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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-11-26 - Orange Coast Pilot,, ·.~l· .... ·••t.~f'-.. -. force uuped IO mveltlple dlil CW. conceded that Goode UlrMd .,. several leads tot.be Sbcrifr• D101r.-disorganized and served no purpose vestiptor from Oranae who tw Bowlin lfJd he ordered the search chilly weather and didn't aps>ear to mtnt and prontited tMl in~= 2 ""' volunteered his services to Laura's haJled late Saturday afternoon be-have mapsoftheana, wtuch 1snot far wouJd follow them up this By STEVE MARBLE County sheriff's car.tain said today. parents, had estimated the volunteer cause members of the search ieam from Twentynine Palms. "Maybe I.bey (the vOl•Un) 0t._o.11r,....... "It was a circus,' said Capt. Gene search team would number at least were makinf Statements to the media '"There was uro orpniz.ation," be stimd upa Jjnlemoreiru.a•.14ae°l A weekend volunteer search party Bowlin. ''As far as 1 can tell it d idn't l,000 people. that "could 1nadvertantly be harmful commented. · know," BowJjn f'elMlbcl. • lookina for 3-year-old Laura Bra<J-serve any useful purpose at all." Goode also described the weekend to our own i.nves,Jiplion." Neither Goode nor Laura's .. Our investiption ia ltill pfq f!: ~ bury, the Huntington Beach 11.rl who The group of volunteers, estimated search as beinr highly coordinated' At least 25 journalists were-on hand parents, Mike and Patty Bradbu!)'. ~along," he added. "We haw vanished more than five weeks ago, to be somewhere between I SO and and said the voJunteers would be as were two helicopter carryin& tele-were available for comment this •8redS of leads were ~ • aad was so disorganized that police finally 300, arrived Saturday at Joshua Tree brok_en int~ teams and aui&ned vision news crews.. mominJ. • . we're in the proc:esa and MllQI more ordered it halted, a San Bernardino National Monument. a remote desert specific duties. Paul Henry, cb1cf ranaer at the Bowbn. who is an charle of a task (Pleue .-••llCB/Aa). Coast We asked folks what they think about setting up roadblocks to catch drunken drivers./ A3 A Huntington Beach Eagle Scout candidate does a good deed.I A3 California Pasadena parade lam- poons Institutions, do dah, dodah./A8 Dying boy may get his flnal wish -to have his grandmother by his side when he succumbs.Ille Nation Supreme Court rejects hearing on Illegal search of convicted burglar's home./BI If It's single men you're seeking, females1imt- Houston and San Diego the best spots./ A8 Two banks drop their prime lending rate to 11 'h percent today In a not- too-surprising move./81 World North Korea vows 'blood for blood' after shootout at border./ Al ' World Court finds In favor · of Nicaragua In dispute over U.S. 'war escala- tlon. '/ A4 Feature Nathan Oliveira's art has as many diverse In- fluences as his native state, California./ A7 Sporta Irvine Hlgh's girls vol- leyball team tangles with Corona del Mar In the Southern California play- offs Tuesday nlght./81 The Rams are stlll In the hunt after a..-33 win at Tampa Bay, thanks to Eric Dlckerson./81 Inexperience plagues Estancia, Edison as the prep basketball season nears./81 Baalneu A West v·lrglnla town wants to outlaw satellite dtshea./IM INDEX Bridge Bulletln Board Bu"neu California News Cluelfled Comlc:a Cronword Death Notlcea Feet urea Horoacope Ann Lander• National Newt Opinion P'J)aruzl Pollce Log Pubtlc Nottcee portt Stock Marketa T~ ,.....,. w .. u. WortdNewl , A10 A3 EM A4 A4 87 87 87 A7 88 A8 • A4 ' Ai A7 A3 87 81 -3 85 A8 A8 A2 A4 Heart pioneer b•nglng on Doctors William DeVrlee (left) and Ronald Barbie lnMrt an artificial heart into Wllll•m Schroeder on Sanday at tile Ba•ana Heart lnadtate in LoalaTille, Ky. Schroeder, tile world'1 eecond recipient of a permanent artiflclal heart. wu reported in crldcal bat It.able con ell don today. See 1tory. Pace A6. Traffic fatals, arrests up over. long weekend Three people killed on county hl ways; police haul In 1 1 7 By STEVE MARBLE Of ... o.llr ......... An increase an fatal car acciden ts and drunken drivma arrests on Or- ange County hjpways over the long Tha~ving weekend set an omin- ous beginning for the holiday season .. Three ~pie were lriUed in hi&h· way acadcnts in Oranae Coun~ during the fo ur days, and the Cali- fo rnia Highway Patrol aJTnled l 17 people on suspicion of drunken Educator arsll. will invade Nicaragua · By ROBERT BARKER Of .............. Huntjngton Beach school teacher Pat ~cCully has somr pretty strong opinio.ns about whafs going on in Nicaragua. Ano the op1n1ons don't exactly square with those expressed by U.S. government sources. driving. Local police departments arres1ed at least another 150 motorists on suspicion of drunken driving. accord· ing to incomplete fiaurcs available today. Last Tbanks&iving, the CHP made I 07 drunken drivin · • or the first time in five years. reported no fat.al car accidents on county highways. A Costa Mesa man was killed late Saturday in Garden Grove. Police said Henry T. Cooley, 23, died after his car spun out of control on a rain- ~lickened roadway and jumped a center divider. (Pleue eee TRAn'IC/ A2) McCully. who visited the Central American nation last Christmas a nd fPleue NICARAGUA/ .U) Pat McCully Yacht.sinks off Dana A 24-foot )'Kht out of ~'9wport 8eed't unk oft the COMt of O.W Pomt early today after harbor patrolrMn IS*'t ~• • futile houn attempting to tow the boat to port. Newport~ r11ldent WllHllm H9H, the 82-~-old owner Ind skipper of the "GIGI,.. wu r•cued from the ulboet, wtllct\ ,de\'ek>ped engtne trouble and began taking on wm. ebout ~ mtlee out of Dana Point Harbor. Hall, the only person aboard thl ~. WM retumlng from Catalina Island, said Orange County Sberffl'• Lt. Bob J<a'nll~ Kemla said H•t's distreae signal was picked up at 10:10 p.m. (Pl1111.-YACBT/A2) .. IJe 11orean 'S dream goes to highest bidders port attorney pays 3 ,000 for first By ROBERT HYNDMAN Beach attorney Bill Yacobozzi was °' .. .,..,,........ once the target of a federal drua Lake John De Lorean. Newport in vestigation. And, like De Lorean. Budding nove)is~s along the Coast get the wFit stuff Here's a bit of expert advice for those who want to publish 1 novel: Learn to write. The expert, in this cue, is Dr. Pat Kubis, an <>ranee Cout Colleac wrilina teacher for m~ than two decades with two published novels to httcndiL And lbe'a . na fHf Wben she ~ j)01 ... learn to wnte before e.11111t upon their &r.book. . "People pick up a peft and think they can write Without any inttrvc- tion at all," the '7·year-old educator 9'jd. ..h's tilte the ptychiatrill who came to me and complained that he'd written three boob and none of them had been pubtishtd .•• Kubis uid ahe ttad aome of his stuff"and it wasn't half'bed. Tbe P17duatn1t toad Kubia M knows bis field and didn't tee any advan\IF 1n takina a wntina coune ~ tacklalll I couple Of' bookt relatin& to pa~chaatry. ) ·1 She told him it would be like her counldin& hJa petieftu without any ttain i !'.'; ·•He d been turned down by pu~ Ulhina houtts for sill years," Kubis laid, lhakint her head .... He could haYe taken a h (wntin&} ctus and betn 1 publilhed writer in a year.'' Kubis slk>uld know. Her students llMave .,_...11~1d or ..... indudtd ttt more than 4,000 publications. That • wu tcvtft ,_,. •· SIM quit count •na after that. (1'11M1 ... AUlllOlt8/A2) ,, ' Yacobozzi was cleared oflhe charges. Both men also arc fond of spons cars. De Lorean, of course. is famous for startini his own sports car manufactunng company before run· ning mto well-publicized cocaine consp1ricy cha raes in 1982. Yacobozzi. meanwhile. is an avid car collector. So wh ile,~ Lorc.an's bankrupt() trustees were forced to aivc up the two ongrnal spons car prototypes at an auction Sunda> to pay ofT creditors.. Yacobozn fou nd himself dnvmg • away wi th one. YacoboZZl paid $3 7 .000 for the stamlcss steel gull-winacd spons car aftrr outb1dd1n1 Don Williams. di- rector of the Black Hawk CM ColJec- uon of San Ramon. Calaf. (Pleue eee DS LOREAK/A2) Laguna's battling on\vaste renewed- By LISA MARONEY °' ............. i..&una Beach will renew its war on waste after the New YcaT, but this rime ~1dents can act cash for their Ulsh. ~ city has agruct to let the Garden talc Paper Co. of Pomona operate a buy-beck ccntc.r for paper and aluminium cans at the comer of ~ Lqu na CanyCJ'n Frontaec Road and Wooelland Dn~e. ()pcrabOU we expected to bc&Jn 1n January, ICCOl'd· in& to Rob Clark, the a ty's t1aiton to the Eneray and EnvironmnJt Com- mittee. U nlLke city-,pontorcd ~hna prosrams of the past. rk said the buy-back center should be ucccssful beca~ the finaftetll return wdl encourqt rcsi<knts co ve their uled nc papers and can ltho u&h ~ nuctu.atcand thttt (Pl ... .-LAGUllA/ A2) ' DAILY PILOT/Monday. No'*"ber II, 1984 T een talked out of suicide l eap at county jail CoN TINUHJ SroR1Es A ps~bolotist la1ked a ~ out of Jumj)ina to bis death y in11de the oranac County Jail. where the youth bid •pmt Thanklaivina •ftcr be1na arrested on 1 bwslary warrant, ahcrilrs deputaes said. S.1. Larry Abbott uid Paw Alan P.in ~tttnn.-f""' "d"-becl O\lft a-tttv~ LAGUNA WASTE WAR ••• rroiaAl is no way to prediet ~Y how much Laauna Beach midentl will receive for their rccyclablct come January, Dave Wat.son, spokesman for Garden State. said the curTent price for newsprint is S3S a ton. Aluminium cans are worth 28 cents a pound, he said. Garden State is the only newsprint manufacturer in C~lifornia, Watson said. The company, which depends en11rcly upon recycled material, has l 6 buy-back ccnten throuahout Southern California including Ooean1i~ Santa Ana and iJilal Hill. The Eneray and Environment Committee studied recyclina \>"°" aramsinotherdtiestoteewhat m1aht work for 1..quna Beach. An option proposed by m ident Paul Munoi, curbside drop off, was rejected 11 uneconomical. Accordin& to the city'• agreement with Garden State, the manned recycling c.cntcr will be open from two to five days a wee.Jc. The company must also set up one to three YACHT SINKS ••• From*'l . l Sunday by tN harbor patrOl ,.etO f91PC)nded. Efforts to ball out the bOlll .... UMUOOellfW In the choppy ... end an attempt to tow the bOlll t.lld, K_. Mid. Hatt WU tlktn to lhore Ind hll boet ... left to the ••menta, Kemle aald . The boat wu Yllued at 110,000. ity 1etttn overtook.inc a .WrweU -1 50 to 60-foot drop -tbma&ened to jump." • Abbott 11id Dr. Peter Chambers a clinical Pl)'cbol()list employed by the county, talked the youna man into comi-dOwn afetr. unattended drop-off centers at schools. with the pr~s to benefit parent-teacher associatidns. Contracting with a recyclina firm may eliminate problems witfi past recycljnt efforts. the memo said. Voluntetr programs failed because fluctuations 1n the prioc of newsprint sometimes made the ventures un· profitable and the task or collecting and rcwlling the trash "wore out volunteers." Oark said. And litter, caused by people drop- pina off their recyclables when the center was cloSfd. should pose no problem now that they will be paid for their materials. the memo said. In addition, the center will no lonJtr accept bottles. which t~passma younpten made a pastime ofbreak-mg. The Eneray and En\'ironment Committee plans to promote recycl· ing by publicizin& the center tbrouah schools and arranging field trips tp Garden State's Pomona manufac- turing plant. DE LOREAN CARS AUCTIONED ••• From Al W1lhams paid S2 I ,000 ~cond prototype. The sale was pan of the Ncwpon Beach Collector Car Auction held thjs week.end at the Marrion Hotel. -And while more than 450cars were up for sale. the two De Lorcans attracted the most attention. Williams told reporters that the De Lorean "is the last hurrah for any- body trying to start up a production company and mass produce any kind of automobile." The failure of De Lorean's company, he said, makes any other such efforts unlikely. "People will look back in 10, 15 years, not tic in the drug problems and realiz.e with a little clearer v1s1on what an undertaking it was," Wil- liams said. De Lorean was acquitted of the drug conspiracy charges last August but faces a crcdnors' lawsuit claim mg • he diverted more than S 17 milhon from the company to his personal accounts. While Yacobozzi says he bought the De Lorean as an investment and plans to store it, Wilhams will display the otber .prototype: in the Black Hawk museum which already has JO cars valued in excess of $I m illion apiece. "Oassic cars are the Mona Lisas of the 20th century" in investment potential, Williams said. But the collector car bidding was not limited to the two De Lorcans. More thtn 450 cars including Cadillac convertibles, fuel-injected Corvettes and a 1931 Stutz Boatta1I also hJt the aucuon block.. according to Joe Molina, spokesman for Rick Cole Auctions Inc. .. The auction was one of the best we've ever had m Ncwpon," Mohna said. "It's such a great place hold an auction in the first place. People were commcnttng that Newport Beach is the only place where you can look at a collectors Rolls-Royce with tht Pa· cific and Catalina Island in the background." Molina estimated that the auction grossed more th.tn S 1.3 million with about 4S percent of the available c~rs sold - a strong showing for a collecto r car auction. Some collector cars were purchased for as much as $90,000. he said. · Nearly 5,000 people attended the auction. which Molina called "the Cannes Film Festival of the car world." The event was the la~est ever held m the Newport auction s seven-year history, Molina said. The next auction will be held during the Fourth of July weekend. SEARCH FOR LAURA 'DISORGANIZED' ••• Prom Al people-to our task fo-1 .... ce-.u.•L------There have been no confirmed The blonde. brown~yed girl disap- peared after wandering a shon dis- tance from her parent's campground. Authorities suSJ?t:Ct the Jirl was kidnapped, possibly by a middle-age gray-haired man with a beard. sightings of the girl o r the sought-after man since the day Laura vanished. Shentrs investigators reported that the man. thought to be traveling in a blue van with distinctive bay win- dows on its sides. was spotted several hours after Laura vanished. Thal ~Mll was made. on a rough back road leading from the descn toward Big Bear. Bowlin said it is his feeling that Laura is still alive. He said 1f she were not. her body hkely would have been found by now TRAFFIC FATALS IN COUNTY .•• From Al Two people were killed Sunday on Ortega Highway in the Oevcland National F'"orcst when the van they were riding in nipped over. Statewide, the holiday death toll was down and drunken driving arrests soared over figures from previous years. CHP officials said 45 people were killed on California highways this year compared with 55 deaths last year. Authonties said 2.435 drunken dnvmg arrests were recorded in the state by midnight Sunday. This figure is up from 2,033 from the prior year. The CHP arrested 636 people for 1nvcst1gation of drunk.en driving 1n the greater Los AnJ.eles area and made 423 arrests in its geographical division that includes Oranie and San Diego counties. All police departments along the Orange Coast have or plan to beef up street patrols with special drunken drivms teams and predict that arrests for dnvrn& under the influence of alcohol could reach record highs this sdsOn. According to CHP spokesman Steve Kohler the number of injury accidents or fatal accidents typically goes down as the number of drunken driving arrests goes up. NICARAGUA FEARS INVASION •.. From Al again 1n September. ~1d Nicaraguans are digging in for an invasion by the U.S., som ething McCully said she fully expects. But she claims 1t won't be qu1ck- h1tting action such as at Grenada. Instead , she said, it is likely to tum into another Vietnam-like war with the Latin Amencans taking to the mountains and fighting for eve I) inch of ground. . Nicaragua may become a Russian satellite that would spread revolution and the communists' brand of totahtari~n government in the West- ern Hemisphere. But McCull y says that's a trumped- up fear Russians) put missiles m Cuba." McCully, a Democrat who said she's always been concerned about poveny in the world, is a Spanish- French-mathcma t1 cs teacher at Gisler Middle School. She said she did a lot of reading on Lalin Ameri- can matters while getting her master's degree in pan1sh. "I heard so much about Ernesto Cardenal (minister of culture) being I W f.ilHfR The c:otd winds 1a4ng W°"'llf\ SOutlWn callfomil Will dlmlnW\ ovwnlght but t1c• wll beoofne lncfellllnOtY ctoudY Tueec:tay. 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L«>g 8Mc:ll 82 0 "'" Ngll I tt-~m ,. l'1IOMlfl 32 12 LOCA,..,_ flnlt IOw &:1 a.m , 1 Qrlftd Aaold• 57 40 =:==:,,, 1·2 poof MontOllla t3 42 8-!dhlgh 11 2•..,., u Hef1forO 50 25 2-4 OOoCI MonWav H .. 14*\a 32 II 40fl8U..,~ 2-4 OOoCI Mt Wllaoll N 30 8-\dlOw M lo.m. .0,1 HonolUlu n .. 22nd'"~ N9w0«1 1-3 OOoCI N9w0«1 ._,, 87 48 Hol.llon 71 t3 etllboaW 1-2 pool Ont*1o 51 ... eun •• 100.r a1 4.46 o.m.. ,... lndlMIOOlla N .. .....,.8NGll 1 poof PMadane 82 31 T.-c!av I I 8 :l 7 a m encl .... llOain II JackaOll,Ma 75 eo ..,,~ 1-3 .... ....... 51 41 44'pm. .I.ck~ 10 u W ... lMIO.~I ..,, .. ,,.,dine> H .. Moon-• I ;np m ,,._ T....oay ~ 17 ». ... 41raetl0n ~ ..,,~ .. 40 at 11.;t1-.--t1•Hp:flll CONTINUED STORIES AUTHORS GET THE WRITE STUFF ••• From Al And several of her students are best-selling novelists. There's Oive Cussler, author of "Raise the Titanic." And Barbara Conklin, who wrote "P.S. I Love You." And Don Stanwood, whose "Memory of Eva Ryker" became a made-for-television m ovie. "Seven of my students published last year." she says. adding two more books wnttcn by her pupils arc coming out soon. Dorothy McMillan. who is still taking classes from Kubis, penned "Blackbird.'' a .novel about a psy- cr1otic poisoner. --- And there's Douglas Muir. a for- mer studen1. whose "Amencan Reich" has been accepted for publi- ca tion. "It's a story about the far right trying to take over the United tates," Kubis says of Muir's book. "I 'ucss you'd call 1t a futunst1c conspiracy novel. It's great " And if the manuscript mentor admires her students. the feeling is mutual. Doroth} McMillan says Kubis has "that wonderful ability to encourage and stimulate you through those tough ·1 want to give up' periods so you emerge on the other side with the determination to succeed." Cus!ler, whose novels besides "Raise the T1tan1c" include "Deep Six;· "lceber&." and "The Mediter- ranean Caper," also has accolades for his former professor. .J1I' "Without Pat Kubis to advise. console, encou~e and shove, during the writing of my first published boo le., Cli vc Cusslcr the author, would never have existed." Kubis. who fi rst started teaching fiction writing, fundamentals and Just Call 642-6086 novel writing at Orange Coast College in 196'3; is retirin& at the end of the year. But she's leaving something behind for aspiring authors of the future. It's a non-fiction book titled, "The Com- plete Guide to Writing Fiction, Non- fiction and Publishing." O K. so the title doesn't grab you. But how about this. The writing text 1s aJrcad y in its second printing -less than two months after its first edition came off the press. Kubis. who co-authored the book with Bob Howland, uieruorcditor for "Rcslon. a Prentice R'aTr subsidiary. says Writer's D11est bought up 5,000 of the book.s and it is sold out at Dalton book.stores. "I was talk.ing about retiring and one of m y students came up and said. 'Before you retire, leave us what you know. You owe n to us."' Kubis asrccd. She gathered up class notes collected over a quarter cen- tury, and with information provided b} co-autbor Howland, beon writina a book that 1s chock-fulf of Dutch uncle advice for the novice novelist. There are chapters on how to approach an editor. how to obtain an agent, how to evaluate a contract. There's a chapter on how to shop for a word processor and even a chapter on writin~ romance novels. "Wnting romance novels is the easiest way riaht new for an un· publisht:d writer to aet into print,'' Kubis says. Nine of her students have published romances and sill o ut or six win ncrs in a recent national Romance Wnters of America winners last year were Kubis' protcacs. "I'd read so many books on how to write by authors that were way up here." she said, holdin!l her hand over her head. "They were so abstract and they left you with nothing." Not so for her book, she says. 'This 1s a real nuts and bolts book. No o ne has ever eut the topic together in a sequence. Besides editing her new book for future editions. Kubis 1s working on a new novel and remodeling her home in Canyon Lake. The ho use 1s on the lake and it'll be 1,740 square feet when it's finished, she say~. "It'll have a huge writing room with a lake view." The perfect ~tti.o.i.for w~hcr third novel. a Nazi thnllcr. "I'm going to write in the morning. just like Hemingway, take long walks in the afternoon and read, read, read," she says wJth a laugh. But 11 w1ll hardly be a retirement. In addition to her wnting. Kubis will continue to lead.writing seminars and act as consultant to would-be authors. Will she miss teaching? "Yo u know. One of my students asked me that," she said. tears welling up io her eyes. "You bet I will." Patriots parade dona tion needed Donations are still needed for the 19th annual Laguna Beach Patnots Day Parade. The parade association needs about $6.000 to finance the event. Joe: Jahraus. fund-raising chairman says. Contnbutors may send donations to Patnots Day Parade. in care of Gerry Hanna. treasurer. 3079 Bern Dnve. Laguna Beach, Ca., 92651 or call Jahraus at 494-6538 for funhcr informa11on. What do you like about &be Dally Piiot'! What don't you like? Call &be nu mber at leh and your me11•ge will be recorded, transc ribed and delivered to U.e appropriate editor. The same U~bour aaswertog service may be used to rttord leuers to &be editor on a ny &oplc. Cootributon to our Lettera column m1111 Include their name and teleplaone 111mber for verification. No circulation calls, pluse. Tell us wbat'1 on your mlDd. "They've dug trenches in parks and cities and written 'no pasaran' (do nol pas~) on the walls She said Amenca is rntcrested 1n Nicaragua and other Central Amcn- can countries for selfish economic reasons -mainly to protect invest- ments of multinaLional businesses. "The perfect eumple.'' she said. "1s the American ovenhrow of the Arbenz regime in G uatemala m 1954. The CIA did 1t because they (the Arbenz rCJlme) expropnatcd the United Fruit Co. repressi vc. He is a pnest and poet. I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" and I had read much of his wntin15. I "1'hcy have every reason to think that this country (the U.S.A.) will attack," the 55-year-old McCully declared. "We've built three a1rstnps in Honduras. we have mined their harbors, we conduct flyovers and the sonic booms make them feel hke 1hcy'rc beine bombed. "I'm so d1'itre.,~d. We're going to plaster them into the ground,'' she 581d. "We're ~oing to find some excuse hkc the sink.mg of the Mame or w mcthrng. We've done 1t over and over again. .. , thought on the n1&ht o r the election when they were ta flung about the MiG J>lan'es, there they go." U.S. offiaals claim &~Soviets are secretly shipping M1G fighter Jets to Nicaragua. The Soviets and the N1cara~uans deny the U.S. charses. Mc( ully d1fTer'I drastically with some 1n high places. who say"1hat "The people of Nicaragua arc so poor.'' she s~ud, "and we're making them poorer by forcma them to spend mo ney on weapons when they don't even have toilet paper. We're forcing them to tum more and more to Russia." McCully. a resident of Huntington Beach. also says that fears be1111 expressed about Nicaragua becoming a Ruman base arc a "red herring. .. She acknowlc:d&es that Russia and Cuba might be moving jnto the area to spread discomfort and propaaanda apmst the United UTes. 8Ul sbe clajms she can't sec them posina a military threat from that nation of 3 million people. • "We wouldn't let that happen," she said. "We didn't let them (the said this can't be. I've got to sec for myself." What she saw dunng her vts1ts doesn't square wtth stalements from a.dmm1strat1on leaders in our govern- ment. Mc:Cully al'io said she learned on her tnp that algae was plugging up pipes at four new health <:alters. McCully was able, she said, to supply the people with water-testina kjts that will deLcrm1nc chemical contents of water. Thal information will help the Nicaraguans keep the pipes function· in" "I fetl I've done something that matters." she said . McCully aaid she has written anicles about her trip for the Cali· fomia Pea~ Academy and had preu credenttals to travel t.fic country from coast to coa~t in September. She's sirrcc joined the Oranae County Committee on Central America, she said. ORANGE COAST Ceroue.tton 7141142...tm D:!7.!'.!;' la Qu.rentMCI 1,4 ,. 'Jiiiy , '1Cla'f " "°" (l('l ,,.. ...... y04I' lie"" °' \ ./Q I> ,.. c• bOllof• 1 I' m 4 ,.,,.,. '"''1 .... lie --""" ., ... ,., .,,.., ~ " ,,., ,,, "°' let-,..... c•"'r 1.1 1 • m c•• Dall«t 'fl -,, <1"CI Y"IUI 'CIPI' ... ,,._..., C lrculetton Tel1P:.MN "'"'' ~=-~· ~ l "O'O'•'~ ....... • • · D1ily Pilat H.l . Schwartz Ill Publisher Frank Zlnl Karen Wittmer Managing Editor Advertising Director Roeemary Churchman Controller "obert Cantrell Production Manager Donald L Wiiiame ClrculAUon Man ger ' ) Cla1111ed ............ 714/IG4179 Al .... .,.,. ........ ta-4121 MAIN Ol'PtCI ,. DD Watt 9'ty It Cotti ..._ CA ....,...__&•1-..0 ec...,._ CA~ VOL. n , HO. 311 SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUTTERS Designed, Finished Installed 31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON.THE MARKET TOD.AV~ •• AT FACTORY DIRmCT PRICESI Call (714) 548~1 or 548-1717 HEllWOOD MAIUFACTllY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 .. --· ' OrMge eo.t O~LY PILOT/.__,,,._,•• a tlM ltl Heart aaver cla88e• offered at hoapital Rcaistratton ls underway for Oecmebcr CPR (card10- pulmortary res~scitation) hean saver classes at SaddJe· back Community Hoap1tal in Laauna Hills. The cl~ses, ofJ'ercd each Wcdnelday 11 the hospital provide ba11c CPR trainina for individuals as well 1$ aroups. Ahematina tchcduled for &fttcmoon (I to S p. m.) and evenma (S to 9 p.m.) clasJet ate available. 'How do you f~ about Instituting road blocbJD Orange County slmlllar to those In BurltzWame, Callf., to curb the problem of drunk di1V1i}g?' The fCe ror the classes is SS. which covers the costs of a ~PR inst~ction booklet and u_se of alJ nece sary equ1pll}ent. S11nups are bcina taken from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and funher information is available at 837·4500. DnJ6 .erie• pr,,.eated A free film and lecture series on chemical dependency issue~ wall be. offered ~or fqur consecutive Thursday evenings. bca1nn1na this Thursday. by the Genesis Dcpen~ency Treatment Proaram at South-Coast Medical Center an South Laguna. "The Cocaine Experience," first of the lectures will focus on th~ facts and misconceptions of cocaine use. Each program will be held in the hospital audjtonum at 31812 Coast Hiahway, South Laguna, from 7 to 8:10 p.m. For funhcr 1nfol"'(Tlat1on, call 499-2295. SJ4WQMIWU N..,.naeaH ear ........ o. ......... C.taM ... .. ................. Flo•er arranging clau Ht Alicia's Flowers and Gifts of Newport Beach will present a free series of flower arrangina classes for the hol;ti,'da season beginning Saturda . ·•1 tb1n.k th.at ifs homble. lf1 JUSl •!)other trap ... "Yeah. I think it'sa.,od idea. It will kerp diwtk driven of the roed." e classes will feature festive centerpieces special &ift or the ~olidays and decorations for the home. They will be presented from 10 a.m. to noon for the nexr three Saturdays at Alicia's, 1701 Corinthian Way. Call 833-l883 for funher information. S.farl Club plans aucdon . The Orange ' C<?unty chapter ~f Safari Club lntcr- nauonal will hold its annual auction Saturday in the 9ran'e County ballroom and gallery of the Registry Hotel an Irvine. ..., Scout Jlm Ganlere, ... tni• official Gayle Amato join fOJ'C89 to cheer klda. HB scout's Eagle project helps less fortunate kids Boy , 12. collecttngtoys and clothes "Even the hair was combed on the dolls." she sajd. Elat.e Stncoff Newpert Bead! Hollnlaker Dlw ....... . e • ..,_1.-d Huntington Beach Mayor Jack Kelly will be the master of ccremomes for the fund.raising event sponosred by the Safan Oub's women's auxiliary. Proceeds will be used for the preservation and conservation of wildhfc through education and scientific management or re- sources. Thc.8 p.m. auction will be preceded by cocktails and an exh!b•t at 5 p.m. and dinner at 7 p.m. Reservations or ticket information may be obtained by calling Doralee Ashby at 846-41 97 or 846-9115. for youngsters in county's Sitton Home Jim. who has been in scouts for five years, spends about two or th~ hours each week fixini toys. A report based on has project will be subnutted at the end of November to a committee of three adult scout leaders. he sajd. ..l think it's a good idea. Anythina that prevents drunk drivers, anythina that helps at all is wonh- while. You miabtcatcb ooe which miaht prevent one fatality." i.een.r ........... Adu .. Yes. it's a JOOd idea. Swedish women ho•t bazaar The Orange County chapter of the Swedish Women's Educational As$0Ciation will hold its fourth annual Christmas bazaar Sunday from noon to 5 p.m . at the Costa Mesa Community Center, 1845 Park Ave .. Costa Mesa. Handcrafted items. baked goods and Swedish food will be on sale as well as glogg. a hot Swedish Christmas wine, and coffee. Donationa arc SI for adµlts and 50 cents for children under 15. The public is invited. Chapman •lngers to appu.r By SCO'M' STODDARD D.., ""'4 Cerr11, '"* :I Dunng the holiday season. people gJVe thanks for what they have - a loving family, a nice house, a good JOb. But there arc many who aren't as fonunate. The Albert Sitton Home in Orange. for Cllample. shelters abused arid abandoned children ranging in age from 2 days to I 8 years old. many of whom have known only sorrow and pain. But this year the children of the Alben Sitton Home may have reason to celebrate. thanks to the efTons of Eagle Scout candidate J 1m Ganicre of Huntin1uon Beach. cbjld who's unhappy, so l'll help them from a distance." Amato said, ex- ~laining that all six branches of Equitable Savings and Loan, includ· ina those in Fountain Valley and HuntinEn Beach, house large col-lection xes. Book 1 toys, and articles of clothing will be pted until Chnstmas, Jim said. Inspiration for the project came from watching television films de- picting poor children, he said, addina that pmering goods for the home "mi~t be a way I could help them." "l m glad I was able to think of this (project) because they really ap- preciated it and needed it," said Jim, who has already delivered about 300 items to the 25-ycar-old institution. The panel will review the docu· ment and meet with Jim before deciding whether youna Ganiere demonstrated leadership ~onhy of an Eagle Scout The candidate e:xpecu the evaluation process to last three weeks. lf selected, Jim, a sixth grade student at Carden Christian School in Costa Mesa, would become one of the youngest people ever to be chosen Eagle Sco11t. Ne•la People will be men aware. It will keep dru.nk dnvcn off the roed md innocent people won't be tilled." The C'hapman-C~leae inger wi.U~ a-r~t performance at the Chnstmas luncheon or the Monday Morning Club or Laguna Beach Dec. 10 at the Neighborhood Congreg.auonal Church. 340 St. Ann's Dnve. Under the darecuon of Dr. Wilham Hall. the singers will present a pros.ram ofChnstmas caroli. and cantatas at the 11 :30a.m. event Re~rvauons ma) be made by calling l.Jlltan Drew at 496-4425. Since last September, Jim has been working with E.:g_uital:tk arinis and Coan branch manager Gayle Amato Lo collect books. to ys and clothes for the children. The two met when Jim's parents took him to Amato's Foun- tain Valley office of Equatable Sav- ings and Loan for a lesson on credit and savinp. When told about the young scout's proJCCI. Amato said, "I was JUSl so excited about the idea that I JUSt wanted to do what I could to help these children also." -Sonja--Dew:tr ~ Albcs:t-Siu.on Home's activities coordinator, said the toys and books mean a great deal to the children. "A lot of them love to read." she said. And "1f we have a child who's crying a lot, n helps to give ham somctrung to hold onto when soing from one station to· another." Dctcn continued, referring to the ad- missions process in whkh the child encounters many strangers. "It's unusual for a boy to do that before his 13th binhday," accordina to Richard.Snow. a ~ut executive for the El Camino Rcaldlstnct, wh1c ranges from Laguna Beach to San Juan Capistrano.•• 1t•s unusual that be would be able to hold to the sctted- ule," Snow said and remarked that most Scouts don't reach Jim's level until age 16 or 17. "He's really a fine young man; he's a real go-getter," Bishop William Boµsfield of the Church of Jesus Chnst of Latter Day Saints said. "He's self-motivated and a real hard worker, .. added Bousfield. who has known Jim since binh. ~Bud1 "Its wron~ I don't think it's fair to stop people if th~r don·t have a reason to. ........... a._..~ .......... .. It depends on~ ume and how often. I ltunk ~sa aood idea on Friday and Satutday ni&bts. Twmty- four hour suspensions have been tried in Canada and It works. Somcthina like that would be ,ood. .. Adult claues begln In Laguna Adult education classes be~in today in Laguna Beach. Panicipants may register dunng the first two weeks of class. . ~urses includ~ ce":'mics, a watercolor workshop. bcginnmg and continuation French and Spanish, basic academics, beginning and advanced typing and English as a Second Language. All the above classes meet at the high school on Park A venue. A parcnt-<:hild panicipation class will be offered at the former Aliso School on Wesley Drive. Parents of preschoolers can observe their children in structured and free play. A course on word processing will meet at Thurston Intermediate School. Students wiJI learn to use Applewriter II. Milliken and Bank Street Writer pravams. Class schedules. reaistration fees and informauon on high school equivalency programs is avaJlable by calling 494-8546. "There's a need to help these ch1ldren .. .I couldn't stand to sec a Dcten marveled that Jim and his felJow troop members restore and clean the toys. .,, ( Longtime CM resident Cleo Shuyler succumbs Jim's gift project was preceded by smaller-scale philanthropic endeavors, which 1ocludcd pulling weeds from the $f<)UDds of a local church and offenng bis services Lo clean a library. He hopes to anend college and become a stockbroker. In fact., earn- ing a ment badge on mana~ment stimulated ham to save his money and use 1t to invest m stocks. Scott Barrett Newport Beacll Baller Elam Fen Ne.,.rt Beed Bouewtfe Monday, Nov. 26 • 7:30 p.m. HuotlD1toa Beacb City Coucll Ci ty Council Chambers, 2000 Main St. Cleo H. Shuylcr. 86. a longtime Costa Mesa res1deni. died Nov. 17 at Spectrum Care in Lona Beach. Born in Craig. Mo. in 1898, Mrs. Shuyler was a homemaker. She was a member of the Order of the Eastern Star in Hutchinson, Kan. and ~icipated in a Kooa Lanes bowhng league in Costa Mesa. Mrs. Shuyler is survived by three sons, Clifford W. Shuyler of Costa Mesa, Merton Shuyler of Hutchmson. Kan. and Max Shuyler of Corpus Christi, Texas; a daug.hter, Frances Simpson of Independence. Kan.; a sister, Karrie Bishop of San Diego; rune ~ndchildren; and sax great-grandchildren. Funeral services were held Nov. 20 at Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway Chapel, the Re v. Bruce A. Kurrie officiating. Interment was 1n Fairlawn Cem- etery in Hutch1nsori.. Kan. "I want money to work fC1f me. not me for 11," Gamcrc said. expla101ng his ultimate goal. At the moment, however. about 113 children at the Alben Silton Home att awa1tmg the fruits of his shon-term project. For tho~ wanting to depos11 gilb for thC' home, Equ1r.able Sa''ings and Loan 1s open from 9 a.m. ro 4 p.m .. Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m. ro 6 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. to I p.m. Saturday. "No. I don't tbmlc n's a good idea at all . For one thing the} will have LO hare more police officers and that would 1ncrcas.e taxes. And besides, who knows how far the) would ao af\er that. It sounds hke it's a start of something scary." "I llunk that dnmk driv- ers arc such a terrible danger on our roeds. But, alona with other Nies that arc invadina people's pnvacy -it creates pro~ lems. I don't see lhiJ as a solution." Purse sna~ching sUspects captured in Costa Mesa Two men who alleaedly robbed a Newport Beach woman at knifepoint. and eluded a aood Semarahan wbo ebued them, were arrested Saturday in Costa M~ police reponed today. '!!!f W. Rieb of Newport Bach and Kirk ijilsren of Colla Meu ~ lnble A mtaurant manqcr WIJ amsted Friday on embeufement charaes after alleaedyketina $8,800 in recelpu. Roben C. Weinberpr, 28, manqcr of El ConejoJ.. 1471 S Jeffrey Road, was booked at unn~ County Jail at\tr the restaurant t owner dbcovercd almost $9,000 mi11in.a while rtviewina his bank deposit record1, police My. •••• Buratm netted a microwave and 1tmo valued at Sl,100 from a Comell Street home over the week· end. • • • Jewelry, 1 nerco. television and a fur wttt taktn from 1 Lincoln S\reet home.· • • • Oardenina equipment worth S800 w11 taken from I tNck parked at 16700 Red Hill Ave. Wednetday. • • • Someone 1tole a video camera frOm O&rtil TV, 1 S33l Calver Dnve S.turday. • • • AT ·top wa1 taken from a Corvette taken into custody a week after the Nov. 17 stronpnn robbery in a aboppina cent.er at the intenection of Westcliff Drive and lrvine Avenue in Newport Beach, police reported. Both art beina held at S2S,OOO bail. Detectives said two men, one armed with a knife. gnbbed a woman's purse and then Ocd in an older model Ford Pinto. An unadtn· hficd man cbucd the bandits into Cotta Mesa but lost them in traffic. Police said they art looking for witncqes to the pune snatchina. left in a P9fkina 1tall on Apncot on Ute carpet at Video Ch iccJ 16520 Drive. Beach Blvd. Newport Beach Someone took 1.m icrowave oven, a video caueue recorder and a tele· vision aet from a residence on Balboa Boulevard. Police said It appears the crook entered the residence lhrouah an unlocked khehen window. . i . A Fiat wonh 2,000 WU atolen from Its perlana 1pot near Newpon Center. A poeket'lwatc:h wonh S600 wu stolen frcwn the top oh drcuer in an apantMn\ on lht 400 block of Promontory Point Dnve. • • • About S.00 in dlmqe was done to an Isuzu coupe Darked In a parkint SlNCture II tM Park Newpon lpeft· ment. Police laid IOmeoAC amuhed In the aide of the car. ~811ela Someone droDDtd bUm na paper thro\llh a mall -,lot In an appartnt anon attempt and burned two poU • • • Four males stole SSO in lumber from a constl'Uctlon site in the t 800 block of 17th Street. • • • Thieves stole a caue\te bolder and tapes valued at $90. •SI SO stereo and a wallet that contaJncd no cash from a car In the 9000 block of Hyannis Pon. • • • A nude male wu reported lurk.ins on lhe nonh lide of tbc e_qucsuian center at Central Park. • • • A woman was detained by teauity l)trt0n.oe1 at w Soonman. 743) EdJnetr Ave.,~ allcledJy steahns Slllln dothina.. --""" .. SomcoM Stolt • uo 11111 It Dltcount Farmcn Mar\tt, 9940 Hamilton Ave. • • • lu."'1an s«>'e a com~ and Qten11on cord• valued at 1450 &om a ..,_ In \be 16000 bloa or Delton. ho ~tn •'* S5 ~n beer from the Cude K, l 949CJ;Be1Cb Blvd. • • • Thieves broke a front door and stoic $750 from cash regi ster at ha.keys Pizza. 19300 Beach Blvd. • • • Thieves stoic a wallet containing $60 cash that a man put in hi5 mail box whale play1na ball with a1uven1le on the front yard of has rcs1denct in the 700 block of Pecan. Lapn&Beacb An attempted robbery at Cl~ Street Beach lef\ the v1ct1m stabbed and knocked unconcaous. The victim descnbed the assa.tlant as a white male. 26. standina S feet St"ven tnChcs tall and wti&hina about 160 pounds. The attack occurred at 12:30 a.m. Sunday. • • • • Valuables totether wonh about $500 were reported stolen . &om a locked car parked on South Coast Hi&}lway Saturday afternoon. • • • A 1983 MeT'CC!del Bent was re. poncdly stolen by armed robbers early Saturday on Skyline Drive. The c.ar. bowtver, ,... recovered in Mitlion Viejo Sunday e"enine. The owocr of the car dacribcd the suspects a two white males l 6 to 18 yean oldl starullaa about 5 feet l 0 Inches tal . • • • A tnan's 1 S.ltarat told Rok1 watch wu f'Cl)Orlcd Jolt rriday e~cnina at the oonh end of Mlln 8cach • • • A llakiah baqdc was reported • toleii from under a carport Fnday e\'Cftiaa on Cypress On ve. c.-.... A ralhof allt9td bopht\anacnmcs plqued Costa Meu bu in ovtr the •ttkend. A 1 O.year-okt COia Meu aarl was \tooocd unday by •• secunt' officers at K-Man wh o allegedh discovered $44 in stolen merchandise. Dorothy Jones Burton. 54. of Del Mar, was arrested Saturda> at the Ma} Co. at South Coast Plaza on susp1c1on ofsteahn1S 103 wonh of merchandise Sabena Toor. :? I. of long Beach. was arrc tcd on susp1· c1on of petty theft at ordstrom's Fnda) cvemna after sh ~cdl}' <;Witched pntt tap 0 JICkC would hive aiven r a S 150 d1 • count. iwo Stanton sisters -Lisa Colette Jones, 28. a cf Tina Mane Jones. 24 -were cau&ht b) secunt} officcn Saturday at llullocks after they allcaccUy swnrhcd pocc taaS as well. Hilda Rua. 55. of Santa Anal. wu caujht Fnday wnh $10 worth ot carrin&S-allq.:ecUy S10len from Bull- ()(lcs. nd an unknown suspect stok the purse of another shopper Satur· day af\emoon while lhe was compar- lna sweater sir.cs,. oolice uid. . ... A susp«t who convin<lCd an Euon market employ« he needed cash to help out with an accident down the sim:t made off with S60 cash Sunday afternoon. l he vtct1m told polioc that the suspect flashed a security bedat an<tnkcd to borrow $60 cash wilt\ the promise to repay the loan two boun later. The loan wa1 never rcpeid. The suspect was described as scandi"4 S feet I 0 inches. heavily built WJth blonde hair. • • • <\ purse and its contents were rtcd stolen from under the table o C6fta Mesa njabt club early Saturday The victim said she left the purse unattended wbile abc was danana. The loss totaled $43. • • • The owner of the J & M Unjon 76 uitaon on Newport Boulevard told police he suspccts two employees of steahna about $800 that aboald have been placed rn the AMioA ·, art Saturday evenina. When be tried to contact the two Newport 8c8cb men the ne:u day. he was told they bad moved. • • • A •old necklace valued at S 12.S and a rina valued at SI 00 were reponed stolen Saturday from a .home on ham rock Parolee held in slaying spree ., th Affeda ... , ..... A cnmeSJ)fttthat claimed the h'-'ts o( four )'ouna tort and pa sta\JOD ckrb has reJUlted 1n a .lkount murder1 robber)' and kidnap-rape <-omplainl IPID tan Ari1ona pn n paro1ce. TcoAlo Medina Jr , 4 t, alt0 lcnowl> a Fra11k Rocco. ..ucaned.. fow- clcrb 1n nta na. Garden Grove and Corona wtth a pistol stolen Oct l l ffom a pa..,n !hop, .aid Thomas Avdccf. the Orante County~~ d1 tnct attomc who said he will the death penalty if Medina ~ convtcted ftc1' the felony oompla1nt was filed "'1 wed, Ccrltnl Munaopal Coun Judlr Edward Lau'd ordc1"ed Mcdtna bcld without bail an Ora~ County Jail. He delayed Medina• a.rraapment' unuJ Nov 29 at tbe rtqut t or coun ppo1n\ed ckfeOJt \aW)er Ronald Kttber. .. .... I I ... .. .. :· •• .. .. • ' "' .. ' ' .. .. .. .. ~ "" . .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Novemb« 28. 1984 \.... World Court's ruling U.S. booze cOnsumption oils U. S._conteatia~· -·~asses 1nta1te·of mut 1. spins\ stress 2. headache 3. neck pa\~ 4 back pa\n 5'. muscle . &. ioint pain consultation Free accepted IJi-----1 Most 1ns1..1rsr;rull with 11\\18 as payment t·pOCket eit· or no out·O ~--r pense , ••• can disputes for a period of two years. That utement by \he United St.ates wu intended'" to undercut Niteraaua'a filina or iu come_Jaint three days later. The World Court today ruled that the United States cannot exempt itself in advance from coun authonty. · Despite its aonouncem~i. the United States wianed a lepl team to the case and has partjcipated in the proceeclinas thus far. The coun bued its rulina on U.S. acceptance of its authority on a l 946 U.S. pledae to unequivocaJly re- cosniu court Juri~ict1on unless the United States had Jiven six months notico tbat it would not do so. The coun's usumption of jurisdJc- tion in the cue cleared the-way for hcarinas on U.S.-supported miJiwy aclion apimt the leftist Sandinista aovemment. Those bcarifl&S could take several years, and any ruling would not be bindina since the court has no enforcement powers. The court aJso ruled today that last May's interim ruling against the United States -which ordered it to cease any military actions against the Sandinistas and to .. fully respect Nicaraauan sovercianty and political independchoe" -sholild remain in force until a final adjudication of the dispute. The United States backs anti· Sandinista rebels based in Honduras and Costa Rica. Nicragua's leaders have claimed that the United States is plannini an "imminent" invasion of the Central American country. Mo Oectuctl>'e Mo Co-payment Somali hijackers play waiting game WHY? "° 0 -9ftl_.. ,.. '-'"' .--. Ho ,,.,.,., ~'-"-Juet .,. enonnow H l1 ctloft of -& ,,-·~ fvn by lrtt.rnotlonelty·known deslgn•r• -llf ptlc9I '°" , ..... ,.., .. , WEDNESDAY ONLY . HOLIDAY INN 3131 BRISTOL ST. DAil Y 11-6 PM And, doft't mfH our Hceptlonel ..&.ctlon of ,,. • ..,,.,.. 9'14 ...... fvn that look entl ' ... , Mlle -(ltut mu1t IHt den lfl.cl •• MCOft4.'-cf wed). TRAD£ IN YOUR PRESENT FUR NOW! Wt S,.Cioliit in Those Hord 10 Find Sitts I ADDIS ABABA. Ethiopia (AP) - The fourth deadline set by Somali hijackers threatening to blow up a Somalia Airlines jct with I 08 people aboard passed without incident today, and Ethiopian officiaJs said they were negotiating with the aun- men. Information Ministry officials told reporters at Bole International Air- port that talks with the sky pirates were being supervised by Foreign Minister Goshu Wolde. The officials did not disclose the substance of the talks. _ More (ood was taken. aboard the Boeing 707, which has been parked at the airport since Saturday, the same day it was hijacked on a night from ' "'~ f ; 1 I I ( /1 ' fOU Tiff /IO J.JJ >Al'\" 11rrr1'H!,f'1llf'11I from 11nn llnnrrt \. Fm n \11H{lt ~prr1;• nf orr l11d\ o r 11 lw roqw· fot11tnv. ""r dt•He,nn <rm 11.\1'" wfa ~ Holiday : fatalities < 1n/11on nr 11 111/J/1'< lotli '" roordmnlrnn nrrnngPmr nl to v o11r r/n o r ) 'rw 1i111\1 \1°/111 I from I hr< nnmir~. t•n.\f'.\ and ,,, In 111c:. m , '"" Ol1 'II r r JI// 111711' I I I, I I I / .• ~,.11 J, J'/4. ~ ( 1'-. T· '/ "A( / -• j I /"'~"""11'-~ I I I 'A . ..,, • ?-vo~mert !/nterioa ~ ( (J\ I I ll·'v f I'''' ,\ft1'/'"'' IH1·tl 61'! Jfl'fl 0/Jru 11 ~-JO Mmt. 1/1111 \nl ~ I ~If.I ,\ I RF.. CJ/ f /t, ,\' < ''"'' /111'\ /'l.f.ft ~"i/ Of"'"''~ ln M m1 1!t111 \111 nm/ I'!' \1111 ~tt f//////t I/,•----·---.. _ • --- ' I I a !II decline B7daeA.Mda-9Pmt • WASHINGTON -Americans arc drlnkinl mote alcoholic-bever11t1 than they art milk but eoft driJ\k.t are the most po~ of all. •Y• a new ._,.;culture Department report. Overall. per capita eonaumpuon of ~ · · u prod oed beverqes" rose to an averaee of l 33 ~om lo l 982 f;:::~':u~ns co~umed 20 years carlie,r. ~t incl~del milk, :'r·2~a, beer, wtne and llquon. soft drinn ~nd f rut~uices. Milk account or . l reentoftbetot.aldrinkaconsumedin l982. rmadeup 18.l~nt while ~ne and liquors accounted for 3. l perc:cnt. e 19~2 consumpuon lnciuded: milk. 29 percent; beer. t 3.2 percent: and wine and liquors. 2 percent. In other words usina those fiaures Americans on the ave~ drank about 27 plJon~ of milk i~ l 982. compared whh sJightJy more than 33 plJons in J 962. Meaowb1lc, beer consumption rose to 24. 3 gallons. in 1982 from about I ~ aatlons 20 years earlier. Wine and liquor consumptiort an creased from about 2.1 pllons in 1962 to 4. l gaJlons. Bb._,,,an ban• ba .. bJ6 . RAJNEESHPURAM, Ore. -Oisciples~fBhagwan Sh.~ Rajneetb, who already use &loves during sex, have been adv1~ tC? stop k1~1na to avofd the danger of AfDS. which the Indian guru says WJ.lJ kill two-thif<Ss of the world puJation. "Rajnceshces"comprisc such a hom~eneous society and-a elose-~1t community that we all need to be rcspons1ble towards ~ other, s~p kisslni, and respond 10 this disease with 1ntel!itcnce " the ~IJoecsb. Medi~J Corp. said in a release published. in a recent ed1uo~ of the Ra1neesb Tames. If you arc smart, you will stop kissing," it said. R~tdents of the eenti:al ~on commune-caty also wc~e ~dviscd not to s~are etgarettes, food or .drink an to rinse all cups and utensils ma bleach solution after washing. Oenusu were told to wear gloves and maslcS. G•• bl••t kill• five, b.arttJ 2 J ~ ST. FRANCISVILLE. La. -An isolated bunting camp was reduced to "just charred leaves and ~tUm{>s" by a. 2SO.f~.t flrcball from a nat~ral p s pipeline that eitplod~d wh1.le bemg rep?ired, lc.ilbng fi v:e worken and injunng 21 other people. officials said. Authont1es were uncertain wb~t ca';&Jed the blast Sunday afternoon about 12 miles wat of St. Francisville m ~e hilly. southeastern Louisiana woods as workers for Clarkco of Jackson, Mias., and Texas Eastern Gas Corp. of Houston reconditioned the pipelin~ ... ~I we know is that a construction crew was working on a Texas Eastern hoc, said West Feliciana Parish Sheriff Bill Daniels. "For some unknown reason, there was an eruption that was followed by an eitplosion." Reagan to meet Iraq envoy WASHINGTON -After a 17-ycar diplomatic break, President Rcqan was set to preside at the reopening of American rclatio!ls ~th l~q. ~ Arab nation that only 21h years IJO was on the U.S. terronst i;ist. Hts e.abt~y California vacation behind him, Reagan was back at t~e Wh!t~ House toda~ to recei ve Tariq Aziz, who doubles as th~ Iraqi deputy pnme mlD!Stcr and f~ minister. Convin~lballraq-• . 1te States was prepared to restore the ti~ that w~re snapped by. Baghdad 10 1967 to protest American support for Israel in the Six-Day War wtth Egypt, Syria and Jordan. New toWD vown rent rollback WEST HOLLYWOOD -Several hundred elderly residents of this new city cheered as members of the new City Council announced a rent rollback and named key city officials at a aet-acquain~ed..mecting. Council mem~rs-elect John Heilman, Helen Albert and Alan V1turb1 told the Sunday gathcnna that when they take of!icc Thursday rent~ will immediate~y ~rolled back. to levels of Aug. 6, with a sill-month freeze on increases and evictions. There W1U aJso be a four-month moratorium on building while traffic and zoning problems arc studied. Although great attention was given t,o the elcctio~ of lhJ:ee openly P Y council members, rent control was the key issue for rcs1ltents m the Nov. 6 election in which votcn approved creatmg ttre city by a 2-l margin. Docton probed ln deatb. LOS ANGELES -Two brothers, both physicians, are beioa invcsdptcd because the wife of one died after addictive drua use and the other brother siancd her death certificate, according toa J?Olice.aff!davit filed in court. !drma Le vine. 33. had been taking the narcouc pamk1ller Demerol despite her husband's objections. but ''in the end she would get whatever she wanted," her sister is quoted as saying in the police document Mrs. Levine was fou nd"1ead May l 2 by her husband, Or. Stephco M. Levine. 4 l , according to the affida'\>it filed in Van Nuys Municipal Court. According to the affidavit, after fi nding his wife dead, Stephen Levine summoned his brother, Dr. David L Levine, 42 . who officutlly pronounced her dead and listed the cause of death as cardiac arrest caused by seizure disorder and metabolic electrolyte imbaJance. JloretembloninSierra MAMMOTH LAKES -Two moderate aftershocks rolled through the Sierra Nevada over the weekend, but few people in towns shaken by a strong earthquake last week felt the temblors and no dam• was reported, authorities said. The larger of the two aftershocks struck at 3: 10 p.m. Sunday, measuring 4. 7 on the Richter scaJc of ground motion. Jt was ~ntcn:d about I 0 miles northwest of Bishop, said Mu Zeal. warning controller for the state Office of Emergency Services in Sacramento. Financier Smitb. to be6fn term SAN DIEGO -After years of appeals and several delays of a 1entence imposed sill weeks aao. convicted financier C. Arnholt Smith was expected to surrender today to begln serving a one-year term in the San Diqo County Jail. Through numerous appeals, the SS.year-old Smith has remained free despite convictions an 1979 of grand theft and income Wt evasion. The last of those appeals, a request to the California Supreme Coun for a bearina on its ~fuaal to hear Smith's petition for a writ of habeus corpus, wu rejected lut week. Smith, a former owner of the San Diego Padres baseball team and a one-time "Mr. San Diego," was sentenced Oct. lO by Superior Coun Judge Kenneth A. Johns to the prison tenn. TJ zwldeam plc~et 1u compaa7 TlJUANA, Mexico -StiJJ moumina for their countrymen killed lo a sencs of ps explosion~ \hat destroyed a Meitico City neiabbothood tut week • Ti~uana ruidcnts are tr)'ina to avoid a similar occurance in one of their ne1ahborhood1. Last friday1 more than 150 people from Colonia Cutill~l a world na-class nclahborhooo northeast or downtown, man:hed in front of tne pa comptny distribution oenter in their neiahborhood. "We don't want . anotbec Lrqedy like the one t~t has the whole country in moumina," said Rosa Maldonado, a community leader who headed the in front orthe Tijuani Oas Co. Plllllpplae Nttle ~. 4 ZAM BOANOA CITY' Phili\)P.ines-Seventeea armed mn IWftlidaed today after a 21-hour ii. In which they took 63 bol.._. and f<>Ulht 1 two- houraun battle with sold1m that Id\ four people deed and 11 wouna.c&. Men than SOO soldiers b9cked by a tank and tbn:e umored penonncl earn.. bad rinaed the buiJdina near dowtown Z.amboenp followina lbe lhooU111. wbkh broke out ahonly after noon Sunday. A laf1C crowd that bad sathered..., tbe scene cheered at.the men CinaUy emeflld today from a two-t1CM'y ...... , bualdlna wtlh thtlr ho&laeea, mostly women and duJdrm. AutMl'i'* tdentificd the lelder of the lln& H former poliele pttl'Olman Rizal •·wt.o they said wu amons the 1uspccu in the Nov. 1'4 uuuination of Zam..._ Mayor Cesar Chmaco. THESE SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE MONDAY NOVEMBER 28 THROUGH WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 28, 1984 , I D-3 DIV nLv1 - .· ... LB. CALIFORNIA NAVEL ORANGES •LIMIT 4 CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP • 12.5 OZ. CAN EA •IN WATER .-•IN OIL CHICKEN OF THE SEA CHUNK LIGHT TUNA EA. SKAGGS ALPHA BETA ENGLISH MUFFINS .. •PACK OF IO ·•GRAPE ·' : 99 • WATE.llMELON EA. • ORANGE •APPLE CAPRI SUN .• PUNCH DRINKS . -.· .. : WELL.A BALSAM SHAMPOO • 16 OZ. BOTTLE• DRY OR NORMAL I WEl:bA BALSAM CONDmONER • 16 oz. iO't'l1.£ • IEGULAI Oii EXTllA BODY YOUR · . CHOICE 49 EA. LB. BONELESS RUMP ROAST . . •LIMIT 4 • BEEF ROlJND ~EA. • 2 UTER BOTTLE RC, DIETBITEOK_ DIET RC 100 • ZOCOUNT EA . A.R.M. TABLETS Copyright 1984. All r1ghl1 rnerved we reHrve th• rtght to hm1t quantities Sales tax collec1ed on all tauble 1tem1 Beer Wine & LtQuor not available in all stdtes Price• Effective •t •II Southern C•llfornl• Alph• Bet• M•rketa TELL-A-FR·IEND .. • • . ____ ___.. _ _.,,,.._.-~. -------. ) --~ • • ........J.--_..,~.µ;...---...:;~~5__..,..__ ~~~~-=---~-=~~~--tr~--.. . .. ~ . Orange COMt DAILY PILOT/Monday, Novemw 28, 1U. lowest ratioJ...Just below Pittsburshi man of Princeton's Office of Popu- Columbus, vhio; Buffalo, N.Y.; ana • lation Reteareh. They found the Neve,...snamed men over lbe •of 4S were eliminated from tho pool. NEW YORK CAP) -SinaJc between the qcs of 20 and S9. women livina on New York•• Loni San Dieao tops the Ust. closely lllaDd have lbe worst chance of ~llowed b Houston c: ... Francisco 4a---~l'llMI .... ~. ~t eli&t~malet-Or d .._-& .-mocMaaG in San Diqo and 1-touston 1 cw leans .n Los Anaeles. The St. Louls. ~market "it one when. .. ~cmamlijormetropolif.an IMl1 (orcn Of supply and demand" apply Lons Island has the natlon·s worst in the same ways as in businesa. (eliP,ble) man sbon:qe," said Lbe The rcscarchen said the totaJ arucle, noti., that up to 7,000 nwnbtr of unmatried men bet~n marriaaea distol ve there each year 16 and 64 it about the same as that of and many of tho.ee men move into unmarried women, and marriqe- New YOl't City (12th OD the li11.). minded men cu ••,eta fairtyaccurate aiudy ci&ed fituret-lhet thawed "if a penon hat not married by the qe of 45. the chaacea of marriaer thereafter are almost nU -about one in 100:• .. ' • aew atudy has found. ' researchers, bow~ver, noted their ,,_ Princeton University study, data for San Francisco may be flawed releeted today hv Money mapzine becauJ& of tho latte numbtr of l'lllkl the nauonf• 38 laraest metrO.: homosexual men there. Politu areas aocordina to the ratio of Nassau and Suffolk counties1 wunarried, heterosexual men avail-' wbicb comprise the Lona blano able for every 100 sin&le women suburbs of New York City, have the Seaalde vlaltor A 230-foot Venezuelan carfo abip cruhed Into the Palm Beach home of Moille Wlfmont du.rtnc lut weekend'• " Tbc study was conducied by view of their pro1peets by reversing Charles F. WettofT and Noreen Oold· \be rltiol .. in the 11udy. •tonne ln Southern Florida. All crew members walked off the •hlp to Afety. N. Koreans vow 'blood for blood' Communists claim Soviet defector was fiiK'en forcibly to South Korea Korean war stipulates that guards the Demilitarized Zone. While Fri· -=-====·-~ _assigned to-thc-joint-secu~ area~y'nhMting was lermeall\e gravest carry only sidearms. in the security area, there have been PANMUNJOM, Korea (AP) - The Korean Military Armistice Com- mission held a bitter four-hour meet- ing today to t1iscuss the shootout here three days ago, and U.S. military officers showed a video tape to back up their version of the incident. to the? South. The Nonh Korean senior delegate. Maj. Gen. Lee Tac Ho, demanded that the Russian be returned promptly. The U.N. Command said the clashes in other parts of the Dem1- North Koreans used AK-47 auto-litariz~ Zone that ha ve resu lted. 1n ma tic ri fl~ in the I 0-minute fircfipn casualties. and 30 minutes of sporadic shoouna Friday. About 80 U.S. and South Korean troops reoortedly took part. The joint security area where military armistice meetings are held is an 2.62.S-foot-dia~eter oval inside The Korean War ended with no peace treaty, only the armistice, and the buffer zone between the South and North concenfrates huge military forces on each side. The top IO marriaae markets, and their ratios of men per I 00 womco bctwten the aaes of 20 and S9 are: San Dieao1 7S. I· Houston, 73.S; San Francisco. 7l.2: New Orleans, 70.2; The oonom IO are: Nauau.Suffolk counties. 49.2· Pitttburab. S2.2: Col- umbuJ, s2.S; 8Uft'alo, S~. I; St. Louis, S4.2; Saa Antonio, Tcua. S4.S; Indianapolis, H .4; Newark, N.J .. SS.6; Minneapolis-St. Paul, S6.S; Cincinna ti, S6.S. Artificial heart patient critiCal bUt.stabletoda~ Internal bleeding halted six hours afte.r surgery ends ---- LO UISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Wil- liam J. Schroeder, the world's second recipient of a permanent anificial heart was in critical but stable condftion today with a plastic pump beating in his chest despite losing half his blood when his aorta began bleeding after the implant. "I'm happy to tell you the patient is doing very well this momina." said Dr. Allan M. Lansing. chairman of Humana Heart Institute Inter- national, where Schroeder's dis· tortcd, malfunctioning~ .hcan was re~laced with softly cl icking 'lir- driven device in a seven-hour oper- ation Sunday. "He is not bleeding." Lansing said. "He is wann, pink and dry, indicating excellent circulation .... ihere appear to be no major complications." . Schroeder is sedated and will continue to be on a respirator to assist his breathing today because of some haziness shown on X-rays of his lungs, he said. He shows slight kidney and liver problems, but these are to be ex~ted after open-heart surgery. be said. Before the operation, doctors had said Schroeder would have had less than a week to live without the artificial heart. The·Jarvik-7 heart, similar to the one that kept Barney Clark ahve for 112 days in Salt Lake City two years ago, was functioning normally, as was its-dclvc-S¥&lem,-bansint•id.- Dr. Robert Jarvik, the artificial heart's inventor, said in an interview on "CBS Morning News" this mom· ing that Schroeder had .. done very well over the night, considering the b~cding problem, which seems to have alleviated overnight." Shortly after tbc operatton, Schroeder had be~ wide awake. squeezed surgeon William C. DcVries' hand. and even tried to get out of bed, Lansina said. But at 8:30 p.m., less than six hours after the heart implant was com- pleted, the 52-year.old retiree was rusbed back to the operating room when doctors could not stem a flow of blood accumulating in his chest. By the time the bleedina was stanched, shonly before 10 p.m., Schroeder had lost 8,000 cubic cen .. ti meters of blood. oir about half of tho blood in bis body, Lansina said.I Schroeder, who ~ived muaive transfusions, was returned to a cor., onary intensive care unit, wbeR be. was in critical but stable condition today, officials SJi~. Lansing said some internal Gleed- ing had been expected becau~of scat tissue on Schroeder's aneries front earlier bypasuu11ery. The blood was leak.ina from a bole where the artificial bean was stitched to the aorta, the principal artery tha1 carries blood from the heart to the res\ oftbe body. Jarvik said the mood in tho operating room during Schroeder's implant surgery differed sharply from' that in the Univenity of Utabt operating room where Clark bccam<- the first recipien t of a permanent artificial heart. "It was an entirely different situ .. ation here - a great feeling ·in the operating room of deliberate, calm progress," Jarvik said. "There wa~ never a pomt when we felt we miaht lose him." Clark lived for 112 days after lhc. Dec. 2, 1982, implantation of his artificial heart. He died of circulatorj collapse caused by multiple oipn failures-. - Schroeder's artificial heart wu implanted by Clark's sura~on1 DcVries, the only person authorizeo by the U.S. Food and Drug Adminis- tration to implant the experimental device. Schroeder. a retired quality ... surancc specialist at Crane Naval Weapons Support Center in Crane, Ind .. lives wtth his wife of 32 years, Margaret, and his six children. The 426th meeting of the com- mission was called because of the .. gravity" ofa gun battle Friday in the joint secunty area of this truce site. Three North Korean soldiers and one South Korean soldier were killed, and one American soldier and one North Korean were wounded. Nonb Korea's offiGial news agency quoted Col. Kim Du Hwan , a Nonh Korean member of the armistice commission, as declaring at the three dead North Korean soldiers' funeral that .. the U.S. imperialist aggressors must pay dearly for their murder of our revolutionary convades-in- arms.'' It said he added: .. Blood for blood. We must avenge our comrades on the provocateurs a thousand fold." Tech t alk: It.'s common interfaci~g The shooting broke out when a Soviet defector, a member of a North Korean-sponsored tour group, bolted to safety in the South. At today's meeting. North Korea repeated 1ls charges that the Russian -identified as Janguage student Vasiliy Yakovlev1ch Matuzok - strayed across the demarcation hne inadvertently and was taken forcibl y · The agency's broadcast also said the incident proves Sou1h Ko;ean authorities had no interest In recent North-South dialogue and tried to disrupt 1t. The U.N. Command. led by the United States, had stated before that the defector crossed into the South voluntanly. Today, U.S. Rear Adm. Charles F. Horne Ill, chief U.N. delegate on the comm1sssion. offered a video tape to back that contention. SAN JOSE (AP) -Some call It high-tech talk. To -other9, tt'• technobabbte. Ancttn1tJe S111con Valley, It'• juat anott• converaa- tlon. . The vocabulary of computer•. once the province of tMec::tronlca wizards, le creeping Into the EngMah language -·-and not everyone appreciatea the Input. "In the 1970t, everything had to be 'relevant.' Today, every- thing has to be 'state-of.th• art,'" Mid Louis Rew. an Engllah Instructor at San Joee S"tate Unfverllty. Student•' ltudy break• are now known u "downtime," their euy textbooks are "ueer friend- ly" and when the kid• aren't "networking" the(re "Inter- facing." "It ueed to be that you'd only hear thOM expr .. a1on1 right here In SUlcon Valley, but now every- body seema .to be ualng them," Rewuld. A p1yohotogl1t rec.nttv enrot- led In San Frlinc*o'• Women'• Computer Uter~ Pro)eet be- cau• she couldn t understand the high-tech terms her patients were using to detcrlbe their problems, said the project'• di- rector, Deborah Becker. "More and more people ~ to be Ulfng theee wordt to talk aboUt everyday ttfe," she added. ''I'm dtegusted by It, actual!}'." At SAi loternatlonal, In.._,.., P~. a telfT1 of edttora tr....._ technlc* ~ lnto Englllh, ~) technk:ll ~ J•lle Aotden MYS the "'8y beftghttng • lollnst battle. "The other day a frltnd of mine ltld lhe wa .... no trouble with her boytrtend Md n11ded to· 'debug' their r•tlonlhlp," ft recounted. ''What wa IC*Y to me WU thet ft Mid It wttl\ a perfectly straight fece. '' HOL IDA Y SKIERS ABOUND A video tape machine was set up.in the commission meeting room and footaJe was shown of the young Russian being questioned by a mem-· ber of the U.N. Command. On the tape, the young man identified himself as a Russian from Moscow and said he had been planning to defect to the West for two years. He said he crossed the lin e into the South of his own free will. Pasadenans_lampoOn Rose Parade By Tlte AHoclated Pre11 . Record crowds of skiers were reported over the Thanksgiving weekend in the Sierra Nevada. along with massive traffic snarls on major hi~ways. 'We had the best Thank<;giving ' weekend m our 25-year h1sto11." sa id Bill Jensen of Squaw Valle~ "0.,.er the 4-day weekend we sold 21 .207 lt ft tickets. That's a very ~1gn1ficant amount." Brady Hodge at Heaven!~ Valley also reported .. a temfic weekend. one of the best openings ever " S1m1lar comments came from other Sierra Nevada ski resorts although all ..aid a heavy storm on Saturday kept many skiers off the mountatnJ. The Pros ' Since 1951 "It was a quite voluntary decision. Yes , I would like to stress voluntary." he said.·· 1 don •t want to go back to the North Koreans.'' 'We 're tasteless, and we wanted to stand out in the crowd-. - Hesaidhehadbeenwork1ng1n1he PAS ADENA (AP) The Soviet Embassy in Pyongyang, the Toro!Toro'Toro! lawnmower team North Korean capital There have added "rake dancers" this year, and been unofficial accounts 1n Seoul, the "tasteless" Texas Chainsaw where the defector is now, saying he Massacre Drool Tc.am was back, wanted to go to the United States. malting the 8th Occasional Doo Dah Sources said that becau$( South Parade seem almost an institution. Korea and the Soviet Union do not But parade founder Peter Apanel have diplomatic relations. the defec-said Sunday, .. If this is an institution, tor probably would be classified as a then mst1tut1ons are in trouble.'' te mporary refugee and the United About 60,000 people packed the Nauons High Commissioner for sidewalks of Pasadena's "Old Town" Refugees 1n Rome asked to intervene. area tive-dccp with an entbusi45m The defection Fnday set off what nvaling the million-strong crowds of the U.N. Command 1enned the Rose Parades _ which arc an "most senous violation in the JOint institution in Pasadena. sccunty area in the history of the They saw such divene entries as armistJcr agreement." lt cnarged that the Sychronizcd Briefcase Drill Team 1..-,.~1 IAllITT llSUUICE 20 to 30 North Korean auards and the Great American Yankee ~ charged over the demarcation line (GAY) freedom Band from West • ~ N h into the South, finng their wcap0ns 1n Hollywood as -well as the mower and {!, ~ onR~~e~ er pursuit of the defector chainsaw wiclden. Present rules call for secunty "When we staned, there were a lot 1 , 831-7740 guards of both sides to remain in their of counterculture aroupa, now, .,., Old Newpo'1 •tvd. own sections of the )Otnt secunty there's a lot more corporate sroups," Newport lleech, ca. area, and the arm1st1ce a~ment said banker James Kemp, leader of ;;;:==============~t=h=at::e::n:::d::ed::t::h::e JlfiEti:::n=::::in::t::he=t 9::::5::::0-::::.S::;3-,·the Briefcase Drill Team. "I took a " p01l, and all but two of our team r •• ,r., s••d o•nner membcrt voted for Rcaaan -the 5••, I ••' •1 othenareoutofstepanyway." r ' But some cluna stubbornly to a ~peclals 16.9S l.l~~· ... telessand we wanted to stand out in the crowd:· said Don Prime Rib or Fresh Fish Coursey. 29, of Huntinaton Beach.. lbc leader of the Drool T cam and the C ompl~t~ Dlnn~r with cholc~ of Niaht of the Uvina Obhonor Ouard. "We're mental NeandcnhaJs. We soup or salad and d~ss~rt want people to boo us a1 ~ ao by." 4' to 6 PM Coursey wore an necutioJ'Cr't ma•k and e&rried a fake bead speared l llJI A WllLJ on a stake. He wore real ch1ok:cn ltp • dan1Hn1 from a nctkJl(lC. 801 E. BALBOA 673-7726 lfnJike the other famous Pasadena L------------------------...-4 parade. the 0oo Dah Parade has no theme.judging or motonzed vehicles, Apanel said. It's called .. occasional," not annual, because one year they had two Doo Dah parades. Sunday's event featured 140 en- tries. many of them with satirical or political messages. The Dump Developers of Un - scrupulous Mindless Pollution promoted low-income housing on the nation's toxic waste dumps. .. You don't even need clcctncity," said Mark Kemmer, 29 , a Huntington Beach real estate developer wbo offered Three Mile Island Triplexes. Silkwood models and stock with a half-ltfe of .S00,000 years. While taste was not a prime consideration, few spectators seemed offended. They lined the streets under sun ny skies to cheer and whistle for their favorite entries. .. It's wonderful entertainment . There's a lot of spirit," said Carol Farina, 40, a nurse who came from Grand Junction, Colo .. to sec it. Her favorite ifOUp was the Canc,creues, a twirling group of human cigarette ~xes. Jim Foster, 37, oflrvme led the I .S· member Toro!Toro!Toro! mower le.am. .,, ... ., .. ~ llemben of the Syncbroallied BtW ... Drtll team,_....., IUdaJ ta ... ..._. ( COAST ·~ . Emlbltlna 8ood tute rtDe Arta Patrou of Newport Harbor Art llueam nibbled C&Dape9 and to.red tbe pllerlee daim. • reception boaorlDC new ud lODC-etaD~ memben. l:&rl Neta.er la cbalnDaD of the froap atarted ID 1961bythe13 mueam foanden. The lOOtbere•w°FlntNew;n81ennlal 1984: Loe ~elee Today" ud 0 wn11am Uey 8calptare." Amoq lbOM a~ were Net.er, aboTe rtcJat, with Toni Ayree, flnt Pine Ana Patrou claalrmaa, and Brace Ayre.. At apper left, Olln Stapp, Belle a.tor ud Patti 81alrley chat ud, below left, E .G. aad Ward Cbamberlln ireet Annette Banrtts. Below, memben JlOD Norton ud Patrina Noor meet peeta Prank and DebbJ Cottla. A'I Artist ·adds up stark figure& By SUSAN MONAH.AN sucb u "Italian Sen~··. Ud ' .., .... c:.. , • • • "Standina Man With· 1 Stack .. are ·. "Prior to 19$ , art1su who wanted elonpled. faceleta forms. ~ to be known Had to move to New . wc;>uldalm~appear~i!'¥ York ... We made 1 commitment at thick apphcatioo o{ paint dido t that time to be California artisu •• anchor them to the caovas .. Laldy, be said Nathan Oliveira to members of al~ has created bro~ ~pNra the L..aauna Beach Muteum of An. with thu combanatton of The artist. who lives in Palo Alto, preternatural shape and named wasatthc museum reccntJytodi1CUss facade. . . . . a survey exhibition ofhjs works from ~ut Oliveira da~ no~ spend bis 1957-83 on display tbrouJh Jan 20. enu~ career ~una this one fiaw'e; His dacription of h1mtelf as ~=eruna. ~,.,."::t,' <>!Mr CalifomiaarttSt seemuppropriate, "f 1ofluen : Havu.,d . . tbe idea only because bis work shows as man . ina a portralta~ be COD- diverse influences u his native state. ttnued. to find ~boo of dlle His men ton were not chosen at n~saty of~ su~~ random, However, nor were they I couldn t ~11 ~ fact tbat simply emulated. The result: 1 Goya had subjects in '!"°d, ~t be coherent rather th.an derivative body also 11\~ commen~. he uid. "So of work. he was cnd of a spmtual father.•• "Wedoartaboutart,"hesaid. "I'm Deco~~· mor:e aware of.modem not concerned about bcina unique." ~ and ~vioa artists,_ be,~ tbat In fact, his first idol was Rembrandt. someth.101 ~ lackiq m the work After viewing that master's work. ··1 of Amencan paanten, and found that wanted to be a portrait painter .~ I be relate9 more to the .work of enrolled in art school so J c.ould paint contC'Olpo~ Eur_opea.n ll'tlsts. like Rembrandt." lo the 1960s. ht1 treatment of~ By no stretch of the imaaination ~uman fiaure beAn to -qwte can even his earliest work be com-literally -e~d. lo contrast to ~ pared to Rembrandt's, but style almoststarkfi&Utnbecrea~~. seems beside the point. "Rembrandt these .fiaures are fulle!'. the paa.nt a put was really a modem artist. He infused on wath a more .. delicate bnub. ~ - his painting with bis own wonderfuJ hazy form of . N~ Negress as energy," explained Oliveira. tYJ?lcal; the body is evadcnt but almost Perhaps bis most important lepcy veiled. . . from Rembrandt was the conviction In the 1970s,. this technique ~ that art had to have a subject. While refined to the potnt ~here ~e ~y lS Oliveira's work doesn't imitate life, it suuested by a diff'ercnna~on of is grounded in reality. brush strokes rather than line and The figures be painted in the 1950s. (Pleue ... OLIVSDlA/ A8 Paul and Vlr«lnla Knott Bender with ...,Y Reaf•nyder aclmlre family'• .tinette. Sharon Winterhalter, Her~rt and Carol Porter and DoD.Da De'riDe chat OTer cocktalla. Was a magician ·behind 'Entertaining People'? By BE'M'Y PORTER ~ ..... c:.n-.. , 1PMt1Rt Sometimes a fund-raising gala turns out so spectacularly well that one wonders whether a handful ofunassuming women volunteers did it all by themselves. Such was the case with "Entertaining People" - a benefit for Hum an Options shelter for battered women and their children -held at the Ritz- Carlton Hotel. The event was so unb(lievably slick, one looked for a magic wand. First. there was the enormity ofit alt-a three-day celebration fora first fund-raiser! And it wasdifferent from anything done before on the Orange County philanthropic scene. ','Ent~rtaining Pe~ple" OP_Cned on a Saturday evening wtth a black-tac gala dinner dance and prtview of2 I seasonal table settings in vignette depicting the lifestyles ofleading Orange County familics,.including the Knotts, I rvines and Argyroses. Each "hostess" was assisted by local interior designers and florists. Sunday's program was a brunch featuring a lecture by Ellu betll Forayt~e Halley, author of" A Woman of Independent Means." On Monday, the speaker at lunch was Joyce MacRae, West Coast Editor for''House and Garden" magazine. All of the functions allowed ample opportunity for viewing the vignette exhibition and for shopping the Christmas Boutique of decorator items and toys. Among theholiday vignettes was " A Countrv Leoa, ~ .......... an•er .var-. .-.., deooratied waltM211•1•z dtaM• ·.••fi~P•ple."At rlllat. IMe• •1•11•, l.tt _.._, ~~ ~. ~t. ....... ~talatloae OD tWr ''Boll .. J 80at PUiM1e .... ,,,.,, tla1m• "-Barry •1•11• and c-s•e AnaQo. .. -~\- • • Christmas" prepared by the Knott family with the help of interior designerManu Greslaam. Vlrp.Ja ltaott Bender (with husband Paal) wanted to be sure that a portrait ofherlate father prominently displayed in the vignette would show in the photograph. "I keep a portrait of my father in a hallway of my home so that I sec it all the time," she said. The list of participating families, interior designers and florists was like one from the blue book. Even thouah the press was excluded from all three days oflhe cele6ration except for the pre-dinner cocktail party and a coffee preceding the Sunday brunch, media coverage was exceptional. For example. one magazine did a two-page color spread and promised to do another one next year. Holdina the "mav.ic wand" -and as beautifull)' , gowned as fairy pnncesses-werc Human Options chairmen of the board Mary Welff(with husband Tom). benefit chairman Carol Porter (with Herb), and vice- chairmcn Doua Deviae and..,.._ Wlaterblter. "Entertainin& People" committee members in- cluded Kade AJdermu, Pam Emery, ltae Ewtas, Anabel l.onwl1er, Lacllle l.•elm. Cris Mcl.ialey, Belen Starlla1, Jlldy Swa)'lte, Mick.le Weblt, Pam Wilder, Maril)'lt Wooten, Mn. Peter C'll.rm and Mn. Fred B. Cox. And 1 f ygu wonder who else was there, just read all1 of the pages 1n your blue book of .. Everybody Who Is An) body an Orange County." Paparazzi 1sed1ted by Daily Pi/or Sryle Ediror Vida Dean. . '" Al Or•nge eo.tt OAILV PILOT/Monday, Nowmber 26, 1984 . Therapy's her only solution to self-destructive behavior DEAR ANN LANDERS: hstarted .-st a party where there wasan enormous fight and a lot ofbrokcn aJa1> • l was alone. Suddenly all I wanted to do was bleed. So I out my wrm with a p1eceofglass. It didn't hurt enough and dado 't bleed enou&}l. w I cut myself again and agam. Afier abouts1itpshci_I bea.mefnghtened and stopped. A friend found me and cl~ned me up. but no one ever knew what happened. I said I was the vacum ofO yi na&lass. Several iponths later It another party, I was feeling hurt and rejected. I went off and did the same thing. this t1mewitharaggcd pieccofmetat I wanted so badly for it to hurt. I couldn'(bearthepain inside. I had to bnng it out. It didn't work, so I proceeded to eat compulsively all ntttht and most oft he next day. 0 What's this thing I ha ve forself- destruction? Now thatt've said this much .1 m 1gh t as well tell you l'verything. Recently I've bttn fool- ing around with a pervertedauy,a real nut. whodoesn'tgivcadamn •• · l.o1EiS about me. Why do I do these crazy thinp? Please help me understand, then m11ybe I'll stop. -A ''CASE" IN ONTARIO • DEAR ONTARJO: Accord1D1 to Dr. Hel"bertC. ModUa,a sealor p1ycldatrl1t at tlae Meu laaer Foo· datloa, )'Ha.re lD dlre Dffd of 01erapy. You blurtt belaavlor It a cry for llelp. Tiie acts of self-destruction you describe are cla11lc exam plea of ao1er,llo1tlH&y aoda11re11loo taro- ed laward. You m11t 1et into a treatmeat pro1ram ud fLDd oat wby yoa llave H ell a low leve l of self· esteem. I arae yoa to seek psycboloil· cal laelp a t once. Your pbyticiao can Having drinks? Then idon 't drive In California dunng 1983. 2.089 people were killed and TRAFFIC Quiz 42,6 18 people were injured in traffic ace1dents involving al- cohol u~ ' This as nearly two thirds of the populauon of Newport Beach being killed or injured 1n one year. On January I. 1982. Cali- fornia m1uated some of the toughest drunk driving laws 1n the country What 1s the m101mum blood alcohol level at which 1t is legally presumed someone 1s dn' 1ng under the inf1uencc of alcohol? A) .05 percent. 8). J 0 percent. C) . 15 percent. 0) .20 percent. ·SU!1fU!JP U<l:>q IOU peq no,( J! u-e41 J;>te;)~ S:>W!l Z I <lJ'I! tU.:>P!""e :>!JJeJt e U! p:>"1or.u! Bu!WO:>:>q JO s;r.>u-e4:>Jno,( 1ua:>J;xi o 1 J O uo11eJ1u;i:>ua:> 1040.J1e poo(q e 4llM lU;).)JJd or (e :J;)MSU\; REMEMBER -If you drive don't dnnk. If your dnnk don't dnve. Qaestloo aod u swer aupplled by tile Newport Buell Pollce De artmeat. rccemmH d a ~erapllt. OT look bl t•e Yellow Pa1e1 a•dtr Mea lal Htaltll . • • • How to -and how much? Fmd out with Ann Landen' new booklet, "How, What, and When to Tell Your Child AboUJ ~~."For your copy ~nd $0~nrs a/0111 with a Jong. st.amped, sdf-sddres~ envelope to Ann Landers. P. 0. Bo~ 1199 S. Chi· ClllO, Ill, 6061 I . OLIVEIRA ••• P'romA7 color. He painted a series of women durina this decade -simply tatled .. Woman" and giving .the number and date -apd noted that, "the figures almost disappeared into fog ... I was developing a firm idea of what the figure was all about - a philosophical position." But from 1963-66 Oliveira "didn't paint a thana ... I worried about it." If he couldn't paint himself, he could still help others learn the craft . .He started teachin~ at Stanford U n1vers1ty and often invited students to draw from objects he placed on a stage in his studio at home. Eventually Oliveira "started over," painting his own still life productions. which he refers to as "st.age paint· ings." First came his pyramid paintings. "Stage No. 3 Pyramid Backdrop 1969" departs in both style and content from earlier work. Though the hazy finish is still in evidence, the hnes have become sharper. the pyra- mids are depicted in all their geomet~1c austenty. 'Tm a \raditionaljst," said Ol- iveira. ··1 don't fool around with trying to create something new every day." Has belief in the abili ty of artists to "bndge time" led to his work with monotype. "an obscure 17th century process" which involves makina a new print from paint left on a plate from 1hc previous printing. The ghosts of those other paintings are what gjve "landscapes" like "Site With R1n~" their primeval quality. His site paintings. like his earlier ones of the human figure , evolved into sculptures. Two .. Yucatan Seque nce" sculptures 1n this exhibit are date6 1983. but the bronze has the dusty patina of an archeological find. And. as always, Oliveira has modeled -1f not copied -this wt5'fr from life. Not with the photographic fidelity of a Rembrandt. but wth the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~-belief that "it will transmit reality.'' lUXU.V fHIATltfS f int T-flllttllH 5'tot11111p * ONLY S2.7fl U11M11 lllotel :!s~~l~=~ Slft~()ft[)I :tcm:i S 113GB•!•L1tl6J 134 zm~!.htz=1!i J Meryl Str•ep DRIVE -INS :n~ STADIUm 0 ill 11 IQ, !lflsllt Nrf! S•tflylll SUN•UaUtL (PQt Plus Co·FHtur• Shun• (PG) .. Al.UNG IN LOVE {PG·l 3) l :'5 3·50 5 :55 1 :00 &. 10,0S THIE .. Of" HEA•TS (It) SHOWS AT 3:30 &. 1 .00 NIGHT OP THE COM«T T1'l4t Auor'• Edge ~ I l) ,,._1 >) ""' Co· Hit u l :00 5:10 &. fO:OO N o Sm•ll Aff•lr (R) 'UST THE WAY YOU A•E (PG) SH OWS AT 1 ·20 3 15 5 10 7 :05 .. 9 00 Ott GODI YOU DEVIL CNt SHOWS AT 12 :0 0 2:00 4 :00 6:00 1 :00 .. 10 :00 Sally FtelO Pl..ACOINTHC tCA'IT (1!18) U : .. 2 SS 5:05 7: 15 &. 1 :25 TWACHE•S l•) l :OO &. 7 :10 Plus No Small Affair (R ) 1 00 5:10 &. 9:20 TIEACHE•S (It) ll"lus Co·Hlt All Of Me (PG) TIEltllOll IN THE AIS&..D (Ill Tltlltropo (R ) &. l"urple Rain (R ) llEVDMaEOF~ ~-OS I•) ""' llacholor Party (R ) Show1 a t 7 00 Piu1 T••• ef Doe• ~) GHOST8USTEllS (N) SOLDIEll'S STOltY (llQ)l INDIANA 'Olt£5 a Tiie Country (PG)" 9 :00 Shows 11 7 ·00 &. t :20 Plus Co-Futur• Gremlins (PG) DRIV( INS Open 6 4~ Wkd1yst6 30 Whnds/Cll11d1en U11•1 12 FREE Unlea Noted s "'FAWNG IN LOVE ' IS A MOVIE TO TREASURE.'' -0....-. f9C.TV, n. ,...,_ IPO·lJI.. A IWMlHl rtllff ~ ----...... ---NOW Pl.AYING- .U ~IUOI _ .... "'"" (-~ ~~ r..-wa. CSll•M -f-oor-c-l.,_a.w....,.. ~· .... c.-~· tl66c R--IMJll l-lll•tS 1-..... 1-511 95CIO llGallO -----~ TV LISTINGS Lee aemlck nan u a woman tenorbed by• crued _.,. ooaYlct. portrayed by lllcll&el Beck ln· .. Re..rriew 11.lrror'' at 9 tontcht on Cb.allnel 4. . -t.11- • CALL TO GlOfrf -•JO-• Cl) NEWHAAT Cl) MOYIE • t t "The Lott MM" ( 1989) Sidney Poitier. Joenne Slll!Ntua. 0 ENTEATAIMNT TONIGHT -10:00- CNMI/£'(. ' lAClY .N!WI I EUAOPfAN JOUNW. CALL TO GLOfrf CAUJNG ALL WOftT8 IAMY MNILOW: THE AT ILENHOit PAL.AC( . -10:11- • THATS HOUYWOOO -10:30- l lN09EHOEHT NEWS FROM THE AMENCAH FILM INITIMt e ... COOPEJl'S OMNOE COUNTY CC) ASSAUl TED HUT'S (B) 80LDEM IH HIDING -10:46-eNEM -11j)()- l. Cl) 0 Q! G NEW8 TAXI 8C1V JEf'F£R80N8 AOQ(F()AD F11.f8 (C)MOYIE ttt "Straight Time" (1978) Dultln Hoffman. Glt'f 84.IMy ())MOYIE ... "Al The Alah1 Movel" ( 1ta31 Tom Ctulae. Crllg T. Nellon. - -1:30- • GAE.AT AEOOflD ALIUM OOl.L.ECT10N TV rivals put egos on hold By Ff\ED ROTHEN"BERG ,,,T ......... Wrtw NEW YORK -Right after Jane Curtin beat her "Kate & Allie" co-star Susan Saint James for an Emmy award. the)' returned to New York to tape tonight's episode. which has>- pcns to be about how two fnends handle their competitive jealousies . In the show. Kate's daughter Emma (Ari Meyers) and Allie's daughter Jennie (Allison Smith) are up fur the same part in a school play. so they make a deal that "the loser won't hate the win ner. and the winner won't hold it over the loser's head." The pact, of course. is short-lived, and there are angry words and hurt feelings -the k.i nd of normal behavior and emotions that CBS' hit comedy. which is about two divorced women sharing an apartment. dis- plays so honestly. The real-life bruises. after Curtin was named best actress in a comedy. weren't as apparent, but Bill Persky. the show's producer-director. ac- knowledged that people on the set didn't know exactly how to treat the stars. "There was a lot of treading lightly," s:aid Persky. who nimsclf first. and they had total approvaf over won an Emm y for best comedy who could be brought in.' director this year. Persky said he tried to avoid "In most s1tua t1ons. the winner potential problems by not hinng goes home and celebrates; the loser actors who have a history of causing g()(S home and cries.'' added Persky. complications. "In our show. the winner and loser CBS' "Cagney & Lacey," about two were rn the same house. It forced us to female detectives, as another show hold down some of the celebrations that d1v1des storyhnes and the acting and condolences." • load between two co-stars, Tyne Daly Persky said the two actresses had and Sharon Gless. The actresses also lunch together and ta lked abou1 their have competed for the same award. feelings. "If there was any problem. it Daly beat Oless for the dramatic- nevcr showed on stage." he said: senes Emmy thl' last two seasons. Persky. whose career goes back to "There were some sensitivities ... the "Dick Van Dyke Show" in the said Barney Rosenzweig. the show's 1960s. said egos can easily get executive producer. "Sharon and wounded in TV. and it can be Tyne have a relationship in real life particularly delicate for shows with similar to what they have on-screen. co-equal stars in the leads. That doesn't mean they're not com- Ci ndy Williams and Penny petitive with each other. Both have Marstlall feuded openly on "Laverne said the other was their second choice & Shirley," and "everybody in the for the Emmy." business ·knew that was a living The episode filmed just before this nightmare." said Persky. year's awards placed the two cops in ''Some of those problems were due deep conf11ct. with their partnership to the personalities," added Persky: senously threatened. "That added to "Susan and Jane have put in a long the emotional ramifications," said time co ming to this. They had worked Rosen7weig. "It was a very difficult together before and were friends. You week." • f€WPORT BUCH • • COSTA WSA • have to remember when this show Daly has played the part of Mary was created, the st~rs were chosen Beth Lacey with two other actresses. 1------------------------------, but she wasn't nominated for an '-~ IOU \111110 11141l(U1 H.1 ,,,,,.,llflll~I Pf, HOO~ Ill 1l I I • SO. COAST PLAZA • I llf t;lill\ Mll'il IM u /1 ,~. Ml\ -"'., •••• '' ,,.,.\fll !>4t<llll "' l11JlllU I'!; IHI .......... , •t IU 01'1lll tl.fOca '"' U~ 'IV ~--. Oil a< TOI DUI <NI ••• 1\ 0 1\ • MS TllNS T£R • Cll'fMA wtsr CINrMA wrsr l'lM t.llD IOU Of~ l'li• ., ,,,. ¥ • 1141 11-111)11 , .. . f.wJ\fMlll\ ll'C.1 llOllll IOIU 1'51 " GARO£N <iROV£ • I llVllQ " 1141 ... , Jl1 U~I ,_,,. I • £0WAADS .... ' . ~ ... ~46 llO> HAABOI! TWIN • ' JI )~~. HARBOR fWIN MISA ' . (IHfMA CIR ----(IN(MA tlll l ~ 4 l ~ l CINf MA r II! ~ .... t ""' ,, "' •t1 I ~i,,U ~lGlll IP<.t . '.f (;II(',/ B•JllN • OH '°°' '~ CO\ trs1 t, ' , • . 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It I I I• AM Mlllf~ CllOOtl .. II I ICO t O'I " tlJNTINCTOH BUCH • .... I llC' °" ...... ., "' ... 0111 HV"ftHGIOH .., If •tit I I , .. 01 • •• I • I la MIRADA (.j 1£WlllCl OI ltf IOOS il l j ' a 11 lllClllOl 'AllT Ill Ill llA1191AT()lt (a) .. Ml llf WU YOU Ml (l'G) t · I 11 •I' >..f\ 11 I ' 171tl"4 1 ... •lt ....... -Lt ,.., .. A1 llt1Ktt•1 "llGHl Of !Hl COWi IPC·lll I J "' 1 ti .l F Al UllG IH l OW I PC l3l i' ·~ • 41, " fAllllG .. LOW (Mi·ll) ~ I,, '· I~ I ·~ l<ISSING .. ACllOll (a) '. ti ·~ .... llf IC...-TOlt <•> . '\\ , rlf umc ONIO <a <•> I H ) I~ I\ flSJIOMI (PC· Ill ' •I\ PACIFIC DRIVE·IN THEATRES• * CINE-Fl SOUIOI At dMM tymlloh p•t tound diflC1 to yMf AM cet * r•dio. If no re•o whll *"'°'Y '"''°"· bfi111 yoltf OWl'I AM pt1JtaM1. CfUl ..... AT IM•., U • ITW 7~"' Chii.onUndef 12 ALWAYS FREE ~ = ·1::.!:'r.t. •.!.."'1· pill!Y~ ORANGf ~) --·~1911 111 '" rnt..-IOI t 1t 1 ¥U:Z:1••' ;:T• h•1 fll: "illsii I :r.-:.:1 .. •.. ... ,. ... "' QMOStlUUOS <Pel '111' lllil41 Of f)( COWl (PC·UI <11 lllDI .... (N) r\llS M-•Ml(N.U) •Oil Of 0( !UIS fl ) 111 ' uatlQa PMTY (~) la HABRA ··•I'•, [:all ·~~ . MISSION Emm y until Gless became Chns Cagney. "They recognize that (Jimmy) Connors always plays his best ten nis against (John) McEnroe." said Rose- nzweig. "Sharon and Tyne arc very close. They rely on each other, and 1f they didn't Jet along. that would show up on the air." On NBC's "St. Elsewhere." Ed Flanders (Or. Donald Westphal!). beat his colleaiue Wilham Daniels (Or. Mark Craig) for best actor in a dramatic series. A day or so after the 1984 announcement, Daniels. who has a bad back and was 1n severe pain, came in to shoot his scene anyway. "Ed heard about it and brouaht in the Emmy," said producer Tom Fon~na. "Bill was lyi ng down in pain. Ed put the Emmy be twee n Bill's lqs, and $8id it was hrs. too. It was a very nice moment." FROM THE PRODUCERS OF THE SUPERMAN MOVIES ... -· -··""" .. ,.,. ·--i..-.., .. ·t=.-r:.. ... , .. .... _ ~';r.'.CMftl -·--· .... ,. •IA-._,,_.._. IM ........ ..... ~, ~· ._ ..... ·---... .. .,JI ........ -~-.... !U ..... ... :::l,r:-" wowwwca --.... -----• .,,. ...._.. ,... .. ..,. ~· •1•1 ...... m- ' I En110R1A1 ----. Caution-urged before allowing waste dumping Extraordin~ry~ situations demand extraordinary responses. Piping 187,UOO gallons of dangerous chemicaljunk through Orange County each day might be considered ex traordinary. Especially if something unexpected were to happen -like a pipe rupturing, allowing chemical wastewater to seep into ground water that feeds a public water suppl y. - Dumping 187.000 gallons of treated toxins into the Pac ific Ocean five miles off the Orange Coast might be considered extraordinary. Especially if there are large populatio ns of food fish feeding nearby. On Nov. 14, the Orange County Sanitation Districts conditionally approved a permit fof' the state Department of Health Services to di scharge the waste from the Stringfellow Hazardous Waste Disposal Site in Riverside County into Orange County's wastewat~r sy5tem for ultimate release into the ocean. The directors of the di stricts demanded an enviroment"l impact report for the project -but not until it is in progress. County Supe rvisors Roger Stanton and Bruce Nestande think that is an ordinary response to an extraordinary si tuation - and an inadequate ~e. We agree. It is likely that the treatment procedure to be applied to the stuff coming out of Stringfellow will render it tame, with the limits that are established for that kind of thing. But these aren't just any chemicals. these are STRINGFELLOW chemical s, and Stringfellow has a reputation on a par with Typhoid Ma ry, the Nazi Party and AIDS: Noboqy wants to be associated with it. Stanton and Nestande think the people of Orange County ha ve a right to know exactl y what's in that drainage pipe as it flows past the ir homes. They thi nk the people of Orange Co~nty want to kn ow what the resu lts are likely to be if something goes awry, what th e effec ts might be on the fi sh, what the cost/benefit relationship wo uld be if an additional level of treatment we re provided befo re the chemicals begiri flowing to the ocean. Eve n if Stanton and Nestande's concerns prove to be unwarranted. there is little to lose by performing th e environmental study 'now instead oflater -the cost will remain the same. A wise person once wa rn ed, •·If you are going to err. err on the side of ca ution." That seems good advice in th is case. LET TERS Crime victim thanks cops for their support, concern To tht E<.11tor: This 1s hard for mr to put into words. how much I apprcuate th l' concern and suppon the Newpon Beach Police Dcpanmen1 has g1,en during the past year and a halt As a victim of' 101l'n1 cnml'. I ha ve survived becau~e of all the hard work the depanmcnt ha~ offered in ap- prehension of my assailant, all the risks officers took. constant concern, support and protection provided in helping me throu$h a long. hard trial. and cveryda> actl\ 111ec; 1 HEY ARE T HE BEST. I w1ll lorcver remember all of them fo r the extraordinary concern and professionalism the)' reflect. lncl ud· 1ng the wh ole depanment ... I give my special thanks to officers Da ve Stetson. Tom Litt le. Daryl Youle. Mike H1etell a. Mike Ramo\. Jack Freer AND ALL THE REST OF YOU! KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK! THEY ARE MORE THAN VALUAB LE TO THE CITY. THEY ARE VALUABLE TO PEOPLE! THAT' WHAT COUN TS. THANK YOU AGAIN' A RECOVERED VICTIM Surf suit imperils legal system To the Edttor In response to the ktter lilied"( II)' shouldn't be fa ulted 1f pcople get hun 1n surf' I felt compelled 10 exercise my opm1on al c;o I ha\C been a 'l urfer for the la\t 20 year~. and ha ve built up qui te a healthy 1 e~pcc:t for the ocean Unfonunatcly, not evel)one take~ the ume necessary 10 become educated 1n the fundamentals of nature'" chanivng mo<ld.-.. My sym· pathy to the in1ured man l'i one of sinccnty. ln the same rc~pcct, o.ne must acct.·pt p<l'>\lblc cntastroph1e~ wh en dealing wnh an unrnntrolled force. What really brought my a11ent1on to this storv wa s the outrageou'i awa rd of some S6 million. M) god! What 1s our 1ud1c1al system th1nk1ng when they make a Judgment like this? Ever) sui t-hungry law)er will be scarchtng for injured clients who may have some poss ible grievance again'it a local government. The bottom line here 1~ that our lcg:1l syl\tem will become even more overcrowded with si milar cases that should not be in the court to begtn Wtlh. My hat goes off to A.J . Wev11l, I onl> wish that it hadn't taken me so long tu respond. BOB K. SINCLAIR JR. Newport Beach U.S. must stand for freedom To the Editor: Re: Letter from Patricia Mc Cully dated Nov. 12. Ms. Mc Cully 1s obviously one of those well-mcan1na but m1sgu1ded individuals who blame all of the world's ills upon the United States. While con:1pletely 1gnonna .th.e Russian ships unloadina soph1st1· cated arms by the thousands of tons she speaks of the Nicar~uan people's hatred of the "Yankee bccall-'C, as W. aiai.a. "they know whci'C lhe- bWJet arc comina from." She must know that hatred of the Yankee Is far from new south of our border and that it is not limited to Nicaraaua. That hatred ts basically, and has historically been, the hatred that "have nots" feel toward "haves." Ms. Mc Cully said: "My country riaht or wrona 11 for moral cowards. Let's make It live up to our stan· dards!" The obvious quc tion is to whose standud 7 Hers? me of us have other standard . r or example, I ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat happen to believe that our count ry 1s 1n fact right t'ach and every tame 11 defends the freedom of individuals. wh ether that freedom 1s defended an Europe, Vietnam or Nicaragua. The protection of freedom from tyrants and despots CH be an ugly thing; however. our forefathers and generations of soldiers ever sin~ have been willina to sacrifice their lives to protect the f~om ofothers. These dead Americans prob3bly tum in their araves WMM\let • Jane Fonda or Patricia Mc Cully point the finger at America and accuse It of beins the awessor and wronadocr. Tho5e whoJlate the Yankee should consider the allcmativc. They hate the Yankee bcc.ause they have been tauaht to hate the Yankee by their teachers. I wonder what Ms. McC'ully teaches her students in Huntintton ~ach and what kind of Amcncan citizens they will tum out to bc7 H. WHITE Costa Mesa H. L. khwetta Ht ~ ,.. ,,.,. Ztnf V1n \I (cH Tom Telt "'1) r ' , ) ... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday, ~-21, 1114 Ae ·'Even before a trial, or lifter someone haa been IQtally, acquitted, py,b//c percepUons of his probablegullforlnnocence are haped by his personality.·· • J \ ' This community's similar, bllt not exactly like others A few da)'s ago, I ~as invited, b)' a lady I've known for a few years. to be interviewed b) the news director of a local TV station. The 1ntcrv1ew had nothing to do with my writing. but was, rather. because I'm a member and on the board of directors of a club that the people there were interested 1n. Nonetheless, I was to be inter- viewed on television. and that prom- ised to be great fun. I got into my car and drove down there. I fo und a thri ving. vibrant com- munit y of 21.000 people. Like most modern communities, it has Its own road repair and mai~tenance d1vtS1on. us own parks and recreation department, its own plannmg1com- m1ss1on and a div1~on of a local commun1t} college. It also ha!'> a TV station. an achievement that not man> comLlun1t1es of this size can claim It has ts own sccunty di' 1Ston. but contract Chke most other Orange ( ounl} commun1t1es) for tts trash removal Sounds li ke )Our typical 0< town. doesn't u·1 .\s of no" 1hiscommuntt) 1s unincorporated, but there is a movement to rncorporate. Because of 11s status. 1t comes under county Junsd1ct1on and 1s protected by the Oran~c County Sheri ffs Depanment. That's where the s1m1lariues end . fhas community has no com- mercial ventures withi n its bound- aries. This community includes. as a small pan of ats agenda. an aerospacl' BILL HARVEY club, an amateur radio club, a ballroom dance cl ub, an American- Italian club. an American Legjon post. an astronomy club. a badmin- ton club. bi lliard clubs (men's and women's). a B'nai B'nth lodge (men's and women's): a cat club. a canine club. something called th e Chicago club. a chorale. a chapter of the Daughters of the Amencan Revol· u11on. a folk dance club. square dancers. several golf clubs. somethtng called the Helmet C'lub. something called the Petroleum Club. d1,1s1ons of the Red Cross and the Sahauon <\rmy. tenn1~ clubs (both table and John McEn roe \On ). a thc:ner guild and a stamp cl ub There are about 180 actt \ 111es a\atlable to the peo ple of th is com- mun1t \ Oh · )'eah. I almost fo rgot. The a'eragc age of the residents of this communtt) is 73. This ma~1c place ltes JUSI ~uth of the San D"·go Frcewa) at El Toro Road. The fi rst resident moved in d un ng September of 1964. so it's a nretty modern place. The entire comm unity was planned. so tt's also a very pretty place. This place 1s. of course. Leasure World. I reall) didn't know what to expect when I was invited I've always known that Leisure World existed but, like most people.. I never aave II much thought. What could be of interest there? After all. it's Just a place where people go to rcure. isn't ti? Wrong! From what I saw. n's a place where vital and active people go to start the second half of a vital and active life. a place where they l'et 10 choo~ what they want to do. with no womes about making a living! Whtie I was there. I saw a man who taught school for. 1f memory serves, 36 years. He had always wanted to paint Now he was painting, and doing a very good Job oI tL Had this man started painting 36 ycan ago, he'd probably have a measure of fame by now: but as life 1s. starting painters stand a very good chance of starving to death. Instead. he has achieved local fame and will probably go on to b1aa,er and better things From what I saw ofh1m . he looks good fo r another 30 or so )-ears. The people I met. far from betng "reti red," v.ere acttve and 'Cl)' bus) The) had things 10 do and plares 10 go. I can hardh "a1t 1111 I'm eligible 10 go 10 this place. B> the wa) tf)'ou'rl" 1h1nki ngofgo1ng, )ou·d better hustle The minimum age 1~ now 52. but after January. it'll be 55. ColumJJJst B/JJ H•rvey /lve1 Jo Hut/01100 Be11cb. Jurors Sometimes ignore U.S. legal system's ideals £:'er since our foundtng. •t has been one of the cornerstones of the Amcn- can legal system that a defendant 1s mnocent un til he 1s proved guilt)' - unli..,e. for instance. the French S)'s tem. where the opposite 1s a~- sumed. · Nevt.•rthclcss, while our public pa) s hp-service to this precept, our hcans remain wt'ddcd to a quite different maxim that ha s nothing to do wi th the law: "Where there's smoke. there's fire." ... Most of us are not too unlike the old farmer called fo r j ury duty. who cxpla,'1cd how he voted: "I look at the fellow they brtng an, and I sa) to m)scff, 'If he's not ~uilty. what's ht.• doing here in coun ? And then l cast m vote." · ~h1le 11 may be factually true that up lo 90 percent of defendants tn a cnminal case are guilty. the)' arc not always guilt}' of what t,!iey att in- dtt"tcd for. and the evidence agamSt them is not alway~ conclusi ve beyo nd a reasonable doubt. These cons1dernt1ons arc not over- ndana. 1n the emotional matnx of a L.M. Bovo ., SIDNEY Hu11s anything m a court of la~ The shadov. cast b' Lrncc's ma- nipulations will follow him throut'h· out hts career. and no coun dec1-;1on can move him bad. in to thl" sunlight The pu blic's nose tor the un~' 011 may here be keener than the JUdgl.'·., eye for technical '1olat1on~ -but 1t s1gnall) fails to grasp the d1st1nt'l1on between a "sin" and a "cnme .. tnal. particularly af 11 has attracted We pnde ourseh c~ on be ing "a large public attention. Juri e4', no ~ss natton ofla "-'S. not of men." bu t th~·n· than the general publit:. arc in· ts morl· torm than 'iu b .. 1ancc. mnrr ll ucnrcd as much by the pos1t1on. th<.·· 1UtJS1on than rcahl~ 10 tht'i bd1ct 11 appearance and the bearing of the someone "1th a rl'\."llrd as a pit k defendant as by the hard facts -and pocket is acc used ol mu rd er. ~r JH' 1fthe) don't like the c.ut of a man''>Jtb. fo r mo~ prone to Jl·cept h1~ gualt th;in the) lind 11 usy to JUSttf~ their that ol a man v.1th nu prior rl•corJ . .,.crdtcl alth ough ptl kpod .. ets commit Even brlorc a trial, or alkr -;ome-murder as 1nfrequen1I~ a!> the J\eragc one ha~ tx·cn legally acquitted. publt r non-felon . . pcrt.'CpllOn\ o( hl'i probable guilt or "Where thC'rl"\ 'imo ... e there 'i lire innlx·ence are shaped b) his ~r-ma) be a u~ful adngc tor .1 hou">C· w nahl} "aura." as tt ""l.'re To n it' l\\O holder. but 1t 1s a dangcn)u\ one lur .1 recent instances. both Edv.1n Mt.'t.'"C Juro r -espcl 1all) \\-hen 3'i man\ l'' and &rt Uinet' arc regard~ b> man}. the fume!>. as in thc De Lorean l :l'it' 1f not mo\I. 10 ha H behavl'<l· 1m· are generated b\ thl' prO\ClUllon propcrh . 11 not illegall)' although Sybt)' H•rrls Is • n odlc•tNI netthl.'r ha' bt.~n found guilt) ol col•m•i1t. Watch out fordangerous rabbits Lnw'i that govern behavior in >\lberta'' fianfT Nat1onnl Pnrk &ive all animals equal nah t5. People arc animals. even BS mo6$C and bt'avcr. Legall y. tht'rc's no superior breed. It 1 gainst the law for a m:m to assault a rabbit. likewise for a rab~11 to auault a man \! md1es1 sta te in the nation. I<'· cord1 na to tho who profess to know, IS 0 .. lahOml. How can )OU II )'OUrsel(•n expert on b3\ketNll 1f ou'vc never heard of lkrt l.ooml'. the man who inHntcd 1he dnbble41 Q Whcn1ronand o' ncomb1nc lhc'\ lorm ru\t, Iron and o')Jtn ronlbtnc 1plcmy tn •he human blood • ~tream Wh) qon't \'c nm'> A \n c01yme<'allcd fct'T1t1n ble>ek on the iron lh u II). U\U3ll) Rarcl\. thouah. more iron than fcmt1n turn up 1n the "}'item\ of 'iOmc and the do ru..i. ll\ 11 v.ere It'' c.tllcd "bron1c ant'man C:a.-.1 s\fncan mon~C}:S ~ream d1f· re~nt v.am101.-. ror J1fTercnt lhrl':lls The \nake en ~nd• all the monk' \traiaht to tht trtt tops The eaak cl') send them down the lfltnks The leopard CT} nd them but to lhc lamb taps. • \ ou knt)~ tho"° pcoplC' \\'ho pC'C'J onh i\ houf'\ or \lt'(f'I a n11h1" Re archen. SA) the~ t mu h dcq> letpl c Cl)-bod) t But tht~ do 111>t ll without tht' r.~t anJ 1a\t hours of h&ht \lcC'J\ thnt mo1it peol'k Cl\jO) ltcm11c 11 )OU "111. all tht ga me' that h:\\ e nee\ C ard'> a nd d11:e. clcarl) Golf Tenn" '\n\ othcl"'I~ o Did )t.•u ~' Tolsto~ "A-f\ltt ·\II'' WC'll r hAt nJ \\ell"" \io. but r\;(' h rd ti ad Tol,lo' did ind~ wntt a lcn th) tome he on11nall) tt1IC'd " II' V ell That End~ Well." bul mebod)' mu t ha\e llPPtd him off about Mr. • haknptarc's pla). l'k-~au he chan cd thc hooknamc to ·w ar and PcaC'e" 01 c'er\bod' Ii.nu"' that Cindcr<'l ·~ d ""•' MmN 8:runo L.M. Bo ' 16 • • adk aft4 r<0Jamal11 Sydaij Banta, oof•••W Campus is haven . . to secret society WASHI NGTO!'ll -I stirred up a hornet's nest in September when 1 reported that ''the hean of Latin American death squad activity beats most stronaJy in Guadalajara, ~ex· ico." where the Autonomoui'Unaver- stty appears to be influenced by an uhra-n&hust. anti-Stmitie secret so- ciety named Los Tecos, The univertity. founded u a countcl"Weight to !~e left-leaninJ aov- emment universJtJcs, was qwck to respond. University auth0Tit1es authored a paid ~buttal 1n the Washmgton Post that cl&Jmcd, among olhe-r th1l\JS, that the univer- sity 1s "non-~bllcal." This is a joke. But I'll willingly concede the uru- vers1ty's claim that many fine stu· dents. includ1n1 thousands of Amcn- cans, ha ve benefined from the educa- tion there But thts is beside the point. My concern lay with the JDfor· matton, obtained by my assocutcs Jon~ Anderson and Dale Van Atta. that tbeclandcstioe Los Tecos socaety ellerctscd a malign influence on the un1vers11y-an influence that under- mined its respectab1lit)'. Surpnsingly, lhe pomt I was tryJng to make was confirmed by one indignant caller who telephoned in defenst of the university. He was an Amencan professor there, be said. and insisted on anonymity. But bis remarks were reveaJing. After he praised the uruvcnity lavishly. my associates asked 1fbc was a member of Los Tecx>s. AAer a long pause. be w d bewu. ls It a nght-wing societ)., Yes, lie w . Why had he Joined? lt was expected of both Amen can and Mc:11can professors who taught there, he replied. Otd he know of any other Amencan profe5SOl'S who had JOtned Los Tecos" Well. be said. he knew of one who bad refused 10 JOin .. and was alwa)S in trouble for this." Wh) had thC' other Amcnc.an gott t'n in to trouble., Becaust he wouldn'tglVt' undeserved ··.i, .. gr.Ides to students who were mt'mbers of the ~crl't SOCIC't), said the c.alJer Had he e\ er wttnesscd an) viole nce bv Los Teco41'' No. said 1he professor~ that was another pan of the group. nut the one to which ht' belonged. He e:\pla1ned that Los Tecos con- sisted of three d1 v1Stons: the admm1s- trator>. professors and school officials who were members; the .. student spies... who kept thetr eyes on suspc'( ted left-leaning professol"5 and students. and the ··1ecos de cboque ... or shock troops. The professor said he had no idea what the strong-arm JI\ 1s1on did -and had no desire to know Could the "shock troops" be an - ' oh rd md1rcctl~ or d1rcctl~ 1n death <;quad act!\ 1hes It wouldn t surpnsc him the professor rephed. Other wuncssc . Melllcan cor- respondents and other sources con- firmed the esscnt1als of my ongmal c·olumn The~ suggested that the uni\ t'rs1t~ "-IS trying to draw me into a ~manuc quagmire. For example. in panash the word "ll'co" 1s a pec1es of owl. Cntics of I us T cco say the name was cho'ICn hclauM' the secret soc1et). ltke the owl. hunts tis prey an~r dar ... Non!ICnsc. said the un iver ii\ 's alum- ni as50C'1at100 The owl name v.ai. chosen. not because of the bird\ n<x turnal prcdatol') 'I Mtincts. but tx-causc of tts fabled ""'\dom and thl \tudent~· devotion to lall··n1gh1 Jcadcmtl' labo~ o\flcr all thC' .-.choors ~0t.·ccr team 1\ ,~allrd thr Tcxm It'' oh\ iou,I\ 1mpo"1<;1bk to a~rr 1mn lhr numher of nco-Na11 \\m p.:ith11cr.. at thr o\utonomou~ l na' rr \ti\ It ha'I been po1ntt.'d uut - an:uratel\ -that w me Jev.1~h \IU· dents ha' r at lca\t been toler:11cJ lhl'rt' Rut 11 " t'quall) oh' 1ou" th.11 ('lght1)t) of the lu nattc fnnge h,,, r txx~n aa' en ~ocllon b\ th.c_unL, ct'\t t' 10 follow 1he1r anti· "m111c 1dtolns~ T1'11' f\a\ n ~ nfirmt'\.I by J~W1'h alumni That wa~ the pomt I made 1n m \ ong1nal olumn And '>O far. It ha nm heen ref utcd. 1 Jacll Ao'~,.... 11 • 1ya4.lcate4 co/•malJt DallTPUot weJcomm \ , • I • ~10 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 26, 19&4 THE FAMILY CIRCUS oy 811 Keane "Mum! Are you dredging up my childhood escapades again'?" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) ., h ff r t ·\ .. ., ""· ; .... ~ .. , • .. .. "I hate Mondays." DENNIS THE MENACE ' ' f r f" • , by Hank Ketcham PEANUTS WHENEVER WE AAVE A TEST, l 6ET SO NERVOUS C BITE ALL MV.f1H6EftNAILS .. DRABBLE ~iRll.K, LU '~ WAK~ IV I I N188LE ALL THE ERASERS Of F MY PENCILS ... ..... by Garry Trudeau by Jeff MacNally by Charles M. Schulz YOU AAVE A REAL CAFETERIA HERE, MAAM by Kevin Fagan tl·lh j ... f u 0 FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston YEA~. 11"5 ALL ()CtJE WITH MIRROR8 "You think you have it tough? You only get out of bed once a day-he has to g~t up five or six times a day!" GORDO GARFIELD I WONPE.R WHO fHAl COOLrJ 0f, ooc. W./ llOON MULLINS rJArJ! MOM/ WMAT ARE YOO POING Hf..f\E/? A LITTL.~ L.E'ARNIN~··· .............. .-... ·-- I I • , 'JUST REMfM8ER,MR.W1L.SO·L SONi~Y I'M GtWNA r:K.YJ UP AA' 6E BIG 'N 'CRANK'( TOO 1 • I • by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis M"I DA P, TM E 5ENTlMENTAL FO 0 L. lfH fltOM, TME. CUCH~ HMM NOTBPO To:JA'{ I DON'T" LOOK Teo 0f\D BRIDG E Q.l -As South. vulnerable. you hold: IV Q65 OQJ095432 •A62 The bidding has proceeded: North EHt South l+ 2 1\7 1 What action do you take? A. -It's hard to suppress a seven· card suit, but think of the danger. To bid at the three-level would be forcing to game. If partner is short in diamonds. they will be picking up the pieces for weeks. You don't even know whose hand it is. Pus, and see how the auction develop~. by Ferd & Tom Johnson Q.2 -Both vulnerable. as Sou th you hold: REA<;,AN .~ou~C> BE So PJ<ot.JD ... +6 IV AKQJ98 OQ3 •KQJO Your partner deals and paasea. aa doea your right hand opponent. What is your opening bid'l A. -You have an excellent hand and. had partner not. been a passed band, you would certainly hue opened one hea.l't. However, since partner could not open you can, vir· tually rule out slam posalbUlliea. Aa a matter of fact. it might not even be your hand! Open four hearts. Naturally. you expect to make your contract. but you also are making it by Harold Le Ooux very dimcult tor the opponentt to venture Into the auction. JUST ee AANAKE llllHEN I PCK 'fOtJ UP TONIGHT AT SEVEN O'CLOC.I<' \ Q.3 -Neither vulnerable, aa South you hold; •KJ782 IVH OQ98 •An Th bidding hu prO<'eeded: N..U Eut .. u. W .. t. 1 o • P... J • P ... J o P.. !NT Put a 0 Pue 1 What action do you take? A.-Partner hH shown a 6·• dialrlbutlon and a dislike ror no trump. 10 there It no ruton why you thou Id Intuit him by blithely go- ing on to three> no trump. All you j I ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ can do now ia t.a.ke a preference to three he&rta -you certainly don't want t.o play in the 4-3 diamond fit. Q.4 -As South, vulnerable, you hold: • K 103 4V 1097U 0 AJ8 • K4 The bidding has proceeded: Soa_. Weet North Ea1t Pue P... l + Pu• ? What do you bid now? OMAR SHARIFF A.-Three bids come into con· stdentlo11-tbne hearu, tbrtt spades and two no trump. We reject three heart.I, even thouah it 1how1 spade support, becaute our values are too acauered and the 'heart suit is t.oo weak. 'f here it Uule to choote bet.ween the remaining t.wo actions. We allght._ly prefer a jump tf three Spadea, despite the fi&W Of having only t hrff trump1, t».cauM our polnla are prime and we have a ruff. Ing value lo club.. Q.5 -Both vulnerable, 11 South you hold: •AQJU <:>Jt 0 97! •ta Th bidding baa pl'OCffded: Eut S..Ut WM& Nlftll 41 0 P ... PUI DW. ! ~ t . ,... , • , ... ' What action do 7ou t.a..kt? A.-For h.11 balantlnr doubW. parl- ner tould be conalderably w.aker than for a double In th dired teat. ( His raise to three spades confirms a sound double, but if he needs no more than you have to make game, he could have cue-bid three heart• or jumped to ~himself. Pass. Q.8-Both vulnerable, as South you hold: •3 4V QJ09754 OAH •t72 Partner opens the biddiog with one no trump. What. do you reapond? A. -You have a guarant.eed eight- CHARLES GQREN card or better flt, 10 your hand revalue to about 10 or 11 pointe. Together with partner'• no trump opening bid, you thould have enough tor game;-~nd It la up to you to bid it. Jump Lo four heart1. . - Rew .. '" d9MM d.. MM .... -.~c._...o_...._.._ .... •. ,._ . .,, ..... ...... o,. k1 ................ .. .. G•re•·L, .. ,, .. care ef &1111 ... .,.,.... P .o. lea eu, , ... ,.,... N.J.-.Mllleca..dl,.1.W.1e ,.. ........... b. .. ., .......... 8 YU '81thful-- not mpologlZlftl for No. 1 '8111dftl In footbell. 82. O.J. 's recor injeopardyi? Dtc~erson needs to average 124 yards tn last three ames .. , like lO think rccordl ....... to be broen and I'd like '° ..-ii if 1 can,-said Dicket'IOll, wbo·u•eflllll jus\ over J2S ardsa pme mil- _, and is 101abc:aC!his1913 pec:e. -------=-----The loss war yet anotber J11i11n. TAMPA, Aa. (AP) -Eric Dickerson lS closing 111 on O.J. Simpson's sin&Je-season National Football Leasue rushina record and spoiling Los Angeks Rams Coach John Robinson along the way. The NFL's leading ground-gainer pounded and sprinted hjs way to 191 yards and three touchdowns Sunday and ignited a fourth-quarter rally that carried the Rams to a 34-33 vtctory over the Tampa Bay Bue.cancers. "What can I say about Eric Diclcersonr' Robinson asked afcr Los Angeles improved its record to 8-5. "You get to where you expect that every week." . Dickerson. held to 49 yards on I 0 carries in the first half. broke loose for 142 on 18 attempts after intcnnissin to hike his leaguc-leadng total to 1.632 yards. . breaker for the 4-9 Buel. wllo'¥8 dropped sevent:j bya ~ or less. At tbe pm Sunday, lbe diff~ncc was a blocked ntra .-... the Rams managed after a boldial penalty wiped out a succetlfuJ coo- veniorr foUowina Tampa Bay's m. touchdown. ··1 knew when I bn it that it wam't goiOJ lo be aood,'. said Rams CS. f-cnsa vc end Ga'}'. Jeter who IJOl a bud on Obed Arin's k:iclc after Buc:I• reserve Ughl end Marie Wine WM flaaed for holdina. Dkkcnon's performance over- shadowed a 312-yant.. two-IOUC:b- down passi.na effort by Tampe Bey'• Steve DeBerg who fashioned a 26-17 Bucs lead throu&h three QIW1erl. Dickerson ipit.ed a oomebeck. thou&h. bolting SI yards on the fu1I play of a 6-yard march that quar- terback Jeff Kemp capped witb a l- yard sneak to slicc the Rams' deficit to 26-24. Raiden cornerback Jamea O..U &rabe a fumbled Raider punt return from the Cotta• Larry Andenon Sunday. The second-year pro who paced NFL runners with 1,808 yards as a rookie is 372 yards .away from Simpson's sinlle-season record of 2,003 yards. He has to average 124 yards per outing in the Rams' last three games to shatter the mark. Henry Ellard returned a punt l 7 yards to the Tampra Bay 42 less than a minute later, and the Rams found (Pleue eee RAllll/92) Raiders tuneup forMiam-i Irvlne, CdM vle for· volleyball sebJ .. ls berth ~ - Od 1 d V 1 Di i i I Poway, 3-1 , last Tuesday. The Va-Corona dcl Mar advanced Wlth an Besides Oden. Irvine also features en ea S aq uerOS Il V S On queros earlier swept aside Edison to easy I S-4, 15-6, 15-1 decision over all-Jeaauers Nancy Bower (aetter) and t C d IM T d i ht claim the Clf. 4-A championshif . Los Angeles City representative middle blocker Chris Roberts. who agaiilS Orona e ar UeS ay Il g Oden displayed a sample o her Roosevelt H igh in the first round of was credited with 18 kills and 13 abilities against Poway with 31 kills thcSouthcrnCahforniaToumamenL blocks in the openina round apinst Defense peaking at the right time; Colts fall 21 -7 LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Angeles Raiders have rebounded from a three-game losing streak by playing brilliantly on defense in their last two 11mcs. However, their next opponent fig. urcs to give them a much more difficult test. The Raiders limited Indianapolis t6 onlY 158 yards in total offense Sunday in roll ing to a 2 1-7 National Football League victory over the Colts. The win came on the heels of a 17-7 triumph over Kansas City in which the Raiden held the Chiefs to only 182 yards in total offense. By DENNIS BROSTERB~US Of .. 0.-., ......... A benh in the Southern California Division I girls volleyball...scmifinals wjjlbe .at stake Tuesday-night when- CIF 4-A champion Irvine welcomes 5-A runner-up Corona del Mar in a 7:30 match. As always, the key to slowing down the Irvine attack will be for the Sea K.iogs (17-4) to somehow ~ontrol thc Lakers' Magic • • m1ss1ng The Los Angeles defense appears to be pea.king at the right time. Both touchdowns allowed b y the Raiders INGLEWOOD (AP) -The Seat- in their last two games were set up by 1lc SupcrSonics, catching the Lakcrs turnovers. without their .. Magic," broke Los The Raiders should only hope for Angeles' winning spell. nearly as much success in their next Ricley Sobers. who led Seattle with outing; they challenge the powerful 23 points. figures the Sonics would Miami Dolphins at the Orange Bowl have won Sunday night's National next Sunday. Basketball Association contest even if While the Los Angeles victory over the Lakers' Earvin "Magic" Johnson Indianapolis was impressive, at least hadn't sat out the game with a sligllr as far as the defense was concerned, knee injury. one key player expressed the feeling "Winning here on their home court that aJI is not right with the defending and breaking their seven-game win- Super Bowl champions. ninf streak is a very sweet victory for "I'm kind of concerned, because it us,' Sobers said after the 105-94 seems like we oftenJ'ust play well victory over the Pacific Division enough to win," sai Los Angeles lcading-Lakcrs. "We played with a lot comcrbaclc Mike Haynes, who inter-more aggressiveness and we got into cepted a pass thrown by Indianapolis the now of the game early. quarterback Art Schlichter in the "After that. we lcnew that the fourth quart.er Sunday to put an end Lalten wcrt without their main man, to a scoring threat by the Colts. Magic. and obviously they need him. .. We weren't rca1Jy as up for this But I thought we played well enough game ~~l say, we'll be next week for to beat them. even with Magic." Miami. Tom Chamben contributed 23 Quarterback Marc Wilson tossed points for Seattle, while Jack Sikma two touchdown passes and ran for had 14 points and nine rebounds. anothcrscorefortheRaidcrs,whoare "We played a aood game and we 9-4 and have a one-game lead over played well together," said a happy New England in the battle for the Seattle Coach Lenny Wilkens. "We American Foot bell Conference's se<> have a lot of new people who have not ond wild-card berth with three games played together very much and remaining in the regular season. they're beginning to play well as a "It's another win, another step," team." ' said Los Angeles Coach Tom A ores. The triumph gave the Sonics a 5-9 who sounded quite satisfied with his record and put them four pmes back team's performance. "At this stage of ofthe Lakers, who arc 1 ~6 and a half- the season, we're just trying to take it "game ahead of Ponlanll in the one at a time because that's what's division. aoina to keep us alive." Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 23 Wilson hurled scoring strikes of points and had 14 rebounds for the seven yards to tight end Todd Lakers, who fell behind early in the Christensen and one _yard to tiaht end third quarter and could never catch Da-ve Caiper and scoreo 6imseJ( on a up. 14-yard 1Ct1mblc. -Johnson suffered the knee iajury in The Colts, who fell to 4-9.t had only Saturday ni&hl's victory over the Los four first down1-in the rmt three A~los Oippen. quart.en and 10 overall, and didn't •One of the bi& keys was that we have possession in Los Angeles didn't get let them get the break territory until the lltird quarter. aoing," said Sikma. and seven stuffed blocks. But Brande still J'CQUs the loss to Poway. effons of the Vaqueros' South Coast "We've met Corona dcl Mar in Gahr in the finals of5-A play. The survivor of Tuesday's contest League Player of the Year, Elaina tournament twice this year and each "Our plan is to keep constant moves into the 1Cmifinal round of the Oden. side-has come out on top once," says pressure on Irvine. something we tournament at Golden West Collqe "We're well aware of what (senior Irvine Coach Mark McKenzie ... They hoped to do against Gahr," says Saturday. blocker) Elaina Oden can do," sax.!_ J.thc Sea Kings) won two out of three ~t4e°) ":j!c let u..Q_ajllinst Gahr_{.a IM semifinals m: JJatcd for 11- Corona def Mar Coac Charlie in fnc Orange-county Tournament oss and that really hurt us." a.m., with section entries from the Brande. "I've coached heT for five and we beat them two out of three in The Sea Kini$ att led by sentoT north and south ~matcbed by a years (m club competition), so I know the San Marcos Tournament." (Tour-outside hitter Brooke Hcmngton. a com toss by the tournament director. that she's got to be the best talent namcnl pool play is not counted in co-MVP in the Sea View ~c. The Divasion I finals are scheduled around." the schools' overall records). Other standouts include seniors for 7 Saturday night. also at Golden Irvine enters with unbeaten --That shows bow evenly-matched Linda Burton. Andrea Redick.. Cam-West. The Division 11 and Ill finals credentials (22-0) after winnimt at we arc," McKenzie added. mlc Lou Dodcr and Cristy Mo1so. will precede the Divuion I match. ........... Kanem Abdal.Ja bbar drtYee a.romacl S.ttle'• .Jack at••• 8aadaf m,bt. S.ttle palled off 106-M ftotory. . Eagles short again, but not in talent Lockwood, Clements to pace Estancia· s post Sunderma n -era By ROGER CARLSON Ol .. 0.-, ........ Is there hfc after Larry Sundcnnan? Few will question the abilities of new coach Joe Reid, but it appears the EstanC1a High Eagles wtll have their hands full defending their Sea View League champ1onsh1p wtth the I 984-85 prep basketball season ap- proaching. Sunderman's teams posted a 149-44 record in the past seven seasons. won or shared the league utle five of the past six years. went to the CIF 3-A finals twice in the last four campaigns and were J-A finalists last season. • Sunderman has since moved on to become the women's basketball coach at Orange Coast Co11C$e and among the losses from graduation arc the Sea View Lcague·s Co-MVPs. Jim Curtis and Jon Johnston. * * * .. , I'll ~ cllli-emely tough to crack the top thrtt in the league, Saddle- back. COTona dcl Mar and Newport Harbor," cautions Reid, al thou.ah be lnows his team has a solid nucleus lo build on with returning all-lcaaue standouts Scott Cements (6-2) and Adam Lockwood (6-0). .. We've got those two starters back.·· says Reid. "but whert wilt the 37 points we got from Johnston and Curtis come from? .. Reid ma} find the answer in the Laguna Beach Invitational. which the Eagles are involved in next week. (Pleue eee &AGLU{B2) * * * Edlsoil. will_depend ~on UDderclilssmeD Graduation hits ... Chargers hard, but nucleus there down the road in.that tournament ii MaieT ~1. wh1t'h 1s tn the other bracket and iS' a heavy-ftvorite to defend ns tourne)' championship. The Chargcn racked up a I S-6 ~ dunng summer I~ play. Among Borchcr1's crew~ retunt- ing letterman Chris Sombcra (S4) and Ken Ammann (6-2). alona wilb 6-0 sophomore Mike Pnn~. Anteaters face .Colorado in opener tonight fhc transformauon was \Cr)' eas) to sec -Jon Borcher1 turned Edison's basketball program from a S-17 campalgn 1n 1982 into a CIF ptayofT entry with a 19-5 overall tccord an his fiat )ear Wlth the Chargers, now the onl)' question is can the Charien conunuc to contend in the unset League? .\mmannVtl'a theteam·s o.6 maa a a sophomore and could be one o( the lequc's premier pla)'t'rS. accord- '"' to Borchert And, the Edison coach ts very h1P on Pnn~ who he S&)" could be one of the top sophomores in Oranae Cou.e-BOULDER, Colo. -There will be .no teams from Toronto to beat up toniabt. UC Irvine tets the lqitimatc oolleaiale bukelblll season in pr toniaht when the Anteaters meet the Univenity of Colorado (7:0S, · K'NV&FM, IOI) here. ua may hive looted im~wvc IMl week in a l 1 l-S7 thruhina oftM Univerwiry of Toronto in ,n cih1- b6tioa contest at Crawford Hall. but the real tat comes toni&ht when you coollder. •Colorado ia S*'!Cld three re- turnina starters includina center Randy Downs (IS. I points per pnte in I 983-84)and forward Alex uvnns ( 12.1. 9.2 rebounds). •The Golden Buffaloes have never to t to the Anteaten in thn:e trin. •If it matters any, head ooech 8lll Mulhpn W1U not be with the team. M utlipn is rccupcrat1na from 1u,.ry tto dear out a cloged ancry in his neck which doctors believe wn the rtason for his mikS 1troke on Oct. I 9. A stint coecbes Mike Bokosky. Herb lavsty and Brian Mullipn. • meanwhile, will be lootina for the same kind of offensive output from the Anleaten u they displayed apinst Toronto. Tht Anteaters ftpre to 1un tan- ford tran1fet' Johnny Romm. ajuniOJ, al center with 6-9\41 Tod Murphy and 6-1 ftahman WaY"C Eneielstacl al the foiwarcb. Senior Jerome Ltc and ftahman Rodney ott wdl be 1n the bed:coun. Ito.JPS lul 1 l of 1 S field pl tn (or 22 poinu 1n the romp over Toronto Murphy ha4 l4 Points and IS m>C>undso ' Colorado bad a 16-13 re.cord last year and Coech ToP Apte 's team was fOW1b in the 8'a £'&ht Con.fercnce wit.b I 6-8 mart. Borchcn lost almo t evcf)one to vaduat1on -andudan& 6-S Brad Hachtcn and~ Rodnc} Johnson, in addition to ptaym.akCT Tim Wcrtntt. so in many way it's hkc stut1na all Joinina llvnns and Downs in lM ) over. starti"'-lineup for Colondo are 6-S "It's a )Ouna team wit?i 1:\ under· bwariS Mate flory, 6-1 tvatd Mikt eta men .. uy Borthttt ··sut 1t's a Reid and 6-4 suarcffony Pnun Rttd "Cf)' 1ntcihp:nt team that \hoots ''nY ls alto 1 retumma Stana'. Ht l\'tT· wll and Vo"C'll play aood prn.su~ aaed I.I points Otr ume a ur qo. defense." Af\u toni&ht'spmc. \ht Antntcn • The Charscn will ' their fint tttum home to holt n Dita<> tilt 1nd1cauon ne't wct1t 1n the ValcnCla Thul'lday at lhc Anabtun Conven· Tournament "'here the) open Wlth ttoo Ctn\cf pcranu Monday at 6: l S. Loom1na ~ l ) ... _...__..._ •• "ThcquntJOD mark 1 lnc -·--. u ysa Boh but Edison's rzc IJVU ever) 1nd1ca on lhOtt" c,.,nccms can be answc pos1uvcly Do d lOd.. a 6-7 21 5-pouod Junior. ha been imprnv1na raptdJ)'. And Borcbcn 1 also h on Strv1tt Hi&h tran fer Baron ( otncn (6-4) the m~onty of the team com from last :a n' Junior vanity, and 1t includo JcfTOatC°' <S-10), Ort n OuBo<iC (6-4). Dav1d Mariub\a (Pl_.. &DIMM'(D) lQ • \. B. Y. Who? That's a queetion many are .. Jrlngof~o. 1 ,,.. AP .... lftel [il BriaJ».m Youna nivcnhy suffers c • t from an idtftu1y cmis that the • na) yen ctY• · '"B Y. Who'?'" Ranked o. I and (NIPDS"taWVd trbll man retl WOliJd be a taanlCld nauonaJ champroMbap. The _people at BYU o1f# oo aPolOllet .. What'1 the bi1 deal?" aw BYU Alhlet1c Directof Glen Tu.ck.en ... Pco'* a.re mak1n1 a lot more o( tlm than et rally ts •• Brilham You~ ended a 12-0 tOJOn wuh a 3 I J vfCIOry fa.st turday ovtr Utah State 0o{)ec 21 , lbe Coup.rs will play . unran~ Mtdl!Pn, 6-S. 1n the Hol.iday BoYrl at san Otqo tr the Coupn WUl, ~ very likely wtll be crov.·ned champions or collqe footbeJI. CllppentopSa.U, 114-109· LOSA l -uol ntoo m decided u.t Loa .a ppcn DCCded. 10-tlme .. ~ .. li~ tbto fuU&Rd ~ ~ lft bW« of ~ pumpsoa ln t.hC C1i~· l&i1 ll potnt.t Sunmy ftiabt t they htld off the UIJUry.riddled Pb«na uns 114-10910 a N1tt0naJ Ba:stttba.ll As.tocUuoa pmc '"I too me a,_bslc to inc. but 1n the roun.h quaner, ooc.c a abot ~ , i>tbm foUowut.. .. said loboten, •ho bad 19 pornts on chc e\totq. ... took over 10 w f'ounh Qu&.r'\a bcaute e occdcd a spark aOd I loolrin& 10 nmr dti happen. Johmon pmooaU) ftodCd Qff &ht wis in tbe .-ani.ot mommts of the COft&esl. u they closed the sap 1everal tamn only to ve Jum wideft the Oippen' lead ap1n. John10npvd..osAnadn• 104-JOO lead witb6:0S rmta.1.Una 1n the coot.eSt. .\ft.tor Phomill cut the d.ifra~ to one point on a Jumptt by Maunce Lucas fnd a free throvo by rc\ef'\c center Jamn Edwards. JohnlOD reeled off Sil CQOiCCUllVe po1nta to II~ the Oappen a 110-103 pad wnh 327 left Dunna the 1purt, Johnson sank a p;ur of20-footer\ and also made a layan. That'• the b11 deal, and that'• Whal hti lM naysaycnCt')'IJt&. lhe Wes&.em Alhkttc Conftf'ena Ka Royal Heroine e r aba honon cream;-puff conference, lbey way. th.at 1ncludet ieam• hkc C-Olorado ~lite, Wyom1na. New Mexico. Utah aod Tc~El Puo. The WAC 11 Ued to a bowl called the Hohday, and that'scuctly what 1L11 for the Coupn-· • hQhday The Holiday Bowl peys $470,000 compared with lhe SS.6 million offered by the Kate Bowl, one of the more revered New Year's Da y bowls that normally produces the national champion. It is no wonder lhe Holiday Bowl can't attract the bcJt teams. INGLEWOOD -Royal Heroine m "lrtually clinched honon as the nauon's top female turf J)C"rfomitr of 1984 ~und.ty by.w1nnina the $200,000 Matna.rch Jn vita· 11onal at Hollywood Park and hand1n1 archnval Sabin only ber s.econd lou of the year fl was the final ra<% of Sabin'\ career, her trainer announceQ pnor to the Matnarch and probably the wt outang for RoyaJ Heroine Follow1ng the race. Ro)aJ Heroine's trainer, John Goj(jen, said, "Quite ILkely she·11 be r d. but that 1~ up to the owner " And that's the road to a national champ1onsh1p? "We rttltze there'• a certa.Jn •mua.ncu 1n the hi&h· populallon areas about us," Tuckett said Sunday "But we understand all that, and we've l Ot no rcaJ ax to annd, "We're not 10 another wor1d out here. We can play Capital• abut out Blac Hawb with these folks. We JUlt don't have quite the respect we ouaht to ha~! yet, but we're not impatient We'll take 11 Dave CllrilUu and Mike GartDtr ra u 11 comes. scored power-play ioals dunna a 37. ' Tuckett points out that BY U did <JChedule second span in the third penod as the Pmsburah. Baylor and Tulsa amon1 its nonconferenu Washinaton (ap11.al1 dtfeated the Chtcago opponenu. Pm was ranked No. 3 when 11 lost 20-14 to Black Hawb S-0 1n a Natfonal Hockey League pm. e BYU 1n ill first pme of the aeason, althoU&h the Sund.ay ma.ht. Before that outburst Cralc l.a•pU. Panthers finished l· 7-1. Baylor was unranked when 11 scored at 6:34 of the fim penod, and Washington goalie lost47-131nBYU'111ccondpme,butthc8earsd1dbeat Pat RlgiD kept the lead intact while posting his first Tex.as th11 past week.end. And Tulsa, after losing 38-1 S • sh0V10ut of the season ... Elsewhere 1n the NHL to BYU. went on to win the M11soun Valley Sund.ay, Su ve KAl.1per scored three goals for the first Conference ume 1n his NHL career and aumed on another as And, Tuckett u ys, the WAC doesn't have an y Boston 1n2pped a three-game los1f)I \trealc w1lh a 7-4 monopoly on weak team\. victory over Montreal Dale H114ur scored on a 20- "The teams 1n the WA( are a lot better than people foot wnst shot w11h I 24 remaining in oven1me, hfung think." T uclcett s~ud. guebcc to a 3·2 victory over the New York Rangers. ~~. of tbe da• uebec grabbed a 2-0 lead on power-play goali ~!:~ ,..uv~ J Saove and AIMlre Savard 10 the first pcnod .. ''Theyw.ttblttztng10mYChyoujul1can'tkeep Loob 5COtcd two goals 10 the third pcTl'od, the first a ...... t f .mtte~ ttWM &..at• matWOf spectacularcfTon 10 break a uc, and &Jve Calgary a 4-2 " .. up'°' an -·-' · · ,....... · victory over Vancouver. Loob broke a 2-2 11c when he lime I*«• we puffed Nay," -Sen FrMdeco spht the Vancou ver defense pair of A•dY Scbllebelaer .. hn quwterbec* Joe Montana f~ h'9 tMm'• a&-3 Nattonat FootbeH LMgUt rout of New and Ooa1 Lidster to score at 13:25 on..n. Sunday. Dolphins, Jeta tangle tonight CavalleratopHawka, 118-111 Dolphins lLJ become "fat uits" now that c II• MIAM I -Don't expect the Mlam1 m they've chnchcd a Nattonal Football RICHFIELD, Ohio-Johnny Dav"• m scored 20 points to lead eight 5eorcrs in double figures as the Cleveland (avahen survived two founh~uan.er ralhes by the League playoff spot They didn't &Ct to 11-1 Allan La Hflwks to pin a 118-11 1 victory CleveJand, 2· I 2. had lo~t three straight games since rccordin& HS onl y 01her victory, 1n.A1lanta on Nov IS. 101·9.9-. wuh that lo nd of attitude The Dolphin\ clinched lhe AFC E.a41tem D1v1S1on utle on Thanksgivi ng wh'1'! Dalla~ beat New fniland 20-17 They celebrated wfth a turkey dinner, and then we nt back t" work to prepare for tonight'., matchup with the New York Jets before a nationally televised !Channel 7 at ii) v1~w1ni. "Although 1he d1 v1s1on champ10n~h1p 1~ lhe fir~t ncp. 11 doesn't mean mue;h 1f we don't get to the big game," \aid Dolphin' <;afety Mike Ko1lowsk1. referring to the Super Bowl "We've got to krep on winning." TeleTlalon, rad.lo TaavlSK>N 8 p,m. -PRO 'OOTIAU.: ~York Jet8 at Miami, Chant* 7. RADIO • Coach non %ula ~1d he was &)ad the Dolphins had reached the first goal he had ~t up fo r them. but he said they've got one add1t1onal important La'ik before the end of the ~awn 8 p.m. -PRO ,OOTaALL: Hew York Jeta It Ma.mt. KNX (1070). . 7 p.m. -COLU• 8AMSTaAU.: UC lrvlne at Cok>rldo, KWVE-FM ( 108). Shootout wrecks polls Prom AP dl1pat<:bt1 AN< HORA( 1l Alaska -fhe \l'vrnlh annunl (1rca1 Alaska ~hoo1out tlttln I du much for the 1 rt·d1hil11 y ol t olkKC t>a'ikethall's pre· \('11\on poll\ lll1no1'> \howt·d 11 may not he the l1dl1on '\ <K'c..orul he'> I team, I Yth· r.rnkt•d Kan"n \howi:d 11 probably \houlll ha .. C' 11n·n higher and un- ltrr .tl<kd Alc1hama -Hirm1ngham 1kn111n\lr,1l\'d 11 dcl1n 11ely i.hould l1a'H Ot'<'O r.inhcl \omi:whi:rc ()11 C..Hn\l'<Ull\'t' n1gh1~. the l/AB llla1t'I\ tlownt•d lll1n1m and Kan..a\ 111 c ;ipllJn• thi: \llootout c..rown Arul C oath< 1rn1· Ban11w thinks his •lull cJ11ln I t' vt•n pl.t> very well in \11 11cl.1y ' /)'(I \f, v1t 111r 1 over Kansai. 111 tlw t h.imp1on'>h1p iwmc \\ twn .,...,. tt111 l1.1 11t• ,1 had day. a'i ..11t• dicl toda} Mid \1111 wr n wcll 1hcn I think wt· re· j1,111ny 111 Ix· pn·tt y good." Ill' ,,1111 \I lt•,1\I 11111 1lllo11rr wh11 alri:ady 1\ pre II~ good " f1 111111 I JUnlClr guard \11 H' "1 1ll hdl \Ctlrcl the uut'itand1ng pl,1yc r of lht; 1lirn· tl.1~ tournJmcnt "1111 hdl 'thn·c· 1>01111 pla> w11h 2k ·.n 011cl\ 111 ti.'' liltt·cl I ''II 10 Vl('tory 11v1·1 Jl.,111\,1\ I Ir 11111\lwd the game w11h I k ;1111111\, hr 111gin11 hi\ three-day 111Htl I~ r, 1 JU\I onl k\\ than tournament leader Le n Bias. While Mitchell's shooting per· tt'ntage., weren't flashy. he alway~ r,eemed 1<> ma ke the clutch shot. In lJAR''i 59-52 upset of lll1no1s on Sa1urday, he -.cored 26 points despite being guarded by llhno1s' be'lt de· fen\1ve player. Bruce Douglas. "Ste\e Mitchell JU~t had a phenomenal tournament," Banov. $31d. "We got key things from ke}" pc.wrlc when we had to " " ha te to lose more than anybody ... s1mi K1rnsas Coach Uirry Brown, "but I'm proud of our k1d\ and the wa y they conduued themselves." One of the key factors in UA B\ VKIOry wa .. the ejCCtion of Kan~s· 7- loot c..entcr C1rcg Dreiling with IO·SO to go While noting he'd never seen only one playt'r cJct:tcd for figh11n,. Brown refused to hlamc Dreiling ., los'i for the dcfea1. "Tha1's not the ~me," said Brown "We can win wrthoul Circg. I he~ made the shoh when lhey had to nnd we didn't " fo yhawk point gu ard Mark r ur· g<·on wacin't quite w phllowphtc:al "It really hun us," Turgeon ..aid "f-vcryhody JUSt kind of folded and played ~arcd the rest of the game:· Coming off the disappointing Sat· • 0 " SI Ill NARI) Sll IPYA HD HAUL OUT RAT ES 39' •• 00 fl,.. ,,,, 40 4'9' iti5 fh . ·~0·5f' . 0.0/fl ,. ,,,. 60 61f J>b t fl 7,l>'fi p $8 00 I Lt l'l .t•:A N & I' A I NT B<>f'TOM $6 50 Per Fool l~bor Only STEAM CLEA NIN G S45 00 hr YA Hr> LA801t S40 00 Per Hour llAlll. OUT$ TO 75 ' 76 TO~. /Mtrlne •ale 223·2 l . r STIH~ .. : r N l';Wl'UHT BEA ti t7 14) 67&·Hi0 I \ urday loss to UAB, the f 1ght1ng llhnt alw were plny1ng \Wired when they 11quandercd a 10-point lead and ended up going into tnplc oven1me to defeat Oregon 75-72 for third place. Tom Schaefer sank two free throws with 1 I -.ccond., left to seal the Illinois' victory in the longest game in ~hootout h1\tory The Figh11ng Illini held on despite the loss of the1r big men, Efrem Winter., and (ieorge Montgomery, on fo ul\ in regulation 11mc. They were able to do it largely on the strength of wme 'iCnsat1 onal c,hoot1ng by Doug Allenqcrgcr, who fini'lhed with 33 paints "We Won under adverse con· d111ons." ( oach Lou Henson said. "This toumamcnl favors the under- dog. rhc underdog has a chance here," taking note of Anchorage fans' 1ondcn1.y to make things almost like a hC>mc gumc for the teams least hkcly IO \UCCeed " I he wd part 11\ that we had the opponun1ty (lo win)," s:ud Oregon C oac:h Don Monson. I hs Ducks had a \1x-po1nt lead in the second overtime but couldn't hold on. Aflcnwo dismal i.how1ngs. a 58-S6 lo\~ to Kansas and a S4-52 victory over D1viMon II Alaska·Anchora$C. Maryland finall y played up 10 its potential Sunday, In the only blowoul of the tournament. the Tcrrap1n11 cru&hed 1 enncsS<'e 72-49 behind Len H1as' 2S point11 to fimsh fourth. Alaska-An chorage played w1ty over 1111 head for the third straight day ttg."t1n.,ta 1J1v11.ion I opponent. forcina Idaho tate into oven1mc before falli ng 73-12 Dfell Ohviee's short Jumper wl\h 3' scconduoaoaave the Bcnpls ~vcnth olacc . .... .......... E rle Dlckenon wu etopped by Tampa Bay•• Byron Br&U• for a ehort •aiD euty. 6at later he led Ram• to 34-38 .nil. RAMS ••• ~romat lhcrnselvcs lcadint )J-26. when f Oicktt'IOn bW~ up the middJc of the Otld i nd rKCd 33 yatds un. touched (Of htt lhird toudldown. Mii..runiforcr1 27-yard :tlt.ld pl w11h S:l' to 10 made tt 34-26. "Our pme plan ii to w~ra ckfen'<! down, 50 1h1t by halftJmc we·,~e ~at up on them pretty aood. 111d Ou:kersOn . who allO K.Ored on 1 J>111r of ?-yard runJ "Then~ the third a.no fourth quarter we've aot the same under control." .. It's hard tocoot11n a man Jiu that (or 60 minute). T1kc IWIY, tl;tc two tong runs ind the pme ll in our favor," Tam~ Bay nose t.aek.le O.v1d Lopn wd ... We have a~ plan for the IUms but we ate not fools. Wt know he 1s the kty and v.e have to atop him." De Bera completed 27 or 44 passes, inc,Juding sconna 11rikC1 of 16 yard~ 10 Jerry Bell and 6 yards to Adgtr Armnrona. He also brouabt the Bue .. back from the l.4-26 dd:ia t wttb a .cven·play. 12-yard march Jame\ Wildrrcapped with luuecond I-yard TD run of the day with 2:" left The Bucs repined ~aon at their own 4S-yard hnc with S4 seconds remaining. but Rams cor nerback LeRoy Irvin intercepted :i pass intended for Theo Bell to k.tll Tampa Bay's hopes. "DcBcradidn't have much room to throw II. He was I httle areedy to throw 11," Irvin said. "He threw 11 behind him (Bell) and I got to the ball." Tampa Bay was also hurt early in the ~e when an official ruled that a d1V1ng-Gcrald Carter was beyond the end hne on an apparent S·yard touchdown reception. The Dues lhen settled for Arin's 26.yard fLeld aoal and a 3-0 lead. Seahawks tie up West Krieg. Largent top Broncos: Sain ts no match for 49ers F rom AP dl1patclae1 DENVER -Dave Kncg thrcv. an 8~yard touch· down stnke on the pme's first pla)'. then combined w1th Steve Largent to decimate the Denver secondary as the Seattle Seahawks beat the Broncos, 27·24 in their AFC West showdown Sund.ay and tied them for first place 1n the National Football League's toughest d1 v1s1on. .__ _____ .__ ... But the Scahawks had LO survive a dnve by Denver in Le.rtent Montana the last two minutes that ended when Rteh Karlis' 2S-yard without nfle-anned quanerback L>an f'outs. field-goal attempt with 39 seconds h1t 1he nght upnght and bounced away. Glutl %8, ClalH1 %7: In East Rutherford, N.J., Phil Kneg. g.aven perfect protection b> an offensive hoe Simms threw two touchdown passes in the final 7111 that d1dn·t allow a sack agamst a defense that h!ft.AJ minutes to rally the New York Giants to a victory over the entering the game, completed JO of 43 for 416 yards and Kansas City Chiefs. thtce touchdown~ 1ncludili~hree-yardcr la-bargcnt that I.be Giants the~ch~lled-lhe victory when-dcfcm ive broke a 17-17 tic with 12:30 left in the game. back Mark Haynes recovered a Chiefs' fumble as Kansas Largent, meanwhile. enjoyed the best day of his City was dnving downfield w11h a chance to get a winning 1llustriou'i nine-year NFL career catching 12 passes for score. I 91 yard\ as he consistently broke loo..e under the deep-Redskin• u , Billi U: In Washington, on the day he dropping Denver hnebackers. then turned them into became the WashLngton Redskins' all-ti me leading passer, longer gains Joe The1smann nddled the Buffalo Bills second.ary for 31 I The Sea11le v1<.1ory left the team'i 11ed at 11-2 atop the yards and two touchdowns to lead the Redskins. AFC West w11h three games lefl and ended a 10-gamc Theismann, who completed 26 of 33 passes and winning streak by Denver. They meet aga in 1n Seattle on moved ahead of Sonny Jurgensen as the Redskins all-ti me the final day of the season. I d h 22 706 d h hd Elsewhere in the NFL Sunday· passing ca er wit . yar s, 1 rew touc own passes of 11 yards to Art Monk and I 8 yards to Charlie Brown to Oen 3~. Sal.Dt1 3: In New Orlean'i, Joe Montana spark the Redskins. overcame a slow stan to throw for two touchdowns and set u~ another as the San Franrisco 49ers clinched a d1 v1S1on 8en11l13~. Falconi 14: In Ci nc1nna11, Turk Schonen "' threw a ,>7·yard touchdown pass to Cns Col~nsworth on c amp1onsh1p with a triumph over the New Orleans the $2me'i. founh P.lay, spark.in~ a 21-point first-half Saints. sconng spree that carried the Cincinnati Bengals to a Montana wa& 0-6 through the first quaner. but wound I F I up with 14 completions ~n his next 24 attempts for 177 victory over the reeling At anta a cons. yards. Brown• %7, Oiiers 10: In Cleveland, Paul McDonald Cardlaal1 17, Eagles H: In St Louis Neil fired three touchdown passes and Matt Bahr kicked a pair O'Donoghue ki cked a 44-yard field goal wit h eight seconds of field goals as t~ Cleveland Browns capitalized on the remaining to ch max a franllc finish and gave the St. U>uis first interce pted passes thrown by Warren Moon in four Cardinals a tnumph ovenhe Phil11delph1a Eagles. games to defeat the Houo;ton Oilers. Stcelen 5%, Cbar1en %4: In Pittsburgh , Mark Malone Bean 34, Vlklng1·3: In Minneapolis, Walter Payton riddled San Diego's secondary for four scoring passes, rushed for 11 7 yards and Steve Fuller threw two ' three to John Stallwonh, and ran for a touchdown as the to uchdown passes as the Chicago Bears clinched their first Pittsburgh Steelers routed the error-prone San Diego title since 1963 with a thrashtnJ of the Minnesota Vikings. Chargers. The Bears, 9-4, are champions of the Central Div151on Malone completed 11 consecuti ve passes at one point for the first time since the National football Conference and ended with a .team-record completion average of 82 spht into three d1 v1s1ons in 1970'. percent on 18of22 attempts for 253 yards ag.ainst the self· Payton ran 23 tames for his 11 7 yards and a 2-yard destructing C'hargers. wh o played more than half the game touchdown and caught two passes for 33 yards. EDISON YOUNG~ • • From Bl ( S-9), Rich Sm 1th (6·2), Mike McCon· nell (6-3), Doug Katona (6·5) and Enc: Wheelwright (6·2). DuBo'IC 'lllW varsity experience during lhc prescawn as a junior, McC'onncll was the JV team's most im proved player and Wheelwnaht has proven to be an ucept1onal athlete with his ab1lit1es 1n track and field (high Jumping) and football (all· league defensive hack). Roun ding out the squad.is junior Chris Cole, up from the sophomore team. •dtMft~ D« •·1-Valtllcl• TourlWlmal'll, D« e-11 Lot Allot, D« 1....-CYIH'tll (llOl'ne), OK 11·'1-l• Quinta Tournamen1, Dec 11·~non Cllv TOUfnamtftl Jan S-•I C.l>lwano Valltv; Jen ._Lone 8H<ll Wll\Ofl (/IOmt), Jen 11-1 Wt1lmln11er•, Jan. 16-0ctan View• (hOme)/ Jan. It-Hunt 1no1on '"c11• (110mel1 Jan 7)-el "°"'"'''" 111"-v'; Jen 2s-Marlna' (home) FIO 1-WMlmlntltr ' (/IOmtl; FIO ..-..1 Ocean v'""•. Feo t-a1 Hunllnoton IMch'J Flt> U-FCIUntllll Vi11tv• OlomeJ, Jrab lhl ~rin.e• 'dtftolft SUllMf Laatua ffmt Al "Oft• loutnement and ~ .. ,,.... "9 n at 7:>0 • m A mllUUla Joiner break s receptlon record PITTSBUROR CA-PY -Charlle Joiner of the San Dleao Cha,_crs broke pro football's ca~r rccepuont record Sunday by landina sill passc In a 52·24 Charaers' lo s to Lhe Pittsburgh Steelers. Joiner, held without a reception in the fint half, cau&ht a 2S-yard touchdown catch amona his Sill aec:ond-half rcccp1lof11 and now has 6' I carter catches. The previous National Footblll Lcaauc record of 649~tches was held by Chartcy Taylor of the Wa hinaton Rcd1Jun1. ~ Joiner, 37. who broke into pro footbatl ,, a defensive back wnh the Houston Oalcn. broke the record Wllh a thrcc-rard catch on the Ct\.Jracrs' nna pouc loo of the pmc. He t.tcr CIUaftl I I 9·yard pass. Joiner'• ICOrina catch came with S: 11 rema lnlna in the pme. AU of the receplions came on pastel thrown by Chartm raervc·1 quancl'blck l:.d Luther. whO rtplattd Dan routl late 1n the tceond qU1ncr af\er Fouts tufrered a "°' n oull. EAGLES •.• F rom Bl Estancia open<; w11h Mclodyland Tuesday, Dec. 4 at 7:30. Sunderman may be miui n~. bul Estancia figures to maintain its in· tense style, which Reid helped crea.te as an assistant. ., Again it's quickness which the Eagles wall be punina a lot of their hopes behind w11h Craig Covey, a 6-3 Junior, the tallest player. Clements averaged 11 . I points a game for Estancia ISIJU ntOr, many or those points comina from the in tenor off the rebound. . 4o_ Lockwood, a talented point guard.' 11.veragcd 9 . .S point I a&me. Expected to play prominent role ·'" Estancia's_game areTodd Mooney. ,Enc Va n Doren, Richie StaJllps, Steve Isaak. Jeff Fun n and Tom Panari~·. Mooney (6.1) was the No. 6 man as a JUn1or, Van Doren (6-0l is a lona auard and Furin avcr'laed 2.9 points a aame and was the team's No. 3 scorer prior to 1ull'crina a foot lr\jury very early In the lcaaue eeason. Other squid members include Cun Ericson (S-9), Llrry Machara (S·8), Raed Mu1tafa (,·8), Ken Ncwell(6-l) and David Hanuna (6-0). "The lack or ht1aht will hurt ap1n." gys Reid, "but we'll show up." t2 ~. Iii. (J 4·01 IMJ It ... !Of\ COllMe47•4J.. t) Aullurll ( .. J .. ) wet .. NHI. al A.leMme. ltturde'I ~ 16. ~~ ClllfwrM 1 .. J·OI !Mt to Notre ~ 19•7 He•I t i UCLA, S.tUt• -----··-NPL NATIONAL COMl'HINCI .... •·Cllleeto Greenlev Detroit Ttl'llH In Mlnnnota W LT 12 1 0 • s 0 • 1 0 > 10 0 C..-11 ' • 0 • • 0 • I 1 • ' 0 3 10 0 .... NY Olant• I S 0 '15 HS 250 WaU'llnotOl'I I 5 0 .415 J:M 2)1 O...• • s o "'s m 140 St. l.olil• 7 6 o .t.ll m 2H Pt11~i. s 1 1 .•n n 1 m AMllUCAN CONlllltllNCI Plll1buret1 Cincinnati c .... 11e11e1 HoustOl'I W"t 11 , 0 II 2 0 ' • 0 • , 0 s • 0 C4Mrlll 1 • 0 s • 0 • ' 0 , 11 0 la•• •·.W.ml .II 1 0 New Enoi.11<1 I S 0 NY~' 6 6 0 l~naPOllt • f O l uHalO 1 12 O a·cllnclled CIMtlOft tlllt 911 -1" .61s l lf m 500 163 ?st * 1'7 )4l 011 "' lU v·ctln<Ncl wlld•Urd Dlavoff t>Ktll ~v'•k­Ramt )4, f •~ lay ll R~ 21. lndl•n.tooll• 1 Cl•Yeland 21. Hou••~ 10 Clnclnn.tll 35, Atlanta 1• New York Gian" 11. KanMtt Cllv 77 Wat11lnot011 "· luffato 1' St. Loult 11, Ptllladalonla 16 Plll•t>uton s1. San o i.oo t • S.11 FranclK;O :>S, N•w Orlffn• 3 Clllcago 34, MlnnHOta 3 5eallta 11, Dallvar 14 T ........ 10.... N•w York J•I• al Mt.ml ICllanntl 1 II 61 T°hvn411V'• o-WHlllnotOl'I at Minna~!• (Channel 1 •• ' p m.) 54MdaY's o""'" New Orlttns at • ..,.. Raldlar\ at Mt.ml !Channel • al I) Clllclnn.atl et Cla'<I•~ lndlanaPOlls el l ufft lo Oaau t i PhlladtlOllla Oanvar 11 Kanws City New Yorlt. Glanll et N.w York Jt ts PlllswrOll el ~IOI'! St Loul1 al New Enoltnd San FraJ\CIK;O a1 Atlante T ame>a Bev a t Grttn lav Detroit at Stania --·· o.c. J Game c 111ctgo ll s.n o i.oo (O\anntl 1 •• J.L. Rams >4, lkKc.aneen n 'r Sceft by (Ne"'" Rams Tame>e lav T&-FG Arlfl ?6 0 10 7 17-3' 9 1 10 7-33 Tl-Wiider I run (kick bloar.adl LA-OlchrlOl'I 2 run (Lan1forel llfckl Tl -J l all 16 Pan from Otaart (Arlri kfO<) ltam.-FG Lanstorel lS Rama-Dlcke<MHI, run (Lanslorel kick! TB-FG Arlrl 2' Tl-Armwono • P•n from O.Baro (Arlrl kl<kl A•m•-K1m11 I run ILa nilorCI It.k ill lltams-Dlcllerto11 ll run Clantforel kl<•) Aarnt-FG Lant lorel 11 T8-Wlldlf I run CArfrl klcl\) A-0 ,241 OAMIE STATISTICS lltnu Finl Clown1 19 ltuiha\·varel\ 43-1'9 P1n lno yarch 61 lltaturn vere11 l I Penn 7·10-0 Saas a v o-o Punts l ·l2 F um11in ·IOI t 1-1 Penattlat ·n rel\ 7·S7 Tl~ ol Poa .. u !oft 1' SJ INOfVIOUAL STATISTICS Tl ,. 21 1S 37' II ,, .... , 0-0 1·40 1-1 1·45 )0;07 RUSHING-tlaml, OiCflattOfl 1'· 191, lttddan l-41, Crulcllf"'4<1 1·0 , 9rown I· 16, Kemo J·I. TtmH lav. Wlldtr 20-n. 0.8ero 2·1 PASSING-Rarni , Kamo 1· 10-0-61 Tampa l1v, Daltfo 11·U ·l·m ltECEIVING-ltams . Elltrel 1·13, Fa rmer 1·19, Gumen 1·10, 0.HIN 1·9, Grant l·S, Olcl\arMHI l·J, larblr l°"mlnu• I) TarllOI 1111, Wltoer IO·to, T 1e11 ..... Hou,. •·SO, J l ett l ·'1, Carter l ·ll, Armstrono 2·11, Dl•Ol'I 1·7 MISSED FIELD GOALS-Nona. Rams (1·5) ll DaHH 20 20 CleYlland 17 " Pith~gh 24 2• Clnclnnt ll 14 33 NY Glantl 12 7t Allanla lO ?e N•w Oflaanl 10 ,, Atlante Q 10 0 San Franclw:o l3 " SI Louis 13 1' Chlcaoo 13 6 Grttn lav 31 ,. Ta~..... l3 O« 7~•w Orleans Dec 9-Hovston Dec 1-.1 San Francisco R•lden 21, C'"' 7 Sc-. ... (Ne"'" lndl•naPOll• 0 0 7 ~ 7 R...... 1 ' 0 7-21 LA-ChrtsttnMn 7 P•U trom WMMHI ll•hr klcll), s 01 LA-C.SPar I Pan lrom WlltOn , •• ,,, lllcll), I., tn6-M<.Mlllan I run (Alltore klclt). 9'11 l'euf111 ....... LA-WlllOll 1' run (ltM kldll, I '2. A-I0,219 GA.Ma STATISTICS 11111 Flrtl CloWlll 10 flluthH·n rds 1'·n Paulno varela ti lttturn vlfO• 20 ....... 10·17·1 Sacllt .... .. .. Punt• 10-4' Ful'llOlt\·IOtt 2· I ~lllet·verot 7·41 l'lma ol PotMIHlon 26:0I INOIV1DUAL ST A TISTICS LA 21 '7·tn 106 7' 13·,3·2 6·4' •·.O H 10•102 JU2 ltUSHING-lndlaftlOOllt, Olcll•Y 16·41, SChlldltar 4•20, Mc.Miiien •-16 Lot An• ...... Allln II 110, Hawll.IM 12·•5. Wllaon • IJ. l(lfle ~·11, Wllll• 2·,, Pruitt l•(mlnus •> PASSIHG-lllClla~'· Sd1llcfl tat 10-27-1-125 Loa Al!ffln, Wlltotl IM3·2·1'6 ltlCEIVING-lndlenatlOllt , Porttr •·O , Shtrwlll M 4, Dlc:ktv I•)), l uttar 1-16, ~11 1-12, McMllan 1·1. Loa AllM'M. Chrltttl!Mn •-17, larnwtl 4·'6, ca.- 11• ... Allall 1-9 MISSEO FIELO GOAL,_.._ •alden tf·4) - ,. 1 20 )0 ,. .. '° J1 (Ot) '1 17 14 1 1 lt l'•lcle SI ... (7 ·t• I) ... , Idle Ne11f ,lorlcle. '9turo.v 1' l.Oulalllll St tie Cl 2 II bNI T ulaM J:MS. 17. r .... CIWl"laJI 11->·0) IOI! Ttxat """' >S-71 11, MtrvltnO ll·HI Mii VU't fl\lt 4S•).4 If UCL.A l•·>-01 was Idle 20. C.-tla (7•)-0) ••• ldlt Neal ~aortca Tac11, Sttur41tv ~T•» HOWTHIY ll'AalO 1. Oeot'OllOWll 0 •0) llMI H1w1n•HllO 11·47. ,, '"'"°'' (2· I) .,.., tcMhO ,,.,, ....... io.1 10 Alabtma·l lrmlnfll'ltm. 5t U; beat Ot990n, 15•n , 30T. J. Oef>aul ( 1•0) Met Nortt1ar11 lllllol\, SM•. •· lndltM (0-1) lc>tt 10 Loulsvllle 7S·" " OIUaflOtnl ( 1· 11 btat MorlMad Stt11, l(y, ..... 6 0\llle CO-el d1CI not NV 7 St. Jonn•s 10-01 CltO not Play I MlmlMtla Stitt (0-0) dlO "°' p&ey f WalNntlOfl IH I did llOI Plav. 10. Soulll0f11 ~~t 0 -01 11ut T .... Southtrn f1·77 1\, ...,,.O.·Lt• VtHt 10-11 IOlt to Navadll•ltlflO '7·"· 11 Sv(tcuM (0-01 d.ld not CMav U ~II Carollna Sta ta (I 01 llMI ~.••·S. 14 LoulslaN Ste .. 10-0) did not Plav IS. Vlrolnla T tcl't (1 •0) llaat Old Do· minion, 102·7' 16. Arkan1aa (I 01 Dtat SouthN&t Lou lalana 65-62 11 Loul1vltle I 1·01 bAI Indiana 7S-6' It Kantuekv IO·OI did not PlaV lf Kt n'9s 12· I) btiat Marvlllnd 51•5', bit• Oraoon, 66-49, IO\t to Ala~ma­ l lrmlnonam, S0·'6 20. GaorQie Ttc:ll (I 0) !)lat laPllt l, SC., ,, .... c ..... MWI rounduo s.111reav, o.c. IS CALll'O.NIA •OWL Allll,_ ToladO, l ·l·I, YI. Nav.Oa·LH VaoH , •·1 INDl .. INDINCll llOWL At Mll'li-1, La. Vlrolnla h en, t -J, vs. Air Force, 1·• ""*"'· o.c. 11 HOUDAY llOWL AtS. 0-.. Brlotlarn Youno, 17•0, vt Mlcnloan, 6·S kMeav, o.c. 22 llllo.IOA CJTaUI llOWL At 0NMa G-ola. 1·3, n Flof'lda State, 7·2· l SUN llOWL Al IL ..... T~Me, 6-)·l, YI MarVland, I •) CHIRRY llOWL At Oetl"9tt MICtlloen State. 6·S, "' Armv, 6· l· I w.-....v. Otc. 26 ,RllOOM llOWL Al AMMlm Iowa, 6-•· 1, v1 Tou, 7·2· l, or Hou"Ol'I lltur'MlllY, 0.C. 'D Ll•IRTY llOWL At MerntiMt Afllenw1, 7·3-1, v1 Auwrn, t ·l. or LSU, 1·2·1 l'rlday, Otc. 11 OATO. llOWL At Jach--. Soulll CaroUn.t, 10-1, "' OkJanome State, 9·2 S.lllrcleV, 0.C.. 1' ALOHA BOWL Al Henetutu $out11trn Matnodlsl, 1·2, vs Notre Oa~. 7·• HALL 0, P'AMIE BOWL Al~,Ala. Wll(O(l1in, 7 • 3• 1, v• Kantucll v Mtfldey, Dec. ) I "IACH llOWL Al A..,,.. Purdue, 7·•. vs Vlrofnla, 1·2·1 ILUllM>NNa1 llOWL At Heu"9ft hau CMlstfen, t·l , "' WHI lllrolnla, 1·4 T""4111y, JM. I ' COTTOH llOWL Al O ... s Tnu, 1-1-I, Sout'*n Matl\00111, I ·? or Houston •·•. VI ~IOl'I CO!le9t •• , l'IESTA llOWL Al Temtll UCLA. l ·l. Y' Miami, 1·4 ROSI llOWL Al ll"asacltN Otllo Stalt . 9·7, v1 use. t -l SUGAR BOWL Al IMw Ol1NM Auourn, 1·3, or LSU, t-7· I, v' Nt OrHka, 9·1 C>ttANGI! BOWL At Miami Olllanome, 9· 1-1, YI WHhlngton, tO t COMMUNITY COLLEGE LOO Gotden West (4·6) l"n·t C°"'9ftncel 21 Oranoe Coe.st J 17 Santa A"" " 11 Tall If 16 Puaelt "" 4J lO Mt San Antonio 2• 30 Lono e .. ct1 JS 21 Carrltos JI 1' F utW ton .0 lS El Camino 41 " ....... ''"'4<1 '11 3 7 7 17 17 10 42 20 21 ,. IJ 10 2't 23 7 t • 36 51 19 )I Orenee c .. ,, (4-6) (Mh1*1~) Volden WHI Fullerton s.ocJlaC>ack IUYarsloa San oi.oo MaH Soutllwastarn San Dleoo Patom.r Cllrut S.ntt Ant S.ddletNta 11-2> (Mhaleft~) El Camino Ml. San Antonio Oranea Coaat RIY.,Sldt San OltQO Maw SoutnwtJl«n San Olffo Palomar Cllrus S.1111 Ane Hkllt KftMf 1tattatk:1 LAST w••K'S LIAO•Rs Rutftlfte 71 l3 21 19 .. 17 10 .. .. lS n J 1 11 .. 0 0 ' l$ I) I SNw11 Ma1 .. v (Marina>, u-1~. 1 Allam Antova11 (Marina>. 16-UO ........ I Sllane ~-... (NtwPO'I Harbor), 1•-n -1, m "'"°'· 1 ro. , John PH •I (Fountain Valley), 10-IS-O. IS. yaroa, I TO ·~ 1. Joey Jamtt INawoort Harbor), S·1'. 2 C9'1 Harry (Fountain Vt lleYI, •·12. l Ho Truono (Nawoorl Harbor), •·SS, • Eric Zeno (Founlaln Vallty, •·SI; s Tod s~ <Newoor1 Harbor), ).U7; • CIWls 0 1v11 t~),,•44 ~ 5'\awn Mauav (Marine!. It ,,..,.~ Cat.-..a•-....--A~ ... ., ...... _,. l llot T•tdler CU U oaf VllH Otrultltlt (US ), 6-J, 6·1, 7•6 (TtltKl'llt wlna M0,0.0, Oetulalllt wlflt 120,0001 .,..,..., .... WMllt (It..._., .......... ) .......... Mel'llM NtWtl"'*9 (U.S) _. AM HaNldl-CUll:' ... t, .. ,. Prep football log . SUNS•T L•AGU• IS ""''" Del IJ It ..... ,,.,.. • 11 $.Ill ~ •DtSON .... , \ a L.otie -..en w .... If 21 LA re:• • u c....w .... v ...... 41 w..n.u 7 '"'°" 17 • C..a Mfte • OP .. CollOft a • ~lne!Oll 9Mal " 2t Unlveoltv 17 )f LM Ai.mttoe ' ~ 10 7 ,,OUflltlft ValaV ,, ,. ....._, Hartlof ,. J LYllWelll ,. SI JOllli IOtCO 1t ~ Marina ,. )1 ... M<lt 1 NlO-elEJ ~ :u Notre 0..-ne ($Mr0alu) 1 Oc.an View I) " w~ IO 17 Wttlmlfltltr 7 77 CCW-MIMM • •v. u .... , •2 C)(iMn View 0 l•A vt•~ L•AGU• Jl LaMla hecft IJ 71 UllM!ttltv 7 27 ~llMIOfl lttch 7 ~AOILMM l6w4) OP 1 ..... oort Hartior tO 10 Feunleltl v ...... It .. HVfttlf\efOll ._,, 10 JI Norwalk 14 1 Tlllllll 21 27 Marina I• ' Sall Clem«tl• 0 1) 111\llWIOll JO .. II T«o ,, CIP' 1 C.llltlrano llallev ,, ,,. Sall Cllmtn .. n 20 81"'°9 Amat 71 14 """""' 1ttcn 7 UNIVIAllTY U·•l 10 Ceoktr-Vain II f WoodbrlOtt ' 1 '"''"" 21 1) Dana HUit 20 flOUNTA ... l/ALLaY <t•l) 12 Coste Mau 0 0 MIH lon Vltlo ,, 42 GAN 10 17 Malft 0.1 ,, • Unfvtnltv IO 21 l.--Hlla 0 1S Miu.loft v .... 11 17 11 l'oro 1• 21 l!sta11e1t 0 " l:st~i. n ,. ~ Hlllt 1 h Ml••loft Vlalo lt • Sa<ldl10aC11 77 17 Sa4ill•••tti n U Servile " • N-oort Harbor lA " ~e..cl\ 1 LAOUNA ttfLU <2•1) 1t L-ltac:h Pot11 20 10 CorOfll -Mat • • W~odte " SJ OCHll View 0 COSTA MUA Ct·f ·I) n , .. ,. MaM 1 I• Es t11Kla 17 Jl Marina ,, • llOlla Or lndl 7 s Nawoor1 Hartior 11 0 U""-slTV " 71 WtJtmlntt« 7 1 Stntlffo )I ~ WOOCIOrldot 1• M Mavtw ,. 11 ~dltOfl 10 0 Los Alamitos 0 Qlll 20 El Two J) 2t HUl\lifleton hacll 7 0 ~ 1' 0 Valencia 21 1 AM\bl v._ 21 a111 10 ~e..cll " . n SM Cllmafttt 1 2• SI Fr9"CK 10 0 ~dtl Mar IJ WOOO.-IOGa Ca-71 7 c.oi. tr t4IO v"""" 21 7 Fonta111 20 0 H¥1DoOt lA 16 La..-'Hllls • 0 Dtlll Hiia t1 7 UnlYtHIT\o lt 1 Tu\hO 21 1 lf\MI )f HUNTINGTON ••ACH (1·1-1) 0 WoodbrlOoe l ' 0 Saft MatCOI " 10 Corona 691 Mar 1• 0 Est11Kla .. .. ....,_"°'' Harw 26 MnMON Vl&M> Ct-M} 17 Otmltn 0 7 C0tona dal Mar • 21 SM DlllO MotrM • 24 ...... OOtl Harbor• 24 UTA IA (4-S·I) n EwllKla I• 21 U111¥tnlt\I • " L.ono e..ct. Wltton 21 J Octen v-21 0 L.l9UNI lka<ll .. " F_.a.11 v.-., ,. tJ Mater Dal " 17 L.-Hllh .. 10 ~ ,, 14 DanaH > t Marin.a 14 2t San Cllmante 21 6 Coilt Maw 0 1• St JoM tote. .. I• Wn lmlnslar ' n UnlYtt•ll• .. I• Un.varsity l1 ,, LHUfll Hlb 1 1 EdlMHI v 0 N-oorl HerllloOt 26 0 Caol:ttr-V....,. • 14 Oc•an v .. w ,. 1• WoodllrlcllN 2) SOUTH COAST LEAGUE 21 EI T0to 11 7 Foun11111 Vallav 21 7 ~ )I CA ... STlltANO VALUY (S·SI IS Irv ma IS 0 CorON1 dal Mar 21 1• FOOllllM n le Sen Cr.mantt 6 MARINA (t •41 ,, Laouna ltaqi " n f l-•nr• " O P' .. e s-anu 26 1• Costa Maw 0 11 C Ol'ONI oaf ,.,.., 1 29 Dow,,.., 20 10 S.rv111 1 71 San C llmt<\tt ·u 16 FootlliN (Oil 13 7 Foothlll 26 LAGUNA a•ACH U•71 1' Dana 1111" 0 N»-EW>trann (at Vt lenclal 13 L.a Oulnl• 1 0 •~•Par• .. " lrvl.,. 20 ,. Mlltlka n ,, • El1lllOft 29 ?I Min ion VlalO 0 SAN CLaMaHTI Cl·l ·I) ,. HunllnotOl'I IHCll 9 7 Dana Hllll ' 21 Leoune Hll" 7 ., ~ttaoo 1 21 Founttln Vallav 11 7 C orOl'IA cHt Mar .. 20 El Toro 2S 0 ~-Ol4 Mar 6 21 oc .. n View ,. 14 Costa Me'9 10 c., 2t Estancia 21 4, W"tmln•ler 19 1 University 21 " El Modena 31 IS Cto111rano v ... v 21 1• EllllOll 77 I• Woodbt'ldga 0 22 I.NI.,. lA Cll' • 2't LovOla 20 N•wPOt't Harbor lS DANA 141\.LS U •71 6 Ml Mlt\111 (SOI 11 21 16 E"ancla l9 7 ~. 5trvlll IJ IJ Sad~ l l • Torrav p,,.. Nll>-FOl'itana (tt w .. 1mtn1terl 6 LA9Ulll hecll OCIAN VllW U •t ) NIE~T HARMMl (t ·l -2) J Min ion VlelO 21 E•tancla 21 Sanla Ana • 0 CaPl\lrano Vt ..., 3 20 lrv1111 1 0 El Toro 10 La Quinta 2t 24 HunllnotOft leac:t'I 24 10 lrvlnt 0 CYPf•U ll 24 WOOdbtJd!M .. 2t s.n c *'*'t• s Gardena 2' 2• Estancia 0 71 l..a9una Hiib ll w .. 1atn .. 2' ~ ,. 0 San 0"9o Hell• 0 Fountain va11av St )4 Cotta Maia 0 0 Edlton ., JS Laguna l!letcll • IEL TO.O (t ·U I• Marina 21 17 Unl,.arslty s l7 Cu ria Parll 3A Hut1tlnor011 &atc11 14 3A C«ona dtl Mar I 14 Fountain Vatlav I) Wastmlnuar 31 cu• • Vateftela .. lalflo•• 1 1t ,,...,,. WISTMINSTIER (4·61 n ~V Hllll ,. 33 Laguna H•llW l La Qulnte 0 .. Dena Hlllt II Pacifica 14 SADOLlaAO< ( 10· I· I) 31 Warren IS S«vllt " 41 Senta Al'la V•llev 21 Mit Moft Vielo -(_ > . NBA WESTERN CONl'llRIENCI "•<Mk OMslafl w L ll"C1. LallWOf\ 10 6 "'" Portlllnd • 6 600 Plloenlr • I soo s .. 111a s ' l S7 °"'""' ~ 10 .333 GOiden Srate • 11 , .. Midwest DIYIMen Denver 11 2 "" HOU"Oll ~ • 71' Oallat • 7 Sll Utall • 1 S33 San AnlOll•O • • 429 Kanw\Cil\I ) 10 ?31 IASTERN CON,ERENCE Alantlc DMIMft 8o•ton 11 1 917 Pt111ed4!e>t1•• • • ,,, Wnh noto,., 10 6 61S New Vori. 1 ' .. New Jersav 6 • 129 Ganlrll OM'*' Mllwau~M 10 s ""' ClllUllO I 1 SJ3 Dt trolt 1 • '67 Atlanta ' • .,, lndl•n• 4 11 161 Clavalanel 2 12 14.J SW!dev'• kw" SHtlla IOS, Lahn 9' oi--i 11', Pfloanl~ 109 Clevtlat\CI 11e, Allllnle 111 T '""""t Oamet No o•me• sclladui.cl T""41Y'• Ot"'" Utall 11 P110tnlt1 Atlanta at N•w York Pttlladele>tlla 11 Wetlllnoton ~tland 11 Cla'<ltland MUweukH et tnolena 80\IOl'I at Danas HoustOl'I at San Antonio °""""' • • Denvar c rocago t t Goldan State Kan1H Cll\I at S..ttta SuMrSeftk• 105, L.Aken M Ga .,, 2 4 '"'.Ct"> SI? 1 ... 4 • s '1 • , '1 l ' • 2 ) )'" 6 7"1 ilATTLIE 1105) -Cl\ambtr1 6·U 1·t It Vrana• 1·• 1-1 s. Slkma S· I• •-• I• HtnOt<_, 7·1• 1·1 IS, WOOtJ S·ll 1·2 11 Soeler\ lO· IS l ·l 23, 81edtwtll 1-1 0-0 2. Klno 1·4 •·• 6, 8 rlCllowakl 4·6 2·2 10 SundvolCI 0 I o-o 0 Totals 41·1J 23-21 IOS LAklRS (M) -Sllftoos 1·4 1-1 l Wortllv l -t l·I 1, Abdvl·JabOtr t ·l6 7·1 13, Coocier •·IS 2·3 1•. McGM t -17 1-1 17. Rambl\ O·O 1·1 2, Mc:Aooo 2·7 7· 10 II Scott S·ll l ·• ll, w 1111 .. 1·• 1·7 • Tot••• 3' ,, 26·33 ,. Seer• ... OU. .... SHttla )() 2• 25 2t-10S Lahn 34 20 21 19-t• Fouled out-Nona Rt0oun<11-s.1111a o (Vr•nt\, Slit.me fl L.A. Lallart S4 (AOdut- JeOC>ar 1'I Anlsh -541•111• 26 (Sl•ma IO. L.A utr.ers 21 tCOOO« 7). Tol•I 10Ula- 5eattla 21. L A Laker• 2S TacMlcal•-Slkma A-12,270 c11.....,, 114, sum '°' f'HOINIX CIOf) -Scoll 1-3 )·4 S Lucas 1·1S 2·2 "· Adttnl 7·1 l -3 17, HOllOl'I S• 11 0-1 10, Macv 2·4 7·7 6, Pittman •·• O·O I, EdWaros f·ll •-t 7t. JOlllS 1-'l 0-0 •. HumOllrlei 6· 10 , • 1J, Foster 3·1 H • Totet '6·1S 11·2• 109 C'-""'IRSC 1111 -M.Jof!Moft t-14 I ·6 It , Whitt 2·S S-S f, Dollaldton •·S 2·2 10 Nhton 11·10 1· I 23, Smltll ,_ 1) S-t 13. Warrleft. 0-1 0-0 o, WallOl'I 3·7 1·2 7 9rldoMlan 6·10 1-1 I), Catehlno\ l·J 1-2 l Goroon O o t-t I, Cava 2·4 2·l 6 Toa11 •1 ., 20-31 114 Scar. ... °""""' ""-"'111 7' J I 2t 11-lot Cllooars ?9 3 29 1 11• FOUllG out-N-ltaoounch-LA CNP H ra .. (Nl11on. Oonalcbofl 7) Al· \l\t~l11 U IHolton I, LA Cl1-t 11 (Nl~Oft •1 fOlal IOUlt-'"'-nl~ 19, LA Cll-• 11 A-1,l:W c ........ .ai .... SUNDAY'S ~II • T~ Gfotet ...... .......,. Ate~me·llrmlllelltm 50, K~u ... tint Dlact IAlllOls 75, OrltOfl 7) I> Ot), third Place Marvlelld n. TtMtt ... 4f. ltttll oi.ce IOIM St 73. ~i.tlla•AndlOt ... n (Oii. .. Vtn!ll tMace ... ........... 11, He'#tll 9'eclfle.,, 0..NfOWll I I, "4twtll·HlllO •1 ..... , Hoitt 0-.,. Mefltlttltn S2 W MICNMll .. , Oalllelld (Midi I l I Wt~~ ft, MorMft St 7' .... c-... ... ......,.. .. ... N Ctl'tllftt t 1, II' ttdlleln 6S • ~ "'"'90ft '1 VMI 6a !all TOM9tfMONMS W91T ~ 11 •• I• M#Y'a UC Oe•it •I~ °"' ... OWfl .......... " .. • llM't et w~ lt0Cttl91 UC ttw.11 c.-.-L.,.. lltU. Cal lte ............ 11 Utall S• t a .. ~ t t N9W Moleo SOUTHWIST Arlt. ·Llltle ltoek t i OlllllN>ma St Marv'•· T•au et HoutlOl'I Lamar at SW Teu s Terlaton St el Tnaa·Arllnoton SOUTH UC Stnra ler~ra a t N Ca roline SI Tannen" Ttcll ., Clal'llSOll Tam1>1 at Ftorlela St Woffot'CI e t N C Cllartollt Concordia , T .. 11 at NE Loul•la111 Auousta COii. et Soutll C.r01l111 &et huna-Cootunan a t Soutll Florlda Miu Vallev $1 at SE Louisiana Furman at StetMHI MorlhltO St at Tanr>ftiee SI Fairmont St 11 Tulalle" 8 1'1d0tw•tar, Vt al VMl Felflaiotl Dlcklnton at Walle Forast Buckntt "' AlaDama Cotumov\ •' Auburn ~ol• COii at Austin PN v Cot>.ar et ClttOet MIOWllST Lora' at ~111w .. 1ern Oelrolt a l M>dl,..n N DallOI• St ., Mluouri W11 ·LaCroue at 8redlav Goniaoa at towa Dull.I at St LOUIS 8emfdµ SI al N l"lllOlt Clltcaoo SI al W>Clllta St IAST SI Francis Pa at Pith~gf\ Klno• Polnl at Coiumole MonmoYlll et Lt Salle St-nlH ti Mau ac:llUUlll Frenlllln & Marllla" 11 Pflnceton Wm Patartofl at St Francl' N Y Trenton St ., SI P•ttr'\ Cent Conn«tlcut at SltOl'I HaN Dreat • at TemPla ll'ICll1na, Pa at Wttl Vlrolnl• C ..... Tep 20 HOW THIY 'ARED How '"' Anoc1et1C1 Pren Top 20 cotlao• oat1t.1tbaH t•t mt terao 1111, w"k I Georoatown I l·OJ 11 .. 1 Hewall·HilO 11·41 2 IMlnoh '1·1) 11 .. 1 ldal'IO State ..... IOst to Alal)atN·81rmlnol\am Sf·S2 "' Oraoon. Sundav l O.Pt ul I 1·01 0..1 Nortt>trn llllnolt ~-st • ll'ldlana (0-1 l IO\t to Louh vllle 7S-6' S Olllal"IOtTla ( I • I) 11 .. 1 Mor tflffd S lt lt t(y ,. ... • CNfl.t 10-01 did not PlaY 7 SI JOM'• 10-01 Oki not Dl•v I Mtmonl• Stat• (0-01 Oki not ptav t Walllfnoton 10-0) did not Pit• 10 SOuti.n Mathodl•t 11-01 11 .. 1 T t • H Sout,,.,.n '' • n 11 Nflaela·La • Vaou IO·ll IO\t to N•· •aoa·Rano t7·" n Syrac:uu (0-0J Oki not Ille" 1l Nor Ill C.rotlna Sta t• <I ·Ol O..t Camc>lltlt •• • 5' 14 Louisiana State 10·01 diO not Pltv IS Vlrolnl• TICll 11·0) O..t Ole! Do· minion 102· 7' " Arkafl\A\ ( 1·0) 11 .. 1 SouthH ll Lou· lttena U ·'2 17 Loulsvllla (1·0) llfft lndl1na 7S·6' II Kantuckv 10·0) did not Olav 19 Kanw• 12·0) bHt Marvltnd Sl·S6, beet Oraoon, U ·•t, v\ Alabamt·Blrm tnonam, Sunoav 20 Georgia Tech ll·OI t>ta• 9ePll\I s C 79·6' NHL CAMreaLL COMl'IR .. KI EdfTIO!lton Ca!Hr't K-.. WIMIHG v.ncouver Sft\'11911 OM.- W L T 9'tt 01' Ull»lll ll I I 17 1111 IO l >'3 11 10 1 1 nu • 17 , 10 ,. ...... ~ GA .. .., 11 ,. llS Cl'llcffO .W-1• St 1.0UI• Detroit Toronto 11 10 ' n 7 t s " " ., ,. .. • t I 19 6 12 ' •• • .. ) 11 10 n H t i 61 100 WALH CONllllAIMC• l'hlltdtlotllt NY lslancMn WH hl"'1on NY ltt11t1n 111111'°"'"' H--"'"• li'lttrtO OM.- 13 :t •>Ott l:t 1 I 77 111 7 t l1'7t t 10 I 17 7S 6 11 2 I• 10 a n 1 12 Q ...... OMI-. I) l , ,. 11 10 1 n II t 1 » ' 10 > 10 . ' ) " ..... .... ~ a..1e111.~· w.w ..... s. c-.... • ~ ,, NY "*'""' t Cao CalJMrf 4 VIW'CalVW J ' T...,._..,_ ,...,._~ ,...""'.__.. Sl~ll V~ ~·· Qllea ~·· fltttt ...... WtW\lntltfl at QlllM( ......... " .... ....., Cllluet el ,,_lmtaNtlll S 9""'!ell al T tNfl .. ,... '° 1t • • .. ., t i " 77 ll 21 7 Lo...-Hlllt 11 71 0 o-Hiii\ ,. 1 7 Et Toro 11 I• 6 Mb.slon VleiO • " " ANGELUS LllAGUS ll MATIA Del (6-Sl 0 0 1 0 11 71 .. 20 0 0 ,. ll Founfalfl ValtY 30 Senta Ant Velav 30 Senta Ant 13 We tmlMI« I• Hunlin.tOfl l4'aC'I I 9bltoo Al'l\at 21 l lillOO McN'llOOt\"lllf V 2t Pius X 21 $1 Pt\li .. s.tvlt• CIP' 10 SI JolVI 8oteo I ol) HllVWMd ... 111 SUNDAY'S RIUULTS 17 0 16 IS IJ 11 IJ 6 I) IS I) (1611 af J1·•Y ._..,...... .. ,._..,..) "RST ••ca. ' ~ C11n1't Lad IValtfl&Ulla) 3 00 1 40 2 20 Peflect Cov•• (Maffeo! HO UO Daltkv (Fwnanoa11 uo AbO rac«S Geoo" c i.i.1 w_, TOWfl Oatld'I 01UIU't Time 1 11 1 s HCC*O RACE. 6 ~~ Loro lan CToroJ 1040 S40 ue Eartv T ruat t01tvarnl •to 3 20 Kfno Wll\t IPtne.avl l 20 Al\o rau o It-Mv Femw PU!lf\KllV Quilt lme>rtt~ve s.r-1 w-. 2AtCa a... Ano ... ·s C.oov Jaton E Tilnt 111 l tS U DAILY DOUeLIE 14·11 N IO "160 TH•O RACE. 1 tu•-• WOt'd fllulef (Pinc.vi $00 Goooovt J Y tMa1tl Sitto o .. t (AMonoec>roll Al~ raceo Arch< Poloee T-'! ~It Ovne\lllelcl n ma 1.2• 2 ! U IEXACTA 11-31 paid SS700 320 J OO SOO h O 100 Er119tf\I•. ,OURTH RACE. 6 hirtono• 111n ar0 Coml11 (Pincavl IO IO S.40 •10 t<aY1n't Trl<At CLllll\aml 6 IO S 00 Amanot ...... l)roti. IOllYarHI ''° AltO raQCI 8otd PledQa Pe< Time, Cnma FrM Dark Har"•" Our G•••~· Natlvt Fortin Time 110 l /S U lllACTA l•-?1 Paid llS3 00 fll'TH •AC5. One mlla EH' 8ra vast Sono <Me1a 1 1010 S20 h O Oaggar'1 Polnt l Hawlav1 • 40 2.tO Jam Siio! COoMl-11 •IO Al\O ••cad Mast•' Nevaio M v ~ F11e1 Pt ul Al!llOll. Ctllll>Olloa Toma ll S JS U EXACTA 16-SI Pl'CI al26 00 SIXT" llACll. 7 lutlO"ll\ Sin ACllOI (P1nuivl 6 IO 4.. ) 00 Wl'lv Zantf\t C"4aw1avl U O UO lltoon1 To ltoam ISt•vens1 1 20 Also •eGeO Snow• w~, l 1noa Otar Margo! Crlsl>.1<1'N Mat1 Manuia Mia Tia lltoa !>lhraf Pril'IQU ~ Vate 8ea T1ma 123 3 S U IEXACTA ll·l l pa.o '1• SO SIVIENTH RACE Ont mile Lac I( (Lo&ovat SOO Fortl1tn L.-1Ptorra1 Stlclt.ttte IHaw,.vl Tima t 3' U IXACTA IS·l l H IO 1'1 SO HO 2 IO 1'0 s 00 /00 n f"ICK SJ.it 11· 1 4·• · 1 ·st PllO '3,ln .o wllll 214 wiMlllO tlek•ll lllvt horsa•I Cerrvovar 0004 paid 1566 tl1 14 "'Ith f "47 •Inning llC.kth (Ila llOrMl l EIGHTH llACl . ON mile on tun lltovat Heroine (Toro I l 60 ? ao 1 10 Reine Mathilda tHttCI) S >O 2 10 Sabin IMaotal 2 10 Time I ff 21S U IEXACTA •1 Si oalO M?OO Nl!CT" RACI . One m11t Cer!aln Trttl (Plncevl I IO Emo0totthNn/Yatlt tOfttH I Tat>uk IHa..,lav) f 1ma 13' • s U IXACTA (1 SI .. Id t"OO All<WIO•t!« • l,'1• , .... ,..~ P'll CliHtk latSMlaAlleC.....I Mfl'l'I ~ SI~ u o HO ... 3'0 4 00 ., .. ., Ma•-•• IHunllfta!~ 8ttt<lll Clfl Mart Hardllot IWt\lmoMtar) 21•t 11 16 ll-lQ. ,.,._., 0.. '**" Jamie l•"ar IHunt.,,.ton e..c"1 11w Clltelwict. (Not"CO) Clfl Merit. HerdlllO p~ ()!)Oii (W•ttmi111terl .I•· 1' U U \ IS 11 IS Metw's A ........ Steve G..-.Ot 1$tnta Ana> def a m "'...,. (Anana1m1 ,, II IS 12 IS • NllM'• ......... And't 5ol•l 10rall"91 Off Mll<t ltomo t San•• Anal 1S 12, 14-If, l6 14 MM'• • °""""' 0.0. Ctt...,man I~ v...., . c .... rt 1("9(111 IHUllllfleton I 111 Oft OKar S.ndollel ($Mt• A.M"'Wt Ct.._ ISanlt A/II) lS 11 I• It, IJ·IS 1~·12, 11 • MtR'• c ....... WaftCIV CU\IWlt 1Yor11e Lll>Oal Oef ,...,, Dwan IYOt'k Llllelal t IS 17• I\ 11 16, IS.-11 MW\ c 0..... JoM 1 111<\la Alll)•Tll'V VllOal 1$tltta ANI Clfl """' ,rt«i<t.U I nit ""9)·119u! c..-IS.U. Alltl I • IS, I~ It IS·t 15 10 ...... ~ OK• SMoo.. (StM\11 Alll>•VttlftM ltee11an IWl1t~tar) -' It_, "Lal!' (Sal'tt Alltl L!Me ...... IS.ma A.M1, IMI IS IO. f U. lt-11 MlllMC~ Mt• Hwnt (~,,,._ hKhl Callilll AllWll """"'.,_."' leadll dlrl i..... '""·-1Hutltirl9ton hliclll 1.l!lclll ''"'' dllrt IH\lfl',.._1911 a.111. IHI, 10-ll t~J. 10 ''· ll , l~ine: tough road? Vaqueros have only 2 lettermen 81 ROGER CAllLSO °'-.......... T wo retu_mina lcnermen -JCnior Nod Trout (6-3) and j uruor Scott Tamura (6-2) fonn the nucleus for which Irvine H1ah basketball coach AJ Henina wJJJ be lr)'ln& to mold into a South Coast Leacue contender lh.Ui year WJth the season approachJna. The Vaqueros, ~ to the lea,ue after IW'ltching from the Sea Vtew, find themselves an to uah circles with Capntrano Valley, MlSSlon VaeJo. Dana Halls. El Toro and Lacuna Hill cons1dered to be teams oo tbe upswing. '"The l~ue i.1 very Slmalar to the Sea View Leaaue 10 I.bat aU of the schoob a.re very competitive. There aren't any lauahe.rsf' ~Herrin,. .. Trout and Tamura will be ex- pected to carry the loed in the u perience area," oontioues t.he lrvane coach. ·w e have some very JOOd young players wbo wilt improve a the sc:uon goes on." One very notable ablencc iJ \.be fact two-year startCi Jdf'Bielman, an aU- lcque football and bascbaJI player, has dcclCSed lO forego ha& tenior season on the basketball team. 8 1elman, 6-2, averaged 14.0 poants a pme as a Junior and scored 1n the 20s seven tames. ~ Vaqs a.rc small -watb moo 1n tllc S-1 1 to 6-2 ranae. Other seniors. aside from Trou t. arc Jam Murphy (S-11). Mar~ Reid (.S-10). Ken Tamura (S-9). Davt Baldwin (6-2) and Robert K.resher (6-0). Other JUntors arc Mike Moeen c.S-10), Jim Raye (S.8). Jorg Schulz (a 6-1 foretg.n cxchangt student from Germany). ~rian Snoddy and Shawn Patchen - The onl> sophomore on the squad 1s Mike Hcmng. a 6-2 swina man who dad not pla}' a year ago because of tnJUT) trvlM lcMdule Dec S--.l Santa AN Vt ,...,, Dec ,_, Mar-Dec l0-1~• Tour........m, Dec 17·7Hr•ww Wor1d ..._,. T-natrwt•, Dec '17 Jt-<anvon l ournamttl't Jan ......,., El l oro'. JM I I-San C"""'"lt' lr.otna). Jen ,.....,., C.O.•tr-Vdav"•, "-" 16-et Dena 1o4,.,,., Jan 1>-Mlu lon Vltlo' Cnomal Jan 2s-Legune Hillt" Ctlomal. Jan ,.__Et Toro· 11~"91 Jan »-et S.n Clement•' (l'IOmlJ Fat> 1-C.Pl\trano Valfav• lllome); Ft0 6-0ana HIUt' (tlomaJ FtO ll-et MIMlon v111o• FtO IS--.t ~ Hlllt' •dtno•n Soutll Cout Ltatvt oame. Al "°" rournamlf!I ano teeoua ~ '*'"' at 7:JO 11 m . ' Cal captures polo c rown LO~G BEACH -Cahfomi.a·s Golden Bears. the defending N CAA water polo champ1oni. rcuuncd lhc'1r 111le unda) at Belmont Plaza 10 the CAA finals when Bill Schocmn' \Cnt a shot into lhe net with J_ 'i«onds left in the champ1onsh ap game 10 gi ve the Bears a 9-8 Win over ~tanford and a ruu1onal ch.t.m· p1onsh1p. Schocntng's goaJ came JUSt af\cr tanrord 11cd tt 1n the fo urth qu<uter at e1'1Jt in a sea-saw battle bctwcc-n two of the top teams 1n lhe count') The national crowning wa\ UC &rkeley's sixth all-lime. Alan G rt'sham. an all-to urnamen1 ~lccuon. dnllcd home three goals fo r 1hc winners. while Mau 81onci added 1wo haun Clcarl). also an all- toumament pick from UC Bcrkelc\. recorded nine goahe saves. Arca product David lmbcmmo <Corona dcl Mar ~1&h) from tan ford wa\ al'° named to tfie aU-toumamt'nt team Hawkes wins in racquetball llunt1n1ton &ach· .. Bnan ~awlt' the rt1amna outdoo~ nauonal cham- pion by virtue: of his endeavors Al Oranar ( TI Colic c 1n Jut)'. wept to the champ1onshap 1n the first 3-wall "' quctball f-all Cla It' at Santa Ana Collete unday ot&ht Hawke defeated W~•m1nl'ter"\ Mark Hardina in the: fi nall. 21 -9 21-16. 21·10 to d a1m the S27S fint pnzc: tfard •na stttlcd tor S l 25 for firu.sb· in 'IC ond In mcn·s doubles 1t was Huot- 1n,ton lkach'& Jamie Barl.:er and "-loreo·~ 8111 Chadwick fin1shil\I fiBt after putting Hardina and West .. minster's Paul Ol5<m away. 16-1 4 • I • 13 ~-1 ~ I"· IS Tllt'rt "'t'ft< no v.omen's finals. but Ocdt' atherman of Fountain Valley and Chem ~nn:ht of HunltOllOD &-acll tolvt'd that dilemma b com- ~t1n1 m t~ men·, A doublrt anJ walluna av.-a~ ~1th &he mk ~T aiptunn • fl \lt'-itt ~I\ &ory u~n • petr of nta ~na men Yorba Landa·, Wend) Cu&h1na duJ llkt-41s.c In men·, C' t.tr\Al COM'-LEl'_E NYSE COMP-OSITE TRANSACTIONS1 85 ~~~.=...c • Merchants decking the ma~ls for their most important season • Christmas accounts for almost half of South Coast Plaza's annual sales L By the Associated Pre11 Southern l'ol1forn1a's shopping malls c>.i>ett a good C'hr1Stmas shop- ping wa!>On, and have spent more lhan SI m1ll1on on decorations to give consumers the feeling that there's somclhtng magic about spending monc}. I hl' monc} 1s no gift. II 1s designed to lure cui.tomers during the year's mo\t tmportant -;hopping season. "On Dec. 26. we !>tart planning for the next Chnstmas." i.a1d David Grant. manager of opcrau ons at the South ( oast Plaza 1n Costa Mesa. where oflic1ali. '>pen l S 7 50.(X)() on decorat1Qns. mC'luding relhdeer and drumming teddy boors. The Beverly Center in Los Angeles budgeted S 125.000 for holiday decor such as brightly-painted wooden soldiers. and it will cost the GlendaJe Galleria SS.000 to hang 4,500 feet of flowered wreaths. The state's more than 3,000 malls expect to make 30 percent of their estimated SSO billion in annual retail sales between Thanksgiving and Chnstmas. This year profit potential is higher, because there arc five weekends during the period instead of four. South Coast Plaza expects to make W. Va. council declares 'War on satellite dishes HAHPERS FE RRY. W.Va.'(Af') -The Town Council Is finding that technology just doesn't seem lo flt In In this historic town. and ~---since It can't change history. It Drlaeway plans to d6' something about the • technology. ' A prodacdon ellOneer at Eaatman Kodak In Roche•ter, The council gave preliminary N.Y.tataadt•kdrbedatinedforu.eon•mallcomputera approval this week to a n ordl- thatthecompnaywilllntrodacealoncwtthallneoffieJdble nance ban ning satellite dishes cllak products. Kodak'• 192-tracu-per-lnch, half he .. ht a~?Tahntt'~na:. Ilk ·st w ... d.J.ne pro•edee 3 .3 me,abytee of unformated •toraae. 'fhe ,. said c~~n~ me~b;r ~~n/~~ll­ unlt ln the bacqround •lmulatea a computer, uercf•lng a• lips. who . voted ·along with her many•• 30 drlTee at a time for up to 34 houa boon to make c.ollea~ues against Tfle huge. •a.re they function properly. round dishes that adorn ma ny Business calendar is rapidly ... replacing the regular calendar By JOHN CUNNIFF U .......... Alwlly•t accor<ling to the bu.,1ncss calendar. a ume of }Car" when many mcrc.hanls do 25 percent or more of their volume. NEW Y{)RK -This 1s the Christmas ~lltng and bu)IO season. It 1s a crowded season. a bus-, calendar as they say. It 1s the ~ason for takin~ income tax losses while it's still possible. And 1fyou work on Wall Street or anywhere near the monc)'. ll might be Chnstmas bonus time too. CALLMERJR ONE CREDIT LINE RJ TAKE CARE OF M ULTIPLE INVESTMENTS ANIJ P URCJ-IASE.S. $5,000 AND VJ? CECILE BUTZ (714) 759-4080 i1me seemi. to speed up at this 11mc of year. Swiftly, you'll find yourM'lf in the midst of the post-Christmas clearance sales. when toys, cards. decorations and the like go on sale. Simultaneously, 11 1s "white sales" season. The business calendar run' nght thro ugh the year, and for tho~ who i.llck \tnctly to business. it crasec; an)' other "time of the year." 1nclud1ng holidays. holy days. and historic da)'s. and even day'i of the week. Sunda)' 1s now a shopping day, and barbcr'i seldom close on Wednesdays any- more. It 1\ becoming more hke that too The New York Stock t:xchange remained open on Election Day for the first time. Labor Day and Wash- mgton·., Birthday are big retail !>ale days. And Valentine's Day isn't reall) for lovers ~ much as for can- dymakers. The business calendar sort of work\ 1h1'1 way· lf}ou arc involved in the finanual world. Janual) is the: !><'a.,on for getting the books straightened out 1n ant1c1pationo bt' annual report \Ca\on, which eJusts s1de-b)·\1dc with the tax season. close on spnng. Before '>pring. however. there come!> the "onvcnt1on season. wht•n all \Orts of bu\1nes~ scmmars arc provided at elegant rc .. on1> precious few of them tn the 'hill) ~onh ('heck doscly. and you ma) find a real estate ..cminar afloat 1n the C aribbcan. • , .. , I~ ""' \ .. I I .. I 'I I I f I Automobile promotion season manages to squeeze in around this time ani.i. believe 1t or not. a "-l.A•·~~Hl I ·tw ••I -I f, , W•i.#UHl'_.J, I tpr,, t • f • ; • 1.,..• ~r ... 11 ~''" ... ,. ,, TAX SHEL YER SEMINAR Maritt•• Reeearcla Gro•p Ltd. will hold a free tax 1helter Hmlnar with FIHt Afflltated Sec•rltl••· lac •• at Lapaa VIiiage •-• Eetate Office 112 8. Coaet Hwy •• Lapaa Beacla Wed•eecl•"• Nove•ber 21 at 7:St p•. RcfrH hmtnta aerv«d. Anticipated 1984 tax wrlte·off up to 88~ on re· tcarch & deve lopment for tafety & navigational equipment for the maritime community. 10-year hl1tory of Partnerehlp operatton1. Limited Partft'er to receive royaltiH over life of Panner- 1hlp. . CALL (714) 497-4465 for re .. rvatloae , nu ••1101111nm1111 I• tlllllltr et\ offu lo .. o llOf • tofl(ll•l1e11 of .. .,.._, lb billy ...... MCWflt ... , Tiit• ...... WM4t> .,.,., •11 tll• ,, .. ,..fhll ""''"' °' Wtlltfl .... y ....... 111•• .. "'Ill ttHIM NIH 111 whl'h Mcwrltt.t 1n1111 lewftdly ~ offflt4 I IHllV ,,_ wcwrltlu l&ol«H •"- _,, 1twM11 tofhr ltl•• w<vtll .. • I• tvcll ttet• II t __ _ somc"'hat smaller season in which hou'\tng . sales nsc oddly in some area\. pcrhap"> because the real estate peopk arc so hard up. Ju'>t a'> the tax ~a'ion 1s fin1sh1ng up. gcnerall) about April 15 for those who get their business done on time, there comes the annual meeting season. wheR the boss orates lo the "todholders about their mutual suc- CC'\'\ or failure. A'\ the annual meeting season wanes 1n May the llummcr vaca tion season bcsins to heat up, and that means spring promotion time -and (ltnstmas gift buying time -for.the department stores and other places that take :rour money. It 1<1 also gradua tion time . and marriage time, which means warmth and pride for family oriented folks. It 1s a lime of great expectations too. especially for those who live by the bu~incss calendar. It means sales. If Wall Street 1s ha v1n~ a good year, 11 saon ma) be the yachttngseason for a good many folks. but deep summer gcn('rall} remains a time when the bu'.ltnt:S'> calendar is often blank. It 1s /1 Amcnca's siesta season. and nothing to date ha!> been de vised by business to get people out of their languor. Perhaps 11 1s 1ust as well, say some who abide by the dictates of the hu~iness calendar. since ll allows us to rc'\t up for the bui.) days ahead. UP s AND OowN s NEW YORK IAP) -Ttie follQwlno Ill! H1ow 1 ttie Over·the-Counler \locks and warrants that have oone uo the mos1 and down lhe {E'' based on oerc1nl of ~hanoe tor Fr dav No Hcurllles trading be w S2 or 1000 sharu are Included. Net and oercenteQe cheltlll' art the difference t>etw"n the previous closlno bid orice end Frldtf~}' lasl bid orlce N~I Lu Chp, Pct i ~:~f rn n ii11 1~ ~: U 3 alum 6~ 111, Uo 4 4 4 vs1111 4~ ,,.. uo .l S lmbSv j'" ~ Uo 6 AMCbl 11• \ti Uo 7 syncm wt '"> uo I M olecln J 1·16 •,; uo II ~~a!o~r :~ 11;, 8: Oeclsf h ~ ,..., uo EnzO{I wt 1? l~ Lio BoroRt ''• Up F'ngmwt -uo Gnsv wtB 1r. Oo ~otec un 214 Uo •o•A ''• ~o eo18lo 11• p bydrO h 1/• 1/• p srMed 1 Uo olcm un 'I• 11• Uo trntrf'l un .Iii Uo PenCot e ~ UP Pu1mn w l ~ 11. Uo LtrM I.In 1 UP DO NI L• 1 _ctti, ct l,'4 -'h 1;. -I/) ~ -~ l Yi -2~ I~=~ ' -:: it. Vt ''• . ..., ~ ~. West Virginia lawns. Mayor Bradley Nash asked that the ordinance be drafted ·'lo preserve t he historic appearance an~ tradlllon of the community." Ha rpers Ferry, where aboli - tionist John Brown seized the federal armory -an act that led to his hanging -was declared a national nlslortc dlstr1ct'" fl v{' years ago. • 40 percent of its sale$-S160 m1lhon of its S38S in projcctc:p ~les -this month and ftext , Grant sa1d. The Glendale Galleria will post S20 million in sales throup_i December. said Stacy Batrich-Smith, the mall's vice president of marketing. For that reason. both care and peed arc needed in hanging the thousandi. offeet of wreath in the 240- store mall. . "The problem 1s getting 1t all up in one week without killing everyone," Ms. Batrich-S mith said. Problems do crop up. La'it year 2,000 poinsettias at South Coai.t Plaza dropped their ~tals one week into the season, as did their replace- ments. A third round held up. but the plant budget blossomed to SI 0,000. About 5,000 poinsettias will grace the outdoor Fashion Island tn New- pon Beach. which will also transform us 90 suppon pillars into gJant peppennint sticks. Santa Claus will arrive by antique train. The centerpiece, however, is a $35.000. 90-foot-tall Christmas tree hauled 1n last week from Mt. Shasta. said Kathleen Lauren. the center's marketing dire.ctor. The tree dwarfs the White House equivalent by 40 feet and the huge Rockefeller Center tree in New York by 15 feet It will take I 0 days to install 3.000 lights. "We pretl} much build Christmas here around our tree." Ms. Lauren . said. Last year the tree-lighting cer· emony drew 7,000 shoppers. while the Christmas season netted the mall nearly S28 million in sales. Ms. Lauren said. Not C\cryth1ng will be sugar plum~ and Santas. however The Beverly (enter 1s in a heav1_I) Jewish area. Instead ofa tree. 11s main d1!>pla y will be a gmnt meno.rah, the nine-branched candlesuck with used • for the Jewish feast of Hanakkuh. Topanga Plua 1n Canoga Park wtll also downplay Yulet1dl' wrappin~. althpugh 1t has budgeted S40,000 fo1 Christmas doo-dadi.. "We try to keep red nnd grt.-cn decorauon'i to a minimum," ..atd Joy Morrow. the mall's associate marl...et· ing. Autoclave buys Orange firm's outstanding stock Autoclave Engjneers Inc. has ac- quired I 00 percent of the outstanding common stock of un rt Instruments, Inc .• in Orange. it was announced today by James C. ~vinson, Auto- clave president. Value of the transaction was placed at approximately $9.81 million, in- cluding $2.2 million in cash an<f 700,000 shares of Autoclave Engi- neers common stock. Approximately 483,000 of these shares 1s Incl uded in the initial transaction, with the bal- ance contingent on unit's earnings performance over the next two years. Autoclave common stock was valued at SI 0,875 at the close of trading Nov 21. On the , ~ ---·- NYSE LEAD£ R) --~ -II'> -tu -'.4 -t'6 .. -- UP s ANO DowN s WHAT AMEx Orn NEW YORK CAP> NOY. 7' AME X LEADERS CoLo Quo TEs That•s an apt description of both business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companle~ are gotn~ and which p ople ar helping them get there,just watch Credit Line·-:-ever da in th Business section of your new lllily IQlal ' _____ ,_ .. .•: :f: ,. I• .. Of•• Coelt DAILY PILOT/Monday. N0'19mber 2e. 18M Drugs suspected la Canada blast MONTREAL(AP)-A bomb that ripped lhrouah a downtown hi~rite apartment, killing rour people and injurina ei&ht. could have a link to Mon~J cocaine Ullflickrna, pohcc say. About 400 tenants of the 2 1-story. 339-unit Le Maisonncuve apart- ments were forced to spend the night with family or friends, or at a deluxe hotel at the city's expense, while police sought an explanation for Sunday's pre-dawn blast. "We still don't know if the victims were working on a bomb or opentnJa package," said Montreal police spokesman Charles Poxon. "But aJI four were known to police." The dead were identtfied as Paul April, 42; Gilles Paquette, 27; Robert Lelievre, 63; and Louis Charles, 54. The first three men -and possibly Charles as well -were in apartment 917 when the blast occurred at 4: 13 a.m. and miaht even have been shot beforehand, P oxon said. Poxon saJd one hypothesis belng considered by inve ttgatol'$ was th.at the blast was tanked to the Nov. 13 motel slaying earlier this month of Frank Peter Ryan, a reputed cocaine kingpin. Facial hoods and "illegal firearms" were found in the apartment late Sunday, Poxon said. It was not known how many weapons were discovered or what type they were. While the nature of the explosives was still unknown, bomb squad invesugators found fragments of a suspected remote control device among the dcbns. Three of the four dead suffered fatal lacerations over the' entire front of their bodies. The Toun.h victim, discovered some 30 yards from the others, had fatal lacerations LO his back. DYING BOY WANTS TO SEE GRANDMA LOS ANGELES (AP) -The last wtlh ot • 7-YMr-Old boy with a fatal brain tumor 11 to die wtth hla grandmother at hl• akSe, eo the Make A Wllh Foundation la. trying to bring the woman out of ww-tom Lebenon, offlclu aatd Sunday. Roget Soltman has asked that hi• grandmother, Kh•dlga Haaan Nanouh, who la about 50 years old, be brought to him from her vtHage In the hllla above Beirut, said Make A With apokeawoman Joan Bullard. Arrangements have t>Mn made through the U.S. State Department In conjunction wtth the American, lntematlonal and Lebanele Red Crou organJz.a- tJona to supply the grandmother wtth a visa to entet the United $~ates, he said. But first Naanouh mutt obtain a Lebanese paaaport. Golden endoraement ,,, ....... Olympic amnut llary Loa Retton adYertt.e. the 'Break- fut of Claamplona' (or General llllla. In comparlaon howeYer, track and field •old medallat Valerie Brleco= Boob alta at laome and walta for the phone to rtnc for aach opportunltlea. "\ High court rules on illegal seizure I . stolen property found tn bur ar· s home WASHINOTON (AP)-Tbe Su- preme Court today Jet stand a rulipa that bars iUeplly aeizcd evidence from bcina used to revoke a convicted criminal's probation. The court, without comment, re- jected an ap~al by Ohio officiaJs who soupt to JIH a convicted buralaf allowed to remain free on probation after police said they found stolen property in his home. The appeal had offered the justices a new opportunity to alter the so- called "exchttionary rule," a device aimed at deterring police misconduct by barring illeaal evidence. Last July, tf\c court wealcentd the 70-ycar-old exs;lusionary rule by say- ing that it need not apply when judges or magistrates make mistakes in issuing warrants and police rea$0n- ably rely on those actions. In the case acted on today, Ohio authorities wanted to revoke the probation of Michael Burkholder of Dayton. He had pleaded guilty in 1981 to brcakina and entering. Burkholder's sentence of two to five years was suspended.land he was placed on probation for nvc yean. In 1982, ~lice armed wit~ a search warrant said they fo und 183 items of stolen property in Burkholder's home. The warrant was ruled invalid because police did not have "prob- able cause" to believe Burkholder bad committed a crime. In other words, the court which authorized the search made a mistake. In other action tOday, the court: payina $60,000 to the family of a man who.e death allcaedly wa1 caused by contact with the weed killer. In the Ohio case, the aUeae<1ty stolen property ~uld not be uled to brina new c haraes a1aln11 Burkholder, said state Judae John w. Keuler. But the judac allowed the property to be used as evidence indecidina tha1 Burlcholder's probation on his previous conviction shouJd be re- voked. There wu no e.rideoce that ~lice tried td violate Burkholder'• ri&hts.or harass .him in obtainina the search warrant. Kessler said. "The· detriment to the probation system in this county to allow (Burkholder) to escape responsibility for his illepJ conduct by virtue of a sweepina exclusionary doctrine wlulc on probation would be severe," Judge Kessler said. An Ohio at>peals court overruled the judae. saying. "It does not augur well for the future if the judiciary may piclc and choose at which of 115 proceedings the Constitution will be reCOlfli.zed and enforced." 2banks Feduelng · lend rate Uruguayan voters select centrist • A.,-ced to decide whether states receivmg federal aid for the handi- capped may be sued for allegedly discriminatmg against handicapped workers. The justices said the)' will hear arguments by California officials that states arc immune from such lawsuits. MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP)- Voterschosecentrist Julio Sangu1ne1- ti as Uruguay's president and then poured by the tens of thousands mto the streets to celebrate an elecuon held to end 11 years of military rule and revive their once-proud demo- CT&tic tradition. Although ballots from across this small South American country con- tinued to be counted today. Sanguinetti was accepted by o ppo- nents as the winner m th~O-man president1'\l race. The election Sun- day was the first national voting in Uruguay in 13 years. "The country has now entered a period of dignity;" the 48-year-old Sanguinetti. a lawyer and parttime political journalist, said in a victory speech at lhe headquarters of his Colorado party. "The party is ready to undertake the task of national reconstruction.·· His major opponent. Alberto Zumaran of the Nauo nal partv. made ... a surpnsc appearance dunng the victory address to concede defeaL .. I feel honored to comply with the decision of the people." he said. embracing Sanguinett1. Official returns from 2,560 of the country's 7,873 polling places showed Sanguinetti's party capturing 237. 753 votes, or 39.6 percent. The National Party had received 208.492 votes, or 34. 7 percent The Broad Front. a coalition of lel'\1st parties, had 98,880 votes. or 16.5 percent. The remainder of the votes were split among smaller parties. An estimated 2 million people had been ~xpectcd to vote. Sanguinetti's running mate was Enrique Tarigo, 57, also a lawyer and journalist. Under an accord with the ruling armed forces, the new leader- ship will assume power next March I. Voters also selected a 30-scat Senate, a 99-member House of Rep- resentati ves and hundreds of local officials. •Said it will settle a dispute over compensation for companies the ~ovenment has forced to disclose 'trade secrets" about insecticides they make. •Rejected an appeal by glass bottle makers who sought to block the use of plastic bottles for alcoholic beverages. Plastic bottles arc already being used in some areas for vodka, blended whiskeys, and bourbons. •Refused to spare the manufac- turer of the chemical paraquat from A GOOD AD! . , Let us help you find your market! Our experienced ad takers can advise you how to "tell all about it" in a low-cost classified ad. CALL ONE OF OUR-:FBIENDLY- AD-Vl-SORS TODAY! . CALL CLASSIFIED . 642-5678 i .~. tNGRAM MARGARET GRACE INGRAM paned away November 24. 1984 In Newport Beach. Beloved wife of Maurice J . Ingram o f Costa Mesa. mother of James A Ingram of Co1ta Mesa; Teresa A. and Robert Campbell of Sunland , CA .: Maureen H. and John Tortell of Arcadia Ca.; Nancy Ann and Mitch Corey of Gar- den Grove, CA . Margaret Frances Macklin of Costa Mesa, CA.; Kathleen and Mario Con~ of Coat.a Mesa. CA.; And the late Diane Ft.ck Aho survived by 14 grandchildren; 2 great erandchildren; n e phew, Bruce Harvey of Chicago, Illinois. Member of St. John the .Bepttst Catholic Church, C.O.ta Mesa. Viaita· lion, Monday from 10 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. at the Mortuary. Rolary Monday, November 26, 1984, 7 P.M. And Mua of Chrlatlan Budel, Tueeday No- vember 27, UHM al 9:30 A.M., both at St John the Baptlat Catholic Chureh. In- terment at Paclfk View. Pierce Brothen Bell Broadway Mortuary, Dlrectora 842-9150 WACHTMAN EDITH WAClf1'MA.N of C.O.ta Mea P.-ed away November· 23, 1984 at a local hoapl· tal. She la aurvtved by ton, Fred Ww:htmari of,:Azuu. ~ dau1h· ter, BenUce Perry of Euaene. Orqon; aon, Don Wacht.man of Com.&na.-CM.·deuah· ter , Rub y Wlschhoefer of Bremerton, Wuhlna· ton; 'on, Glenn Ww:htman of Port Orchard, Waahln1· ton; daul}\ter, Purl Rarick Of c.o.ta M .... CA.; 21 arandc:tilldren and many areal vandchlldten. ler- vtc. will be lwJd an Wedneeday, Naftnl· ber 28. 19M at 10 A.M. ln the A.MheUD Mortuary Chapel. In. terment wtU bt ..... at Rlvendde N.uor.t Cemetery ln Nvtr~ ldde, C.A. tr1endl """ call at the mortuary on Tuelday, D P.M. to 8 P .M . Backe• Kaulbul BIQott a. Schacht Anahtlm Mortuary. Dt~ 772-1817 I ':.~ = Ml.JC NOTICl '1CTmOUe .,.. .. ~"°:' P1CTmOUe..... The~: .. llOUa IUD um STAT.-.T doing~ ... JONll de!'::::::::~ we JAVAHO l ASSOclATES, Am OP H ii hON PACIFIC E(ECTAIC COM· 527 Senta Ana Avenu.. TO A.G•HTllll PANY OESIONED SYS· Newpot'I Bwtl, Celif. t2tl3 llTATI MO. A 111117 TEMS, 5327 Humboldt Outy A. VWI Orden, 527 To .it Min, ~. Orlw eu.n. ,.,. Cellf Sent• ""•"'venue. N9wport credltotl Md oontl~t 9092; ' · 8-dl, C.at. l*3 ~Ofl. Md pertone who Juon M. BrMdt, 6327 Thi• butlneee It oon· ,,,.Y be ~ lntetetted Humboldt Drive, Buen• ducted by: lnd!Ylduel In the wlll Md/or ettaw ot. Pll'll Ca11f toe21 Ouly A. Ven Orden MOLLIE £. JONES, lllO Anne L.. BrMdt. 6327 Thl9 mtement •• llled known u MOLLIE ELLEN Humboldt Drive, Buen• wfth the County Clerk of Or· JONES Pll'k, <:a11f. 90921 11n09 County on October 29, A peWon l'Mll beet't fled Jaeon 8'andt 1M4 try~Speen In the Su-TNt ttatement w• llld ,_,. '*'°' Cour1 of Orange with the County CWk of Or· PublllMd Orente eo..1 County requH ttno tll1t .,. County on NowemOer Delly Pltot No'tlember 5, 12. Ptlylll Speere be IA)Olnted • 1914 11. 21. 1164 • ~ repreeent.,IW ' ,_ M·1'4 to ~ the • .,. of PuC>lllhed 0rll'IQI eo..t •-------- the decedent. Oel'b::n Nollemw 12. 11. Pl8JC NOTICE The peUllon requettt 29 w 3 1"4 1----;.m.;~~.;.;..-- 1U1hoftty to edmlnlltel' the ' ' M-209 flCTrTtOUI ...... ettate ~the ln6epen-.... .-... AT.-.T dent Admlnlt1rltlclft of El---------.,._ •' .... Act. rtB.IC ll)TIC[ -~~ .. ..:~=~:::: '1CTTTIOUl.,_ll IRVI E CHRISTMAS 11. 1.... 11 9:30 A.M. In NA.Im ITAT.-.T ~E~t~C:. "=-MeM. Dept. No. 3 It 700 CMc The~ -Calif. 92908 • ~'CA':;702~-· Sent• ~ST COAST STA-Joeeph Porto 200e Pon If' YOU 08JECT 10 the TIONERY AND VIDEO ~ Hewpor1 9Mdl, grMtlng of the petition, )'OU SUPPLY. 18317 8olH TNa bv91neee I• con· lhollld ..,,.., llPP9ef II the Chlc9. HuntJngton 8-cft. ~ by. Ill lndMdull hMrtno end tt•te yow ob-C.iet. 92649 JOMPh Porto )ectlona or Ille written oblte-s.ndr• Spiro, 4061 Mom-Thie ttatement WM flled tlone with the court befofe lng1ter Dr.. Huntington wttll the County Clettl of Of· the hMftno Your llPPM'· leedl. Cellf. t264t County October 29 lllCI "'9Y ~In pweon or by Thi• t>utfnff• le eon, = on • yow ettomey. dueted by: Ill lndMduel ,..., .. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR s.ndfe Spiro Pubhhed Ortinge CoeM or • oont111gent creditor of Thll 111tement wee Ned o.lty Piiot NowmlMW 5 12 the decnnd, )'OU mu9t Ille with the County Clettl of Or· 11, 29, 1964 . • yow clelm """' the court Of ente County on November M-1'4 preeent It to the pereone1 I , ltl4 r~l\Oe lllOCMnted by . ,_ the court within bit mon1hl Publlehed Or.... eo..t rtaJC M)TIC( from the dete of Int • Delly Piiot NovemlMW 12. 1t, 1Uf1n01of1etter1 .. provided 2t, December 3. 1964 l'ICTmOUe ...... In Section 700 of tlle M-207 MAim STA~ Ptot>Me Code of Cellfomla. The folowlng per'IOnl .. The time fol' lllna dMne .. doing ~ •: "°' expire pncw to fOUf rtB.IC NOTICE THE PRACTICE BUILDER montN f\'Oft'I tN date of the flCTmOUI .__.. AO AGENCY, 20e1 lullrw i-tng not1o1 abOt1e. um STA'f'llmlfT Cent• Or. I 101, lrvtne. YOO" MAY EXAMINE the The folowtng penon II Cellf. 12715 1k kept by tN oourt. " you doing ~ •· The E-or-n Oroup. • .. • pet'IOl'I ~ In T ~ 0 MA 8 WA LKE A Cellfomll oorporat~. 20t 1 tN ....... )'OU fMY ~ 8UILOEAS, 12t !. Wlleon • ....._ c.nter -Of. ii 101, uc>OI' the executor or~ Col1• Meea. Callf 92127 !Nine, Callf 12715 11tretor. or uc>OI' the et· ThotnM Denili Wllkw. Thl9 butlnete i. con- tomey fol' the executor or 121 E.. w11eon eo.t. MeM ducted by: • ~ edmlollltretor Md Ille wtttl Cellf t2t27 ' ' Alen S.Mtlin. ,,..,_It the court wit~ proof of •· rni. t>ullneee 11 con-Thie Mtement ... llld w. .• wt1ttefl ~ ..... ~ed by: .,.. lndMOuel wltll the County Clettl of Or· Ing tNl you dellr9 epldel ThotnM 0... Wlllcet tinge County on October 29, notloe of the lllna of M ~ Thll ttetement WM llld lM4 ventory Ind t!PP'~ of with the County Clettl of Or-Publllhed Or "= ..Cele..-. or of !tie ~ tinge County on No¥emtier ~ Piiot ~ s 12 tlON or 11CQOunt1 mentioned t . ttM • • In 9ect1on 1200 Ind l200.I of ' ,_. 19, I. 1964 the Cellfomle PtobeM Code. Pu~ Ortinge C:O..t llMH IL.. AMO IL .. , Al• De11Y PNot NoY9mlMW 12, 19, ..,_,. .. a.aw, •• ._. 21. Deoemw 3, ,..,. rtaJC NOTIC( '"" ....... C.... ..... M-206 •-------- CA_, • --------flCTmOUe.,_N Putlllfled Orll'IQI Coeet MAim ITA~ D1t1y ll'llot NcMmtMr 25. 21. __ MUC;...;..;. .......... NO_T_ICE__ ni. folowln9 per.one we December 2, 1tt4 K·Mnt doing bU11rie. ee: ....,..~======SuM-IOl=:::::-"'lf PICTTnOUe IUl••ll PACIFIC COAST MANNA ~ um ITA,._,.,. 8EAV1CU. 1no1 Meune McCO .. MtCK MOATUARY 1795 Lagun• Canyoo R~d Lagun• &.ech, C•. 92851 494-9415 HAMOR LAWN- llT. OllVI Mbfl'O'VY ' ~etary Crematory 1625 Olaier AY9 Cotta Mal8 540-555 lttlRCI aROT .. RI MLL POADWAY MOATUAAY 110 Broadway Cotti MaH 642-91~ aAL n •RGlllK>N IMITM a TU'Tt&L W.ITCL•F CHANL 427 E 17th St Cotta Me.a 6-46-9371 • The folowlnQ per'IOnl .. LaM. Huntlnfton a..cn. doing~..: C.iet. t2Mt LIGHT INOADE GLASS 1~ ...,,,,_em.~ WON<I, J l tS N 5IO W. ~leeotl Cellf, t2t4t 1tttl St,_, Co111 Mele. ....._ ;,...........:_ 1~1 ~t2t27 ..... -... ........... U-. M, ...... 251 ~ ~~lngton ...,_, ltreet. Coete Mele. Tnte butlneee II con-e.::-:~ 11 con· dUCt.cl by. 1 99'*11 1*1· ~ by. .n lndMduel '-.::.. L ldMa LUCILLI M. lfAW Tlllt ttel""*lt ... tll9d Thie ~· ... tll9d ~ ,._ ""'91 IN County Clettl of Of· with the County .,_.,. of .,.. r.r. County Oft No·--= COUntr Of\J)CtOlllr n. . .... ,...,,.. ,_,. Pu«llllfl9d Ofenge OoeM Publlltled Or-. COM! ~Piiot~ 1,,11, DlllY ll'llot ~a. 11, December 3, iO, 11M tt. 2t. llM M-211 M-ltl M-1t7 MUC•TICl ,) .. CLASSIFIED lfl>EX Tt "9c.t Y• M. Cal 642-5671 El [SJAl( OTAU ....... '""'""'""" H.,._ U.,,..,.,,...,.. Ho.Mn t\wnioMd .., Unl"milhtd Condo""" Condo Uni T_,.,,.,._ '""" T_,,._u.,1 Dup6t-""" DuplnftU"I A...,_ta P\tnwhod A-ta Uni A.._ "°"' or u .. 1 -1'4>0nt .. lloetd "-"" ..._.. a-.._.. S.-llrntala v .. ~ 11.ftl&lt • 11otn1&1a IO $lwot9 • ftrnlalo w..,,1ec1 0.,..... '"' ""'' 0 11 ..... llefttala ~ lndwt ........... s..,...,. Mllt Ronta1o ...,.,_,_""' .. Loot .. '""""' "-"' p..,_j S..Vl<ft s. hoolo & lnaU'\OCUM .,.,,,_. BUSKSS & FINMCIAl """'-1ut5Ale .... _ °""""""u.. i...-w..,,led lnwolnwftl Opport-Uft ttOO noc ( .111\ 1·llal11111 ... 11 11d n1rn ·1·ti1111 ... 111,1\ Ill' lll <1tl1• 011 '<1 1111' d1'.t1ll1tll'' •I ' ,il111\ I ' 1'1 1 .. t-.I' •''" f11r a 1·,1111·1·11.1111111 111111.t"'r ~t.1·11 1·a111•1•lli111! \111ar .111 ERROR.': ( lw1·k 'our ,111 1la1h .11111 rq111r1 nror... 11111111·il1.111·h . I I"' I >\ 11 ' Pll (fl """""'''" liai>i lit ' f11~ 11 ... fir ... 1 111 1·11rrt•1•1 111 .. t•rt ion onh. C:l.A ·s 1FIEO 6·12-5fliH LIDO ISLE Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 78' on bay. pool . spa \00' boat space. Xlnt Fin. $4.850.000 Charming Spanish 3 Br. 2 Ba on 45' lot. deck. courtyard, pier & shp $1.100.000 aA YlfDE DRIVE BA YFRONT CONDO • ........ .... R&IM~ --- 4 Bdrm, 5000 lq" ,,...,. .,_ mll .. p6ece In L.egune. 8'8pe to 3M wlttl .. dwood tlootl. bHCh, brHtnt•klng .,.. cerpat, fNttl pelnt, view, •P•. newer dGUt*t geraoe. LMve A2 S 1.520,000. IOf'9d '°'· "°°"' tor edo-lJ~l{;lJI 11<.'tf S dlOoMt--. 1123.500 AMftOJS 17M06o .., ....... . · ... nll ' -~ ,.._,. IO .._,, .._y WOftled ~TD• Jetty & Bay view. newly deroral.ed Mai Kai. 2 Br. 2 Ba. 40' pauo. Now $575.000 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil L()tlllty 4 • ~. a. ..... In COleQe Parti S 125,100. 116-4711 • ...... COLDWC?U. BANl\C!R ~ MOCHMDIS( An._ Appl- A~ 8tdt Mat.malt ea-• r..qu..,...., • Clompui.n ,,..., IO YOAJ "'"'"..,. o.,..s. ... HO....hold Ooodo hwelry Marl\llWf'Y M_.U..- MIO< w.,.14!d Muolall~lt °'""' """'""" .. ......... _. Pvnoo• 0...,.. s po<\lnfl Coodl TV R.d11> s._ All• "°"'""' A...t1 A .. Ull BM\\ Cit..- ""'""" O.Lnr-n , ... ".,, ,.,., Hoftda ........ J•cw• -~·fll•l\4 , .......... l.atw M•kl. MMH•U M~ ..... M1._..~, MtJ <>lwl ........... ~ .... i.. ......... , lllllio ,_.,.. .. 1111-&.ab iw ....... Tt<WW ~ .... \lotlu•..,,,, v ..... ,._ )100 ftENINSULA HOME OCEANFRONT )I~ I Ba I Exc1ttng Ocean & Jetty views. -1 Br. 3 )50a 3700 sq. ft. car parking. $1 .285.000. :i: WEST BAY AVE BA YFRONT ~ ~ 6010 6011 I012 IOI• 91.fle l!Oll 9022 &02) 8100 •212 4214 e21e • 9211 6220 et2• At N H Y C Trad1t1onal 5 Br spectacular bay view Owner fmancmg $1 ,050,000 LAGUNA BEACH HILLSIDE Panoramic ocean & city view. spacious 5 Br. 3 Ba. Xlnt fmaneing. now $750.000 COTTON POINT ESTATES Custom ocean view Jots next to Casa Pac1ft<.'a. San Clemente from $550.000 WESTWOOD VILLAGE ...... L.erge 4 Bdrm 2 battl on quiet "'"' ~ ftrpleoe, neer new~ l dr.,_ THE ~EAL ESTATE:RS &~lchd'letl ~ --------•-+mat• Ntoe 48r time ., ....... :~ Prime• English trad1t1onal 3 Bd, 3 Ba 3 eno Frplc's, hrdwd firs. nr UCLA $695,000 8232 llcyMghta. Cuttom lk'9 ywd wltll AV 11CCM8 Priced 11 1 187 ,000. 751-3191 C:::. SELECT eoo " " eu-t un1t Clrculer dfM, pool, fruit ,,... I mucn more. Own- .. wlll oonetdar C*Tylng tit TD. P'1ced 1297.SOO '7010 lOll '7012 lOl• 701• '7011 1020 7012 7024 7cnt l02AI .. ~ 8107 ... tllJ .. ,. lllT tilt •m till .. ,, t11l ... em tUJ ••» ttn tl41 ... , tlU ... , .... "" .. ~ "" tl)l tlM .... t11J "'* tll'I ... "'' . .,, "' ,,,., BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR I• ,, , ,, U· ., .... ~ ~,.) ~lbl .... .... ..... ~~TIES Al/TO BODY SHOP+ Lane FVU..ER REAL TY Xlnl Coe1• ..... loc IU· 1211 1225K OWC. Zoned MG iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Stterry Coehow IMcr. I -.. 831-2242 .... THE REAL ESTATERS 9111m.L .. Recentty remodeited 2· atoty horM on '5' lot. f'renctl door., IMo.d gAMe. oat! ~ Ind eunny IOUth patto In- duded In thtt ' bed! oom. 3 beth horM. OWNER 1H DISTRESS .. BNNG Of. FERS. Wa In ~ - S3tl.500CALL131· 1'°° ULllLllPI• Ctoaa 10 8-y, Ihle 1-.nd horM 1181 brick. wOOdl Ind wennth In tl'lll 3 bedfoom horM with 1o11 lfTm.... At*lnQ S380,000. CALL 11 JI. 873-eOOo. ....... -~'\n NINO'l 3 BR/2 BA ~ l • 2 HOMl \ 11M BR/den 2 .. toty ~· REAL €STATE ment In the ,.., .. well 111-'MOO melnlelned Ind IUlt•blt '°' ~ oceuc>enCY end I~~~~~~~~~ rent.. Coby Wwd M90nlfl0ant PentllOUH ~ wftlO d,r.. vlewl 1295,000. ~ 30 't' fixed rete, $351/mo owe eecond l50-4e8I ~ Macnab · lrv1nP. H•.,. IOmetl'ltng 10 Mii? Clbllflecl Ida do It .... NOTIC TIM o.Q1.Uot wW ao 10.,.,. be open on S.blrdaJ •Of"lllACa. Ou operattac Men wW be lloed&J o.n. Friday. 1 :00 •·•· to IS:SO p.m. Deidlla• will be u folloW9: &DITIOK D&ADLIJU Moed&J ...................................................... Friday, 4:30 p.m . 'heeday ................................................... lloa4aJ, 4:30 p.a. Weda11 .. 7 .............................................. ,.......,. 4:30 p.a . n111'9da, .................................................... ,. •:.30 p.a. PrtdaJ ................................................... T1uar9daJ, 4:30 ,.-. .. ...... , .................................................... P'rlday. S:OO P.•· ...._, ...................................................... l"rtd&y, S:OO p.a. AUTOS, OC.lllC AMt' ..... ptopl• ftAd c•n~lltd \ - ! - ·-.. ,.. ---.. • 2114 Aun ........ ..... .. ' f!J1mf8 I • -·-";;:I.: i:::..:;;::.:;::.;.;:;.;;,;,s,,;;;.;;;;;~U~T~I ftH lllWWt ... k fill 1111 All MTll. lllPllT AIU..... SPIAJTUAl READINGS lnrprt hack _...-..,.-.. _____ ,Ct na ••I •ar 2212 lnzert ltack -.-.-. ..... --.-.._ .... _ C..ta MIN -;;cz Wkly rentals now ava11. 100 st. 3 once & recapt. AcMce In All Mettert & ,::::.i;:.:.:,.-,,_-.. ..... --. Lg•~ :~~~~!i1!n~ ~ • c gar st 3 Br 2'h Condo w/2 ear 2 BR + d9n frpl twnhM HUGE new stUdlo, eoo eq. 1128/wk & up. 2274 New· 1300 af • open ap plan. COun ... lng, 1815 So. El .... T lllllTI ~ner (714) 844-1451 blk to bch 1300 mo No attach gar, 1 yr IN, 1850. Comm pool & apa $8115 ft. t>Mut bthrm. 1350. port Blvd.C.M. 848-7445 Wiii tx.llld to ault. Al8o Camino Reel, San Clem. FOR SALE BY OWNER. 1-11w pet• 835-0344 eves mo. 976-0584 /mo + dep &e1..0273 mo. Caaey 857·2103 v tl adje 2000 sf. RMdy for Uc'd. 492-72" 3BR + d«'t. 1249,000, ••• Ill •• occpy s1 25 orou. Call 7141852-2418 or Iv B.EACH TRA ILER 100 3 BR 2'~ b1, lmmac:. Bright Eutal~ newly painted FULL OCEAN VIEW. New ~!:: .:s'=•/=~1~ IN NEWPOftT BEACH lntala 2"7 852..S7°14 R & H INVEST i.:'";;';;';'; .... ;;· ;;iiii';'";;; megat714m e-1oa1 llepe to Mnd. 8'• 35· andalry.Walk tot>Nch, hM. 28r 1Ba, MPW•te never ttv9dln.2brCondo, Monrovt..M&--0338 A Mlplaoetoll\oeonthe loe &IQ e;;C:bfn.POOI 0 .C.AlrporUtM.225'.tOll --·--••tl,800 w/10'11 20' cabanna llland/shops, avail now ·dine rm, hardWood nrs. dtwmlcro/oV9nfrpl2cat ~ a p 1 t• tbl cotortv 2frplct IS30' $110sqft loteof ~P~~ 15'e-9182 s11.ooo 499-1819 ev.a &1450/mo Agt. 760-8311 dbl gar. 1g tand9Ca,ped encl gar.,traatl p/u saoo ~t E-elde 1Br, t>eem 01~C~~u .. :Y·, ~::ith s1!.es 14. S4M91e pencing: utll'• 1ne1. GrMt B -------~ LARGE CONTEMPORARY yrd. Avt nowt 8 1000/mo. mo. 875•1739 Marcie celltnoa. Suitable for 8 tennll court• 7 PARK CITY UTAH CONDO Location. 852·93" 5109 Sealhore Orlve. N. · LI. hckU[I HOO 3 BR 2'h BA IN OLD COM 5<48-3155 or 998-3434 mature W:""n. No pet• =i. c:loM to bullnets, Avall Dec 29 to Jan 2 --_,.......,,....-=-==~ FOUND ADS ARE FREE Cal: YllUILUl•M Wm tr8& Palm o;;;;t $1500 MO EASTSIDE RENTALS Ta1tia 22to !4~~~7eecurtty OC Airport, FHhlon ateep1 8 2 BR 8200 per O~E~~~~O 2BR 2ba 8107,000 Condo II Monte rey JOYCE WALTZE Ideal 2b0rm 2b• w/mod circle I call 2br hM ltland, convenient lh<>P• day 838-7082 500 eq ft & up. w/approx H 0,000 ••· Country Club lor 831-1288 b1tns a)9welat$eookld1 fncd/prv14peteEZmove MW&nm onllght. lntal1t1 JerryHafdahlBkr eumable loan, owner wm houM/c:ondo/apte etc. welcome 4 appt upper $400'• at S495/mo 1 Bel 1 b• UPP« lka 2tOI 714-856-1200 ~ry 2nd -off.,. wanted. Marte (714)558-8001 *Ht-11H* 8-t Alty lee 539-6190 unit. gar, Indy rm, cloN Slnglee 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart· JI Call Mona or Jack to ..... LL Waat.. l S 1700 get• 3bdrm 2ba lam to shop1. manta & Townhouaee S325+dep Newport. Frpf. Shara CM l250sq ft ofc IO·Hll CHESHIRE R.E. 759-1877 ~ apot w/chef's kit & d• • i l 1923 Pomona from 1720. (Alk about BBQ PartclnQ. Near water w/tx.lllder. Shop IPICl9 If you have •table ~b, ~ SP'!C vu-2BR 2ba, on bch, llgner decor dial Cn •• • ••• TSL MANAGEMENT furnished apta, complete l aflopplng M5-1808 avall. S250/mo. &48·9457 ~~~~~~~~ WllTIUff YILU credl6.'n :,_~l29 N or furn/uni, pvt gate. 11800, Beet Rl1y fee 539·0190 VaJarahW 24lt 842-1803 wtth TV, llMN & uten•ll•. Fem pref, tovety big l\M, 2 •CdMdlxeult•.AC,ampl Found Blk fm cocker A deltgfltful condO foe the you. utlls Incl. 076-333-4 §ll MtrGO:t §Up, po;\ 3 PAL.M MESA APTS maybe r9nted lor thort frplc/pool. 1315 ut pd 111 prkg, from '225. 2855 E. apantel (Fair Or) 11122 adufta. 2 Bel 2ba.. frplc:, I! tab C t i tn HR Gorgeous 3Br 2'~Ba br, 2-A ba, W•t Newport Eutsl~ 2 Br S585. ·No term or longer). On Jam-/lut 8100 dep 241-0832 Cout Hwy. 875-fiOO 873-3888 876-8855 cer oer. comm pool & lta1t1Fuallk.. 2Bdr! Hi8a lg; yard f:nds1~~'19:o~r.:?'9~ nrbehS1350759-0588 =~5:i.~t:'~·CaJI ~~~d.etSanJoaqutn HNw/garden.NBnrbch, CWtrrial Found: Ladlu Gold Jacuzzi. Super loc:atlon 1.;;;--.;-..oioiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiioiioii--5875/mo Shown M-F · • i•• llOO gar/fplc/pool/tenn S450 ltatal1 2tll Watch. Coeta M ... Call for markets & ahope. 5-7 m 9.5 m Set/Sun Large 28r 1Ba duplex f i .... SH.ARP W...ide duplex up-,.,.. M/F, gay or 11ralght, n· to Identity. MG-3532 s 159,000 Ciltaa ••I au 21 D p "~3 E p22nd St wfgar. W/O hkup•. No AJ1rta1at1 .,. •• stair• 28r 1Ba. end oar amkr over 25. 64tl-OIM OFFICE/WAREHOUSE 11/17 REWA·o s I •-••••n "" · pet•$600/mo 545-7983 · ' 1000 eq ft In CM . Lost: n • m .,.. .._. Comp. Furn. 2Br 2Ba Mod · W ID hkUp, new drapea & Lg M1tr bOrm & be In CdM (213)435-8371 Himalayan Cat. WhVgrey lll·lHO kltS1000/mo-moto8/30 2br tbed~x,fncdyard no LOVELY new Spanish crpta '550+ depoett. No ••TllWITD* rem praf. $400 + v. u111: marklnga.lrvlne Terr . •• a.u t ... " l lAA Wik to bCh 780-5055 pe:j 19h: ~~J!25+ atyle twnhH w/2Br lt!Jlrl hack 2'11 pet8. Must stand credit S..Utlful 28r widen. W/D 8-44-5511 FIR ITlllllll ILll. CdM 790-8582 .., '"' er 1 c -1'~Ba, court yrd & prvt -r cnec:tc. 770-58~ hkup 1g kltOhen, lrplc, 4347 sq ft •WAfflFliif • 111111 llHll 2 BR, pvt & quiet. trg yd, no patio, ~"s prkng •P~· 1~~°". J~~ ~5. •STUNNING L'l._1 l 2Br 1219S/mo. 760-0919 M,,•le , ·~w ~·~·~ ~r AIRPORT A.REA.: 90c tt. L:~ ~:.:=~ifo~~a~ ......._. ......... 3~~~u~~':°~! =~;r1~•nr57~/~~· 11t + :ta.1f1Js o~O:.t;:3. at 870!:909 1 28• Gard«'t ·10t. POOi 1rWA'fllPlll1'* p~m~ •• kit~ 0pr1v, ga; <714>944-4910 I• Wtit, vie VlctOrta, CM. I.I IAOl IAY fum. S2900/mo, 10 mo 648'~ W~018th. 497~0287 Updated & ready 3b0rm Wlnte<rentaJ bachelor apt. $485 & 1595· 71 W tSth •PllPlln* S225 'h utlla 448-3770 WtlltJ I , Ta,ltr It, REWARD! 850-370& 2BR 2SA. SPACE 37. tu or more. Oya lllH I 2 Hftl w/dshwshr gar yrd for 1 block to beach, 'h blk to Two 2 Bt'I, A~I 1211• 18r on Bayside Or w/PM M or F wanted to shr lge AaaHactanh 3iil LOST HMring Aide at the 300 E Coaat Hlghw 581·2~7. IY9' 700--0181 a IE _,.. kids/pell won't tut $685 bay $450 mo. 075-4902 $1595. mo. Avail. 12/8. beach l boat mooring•. 3500 s/I hm on Cherry SCRAM-LETS OMV or NB Post Offtoe. NewpOrt 8Mch ay. Designer fully fum 2 Bd Eutllde • Includes nr• Best tee 539-8190 A t t U f S580. mo. 8th dn, no S995/mo. 700-0919 Lake $850, utll pd 848-4288 De A Baysld VIII t houN POOi & ten Is piece. encl yard, dbl gar fl1 •ta 1L a ' dog•. Victoria St. nr Ca· Nanot Rod 675-0256 ('f:4)873.1~1 -oe c~11195 073..o890n w/opener, gardener. 2 IHI.hack 4 ,._ 4 ,.702 nyon,831-8812 3&4Br.2B1,Qar,yrtylN . ...., · ANSWERS Ptrltaah 3012 Brand New 1 atory. Rent: ... aeral • Newport Penrnauta S900· NICE CONClO, lemate Tl/lllnS D Id I let I 1-.a.. a...&.~ $1000/S1200. Call for S410paytrent&utllsbrlte t:1 L ..1 WllPflll--S1200 Avall Dae 11 . n/smkrprefS3501st,lut EIOH ·~u~';.,:. ~~~ to':a~ ltlHI ... r•n•I• showing. Agt. 631-2242 1bdrm move ra~t or57b1g 2~S:,B!u~/n•{7'1~ Want a Mlectlon ol great 875-4912. 754-1792 Bkr ..curlty 847-1438 Intone-Enemy Outcalt ONLY 835-9199 ket Of 557 9390 Gntral U02 tam 3br pets fOo 50 · · llvlng? we can offer any-Flour· Squirm ' r • $400 bach pad w/mOO S..ttee539·6190 891-9501 7-8917 thl~freemallapttol 4Br, walk to bch, lndry Ownroom3brcondoW/O FRONTolME WARM WOMAN 18-45? PARK~~ ~utuuy L~".;~~~f:>:~;: ~r~~~: ~::.r,90 lmae 2244 ~!'~~ ::~. = 1e:: ~r °' ~e'~~r:1~ ~~ ~~· ~~2~/m~~1~52-~~1let•. ~d13~1~f.9rot R't: ~~:.!e1::i, 11~~;~~i~~~ ~::.:~~b= custom!* 20x52' Kay rooms. Spanllh vllla, In-$985/mo lovely 3 Bd 2ba 2500 s/f :aBr 3ba. ki yrd, Pool, teeurlty oar. CloM for that Choice ldMl IMng. CLOSE TO BEACH Prol'I F/M non-1mkr 1g NB off sea.eon? They go to Want love, nice OUY 40? Weatllomeonacorner terlor swimming pool. houNw/yerd,lndryrm, upgraded. 1125~/mo toeverythlng.RoyalTahl-TSLMGMT 842·1803 28r1Ba.S750/mo hme wtk 10 bdl $.400+ the movies and tit In Kld10K 842-1031 lot. 2 BR 2ba w/llght In-$8500/mo. 831-1400. gar, all bit-Ins, nice east· 524-1940 or 559-5958 Uan t-o 8ci1 494-8083 NB REALTY 875-t«Ma Agt 842-3850 83M722 or 845-eeel FRONT of ME. 1erloq. A very attractive BALBOA IS. BAYFROllr: alde location, utll pd. Compare 3br 2ba pool lalMa lal... flOi --. aH YIWll NEAR BEACH: 3 BR 2ba Rmmt ahr hM In axcluelve ltlt Waat.. 51 ltlt Waat.. 5100 home for only 125,000. 3 bed fum. VIEW on Main 231 CabrlllO .. ome S750 nntlon to """ "-•..a& Call 540-5937 BI y . S 2 0 0 0 I m 0 . TIL IUUIUlllT Best Alty ,.;539.,e1eav' 2 LO BR, 2BX Cfi.rmlng 1 & 2 Bel .... POOi, ape, UPP« apt, Frplcc: + 2 cat N.8 . neighbortlood to bO 1 •1 p•1 A -873-e900 houN on Coral, w/2 PY1 gar, Indy rm, no pet•. gar. I 1200/m~. Aot S250mo+ ut 842-63 f2 ev II y I DI • • • • • • • • ••• IEWPllT IUOI WITUFUIT ... El M2· 1IOI GOLF COURSE patios, frs)f, d/w, end gar. TSL MANAGEMENT 67W170 or M4 3375 Stir hM: So. Laguna. Pvt e DEANZA 111 1400 lll-1100 •Eait·llde CUTE 1 BR LOCATION $1350 yrly 213/277-2120 MW122 NEWPORT CREST Condo entr, ba & beh. a.autllul · 'e • Double wide home with 2 • house newly decorated. Luge 2Br, den, 2Ba C • I M 27U "·--p,a-t flH 3br nr pool/tennis & peaceful. 111/lut/dep. -• BR 1 beth. Large llvlng, S Condo In Rancho San IHH t lf _.. .. . $1100/mo Agt 846-2235 Aft Opm 499-5884 • e dining and kitchen .,.. carport/yard 550+dep Joaquin. New carpet• l LARGE 28 28a temp ren-&itxe 38( 2L w/fl!PIC, • • Must Mii. Befnn trans-Winter Rent.all 548-6091 859-8225 1 1n"5/ C-" r ... __ i. .. i.vu... No V ..... lles 1 Br Vu S800 Woodbridge. Furn rm, Pvt • • ..• JACOBS REAL TY drapes .,... mo. ... tal ApprOll 4 ~ Avl ......... gar, ............ ,. • 50 d ..__ lerred from ar... PROP MA"""'GE .. E ... T EASTSIOE CLEAN 2Br. 851-0892 0< 640-0937 12111875/mo 559.9285 peta 559-7184 Vitia Ba!boa 2 br 11 ba, luxury con o, , ..... to • FULL• TllE e AGENT 540-5937 ·~" m "' 1Ba & new paint. Ger, . . 831-4HO Agent shr w/M/F. 1275/mo • e 7141676-8173 yrd. Avl now $800/mo. IEITll.S *PITlllPTI* laat ..... k JHO VERSAILLES 2 Br lncleutllntea. 561-1582 • OFFICE CLERK • MHatala, 11t 548-3155 or 998-3434 CALL us REGARDING w11n w1lklng of the bch. NLm ••• 11 U. 2b• penthouM with vtew' l1atll1 Wut.. ltH • • ltttrt 1450 lalMa IRVIN~SES 1 l 2Br $650 & Up. 1 mt•· ~ ......... ""'·• frplc', ....... , 2 car pa_..,,.,.', L!!!t ~""'tr..-,.., l •""' r• •. •. • i I 2207 Eut tide CM 3 bO 2'~ be .. .,_., ........ ..--'" ··• ......, .....,, _,..,. ...... \ 1·n hu .. ~ finulot ion Offi1·t' ho .. Deep Cnyn Tenn Clb 3Br ta •H I Condo S900/mo Joyce ~ -1• •Immediate QcQupancy O/W, bftln•. emote• airm, no pets S 1,000/mo qulra .... -rm rental, 2 e 1 . 1 . • I ••• t .. t M t... ••• n•52 .,._""' 1111 •'lllf\ lt·•.-1 1· t•rtc•n 1>11 .. ilHlll furn. Wknd, wk or mo Femlly home-yearly rental· Waltz 031·12&e Q SOr .... on.,.<>-on" balcony. water pd. ~""~ bath, encl get., Eut C.M. e e H6a::·:::~~~~~:u.()~:~, i~,!c,~ ~~.~d~ -ealfy t Ctltl ::n11 27H =::':~~~:~~.~ ~~~~1~.2~~ d:: gr,:g:=t~~9Call : ~:~~:!l;::~:;n~·:~ ... :~·,::, r.i~th~il~~~~;~: : to sell? Cl1111hed ads do be 1 ch· N ° Pet 1 · J yard. w/d hkp, M50/mo, S725/mo, yr IN. 111, IMt Mature woman •eek• • t•u.,j 1 i1111 i 11d udt•., rrnA"''· .. in~ • n wett.642·5678 S1295tmo 975·9006 786-1172 1Br $440utUepd,lndry. 53.6·77e9HO-aOll 844-98"42 or720-9177 quletwpTM-W/ba&l<rf • phorw ... fi lin". t'nin" und Jo111 : HOROSCOPE SYDNEY 0MARR · Carpon. A'VI 12'1. No ' I wkdyt ty d afs e "' ',. pets383WBay548-9518 llWLllllYIPTI. ...., prv e45-4S:x1818r · • pron .... '"I'· \1>plirunt <.houl1I h1• • 1BR/ '380 ~ Now renting on a..ch i375El:gantNftPOl16Cb • nNtt. lil.t• 111 ""ork ""ilh 1wopl.-and : upper • 1 ..'7 ' Blvd, So. of AdtlM Ave. home neer ocean N/smkr Need ~ entr rm w/bath • 0 3880 Mlehelaon 0r1Ve =·r~~5-a'1si . Studio 1 l 28r 1-loft 850-2044839-1132 n/amkr. "tober. Gar? • lrn• .. It fH t"ithf' uttitu1li>. I hour • lrvlne .....,. 1t1 indoor r-uetbelt ~let,i:;78M443 • """rk ""''t·k . \100118)·1-"rido). • un · ..., • F nlafled prl\late room 1 Hl.. • Tl'leSprlnge 18r Condoby 2 Bd prlv garden •Pt tennl1, pool, ape, ..una. ~~tchan prlvllagei ct I I .. : "•ur1in1it .. utor) ii. CJ;)O/n10n 1h. e running stream. POOi, jac w/gar. Brand new carpet. For le~g •1'~fo call • ..-./mo 8-46-2435 ••-•••• • (;oml •·ompa n Y. tH-11t>fih. Appl" in •. & tennl• $575. 891--0999 ,, .. fl paint. ground noor. .......2 .. v ----· --; •u k f241 1595/mo. Sor~ no peta. --------Male/Famale retired. 150 aq ft prol ofc • Jlrr"""· \1onda~·Thur .. da~. 2:00 e Lataaa -c 845-18 3 IUWlll Room avail. Lllite doga & w/wlndow view. 2301 : 111 l :OO p.m. \.,k for t-;ilt"f'n, • •••••••••••••• ~ I City ughts C . 2BR 2.... hot water pd. YIWIE drive. 538-0921 Cwnpus Or, 1'211. lrvlne, • • 11350 """' COf1*' Campu• & Von • 3br 2ba, xtnt cond $650 +MC dep, avail New 1 l 2 Bdrm tuxuty Muter br completely tum Karman. Incl recep-• • Tuesday, November 27 ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19}: Fnendsh1p grows stron~er. could be transformed into "meaningful .. relationship. Pisces. Virgo natives figure prom1nentl ~. Clandes11nc meeting leads to romance. helps you get inside track on confidential data. TA URUS ( -1.pnl 20-Ma\ 20). Accent on career .... prestige, achievement. chance to '>tgn1ficantly increase income. Rclauonship 1ntens1fies. long-range commitment could be featured. Cancer. Capricorn per~ons figure 1n unusual scenano. Go~ GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Horizons expand. you see more. persons you respect consult ~ou, lo"e ceases to be a stranger. Reach beyond current expectations. realize )OU actually have wide audience. Focus also on educallon, traq~I and commun1cat1on. CANCER (June 21-Jul\ 22)· You rece1"c excellent news concerning resources. pos!.1bie financial \upport. You'll make new start, loved one helps you get to heart of ma11er!>. U) digging deep, you could stnkc pay dirt. Leo aids cause LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Go '>low ltc lo"' choose secunty rather than intnguc One who tempts )OU ma) actuall)' want you to fall on your face. Know 11. protect self in t'mottonal chnche\. Legal affairs command attention -find the papers. VIRGO (Au g. 23-Scpt 22): Gain O\erall view. leave details fo r another time. Focus on health, pets, dependents. e"!Ploymeot and spec1aJ !Crvttt!. You 'll be mvnett ro travel. to attena ~ociaJ affair. Sagittanan plays s1gn1ficant role 1n Kenano LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22) lk willing.to re\ ise. re view and pos~1bly to revamp procedures. Moon po'it11<>n htghh&hts charisma. physical attra~uon. mtensified romantic intcre!it You'll be given green light for creative proJect. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No.. 21) Be ready for change. travel. variety end important messages You'll lcaro more about safety. secunty, property values and Iona-range prospects. Gemini, Virgo. ag11u1riu1 persons play key roles. Make the sv,,nch! SAOl'M'ARJUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Restrictions arc lifted, the trip wi ll be made possible. H1ghlt1iht curiosity. make inqumes. get answers to pentncnt questions. DOmc~t1c adJustmcnt 1s pan of scenario. could include chan~s in the home CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J. n 19). Follow1n11n1uaJ disappointment, )Ou ,act aood news concerning Pornblc 1ncrea~d income. See others 1n realtst1c liaht, define terms, avoid self-deception. You'll locate article that had been lost, missina or !tolcn. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb 18): Thi' 1$ )'our power-play day! AsttoJoaicaJ. numerical cycles h1ghliaht ach1cvcm~n1, money. prestiae and love You'll bt at riaht place at crucial moment. Judamcnt and mtuitJ on are now on ta,.eL PISCES (Feb. l..9·March 20). Look behrnd scenes. realt1c that one who aided )'OU in past will h(Jp ap1n. fhrow ai1dc falst pride! Cycle contlnuC$ 'h1&J'l, take initiative, rtah1c ~our own worth. You'll ove~omc d1 tancc, la bamcrs. mo. 497•4170 or 497-aoao Dec 2, own/egt 548-1939 apta In 14 Jjlana. 1 Bdrm, prtv ba M .. Verde area Uonlst, phone answering, • ORANGE COAST • Studio. ocean view. pvt & 2 Br, toe led yard, 2 Bdrm and Townhofnea Fml onlyl250 &49-8677 conl rm. con .. rm Pf'IV. : DAILY PILOT • quiet, no pet1. Nr Woods pet OK, seoo. mo. + poola, tennla, water-Room w/kltchen prlv nr $400/mo. 752-2484 • : Cove. 11t + security. 848--072 1 fall1, pond&. Gaa ~-bus route/Shopp't ng IUI I.I. lllNIT : :-l~O West Bay Street • l540/mo.h .. • 97:!1 7 •Btcltl, big kltch & bath. ~~~': :;:'h ~~ Center. Call M2-5?00 Lu.x ofc, up to 2000 sq ft. • Co. ta Mesa, CA 92627 • I rt IC• 6ff Lotu privacy, porch McFadd«'t and W•t on W-slMpl'IVataroomw/frlg avall 3 ofce, all • • r w app 1 1375 No pets 752-5822 McFadden to Sffwlnd In Apt complex. Utll1 pd. • m •net I e • . J o d Y, e • ap-~~~or• •P~~OOEOO~• w~~1~~1~ =N=o~pe=t=•='=~=8=4=8-=4=3=~~~~=3=·=~=7=0=====L•~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~~~·~·~·~·~-:·~·~·~·~·~·:·~/ 2ba w/gar 1900'1 today 2Br 2BI spilt level. frplc, WALK TO BEACH. 1Br a.at '" 53g.9190 W/D, dbl gar, poot/apa w/drapu & carpet• *WTILlfF• 1950/mo. 55t--9200 $!500/mo. 83M037 R9nt or IN option. 3Br •Rl•llllm* lniat 2744 21AB1, front & side patio. Lg 2 l 38r Apta. New crpt, -;~ii;iiii;;iiiii;;;; View overlooking Bac1< drapae, tlle. etc w/pool. • Bay. Newly decorated No pet1. 842-5210 .... :=::oA,g~'~t-~~+ 8585/mo 2 Bel 1b1, patio, W•Wlll ... ntce eMtslde locetlon, IPllJmTI Lrg 3BR 2ba, frpl, ctoee to pool, Indy rm. ctoM to all. bch 1713 W. Balboa Blvd 149 E. Bay Conveniently looated In 11050 Yaarty 873.-4743 TIL llllAll9llT one of Jrvtne'• neweet 3Br 28a w/frplc on New· Ml• 11N ~ala':'~ 1, 2 port Isla S 1100/mo. 'l 3 b.clroom ll)eltlMnta 851-1 115 or 850-8648 ...,..8 !:;9 nu ld~ally attuated n,H r 381'"288 W/frl:llCJ. Clotl to ~ .......... echoolt. ~IO and beach. J:~~o. Agt IPAlmlll pattca. --------..,1 Beautlfully landaecaped '°' leulng Information HR. tam rm1 to kltc:h, encl ~den apta. POOi/ape. plea.. call: (7 U ) yard, gooa aoNa, oar· Patloldectt•. No pete, 659·5012 Monday-Sun• csen.r. 1 1350, 831-3071 18drm !M64170 day 8:30amto1:30 pm BAYfRONT 38r+ den 28drm w.a. Hl6-Seeo 11950 w/o dod!. 12100 38drm2I• 1750 -....... --iliii------17--, .... , w/d~ A;t e.51-1851 181!18th 842..otaelii-iiiiilliiiiiiiiiii~-,iiiiiiiim~..--.... ' 161 E 2191 Ml-2408 llUf'fS 3 Id 2 ~ ba, 2250 Vanguard "40-M2t Only 10 mlnut" from Trtne ff'&..t.:3e' 1400 8-Jtlful. quiet 2 Id 2be. 2 Laguna your own Pflvlte ...., patloa. MOit utf "'°· 122 OONn ~ from o.na aluFFI 3 8d 2 ~ be. Htmlhon-Aon Ml-0417 Pofnl'I "'°" MCfUdect Tr1na ~4 :':;.11400 WTi1ot21r i .. w//C ~,:"'.w.U:,:-.J ::::a , a Wport MOO. 11r 0 1• p e lloa. 0 111 hltDMY rtnt/~tlon, • br, el'flcleneyW/Ol(pOf1 U()O teo-al1OI'111"""41 2 bl. 701 lleon, Avlll 1211152-tsM 1'M71I fiotlde 1e; 21e w/veufMd ltwlii:~~ WTILU#, VllW HOMI! Ollll,., frplc. ddbl 0# WW1iWlil#, 41,., HA with poof. w/euto OS*'* 1111/mo. jftd, No ~ Cal 12000 1eW '40-7511 11t, i.t. 1eo WI. I pet• lem .,... dil#r 11414111-44••• HV ~ l\lliONIOO •'"'1 aona, no peta. llO-t7" i ICJ fril. Ar a MOW9. r.t3~:.~~·'°°· ·~,:.:.1~ :f!'=;..~.t::.r' ,..;po;t Terr llr 2L •J>Ort• a ~ry. AYlll Hr , ........ OIOii Condo. W/O, retrlG MOO 11/1 No peta. MIO/mo to~. t bl!& loOOllM 1»<04IO, 14..,.1411 Our'! II 63t•t211 t 7eo Ill 4oa e¥t District Mana9ers --------If you •njoy working with yojing boy1 & girls ond de1k job• ore not for you, con.Ider o career In the MW1poper circvlo· tlon field. Thi1 is o vni~ potftion ..,lf+I dolly <hol!ef1911 & r.-words. Our openlngl or• immediate. Appllconts mu1t hove o von, 1t0ffon"'°90ft or truck. We offer on ••<•llent Malory with o bonu1 pion 411d oo• ollowonce. w. ho ... on excellent '*'-flt pion thot Include• hosp!· toli1otlon ln1uronce, liberal vocation ond holldoya. Condldcma mvat hove o dttlre to be wcc"efvl ond be willing to worlr hard. If you think yov hov. the quoliflcotiona, p&eo.. opply In penon to1 MMtdoy thru 'tldoy 9-l I om or 2_. Pfl'I 330 W. Bay . Cost1 Mesa, CA 92626 1--...-......:;__~,;;;;;;;;...;;..;..1...~~~--~--~£.-~~~~~---'-~--~-------- ~ Scbools a lnstraction -. 642-4321 Lois ext~ 309 -- F.orfurther information regarding advertising · placement in the . Schools & Instructions Directory -call Lois 642-4321 ,. ext 309 _.,,,,: Pacific Travel School 610 I. I 'Ida St .. Saoca Aaa, Ca. 91101 ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY PllV An ACCREOfTED TRAVlL AGENCY SCHOOL MOANING, AfTERNOOtil, EVENING Cl.ASSES ·c.11 (714 > 543.9495 . Ma .................. .--. ..... ....... TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 52 Gallon part 53 Cartogram 1Cbff& ~In the know ab<>ut 5 Athta 55 Piano p.ace 10 Hand loots 5 7 Housenotd a tnd1eahon 58 Repuu11on 15 Quickly 59 Pluck1e1 16 "'All -Jan 60 Harrow s foe 17 Ingran 61 Hills t8 Weighed down 62 Ground cover 19 Batucgull 63 Ealled 20 01v1·s m1l1eu 21 Employ DOWN 22 Well-garbed t Rap1eall10n 24 F ruatrate 2 Wood 26 !<Ind ot fund 3 Owelllng 27 Work prar 4 Bridge woro 28 Bee.ma angry 5 Compelllng 31 Amatgamala 1000 34 Pusad out 6 Se11erally 35 Novehll 7 RjQUHted Levin 8 Bar need 36 -S I Louil 9 Plant organ• 37 011eo11arles tO Napping 38 lnsact 11 LIP music 39 Attack 12 Oawdlea 13 Corset part 40 Incline 2 1 R1nge group 4 1 Kind ot c111 23 0 111da11on 42 Angu11nes 25 0111cnarge . 44 Vel'llCle 26 Commer~ ' 45 Fruit 28 01111ts tear 46 Alla 29 Eno1ng tor led 50 Ended or run 2 3 4 8 11 7 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED JO Engagement 31 Paragon 32 Hangout 33 Elevator allernauve 34 TV control:r. 37 Breakfast •tem 38 Emanate 40 Hockey e g 4 1 Llughing SIOCI\ 43 Cap perts e 44 Siiiy errors 48Wa11a 47 Act hammy 48 SpanJSh name 49Wa~~ut 50 Strange cnap S t W1tnin pref 52 Fellne 56 Rooting ma1er1a1 57 cnop 11 12 13 Nl!ise~..,_ - KIDS-EARN GREAT TRPS AND PRIZES! AGES 11-14 J , EMN lt' TO $75.00 PO Im. Wit 110W ''"' lS.,....... tw JMI .... .._,to*"' r'*1 ter TN Or ... C.. OeifJ Nol 0w Cltw$ ltaft II 3 JO J • ... t•• ... )0, • ........,, °"Set ...... IM 11tw eort llollcs YOI .. Mt• NtJ W. ......... ..,... ,.., OWi..., I .... ""' ....... Of C.olllc -...-• ,.. ............ cal ... (lfl • OfanQe COM4 DMlV Pll.OTIMo"*'>, NNolaw1•• • WlllY useo CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOA Flll.,._11. eom.r-o.L..Mo -.n 18211 BEACH Bl. VD. HUNTlNOTON BEACH 141.-111• 1111 l ' ""' . ... ... SOU'H CO~ll TT VOLKSWAGEN I I •• ' I 111 I• l• Ii' I • I• ""• I ( \1>111 \( I llLL YATES I · VW-PORSCHE I I .J 7 ... 0 0 0 ) .• s I I 75 GtawSa GNe.$1100 080. Vwy dMI\, run. grMt. gd trenl &42-4929 '71 Ford F116rrnont • Of ....,.~ ... ---beMry. a1too ~111 ~el.._ ..... IO Pinto 5tK ml lOfl4 eondl $2.00 OOo 71..,...,122 • ( ' Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT /Monday, Nowmbef 26, 19tM BUENA PARK 91 ' GARDEN GROVE ...J c:o -...... ,,.. ... ........... _ .. 22 FRWY EDINGER Q WARNER 0 CHICK IVERSON Che~;let • Porsche • Audi 441 E. C11st hf,, ltw,.rt h1oll lll-OIOO ~ c:o Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 NABERS· CADILLAC tB 2100 HARIOR ILYI., COSTA IESA (114) 140-1100 (213) 117-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location. • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA # 11 Alft Ctlftr Ir., lni11 In 'The Irvine Auto Center ' 830-7800 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 /1 Ttl W11t For #1w }fll Salls For I r11rs .r °l':"~e • SALES t • SCRVICE oa • LEASING . --.-. m~;.~~?...~~"0 • ACCESSORIES DEPT ' 549-ao23 4D INTERNATIONAL MOTOR COACH INC. ._,,Pilai class1f1ed ads phone 642-5678 • J 0 THEODORE ROBINS LAGUNA HILLS 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET FORD 1121 lalhr lhtl., 1est1 lesa U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer over 23 Years Serving Orange County Modern Sales, Service, Part$, Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Sales • Service • Leasing Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 546·12ff · S,.UI Parts Ult 546-MH 2MO l1rMr lhtl., Otsfl lesi MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:oo PM 142.0010 .' l .a"·l2l l SATURDAY . 8:30 AM -6:00 PM .., SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 ~?!~!M~~~sMPORTS INC. '•.STADIUM PONTIAC' 0 • COMPETITIVE PURCHASE PR1as 0 · W•'r• N•w -W•'r• O.allng ,A... * HUGE INVENTORY d·ial MERCEDES Acroea from the Big A on K•t•lla Juet Weet of the (57) Or•nge Freeway 213/714 837-2333 Sales • Service • Parts• Body Shop on Premises Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on 2221 E. latella aa'•llll Manchester /Beach Blvd. 1111111• v- G RAY FLADEBOE VOLKSWAGEN #20 Wt Otlttr Ir., lnl•t In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7300 Orange Countys Newest Volkswagen Dealer Complete Sales, Semce & Leasing G BILL YATES YIUIWllEI • PlllllE • Pl .. IT SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE . 12U2 Yelle 1184, S. ~ ... o.,ittraH 411-4111 lll-41GO 'I MISSION VI~~£] g '8 0 MISSION V1EJO SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 0 BAUER MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU Comt>lefe Automotive Needs SALE$ • SERVICE • LEASING Ane Setectlon of Qualtty lJMd Vehlclel 111 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2925 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA . 979-2500 . 0 RAY FLADEBOE UIOILI IEIOllY ~11111 tsm # 11 a... .. ..., .. ., '"''' In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7000 CREVIER BMW "' SALES • SERVICE • LEASING "" "Where Professions/ Attitude Prevails" 8pec:Wl&lng In EuropMn Dellwerr. lxcelent lllHtlon of New and c.r.tullr pr.,.,... Ueeci IMW'• a!Waya In stock. 835-3171 208 W. 1•1 St., hnt• An• Corner of Broadway & 1st St. CloNd Sundays $ uus 0 !!E~~N~UTS IR 8 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE GJIM SLEMONS IMPORTS Overseas Delivery Specialists PARTS DEPARTMENT OPEN tATUROAY~I BMW -ROLL& RO¥~E · 1640 Jamboree Rd. ' HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. 1301 Quall Bl. -INw C•r Loe.Hon 1001 0111111 Bl. -,....,_ DM9lon © Wor~·~=-lon~~ _ 833-9300 . Newport Beach 840-8444 Costa M•n----sg;o7f3-- 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy . Un · LMllic · Pn · Senlct • W, .... I Cl DOING BUSINESS UNDER A FICTITIOUS NAME? All new bualn••••• u1lng • flctltlou1 name, mu1t by law M regi1tered with the,.. County Clerk. The DAILY PILOT · provl•• the form1 •nd flffng Hrvice1 for our ~u1tomera. If you are •tarting • new bualneH c•lr the DAILY PILOT for lnformetk>n and form1 Dalf Pilat I i • .. .. TOMORROW: I 1:11m 1111111 MONOAV . NOVI MBf H 2b 1484 OHANGE COUN T... 1.,A L 1 ~or1 N I A '}'J C f NT ~, Search for Laura termed 'circus'. Volunteers. led by private investigator, 'CITSo rganized and served no purpose· area where young Laura was last ~n . . Law enforcement authorities who "-"Oct. 18. viewed lhc volunteer effort. however, Waller Goode, a private in-painted a different picture. vesligator from Orange who has Bowlin said he ordered the search volunteered his services to Laura's haJtcd late Salurday af\cmoon be- parents, bad estimated the volunteer cause members of the search team search team would n umber a t least were makins statements to the media l.000 people. that "couJd inadvertantly be hannful By STEVE MARBLE Qf '"" O.ily .......... A weekend volunteer search party looking for 3-ycar-old Laura B.rad- bury, the Huntington Beach girl who vanished more than five weeks ago, was so disorganized that t><>licc fina11y ordered it halted, a San Bernardino Coast We asked folks what they think about setting up roadblocks to catch drunken drivers./ A3 A Huntington Beach Eagle Scout candidate does a good deed./ A3 California Pasadena parade lam- poons Institutions, do dah, do dah./ A8 Dying boy may get his final wish -to have his grandmother by his side when he succumbs./88 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Nation Supreme Court rejects hearing on Illegal search of convicted burglar's home.188 If It's single men you're seeking, females find Houston and San Diego the best spots./ A8 Two banks drop their prime lending rate to 11112 percent today in a not- too-surprising move./88 World North Korea vows 'blood for blood' after ~hootout at border .I A6 World Court finds In favor of Nicaragua In dispute over U.S. 'war escala- tlon.' / A4 ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Feature Nathan Ollvelra's art has as many diverse In- fluences as his native -state, California./ A7 Sports County sheriffs cap,tain said today. "It was a circus,' said Capt. Gene Bowlin. "As far as l can tell it didn't serve any useful purpose at all." The group of volunteers. estimated · to be somewhere between I SO and 300, arrived Saturday at Joshua Tree National Monument, a remote desert Gbode also descnbed the weekend to our own investigauon." search as being highly coordinated At least 2 S journalists were on hand and said the volunteers would be as. were two helicopter carryrng tele- broken into teams and aJsigncd vision news crews. specific duties. Paul Henry, chief ranger at the Heart pioneer hanging on Doctora William DeVrlee (left) and Ronald Barbie lneert an artiflc .. I heart into WUJJam Schroeder on Sunday at the Humana Heart ln•tltute ln Loul•nlle, Ky. Schroeder, the world'• eecond recipient of a permanent artificial beart,_wu reported in critical but •table condition today. See etory, Page A6. Indian Cove Campground 1n Joshua force ass1aned to 1nvesuaa1e &be CMt, Tree, said the volunte~r group was conceded lhat Goode turned over unprepared for the desert's harsh, several leads to the Sheriff's I>qmi. cb1Uy weather and didn't aps>ear to mcnt and promised that invesbpton have maps of the area, which 1s not far would follow them up this week. from Twentynine Palms. ..Maybe they (tac volwneen) .. There was 2ero orgamz.auon." he stamd upa linlc more intettSt.. J don•t commented. know," Bowlin remarked. Neither Goode nor Laura·s "Our investigatio n is sull pl~QI parents, Mike .and Patty Bradbury .• along," he' added. ·~we have bun- were available for comment this drcds of ldds wett worlonJ on and mominJ. . we're in the process and addm& more Bowhn. who is in charge of a task (Plea.e .ee 8EA.RCB/A2) Traffic fatals, arrests up over long weekend. Three people killed on county highways: police haul in 1 17 By STEVE MARBLE Of .... °""' .......... An increase in fataJ car accidents and drunken dnving arrests on Or- ange County highways over the long Thanksjtiv1ng weekend set an omin- ous beginning for the holiday season. Three people were lulled in high- way accidents in Orange County during 1he four days, and the Cali- fornia Highway Patrol arrested 117 people on susp1C1on of drunken Educator fears U.S. will inv.ade Nicaragua By ROBERT BAR'f\ER Of ... 0.-. .......... Hun1ington Be3ch school' 1eacfler Pat McCully has ~mt' preu~ strong opinions about \.\hat's going on in Nicaragua. And the opinions don'1 exact!} square "'11h· those e'prcssed by·U.S. government sources. dnv10g. Local pohcc departments arrested at least another I SO motorists on susp1c1on of drunken driving, accord- ing to incomplete figures available toda)'. Last Thank.sgtving, the CHP made 107 drunken dnv1ng arrests m Or- ange Count) and. for the first time 10 five )'cars. reported no fatal car accidents on county highways. A Costa Mesa man was killed late Saturday 1n Garden Grove. Police said Henry T . Cooley, 23. d1cd aft.er his car spun out of control on a rain- ~1tckencd roadway and Jumped a center d1v1dcr. (Pleue 11ee TRAFFIC/ A2). McCull). "'ho v1s11ed the Central Amencan nallon last Chnstmas and . (Pleue NICARAGUA/ A~) Pat McCully Teen talked out of jail suicide A psychologist talked a teen-ager out of jumptng to hit ,death Sunday Inside-the Orange County Jd, where the youth hecJ ..,_,. Thanksgtvtng after being arrested on a burglary warrant. .,_ lfr'• deputies said. Sgt. Ull'ry Abbott said Paul Alan Pinkerton, 18, "climbed owr a security screen overlooking a stalrwett -a 50-to 60-f90t drop-Md threatened to Jump.·· · Abbott said ·0r. Peter Chambers, a cUnfcal psychOtoglat employed by the county. talked the young man 1t'to coming down safely. Irvine Hlgh's girls vol- leyball team tangles with Corona del Mar In the Southern California play- offs Tuesday nlght./81 De Lorean 's dream goes to highest bidders The Rams are stlll In the hunt after 34-33 win at Tampa Bay, thanks to Eric Dlckersoh./81 Newport attorney pays 37 ,000 for first gull-winged sports car at Marriott auctio.!!_ I By ROBERT HYNDMAN Beach attorney Bill Yacobozzi was Of ... °""',......., once the target of a federal drug Like John De Lorean. Newpon invest1gat1on. And. like De Lorean. Inexperience plagues Estancia, Edison as the prep basketball season nears./81 Buaineu A West Virginia town wants to outlaw satellite dlshes./84 INDEX ,Budding nd>velists along the Coast getthe wri~e-stuff'.- Bridge A 10 Herc's a bit of expen advice for Bulletin Board A3 those who want to publish a novel: Business 84 Learn to write. California News A4 The expert, intthis case. is Dr. Pat Kubis, a n Oran&e Coait College Classified A4 writina teacher for more th.an two Comics B7 decades with two published novels to Crossword B7 her credit Death Notices B7 And she's not beina flip when she Features A7 su .. csts potentiaJ novelists team to Horoscope B8 wnte before they embark upon.,thcir A8 first book.. Ann l.andera "People pick up a pen and think National News A4 they can write Wlthout any instruc- Oplnlon A9 lion at all," the S7-year-old educator Paparazzi A7 aaid. "It's like the psychiatrist who Polloe Log A3 came to me and complained that he'd Public Notices 87 wntten three books and none oflhcm ports B 1·3 had been published.'' Stock Markets BS ,Kubis said she read some of his Tetevlslon ' A8 stuff llld 1t wasn't half bad. Theaters A8 The psychiatrist told Kub11 he Weather A2 knows his fie&d and didn't see any World News A'4 · advant.aac in takina a writina course ~--··••••r bcfoJ"t tacklin& I couple Of book • rtlatina to psyduatry . • ----=-~=-------- SmE llTCIELL PEOPLE IN THE NEWS She told him it would be hkc her countelina bis patJents wttbout any traint\a. ••fi'c'd been tu.med down by pub- hsh1na ho uses for six. >can." Kubis 111d. lhal1n1 h head. "He oou.ld have taken a few (writing) class and been a published writer in a year." Kubis should know. Her students have published Of been included 1n more than 4,000 publi~tlon That WIS lliC~n years atO he (4Ull COUnt- 101 af\cr that. (Pl_..._ AUTBOR8/A2) Yacobozzi was cleared of the charges. Both men also are fond of sports cars De Lorean. of course. 1s famous for startine his own sJ)Orts car manufactunng company before run- ning into well-publicized cocame consp1ran char~es in 1982 Yacobo111. mean"'hile. 1<, an a' 1d car collector So \.\h1le De Lor~an·~ ban~ruptC) truslees were forced to give up the two ong1nal sports 1:ar protOI\ ~s al an aucuon Sunda\ to pa) off cred11ors. Yacobo111 found himself dn' in~ ' ·' a"' a)' wtth one. Yaroborn paid S37.000 for the suunless stet"I gull-wmged sports car after outbidding Don W1lhams, di- rector of the Blad. Hawk Car Collec- uon of n Ramon. C'ahf (PJeue eee DE LOUAJll/A.2) HBeYes upgrading Center -By ROBER I BARKER O.llieO., ........ When 11 "M built nearl) 10 years ago. Hunung1on Center was "the ni<'tst'· rcuul center in Orange Coun- t)'. aCC'ording to Huntington Bach Cit' Councilman Ron Pattinson But the )'ears and compellt1on other o;hopp1ng c-tnters have t.akt>n their 1011. Pattinson ~1d "Now it's losing too much bus1nc s to Westminster MaU and all that (sales) ta .. money 1 ao•nt to other c1ue " he -.aid "h n~ to bt u raded ·· ~c ma1ont) of1he ('11 Counc1l tS e\pected to aJrtt wnh Patunson tontghl and appro"c a redevelopment pro.)«t for the c;hoppina cniter at 7777 Edinger .\"e south of the San Diego frttwa} and v.t'sl of Bach Boukvard Tht met"tma 1c; ~t.tcd to \tart at 7 '° p m at C'1h C'oun<"1l chambcf'\. 2000 Main t If the plan 1~ OK'd tonight, about SI m1lhon v.ould bc m de av11labk to upgrade the center throu&h t.aA (Pleue eee CltNT&RJ A2) \ ' A2 * Orooge Coul OAILV PILOT/Monday. November 28, 1984 CoNTINU lD SroR1Es o.llJ ..... ,......, ....,..,_..,..... Auctioneer Rick Cole atand• be8lde De Lorean prototype prior to Sunday auction. DE.LOREAN CARS AUCTIONED ... From Al Wtlhams paid S2 I .OOO for a \ccond prototype. The sale was pan of the Ne""pon Beach Collector Car Auction held this weekend at the Mamou Hotel And v.hile more than 450cars wcrl' up for sale, the two De Loreani. attracted the most attention. Williams told rcponers 1ha1 the De Lorean "ts the last hurrah for am- bod> lf)tng to stan up a produc11<in com pan) and mass produce any kind of automobik." The fa ilure of De Lorean's company, he said, makes an~ oth er such effons unlikely. "People will look back m 10, 15 )eari.. not 11c 1n the drug problems and realize v.1th a li ttle dearer v1s1on what an undl·rtaking 11 was." Wil- liams said. De Lorean was acqu111ed of the drug consp1racv charges last August but faces a cre-d1tors' lawsuu cia1m1ng he dl\ertcd more than SI 7 m1lhon lrom the compan) to his personal accounts. Wha le Yacohon1 ~,~., he bought thl' I><.· Lorean ai. an inH'stmeni and plam 10 store 11. W1lhams will d1spla} lhl' other prototype in lhe Black Hawk museum \\htch alread) has HI cars 'alued 1n e\ccss of SI m11l1on apiece .. Classic cars are the Mona L1sas of lhl' 20th century" in investment potential. W1lhams said But the colkctor car bidding was not limited lo the two De Lorcans. More than 450 cars including ( ad11lac convertibles. fucl-in1ected Corve11es and a 1931 Stu11 Boattail also hit the auction block. according to Joe Molina. spokesman for Rick Cole Auctions Inc. '"The auction was one of the be'it we''e ever had m Newpon ." Molina ~Id "ll'i. such a great place hold an auc11on 1n the first place. People were wmment1ng that Newpon Beach is the onl) place where you can look at a rnllector's Rolls-Ro}ce ""1th the Pa- cific and Catalina Island 1n the background." Molina estimated that the auction grossed more than S 1.3 million with about 45 percent of the available cars <,old -a Mrong showing for a collector car auction. Some collector cars were purchased for as much as $90.000, he said. Ne.wly 5~000 people altended the auc11on. which Molina called "the Cannes Film Festival of the car \\Orld." The event was the largest e'er held 1n the Newpon auction's seven-year h1stol'). Molina said. The ne't auction "'Ill be held dunng the Founh of Jul} weekend. CENTER UPGRADING PROPOSED ... From Al increment financing. Ne-w ta,cs w11h1n the d1stnct ""ould go toward pa}1ng off refurbishing costs. officials 'iaid. Most of the construc1100 "'ork would be aimed at 1mpro' ing trans- portation access into the center al Edinger and Beach that is descnbed as one of the most severe bottlenecks But one of the big efforts. according to C11y .\dm1n1stra1or Charles Thompson. would be to malce better use of the the outhern Califom1a Edison Co power transm1ss1on line~ that cross the freewa} between Hunt- ington Center and the new Number One Plaza commcerc1al center to the \\eSt. '"It wou1d bevel'). vef} cxpens1'e to undergound the lines," T hompson said. "But they're taking up an awfully lot of space. We would hope to modernize the system and to make better use of the area." Officials, however. chiefl y arc hop- ing to use-'tfic-moncy to improve the traffit flov. on Edinger b} s1ra1ght- en1ng the cunes on adJa~ent Center Drn e and linking up Gothard Street to Hoo\Cr Street. which terminates on the nonh side of the freewa). Several other areas in Huntington Beach -including the downtown- p1er area area. the Beach Boulevard- Warner Avenue commercial area and the Emerald Cove senior citizen housing near Talbert Avenue and Beach -have been put into re- development districts. SEARCH FOR LAURA 'DISORGANIZED' ... Prom Al people to our task for1.c The blonde brown-e}ed girl disap- peared after wandenng a short d1<,- tance from her parent's campground .\uthonucs su<,pect the girl ""as kidnapped. po'is1bl~ b\ a m1ddlc-agl' ~ra}-haired man \\Ith a beard fhl're ha'l' been no confirmed '>1ght1ngs of the gJrl or the .-,ought-aJtt."r man since the da\ Laura vanished <;hcnffs 1nvcs1iga1ors reported 1ha1 1he man. though! to be tra,eltng an ~· blue \an w11h d1s1tnc11ve bay v.an- dov. c; un m side ... "'as spolll'd c;e' era! hours aflcr Laura 'an1shcd That 'i1gh11ng ""as made on a rough back road leading trom the descn tov.ard Rig Bear Ao" ltn ..aid •t 1\ his feeling that Laura is s111l all'e He said 1fshe "-ere not. her bod) ltkd} \\<Ould ha'e been found b} no\\ TRAFFIC FATALS IN COUNTY ... F rom Al Two people wt·rt· killed ~unda} on Onega H1gh v.a\ in thl' c lneland Nat tonal Fore\ I when the 'an thq ''crc mJtng tn ll1ppcd 0Vl'f. ~late-wide. lh1.. hohda'> death toll was down and drunken dnvmg arre~ts soared O\ er figufl·~ from prev1ou-; )Cars CllP officials said 45 peopk were ktlkd on ( ahforn1a h1gh""a\<> th1<; \t'ar wmparcd with 55 Jeaths la'it ~car .\uthonttrs o;a1d 1.435 drunken dn vmg arrests "'ere recorded in th e '>talc h~ m1dntRht unda~ This figure 1<. up trom 2.0~3 from the pnor year fhc CH P arrested 636 ix·opk for tn\es11ga11on of drunken dnv1ng 1n the greater Lo~ <\n~clcs area and made 421arre'\I'>1n 11s geographical l.ltv1s1on that include'> Orange and San Diego counties .\II police department<, along the Orange Coast have or plan to beef up street patrols with special drunken dnv1ng teams and predict that arrests for dnvmg under the influence of 11kohol could reach record highs this ~aron. ~ According to CHP spokesman Steve Kohler. 1he number of inJury accidents or fatal accidents t}p1cally goes down as the number of drunken driving arrests goes up. NICARAGUA FEARS INVASION ... From Al again 1n \1.'ptemt)l:r 'atd "icaraguans are digging 1n for •rn 1n' a'ion h} the l ' S '.lomcth1ng \.1d ull\ <.atd <,he fulh c'pcct\ B·ul '>ht· claim<, 11 "on't he ~u1c~­ h111 1ng action <;uch .i'> Jt (1rcnada fn<;tead. \he '\cltd 111c; lih·I, to 1urn in to another V1ctnJm-likl' '-'ar "'1th the Laun ·\mcn can<, 1ak1ng to thl' mounta1n.,<1nd figh11ng fornef! in1..h of ground 'i1caragua ma~ hcrnme a Ru'is1an 'ialcll1te that would c;prcad re' olu11on and the communir,t,· brand of totalitarian go .. crnmcnt an the V. e'il- crn Hcm1<;phcrc tJut l\1c( ull\ '3\\ 1ha1·,a trumpcd- up kar · · Ru.,s1ans) put m1'>s1lcs in< uba ·· \1cC ult) a Democrat who said '>hl"'> al\\a\<. hccn concerned about po,ert~ in the \\Orld. '" a Spanish- f r('n<. h-ma1hl·ma11cs trarhcr at (J1slcr "11ddlc SlhOOI She said '>he J1d a lot of reading on Latin Amen- can matters whale gc111ng her master's Jegree 1n Sp:in1'ih. "I heard ~o much about Ernesto < ardenal (min1<,tcr of culture) being - Clouds to replace cOld winds TM COid wind• ~ through 8outtl«n c.ilfomia win dlmlnlah OW4'nlght but aklee will become lncreuingly cloudy Tuetdey Ov•mloht Iowa Wiii range from 37 In lh• valleys to the upper •Oa In L09 AnQtilet, follow9d by hight Tueeday In the upper 80t and low 70., the National w .. ther ServtQe NJd. Along the coast. It wlll be fair tonight, but not quit• as cold and local a anta Ana winds dlmlnl1hlng by late night. Increasing clouds Tuesday. Highs Tuesday 65 to 72. Lows tonight In upper 30• and •01. From Point Conoeptlon to the MeJ<lcan Border -Inner waters: Par11Y cloudy and eotd tonight. Fair with decreasing winds Tuesday. Hight In the ~Os Tuesday. Lows tonight 12 to 2S-. Outer watera: Variable winds 5 to 15 knots tonight. South H•<J" wind• 10 to 20 knots Tuesday Combined seas 5 to 8 feet. Fair ''""l""·•1 ·"' toolght lncreas.lng clouds Tuesday. U.S. Temps K1111-C1ty 67 S4 LMVeo-a 63 31 Uttte Aoeti 57 41 ........ HI ~ L~ 64 42 r ,. ... • . ,. I -.... Albany $1 24 Memptll8 17 92 Albuquer-43 ... Mttm18Mcn 71 ,. Ametlllo eo 41 ......... S3 41 Mpi...StPllUI 52 42 • •• &.l • AneltOtege 24 7 NulWllle tl1 45 Alllll'lte 86 42 -o.-7& 59 Atl9ntle City 54 27 -York 53 41 AutUn 56 37 63 .. eo 43 Calif. Temps 73 SS HottOlk.Va S4 33 84111""°"8 SS 27 Olllallorne Clly 64 52 31 15 31 21 H1g1> tow tor 24 llOul• anO•nv 11 5 BKmingnam 17 41 81eme<dl .. 33 8olae 37 20 Boston 45 31 llu"alo 50 30 Coper 42 1e Cherie91on.S C et 48 CMtleaton.W V 81 30 Qlwtone. N c 64 i1 ~ 41 JO ~ !>3 '2 Clnclnneu 55 43 CleYtrlend 66 a.c Colurnbu•. Oil 55 S4 ~0,NH 44 20 Delu-Ft Wotill 70 62 S3 OmeN OflanOO ~· Phoenl• Pina:z: POtll. .Me PotilWld.0. Prew!OenOe Allleloh 8nr..-.pon Spoil-Syr- T°'*'a TUQ!On Tut .. WU111n9ton 52 41 71 51 $4 21 so 3t S4 29 43 n 45 40 47 30 11 )() 70 eo 32 25 54 24 S7 S4 64 37 82 SS se 33 e m toOpy 8altettllel0 EUtelle FtMnO Lencaal• LoaAngelel 08111...0 PuofloOlet Rad Bluft AeOwooO City s.c.-10 .... ' San Diego SM FrancillCO S•nta8art>ata SI oc;lt I 0<1 SS 31 SS 3e se le 48 33 64 45 se 42 se 31 48 34 S7 40 51 31 S7 37 62 41 S7 46 83 34 S7 34 Extended Oeylon 21 Denver 60 25 Wochll1 St •• Wlllt-8e11a 52 211 Tides HIQll. tow. PflCipllalton fOf 24 hour• 0..MOIMI S4 48 Oelrofl 55 30 Duluth 40 "° EJPMO 5t 40 Surf report Flllfl>anlla 03 ~ Fwgo 57 42 LOCATION am 1KiH Flag9tall 32 12 OrWICI ~ 57 40 HUl!tlnglon BeKh 1·2 poof HwtlorO 60 25 ~ Jetty, Newpor1 2-4 goOCI Helene 32 12 40th Sttwt, Newport 2-4 goOCI HOnolulu 11 ea nno S••wt. Hewoo<t 1·3 goOCI Hou9ton 71 63 Balboa Wedo-1·2 poof lnelleNIPOlle SS 31 Laguna 8Mcn 1 poof Jecllaon Ma 75 eo Sanci..-te 1·3 ,.,, Jedtaon\llh 70 62 Wetw temp 90-61 ,,.,,_ 37 32 $ ..... OlrecttOn aoulllwWI CONTINUED STORIES ending 11 5 p m Bet11tow Big llMr 81"'°1) Blyl,,. Calellne L0119 BMcn Monrovia Montway MIWtlaon IW#pOf1 8Mcll Ontatlo Puadene Rtwt- San Bet netd4nCI San Olbtlel ~ 47 3e 11 45 25 82 SI eo !>3 112 45 83 42 se ., se 30 87 41 58 44 112 31 51 45 se 4& ea '"° TODAY Sarona hlQh 10;35 • m 59 Second tow e·18pm -0 s TUllOAY Fitll high 1.Jeam 38 Finl tow s 12•m 3 1 Second high 11 24 ._,,, 53 Second low 7 tt p.m -0 I Sun ..U 1oOay at 4·•!> p m rl- TUMOay al 8 37 am and Nia egaln at 4 44 pm Moon Mii al 8 73 pm . r-TUMOay at tt 18am --•lf25pm AUTHORS GET THE WRITE STUFF •.. From Al And several of her students arc best-selling novelists. There's Clive Cusslcr. author of "Raise the T1tan1c." And Barbara Conklin, who wrote .. P.S. I Love You ." And Don Stanwood, whose "Memory of Eva Ryker'' llccamc a made-for-ttlevision movie. ·~ of my 'St udents pubh~he<I last' year." she S3)S. adding 1wo more books wnttcn by her pupils ·arc coming out soon. Doroth) McMillan, who is s111l ta king classes from Kubis, penned "Blackbird," a no,cl about a ps}'- chot1 c poisoner \nd there'!> Douglas Muir. a for- mer student. whose " mcrican Reich" has been accepted for pubh- cat1on. "It's a stol) about the far nght trying to take O\ er the United talcs." Kubis S3)'S of Muir's book "I guess you'd call 11 a futunst1c conspiracy novel It's great." And 1f the manuc,cnpt mentor admires her student\. the feeling 1s mutual. Dorothy McMillan say\ Kubis has "that wonderful abiht} to encourage and stimulate you through those tough 'I want to give up' periods so you emerge on the other side with the determination 10 succeed." C'ussler. whose novels besides .. Raise the T itanic" include "Deep Six," "Iceberg," and "The Mediter- ranean Caper," also has accolades for has fo rmcr professor. "Without Pat Kubis to advise, console. encourage and shove, during the writing of my first published book. Ch' e Cusslcr the author, would never have existed." Kubis who first started teaching lict1on wn11ng. fundamentals and WE'RE LISTENING just Call 642-6086 novel wntingat Orange Coast College in 1963. is retiring at the end of the year. But she's leaving something behind fo r aspiri ng authors of the future. It 's a non-fiction book titled. "The Com- plete Guide to Writing Fiction, Non- f iction and Publishing." OK , so the title doesn't ~rab you. But how about th is. The writmg text 1s already in its second printing -less than two months after its first edition came off the pres.\, Kubis. who co-)uthored the book with Bob Howland, a senior editor for Reston. a Prentice Hall subsidiary. says Writer's Digest bought up 5.000 of .the books and 1t 1s sold ou1 at Dalton bookstores. .. , was tallung about reu nng and one of my students came up and said. 'Before you retire, leave us what you know. You owe It to us.'" K ub1s agreed. She gathered up class notes co llected over a quarter cen- tuf}. and with information provided b) co-author Howland, began writing a book that ts chock-full of Dutch uncle advice for the novice novelist. There are chapters on how to approach an editor. how to obtain an agent, how to evaluate a contract. There's a chapter on how to shop for a word processor and even a chapter on writing romance novels. "Writing romance novels is the easiest way right now for a~ un- published writer to get into print." Kubis says. Nine of her students have published romances and six out of six winners 1h a recent national Romance Writers of America winners last year were Kubis' proteges. 'T d read so many books on how to write b} authors that were wa} up here." 'ihe said, hold1n11. her hand over her head. "They were so abstract and the) left }OU with nothing." Not so for her book, she sa)'S. 'T his 1s a real nuts and bolts book. No one has ever put 1hr topic together in a sequence." Besides ed1t1ng her new book for future ed111ons. Kulm 1s working on a new novel and remodeling her home in Canyon Lake. The hou'\c 1s on the lake and 11·11 be I. 740 ~uart· feet when it's finished . she ~a)~. "It'll have a huge writing room wi th a lake view." fhe perfect setttng for writmg her third novel. a Nazi thnller. "I'm going to wntc 1n the mornmg, JUst like Hem1ngwa). take long walks in the afternoon and read, read. read." she \a}'i w11h a laugh . But 11 will hard I} be a re11remen1. In add1L10J1 to hl'r wn11ng, Kubis wall continue to lead wnting seminars and act as consultant to would-be authors. Will -,hl' miss teaching? "You know One of my students asked me that." she sa1d:1ears welling up tn her C)es. "You bet I will." Patriots parade dona tion needed Donations arc still needed for the 19th annual Laguna Beach Patriots Day Parade. The parade association needs about S6.000 to finance the event. Joe Jahrl'u~. fund-raising chairman says. Contnbutors may send donations to Patnots Da) Parade. in care of Gcrr) Hanna. treasurer. 3079 Bern Dnvc. Laguna Beach. Ca .• 9265 I or call Jahraus a1 494-6538 for further 1nlormat1on Wha t do )OU like about the Daily Pil ot" Wha t don't ou like? Call lhc number at lefl and your message will be recorded, lntnsl·rlbed and delivered to the appropriale edilor. The same 24-hour answering service may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Coolributors to our Letters column must Include their na me and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please. Tell us what's on your mind. "The)·, l' dug 1rcnchrc; 1n parks and u11ec; and \.\rtttC'n no pa'>aran· (do not pass) on thl' v.nll\ She said \ml'nca 1\ interl''>ted 1n Nicaragua and other < entral Ami:ri- can countries fur selfish l'CO nom1 c rca\on., -mainl~ to pro1cc1 1nwc;t- mc:nts ofmultinat1onal hus1 nev.c.-, ··T ht• pcrlcct exampk," 'iht• !>aid. "" the Aml'rican ovl'rthro"" of the Art>cn1regime1n Guatemala tn 1954 . I he CIA did 11 becau-;e they (the .\rben1 rcg1mel expropriated the l ntled Fruit Co. rcpres\I vc. H c 10, a pnest and poet. •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~1 and I had read much of ht!> wnt1ngs. I .. The} h:l\l" t'H'r. n:a-;on to think that th1\ wuntf} (the l I ~·\ J v.111 attack " thl· ~5-year-old McC ulh tlcclarcd "Wt"'c hu1l1 thrl'c a1f\lrtp\ tn Hondura\. \\l' ha\l' mined their harbor.. ""l' rnnd ult lh 0\ n'i and thl \Ontt hoom., mJkl' thl'"1 feel hh· the\ 'rl' being bomt>cd "T m \O dt'itre<,\t.'<I V.C'.rl' g111ng to pla\tcr thc:m into the ground ·· \h1· <>atd "V.i:'rc going to lind \Om(' e'CU'il' hke the \tnk1ng 111 the \lfa1nc or ... omC'thing Wc'..,c dom· 11 O\Cr end ov<'.'r aga1 n ··1 lhought on the night ol thl' clt'ct1on when thq wl·rc talking .1hou1 the M1G £lane~ there they go." lJ.<) offi cial<, tla1m tf'lc 'iO\lt'I\ :m· secret Iv '1h1pp1nr-M1(, fightN J('I\ 111 Nicaragua Tht ~ov1('1c, :ind thl· N1caraguanc; denv the I \ th:1rgt.·\. M<:Cu ll ) differ\ drn\lll.111~ v.1th r,omc in high plalC' wh11 \3'f that Dally Piiot D•tlvery It Ouer1ntMd "' !'l•t ' "'• ' ' "' r...t.• .,.~.Jf ,.,..,,.. ei- ._,Jl'!r /t n-•~•frm "The people ol N 1raragua arr <,o poor:· o;hc .-,aid. 'and ""e're making them poorer b) forcing them to spend monc\ on weapon:) when they don't e\t•n ha'c toilet paper We're forcing them 10 turn more and more to Kuss1a " McCull~. a rec;1dent of Huntmgton Beach also ~} s that fear<. hctng expressed about :--.i1caragua be<:oming a Ru ssian base arc a "red hcmng." She acknowlcdgec; that Ru'is1a and < uba might be movmg into the area to spread d1~omfon ancl propaganda against the I 'n1tcd ~tatec. But she claims !>he can't '>CC them pO'iing a m1htaf} threat from that nation of 3 m11l1on people. "Wl'"-OUldn't lct that happen," she '\aid "We didn't lei them (the ORANGE' COAST Daily Pilat -;aid ttm can't Ix'. l'vt• got 10 see for myself." What she '>av. dunng her visits doe.-,n 't -;qua re " 11h statements from adm1n1s1ra11on leaders in our govern- ment Mc( ulh al'\o <.aid she learned on her trip ttldl algae wa'i plugging up pipe\ at four new health centers. Mc\ully wa<, abk she !>aid, to supply the people with water-testing kt ts that will determine cliemic~I contents of water. That information will help the Nicaraguans keep the pi pes fu nction- ing. "I kcl I've done something that matter!>." she said McC'ully said she has wntten articles .about Mf tn p for-the Cali· forma Peace Academy and had press credentials to travel the country from coast to coast in September. She's srnce Joined the Orange County 'Committee on Central America, "h~ "aid. Clrculetlon 7141142"'4333 Cl•Hlfled edvertlelng 714114.2-Je'TI All other dep•rtment• 142""'321 MAIN OFFICE .. , ,. f:# H.L. Schwartz Ill PubllshPr Frank Zlnl Mar ;:iq1nq Fd1lor Keren Wittmer Adv~rt1s1ng Director ff•'ll"I IQ&l Ch~(. " PvoWW>Q ~"Y No ,...., """"' •A1•1r-. l'C)tor .. 1 ,.,.,,., or ..,,,...,_ -~•t --"l~r M •.C-OdUCed wolfQit --..i '"'° .,_Cl I <vroQf'I """'* ""' .. , ....... .. Clrcul1tlon Telephone• "' ,., II' ., ... ...,~ RoHm•ry Churchl'(l•n Controller \ Rot>.rt C1ntrell Prorlurtt0n Milf'l.JUPr Don•td L. Wllllem1 C1 rcula t1on Mflnager VOL. n , NO. 331 ' Designed, Finished Installed 31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! can (714) 548-6841or548-1717 1 HEIRWOOD MAIUFACTORY 19n Placenti a Avenue • Cost! Gesa. CA 92627 & .. • TOMORROW: \ f IRST 1011181 MONO AV NOV[ MHF R ::>6 i9S-l ORANGE COUN l V C A L H ()H N IA ;•, r,t NI , Coast We asked folks what they think about setting up roadblocks to catch drunk drivers./ A3 A Huntington Beach Eagle Scout candidate does a good deed./ A3 California Pasaqena parade lam- poons institutions, do dah, dodah./A8 Dying boy may get his final wish -to have his grandmother by his side when he succumbs./88 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Nation Supreme Court rejects hearing on illegal search of convicted burglar's home./86- If it's single men you're seeking, females find Houston and San Diego the best spots.I A8 Two banks drop thefr prime lending rate to 11 1/2 percent today in a not-to- surprising move./88 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: World North Korea vows 'blood for blood' after shootout at border .I A8 World Court finds in favor of Nicaragua in dispute over U.S. 'warescala- tion.'/A4 Feature Nathan Oliveira's as many diverse In- fluences as his native state, California./ A7 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Sports Irvine High's girls vol- leyball team tangles with Corona del Mar In the Southern California play- offs Tuesday night./81 The Rams are still In the hunt after 34-33 win at Tampa Bay, thanks to Eric Dlckerson./81 Inexperience plagues Estancia, Edison as the prep basketball season nears./81 Business A West Virginia town wants to outlaw satemte dlshes./84 INDEX Bridge A 10 Bulletin Board A3 Business B4 Callf ornla News A4 Classified A4 Comics 87 Crossword B7 Death Notices 87 Features A7 Horoscope 88 Ann Landers A8 National News A4 Opinion A9 Paparazzi A 7 Police Log A3 Publlc Notices 87 ports B 1-3 St()ICI( Markets 85 Tetevlalon A8 Theater• A8 Weather A2 Wortd News A'4 esertsearc . · rt pioneer hanging on Docton William De Vries (left) and Ronald Barbie in.ert an artificial heart into William Schroeder Sunday at the Humana Heart InatJtut e ln Loul1Yllle, K y . Schroeder, the world'• aecond recipient of a permanent artificial heart, wu reported in c ritical but •table condition today. See atory, Page A6. Vo1iinteers, led by private investigator, 'disorganized and served no purpose' By STEVE MARBLE County shentrs captain said t~Y· ot1t1eo.11y...,....., "ft was a c1reus;• said Capt: Gene A weekend volunteer search pan> Bowhn. "As far as I can tell it didn•t look.i.ng for 3-}'ear-old Laura Brad· ' serve any useful purpose at all." bu!). the Huntington Beach girl wfto The group of volunteers, estimated vanished more than fhe weeks ago. to be somewhere between I SO and was sod1sorgan1zed that pohce finall} 300. amved Saturday at Joshua Tree ordered 11 halted. a San Bernardino (Pleue eee SEARCH/ ~I Traffic fatalS-,-- arrests up over long weekend By STEVE MARBLE Of -Delly No4 ltllft .\n increase m fatal car accidents and drunken dnv1ng arrt'sts on Or- ange Count} h1ghwa}S o"er tht' long Thanksgiving weekend set an omin- ous beginning for the hohda> season. Three pcoplt' "'ere killed in high- way accidents m Orange Counly dunng the four daH. and the Cah- fom1a H1ghwa} Patrol arrested 11 7 people on ·suspicion of drunken dnv1ng. Local pohcc dcpanmcnts arrested at least another I 50 motonsts on suspicion of drunken dn' mg,. accord- ing 10 Jncomplete figures available toda) Last Thanksgi' ing. the C'HP made 107 .drunken dn"1ng arrests in Or- ange Count~ and for the first time 1n five ~ears reponed no fatal car accidents on count\ h1gh"'a)s A Costa Mesa man "'as killed late Saturdav m Garden GroH· Pohc-e said Henl) T C'oolc~ :!3. died after his car spun out of control on a ram- shckened roadwa) and 1umped a center divider. Two people were killed Sunda) on Onega H1ghwa' m the Cle-.eland Nauonal t-orcst when the van they were nd1ng 1n flipped over. Statewide. the holiday death toll was down and drunken dnvin& arrests soared over figures from previous }'ears. CHP officials said 4S pcQple were killed on California htghways this year compared with S' deaths last year. "A.uthonnes said Z.435 drunken dnvmg arrests were recorded m the state b) m1dn1ght Sunday. This figure 1s up from 2.0'.H from the prior year. The CH P arrested 636 people for . invest1gat1on of drunken dnvang an the greater Los Anf.Cles area and made 423 arrests m its gcop-aph1cal d1\.1s1on that includes Orange and San Diego counties. .\II poh~ depanments along the Orange Coast have or plan to beef up <itreet patrols wnh spcoal drunken dm ins teams and predict that arrests for dn' mg under tht' influen~ o( alcohol could reach record highs this season .\ccording to CHP spokesman teve Kohler. tht' number of tnJury accidents o r fatal accidents typically goes down as the number of drunken dn" mg arrests goes up. Teen talked out of Jail suicide A psychotoglst talked a teen-ager out of jumping to Na death Sunday Inside the Orange County Jatl, where the youth Mid ..,_.. Thanksgiving after being .arrested on a burglary w8"Mt, at\i8i atr'• deputies said. · Sgt. Larry Abbott said Paul Alan Pinkerton. 18, "cilmbed ~ • secortty screen overlooking a stalrwell -a 50-to 60-foot drop -_.. threatened to jump." Abbot1 said Dr. Peter Chamber•, a cUnlcal ~ employed by the county, talked the young mah l_nto comtng down safety. De Lorean prototypes go to highest bidders Newport attorney pays $37 ,000 for first gull-winged sports car at Marriott auction By ROBERT HYNDMAN Beach attorney 8111 Yacobow was °'.,.Delly,.......,, once the target of a federal drug Like John De Lorean. Newpan investigation. And. like De Lorean. Budding nove~ists along the Coast_~ get the write Stuff Here's a bit of expert advice for those who want to publish a novel: Learn to write. The expert. in this case, is Dr. Pat Kubis. an Oragc Coast College writina teacher tor mOt'e than two decades with two published novels to her credit. And she's not being nip when she su.,ests j)Otential novcJiats learn to wntc before they embark upon their first book. "People pick up a pen and think they can write Without any instru<> tion at all," the S7-year-old educator said. "It's tike the psychiatrist who came to me and compWned that he'd written three books and aorfe of them had been publi hed." Kubis said ahe retld some of his stuff and it wasn't half bed. The psychiatntt tokt Kubis he knows his field and didn't tee any advantaae in takJna a wntma counc before tackhna a couple of books rtlatint to Q ch1a1ry. . . .. SYEJE llTCIELL P EOPll IN THE NEWS he told him 1\ would be hk.c her counselin& his patients without any •. trainina. "He'd been turned down by pub-hlhlna hou.ses for sa years." Kubts said. sbll1n1 her head. "He could ha\'C taken a few (wnt1na) clus and been a published wnlcr in a year.'' Kubis should know. Hrr students ha\rt pubh5hed or been 10cluded 1n mo~ than 4,000 publication That was tcvcn )an qo. he quit count· \na after that. ( ..... ,.. AUTROlt8/A2} • Yacobozz1 was cleared of the charg<"I Both men also are fond of spom t:ars. De Lorean. of course. 1s famou'i for staning his own pons <ar manufactunng compan) before run- ntng into well -pubhc1zcd cocaine consp1ran charAe 1n I <>82 Yalobo111 mean1Ah1k 1<. an J' 11.l l.'ar collel tor ·o IA hilr Ix 1 llrl'Jn ' hank.rup1l·, trustee<, "'<'r<' forn•J 111 Lt•' l' up the tlAO ongtnal <ipon" l-ar prNot' pc~ at .m auction ~unJa, to PJ' 1111 lTl'd1tor' 'al·obo111 found h1m,dl Jn, 1ntL a"'a~ w11h one. Yacobozz1 patd $37.000 for the 'ta1nlt' steel gull-wtnged spons car after outbidding Don W1thams. d1- rcctor of the, Black Hawk Car Coltrc- 11un of~n Ramon. Cahf. (Pleue eee Dlt LORE.A.ft/ A2) Educator fears U.S. will invade Nicaragua By ROBERT BARltER OflMl)ely ........ Huntington &ach school tcacba Pat McCull) has some prctt)' strona opmt0ns about whafs go1na on LD 1 aragua nd the op1n1ons don't euctl ~uare with those oprcued h) ll go-.t'rtlment sources. M~ull). who V1Slted the C'tnU'll .\mt"ncan nation last Chnstmas and again 1n ptt'n)bt'r. wd N1carquant art' d1g1n in for an 1nva ion by tM ti <;. 'iomcthina McCull y said she full) <'~pteb But 'ht' claims 1t won·t ht' quick· h1tt1ng a lion \UCh as at G~nada lMtead, ~he \aid, 111s hkcl) to \um into another V1etnam-hkt' war Wlth the Lattn \mcn~ns t.;a~na to lhc" mounta1n.,.and ftghtma forc~ccy UKh of ttmund • ThC'~',C'du trtncht"Stn pubaM' nt1c" and v.ntten 'no pasaran' (do not (Pleue ~A/A&) or nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 26. 198• '"/'ras h recycling center to open in Laguna Uv 1 1~.\ MAllONEY 01 .,,. O•lly 'Not ttall l ugu 11.1 lkut h will rl'nl'" 11!> war on ' 1~11.: ,1lh'1 tlu "le\\ '\ c.11 hut this 11111· rn11k111 .. l.111 get lot\h tor theu 111 Ii I h ''' h:I\ ••l'•c.-Cd to kl lhf t 1ml!"n '°>! ttr Paper ( o ot Pomona uri 1th .1 h"' IMl k ll'ntcr for paper CONTINUED STOR IES and aluminium canlt at the corner of Laguna ("anyon Frontage Road and Woodland Drive. Operntaons are c.-.pectcd to bcgjn 1n January, accord- ing to Rob Clark, the c11v's ha1son to the Energy and Em 1ronment C'om- m11tce. Unlike city-ltponsorcd recycling programs of the pnst, lark '81d the t>uy-bad. center should be 'ucccltsful bt'c:uu'>c lhc linaocml return will encouratic rcs1dcnt\ to ~ave their u'lcd ncwspa~r., and cun\. Clark didn't know ho"' much Garden ~latt' plan!> 10 pa} tor rc- cyclabk\, but reqcl1nKafic1onadm an othercon11ttu n111eHa} 1hcyca11111<1ke eai.y money \Imply by ltnvrng what th n U!>Uall > thww uwa~ 0..., , .... pftotO by Howatd llplll Aurlfnra~cr Rick Cole stands beelde De Lorean proto~ prior to Sunday auction. p.11d S::! 1,1100 1111 J \l·u 11ltl •I t• 1 \\,1, p.111 111 thl· \,c"r>un I ' 11 1 .. 1 C .11 \11011m hdd 1111, ~ 1 J .11 ti l \1.ar. 11111 I lotd \11d "hill morl•than -':'illcar\\\Crc f 1111 "''k tlw tY.o l>t· Lurt•<in'> 1"" tn l th1 nw't Jtlcntron \\ 1ll1.11m 111ld fl'f)llrll'f'> th<tt lhl· lk I 1111·.111 I' till' lit't hurrah for arl\· "I\ tr'\ rny tt i \tart up a prudul·t111n •111 p.11" .11111 m.i,., product> anv kind ti tt1lt1mnt•1 k ·· I he.· failun: ol Dl· I • ,, , .. , 11 ·, l 111111Mm hl' \a1d ma kt'' '' 111l1n 'ud1 l'llort., unhkcl\ l\·nplt-\\ 111 lnok hark in' I 0 I 'i ~' 1r' 11111 111 in the drug prohkm\ ell d lt'.11111 \l llh J llllk ckarl'f Vl'>IOO \loh,1t a1 1 1ir1tkrtak1ng It WJ\ .. W1l- l1 1111 \;till I>• I orl 111 y,ac; a<.qurttt·d of the dr 11)! l 1111 .. 111rae..,. r hargoo. lai.t i\ugu\I hut l<ll l' .11 11·d1t01\· 1a~\u 1t da1m1ng lw d1H'rted murl than ~ 17 m1lhon trom thl· l Ompan\ to h1\ pcrc,onal JtlllUnl\ \.\h1k Yarnho111 "c,a~'> hc bought thl' De Lorean a'> an 1n,cs1men1 and plam to store ti. W1ll1am\ will d1spla> the other rrotOI) pc 1n the Blaclc Ha~k mu\t•um wh ich aln·ady ha~ 10 l ar<, \alul'd 1n extC\\ of i I m1l11on ap1ct1· .. ( la~\K l·ar~ an· thl· Muna L1sas of lhl' 20th centul)" in rn\estmcnt potential. Wilham\ ->a1J But thr collector car h1dd1ng was not hmrted to the l\\o Dl· Loreans "1on-than 450 car\ including ( addlac comeniblec,. lucl-rnJectcd ( onc11es and a 1911 ">tu11 Boattarl al,1> h11 the aurtron hlotk, according to Joe Molina. !>pokc.,man for Rick ( ole o\uctionc; Inc. "1 he aucuon wac, one c1I thc hnt we've C\er had in Newpon," Molina + sard "lt'c, <,uth a great place hvld an aur11on rn the fir'lt plate Peoplc "ere rnmmenttng that Newport Beach is thl' onl> plate "'here :rou can look at a collector·~ Roll\-Ro} cc with the Pa- cific and ( atahna lc;land m the hackground ·• Mohna l'\llmatt•d that tht· auction gro'>~ed rnon: than $1 .3 m1ll1on with abou1 4S pcrn·nt ol lhl· aq11lahk l itr'> o,old -a \trong ~ho"' 1 ng frn a colkctor tar auuion Soml· u1lln1or car' "en~ pun hac,l•d for a\ mlll h J'> SW> 000. he ..aid ~earl\. <i,000 people alll'ndcd thl· auttron "h1th Molina l.tlbJ .. thl' < annc'> I 1lm I ec,tl'.al ol 1h1 ta1 \I.Oriti •· Thi: ncnt wa'> the largc\t e'er held in the Nl"w port aucuon'c; scven-}car h1ston. Molina <:..-itd The· nexl auction will be'~ held during the f·ourth of Jul} weekend EARCH FOR LAURA 'DISORGANIZED' ... FrQJn A 1 t 111.11 \lo 111 uml·n1 J rl·rnote d1:..,ert ;ire 1 ''"l'll' \11111111 I ;rnra wa\ lac,1 \t'cn ) 11"1 \\ .il tr1 ' 1• 1nlll' a pn' att• 1 n- !1~· ttn1 lt<1 m (hange ~ho hJ\ u11t1,; .,, d It" 'n' H:l'' to l aura\ p .. 11:111 ... , ltttd l'\ll111<1tcd the \uluntccr ''Ii tt·~1111 "•Hild numhcr at ka\t ~ I r ' p) I Jiiii( 11\11 lf1•,1 rt ll\.'d till' "-l'Cl.l·lld 1d1 .1\ Ii •111g h1gh l\ l11urJ1na11:d ,•·1 I "' 1 111 \ 11l111111:1·r, Y.ould Ix I 11 1111 1 t1"'"" '1nd a\\1gn1·d •I I 1'1 d 111 ''> I ""''ll'rTH'llt .w1h11rrt1t•c, "'ho \ft Ill ,11111111cn1..ll11rt ht1\\(\l'f I••""'' I 11lilll11 nt J'>ll turr 111 lie 111Jcrc d thl· wart It "·tlllrda, :illunoon hl' •• • ''"" 111 thl· \eart h team ~ 'Ltll'll l''nl'> 1<1 tht: ml·d1a ' 1• 111\ntantl~ hi. harmful "' ,.,1tg;1t1on ·• \ t lca'>I 25 JOUrna h\I'> \\l'fl' on hand .ic, "'-'re two hdicor>ll'r l <ffl)ing ttle- ' !'>Ion nc"., ere"' Paul llcnf). chief 1:.tngcr at \ht· Indian< ovc ( ampground rn Joshua r rec, 'Wiid the volunltt'f groul) was unprer><1red for the dc'>l'rt\ har~h. t hlll) \\talhl'r and didn't am>ear to hJ' r mapc, oft he area.~ hi( h 1c, not tar l(llm l ''Cnl\ nrnl' Palm' ·· 1 hl·rc "'a' 1cro urg;in11atwn ·· he 1 ommented B11"hn Y.ht11'> 1n lharg1· ol a ta'>I. lun.1: av,1gncd to 1n-.c'it1gatl' tht· ca<,c. l om edcd that (J0tXk turned U\ er w' era I Icade, to thl' ">hl'ntr .. Depart· ml·nt and prom1'>Cd lhal tn'l''>llgatorc, ~ould f11llo\\ thl'm up ttm week · M.i)~ll thl·> (the 'oluntet.-rc,) \l1 11 u l ur<i ltllk rnor1· 1nll'rc\t I dun·1 kn"''· Bm .. 11n rn11.1rlo.l'<l c >ur 1nH''>l1gat111n I'> \1111 plugging al11nii ·· he add<"d "We ha' c hun- dredc, ol lcad'i "-l'fl· ~url.1ng on j nd we're rn the pruH'\\ .1nJ adding mhn· rcoplc to our ta'k lort l' " The blonde hr<i" n-1'\l·d girl Lll\<tf)- pcan:d after wan.dl·nng a c,hort tl1'>· tant·c from hl'r ~ent'' campgniund Authortt1c' <,u\rx-l t the · ii.ii · wa<, kidnapped. p<1-.<o1hl> h> a m1tldk-aj1.l' gra>-ha1red man \\Ith ,1 bl:..ird There ha'l' hcl·n n1J uinlirmed ... 1ght1ng'> ol tht girl or tht· \tiught-altn man c,rnn · thl' da-. I .turn \an1<,h1:d Sherr ff<. In\ l'\l;g;ilor'> reported that the man thoug.ht to tx· tra"chng in J hlue \an w11h dt\ttnt 11-.e ha) \\oln - dowc, on "' <.tdn wac; c,po11ed several hourc, alter Laura 'anr!.hcd That s1ght1ng wa'> made on a rough back road leading from the desert toward Big Bear Bo~lin c,ard 11 1~ h1'> feeling that Laura " mil ali\C lte ..aid 11"\ht· were not. her hod> l1lcly ~ould ha'<: bcc-n found hy no" ICARA GUA F E ARS INVASION ... 1omA l I I• rt tl1 \\,tfl\ 11 I 1 t' n 1·r, rl·a,, 1n 11 • th1nl. l,1 1111111' ./1h1• I "I \) \\di 1t. ""'·H·or-nld \.Id ull\ ~\ ,.•\ 1: hu1ll thrl'l' Jlr\trtp\ \\1· ha\l· m1m·d thl'H I "lld Ul I lhll\l'f" Jlld lhl 111' r11iJl.1: thl·m kcl h~l II£ hl•lllhnl th q 1 !'\\nl \.\ ,. rt )!OI ng to ,1 • •11 111111 thl' ground · c,he I \\. ' t'Cllflj! ltt l1nd \lllnl' C>;lU .. e 1 .. 1h• ,t ~ing 11f lhl' \4a1nl' or •11• r 1111• \\ 1 '\r c1onr 11 '"l'r .rnd I I H I II I •I viii 1111 th1· 111).'ht ol 1h1: •1111 ~It·,, tlw~ "l·r1: 1.ill.111gJhou1 \I I pl .. ,,., lhl'rl' tlil•\ ~II .. , 11 1 1.il 1 l;11m lhc \t1\ 1etc, an· • t rl l111•1'lfl~ \.II(, fighter JC!\ 111 11 i , I hl \11\ tl·t<. and thl· ., .11 111 11. •kn~ thl I \ charge\• \1 ' II d1 tlt'f \ d t11\l1l ;1lh \I.Ith ''" plJll'"· "h11 \ii\ lh'lol l•t.t\ ht'l Olllt ,l ~ U\\Hln ~ollld 'Pr• .id rL\iolutron 11 • 11111 mun 1c,1-.· hra11cl ol I 111,1'1 !'''" ljfllnC'nt tn th1• \Vl'\I I I 11 t .pl 11· rl' I' 1 I ' 1111\ '·'~"that'\ a rru1111~d II I \111 lll,1 " lllll ll'\li'd Ill 1 1111l 111h1·r c ntral \1111'11 ~ .!.L,MWUJ.,.~~-1U~lf~.lJ '!.l,IJl.Olllll 111111\ t 1 pr111!' t 111\{'\I I iill ,11!<1ft,d ht1\llll'\\(' I l I '\,111lplt • \ht' \did Ill .111 •l\l'llh111<,< "' lhl' 111 ( 1ll,flt'/llo1f,t IP I 'J\4 I 11 lw1 auw 1111 1th1· 11t I 1·,11111p11.111·d th1• ( I fJ11lly Piiot O•llvery I 1 r.111u •nte•d I hr ix·opll' 111 ~ 1raragu<1 .ir1• '>o poor .. '>hr .. aid "and wc'n· rna krng thnn poorer h) l111c 111g thl·rn 111 o;pcnd m1inn on Y.t:apon\ Y.hl·n thq don·1 l.'\l'O hall' twkt paJ)l:r \\l·'re lorcrng tlwm t11 turn mon· <1nd mon: to HU\\IJ . \1d 1111~ a fl'\ldrnt of I lun11ngton lk.il h al.,11 'a'" that tear\ hcrng nprc<,c,cd ahout '>j1t aragua hnom1ng ,1 Ku~c,ran ha'>l' • .ire a .. red hemng." \he arkno~lcdgl''> that R uc,~1a and ( uha might ht mo .. 1ng into the area 111 c,pread d"comlon und propaganda aga1n'1 the IJnrtcd \tult'\ But '>he d .11m' 'he can·1 \l'l' thl·m p<10,1ng a rrnlitar) threat Imm that na11on uf 3 m1llt0n people ·v.c \\Ould11't kl th,11 hJppcn "\ht· ,,ml "We d1dn 1 lcl lhl•m ltlw Ru,c,1a11'1 rut m"""l'' in C uha ·· \k( ull\ a Drnw<.ral "'ho c,a1d <.ltl·., .il""a\' hcrn 1nnll'rncd about / pmal\ rn· thr ""rid I'> a ~pana\h· J I rl·nt h-mathl·m.il1l \ tcachn at c, ... rn M1ddk Sd11111I "lhl· 'iard sht• PatMcCully did a lut of reading on La11n Amen- van p1a1wrc; wh1k gl·ttrng her master\ dc-gree In Spanrc,h thl' rw<1; t,. Wt lh Willl'r tl'\llng kite, that 'I heard c,o mulh about Eme\to "'ill tk term1nc t hcm1rnl l.·nntcnts of < .m lrnal (m1n1\trr 111 1·ulturt•) hc1ng wain 1hat1nforma t1on will help the 11 prt'\\IVt' He ,.. ,1 p11e'>I and po<.·t "'llJraguans kel'P lht• pipe\ fun ct1on- .ind I had read m111 h ol h t\ writing.<; I mg .... 11d th1c; rnn·1 ~· I H' got to 'iCl' for "I fl'l"I l'vc-dnne \Omcth1ng that nn'><'lf .. mailer\, .. \he \aid \.\h,11 'ht· ,,n\ during hn v1\1t\ \k(ulh ..aid '>hl· ha\ wr111en dot•\n't <;qu,1 rl' \\.1th 'itatement., fro m ·-~.;;;ttlc<i ahout hn 111p I.or the (ah- .11lrn1111\trn111m lcaderc, rn our gO\ern-fornra PcJcl· Arndemy ;and hnd pres!. r11r nt u1·tkn1ialc, to travel the country from 1 "1d ulh dl\11 ~ard she learned on coa!lt to rna<it in September. hi 1 1r1r> tha1 .ilgal' wa\ !)lugging up 'ihr'\ <.111cr 1111ned the Orange prpn c11 four new health centers C ount:r < 11111n1111N· on C enlrnl \.tc' 1111\ w,t\ ahk, <ihe 'latd to supph •\mcnrn. \h1• \aul Daily Pilat Clrculellon 7141942-4333 c1 ... m.ct Mtvertfelng 7141142-5'71 AH oth•r ct.pertm•nt• 142-4321 ~AIH OFFICE I ' ,t fll•• I I I .41ii•tl !,.... / H.l . Schwartz Ill .r,'lll' w-R41 ,, '" •• "'""' c" M1t• t')>loA B<· • t C,ll1 Go\1 • MGM ( A 171 Jt C.•.Pl"'ll'l l~) (HAl'llf' (, A•t P·IO-r'lj C.,,,'l,al'\¥ N3 ,....... .. ,...._ """"•"'''' ,_,,.t0tt4! ,...H.., ,,_ "~t tf.,..,, ,...,, f'Ntt , .. "'0' f]\f( 'tfj .,,..,,.,. ·~ "' ~ I ~ • f f ,,.,._ tilt' ' , ....... r. "" Clrculetlon r nh•phon•• ''" ... ..o. r·ubllsher Fr•nk Zlnl Milnaq1ng Editor Karen Wittmer Adver11s1ng Director Roe•mary Chur~men Controller Robert C•ntrell Production Monagt , Donald l . Wllllam• C1rcula11on Manager -<>I tO(r(rl\jlol C>W.,f'I < llW ,.,..~"°"'°"'.Nm .. ,. ~"'" .. ~· ... ~ ... ,__,,,_ .. ,..~ .. ,,,, .... Or""V"· ••Pvt•""'V ~1·• y ,,,,,... f!<j '""" .. " ,,..,,,.., .. , '°"ll''°''l '"·"-'Y '''°"1 4 .....,. '''II'""" _,.,., " '"' ~ •1 ...,, anc1 """"'" l~fl r-iN , ... P'~tQ fll.,_I,. •t J In"' I flt•• f.t1.-rt1 f1 p ~ tt lfV• I f ~ ( • f -,,, -ti Q t ,, WEATHER ·Cloud s t o r e-pl ci c e c oldwinds The cold winds eweeplng through Southetn California wilt dlmtnlah overnight but •kles will become lncre~lngly cloudy Tuesday Overnight lows wlll range from 37 In the valley• to the upper 40s In Los Angeles. followed by high• Tuesday In the upper 60s end tow 70•. the National Weather Service said Along the coast. 11 wlll be lalr tonight. but not quite as cold and local Santa Ana winds diminishing by late night Increasing clouds Tuesday. Highs I uesday 65 to 72 Lows tonight In upper 30s and 40s. From Point Conception to the Mexican Border Inner waters Partly cloudy and cold tonight Fair with docreaslng winds Tuesday Highs In the 40s Tuesday Lows tonight 12 to 25 Outer waters: Variable winds 5 to 15 knots tonight. South •• 1r winds 10 to 20 knots Tuesday Combined seas 5 to 8 feel Fair t ' .. , .. , "' •' ··•· ton1g111 1ncreas1no.. cjouds Tuesday 0 8 0 1<anN.tCtt1 57 S4 tg·I \ ·::;\ ..-) ~AON TS U.S. Temps Laa Vegaa s.3 3' 'if~· ~ l ltlle Roc;a S7 48 ~1 :r n! , i .,. J h• -·~ HI lo lOUlh~ .. S3 42 . ,.,. fq, f ',, . " l 110 ... "' ........ Mempho1 87 12 , Albauy ~I 2• Miami 8Mcll ,, 74 ..,.,,., .,,._. 'h'1H'' .. . '• •• AlbuQ-QUO 4J 711 MllwlMJ~M 63 41 Ame11110 l;ll •t Mpi.-SI P1u1 a2 42 Aocll0<1Qe , H 1 NHl\Ylllt 87 45 San JOH 56 37 Atlanta t.5 42 N ... 0.IOanw .n St Calif. Temps Sanla An1 83 48 Atlanllc: Cit~ ~II 27 Nt!W Vorll 53 41 Santa Cruz eo '3 A11111n n 55 aailltnO<• ~~ 27 NCl<IOlk VA S4 33 Hlgll. low lor 74 l>O<K• ending •t ~ Tahoe V•ltoy 31 16 Okle/loml (;1ty 64 52 Y-llVly 39 27 Bl<mfnOllam "' 41 a"' tod•y 8Hfm•lt~ •ft )J Om1111• S2 41 Bek••~ s~ 37 llolM " 10 0.lat>Oo 17 68 e ....... SS JS 8olt0f• 4~ JH PMadeil>nla 54 78 F1eano 56 .)8 Bu""" !,() )0 P"-'1• &o 39 Unc:atlet 41 33 Ext~nded C•'IOO< 42 t& P111~ 54 29 loe AllQ9IM 64 45 Cl•t1tt1•1un S C I I 41 PO<I Me 43 27 O•lend 51 42 Clle1~ton w v lt1 JO POfflancl Or 45 40 Pet0RoOIM r 51 31 en-ol r..,. W-'-ay ~ Cll.,l<>tte NC 64 31 Pr-47 30 A.o 8luft 48 34 et.ey.., .... 48 20 RMIQl1 111 30 A«l1'rOOd City 51 40 ~ PW11y cloudy fl'lu(ecllly 1-M91n!J S11<evopor1 "IQ/I cloud• Friday Coot.r 0.19 wt111 Crnc:ago 53 42 70 eo lecr.,,,...to 57 39 high• In the &ot Lows In the 409 10 C1ne1nn•t1 55 43 $polltlll<I 32 26 ,.,.., .. 57 37 mid so. c....,.,,.nd 55 3" SYfe®M S4 24 Sen DMIQo 62 49 Columbu• Oh 55 34 f()f>elc• S7 !14 81111 Franelec:o $7 45 Conco!!INH .. 20 '"'"°" S4 37 Santa Barbe,. 63 :M OeHu rt Wollh 10 5:.> lulH 8:.> 55 Stoel( Ion 57 34 53 " Wallf11ngton Ml 33 O.yton Tid es o.n ... 50 :.>5 wic.nlt• 59 44 Hl(lll, tow, p<ec;lplt•t1on 101 24 flOUro Wllh•t·Bw•• 52 26 DH Mom•• 54 •6 ending at S p m 0..•0>t 65 30 a.. ... -sa 47 TOOAY OulUth 4$ 40 BlgBMr 36 It S.Con<I high 1035• m 511 El Paao 59 40 Surf report Blatl® 45 15 S.Con<l tow 8 llpm .() 5 FMbankt 03 -09 8tylh8 19' 6t Fwgo . 57 42 C•t•linl 60 S3 TUESDAY Fl9Qt1an 32 17 LOCATIOM aiu IHAN long 8Meh b2 4S Flftl "'Oh I 38 • m 38 Ot .... Aai»<I• 57 40 Hunungton 8-ell 1·2 POOf Monto...1a 63 •2 F111ttow 5 12."' 3 I Hwtlofd so :.>s ~.i..r,~1 2 4 good Monlet9Y se 44 SKona lloQh It 24 am 53 H919n• 32 t2 40lh Sl1M1 Newport 2-4 good Ml W~ton S6 30 'iKOndtow 7 lllpm .() t HOnOIUlu 77 &a 22n<I StNlel N9woor1 t·3 0000 ~llMICll 17 48 HO<ltton 71 83 Balboa Wlllg9 1·1 000< Ont.,IO 51 4.4 Sun Mii lod9Y 11 4 45 p m rlMI ln<lllNIC)Olll SS 39 LIQUll• 8Mcll 1 000< Puao.n• 62 39 TUM<l•y II I 37 am end Mii aglin al Jaell IOll ..... 75 eo San Ci.tMnte 1·3 ,.,, RIV ... el09 58 45 4H pm JK•M><Wllllt 10 62 Wllet t9ml) 80-11 I San Be<nardlno 51 41 Moon .... •I a 23 p m , ,,_ 1.-0ty Jurutau 37 32 s .... t <11tec1ion llOUth-t San G•l>flel 66 40 •t It 1e am and..i11t926pm CONTINUED STORIES AUTHORS GET T HE WRITE STUFF ... From Al And several of her c;tudt:nt'I art· t>cc.t-,ell1ng novelist'>. There\ Clive ( uso;ler. author llf "Raise thl' Titanic." And Harhara ( onklin. wh o wrote "P.S. I LO\C You." And Don Stanwood. who~e "Memory of fva R)ker" hccaml' a madc-for-telcv1s1on mm re "'\even of my '>tUllt-n t'> puhh\lll'd la!.1 >car:· c,hc !kl}'>. aJdrng two m11r1· bqok'> "'ntten h~ ha puprl'> Jre tom1nli.out ~oon 1~oi!T'S' McMillan. "ho 1<, '>1111 !JI.mg cla,.,e., from l\.ulm prnnl·d "Blatkh1rd." a no"l'I about ii P'->· l hllll l p<ll\llOl.'r \nd thnc·, Do11gl•" \1 urr. J for- nwr · ·'ltudt•nt \.\ho-,c "\mcnrnn Reich" ha' tx·en ctl t'l'ptcd l11r puhll· l 11111111 · It'\ <I \tllr\ .ihout thl· far nght Ir) 1ng to 1akl• 11\ er the l 'n1tt·d \ta tee,·· l\.uh1c, '><I>'> ol "1 u1r'\ book "I gul'"' \ou'<l call 11 J lutun\llt conc,p1 r<1q nmcl lt'sgrca1 ·· i\nd ii thc manu\<.npt mentor admircc, her '>ludentc; thl' leeltng " mutual Dnroth~ McMillan ~ay<. Kuhl'> ha\ "that wonderful ability to encourage and 'illmulate you through tho'ie tough 'I want to give up' pcno<l~ so you emerge on thl· oth er .,,de w11h the determination to succeed " ( U!.\l cr. whose novels Oc'>!de!. "Rar '>C the I 1tan1c" include "Deep S1Jt .. "ln·hcrg," and "The "1ed1tcr· ra nean < apn.'· al~o has atrnlade' for hrs former profei.sor. "Without Pat Kub1<; tu ad v1c;e, conc;olc. cntouragc and c,hovl·. during the wrn1ng of my fir'it publr!.hed hook. ( li\.d us.,lcr the author. wo~d nCH'r ha\(; CXl\ll'd ., • Kuh1\ ~ho liro;\ c;tarted 1eath1 ng li<:1 11m '~rr11n~. f111'lda1m:ntalc, and WE'RE LISTENING Just Call 642-6086 nmcl "ntrngat Orangc Coa\I ( ollegc 1n 1%3. 1'\ rc t1nng al the end of the vt•ar · But she\ leaving <.omething behind for a!.pinng authors of the future. It's a non-ficuon book titled, "The Com- plete Uu1de to Wnting Fiction. Non- F1c1 1on and Publishing." • OK!r,o the tttle doesn't vab you. But hu~ about this. The wnttngtext 1s alrca<l> in its scc9nd pnnung -less than two months afler llS first ed1t1on tame olTlhc press. Kuh1s, who co-authored the book "1th Bob Howland. a senior editor for Rl'c;to n. a Prentice Hall '1uhc;1diary, '>a>" Writer''> D1ge'>t bought up 5,000 of the book'> and 11 llt c;old out at Dalton bookstore!> "I wa<, talking ahout rctinng and onc ot my 'itudent'I rnmc up and said. ·tklorc )OU retire. lea-.c us what you kno\I. You owe 1t to u<o .... I\. uh" agreed She gathered up class n11tl'' lOll<"ctcd over a quarter cen· 11ir-. and with informatton provided h) rn-author Howland, began wnttng a hook tnat llt chock-fuU of Dutch uncle advice for the novice novelist. 1 here are chapters on how to approach an cd11or, how to obtain an agent, how 10 evaluate a contract. There's a chapter on how lo shop for a word processor and even a cha pier on wnttng romance novels. "Writing romance novels 1s the ea!>1cst way right now for an un- published wnter to get into print," Ku hrs says. N me of her students have puhhshcd romances and six out of six winners an a recent national Romance Writers of Ameri ca winners last year wrrc Kuhrs' proteges. 'Td read \O many hooks on how to write h) author.. that we re wa} up here." o;hc ..aid. huldrntt her hand over her head. "l hey were so abstract and thq left you "1th nothing." Not 'lo for her book. 'lhe says. 'This 1s a real nut~ and bolts book. No one has ever put the 1opit together an a sequence" Beside\ cd111ng her new book for future ed111ons. Kubis 1s working on a nc" no .. el andle lodeling her home in Can}on Lak ·1 he hbu..e '' n the lake and 11'11 be 1,740 c;quare feet when it's fin1'1hcd, she ..ay'> ... It 'll have a huge wntrng room with a lake view." l he pcrlecl setting for writing her third no,cl, a Na11 thriller. ·Tm gor ng to write 1n the morning, JU'>I like llcmrngway, take long walks 111 the ;iftcrnoon and read. read. read ··'>he <\c'lYS wrth a laugh. But 11"111 hard I> he a retirement. In add111on to her \\nting. Kubis wtll ton11nu1· 10 lead wn11ngsemrna~and au aHon\ultant 10 would-be authors. Will she m15c, teaching? .. You know One of my students a\ked mc I hat.'' c,hc said. tears welling up an her eyc'i. "YotJ bet I wi ll." Patriots parade donation needed Donations arc still needed for the I Ylh annual Laguna Beach Patriots Da) Parade The parade assoc1auon needs about Sfl.000 10 finance the event. Joe Jahrau'>. fund-rarsrng chairman says. C nntnhutors may send donat1oni; tu Patnutc, Day Parade. in care of Gerry I lanna, trca\urcr. 3079 Bern Drive, Laguna Heach, Ca .. 92651 or calf Jahrau!> at 494-6538 for further information. What do )OU lake abou·t the Daily Pilot'' What don't you like? Call the numbl'r at left and vour me'isage will be recorded, transcribed and deli vered to the appropriate editor. The ,a me 24 ·hour answering service may he uiied to record letters to the t•ditor on any topic. 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