever work stoppages .. . Gunman. shouts 'Reagan 'a next' after firing two sliots By Ute A11oclated Pre11 BO TON - A campa1an worker lor President Reagan suffered wounds from stone frogmen ts that ncocheted when u man fired two shots from a taxi nnd screamed "Reagan' next" before fleeing. Police and witne ses said. The shooting occurred after "a confrontation between Mondale and Reaaan supporters" near the Rcagnn-Bush headquarters in Boston on Monday night. said Petec WGloschuk. a police spokc11man. The campaign worker, Gary V'llilalli, 19, of Jiull. suslmned minor injuries when he was struck by stone fragments froru a building. Woloschuk aid. .. Former flrst Lady ho•pltallzed NEW Y~RK -Pat Nixon. the wife' of former President Ri chard M. 1xon. wa nspffallzed Monday with a rung infechon,'"Nlxon's ofllce said. It was the second time this year the 72-year-old former first lady has been treated for a pulmonary 1nfec11on. The last time was in July. Nixon drove his wife to New York Hospital from their home in Saddle River. N.J .. said John Taylor Nixon's assistant. Shr w1 ll o;t.ay for several days for tests and treatment. Taylor said. William Green, an admin1s1rator at the hbspatal. confirmed that Mrs. Nixon was adm1t1ed but ref used to release any other details. including her cond1t1on. ~ Dlozln at plants no threat MIDL\NO. Mich. -Rc111dcntsand Dow Chemical Co. workers face no health threat from dioxin contam1na11on. which 1s below fedrral safety standards at all but two isolated plant sites. company officials said. Results of a 15-month study seeking sources of 2.~7.8-TCDD. the most toxic type of Police spokesman Lt. Thomas Jefferson said police fired birdshot. . dioxin known. were released Monday by Dow. On Friday it was repo rted that tpiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia l Dow found two a rca ~ of dioxin cont am 1nat1 on ~ t the plant to be as much as 50 times higher than federal safety standards. The federal Environmental Protection Agency has presented Dow w11h a plan for containing the Sites. Dow planned to.accept the plan . Vern May. manager of the company's agricolt ural chemicals production and environmental scrv1ee!I. based on political gricvancec; .. N E WP O R T HARBOR S' llPYARI) SHIPYARD .HA UL OUT RA TES <'LEAN & PAINT BOTTOM $6 50 Per Foot Labor Only STEAM CLEANING $45.00.hr YARD LABOR $40 00 Per Hour "I've never seen any- thing like it." r "It's t he best. t.hing I've ever done to myself." ELIMINATE NAGGING BACK PAIN TONE& FIRM LOOSE, SAGGY MUSCLES SOITIOOAIT FITllSI & HAUL OCTS TO 75' -75 TONS1Marme Scale 223·21ST STREET NEWPORT BEACH (714) 675 ·2550 PllYSICAl TllllAPY , R1f-::Olcut '---JSoo s. ntsTOL sum 200 -,--------------' THEllDll'S I lllESI s ll- IS RUCH• OUT wnH SlllT Cl llETIEITS. llTE , Rig~! nt)W, A merican Saying-lnve<.t· -The more yo u Jeposit, and the longer -fur you to spc~ak qiith one of our professional nwnt Offil e r., an· 1. allmli! all C D mvcc;tor., your term, the more you earn. lnvesrment Officers. t<t rd! them nhout nur Money Ma1nx CD And it's all bat ked hy the size and ___ ..;..;..._,.;.. __________ _ /\\c ()Ufl(, n1(.' ( ·n rhnt\ 't() 01.·xthlt• II k·tc, ..,tn·n~h of the nat ion·~ larg~l savings ~nd l-•-ZZ7-1571 EIT. IZ3 \1 iu J et1.·rm111t.' rh1. ..,141.., tl·rt11 anJ r;irc of lonn. Rut why wait for your phone to nng? 9 .:Hlr fl\\.'l"'l m 1.·nt S1mrly 1.all us mll-fn.:e and we11 arrange ~ AMERICAN SAVINGS A,.,W,,.. In'"""' /mm I l tn•IS ,.,_,J,, '°'h!Juntwl r--iJf"!+r. .arh Mtlw:lra..te1I A""Wll 'ftdd brutd nn mm"'*""mt wlltn ANO LOAN A880CIAl lON • 1ntt"t11 11 lr/1 nri tlr/•flfll /r11 1h1 mu••~ l\/l(>tt •<.llt, ...,tld 1111'1 IC""' •Mh/tcl 10 chnnit .. ullm.1 llOfU't c:os·rA ME A • I! I"-l\rc t •I 117 I \1~1\ (,AROE:". (,Rovr I 'J.t I C ;,,r.11 r (If• H Rh ,I ... q ... ,.) H UNTINGTON flEACH 7 ll r d111i.it·r A,,. ~4"1 ·22~! LAGUNA HI LLS l 4l\ 5 H Tctr1t Rd 7il°'·2H lt' ORA GE 1%5 N Tu,11n \)/4 lf\!l' __________________ __..S ........ ...._.BJ;ACIJ "1'J I' I lfll ( ll·l'I lfo.:h\\,f\ "1'14 ...... :;~ ,. Home knlttlng approved WASHINGTON -The Labor Department says 11 will permit manufacturers ofknillcd outerwear to employ people for work in their homes, if the companies fi~t get a government ccr'l1ficate. The new rule. which takes effect in 30 days, grew out of 1he so-called "Vermont knitters" controversy involving n few hundred women working at their homes. It was published Monday in the Federal Register The Reagnn administration first 111\ed a longstanding ban on such work 1n the home in 1981. That action was challenged by the International Ladies Garment Workers Union and the ban was reimposed by a federal appeals court . A~pl!ln .tkr"'1t to klds told WA HtNit'ON -A pri vate group's tclcv1s1on spot could endanger child re n by getting their parents to ignore possible hnks between use of aspirin in children wi th viral illnesses and the potentiall y fatal Reye's Syndrome. the ·government warns. The Food and Drug Administration on Monda} denounced the telev1S1on advertisement. circulated b~ the Committee on the Care of Children. a group once financed by the aspinn industry. The group, which includes ped1atrit'lans among its members. was formed to counter the educational campaign run by the government since 1982 that tells parents to ·consult a doctor before g1v1ng aspirin to children with symptoms of viral illnesses such as chicken Po>. and innuenza. Health expens have noted an association be tween the use of aspirin for children with chac~e.n PoX and Ou and the development of Re ye's Syndrome. although no direct hnk has been established. · CALIFORNIA TV actress dead at 95 C1LENO.\LE -Merle Earle. the actress who played neighbor Maude Ciorm'I~\ on tclc\ 1~1on ·s "The Waltons" and who admonished viewers of TV a n·mcmbcr.Jo.talllht,1r molhe.rs~ died_ unda . he w~~9i, Mrs!. Ea..!1!.did no.t act professionally until she was 77. when a talent agent whose son was performing at a church1>13} spotted her. She was a veteran of several film's and dozens of commercials. including the "reach out and touch someone" tclcphonr senrs. Bradley forms 'Gangbusters' L,OS ANGELES -Ma)Or Tom Bradley an nounced formation ofa new task force to curb gang violence that has claimed 144 lives this year in the city. "We are determined that we will not give up an inch of territory of this ctt,Y to the ... hoodlums of this community," Bradley said Monday, calling the slayings "urban terrorism ... But questions of the cffcct1 ven.ess of the effort were immediately raised. "'Whenever a cri!ii!I comt•s. we get together." City Councilman Robert Farrell said. "It hasn't really made a difference in the south side of Los Angeles .... Unless we grab hold and make this one work. South Los Angeles has had ii for the balance of the centul'y." 'TWlllght Zone' charges reinstated LOS ANGELES -Mov1emakcrs should be more safety-conscious after 75 years of film makmg. !ia1d a ju~\\!bo reinstated -I cfiarges apiml-a- 1rec or an our otficr dC endants in the fiery "Twilight Zone" movie set deaths of actor Vic Morrow and two children. "This is a case to be tried." Superior Court Judge Gordon Ringer sard Monday. "This isn't nickelodeon lime an ymore. I would have thought that after 75 years somebod) might have thought 11 inappropnatc to put Lillian Gish on an ice floe and send her into the middle of Niagara Falls to make a movie," Ringer added. Miss Gash starred m the 1914 film classic. "Birth of a Nation." Ringer's ruling left director John Landis facing fi ve counts of involuntary manslaughter. He 1s the fir~t Hollyv.ood director charged with cri mes arising from a movie accident. Executlon slated ln state SAN QUENTI N -Officials at San Quentin Pnson arc expected to annou~ce today that a 26-year-old inmate on death row has been scheduled for execution on Dec. 7, a television station has reported. If the execution is carried out. it will be the first in California in 17 years. KTVU in Oakland reported Monday night that Stevie Lamarr Fields is scheduled for the December execution in the gas chamber. Fields was sent to Death Row in August 1979 from Los Angeles County af\er being found guilty of killing a 26-year-old Universil)' of Southern California student a year earlier. He was convicted of first-deeree murder in the shooting death of Rosemary Janet Cobb, whose bullet-nddled body was found on Sept. 28. J 978. 'WORLD L_ --- Iran selu. jet IJlj~cken NICO IA. Cyprus -Iranian sccunty forces seized the h1Jackers of a Saudi Airlines Jetliner commandeered to Tehran today and freed all the passengers and crew on board. the official Iranian news agency reported. Officials at Saudi Arabia's c1v1l av1at1on authonty in Ri yadh said pa'Ssengers on the Oaght . which origin.ated in London. helped overcome the hijackers. The two were identified as North Yemenis and one was said to have carried a gun. The Saudi officials. who reported that there were I 17 passengers .-nd 14 crew members on the Tnsta r jet when 11 was diverted, said it was th e first hijacking of a Saudi airliner. The plane was hijacked shortly before it was scheduled to land early today in Riyadh. the Saudi capital. The hijackers were captured about I 0 hour later. Polish prle•t death 'terrifying' WARSAW, Poland -A Polish dissident says church officials arc tryina 10 maintain calm hy kcepina secret a "terrifying" report on the autopsy ofslain pro-olidarity pnest Jel'ly Popicluszko. There has been no public report on the autopsy. eon~ucted last Friday. but fnends who saw the priest's body said hi s eye was badly swollen and his face appeared to have been beaten. One autop y comm1 5ion mcmbersa1d'lhcre was blood io his lunas. Dissident historian Jan JozefL1p~ln, n member of the now-c.ti banded workers" riahtsaroup KOR, told Journalists Monday he had learned from church sources that "the doctor's dc~rfl)tion of the body and what mo t probably happened is tcmfyi na and could heat up the present tense emo11ons.'' 660poandaofcocalne11el.sed MEX ICO ITV -The attorney acneral's office ha announced the seizure by police or 660 pounds of U.S.·bound pure cocaine which drua traffickers allc&cdly planned to smuglc aero the Rio Orandc on rubber rafts. The office annouoccd Monday that federal Judicial Police made the capture • AltlhUlc·NIRVO'"'tlmfO"l'Ola lbt Te~n~ border and tak1na over the muuJers' cuavan. EiJht were arrcsttd, according to Felipe Flores, poke man for the attorney acncrnl's office. Flores, whosa1dhedid oot know 1hecuct time ofthccapturt. reported th at thcrtwc~ no ~hots fired and no &nJuric dunna the sei1urc. ' -Gandhi vowing relief for Sikhs Victims of Hindu rampage to receive compen sation, to 'heal th e wounds' NEW DELHI. India (AP)-Prime ports. Minister Rajiv Gandhij(promising The ~ly figure given by the financial relief to thousands of Sikhs govemmMt so far is a death toll of victimi~ed by the violent Hindu nearly SOO in New Delhi. No official backlash that followed the assassina· nationwide figures are avail~bl~. ~ tion of his mother lndi.ra Gandhi. Ao anonymous caller claiming 10 Or n~ Cout DAILY PIL01/Tu.ct~. ~ 8, 1 .... Hopef u~s launcm V ad tilttzkrieg Mondale uses Crosby, SUITS, Nash ; Reagan says work's n ot finish ed yet LOS ANGELES (AJ>)-President Reagan and Walter Mondale made . final e1e<:t1on-cve bids to sway voters Monday night, wuh the Democratic challenger making what a sJ)Gxesman said wlis his largest television ad~ertising purcha~ of the cam~ The commcrc1al touchts scvnal themes Mondale bu stmeed in has campa1an. (:OntraSlifll ch1ldrtl\ taJiv ing 3bout what they want IO be -.~n they gruw up with foot9 or nuclear mis iles bhts1ing out of 1ilos. Those Police, still under orders to shoot ~P.resent the Sikhs claimed respo!'si- riotcrs oo siaht, conducted house-to-b11ity for the murder of q andh• to bmise searches 1ada~-Dclhi-aven ~ her crackdown on St h se ar· for loot stolen during the foµr-day a ists an t e. un1a prov~nce as\ wave of violence ·that followed the J~.ane. Gandh,1 se~t the army m to rout ·same scenes have been used in a shoner ad afred by the Mondak h -fi .....__,.,.mpaign1n the final wcdc. ~· ----~• .. T e Mondale orces bought ad time h also feat ures scenes of vice · · 1 w So Sikh e,xtremists 1n the Golden Tcm-assassmatJ~n ast ednesday. me pie, the Sikhs' holiest shrine. $600,000 an loot was was . found The United News oflndia reported Monday. . . that the deputy commissioner of Someies1dents.dumpedthe loot an police. G.R. Gupta, and .assistant the street as police approached. At commissioner, D.C. Gulia, h~ve been least 2.40.0 peo~le h~ve been arre~ted suspended until an inquiry wto ~he since the. ~ssas?1na11on c;>f Gandhi by· assasS!nation is· ~ompleted. Both.' two men 1d~nufied as Sikh members 6flicers are members of the special of her security guard. Security section responsible for the Five people were reported killed · prime minister's safety. Monday, but the violence was ebbing Two Sikh guards, constable on all the maJOr networks, plus CNN• presi.dentutl c~ndidatcGcraldine fer· ESPN, WTBS, and Chnstian Broad· casttng Network. to air a four:. raro campaigning. and contains a clip .., of former Pre 1dcnt John F. Kennedy minute--0-sccond commercial. saying the nation should not "pretend f1'es1dent ~e.~ga11 was amng a 22-. th.at the quest(fc r aisarmamcnt is a · minute tclevmon addmss that was sign of weakness. for in a spiraling 1aped 1n the Oval Office last week. • arms race a nation'-s security may be Th~ ad was being.run on the three shrin~ing even a.Sits arms increase ... maJor networks at a 1.ost of S 750.000, . Mondale is seen teUing v.otcrs. "rd aides said. rather be in 'an underdog irf a / and life was returnjng to normal after Satwant Singh, and sub-inspector the massacres, arson ·and atrocities by Scant Singh, shot Gandhi as she Hindus. a majority in this nation of stepped from her official residence more than 730 million. against Sikhs. Wednesday, according to officials. a reli~ous minority whose adherents Beant Singh was killed by other hold Influential posts in the military guards and Satwant seriously and government. wounded. He remajns hospitalized in Reagan jump• ahead of Mondale In nation'• first vottnc. Mondal~·s ad opens with the campaign about decency than to be Crosby. S11lls. Nash & Young son~ ahead an a campaign only about self "Teach Yo_ur Children," and scenic interest." shots ofagnculture fields. the qolden The commercials also ran ovq the Gate Bridge and the Statue ofL1bcn y. weekend. once on NBC and four Raj iv Gandhi, who immediately New Delhi in stable condition. succeeded b:is-molhe.r.as pqm~minis-Police-and Raj iv Gandhi's go-..:cm- ter. extended the offer ~f compensa-ment were facing increasing criticism tion to the Si khs in an effort to heal for their failure to control violence the wounds of the furious Hindu foliowi ng the assassination. Some rampage. Sikhs have aUeged police actually A R ~gan 'landslide' -at leas t in Dixvill e The ad. shown to reporters ilS times on CBS. Widmeycr said. Mo~dalc campaigned 1n Southern "Our message is one final chanc.e to California, was be_JQ& aired a total of get atrOS5 to the voters where Walter I I times on the~ht bcfol"t the Mondale stands where he would Jead electton in the bi~est single buy of this country. th~)ind of eresident be thl'-campaign, s~1d depu1y pres~ would be ror all peopt~; Widmeyer secrt'Lary Scott W1dmeyer 10 V.:as)l-said, adding that the campaign W8'S Meeting with Sikh leaders Mon· joined in all~cks on their homes and day. Gandhi promised the govern-shops. _ .. · ment would pay $870 for each Sikh The Citi zens Council ofNew Delhi killed, the same amount for each said that 2.000 died in the ca pital destroyed home and half that much alone, and about $25 million in for damaged residences. Every in· propeny was destroyed. One opposi- jured person would be given $1 75. he ti on leader pur the death toll at announced. . I 0,000. For their pan. 42 Sikh leaders The council president. Kanwar Lal issue4 a statement condemning the Gupta. said: "It .was evident that killing of Gandhi. there was an utter failure on the pan A~ter he was shot, at least 1,000 of the intelligence and security forces. people .. mostly Sikhs, were killed which resulted in the assassination of nat10 ide, according to press re-Mrs. Gandhi. -- OIXVILLE NOTCH; N.H. (AP) -Dix ville Notch voters haven't always been a bellwether ofpres1den- t1al elections. but 29 of them followed the polls early this morning and gave President Reagan his first votes of the 1984 clcct1on. One person gave Democrat Walter Mondale his suppon 1n the tra- ditional midnight baHoting. tale "RepabhcaTis' dreams of a "viotor~ sweep pany" got off to a rousing stan with Dixville voters gi ving Gov . John Sununu, Sen. r Gordon Humph rey. and Rep. Judd Gregg si milar support. Dix vi lle Notch. located in extreme nonhern New Hampshire, 1s a com- muni\y whose main resources-arc a rubber company and a resort hotel. The numbef of, voters hovers around two dozen. usually more vote in the state's earliest-in-the-nation presidential primary 1-n Fcbrua~ when the hotel is busier w11h ski season. Republicans usually out- number Democrats 2-1 . The-co mmuni1y incorporated onl-y- for the purpoSC$ of \roting and has been casting the nation's first ballots since the early 1970s. Before tha't. Dix vi lle Notch voters cornpctcd \\uh those in a yet smaller Whne Moun· tains community, Hans Location. 1ngton. · also showing other JO...sccond ads. He refused to say how much ttfe air .----·----------time cost. Red chief says U.S. goals a r e ~insane' ICE SKATING L&§ONS Tight security marks Queen ; s pa_rade MOSCOW (A P) -Prrndent Konstantin Chernenko says lhe Unll· ed Stares-haSS'tt foritse-lflhc msaTie · goal" of establishing military superi- ori ty and declared that the Soviet Un ion would not alloy. this to ha ppen . LONDON (A P) -Glittering pageantry mixed wi1h tight security today as Queen Elizabeth JI rode in a horse-drawn carriage from Buck· i ngham Palace for the state opening of Parliament. accompanied by armed detectives disguised as royal foot- men. Despite drizzling rain. crowds lined the route of the procession, some standing above sewers scoured --by bomb-sniffing. l)Oli€e.--Oogs over- night. The security arrangements, be- lieved to be the ligh test ever for a roya l occasion. were undcnaken as the lnsh Republican Army rhrcaten· ed ·more bomb attacks in Britain following its Oct. 12 attempt to blow up Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and most ofherCabincl at a Brighton· hotel. The 58-year-old queen, accom- panied by her eldest son Prince C'hai:les.and daus01cr-t~-law P-rincess- Diana. smiled and waved from the gold·encrusted Irish Stale ( oach drawn by four gra) horse~. Foo1men who walked beside the coach· as it left the palace and saber- carr71ng cavalry men in red and gold uniforms who rode bl•s1dc 11 through tht.' -.1rcc1~ of Ct'ntral London were armed dctectt' es. Press .\ssociatt on. Bn1.a1n·s domestic nt.'ws agency re- pol'tcd. Hundred~ ot uniformed London pohccmeo. mo~ armed onl~-w1tb..a nighlst'lck and a whistle. were as· Gunman kidnaps reporter, later lets hini go Unharmed I LOS ANGELES ·(AP) -A Los "Who coyld resis1?" Carlson lold Carlson used up a hal f of laAk of gas... Angeles Herald Examiner reponer 1he Evening News. chauffeuring his captor around to who had been covering a murder was But la ter the man claimed to hn.,.e a make drug deals. freed un harmed early today after .45-caliber handgun and warned him ..\t one point he convinced his being kidnapped by a man who to "keep on walking." captor to anow him to call his editors. 1hreatcne<t to "blow his head off," "I should have run back but I have whom he told he was still doing police and the victim said. learned in o~her si"tuations" to do as research for the story. Timoth y Carlson. 35, was released you're told. Carlson said. Carlson's wife. Carol. Op-E.d Pa$e about6:30a.m.todaybythemanwho During the next seven hours. ed11orforthe Heral.cl£xam1ner.sa1d signed to the onc·mile parade routt' But Scotland Yard marksmen were posted on roofs along the route. arm~ and anti-terrorist experts conducted an intens1 vc search ofbu1ldings all the way into the Houses of Parliament. and armed detecti,es mangled '-'Ith the crowds. \ band <>truck up the na11onal anthem as tt\C quet.'n wearing a full· length sequined white gown and .dla.mond crowu arn..:cd..u. Lile Ho of Lords. Chernenko. in a speech Monday to a gathering of )Ou th organ1zat1ons from Communist countries. said the Soviet Communist Pany would work 10 st rengthen its alliances 10 pose a "'fitting rebuff" to an) aggression. but he did not announce an) specific m1htal) measures. "It 1s the LI .SA. and 111; alhM that ha' c \et themselves the insane goal of achieving m1l1tal') superiority over soc~.a4s1-<--0uRt-Res.-.. -tke-~~adef said. ~----------------~--~---------1 -\ THE EASY SOUNDS • Enhance your child s POl5tl ano posrure <iA planneo program ot lessons with ine 1nterna- l•onally tamous rce Capades easv 1earn11)g rnelhod gives you or your ch1ICl wholesome nealtny eicerc1se 1n co,..,for1able super111sed sur roun01n9s New Skaters Welcome ! REGISTER NOW ( 11 ~~79-8880 ----i.h ... a ... d-.1f1:;..o-rce....+d-<C0a·~r ... ls,...,0~11-.1-u~d ... 1_..i-ve·-a-ru-u~11...id~€.P...a..ii1~so""1...,t lh.e-a1~1..,1e-Ad...,hmis,..,.c"'a""'p ... 10"'1 ..... ~""'asasmalt-trcr hUS'trand C'all'Cd-hcr at another Los Angeles while he made drug deals time drug dealer named Dennis. 20. point and told her to take whatever on the street after warning the who claimed to be seeking help for a ra'lh she haq and put 1t outside their re~rter he would "blow his head off' drug problem. During the ni'ght. home. w1U'l a gun he never produced. rr===============::i:::=========================:::;-1 Carlson told the Dayt9na Beach FM ·STEREO ~"'01 Hubor Blvd Cost~ Mtsa, Ca. 91626 Evening News in a telephone inter- view. Carlson, a Daytona Beach native. said he was released in the North Hollywood section of Los Angeles after he used an automatic teller bank card to withdraw $160. which the robber took and fled. Carlson was not injured in the seven-hour kidnapping. "I just had a bnef talk wi th.him to make sure he's okay," Herald Exam- iner City Editor Larry Burrough said early today after spectiir\g by tele· phone with Carlson at 1he reporter's home. "He said he was happy as hell to be home." Of his ordeal, "He made some reference about wanting to get the best story possible." Burrough said his reporter quipped. Carlson. a Harvard University graduate who previously ~rked for the Daytona newspaper an has be~n with the Herald Examine for about six years, said Herald edit s "were probably a lot more shaken up than he was," Burrou~ said. Carlson said he had gone to the S<lCnC of a murder in the Hyde Park section of southwest Los Angeles when he was apP.roached by a man who promised: 'I can ten you the whole story." • .. auFFliFs UPIOUTlllY, llC. '" "" lltst Of ,., lift tm ..... avo .. COSTA tilSA -S41·11S4 .... , •• 7 Lit. 3 15700 ,• GET WADED ~OUK BAK . Announcing tM 8oarilwalk's great new salad bar and menu Our new salad bar offer.-, evtuything from calamari and bay shrimp-, to melon 'ili ccs dnd home· made bacon bits ... over JO frc h items every ~ay. And lbc r~t or our new menu is equally d5 tempt · Ing: homemade chil i. past<\ made daily. in credible d~rt.s and moqulte broiled st1lm on. halibut. -,callops. ~hrimp. chicken. dry aged bl.K k t1ngu New York ~teak.' 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J • 1 69 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, November e, 1984 W. ~ally.wood: AgayCamelet? Today's incorporation vote determi nes what kind of city it will become APWlr ..... IO Ron Stone, hopa to help form flrat 1ay-contr olled city. rec«it IOU of hla Job. • Rookie patrotman Mark K. Aulh, working part time ae a bank eeourtty 9uard, aald McK.ai.r had ehavtng cream on hW head end WM hotdlng a Chrome-colontd Object he be- Neved was a gun. After 111tng Ruth, whom he knft, McKeUer bolted from the b8nk-and ratt to hfa-car parked two btocke away, potiat aaJd. But he drove Into a dead..end alley, and Rush arrested him a ~time later. ,. WE T HOLLYWOOD (AP) -A chance to form the natio n's first cit y controlled by homosex uals has in· fuc;cd this two-square-mile c;ommuni· ty wnh a sen-.e of history .and hopes fo r n ··ga) ( amelot" as voten. went to the polls toda)'. · ' The actual question before voters in the Los Angeles. County temtOI) sandwiched between Beverly Hills and Los Angeles 1s whether to incorporate the area as a c~'t . ~ctlicf t m prorsforci ou&wus the issue of rent control. T e existing rent-control ordinance was due to qc phased out beginning in January. which conc:e rned the 88 perc;ent of residents who rent their shelter. That issue bas been somewhat d11Tused b) a last-minute extension of the ordinance, and now attention centers on the hkeht\t>od that a new city counc:1l 1n "the new city would be dominated b) gay men a nd lesbians. i\bout half of the 40 candidates for a fi ve-memberC'lt) Council -which takes power 1fthe c11yhood passes - are openl> gay. Propo nents say incorporation 1s a fo regone conclusion. "The question 1s not "hether "e'n: going to be a cit). Evel)one ha~takcn that for granted. The qucsuon is what kind of city arc we going to be." ~aid council candidate Ron Stone. 36. who spearheaded the cit) hood drive. There are no precise estimates. but most people put the ga) pGpula11on at about a third of the communi ty's 36.000 residents. and man} bust· nesses in West Holl}"ood arc ga)· owned or gay-oriented. 1oclud1ng two banks and several ga> clubs. While gay activists emphasite the) would run a city responsi ve to the needs of all tts c1uzcns. the cit} hood proposal ofTers man} homosexuals a new kind of pndc. "The word that's bcina uscd 1s a ga) Camelot." said Enn Lorber. ex· ecut1'e d1rcc:tor of the Mun1c1pal Elections f'omm111ee of Los Angele\ an mnuencial gay poht1cal group. Council candidate Valene Ter· ~gno said. "For gay people there's a personal extra" in the ballot que!>t1on .. I see 11 as sort of a step fro m leH·I one to le' cl two in the sense that now 1ni.tcad of JUM being accepted a~ c:1t1Lcns. the> ca n now be accepted as leaders and be openl) ~~ " said Bill How To .Get Larkin. JY, a p y businessman run- ninJ for city council. "I think it's very exc1tin1 for aays but also for straights." • West Hollywood IS a m ix or commercial bu ildings, smalt' bungalows and new condominiums, • blending chic and traditional styles, On one side of the dis1nct is Hollywood. on another the Fairfax' distnct, whose elderly and Jewish population spills into West Holly- wood. Adjacent to ithouthcrn border are the sprawling grounds Qf Cedars· Sinai Medical Center, the se<alled "Hospital to the Stars." West Hollywood has become the center of the West Coast interior design industry. anchored by the monoltth1\ Pacific Des.ign Center. h 1s also home to some of the area's most fa shionable restaurants and hotels. the Sunset Strip and a Warner Bros. movie lot, numerous record c:ompanaes, entertainers and agents. The pro-c1tyhood forces say they \.\-ant a local government closer to home. one that 1s more responsive than the downtown county Board of uperv1sors to critical issues such as .traffic, Jand use and parking prob- lems. . Joining ho mosexuals in the push for cityhood are the overwhelming majonty of tenants and elderly people. who make up 22.5 percent of the r~sidents. Only 6 percent of West Hollywood's residents are children, according to the i9i0' census. The tradiuonal compatibility of the community has resulted in a cam· paign in which anti-gay fears have not been prominent. "Really there hasn't been as much as 1 thought there would be ... said Lorber. no tiqg that other concerns, principally re nt control, had domi· nated the el~tion . Temgno. who 1s gay. said that \.Otersshe met had never mentioned a ga)'-controllcd city until recent weeks when several newspaper anicles ap· peared to emphas1tc that aspect of the electio n. "l started getting a couple of homeonwers saying, ·1 don't want this to be called a fag town,"' she said. "Not because they're prej udiced. They JUSt don't want to be misiden· t1fied .. They have family in Iowa." .. .. A Good Night's Sleep. ~ . . Man) 1h111K" L.lll ll.1 ppt~n 111 the hanking husint:'' 1hat cau~c bankers to lose sleep 1 hcsc thing.., often '-lt:m tro111 thll'C p it m chc '>ky. gct·rich-q uk k deals. Such as lending cu · tomcr\ han.J.L<trn<:d n1t lf1l'\ I<, 11 •rc1xn t c iuntm:-. Or accepung broker deposltS thac can lead to an unstahle a'-'etn1ahllll y p< >"llH 111 ~1.1\ Ix.· even hcing Muck with a lo t of cumbersome real ec,tate foreclosure., Wt:ll. none CJl 1ll.1t t·vcr made much sen5e to us. Never w iU. Thm~., 1h:11 do m.11-.t· J lot of '>(.'n'>e to u., are based o n som e preu y sound ideas. "1a\he .1 lmk <.on,t·n.111 ... m .ind rc•..trJ1nt I 1kc ha' inJ< more capital than the FD I C. require O r '>h0\\'1n~ ,1 pre >flt ~ t. .ir ::rtte r \ c:;ir .. 1ftcr ~ ~:.1 r O r emplu)-ecs that have bci.:n investing lhcir time: In chJrn 1c.,, ..,t·n ·1u : < IL1h' .1rn.l < 11mmun11 y l.'\l'nL'i. All o f that for t\velvc years We caJI lhis rcinvc..,tll'l~ in !he lo1111111 1n11' f>u 11111R hJt k a httk more th.in j.., taken qut Thi.c; aJI adds up to a ... are. '><iht.I u1mmu111t\ h.1111\ < 1111t·11.., B.1nk We .,k·ep "ell at night. you 11 .,ll.'ep wdl at rug.ht. r ClllZENS BANKiifl'l!e Of < O 'iT <\ ME A ~ .. r ... ,.,.,.,.,..... Patty Lee, co-owner of Manley loctce, Af8 •he'• a aunt.-or. Manley residents remain stunned by seven s,.yings 'It's astf they (visitors) think we 're resp~nsfble for the horror .. MANLEY HOT SPRINGS. eral store a nd post ollicc along wtth Alaska (AP) -It was spr:ing whe n a her husband , Bob. "To me, that's like brooding, Jobless loner· from Illinois Russian roulette. We're the ones that mettrodically executed seven resi· weren't hit." dents af this wi ldemtss hamlet and The carnage chilled the soul oflittle dumped their bodies m to the rain· Ma~ley Hot Spri ngs. perhaps chang· !>wollen Tanana Ri ver. 1ng 11 forever. Now, wtth winter's grip squeezing F irst came numbing shock. Then, the hfc from the countryside, towns· the anger. Townspeople could not get l"'Ol>trjmm1er10eliilgen ng orror crrSi11c.r,so1hey'took oat mntf"of tneir- and the changeslt made in their li ves. frustration on his car. which he had Michael Stika of Hoffman Estates, abandoned along a dirt road leading Ill., was 25 when he drove a beat-up to the bloodied boat landing. sedan crammed wi th guns and gear "The boys shot it up, beat it up, tore north to Alaska. dreaming to Jive ofT it up and shoved it in the river," said the land in the back country. Cy Hetherington. who runs a fl ying Authorities believe he had already service from an office cluttered with murdered !l man in Fairbanks by the artifacts, a1rcran parts and hides. "I time he reached this log cabin think it may have helped. It got some set1lemen1 of about 50 year-round of it out of their systems." residents and Killed seven of them. The phrase "time will heal" pops including a pregnant woman, her up re peatedly tn conversation. but husband and their 2-ycar·old son, in a some of the anger still smolders. three-hour riverbank rampage May "We're all very happy Silka was 17 Nearly a day passed before the killed, rather than having to pay for town figured out what had happened his sitting in an insane asylum," said to the missing people. Alaska state Le.~· • . troopers in helicopters headed up the ~ do~ t b_cheve they should have. muddy Tanana after the young buned .S1lka m the veterans cc~etery. dflfler. Thal d1dn:! go _over too ~llwt~h a lot • He died May 19, hit fi ve times by of people, sa1d Hethen ngton s son, troopers' M· 16 rifle fi re on the muddy To.m, a 26-year-o!d trapper, m~h· bank of the Zitziana River. Sccondsd'Wnic apd ~ommercial ~sh~nnan. He earlier. troopers had ofTercd him ai.l>'Wad no nght to that. S1lka was an chance to surrender. Instead, he Am:tY veteran w.hosc ashes were stepped from behind a tree and fired a buned at the Na?1onal Cemetery at high-powered rifle at one of the Sitka at his. fat~er s reques,t- heltcopters killing trooper T roy Dun-Ma~ley t~ literally paymg. f~r the can. • notonet~ Stika brought. Rcs?dcnts Nobody knows how Silka found say tounsi:n, one of the town s few this · isolated village on the EllM>n • sources ofmcome,.and the real estate Highway. Nobody knows what market were ofTth1s summer. stirred his de mons. · "Tourists, people who like to come People think he probably first shot here, were afraid of how ther, would a single person, perhaps in an ar,u. be received here," said Lee. 'People ment, at the boat landing outside were afraid of their welcome. There's town. then -to escape without been sort of an unrest in the people witnesses -killed the others as they here, short temper&." arrived before he fled in a boat. "Some of them said the town just . "Every one of us knows it could didn't feel the same," said Gladys have been Qny one of us," said Patty Dart, the main teacher for the village Lee. who runs Manley's lod&e. gen· school's 16 students. Huey Newton gettin~ 'back on rt~ht t~ack OAKLAND (AP)-8leck ~ ther go..founclef "--,, __ .. comedlM NcNrd ,,,. hM helped""" b9tUe the.,... Orange Coaat ~Pll.OTITuM~. NOvembet' e. 1984 A7 .. IN TERMISSION 'Grandmother's -Ho,se • drama Restored movies ·make m .one-Y, ·toO of refilled Dt1St Parents, and tfiandpurents. suffor- lna from the "empty nest syndrome" . would be well advised to visit the · W~t~instc.r Comm.unity Theater for a.n an~1ght into the flip side oLthc s1tuat1on. In "To Grandmother'<> House We Go," a new dramatic comedy makln.a Its Orange County premiere, the title chaJ]lcter is faced with the pr~c! of ~er t~ree grown J"andchildren de- 5cendang on her indefi nitely while they rearrange the scattered pieces of their lives. Since her daughter an\! brother already are under her roof. it's not...a welcome prospect. Playwright Joanna M. Glas!. has focused, so)'Tlewhat melodram- atioally. o.n a social problem that· hasn't attracted much theatrical at- tention heretofore. Her character-; arc inieresling enough, but Glai.s moves them slowly, and hesitantly. like chess pieces manipulated by an overconscrvative competitor. At Westminster, director Larry Blake serves up some tasty portions of Glass' Thanksgiving pie. but the ensemble efl'eet often resembles cold leftovers. Both the scnp\ (primarily its first act) and the production would benefit from a.stepping up of tempo. Some excellent individual ·per- formances emerge, notably that of Jan Angelino as the w~ary but still feisty grandmother torn for her desire for solace and the grandch1ldren's appeals for sanctoory. Impressive To• Tnus A country kingdom for 'Polish Prince' By JOE EDWARDS 1h11Dl•led"'-WrMw NASHVILLE -After rehearsing · one day with a local band for a TV s ow, singer Bobby Vinton turned t9 .the musicians and said admiringly: "If J make the big time, I'll take you with me:· Unfortunately for the amb1t1ous musicians, they were 22 years too late. lives in ~.anta Monica. "Country caught up with me." · In 1964, Vinton recorded "Blue Velvet" in Nashville using top coun- try musicians including Boots Ran- dolph ;lnd Floyd Cramer. Actor- musician Kris K.nstofferson, then a Ocdgling songwrite·r, worked for CBS Records and drove Vin ton to and from the Nashville airport. How Yo.u Love Me ," "There. I've Said Jr Again" and "Please Love Me Forever." He has earned more than a dozen gold records and aJbumsand says he's sold more than $0 million records - his biography puts the figure at 25 • million. From 1975-77. he was host of a weekly syndicated TV series which aired 1n this country and Canada. He also has been host of a network variety special and appeared in two John Wayne movies. "Big Jake" and "The Train Robbers." By 808 THOMAS .......... ""' . ..., "Ill WOIS (JR" «"-IJ) l 00 ~ 10 10 X '?GI.JC( llCMOll"' (I) J I\ II~ LoMIRADA • ' JMU Of IUllS0 (I) 11!0 1 20 1~ _ n n..aroa r 111 110 610 10 10 "f llSl'ltM' "" Ill 100 Jll ~JO "~ 1000 Sit 0rrr H~ HO H~ IHI! "'•-!00 'Ill ~IOI" (J) 11 ·~ J ~ ~ ~ 1'\ 10 ~ 0 141tM 1400 l• ..... -.w h MwtA A1 ACJMC1tt1tt CM 111 "''*" ro 110110 snar ll"C) .1 JC f JCi ! Jl)O fl« .. lf'f' '11 l~ blS"l01> "l SlllDO 'S SICllr (l'C) I? JO 1 ~ f 40 • ·~ UO. 10~~ ..... "IOOf DOllU <•1 100 J A ~!>Of I~ 104i> ·111 ~ltS" (I) . .a. \ \ JU 1 • ., :o na "1111111811" (f'C) .. 00.lf )l(•O 100 ·~ '~ '"\' 111 LJTlU .... -·(JI) I 00 \~ 1010 "Ill M 1*1 IO DD" (I I HO t10 "fMIJ OI llJll$" (I) :i io u o no lllM110PI" (II ?JO • 10'>0 Vinton, known as the "Polish Prince,'' has been "big time" since 1962 when his song "Roses Are Red" capti vated the na- tion and set off a string of love songs th~t sold romance. Besides "Roses Are Red" and "Blue Velvet," Vinton's other hits included "Mr. Lonely,'' "My Melody of Love," "Blue on Blue." "I Love Reflecting on his success. Vinton said: "l had the sound oTfhe times. I was popular with adults and teens. I sold romance on my records." A new television project he's been involved in recently is ~ one-hour syndicated show of family entertain- ment featuring himself. Patti Page and country singer Boxcar Willie. PACI FIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES• Today. the 49- year-old performer lSJDaking..iLbig,as country music singer. He has a country-styled record out. "No Bed of Roses." complete with whining steel guitar. And while recently visiting Nashville. he taped an appearance on "Hee Haw." the syndicated TV show featuring coun- try music and com pone comedy. ''I started as a country singer." he said in an interview. "I patterned myself after Patsy Cline: I use her style and feel, and no male pop srnger ever did thaJ. I've never told anybody that." The late Cline was a top country star in the early 1960s with such hits as "Walkin ' After Midnight," "Crazy" and "I Fall to Pieces." ...... ~ ......... , \2'>J)ol M'.U'AM v,. ...... . ...., .. . COlla•u (O-#et~~ ..... t'9•U' CJllT•-,.i;-., ~- -,,. .. ~#fAl'O/- ~ ..,.,.~.,~ .... -...... """'\ii...• M ..6.U .... -lilll'.H.-...~~ \ ~j\B;lt -Ml(.C~""-' "'°"'° -1.1itt-.~oei•'' •WU,_..,.•r ..... r...,....."""'••n --* -·-... , .. -ll(Jt( ........... .,,. ~•11' cm --°""" .. om FIRST 80RN (PG· I~ S HOWS AT 1.15 l 1$ 5:15 7 15 & 9.IS Diane Kulon THIE UTTLIE DRUllMER GIRL (R) 12:00 2:10 5 :00 7 :30 & 10:00 Nit:k Nolte TEACHl[RS'(R) SHOWS AT 12:30 2 :40 4 :50 7 :00 &. t :IO TMllEf' 01' HEARTS (fl) SHOWS AT 3 :30 &. 1 :00 TM Ruor'1 Ed9e (P~l 3) at1'1>0 5 ~30~~0-~0-0 Sally Field ~CESIN THIE HEART (PG) 12:45 2 SS S:OS 7 IS &. 9 2S Steve Marton ALL Of' MIE (PIG) SHOWS AT 12.1-0 2 ·00 3 50 s 40 7 •30 9 :20 T HIEF Of' HEARTS (fl) Plu1 Co·Hll T19l'ltrope (Al J.OV £ LINES (R) ,.lus Co·F9'ture Hard Bodies (Al TERROR IN THE AeSLLS (R) Sc.M'face (R) ALL OP: ME (llGJ Plu1 Co-F•ature lrreconcllablt Olller- ences (PG) Cl'lrlUopl'ler P•nn THE W i LO UP'E (R) Purol• Rain (RI GHOST.USTER.S (NJ P1u1 Co-Future Gremlln1 (PG) "People who listened to 'Top 40' I 0 or 15 y~rs ~o are listening to country today,' said Vinton. who ORtV£·1ffS Open 11~45 WMday1/8•30 WktndJIChlldrtn Under 12 F RH trn1tu Jhtt.d ORANGE COUNTY VOTING RESULTS! iiliiiiiiiiiiii~EX c LU s IVE I LIVE, ELECTION NIGHT -COVERAGE! Jim Cooper and his special e lection night news tea m repo rt up-to-the-minute election totals, trac~ ballot issue results, and intervlew key candidates! TONIGHT · 9:00 p.m. · 1:00 a.m. --~~ l't•Ot po1191blt b)' gr•nt• from 51gn•rLandmark. Robert natf of Southern C•tlfornla , th~ CommlUH to rrtMf'\lt .t Kdpon•lblt Judl<lu """ lhf' Corporation for f'ubtlc Bro•d<••tlng. • NEWPORT BUCH • 1 wl • tit t lil• C()Jlllll '"'' , .. 1 ... Ill ' wt ~ 1 ~• V -, 111111\ t~N 1P\.1 •• ... ' •• ''Vt 't ,, 1"1, '•• .,... !It GOOS Ill.ISi • tlAll I"') '~I 11 ~· !OWN ClHl!lt • ~· , ., '-'•• .,,. a S<lDH S "Oii 1'111 " 11&4 .. • .. IOWH Cf HI[ R I r • •• "'°"'... f•Sf_.. "•\I\ • • "•CU 1111 ltt ltlll " 111111 -• ~ ... 11•• ~ 1(6'1\ • • IRVlf« • ti ccn • llt lflll &It !NI _111,..~pt) lJll 1G.1~ - ... K ui•W• "." (I'&) Cl"I If! II CMI& 10 ..oao SI •l'SI 'I\ 1tt& 1111 Ol IC 1'C1 .. llACllrt 111 , , * CINE-Fl SOUND! At these symbols pHt sound direct 10 your AM car * radio. If no radio with accessory position, bfint your own AM porui.i.. EN WEE.KENO 6:00 PM. DAILY 6:30 PM nllTI t• N ChildrenUndef \2 ALWAYS FREE BUENA PARK IJ:Ml!4ft13l1l:~~·.~~ l.!..~"') • • SUPER SWAP MEETS her; $AT. & $\tndi'V• • 111411?1 Ull/ Lual• ""'DI h.n • . · ' · · * I "UltWTor' 1 (ti :~ 'IOO'I DMU (I) "IOISl ll 111 a.ror· 11o o...-,1-oe * "CHISIUIOS' CPS) 'IUS 'CllOUIS (rfi l I •ruaos Ill 1 ·r11,11u LW£ 111 J "CUJS ~ ltM (I) I '1UOOS" (II l ''91ll111 ..... l'IOll' ,., l ·cun OI I ..... (t i IUt lt1 lHl w ... ,._ .. u .. a..c11 S Ot ,.,.,,. c.~o"' J~ .,, OI ..-ff'S I * l'lt/' ...._C(IQMU DfTCJCllClS i'CI ORANGE ~ (7141 1)4 tl61 o ..... Su11 AM F.,. A Sui• c .. • * SUPER SWAP MEETS Every SAT. & Sundly • • f ROM IAM 10 lPM f 01 lnlorrn.hon ll•I 63• 0~9 "111 ~fOI' (I I !'\US "OOllGllUO"' (I) ·rml'lmll" tK m !'\US 'IOD'l llOCll • <"' Ill l "M(ll(llllTlEl'llO'" Ill l 11GllllOlr (I) 1 re.a. 11 01 w .n 111 lllORllWPY • 'lf(I< "' "" " I !ti: ®/?;tZIM.W '11•1111 1 ""''"' ._, a !!ti"' l o.flits "' •• of IOf OI SO 111 "'•MU 4i0 'SO F ..... a c.r.n .... 'IOD'I OOIAL' <t ' 'Ill\ . Tll lllllM II t£D I~ ll SUPER SWAP MEETS ElfffY SAT.& Sunday . FROM 1 AM To)~ lo• l•lo•"'"•o• 114111~ 51') ALL SEATS $2.00 AT EDWARDS t«SA , EDWARDS WESTBROOK • IRVlt« • IJIVElSITT t-0. ..,_ ~~l fy -°' ...... Ir• UCI -'Y '-°' k-,_llCI -~ty t -0. Acm1 lr•UCI •11>• O(V'l I • I •f. • l•\l(Plll I'\, I • Mlt1111Cl lllll OlllRl1'<11 'f. .. 'j{, ,, ..... I 't llt Ulllll •( ... nu .... 11 ..... 1 _ __:._ iiiVtasm lflW(9" IHI •!\II "-°' ' ...... f,-•uti ,,.111wu• Q!·Yll lllmSHY c-o. 'cft!U .... ...c1 hf tlJTIJ \ IOQ Pio I l~·Ull \1\111 ~·GM\ • • WESTMINSTER • CIMMA WfSI ., _..1, -.,. CHMA wt ST .... , y .. Clf«MA wt<.1 ··~l.!'I!"' t ... , ~" ·~" CINEMA Wf Sl .. -. -... •co11cua1 llfl at\ tN l "•Ot"t1 fl .o 0 '°" , .. 1 •• I I • UWlfUS ·rfi • OTINGTON BUCH • lllNTINCTON ....... ' ... &O OlH ltlNTltGI •.. . . ~ .,.. t i .. ao om ... • ,.}_ Ill ,, •. t; • GlROf fC GJIOvt • MSTIROO. .. ,~ ...... . ... ._..,, ~ '' \JO .. 01 I I MSTBAOOIC -~· .. ...... .._. '" \!(I URI i 1111 oa1111 \ • COSTA ,_.SA• rowuos ... .. HARBOR IWIN ~ ~J. l,1 .. .HARBOit I WIN ~4~ '>(\- 'c1 Ml ··~ IHI "41 IP ' ~ I CINfMA IP ........ , .,. ''~ '"°' v un SOOIH COA\I .. ........ ... ....... ' .lf lot l0 -1(11 I i .. U /111' ~ UlQ 0(. IJ I' it1'd --~·~ . ,,, .. l(H 1e fl IHI tNI\ " hi) i .. ,.....,., • 1.111\MIJl~l ... '1 "' 11e 1 11 ""'\ • -O 'ltll \lllCI ~ 11 4 497 IHI ,. P!W U/ '"'' •le) "I" I •• flMH ""' ... , ilmmmili 1ACllftl t4111S 1011 t .• , "" ' •,( .. , '• ... l '" '-11 ... I Af,1110 HI! I\ liil&I • El TORO • SaOOt f8AC• .... "ft'• 'i4 IHI. 11 --ll» t ,aom t 111 ~ ....., " •1. '"' M!l'811 !'fl ~ ~~ ~ \AOOI ! fl•l ~ 11""" Ill ... II'.>• I I l[~ll I 11• t • '"l' CJ HJ.YT'< I ·• Wlil"~IH nt1 lin .. Q'I! .. , ~ If\' ~1 ~\..,.-tl '"' ~)., ... . . I \(I ii I , •• 1'( • llSSION VI.JO • VII lfl IWIN 11111 O'I-• ,,., I u 11•\•0l.i l'I. ·~ ., ' 4q\ t . ~ -----'fl(I() MAil "ill"" 1141 Ol W il'C, ... ,.. • °" \ . . • SAlfT A ANA • . . ..., \•~ .•.. iiii'flOl IHI. 0 • ....... \48 ••• AA!\ 10I . -. ... """' ... ~ ... - . Go out and vote unless you think -& Ferraro's a cu .. . .. ~ If ifs not yet 8 p.m. as yo u read this, if you're one of the 13 million registered voters in California, if yo u haven't voted and if YQU have the slightest idea w,h o's rwnning, get off your duff. On the other hand, if you think Ryaga'n is ·suck Roger's pi~tol, Mondale is a housing development in Irvine and Ferraro 1s that snappy, red spons car yo ur dentist drives, stay home. If you know that Proposi tion 39 will change the way California draws its legislative districts, get out and vote. But if you think Jarvis IV Is a personal computer, avoid th e polls, please. If you know that Marian Bergeson is running for the ~tate Senate in the 37th Di strict. head for the booth. But, if you think Donn Hall is a college dormnory, head for the hills. The principle of self-rule is based on the notion. sometimes fanciful, of ah informed electorate. When a voter walks into the booth, finds the names of the candidates and marks.th e ballot for the ones who best reflect his idea of good government, th at's democracy in action. But, when a voter wa lks into,he booth and casts ballots fof names and ideas that are as fQreign to him as rubles and yaks, that's chaos. Our political system was not designed to extrac t truth from the multitudes. Rather, it assumes that a good citi zen will take the responsibility for creating hi s own government; that he will learn something of the candidates and the issues and , acting upon that knowledge. will cast hi s vote for the best person for th e job. o, if you know who Myra Mendola is. or E. Nick Homer. or Ali ce Keyser or Maxine Bell Quirk. do yourself, you community and your count ry a fa vor: vote. But . if you believed yo ur butcher's explanation that Badham is a cu t of meat that will make you ill. if yo u took yo ur doctor's word that Lungren 1s an upper respiratory Infecti on or 1f yo u thought yo ur hairdresser had a good idea when she said Frizzelle will curl your hair, do your democratic duty -tune in the A Team. Of mice and song Mice c;ing.tllgfl note\:-Ver: hign. Q. What vegetable 1s most w1dcl) used worldwide,, A. The onion. Of the 50 m1ll1on eggs a female oyster spawn.s at a single setting, only two car be expected to survive. If you dug straight down and kept on d1gg1ng. theoretically. }ou'd come out not an Chana but tn 1he Indian Ocean. From almost anywhere on land worldwide. in fact. you'd come out 1n some ocean Only 3 percent of the earth''> land 1s what the scholars call anupodal -opposite 01her land You know that musical "West Side Story"? Ong.mally. 1t was called "East Side Stol)." Q. Boxing nng\ coml· h1g and small. but what's regulation,, A. 20 square feet No matter what lead!. up tu that cond111on calkd "hypoxem1a" - insufficient blood "'the brain -1t 1s lh1..· 1inal cause or-almost all tiuman death. ft wai. the fellow on the end of the rope in one of mankind''> old1..·st games -tug o' war -who ga"e u!> the telev1s1on title of"anchor man .. What, you don't recogn1LC -Snoopy's s1s1er Belle'! You say you·ve ne'er heard of his brother'~p1ke,, r1 cost Pnncess Margaret S29 and took her 53 seconds to divorce Lord Snowden. Muckle John 1n the reign of( harles I was the last royal fool of England, unless you want to get nast) about 1t. Q. Has an actor of Chinese ex1rac- tion ever played Charl ie Chao? A. Not in the movies. You don't alwar1 think of the obvious why of things until you're told. For example, the world's biggest user of silver 1s Kodak. L.M. Boyd is • ayodicated columnist. · Strong aid to Israel justified • To the Ed11or: President Reagan ha., lhanged the nature of the mcncan-lsraeh rela- tionship from one hac;cd on '>ent1ment to an openl}' acknowledged '\trateg1c • alliance Given th<.' 1ntclhgence-shar- iog and dctensc-re'>l·a rch-and-de- ,. vclopment rclat10n\h1pc; between us, from which America hcncfit!> d1rcct- ly.,and Israel's slatu!> a\ hoth 1he onl> democracy and onl) 1ndu'>· tnal/technolog1cal po1.1tl'r 1n her re· pan. I feel a strong. aid palkagc 1s 1ustified and pa)\ di\ l(knd" for Amencanc;. Of course. the amount and tam-; of aid to Israel and the purpo'iC\ uf that aid from the viewpoint of Amem:an interests arc entirely leg111ma1e o;ub- jects for examination and debate But -when I read "Cul ofT all aid, military and economic" a-; Carol Ann Bradford has wntten -thl\ say\ something definite and unmistakable to me; even 1f I were a liberal Democrat I could not as a Jew be nai ve eno ugh to fail to lite the 1mphc1t message. It is a mcs,agc that has spread for the last ~vcral years from its tra- ditional home 1n the gutter to a new. respectable home on the liberal Left wh ere..n goes hy the nice euphemism of"anta·Ziomsm," and 111.sa message that Slinks. · ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat f Bradford. such an expen on the Middle East that she couldn't spell the country's name ("h rcal") IS Just such an "ant1-Z1 onist ·· She JU!>llfied her 1982 outbur~t by pointing to the tragic Beirut massacre ol Pale'itin1ans but puts all the blame on hrael. not even mentioning the Lebanese Chn.,. t1an militiamen who killed the v1c-.. urns. I've seen this before in relation to Beirut. 11 1yp1fic~ those who are uncomfonable wJth the tcrnblc re- cord of Jewish sufTenng tn Western history. who are fundamentally un- comfortable with J<:ws and want a chance 10 say. "So there " Bradford also put the word democ- rac) 1n quotation marks as apphc!> to lvacl. which 1s a lud1cruous and outrageous slander, again showing her hostility Bradford is typical of toda)' 's liberal ac11v1sts in 1hc Democratic party. over a wide range of issues they arc demono;tratln$ that they are not friends of the Jewish people I believt' 1t 1s incumbent upon the many Jews who arc Democrats not only to refrain from voting for this woman. but to let their party leadership knO\\ 1n no uncertain terms that radaclih "ant1·Z1o n1sts" like Bradford l\rc unacceptable 11s standard hearers. BRUCE J. SCHNEIDER Coo;ta Me1;a H. L. Sehwert:r Ill t , •• Frank Zlnl ~· , ,err J I .., 1 Tom Telt ''•-r f _. 't" t9"ill itt• tJ(; N~t ,,.,., I 1r ,...... •oo • ' "r• • ,,, ~·' fl • ''' 1 .. Y~t /..it ,,, • f ft f Crelg &hett '"""' ' ,,,,..,. ' ·'Men or wom en who kill Jn a jealous rage -as we read In the papers ntarlyeveryweek-arereallysayJng, '/f/can'thnveyou. nobodyelse w/J/.' .. ... SYDNEY HAJUU8 COllllll.OJ.at SIDIEY Hu11s On true -...-------· ave in our life Too muc h j ealou sy s p oil s rom a n ce of r ela ttons hi p ,. --- A littleJcalousy, like a httle greed, 1s a normal human emotion; although neither is attractive, both are toler- able within limils.-But se xuaJjealousy poSSC$SCS a demonic quality that is quite sin~ular. \ -Travels in Tahiti turrl up Obsessive jealousy has little to do with reality. As some wise Frenchman has said, "To be: jeal ous is to love people as if you ha~tcd them." Men or women who kill i a jealous rage -as we read m the pa rs nearly every week -are really sayinl! "If 1 can't h~.ou, nobody else will." This. of course, is not love, but ats diabolic counterfeit. To love an object. whether romantically or not, 1s to d~itc what is best for 11.1 not what 1s deemed best for onesel1. But the fiercely 1ealous lover. or ptale, places his own needs above 'those of the object. tour gujde sweet ':ls Sugar ) C\. m\ 'al.it1on 1ntcrfrrcd w11h Searchlight rnlumm for two w1..·cks. And, Judging b) the telephone ca lls, that om1'>'>1on made .. omc of you prell) mad Of courk al m-.. advanced age. nothing pkase\ m) ·old ego 50 much as to hft...,~ 5ome telephenf'eall'i from readers '>a~ 1ng they miss the Sejlrch- ltght Hov. v.a\ my \acat1on" Wonderful' \ctu:ill}. 11 wac; the most delightful vacauon J'\C had in )Car\. . M) v..1fc and t'ilcv. to Tah111 and 11 was on1..· of the pleasantc'il f11ghts I've ever experienced. It wa\ on a French airline called UT A. The stewardesses spoke both French and English and the} served us dehc1ou!> food and be\erages Seven and a half hours lalt.L~urri.ved ... Thvs...cndcd an idyll. At Papet:te on the island of Tah1t1 things began to get a little rough. We had to wait hours for a flight to Bora- Bora on an Air Pol) ncs1an plane. gh' The scats were so clo~ together I was lucky to get on"' 1th no worse than a leg cramp. Bui t~ fl1g'h1 lasted onl y an hour. The Bora-Bora airport 1s dear out on an island in the middle of the dnnk. From there you gel on a boat (very pleasant) and to a landing at the far end of the island. You then ndl' "Le Truck" to the hotel. Rut this isn't a travelogue. The sole purpose of this column when I decided to write 11 was to tell you o;omething that seems amazing to me We met a "Le Truck" driver .qbo 1s a most mtere5ting i>crs~er name 1s Enua Doom. hut everyone calls her Sugar. One oft he amusement'> I\ ofTcred 1s a tnp arouQd the island of Bora-Bora. This. of course, 1s on a "Le Truck" dnven by Sugar. he 1s a South Sea na11ve and she \peaks the mo~t grammatttal E.nglish of an) one l'v<." ever met Far better. tor example. than I have l'Xpcm•nced with "highly educated" natives of apparentl y aboul all the growing Minnesota or Iowa. things. I got her story. She was born on She also knows abut the fauna. And Cook Island. one of the Rarotonga I would say she has all the qualities of group. Cook Island 1o;a British-owned a well-infoIT(led sociologist. 1 land. When Sugar was a child each Of course. most of the economy of member oflhe famil) got a very small the island used to be based on copra. income for many hours of worlc -CQpra comes from coconul.s th at about SS per week per family member g won high palm trees. To keep the -and 1hcre were a lot of children in rat rom cfimbing the palm·trees and the family. On Cook Island, however, stea ng the coconuts. 1t has been the the Bntish took the education of their cust to wrap a metal band about 12 subjects vef) seriously and each child inche wide around the trunk of the was required to allend school from tree. T as called a rat guard. "I:he the age of 5 until about 15. way 1t w rk s is, when the rats try to Sugar~ father apparently was an climb the ree. this area of the trunk unusual man. Small as it was. the becomes t slick fo r them to keep entire family income was collected by climbing, so hey give their attention him and devoted to enabling the to coconuts ~ at have fallen to the oldest remaining child to go to New ground. " Z.,·aland where c.ondilions..weTe.l>ct~ --+-asked -Sugai why-there were a ter number of free without rat.guards. WALTER BURROUGHS Then. as the next younger child became top candidate, the family income was devoted to him or her. Sugar got a little 11rcd of waatul,&. so c;he accepted a proposal f~m a Tah111an who was on Cook lc;land ctunng World War II. This man was the son of the man who owns and operates all the trucks on Bora-Bora. Result: She not only became a wife. but she became a truck driver. And she continued to learn. Ai. I menti6ned. I have seldom met a betlcr-Enghsh-spealdng person or a better-informed person. To conduct a !>ight-sceing tour she is perfect. She speaks French and Tahitian as well as FnJ.hSh. She know') about the nowers and "It's easier to io o.work for one of the hotels on the i land. So. they do't want to do the h.ard work of climbing palm tree$ and wrapping the metal strips around." She showed us 1he thousands of land crabs on the road which, to avoid being run over. would dash for a hole. Sugar ~ot out of the truck and, protecung her hand with a piece of cloth. reached into the hole and pulled. out a land crab. The land crabs li ve ori vegetation solely and they are just as good to eat as crabs from the water. says Sugar. I would sa)' she's a self-taught sociologist and oconom1st. She can predict 1hq future of the island and how it wil~ affect the welfare of the inhabitants. Well, f dipn't intend this to become a d1ssenatibn. but I did want you to meet Enua L Sugar, that is. If you ever go to BQ.ra-Bora be sure to meet her right aflet she delivers children to school or mcFts an inco ming boat. Waller B'1rrougb• I• lbe Pilot'• fouadl111 pob/J•ber. Sometimes the emotion does not even pretend to be love. but mere possessiveness. A man who may not have made love to his wife in years may bmerly resent the man who does. like tlie dog with the bone in Aesop-..s fable. In more cases than not. 11 1s pnde and vanity that spur revenge. Some people arc so covetous thal they do not care to lose or even share what they do not want, which 1s a kind of moral insanity. There is an old Spanish proverb: "Take hold lightly; let go lightly: this IS one of the great secrets o(felicity JO love." But the obsessively jeaJou!> nature 1s not looking for felicity in l<tve: It 11 loo~n$-for1ntcns11r,a11d a certain kind of intensity can after a time. repel more than it binds. Chesterton ooce advised, "The way to love anything is to realize that 11 might be lost." Emotionally needy people. however. cannot accept the possibility of loss -at 1east to another. if jilted or bc:trayed, they wo uld rather visi t death. or at least misery. upon the object of their affections. This 1s the litmus test for d1s- tm_gu1shing genu ine love from its evil twin, which is possessiveness. If the happiness of the object 1s not at least as important as one's own, then there 1s little real love involved. If a relationship 1s denied the freedom to change, the bond is transformed into a chain. and man and maid turned into capti.Ye and captor. A little jealousy, Like a little salt. puts Oavor into a romance or a marriage: an overdose of brine makes it as unconsumable as sea water. And. like sea water,jealo~sy only provokes the th irst it seeks 10 allay. Sydney Harris I• a •yadlcated columol11. More on Jarvis IV initiative Mesa council doing •greatjob' To 1he Ed11or Permit me to c;et the n·rnrd \tra1gh1. In recent week\. 'iupportcri. of Prop- os111on 16 th\.' m-callcd Jarvis IV in111a11vt· have claimed th<i l 11 their in111a11v1..· •'I defeated. Propos1t1on 13 will encl on Jul> I. I '185 and propert} taxc'i will douhlc rh1s fahncauon is purposely raku- latecl to sCllrl' the puhlic into voting for Propos111on 36. Mr. Jarvis· claim J'i literally . pol111call) and 1.onsti tu- 11onally 1mp<1\\lblc. Mr. Jarvis has distorted a 1982 C aliforn1a 5upreme Court decii.1on (Carman v. Alvord) that cnabk\ n11e~ with vc~ted pcn- i.1on obhgationi. approved hy the voters before Prop. I J ( 1978} to finance them with a property ta\ ovemde above the I percent hm11 allowed by Prop. l l However. only 67 cities (out nf 436) and 6 coun1ies (out of S&> hove prior-approved pension system-. Th(' 1mpart1al ~talc Lcg1!>lativc Analyst cst1matC!> that at most a 10 percent increao;e 1s possible for these pension !lystems. but only Jf per- miucd bv the governor and the Leg1)lalure < an you imagine Gov- ernor Dcukme11an and two thirds of the Lcg1slaturt: approving an urgency mca'iure so 6 7 citiec; and 6 counties can ,e,ercisc the property tax override tor 1985? The governor has repeated- 1) \lated he will 'cto \Ucha measure Not onl}' 1~ there no poss1b1hty ofa douhhng of th(· property tax 1! Proposition 36 fa1l'i, the basic 1 percent tax limit under Proposiuon 13 l'i 'illll vel) much ali ve. W11hout Propo\1t1on 1 l ( alifornia taxpayers rnuld pay B'i much a\ $24 b1lhon 1n propt.'Pi) tucs th1~ year. Instead, we pay SU billion. Homeowners who have owned their homes since 1975 pay as Ii Ille as one half of 1 percent of market val ue in property taxes. Home!I bought a'i recently as 1982 have a bt'tter deal than onginal Pr0Poi.1t1on 13; le'i!. than I percent of market value 1., paid on their rcs1· dcnces. Voters <ohould be wary of last- manute scare Lact1cs. RICHARD P SIMPSON faccutJve Yacc Pre 1dcnt Ca hfornrn Ta}lpaycr.i' Assocuuion Carter-Mondale regime naive To 1he Fd1tor· The ( Mtcr·Mondale rC"g1me wa~ h11ppy with 1h tclationsh1p with communist Ru-.s111. until the oven 1n va'i1on (If '\f,han1)tan They then reacted with n grain and Olymp1< Fmbarao Many of uc; were much more rnnrcrncd w11 h lhc communist l'Onsp1racy in Africa. \ in and Central Amenca The ( aner Mondale regime had, 1n many case • a~ttcd that con,pirocy by echoini communist propaaanda. about human nght1; vmlauon~. etc. They would ohandon fnendl> &O\'· crnmenl\ to rnmmuna\t lOkcO\iiil < :inc·Mondnlc wn'i sucked into the commun!st conspiracy by echoing communi st propaaanda It was no ~urpmc to man> of us when Rui.!>1a auarkcd AfV1an1!.tan. It was n '>ur- pn~ when they attacl.cd Poland, when they wert under iueg.c by Hitler. Some of uii. were ocq uointcd w11h R us 13 and their tnct1cs and obJcc- tives. I hope that the mer1can people don't tum the government over aJain to the naive people. who abetted the communi\t C'onspiracy to overthrow 'K• many fncndly t1-overnrnenl\. JIM BOI DINO C 0'-13 Mc .. a To the Eduor: I am proud of the direction the City Council has taken 1n recent years with quality and well-planned develop- ments. and I would like to illustrate the pos1t1ve transformation of Costa Mesa's image with this true story: A fnend of mine was shopping on Fifth Avenue in New York City and presented his out-of-state check to the sales clerk. She looked at his Newport Beach address and asked, "Where 1s Newport Beach?" My friend replied, "It 1s about 50 miles south of Los ' Anieles." The sales clerk then asked, "Is 1t anywhere near Costa Mesa?" The point of my story 1s how much the image of Costa Mesa ha s im- proved in JUSt the past few years. We no longer are thought of as .. Goat Hill.'' Costa Mesa is the home for the Orange County Performing Arts ('enter and one o f the nation's finest ~hopping centers. Some of the stores at South Coast Plaza proudly hst the cities they serve: "London, Rome, Paris. Cosl.'l Mesa." 1 think this city hu .nany rca~ons for 11s residents to be: proud. Sure. 11 1s not perfect. The noise and park1na around the Pacific Amphitheatre cause some problems for those who live next to the fairgrounds. As we all know by now, the fairgrounds are on state-owned property and it is dif- ficult for the ci ty to enforce its ordinanccc;. But Mayor Donn Hall, Councilman Eric Johnsoh' and the ~st of the counci• arc working hard through the couns and state legis- lature to solve those problems. The h1$hC t rates in the county fo r commercial office space ere now in Costa Mesa. The Center Tower is the most prestigious office address io the county. Costa Mesa resident's enjoy the best fi re and police protection. some of the finest parks. streets and oth er c11y services of any city in the county, ma ybe even the state. Our neighboring cities arc extreme· ly envious of the tremendous sales tu base that we enjoy from South Coast Plaza and the car dealers on Harbor Boulevard. I think Mayor Donn Hall and Councilman Eric Johnson deserve our vote~ fOfTC"-election. MICHAEL R. LAWLER. JR. Costa Mesa Prefers Bradford to Badham To the Editor In Da ily Pilot's Oct. 21 endorse- ment of Badharn. you say he as Cong.re s' leadina Junketeer and add the onl y aood quality about Badham's congrcs ional behavior is that he 1s a "reliable rubber stamp" for Rcagar;i'• pol1cie1. The 40th das- tru:t docsn'• need rubber stamps, the d1stnct needs leadenhip. Your editorial also implies that Badham'1 challcn,cr. Carol Ann Brodford. has supcnor quaJifi hons over 8adham. that Bradford's interests arc attuned to the 40th district and Bradford ha b1part1san suppon. Yet, the Oa.lly Pilot didn't endorse bcr. You suuest Bttdford haa flawi The ooJy flaw Bradford has 1s that she isn't a Republican, which illustrates how blind p&!lisanship and blind obedience havcobscurcd this new • paper's objcctiv1t~ a.nd v 1 ion. CORTNEY WELC'll Lagunn Beach 1 .. , .. .... \' TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6. 19M ... I_lelielfOr D~wn ~s Syndrome.debated Developer 0 U Series Stil country wbo is uslnf the "U Series" he developed; the Food and Dnaa Administration hu disputed iu elrcctive- k FDA, } ness •nd has denied apPfoval for conunercial distribution. see tn__g s ~_J!rova ·Turkel discussed his treatment -and his battle with --===:;..o...;;.~:;..==='---~~:;;;;....-===-===-i!Me"J:rr.c:-= unna t e recent ntemat on ympos1um on By SUSAN MONAHAN Down's Syndrome at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim. o.1r,...c.11111 a• . Tbesymposium wauponsorcd by the non-profir National For more than 40 years, Henry Turkel, M.D.,,has been Academy for Child Development for professionals and treatina victims of Down's Syndrome with medication parents ofafflicted children. that be claims enables them to develop nom1ally, both Down's Syndrome lnhe result of an extra No. 21 mentally and physically. chromosome; instead oftbc standard 46 chromosomes, a . "The Downs Syndrome child ~s a normal child who person with Down's has 47. The characteristic epicanth1•l throu&h an· accident haS received a normal extra folds under the eyes of people with this disoroer caused chromosome," explained Turkel, who operates a clinic for them to be labeled "Mon&oloids," a term which is rapidly Down's Syndrome J)&tients in Southfield, Mich. losing favor. · However, Turkel is one of the few physicians in the The chromosomal abnormality also can cause mental -.. :llliililll retardauon, conacnitaJ hean defects, a. weU,mcd rapir· atory fystem, uncerdevelopcd sinuses, imnfatW'C retinac, club ~et and poor muscle tone. The severity of this dilQ!'®r_y . . ., Syndrome will not n~y be afflicted with all of the1e conditions. Turkel says that acnes on the extra chromosome: produce chemicals which like up space and interfere with the delivery of nutrients ana the removal of wastes. Because these chemicals are not themselves ab- normal. he c.xpla1ned,. they arc not s:cmoved by the placenta while the fetUs is developina. Therefore the normal development of fetal and ..embryonic ocUs 1s blocked. After the child 1s born, the wastes continue to accumulate, and because the excretory orpns arc often underdeveloped. the penon witb Down's may Dal ehm1n1tc body wast.et efficiently ... Tbe wholie body aocumulaies wuies. and as they a.«umulate, the child eittS worse" -~~~ Althoush Turkel concentrates on Down'• peticnU. lte says that manr other ditealel which are cauted by "accumulations ' mpond to the U Seri.et. HetDd that ua medical student• be uted a AfDilar t.reatmcDt OD diabetics. thcorizin• that Cauydepoaiu in the liver i.nierfered witb the body's ability tO Ult insu..lio. • ' The U Senes is not desianed to elimiaaie the "tra ch romosome, b\lt to set rid of the ICCUm:e be explained. The medication is primarily com of vitamins and minerals, with many cuily a · and common drugs included. (PIMM ... DOWJll'a{lll) . . Teen y~ars: T·he ~est is yet t~ co1q.e • SAN FRANCISCO (A P) -Teen-agers need more information about depression al)d how to deal wjth it if authorities hope to curb the incrcasina number of those who commit suicide each year, a counselor sa s. -On oflhe bes p Ices to act lhaCirlformation is at JCbool, said Charlotte P ....Ross, c.xecutive director of the Suicide Prevention and Crisis Center of San Mateo County. "Youngsters do tum to each other and, whether we like it or not, they're the major resource (of information)," Ross said. "And if we can help them help each other more effectively, we can do an awful lot." • Ross and other panelists discussed the arowina problem of teen suicides in the United States at a two-<lay symposium sponsored by UC San Francisco and the San Mateo prevention center. An estimated S,000 people · between the aaes of IS and ~4 kill themselves annually. "The aencral approach has to do with helpina younpters ... understand nonnal reactions to stress, pain (and} loss," she said. · 'That is (to understand) the depression of even thinkina about suicide, but knowina there's a difference between what we think and what we do. Helplna younptm so they don't panic and belpint younpters know and understand and enable to use the ra.nae of Many people-------------When his audience responded with lau&ht.er, he added. think that the only "Oh, do you have one of those, too?" thing worse than Adolescence is usually divided into three m-_jor being~n ada1escent is I • stagesj· the &ood news is that the worst comes first. Parenu 1ivinsWith one. . ulDA in their own mid-life arc a1wars encouraged with the idea Since the begin-that hope for improvement is in the not-so-distant future. ning of time, even AL"•"I And ljke the adole!l<lCnts themselves, parents need all the healthy teen-agers wu. encouraaement they can &et. have been known to I still remember Marilyn, the gJrl who made my life stand whatever hair miserable when we were both in the seventh grade. The is left on their parents' heads on end. Distancin& oneself major goal ofa 12-to IS-year-old 1s to be ac.ccptcd by his or from parental authority seems to be necessary in order to her peers, and Marilyn, the self-assigned queen of P.S. 217, entet'1nto healthy•dulthood:-dtctnontcepl me. - Distancing from one's children may begin to feel real I used to wish she'd get a toothache. The child in me att(active durin& this time, but most parents opt to wear a still hopes she's had one. hair shirt and suffer along with their offspring. It's touJh to be 13, ha.vina to stru&&lc with a new bQdy,,_ And what suffering it is ... even at best. a new identity and new expectations. -9ut it's also tou&h to It must have been the father of a teen-ager who was the be the parent of a 13-year-old. • first man to tear a phone book in half. 'fbere's a novel kind of relief in store for parents I beard comedian Corbett Monika say recently that he whose, children survive to their mid-teens. The sounds of has adaugbterwho has berown apartment-in his house. home fife chanae. In place of conversations(r5-to 18-year- -. .a. . olds wlll taJlr, to anyone other than relauves), comes loud music. ~otly, the music does not blot out the abilJ.!y to thin use mid-teen~rs hve a m:b-fanwy life. They worry endleuJy about bow they look and struale desperately to find a place for themselves in this world:'" As youths approach 18, it's a clic.11e that their parenu &et srnaner. A&ma teens, while still idealistic •. have achleved a somewhat more realistic, more mature view of themselves ... and of thCir parents. Goals may even bccorQe re<:ogntzable. A few have even been known-to discover that their ~ts can be a source of JOOd information for future Plinnina. . ' And then ... 1ust when they become really pleasant, they leave., Dr. A/D.Zi is • marriqe and family r.benpin in Corona de/ Mar. She welcomes your mponses. Uyou will.J a reply, pleast: enclose• swni>ed. self.~ avek>pe. Wme to Linda Aluzi, Ph.D., c/o Daily Pilot. P.O. Bo~ 1560, Cost.I Mesa 92626. __ .,. resoUICCS available to them." ...., ............. .,....., ... ltossuid teaciters-alto must be tau~ ... rec:-:o"'jan~iz-c~~--=-...,....,,......._ ..... ba ...... ----:-'I sians of depression and hints of suicide, and be able to give onoree8 Dlck&ifea and Walter SCllmld chafw1Ule Hyt.-~terlletlrCODIJ1lta.latc Peter Ueberroc:u atC pmau iaiate. students accurate information. Some educators have been afraid to tallc about suicide with stu<lents for fear of somehow ~ina held responsible for the y6uth's actions, she said. . TRIO'S VISION CITED • The fin1er-pointina that sometimes follows a suicide can fuel a school's apprehension, she said. "One.common '¥hiPPinJ boy, one comm.on place. to blame is the school," Ross sa1d. "A common kind ofth1n& to hear is that if the schools were really doina their job, they would have recoanized" the sians of depression. "Tbis results ... in a major inhibitor apinst action. The school becomet very defensive because if they're goinf. to be held to blame, they better be very, very careful. 'I do hear school administrators say, .;rm in the education business. If I do that I'm safe. If I &et into the suicide prevention business, I'm in trouble.· " -... : ... By DORIS ORTIZ ~,... Ceftn••,,..., An illustrious trio joined the ranks of Chapman College American Celebration alumni Saturday when Rlcbard Bertea, Walter Schmid and Peter Ueberrotb were honored at the S6tb annual founder's Day event at the Anaheim Marriott Hotel. Reminding the l, I OOdinnerguests that "man's reach should be longer than his arasp," narrator'narl Raventcroft said the ~r-ecs shared a common lmproveilKnt:e operation speeds mending, benO.ing Surgery through arthroscope allows ~ quicker recovery less 1han half an inch each. The operauon can be perfonned in outpatient centers without hospitalization which is more convenient and less costly. But most importantly, there is less tissue destnaction to act inside 1he knee. and return to activity is remarkably easy. "I'm ready to •o h .. d------------This new suraery also can be orrformed under local ome now, 581 anesthesia. This means that nµmbfna medication can be Larry about IS · ·I · th II h h minutes •"'er his injected into the JO nt and into e sma areas w ere t e 11 B incision will be made to introduce the instruments. The knee 1uracry was fin -RENIAll suraery can then be done wbUe the patient is awake. ithed. He had been " The advantqes u~ nummnn. The risk assocJated wheeled into the oP: CASSIDY with a aeneral anesthesia it small but real; the risk is almost eratlna room wtih a nil with an operation done with only local anesthesia. tom canilaac in his ••••••••••••• Nausta and vomitina can often occur with sencnl riaht knee about anesthesia, and it takes boun to recover from the efTecu of I f:30 a.m. 1eneral anesthesia. All of this is averted with local Ninety minutes later hit surscry was completed and anesthesia 1n the joint and 1utroundln& t1ssues. For all he walked out to the parkina lot where his wife waited to practical pW"poscs. if necal&t)', you could act up off the drive bim home. The tom cartltaae In his knee had bttn operatin' table aner the suraery and walk out of the room. removed. If you ever f!hd younelfin the unfonunate position of The operatlna room was not at the hospital but at an needina suraery on the knee, uk your onho~lc suraeon outpatient center for 1urscry without hospitalization. about suraery throush the anhr01Cope or if be or she Thcte centcr1 a~ often referred to u sursicentcra. (Not to belonas to an anhl'OICoptc auoclation. Also uk about be confuted with emef1icentera which are for walk·in surael)' performed without bospital~tion and without tcncral medical care.) • aenefll attestbnia. The rapid development of sul'lk:al techniques hu If your doctor does not do su,..ery tbrouah the been remarkable in cenain areas. Juat 10 Yfll" .,o a anl\roscopeoruy1thatyour1uraeryca.nnotbepenormcd similar Of!Cr&don on the knee required hotpu.aJi.zauon ror that way feel free to tct 1 1eeond opinion from an four lO nve dayi. a call for four to liJl wtekt and orthopedic SUfl'On wbo has eAperience with this new approximately aix months forrehabilhalion oftbeafl'ected auf'ICtY. Jt will save time and money for you. And it W111 tea. save a lot of pe1n and suf'ftrin,. Today with 1he advent of new procedures, the anll• can be removed throuah an instnamcnt called the J. BrenMJJ C~dr, M.D., pncuces limil)' and arthroicc>pe. It ~u1res only a couple of small an 1 Jon -cmctJtncy medicine in Cc»ra fcu. .l ... ~ ' ~=,,_-----·-.. trait .,.. "the vision to sec a challenge and the courage to roeern." A musical montage, perfonned by Chapman Concert Choir. the Chapman Cham~r Orchestra and American Celebration Dancers played against a mu lt1- imagc scrce nina on the 80.foot staae to dramauzc events in the life of each iuvard recipient. "This staac. the closed circuit TV. the mulu-mcd1a production dido 'tjust get here, they are the result of the skills and talents of Chapman students," said G.T. "Buck" Smith, president of the colle&e. Bertca, cha1nnan of the execut1vccomm1ttee of Parker Hannifin Corp. in Irvine and a Chapman trust~ (Bertca Hall on cam~us is named for him). has realized his hfc-long fascination with flight and was so cp1tom12ed. An aviator who owns several aircraft , he has no"'n Navy JCts. sports planes, helicopters. c1v11ianJet transports, and knows-fint-hand the serenity of soanng: in a glider(tosay nothina ofthecxhilaration of climbmg the Matterhorn, which he did while living in Switzer· land with his family in 1981 ). Bene a and his wife, Hy la, were c<>-<:om m 1ss1oncrs .of gymnastics for the 1984 Olympics. a Job the president oft he Games. Ueberroth. told them would require 100 percent effort. UeberToth, who could be called a 1.000 percent role model. was honored as the catalyst for those econom1· cally successful and stylish Olympics. That the Games cn1cndercd a national pndc and euphona. a S l SO mil hon surplus and a record attendance arc marks of the extraordma.ry success ofb1s 1ch1evement. That he accepted no remuneration for the four-year assianment, and that the balf-m1llion dollar bonus he wafjiven will, in tum,l>e donated to his chaiities (both facts revealed by Smith), 1s furthcrev1dcncc of Ucberroth 's style. Thestand1naovatJon that was accorded Ueberrotb at the clost of the Games wa repeated, in 1 scns.e, by Saturday's audience when hands we rt JOincd a.nd voices hf\cd tosina. with tbecho1r, themov1na"RcacbOutand Touch Somebody's Hand" to recreate Gtuy U""l'· roo'a favorite moment oftheOlymp1cs. Schmid, an Oranae County resident for 73 ofbi 82 years, hascst.abJishcd himself as a farmer. rancher, bus1ncuman andcommuruty leadens wtll asa te.der 10 the polmcaland soc:tal development of the county. He hat been a Chapman Collett trun~ 51 nee 1966 and with hb wafc, Marat, cstabb hcd the Waltmar Foundauon to provide scholal"lhips and panial fund an.a for construction of the Watunar Theater on camp~ At the close of the prosram. themed "Somethina's Com1na!." all three honorttsandthcir wtvc wtre invucdon stqetobcprncntcdW1th 011 ponra1u painted by Lquna Bcachartat ftobtrtSeMar. m1thandht v.1fc.J ... 1e.~rtJ01n«lby · ch11rman Jad l>Mdy and 9.1fc Fra~ in v.ekomina Gene Aatry ireetallal'J and Jam• ROOM· velt at A.mmcan Celebration banquet. guests a ta pre-dinner reception in a suite at the hotel. Ginn) L'c~rroth. ma black jet-beaded cockta1l-lenath dress. confided that she "gcu to root for everyone" now that her husband 1s Commissioner ofBaseball. lie. too. claim~ to be a non-partisan rooter now although he was a Cubs fan when he hvcd in Ch1c.aao and was a Oodaers season ticket-holder. The couple recently moved to Manhattan Baseball pcrsonalit1« amona the aucm included Angels owner Ge.ne Aatry and his wtfe, Jactie; Detroit T11ers' th1rdbascman MartyCaatWo(aChapman alum) and h\s ~1fc. JaUe (nee Zeh of Ana.bc1m.1 and mother of the couple's 2-week-old SQn, "'111t .... r), Angels' 1cneral manqcr Mike Port, ana 'IUJ Bava1l, director of minor lcque operations for tbe An.acts and SQn of former aeneral manaacr Batt)' Banal. H)'la Bcrtea, 1n multi-colored sequins. takes her bu band'uccomplishmcnts 1n stndcand chat upa few adventutts on her own She recently returned &om Bhutan and HOl'\I Kon.a and had a one-day stop0vcr in India ju · t pnor to the assau1nation of Pnmt Mmister - 1 ndara Ghand1. • · Radiant amona ~tuests was JadJe Mllf91 (husband Georp 1s chlirmlln of thr board of Chapman Collcae), who went all~ut spectacular 1na stunrun18111 Blass ~rlet and black sown topped with a fcath.er boa, Ket red necklace matched '1>e red WTi "I' that dropp(d tOJU5t bclov.hcrbtack. bluntcuth.a1ntylc. Ghuer and aJamour, p111lent~ and spanaJcs were not f'(Hnctcd to wives of the honorca. liver and aoJd sequin bn1hanfbeidffil'•nd cleaant \IJTe\I and silks • &hmmcred.ihrouahout tlie ballroom and t~odancc floors where auC$U danced to Mwrn,-&...,..•1 orchestra. Table-hoppen (and there v.-ere m&a)' betWttn banquetcou ).rcort nttdacroutectionoftbe (P1eue ... CBAPlllAN/81) I .. ~--- Orange COut DAILY PILOT/TUNday. November e. 1984 • -. ':. Hu P YouRSf LF . ;. -• / I ; --------------- Folk med-ieiae: The seience'beb.iri ( b,elii!f- Appltcations Of Olive Oil -Make Your Baby a Music-Lover Before He's Dom? 1uhJetc's foot . even when l danct barefi~;-.+ r-~A_mcnan Hfca1 h, Ed. All 8tht'S~ ~~~i:r::i~} . Studies show tllat unborn babies hear and ttSpond 10 Dett'rm n. Ol:nton~ Tcxa ~ ·contain a ie!~ ys aa.r • lu.., ---ounds from thc outside world, but so far the research 1s "I U$C cider vin«:JBrappticd full $l~ alh will}• cotton the ~erm11ol 'Id mcnt at Utt' University of Texas SOften brittle fingernails still embryonic. In 1982 0~. Ja on 81mhol1 of Chicago') swab. To prevent ttffllnfcct1 ~'\Jave ~:a:: n af\cr·bath Med1cal Brai:tc at vcst~n. hi , foot Ike other Note: Folk Medicine exploreslbr sdenutic evidence Rush Medical Center. and Beryl Benacerraf of Boston's nnsc ofone part Vlnep{ patts IN • lt works!" -fi Dr. mtt~C~P~IO$ 't ~h ·:e 'f~t~g~ somct1~escures for (or against) popular medical beliefs. Ir is not medical ~iagno~ttc Ultr.uound :"~iatton. used ultrasound Gle~.w~~~nm'Z'iltou, '~nd had a ood case of :~~~1~nC:i~g yoJr ~~':'~n °a J11~ 50lut1on of water a.nd advtr-, which is available only firom yourphys1"1an. pic~urcs to show a fetus blanking to the sounds ofa buzzer thl t ·~ t. A;t;a~.,. kf:• · Jlg 1 k ho •Ahold bleach or vin-"r mav simply ipecd rbe ht'ahng '"?'• '" on its mother's stomach. . a . c c •OQ ~~ 1tmc. "wcanng a -ny on soc s. u.... . . ~-, -Oltve Oil Softens Brittle Nails. Strong, healthy · , . b b ~ 1mmc p(tly sef out to fi all..cotton socks, and that by dryina up the skin. . nails contain enou&h moisture to keep them from cracking. Nobodfi 5 yet tt ted whe1her ao uO~f!l 3 'I expo~d change worked wh3t he thought was a miracle'" -Mrs Couon socks may not work magtc, says the Texas But when they lose moisture-as a natural result ofaging 10 mu~·~ wi 1 become an aficionado. but tt s an rntrtguang Charles Cohen. St. Louis, Missouri · · dermatologist, b1,1t they keep your .tect dryer than nylon. or from harsh chemicals like those in some household possibility. . "The 'Beach Cure': Take lots of sunshine on n sand which promotes the sweaty env1ronme.nt favore;d by cleaners -nails become brittle. -More Athlete'~ Foot Cures. An item on bak.ingsoda beach. Walk barefoot over same for several days. Put shoes athlct 's foot. As for the "beach cure," S.m1th ~ n C8n How to replace moisture? Soak your nails '" warm as a pol>S1blc cu~ for athlete's foot drew so many responses and socks in sun to dry and stenlize. Keep all footwear dry keep your f~t dry, but he cautions aga~nst expectl!"I the water, tben coat them with olive oil. The 011 acts as a that we chose these at random: and feel clean and dn'· Walk 1n hot sand as much as sun to stenhze your sboes. The fungi may survive as tcmpora~scatanno keep the moisru~ fn.Tlolive oilis too '"WJiilliiS worJcedTor me I s soa mg my feet in warm possili e. xpose toes to sun." -Anne . Westfund: pores, trcpolimlSut.Just wail Int for the ncnsneak attack. pnce) 1rv retrnlcumJell~. It ,,0 rl..!> jtro a~ \\ell. water with a h11lc blea~h maxed an with the water. No more Central Lake:. Michigan Amerle .. He.lt Magnlne W EDDIN GS SUllNER,:-CROMWELL An Oct. 13 noon ceremony at St. Juliana Catholic Church in Fullerton joined_ in marriage Kell) Patnce · Cromwell of Fullenon and amuel Storrow Sumner of Fountain Valle). Thomas Eadington of Fullcnon. brother-in-law of the bride. gave her an marriage and the Rev. Gordon .. :.. Pillon solemnized the rites. The bride is tbc daughter of Mrs. ·. HaFry Rudolph Cromwell of Full- erton and the late Mr. Cromwell She wore a gown of ivory candlelight silk lace decorated with seed pearls and silk Yenise lace. It was designed with a sweetheart neckline with benha collar, lonJ·fitted sleeves and a full circular skirt ending in a cha~I train with a flounced hemline. Herl>1ll-box headpiece of matching lace and seed pearls had bustle veil in$. in back and a Mr. and Mrs. Sumner 'hemstitched chapel veil. She earned. gardenias with stel,'thanotis and white roses on a white mother-of-pearl IV of Fountain Valle) arc the parents prayer book, a gift from her mother. . of the bndcgroom. He chose Edwm Maria Yir..sjpia Cromwell, maid of .Sumner V for his bc~l man. and honor and Mrs. Thomas Eadington. ushers were John ·umncr. Charles matron of honor are siste rs of the BarrenA arry Rudolph C'romwell bnde. Other bridal attendants were Ill. E<fwin umnl.'r IV anct Paul Mary Sumner of Fountain Valley. Cromwell sister of the bndegroom. Mia Ead -Guests tra"ekd to a rt·ccp11on at 1ngton. the bride's niece, Mrs. Jerry the Balboa Bay Club and the couple's Gay and Mrs. Keith Pepper. Nicole wedding trp includ ed Nonhern Calt- Eadangton and Eno fromwell were fornfa. Carmel and Monterc~ .. They flower girls.. and Paul Cromwell. are now residents of Sunset Beach. Mathew Sumner and Michael The bride as a descendant of Irish Sumner were the rin$ bearers. poets AJice and Phoebe Cary and is. Mr. and MI'S. Edwin Vose Sumner the grand-niece of the first woman doctor 1n Wheeling. W. Va .. Lydia Cromwell Hearn.· She attended LI.t Habra High School and Fullerton College and 1s currently employed b) Nordstrom's in Brea. Her husband is the great-grea1 grandson of Edwin Vose Sumner I who was commander of the Ca h- fom 1a Department of the Paci fic 1n 1861. He attended Don Bosco Tech1n1cal Institute "in San Gabriel, Golden West College and graduated from Cal State Fullerton with a BA an accounting. He was affiliated' with Beta Alpha Psi fratemi'ty there. He is employed at Ernst and Wh inney an Newport Beach. MORMANN-YOUNG Shen Lynn Young and Kenneth Edward Normann of Huntington Beach exchanged wedding vows an the First Presbyterian Church 1n Westminister on Sept. 8. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Young of Hu ntington Beach are the parents of Lhe bnde. She wore.a gown of white bridal satin wi th an open sweetheart neckl ine and puffed sleeves. Alencon lace. seed pearls and irridescen1 sequins trimmed the bodice and the chapel-length train was encircled with lace. A halo of silk flowers and seed pearls held her chapel length veil. wh1Ch was finished With scalloped edges. Riva Kestenbaum was maid of honor, and bridesmaids were Carolyn Van Housen, Jennifer Lumary, Bleeping ~epers cro~~!~,sig/J_als I've watch~ animal dbcumenlane!> to know there isn't an animal altve who has not been tranquil- ized with a dart and fitted with a beeper to E111a track h1sm1gratory habits. lllft 1he '80s. . The beep has become the mu!tar of BO.MIJECI •..---.... It was only a matter oft~.rne before we • Mr. andMra. Normann Diane Boyer and Ua1l Aldenbrook. Shanon Negri was flower girl and Joshua Normann was ring bearer. Jolie Butner was 1n charge of the guest book. The bndegroom 1s the son of Mr. and Mrs. RaymQnd Normann of Cary. Ill. His be ( man was te' e Glasder. and ushers were Tom Nor- mann. Chester Shue11. Rid. Young and Darryl Young. Following a reception at the Hunt- ington Harbour Bay and Racquet Club. the cou ple left on a honeymoon lnp to Italy and Greece. They arc now resident s of Hunt- ington Beach. She is a nutritional coosultant at Fountain Valley Com- munity Hospital and he is wes.tem regJonal sales manager of Cary Metal Products of Barrington. Ill. -8:00-(C)MOVIE started tracking dowt'I our doctors, our plumbers and salesmen with electronic 7, ~ devices. Then someont figured out why not keep track of'tqe most ehJ we thing on God'sgreen earth ... car keys. So. a transmitter wa!> bu1tl to attach to thccar keys and a receiver told us wheD we were w1thtn 30 feet of them. , And the beep goes on. In Florida. the honor system for low-risk prisone~ 1s bcingsubs1dtZed by tittle beepers attached to their legs. When they stray too fa rout ofbounds- beep beep, yo u have them cold. 1 • • Enter the newest electronic eye ... a beeper to au.ach to yourchildrcn. Parents carry a recci ver the size of a deck of cards which picks.up the signal ~nt by a transmitter attached 101 he child. It's called Child Watcher and sells for $74.95. - · To a young parent that probably sounds li~c the greatest invent.ion since black towels. but to a woman who bas raised three to adulthood, bcheve me when I tell yo u It's sometimes best not to know. When I put mych1lddown fo r a nap and an hourlaterd1scovered he was sleeping with wet hair. a \\Cl body that smelled lake chlonne and a smile on his face. I figured why press. lfl had outfitted my daughter in a beeper. I might have womed when I sent her to the k11chen fora glass of water and lost her signal for 36 hours. And who needs to be fast asleep and hear a beeper returning home at I a.m. signifylng yourteen-ager'sapproach and have it remain in the same spot until your imagination goes cra1y? No. no. the bccpere.xpcnence has gotten out ofhand. lt'sgoing to get crazy. I can feel it. Parents wall be looking for their children and pick up the signal of a black bcarhibcmat1ng1n Montana. A woman will track down her plumber onl y to discover he's-;crvang time in Florida. and)USt when you think your doctor 1s no farther away than the topof}our rcfngerator. you'll discover the signal is for you I' lost car kt:ys. When you come up with a beeper that not only tells me where the k1dsarc . . but what they're doing .. beep me -1:00-1 CHIPS HAAT TOHAAT THAEFS COMPANY e STARTIB • * • 'h '"National Lampoon's Anl· mal House" ( 1978) Jotln Belushi, Tim Matheson. -11:00-e Cll ®l m HEWS 8 TAXI 0 JOKER'S WILD 8 MOVIE * * '"r "Dark Vlctory" (1978) EJl21· belh Montgomery, Ant~ Hoplclns. 8 HOLL YWOOO CLOSEUP e IUSINE8S REPORT ID OCEANUS CJ) NATIONAL El£CT10N RE8lJl TS l~COVWGE m DICKY~ DYKE (O)MOYIE • • "Beastmaster" (1982) Mwc Sklg9f, T~ya Rober1a. -8:30- G) AUC£ 9 MACNEJL I LEHRER l:mTHAOOOHTHE ( MOVIE **'Ii "Mr. Mom" (1983) Mlc:tlael Keaton, Ten Gau. OJ AMSTOOAM FESTIVAL Of FOOLS PAPER aiASE: TliE SECOND YEAA -a:ao-• ABC HEWS NIGHTUNE m WILD AMERICA -9:00-a m (J) ®l Gf El.ECTIOH COVERAGE Cl) ROC1<FOAO ALES Eli) OHl Y WHEH 1 lAUGH m a..ECT10N COVERAGE (COH1) O)MOVIE * * t "'Lei's Spend The Ntghl Together" (1982) The Rolling Stones CSJBAOTHERSQ (%)MOVIE **'"' "Arruza" (1972) Documentary . N11raled by Anthony Quinn. -11:3().4 0 CJ) ELECTION COVERAGE 8 000 COUPLE MOVIE * *'" '"My Pal Gus"' (1952) Rictlatd Widmark, Joanne Ofu Cl) MOVIE • • * "The Candtda11'" (1972) Rob- ert Redford, Peter Boy1e. ®) ENTERTAIHMENt TONIGHT m HOW TO MAKE IT IN AMERICA (O)MOVIE * * * "Soutll Pacific" ( 1958) Mitzi Gaynor, Rossano Bram -1:30- Enjoy the racing edge • ARTS Tree RacJ.nc Auoclatton and all of hta -~~COVERAGE (!) WKAP IH CIHCIHNA Tl 9FAONTl.M m ALRE> HITCHCOCK PAE.SEHTS 0 TIC TAC DOUGH G)NEWS fD LATBIGHT AMEAICA e GREAT REOORO ALBUM COll..ECT10N 8 BEST Of LA. TODAY WELCOME BA()(. KOTTEfl COUNl90WN TO lOOKIHG GLASS Norma and Bo lleyen and Barbara and Bob Grant were P•ta at 8a.nta Anita of Lynn and Clement lljnch. Be la resident of Oak guests, lnchacU.na the Jamee Roioeevelta and _7:00_ Jack P~ltuons came aw.ay wtnnera. ~ Truckers' manners tarnish 'Knights of the road' image DEAR ANN LANDERS: The let- 1erfrom lhewifeofa man who drives a tanker got to me. I am the mother of a I-year-old and I cannot countthe umes I wished J had a giant hand that could reach out from under my bumper and get the"b1gguys" ofTm y tail. They have passed me on narrow bridges, and leaned on their horns like crazy when I went under 55 mph. "No Name an Cahfom1a" said her husband and has budd1esarc wa1t1ng to "~et'' some Jackass. Well. Ann. I saw 1t happen. One of the bag boys fo llowed a motorcycle for 10 males. The motorcycle slowed down. Whether he was going to turn or was having problems with his bike wall never be known. The big guy was on the bike's bumper and wouldn't let up until the bike and thedriverwerc under his rig. I w1c;h there were some way to make the b1gguys understand that other ANN i.JNDERS DEAR 1..JTTLE GAL: Truckers used to be known as "the knights of tbe road." Wbat bas bappeot'd? Man y readers are complaiDiag about "-'be big guys." It makes me sad. A.Dy 1tnswert out there? • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: You were dead right when you advised .. Tortured hy I ndcc1sion" to keep her daughter's paternity a secret. I wash my mother had wntten to you. means m) t-wo )'Ounger brothers and I havcdafTercnt fathers. Somehow I will never feel a!>close to them as I did before. My mother was unable to tell me anything about my real father. Her confession did a lot of damage. I no longer have an y respect for her. She mu'it ha\e needed someone to dump on and chose me. Keep telling your readers that some skeletons arc best left in the closet - EX HIBI T .to\ IN KANSASCITY t DEAR A.: 'Vou told them -and lo a way I never could . Thanks for writ log. • • • lr."s not always C41Sy to rccognm~ 8MOY1E ••'h '"Clash Of The Titans'" (1981) Harry Hamlin, Laurence Olivier. &MOVIE H*'h "The King And I"' (1956) Deborah Ken, Vul Brynner Q) THREE'S COMPANY Cl> WHEEL Of FORTUNE ml ~2-1 CONTACTQ m Mtl.UONAIAE Al AHO IF l'M El.ECTE.D -7:30-mMOVIE t ••; "Meatballs'" (1979) Biii MUr· ~·=~~ fD WILD, WILD~ Of AHIMAL.8 mNOVA m RACING FAOM OAK TREE (f{) AND If l'M EL£CTED ... PART II 'Sl WASHINOTOON 2 MOVIE * * '" "Sl90hlly Honorable" ( 1939) Pat O'Brien, Broderlat Crlwford. -1.'00- G CD NEWS 13 Gripping Drama Of * PueionlPower/ReYtnge A Woman Of Subetenoe ICCO' Act. Cl) A WOMAN Of SU88TAHCE . fli) NOVA t1J) THE '14 VOTE: BAH DIEGO El.£CTIOH COY£RAOE m 12 O'CL()()( HIGH @ MOVIE **'h "The Party' (1968) Peter Setterr,CllO'Otnt1:onget Cl.)MOVIE • • "Staying Alive" (1983) Joon Tra· volta. Cynthia Rhodes. (%)MOVIE • • '"Rumble Ash" (1983) Mall Oii· Ion, Mickey Rour1ce. -8:30- " ElECTION SPECIAL CD MOVIE * * * "The Boys In The Bind" ( 1970) Chff Gorman. Laurence Ludl· 1nbill Q)MOVIE . • • • "Love Al Aral Bite'" (1979) George Hamtllon, Suaan Sein! James. m MARK RUSSELL CfO NOT NECESSARILY THE HEWS -9:50- O HEWS -10:00- U HEWS Eli) CONSTITUTION: THAT OEUCA T£ BALANCE '11> ELECT10H COVERAGE 0 TH£ '84 VOTE: SAH Dt£OO El.£CTIOH OOVf.RAOE maoXJNG (C)MOV!e * • * • '"Raiders Of The Lott Ark" (198t)Harrison Ford. K11en Alltn. CH)MOVIE • H "Hoope<'' (1978) Burt Rty· nolds, Jan-Mlchael Vlncenl -10:'5- (%) CINEMASCOAE 9 THE '84 VOTE: SAH DIEGO B..ECT10N COVERAGE m 100CUJB 91.AMEQ -11:'5- 1tf)MOVIE • "Stroker Ace" (1983) Burt Rey· nolds, Loni Anderson. -12:00- I) MOVIE • ** "'U~a·s Raid" 11972) 94Jf1 Lancaster, Broce Davison 8 TWILIGHT ZONE &MOVIE ** "Hong Kong" (1951) Ronald Reagan. Rhonda FleminQ. CD INDEPEHOENT NEWS G> STREETS Of SAH FfWCSCO (C)MOVIE * • '.h "Valley Girt" ( 1983) Nicolu Cage, Oebora.h Foremen. CID MOVIE • • "Nightmares" (1983) Cristina Raines, Emlllo EstMZ., -12:15-m JEffERSONS -12:30- • ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESafTS 8 THREE THREE 0 SEA HUNT fD VOYAGE HARRYO ~ = & MAATIH'S LAUGH..iH • "A Night In Heaven" (1983) Chrla- lopher Atkins, Lesley Anne Warren -12:45- -1:45- Q) MOVIE • • "Blondie's Hero'" (1950) Penny Singleton, Arthur Laite (C) LOUISIANA ($)MOVIE ** "Revenge ol the Ninfa" (1983) Sho Kosugi. Arthur Rober1a. -2:00-6 CJ) C8S NEWS HIGHTWATCH G G!NEWS ZJMOYIE * * • * "Raiders Of The Lost Arlt" ( 1981) Hamson Ford, K11en Alltn -2:30- CI) GUil TY OR IHNOCEHT -3:00- CD ClACUS -3:05- <tD MOVIE • * • • "Fanny & Alexander"' ( 1983) Pernilla Altwtn, Ber1il Guvt. -3:15- Q)MOVIE • • "Bente Of 81ond11" (1951) Arthu! Lake, Penny Singletoo -3:20- ($) WOVIE * * "Young Warrtors'" ( 1983) Rict.-erd Roundtree, Ernest Borgnlne. -3:30-(}) FArTH 20 -3:60- 8 MOVIE * * * "The Min Who Ctltd Wolf' ( 193 7) Lewis Stone, Tom Brown ... chicles have Just as much nght on 1he h1ghways as they do. I pray that not a If truckers ha ve turned socold- Out of the blue. she informed me that the man I believed was my father for 21 years was not. She told me m) falher had died when I was 3. This lo ve. cspec1al/y the first rtmc around. Acquaint yourself with Lhcgwde- lincs. Read Ann undcrs· book/er. "'Love pr Sex and How to Tell the D1ffcrencc. "Fora copy, mail 50cenrs and a long. self-addressed en vclope with }Our request to Ann undcrs, P.O. Box 11995. Ch1cago, l/J. 6061 I. DOWN'S SYNDROME MEDICATION ••• -~~_3£_P.1_o_AN_L~_J;J_5_~ G-A_L_IN----. CHAPMAN HONORS ... r YOU CAN DO IT ••• STOP SMOKING ,_,__,_..,,.~ _ ........... ~ WITH HYPNOSISll tAlll T COMIOUAll. 'f-,llMANINn 'f ••"-H• ltft• •.t~ tlHC•tt '•t• • .............. _...,.. tw-r-•· c.. • ...,, '" • .......-. ~ , __ .. (714) 47UY,NOlll (4976) •-i .. "'II..... -· '"0 -.,.,.. °' ,_ ,_ 0 , __ . . t From Bl • county Among them -Patand Robert Hitt, Marlan and Gartb Bergeson, Pam and Brace NesllDde, Harriett and Irv Wieder, Ginny and Paul Btadt r. Mary and Jamea Roosevelt, Marloa and To1y Mont.apert, Carolyn and Ma.ry De Wald, Evie and Bill Dan· nemeytr. Suzy and Herb Sutton. Firs1-t1mc guests at the Chapman relebration were Jim Dale, presi- dent of Newport Harbor Arca Chamher of Commcn.'c. with Cretcben Braktsman, and Ralpb Rodbttm, president of thl' Manne D1 v1s1on of the chamber. and h1 wife Both men arc alumni of Chapman. Former mcnean rc:lcbratton honorees who "'en: recalled 1 n a pre· dinner slidt ~how included Cati , Karcher, Or. Arnold Beckman, the Chapman. Knott, cgerstrom. lrvmcand Fluorfomiltcs. OonaldP. Kuntdy, Belly Hutton Wllllam1, Ra1dall Presley and D. J ames Sutley. The scne will culminate 1n 1986 when Chapman cclehratcs It I 25 th anmvcr'>ary. A goal of SS4 mt I hon has been stt loward strenathcning the college as a private instil\ltto n. Gilb and commitment from col- leac trustees represent more than $27 million of th~ SJS m1ll1on ~cur~d lo date: the rcmainina S 19 m1llron 1 c-xpcctcd tot>c raised from 1nd1v1duats. bu me ~~ and foun· da11ons. Sm11h ~1d. l'iJp:JrtJILI IS cdllcd b\ 031/} P1lo1 Stvle [d1tor ;da Oran From Bl Turkel stresses lhat the cells have not been damaged by the accumulations. but simpl y inhibited. "The cells can develop provided that you can remove the wastes and let nutrition come throuah," he said . To demonstrate the results. he showed "before and after" photos and X-rays of some of his patients. The pictures indicated that many patients lost wciaht (obesity 1s a common complication of Down's) and their features seemed to lose the characteristic "Mongoloid" cast. X·rayssboweden~ hcaruapparcntly r¢tumed to normal sire and conae ted lunas that cleared up. "You arc not treatinajust the mental part. but the whole body," said Turkel. Testimonial letters ftom parents and patients, however, mentioned dramatic improvements in 1.Q. scores and academic performance. But Turkel also shared some IMS cncouraaina letters. w1tt\ his audience. Since he first submitted his application for New Dru& At>proval in l 9S9, the FDA has repeatedly denied approval, eontendi~ that Turkel has not proved the efTcct1 ve neu o(the U Series. There was a lepl battle. but in 1970 a U.S. Coun of Appeals upheld the: FDA's decision. Nor has thert been much 1uppon from the medical community. Turk.cl pointed out that his name 11 not included on a hst of Down'• yndrome experts compiltd by the National In titute of Health. An indcpendtnt study connected in 1964 concluded that the U Series does not improve the condition of Down's victims. "They hcd about the results or e1sc they were not aiving the patients the medication." contends Turkel of the study. He claims that "before and after" pictures of patients 1n the study mysteriously disappeared. Although Turkel is prohibited from shippina the medicine (which he has made up by pha.rmac1es) across state linesi olhcr physicians can come to him for the formula." t's not a secret," he said. So flt, most of them haven't. ''They don't want to spend a day goina over my case studies," said Turkel. lk<:ausc the U Series is not FDA-approved, insurance companies will not pay for it. The treatment -at approximately $200 per month -includes the cumin· adons and the medicine whicb ia &aken orally. The lenath of the tteatment varies with the severiiy of lhc condition. Turkel, 81, doesn't plan to submit another appllcatio~ to the FDA because "that ta.kc a lot o( time and money, and rm too old for that." RoweveT. be uf'ltd his audien~ to push for further 1nvcst11*tion of the 0 Series -"Wntc to Conlt'Cis· write 10 the president ... but tcll lhem to have some dcpar\mcnt other than tht FDA do the inve t1~tion.'' The NACD ha 1 branch 1n lrv1ne. For more inform111on. call 8'7-0326. . I , j l Ml.IC NOTICE NllC NOTICE MOC "1TU MlJC llOTICl MOC mTU Ml.JC llJTU llD NO. It antll be mind1t0tyUPQl't ____ ....., ______ , __ _........., ...................... _ , __ ....,......,.._ ............ __ ,. ____________ _ 11........ the COtoCTAACTOR 10 wtiom T _, .. mo NWfTMt YAU.IV NOTICI TO the contrtet .. IWW<*S, Md ..once "' MOncl • ecMOOl. •t llCf c~~Oftl ~= =. ,:u::;~ ~=-~.J:' Ofl~~Bf!Otf~~ IMTM_. ltOI 111911 tlluald ~ ret• ~ANT MOT'IC9 .... ,,_ TINT TO LIMI alJll'hUI NOTICf II HIAHY SChOol Olttrlct IRVINI ·~ W<H1unen ~ioy., by TO ==n vou lirN IN DaAUl T °':i"~ ~"'°""TY ~ -:: Mdl c:: ~~~iEO SCHOOL OIS· ~lr:itlll ueo11tlon of lhe YOO AM IN M'AULT =~&~~r,:."::~'. NOTICt II HfAHY of CM °'Y ":. ,,:::, Cell- .8ld Dttdllne 10 OO No bidder may wttndrn UHOIJU DU.D °'T .. UIT, UNllM VOU TAKI AC-OIVIN THAT THI ,O\M-fomlefOt~ .. IMMt. o'clOck ot the 14 day of No-hie bid for 1 perlOCI Of 30 DATEO 9115183. UNLUI T10N TO "'OTICT YOO" TAIN VALLIY ICHOOI. lebot' MMoM. me--. vemt>tr 1984 d•Yll •lier lhe dlle Mt for YOU TAKI ACTION TO ,,_()HMY, ll MAV II D18TAICT Ml~ tt1et ~· ...... P1ecie'of Bid Aeo.iot 6050 Ille OC*ll.ng of bldt. PROTECT YOUA ,Ao,. IOlD AT A ~IO IALI. the ~ ,., Pf09W'Y " • uttlllee Ind 8.ac1~ Pkwy, U'ViM CA 6 payment bond tn4 • EIU'(, IT MAY 8( 80LD AT IF YOO NUO AN ''"LA· win not be needed fOf .. ll4llM Ind, ...... 92713 ' ' ~ormenot bond wtll be A PUBLIC &ALL " YOO NATION OF TH£ NATUfll! olultoom purpoee1: naCHHry therefor, •• Proja" ldantlflcttlon requlrad prior to axacutlon NEED AN EXPLANATION 0, THI ,AOCIEDINO Ona Olflll'OOM wt J.,,_ prcMclecl In 1M oontraot NMM Aoolll'\g r.p,tlr . Uni· oftheconlrtct. Thepeyment OF THI! NATUAI °' THI AGAINST YOU. YOU o. Har~ldlool ioc.t.cl et ~. fOt vettlty HIOh &OttOOl bond lh"I be In tlll form NI PAOCEl!OINO AOAINST IHOU1.0CONTAOT A LAW• iN16 lent• Vn.a It,_., AUUIMlNT D18T .. IOT Piece PT•nuraon Illa• Fe forth In the contrect docu. YOU. YOU SHOULD COH-VIA • ._.__ Founteln V~. Cellfomle 14-6 M.AUCHL.Y I TICH- Clllllai Support Sarvic. .. men'a. TACT A LAWYI~. On ._........baf 1', 1184, It The IOlrd Of T,,..... of NOLOGY DAIVI ITAUT f4500 Send Cenyon Av~ Govtl'nlng so.res On Nov. 1•1• 1914, II 10 10:00 A.M.. CAU,ORNIA Iha FOUl\tlln V~ 8ct)oot !MPftOVIMINTI foOtt. h« enu1, e .. t INlna. CA t2HO By A. Stanley Coray A. M. , 8 0 u TH 8 A Y ~Ol'TOAOE llAVICI .. Ol9tJ1ct r..oMI to 1e11M tit; With aippur1atlMC* 1.,.,...o, NOTICE IS HEREBY Superintendent FINANCIAL OOAPOA· 4IUly 1ppolnt1d TrutlM flCllltltl t0 lndtmtad 1_~ In 11r'lct tcOOrdllllClewtth the GIVEN 11111 lhl lbOVt• Publlahad by the Ortnae ". TION, .. duly ll)polntad under end 1)4K1Ullll to Deed uncs.r the latfN Ind~ ~Iona on ,,.. It the rwnad Sellool Di.trtct of Or Cout Dally Octow ao. No-Truet" undlr Ind pureu1111 of TNl1 rec«_, 10127112, ~ wt.-s In ._ ""°6-office of the Olr•or af Pvb- •nga County, California act: vtmbaf 8, 198.4 ' to o..d of Trutt, tecoro.d • Intl. No. 82-377414. ot u1lon of the loerd, Aelol-lie Wotka. Ing by and thlOUQll ltt Gov T-291 Oct. e. 1983, .. !Mt. No. ()fflolal "-oofdl lo the office utlon No. P.11. DATE OF OPE.HING 8108: arnlno 9o•rd h«flrrlflll',..: . 13-4400ae, ot ~ "-'" Of ~ ""''., of -l~f"""unr montftty lldll wtll be l'9ClllYlld-.t tt11t !erred 10 u ..OiSTAIOT" wlll Ml.JC NOTICE cordt In IM of'llce of IN OAANOI County. ltata of laW ~t fOt the term Offlcl Of IN City Clal1I of the 1 ' ~ty Aacofdarl of OrMOt Clltfornl1. !x...,_, tly WIL,, of 1M thall not be .... City of ~ ~ It ;~ vt up lo, but nol llttr NOTICI Oft ~TION Col.lnty, St1te of Celltomfa, LIAM l. MAY AND LAETITIA then Ave hundrtid flfty41ght 17200 JamborM Ao1d, ..:n~n:~:c::.::~d":f TO 111.L. AL.COHOL.IC •xecutad by MICHAIL 0. I. MAY, HUSBAND ANO dfOJlet• Pit montll lrvlna . C1llfOfnl•. 1eontr1et lorthe lbova Pl'"-•IYl .. AMa MC OUl'fl!f & Jl!ANNE M, WIFE, WILL 81!LL AT PU .. ($551.()0hno(rttl~ The mini-92713-11676. untll 10,00 1 m. "" . '1·6-14 MC DU1'11!1 HUHAHD LIC AUCTION TO.HIOHOT mummontnly .... ~ on Nowrnbat 14, 1N4, It tact To Whom II MIY Conoarn: ANO WIFE. Will 8&L.L AT llOOfA FOR CASH OR tor IU~lent l*todl ffWI wNcfl ·~ Ind piece ~ lhe81d1:::,.:::.: AVILA, Eclwtrd '( It epply· PUBLIC AUCTION TQ CASHIER'S CHICK (PAY· be ICSJuetad annually It the wtll be publlcty opatlad Ind .,. 1 · Ing to the ~rnant of Af. HIGHEST JIODlA FOR AllFAT TIME Ofl SALE IN Olltr1ct'1dtllCNtlon.AMCuf· tMd Ibid. llkl8 1N111 be ~~ll:~a1: .. ~ =-:I~ collollc ~1g9Controlfor CASH ~ti ,1m1·of LAWFUL MONEY 0' THE 11Y/cMNno ~ Wiii. be 1ubmltta~ In Hlled "41" ON SALE Beer & Wlna .... In ._,..money of Ula UHITl!D STATES) at the raqulfed prlof to occupancy. eiwe10Paa mantad, on the lbove·ltltld Umt (PUB EAT Pl.) to Mii al· Unltld S,1te1) al THE lol>t1Y lnfrontof&ult1·107 1t No~ lt\all be outtlde, "llDS FOA pleca COhollc bavertgaa et N30 NOAJH F~T l:NTAANCE 2130 E. Fourth It .• San .. peld to eny lloentad rael _,.ASSESSMENT DISTRICT ,...:!= ~ ~.!.!'!.~~ W1mat Av. .. Untt I, FOU(lttln T 0 T H l C 0 U N T Y Ana, Cellfomle al right, tttla 1111 ~-In tNe regerd, 14-6 MAUCHL Y & TECH· ...., "r"' Valley.CA ·"* COURTI«>USE. 700 CIVIC tn4 Int,, .. , ~ to _...,_lnalbenodeduc-NOLOOYOf\." =~~·:ot":~~.:~ Publlthed °'"'°"~CENTI,,, ND~IVCI WEST,~~~~"~ IM 11ftrPf...,!l)CS. 0L2KC·~~ON OF THE within n/a diya 111., the bid Delly Piiot "°"'*'• ~ t , ~~ A ,., ALIF. Ill _, ..-u ., """ ._ f the tllghe9t ,._ W " . , ,,. WO<k lo be pat• 1984 ' .right, tltla and lntara.t con· !>foparlY tltu•tad In Mid btddef. foNnad hereunder It located opening dett T·2N vey9d to Ind now Mid by 11 Col.Inly and •tate daactlbed 8eelad propoaelt to.._. In the City of lrvtna, County Each bkl muit conlorm , under Mid o..ct of Truat In 11: Leri 3 of Trect ~1872. Mid Pf°'*1Y l'f'Utt be ,.. of OrMQa 11 THE IRVINE Ind bl rNponalvt lo tht PUBLIC NOTICE the. property lltuated In Mid In Iha City of Cotti , M ~ by IM dalaQa1ad of· TECt4N6LOOY Cl!NTEA. contrtct documtnti ;:, County Ind Stitt cletq'lbed per m1p reooro.d n 8oolc ftc.r at the Fountaln Valley DESCAIPTION OF WORK: ~~ bl4b" :!'!11 bl 'fCOfll· fllCTITIOUI IUllNlll 11: LOI 11 In Block t Sactlon 63, P~ 47 tb 49 lnclut!Ve, 8Chool Dl11r'lct Educetlon The work to ba parfOflTleCI pin._ 1 ,.., NCur ty re-NAMI ITATaMINT 5 Balbol ltland, 11 per map mllOl41anaout m~, In the Centw, 17210 Olk 8tr99t, IMll lncluda bu1 not be llm-~atrad 1~ In th• contf1e1 Tha lollowlng pereona 111 ~oro.d In boolt 8 page e of Pftlce of the Col.Inly Re-founi.in Valley, California, ltad lo Grac!J,,g, CI 0..1. Ac • . ~~:•g1~T~ICT doing butlnaat 11: MltOalllMOUt Mapa In the cor~ of Mid Col.Inly. 92708, no 111ar tnan 2:00 Agg. Bua, Striping, :norm rtH rvH CBESTVIEW 48, 1i24-olflce of the county r900rdar JM ttr"1 addrlN and SlJl\...li~-8... J9&4. Draine, and othaf work ~ ~,,.1 .. right to ra~t •nv elf •II Gata)()' t>rrv1. Newport of Uld county. otfltr oommon dellgn1tlon, 8efOt'aaiooe.sunt111yWt1t· ~ With Str"t Im· "' or to Wlllve any Ir· Bt1en, C1111. D28e0 , The alr"t addr... and If eny, of the rMI pre>Perty ttn propOM11, the daleQatad provemant1. rtgvltrltt•t '°' lnform1lltlN Mlehatle G. ShOlkoft, 132~ other common datlgnatlon, duprl bid I bovt 1 t otnoar thall celllor or9l bid· COMPLETION OF WORK: In any blda °'In the bidding Galaxy Orlvt , Nawport If eny, of the real propeny purported to be: 110 VIC-ding. Any pareon who h .. Att work 11 to ba oomplelad The DISTRICT hat 'lJ>• Stach, Callf. 928e0 dturlb a d 1bova ta TOAIA STREET, COSTA heratofora 1Ubmlt1ad 1 writ• In 1 total of 100 -=~ ll lrte9 from lht Olract6r 0, Sttpllen Sholkotf, 1324 purported to ba: 220 • 220~ MESA. CALIFORNIA 9212e. ten bid may IUbrnlt Ill Of'al dlya from Iha dlla ttl• CJepcrtmant oflnduttrlal G1ruy Or Iva, Ntwport Abalone, hlbO& ltlend, CA. Tr.a ~ Truet• tilCS ex.caadlng by 11 ia.t flV9 In the Notice to Prooaact. Rel1tloni tilt gantral Bapcn. C1llf. D28e0 Tr.a uncllfllelned Tru1t .. dl1ctalm11nyllilbllltylorany (6%) percent the tllghelt AWA.AD 0, OON'TAACT: ~'rgtr:_•11a 0 1' per' di~ Barb1r1 Ltcnman. 1320 dllClalm• any llilblllty for eny lncorractnt11 of the 1tr9el written bid. The hlOMat ,... The o.nw rMaNM the wegat n ocp lty ~h,..., Mulnar1 Dr.. Ntwport lnoorractMM Of Via atraet addr ... Incl other QOfTllftOn ~ blddlf tNll bar• ~. 1fter opanlng bldt, to :hit = 1• ~ 11~ pa~"'4 Bttch. c1111. e2eeo adclf ... ..-other oommon 'dellana1lon. If any, thowf'I qulrld. to exacuta the form reJec;t wry or Ill bide, to or ere or 0 J1y \,.lchmtn, 1320 daelan1llon, If any, thowf'I hafeln: of llUe;' Midi format Ml waive any lnformallty In I worlcmen needed to 11 Mlrlner1 Or., Ntwpotf htraln. SakS Mia wlll be made, bUt hlfefOf(j(a baaf\ apptowd bid'. to mak• awwclt rn the the A::Ontr~1 T~ '''" are BMch, Calif e2eeo ,, Said Nie wtll be made, bUt without 00¥9nlnt or war-~ the Board of Tn.111 .... · Int..-of the o.nw and to on Ille 11 ~ ... ~trlc18 olflce Thi• bualntaa la con· wttl10U1 oownant or WW· r111ty, 11Cpr ... or lme>llad. r• TM Boetd of Tn.111 ... rejec1 alt ottw bld1. located II <IV arrance dueled by • ~ .. __part· ranty, lllj)( ... Of Im~,,... gardlnt Ill~ POH .. 1101!.. Of ·"'811 ~ ~ PROPOSAL OUA•ANTR Ptcwy, INltla. CA 92713 ner•ftlp gardf11~fllfJit, pa111nlon, or encumbrencaai to pey the tlon .. to Whether to IMla ANO BONDS: Eactl bid tl'lall Coplet rl'lly ba obtelnt<I Mlchella G. Sholkotf ancumbrancaa, lncludlng remal~ prlriC:lpal Mn of NICI f9cllltlae wit. hln ten ("10) ba accomp1nlad by 1 on reque1t A copy ot tnatt Thia 111temant wu fllad feet, ~ Ind expan ... the Not •I MCUl'ad by Mid 68YS afllf recal9t of bldt. oartlflad Of' calhl«'• ~ r11 .. lhell bl poeted et tilt with tilt County Clerk of Or· of Iha rru11 .. Ind ol the o..d of Nit, Wlt~lntateet rntorm1Uon concerning Of by 1 OOtpOflta lur9t'/ Job lltt ange County-on Novemt>« ll\llteciealed by Mid OMd thereon. 11 provldad In Mid the propOMI lhould ba Id· bond on the form fumlthed The foragotng tehedula 01 t, tll8• of Tn.llt, to pey the remain-notl(t), advancea, If wry, dreeead 10: FOUNTAIN VAL· by 1M 0wnw M guarant• par diam r1te1 11 bued n.a11 Ing pr1nclpal tumt of Iha uncllfthetermtofNklo..d LEY SCHOOL DISTRICT, that the bidder wlll, II an upon• working d1y of light Publlahed Ortnae Coast notl(a)t MCUrad by H id of Trvtt. feet. oharget and 17210 Olk Street, Fountain awvd la mlda to him In eo- (8) houra The r•t• for nol· Dally Piiot November e. 13, DMd of Tru1t to wit: t>IJ*'MI of the Trutt .. end Valley, Callf'ofnla. 92708, oordlnoa W'l1tl IM tennt ol ldt y Ind ovt llma .work thtll 20, 27 1984 180,000.00 with lntlrHt Of the lnJttl creatad by Mid (714) 942 .. 61, Attention: 1'111 bid, promptly MCUre be •t laut tlma ind one-T .299 tllaraon from 8/8/44 at 15% o..d of Tru11. Cerot .ion... Workman'• Compent1tlon hill. par annum 11 provtdad In Tr.a total emounl of tt)e POUNTAIN ¥ALLaY lnaurlnCe and lllblllty ln- N ld notl(1) plua coeta and unpaid balance of Iha obl,I. ICMOO&. Dte'TNCT IOAM) .,..anoa, exlCUta 1 contr~ In)' advanoet ol anaa.84 gallon MCUrad by the prop.. Oft TIWITll8, 1....-. In tha required form and DEATH NOTICES "--------.• wttn lntera.t. arty to be told 111d rauon-Moeta, er.tr of ~ turnlltl t1htftctory bond• The baneflcllty under Mid I ble 11tlmttad ootl•, ... Deta: tor Iha flltllfUI patformanot M.cl.ndoe Be ch Pacific View o..d Of Trutt hlfatotore ••· pen111 end 1dvanoet •t the Oelot>at 11, 1ta• of tha contract and for tha a · acutad 1nd dallverad to the llma of the lntltl•I publl-Publlthed Orange Cout p1ymant of clalma of m1- ANIT A C . MACIN-Mortuary, Directors. undartlgned 1 W!'lttan Dec· cetlon ol the Notte. of Sale Dally Piiot Octow 23, 30, ttrl1lmtn e nd l1borafl DOE pa ed away 644-2700 lar1tlon of def1u1t and Da-It $63,504.86. NOV9!Tll>I< e. 1944 thereunder. Said ~ or mind for Sala. and 1 written The baneflclary under Mid T -247 blddat'• bond lhaH be an November 4. 1984. at DA VIS Notice of Daf1&.11t and EJec. o..d of Truat heretofora ex-emount of not IMI than ten her residence in SYLVIA P. DAVIS, tlontoSall. Tllaundanlgned ecuted and dallvarad to the "8.IC NOTICE percent(1~1ofth .. mount Laguna Be a ch N be 2 l984 ceutad Uld notlca ot Da-undartlgnad • wrlt1tn Dae· · of tha bid. The Fllthful p.,. ovem r • • feull and !Jectlon to Seti to larttlon of Daf1u1t Ind oa-YOU AM '" O.,AUL T formtinOa Bond lhall ba not Survtvl'd by her son age 8 4 of Irvine. ba recorded In tha county mand tor Siie, and 1 written ~" A WID °' TMllT .... than one twndred per. Walter Maclndoe. Jr Survived by hua-wt1at• the rMI property 11 Notlca 01 Daf1U1t and E.lac· DATID MAY 1t, 1tM.,.:; cant (100%1 of.._t!I! 10111 of New Jersey, band Elm OavisS 1oca1ac1 llontos.11.Theundlftlgned 6.IM YOU TMCI AC llTIOUnt of the 'VIG prtot J C ' er r, louTH IAY '1NANCIAL e.uMCI Mid Nollca of Da-TO PROTICT YCMM ~ narnac1 In the contrect daughter.I, oan sons. Elmer Jr. and C~ATtoN, ... Mkl flUlt and Election to Sall to IRTY, IT ~y M IOU) AT PREVAILING AA.TES OF Lynam of Laguna John W Davis, '""'"· 2'011 CreMfwl• ba recorded In the county A ... ~ =-·:;.:WAGES: In aocordlnoawtth Beach;-and eieen M daugh fer:--BeUy • .. "TonMClr, e A--. wtllfrtha-rliat pt opll1y -_._ .. ·--~ -PIO••our~ -e.cttorr Tanner Of Capitol.a D • 0 d (t1:J.:!,1m· ~ Howant locattd. ...... .... -·-...... ,,,_ 1773 of the Cellfornla Labor • 8V1S, 1 gran -c T~ CAl.t'O"NIA MO"T· '"OCllDINO AQAINIT Coda tM Qlnltal preyllllt\Q Ca, six grandchildren. children, 17 great-• :;...., Q AQI 11111 v1 c1 Al YOU, YOU aHOULD COM-r1t•0tperdlamwege11n0 three great-grand-grandchildren. Visit.a-Oatad: Oct. 16, 19M TIIUITll • ., CALWIO• TACT A LAWYUl llOMdeylndowrtlmawcnln chlldren Mrs Macln· uon at Saddleback Publllhad Or1nga Cout TIIUIT DUD •"vtell, NOTICI O!,J"UITll'8 thelocelt'Ylnwtlldlthewcn d I Dal"' Piiot Octobat 23, 30. tHC. AoaNT, t1IO I. •TH •-II to ba performed nu been oe was a e even year Ch a p e I Tuesday No~t>ar a 1994 IT • 101 IAMT A ANA. CA T .1. Ne • ._ obtained from tilt Director resident of Laguna 4·9pm. where ser· • T-216 .,.,0. (7;4) ID-tl10. IY NOTICE. IS HEREBY of the Department of lnctu. Beach and a ca.shier v ices will be held Kartn Waloll·DeYlnt , OIVEN, that on Wednetd9)', trlal Re1111ont. 1 copy of f Lagun S Trua ....... OfftMI' Novemt>«21.1N4 a111:00 wt11chl1onlllalntlltoffloeof or a unset Wednesday Novem· Dita: Octot>« 2, 1914 o'cloet! a.m. of NICI d1y, In the etty 0*1I of the City ot Drug Co. for 10 years ber 7, 1984 at lPM. -Publltlled Ortnae Co11t the room NI ulde tor con-lrvtneandwlM bemad .. vall· Funeral m&M will be Officiating Rev. Rex ... Dally Piiot Octot>« 23, 30, ducting TruatM't S1lft, able to 1ny 1n1ar11tad party held Wednesday No M D · I f h CD Novemb« 8, 1984 within the otlloM of REAL upon ---t. The contrte-• c an1e 0 t. e T-273 ESTATE SECURITIES SER-tor ~d~ IUbcontractor vember 7. 1984 at Tustln Prnbytertan VICE. located 11 2020 North under him lhllll pey not 1aa1 1 0 A M i n S t . C hUNh. lntennent El ~ 8roadw1y, Suitt 20e, In the than the apaclt'lad prevaltlng Cathrines Catholic Toro Cemet ery ._, CltyofS1n11An1.Cou11tyof r11 .. of w~ to all work· C h h L g S · Orange, atatt ol Calltornle, men amp1--< In 1111 execu· urc • a una Directed by addle-REAL ESTATE SECURITE8 tlonoftha"'~-;;,,ICt, Beach Interment will back Ch ape 1, ~ P\8.IC NOTICE SERVICE. 1 Clllfornl1 cor· LABOR REGULATIONS: be at All Souls, Long 544-1450 por111on. u duly appointed The contractor tnlll compty Beach. ln lieu of CD POUNTAIN VAUIY T'ru11 .. t1n<1er Ind put1U1nt wttn 111 lhe requlflmenta of fl b ORR ICHOOl DtlT'RtCT to the power ot ulel con-Section 1777 5 together With owers contrt ullons G RACE L YDlA ORR NOTICE OF AOOPTION ferrad In lhlt certain o..ct of all other eppi1cabla requlr• may be made to the ~""H""' Oc ber. OF RESOLUTION OF IN· Trult ex9C'11ad by Dana H. manta of ,,,. Callfornll 'Amer1ean Cancer &r ~ away to TI:NT TO LEASE SUAftt.US sm11n and Sandi w. Smith, Labor Coda. cietyortotheVis1ung 31, 1984. Survived by z OISTRICT REALPROPERTY Trutt ... oftheSmltnFll'lllly OAAWINOS AND SPECI· Nu AMOt t Or her aon Dr Richard 810 NO 15'-07 Trull El1ablllhed July (l4, FICA TIONS: A fUll Ml of rse . o • 0 f Phlladel hi NOTICE IS HEREBY 19to, r1CO<ded Miy 22, dr1wlng1 Ind ~lone ange County , p 0 rr 0 p a . GIVEN THAT THE FOUN· 1914, In the office of Iha II 1vallabla '°' lnl9«11on Box 1129. Orange. C.a PA. and daughtqr I • I TAIN VALLEY SCHOOL County Raco<dtt of, NICI without chMga at the offtca M c c 0 r m 1 c k Lura & Art h u'r DISTRICT nu decllrad that County. "' ~-• In-of tht Olrtctor of Put>Ac McKenzie of c.o.ta • • the following rMI 1>1'°'*1'! ''""'*'' No. 1-4-212612, by Wortca of 1111 City of IN!ne. M ortuary. Laguna • I • I wlll not be needed for reuonot11>reac:tiOfdeflUll Complelt tat• of Mid Bealh, Directors. Mesa, grandson, -cllltfoompurpoeM: In payment of 1*1ormanca drawtnga.epacfflcatloneanct 494-6635 Mark Warren (Pa-Ona Portebie C1uaroom ol the obllg1t1ont ..cured bid document• m1y be tncif) McKenzie, of locltad at Numl>af one tharaby, tncludlng that purcf\atad rrom The 0epar1. BROWN Irvine ~at-grand· LlghthouM L-. Fountlin brMdl or defaurt. Notlca of mant of Publlc Wortca, City STEVEN P BROWN ' Val*Y ca111ornl1 which WM ~o.cs Juty 29. of lrAne 11200 Jtrnbor.a • daughter Kendall ... Tilt• Board ol Trutt ... of t984 .. Rac«dar'a ll\9trv-Rid. rr~ln1, California. resident of Costa Morgan Mc Kenzie. .. " the Fountiln valley School mant No. ~.WILL 92713·9575. A non-rlflln· Mesa Passed away Mrs Orr was active in Otatrlci rN01v1t to laue tne SELL AT PIJBllC AUCTION d•bla tee JJ4 135.00 wllt be November 3 1984 . facmti.. IO Indicated ebove TO THE HIG..,EST 8100ER Charged fOf MCtl ... of • several senior Clt.iz.ens A~ under Iha tlfmt and con· FOR CASt1 ...... money of doeumante. Or1wlng1, Born March 5, 1956 in groups in the area. ..,, dlllon• atlled In the Relol-the Unl1ad Stat ... or • apacttlcatlont end bid clocu· Detroll, M1ch1gan Services were pri· /1611;. utlon of 1111 Board. Raeol· calhlaf't ctlaCk drawn on• mant• 'Win be malled, upon Survived by parents, vate In lieu of .,., utlon No 16-11. ttate or n1tl0heil t>lnlt, • TIOlipt of requettl no lat• p 1 d A · . (I') The minimum montnly 1t1ta or fedeflll Cfedlt union, 1nan 10 celander dlya pr$Of a mer an ni ta flowers donation t.e ...,. P•~ for tne term or a tt1!• oMed«al .-vlng1 to the d•t• Mt for opanlnQ Brown . brothers your ffVOrite charity. olthe 1 .... .na11 not ba 1e1t and 1011r1 MeOClatlon doml· bld t. tor 1n addltton•J. Douglas and Thomas · ai than two hundred ttvanty· clled In th• '1ate, Ill, payebla cn11ge of U .00.. 1 Brown au of Gross MC GAVR nln• doll•r• ptr mo"'" II the time ISf ....... I right, SECURITY t.h~. COhf~ P oint' Michigan PAULINE HELEN ($279.00/montll). The mini· ~~:l.:'::!t": by It, Pt.~~N OF ~Rt<: flWl Memo~ial service~ McGA VARAN, age CD :''!'u~=::!~:~~ .,;.., llt~ tn ..fo e~ =~~ !:"::.~: wlll be held Wednes· 67 yrs. Passed away be ed)u11ac1 by the Con· and St11e, daecrlbad .. fol· buad llPOfl tt)e ~·· day November, 7, Nov. 5. 1984.Mts ,... 1Umer Prlca 1nc1ax ennual ~ 'In &Ioele at of.._. •tlmatt_~.!._ tllllj percentage 198.. t 1 PM at St McGavaran was a 1verage rtftactad a1111a and ot ~ . -111 t...... 'It..-... of wori QQmptetad. The City ., a · id f C of' •IMM period. A MCIK· port 8iMCSr, -111 ,,.~ "' will retain ttri}*."cant (1~1 Jame':. Epucopal res ent o osta • 1 ~9Pf?lll w111 be N9wpOft BMcti, u map otMChPfOOC-,...,,,_,t~ Ch ur~h . Newport Mesa for over 40 Id 1g9C1Cu r.c:ordecl In recor ~ teeurlty ror~coml)letlon of years. a member of :i ~ I z ~ No 1n111Jon 111111 .8001t 3. ~ 29 ltf 1 bf. the bllan<la of ma wor11 At BALTZ BEAGEAON SMITH I TUTHILL WESTCLIFF CHAP£\. 427 E 17th St Costa Mese 648-~371 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 3500 Pac~llc View Orlvt Newport Beech 641·2700 McCORMICK MORTUARY 1705 L&ouna Canyon Road Leouna Bt1ch. Ce 92G5t ..OA-OA 16 "·' HANI°" \.AWN• MT. O\.IYI Mortuary • C.metary Crematory 1825 Gtattr Ave Cotta M• a 540·555' the Newport Harbor ~ C: 11£ paid to any llclntad real ... ~of 1 ...... ,._"'!!'-ty~~~ the requeet Ind ••penM. of -19 6 c: tltt bfOlittt In tlllt rtgard, ,..,,. ,,. """"'' .,....... the tuCCNtfvl bidder, "9 Emblem Club. and an ~ ~ a :1.1 -Ind theft wu 1>a no deduc· of Mid Coun!Y· City will pey the -.it a.• :~vt~t~~\e~h:hi~ l ~ ~ !1 ::"m'1~~~=~ ot~ 0::, = ~ u~ d Cha ,_ CL'-.. -> QI a ""~ apontlbla bldoer of the ,..., pr()99rty 0ovet""*'' Coda Sectlon nm r1a1 uKM1 , a 0 ' ~ -Sealad proposal• lo ..... 1bova da1cr1 l>ad It 14402 arid the piOVllk>I• of Frank (Barbara), and ~ Qi & Mid propeny mull ba r~ putpe>rtact to be' ato1 S... tn. contr1ct documentt F r e d ( M a >f i n e ) <g ~ d !I cal\lad by the da6eQltad of-lhore DrM. Newport 8-:n. pertaining 10 "Subltllutlon M G a_ ~ i;. Q f\cef 11 the Fountlln Vlllay California. of S«:utllltl " c a v a r a n • .! g ~-~ SchOOl Olatrlct Educetlon TM under'flOMd heNby PROJECT AOMtNIS· cheruhed grand-_ & ~ & Center, 17210 Oak Street dllClalme .. lllblllty lot 111"1 TRATION:AMquattlonl,..._ mother of Lorri, Paul, :{ j ~ ~ Fountain Vallay. Celllornla, tnoorrtct,,... In MIO •tr99t !Ive to thlt prOject prior to Melissa. Lisa. Chuck, .;. ~ ~ ~ 92708. no 11tar tnan 2:00 addr ... or other common opanlng bid• ati111 b• d M · ~ 'l ,. ,.. p m Novemb« 9 1944 daelanatton directad to A. Santellcae L 1 n a • • x 1 n e , • i EWore 11CCePttnO any writ· se1d Nie Wiii ba mlde M0-3tM. Larry I Kristi, Terri a et ~ tan pre>poaail, Iha dataa•lad wfthOut wvranty, ~or BY ORDER of the City and Rich. Great· IC j, ~ omcer Ill•" cen fqt Of9l bid· lmpffad, regardlnO tma. po. Counc:ll ot the City ot trvtna. d h f is } " ding Any pereon who Ml ....ion. or ancutnbflt!OM. Date: Octot>« le. 1N4 g ran mot er o ~ ii~-,..fo1ot11Ubm1t1ad 8"wrlt• o •11-fY tile prlndpal .,._ CITY Oft "'V1HI! B r y. n • w y • t t • i II tan bid ~y eubmn .,, Ot'll Ince °' the ~ or other NANCY c. LACfY Ca m r on , tr r a c y , ~ g i tlld axoeectlng by 11 teut flw OC>llgetlon MCUt'ad by Mid City Cttl1t Nicole and • Cherie. ~ (5%) petOlnt ,the hlOf*t o..d of Tr\194, wtth int.-~ by 1ne Orenge ed · ( n -; i { .i. written bid The hlOhelt ,.. Ind other IUITlt. .. provided OoMt 0...., Plk>t Ootobat Devot a1.1~r o nay. ,, ~ ,. ~ fC)Onllbla bktdar lhall be,. 1'*9ln: plua lilttancat. If 30.,~ t. tN4 Ed , Pa u 1, f red : S Ill-qlllred to •K~t• the 1orm any. unctar IM term1 theNof T ·21t Trautweln and Sitt.er ~ ~ of ...... IUClh format llM Ind lnt«Mt on IUdl ad-Anna Mae. F\ineral e .c;A hef9'~ ~ IWO'M ::,;. :: ~":. __ MUC ___ NO_TICE ___ , ~ to beld () by i: ':::,of .. ru;=:._ the TNlt• and of IN tl"Ult• _ ....... ..-..-..........,....--...._., l ;PM Wednetday at fi)' lhal meae the datermtna-~t.ct by lald o..ct °' PllCTmOUe..,..... Hubor Lawn Mem ~ 11on .. to "'*'* to .._. Tiwt The totll wnoum of U.. ITA,......, orial Chapel wlth ffi = :i-~ '::,!10) ::O.:r=: ::':::. -~_.,.,-• R e v D o n a 1 d a. lntonMtlon cone.nine cMroet and~ of.,_. JA & AllOCIATU. Thurman offld.atinc. m the ~ ~ be -. T"*'9. 1t •~of 1n1t111 627 liMa AM A*'"· lnt.en'Mnt foUowtna. a. dfelMdto~rouHTA~VAL· ~of"* ...... "="A~·gr'ctln.. "= Vlatutlon toda en Wa1o'8."°:..'-..f'~ ~--No~tlar 1, 1tt4 ..,_AMA:..,...._.,, ""'·.........a·y 2·PM-8P l v-,....-.._.. 12--MM. UTATI 8lCUN-9lecl\. Cell. t1ta I~ • • ~ _,, _,_,_ ,_ Tiii aJIWVU a CalforNI fllll ~ • 'tOft- famil)' •ua-t In lieu ~ ~1. AnentlOn ~·· .. T,,,.... ~by. lllC9MdUll o f flowtn dona dona POU•TAU• v AL ll y ,...., D.J. Morter. Ila • Quly A. Ven On9ln bP" made to the O> • ICMOGL~90A9 '•tA1•1 •t • Tiiie ••-••" ..... flW Am rtcan r .. _,,..,. So-~ Q' 11IU9TIU 1IOO Nof1tl lfoMw9'!, 1llffl w. Coun'Y Ollttl Of Or· -or::_,.~ N oa.... ._ 100 ._.Ana. C. lflllOowneyon~M. ctety Suvlc.w wNll'r ~ 11, 1114 t270&. T• .. hone-(714) 1"4 tht Olre<"tlon of 8; PublllMd Ortnoa eo... ta-t110 . ,..,.. Harbor Lawn·Mount "'-' Olly "°' Octot>at u . ~. ~b= ..::=, ~ ~ ..::=, ~ Ollvt" M o rtuary, <» ~I. 1M4 T·tll 2,0.1"4 11.a..1"4 _ ~40 ~~~4 T-HI W.114 } . . ·~ Orange cl..t DAILY PILOT nu.dey, NoWmb9i' I. 1"4 • • .. .· .. Auto sales , housing and employment-t·he segments of our economy on which so much of c ~sified depends-,-are l ooking better than they have in a long time . We 're fee ling good about that and the opportunity it gives us to offer_ you a bigger , better-than -ever classified section . If you haven 't r ead classified lately , com,e enjoy a bro-wse through our ... columns . You 'll see why we 're feeling good about classified. 642-5678 ~ : Orw.g. Coaitt DAILY PILOT ITlMeday, Novemb« e, 1984 .. Bl LL GRUNDY , REALTOR ! 11 f~"Y''"' l>r•v• N [~ 61~ filbl let Ut H•I• Y •• Sell Yott Protettrl fht Dally Pilot often you this euct iiu 1d on ow "PKlurt Pace" week.ends for just $25 per day. Of 2 days for $45 S-.. a pictwe. 0t we'I photo1raph 1t for ,. It I llilinal ~rlt e. Cll11ifit4 642-5678 '::~::.~' s~~~~-4£~s· ... , .. , ~ CUY • l'OUAll ----- •• _,.._ .,.,,,.,, 01 "'• '°"' ...... led _ .. , --.... ,. ...... ,...,, ..... ,. WOfd• I BATLI{ I l SHOTI I • t11ou11m Beem1, bflclc1, newe< 3 Bdrm. 2 beth home 112 ~ 10 IM bHotl With help fl could have • view S359,600 lJ~IVUt ti()MtS RMll0<1, IS7S-eooo Ulll&PmlllU ... llYtt" Ow.tw DESPERATE end AN)(IOUS to NII d•· alr .. bla Balboe Panln- euta POlnl 2 1tory home. RE.DUCED to S21S9,000I 3 bedroom•. den. llvlng room with fireplace and oharm g1ior.t \11,r.,lf Rr RC'N1 llOMI., 1 .. ~. AEAl [}jTAf( 131·1400 . llHY TRUllFlll tttMtyte Of condominium own•r1hlp with lhlt 2Bdtm. 2 ba L1urel MOdel In Tunte Aocll Hlghlend1 Townhomee Exceetent lcJQtlOn wfll'I Petlorll view. MC>Ye In oononion S114.000 • .mil ~lso~ ·R-alty 786-1172 i I ,rr r. NOTICE .. ~! Dally pttot wW no lon1er be open on Saturday m0 ... 1 .... vw. operatta.i boue will be Monda, th Frida 8 oo ·---.•· 5 :30 p.m. Deadllnee will be ae foUow•:na y. : a.m. to EDITION llooda1 ....................... . •rt~~A~L~~ h--.. _-. ····························· .. ~1, .:~ p.m. ~1··············1•••••• • .. .. _ .. f!llft Wedaeeda • • ............................ on-y, .. :~ p,m. T1atar'9Cla y ••........•......... ~ ..........•..•..........• ~.clay. 4:SO p.m. Prtda 1············································ Wod.DMdaJ, 4:30 p.m.. S. 1··················································· Tba.1'8d,aJ, 4:30 p .. m. 8 tatdaJ......................................... ...... .. _, ""·00 p -UdaJ ........... rir1--.~. - ·•··•····•······················ rrt .. -y a 00 • -••• ••••• •• ••• .•• ••• ••• ua • "'' p.m. -·Daily P.illd people read clau lfted • IMMI V1f111i1•H A lmat U44 ertatatl, Vat. &prtetatt, Vat. &prtetata,·vat. ti Wu... SIM ... ...... SlM '* ...... GOLF COURSE c.nu •tt llar 2?U Cettl ..... Z'l2f 1-ert ...,. "91'T111D1 ..... tt D~!'i'!f~ R.ceJU .. LOCATION VIiia Balboa big 1bf,1 ba, 2Br 1b .. 4250 Stlorecr•t •PENTRIOOE COVE• 18' $550 dahw9hr f""' Newpon Beach c:otorTV --IPN9M. ._._,.. ,.,.. l>r9. exp Ilk• new. lull aecurlty no L N 28' 281 ........ ._... trplo I c . ... S125Wk.,., • ---.H ... m IPDAlll Biiiing, pnon.a, typing, req'd. NB IU-2'2e Larg41. 2Br, den, 2Ba klda or peu $850 ~ n. opeta,n-tmtler.All ....,.., _.,.., '·nd. No pell. all btwn ._.,no.._...... fnlU\ •os Parttlmed8)'& ...... ltllfta PIT Mon-Thut 1~5, ~rl l=-::-:-:"::-:-:---=-=-=-="=""== Condo In Rancho San 845-9238 · · redone$750, 780-0328 W/D, dbl gar, PoOI/~ 9am-4pmcSalty545--4&55 3029WeetCou1Hwy uunll ft avall,631~140 9-1 844--2292 DENTAL RECPl/8EC Joaquin New carpets & • $950/mo. sse..9200 ·-·-· .. -----anr.--rorr--wfnyr~ drapes ·s1095/mo can YEARLY LEASE •P&TIIAPTS* _. .. , ..... IHI MLrn.u vc~. ILDIUL/lllPI 4d8)'1~CM 851~892 or 940-<>937 3 BR 2ba, unique Oriental Wlln Walk!ng of the bch. Clean and sharp lower 3 6( 1 s; W..i CM h.. Exp• must. $5..25 up/Hr • paradise. Upper un11 on 1 & 2Br S650 & Up. 1BR, D/Ww, garage, no N/amkr Ill yard •21s1mo Cal·. 382 3td St.. LIO Bch pan time to wcwti In fbta1 DIVER. Min 6 rno'• uncw- WOOdbfldge. 4BR 3b•. 3 Penlnauta. A mut1 to see. •Immediate Occ;upancy pets. $485, 831-5553 ~ ~ 1~503 lhoc>. Will llaln ~ wa• }'Kht rNllnt.. ~ car gat, lam/dining rm $1800/mo. DANA POINT •Month-to-Month EASTSIDE 2 BR. 1'A, A~=':!=~he Female to.,,.,. 28' 281 142-llll App tysser..B,;E"! n ly . AM'• 433-1888 Of 1 yMr ~d expar: $1250+ MC. 552-,.937 REALTY 240-1502 IU.-U11 patio. No peta. $800/mo, Upper Bay. Private Vertaltlea Condo. $400+ MacGregor Yactlta, 1831 otD•&L. :ta:!'·.:;'&-::'.:'° L11••1 ·-~ 2 4 Yearly rental Cosy 3 br 2 ,.__ • 27,u Clll ~6-9950 clubhOUIH & hHlth electrlc, 25+. Cell Wkdya Ptacen11a CM Chffrful mature Hll· Knowtedge of Npt ~. -ba w/lrpl, bckyd, new .,_ti Ill Ml WTllll ~. 8 tennis oourta, 7 873-8170 °' E~/Wkndl BABYSITTER WANTED •tart« IM ueoclatlon 18.'3 tv. s.d thll 9CI & 28al~b8eo~~r kl:;,.~,; crpl, drapes, 1 blk to 2138( conaot. 2 car gar, Count WOOda PoOlt. ciOM to bualneu, 850-7518 Found: Cat-very lite Of· PIT mus1 have references, work Varied office yox reaume to )ob cwdlt eiew $800/mog 498-0035 bMcl\refareq'd S97~mo Ir~. mtcrOWIYe ·92~ Large 2Br 2~ loft apt No OC ·Airport, Faahlon Femate to attr 38r 28a anQe WI.UV. UN COilar. i xperi.nce w/lnlantt own proeedur ... PlfMlfM. •~13001P.O.8C!ll 1f to2. -----·---Call mike 850-1033 *ark S 1000 mo. 842~ pets 1710. 846-4282 or · llland, COO~ BALBOA 1& deluxe '675, VIC t1B 963-9002 1TSnspOrtattOn. 940 . .' 1Mlt ~ lull tl!M. Hn ~ Loe~ .cA..IOO 1.5." LGE 2 BDRM 2 BA. prlv & 842-5505 after 8/~nda 2B l 'nB encl N 845_9543 . on light. tat & l•t. 850--0404 FOUND Fem blk/wht occa. traY'll. M0-2421 Not later than 11-11-M quiet. Frplc, W/D, ocean A F I LJ r a, gar. 0 Singles 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart· Beagle mix Fem blk Banking CLERIC PIT F YU, no pals. tat + MC. ......... • .... ? ~1•· 2025 Pomona. Lg 1Br w/paol, lndry fac, menta & Townhou••• Fml 2 bf furn bch hae HB, Shlhtzu mix Fttm blk/wht Y&ILT mLD AL . ront of-"'.,.HI., S 1050/mo 497-8287 25/mo. 846-4. 5S9 watlH pd $424/mo. 1884 from $720. (Aalt about prlv shower, need br turn. Aaotrallan s· t.a..ard mix. SUC<leulul Independent ~.~ ~ .. 21~ WWtted. fltlme, 5 ·~ Moor la 543--033«1 ... 1....... $375+ •,1, utl/cabla ·~"' ,,,_,....., U'Jnu• .,........,. .. ........, In -2134 &. I t It L 2,.,.1 lalMI Delux 2 br )'n ba lndry ov · ,.,rn .. ..., apt.I, complete 5384935 536-1316 Fem Brlndle wht Boxer. eorporate bank hu an · ....,...., ..--·· f!J!t ICa ,.. I I ' 21u· hkup, newer, twnhae SHADY LUSH LNDSCPE with TV, llnena & utenlll1, Numerous c.ta/klttena & Immediate opening In 1t1 Construction COMt Hwy, CdM. I II . '"' atyle, fncd patio, encl Br!Qht. Top ar ... tBr maybe rented fOf lhor1 Lg furn rm, ba, In Npt Bch Tarrier Mix puppies. Newport Beach head-&llllT&IT ELECTRIC 1 AN / 2 Br Condo, 2'n Be, den 2 br 1 ba w/d ma&ura crpon. Hamilton St: No $5lf0 & up Pool IP• bbq term or longef'). On Jam· apt., all amenities, nloel Newpon Beach Animal quarters offioe for I vault llflllllWIT JOURNEYMAN, min Syra prlatlne view ol hllla Ir~ tadlu or couple no peta pet a $675/mo Craig out9t. No'peta: · ·boree Rd. at San .k>aquln non smkr 1375. 631~377 Sheltet. 125 M... Or, teller (Min. 2-3 Yfl ten. Muat be familiar With tllt· up. Tenant lmprcw.- kltchen & llv-rm, bit-In at prklng avail 111)5 831-1288 MESA PINES 549-2447 Hiiia Rd. M/F· CM/NB arM. Fpl, CM 6.U-3856 exper. & preYIOul auper-p & gredlng General ment exper. helpful, lrlg, new e1p11,very fresh -6115 $675/mo 873-3608 Nr SC Plza 1 IN Old"~""-. 144-llOO 3Bd, 3ba 1280 +utll. Found mana watch Est~ Vlsory ell.per. preferl'9d), ~llructlon '**ground clean-cut, muat have & cheerful. S 1700. no C •.a ,. """""' /I /"'-•uo " .. Competitive talaty, lClnt mandat ,..._......;:.. __. good drtvlng rec:Ofdr leue. 780-85t2 tltl Ill ,,.. 28'2Ba.Beeutllv1Mttlng tat aat .._-..-.. 14u eta High School. Call to benefits. Cell penonnel, 831-761~ ,._ ..._ Salary negotiable. --------1225. Dix mobli.tOme, no '825/mo. 844-296! 2Bd 2b1 walk 10 bch, new NB lg 48' wtboat/lllp, on Identity 543-8~7 851-9900 aft. 10AM. 770-0102 Of 788-9094 $475 pad near Balboa Pier pets. Maturi adults. 2Br 1'ABI ToWf!houM, PALM' MESA APTS. cpt/drp gar Indy 1v1 water Fr• cable. $525 Loet: 10/31 Fem• long Plw.l Olm EL.ECTROHJCS let kl ~: Quiet aecur• ale, gar, patio. No ..... 11 Eutllde 2 er. $585 No no~. N. 0 p'eta •5850 850-9070, 546-1807 haired Tabby/Wl'llte Fat IASI• llllm r--~ __ 1 __ .,..com= p e t~s er~ 1981 ••• itiDA 146 ·83 ...-.. CaM. ~P•tte11ced with 1ttong ~Rrtya7~ R I rt •"'•'cL ·~1 ~ -=-~i:~ra:· 87W ~ lrgh0me$425+ U1llltln Bob,67~,191 -~~~~~orouncs.'ti,.•iii11ii1~m=•~•=a::.~.~----; • ,.. 2Br 2Ba, 2 c.r gat, Ir~. 2Br 181 nr oc:e;an $725 ......,.,_. Thi .. tll _.. ti Blk 1o bch, 3tir 2ba, gar N frig, micro, W/O, paol, Quiet 1Br, pvt patio, utll yrly fr pie, gar, d/w. non-amoker 846-2106 LOST .M wttt cet 11 tan tall IUm &SllST&ITS must 0 C I\ pott .,.. c.. m,..lr~ on .. 1200·.com poolllM,$t195 tBr w/all amenltlea. lt1 spa. Water oriented pd, lndry No chld. $510 309..36 11; Me Sun 11-1 Prol fem to ahr apac1ous ..,, 1~127 ~Gamet B.I Good training program 756-M01 ~P1eue cal .: mo 11t/lat1 $500 dep clus decor a lvrnlture $1000/mo. 760-9811 +MC S500 + rn 2038B oentmt 2Br duplex yr name Simon 873-5267 Richard Ouellete Salon. Fun a pen time ~llnga. Bennett 631-5193 213/888-7868 *21U70-5723• Meyer Pl·D 842-0350 or 4BR 2ba.· yt1y 114001"'°· round In NB, rutty furn, LOii ' POOdle Ortl Grey 200 Newpof1 Ctr Dr. NB for Ll~eb~ ~~~! ~~-760-9396. Nd Mgr. negot 16F~3 Wd;,.w_; fBrlgl 'c":~d21*24u1p utllt Incl S500 831-5844 w/wttt Blind, needs med Body Shop E1t1m11er .. , • mflll PlllTll Lido tale apacl<>ua 3Br, Apart••ta~ 1111. ' .... """ 53• "282 Vic HB o 3'1rBa, ramlly rm. patio, _ ~ :. 2 car gar E-alde Sharp & clean 1 BR Gar-Prot'I resp N/amkr M/F lhr .,..,. Benell ts See Patty Day & eve lhltta avail Printer 1>9rator with $2200. Agl 873-l323 lilL-. lalia..a 27_ $800/mo 644-7211 agt den apt. Stove/refrlg. No VIiia B1lboa-Ver11111es Lg NB hme pool/ten wlk * * iirw••t * * 9am-11am 1001 Quall Appty, ME & EOS PIZZA ..tup UP« In thtd! film. -• -pets $460. Call 548-1377 ··$750-$1200 to bch $450+ 839-8722 inr-St. N-port Beach PARLOR. 410 E 17th St , PteaM cd Chucil 09!1- L Cond B' Ca-Agt 831~980 Loat Male lrlah setter gett ux 0 , .g nyon, 1Br upst1lr1, stove, mealiBllU s-di E c c M EOE M/F . tu o aat1lde M. Quiet 3 br NB apt. Meaa Ve rde area •-•1irR-3Br 3Ba. GoU courte YU d1hw1hr, extra clean ._. _,..,. -----No pets S 1550, 84~5792 $550/mo. 114 Agata. a.a•Jlllm Kitchen, patio, high cell-Sense ol hUm0< 21 -30 ~0-3688 882-1868 E.xper tor fut growtng WT""" mPIOlll -.i9 8)289-9307 f1 5 .,._ Inga $415/mo 650-9228 Spacious ~ingle one n/smkr Ron 873-7570 REWARD! Lost Mle c.t company GIL, AIP, A/A en~ le'Y'9I ......... Ion with 2 Yrs exper. with a mero- Nwpt Hgta lg lam hme. '"' 1 a Beautifully landsacap-"" • "··o bedroom ~pl & Oii H nd """'""' I ""' •STUNNING Lg 1Br Gar-a ,.. .. ~ Resp n-smler 23-35 shr 1g llameee. Vwy Old. Hunt· P•vr • • on com-O. Ad agency Wtll trllln •co P • on m c r o • 3Br, 2'hBa. den + fam Charming 1br, patio, av all· garden apta. Pool/tpa. den Apt. Pool & rec .,.. nu HB twnhm 2bd 2ba Jae/ lngton harbor &4~6707 pvter exp. helplUI Call word Pr c) c ••a In g electronlc:.9. P1eUe call rm, 3 frplcl. Completely able now. e mo. lae $550 Patlo/dectca. No peta. s~9c 710 W 18 h St lor appt 842-4""3 "-· "''""klnt I bl h d N t .. "· t · pool/ten Behl Ad1m1. · '"' 250~ 100 ' uvreen ,..,_, on. re ur • • . o P• •· tst/lut. 875-7847 2Bdrm n~Ba te70 SCRAM LETS S8515002-87/mo13 A. Inc& IHgr,nndvetr atv.c. lal . 2250 Va_ng_ua_rd_~_40·9e26 WI lfPll 1111111 ~uat Ilka cite S375mo. • OASllH .....,.. f ~6():5306 Sherri Pa... time C.pftA. •1nvvt •ITD nam Want a Mlectlon o gr•t •NSWERS " ,. .,., "' . ..., .. I Lagun< d ....__ -· • -QUALITY RENTALS Pt1ia11l1 2707 18drm $540 living? We can oner any-Amte wa.nted. S330 plue " Texaco. 4878 Campus or r~ ry ..._nera. UN • Thia Is What u wantl 0-29R niBA. 115 25th St. 241 w Wiison 831-0980 thing fr umall aptto a dep. L:r,na Beach. No Or, N.B. 497 . mt& mu front 2br 2ba lrplc dbl gar yrly $785 mo. Avallable Beautltul. quiet 2 8d 2ba, 2 4 Bd hae. II looking In CM, peta. C 1497·1830 ~~~t:J:~~ CAlllHS tlUYlll . llMJTI gar klda/pet $700'1 1211 760~737 patio. All new Int 822 NB. or HB think of ua nrat fURNISHED or Want mature fem. n-tmkr Part ume Muat have good lr m M"Uiiiift-.tp;w&iii •IH-11IO* Ct .. Illar 72 Hamllton-Aon 548~477 ~~~~~:~ 1"::'2~r~ UNfURNISH£0 S275. Incl utll c 111 A p~i::JH:.~ormer c~ Full/part time. drtvlng record 833-1885 ~~~= Yearly 3br 2ba ei.gant rtal . , NB REA TY 87/f. .~2 H[ALTH 846-8541 c.tla was demanding 1 stage ---Demorlst ators ' amenltlet lrplc dthWlh t br w/prfV b(ldl patlo Brighi airy & new .. Cpta & L .,.. t.,.. manager aound tech· CASSETTE TAPE DUPLI· r fVQ lime pay IOf ~ ttme b11COny view $1000 now $550 tat /last + $200 aec drapes. 2Br 1V•Ba CLUBS l[NNl'J ltat I Wut.. nlclan aMI tight ex.pert CATOR & DRIVER. run FUI JOI work, evenings Call 539-6190 Best Alty fee 840-7782 Twnhae. Micro, tr~. 2 WESTFIELD LOGO SWIMMING olu' Mi atdnt w/H ;mpi:;;;;t The OWMr ot the local time P<>sftton S4 ptnr _85_2_·9_1_8_1 ___ _ car gar. w/opener. Laku, f&MILT •-mu<h mor"' c..orn. to rent or shr 2Br apt theatlf replied. 'I'll be Must have own auto In· FILE OlEll/F T Rental• Aval! Now 2-4Br Bachek>r apt. In CdM, walk -$75042500 Ferguson & 10 beach, 1 room w/bl no atreama & watert1111. -.,.. •• ~ ., · • CM/lrvlne. Bob 854•7238 THERE .. sure.nee & ablhty to lll1 70 Ar• you edventurous aod • Pool/spa, no pets. $875 Sparkling clean 1g apta for no pet\ Model\ Eves; olc 54()..4925 • lb boxes ~H905 need money? Ar• you Entry leY'll, no •Jl?er nee ~9-2447 or Ms-3115 !amities w/ 1 or 2 cnfldren. open darly 9 to b • l1taan1tt t><lght, well ~oomed & Call 145-9000 .... 8:30 & 5 -=====-----=-'========:..!.======== Nr park Heat pd. No ~ d Office lntala 4 In Salt 4012 COT. lllSI UlfS eeger 10 team Travel Fill/Tm PIT Hahn RE S..2-1 t83 kllc $400 mo. 836-7062 HOROSCOPE SYDNEY 0t]ARR Wednesday, November 7 ARIES (Marth 21-Ap nl 19): You cam money by asking questions. writing letters and submitting special format Member of opposite sex figures prominently, lends SP.ICC to yo ur life. Judgment and intuition arc on target. Watch Gemini! TAURUS(April 20-May 20): Cycle high . yo u'll earn more, you'll be more emotionally secure and family member will diU>lay spint of cooperation. You'll be at ngt\t place at crucial moment, income will increase and health will improve. . GEMlNI (May 21-Junc 20): You learn a secret, you gain through mcd1tot1on and you should visit individual confined to home or ho~p1tal. Pisces. V1fJ.O natives figure . prominently, you'll resolve dilemma and there will be a happy rcun~ · CANCER (June 21 -July 22): R~nonshlJ> grows stronger. rcsponsib1hues increase and )'OU'll have chance to chmb financial ladder. Focus on desires. friends and fulfillment Powers of persuasion arc heightened and you could win a contest. Ll!O (July H-Aug. 22): Accent on ach1evtment. completion of proJCCt, succe1s, accolode from professional superior. You'll have wider audience. mott 1ndrvtduals will confide 1n you and consult }OU. ' Aries. Lt bra persons fiaurc 1n dramatic scenono. pets. ~ &+ ..,, ft m\& part t i m e 7-3 pm, W•tern Stat• and Re-,._ 28drm, 2Ba $885 VV 1783 Or ... Ave caJi Smallcafe-bekwy-4ell, fOf 3-1 t 3~m . 11-7arn sortareaswithouraJper-,_,/Tm_ 398 w Wiiton 831-5583 Ownr-Betty &45-9181 or Info 831-3158 2.30-4pm Near O"C. flff'Vround.1 visored marketing IMm Opportunltl• avartabl9 --------Apartmtnt.s ~2270 . only NO brkrt pleaael Ute petlent loed Goad J P Ent•prlaee t\al ...,,. with the LOS ANGELES W·llde CM•3 bf 1'~ ba 2 Ntwport Beach So. I 1_ fll fOI" working COnd Call btwm •II 1mm«Slet• opening• TIMES Clfeulatton o.-atory, pattoe dlshwa.,,.,, UIOITIYI lfFIOll lla.nl • . , 9-5 Mon-Fn 549-3061 tor thole 18 and OY'lf we partrnent 1n our doof ,0 ~9~n~:~~%7';° peta 1 701~118~~~~:'~"1 1..,.rt ..... p~1~0~:h0::,!10~~ Oltll I IMSI WI :1a~1!~::._ ': ~~r•~•n= 1al. lt1c• 4 64 2-5 113 Prime location, four-office Old & growing Profitable possible llYe-ln H B aoper-the l<>b training Ellc«lng hourty wage plus com. space lmmedlately 1vall-Muat Mii at coat. $8000 YIM 9 & 1 t yr olds & n bonua program High mlaalon Hal.in: a.m to 2 2Br XPt. ocean Vl4iW 1775 Nt wport Beach No. able. Approx 82S aq ft ptua Inv Ag1 ~~7740 t\sWrk. Min 3-lpm wlldya, earnings. transportation pm or 4pm to 9pm. Tr.in. mo. upstairs, quiet. 880 Irvine .\venut> Prlv entrance, aome furn wlll conalder student tumlstlecl Start tmmecs Ing 11 prOYlded. Potentltll duplex. 119 Huntington 131 16th) available. Near freeways tit ..... SI IO Send qu1llllcet1on1 & For 1pp1 call June ,0 earn S300 phis per St. 980~725 or 496-8890 and airport. Can rent refs. to • R. Stev.ns, P 0 pr 1 d gen 8 U 3 3 3 7 ·--'-F •--~ 645-11 04 mo/mo. Wiii conalder IDYEIT. IEDll Box 27t2~ Huntington (12noon-4pm Thu;s &. Fri ;.i'." or "' ... t-.. _..., WALK TO BEACH. 1Br le .... Call Marllyn c.tt.y s Beech, Ca. 92847 only) 957-2381 eJC1 1204 S~/·~.'53L:';P•t• VERSAILLES 2 Br, 1 V.ba, 955-2000, SILE --- comer unit w/oc.an view. NB wlll ahare deluxe eult• U ... ..1 I CllllSTUS HlllSTUTHS IDDll.,,. lmat 744 S.C. no peta, S t,025 per w/n-amoker $320/mo •"•• .,., let Earn som. e1tt11 ~Y needed part time tor PIT perm, It bkkg, type 55 mo. AYI approx Nov 10 645•3700 FIT & PIT Potlttons •veil Survey work In SA of· 1uper.rnarket1 &. dept wpm, gen·1 office 3 br Condo llOO/mo Call 644-().452 We are acciepllng the llOe Perteet tor houte-atorM Y""" area. No •KP NMt AlfPOrt 152· 1 Doug AmfMfm&n WOt1t --------Npt Bch prime toe approx ~t & aerloua. No exper wives & students No HP nee Training avail $5 851-2000780-0951hme •W&TIUlllT* 5550 1q ft $550111\0 nee WIMtralnllquallned nec.Cornpenytrems No m1n1mum p l hr p lua lllllA&. 2Br den apt 1800 aq n of 87H173 C'1,L for personal Inter· selftng salary t0-2pm t>onuMa Call Roee. ~ PIT. fleXlble hrs for gen1 UMlllW'I W-11111.11 &PllTllllYI Convententty located In one ol lrvtne'a neweat reeldentlal MU!ngt. WlndWood Glen off.a 1, 2 & 3 bedroom 8'*1ment1 ld11lly situated near achOola. ehopplng and per1(1. ~ emldlt beeutl-0C Airport aree 3 r~ -~-0-8895 elf1 21 _ Moll-Fn Julie 662·58« lect 2 t3 1'52-s.55 otc.Jyplng req HS-S500 tul garden• & Whit• undy IUll• All utlla lnel LOii Of ·-----------------.. bMches. A IC)«)lal plua parking $485, mo-to-mo tor boat owners. Moor OK 852-9388 you boat In front of Y""" __ _ apt Boet 1ovet1 or not, OC Airport ar• From 700 llYlnQ 11 tne ~ 10 3GOO af New dffice Marlna i , a happy btdg, avail for lmmed oo- carefr• way of llte. Pree-cupancy/bulld to eull• ently available at $2495 • 1 25 9q tt 'roaa Bt<*• No pet .. P1eue pl'lone coop 852·1 14 (714)7eQ.0910 R & H INVESTMENTS tlAu . District Managers II you enfOy worlung with ~ ~ & gtrl1 ond ~ tob' ore not for you COl1l•d•r o corHr '" It\• ne""'poJ>41r circulo ''°" ti.Id Tlm " o untque po'mon wilt\ doily choll~ & r-ord\ VIRGO (Aua. 2~pl. 22): Problem of distance is resolved - communications improve and you do act to hean of matters. Light is shed on area prcviouslr dark. Take initiative, stress originality and staod tall for principles. •UBRA(Scpt. 2 ·Oct. 22): You'll have choice between intri1ue and liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil happinc s. iakc course that brinas you closer to family, provides Our o~•"9' or• 1"'med1ate Appltcon!\ 11\V\I how o V<lf\, 1tattonw090" or tnick W• oH•r on exceli.nt tolory ""Ith o bonu' pion ond 901 allowance We ho... on excellent ~tit pion ltlot •ncludet hotp1· tolt1cmon 1n1uronce, ltberol VO(otion ol"d hol1doy1 a,reater emotional security. Favorable news is received concerning ... llWI payments, collections possible bonus. SCORPIO (Oct. h-Nov. 21 ): Focus on popularity. travel, joint cfTons, po siblc panncrship. Lona-distance call aids in resolving dilcmma.;I f1ctors~re promincnt -c~cck rightsand permissions. Gemini,. uanus native pljly outstand1n1 roles. SAOI AIUU (Nov, 22-Dec 21): Stick to routine-be aware of fine points. dct1Jls, •ubtlc hints.. K~p rcsol\)fions oonccmtna diet. nutntion, 1cncr1I health. Rcl111ve 1n transit takt1 time to C'om- municatc. Scorpio fiaurcs 1n scenario. • CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19). Dia deep for information, diS«m mo1 ivc . Do me pcraonal detective work. Focus on variet)', plcasutt. ph)'iacal auractton. Youna pcoon offers to become all y. Gcmm1, Vtrs<> person• fiaure in CJ(c1un1. sccnano. AQUAIUU (Jan. 20..feb. 18): Request 1s fulfilled, you'll have mo~ rc~pon11b11ity aqd chance to inmate income. Focus on 1n1cns1ty. roman('(', ntlmenl, plans for the future. Family membcT coopcrates. helps hllanct budact and approve desire for rmovation. 1•---••1111111111•1 PISCltS(feb. 19-March 20): Travel plan ub,Ject lochanac. C'hcck l!Eii!iJC!! ~-----­dctAils, be po 1t1vr conccrnina source ma1e11al. Another P1sca is m picture, t \lnc:erT hut could be m1,1nformcd Rely upon )Our own on • Jud mcnt, perf<'t•l 1echn1quc~ and stttr clear of sclf-dcccp1ion. car ~~11!:°°'mo ... \ C.ond1dote• "'u'' hove o d4"•r« to be \v<Ceu h1I oftd be willing to wot\ hotd If you ltlln&i Y°" ho.,.. the quollfk orio•-.. plto .. opply .,, pa"'°" to the 111i1J Pilat 330 W. 81y Costa Mesa, CA 92626 • Onwtge Col9t DAILY PtLOT /Tu.day, Novembef' e, 1984 ~· _ AGES 11 • l!.. ---EARN lt TO S7S.OO PER WEEK Wt now lltwt 15 Ol)tn1ncs 101 younc "'" beavtra lo w;ure rudtll for Tiit Or•nae Cont Delly Pilot Our cmn surt 11 3 30 p m and 1 work until 8 30 p m "*d• ys On S1turd1y. we 1 wort 1 ftw m0tt llours You will earn ma11y trips , and pmn. atone ••tit """"' rour own money tltfrt rs no dtitm•na 0t tod«tton 1nvolwtd If yCN lrt 1ntemttd pltnt cd Mr brr (714) 548-7058 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACfll088 1 Skin crack 5 Encourage 9 -metal 14 Opera box 15 Forec:Hter 1e larae11 coin 17 Ruaa11n name 1e Ar~nd pref 19 Walle mailer 20 Length unll 22 Fine thread• 24 Nov• Scott• cape 2e Roof P•rt• 27 Spaca 29 -Pan Alley 30 Tax pro 33 8p1Hhld 37 Trifle S7 Huard se r •Pil•t•v 59 E.11111 8 1 Study e2 Wooded area 83 8rl10 "'llVI e' To be Fr 85 Mora tog1c1r 88 CauM<l 10 go 87 Hlgh·P"tld DOWN • S1opa uP"'ltrd 2 Hang at>out 3 Chal~dony 4 Enter 5 Rapttla 6 Comp111n1 ll1ng 1 Uncan"y 8 Thrae-a1d10 9 M1n1aca 10 Man·11t1ng PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 38 Sulky took• 39 Hiii 40 SktrllO ar11 41 In edOttiOn g1ant1 11 TlfT'a of di v 12 Al '"" ot>• 13 FafT'lll 33 Want QUICk ly 34 M ounted gAme 3S tntenM 48 Slyly mal1c1ou& 50 Aenge crH I 42 Onta110 Huron et al u Speck AS Addltlonally •e Plunder 47 LIQUld fOOdl 49 Tut>ar 53 ICI Pll ltClfl 14 20 24 2 1 ChHrt 2:J Gr .. <11 2S Neg11t11e 28 CofT'munity 30 Cale wor~er 31 Cnurch head 32 Fermented an thu.,Hm 38 Kind of OHt 3 7 Buttered up 40 Sallt>oa1 •2 Joint ailment 43 HIQhllt part •5 Pitcher 47 Orudg9 SI Popa I WDll tro"'ln ~<' S.n1or 53 Cron11 11on s5 •o• 56 Un1lorm 80 Gobb•• up 10 11 12 13 OllllllllLI H .,,10111 HUNTINGTON BEACH • Opportunity IOf 1 hlghly mot1111ttd pereon 10 work In OYr Huntington Beech Contumll' L.,,dlng Of. flee ldH I c1ndld1te 1hould hive m1n1ge-"*'t c;41p1blllty With mini- mum 3 yn expeflenct In con•umer tending . fln1nce. equity p~ck· agl~&nd un<*Wrltlng Ap nt muet h•V9 fhe lb llty to oommuntolte ettectlvlly Wlt'11t.1tf end cu1tom1r1. •Otllent 11l1ry 1nd benefit• Thoee lntlf .. ttd contect Otbrl Pilz 11 (213) &'40~87 IMPllW.U,_. AIHllANI 111<£ lcKEllA'S- SOUTN cou•n MOTOIS ® , 1914 RABBIT 4 dr. · •a !"o cu SllS 14+ tu ptt mo IOP $5858 40 CAPCoal $3138 S6 RtslduM S6 200 00 ® • • • 1114 ¥111101 IL ,1 CONNELL ••• " "' 1 I 1 -.,1 •'" .,, HI • #f I CHEVRO LET I '\. ')i 11 II 1." I' I 714 -833-1300 ' 1 • r. I \ \1 I , ~·~I 200 ••••• llli •I Ull lllOI 176 ciVic .• ln1 oon3, new Sell your oar. tn1ian1 Cuti :~2~ pitnl •2•2&o. for y04Jr eer. Mylnlke or •--------- model. Plld for or not. 'II •IA &lllU , Get our price"'•'· , .... , + tv ......... _ BILL MAXEY TOYOTA ~· mo. "'' -_....,., c.e. Commerdal ..... 19202 BMch Blvd ALL·SAVERS Huntington BNch (714) 432· 1977 ee2-0a29 WlllY USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR nn&PPUJm Cormler·DeLlllo OIOHLn 1821 t BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH 14l·IOllsl4.,1111 WIWAITYMI OWi 1111 O&ll .a. Ronald Dace THIOOOH ROBINS FORD ·1111,0 ltARBOA 81 VI> (O\IA Ml \/\ b•l I OOI() PlllEIUllll * HOlll* HAS HONDA CARS 1'160 MfWICflettet lt'tlld ........ 11 4111-HIO 60mo C El o S229 H • 111 per 1'1'0 TOP nu2e ao CAP $14 ff& S2000 CAP rtoucOon AHldual 15840 80 4sk eoo 1n l Hl"'0 18Zl-1 ~ach Blvd Hun11ngton Beach (114) 142·2000 AatN, DtaNtit ..... tJt7 'h century, xlnt cond. MaOO. Cell Mon-,rl t-5, 955-0333 Ca .. lltc 13H 1'1 El BOf:do ilerrlG t.ut ot the big ceral '3500 • 720-1363 'M Eldor1do, wtlt/ten, 5 yr w.a u .. a.n~ to a.de d, M4-9tt1 or 720· 1633 'eSCAOILLAC8 StHdown CloMdEnd Commerct11 L .... ALL·SAVEA8 (714) 432· 1877 I COMNH C HEVRO LE I -~ I '. I' • r I ' \I I S4l> I 200 .......... _____________________ ...,, __ .............................. ____________ ~-----~~~-----::......------~-~~~~·~----~--...&....L._~---"~....-:1~---·-~~---........ -----~-=~~ .. ) . John McKay ••Y• enough'• enough, he 1tep1 down. C2. lrvlne91 V11queroe 11111 have 1h0t at CIF playotta wit~ big win. C2. StoV 11 had cure·f or OceBn·View. Seahawk sen r's double duty pays off Just "wanting 1t" IS what bas kept l ---· -. St~vall and the rest of the Seahawks p ayer of the Week "ll't. · our Homecomint•• 5'YI • Stovall. "and I want that ig play. right away. instead of wahina until a~t quanc1 like Ma1i11a.,. t~1-ide-the-snai:k-for~ig '.Vi-n o-vei:..~'"g through har9 t,imes in 1he "" .t' • ""' • _ _ .t'_ c, af\u tt s what Kart-- ------Gaytan, in is first year with Ocean By ROGER CARLSON Seahawks were 10 roll up a 21-0 first View. 1s building on. ~gmnu~g to feel the pmch af\erscven What's kept Stovall cominA back for more after so much losing? 'Just a desire to win." says the ~nior ... Jus1 wanting to win," 01 •M oe111 l'tlo1 ••en quarter lead. Stovall barged for I 09 . ~1~~ppointments. . ,, yards on I 0 carries and as usual was As a. Junior Stovall endured a 1-9 I wa'.!> out of things to say, says After seven straight losses, three 1n th e Sunset League, something ob- viously was needed. And Kelly Stovall. a 6-3, 215-pound linebacker and sometimes ball carrier. had Just the cure for a team dependent on the runn ing game. the force ;n the· defense at' his campaign, w1nk·ss ,in lc?gue play. Gaytan. "But the.kids tooko.ver, they linebacker spot. -. Now. however. t~ey re g61ns for two could fec:l 1t. We were a litll.c tentauve IO .a row and ~lteve they snould ~ to gq out and l)Ut H-to Manna. Manna , He scored two Jpuchdowns in' ~II. going forthree 1n a.row (Marina held is a su~r team an,drwe played them Stovall has been instrumental' in Otean View's defense all year; but he missed offehsive duty for a four-week span because of a brolCen hand. ·and his blocking paved the way foi Ocean Vie~ off the week' prior. :tough.·• _ ·- two more TDs by teammate Wayne 21-1 4): · Par1ng a 21-0 lead to 21-14 1n the Seanoa. and for 1L, he's the Dail) "I thought we were going 10 have fourth quarter. combined with the Pilot's prep football player of the 'e m (Mlarina)."say~ Stovall. 21-0firstquarter spurt on the way toa week. SaysGaytan:"Mostofourkidsare convmcmg 34-14 triumph over . He broke over his own tight end. slipped a Lackie and sped 72 yards on Ocean View High's first play from scnmmage.agai nst Huntington Beach for a touchdown. "I took a look back at about the 20." Ilk~ Kelly. They've had four years of Huntington Beach puts the Seahawks say~ Stovall of his opening 1out'h-losm~. but they've never given up. into an unusual situation Thursday "It really ~ook the punch out of our offense," says Gaytan. "And. bccau5C we didn't have him we started tryinl -things we weren't planning on doing. Since his ~ return. tiowever, the > Seahawks have returned to their basic · Before the night was over the down run. "I saw a free safety coming. They ve continued to believe." -they havt the momentum. and but I just wanted it." But even Gaytan ~dm1ts he was their foe (0-4 Westminster) does not. Kelly Stovall Barons eye t111beaten title; Edison., Vikes hope for best ·F ountain Valley duels Oilers; Cha rgers, M<:trina square off By ROGER CARLSON Of tn. OellJ "'°' It.en Two games or maJOr significance clos" tht• curtain on Sunset League football Frida) night -Fountain Valley toes for an undisputed champ1onsh1p and Edison and Manna fight it out for maybe a piece of the cake. or at -..orst. No. 2 crcden11als from the league as they enter the Mike Milner IF Big Five Conferenc:e playoffs next week. . A third game -Thursday night -ftnds·Ocean View carrsay. T ITis ts a -pride game-'.for-us-. . . - f Oing for .something the Seaha~k~ ha~e ' never ac-"We have a lot of seniors and they know they can beat ~ompl!shcd. Two str~1ght leagu" wins in a single season. Fountain Valley. They know how to prepare. It s the week !'Clore (the playoffs) and the wee~ after "Anytime you play somebody wtth tha{ kind of (Fountain ~alley s 11-10 thnUer over Edison '" the reputation, it's sweet. they're on a roll . but there's going to show~o';n at An,ahe1!11 Stadium, paced by reserve be some controversy 10 who is going to be their quarterback John I eart s last-quarter Ourry) quarterback so that could be a benefit to us .. Here\ a look at each: · · Fountain Valll'y ( 7·2, 4·0) at Huntington Beach (2·6· I, Edison (7·2, 3· 1) vs. Marina (6-3, 3· l ) at Ora~e Coast 1-3r: .. We've played so many big games this year." says College: "I've never played them when they weren t ready. Fountain Valley Coach Mtk(' Milner. "It's ne ver ending. It Bill (Workman) will have them read y," says Mann-a Coach seems like we ... ve had a big game each week_. . Dave Thompson. "We have our ~cason goals, and the ne'.\t one: is to "We have to worry about a letdown. 100. We're m the . obv1ou'\J} win the Sunset League championship. playoffs and we're commg ofT a big win against ~ --·-':....~ ilavt.~a1we--l6-wtn-the-leagtio otitnghtcmd-Wtttmtn~te . We!re-ie mg to-play-nett week: wm orlosc:-- that\ somethin~ that hasn't occurred the last two )Cars, but I think the Manna kids want to beat Edison." "I d1dn't th1nk there would be anybody that was going T.hompson admits it's a big task. "It could be tough 10 to be 5-0. and Huntm$ton Beach has had some bad breaks score. And the) 're m1x1ng up their pass and run real well. thi s season. By dcft·at1ng Fountain Valley that would end They're not a one-stretch offense by an) means. The therr season on a positi ve note. . question 1scan we do the necessary things to beat Edison., .. "And 11 wou ld coo;t us an undefeated season, 11 could Workman c;ecs 11 a ltt1le chfferenth. bccaU'il' he's influence the CIF pairing\. There's :1 lot at stake for us. rnming from another angle. · "Thq•'ve been succes~ful rushtn~ the football. and I "lt's not a que~tion ofa ktdown. 11·, a qUl'Sllon of do th~nk they throw the football well at ttme'i. Deft:ns1vd). I )OU gt•t back up?,'' sa)s Wor~man. thmk they've had some probkms wllh their linebacker!"> so "Manna ha~ u great taif~l'm (tailback Shawn Masc,cy I Jon't know who's going to play at linebacker for them." and fullback Adam Antoyan) and they ha ve great speed. Huntmgton Beach Coach Georgt: Pa!">coe reflects We've got to stop them to be 1n 11 and we hav(' to o;core Mtlner's comments: more than l'I points. ··we blew it (against Ocean View) and that's all yo u (Pleaae aee SUNSET /C2) WATER POLO • ounch-1t-out offense. Bad-N .ews Bears next for Rams. There's n o doubt: Sunday's ·game will be physical _ fen~ sidelined start.mg Raider quar- terback Marc Wilson on two different occasions. first with a mild con- cussion then later WJtb a bruised thumb on his passmg hand, and also knocked out ht\ replacement, David Humm. with torn knee ligaments. Rams cbach John Robinson says >\fter the game. some RaTders his own team's offense is "close-to-acciaed the Bears of taking "cheap the-vest," and that he assumes the 1;hots." Chicago Bears will be in much the Robinson. however. said there was same situatio n when the clubs meet m "no reason" to e~pect the Bears to Anaheim Stadium Sunday. pla y dirty. He added. "The issue with The Bears will use. Steve Fuller at Chicago 1s that they"re a good football q uartcrback. with starter · Jim team: they tackle the gu y w11h the--ball- McMahon out for approximately a and they sack the quarterback.'' · month because of a lacerated kidney The Rams coach did. however, suffered m Chicago's 17-6 victory last laughingly make reference to the fact Sunday over the Los Angeles Raiders. that the Bea.rs' defense has been rolJih.·· ~ .. , •·· The Rams' ofknsc has been con· on opposing quarterbacks recently. servative since JefT Kemp became the He said that Ferragamo will suit up to starting quarterback after Vmce Fer-be the No.3 quarterback unday. raga mo was sidelined with a broken "Jfwe lost the othcriwo(JeffKemp hand m the third game of the season. and Ste\t Dils)." ltot;inson JOked. Asked how McMahon's loss mi,ht "there might not be many volunteers affect the Bears' offense. Robinson to take O\.er . I know it'!> not m my said: "It will probabl)·be some of the contract:· _..;;.;.;._:.,;-"'~ ..... fiings thaf allecTS,.eVcrV1rtl~~ ... ha ... 1---A&~y.c~~Wl-l'acl­ loses its quarterback: }OU have to ph~s1call) rnum1dated, Rob1n'.!>On retreat a little bit. go bad. and cover ~1d he doesn't hehevc most players sorpe of the ground )Ou've alread) can. but added that a quarterback covered. I think ll tends to limit \OU. might be"vulnerable tn that respect." your focus on the game." · The Rams. commg off an 1m- 01111, Piiot 11111n pfloto Fountain Valley•• John Peart rallied tl\e Barona to an 11-10 vlcto ry over Edlaon laat week. He and the Barona are at -Huntington Beach High Friday night. press1' e 16-1 l '1C10l) O\ er St Louis He added that he e'.\pcCll'd to \Cl' Sunda' arc o-4 and '1nualh out of -~ Walin Payton can) ing th1.· ball more thr NFC West race since a·n Fran- for the Bears. c1,c11 has a three-game lead with '>IA Chicago. wh1rh lrads the Na ti onal remain.ing Football C onfercnet• Central Rohin~on ~aid hov.:r,er . .that h<' D1vis1on with a 7-3 record. phys1call) kd~ Los .\ngckc; 1' '" "good po~ dominated the defending Super Bowl 1l1un .. for a "'•Id-card berth tn the champion Raiders. Ttte Bears· de-pla,om ..._ ·~ - B ~ d. . h . t · s ··1e d . eien -1ng-eamp1ona1rsraw Westmmste Corona del Mar travels to LB Poly; Marina to ~eet Tustin in a night game Thompson. Doug o·oonndl and Rich Stanle}-alc;o stand out for the league champions. "I think our whole starting line up has t>een playing Wl'll." said 8111 Barnell. Newp<frt'!> Coach who guided his team to a 7·0 leagul' record. "Probably overall it's our depth on offenst· that has done 11 for us. but in the big. tight games -like the Corona game (last week) -you have to play defense. Sea View League champion New- port Harbor, again asserting itself as th e Cl F's best with a 21-1 record. faces Wcstminst('r in the first round of the ('If 4-A water polo playofTs Friday. The Sailors. who'll host the Sunset's No. 3 seed. claimed the title when the¥ beat rival Corona del Mar. the 'iecoml-ranked team. last week. Black Hawks catch Kings bysu~pris~ INGLEWOOO (A P) -Some un- expected n1ft} M1ckwork by Chicago cenicc . TroY. Murray provided a timcl)~chtlng~ of plans for the Black Hawks. 1 A fl er knocking the puck out of m1d- a1r. Murrayiscored the deciding goal on a power play with 8:21 remaining Monday mght to give Chicago a 3·2 National Hockey League victory over the Los Angeles Kings. "The original thought was to dump the puck in lhe comer, but I batted 1t out in m18-ak cand-J caughl the defen!«! by surpnsc," Murray said, "(Kings goalie Boh) Janecyk came out and I med 10 shoot it across him. He caught a niece of it but it went in." The goal . the tir'>l scored off the Kings in 26 short-handed situations. enabled the Black Hawks to snnp LA 's three.game .winnrng.strcak.. X1ngs Conch Pat Quinn was unhap. py with the circumstances surround· 1ng Murray''i goal. • "The problem wn'i they reached out and took It from us:· Qumn , · "We took a dumb pcnRlty and then made o fund3mcntnl error at the blue line. Go<Xl teams U'illftlly tnkc advan- tage of tho!.C 11i1uation, nnd they did." The Kinas led· 2· I on o gonl hy l\ndcni I lokans~rl. but just 25 src- ond'I later. Murray fed c~..Olymp1nn Ed Oloyk fo1 the tying onl with t 8. I 9 len 1 n the game. Corona dcl Mar. the defending Sea View champion. will travel lo Long Beach Poly Frida) in first round ac11on to face the Moore League's No. 2 representative. Senior goalie Mike Campbell. ard drivers Trevor Benedict and Andrew Lawson, both of who m earned All- Cl F laurels last season, lead Newport Harbor. Jon Ell ioll . Cameron "And we had excepllonal defense against Corona " The ai lors lost their only ma~f AP wlf ....... Atla.,ta •a Alfred Jackaon (left). Reda.kin Anthony Waahlna- ton battle for pc>Mealon durtna.Monday nl&ht'a NFL aame. 'Sklns gamble pays off . WASHINGTON (A t>) -A httlc sleight of hand and a successful &omblc by quarter back Joe Thc1smann has the Wai.hington Redskins s1ttina in the pack at the top of the sttu!'1' in the Nnoonnl Con· fcrcncc's Ea1Jtcrn D1 v1s1on. 1'he Redsk ins downed Atlanta. 27-14 tn e National Football Lca3uc game Monday night to JOtn Dallu,, St. Louis and the New York Grnnts atop the d1v1\1on. each with 6-4 morks. The Rcd'ikln!\ were nur111ng a 7·0 ltnd midway through the ltl~ond Quinter when T he1\mano cngmecl"t'd n dri ve fro'l"n the Hcdskin 'O-ynr<l hne to the Atlanta one. tlnntu tw1tc ,topped John Riggins for no gnm. but Redskin onch Joe Gibbs cle<:tcd to try agnin on IOunh down. "I called a power ploy for John off ta klc," \aid Gibb But Thcasmnnn. who completed ·19 of 25 pa<tSC'I for 170 ynrds and a touchdown. had other idcM "On ~onJ down. 1 \3W the ofT..1dcs fc1y come up rtQlh Qu1c:k so I dt'Ci\lcd to toke a chanrr. ·• \llld The1smann. ., . the season 10 Miramontc in the finals of the North('rn Cahforma Tour- nament earlier 1n the }ear fhe ~ca Kings."' ho last }Car won a defensive struggle from the Sailors. 5-4, to claim the title anJ ~ere eventual!} oustl'd h} Sunn} Hills in the C IF ~em1final!>. are headed by Gary Tichy. Jason L1k1nc, and Steve Schroder. l/n1,ers1l\, No. J 111 the &a V1e1A.. "-111 he at Su.nn} l11lh. Sunset League Champion Manna and runner-up Fountain Valle). meanwhile. garned home pool ad van- tages Frida). The V1~1ng..,, "'ho knod .. ed ofT Westminc,ter 18·., la"' week to <\CCurc their fif'ot water polo champ1onsh1p c' er. host Tustin Jl Golden West lollege (6.JOJ The Barons. "'ho Ix-at out "v1anna for the league crown thl' past twi) <;casons "'1th suddt·n-dcath '1ctonl''. will host Villa Park (the Nn ~ rt-prescntau'e from the ( t·n tun Lt·aguc:) at (rukkn Wt•st < ollegc Frida} at 5 p.m l\i1 e<1n\A.h1k. 'Wc~tminc,tcr t'nlt'r\ the pla)off\ after fin1'>h1ng ~-~ 1n kague pl:l\ Sea Kings, Laguna, Edison, Vikes home Barons tangle with Lakewood in wild card game Corona dcl Mar and Laguna B1:alh high «'hools. Sea View league to- chnmpionc; 10 volkyhnll. cnmrd home l'OUrt <;pots in the girlc, <. If 5-.\ playofh which tx·gin 1 hursda) the ('IF Southl•rn Sect ton otlke an- nounced Monday. The lieu King' get the nod a' tht• kaguc·~ No. 1 n.·prc\l·n1at1\t' in the playoffs by virtul' of a p;ur of IA.In' ovrr the Artists. ( orona dcl Mar. I Z·Z in lt•ague plav. fal'Cs the Ua'" l.eagut··, No. ' 't'<.'d. We'it Torrann• 1 hurc,da-. in llr\l round a.c11on. and ~una Beach how. Paramount. thl' ~an Uabncl Valle) League\ \t'rnnd Jrlan· tt'am .\I-so ga1n1na berths (rom the •a i.ew arc NewJX>l"l If arhor and nan- c1a. the la11er a wild-card ttp1r cnltl· t1\C which fin1she-d fourth 1n lht· kaguc. The • 110() will trtk to l tuencmc to tnnaJ<' with the C'ilannel League champions while Estan JU travel~ to Gahr to face th<'. n Ciabnd Valley Lca.auc's to~'ffikd tr m On 1hc 4 \ 1de. Fountain Valle' will find out 1on1aJn whC'thcr or not it'll b( 1n first round pl3) Thur~a' ii'> 11 ho\15 L~l..c""ood in a ""•ld<ard ,, . match at 7 \0 Thl· \\Inner \\Ill pl.1\ thr Ccnluf1 Ll'ague\ '\o I \l'nl < ·an\tin. at< 'anH>n [ l~e"' hl'rl\ '\un<>ct I Nglll' ( hJm· p111n fdi,on and runner-up \t,mna hmh \tan lir;t round ph1\ on thl'H home rnurt~ Thur'>da) l hl' < hargn' fal'(' LI Dorado (No I from the: fmpm· Lt·aiue) al ., "'h1k thr \'1ktn(l' ml\ 11 up w11h ( \prt'\!.. the Fm pm:\ runner-up at 7 \t) ln1ne. the \outh (oa~t I cnguc Champion and undefeated at 16-0. I' a.l~1t:U.hc 4-i\ dl\l!>IOn pl3'.tlng ~I 10 the ( l'Olllf\ ·c; No '-.C<'d. r (X1lh1ll '\je~ pon (~hmta1n. the .\cadcm' I «agul··, runnl·r-up an<l thl· onh area l«am 1n thl' "mall "l:hool' dt' 1\1c>n tra .. ct~ tn BMCln thl' l}..•'l<.•rt-ln\<l I l•ague d1ampwn. 1n f1r\t rnunll ncuon lnme. ~h•~h eJi.1h IA.OD the oulh < oac;t lltk ""4 I ~-·O. " kd h\ < It 4 \ Pliner ot tht· Year can<l1datc l la1nn Odrn. a St·n1or m1ddk• hlt~·kn "'ho ea med .\ll·CI f re\'ogn1twn thl' Jl:l\t tw" ~ason5 Chn'> Ro~n,. a 6-4 middle blocker. and scllc1 Nann 8o~l"r also head the Vaquero,· poten.I ntta l Kathy Stl'"-tlrt. ()1onnc Pn"-Cr\ and Pam L.ince ( 18 kill!> 1n the C11:1racf'\ kngut-cltnch1n8 w1n ()\.Cf f ()uri1a1n Valk>) gu1dl' falt\<.in. "'h1k Mnr1n:i (7-\ in kagu<' pla\) " lC'd h ~n101 out~1de hitter. Mal'J((I Kut",trr a"'I l mn r ergu~on LOS ANGELES (AP) -With lnjury-ptone center Biii Watton on the bench with hla latest ailmen1. tne rest of the Los Angelesettppera took It upon~ to pic:k up the slack. Norm Nixon pitched In 2 1 pointt and Marques Johnton. J.,,,.. Donaldson and Derek Smtth ~ add~ 19 as the Cllppers held oft the sharp·ahootlng Denver Nuct- gets 107-10• In National Baek•• ball Assoclatton action Monday night. The Clippers needed a ltttle extra from some key player1 to meke up for the absence of Watton, lk»- llned with tendinitis In hit left toot. "Without Walton, we all tried different things tonl<Jht and ~ thing worked out,'' said 9'*d JUnlor Brldgema"· who chipped In 16polntt. _ Donaldson grabbed a Q8fM-· high 19 rebounds, lncludlng 12 off the defensive boards. With the Nuggets coming on In ttM ftNll quarter. Johnson pk:ked thlngt up for the Cllppera with 10 Point.a. "I realty ttled hard In the four1t\ quarter. hoping to be• c.ta1yat:· said Johnson. "I wanted to make things happen," The Cllppera led by nine pofn19 with 48 MOO(l(ll left, but 3-i)Otnt goaltl by Atex Engffeh Md Laf_.e. 1 te Lever brought the ~ wfthln 105-101. Nixon sank two ,,... uwowe _.. J 1 MCOnc:t. left to put 1N ~ awav. Dodgers add bucchesi, Bush I ()~ \ N< ti I ( ~ -Frank I UC• l hl'" a forml'r f1'<Um il'n.$UC man· afl'r :ind ltm Ru\h formrr CLA tracl Jnd field ( oad1. hi\ e been addrd "' thl ,t.tn of the I os -\ngclc~ Dodgl'r ... l un.ht'"· "'ho rn11n:1at-d the Ph1la- delph1J l'h1lhl'' .1m1 Tl'\ \ Ran en. v.uo; h1rl"d All .in .-ch ;inn· ~out for the Nnlmnal ltJguc tcall'I 8u\h ~ho r('crnth rctm•<t aflc-1 ~u ycan. " I < I .\ \ tmcli. nn(1 firld roach. h11' ht•l"n f\IM.I tt\ n runnint <'03C'h .... i"- .. C2 Orang9 Coast OA{LY PILOTITu.s.ctay, ~ovem~r 6, 1984 ·- " SP ORTS BRE AK McKay steps down at the end of '84 as Bucs' coach Prep footballplayers of the.week f"rom AP dl1patcbH TAMPA -John McKa). the onl~ 'ii' head coach 1n 1hc n1ne-ycur h1stol) of the ~ Tampa Bay Buccancl·rs. rcMgncd Monda) effective a1 tht' end of the 1984 National Football League 5eason. \tting heahh rea~on!> all well a!\ thl' l lub\ ,_ 7 <,tart, the 61·)ear-old coach sard he will ncn·pt an olkr Imm owner Hugh CulvcrhouS(' to tx:rnme tl·am pn.•<,1dcnt 1n 0...-ccmht>r. "Let's fan· 11 \\'l·'rl' not getting the JObdolll' "Ml ~a~ told a IITTC"-aftemoolf nc\.\c; lOnfi.-rl·n('c at the Ruccan~r~ tra111111g tom· plcx "Ma) be getting solll\' 'ol1ng blood in hcrc.-"'II help .. McKa\ ·., rl'\1gna1111n l3ffil' only I 0 da}' alter thl· llul" rnal'h was. quott:d 1n Ol'"'>PUl'>l'f'> ti\ !>ll) rng he mull.I l"ll'contl' the "nc\t Sam Rutigliano" if the Bul'!> didn't pla~· \I.di aga1n\t the Kan· McKay ~a'> C II) Ch1eb on (kt 215 Rut1gltano wa., fired h~ the Cll'H·land Browm la'>l month. but{"uh l'rhou..e d1.,m1~sed Ml K;n \ <,tc1tcment a'> fru.,trut1on brough1 on h) an embarra.,.,ing. lo.,, to the Chicago Bea~ the "cd hcfon: Quote of the day •·1 feel all the critica1m he' h.ad is unjustified. If he had sbowder peds •nd a helmet. maybe he could t.ai..e t0meoftbe blame. It's on the players, not the coach. It'~ up to u.s to execute and get-Mle job done. How can it be his fault? He's on lbe sidelines. We have the P,lays." - Not.re Dame runni.na back Allee Ptakett. rcfemng to his coach, Gerry Faust; The Noble Player wins finale ARCADIA -Hea' tl'l-·fa.,,orcd The Noble Pla)er. ndden h) Chm \.kC arron. took the kad entering the !>tretch Mondo:i) and won the $65.800-Henn P Ru\!.l'll Handicap, the clo'>1ng-da' fl'a.ture rare at l)anta Anna. Carrying h1ghwe1ght of I 2 I pound!,, The l'-obil' Player finished 1 11~ length<, 1n lront ofTralo.ad\. rn.ldt•n by Kenn) Black. in the 11 ~-mile race on Lb~ turf on closing da) of lhl· 27-<.ln Oai... Trl'e meeting Trakad, fin1'>hcd a head in lron1 of Oalh' ridden b} Frank Of1\Cra\ Sent off the odd.,-on fo, onte I hl' \:obk PlaH·r paid $3.20 S.2 40 and S:!.20 Pa~-1 0 lauds two pl~yers W.\LNlJT C Kl LK -•\riwna ~tate m quartl'rback kO Van Kaaphor~t and Or· c Cl > cgon \trong <,afct) DougJudit· were nam1:d Monda} 3'> Paufil-Ill ( onkrcn<'e Pla}er" ol the Wee!... Van Raaphur~I hcl'ame lhl' fir'>t r~JC·IO plJ\l.'t Ill l'\Cr pas'> lur more than 500 )ard<, in a '>tngk gJml· during ~r11ona \tate\ 52-44 lo~'> to fluridJ \tJll' \Jn Raaphor'>t a sophomore from El (aJOll. wmpletl'd IX of 59 pa<,<,e\ lor 'i l:! ~Jrd., and four wuchdo" n' Judge "3'> the kc) factor behind L~ Ore&on l>ud • .,· .20-IX upc;c1 \ICton aga1n'>t the I 'Cl~ Bruim ANDY COLEMAN Corona del Mar fh~ Sea Kin~\· 6-0. 175-pound '>lmng !>afl'h ~rath..•d out h11h on thl' film-; :ind pl.iH·J .in all· around hnl' ganH· Hl· h;1d I 0 ~olu tal'klr'> and I 0 a\\1\t\ ·---~~~~~~~~~~- SHAUN M cCLUSKEY C08ta Meaa I hl' 6 O. I 70-i>uund '>l'l110r hnt·bat'ker·1.n1w1 "1u\t played a good solid g.rnw " ~Jul C oarh Tom Buldwm "Hr''i n great k1li hr''I playl•d both wa~\ all \ear .. *~-------~~--------........,,,_ ALANBLAVER htancla I he 5-9. I till-pound JUntor earned th~· h;1ll '' time\ tor t;7 qmh. raught f11l11 pa"l"' for .29 \ard~ and rl·turnl'd Jn tntl'r- 1;cp1 ion '7 ~ :1rJs for a tout hdo" n. ·---~~~~~~~~~~- FRITZ HOWSER Newport Harbor 1 hl' tl-2 I~ l·fl<IUOd 'llllOI tu II had. "ho hJ\ ru'lhl·d tor Xii I \ard\ tlw .. tall lamed thl' hall 2n i1ml·\ for t 'H \,ml' lk .1i..o n:turrwl.I a kid.oil ~n ~an.h ·---~~~~~~~~~~- MARK McGRATH La.runa Beach Inc 6-.2. 190-pound ~t:n1or llnl'tiad:l·r had three quartt."rback '>atk!>and had SC\Cral kc> tackle\ "I k \\a"i JU'>t C\ Cl) Y..hCrt.'," 'i:lld hr., rnalh, Denni<, Ual)ung SUNSET LEAGUE From Cl • • • "I doubt 1f\.\e would ha'l' bt'l'n Jbk to plc1} a lootball gaml· on Monda'.r . hut "l' "111 on Inda) You're either tough enough and '>trnng enough to bount'l' bJ( k or }ou"rc 1101 "I hoix-the) don't \rnH· 42 potnt'> berause I'd hatt· to h,l\etu~l·ore 43tohca11lwm fhl·~ ha\t~agoodpad.J~l" Westminster (J-6, 0-41 vs. Ocean View (2·7, 1·3l at Jlu.o&ington Beach; It's Ocean Vic" ·s Homnom1ng and thl' "'icahawk' an· mltng high despite their rl'lOld, I hank\ to two \Ound pcrformam·t,, capped b} la't week·., 34-14 'rrtur) over I I unt1ngton Bcn('h. "I rl'all) think Wc'olmtnstcr'!. 1.juarkrballo. l l ed Mt·Mtlkn) 11; the hc'lt 1n lhl' league." \a\'> < >n·an View c <MCh Karl C13)tan "It'' JU't too bad ..thl' 'l'·""" "n'I \tarting 1h1~ "l'ei... "T he main th111g" "l'' \l' gl\ en 'oml· llo1>\' lor thl· lo.id\ 1n thl· program .. \\ e'>tmrn'itl'f flJ., fallen on hard timer, lllJUf) ·" 1\e. but I'd wmparc 1h1:m ph)\ll311} with C1ardcA<1" Bill Whelan ~111 d1ret1 1hc Ocean Vil'" a113t k at quanerbad .. 1n 1h1\ <,cason finak for both 1eam!. cEntoe auapension:..42 days.--------------- 'ff(){ K HOLM -John Md:.nroe "a' ~ .,u~ix-nded from pla}tng tl•nn1\ for 42 da~'> Tuc~da~ nrghl. \hortl) after he blrtn·J l)"l'den· .. Mat~ \\dander 6-2. 1-6. 6-2 to "In thl· "it<.x.kholm Open ( h3mp1omh1p l hl· re1gn1ng \\ 1mbledon and l \ < >pt·n <'ham· pion "~ted 10 "a"e h1\ nght ofapP<.·al" and altept the ,u,pcn\1on l)a, td < uoper a<,s1stant admin1<.,trator of thl' \.kn'' lntcma1111nal Prok'>'>•onal Tenn!'> C oun· l'll. .. aid 1n Ne" York "fk Y..111 Ix· .,u,pcndcd for 42 da}' hcg1nn1ng 1mmedtatl'I\" fhl· '>U\pcn'i11>0 lJn Ix· lut 10 21 da" ii Md.nroe doc., not pla} 1n am cxh1b111nl'lc, dunng ·the lll'JC.I thrl'l' week'> allowtng him tu rtturn 10 ar11o'n 111 the ~u .. 1ral1an Open Pls~ons top Cavaliers, 107-98 Htc Hr tf1 D <>h10 -r..1ah rhomas ·m <;cored I) points. I cm I\ lcr 'i<'orcd 25 and RHI .. t.;u~·cr acltkd .."!O · .i..nu ('Olin tcd ~ 2 rl'hounJ\ a\ the l>t1r111t Pt'>ton'> ddcat(·d- thl' < lndand C J\altt•r\ 107-98 1n a National Ba\lo.l·t· h;1ll \\\ol latmn 1iwn1l' '.1ond.!} night lktrutt kd 81-64 earl\ in the final quarter ~lnrl' thl· C .H.1'1er' lhoppe<.I thl' kad to 85-8.2 "''h X.Oh rem.11ning ~iftn Johnn} I >,1, I'> 'tcon·d a JU mp 'hot and fnur < ""'<'n111' r lnT 1hrma.' Notth Stars record 5 -3 victory HI < 1< 1\11'Cr1< >' l\linn -Brian Hdlo'~' \lllfl'll thl· 1Atnn1ng goal a\ thl· l\i11 nnl·,01.1 '11rt h \I.tr\ \l ort·d IC>ur th 1 rd· period ~oal\ \fondJ~ n1gh1 tn heat thl' r oronto \1Jph-1 (',tf\ '\. \ Jnd c,nap ,lr) l'lght-gJml' "Jl111nal I l•>l kn I l'Jgm· v.rnlc\'> '>trcak f hl· .\lapk l t•af\ took a J.() lead ht:lon· the :".111 th ~tJr<i l3nll' t11 l1k aftl·r going ().()-1 \Intl' (kt 14 l oront•11\n11"-1-8·1 tn rt\lfl\t lllgaml'' "l'lth \d11n \lOrcd Minne\01a·., lir,1 w1JI 0111 .1 po"l'f pltt\ .1t 111 llX •1f 1h1: \euond pcnod Television. radio TELEVISION 10 p m. -BOXING: From the Olympic Auditorium. Channel 56. RADIO •7:30 p.m. -PAO 8ASKET8AL~: Denver at lakers, KLAC (570). MONARCHS READY TO DUEL SERVITE Every year It's The Big Game, this year It's even more as Servite Hlgh's Friars, two-time defending CIF Big Ave Conference football champions, put therr 4-0 Angelus League reoord on the line at Santa Ana Bow1 Thursday night at 7:30. Awaiting will be Mater Del's rejuvenated Monarchs, on a three-game winning streak behind the passing comDl~at~qn of freshman quarterback Todd Marlnovlch ana baske1ball star Mike Mltchell. Mater Del Is 3-1 In league play and can clalm the No. 1 berth from the league by sharing the league tltle wltti. a win over Servlte. The loser enters the playoffs as No. 2o while the No. 3 spotwtff go to the Winner of the St. Paul-B18hop Am~~~~· s 1 e pta91s an excellent defense and they h'ave some outstanding athletes," says Mater Del Coach Chuck Gallo. "We have to control (Eric) Buechele's paaslng game and the running of Tom Wiison concerns me." Irvine eyes wild card \I lir,1 ghHlll' )OU m1gh1 Lhtnl... Irvine High·., ~outh C OJ'>t I l'.l~Ul' finale "tth \IS1t1ng Laguna Hill\ Thur<.<.la) night (7 '11) t'>JUSt that -a wrap on thl' sca<;on But. the VaqucrM mathemat1<.:all) Y.ithout ('hanc:<.· lor om· of the thrl'l' <IF ~outhrrn ( onfcrt·ncl· pla)on lx•rth' lrom 1ht· league. feel the> 'H. got JUSI a-. good a 'hot .11 thl· nl.t)ofh a\ the Y..tld l'."ard tram as an:r l 1Jrtn\l!lml·. lr\lllt'wh1pf)('d I fn1vcrc;11:r . 2 1-7 a team "lmh "l'\tng a tx:rth in the ('l•ntral C onfrrl·nte pla}ofh lr\tne dealt< :.lf)l\trtino V.ille\ a .20-llS lo'><i. thl' \amr < apo t('Urn that "tn the hunt for tht• \outh ( ClJ\I 111k \ nd Ir" 1 Ot' t 1e<.I M t\\IOn \I ll'Jll I 5-15. a n1>lhl•r pl.I) oil· hound tl'JITI v.1th J glo-ss" Pil't \n I hurs<.la' \game 1\n't JU\t J league fr nail' -not h~ ,1 l1111g ..,hot according tn <oath 1 crn I lcnrgan '\\\· kd Y..l' ha' c JU'>I a' mm ha right tor J \\lid lard J\ .111\hnd' tn the count} · <,ti\\ I lcn111an .. r ht\ IS going to l1l' a ph) \Ila I gtlOll' ant.I thl'lr (I aguna ltill\) <,11c 1s our htggl'\I lOnu·rn ''"11mct1rnl'' it'\ hard tor u\ to run 1n\ldl' "lt',notgmng 1 11twt·:i\~ Wl·kl'l\\l·ha\c tO"'lll amJ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ""'111mprcss1,cl> .. , I I t ,CAR TELEPHONES • As low-as 63°0 /Mo. leasing • Same Day Service • Cert1f1ed, factory-trained technicians •SAVES TIMl • £ARNS EXTRA $ • IMPROVES EFFICIE NCY I ~80 I Roe kfrrll'.I Blvd Suite l • lrvtnP., Cahlorn1a 927,18 (])~) 770 3361 ·- CIF volleyball. polo pairings VOllevblll (Tl\Ur\NV, 7:ac> o.m.I $0 A FIRST ROOHO DO\ PutOIO\ •• Sant• MOrllt" Newii.rt Hel'tMlf' Al Hu•n•me. Downtv el ~1 JoHon. Whl T11rr11nteo et Corene c:lll M¥. Miiter 04" al M••• r O\te. l'ar11rnou111 el l•tuM lkactl \•n•• 8•rt>ar4 41 fl•\l'IOO Mot'llGOmC'rv Estl ll( .. &I "'"' 4-A FIRST ltOUND r OO'"' e t lrvtne Los A"""°' •• Torr1nce C.vpren at MllrWY Hoov., el Helf• Oame SAii c~·· •• C.erc:lef\ C.rove 1'911Ml111 v ... v Ot l aHwO<>O 1tt Ca nvon, 8urb.tflll. 11 le• J.i• flevftr 1y 1•111, 11 L 8 Wllwn ~ent1 ""• 11 De na Hill\ Jord•" at E:\Dlr•n•• C.tenoa11 •• \M C.11or111 LOVl\Vlllf 11 Ma11oort1U9h. 8urrcwoh' "' Arc &die. WHll•~• iot ll'lamln•~ la Quinta et Culver Cltv Et 0.,,000 11 ldlien 17 om 1 Water INfo 4:A f'1'UT ltOUNO (f'rlcltv, J IS) Wfllrr"n'lfr el New-1 Hertler ~1111e Al\e v,, .. ., al F11•·~ton VI"• P•n "' l"eufttltll\ Vflfl«Y al (;OiOlfl WHI (Of.... ~ o" lu-..a P•t" a1 r<>tlo But11 W•1\0n t M •·•a,..•• F1>0tr11•. Ufti\lws1'V et \\.""• 11111\ f, t,.. .. , Mar-"' C.OICHtt1 w,,, • tO 11 m Ci'"ene c:lfl Mar •t L ll PO-• SCOTT ARNOTT EdJ•on l ht· 6· I 1'>5 1x1un<.1 <.ldc.-n\1\t l1nt•man hJd one qu:11 t~rbad.. \al'I.... ~·q·n '><>lo rnd..ll'\ an<l 1hr~e J\~hh "lit' gen1tr:ill) did a good Job," \aid Coach 8111 Wnrkman. •~~~~~"'-~~~~- JOHN PEART Fountain Valley I k WU!\ n•plal'inl( r nr L(•no at quartcrba('.k and i.teppcd . 1n to guide the Baron" to an 11-10 \ ICtOr) 0\ l'T l dl'iOO b) (Olllplut• 1ng '"of 10 pa\~e\ for 61 >-ard!> SHAWN MASSEY Marina He ru'lhl·d fw 11 ~ \ ,11 d, 011 I i l·aml''>. 1ndud1n~ a ~I-yard touchdoY..n run on thl· V1kec,' first pla~ from '>tr•mmuge. h1\ fir\t uf thrt.'l' f J) ru I\ IJI a 42-J l> \.\ tn •~~~--"---~------~---- ERIC CHAVEZ Huntington Beach In lw. f1rc,1 gaml· had1 \ln<.:l' thl' third ''l'l'i... of thl' \ea\on (l...nel' lnJUr\) hl' Y..3\ all (I\ c·r the fil'ld ~.11n1ng Ill un<1"1.,ted tad,k' and II\ l' a'>'>l't' at hnt•bad.n 0 ·~---------------------------- JEFF DIELMAN Irvine l hl' '>l'n1or 4uarterhat:k rom· pkted nine of 24 p~t,\l''> for 99 \ard\, pt<'ked up !!6 ~ar<l\ rushing on nint• came<; a11cJ tnterlepted a pa.,., from ht'i '>afl·t> po'ittion CHRJSSMJTH Unlvenlty t He knod<~d down threesa~sc • hod three solo tadlc'> <1n thm: 3\Slst\ "He did a good JOI'> shutting down Newport\ pa!>sing T game." said Coach R1r l... C'u rrn. "'"'!DUii"" •~~---------------- DAN O'CONNELL Wood~rldCe · fhe 6-2. 190-pound JUOtor defensive tackle rcrnrdcd eight !>olo 1ackk!> and four a'i!>ISts as the Warnors blanked C"osta Mcsu. b-0 He centers o n offl·n'iC "*~--~~----------------~· JOHN SUGGS Mater Del I he Monarch•; 6-4. 2J5.pound IJ:n1or ollensivc tacU.: graded out to a 74 pacent, delivered 1wo drop knock-down !\hots and gave .:xn:lleqt pas'I protect.mo. ·-------~------------------ DAVID HICKS Weatmlnater .\ 6-.2. 19M-pound hneh.tl li.t·r on defense. Hicks <'aught 10 p;.1sscs tor 1.20 'ards. scored "1th a I(). 'ard pass. and caught two two·. potnt pa<.sc'i for thl' L1om •---~~~~~~~~~--- JOHN C 00 K Saddle back The 6-2, 180-pound M:nmr quarterback has helped thl' Road- runners climb atop thl' ~a View League. f,iday nigh1 hl' hit 11 of 1.2 passes for 184 }ards SIXTH RACE. 1 furlongs Town (Stevens> 3 00 Miami Ktd (0rteQa ) lotkuPvourdeuvJ\ter Uml Time 1 2S 71S SEVENTH RACE. 6 lurlonos Double Ftuff IPeoroia) 310 l e Ova1,.ene 10om1noue1J LUCl<V Kev A IH•nHnl 710 740 190 3 00 620 Ho no 00 780 .? 40 -(_ > . T1mt 111 I$ U EXACTA (2 61 oa•d 5$$00 NBA NFL EIGHTH RACE 6 furlong\ WESTERlt CONFl!lltENCE P • ciflc OivlMcln NATIONAL CONFERENCE Tangent !8arreral 160 7 •O 120 weu MaJuuiennv 1oom1ruwez).... .l.60. 2.20 W L T PC1. PF PA Raia 8abe 8aDv <Cutenedel 160 ~an Franc•"o Rams 9 I 0 900 770 160 Time l,.10 )IS 6 4 0 600 100 113 '5 EXACTA IS II oetd S30 SO N~w Orleans Atlanta A 6 0 400 199 ?28 OUARTERHORSES 3 1 0 JOO 198 739 NINTH RACE. 3SO va•ds cn.,agc. Delro•t Centr•I Miu Mghtv Mrv IT revel 160 2 60 1 •O 1 l O 100 711 U9 Euv Au111n tHem 7 70 7 20 T 4fT\Oit Ba• Gre>~n Bav M·nnesota l 6 I 3SO 191 2U Arteua <Creager) • 10 J 1 0 )00 1'7 7S1 Time 11 .. ~ g = ~~; ~!~ SS EXACTA t) I Pa•d S3S SO EHi '2 PICK SIX I I 3 7 S 31 Pa•d '7~ 40 r.• Lou•' 6 ~ o 600 719 779 .... t,, •O w1nn•no 1tc.1<etl l\oa norseu s7 NV c anO\ 6 ' 0 600 19' 193 PIClt SIX consot•lion oald S19 40 "'''" I 026 Da• 8, 6 o 600 !16 191 .... nn.ng ••<kfts fftve norstll Wn,,1nu1or 6 0 600 2S7 19• THotlOUGHllREOS Pn adelD'"ll 1 4SO 176 700 TENTH RACE. 6 lurtot'lg$ AMERICAN CONFERNNCE '>tf'van \ Nturtle lltova l 3 60 2 60 7 10 Media C.irl 10t1vare\I ) 40 2 20· -~ ~1.'aflle Raiden t<ansas C 1•v ~an Die1,1u Wnt ~ I 0 8 I ' 0 900 7-l-l ...UJ-.J £tilJUHM.WJl 2 10 800 789 156 Tom<' I 11 • S ' J 0 700 140 201 U EXACTA II 21 oa tO S3200 s s 0 SOO 177 171 ELEVENTH RACE. l 1116 miles ~ ~ 0 SOO 7S9 2$7 T enl Teti!. IOhveresJ 16 70 9 10 3 80 P1t1sburo" c.nc1nna1 (:~ve and HOuSIC>' Centre! 6 4 0 ) 0 7 0 0 10 0 Eell 600 7)$ 181 300 180 no 200 179 176 000 173 300 M.am 10 0 0 1000 136 U I NeN Eng ano NV Jets 6 ' 0 600 2U 2l$ 6 ' 0 600 238 111 t,..o.anaoo ., Buffalo 3 1 0 300 lt.4 71>6 0 lO 0 000 l$l 78' Monday'' SCO<e Wun11'gton 11. Allenle 14 Su!MUiv's Gamu Cn1c.e110 at Ram' 8ufla10 a1 New C:no111n11 lnd1anap011, at N v Jet, Dalla\ at St Louis Detro11 "' W<1V11no1on Houston at I< a nsas C11v M,Me\ota vs C•een Bev at Mllw.,u•e~ New OrieaM nt Atlaflla -. Pnuao~1on10 at M1em P1ll\burgl'I et C nc1nne11 San Franco\CO et Clt'vetand Denver a1 ~a" D l!QO _NV G·~ !!...!_amoe pev Moncl•v. Nov 11 R•lden at Sea111, Colleoe AP TOP 70 RKO<d 9 0 0 Pts Pvs I Wa\n•nvton • !oOJ 1NeDras~& 141 I 147 I • 1 0 1,067 3 3 Texas II 1 'evu •31 6·0 I 9 0 0 • 0 0 9·? 0 1 I 0 I I 0 1.03? ? 1,ooe 4 S Souln C11rol1n11 6M1em1 Fla 1 oi..1enoma !>t&lf' 8Ceoro1a 9 O~tal'IOma 10 Ftor1da 11 Flor•da Sllltf' 17 LSU I) Onoo 'ilete 14 !.Oulhern Cal IS Te•as Cll,.\llan 16 8011011 ColltQt 17 So Melhodl\I II Iowa 19 We\t V"g1n1a 10 Auburn 6 1 1 6·1 1 6 l 1 6 I I 7 , 0 , 1·0 1 I 0 s ? 0 s ' 0 6 ? I 1 7 0 6 ) 0 High sch°°' CIF l ·MAN PLAYOFFS Font Rovnd, Fr~Y Lerte OM'lon I' ran(.•\ Parker at F••lh 8•111111 Maroeo11a el Rio Hondo Prto PuedC'na Polv et 8v< klev Masedo at T tomoteton Smal Division 921 s 832 ' 111 1 719 • 616 10 66S 13 509 14 411 IS 447 16 403 II llO 70 2~ 9 164 19 1S9 17 107 17 92 11 N•woort CllrlUlan 111 8 1g p,,..e I Satur dav I om 1 e1oomono1on Chrtshan 11 Coal! C11rl'1lan Cotev1lle al Cal Lutneran Temolt Cnr1\llan al HHoerle Cl'trlsllon LO\ Alamltol MONDAY'S •ESUL TS (IHI Of ll·flltfll telr "'*~) A"'PALOOSAS FllUT RACE & lurlOt'IQI Sl'lellv l. H !lhl'l• 1n> 3 10 1 40 1 40 Miies J J !Gagnon) 4 tO • 20 Moire Megk (Scoll} UO HO 7•0 l•mt 1 I) 11s U EXACT A 11 l> oe td \ 19 IO OUAATl•HORSli$ HCONO "ACE HO .,,.,d, Too lnltnt II' rvd•"> 16 IO UO )10 H-. f'•n I H1r1) ) IO 2 60 Otts.rt RO<kll IM•l<.htlll )60 ,.,,,. 1110 TH~OVGHIREOS TH1•0 "ACE 6 lur~\ lr1v1111on ce ruw•lll HO JOO 260 ~ C.111an1 l~nel 1 40 7 70 Ru"1·m On !8 urn\l l IO Ttmt 1 11 I ~ 'S IXACT A 11 71 oe ld 11' 00 '0ulnH •ACE. 1 turtomn ltumou\ AhHd (011verhl 1 40 l 00 1 .O HOid Tllf Ovfltn !Mei.a> 160 170 F•n111sll( '°4111 IC .. rk 1 l IO Tlrrl<ll1'1S f'lft'TH •AC• 6 lu~I0119\ Ttrl~o (lOlOVll ?000 1 t() 6 70 R~t Oii TOOlll IC>om~r) ~40 660 ._w . •llil• '' trr1ancH11> 6 70 T~ 110 l S '' lXACTA I I ,, oe•d 04' SO . .... :. .. R•t Au Lall <Pec:troral S 00 l 60 AtaDaoo CMaHeol 110 Time 1 44 • S '2 EX.ACTA t4 ll oa10 '8• 10 A "~"""net 6 114 011! Tree (at Saftt• Anita) MONDAY'S RESULTS Ct.st ot V·dav thoreu!IN>red mHtoft9) FIRST RACE. 6 lurlono' E111 Brevil Sno IV1niu1e> 8 60 3 tO 3 •0 world Ruler (P1ncavl J 00 2 60 Menoeru tC.arcfa l 1 60 Also ret•d Selling Weil, Woll\ llberlv, SPOrhng Blood. A Moment In Time Blue Tan. Eruotlvt, Re.I C.OOd Man Time I 09 4'S SECOND RACE. 6 lurlonol Al' BIO Time (Plncavl 120 '60 3 20 Laurt'n Ltogh !Domlnoue1> 140 SOO Star Por ett I McCerronl '00 At\o r•teo Friskv Fawn, Kn1gn11 Cro11er Arc.lie Helftu. Taite Petra. !one'' A TombOv, Vic torte Sirl~, Soutnern F •rt, Re·st1fe Wl'l11I tn Tn. WorlO ...r llnl. l.l 2 . n DAIL v DOUBLE (2·31 pa10 S27 70 TMIRD RACE. 6 I 1 furlong\ 8 lnv1nc1Dte (lotoval lSOO 7 60 6 00 J P s Gift (Miia) 1900 1170 Proud Thief (S1D111e1 1170 Also roced Ma1tt\tv'1 Proml\e, La Femm' Na1ura1. Nex1 Come\ Love. Fair Ame. Room To Roam Time I II 2 S FOURTH RACE One mile Good11de (McCtrronl j lo 7 60 2 •O Soec 1acutar L•Ov I Pinc av J 7 IO 3 00 Proven PrK•Ous !Torol 4 IO Also ra,~d We10.t1l'IU Fr•volous Pussv Cal, T ali\men.c Suotr S1ar11 T1mt 140 FIFTH RACE . I I I mile\ on turf Potv Test 1P.ncavJ 10 80 4 80 ? IO llem lwo (Sl'IOemakerl 360 260 Counlv Seal IMcCerronJ 1 eo Also raced Crv11e1 Court Allowanc' Antigua, Loaded Deel<. Exalted Noble. Time I SO 'S EXACTA (7·Sl 01111 '11 SO SIXTH RACE. 6 lurtonos W"lng Uo tVetenruelel II IO S60 S?O Cemoa,,.ro I Delariounntl S 00 4 IO w 11nou1 Tears 151tvens> 11 IO Al\O raced S.rt>len Pronceu, L•v6ul, Raf\e Uo And Dance, Arc's Wlnd't Snow. M•n Roval Monie Time 110 41S SEVENTH RACE. One mile R10M On Red IOtnuuaveJ 1 00 410 2 IO Ice Ca11er 1P1ncevl 4 40 3 ?O Vat Dt Ro• <Hawlevl 3 00 Also ra«!d Tom Sland Pel, Just Ar· rived Tome 1H11s is EXACT A !7·41 Paid S84 SO EIGHTH RACE. 1 1/4 mltes on lurl The Noble Ptvr IMcCrronl 3.10 2 40 210 Trek adv t81•Ch) ')IO l 70 Detbv (Oliveres> ' 70 Time 701 is l!XACTA (3·•1 o•ld \?800 '2 PICK SIX 11·6+4·1/l·)l Ptld s.3,639 .0 wl111 47 wlnnt"9 llcketi ( i lx norstsl '1 PtCll Sia conSOlellon oald '1!.6 60 with 91S wlnnl"9 11~•1• (live !lorr.tt) NINTH ltACE. 1 1116 mjlel D•kar !Slmo.onl HOO 14IO 660 1cell CV1tenz...ia) 4.0 4 40 Prtv11e -oom (Fernendet) S to Tlmt 1 4-4 )IS u IXACTA (I J) oeld 0100 Alltndence ?6,..lct tntera.cttenel H teumerntnt I et JIM We 'IN T 111111 s OU.) seu!Mnl c~ •· ••ov ~·"' > "-' Tom LeoMrd ISC) IMI, Jim °'borne, l '· 1 ~. 1 •· Lerrv Mai+ <"Ml def Jt"v V•n l lngt, 6 ,, 6 2. Oouo Smltn ($Cl 0.1 Kf1tP., Ntllwn. 6 4, 7 S, Denni' Troul <SCI dtf lier! Tllom1>M111, 6·4, 6·J, Oen &Cllwlnn !SC I !Mt Clan ltOOlll\on, 1 ' 4 6, 6 3. Merl• l.Oyte (ltMJ ci.I Jim Upton. ' I I·• ' . ' ~ Leotllfd Fothtll 1$CJ dft <hwn Ht~. 1 ~ S 1 dtf1u11. V111 Llnve Smttn UC> o.f ThOmPMlll Lovie, •·• 6-l Trout ~1n11 1ic1 Clef ROl>lnMMl•,...,tion, I• def•utt W L PC1. Pnoe-nrt ~ 0 I 000 cu_, 3 2 600 Porll .no J 1 600 Laktn 3 l SOO Sea111e 2 3 400 Golden Stolt 1 • 700 MldWt\I OlvlllOft Hou\IOl'I • 0 I 000 GI 2 2 21~ 3 ' ~.,, AMon10 • I 800 ~ ' Denver 3 1 600 I ,., Utah 2 3 400 2 > Daile• 1 lJJ 3 -Kensas C rv 0 • 000 EASTERN C-ONl'ERIENCIE Allantk Oiv1Mell Pn. OOtlPl'l•.tl 4 0 I 000 eos•on 3 o t 000 New Jersev 7 3 400 Wesn1no1on 2 4 333 New Yorio. ____ • .l X>Q ' M1lwau"ee C111caoo Dt1rot1 Allanta 1no1ona Ctevtlana Ctn1Tal Oivlslon ' 1 3 2 3 3 2 l. I 3 0 6 MorWlll't'l kO<I\ Cllooen 107 Denver 104 DttrO•I 101 Ctevetano 91 Tonltflt's G•~s Denver at u~..-s Ne,,. York al Denn KanHs Cltv et Houston Sta 111e at Se" An1on10 Phoenow at Porllano 100 600 soo 400 250 000 Clloe>en 101, Nueeen 104 ' 2 J ) J J 1'? 2 1 I DENVER (HM) -Engllsl'I 1s12s 2·3~ Nall I 14 1·7 17, C~r 3·1 1·7 7, t.rYer 9 IS 0· 1 19, Dunn 1-3 1-13,~1·12 1·2 7. .Evon\ 1·• 1·2 3, Tu~S 0-0 4, Hanzlik S·I O·O II Tolell 47· ·1• 10.,, CLIPPERSll07) -M. nnson 7·13 $·1 19, Whtie 3·9 1·2 a, DonaldJ 7·11 S·S 19, Ni.on 9·?0 3·• 11, 5mlln S· IS 9· 11 19. 8r.d1141man I 12 0·0 16, Catcnfng\ l·S 1·2 l. Ceot I 1 O·O 7 Warnci.. 0 O O·O 0, Gordon 0 10 0 OT01al1 41·881S·ll 107 Sc-bv OU•,_. Denver 24 21 26 31-104 L.A C@peo 27 23 76 ll-107 Tnree·oo1n1 ooals-Engltsn, lever, Hanzlik Fouled 01.11-None lh · t>Ounos-Denver 42 (luel 9). Loi AnQlll\ 61 IDonttdJon 191 Aul11s-Oenver 2S CL•ver 11. Los Af\Oete\ 71 INl•on ll Tolal toull- Denver 72. t,.os Amities 19 Tecnnlcall~ LOl Angeles bencn !loo m•nv olavtrs), lo• Anoelas Illegal defense Denver llleoa1 de· tense Allendance 6.'1• NHL CAMPHLL CONl"ERENCE SITIV1M DMllen w L T 1111' OF OA Edmo!llon 10 0 1 11 .. 21 Celoarv • s 0 16 70 S3 W1nn111eo • ' 2 10 .0 JI lllnes 3 7 3 9 " S3 Voncovver 1 10 0 4 39 71 Nen1l DMlletl Cl'lt<:8GO 4 • I 13 SCI SS St Louis s s 0 10 39 39 Toronto 3 • 1 1 31 SS Delro11 3 1 1 7 " S6 M1"nt10le 3 1 1 • 37 ., WALES CONl'ER•NCE Pttrldl Ohllsten Pl'lll1delohl1 7 3 2 16 S6 ll NV Islanders 6 6 0 11 61 63 • w1v11n111on s l 1 11 40 3S NY Renoe" s 4 1 11 4. ,, Plllsburon $ s 0 10 39 '2 N~w Jef\ev 3 7 l 1 .0 S3 Aci.mi Olvhlen MOnlrt•I • 2 1 11 43 ll Boston 7 s 0 ,, .. .0 BulfalO 6 ' 2 " S3 4S Hertlotd • ~ , 1 .. ,, S6 O..ieo.< s 1 I ll 47 SS Mendl\"I kWff MlnnH ot• s, Toronto 3 Chicago l , K"-1 Tenlttlt'1 Ge~ M<1ntrea 1 el Oe1ro11 Wlnntoeo 11 Qveblc SI Louis 11 NV l'l•nders Edmonton 1" Pllltbufllh lteck Hawkl J, Kf"9j 2 $ewe llllv Perledl 0 I ,_3 0 I 1-2 ''"' lttnecl NOM Ptne llfe.-tledmond, LA (lflp oonoJ 1,13 0 Sutter. Cl\I ltrloe>lno). 1124 T Murr1v. Cl'!l (hooking), 14~ Seqnd Ptritd I l A f'os s (Nfetlol\,ltulllOW\kl) ' ''· 7 Cnt, Sevard 6 10 Wll)OllJ, 13 Of ~· ttes-0 Sutttr tcrou·c~1111101. ' If Brown. (Ill lholc:lll\91, 1• S6 l!v1nl LA thOloono1 lt 07 ~ P«leel l LA, H•lulnuon l (Miller), I ... 4. Chi, OICl\lll S IT .MuHl v, flrOwlll 141, S Chi, T Murrev • Cl Wll•Olll. 113' (DO) Pen••· "" L•OOlnle, LA (l\OC*lno). 143 we111. LA lllOIOllWIJ, II~ 01u.,11, c111 Crowlllnel IS S3 Wellt LA (rOl,IOl'llllO), 1B3 $1\0!• on oo.1-<hltego 9·7·7-n l.Ot Anoete\ If 10 t-JO ~llet-Chl<"9 fllMermtll (If JllOIJ, I• MIVt\) SkOfOCIM&ki (" ll'\011, I• .. Vt\) Lot A~ J•M<tll. 1n '"°'' 20 a.vet) A ... 1t.it1• llerrv FreMlf l \ ) .. t' Red,ucing b.u~get ~efiCit biggest e·conomiC issue . .. Many Amerrc~ns see f mpac on pocketboo""k as top reason for picking candidate By JOHN CUNNIJl'.F dotn~so. -u lullMee .....,., ' Democratic big thinkers, including presidential candidate Walter Mon-~EW YORK-As the big than~ers _ dale, tcrulto araue that many people . see at,. to~ maJoreconomac issue of the today arc living in an economic elec11on 1s the budget deficit and what dream world that soon could be' needs to be done to reduce 11. shattered by renewed inflation, rc- lt 1s the root issue from which cession and unemployment. emerge the other ate ms of concern: the They contend that the deficit for~ value of the dollar and protectionism Uncle Sam into the credit market: and the trade deficit -the latter place in competition with t~e private being the ~nability of Amencans to sector. And to end th is competition, sell more abroad than they import. they argue that taxes must be raised to Thebig thinkers are those who are reduce the deficit. absorbed in those vast, abstract issues When the deficit shrinks, they that affect industry and government continue, interest rates will begin to and major institutions. Prominent fall, .and this in turn will permit the among them are academics. govern-overvalued dollar to shrink in reta. ment officials and chairmen of major tion t~ other currencies, permitting corporations. Amencan exporters to set more But a great number of Americans competitive prices. vote their pocketbooks. and to them If all goes welf, tfiis is Hie route to such issues are vague. distant and resolving the problems of a budget unreal. Their big issue 1s takebome deficit, high interest rates, the "ex- pay, and that means they are con-porting" of jobs, and the trade deficit ccrncd pnmarily w11h jobs1 taxes and -and the threat of more inflation inflation. and . a potentially devastatiog re- Whach as to say that a great many cession. •, . same oroblem bUt they have a markedly different approach to re- solvina them. They don't want a tax increase; they fear its consequences; they contend it would be self.defeat- ing. • Instead, they would rely on a steadily expanding economy, which .Lhey say would produce'the goods, seryices and jobs that are the basis of taxes. Simply stated, they would raise more revenue by creating a bigger economy. To many bread-and-butter folks, such issues arc 100 distant from the day-to-day realities in time and topic. Important to them is the immediate now, not a decade from now. What matters is the abftity to work, save and live.- They view academic economics as unreal, and they point to a longJist of · "protound" economic notions by star economists that have fai led' to prove out. They tend to think muddling throu~ is as good as most economic th cones. Which will it be? Will people vote the big thou&}lts, the preponderance of which -nght or wrong -seem to be propounded by Democrats, or will fheir sense of well-being or lack of 11 guide their hand to the right? <:>range Cont DAILY PILOTITUMCtaY, ~-e.,.... COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TAANIACTIONS,~OI. . Heavyatuff A &tant backhoe lowen a 25-ton .eament of concrete pipe lnto a hole ba.J.rdosed ~ea th the bed of the 8alt RlYer u part of . a 833 million, 17-m.lle .ewer CODWtloll between Tempe and a we.t pboenls, Arif., ~~ treatment plant. people arc agreed that the economy Republican big thinkers sec the and what is proposed about it arc .---------------------------~~~----------~~--~~------~--~~~------------~----------------------------~~--------~~~~~--~ major issues an the election. but that there are at least two vast groups who approach the matter from different d1rect1ons. In a sense, the big economic issue therefore is between the bag thinkers and the Qree&d-and-butter folks. and to confuse matters. each t~ is found in both major parties, and sometimes wrth1rt the same individual. If you get into a discussion with big thinkers, they will seek 10 convince you they are concerned with more than meets the eye. They argue that they want !he deficit cut because of the potential consequences of not ·MSI Data · -. purchases computer business I· MS I Data Corp. 1ft.Costa Mesa has completed its acquisition of Azurdata Inc. of Redmond, Wash. The purchase price of Azurdata Inc. consisted of an initial payment of 45,000 shares of common stock made at closing, and a . payment of ad- ditional shares may also be made by MSI in early 1986. The quantity is dependent on the level of Azurdata revenue achieved within a seecified minimum dollar range dunn~ the next 12 months. No revenue estimate for this penod was gi ven, but MSI did say that the 1984 level 1s expected to be between $5 million and $6 million. MSI stated that at intended to 1mmed1ately integrate most of Azurdata into MSf's existing oper- ations. Specifically, all adminis- trative, manufactunng. hardware en- gineering, sales and service acuvuies will be consolidated under the exist- ing mana$ement structure of MSI , thus effecting sipuficant savings. Only marketing and software de- velopment and support will be main- tained in Redmond, under the direc- tion of Leslie A. Larsen, a newly appointed vice president of MSI and Azurdata's former president and chief execut1 ve officer. Charles S. Strauch, MS l's president and chief executive officer. stated, "Azurdata has orien ted itself toward practical sof\ware solutions to cus· tomer problems. They bring to MSI application software expertise in route accounting, direct store de- livery and store pnce audit, areas where MSI has not been particularly . strong. With Azu~data prod~cts inte- grated int<? MSI s worldwide sa!es and organ1zauon. we can op11m1ze the strengths of both compames." Export ventures seminar planned A "nuts and bolts" seminar, dc- sianed to prepare individuals to start their o n exportina venture, will be offered t Orange Coast College this fall. · ed .. Big Profits in Exportinrfor Small Bu'slncsscs," the seminar is co- sponsored by . OCC ~nd th~ Small Business Admmlsttauon. It 11 slated for Nov. JO, from 9 a.m. to I p.m. in OCC's Fine Arts Hall 119. Admission is S2S. The fee includes handout materials. Marketing Directions expands fiealth ads Marketina Olrect1ons. Inc. has ex.pa nded 1t1 health care advert1S1n1 •ffon with the addition of Pa· cifiCart, a health maintenance or- 11nizat1on (HMO) ba1ed in yprcu. HMO.. uch as PactfiCerc. com· bine both the delivery and the financina of comprehcMavc heahh 1trv1cn. You'll get~ on CUllARD crUises ...... ·· · · · . ~QPellaMoney Market Certificate Account. If you tht~k aving won't get you ,anywhere in cht co Alaska worth fcx~~ere nl) ohl1\?.Hll'n lu ... t till out world. it ' time you opened a Money Market Cemficace an entry form at the Pac1tic ~a' mg ... B.m~ Ol',lfl'"I n )u Account wtth Pacific Savings Bank . For up.to--the,mmuce mone\ m.1rkrr C"l•mti ... ate rate . Noc only do these accounts pay high money market and more information. call I· Ol"-PACIFIC t l-~"\'-722·4 H2 I 1n.tere t, for a limited time they come with ubstannal or mail m the cou p6n below savings'* on luxuriou Cunard cruises. Monev Market Cemf1cace Accl'Unt' !rpm P:ldtic T'ERM SHIP DESTINATION AVlNCS--I month Princru Mu1co/Al1•t.... llW • \ month1 Princn.o Mesko Sl~(' 6 month• Princ"9 Mnlco S)OO I ~Ir Prine~ Mnko ~' I montht Sa110ord TnntCanal/Aluk.a SJW ti monrht S.110ord T,..antCanal/Alulta S~' I year •••Gord Tnn.Canal/Alulta uoo • ovln1• P•r p_,0<>n doublt OCCUplncy, Olhrr l'NiMn, U Upl S1e1(1orJ WMld Crul•r" m•v b. avallabl~ ul'@n r•qu•• Ju t depo It $5.COO from a source ocher ch:m i'ln exist· ing Pacific Savmg Bank account You 'll save on Cunard Prince Ctut e to Mexico or Alaska. or on Cunard/NAC i'l~af,ord Cruise. to Ala ka and the Tran Canal Enter the Pacific Savin1s Bank/Cunard VlP Sweep 1ak~ . You could wm an lJ day Sagafjord Cru1 ~ fo r two avmg Bank Isn't tt about time v0u l?\)I ~)mew here 1 'P1~nl••ltt-rt-nJ,flt-,.,·mht-r I -- - - ---l \I ~'l4 Eml-.irL tvt.•N' ~rn1 'In I n1 1nrc"'°'1tJ m • '""'-~-I ht-r 14 IQ'l~ C•nlY ""(' ,,,u..hrr I 6m~-. lvr-M"°" Merur Cm1fiatft! l"t'' tam11.,, ni .... "lt.ln" '"' ,,tfrl'NI I Acrount inJ ,...,uu I nl(W't 1n'1nntoon I b., t.unarJ 1nd ll'f' I-a~"" CunarJ • utt>• J"t'' J"t'l'•<>n d.•ut>lr I NarM I «•nurtn, \' .inJ ma\ """ht-u~d 1n ,.,n,undk.>n -.uh "'h«'r I Add~ I Cunttnf dt~OLOllu.))t ~romo 111>n Maximum i-.c...,kmlol ""' I ~1.-r~ I I o1'tM f't't 'nn~ Mm1mum I I 1if1Jc, Im l.un~rd Pr1n..r" .arr !' 8t1t Tlmf' in C..11 ------ F.~l\lll'ltl ra..1h. "'''"~·U•h•mtl" I I a"' tha1t-w •• "1na •• 'mnntt Sc-nd ''' ~1Ae Inv S.nk _ hAl1nct ih ot 0.:r.•l:w-r-1~ 1')!14 " j P 0 'f\t, ~ I '"' ,,..tt>J l'V 11 lt>1•1 S\ ~\.~ n • ~1 M'°"' (A Q21'12 .:iu•liiv•"I A<"('t'Unl c un•tJ r,. I I •C'U 1nJ CunarJI~.-.( '\ ,,,...,,J L OP _J ll'f' N'f\\tf'!'f'J 1n tlw f'.ih1m•• - -- -- - -,. .. PAOFIC S'\VINGS BANK CUNAllD P1UNClSS Cl .... #C SAGAflOlO A 'IAHEIM lfl\)fi ~ li.alt'll• A~ -\n1hl'tl'I ( .-, \ll '4 1 14• •I, 4it>I t\)' 1' \.UV, '\4 f1•1 l7th r C ra '41'• .. \ ~ \ll"i-17141" II• :\' Hl 'NtlNt.rn-.; HARA()l R \f'l\)11 "'""'"•1111n ..,, Iii' lln.t"lfl f\. llh l ... \l~f14\l I "l41 "41' • \~\ \ .. ..... I I I • •. .... - Movie 2 elected to board-industry arker Hannifin future ' . Paul c. Elf Jr. and AU&a L. Rayfield hav~ been clcclt'd lo the boa.rd of cl 0 u dy dircc,ors of lrvmc's Parker llunJfiJI Corp. lly 111 an executive vice pres1drn1 and direttor of HewleU·Packard Co., with reponsibility for the analyst1cal. components. mtd1cal and technolog) )el tor Rayfield is senior vice president of GTE Corp. nd prc~1dent and chad oper:Utn$ officer or its d1vcrs1ficd products and services g~oup. both headquancrcd in Stal"l'lford. Co~n. Parker Hanmfin produces flwd po\.Vcr . systems· and components for 1ndustnal. automotive. aviation, space and mannc markets. • • • Aodrew L Yo11.111qulst ha been named vice pre adent at Blrtcber Con1truedo1 of Laguna Niguel. "'herl· he will oversee all aspects of management from adm101strattve rcspons1b1h11cs to on-site projcn decision· RAYFIELD O'DONALO YOUNGQUIST ELY making. You ngqucst prc .. 1ou'll) served a' pro1ect manager for Birtcher, Birtcher ('onstruct1on's parent com pan). lormcrl) known as Banchcr Pacific Youngquist lives 1n "lcwpon Beach. • • • Jay O'Oonald has been na111cd director ol national arcounts for Emulcx Corp. of Costa Mesa, with responsib1ht) for sales management of such accounts as IBM, DEC, AT&T and the federal govcrnmt:nl. lk 1s based at the firm's eutem rcg_ional sales office in Ne" Ha mpshire. • • • Two Orange Coast resident has been added to the facult> and adm1mstrativc statTat Cal State Do"hl1nguet Hills Rodger Allen of Huntington Beach is th.e new dir«tor of plant operations and Irvine resident Jan Ventura AiicninJJI is a counselor in student development. - • • •• Jeanene Engel, Neal D. Graham and Terry R. Teeple have been promoted to head three devisions within the newly formed Meister Development Group, Oot' of two ma1or operating cnt1t1cs ofTbe Meister Co. ofNewpon Beach. Engel is vi~ president of the commercial d1v1s1on. overseeing the de' elopmeot of several new pro1ccts. Teeple is senior vice president orthe residential division, while Graham -who has been '.I.Ith the company smce its formation in 1975 -is senior vice president of the apanmcnt investment division. where he .. oversees the firm's newest phaM· of operauons. including a 272-unit apartment community under wa) in Laguna Hills. • • • Shelley Blsbop of Cold"ell Banker Residential Real Esute has been named assistant 1ra1nang director for the company. The Fo untain Valley resident has been wath Coldwell for three years. former!)' as secretary for the career development pro~ram. In her new post, Bishop will schedule training classes. managers' meetings and seminars and coordma1c on-site company rucnt1ons and educational programs MCA slimmer film earnings down 23% LO AN(,l:.LE . CAP) -Clung a ·•,en dt!illppointing" showing a1 the he>\ otlict• 1h1'i c,ummcr. MCA Inc on ~1 onda\ rl'poncd earnings "-l'rc do"'n b~ 2.3 2 peru~nt for the third · quwcr and 11 • .S.pctc.clll...foL !he. fii:u 1l1nc months of th<.' }'car. Meantime. M(iM-l' .\ Homr [ nu:nainmcnt < o Inc .. a home T\' d1\tnbut1on lirm ha.,cd an Nl'" '\or~. 'kltd m protits rmc h\ 18 6 ncrccnt during 11s second ~car 1n operation. It '>'a~ the sc<'ond sharp quarter!~ drop tor MC A. the cntenainmcnt (onglomeratc that O\>. ns nl\ crsal 'Studio'> In .\ugu'it. the compan) i)a~ tn wbttrban l'~m'Vff'Sftl (1tr srud tl) income for the M:-<:Ond period and thl' half plummc1ed by about 4(1 pcru:nt l n1H'r\al d1dn'1 ha\l' an) big hits th1<i summer EARN 10o/o MONEY MARKET ACCOUNT r Annual Yield 10.47°/o* • 2500 MINIMUM OPENING DEPOSIT •CHECK .WRITING PRIVILEGES • INST ANT LIQUIDITY CONTACT NEW ACCOUNTS (714) 756-1919 4525 Mac Arthur Blvd., Newport Beach, CA 92660 16902 Bolsa Chica, Huntington Beach, 840-1321 MEMBER FDIC -·Annual yield cased on principal and interest remaining in accounl for one calendar year. Rate subject to change without notice. WA'illl U ION ( P) -~sptll' records al the bo' office 1h1 ~pnna and summer. the .mott~ picture tndustl) face~a cloud) future bccnu c of the potential for a nattonw1de recession and instability within the business. thl' nation's tht•att·r owners were told. i\ 1985 recession "portends limited ~rowl.b for our bo~ Q.Okc ~nd Li.mu~ unds for film production." Lester Polla\k, former cxecu\i\ e vice prcsi- dCf\1 of the Locw's theater chain. arncd the Nati onal A'\'iOCtatton of Theater 0 '>' ners. Hts pcss1mist1c view was at odds with virtually all oJ her dcscnpuons at the group's·. annual conference.' .. of ·where the movie industry stands. For e\ample: "I f('el an honest op11m1 m that our indu'itf) and political strength "'" only grow stronger.'' aid Richard Fo,., 1nt·oming NATO president. "We arc on a roll." But Pollack. now a gcnl·ral panncr in the Ne'>' York financial firm of Odess> Panners. presented a future ol "too little production and too man) screens" and exhibitors no longer able to rely on "a steady stream of quality product." , He warned that film production will $0 down in the coming year. pointing to the decllmng numbet ol movies purchased by the television networks. And he said the im pact or cable television and video cassette recorders will grow. taking audiences away from theaters. Movie screens. one measure ofhov. we'll motion pictures arc selling. havl' steadily increased over the past decade to levels near those of the late 1940s boom period. This year. dis- tributorsand theater owners arc being kept happy by such movies as "Ghostbustcrs" (S260 m1llioo gross) and "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom ($230 million). But Pollack warns that 85 percent of.the movie profits tbJ~ )'ear have rome fro m JUSt nme of the more than 250 movies that haYe bc<:n released. "The ns1ng cost of film production -the costs of negatives and talent ;.in· ~01ng wa> up -portend'> a <.lowdown an the gro'>' th offilmmak1ng." he said. "and in the absolute numbers ol quality films ·· Holl) ""ood. "-•th St'' era I r hanges 1n top stud) manageml·nt , ·~ Lhang1ng. he said. and "the culture of manage- ment is changi ng to lhO'>C who now do not look solely and onl) to theater .... 10 show movies.. Home' acwing hab1tsarc becommg more-wldcsprcatl.nc said~ wliTi\ lcleo cassette cccordcrs m I 5-20 percent of the nation's households: that number I" expected 10 swell to 30 percent b~ thc,c;nd 9f 1985 , UPs AND DowNs NEW VOR K (AP) -The lollowing 11\I shows the Over ·lhe-C.ounter stocks and warrants that have gone uP the most and dow n lhe rnost bued 9n percent of change tor Monda v . No u curltles trading below '2 or IOOO shares a re Included. 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NL GvlS.C S • •1 Amco I 71 8 91 1vGt 12 M NL OOln S 74 ~"' Hr ,, 76 NL Nocn 11 II NL NY Tar 9 t3 NL 1111G1h s.A A Mutt , .. , 'l" H1YkS 1316 1393 fax E• 936 ul r 74 NL Ncnlnc l NL Securltv Fund• C•r tnc 141 l . ~ 17 « I ~ lndVI r 10» NL Fle•Fd 106' NL u• r S 16 NL NE lnTr II NL Acil0r> 7 17 H Inc IL 4j ~;;"~' 14 21 I NllR.¥, t NL 44 WIEa 4 n • ,, ln!l r 4 71 NL NE ':'Pc' j I 79 NL ~ono ~7 f ~~ lncom 13' 4 G~ .. ·.~v :~1 ~ 1' ' r.~it: 9 ~ ION~ r,,~~.,, t fl s~ J.l~~ r il tJ NL ~~~=.~ l ~ l ~t ln~~~T ~ f SJ -~M~tcol '.~o I tncom I S2 ~ USC.vi 18 41 Nt Founde" GrO<Jp JUdPH r UlleveU ~8 101s NL Ullre t 2 I 44 eflre S~ ICA 99 'I ~ldW " N Grwll\ t ,, NL Leo11Ma\ 20 61 NL ni..1mer Fd Selectt<I F Eno 9. I NE co Hu I Otlewert Group lnc:om I 1 St LellC•P It 13 NL lM IS St 17 04 Am Stls NL Vario S NPtr• 1 l ~c 'ff 'ft Mutual • Lelllnv\t 1714 NL ~rKI ll171941 .JOISM,.l76S NLu'i*'vlGfl T81E 9 eut I~ 11 S~t 2• 4S Levroe 7 12 NL olnc t 7• 7~1 ..... tvt'lllln "'~f un1val A 1~~F'~' ~ .Y 'i 1. .':I: 'J ~ '!· i Fr.:aklln Grrn ' Ln il'on Y''"' " 'tt J ., ~~t~ lh9 l~.~7 rowltl une,;:~.4 A Herito 216 NL A x fre 6 7S tl1 DN~C 1rn ~ Ir ~ 't? St 4 omvn 7 Sol ' 4 riocl \l!llVl ll tnvtst 700 NL Delle 1117 12J1 F'tdTx 1 NM1 19: ~t ~~Id nu an rowtl't s,76 f Vt1Fr11 106S A Inv In I 86 NL ~ll CG I~ J• NL GGf<I I l row I 04 NL R~v 11 14 1 lnco II I I V\lVe UM ~d. AmMed ?961 N~ 'l AG I l Nt Grwlh 1 S4 1 44 1 77 ~·-99 ~UTA 693 l!ond lF• 1 ~ ~:~~ itll ,;~ 1, 80 ~ ~L ~~,Jnek ';·; •0m ti~~( f Ai ~t t~~·, ·~rs t·~ ~l~~t: 1~ir1 ~·' HY~~ 1¥:fl A.m .. I •,• 1·2 'l 6..L ~~Iv ~·~ NL uj lls f· Loomis Sovie. Tlmt 1117 11t1 N•llTT•. 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NL M ~ t 1 II PAR ,yn 12 hm• urldf T ~•PAP 2su NL ¥.i~ l~. :• l ~i::k~OA 1•f1319 ~ M I 4 Pllv Fd 13 °' 1• Ceolt 1 u '! i GN"/_H . v•tnc 10 I NL v! ·~ 11 1* 4 ~ .. , ,. ,,. la 41 ~L MF ,' I p'J""r Fund lnco 4 I HIYid ~ oGtn 'J NL "~ " M l ond d 94 -9 n Jnve\I 5 IC.II~ Bo•tl'Fd 1 .0 1u 6 E!>trstadt Grovp Harl Lev l '1 L MM8 t unc:t 09 21 1 Spcl n i 76 \hn ~ I t.,,., 16 NL flltm 9 32 10 H Homelnv " NL MFH t 1 It inc 4 61 16 tr\/\• I 9• I ., r 1 uce 107 J.4 NL noR' 1~ '~ j3 I Hor Ma" 2l Q NL MMH 10 Ill Inc 11IO·13 ven1 91 ~H r uM & Beer Gfi urvev 1• l Hulton Group MSF 6 144 Plltrrl(I J2 64 Nt ~Ecuv ll 2~ ~ Mui I l N ~ap1tG l7 3 NL H •PBtd IS n 16 04 ~ond r 10" ~ Metl'ttr\ "9J NL Pree.MU u~ ,.. ·~Gr .... ,, M ~no . °"''" 11 f>IL VUlil • 11 B NL ekl 9 20 9 f.MR!lrl n 01 NL Price Fund' en In 14 03 146 Mu Iii I . olcn jO NL vrorn r 40 NL mro r li ff L Mirr ill LvUn Grwt11 f J' fllL w nine 4 u NL w u 11 H1Vld 39 Nl ;.i·~~ndl 1S , NL 'i:~c' I ~t ••le I 't *.20 Gllllnc · 1 NL Ytr In 19)9 70 41 w~1fn I • C11ver1 Group Cao•I 9 19 999 0 SK NL •Pit l 4 17 1ncom NL •~• 8pnd urp wnotr I Euuttv 16 67 NL Nwlnc iJ.I ,..~ Natt 913 •g M <1u Bo II 3 111 lnll I ~ NL om SI f H s.s Vtnll,ll'ln 1 lnco 14 96 NL Permt 13 ~ i• NY M " • ,, I ttdSc 9 62 10 26 N Ere I NL Iver' t Wanst • 04 Soc•at 16 •• NL • u dfnl 10 83 NL N Horii n NL OQrl ' w In E u_. fl T ,FL 10 3i NL F Perro 'a\°' II IRI Sick 1'31 IS OS H1lnc 179 ! u sr.Trll • NL ~tFrm GI t SJ NL w:1oro Q )]46 ll c Ca~:.~L Buo;:.._• NL F~retta Full<!• NL IOtl..s"lu~'11 S .0 NL rn\1!t:: lrn l06J t~~l 1 ~t i:F~~~I a :nv13 l6 NL WOOdV Sfru I ' N 499c,1 1 .so '20 Am Ldr 1011 11 6' .I~~-<> ' lnTrm 10~ '21 PrlnPTE 9 NL •Ch R ~f-~ IG ~ ~~ ~~~ lJ ll 1. lf ~d%rl ~in at l~i fr ! lJ ~t k-:~1 '61 f PrM.cisyvicef ti NL tn~'":ilrt r 0 fS 1r1., y:~w ~· r• h1v10 z 03 1 ~ ... r tcm 11 (? 17 b, I ?s 6 ll t H Muniln 6 '° 7. Fund H1 NL SIHdmen ~· ~L _ No d llll"c ll ft I lnco l~U NL l K 4 P•~f.G l'ti 'i lncom NL ,Am Ind af-,, ... , ~!.~ mo"~"s 10 l ShOrl 1 NL I rt 1S l ~,,;II f I ~ Pr~~·' !,•~l'tt NL ~~~~ t t '! Pr~~v't hFre 9 t \IOC.k I NL IDS HIY 1 •• •ti.I $~ Vat l 4 I S £11\Jflv U JO IS.34 e>eeen 6 24 L ~uo t r ~ .... ·-foll Premiu·m Rates. E~sy Access. Great American Firsl avings Bank \ ( 1/1/1 ""'·' I 111.1nr t.1! I 1•.11/l'f ""'' ,. INI i ..... • Our Premiurn:-Rate Mooeymarket .iccounl gives you complete flexibility and safety. · • Your money is available whenever you need it. • You earn high money market rate • Interest is compounded ddily. • MinTr:num Deposit: $20,000 ~ Open your ac ount today. Call the toU-free Financial LJ line: J.800-272·9000. • Century of Service • lmured Safety • $6 Billion Strong Huntln,ton Bdch F ount.jn _,iey Balboa Peninsula Balboa Island Newpott S..Ch ~idle .. •t ut~t ''''''kt,,,._,...." n."' ,J •wt m.~~110 ,..._,.,, '' ,._ 110 •••• .-n.t "•n f'fh f ''",. •""04' '"'Id t14W'd ,.,.. u .. , ,,.,..,~ ,,.,. --..tot h 1\ ~ t nouAI •U lnt~t '' tf1"lft\•untf("ff c:l••t\ on 4 "'" .._\ J •\' 1.,.," '~.t1ti1Mfn\ tuil,tnc,. '' j1 (KW" tJnn lnU"f,.\t r.atr tlf•1f"• t '" 1 t\4'/\t(" tt•r•~ h ~ 1 ount 141H\ h.4."" '..'<UWJU • ~M~' rtttt' ~Jt Af'tlil~ L1cun18Nch ~h8ay Lieu~ N1CU9I San Juan Capiatr~ Capl1trano Buch S.nCi.mtnte ~------------ ' Qn the ., e ' WHAT NY SE DID NEW V~K (,ut) Nov. I. NYSE L[AOER S UPs AND DowN s NEW VORK (AP> -The fotlowlng llst 'how' the New YOf'k Stock Exd\ange "ocks and warrants that have oone UP the most and down the most ~se<J on percent of change reoardleu of v<Mume tor Tuesdev ~ No ~urllles trltdln11 betow s2 are lncl-·vded Net ertd oereen190e Changes .,,. lt\e difference between the previous dosing price and Tuesdav's 2 p_m. price UM Name La.st Cho Per I 111Ct1rtCo pf ~ . r. UP ' ' f 2 Sou1t1Roy1 14 t'. UP ? .. .J 3 MexicoFd ~,,. ~. UP ' .., 4 Grotler n ,·~ :.'.t. UUPP :J S AP't!'~Engv -... ' t ~'?,foe l'i~ l~ 8~ ~:• 8 119ut lt 1~ UP 7.~ 9 C rl,tlana ~~ ~ UP 6.9 10 TacomBoat 3'1'1 ''• BP 6.9 11 ¥nltDrlll 3~ • p 6.9 12 ranswld w t ll:t• t ¥o p 6.1 13 L ennar 1311'1 ~ UP 6.1 14 Alli.OPrd 20 •1 l''• UUPP ~· lS Tenneco 38 ~ 16 Pfe< l Inc 181' ' .. UP 6. 17 PSNH 3 7~f0 12' • J,., Up 6. H SP.artonCp 14 • l• UP 6 lt~~J~Tcn 4 a + • UP 6 '~~~~r:, 11:; I ~ 8:1 ,; jl AL wl 2~ 1'e Up ·t • elecom p 2 ,~ ', Up S PSNH 2 llof8 1~ 1J'J UP DOWNS . Name Last Ct!O Pct I Mobll Home 2'• -~ ~ 11•~.~ ? 8rockHll 4~ -~ 3 FinCoAm of ~ -:i. ~ ~,.."~;f.f''" I • = 1~ I ~ ~ 6 GF Corp ''2 -.., 6 3 ' McDrmlnl .vt I -i -'"3 16 I Tonka Corp 39 • -1 • 4 9 G Hou1ewar ll' • -~ 3 10 WillmsE I 2 • -• 3 11 Bull" Gu •~ -• l 12 H1Shear 16 • -'~ I ~1-Wvm"3,,..,to,....r -..\~'l+. = 4 l1 lJ NutnSvs 1 , ~ ~? u t~~: n \n ~ j I p ~o ~1a1r Jn 23'. -1 4 ~ ,j C~~ Corp : -• ~· S 23 Mao1c Cnet JJ1~ = l~ ·9 24 GalvstHou 6loa -• I 2S ~e<>e Tu 2S. -I ' J'e WHAT AMEX DID N E W YORK AP Nolf 6 Prev rDCSar CS.v Advanced 3 7 241 Declined m ~n ¥nchanoeo 13! Olal IU Ve) n9 New h•OllS 14 14 New IOWS IS lS AMEX LEADERS NEW YORK tAPI -Sales TveSdn Pt•(e and net Change of the 10 most active Amencan Stock ExcmirtQe issues .1r1d1no na11onanv 111 more than SJ. Pren I Hall 767 ,.tOO n • + 2 Wan!lLllt>B SOI 100 71 J • • Gultcan o n9 200 14 • ~ .. BAT Ind 3 . too .l9 16 -1 Ito DomePtn 26 ,100 1 + 1 16 VerNIJm 271,SOQ S""° -\\ u111ma1e 177.300 16'11 + 1 ,. Da111Pr0d 1S3,I 16\t -t ' MCO Holding 1Sl, 14 Ech08av on 131. 10., -... NASDAQ SUMMARY NEW YORK AP -M oSI ac1•11e over 1ne countrr stocks svPOliecl t>v NA:SD No me Volume Bid A\li.eo Ch9 Corvo• 2 101 100 s1. S11 -1 • ?rooOo 87S 900 4 ~ '""' MCI 790 300 8 ''!1 · 9 Intel 641 S00 17 • 27 , Syncm \ s211j60 1 1-16 1 • • j t-1~ P"11IGI 50 .soo 161.. 16 '• Aoole< •70.400 7414 24'~ Seaoaie 4'(800 5 • 5 ~ Amr tr 417 700 S4 , ~·· • FortnS 4IS 100 3 • J\fi • • CoLo QuorEs """"'''° "'"IO '::-1<.! C".: .. '"'•• l -""""'"ll '• '>Q $J•~ II\ ,, $.' ~ L~•"•·"<'C'I '"nfl i~,, • ., s .. ~ .-.,. •• ,..., .. "''v. r •i"\\) 11• C.8 "' S\'. ,..q ,,_114r1 ....... ~" x ... i , .. l .. •lcll •• ,. •"•" ... INl U •b Xi " s.; )C' s 4.1 -........ " HllfWlt & ...._onen '""' J1111tv qumf! S 1•• "' •l S "-l~atd, n1, C1.t••\ uwt•1 l...'•O ~ 1t-S. "" •• f>O .. Md lol'I< 41"'' l<>'llt n•1h 0 I I• ~Ill~ 1 $J &• NV C:-1 g,'4'1 f.C'(lt m "''~ M<>n j J4 00 . ., s~ 4 METALS QuorEs Nrw '""" API SOOl -•·au1 _,. L->I•• I 'Cl•• • .__ 'J •O ,.,,, ""' """"'°' •o • .,,.. ....,.,,111'.tn-U..... • C._..., •''> t • C°"111 • _...., IJ !i ,_,..,.,...,.,, c:...., '° 110 , ..... ~ ~ ... c;o..... oc ........ ""'"'°" .....->• 2$ c.t"ol• • l)Oul\4. l1"c 0 _.,. • P0\1"'1 '*'-°" It I~ 8 Mttl All W-C<'t!'t"""'"I' fh .,.,.._ CIC•~ HlnO, & Hltt'PIM (0-."" d .. "" •lU<>I., ...... • • Ml(\ -''"" '"""" "'' C-· 'i'01 "">II" ' ... .,., -.."" '-'· ( 00 '33' 00 C... l6 111 111 ... -•or• ~"'"'"' l 1 •11 OO.W1 O(I "-'< -c;-.1 11~ .. That' a n apt de criptionofboth bu ine and bustne people a long th Oran o t . Tokeeptra kof where companies ar goin~and whi h people are h lpin th m get lhere,just watch Cr dit Lin · -every da in the Bu in ection of our new Daily Pilat · ,. . • ~ Orange Coase OAILV PILOT/Tuesday, November 6, 1984 FUNKY WIHK.ERBEAN / THE FAMILY CIRCUS . .. .... C> • .. by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY 'H:J/fll/N6, MJrt 60/JYI 8/6 Qqy '1004Y1 I IS "THAT f ~,,,, ~~ I • • • I • • -AAA ~A~L.Cf JlalQO~ MINNOWS. ""''t.l• t........_. ..... ,~.tf'C .... o. •• , .. ..,..,,,~_...""""" .. ~ PEANUTS OUR NEIGMBORS HAD A NEW BAB'( SEVERAL MOMTHS AGO .. ~t SEEMS lb BE ~OWING UP SO FAST ... y 't'ESTERDAY SHE WAS CRAWLING .. TOMORROW SME'LL ~08ABL V BE WAU(ING AHO TALKING ... II ' by Garry Trudeau J~fl(]TTO STAKf GUITNG l)P EA/lJ.I~ \ I by Jeff MacNally 'mt. 8AJT SIK-KE.T. _; " by Charles M. Schulz THE'< DON1T CHANGE SO FAST 1 "I g et an A in art if I hang this poster where everyone in the house can see it!" "I've got to move. They're running a freeway through here." MARMADUKE by Brad An derson "Marmaduke! Get bac k in this car right now!" DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham I I I 'll'L~ STOP. Joey lT Al.WAYS HAS BEFORE ..'' DRABBLE FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE I DONT KNOW WHERE- FWYJfi1NG 1& ANY MDRE.. I RaV ON "{CJJ lDMPIElEJ..'/. 1Mfl.61NE I.low M~!ll'4 11€-0Pl..E. IN ·rnf. WO~ IJOJl.O l.O'Jt 'fO 6~ M~L.€--ro. 'JO\€-VoR 50ME.i~IN(,I, Yes, ws'RE A REAL•~ IF I HROTo Dr.~IBE Yoo IN A LUOBD. 1'0 SP.y you WERE by Kevin Fjgan by Lynn Johnston PREGNf\NI! GORDO by Gus Arriola TUMBLEWEEDS by TorTf K. Ryan GARFIELD OKAY. 5QOE.AK, HtRE.'S TME GA°Mf PLAN. f.VE.R.Y NOW ANti' l'Mf.N, YOO SHOW OP IN FRONT OF JON ANO VANCE. AROON O ONl'IL. I APPEAR. ON THE SCE NE. ANV CHAS E YOU AWAY MOON MULLINS ~URNEYMAN 'S .Joe ... JUDGE PARKER -tl-0 ____ ....... _______ .. IN RE.TORN, YOO GET A NICE MOMf TO LIVE IN, ANO l G E.T TO KE.E P MY JOB a ~E:LL, IF l DON'T TAL-1< !.OLIC', I 'LL FALL A'5Lf:E:P' . by Jim Davis ~ ' by Ferd & Tom Johnson -· t.f ·""--.... , ..... -· by Harold Le Doux HeVl I HEA~ GEROrJtMO ANP cooose HAS' 'rtXJ DVI!!~ FOR S"INNeR &..AS'T"1Ue.SPAv'! ... ~\J ROSE IS ROSE IT'S ~E Of UfE'S MYSTERJES THAT CAN'T 06. ~f'EQ, JIMBO ... by Pat Brady I PON'T KHC1N HCNI ~t eM Of ~ES CAN YIUO SIX eA6S Of GAABAGE. / BRIDG E H<>1h vulnerl\ble. South <reals. WET • 76 . '"?J 75 0 92 • QJ 10 NORTH + KQ5 7 Q642 9 &63 • K95 EA T • 1032 C? K 103 Q K 10 fl 4 32 +A 76 SO TH •A J 9 8 4 i.:7 A98 0 AQJ 7 ., The h1dding: outh Wett North Ea11t I • PaH 2 • Pau 4 • Pa11 Pat1 Pan Opening l<'ad: QuePn or +. Tht>rtl are a number of 11ituatioM wh<>rt' a play CM only gain. It is to your advantage to he ahlt> lo rf'cogni7.e tbc more common of thl'!le. Cons ider thl11 hand, when• many or the df'clarera in I\ rluplicale gamt failed to find tht> winning line. The auction is !ltraighlforwtlrd. fndt'ed. f'very po.Ir in the l{nme reachrd the four 'Pade rontrn<'t, •lfAintt which We'll made hi'I .. ., CAN WIN. CAN,. LOSF. normal lead of the qul'en ur clubs. Declarer played low from dummy and ruffed the club continuation. Obviously, the diamond finesse had to be taken. so the declarers crossed to the queen of spades and sue· cessrully finessed the jack of diamonds. Back to the tabl e with the king of spades and another win ning diamond fi nesse was taken. Now the unsuccessful dedar~rs fea red a third·round diamond ruff. OMAR ·o SHARIFF .. ~· ,( so they drt'w the lost. trump. But when the kin!{ of diamonds did not drop under the &Cf', tho. t' dt"C'IM('r'I still had to lose 11 di3mMd. Th<'ir last hop<· tor the contrl\('t wu to rind wl'!Sl with the king of heart!!, but whrn th3l provf'd foflorn tht tontrart was down Otlt'. DeclArtr should not draw tht' lut lrump Mtcr winninl{ the ll<'rond ctia mond rineu~. He shoultf try to ruh thr A<'<' of di mond' and, when W rst doe" not follow but cannot ruff. thf contract is se<'ure. Ot>darer simply ruffs his last diamond on the> hoard. What if West ruffs the ace of diamonds? II. costs declarer nothing -he is simply trading tri<'k for trick. Now he can ruH his rematning diamond in dummy -a trick he would otherwise have to lose. He can then fall hack t• tahlishing on the quePn of hearts in a n allt•mpl to make his co ntract. CHARLES GOREN For laformatlon abo,at Charita Corn'• ne.,,. nt'w1Jetur for brldre playert, wrft.e Gorf'n Brldgf 1.t'tter, 1909 CIH .. lnton An ., Clnnamln· .... .J . 08077. ... 1:1um 1111111 TUE SDA y Novr MBE R 6. 1984 OHANGl COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENT S The prosecution's re- quest that jurors be taken to see the remote desert gravesltaof twO-AAaheim teen-agers.has been de- nled./ A3 A massage parlor In a f amlly shopping center rubs the Huntington Beach e ity Council the wrohg way, so It's dlsap-~ proved./A3 . :-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:.:=:·:-:::.:-: California An LA reporter was kid- napped by a gunman who threatened to 'blow his head off.' I AS :;!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:-:-:::::ii:::.:=:·:·:·:·:·:· Nat ion Dlxvllle voters give Re- agan a 29-1 'landsllde' victory shortly after mid- night potnng./ AS Reagan and Mondale blitzkrieg the voters with a flurry of last-minute TV advertisements./ AS :-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: World Rajlv Gandhi promises compensation for Sikh victims otHlndu rampag- ing./ AS Six black South Africans are killed during latest rioting./ A4 ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::: Mind&Body Does the U Series medi- cation provide relief for Down s yndrome vic- tims?/8 1 If you ever need knee surgery, ask your doctor -about using the arthroscope./8 1 Sports Ocean View Hlgh's Kelly Stovall ls the Daily Pilot's prep football player of the week after leading the Seahawks to a 34-14 win last week./C1 CIF water polo action begins Friday and the pairings have defending champion Newport Harbor at home./C1 Coronadel Mar and Laguna Be~ch have drawn home court as- signments in the first round of girls volleyball ptayoffs./C1 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Entertainment The "empty nest" Is re- filled in a new dramatic comedy at the West- mrnster Community Theater./ A7 Business The biggest election issue for most Americans Is takehome pay: Jobs, taxes and lnflatlon./C3 ·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: INDEX Erma Bombeck Bridge Bulletin Board Business Cellfornla News C1111lfled Comics Crossword Death Notices Help Yourself Horoscope Ann Landers MtncMind Body Mutual Funds National News Opinion Papatuzl Pollce Log Play Review Publlc Notices Sports Stock Marketa Televttlon Theatera WHth .. World'"-' B2 C6 A3 C4-S A4 B3-6 C-6 B6 B3 B2 BS B2 81-2 C4 A4 A8 B1 A3 A7 83 C1·2 C6 82 A7 A2 A4 .. ...... OC ·votin moderate . ~ O.itr ............ ~ McNfd 1( ....... Early-'!1omlng vote,.a llne up at 6:55 a.m. outalde the Graham reeldencf at 1 106 Reddin& Ave. ln Co.ta Meea. Motiley cocaine dealers hit with maximum terms HB drug_k ·ngpin grantecfdelay in - his owri sentence By STEVE MARBLE Of I ... Oelly l"Mol ltafl A dozen members of • Alan Mobley's Hunti ngton Beach-based cocaine nng were given max imum . sentences Monday and fede ral pros- ecutors said the stiff terms should "nng out a message·· to others in.the illegal drug business. "Anyone out their thinking of gelling into the drug bu'l1ness should take a look at this case. ·1 here's a lot of people here who are going to spent a good pan of there lives 1n places that aren't ve11 pleasant.'' Assistant U.S. Attorne) John Kuray said. Mobloy. a..14-year-old graduate of Fulleng~Jt School who once had _ambtu ~~..sa " fede ral coun in Los i\ngcles Mon.eta) even though his sen.1enc1ng date vtas postponed. Mobley's sentencing was delayed because his altorney 1s 1n\olved in a trial in l"e~as. Prosecutors said they ant1t1pated Mobley will be sentenced w1th1n the ne"<t two weeks. Mobley faces 45 years in federal pnson and a special lifetime parole. Those sentenced belonged to what 1s believed to be the largest cocaine network in Orange Count) and the largest cocaine nng ever prosecuted on the West Coast. Mobley's group nioved more than a ton of cocaine into Orange County last year. federal drug agents said. The nng was smashed in a massive raid last pnng. Of the 31 l)eopk indic1ed<rftcr1 (Plea9e 8ee COKE/A2) Water districts repOrt no gripes over chloramine ' 0.ity Piiot ptloto by T en1 1(- Sandra Charlonne, 6, hold• picket algn at council meetl.ng. egtstrir-predic 'low' 74 percent turnout at polls By ROBERT HYNDMAN Ol .... o..;......... . • Voter turnout appeared modenlte throughout Orange County dais morning as voters entered polliftl places on their wa y to what the county Registrar of Voters prcchcted ~ould be a 74 percent turnout -low for a pre'11dcnt1al elecuon year. \(he Registrar·s office reported a •• turnout of about 23 percent of tbt county's regJstered voters at 11 a:m. this morning.. Dunng the 1980 p- enH elccuon, the 11 a.m. count wu about 25 percent in Orange Count~ the final voter turnout that year WM 78 percent. Locall}. a stead~ stream of voters chose among t!and1dates and 17 stale 1n11iatives afpollingstations \hrouJh- out the Orange CoasJ. (lnformauoo on polling stations and votina procedures may be obtained by calling 834-2244). i\t t:n1vcrs1t) High School in Irvine. election workers reported 23 \Oters in the first 21 minutes. The drawing card in Irvine and throughout the area seemed to be the pres1denual race. Said lrvine·s Randall Paul, who 'otcd for Pr~1dent Reagan, ··1 think he·s the man. not only for the nation (Pleue .ee COUNTY/ A.2) 500 fIB workers ·1ose bid -feJLR~ike-<- Council members-- face pickets, air message at meet By ROBERT BARKER Ol IM 0.-, """ '""' Representall\~ of about 500 ctty workers "worked'" 1010 the early hours toda} to get Huntington Beach Cit\ offic1als 10 go arong With a 5VJ pay increase. But their efforts wert futile. In the end. the} couldn't persuade Cit) Council members to reopen negotiations. The Mun1c1p3Jt Employees A5>- oc1at1on. which has been at log-· gemeads ror months over-a ¥7-per~m­ [>3) increase -or a total of about S65.000-staged massed p1ckeungat C11> Hall a1 1000 Main t st.aning at 6.30 p.m The\ hired an airplane to O} a hghtecf message that requested .. fair- ness in negottattons:· Thev sat through a desuhol") City ( ounc'il meeun' before being allowed 10 speak their piece after 11 pm. ..\nd some watched the proceedings (PleaM see PICKETS/ A2) By TONY SAA VEDR'A Olt ... Oellyl'Molllafl T~e stream of questions and tele- phone calls about chloramine has tapered. said local water department officials this morning. a day after the disinfectant was edded to water d1stnbuted by the Metropolitan Water Distnct. reports of any problems with the water. The chloraminc. a mixture of chlorine and ammoma. was in- troduced to lhe MWD's water suppl} Monday morning to keep the water free of suspected cancer-causing agents. Previously. the water was purified.. with only chlorine. Cat lady pleads no contest Orange County MWDoffic1alssa1d nearly all the water used on the Orange Coast. at one time oc another. co~ from the giant water whole- saler. After spending the past few months notifying and educating Orange Coast customers about the new. more effective disinfectant. local water depanments said they hod not re- ceived any complaints on the taste or Before the switch. an extensive public awareness campaign was launched by MWDilnd local depart- ments. warning that the ch loram1ne must be filtered out of water used b} k1dne} d1al ys1s patients and in fish tanks. Jay Malinowski. an MWD spokes- man. said the conversion was runmng smoothly. with telephones calls from (Plea9e see WATER / A2) By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of -0..., ..... '""' The auorney for Nanq Jane Elli\. the Indiana woman who was charged w11h animal cruelty and neglect after she brought more than 130 pets tu ln1ne in a Jampaclccd motor home. ..aid toda) his client should haH~ fought the charges in co urt. Instead. the 37-year-old "oman pleaded no contest Monda\ before Orange County Harbor M~un1c1pal Cou n Judge Bnan Caner. One l'ount of animal cruelt~ was dropped Cann -~ntenccd Elhs to two )Cars informal prohat1on JnJ $J40 10 fine\ on 1hc remaining charge \. , Informal proba1 1on means that Eiits will not ha\C to repon regu lar!) to a probatwn officer. he faces up to six months 1n Jail. ho"ever. 1f sht· breaks an) la'>'~donni her probation Ell1~d1d no1appear1n the -...ewpon Beach courtroom. and the no<onte<.t plea "a\ entered b) her attorne) <. Thomas McDonald. Thi.' no-<ontt•\t pica wai. a change from an l·arl1er pica of inn<Xent "I thin!.. <.he "houlJ hJ\l• gont• tu 1na1:· "-'kDonnld said tcxla' "I thin!.. '>he "as not guilt' ot the offenses." But the attome' \3td Elhs deetdcd aga1n<.t tigh11ng thl' charges because \he did not wan1 to face the stress ofa tnal and acrompnO\ mg news co:v- eragl.' ··\.he JU't "antl"d to put 11 behind ht•r .. ~1t [h)nald ..aid The attornn ~1d he does not know "ht·thcr Elli' 1c, c,1111 h\lng in Orange (. ount\ [Iii, .. lc~al prohkms began Aug. 22 "hen animal t ontrol offi cers in In 1nl.' 1mc'it1gat1ng reports of a (Pleue eee IRVDnt/ A2) gQ m ·illion in .B. S. expected W !ll _bell Eetlir'-11 . to cast their ballots today with swallows? Polls predict decisive Reagan victory; pres~dent 'has a sho\: at all 5.0 states By DONALD M. ROTHBERG .,,.......,..., Americans voted today aficr fi nal campaign appeals in which President Rcapn a kcd for renewal of his c6n$Crva11ve m1nd.a1c. sayina "our work 1 not finished~" while chal~gcr Wahet F. Mondale de· fi ned 1hc cltetion as a choice hctwcC1l "d~cncy" and "stlf-1n1crcst " Forecasts wtrt that more than QO m1 lhon people would cast ballots, and opini on polls wcrt unanimous in predicting that a sohd m~onty would 11vc the Republican prcs1dcn1 a second four·}ear term. There ~•' rain 1n the Northwt"<.t and a Iona pan of the East oast, hut the forca t was foraood wtathrr for much of the n tion. Early voter •• • " turnout was descnbcd a\ fair!\-hea" in SC'-Cral 11dwc~tcm and sq...thcrn states Mond:ile and the '-1~ p~1den11al candidate -Republican George Bu h and ~mocrat Geraldine Fer- raro -were amona the early '-Otcrs today Reaaan was vo11ng later 1n ahforn11 ~ond1le Ind his (am1I) WCl't up early to 'ote JU t after the poll opened at the orth 0Jls Recttation ( cn1er on a cool. sunny Minne ta mom1na,. I le mcl't'I "'"d good mom- (Pleue eee VOTtR8/ A2) ~ . ) • \ •• ·- .., I \,. /'2 * -Orange Coi.tt OAIL Y PILOT /Tuesday. November 6, 1984 Needle feported in Halloween candy Poltce plan to X-ray u doubte handful of candy. the remains of an lrv1nc i!rl's Halloween plunder be- cause ~hC' says she found a sewing needle 1n a candy bar. Police took a half-eaten Milky WB) bar. us wrapper and about 20 other Pll~s of candy from \he 9·ycar-old girl Monday after her mother, usun- nc Patafio. reported the child found a m~edlc embedded in the Milky Way. CONTINU ED STORIES Ir-, inc ·Lt. "-I Muir termed lhC incidt•nt a .. safli.)t cpiso<lt'" and said, other than check.ing the other candy, there 1s not much more th<' police department can do. Patafio told police her daughter had gone 1ncl.-or-trea1ing 1n the ncighhorhood a~und her tarragul Streer home I lallo"Ween night. But the child ~:ould not rt'mt•mber where she was given the cand)' b<tr Muir said. "Thl.'re ..ccms to bl' ~me specu- lauon as to how th\'.' needle a<>t 1n there." ht• i.asd. 'I he 31rl. whose nnmc wasn't re· h:ased. wa~ 1101 hurt by the needle and had eaten several other Milky Way bars before finding a needle fn t'1e last one. Muir 'illld. "Wl•'re not d1~counl11lH ht.'r stotv al ths~ po1111. but wc·ll probably be QUl'St1onrng her <sddiunnall) " • PICKETS AT COUNCI L MEET .. _________ _ -YroirrA1. · 11n 1dev1s1on until I am ""hl'n Coun cilwomen Ruth Ba1lcv and !<.uth Finley asked their colleagul's w open rencgoliations that perhaps ' could haH' led to settlement. But the bid luilcd under the negative vote!> of ~JaH)r Jack Kell~ and Councilmen Oun MacAllistt•r. Bob Mandie and Juhn Thomas. Ron Pattinson. who!>e w1fi.· Linda is a member of the l·mplo)'ces· asssociation. didn't \Ole Whl'n cit) accountant Arnie Ros ... J1d get the chance to speak. he -;aid that the labor group was shon- l hanged rn negollatrons last year. Tht• police. he told officials. got a h1ghl·r raise after pledging not to accept ovl.'rt1me for court appearances. But Ross daimed that pohn· overtime 1.:osts ha\\: soart'd this year despill.' rt'cl.'1 \ rng a bigger increase last ) l'ar than the MEA. Glen pav1son, a ca~t)1er in 1hc city treasurer's offi,·e, said l'nlf!IO)l'Cs ar1: trying ll> gl'l an addnionnl 11, boost 10 . nrntnbule w the retirement medical tund Sht.' da1med thal rctirl'd l'll\ cm· plo~ccs. \\hu !lhr said don't. haH' ~<x-1al Securm. Mc:d1-Cal or Mt'lh- < ·arl' lx'nefit!I: mu'il pa} ml·d1cal 1n!>uranc<.' prem1um1' of $31 I a month for thl'rn~el\e). tht•1r !>pOU!>l' and onl' deprndent. l om ltaM). a m1.·chan1c 1n the maintl'nann· dcpurtment. said he bcliew~ c11y 00iti~1ls may have dehbcralel) dra~cd out the decision at Munday nrgh1's City Council meeting to wear down employe~s. • "Wt.' havl' 10 go to wor.k early. Thompson (Ci1y Administrator Ch;1rlc' fhompson) doe~11't have to punch a time clock hkc wt• do." hl' )31d. ( '11~ m·go11ators h:n·l· held lht.' line at a 5 pcrrcnt pay hike. claiming that an 1ncrca!.l' would be unfair to other cit) labor groups that alread} have accepted 5 percent offers. IRVINE CAT LADY IN CO°lT .•. From Al strong odor. checked her motor homl' ·1 he animal<. \vcrc tr ·d and Pagano sasd after the ancmpts to which was parked at a local shopping boarded at the nl> 's an1m I ~helter sell Ellis·. ani mals wcr~ conclud~~. center. , Jnd at a prl\ ate pet hospital. In more t"han 80 c.at~. M:\'cn dogs ·nn<1 Officers seized more than 130 rx·t dogs. cats and rabbits that had·bcen crowded mto the vehicle during Ells)· cross-<:ountry journey from Indiana. Many of the animals required treatment for health problems ap- parently related to the difficult tnp and the cramped quarters. Some l;iter died. ( ktobn. v..ht.'n the boarding diargei. five rabbits rc:maincd unsold. Since nrt.'Cdt.'d $~0.000. Cit\ officials bc~gan then. he said, all of the remaining offering Elli.,· animal\ for sak dogs and rabbm and many of the cats have been placed m homes tprough the animal shelter's rx·t adopt.son program. ~t.· animal '>l'rv1rl.'s supcn1i.t1r ( CJ rl Paga no !>a 1d toda) El hs st ill owes the cm about $32.000 for board and mrd1cal ('arl· of her animals. He said hl' wa<; not certain of the Cll} ·s plans for lOlkc11nn . He said some of the remarnintc'a1s ha ve bt.·t.'n given to other pct agencies for placemen" and about 15 remain at the In 1ne shelter. WATER CHEMICAL UNCONTESTED ••. Pro m Al concerned customers falling to a tnckl e. ··.\nd in 1crms complamts'Ot taste or fish-kills. I'm not aware ufa single one:· said Malinowski. ·'People arc: still calling with questions. hut the levels have decreased ." -John Hampton. Foanram Valtc~ water supervisor. said calls have !~lien to maytx· three or four rn the past coupk wl·eks. "The b1gges1 question we're getting 1s about fi sh. and we're ~ecommend­ ing thl'~ contact pet stores. Hampton said. I le noted the cit) 's 16.000 cu-;. tomcrs usuall} get their biggest sl11p- mem of MWD water dunng the summer months. with virtually all their water com in~ from local well'> in the winter In Newport Brach. nearl~ all 1he warcr flowing through the taps of the cit\ 's 22.000 customers 1s 1mponed fro·m the MWD. said admsn1stra11ve assistant Bob Dixon . "Wl· hawn't had any c:ommcnts or caH~vct ." said Dixon. who added that pnor· to the change. 1he city was recc1\ ing questions ever) day. -· ClOudy and c ooler alorig Coast Co astal M~ly c:IOW~ 1on1Qlll Pllfltv clOV<ly w.a11MO•y cooi. d•v• wi111 i11gh1 o~ 10 12 Wedl\Mdly LOWt tonight 52 10 82 little fll~k lat A .. LOU4tv1A. "'""'""'' Mlamla.ac" Mltwauk" Mpt..SI P1ut N1tttvlll• NtlW ()(leant 61 u n u e:t u 63 43 80 66 40 ff 40 22 6& 36 14 66 89 53 From P0tn1 Conc11>11on to me M••· IC..., Botdel •nd ou1 90 mile• ~ wa1 .. 1 Light • .,11ble wlndl 111<0..Vll W.On.telay ••OtC>t llOUl"-t to -1 knot• with 2 10 3-fool wltl<l w1.-.. Wld/\etdl'f WMt .. ly I~ 21031 .. 1 Parlly cloudy lllrough W41<1~t:t NewYOl'IJ N0tlO!ii,Va 0111.noma Clly o.n.r.. -SI 63 \ 119 41 6~ 35 0u1.. watw• WW.I 10 no.111"11 wind• 15 lo 26 knoll lprt!Qhl anel WIHlnHday CpmblnlCI MH 4 10 8 1 .. 1 1nc:•tu•"9 lo 6 to 12 '"' by Wed,,•• day Partly clOudy Tl des TOOA'I' Second low 2 05 p m ~ood h!Qll a o~ o m Wfl»fl!IOA'I' F1ro1 iOW FtfSI tl•91t Second low Sl!OQf\d lliQh • 13ll•m 7 62am 234pm 8 41 pm O!! 4 4 I 3 67 . 02 42 Sun Miia !Oday el 4 56 p m rt ... Witdnesd•)' 81 6 HI • m en<I Wit ro(lli(I at 4 SS pm Moon "-01 • 07 p m . Mil W.OM•· day at 4 111 o m """ rileo 898"1 al 4 33 pm T emp eratur es HI l.t> Albany S& 43 Albuquerque 65 36 Amarillo 67 40 ~ncnorage u 24 llWll• 41 Allan1~C1ty 12 55 I Autiln 8alllmore B1rm1noh•n> B11marck ~" Boston 8uflalo c .. I* Cl\arlfslon.S C cne11es1on. w " Chartott•.N C Crwyen('e Chaca90 Clnctnn•I• Cle ... arl<l _ • Columbta,S C Columbua.011 Concot<l.N u OaH .. ·FI worm Oa-y1on Oen- 0..Mo.rtff Del"''' Oulum Extended 73 47 63 43 67 38 ~. 19 A9 43 59 SI 5J 38 SI 26 73 63 GO 40 83 43 48 30 40 22 67 32 46 38 70 42 ~ 37 56 34 71 42 51 31 57 ·32 45 30 48 35 32 18 Patliy cloudtl with cool day• HigM 65 to 72 Low• 411 10 58 EIPHO Fa11b1nka Feroo Fll19ttatf Grand RllPld• Grett FaNa HefHO((J • He4ena , Honolulu Houston lndlanapolla JIM'kaoo,l\41 Jacksonvtll• Juneau 1<anu1C11y L .. Vegaa LOCATION Hunli1>9ton Beecn Ai.er Jelly. Newt>0<I 40th SlrMI f'49wj)Ofl 22nd Street. ttewoort Balboa We<19e l89una S.aoti S•n Clemente Wat .. temp 62-+' Orlando PalmSptinQa 1>111ia(l.iphla l'tlOenlM P1tl1bur9h P0<1land,Me P0t11tnd,Or ProVld611Ce Rai.tQh AepidClly Reno AiCllrnood -SiCrimilll'~-~- St LOUii St Pete·T.,.,pa S1J1 lake Ctty San Antonio 76 4 1 ;1 San OteQO 16 ~ S.n Frall{iitc() 18 21 Sen Ju•~ R &a 30 SI Ste Mar .. 45 31 s .. 111e 49 30 Shreveport 0.0 48 S1ou• F 1U1 49 ~ Spo1<an.o 85 76 Syracµse 7 1 62 l t>l)elll 50 28 W<:aon 71 38 ful•• 73 ~ 1 Wa1h1noton 40 39 WIChlla 57 32 WolkH•Barre 73 51 Wlimll'{llOfl.Oe l lll 1·2 1·2 •·2 1-2 1·2 1·2 1-2 Swell d"'llCl'°" soul~wHI 64 " 611 54 63 60 118 68 ~! ~s 67 t7 87 411 67 "' 65 22 68 40 e6 45 .. .-66 32 62 67 S7 42 76 41 1111 65 66 57 111 75 38 211 52 ~ 74 42 S4 23 49 38 55 41 53 30 88 62 70 38 65 411 64 32 60 45 119 47 DMICTION lllr poor lo 1a11 poor 10 lfllr poor to lalr poor 10 latr j)()j)t poor -~liWHl@liit.JMl~-------------- voTERs CHOOSE PRESIDENT TODA y ... From Al ) ing to rcponers-, but son Theodore )OU on our farms. rn our inner cities. decade and be)ond." declared. "We've taken an early lead or working io older snduslrics not yet The prt>sidenl added. "Four years in North Oaks:· back on their feet." ago. infla1ion, taxes.1ntcrest rates and Bush and his wife. Barbara. stood Mondale's closing appeal was 1n a crime were all gorng up. Tonight m hne for 17 minutes in Houston. fi, c-msnute commercial. broadcast they're coming down. Con fidenc~. 1hcn ,o~d in a r~al estate office ... , 11 times Monday. in which he said. JObs. rn veslment. · growth, and did the nghl thing," he told reponcrs .. 1\.1 rather be an underdog in a achievement in our schools were all later. campaign about decency than to be going down. Now, they· re going up." Ferraro voted rn a pt¥blic school ~n a.head in a campaign on~y about )>elf-The Democrats ~nl .. mto the- hN nc1ghborhoodsn Queens. N.Y. interest." deetion with control of the House by "Yt>s. we're very optimistic.'' she Mondale campaign officials said st a 166 to 167 margin, wilh two told reporters. "We're going to prove was the biggest commercial buy oft he vacancies. The Republicans took thl' pollsters wrong.··· She flashed a ca mpaign but they refused 10 disclose control of the Senate in the Reagan thumbs up signal. thl.' cost. The Reagan campaign said landl!lldc of I 980 and their majority Frank J. Fahrcnkopf Jr.. the Re-$750.000 was spent for the lime to stood-at 55 to 45. publican national chairman. told a broadcast his commercial. In the 13'staleschoosinggovernors. businessmen·!. forum in Wash1ngtoo .The contests fo_r offices great and seven now are Republicans. six are that the Gor ·s latest polls. completed small. from the While House to . Democrats. Nationwide, JS of the Monday nigle,t. showed Reagan with a countv courthouses. cosl about $1 .8 governors arc Democrats and IS are 20 perce nt lead. billion, according 10 Herbert Alex-Republicans. ··We've got a !>hot at SO" slates. he ander. a Uni' ers1ty o f Southern c,aid. but add<.'d thal Mondale '"could California poli11cal science professor. Reagan campaign spokesman CR. W Ii .. H d d The Federal Ei"Cl1on c·omm1·ss1·on Jamt.'s Lake satd the president's polls • ___ _..,.~.n'ITv . vi -DRA!'ITSSTIFi'~_TER.....,u...,....B __ ..._....._ ____ -.l.Jw.4urn., .. ',\hc,.~,r_.,_1x \ta_ie.,_ c ~ no1 .. f " 20 ~~ ~ · ____ ......_ ___ '....I:'_ -~---~ ......... _ ~ uut the tab.fut fcskr_a.l.n~lll more sho...,cd hsm with a lead o h 10 FromAl Former President .l 1mm\ Caner than$1 billion. --"""po"1lmr.-Rt•:rgalf"r"!fd'ltSler-Rttlrar<t- hs raid. 12 were 'it'n.tcnced last month. 1wo were scnten1.·ed during the sum- mer and four rcm.[tn t\1g1tl\ c:s. Three • of lhl.' fug111ve:;. all of "'horn arc behe\l.'d to be h1d1ng 1n their native Colombia. arc rcla1ed to Moblc' 0 through marriage. · Th<.' harshcs1 'l'ntencc handed down Monda\ "'as to Mark McFarlane. 2<4.' of "ian ( lcmente. McFarlanc. a maJor cocaine d1'i- tnbutor for Moblc). was given 25 vears 10 federal pni,on and a special 40-year parole term Unlike a c,tandard parole tl'rm. a repeal offender on spcnal parole J'> rt<turncd to prison to servl.' the entire number of )l.'ars <>pecified on parole. "If \orm·onc gets 40 years spc~1al paroll' and he violates parole during his J9th )ear. he still goes back to pn~·on and serves all 40 years.·· Kura > s,.tt..1. "Ifs prelt} tough." Given 15-)ear prison term.., ~ 11h added spl.'c1al parole terms were: Wilham McCah1ll. 25. of Huntington Beach: Ronald Congelliere. 30 of Brea: Clifford Bruce Casey. of New- port Beach. Edgar Josl' Ram1re1. 31:!. of Miami: Luis J. Rci,tn.~po. '.\O. of M1am1. and John J Monto~a . 24. of Canoga Pari.... Bck'n Puerta Ma('h:tdo. Muble) mothl'r-in-law. wa!> sentcnn·d 10 eight ~ear'> in federal prison. Her husband and two '\Ons ar<.' amoung the fug1t1 Vl''> Four othw-'> linked to Mobley through the cocaine nng were given less.er sentences. Mobley's wife and s1st<.'r were !>e ntenced last month. was anothl'r early 'ot<:r toda). Wl.'ar-Reagan spent hi s last campaign day Wirthhn predicted Reagan would get d d k (. Ill ra11·rorn1·a. At the state c·ap1'tol 59 percent of the vote . rng Jeans an a enim Jae 1.'l. arter ~ •1 S I II h d R • rode-a bicycle 10 the pulls in Plaih'>. where he served eight years as • evera lale po s s owe cagan s {la. .... governor. Reagan said his top priority margin narrowing. but it remained While experts talk~d·about a turn-dunng a second term would be formidabk. A Washington Post-ABC out of55 percent crfthe <.'l1g1ble 'oter'>. "peace. disarmament and the rcdut--News poll taken Saturday through compa red to 52.6 percent four years tion of world nuclear weapons." Monda) .&et Reagan's margin at 14 h f • Mondal"' ofliered a sharply con· percentage points. 54-40 with 6 ago. 1 e extent o pan1c1pa11on w.on t .. ·d d Th · be known until polh close from trasung view. If Reagan gains a re-percent undecs c · e margin was c:asternmo!>t Maine to Hawa11 and elecuon landslide. Mondale "told a the same as in its polling taken Friday Alaska. Los Angeles rally. •'t hey'll call it a through Sunday, which showed a Th . I h d I d h h1stor1cal mandate. Do yo u really declinl.' from 18 points in· a similar cir ast spel.'c cs e 1vere . t e T presidential candidate-; returned want to give them a mandate to turn poll concluded last hursday. Monday night 10· th~ir homes -their backs oo those who are suffenng Pollster Louis Harris found an R h. c Ir h d 1·n Ameri·ca"." even smaller I I-point margin for the cagan to 1s a 11orn1a ranc an r 16 I Mondale to his house outside St. In theclosmgdaysofhiscampaign, president. down irom points ast COUNTY VOTING TERMED MODERATE ••. -Paul, Minn. -to vote and then await the Democratic challenger repeatedly week. the returns. described himself as "a full -employ-A poll b} the Roper organization In addi11on to the pn:s1den1ial race. ment Dl.'mocrat .. and "a people's pui Reagan ahead by 10 points · 1 · d 33 Democrat.'. nationwjde. buta New York-Times· From Al -=-1hcworra .. 1tan~~w world on the nutl~ar rrngr.rn1 he·\ the one ""h u can Ju ll f he man 1\ hone'>I hl'"• ""urk1ng 1<m..1rd a bal- ancctl butlgt.'t I l •iuld ~" on tor 211 miout.cs.'" Chn' V.. h11l11l ~ of I lun1111g111n Bealh agr<.'ed 11 "J' 'dd'1n11vh 1lw prt.''>1dt.'nt1JI fall,.. th.11 do·" him ll> the 1.akl· "ltr<:l'I I Hl' \tat11111 l11\ ·•'' h1' hallot l'a rl\ tod:J' ·· 1 \ otl:U f11r K onJIJ RcJgJn ·· Wh1tlock \;11d "I hdrl''t 1n ""hat hl .. 1amh for I hl'l tt'\l ht"' m<Hk ou1 lOUntn .. 1ri1ng I al\o hdll'\l' lour mort• H'ar'> ol hi\ c1d1111nl\lli.ltH1n t<iu ld ·-.tan u\ 1111 a path to\\:ird poltt1 ral .,t;1h1lt1 ' I In mer f\.r cp' rkt lton llt\prt tor .11 thl' ti rt• '>lat 11m ';11d lhl'fl' "'a' .i \trn11g l'Orl~ IUI Jll)lll al thl· p11tl1ng plJtl' whcrl' 750 Hun1mglon lk::ith n" dl.'nl\ Wl'rC cl1g1hk ltJ \Oil' "i\hout 55pc<iple h~1\l' \oted in lltl· · firsl hour.'· K1l'f)\ <,aid .. \rltl \\t·'a· 'i<.'emg a lot ol ~ rwugt:r pl·11pl1 1111 ng tod~n . Y..h1ch pkaw<, u' ·· In. Fountain Valln 12-\rar-old John 80\J had .inntlil·r op1n111n 1111 the prcs1dent1a l rarl' .. Reagan I'> not 4ual1tint I h"' n111 quid cnou~h on h" frcl anti 11l"' :in Just Call 642-6086 c.l1ll~l ·· Boyd said out!.1111· 1h1· voling. booth" at Founu11n Bo"' I. But he .also \aid he didn't hl.t· \fondall' and would rather haH· \t't'n ~ crraro run for president. .\tthl'Coo,ta Mesa( II} llall. lnout 111 the.' 97ti rl'g1stcrcd \Oler'> 111 lhL' prt.'trnll had rnst their ballot' v.11hin h;11f Jn hour after the '\tatt0n\ opened. Bl'\1tk<. lht• a1trn11on to the prl'.,I · 1knt1al rate.< 11<,ta Me\a \Oler' alc,o had \lrong kl'l1ngs on the ( II} < ttunul ratl' which ha' become a ti~hl hl.'l\A,t.'l'll hu<,1nt.'., .. 1ntCfC\I\ and \l>l11L" rl''-Hknt' 11\ er thl' future de- q·lopmt.'nl of the t.ll} ··1 th1n~ thl' race v..as 1nterc'illng lhl\ 11nw v.hat lhl·~ 're going to do 111th lht• luturt' and hov.. thn 're grnng 111 h<111dk g10\\th.'" <,aid Kathll'cn C)t11 r111 ~ ... · I \ oll'd tm the cand1datl'\ ""ho \H>1ild l1rn11 thc growth 1n ( osta M~·-,a and not k·t tt hc:cnmc a m1m-( entu~ ( I I \ 111 I ;i~una lk:ith v.ht.'rt' \Oll'r" ''''PIWd 1111 at the l;)ourh \ oa<;t frw1'>h < cnll'I on Arnad...,a; tx·forc hl.'ad1ng 1111 v..m~. a11en11 on ""a' al<,o d1rc:cted to thl' t 7 \late 1n111atl\ c' nn the hallot \aid krr. I r;.1cl. a dt•partment \ton· managl'r ·· 11w mn\l important 10· this e ection was e1ermmtng 8 fi 0 . h . . CBS poll said the margin was 21 • . ... d--•: Senate scats. the entire makeup of the e ore a ag-wavmg. en\nus1as11c points and a survev for ( JSA Todav tl1at1ve, I tbo11gbL waiwJcCone ~ng-435-~and f:tl'OnRsrs-c1owd ~owa~Mondaf~ ----·----------~ ----------+ with reappor:t1onmen1 (Propos111on for governor. recalled that he feVC his first cam-said Reagan kd by 25 points. 39). I don t hkc 1he way the Dem.o-One <;enator. J. Bcnnell Johnston. paign speech there after announci ng Republicaqs were encouraged by era ts .~av\.' gerrymandered the dis-D-La .. was assured re-election when his candidacy. forecasts of a big Reagan victory to lrl"t' h · 11.Aondale sai·d he return•·d ther" on prcd1rl a pickup oft he 20 or so House ' ~. e won a non-pan1san primary m '"~ ~ .. .\nd at the Newpon Center Branch Scptc:mber. In the House. 68 incum-election eve because .. I wanted scats 1t would take to restore =the L1braf). wbere SQ vot~rs _of the 473 bents _ 54 Democrats and 14 America to know kn()w where I'm conservative coalition that gave Re- rcg1stl·red had cast t~1r ba~~ts early R<.'puhhcans _had no major opposi-coming from and where rm gorng. ... agan majorities he neC(ded for passage 1h1'> morning. th e lottery 1n111at1ve. tion I want to reflect our values here in the of his tax and bu'/f.el programs his J>rupu'i1l1on 37. was discussed. In. a ~2-minu lc tek\l\lon mm-great Midwest." first two years in o ice. .. ~aid .lnh_n Shields after vo.tmg. mcmal hroadca!>l on the 1hn:e major In his closrng commercial. 1he That coalition was broken in ·the I m \Id of thos~ ads that say 1t s an network) Monday night. Reagan said president said. "I ask for your vote for recession-year election of 1982 when 1mmpral "'a} to raise money. Taxes ·\mC'nca had made an "ama1ing one purpose onl y -to complete the the Democrats picked up 26 seats. an· ,morn I'! Monl.'y's money. The) coml'hack.'' But. he added. "We still task we began together four years ago In the Senate, where there were 19 ha\l' ·them 1n Vermonr and a lot of have much to do -10 make our ... We must continue, not only into Republican and 14 Democratic scats other ~talc'>. 'O why not here?" . · families morl.' secure. to help many of the next four years but into the next being decided this year. Th roughou 1 the county. campaign ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!il worl.ac, pa<,'lcd out last-mmutc lit<'ra-I turt.' In Laguna Beach. for rnstancc. \ oluntn·r' for congressional can- d1datl' ( arul •\nn Bradford en- couragnf '11\loml·rs of a roffec shop 10 \Oil' . .\ nd m In 1 nt'. A rad ford cam- pa 1gnl'r' v..cn: holding !.1gn-; at the Culver and Jamboree ramp'I to the ')an l>1l·gn f-rcewa~ Dotl'O\ of ac11v1i,ts with the Al- ltann· for ~ur\ 1val had planned to d1t,pla\ \1gm along the frcl'wa y ask mg \.Otcr' tn '>uppo n an 1m mediate frccl.(.' on nucl<.'ar Wl·apon'i. SHUTTERS CUSTOM QUALITY SHUTIERS Designed, Finished Installed ~_._......· \\'hat do you like about tbe Daily Pilot? Whal don't you like? Call the number at left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answering service may be used to reC'ord letters to the t'ditor on any lople. Contributors to our Letters column must Include their n11me and telephone number for verlflcatioo. No circuJaU011 calls. pluse. Tell us what's on your mind. • I. t J 1 f. T Clrculatlon 714/642·4333 Dally Piiot Delivery I• G.uaranteed Daily ~ilat CleHlfled ic:lvertlelng 714/842-5678 All other depertmenta &42~4321 MAIN OFFICE ·~ .. ,. Clrcul•tlon Telephones •• MOCl ' H. L Sc hwartz Ill f 'llbl1 ,f (I Rosemary Churchman ( ( 'I I ( ()ilf ., , St ephan F. Caruo F ' : I I I H 1• 1r)' • Donald L. Wllllamt ( rt it.itir ,, M 1r d•I• r I VOL. n , HO. 311 3 1 Years Experience Maru1a7turing Quality.Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841 or 548-1717 HEIRWOOD MANUFICTORY 19n Placentia Aven ue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 .. -,,... ·- • .. • • .... l -.. f 1111 .1111111 ~~ I tJt ~·DA 'I Nt IVI Miii 11 11 1'111·1 ( >11A f4 ( •• I 1 tllf~ I l I /\I II c Jld-41/\ .". (I l j 1 ·. , ·O . ' : . 9 :. . .·s c .oca1ne rawsm 1mumterms Coast The prosecution's re- quest that jurors be taken to see the remote desert graveslte of two Anaheim teen-agers has been de- nied./ A3 The defense attorney in the case surrounding a deaa Cal State Fullerton professor has received permission to review the dead man's bank re- cords./A3 California An LA reporter was kid- napped by a gunman who threatened to· blow his head off.'/ AS World Raj Iv Gandhi promises compensation for Sikh victims of Hindu rampag- ing./ AS :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Mind&Body Does the U Series medt- cat!Qn.provide..t.elief for G&w~rom&-\A tlms?/81 If you ever need knee surgery, ask your doctor about using the arthroscope./81 .::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Sports Ocean View Hlgh's Kelly Stovall is the Daily Pilot's prep football player of the week after lead Ing the Seahawks to a 34-14 win last week./C1 . ; Delly ........... bJ lkMrd 11...-. Early-morning voters llne up at 6 :55 a .m . outalde th·e Graham re.ldence at 1106 Reddlni A•e. lp Costa Mesa. _E~l~ counqyotin moderate Registrar predicts 'low ' 7 4 per cent total: camp~igning continues on ~~ection Day By ROBERT HYNDMAN 01 Ille OallJ Piiot ltett Voter turnout appeared moderate throuihout Orange Cou nt y this morning as voters entered polling places on their way to what the county Registrar of Voters predicted would be a 74 percent turnout -low for a presidential election year. Locall). a steady stream of voters chose among candidates and 17 state init1a11 ves at polling stations throu~h­ ou t the Orange Coast. (Information on polling stations and voting procedures can be obtained by calling 834-2244). At University High School in Ir vine. election workers reponed 23 voters 1n tht>--first 21 minutes. The drawing card in Irvine and throughout the area seemed to be the pre~idential race. . . -the world. As J?rry Brown sail. if anyone can unite the world on the nuclear program, he's the one who· can do it."' Chris Whitlock· of Huntington Beach agreed it was "definitel y the presidential race" that drew him to the Lake Street Fire Station to cast his ballot early todav. "I voted fof Ronald Reagan." Whitlock said. "I bclie·ve in what he stands for. l believe he's made our co untry strong. I also believe four · more years of his administration 'could start us on a path toward political stability." --------- dents were eligjble to vote. "About 55 people have voted in the nrsr hour, "Kreps said ... And we're seeing a lot of younger people voting today. which pleases us:· A"l the Costa Mesa City Hall. ! 6 out of the 976 registered voters· in the precinct had east their ballots Wltb in half an hour after the stations opened -1t 7 a.m. In Fountain .Valley. 32-}ear-old John Boyd had another opinion on the presidential race. ··Reagan is not qualified. He's not quick enough on his feet and hc·s an elitist." Boyd said oµts1de th e voling booths at Fountain Bowl. · Drug kingpin gets delay in own sentencing By STEVE MARBLE OI .. Delly Plot St• A dozen members of AJan Mobley's Huntington Beach-based cocaine ring were gjven m~imum sentences Monday and federal pros- ecutors said the stiff terms should "ring out a message" to others in the illegal drug business. •• Anyone out their tbinhn& of getting into the drug business should take a look at this case. Ther<M.a l<X-O people here who are going to spent a good part of there lives in places that aren't very pleasant." Assistant U.S. Attorney John Kuray said. Mobley. a 24-year-old graduate of Fullenon High School who oooe had ambitions or being a lawyer. sat in federal court in Los Angeles on Monday dve n though his sentencing ·• date was postp0ned. Mobley"s sentencing was de~yed becau5e his attorney is involved tn a trial in Texas. Prosecutors said they anticipated Mobley will be sentenced within the next two weeks. Mobley faces 45 years in federal prison and a-'spcciaJ lifetime parole. Those sentenced btlonged to what 1s believed to ~ the largest cocaine (Pleue 11ee CO'KE/ A2) -Anchor used in ~ba-Q.i vers an Newport Beach found the body of a man who apparently kiJJed himself by wrapping a chain and an allchor around his legs and tea ping off the end of the Newpo~P1er Monday. The man was identified as 'Daniel Mark Henson, 32. of Santa f e Spnngs. according to Newport Beach Officer Tom Little. Several wttnesses rcponed sec· ing the man j ump off the pier tn the pre-dawn hours Monday but an initial underwater search was called off because of poor water v1si b1'1ty. Lillie said. The search The Regi strar's office reponed a turnou t of about 14 percent of the county's registered vo ters as of9 a.m. During the 1980 general electi on. the 9 a.m. count was 16 percent in Orange C'oumy: the .final voter turnout that ~ear was 78 percent. Sa.id lrvine!s Randall Paul, who voted for Presid ent Reagan, "T (hink he's the man. not only for the nation Homer Kreps. election inspector at the fire station. said there was a strong early turnout at the polling place where 750 Huntington Beach resi· But he also said he didn't li ke Monoare and woald rafher ha ve seen _., __ _ (PleueaeeCOUNTY/A2) ........... _..j (Pleue tee._Pl&.RtA2J CIFwater po1oaction begins Friday and the aif:mgshave deteoding__j_!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!l!!l!!l!lllll!l!!ll!l!l!!!!!!!ll!!!!ml!!l!I!!! ........................................ .-........ __ champion Newport Harbor at home./C1 Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach have drawn home court as-,, . signments In the first round of girls volleyball playoffs./C1 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Entertainment The ''empty nest" Is re- filled in a new dramatic comedy at the West- minster Community Theater./ A7 Business The biggest election Issue for most Americans Is takehome pay: Jobs, taxes and lnflation./C3 INDEX Erma Bombeck Bridge 92 C6 A3 Irvine's cat lady pleads no contest 8y PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ol lhe 0.llJ Piiot Statt The attorney for Nancy Jane Ellis. the Indiana woman who was charged with animal cruelty and negJect after she brought more than 130 pets to Irvine in a 1ampacked motor home. said today hi s client should have fo ught the charges in court. Instead. the 37-year-old woman pleaded no-contest Monday before Orange (ouniy Harbor Municipal Court Judge Bnan Carter. One count of animal cruelty was dropped. Carter sentenced Ellis to two years informa l probation and $340 in fin es on the remaining charge. I nfom1al probation means that (Pleue aee IRVINE/ A2) Nancy Elli• and friend Water districts report . no gripes on ~hl_oramine· -Most phone calls so far seek advice ---on chemical's effect on fish in tanks By TONY SAAVEDRA Ol the OellJ Piiot Si.ft The stream of questions and tele- phone calls about chloramine has tapered, said local water depanment officials this morning, a day after the disinfectant was added to water distributed · by the Metropolitan Water District. Orange County MWD officials said nearly a\1 the water ·used on the Orange Coast. at one time or another. comes from the giant water whole· saler. • After spending the past few months notifying and educating Orange Coast customers about the new. more effective disinfectant. local wattr departments said they had .not re- cc1ved an} complaints on the taste or repons of an} problems with the . water. The chlora fl\1ne. a mu.ture of chlorine and ammonia. \\DS in- troduced to the MWD's ~atcr suppl) Monda\ morning to keep th e water free or suspectl'd ca ncer-causing agents. Prev1ousl~. the water was purified with onl} chlorine Before the S\\ltch. an e\tcns1\e public awareness campaign was launched b' MWD and local depan- mcnts. warning that the chloramtnt' must be filtered out of water used b' k1dne) dialysis patients and an fish tanks. · Ja) Mahnowsk1. an MWD spokes- ma n. ~1d the conversion was running \ffiOOthl). .. ..\nd 1n terms complaints of taste or fish-kills. I'm not aware ofa single one:· said Mahno"skt. John Hampton, t-ountau1 Valley 'Water supervisor said calls have fallen to ma) be three or four m the past couple "ec~s ··The biggest question we're getting 1s about fish. and we're recommend- ' ntt the' i.:ont.act net stores:· He noted the c1 t\ ·s 16.000 cus- 10mhs usuall) get th.eir b1gge$t ship- ment of MW D water dunng the c;ummcr months. \\Ith virtually all their" ater rnming from local wells in the winter In "Je\\pon Beach. nearly all the "ater Oo\\1ng through the taps of the cit' 's 22.000 ·customer!. 1s 1mponed from the MWD. said admimstratiYC assistant Bob Duon. "We haven't had any comments or call s )et.·· said Dixon. L Bulletin Board Business Callfornle News Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices Help Yourself Horoacope C4·5 A4 83-6 C6 86 B3 92 B5 B2 · . . . Will bell return 90 m1-l_lion .1n ~B .S. expect~~ With swallOws?.-~-~~~ to cast their ballots today Ann Landers Mind and Body Mutual Funds National News pinion Paparazzi Polloe Log Play Review Public Notices Sports Stock Markets Televtslon Theater• Weather World News 81-2 -C4 A4 A8 81 A3 A7 83 C1·2 C8 82 A7 A2 A4 Polls predict decisive Reagan victory: prestdenf'fias a shot· at all SO states By DONALD M. ROTHBERG .,. ,. ... ,'"' .,... Amcrkans voted todQy aflcr final campaign appeals in which Pre tdcnt Reagan asked for renewal of his con rvativc mandateh saying "our work 1 not fini ed." while chaJl&nac, Walter F. Mondale dc- fine<rlhc clcct1on os a choice bctwe<-n "dl'tcncy" and "S<'lf·1nterc t .. ' · Fd11cca51.S were that mort than 90 million people would cast ballots. and opinion polls "'ere unanimous t0 predicting that a solid majonty would awe the RcpubliCDn president a second four-year term. Jhc~ was rain m the Nor\.llwcst and alona pam of the East C'oast. but the forcca t was for good ~at her for much or the nation. EArly · voter / \ , Aa OrMge Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. Nov«nber e. 1984 HB nixes massage parlor at family shopping center By ROBERT BARKER Ol ... 0.-, ......... The relocation of a conLrover\iul ma saac parlor to a "family hopping center" ~as denied Monday niaht by the Hunllngton Beach City Council n<J Councilman Don MacAllister, who joined his col· leagut1 in the unanimous reJection of the move, asscned there are too many ma sage parlors 1n the city alread) iand that ~e w11l work to reduce the number. "WHave mo~ ma~sage "P<lrlbr~ per capita an Huntington Beach than Los Angeles," MacAllister said MacAlllSler Wll$ referring to a police depanment survey that show- ed Los Angeles wuh a total of 104 ma~sage parlors and u rauo of 3.47 ma$~ge parlors to IQ0,000 people Huntington Beach ha~ 11 parlor and a population of 180.000 -a ratio ot ti I I purlor'i to I U0.000 pcrwn~. n~·lordang to the report. The propo!>cd hifi of the pa of Haw:ua massage parlor to the shop- pmg u:ntcr at pnnadale treet and Warner A ve nue was at first approwed by the city'" Planning C'omm1<;'iion 1n September However the com· • m1ss1on rcver!>Cd its decmon an October after a publal' outcn ..ovc1 lhc decision , Rcsidenl!> charged th•ll ltlc "adult business" had no plat.·e in tht' shop- ping center that contained an ice cream parlor. famal} restaurants and businesses. Busi ness people said cus.- Needle ·in candy bar a Halloween trick? Pohce plan to X-ray a double handful of cand). the remains of an Irvine girrs Halloween plunder be- cause she says she. found a sewing needle in a candy bar. Police took a half-eaten Milk> Way bar, Its wrapper and about 20 other pieces of candy from lhe 9-year-old girl Monday after her mother. Susan- ne Patafio, reported the child found a needle embedded in the Milky Way Irvine Lt. Al Muir termed the incrdent a "single episode" and said, other than checking the other cand). there is not much more the police department can do. Patafio told police her daughter had gont' 1mk-or-trea11ng 1n the neighborhood around her Farragut Street home Halloween n1ghr. But the child could not reml·mbcr v.hcre she v.as g1H·n the cand} har. Muir i.a1d. " fhl'rl' seems 10 be sor:nu specu- la11on as to how the needle got in there ... he said The girl. whose name wasn't rc- "'lca~d. was not hurt by the needle and had eaten several other Milky Way bar> before firv.J inga needle 1n the last one. Muir said. "We're not d1scount1 ng her story at this point. but we'll probably be questioning her add111onall). It's the onl'r 111c1den1 that's been reported 10 us.·• he said. 1omers would rdu~ 10 v1sll the ce nter if the m:is~gc parlor, were allowed . u~1c t1ong. owner of the spa. appealed the drc1s1on to the ruy C"ouncal, da1m1ng that the 1n1t1al approval '>hould Jand because there wa!> no appeal or challenge w1tlun 10 days. Bu1 tlw rnuncal members. who said the) rct·c1,ed report'> of lhree law \ rolatioo"> agarnst the parlor at its present s11e on Beach Uoulevard. sa1d illLu>Jlllllli~lOD jlC,l£d properly by rccons1dcnng 11s decision at its next mec11ng. Hong l'i being forced to vacate her present location by a 1981 city ord1nant·e that proh1b1ts "adult busi- nesses" from being locaged w11h1n ~00 feet of residences. 500 feet of a school or church and ID.000 feet of anl>ther ad uh busane!>S. The shopping center provrd 10 be a legall} accepted site, critr<.'6 say, only bclaU!.C ufloopholes. They sa)" a flood control thannel barel} separates the shopping ccn1er from nearby homes by a liule more than 200 feet and that the parlor would have been proh1b11ed because of the proximity of a school, C,\.Cept that the school closed a few years ago. Cloudy skies to linger By tbe Associated Press Skies will be partly cloud) through the early morning hours around Southern California on Wednesday, the National Weather Servrce sa)s. Hi&hs will be near 70 after lows tonight in the mid-to upper-Sos. COKE CREW DRAWS STIFF TERMS ... From Al network an Orange Count} and the largest cocaine nng ever pro..ccutcd on the West Coast Moblcy's 8:fOup moved mor~ than a ton of cocaine 1n10 Orange Coun1 y last year. federal drug agents said. The ring was smashed 1n a mass1'"c raid last spring. Ofthe 31 people rnd1cted after the raid. 12 were sentenced la!>l month. two were sentenced dunng the sum- mer and four remarn fugitives. Three of the fugitives. all of whom are believed to be hading in their natr' e Colombia. are relaH·d 10 Moblc) through marnage. The harshest sentence handed down Mond11 ~ wa~ to Mark Mcfarlane 29. of ~an ( lcmente Mcfarlane. a maJOr cocaine d1s- rributor for Mobley, was given 25 years 1n federal pm.on and a special 40-year parole term. Unlike a standard parole term. a repeat offender on special parole 1s · re1umed to pnson to ..crve the entire number of )ear.. specified on parole. "If !.Omcone set<; 40 ~cars special parole and he violate s parole during hrs 39th )ear. he strll goes back to pnson and sen es all 40 }ears." Kura} .-.ard . "It\ prell~ lough" Given I 5-)car pnson term!> w11h added special oarolc lerms were: W1l11am McC'ahr ll. 25. ofHun11ng1on Beach. Ronald C'ongel hcre. 30 of Brea, (ltfTord Bruce Casey. of New- port Beach: Edgar Jose Ramrra:. 3~. of M1am1 , Luis J. Restrepo, 30. of M1am1. and John J. Montoya. 24. of Canoga Park. Belen Puerta Machado, Moble) mother-1n-lav.-. was sentenced toc1gh1 )Cars in federal prison. Her hu<;band and tv.o son<. arc amoung the fugill\.CS . Four other<, linked 111 Mohk) through the coc:ainc nng were g1'"en le~'>cr -.cntenccs Moble) ·s wiflo 11nd 1,1ster were senicnccd last month COUNTY VOTING TERMED MODERATE .• -. From Al Ferraro run for president -Be~1des the auen11 on to th(' pre'i1- dentral race. Costa Mesa \Olcrs also had strong feelings on the Cll} Council race. whrch has become a fight between business interests and some residents over the future de- velopment of the ci ty. "I think the race was interesting this lime. what they're going 10 do with the future and how they'rC' going to handle growth." said Kathleen Quinn. 24 "I voted for the rnnd1date<o who would hm111he growth in ( O\Ul Mc~ and not let 11 become a mini-( cntur) Cit} ... In Laguna Beach. where vmers \loprx:d ofTat tht South Coasl Jew1s!}. ( enter on Broadwa) before heading lor Y.Ork. 3ttent1on was also dm·cted 10 the I 7 state in111ati vt:'i on the ballot Sard Jern Frad, adepanment store manager .. :The most important 1n- 1t1a11vc. I 1hough1. was the one dealing v.11h rcapport1onmen1 (Propos1tmn J9) I don't lrke the v.a) the Demo· crat'I have gerrymandered the dis- PIER SUICIDE ... From Al wa'i resumed later 1n the da' Henson rcponcdl) left a su1c1de note and a page from lhe Bible at hi'> parent's house. polu;c ~Id [he man\ 1.:ar was found parked at thl' base of 1hc c11y pier Police '\.aid the man\ mother on1acted Ne" port Beach authont1l''> l'arl) Monda) to repon that her son ) 1.u1ude noll' 'ia1d he intended to drown himself at the Wedge, a popular bod} 'iurfing spot at the tip of the Ralhoa Peninsula rhc mother '>aid her son had had a hlclong struggle with mental drs- ordcr\ hut appeared to be 1n good \Plrll\ the da)" before the apparent 'u1rnk according to Lntlc. Incl\ -\ml at the ~l•Y..pOrt Center Branch l.1bran. v.herc !$0 \Oler-. of the 473 resastl·red had ('3'>1 their ballots earl} thi.. morning. thl· loller) 1n111atl\e Propo\ll1on 37. wa!t d1~CU'>Sed. "iu1d John ~h1elds after .\Ollng. ''I'm s1<:k of those ad!t that '>3) 11's an immoral wa} to raise money. Taxei. arc moral? Money's money. They ha'e lhem 1n Vl·rmont and a lot of other states. so wh> not here?" Throughout thl' rnunty, ca mpaign worker\ passed out last-minute litera-- ture In Laguna Beach. for instance. 'oluntcer<; for rnngr('ss1onal can- didate Carol Ann Bradford en- wuragcd cus1omcr'> of a coffee shop to vote And 1n In inc. Bradford cam- pa1gnerc; were holding signs at the C'uher and Jamboree ramps to the an Diego Freewa) Do1en' of a<·11v1sh w11h the Al- liance for '\ur\ 1 "'al had planned 10 d1spla\ \lgn'> along the freeway asking \.Olen to '>uppon an rm mediate free1e on nucler1r v.eapon1.. IRVINE CAT LADY IN COURT ... Coa•tal ~lly ~ lOlllOftl ,Wily IPloudY W9CltlNll•r cooi.r cl•ye wt111 lffOn. es 10 71 Wtd...-day Lowa lO<llQhl )? 10 t2 frO"' Point Conc.p1ion 10 11141 Mt• ~en 80<<1et ...., ou1 eo Mtlee ,,,,,.. ..,.,, L'Qllt variable wind• 11110..011 W9dt.Oey ••a.pt eoumw••• 10 -• 'no1• wllh 2 10 3 fool wHWI w1 ... Wed~ W•1.,1y-?1o>i..t Pwtly c.IOuOy lhf°"91' Wed.....,ay • Ou•• ..... .,.. w... to norlh-• wtndl I 6 to 25 -no•• IOl>lghl AIWI Wed....Olt Comblr..ct -• IO 91 .. t Incl~ IOt 10 12 , .. , byWedMe· clay Parity CIOUOy Tides TOOAY 205pm 105pm WfOHflOA'I' l 38tm 1 52 am 2 34 pm 8 ., pm OS •• I 3 ~ 7 02 42 Sun ~ts too•y at • 56 pm ,,_ We<l....Oly 11 6 18 a m And Mii eglln 11•SSpm Moon•-11 • 07 pm Mii W.O,,.._ oey'•t • t9 • m encl rtMI Ill•"' 11 • 33 pm Temperatures "' lo Aloenr ~ 43 All>Uq1Wq"4 115 36 "'"""~ 87 4() Anchorege 31 24 AUenle 151 •• AllentlcCrly n SS I ""'"" Balt•l'llOfl e~""nQMm a..tnardl 80IM 8oc1on 8utt110 C19'* enw ... 1on sc . Chat1111on W v CharlOlle N <; C~ne Cnicego C1nCmn1t1 Ct•vet1r><1 CoMnbta,SC Columt>us Oh ConcOfo N 11 Otlt.U-fl W0tth 01y1on '"'1vfr Oea MOlne& 0.trOll Dlll\Jlf\ - Extended 73 47 Et PbO 113 •3 F .. rt>enlo• 87 38 Fargo ~ 19 ~1'9'"" 49 •3 Grind RIU•<h 59 5 I G•e.tl F •II• 53 38 H .. llOfd 51 28 H-.a 13 53 H()l'IOlul<i 60 4() HOullon 63 •3 1no1ana~" •8 30 JKU on Mt 4() 22 Jaciltonv1ill 51 32 JunellU •a 38 1(1n11s C.ny 10 •1 Laa Vegat ,, aa 37 ~ 3• Tl •2 51 31 51 32 45 30 48 35 32 18 LOCATION HvnllngtOtl a..c11 Rr1t., Jell)', N"'l>O'I 40111 Sir Ml. NewP0<1 ?1nd SllMI Newpotl Batl>OI w.ag. - llgltfll 8lacll San Clemenll Wet., temp 82·6-t Peftl Cloudy Wtlh coot days Hlghl 115 to 1 Lowt •8 10 Sii tlZI l 2 1 2 1·2 I 2 I 2 •·2 I 2 • ~ .. e11 d11ec11e>n eoutnw"l ' OHlfCTIOt4 tau poor 10 lalf pOot 10 lair poor101 ... poor lo''" -POO< ~um111111111JM'"IL---------------- voTERs CHOOSE PRESIDENT TODA y ... From Al 1ng to reporters. but son Theodore you on our farmi.. an our inner c1t1cs. dl'lack and 11i:Yond." declared ... We've taken an early lead or working 1n older industne<> not yet I he pre!.1den1 added. "Fo ur vear\ 1n North Oaks." back on their feet:· .igo.1nlla11on . ta,cs. interest rates and Bush and his wrfe. Barbara, stood Mondale's closing appeal was in a rnme Y.l'rc all going up. Tonrgh1 in line for 17 minutes an Houston. five-minute commercial. broadcast thC} 're coming down Confidence. then voted 10 a real estate office. "I 11 times Monday. 1n which he said. JOh\. 1 "' c'itment. growth. and did th e ,_ht thing." he told reponers ''I'd rather be an underdog in a ach1e,cmen1 an our schools were all later. _ campa1gn . .abou1 dcccn~y tha n Jo ~· gornguown. Now. thn'rc go1og up." Ferraro voted in a public ~·hool in ahead in a campaign only about self-The l>emouut!> went into the her neighborhood 1n Queens; N. Y interes1:· elcu1on with control of the House b) "Yes, we're vef) opt1m1st1c," she Mondale campaign officials !>3rd 11 a 266 10 16 7 margin. with two , told reporters. "We're gorng to prove was the biggest commercial bu)· oft he vacanl.'1e\. fh1.· Republicans took the pollsters wrong." She flashed a campaign but thcy'rcfused to disclose control of the 'ienatcpn the Reagan 1humb1. up signal the cost. The Reagan campaign said landslide of 1980 and their maJOnt) Frank J Fahrent..opf Jr .. the Re· $750.000 was spent for tht ume lo '>tom! <ii 55 to 45 publican national chairman. told a broadcast his commcmal. In the I\ ,tatl''>Choo\lnggovernors. businessmen's forum in Washington The contl''>I'> for oflkes great and \e\en nm' an.• Rcpuhl1can<>. SI\ arc that the GO P's latest poll!>. completed 'mall. from the Whale House to DemOl rats Na11onw1dc. 35 pf lhe M onda~ night. shoY..cg Reagan with a rounty courthouses. cost about $1 .8 governor' an· l>erriocrats and 15 arc 20 pcrccnl lead. h1ll1on . alcording to Herbert Alex-Reouhltcans · "We've got a shot at 50" \talcs. he ander. a Un1vers1t) of ">outhem .,aid. but added that Mondale "could <. altforn1a pol111cal science profeswr Reagan lampaign spoke'>man wrn fiH· or s1>. states." He did not The Federal Election Comrn1!>~1on Jame~ Lake ~id lhl' president'!> polls put-the-tab forfedcrat1~r1i1~rrc-howcd-hmrwnh <r lemt of' 111\o-:!CT D:1fo~~:°~Pre">1den1 J1mm} ( arter lhan SI b1l11on prnnt' Reagan's pollster Richard h I od W Reagan Spt'nl hi• 13 .. 1 campaiun da'" W1nhlin prcd1t ted Reagan would get ""'a not er ear·" \.Oler t a'... car-.. , ., ; .. I c· 54 n.•rl'1.·n1 ol lhl' vote. 1ng Juan' and a denim Jackel. Cartl·r rn < al1forn1a. Al the state ap110I .,, . h I h II Pl "here he served eight '-cars as '\n era I latl' llOll\ \howcd Reagan·., mtk a 1qc e 10 I e .po 'i rn aim R d h ; margin n:irrov.1ng. but 11 remained < 1a &0 ' crnor. cagan saa is top pnont~ formidable .\ Wa\hangton Poc;1-A 8( While l'Xpcn'> lal~cd about a turn-during a c;econd term would be out uf5Spcrlen1ofthecligrble vo1cr'I. "peace. d1!>armamcnt and the reduc-Nt'\\\ pull taken Saturday through mm pared 10 52 6 percent four )Car' tmn of Y.Orld nuclear weapons." Monda~ Sl'I Reagan's margin at 14 f · Mondale of1iered a •harpl' con-rx·ru•ntage points. 54-40 with ti ago. the l'Xlent o part1cipa11on won l " ; d d d. Th be known until polls clo'>e from 1ras11ng vu:w. If Reagan gains a re-peru·nt un eu c c margrn wa) M H d election landslide. Mondale told a lhl' ~;iml· as 1n m polling taken Fnda) ea~ternmo'>I • a1nc to awa11 an I II h 'll II through Sunda). wh1<.'h showed a. Alaska. Los Ange es ra ). "I ey ca 11 a dethnc from 18 points rn a <;1milar Their last speeches deli\Cred. the h1s1orrcal mandate. Do you rcall) pres1den11al r and1Ja1es returned "ant tu.gi ve them a mandate to tum poll rnncl uded last Thur'ida}. Monday night 10 therr homes -lheir backs on those who arc -;ufTcnng Poll'ltcr L.uuis Hams found an h ( I I. h d in Amenca.,·· C' en smaller I I -porn I margin for the Reagan to is a 1 urn1a ranc an d r I 6 I Mondale 10 his house outside St In 1heclos1ngday!>of h1scampa1gn . president. own irom pornlf, aM Paul. Mrnn. -10 vote and then await the Democratic challenger repeatedly WCl'k the return'> de">Crrbcd himself 3) "a full -cm plo)-.\ poll h} the Roper organ1131ion In add111on to the rre!>1dcn11al race. mcnt Democrat" and "a-people'\ put Reagan ahead b) 10 point\ d 33 l)em..v·rat." na110nw1dc. but a New York T1mes-1h1s clec11on wa1. e1erm1 nmg "'" h 'I Senate seals. the en lire makeup of the Before a flag-waving. enthu'i1a!ltrt C'BS poll said t c margin wac; - 435-member House. and 13 contcsh crowd 1n Ma'ion Cit) Iowa. Mondale point\ and a c;urve} for SA Toda} for governor. recalled that he gave his first cam-sard Reagan led by 25 points. One senator. J. Bennell Johnston. pa1gn ~pecch then: after announcing Republicans were encouraged b) D-La .. was assured re-election when h1) cand1da1.:} lom:ast., of a big Reagan vactof) to he won a non-partisan pnmaf) 1n Mondalc'>a1dhereturnect there on prcdictapi{kupofthe20orso House I h H 68 Cle' lion rv" i..ficause "I wanted <;cats it would take to restore the \eptembcr. n t e ousc. 1ncum-' ' '"" · I h R bents -54 De mocrats and 14 America to know know where I'm conlll·na11 vc coa at1on t at gaye c- u bl h d coming 'rom and whc~e 1·m going. agan maJOrit1es he needed for passage "cpu 1canc;-a no maJor oppos1-1; • f h d b d h tl<ln I want to reOctt our '"lues here an the 0 rs 1a:i1 an u Met programs is In J 22-m1nu1e 1elev1S1on com-great Madwl'!>I." first two )Cars in ° ice. rm·mal broadcas1 011 the three major In his do!ting commercial. the That coaht1on Y..3s broken in lhc From Al Elli~ will nc>1 ha\C llJ repor' rcgul.irl} to a probation officer She tact'\ up to six month'i 1n Jail hov.e'"n 11 \hl' breaks an} law\ during the probation period. aga1n\I fighting the 'harges hcLause \hed1d nol want to fale the '>Ire\\ of a tnJI and alCO,!!lpano. 1ng nl'""" l"O\- cragl' ne1work\ Monda) night. Reagan said president ..aid. "I ai.k fo,r your vote for rcces<i1on-}ear election of 1982 when America had made an "amazing one purpo~ onl} -10 complete the lhc Democrats picked up 26 scats. t·omcbact.. .. But. he added. "We still task we began together four years ago In the Senate. where there were 19 have much 10 do -to make our . We must continue. not only into Republican and 14 Democratic seats families. more secure. to help man}' of the next four years but into the next be1n~ decided this vear. c.lo>1.'>-t.a l' i.l nll ra hblls that had been ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!~~~ Elh'> her~clf did not appear in lhl' Newpon Beat·h courtroom Jnd the no-contest pica was entered by her attorney. ( . Thoma\ McDonald 1 he no-contest pica was a change from an earlier plea of innocent "I thank 5he should have gone to trra l." McDonald \aid toda) "I think she wa'i not guilt} of the oflcn~s ·· But the auorncy 'iatd Ellis <.lcc1dcd Just Call 642-6086 Delly Piiot Oeflvery I• Guerenlffd "\he JU'il wanted 10 put It behind her " M< Donald said. T hl' altornC\ o.,a1d ht· doc'> 11111 know whether Elli\ j, \till It' ing 111 Orange ( ounh. f-ll"" leg.ii prohkms bl:e;in ·\ug. 22 when anrm:ll t.ontrol nfTiters in lrv.Ol'. 1n.,,e,11gating ii \Iron~ odor. ehecktd hl·r motur home. which wao., parl.cd at a lo<:al \hopping u·nter ()fTiH·ro., \t'l/t•d more than 110 pct ~::~:"~~"''.:~:,~::::!;:3 SHUTTERS CUSTOM QUAUJY·SHUTI~RS trcatnll'nt fiir health prc>blcm' ap--I parl·nth rdiltl·d 10 the d10itult trrp =3 _ _.....,_. anc.l thn onfinl·d quarter!>. \omc later died '"" '"l .1n1m.1" v.erc 1n.~1cd and Des.igned hoarded JI thl· t 1t\ ·s animal 1hdtcr ' .ind at ,1 pr1\:.tle ·pct ho~pll I. In F' • h d <>uuhl.·1 \\ht•n the hoarding t arges 1n1s e e\lCt:d1:d \~ll.000 cit) offiuah ht:gan oflenn"'' "".animal, for .. ale Installed What do you like about the Daily Pllol'! What don 't you llke? Catt the number at left and your messaite wm be recordtd. transcribed and deJivered to lbe appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answt'rlnll service may be used to record letters to the l'dilor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters eolumn must lnelude their name and telephone number for verlfieatlon. No elrcul•tlon c1l11, plean . Ttlf us wfiat'-1 on yoe-r mind. I ('I ,I l'I. ' Clrcul1tlon 71'1642-4333 Daily Pilai Cleulfted ectvertl•lnO 714/642-5871 All olh•r deperlmenl• 642·4321 MAIN OFFICE H. L. Schwertz Ill 31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters Clrculetlon TelephonH r I • , r Aoaemery Churchman \.< r 1r llPr ., "-' ,.""">"' •, . ~-..,-')" I ........ Stephen F. Carazo Produt IHi' M(tnaqpr Donald l. Wllllama Cir< ul<1t1on M;tni3Qf'I VOL. n , NO. 311 FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY .•• AT FACTORY DIRECT Pf:llCESI Call (714) ~-6841 or 548-171~ MElllWOOD MAIUFACTOIY 19n Placentla Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 r