Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-09-09 - Orange Coast Piloti I ' s • • I ' ~ ' , ~ ' • . • ' I • CLOUDY FOMCAIT80NA2 · Serving Newport Beach, Costa Met1, Huntington Be.c:h, lrvtne, l.agun1 Beach, Founteln V1Hey Md South Orange County ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA MONDAY SE PTEMBER 9 1985 · · 25 CENTS Ho~~l . gets oil dr~lling warning California legis lators tell Interior chief WJth m~mbers o f t.he California same, the telegram stated. protect an but I so offshore tracts tractlo of ocean floor for oil explo- --__ _ _ congrcss1onal delegauon represents ~stators sent the telegram Fn-unul the year 2000, has been cnt1· ration. lar&ely off Northern C~li-to honor CO ffiprOffiiSe to Sa Ve COaStlin e the most balanced ~ppr~~h to the day 10 response to Statements Hodel Cited by 011 &nterests for not offenng fom1a's coast. wh1k protecting 6,310 --__ _ developm~nt .of California~ coastal made t.he day before. Hodel said he pnme 011 dnll1na areas. tracts from dnlhng for the out Is resources, said a telegram signed by suspects .a tentative agreement Hodcl's statemenu were cont.aJncd yca11 In eitchange, the legnlators From 1taff ud wire report• More than two dozen California lawmakers have issued a warning to U.S. Interior Secretary Donald Hodel that he had better honor a com- U•111 pfw1c A Ty for the record Cincinnati's Pete Rose tips his hat to the crowd Sunday after tying the major league record of 4, 191 hits set by Ty Cobb. Story In Sports, Page B 1. Features South Coast Repertory supporters celebrate 21st season In style./A7 Entertainment The Stop-Gap drama therapy troupe Is plan- ning two Orange County premieres for this season./ Al Nation President Reagan an- nounces economic sanc- tions against South Africa because of Its pol- icy of apartheid .I A• INDEX promise reached this July protecting much of the state fro m offsho re oil dnlling. .. We are convinced that the preliminary agreement you reached . Opening day of school smooth Sfx Coast districts launch another ~-,---~ --'---scholastic year By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of -0.., .... 9WI School pnmc1pals througho ut the OranJe Coast reponed a smooth trans1uon this morning as students traded in their surfboards and sandals for pencils and penny loafers on the first day back to school. While the Irvine Unified School Distnct began mstrucuon last week. six other school districts along the Orange Coast began the school year today. At Marina High School 1n Hunt- 1n~ton Be.ach, Principal Ira Toibin said the campus was decorated this mom10g with posters and signs modestly procla1mmg, "Seniors arc Best." To1bm said students are still enrol- ling in classes this m o rn&ng and will conunue for the next several days. .. When tbe dust finally settles. we'll have ab9ut 2.825 students," he said. Teachers, studenu and adm1nis. tratorsare still $)owing from Manna's rccopition this year as one of the st.ate s model schools. an honor bestowed by the U.S. Dcpanment of Education following a review last spnnJ.. To1bin said the school is intent on maintaining that eitccllencc through three goals outlined for the com ing (Pleue 11ee SCHOOL/ A2) 2S me~bers of the House of Rep-reached with membtrs of the state 10 a letter addressed to Rep. Sidney R agreed to drop efforu to ren<"W a four- rescntat1ves, Dcmocrauc Sen. Alan coogrcss1onal delegation will place Yates. 0-111., chatrman of the House year con~ss1onaJ ban on oll explo- C'"ilnston and Republican Sen. Pete "potentially vast e ncrp re-Appropnatwns subcommittee work· rauon covenng aJJ of the 6,460 tracts. W!}son. sources.,.beyond the nations reach ing on the compromise lcgJSlataon. But Fnday, Hodel revealed be hu We intend lo honor o u.r commit-for too long a penod of ume " The Hodel bargained with IC11slatorno directed lntenor Ocpanment staff to ment and expect you., will do the compromise proposal, which would open I SO different 9-squarc-mtle (Pleaae eee OD,/ A2) Klndera arten teacher Carol Caballe r o &fYee 6 -year-old Jeu OembrlnJ ab~ hq after aetttnc. bouquet of n o we,.. at Coarregee School fn F oanta.i.D Valley . Accidents in freeway rep·air zohe kill three Eight people Injured tnthree-carcrash ---o_~ Ortega Highway By ROBERT BARKER Of-0.., ......... Three motonsts were k1lled earl) today m two separate accidents when they crashed into the back of trucks being used to repair the Costa Mesa Freeway, a Cahfom1a Htghway Patrol officer said. The fatal accidents occurred about 35 m inutes and Silt m iles apan in the southbound lanes of the 55 Freeway. accordmg 10 the C H P's Paul Caldwell, who added the closed lanes were clearly marked. Apparently, both drivers ignored traffic cones and lighted warnings. ln another major accident unday afternoon, eight people were Injured -three seriously -1n a thrtt-Olr s~hup on Ortega Highway about a mile west of Caspers Regional Park near San Juan Capistrano. In the first of the fatal freeway accidents. a 1980 Plymo uth pickup driven b y a 22-year-old Newport Beach woman smacked into the fQf of a Kcnworth dump truck north of Founh Street 10 Sant.a Ana about 2.15 a.m ~ "WOman whose 1dent1tv hasn"t beeo rcJeued beca~ her family haso '1 been notJfied, wa.s pronounced dead al thC' scene with massive head JnJuriC'S. In the second acciden1 at 2:50 a.m at the 55 Freeway north of Lincoln Strct't 10 Orange. a m otorcycle ndden by a 25-ycar-old Santa Ana man and his woman companion slammed "full 'lpccd" into the back ofa fiat bed truck that had its lights on. Caldwell 'Mild Both suffered ma1or head 1n- JUnes and died at the !.Cene accordtn& to Caldwell. There were 1nd1cauons that the couple who were not 1dent- 1fied. were returning from a pan) he \aid The freewa} repair work which has been under wa) from I 0 p m to 6 a m for about Silt weeks b)' the) eager ( onstrucuon ( o of R1vers1de. was marked clearh .,_,11h orange Lraffic cones and lighted .,_,ammg sign~ Caldwell said lnvesugator<i found that warning!> of the closed lanes had been checked and found to be .,_,,orlung. Cald1A1ell 'Mlld In the accident unday on the Ortega H 1~wa) near Caspers Park. three v1ct1ms were flown to area hospitals b~ emergency helicopter Kent Shan>. I 8. of lnd10 was arrested at Western Medical Center 1n Santa ".na on susp1c1on of felon-. drunken dnvmg He was reported 1n stable cond1t1on with moderate head tnJunes and a broken arm. David Davis. 30, of Santa Ana. who~ car was struck bead-on by Shan>'s Volkswagen Sirocco, also wu hsted m stable cood.inon at Western Medical Center wt\h head •nJunC1 and a fractured pclVlS DarTcl Woods. 1q. Palm ~rt. a paS)en~er in Sh.trp'!I \t:h1dc '4a\ listed 1n senous condJtioo at Mission Communt1)' HMpJW io Mus1on VieJO Wltb ma1or abdominal IQJuncs F1 ..,e other v1cums su/fer'NJ less SC'nous IOJunC's C'HP Officer Ken Da1h said \hdrp "as dn,ing abour .. ()mph ~hcn he (Plea.e 9ee REPAIR/A2 J Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi Pollce Log Public Notices Sports Televlson Weather AlO A3 85-6 B7-9 A10 B9 Sgt. York's troops face uncertainty • Lagunan flees boat explosion B10 A9 B8 AS A8 A7 A3 89-10 B 1-4 A9 A2 By SUSAN ROWLETT Ford Aerospace & Communica- tions Cofl). officials said the remain- ing workers on the canceled Sgt York battle gun prOJCCt are feeling better about the future following a massive JOb fair Saturday, but 1t remains unceruun whether they will be hired within the company or forced to seek employment elsewhere. .. They feel mo re comfonable and more hopeful that there are JObs out there," said regional spokesman Plea of Stalker · suspect delayed Attorney requests continuance fo have more time to prepare By lite A11ocla'ed Pre11 ,. LOS ANG ELES -The plea of "Night Stalker" defendant Richard Ramirez, accused of one murder m a cue that has &ncluded at least 14 deaths, was delayed today by a JUdgc after his atto rney requested more umc to prepare. Ramirez, 25, stood silently, show- ing no emotio n. as Deputy Public Defender Allen Adashek asked Mu- nicipal Court Judge Elva Soper for the continuance until Sept. 27. There was no objectio n from the prosecutio n. and Soper granted the delay. ''There's so much mate nal m· volvcd m this c.asc, it's going to take a great deal of time to prepare," Adashek told reporters after the bnef hcanng. Adashck said he had been con- tacted by El Paso attorney Manuel Bam.za, who said he will go to Los Anaelcs this week to tAlk w1th Ramirez at the requestofh1s family m Tellas. Adashek said BamLza had not yet arrived in Los Angeles. The public defender said publicity Donald Flamm. The emplo}ecs .,_,ho rccc1.,,ed their spent their last da\ v.nh Ford Fnda\ The gathenng of 35 separate com-notice of term1nat1un 1-nda\ werc will not rece1,e tu1ure benefits ht· pan1es representing ..,anous d1' 1s1ons mostl} lrom the mechan1cai. engi-e~pla1ned. attracted I ,CXX>employeesand recent-neenng and logisllcs ..ett1on'i ol the -\n internal JOb fair otTcnng t'm ly laid ofT employees from Ford's Sgt. \ ork prOJ~t. Flamm o;a1d plo' ment from Ford\ hrandle'i in Orange County plants. Flamm said Flamm said the salaned emphncc'> Palo -\Ito. Houston l..i' \cg.a~ and .. The obJect1vc was pnmanl} to .,_,111 receive one week\ pa1J 'a1..Jt1on Colorado Spnng.s .,_,,II ht' 01ffercd .t I make contact. and that objective was for ever} year of 'iel"\> ll'C to Ford this v.eek at the "e.,_, P<ln lkal h plant definitely reached" Flamm said -\erospace up to the ma\1mum of IS Flamm said The second 1n'itallment of layoffs )Cal"\ He added the laid-off cm-The 1.200 lOmbined la,oth "t'H' came last Fnda}'. when 600 salaned ployees will be able to maintain thl' prompted b~ the -\ug 2~ dC'l1~111n h' workers v.ere gi ventwoweeks tofind compan-.1murancl'al 1hegrouprate Defense Se cret .tn < J\p.tr new JOOS Currently, 1.200 ot the for one to four month\ dcf)l'nlling on ~ embcrger to dump SI l< oll hon I. 900 employees working on the Sgt sen1onty pro1ect. York have beC'n laid off. But the 600 hourh ~mkc'r<. 1ha1 (Plea.e aee SGT. YORK/A2) l. I ;igunJ &0Jl h m.m c .... .irx·ll nJuflt''> hut lo\! hi\ 'J1lhoat \unda\ v. hl'n 11, .rnght tir{ .trd )Jnlo. ~ 'Tllk'> \l•ulh"e't I 't " r-n fkal ti th( < oa\I < ruard rep.•nt'd John ~ llht'r "·l' 1ran'>lt'mng tuel Jh\\ard h•' ~'·In• · 'l.lilt-.•.H \targuer "hen th 1ud n·p. ned' 1gm1ed and \preJd ~Ull )\ 'did < ua\I ( ruarJ 'Pl' <"'fl Jn Tom lktlid, ~ dl'ot r ,,. h• • "J' Jlnnt• un lht' °'IJ t t"\c..Jf'l,J 1n Jr nll.itahk J 1ngh' .ind "J\ r11 io.t1l If' t'>\ J f'J\\lng hoat lhC f Pleaee eee BOAT/ A2) Mesa 's Arts on t h e Green draws 3,000 culture lovers Richard Ramires surrounding the case m1gh1 make 11 difficult to grt a fair tnal 10 l o-. Angeles but said no dec1s1on has llet'n (Pleue eee PLltA/ A2) City, merchants sponsor·second cultura l potpourri by county's a rtistic organization~ ByTONV AAVEDRA .\bout \,000 pcopk gill J tJ\tC \lt culture. Orange ( ounl\ -'•t' k \unJJ\ as 27 music. danle anJ lhl'Jtcr trouix'i toolo. 1he 'itagr Junnp. < '"ta Mt'.-.a's ~one.! J nnual \n'> 1m thl· C1rttn k'>l1,al Howe\l:r tht' tin.ii hov. .._.,·nt t•> the cit) art'> o rgan11at1on' .ind lnc.·al bu~ineSSC) for ra1•i!ng the S \I) 1MlO n«dcd to offer tht' fret l'ntenainmt•nt on four stagt'.'\ 1n thr <\outh ( n,1,1 PlazJ area The fest1,al .,_,a._ an cn .. m· !"'-'' fonnam'e of last 1,eor ' : Ith JO Ol\Cf\af) cclehrat1on lc11 ,,luth ( li.t\I Reixnor} theater RarhJt:1 l 1raJ, spokes.,_,o man for thr....,hr.itrr \.1111 t ~orlo.ed so .,_,ell th.it ~he < 11\tJ \k-..1 Chamber of(. omml·r1 r rn '<'d thr affair as pan ofthn 11, '-\n '\I 11th ·~5 ' ( olorful bannr" v.t'rL' huntz Jl1111tt ,1 \-mile t~tl'h 1ll HJr°'1r Bnuln arJ announcing tht• '"' '\ m11nth h1n~ Picture• on A3 tnl"lut · 1 • • pt'r11•rm1 q , .irt' < "''J \11 ..a tht• \t: f-rr4 )1. l.unw11 < I\ •I 1!11 .\n' I' \fUlllfl('llng 1' 'IJ I J\ J' th( hnnll' • •I I hl fl"O• ,.,_,fl "utt 1 l•J't R!'f)t'n1•n tht•atN J' "°'l ;J\ !ht nC'V. I >r:\OKl' ( 11U01\ l'alnrm1nF-\rt\ ( rnll•r Th<' n J nun1•lh 11m pk" '•ht•.! uh·.t I• ··f'l·n in C\11,~r )4 t.. .... ,11 pl.t' h11\1 111 "orld-..la-;, n pera ,,m. ph1ln\ hullet and mu\llal theat("r 11 al''°'"'" ~11lmt' th(" ner't' c..entcr ltH (Ple&K ~ ARTS/ A2 1 Land swap for hotel is latest wetlands dilemm a Mills Land & Water Co.president sees tprec19us little~ in offeroy conservancy A proposal to settle a dispute that's stymied plans for ye~rs to do anythma with tht oceanfront in southca5t Huntmaton Beach has been unveiled by reprcxnt.alJvcs 9fthe st.ale C'out.al \onacTVancy. The comcntone of the plan 1s an exchanat of land lead1na to construe· tJoo of 1 three-story. I SO.room luJtul)' hotel at 8eaeb Boulevard and Paaffc c oast Hiahwar Tht Coast.a Con~rvant v's Rttd Holderman sa1d he 1s "caut1ou ly optjmistic" that the plan, or some-. thioa 11mtW-to 11. uhunatety will prove acceptable. But Robert L Moore, president of the Malls Land&. Water Co. that owns much of the land, finds "prtaous httle" in the proposaJ to aaitt wtth. He indicated that development plan art not ambltious enou&h. Two factors appear to bf thttfl) respon"ble for the stalematt .. Onr 1\ that about 150 31.rt'I of the prrny lymg inland of Paufi' ( <>ll\I H1 way between Beach Bo<tttvt1J an the Santa Ana River were des1anatcd wetland' b) thl" '13tl" Department of Fish and Gnmr 1n 1983. A nd maJor o b<1tacle stems back to the mid· I Q60s whrn the st.ale took pan of Mills Land & and '-"ater Co. proprn)' for a Paofic ( oast Freeway which was never ron- structed The Tland wu not rctumro prompt1na a laW1u1t b)' Mills In 1913. thr st.ate Lq1 laturt pa sed a spclCl.al act c.alh~ for tht re-tum of the property to Mall~ whtn and 1f the company acts approval 10 \ ROBERT BARKER Focus ON THE NEws build ~methina on thr s1t( l ~st March, cuy offi<"itl'I enhm·d tht' help of tht talt ( tlastal ton ~rvanry to brr l the 1mpu~ The COnK'f"\Bnn . l pubhc aat'nl V formt'd l<l pft'~r' r ~t·tland\ pl.nt'd a pn1m1· ncnt mk 1n .l ~1lmprom1~ JC'l.1.,100 10 prt"4'1'\ e lJ I) ~ ot ~rllanJi an 8ol'SU ( hilt\ 11\ unlnlOl"pMll<"J lt'rTI• ton w thr northeJ\t Tht rnn~n anl"\ ·, I loldC'rman ha"> outlined a plan that "'o uld call tor tht' ~tale Ot-partmtnt l,I Transportation to Stll a ~I -at f't' pan."'.el The < on ~" anc' would bu' I ti a TT., and l'T'tort them as a "'etland' tor th<" hatntat of manne wildllte '1111\ ""'hlCh '*"OU Id drop le-gal lltl()n lplO\I tht' C oastal ( omm1\\1c\.-and < altrans a~:ordin& to Holdrrman' ~nan(I ..-ould hu\ fiq-i11.rt\ ot tront~t pm~r1\ at tk ~ h fiouk' ard .. .rn.t F'J11111 < 1'3't H1{th.,_,,I\ Im lhr h.1lt' I T.ht. I. u.i\t.ol ~ on'-L'n .rn"\ v.vulJ nt"l(I \1111\ ttrl .lll nC'lt','S.JI"\ f'('rml\\ 10 h11il1i tht h1,tel \nJ tht· u'n~nann ~,,uld P·'' Im tht ~nham eml•nt nt thr .,_,l"lland\ propert' a n .irc.i to be> CC\\.t'rtd h ... "•llt't t<' \urpon 'Cf.· ruuon an1I pro' 11lr a hnhi1at Im h1rd\ h\h and animah But \.1111' L.and and v. ater < u ·' \ioorT ~1d l.itt la 1 W("('\t th 1 1hc l OmpaO\ " not ahout tn l'f'f)un ha~ tht frontaar rroP<""' and P3' tu~· on 11 ~uhout as\urunlt'' ,,f ~llnh v.h1lc lOmmrrnal Jt\('ll>pmcnt (P1eue 11tt COAST AL/ Al) J ' # Ow• .. ~ ~LY PILOT !Mond8)'. 8-ptember 9, 1985 PLEA OF STALKER SUSPECT·DELA YED ••• l'l'OIDAl made on wbetber to ICCk a cb.anp of ------------------------venue to move the cue out o( Los t d ~ope we can IS5ume Mr. El Paso attorney re aine R.amirn will act a fair trial hero in t d . .&'. d St Jk t LA.''. Ot~uly Di~trict Attorney Phil 0 e1 en a er SUS pee ~J>tnaa~. The prosecutor aid be anticipates Ramiiu will be lned io Los Anaeles. BJ .. Aned81ed Preu He said he would Oj)p09e the ebansc EL p ASO Texas-An El Paso lawyu $aid he bu been rc1.&1ned to defend of venue because of the cost. RJchard ~the man arrested in the "Nl&ht Stalker" serial killinas case. Halpin also said any additional and another local lawyer is consJCierint helping in the case. charecl in lbe case would be filed Lawyer Manuel Barraza said be will So to Los Angeles this week to talk ~1fore~Ramire1 is scheduled.to enter with Ramln::z at the request of bis familr,. He said he hope to associate with EJ w Paso criminal defense attorney Joseph 'Sib" Abraham in the case. •• ey •~ 5till investipting the Abraham confirmed late Sunday he is considering joining the defense of cases to ascertain whether ftirther Ramirez, 25, an El Paso native w~o moved to C,aJiforn1a about seven yui;s 140. charges can be fil~" Los An&eJes Barraz.a said bis firs1 pnonty would be to seek lO have Ramun ltlal County Sheriff's Deputy Rick Adams moved out of Los Angeles. said Sunday. He could not predict "That shouldn't be much of a problem," he said. "The public scotJmeot when additional cba.rscs might be there is jusl too arcat against this auy. It's the classic tlung about free press fil~~ . 25 ... _ .... 10 da against fair trial... .• . . ,,_mtrez. .• was capwi9U ys He said if it would not be possible lo move the case out of Cahfom1a, he IJO in. East Los Angeles and was would seek to move it to a community where the coverage bas 001 been as charge<l last Tuesday with one count intense as in Los Angeles. . . . . of murder and seven other felonies Barraza sajd be was retained by the Ranurcz family because of his Ste~ from two early morning reputation for defendinJ others in the Central El Paso neighborhood where attacks m May in Los Anaeles Ramirez lived as a child: County. He sa.id he bas spoken to the suspCcl's sister. Rosa Flores. who told him her No pica was entered last and brother wants his help. . Ramirez was ordered 10 appear again ''The sister is tl\erc right now," Barraza said. "and she called and said he is today before Murucipal Court Judge interested." Elva Soper. who refused to grant bail "You can imagine, the wax be was chased and everything, he feels like in the case. nobody is on his side out there, • Barraza said. The charges stem from the May 14 He said he could not say what the defense might be based on because he slaying of William Doi, 66, and the docs not ret know the facts in the case. attack of his wife in their Monterey "All know is what I've read in the papers." he said, "I need to go out there Park homei and the May 9 attack on and sec what the facts uc. It might be worse than I think it is. I hope it will be Clara-Ced ia HadsaJJ, 85, who was bener." robbed in her Monrovia borne. Barraza said it will be necessary to retain a California attorney in the cast Dislrict Attorney lra Reiner has because he is not licensed to practice law in that state. said more charges may be filed against Ramirez, a drifter from EJ Paso, Texas, whose penchant for been identified. heavy-metal rock music and referen-R.amirc2 bas been served with an ces to devil worship bas been de-arrest warrant stemming from the scribed in coun documents and Aug. 17 Night Stalker slaying of Petet" detailed by friends and relatives. Pan, 66, in San Francisco: "AssuminJ the evidence warrants, The wave of Night Stalker attacks, we will be filing additional charges including 14 killings during dozens of within the next couple of weeks," assaults since Feb. 8, have been tjnJed Reiner said before the eight felony with satanism, evidence of rituahsm counts were filed last week. Those and the use of devil worship symbols. counts alone could make Ram1~z A San Francisco police affidavit eligible for the death penalty. said such a symbol was found on a About 30 Night Stalker victims and wall at the Pan home, but in- witnesses viewed Ramirez 1n a vestigators in Los Angeles have jailhouse lineup last week, but refused' comment on news reports authoritie~ refused to say if he had .,, that similar symbols were found at Southern California crime scenes. Last week, Los Angeles sheriffs spokesman Lt. Richard Walls said property allegedly stolen by Ramirez in Southern California had been rc<X>Vered during searches conducted in El Paso, San Francisco and the Los Angeles area. Authorities also blamed the Night Stalker for an attack in Mission Viejo. Bill Cam&, who suffered gunshot wounds and whose girlfriend was sexually assaulted in the Aug. 25 attack, remained hospitalized Sun- day in serious but stable condition. SCHOOL STARTS IN COAST DISTRICTS ••• homAl year. Toibin said teachers iliis year will emphasize the learning process in their instruction. work on a positive 9Chool climate and increase the recognition of the school in the community. Ninth graders were welcomed to the school with a recent orientation program conducted by up- perclassmen and designed to brief the newcomers on the finer points of campus protocol. "They're told how to avoid being embarrassed,"Toibinsa.id, "and how to not look like a freshman." No more lunch pails, no more forgotten locker combinations and absolutely no more running be~n cla&!CS. At Mariners Elementary School, Principal Al Zeidman and the leachers are working at making their young pupils comfortable with the school. "The kids usually know beforehand where Lhey're going, but !here's stiU some worry about whether they have their lunch money and bus passes." he said. Teachers 1his morning will discuss the safest routes to and from school with the school's 584 pupils and remind them where to catch the buses. "The younger ones are given little tours of the school, shown where to cat lunch and where the playground is. We want to orient them to the school as soon as possible," Zeidman said. · New pupils in the upper grades are typically assigned a new buddy to show them around the school and make them feel comfortable. At Thurston Middle School in Laguna Beach, Principal Ann Becker said the students were remarkably well behaved this morning. "They were absolutely wonderful," she said. "We plan carefully with the ~cbers and the parents to set up the first day and first week of school to make sure there's no rca1 confusion." Becker said Thurston set a record this year in organizmg theu 450 students rnto their appropriate home- room classes, schedules in band. With the first class schedule for 9:05. the students were in their classes by 9:07. The first few days of school for the sixth. seventh and eighth graders arc spent going over a student handbook which includes guidelines on every- thing from how to use the locker to bow to use the library. Teachers also discuss school-wide awards students can earn through their scholastic and other effons. "We make sure they know what our expectations are." Becker said. REP AIR ZONE CLAIMS 3 •.• From Al apparently lost control at a curve and struck Davis' car head on and then spun around and struck another veh.icle driven by Herbert S. Blair Jr .. 48 ot M1ss1on Viejo. The speed hm1t is posted at 55 mph, he said, with numerous warn- ings to slow down for curves. OIL DRILLING WARNING ISSUED .•• From Al pinpoint 150 of the most promising tracts in preparation for renewed negotiattons with the congressional delegation Tuesday. Meanwhile, a contingent re1>- resenting three Orange County coastal communities arrived in Washington on Sunday to meet With key legislators who crafted the orig- inal compromise. Coastal communities oppose ex- panded 011 dnllin,a off Orange County and hope to impress influenttal congressmen With their position. said Denny Fre1denrich. a spokesman for the c1t1cs of Newport Beach. Laguna Beach, Hunuogton Beacl1 and San Oemente. Rep. Bob Badham, R-Newport Beach, also opposes the compromise as long as Orange County tracts arc included Badbam is trying to arrange a meeting between White House staff and members of the congressional delegation. The congressman will also testify at a Wednesday subcommittee hcanng on the drilling question. he said. The hearing will be the first opportunity for Congress as a whole to examine the compromise crafted by the state delegation, Schreiber said. Badham did not sien the lelegram lo Hodel "for obvious reasons." Schreiber said. Because of the coun- ty's specific interests regarding the matter, "we're not going to deal with either of the extremes," he said. "Somewhere in between there's some common ground." Freidennch agrees. "I don't sec (the telegram) as a ma)Or threat to Orange County," he said. "We've always supported lhe agreement ... We think Oran~e County tracts can be (eliminated) in the fine tUDlllJ of lhe compromise ... Freidenrich said. COASTAL CONSERVANCY PROPOSAL .•• l'romAl ~oore claims the plans for re- storing part of the property into wetlands, fr1YC from development, 1s not c-0mpahblc with commercial prospects with the area being a prime visitor-serving commercial because "Beach Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway are the most densely traveled thoroughfares in the city:· Mills Land & Watu, a land Just Call 642-6086 YCWICMy kw»y " \OI 00 --,_.,......,. 510C>ITI '*'b9'ore 7 p m development company, bas owned property in the ~a since 190 I when 1t was an effective tidal marsh. according to Moore. BuWe said that when the state took propcny in the 1940s to develop Huntington State Beach, the wetland features were destroyed m efforts to tum the area into a batluoa beach. lo a second. and far Jess con- ¥ troversial proposaJ, the Coastal Con- servancy's Holdennan is negotiating another land a~reement with caltrans. It would include the trans- fer of I 7 acres south of Brookhurst Street to the Coastal Conservancy. In return, ca1trans would get ~r­ mission to widen Pacific Coast High- way from four to six traffic lanes. Wlaat do yoa like aboat tbe Dally Pilot? Wiiia& doa't you like? Call tbe number at left ud yo ur me11a1e wlll be recorded. tru1crlbed ud delivered to tbe appropriate editor. Tiiie same %4~llCH1r u1werln11ervlce may be used to record letters to tbe editor on any topic. Contributors to oar Le tters column must Include their • name and teleptlont number for vertflcatlon. No circulation calls. pln1t. Ttll 111 wut'1 on you mind. K....n WlttlMf Publlshef Clrculetlon 714/M2.a:a3 Clnalfted edYeftlalng 714/142·9171 All other depertmenu M2~ MAIN OFFICE \JO WWI 8ey S1 Colle ~ C'\ Mal llOO<-9o1 I ~ Colle ~ C.A 112926 lflO yOur ~ ... bl ~.., """°) -~ II fOJ 00 NII ·~ tOJ1 ~ °" -.. ... (A# °""~ 0 • .., ""° '°~ QC~ - b9 ,...."' Frenk Ztnl Aoeemety Chvrchmen C«>yfiglll 198:l °'~ °'"' ~ ~ No ._, Mor• ._,.,_ tOlor• men• "' eo-1 .. ...... ~ ,...,..,, ...... n. •to<OCM:4'0 -''"°"' _.., °'"' -O!COOY''f/'11- Clrculletton Tall~ \ f'd410f ConlrOllef RoOef1 L Centreft Oonatd l . Wllllema PfOOUC.l•Of'I C11culato0n Ma nag"' ~anagei- ttowerd Multenwy PenJ -.Vfna ~a~us•no C>rec10t Cl toed Oit!<:IOr VOL 11. NO. 252 s-p<111l1"09 IMl'O •• ea... -c-tor-u" •« 8001 ""*"°"°" err u .,.. a& 26 ,_,m1y =-· ..... 11 00 """'""' / I Showers may dam pen Coast Cone6del •bte cloudlMaa from a weethW aytttm moving down the ooatt wlll brlnG •alight~ of th<>'Mn to Southern Caltfomfa cout.i and mountain reglona tonight and Tutlllday. The N1tlonel W•ther ~ Mid an upper low prteeure ~i.m oil.the Northern Caltfotnla coat-wee moW'CI eb#ty eouthward tod.y end le ~ed to Hngtt there Into W.Oneeday. The IY9{em wtll cau• Southern Calltornla'a daytl~ temperatu,.. to be • llttle coolet u well. Along tt-. Oranae Cout there will be conllderable doudlneea through T'"u.act.y. Slight ~ of ah<>W9n late tonight and T'ueecfay. Slightly coow days wtth hlgti. &a to 78 and IOwl 57 to 64. From Point Conception to the Mexican ·eorder "!... Inner w1tera: Light varlabi. wlnda through TuMClay ex~I 1outhwest to w.et 8 to 18· knots In the afternoon and evening houra. SouthwMt Swell 1 to 2 feet. Conalderable ctoudlneu through Tueeday with a sllght chance of showers tonight and Tuesday, mllntv northern waters. U.S. Temps TOOAY 71 56 76 13 ,, 12 87 48 111111 IHAN 1·1 poor 1·2 pOOf 1·2 poor 1·2 000< 1·2 poor 1-2 poor 1-3 ,.., 12:03 p.m 1-oe p.m :u SI 1\MIDAY 13'a m 828&.m 12.53p.ITI 1:53pm 0.3 40 29 H ARTS ON THE GREEN DRAWS 3,000 ... From Al performing arts groups throughout the county. Grady said she is hopefu~ the Arts on the Green festivaJ at Town Center Park will continue through the years, with efforts lo eventually hane ban- ners aloJlg every major street in the city. She also applauded Costa Mesa for "~utting its money where its mouo is • by donating $10.000 for Sunday's festival. "This was just a taste. to show the breadth of what's available in Orange County." Grady said "It was to tickle people's imaginations and help get them involved." With blankets stretched on the park lawn, nestled between a hotel and some office buildings, culture lovers were serenaded Sunday by the Orange County Master Chorale as well as other troupes. Inside South Coast Repertory·s Second Stage, artisans read ethnic poetry. played classical guttar and perfonned mime for the audience. "What a special thing. for all lhese people to enjoy this free entertain- ment," Grady said. Next year's festival will be a prelude for the Orange County Per- forming Ans Center's opening season. and promises to be even bigger and beuer. she added. "This was a year of JUSt getting 1t rolling and trying different things out to prepare for a tremendous festival next year," she said. In observance of Art's Month '85. SGT ~ YORK WORKERS .•. P'romAl "We're trying to do everything · possible to ease the burden of these people and help them to find JObs as soon as possible,·· Flamm said. Personnel repf('SCntat1ves from five d1 v1sons of Northrop Corp .. and vanous div1s1ons of Litton. TRW, Magnavox. Honeywell, McDonnell Douglas. Aerojet-General Corp., Lockheed Corp. and Parker-Hannifin were among those present at the job fair Saturday. The layoffs came on the heels of the decision by Weinberger, who said independent tests on the Sgt. York concluded lhat the weapon did not measure up to Army specifications and the growing needs of the mihtary. The project was canceled after 64 of the guns were delivered, Flamm said. The government ongJnally ordered 146. It was named after World War I hero Sgt. Alvin York. and consists of two 40-mm guns hnkcd to a computer and radar. Flamm said. Ford officials are working with a federal termination officer to sort through the red tape involved with cancefing the immense contract, Ramm said. He said some of lhe remaining workers could stay with the project a few months until the termination is complete. single age26 the play "Galileo" will open Tuesday at South Coast Repertory, running through September. The theater w11J also offer a fashion show Sept. 23 at 7 p.m .. and the curtain will rise Sept. 27 on SCR's Second Stage production of the "Blue Window," playing lhrough Oct. 20. Meanwhile. the Costa Mesa An League will begin its j uried exhibition 7 p.m. Saturday at the Jewel Court in Soulh Coast Plaza. The exhibit runs through Sept. 22. Other act1 v1t1es include a per- formances at South Coast Village by the Orange Coast College Jazz Ensemble at 6:30 p.m. Sept. 19; the Orange County Chamber Orchestra's Bach Players at 11 a.m. Sept. 21; and the Orange County Ballet at 2 p.m. Sept. 28. BOAT •.. From Al Subchaser. The crew aboard lhe Subchaser radioed the Coast Guard and reported the fire at about I I· IO a.m. A 41 -foot Coast Guard cutter and a Hunlmgton Beach lifeguard vessel responded to the fire. The bla1c was extinguished by the Coast Guard just as lhe sailboat bu med to the waterline and sank. Hefl1ck said.- The loss was estimated a1 S.20.000. Wilber was taken by the Coast Guard to Dana Point Harbor. A person afraid to face th e world is freq uentl y the victim of a men - tal crisis. No one is immune to th e stresses of modern life that can cause abnom1al behavior. Each sit- uation is different. That's why Jaw student there are different sleeps l5 hours a "a-wr ways to help . The ~ Information Center at Capistrano by the Sea Hospital ha a free book- let on mental crisis. It outlines the many options you have available. Hospitalization is only one of them. Call (714 )831-1787. You'll receive this useful book- let in absolute confid ence. We've helped people cope with the -problems of today 's society for over 25 year ·. We understand. How to Handle a Mental Crisis ·- BU LLE TIN BOARD Energy sem.inar set in 'Newport The Newport Foundation will bold an energy colJoq_wum enti~C<l "ReneW1ble Enersy Sources" at a breakfast meetma Tuesday at 7:30 a.m. ,The spcaken will be Edward M yen, vice pretideo~ for . systems development a.t Southern Califo.rrua ~son Co.; Richard Escbcnbura. assis- tant vtce prcs1dent of PAE International and Owen McCa.u&hey, chief ellccutiv.e officer of McGau~ey & Smu~ Eoeray Associates, Inc . . 01fford Lyddon wdl moderate. For reser-vatJons, call 644-4311. Oli ve Cre.t meeting .et ,._ Supporte~ of Oliye Crest Treatment Centers 1or Abused. Children will begin the fall season with a membership luncheon meeting Thursday at 11 :30 a.m. at the McCbarles House Restaurant and Tea Room, 335 S. C St., Tustin. ~~d~.nt Janice Walker says the purpose of the meeting is to a~u.aint prospective members with th~ pr~ms .Ohve Crest proVides for the 350 children. 10 their ~-" ldformation and luncheon reservations are available b~ calling .S47-036J. Artlultl• group meet. The mof?l;hly meetinJ of the South Orange County Arthnlls Support Group will be held Friday from lOto 11 :30a.m. m the Western Federal Savings and Loan community room on Crown Valley Parkway.in ~ission Viejo. • . Pod1atnst Lawrence Kaminsky wiJJ present a shde show about foot problems and foot care. Call Faye Krooth at 859-5786 for more information. Irvlne ma.eam to reopen A grand reopening of the Irvine Historical Museum ~ll be held Saturday from 4 to 7 p.m. at the museum sate, I Sandbura Way. Irvine. A new exhibit on East lrvUle, its history and the ol~ town de~elopment project that is to begin later th1s year, will be presented. The display will be .shown thro~gh March 14 and further information may be obtamed by leaving a mcssaac at 786-4112. Wrlten' work•IJop planned Workshops held by science-fiction novelist Greg Bcnfore and international sportswriter Olym- pic athlete and history professor Dr. Andre~ Strenk will be held Saturday by the Laguna Beach branch of the National Leaaue of Pen Women. The all-day event is scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Laauna Methodist Church on Wesley Dri~e at Pacific ~oast Hi~way, South Laguna. The fee .1s $40 and .1nfonnat1~n. ~ay be obtained by calling co-chairmen VUJlrua Chamberlin at 494-5221 or Ann Wells at 49.S-SOS5. J•ycee• to print klds . The Huntinaton Beach Jaycees wiJI bold a chil~n·s. finaerpri~ting session Saturday in con- nect1on with the nallonal concern in helping to find lost children. ~ All children accompanied by their parents will be fingerprinted free at the Chuck E. Cheese restaurant at McFadden A venue and Edwards StrtJct in Huntinaton Beach. Call Susan Dalrymple at 89S-S626 for further information. · Fine .rm coate.t In Meu The Costa Mesa An Leque will conduct its 10th annual fine ans competition Saturday through Sept. 21 at South Coast Plaza. Raser Armstrona of the Laguna Beach Schoql of Art, past president of the National Watercolo~ Society, is the juror for the exhibition. The winning anist will receive over S 1,000 in awards. Pro6nm on Mmco •t occ The historical towns of Mexico will be the focus of Saturday's opening presentation of Orange Coast ·College's 1985-86 travelogue series, "Armchair Adventures." "Mexico's Fascinating Towns of lndepen- dence," the opening presentation, was produced by Allen Hubbard, who will present the program. Admission is $4 in advance or $5 at the door, while season tickeu for all 14 programs are priced at $30. Call 432-5527 for more information. Arts·on the Green provide a preview of Center star dom South Coast Repertory's Youn.g Conse~atory Players -and the City of 9°sta Mesa -had ~ood reason to kick up thetr heels Sunday during a fi ve-hour Arts on the Green • fesuval. l)le ~nual showcase for Orange County cultural and performing arts o~uons attracted 27 participating groups and reflected great ethnic divez:sny. Spectators could see and hear Hispanic and Vietnamese poetry, classical JaP.8nesc dancers, Buddhist drummers and Irish pipers. Ap~g to th~ younger members of the audience was the Orange County Puppet Guil~. Annika Schader, 31h, of Costa Mesa, found Mr. Longneck particularly likable and gave him a hug, at right. The afternoon of music, darice and theater filled three outdoor venues at Town Center Park and a stage at SCR near where construction 1s finishing on the first phase of the. Orange Co)Jnty Performing Arts Center -the focal point in Costa Mesa's claim to be "Cuy of the Arts." . "This year the festival reflects the surge in performing and visual arts as the city pr~pares to open the Center," said Dwight Richard Odle, co-producer of the arts farr. Dally Piiot photo• by Kathi Kent RJ .. y Episcopal meeting addresses abortion, divorced clergy By die Auoclatecl Prn1 The Episcopal Church's milestone con- vention went LDto its first full business day in Anaheim Sunday, wrestling with issues ranaina from locatJon of its headquaners to abonion, alona with corridor reverbera- tions about divorced clergy. Apart from floor discussions, specu- lation also flowed about who would be chosen Tuesday to be the denomination's new primate, its presiding bishop. A stir of milled, sometimes disturbed reaction was being voiced among delcptes to a statement by the outgoing presiding bishop, the Most Re v. John M. Allin, that divorced, remarried clergy ought to revert to lay status. at least 1,3.SO divorced pnests amona the ch urch's 13,.S48 cleray, and a few bishops have been divorced and remarried, includ· ing rwo still headina dioceses. A liberal coalition's convenuon publi- cation, "Issues Sun," needled Allin's suggestion that "divorced priests might better serve the church as active laypeo- ple," saying: "Jfwe follow that log:c, divorced active laity would be much more use to us as passive laity and divorced passive la11y as the unchun:hed." Ofange CoNt DAJL Y PILOT /Mond->', SepMmber 9, 1N5 1t AS - Bur~edboy getting a kick out of Karate By 1M A.Meda~ Pn9a David Rothenberg. v.h o battled mMth~ of p&tn aJtcr bu father tet him abiaz.e, p ve a kante show th.is ~end to belp otb~ • fire.scarred children bck despMI'. Tbe 9-yeu.oJd. wbo was once swathed in bandqes, wore a white outfit and headbtnd Saturday as be demonstrated lacks and punches under the tutelage ot mstructor Jon Patncko About SO burn patients. and their relauvcs watched the exhb111on ·dunng a p1cn1c at Garden Grove Park for pa11en1~ at the L'naverslt\ oi ( ahfom1a at Ir' 1ne Medical Center Burn L nit Patncko sa1d hegaq·the bo~ lret' le'>'"'"' t"1ce a week: for three months .. It's been real!) good for him It &l'"~ him more perseverance, it's gi ven him more self-esteem." said his mother. Mane Rothenberg ·Tm rcall} proud of him They're entitled, hke others, to "the opportunity to replace a lost relationship with one of promise," he said. but added. "In making such a choice, however. faith and love and courage may be clearer and the church's mission better served by the willingness to relmquish the role model of clergy and to continue faithfully in a valid form of la y mirlstry." It was possible, from phrases linked with Allin's comment 10 a covenuon address, that he referred only to clergy remaining in the same pansh after divorce. He has not been available to reporters to clanf) the point. The church. considered a 'mdge be- tween Roman Catholicism and Prot- estantism. used to ha"e stiff restncuons agamst remamage after divorce. but 1n 1973 modified those rules to allow It aftt"r pastoral counseling. Archbiahop of Canterburr Rob- ert Runcie at EpiecopaJ con- ference in Anaheim. The sport also has helped med1calh -'bout a month ago the 'iCarred 'ilon around his arm ~n to strt'tch and the arm began to s1ra1 tt'n Dr Bru~ .\c auer of l 'C II"\ ane confirmed some arm surge~ v.as no longer nt'cessan be{au\t' of the karate lesson Monday, Sept. 9 abortion Saturda). but calkd for a ... h urch- w1de stud' of the matter • 7:30 p.m. Newport Beacla City CoucU, City Council chambers, 3300 Newport Blvd. Statistical projections LDdicate there are The church's House of Bishops reaf. firmed the church's present ~tanJ on The church·s present stand discourag~ abortion hut 1s against am la"''i 1nterfenng "'1th per\onal choice about 1t Da"1d v.as badh bumea on "1arch ' IQ 3 v.hen h s ather Charles. poured lceroStne an. und the bo' ·~bed and ~t him ablazt' ID 8 Buena Parli.. rrwtel f(\1111" • Pou cE Lo e Bandit robs Mesa market at knifepoint, gets $300 A kn1fc-wieldinJ bandit escaped with $300 early tb1s mornina from a Costa Mesa convenience store after ·robbina the cash resister and opening the safe, police reported. The intruder first served bimself a cu p of coffee before accosting the Fountain Vall~ Someone reportedly stole a bird cqe containina two birds from the avtary ofa Pet Country store, 18918 Brookhunt St.Sunday momina. The birds were described as beina eiaht inches high, red in color, with yellow, blue, areen, and oranae plumaae. The loss was estimated at S6SO. • • • Police reported that a robbery took place at a Video Outlet store. 8872 Warner Ave., Saturday evenina. The reports said that the suspect entered the store at about 7:4.S p.m., displayed a 12-inch kitchen k.l\ife. ordered the 19 and S8~year-old clerk.a to lie down on the floor. and took an unknown amount of cuh from the rear office and the rc1JJter. He Ocd on foot. ..... A contractor for the Oranse County Sanitation District reported that van- dals usint a four-wheel-drive vehicle broke a mile-Iona, sb-1ncb diameter pipe beina uled to pumj) pound water from a site in the 11300 b1ock of Euclid Street. The incident. wtuc.h occurred Friday niaht. resulted in over I 08,000 pllon1 of water bci"I clerk at the Circle K store at 1178 Sunflo'wer St. about 4 a.m., Sat. Ron Smith said. The robber forced the clerk into a walk-in rtfriaerator, emplled out the ca.sh rqjster and opened the store safe, apparently usina the combina- spilled at the site durina a six bour period. The damqe was estimated at over S 1,000. • • • A $300 TV and $200 in jewelry was reported stolen from a home in the 17000 block of San Ricardo Saturday momina. lntne Someone reportedly stoic $31200 1n cardboard storaae boxes from tne rur of a buildina alona Hu&hes Sunday. . ~ . A ll-year-o&djuvenUewuarrested Sunday and booked at Oraqe Coun- ty Ju'lenile Hall on sus1>1cfon of b~. • ... A bw1Jar stole a car stereo worth more \Mn $400 from an unlocked vehicle parted alon, Candela Satur- day niabt. • Newport 8-cll A ruideftt in the 200 block. d'f lStb Street rep0ned Thunday that a USO fur coat. SSO in jewelry, a SI SO stJ jecket and S600 in Nd equipment wu stolen from her home. • • • ti on. Smith said the bandit. dcscnbcd as a Hispanic. 25 years old. S feet 7 mchcs tall with a blue T -shin. fled on foot Poh~ were unsure how tht' robber obtained the safe comb1Qat1on. Police reported that two burglanes took place in Upper Newport Plaza Sunday mornina, In the first 1nc1dent. two $8,000 IBM computers wcrt taken from the Meister Co. In the ~nd1 a $450 camera and two $998 typewnten were taken from Bcrkus Group Architects. • • • Vandals caused S400 damaae to a police car early Saturday when of· ficcrs drove into barbed wire the vandals had stretched acros5 the road at the intersection of Irvine Avenue and University Dri ve • • • Thieves aot away With mort than $20,000 1n cloth1na. Jewelry, luqaae, and cuh whc-n they twrglmm! rwo ~oinina hotel rooms at the New- poner Resort, 1107 Jamboree Road. Saturday. Pobcc reports said the victims were tnvchna tottther and had left the door open between their rooms when the incident ocxurrcd c.-11 .. Audio equipment val\K'd at S 1.124 was rcponed stolen from the locked Pf'llC of a hotM in the 400 block of Ww Bay tnoct unday • • • Someone reponedly ~tole S 124 1n cash and S62 1n persona l check\ from a Super Cuts hair salon. 210 E I "'th St . Saturday • • • .\ S2SO car stereo "B!> rt'portcd stolen from~ a s1lvt'r Dodge rnn· vert1 ble parlted 1n the \00 bloc~ ot Memmac unda' ••• A $450 TV and a S7S '1deo c,as<,eue recorder was rtported stolen 'from a home an the 1300 block of E. Bnstol Street Fnda) South County A SI . 700 "1deo cassette rt"Corder SI, 900 10 Jewelry and a SSOO camera was reported stolen from a Dana Pornt home 1n the 33300 bl ock of\'1a Len1ta. • • • " Laguna Hills resident reported that a ST .SOO custom made diamond nng was stolen from the bedroom of her home 1n the 2 S 700 block of Terra Bella. • • • An 81 -year-old Laauna H1ll'i woman reported Thunday that wmeone had stolen her $20 pun.e contarnina S7S an cash and SS an m1scellanrous items. Police report~ said tht' v1ct1m had left the purse unattend~ while she was load1na shopp101 baJs into her car 1n a perk1na lot m the 33600 btoct"--of Moulton Parkway Lap.naBeech The v1C11m ofa n ron,-arm robben rtponed the lo of S l 00. Pohc:t said lhm are no details oo the suspect or suJpccU involved The incident rc- porudly OCC\U'Ttd at 2.45 a m Sun- day on Forest A venue.• • • • A Willet was stolen unda} afkt noon on Mountain Road. The '\ 1ct1m rtponed a S200 lou -' ~allet coouumng S42 "a~ )tolcn from a purse aturda' at a \outh Coast H1gh~a) address. the \ 1~ t1m told police • • • Police arrt"Stt'd four moton\t\ 1'n suspicion ot dn' ing undt'r the in· fluenceofakohol Jamt''i 't'"ell Tatr Ill. 31. was stop~d at I ~~ am \fonda\ on Broadv.a' R1l hard (1t"nc: Gonzales. 35. "as arnsted at I: 11 ' am unda' on Broad"a' l\.Jt'ld Johansen. 2~. "as arn<ited ~lurda' night on North (OJ'it H1a.h"a' Francisco Javier Ord.u 2~ \A.&S stopped Saturda~ nigh t on Laguna Can} on Road. Ordu''i p.l\SCn~er '0. )ear-old Sergio Gomo \f.l\ 1a' \A.as arre~ted for allcge-d pul"lhl in ti,\ll&· II On Huntinaton Beach .\ buf"llar reported!~ \"lw t: int<' 11 homt' at tht ~omer of Oh'l' •nd 14th Strttt and ~tole Jt'"ell' 'alued at SSOO, and clothing and a Jt'"eln bo' wonh SI ~O Pohl'.'t' rt'pom said tht' thief ga ined t'ntn ti' tcircing open the lockca m"'nt door \ anua" rrportedl) Ok'"' ur a mautx'' in th<' l (XXl hli l\~ 111 \wrmon: >;unda\ 0111.ht • • r-· \ $ '' l amera was reponl'\.1 'tokn 1r,,,,.. a Jen~I office tn tht· JOO hlod •! c 'range aturda\. night . ' . P\111lc reported that thrt•e 'tamp mal"htnC' 'hefts occurred o;omcttmt• l\aturda' or unda' In tht' hr<;t tnodent s~)meone stole S l ll5 I 4t1 1n \.&Sh trom a stamp machine at tht' l"omer ot Golden \\-t'st '\t~t and \a. am er .\ \ enue. t n the second somt'· one stole S6001n cash from a machant' al the Huntington Center In the third ~tamps \alUed at $)6~ '\l) ~e re reported stolen from a machtnt' at the post offiC(' 1n the Huntington ( cntrr • • • Hanging plants worth S~no ~q·rl' rtportcd stolen from the front porch of a homt' 10 tht' 1 9~00 hlod 111 Bushard t~t Saturda' mght • • • .\ rts1Jent in the I , l()O hlod ·• C\1ms reported Sunda\ tha1 her S2 l Kll • nng was missing from ht"r home Belushi suspect in court LOS .\:--,(,UE (·\Pl-Thr~ and a l\slf\cars afler Jcihn Bttu hi ' drua O\erdo\c death the C anad11n woman chara-1 ~1th lolhna the comedian face., a "·ourt heanna th•t ~ill detemunc whether \he \hould ~tand tnaJ for murder Cath) £, el}n mtth. \1, a former rock 11naer for sucb record1na arMt as Gordon L1&htfootand HO)t .\it ton. was scheduled to apsxar an Mu01c1pal C oun today for 1 prchmtna" hur 10 he. IS chAf'ICd \l."\lh second· deartt murder &f'd 1 ' \.'OUnt' of turn• n1n and adm1n1\lerina na!"l"onc to Betusht Bclu h1 the l..&O} \tar 1\I tt'le· Hs1on's" turda) "•~t l 1,e · dft'd at aae 3l 1n a rcn1ed s~no-a-<ia) bunplo"' at the hueau '-1arm\1nt Hotel on the unStl tnp on Man h 5 I 982 The coroner lasted " u(,(' 1lf dea\l\ u acutt' heroin 11nJ ux-i11nc po1son1ni m1th wa~ 1n1ttalh QUC\hon<'d h' poll~ and rtlca~ mnh spent ll month\ hflllLu~ t\trad1t1on from .c anada - ' 1 I COMC DAIL y PILOT /Monday, Sep1emw '· 1815 Reagan twists vise on S. Africa President announces economic sanctions aJnst white re me. condemns apartheid United Stat.et from apartheid but people are impetient. We all ~I very usodate us positively with peeceful stronaJy about the chanaet needed." cbaqe." Reapn repealed that be would Reapn sa.id be is: veto the sanctioDJ leaislat.ion if it -Bannina all computer eaporu to ruclles bis desk. aiveo n&hu. Amenca's va~ of ~uth Afric:an lawenforcemcntqen· SecrewyofStateOeo~P. Sbulti, apanheia is simple . and stta~aht· cies; , who briefed reponen after Rtatan'1 BJl>AVIDDPO 't , ....... ...., WASHINGTON -President Re-forward: We believe at's wrona. ~e -Haltina al~ ex~ of nuclear statement. laid the admini1trtbon'1 •n. beclcina away under pressure condemn it and we are united ao teclinok>ty unbl Prctona aarees to chief objectioa to the pendl.na leai .. from bit tonsnme oppo11tion to hopina for the day when aputbeid m~ the terms of international non· latioowua~vilioothatcoufdbive sanctiona apinst South Africa, acted will be no more." probf'erat~o~ ~men ts; impoted additional aanaions If the today to puni1h without delay the Tbe abrupt shift was ma~ in hopes · -;-PrQhibauna. loans to the South Pretotja resime failed to make 1uftl- wbito-ruled rqime economically for of avoidina an embarrassrn& forcl&Jl African 90vemment, ex.oept for those d ent proareas toward endh\a its apartheid laws diecriminatina policy defeat in Conaress. It came as aoina_t~ prosrams belpiaa ~· apanbeid in tbe oear future. qainst the oation'1 black m-.jority. the Senate prepared to move toward -Tat:tna ~to ban the ampon-The ad.mini1trttion opposed such By his own hand, the pre$ident put adoption of a sanctions bilJ. But ati~D of the k.ruae~d, the ~uth ltepS as potentially doiq more harm into effect most o( the provisions of Republican leaden said they would African aold cofo. m the Untted than aood to Sou1h Afric&n blackl but widely supported sanctions lcais-move to delay further action on the Stat.ea, •~b~ to conaultadons with also ~ tbem as unwarranted lation lb.at bas puKd the Howe and bill in li&ht of Reagan's announo-Amenca s m"or trld.in&rr=en. interfeieoce in the president'• ro&e 11 it before the Senate. ment . ff~ also ~ the !'C"llf'Y to chief architect of U.S. foreiao policy. Soeakina from the Oval Office. he Reapn said bis exccubve order contJder mtnlift& a a.old co•o to tcrve said in a national broadcast: was "desiJned and ai~ed IP.in•t t;be ~· an alternative to the poin, held by Reapn said be would name an- "Tbe sy1tem of apanbeid means machinery of apartheJd wtthout in-anveston and collectors: stead an advisory committee to .. 21Di88lng Californians turn up safe in Indonesia •1&M~Pr'tM JAKARTA lndoneala -Two tourists from California made it safely to shore after the boat they had ~n dri~na on for 21 days ~roke up at aca, the U.S. Embassy said. The two tounst.s, Rickey Ellen Betkowtti. of Rancho Palos Verdes. and Judith Oai1 Schwartz. of Palo Alto, both 27, bad been.declared millina at sea. Embassy spokeaman Gerald Huchel said th~ chaner boat they were aboard developed en.aloe trouble on a crujse from Canta to UJuna KuJoo on the ialand ofJ,vL The f 6-foot craft broke apart in the Indian ~n Sunday niaht, and the American women and two Indonesian boatmen made at safely to the cout on Ben&kulu in south Sumatra, he uid. Car bomb harta 19 ln Madrid MADRID -A car bomb exploded on a downtown Madrid street today as a van full of paramilitary soldien passed by, police ~d. ~ineteen people were injured includina an American businessman. Police wd the car bomb was detooaied by remote control near the Plaza de la Araentina at at>c;>u.t 7:30 a.m. {10:30 p.m. PDT). The van was canyina 24 members of the c1val 1uard to several embusi.·es. including the Soviet Embassy and con~u!ate, to reltefolber embassy auards. police said. Sixteen of those hurt were: CIVIi guard members. and the other three were civilian passersby, officials said. deliberate systematic, institu· discrimjnately punisbjna.the people He warned Pretoria to take clear recommend in a year measures "to tiooalizcd, CIClal discrimination de-who are viCtlms of that system -atepS to end unequal treatment of ~~~ peaceful cbanae in South nying the black ~ority their God-measures that will disassociate the blacks and said, ••The American "·'u.._ .====;;;;;;;;;;. __ ....;;;;;;;--;;;;;;-;;;:;;-;;;:;;-;;;:;;-;;;-;;;-_ _.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===;;;;;;;;;~~;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'~~-====:11t1 Engine failure halts plane flight ' ·c J. . LONDON -A TWA jumbo jet en route to Copenhagen turned bac~ to ~. .A London and made an emergency land.in& today because ont: of ats four engines P ~ ,.. failed in fli&ht, officials said. Fire engines and ambulances hned the runway at ~ Heathrow Airpon as TWA Fliaht 7S4 with 94 passenger5 on ~rd ~ade a safe ~ ~C\. landing. Emeraency vehicles followed the Boeing 747 as. •t tax•~ to the ~ '-Jr terminal. A.i.rpon and airline officials said the plane had amved earher from WEEKDAY DINl-N-G Early Bird Dinner Specials •s.25 Complete dinner including soup AND salad, garlic bread, sherbert and coffee. Served 3:30 to 7:30 Monday thru Friday 17502 ~ach Blvd. at Slater Huntincton Beach 842-5505 23$ Wiii Get You AT Reuben\; OF NEWPORT BEACH 251 E. Coast Hwy. 873-1505 Build your own sandwich bar Choice of 4 fresh breads and huge variety of condiments Tuesday thru Friday 5· 7 pm For lounge customers only LU -IGl'S Wedaeeday LaMpa Special Tlaaradav Spaghetti Special •J.65 •2.65' ' Boda lacl•••• eala• A ••rile ltr .. d bo• t P• Lunch Specials 11 AM-3 PM S VerietlH of Subs '2.65 Spe9hettl ~2.75 l..aMttH •!.25 Mankont or O.nnelo•r -.S.!5 Individual Plue •!.25 *2 .00 Off Large or Medi•• Plau with th•• •d .... ... 1862 Plae••tl• Con. MeN 'Sl-StSS Cloeed Jlo•dav ----,_ . 'I Nm CLUI I RESTAURANT cafe with a conlinenlal flair LOUISIANA SPECIALTIE S LMIMI lOISlll -lla·111on. M.-. 9 95 1 LB Happy Hour 3:3o-6:30 M-Thurs. r TGIF 'LOO Happy Hour ~ ? 3-6 p.m. t' 130 E.17thCOSTA MESA HOURS llam to 2am · (714)646 -8855 Coaalry Goar•el Bre1kl111 Plaa year ••li•t11 aHtia11 ia oar friYalt llame , ..... • Cu.tom Omeleu -30 iterna to choose from • Homemade cinammon rolla • Hearty b ... akfuta eure to pleaMI LASAGNA BUFFET ""' One Mellt OW\ Ev~ry Tu~sday Night 6-Jo·P.M . •S.95 lntlud~s salad, garlic bread and fr~sh fruit Dinn~rs 6-10 P.M . Tu~s.-Sat . Lunch 11-3 P.M . Mon.-Fri. SPECIALS OAR Y Monday Night Football Footlong hot dogs and chili Uve Entertainment Friday 2 Saturday Nights S~~ Us About Priv6t~ Parti~s & Cat~ring Ameteut N'9ht-W~ UdletMght'- SMurUyt 9· I I I' .M . ... °"'*' • '.oo Newport's Cannery Village @fextd·o praenta Late Night DINNERS Comqtlet• Dl•••r II••• avallat.le 6 Pll aUt•• ••vt•r-• 12:M•W• .. •t Enttrtalment nightly Y:30 PM to 1 :00 AM Gourmet Food with Gourmet .lau 2900 Newport Blvd. Newport Beach 675-2968 Boston with l09 passengers on board. U.S. guaru defuae firebombs in-Germany STUTTGART, West Gcnnany-Three firebombs were planted outside a U.S. military hospital but Ameri~ "18'~ defused the ~e~1e:cs before they could explode, West German authonues saad today. No anJunes or damage resulted from what was the latest in a series of attacks and attempted attacks on the U.S. military in West Germany. Investigators suspect leftist terrorists planted the devices. laraella to release laat Arab POWs TEL A VlV -The Israeli government wiU release the last group of Arab detainees whose freedom bad been demanded by hijackers of a TWA jct an June Tuesday, according to miljtary sources. The group of about 130 prisoners are the last of I ,200 captives, mostly Shiite Moslems. transferred fro m Ansar Prison in southern Lebanon to Atlitfrison in northern Israel as part oflsrael's withdrawal from Lebanon. Most o the prisoners were captured during the final months of the Israeli army's occupation of southern Lebanon. when the lsraeli army came under increasing attack from Shiite guerrillas. Israel responded with an "iron fist" poLicy of raiding villages and rounding up suspected guerrillas. Weather blamed for tone spillage NITRO. W. Va. -Officials suspect hot weather was panly to blame for the leak of a foul-smelling poisonous chemical from a pipe for more than 2112 hours, sending five people to hospitals. "The high temperatures bu alt up a little more pressure," Elmer Fike, ownerofFikc ChemicaJ Co .. said Sunday from his hospital bed. "We can't teU iftbe &lass (on a meter) broke or if a gasket blew." He said the exact cause would be htown today. New heart recipient progreuing TUCSON -Michael Drummond took a few steps and ate solid food just one day after his Jarvik-7 artificial heart was replaced by the heart of a young traffic accident victim from Texas, hospital officials said. Nina Trasoff. a spokeswoman for University Medical Center, said Sunday that Drummond was doing weU and doctors were pleased with his prOJfCSS. He remained 10 critical but stable condition today, according to a taped hospital statement. Michigan teachers return to work Teachers in Pontiac, Mich., go back to work today without a contract settlement, but Seattle teachers said they were preparing for a long strike as no new talks were scheduled in the walkout that has id.Jed 43,500 students. ~sewh~. n~otiatioos were going on early today to avert a planned walkout an Euclid, Ohio: that would affect 5,000 students. Strikes in Michigan Ohio and Pennsylvania dragged on. In New York, faculty members at C.W. Post. the Greenvale branch of C:Oog Island University, said thty wouJd stnlc~ today, the fint scheduled day of classes for about 6.200 undergraduate students. White aupremaclat trial begin• SEA~ -Prospective jurors for the trial of 11 members of the white supremacist ~up The Order, accused of trying to overthrow the U.S. govc:f!lment, wdl _be ask~ about their views on Nazism. racism and anti- sem1usm1 a~rdan&. to h~ts of qu~tio~s submitted lo the judge. The racketcenng tnal, whacb begins today With Jury selection and is expected to last th~ months, stems from a federal gr:and jury ii:idictment handed down an April that accused 23 people of runnang a cnmmaJ enterprise through the group. Th~ defense's. hst of about 120 . suagcsted questions included what bumper soc.ken t!'e JUf.OS:S had on their cars and whether they think the Holocaust., m which malbons of Jews were slaughtered in World War II concentrabon camps, really occurred. Cauae of 31-fatal craah probed MILWAUKEE -One engine of the Midwes~Exprcss Airline& OC-9 was aiready maged when the plane crashed after t;atceoff, killing all 31 aboard, but ~e pl~ne sbo~ld ~ve been able_ to land wtth ooJy .one engine, a federal t0vesugato~ said. A~t IOS, h~ding ~or Atlanta, cruhed Friday a half-mile ~utb of M_alwaulc~ 1 General Billy Mttchell Field, where investigators were suU searching for sagos of why the twin-engine plane cruhed. Metal detector sweeps of the run~~Y ~d turned u~ 20 compressoT blade pieces and 13 other ~ from an engine like the ~-9's, National Transportation Safety Board Cbauman James E. Burnett wd at a press conference Sunday. Slayer releued, not repentant VA~ ':'IL~ -Theodore Streleski, released from phson after seven years for killl!'I ha~ math prof~r. says be bu no plans to kill a.gain or to visit S~ford. Uruv~tty. S,ti:eleaki, 49, was released Sunday morning from the Califorrua Medical Facility and repeated to reportcn who met him at the ptc that be couJdn't,_however, rule ou~ the PQssibility ofkillina again. "I killed the man ~nd I ~ubm_1tted the~ to &Judge and jury ... " the bearded Streleski said. s~~ wt~ bas Iona hair tied beck and "'.C8"o• a light d~nim jacket ii) the chillymlll. As I stand here now I have no mtentJon ofkillingaaain "But he said, to.~laim he felt ~~orsc for ihe murder would be untrue and "'undercut 'my protest o,fStanford. I am a murderer. I am not a dirty. lying doa. .. Fisherman HUCht off Santa Barbara SANT A BARBARA -One of four crewmen was the object of a sea search early today after•. 32-f~t fishina vessel sank in the Santa Barbara Channel, a <:out Guard offiClaJ saad. Th.ree otbeT men who were aboard the vessel Fat City were recovered, said Petty Officer:Pat Milton at the Lona Beach Coast Guard headquarters. AlJ three were cu.maned and found to be in &ood condition. UFW plane atady of peatlclde. . DELANO -1:he l;Jnited Farm Worten of Amcri~ marked the 20th anruv~ of~ b1110nc Delano ~pc strike by annouf\Clna it wall launch 1 statewide atudy on the effects o(pesttcfdet on fann workers. Cesar Chavez the founder ~nd presldcnt.of t;be UfW, al~arect ""War on pesticides!' sa' ·n tlie cbe1:rucal1wereaaide111ue an an earlier boycion, but now will becomith: oeotefl)Jcce. Train rama car; seven perlah SAN J~E -An Amtta.k train amubcd into an auto travclina on a rural din toed, kilbna a1J .even occupenu of the car and dtlf&ina the vebicle ri ~lm~ • mile. J4lled were five children and two edltlU andudina tl\e driv:r' Ldenufl~.by police as Fidel Soto-Aores. 42. ofMorpn Hlll. The names of the other VKtlms. one a child a,bout 2 yean old,i were not immediately releated "It wu one ot:the. mott ~me l<lcldentt 1've ever teen in ovtt JO yan ~s 1 Rrefiabter, sard Rudy C..bipl. who helped tear the roof off the mutilated car and ••ll'llCt the-~ nt'Tll~ t • -=T - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, September 9, 1985 Al Victories over mother-in-law are hollow at best DEAR ANN------------They greeted us with tcan and open arms. We both LANDERS: A cou-expressed deep sorrow at the years wasted io bitterness pie of days ago you and rccrimjn.ation. We have invited them to our home printed another let-Allll next week and l know Jt will be a warm and lovina ter about bomble reunion. mothers-in-law. For I....... Parents, too, can team. They deserve a second years I bad an uneasy LAID£1S chance. My husband is elated at th ts happy turn of events. and often hostile re-We both feel that our children deserve grandparents, and lationsbip with••••••••••••• if my mother-in-law is good to them it helps us too. mine. She was over-Blood tics can never be broken. Everyone 1s affected bearing. .inlr)lsive and extremely critical. We ceucd by family rifts. Life is too short to waste yean bearing old commU;DJcatmg after . a major row. It ended with grudges. accu&ahons, narne~hng and a door slammed so bard a Please tell daughters.-in-law everywhere not to be picture fell off the wall. smug ~ut "wars won." Such victories arc holJow at best. ~ow, four years and one baby later, my husband and I've learned a lot dunng l4 years of marriaJe. I hope I decided to take a chance and stop by to sec hls parents. to be a mother-in-Law someday and my expeneoc:e will Family s .earch ends in death Aband oned teen ·wa s just startin g to grow, find love' By DOROTHY GAST ' I I 1 f ,.,_ .,._, ROANOKE, Va. (AP)-Rejected by three sets of parents. Tammy Marie Agee, 14, was a loving but difficult child who longed for a family she would never find. Last month, just as she was showing signs of finding herself. she was murdered. "Tammy was a very family-orien- ted child aod wanted a family," satd Margo JUely, director of the mental health residential program in Roaoolle, where Tammmy lived for 13 x.ears. • She was a very motberlr. child and made friends with other chJldren very casjJy. As much as we loved and cared for her, there isn't a substitute for a real family." This week police found J,he badly decomposed body of the mentally retarded, emotionally disturbed gjrl. She was gagged and tied to a tree along the Jameuu ver in Richmond. PoUc:e. believe she was sexually abused before she was lcillcd. On Aug. 12, Tammy had disap- peared from her latest residence -a ~ Richmond home operated by a corporation called Environments for Hl)man Services. The qcncy, which is "being invcstipted because of the girl's death, tries to create a home~like atmosphere for children with a his- tory offamily problems. Tammy qualified. When she was 3. her parents were accused of neglect and she was turned over to the Department of Social Services, said Corinne Gott, agency super- intendent. The parents relinquished custody permanently about a year later. Social Services workers placed Tammy Wlth families as a tnal for adoption when she was 4 and again when she was 6. Neither family kept her for past six months, Gott said. "Her problems were ~ter ~n mdivtduals could handle. she said. The child spent the next sax years at the Children's Center. a Roanoke home that houses up to nine children. Tammy attended a special education program in the public schools for three years ·attained the academic level of a fint· to third~der. sh~died l)'TTlnastics and part1c1pated in a church group that visited the home. 1Cie1y saiOTammy was a loving, motherly child who made friends easily, loved coolciDJ and adored animals. At the same nme. the S-foot. brown-haired girl with soft brown eyes and a wide face needed a $feat deal of attention and emotional support. When Tammy turned 13, she was sent to a diagnostic center at Wakefield for a 60-day evaluation. In January she was placed in her Richmond borne, one of 20 owned and operated in Virginia by Envil()n· mcnts for Human Scrvic:es. She shared the home with a 16- year--old girl and a I 9-ycar-0ld boy who were supervised by two house parents and a relief worker. On Aug. I 2. Tammy asked ptr- mission to go swimming in thcJamcs River but was refused. Instead she wu told she could swim at a nearby pool for half an hour. Dem Anderson, director of clinical services for Environments for Human Services, said the 19-ycar-old resident accompanied Tammy. He was not mentally retarded and ~ independent enou&h to have a JOb, Anderson said. When the bo)' came back about an hour later. Miss ~ was f One, Anderson said. He wd there 1s no reason to believe the youth would have bun the Jil't. Police have q»e1tioned the youth but have not said he is a suspect Anderson-said Tammy had spent a month at C.Cntral State Hospital just before her dJaappearance and teemed to be doin& well. Her emotional and mental abt'litict Qlied depend.Ina O!l whether she bad\ taken her med1- cation. be said. "She wu staruna tn her own pcc\lliar way to become a youna woman" he said. ••She wa1comina to pipt wlth who lhe wu. She wanted people to love her and tak~ care ofber. SfieW11 fllninl to pow. ' Get Advantage Checking"" from Great American. $300 minimum balan~. No service charges. No loddmg. lllat's it. Ju.\t keep a'™ $l00 minimum 001anc:e in your Advantage Ched.ang accoont aro there are no !oiervice c~ You won't be charged tor a lot of other tune ~I money !>3ving serv~. either. More free services with Advantage Checking. Yoo'U have aca:M to Money L1rc.• ixirt ol Gre& Amencan:, telephone banking system . You can autl)- matically transfer mone}' from your checking account to ~ Great American accounts Aro vice versa You can al4'0 use Money Lmc to check your OOJaocc anytime you want to. You can pre-authori1.e any Great Annlca1l ll~ or credit cani payment to be made automatically fn>fll your accoont. No ched. to write. No ~ In I'\•) FSIJC --·--"-.............. - cqwp me to do a better JOb. -HAPPIER NOW IN ARlZONA. · DE.AR HAPPIER: Wllaat a C9Stncdve let&er! A real dAy-bdlla....,. a...1.,..,.,.....,p11711 coata,Soes. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Next year m y husband and I will celebrate our 40t.b aontvcrsary To outside observers I have everytbtnaa woman could want-fu~. Jewels, trips to Eu.Tope, two houses, ~veral ca~ and some beautiful works of art. Thu past year I learned that my husband bas been involved in several crooked deals. Large sums of monc·y have been involved. At a ume 10 our lives when peace of mind should be ours. I am angry, depressed and frightened. My husband became phys1caUy VlOlcnt when I confronted him with what I knew. When I told him, "We must straighten things out," he threatened my life. I need help but I'm afraid Lo confide an an outsider , Also he would be angry wi lb me for see kin& countcl. I am -a prisoner in a s1tu.auon I didn't create. Pfeue, Ano, tell me what to do. -LOST fN PARADISE. DEAR LOST: A .. 1welJ py"" doeu't 1-e• lmv•lvM a. cnH>kH bui.Dea1 dw1 ud bock ~. wUe ar ..... Yoa are la desperate Deed of eoeueUq Ulll I _..... yoe co set It. 0.'& udereslimak you at.Wey .. .U. lt al.e.1 llaave u Idea you life woald be euJer wtd!Mt Wt mu ud I llope )'H uve "e coara1e to _. tM '"8k. • • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS Twenty-five dollan 11 nding on your answer I bet my fncnd that Elinbcth Taylor has the largest diamond an the world. h wu ha enpgement ring h-om Rlcbard Burton Am l n&ht? - A THENS, GA. GAMBLER. DE.AR GAMBLER: VH Jose. TM Hope d.la.m ... lt u.e world'• lar1esL U 11 oe ea.&blt •• "e SmJdlt-1 .. la1titwti• bl Wa•lltDl'H, D.C., welpa u .• ca.rah. ·-ens1ve. 24-Hour banking. Your Alh anw~t: Cl~d..m~ PtL\\11mr ptll' 11\l'r nne hundro.I 24-Hnur fdkr' JI ~our tmgl'nlP' 'v\ 1t11 Jr.tw mone~ [XJ1'l'-ll m..-1111.~' [x111.1ll f1't111-.: .un day StiU nn 1.h.irgc Your Pa .... ~anl .d"1 plu~' ~ou intt1 thl· ~ l •\R ~ SYSTEM f'll."t\\or~ l -.c: 11 ltl ~ct up tn S~(l) .1 J.t\ many ol "'er 1.<XU .\ f ~ 1' Jr-.pla' '"!! ~ \ T•\R SYSTEM ') mhi ii ome checking account option.,. Pcrhap-. )llll 1.1. .tlll ..i 1.. t'C1.. ~ang .11.1..1lllm lh.11 fXt'' tnlcl'e\I On:a1 Ament.-an h.1,, d'K )'.(' ''" 1 Interest Checking f'i)' 511• •, 1nll'l\''t 11n \1111r h.d.lfll'C Aoo then-.ire I'll' -en K"C "·h.tr~~ "'hl·n '' "' m.untaan J \l,l"ll 1 minimum hal.inl.1.· Insured Monevmarket Checking fXJ"' h1~h rtll'lflC'rmJtl>..ct mtcre-t "''th ,)fl), .t IJX txil.m.'t' 'tiiu'll.cam t"\cn h1~r mten....i "''th a ~.lfll\.' 1lt ~.CO.) or m.we It \l'lt.lf Nm"C tall' hcl<'M I JU l you'll "'II cam~•,. '1 mten..."'-l •W 'rl'IU'll ha'l' 11nhm1tctl d-.ed. "'nt mg P"' lie~' Open 'our .t(1..·1111rH ~' ph11rk (. aJI roll-fret'. l -X00-4: \ H \' t.. • 1 11\.1n l.'.WI 1.u'k:.' Sp.~ 1.111,1 \' I 'I'' •w " 'I I "" 111<. phr1nc.thcnx·nJ \1 ,11.tl1<. 11<."t''-rt n'l'' mail All lh.11 , ll 11 1, .i qui,~ • ' i. 11-.: 11111.\' nc.ir ~1'lJ ''h 1w ",. 11.1111 1 II t' "-•· ~ -. .,, t •rt·.11 .\n'a.'~"an' 1\1\\.',1r'·''""'" ·'" .111 1.11'\.1~1.. nlent.11\ 1.·r \ ''11111 '" 111 ·''""'" 11i.~ I " 11 lll'lll trll ..:_ ,, I \.1111' \\h"l l "''"Ill' ~ ' '"""" II ( 11\'.ll \tnt. f lt .I! "l' le. \1.'I 11 ll'l ' l ti !<.' ... ll-Jtlff"-'' I 111 111\.lllt1.11 _..,, '"'' l.ir 'r .... 11\.11 •-1:r I\.\' ''"'·'"'·'''"·''t·•h1 1111 1111 ... ~-' -. ... ' "' i "'"". ' I I '~ • ., .. - ; l I ( . C... DAtlY.PlLOT/Monday, 8-p•utbw t , 1815 California GOP candidates 'shy' Coup attempt in Thailand crushed; 2 newsmen killed Many seek Cranston Senate seat. but f cw coveting state offices By DOUG WILLIS ............. SAN DIEGO -Alan Cranston ®\lk1 fill a arnall'boQt with names qf Republicans wbo plan to try for hls seat in the U.S. Senate next year, but few Republicans are even talking about cbaUenaina the six incumbent Democrats up for re-election throu&hout th~ state. Noihina happened to cbanae that lack of Republican candidates for lower-profile state offices during the California Republican Pany weekend convention in San Dieao. A non-stop series of speeches, rec:eptions, parties. news conferences and other appeals for endorsements and contributions by 10 of the 11 Re publican contenders for Cranston's job dominated the three- day convention of more than 1,000 California GOP leaders. Even Cranston, wbo is seeking the Democratic nomi~tion~t June for a fourth term, aot into the act, staging nis own news conference a block from the GOP convention to challenge all of his potential Re- publican challenaers to defend or renounce President Reagan's record- breaking deficits and other economic policies. But while the competJtion for Cranston's seat continued with the bigest field of prominent Re- publican contenders in several dec- ades, there was almost no mention of our ot tht other seven races tbr statewide office in California next year. Aside from Oov. Oeo1Je Deu- kmejian, wbo is uno~ for the Republican nomination for a aeoond term, all of those other offices arc held by Democrats. . So far, there are only two GOP coot.enders for lieutenant aovemor, one for controller, and none for attorney pncral treuUMr, secretary of. state and the nominally non- pa.nisan post of superintendent of public instruction. Normally, by the time the primary is nine months away, there arc at least a few potential candidates with exploratory committees testina the waten for those posts. and tbc fall state pany convention -the last official party meetina before the March 7· filina deadline for the June primary:-is traditionally a abowcasc. State GOP Cbairtnan Mike An· tonovicb, himself one of the 11 prospective Senate candidates, de- nied any concern about the lack of prominent -or even relatively obscure -Republican candidates to cballenae the Democrats who control most statewide offices. --fhat--when u.ked-to name some of those pros~ts. Antonovich said there were ' a number of people who have indicated interest," but be could come up with only one name for four races. Another hiah·rankina Republican who. declined to ~ quoted by name: put ll more sucetnctly: "There isn't any. rush to be a sacrificial lamb" apmst such welJ.·entrenched Demo- crats as l'reaswer Jesse Unruh 01 Secretary of State Matdi Fo111 Eu. Not alcoholics Neil Daria BANGKOK, Thailand CAP) - Oovemment forces CNabed a coup attempt today by 400 to SOO soldiers led by former top military officers who attacked key army installations with tanks, officials said. Authorities said at least four · J>C9ple.1.includina two members of an NBC News crew, Banakok bureau chief Neil Davis, an Australian, and American sound.man Bill Latch, were killed in in a battle at an anny Fi~hting con tin ties in battered Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Shiite Moslems battled ~ieaed defenders of a Palestinian refuaCc camp with tanks aod rocket-propelled &renades, killina one civilian and woundina four others, police said today\> In other develoements today: -Finance Minister Camille Cha- moun denied a n~wspaper repon that he hadl'esignecthis-post.-'--- -Prime M inister Rashid Karami said a Syrian-backed peace commit- tee agreed to imelcmcnt a security plan Aimed at ending militia rule and lawlessness in mostly Moslem west Beirut. -Eli Hobeika, leader of Lebanon's largest Christian militia, the Lebanese Forces, arrived in Damas- cus for talks as part of the Syrian aovemment's effort to solicit sugae~ tions for reconciling Lebanon's war- 37 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH ( 714) 644-2030 rlna Cllri1tians and Moslcms. Karma.i, who· heads the so-called Coordination Committee, said it bad qreed to implement a plan that caUs for the withdrawal of aunmen from west Beirut's stteets and the closure of militia offices there. The security plan wu reached in l.lulY and the cqmmittce was formed then to oversee its implementltiou:- Jts members include representatives of the Shiite Moslem Amal militia and the Druse militia, who are locked in a1>0wer struaale in west Beirut, and Syrian military observers. So far, it has failed to enforu any of the truce meuurcs. But Kararnj said joint Shiite-Oruse units now were patroUina west Beirut, a development he called 0 reassur- i~" RUL YIEllllESE DlllllER Featuring the lighter cuisine of AUSTRIA . Plus chamber music. This Wednesday September 4. ReNrVatlons a Must. comPQUOd that followed proclarn•· tioo of the coup. Stan.in& at the aovemment'a sur- render deadline of 3 p.m. (I a.m. Pon. rebel soldiers mannina tank.a in the Supreme Command compund, which served as the rebel base, began to throw down their arms. Govern- ment officen said all rebel soldiers qreed to surrender and rebel leaders were under house arrest. Radio Thailand said Prime Minjs- ter Prem Tinsulanonda hurried back from a trip to Indonesia and bad an audience with Thai Kina Bhumipol AduJyadej. The Irina is the sinaJe greatest ~DJ symbol in Thailand and bas fl&W'Cd prominently in the success or failure of preV1ous at- tempts to cbanae power. Oen. Tienchai Sirigumphun, act- ina head of the armed forces, tol~ reportcn the coup attempt was eoai- neercd by former Prime Minister Krianpa.k Chomanand, once a top military man; former armed forces commander Gen. Serm NanaJcom and former army deputy commander Oen. Y od Thephadastn. He said the three bad "deceived" or forced junior officers to join the plot. Tienchai said S9 people, 29 of them soldiers, were wounded in a tank-led rebel attack on a loyalist stronghold. Also reported le.Hied were a soldier and a civilian Thai woman. . BanaJcolc's international airport re- mained open, but government offices and schools were closed today. The capital's streets were normal. Actina Prime Minister Prachuab SuntraQ&koon declared a state of emeraency to suppress the coup attempt. At 6 a.m. ( 4 p.m. PDT Sunday), rebel soldiers seized Radio Thailand, and aovernment television Channel 9. They announced they had seized power and dissolved the Parliament and Cabin et. Soldiers maruung 1'4 tank• It the Supreme Military Command began to throw down their weapons at 3 p.m. Four other tanks controlled by the rebels apparently surrendered earlier. Reagan financier..s leaders of the PAC WASHING TON (AP) -Presi- dent Reqan was the big beneficiary in last year's campaian spendinj by political action committees and md1- viduals1 who reported sbcllina out nearly )23 million total, mostly for conservative candidates. Conservative PACs spent a total of $1 S.8 million promotina Reqan's re- election. while liberals spent only $803,923 on their own trying to elect Democrat Walter Mondale. There was $343,835 worth of negative expenditures aaainst Reagan and $44.S,240 apinst Mondale, according to a report on independent expen- ditures released Sunday by the Feder- al Election Commission. • Independent campaign expen- ditures are those that are not or- ganized bl or coordinated with the candidate s own campaign organiza- tion. pendent expenditures, spent $9.8 million for President Reagan. NCPAC also spent $289,995 apins1 Mondale and S 116,000 against 14 other Democrats and Sen. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. of Connecticut, a liberal Republican. The FEC report showed that the biges1 individual spender in the 1984 election was Michael Ooland, a wealthy Southern California de- veloper whose single-banded advertising campaign helped oust former Sen. Charles Percy, R-111. He spent $419;.S 73, the report said. James L . Moore, a real estate investor from DrippinJ Springs. Texas, was the second b1gest indi- vidual spender, putting out $79,934 for the unsuccessful U.S. Senate race of former Democratic State Sen. Lloyd Doggett against Phil Gramm, • Hlllth Ntws ... Whlplaahl Threat To ThelnnecentRepeated BY DR. JAMES McEACHERN The National Conservative Politi- cal Action Commjttee, which won a Supreme Court victory over the FEC , last March allowing unlimited inde- th.e Democrat-turncd-Republit_a wmner . Houston businessman Cecil Ha n was third on the list, spendin $40,386 in favor of Reagan. themselves todea Some do it with cap· ·ule .. and pill-. d .~ e atlve . ..- tranquilizers. hypnoti c ~ nar- coti<· .... ampheta- m i nP:--and _, ""' anti-d epre ... ants. .\II of them ca n be abu. ed to the point of addidion. And, when taken alone or "'ith a cha~''r. <·an he ·lethal as well. But therr·s a way out f( .. n tllf"d Ca rel' nit CareCnit surce ·~·Jullv lrPab 111on· people for alcohol and clru~ · prohlt•rn .. than any other private progran1 availablt•. \nd if available at a loca l eom- munil~ ho-.pit.al near you. But lwl( m· treatment ca n begin. you have to <·an· •·11uu 11h to call. And to do that vou r . h<n r lo rt •founize that vou or someont-vo u r"' " • lo\f· rw~d .. Jwl p. , , If ~011 don't. yo u <'an be ur of one thin ~. r Jw prohlf•m \\-ill onl y get worse. ·1;, talk pt·r-.,onally with a Ca reUnit <'ou n ~f·lor. f'<l 11 u~ rod av at the number li~ted lwln\\ ur "all u~ toll -f ~Pf' at 800-854-0318. ' CARE UNI? obody care the way we do: ( 71 ) 650-1090 llE. 'A MEDI CENTER HO PITAL 301 \ ICTORIA STREET •• I have warned for 1c:>me time now of the aevere CONeqUences of the whip- luh injury. Becawie of this coocem I would like to report on a newspaper column by Dr. P. J . Steincrohn, M .D. DR. McEACHER N We need more, many more articles auch as the one by Dr. Steincrohn, under the column "A Doctor's Views," on this serious whiplaah problem. I would like to repeat here u much of the article as space will permit: ed physically and mentally, you are at the mercy of the sudden, aickeniJl8 jolt from behind which laahel your he.ct backward (or beclcward and forward) on the top of your spine. "The result i. an a«eleratlon in- jury. AJthough It a true that IOme complications are a oonvenient and imaginary damage which eerves u a baa1a for litJgatJon, you· can be aure that in moat inatanoes the Innocent sufferer hu suatained painful after- effecta which may lut for months o even yea.rs. (Even though litigation is over and X-raya and other examin- atJona may not uncover evidence of dam.age). "In rabbits, lnvestJgators found that there was alto damage to the middle ear which may be one of the reuons why, ln humans, there are complainta of dlzzineta, headaches and lOIS of equilibrium. Other symptoms are blurring of vision, nauaea, and of ooune neck pain, muscular spasm and limitation of neck motion ... " If you're involved in a rear-ender .. . no matter how slight. I urge you to call your doctor for a oomplete exam. The "whiplash" ia one accident that - ' Join Now and Get One Month's Dues Freel ING HOUSE •l ... $c>O•ll"V Houst ••••ylh•"V '°" netd to keep ,Out b04ly 1t1 1"d tl .. ut1ful •lnd1w1du•I [11•c1tt Pr09rema •S11i.1n• Ste•tn Jecuu •lu•U'•Out l oc1a11 '•c ,,.,, •81Ut11U ll Ft1lurt"V •2$ liltltl S11 l ant l 10 •N1ultlua Pool & Sun Ot c• •G••"' Scru n I V •Soc,11 Acl 1t1l1t • •Aet f1ur1n1 •Ch•td c1,, •lnquut AbOvt Ou• Cotpata l• Mt ""b•t\h•P• • l •lt Cyclet •2 S1nd VOllt Vbell Tti1 SPOfl"'ll Mouv • 11 Aecq,.t tbell Cout1a Co..rlt Wti••• 8uu1otu •Volleyb11t tnooo•t •Aero1>1u Bod•H llt9on 3601 Jamboree, Newport Buch (714) 752·0565 "WhiplUh! It de.erves an excla- matJon point. Of all injuries it ia near the head of the U.t in ita lightning-like strike at th.e lnnocent. need.a aomeone'a attention other than t--;;_.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;~ your own. I When you are drivmg your car you are at least 1emi-tense and mentally alert. But when you sit quietly waiting for a light to change, oompletely relax- Dr. McEachem maln1ain1 • Chlroprac- lic office •I l 755 Oran1e A•e., Suhe .. E," Cotiu. Meta1 ( 714) 631-0085. Reprinted From Friday, August 9 Dally Piiot New device boosts autos' gas 1nileage WASHINGTON -With the oil glut worM thin ever and OPEC wringing Its hands, the govern- ment hu 1w1rded 1 Botton firm S22.000 for developing e device that lncrHHI gas mlleage by 22 peroent. , Called the Pl1tlnum GaSaver. the 1utomot1ve accessory by National FuetSever Corp. can be ln1telled In about 10 mlnutea. It Injects mlcrotcoplc quantltlee of pl1tlnum Into the alr1tream enter· Ing the engine. That plellnum lncreaMS the amount of guollne that burn1 up In the engine from the normal 68 perc.nt to 90 perc.nt. The eictra 22 percent being burned would normally not do 10 untll lt came Into contact with the platinum-coated surfaces of the c1t1lytlc converter. By Introducing the pletlnum Into the' engine. the fuel c1n be burned where the relHM of the' heat and ene<gy is harnessed to drive the vehlcle. The proone work• on both le1ded end unlMded gaeollM, and meet• EPA end C1llfornl1 standards. It aleo m.an1 that 22 percent fewer gallons are required to run the car. Federal Judge Walter Jay Sktnner concluded a flV-..ye1r 1tudy of the GaSaver by noting tl'•t tt\e benefit• can t>. even greater than claimed: "lndepen· dent teatlng 1howt grMt., fuel Hvlng1 with the GaS.ver thin th• 22 percent claimed by It• developer, National FuelSaver Corp." In 1nother 1tudy concluded rec.ntly. the government con- ·nrmed that the Platinum GaSaver rallM the octane of gaeollne, eliminating the need for premium galOllne. Joel Robfnaon, the developer, commented. "We've alr .. dy 1otd over 30.000 G1S1vera ... For further Information call: (800) 537-4277 A free Smokenders meetJng shows you how tO' qult for good, without gaining weight or cHmbiog the walls. ~. )'OU will stop smoking 1ust fouM\ttks from noo. calml~. cnmfortabl) and for good. It doesn't matter how long you ha~-e Ix-en smoking, how often }~U light up. or how many times )'OU ha\'t trk>d to quit this lime, you can quJ1 moklng for llf e• Tht Srnokenden Proatam ha.' already helped more than 500.000 prople stop smoking and ii will work for you. lOO 'D cllJco\.w why It works at one of the special f l"f'f' meet In~ . i.a:>u ~n't be under any pressure to join ... w t\'en If you'"' not sun-)Uli'l't' ready to quit yet. rome to the FRF.F. Introductory m(.~tlng Tht only reuon you tto on tmoklng I that )">u simply don't know how lO ~top Smokenders "111 shuw you how What's more. you·rr fn..it to mokc durln~ the meeting. All of us at Smokendel'l! '4tre mokcr.1. and you'll ht· treated "1th dignity and re pect FREE INTRODUCTORY MF.ETING~ ~ Healthcare ~ Medical Center of Tutln 14662 Newport Avenue C°"'"'Hlcy Edttcatk>tl Roofft Ion tlM Wut Itek of flOllpft•l l T....,. S.,cemtwr 10 a W..Cldll)'. Scptuntwr I I -7 l)O p. m. -or f;rJ I Fountain Valley Rqlonat Ho.pltal •nd Mtdlcel Center --17100 Euclid AvenH at Warner (Directions to M~tlna Room •mhible at fr'Otlt clak la main lobbyt \Ved11ad.y, Sepe.mber 11-7 alO P. M. fN• I••• x,_.1 Ttt1 ,,,.llHle t-61Jt.71JO 1M al ......... -..tt..t ...... .._ ...... <AlllllllAllJMl>---- f I ~--~~---~----------------- At SCR,. the play . is 'Still the thing' after 20.seasons. By VIDA DEAN Dllllr,....,......, "The play's the thing," Shakespeare once wrote, and it was the thing • Saturday night that ignited the spirits of South Coast Repertory supporters, celebrating the soon to open 21st f'SCason. It was a touch of theater magic that always seems to ai ve SCR events their special appeal. "Putting on a gala isjtind oflike putting on a play," said emcee Paal Radd as be introduced the 30-minute original show of song and dance depicting the challenges of a pro- duction. The excellent (and li vely ... what a tap danc~· . finale it was!) performance, highf ted the oala appropriately titl~~Onstage. r. The musical production for "On- stage" at the Irvine Hilton, was written by SCR literary manager Jerry Patcb with songs by Dlue Kln1 and choreo- graphy by Cbet Walker. "Good p1-ys last. . .," added Rudd later in the show performed before a 30-foot, brilliantly lit sculpture of the "Onstage" logo created by SCR resi- dent designer Cliff Faalber. The SCR galas last, and the white tie prefemcd events have been called Orange County's fall social season · openers ever since the first one was held in a tent eight years ago. The Saturday evening gala was under the direction of chairman Arden Flam1on, who confided during the cocktail hour, "We are goi ng to make a lot of money." _ ~ofruo.ney..umeto nearly · --sl20,000:1>ro<llrction costs had been underwritten by private and corporate gifts, assuring that nearly all the proceeds would be applied to the non- profit theater's operating cost. "I dido 't do this by myself," said Ramson, (in sparkly lacy attire) who has been involved in two previous galaSr "I had a very supportive com- mittee working with me.·• Assisting her with the "production" were Marilyn Nlel1en, Mar1aret Karcber, Renee S1entrom, Dot Clock (chairman ofa former gala), Lola Dailey, J•dy ThresbJe, Gail Ocb1, DeAnn Baldwln, Dolores Vlrtae, I Cbrlotte F•1co, Jackie Rod1en, Bon- nie Kremer, Ju~R 1, Patty Clark, Doua O'Bryu, B ra Roberts, Darlene Gerba, e McDermott, Louse E~ irman of the first &ala), Ju , Cadaerlne 'nyen, lsarble Hoyt and Barbara Bowle, last year's gala chairman, as trustee rep. rcsentative. The SSOarrivingfortheevening were gi ven the"redcarpet" treatment with six Fanfare d'Elcgance liveried trumpctccn heralding their appear- ance at the special entrance of the hotel. Once the partygocrs got past the photographers, they were able to make their way to the reception area where they were treated to music by the Jack Reidling Trio, a seafood buffet and waite1*Gifculating hon d'ouevrcs trar,s. ' We tried to ai ve the feeling ofbeing backstage in the reception area,'' said Faulkner, pointing out large photos of events going on backstage at SCR in preparation for the Tuesday opening of"Galileo." "Inside the ballroom, we hope the guests will have the feeling ofbeing on stage," said Faullcn'erofthe area he decorated in collaboration with Tom Ralika, lighting and sound designer. Some of the dialogue heard: "We've been to all of the galas," said Jim and Sbaron Henwood, with heradding "I was on the committee for the very first one." "Ob, yes, I've been to other galas," said Donald Bren, pausing briefly in a cocktail hour chat. (He was escorting Jellllifer McKay and has his own big Bommer Canyon bash coming up Saturday). Tom Riley.Just back from North Carolina, was beaming over a success- ful mission. The 1986 convention of the Congressional Medal of Honor winners will be held next November in Orange County. Carol and Jobn Miltner who attend- ed their first gala shortly after he arrived at UCl three years ago were there. He was beaming, too, revealing that a record fund raising for UCI this year will top $18 million. .. I o.117,... ...... .,, ... ._.,.,.. Photoe, clockwtae from left: Ted and Jean Roblneon with lla.rdy and Art S•endaen; Richard and Arden Fla.mM>n and lleU... and Jeff Stack; Cliff P'aalk.ner chata with Joeepll and Barbara Giampaolo: Bonn.le and Bnace Lambert with Fanfare D 'ele&ance lD back- IJ'OQnd; Charlotte Fu.co ana Jerry Patdl; ll.lchard Moriarty with KrlatlDa o.a.tafeon: Stewart Woodard and Llnd.My 8chepla. We're adding some branches to .our family tree. 100 years of service. 135 branches to serve you. fF5fiCl ~ -~~ Deposit this coupon at the branch shown abO\r dunnR our Open House HUNTINGTON HARBOUR J r.•11 J Al~11nqu111 ..,, rt't·' Huntmi.;t(ln 1-{t'.tl t •.:1 I'• 71 I '\-lt" I\ i ·, \\ 1 t'r \\ ... . . AMERICAN SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION --------------~------------~-------~-~ .. ., I - College degree raises lifetime e~ming power IJ DA YID A. BROWNELL The Coast Commumty College Distnct includes Otange Coast College, Golden West College, Coastline Community College, and Channel 50, KOCE-TV. The district's nearly 120,000 student registrations per year are accommodated by some 3,000 employees. The 1985-86 general fund budget approacfies $95 million. Make no mistake about it, public education is big business. We can all appreciate the intrinsic values higher education provides. However, consider for a moment the economic advantaies. A recent Bureau of Labor Statistics Repon on lifetime earnings may be sum- marized as follows: The average lifetime earnings of an elementary school graduate is $911,000; the average lifetime earnings. of a high school graduate, $1 ,303,000; the average lifetime earnings of someone with one to three years of college is estimated at $1 ,645,000; the ave~e lifetime earnings of a four-year degree holder is estimated at S 1,898,000. For today's high school graduate, this equates to a return of approximately 25 to 1 for the "investment" in four years of higher education. About one of every 12 adult Californians is enrolled in a community college. For those who graduated from high school within the past two years, approximately 46 percent will go on to seek, at least, a four-year college education. The economic impacts on our society are mind boggling. Currentl y, the community colJeges of California are experiencing a major re-evaluation and transition. Statewide commissions are examining the elements of finance, governance, mission, matriculation, transfer. vocational education, and remediation. A distinguished forum of business and professional leaders, The California Roundtable, including such luminaries as Walter Gerken and Tom Nielsen, recently completed a comprehensive study of California's community colleges through the auspices of Berman Weiler Associates. The findings and conclusions will provide much valuable and practical support to the Master Plan Review Commission. The colleges will emerge from this cyclical period of introspection stronger than ever. While college is not for everyone, the opportunity is vinuaJJy universal. The community colleges of Cali- fornia beJong to the people. These institutions provide open access at a minimal cost They will continue to serve us well. David A. Brownell Is Cbaacellor of C011st CommuaJ- ty CoHegea. .. Lighthearted treatnJent o£alcohol inappropriate To the Editor. Mr. (Bud) Tucker's column, de- teribins hquor rcstnctaoos as ·quite laU&hable" and the general tone of the artklt is, 10 my opinion, a very naive, artless and/or s1mplist1c attitude to SJ9H along to his many readers. No -r do not thank Mr. Tucker IS any ofJ,ht'l!bove. Where and how, Mr. Tuckir. do these booze-loaded people drive (?) home?'? I do feel Mr. Tucker 1s not aware of the senousness nor th e cost ofalcohol consumption to nondnnkers as well as the drinker; of our society. Sixty b;JJ1on dollars per year is wasted through health and medical costs. motor vehicle accidents, viol- ent crimes. social responses and fire losses (a 3·year-old ~tatastic). I do not belie' c a light-hean.ed article such as this does anyttuni but "flaunt" this problem -which as an addiction to more than 13 million adults and/or 1h million youngters under the age of 21 . Mr. Tucker, I feel the public should never(and that's a long time) be given a "light-hearted" story on a subject as deacfly as this. Franklin D. Roosevelt repealed prohibition in the '30s because of the costs to go vernment for enforcement J JUSt wonder wtlat the lives are worth . lost because of booze. Eight thousand teen-agers arc killed annually in youth alcohol accidents and 40.000 arc disfigured in some way. This does not include adults killed. Thanks (or hstcning! ~/QSEPH R GROTHUS J Balboa ~~~.~~~~~~e!.~~. ::~~::.:., "hairless cat"? as predicted by Nostradamus He also A. Is indeed From a mutant. It cau predicted the human race wall survive lake a horse. coos like a pigeon, and until 7000. mag.ht.add. wags its taal llke a dog. Furthermore. its temperature as a couple of dCjfctS bil}ler than tbat of other fehnes Some cat r '· Q. Says here ·;be1sboru" as the most popular spott in Japan How's 11 played? • I . A. lake baseball In fim. 11 1~ beseball Ground rhino horn 1s .. an illegal subsULnce" an man)' countnes world· wtde. and on the "-Stan markets. 1t has oi street value about equal to 1hat of cocaine in the tJ n1ted St.ates How old you will )'Ou he 1n 199'1" ORANGE COAST llilJPillt I "H 1lanous laughter" 1s outlawed an Helena, Mont. Understandable maybe, 1f it's a public nuisance. But v.h) as 1t 11le.pl just to frown in Pocatello. Ida.. · Q How long can a rat tread water'> •\ That's entirely a matter of morale W1th hope. three days Without hope. an hour maybe. Possum!> kc-cpon growangas long as they live Roses go back further than people. L.M. Boy' 11 • •18'k•IH rolomol1t. ,,.,,.. Dnl (OttOf T.,,. , ... ~(-.. O...P...., c..,r... ~.:,.· , ''How much can they know about pipes Jfthey don 't even know where their ad ts Jn the phone book?'' . BHILHARViY "SO THEN WE NOTICED THAT NOBODY EVER DEMANDS POLITICAL REFORMS FROM RUSSIA .... " Who ya' gonna call when the pipes start to gurgle? Takes persistance to find the right man for fix-it job Ann and I had quite an expencnce with American free enterprise the other night. We had spent the day cleaning cars and doing other chores that needed doing and, because it had been a panicularly hot, muggy (I lcft the East Coast to get away from weather like that) day. I decided a nice, cool shower was in order. Besides. I do my best thinking in there. An}W3}. I turned on the water and soaked for a while. I had almost finalized a plan whereby world peace and prospenty would be vinually guaranteed, when something dis- tracted me. My shower said, .. Gurgle." You know how when you're lost, deep in thought, and something catches your attention. how your ears sort of perk up and you mentally (most times. anyway) say, "Huh?" Well, I did that and m¥ shower said "Gurgle" again. To my knowledge. my shower has never said "gurgle" before. I looked down, and discovered I was ankle deep in water. Oh. mercy. I hate plumbing prob- lems. After allowing myself a maxi- mum of three whimpers, I set out in search of our plumber's helper. The last time I recalled seeing 1t, someone was using at ai. the peg leg part of a pirate's costume. My knowledge of plumbing begins and ends with the use of a plunger, so I ran to the store and got another one. After several minutes ofslostUng and slurping with great abandon, I gave up and asked Ann to call one of those companies that come and shoves this magic ware thing through your pipes. B1LL Huvn Actualjy, not JUSt ariy company, but the one that advenascs on TV . the sort of GM of pipe cleaners. The man said that it'd cost $59, but that it would have cost $48, except that it was after darlc. Fine. He arrived, and walked aJI around the house with his nashlight, look1ng fora clean-out. He began to panic. There was no clean-out! "You know what that means? I have to go up on the roof and put my magic Wire down one of those pipes, and ... and ... " He wept. After a suitable period of mourn- ing. he told me that he had to get another man out, in case his magic wire got cau~t. and that'd cost S 7 S. I told him wed think about it. Back to the phone book. Maybe the Ford of pipe cleaners ... The next company wouJdn·t make a quote over the phone. They'd send a man to give us a "free. no obligation estimate." Fine. Then, he asked more questions about me than the person- nel mana~er asked the last tame I went for a job interview. The final question was, "Can you give me the page number of our ad 1n the phone book?" That almost did it for me. How much ca n they know about pipes 1f they don't even know where their ad 1s an the phone book? I was. by now, thoroughly shaken, but somewhat hardened to the situ- ation. Why leave things to chance? Break out the phone book again. The third (Amencan Motors?) pipe cleaner threw yet another curve. The first had based his esumate upon the number of feet of pipe to be cleaned. The second had refused to give an estimate. This one said, rather pleasantly, "$39 for the first haJfhour and S 15 for each quaner hour after that." $69 per hour. How long would it take? "Gee, .f have no idea." The fourth said, Wlth a note of challenge in his voice, "It's gonna cost you $88 ao hour." 'Bye, now. click. What the heck, there were still more names in the phone book. Maybe the Studebaker of pipe cleaners ... My granny always told me that persistence pays off, and she was nght. The fifth -and final, it turned out -said ;'$44.50 for the first 100 feet, and 15-cents a foot af\erthat." He has to go up on the roof. "That's OK." He has to go from a 2-inch pipe into a 4-inch pipe. "That's OK." Are you sure? "Yep. Hcfs on his way." The man came, and went about has business. I asked him about the 2- inch-into-4-inch business that the first man said was a two-man JOb. "Sometimes the blade gets caught, but hardly ever." I told ham that if his bU!de got caught to call me, and I'd move heaven and ean.h to help him get it free. I've learned that when someone comes to your house to do a JOb, the very besi thing that you can do as to so away and leave him to has work. I dad that. The house reverberated with some very strange noises for a while, and pretty soon the shower was empty. The man packed up his gear. and we gave him a check. We also gave him our sincere and heartfelt thanks. I imagine I'll react exactl y the same way the next time our shower goes "gurgle." I'll go buy a plunger, and do the business with the lye, and cuss a lot. When I finally admit I'm beat, though, I know exactly who I'll call. His name, Mike Cantrell, has a big red circle around at in our phone book. CoJSJIUJJ1t BIU Huvey JJve• hi Huu.gto• Be•d. No matter what, boys will be boys, girls will be girls Boys still prefer guns. girls continue to ---play with dolls despite parents· efforts A recent aniclc by a left·handed wntcr summanzed very well the centuries-old unreasonable and un- feeling d1scnminatJon that society has imposed upon left-handed people. He told how growmg up an the New York public schools in the 1930s and 1940s meant repeated whacks from teachers who tned to force him to wnte wHh has nght hand. Thi~ wnter remanded us that ant1- lcft-handcd baas as enshnned even in the language of Western cwihzat1on The Latin fo r left hand, "sinister," translates into evil in English. The French for left hand. "gauche." means crude or awkward 10 English. When the mistaken belief that enlightened education should endeavor to correct left-handedness finally was relegated to the Junk heap of quack psychology, a remarkable fact occurred 1n l J.S. '>tat1st1cal an- nals. Betwctn I 932 and I 970. the recorded percentage of left-handed people rost from 2 percent to 10 percent of our population .• ancc. 1t 1& mcred1b1c that thr percentage actu- ally ancrea~d \0 dramatically, the stat1st1cs could reflect a new willana- ncss of ~uthp;iw' to admit the)' arc d1fTercnt , or the anon)'mou~ bureau· er.us' willlniflc s to admit that left- handcdne:io~ is JU'>t a~ normal as n&ht- handcdne s. or both Modern sc1ent1fk medical and ~ycholoa.ical opinion now teaches that 1t 1 wrong -physically and psychologically -for tcachen to try to force left-handers to be nl!\t· hMde.-, I wonder if. a few dcca<fel PHYLLIS ScHLAFLY hence. writers will comment as con- descendingly on the peculiar pedagogical passion of the 1970s and 1980s to force boys to abandon their boyishness and girls to abandon their girl ash ness. Those who have not kept up with trends in the classroom would be surprised to learn how pervasive is this passion. An oppressive de- termination to eradicate the natural gender trait' of youngsters extends from pn mary·grade rude rs to eareer- gu 1dance matenals used m high schools. L>csp1te aJI the attempts to blur if:ndcr 1dent1t y by. for example, 5howins pa<·tures of &Jrl1 p1ay1ns with '>nakes and boys usma hair spray, and even to pervert the En&J1 h lanauage by forcing schoolchifdrcn to use pronouns as he he or shehe. there is no evidence that human nature 1s chanJJna The attempt to change it confuse the youth and frustrate' the adults A case in point 1~ a recent halanous article an the W11h1n1ton Post caJlcd "Boys Just Want to Have Guns." The Post's stafTwnter admitted thal her 3- ycar-old son. and t~e sons of all her ~cifist-feminist-yupp1c friends. de- spate their parents' persistent efforts (bringing them up sex-neutral, with no toy guns. and no TV except "Sesame Street"), nevertheless are naturally. irrepressibly male: boyish, aggressive and fascinated by guns. In addition, she moaned, the daughters of "what used to be the Berkeley left." given trucks and airplanes, still go for dolls and dress up with jewelry. "The boys slu_g each other and the girls paint their fingernails. Where arc they getting this stuff?" she asks. In the late I 970s, the maJOr textbook publishers, such as Mac- millan and McGraw Hill, published "guidelines for the elimination of sexism," which listed the words, illustrations and concepts that hence- forth would be censored out of all textbooks. This impudent intolerance gal- loped unchecked through school ma- terials, so now the fem inists have presumed to rewrite children's stories an order to teach that women are strong and men arc bad. Once upon a time. children read a charmina allegory about "The LiuJe team EnJine that Could." It told how the httJc CJlllDt. with a Jot of effort and another engine's help, climbed a mountam. The currently used cdauon, pub- luhed by Scholastic lnc., identifies itself on the title Plft a "The Complete, Onganal Editaon retold br, Wally Piper." What does "retold • mean? It means that the ao<>d. kmd, hard-work in& engines in the story are 1dcnuficd al female. whale the bid, arropni, selfish en,jnes att ident- ified as male. P*.1111• ~•ny '' • q111111a_, col•m•l•I. JACK AIPEISOI Jnd OAll VAN A TT A columnt.t She·'s got feds on the ·c·arpet FOi Act lets her know when carpet firms overcharge WASHINGTON -It's not every day that you find a Washington matron hectoring the federal govern- ment about a $31.68 overcharge by a contractor. But Joan Estrada is our fa vorite free-lance waste-watcher. No irregularity in government procurement is too insignificant to escape her eagle eye -especially when it involves tbe laymg of carpet in government buildings. The installation of carpet 1s Estrada's business, which she oper- ates from the basement of a Victonan house in Che vy Chase, Md .. just across the District of Columbia line. Almost from the day the Freedom of Information Act went into effect. Estrada has used it to obtain the invoices and pay vouchers of her competitors in the carpet-installation field. Then she points out to federal agencies any overcharges or other errors she has found . ··1 used to get upset because I heard about things that were not being done," she told our reporter Kenneth Reid. "So I found out about the Freedom of Information Act -even before anyone staned to use 1t." To Freedom of Information of- ficers at the various agencies Estrada has targeted. she as a famahar cor· respondent, whose dot-matnx letters. 'tun off on her personal computer, aro of\en decorated with smiles, frowns, hearts and flowers. She 1s also becomin~ ancreasangJ) familiar to agency officials whom she informs of contraciing errors. as well as to congressional leaders and White House officials, 10 whom sht" for- wards topics of her correspondence. Herc art some of the Chevy Chase carpet-badger·s tnumphs: •A Baltimore firm has been asked by the Environmental Protection Agency to return $31.68 for a dupli- cate pa yment for soil retardant put on agency carpeting. "Your bnnging this matter to our attention 1s very much appreciated, .. EPA procurement chief Alfred Smith wrote Estrada. Tht" Baltimore company's president was not so appreciative, claiming 1t was EPA's fault. "She's just causing a lot of problems for the government to furnish all the in voices and every- thing." he complained. •A Washington. D.C .. compemor, actin~ on misleading specifications provided by the General Services Administration, charged $2.10 for laying each 18-inch c~rpet ule, when the proper charge was 48 cents a Ille "We do make errors," said Shirley Bruce, a contracting offi cer for GSA. "We already corrected it." •Last May, Estrada discovered that a company providing fire ext· inguishers under a GSA contract had billed the government S 1,800 for parts and labor not mentioned in the contract. "Errors like this have been occurring at every agency for 20 years," Estrada wrote to GSA. "If they happen on small dollar amounts, they are happening on large amounts." The GSA's Regional Procurement Director James H. Jackson con- gratulated Estrada "for alertin' thjs office. to ... the overpayment,' and promised that pncc schedules would be changed to avoid a repetition. Estrada's act1V1ty has earned her kudos fro!'l J. Peter Grace. who is spearheading the drive to reduce waste in government. But 11 has also, understandably, earned her some- thing less than a hcany wclcornefTom some of her tarjels. GSA's e.,_..ror example, claimed Estrada ' was "upset" because she lost a c.nrpet· laying contracl to the Washington firm she blew the whistle on for the overcharge. The company got the contract under 8 set-aside proaram for minority businesses. And a GSA spokesman said gettina the FOIA material together for Estrada "is a tremendous workload for us." But Estrada's answer to cntacs as disarm1naJy forthn&ht: "I Just can't see thin'5 wrona and not say somt thing about 11. Could your' Footnote: We invite other whastJe· bk>wtrs to help keep a watch on aovernment waste. Report any m1s- 1pend1n1 to u' at Post Office Box 2300, Washington, D.C. 20013. Jlld AIMIUNll alHI Dale Vu Alta lt'e qNfat8 C.fUJ1/1r.. , Stephanie (Julia Duffy) confronta her wealthy father (gue.t •tar Joee Fener) on ''Newharf' tonight at.9:30 on CBS, Channel 2. ~QUEST FOR THE KILLERS PAAaSE THE LORD MOVIE **'It "The Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bonny MOYie (1981) Animat- ed Voices by Mel Blanc:, Juoe f()(ay fHJMOVIE "Mu~lnl The Oecllne And Foll 0t II Duce" tPar1 2 ol 2) ( 1985) Susan Slrandon. Anlhony Hopkins S FAERIE TA.LE tHEA TRE -8:30-~~ACOOUGH e P.M. MAGAZINE CHARlES CHAMPUH T AU<S Willi -t:00- 1) Cl) KA TE & A.LUE 0 '8MOVIE * • ,,., "Love Child" ( 1982) Amy Ma- digan, Beau BtldgeS 8 HAROCASTlf AND MCCOfUCK ONEWS I TO BE ANNOUNCED QUEST FOR THE KILLERS SUfMVA.1. ®l CHARGER REPORT EE PRAISE THE LORD mBOLDONES IQ)MOVIE t * ,,., "Untll September 11984) Karen Allen. Thierry Ulemlrtte S MOVIE • * • "Yentl t 19831 Barbra Stretsand. Mandy Pat1n1on Z MOVIE ft* t "'Cal" 119~) JOlln Lyncti Hel- en M1rren -t-.30- 1) Cl) NEWHART MOVIE ***''I "The Ktng And I' 11956) Oe- bo<ah Kerr Yul Btynner ~ EHTERT AIHMOO TONIGHT C PAUl SIMON· HEARTS ANO BONES H NOT NECESSARILY THE NEWS -10:00- i) CAGNEY & LACEY 0 &>NEWS Q EYEONLA G F AHT I.SY ISt.AHO .. fD COCAINE: A SMALL FA.MIL Y 8USINESS ,. ml INTE1'HA TIONAL EDCTION ®l HARDCASllE AHO MCCORMICK EI!> BEHINO THE SCENES m CALLING All SPORTS "C MOVIE •• 11 "Teac:hefs 119~1 Nie~ NOite Jollelh W1lhams H MOVIE ••• , Mother Lode ( 19821 Charl- ton Heston, Nick Mancuso -10:15- EI!) RELIGIOUS PAOGRAMMtNG -10:30- 0 NEWS (!) IHOEPENDEHT NEWS ml CA.PITOl JOURNAL EE HEALING FOR TOOAY -11:00- i) 0 8 fO "»NEWS O TAXI O LOVGRAHT 8) WKRP IN ClNCINNA Tl (!) BARNEY MILLER ID INOEPENOEHT EYE ml 8USIHESS REPORT EI!) HERIT A.GE SINGERS m MILLER'S COURT 0 MOVIE t Ptayg1rl' t t9821 Ve<ont<:a '1art Samantha Fo• l MOVIE t • •., My Tutor ( 19831 Caren Kaye Matt LattatlZJ -11·30-e I' SIMON & SIMON O iJCllTONIGHT 0 SA TVROA. Y NIGHT 1.UXURY f HfAfRfS 0 * NlWS NIOKT\.M =:"..a LATBDfT NIBfCA M008lt IMlUITY PMmMLON> F°"80H INTllGUI MOVIE **'Ir "TMCll«t' (1964) Nd. None. Joeeth Wlllilms -11:50-~ ~ E11terminat0<" ( 1980) CMstopher George, s.n.i1111 Eo-oar • -1to0-- THf&THAEEO OOHOSHOW INOEP9CIEHT HEWS MCH AEA.I. P£OPll 9700ClU8 {t)MOVIE * • • "The Big Red One' ( 1980) Lee MatVln, Mark Hamlll -12:30- D Qt LATE NIGHT WYTM DAVID l.ETTEJWAH 8 A1..FAED HITCHCOCK PfeENTS UMOVIE • • • "Tempes1 (1959) Van Heflin Sllv8no Mangano ZANE GAEY THEATRE Q)MOVIE • * "Carry On A.broad" (1974) Sid-ney James, Sidney Jlll'leS. Joan Sims II ~AlrDCAH STYLE Ol OO'ERT AlNMENT TONIGHT GD PfWSE TH£ LORD '0'MOVIE t • '°" "Sl1t 80" I 19831 Manet Htlm 1ngway. Eric Rober1S -lt,40- 1) MOVIE • * •.; ·~rooks And Coronets ( 1969) Telly Savlllas, Edith Evans -1'()()- O FAMILY 0 AT THE MOVIES MOVIE •'" "Robin Hood Of Monterey· ( I !M 1) Gilbert ROiand. E Y9lyn Brent G> MOVIE * * 'Sign II Death • t 1974) Frances- ca Annis, PatrlCI! Allen ({O') NEWS m PAUL RYAN Z MOVIE • • •, Ten From Your Sl'IOW Ot Shows ( 1973) Sid Caesar Imogene Coca -1:20- S MOVIE • H t Untll September I t98A Katen Allen Thierry lherrMte -1'30- 00 NEWS ~AU. IN THE FA.MIL Y EI!> PAAISE THE LORO m A.BOUT TEl.EVlSION -135- H MOVIE •ft "Tiie HtgheSI Honor ( 1984) JOlln Howard Stuart Wilson -1 55- C MOVIE • Su'1 II t 19~1 EddMI Oeeztn. Lin- da Kemdge Symphony names new executive WALK· INS * f ull Two M11111tt Sllow1n9i * ONLY S2 1S Unlm Noted OOOlll-LA 1'0-U) 3 40. 7,30 DRIVE -INS :~:~; • il;l•lQ:uW6I 6)g 11 IQ M.,1,H1 Jiau • Si'."'"' T£C.. W«.F IPG) Plu\ Co-H1I N"'llll 01 Tnc Comet (PG 1 ll ttUMGS 1000 ~ i. read the llit---water p\ants 4. read the . ...,~ 5. s~P"'l ·~ .• A UYRY FUI Of IOTH smsTAID Alm LA181TER ••. " -KEVIN THOMAS. LOS ANOf1.ES TIMES MIEIMIUW RmllllWIEM ..-nor wmt Ill RD.mil ~ ...... "'-•••"'•" ~~\)II uurw u.t-. N•• ., ...... r-"""" h,..QI NG A l>.\AAMOUNT PICTURE ~ NOW PLAYING COSTA llfl& r~-•o r.-.. 1\1 4114 ...., .. , .. MJIOI r-c-...M ... ' "'""""""" , ... , O .. MLIHl (l'O) I ..0 S 30 9,20 Sf, ILMOS'S flll {al 1200 400 800 HIAUASl ClUI (I ) 10j 60j IOOS COllPROlllSING ll05I TlOMS (It) I IS J 20 5 JO 1 40 & 9 so KE WIEIE"S IMt A-.-wre (PIGJ AT 12·00 2 00 4 00 6 00 I 00 & I 0 00 ~ POlmOMJ(lll , .. ,... , .. , ...... 11.- PllSH AHO ll0001., wt•• 'All llDll ,., .... -...... LAK W Center South (ZlllU.t 1111/ftc•llY 11.0ol A"o LT.UlU~INI ···-.... SUMMll UNTAl '"' ............. MaAICll~ ,,.. ,,. WMAn~ ,_.. .-wT (II •U ti» 11"'91 Of M ~ llM It) WJ le.at AMllKAN NINJA ,., '". 11U ..... II llU 1•11 REAL GENIUS (l'C) SHOWS AT I JS J 40 S 4S 1 !10 & 9 SS It OF THE OAA (R) SHOWS AT II JS l 20 S OS 7 50 I 0 l~ SILVIEAAOO fPG·UI I I 30 2 I 5 5 00 7 4!. & I 0 JO I" 70MM WCMAIL CUMHO't YLU Of THI DlAOOH (ll ... , .... ,. 2010 ... , .... -" ... llAL GINIUS 1N1 .... _ t.T. lXlU TllllSTllAl !NI .......... , .. 2. THl IMHA&.D POtllST 1W1 ....... 'ALI llDll ,., ............. ,.... .... l'UICll '°"' n9IO COCOON i-.111 • 1!141 >M l1U 7141 !Mt GODZILLA cP'G·I ~I Plul Co Fe•lure Fraternoly V•Ulton(RI REAL GENIUS (PIG) Plu1 Co·H 1I My Science Pro1ecl (PG) ~W£E'5•G AOYENT\J ltlE (PG) Plu• Polle• Ac•demy P1rl II (PG·I JI W'EIAO SCIENCE (PG-I J) Plu1 Fd91ll N lgl'll (R) llUCMAA J.. PO• nlN WOLP 1N1 ll>JtJl)l4'Je ....... . , .. WH'S ltG AOVINTURl 1N1 .... , , ... ,.., , .. ,, .. ·- AMl•tCA.1'4 NINJA.., ............ Dlf-<ON 4 C111 ........ ,_ OOUY ITUIO '""'"~ NlllMI IA(I( TO TMI fUNtl '"" lhU Jill WI .. t•U Wlt•D KllNCI i-111 ........... NATIONAl LAWOON'S IUOIAN VACATION i-111 ............. *PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES• * CINE-Fl SOUND! At thtSt symbols pHt sound direct to your AM c11 * radio. If no radio with acctu0ry po11t1on, bf•nt your OYm AM portable . ALL OPIN 7:30 Start 1k Chlldrenl>ndef 12 ALWAYS FREE surlll swar 111u1 hrr '°"''•"' All4 s.,-, f1t• IAlll 1• ),... h• loltf110t•• t.11 Cll•ltlt DH ANAHEIM 1m 1m !!ttlLean Mm r,., * AMlltCAH NtNJA '" anulN Of THI LMNO DIAO 111 t. IUMMll llMAL ""' 2. YOlUNntU .., I. OMOtTIUITIU '"' 1. IT. llMO'I ... 11111 2. TMI lllMPAlf CWI !'Ill I. TMI ... CHIU !'Ill ORANGE ~1U ~I ............. Mal 10 M MUii "' .... ........ NATIOMM~ ....... WIUIDt .... ,.1 flnat '"' ... . ..,..,," .... ...... ...., ,,_ IAM le fftj/I., 1.i.. 111 ... hlHll•tt~ •Ht • ;\!J ¥i tj J~j;j :w 11u 1111 f1 \••el• w •'hen * * NATIONAl~S ~VACATION 1-••1 -Wlt•D KllNCI 1-••1 000.ltLlA t•U ,,.., PltOHT HtoMT <111 1m:m~1.v;:rt& l)ll\111 '!!!,..,.,..!pt I !1Qr I, IT' llMO'I , .. "' 2. THI llllMJAIT ClUI,. >. TMI ... CHIU "' e:1m~4·11 11••1tt1 Jtu,...tF si ,..,, ):( >:t AMllKAN NINJA 1t1 DIP-<ON 4' 1• I. IT. ILMO'I , ... te1 2. 1'MI lllMPAIT ClUI cii. ~ lNI laD CMlL PGWll'IMO AllWMVll 11'111 TUN WOll '"' "'l Orange Coast DAIL y Pt LOT /Monday, September 9, 1885 .. Stop Gap sets two premieres top Gap, a non.profit theater company that prov1d~ drama t~r­ apy servic.cs to the elderly and dt~bled ofall agesm Onfnge County, will be prescnung two couot) premieres th.is season Pcrformanc.e w1U be &Jven Fnday aod Saturday at 8 pm . Sunday at 7 p.m and Thurs.day through Saturda) ofnell wulc at 8 pm Proceeds from the two producuoos will be ~ to fu11hcr \be company's work with v.oup-, tnclud.i.na abused children, children with hfe-tb.reaten- 1ng d1~Moe or leanuna d15ababoes. •kohohc v.omcn .snd the frail and l'Onlu~ elderly "Duct for One" by Tom Kern- pinsld , a drama about a himou violinist felJed by mult19le sclcro~•~. will open Friday at the Gem Theater 12852 Main St . Garden C11ovc In "lo"cmbcr, top (1ap will \ta~ Chri\tOpher Durang'!> comedy .. Beyond Therapy" 1n the Forum theater on the Festival of >\n<o ground~ 1n Laguna Beach Pro- duction date~ are Nov 8· 16 Tack.el informauon on both St0p Gap pla)'s may be obtained by calling the theater group at 838-5344 GEAR UP FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL £(1;~ ~&lllr~~~ :;t; FASHl1)1\J ISLAhJD · l'JE WPORT BE:ACH -! 714 1 044 5070 edwards NEWPORT 644-0760 IC[WPORT CEICTER BETWHIC JAMBOREE & MACARTHIJA • TUii .. , ITOlt "UCITIM fVTm" lPCI 1111, tlJt edwards LIDO 613·8350 NEWPOR' Bl~C AT 11100 UDO DllllM ·=··-_.. , ............ ... , .. , .. (I) .... 111• ,., . edwards TOWN CE NTER 751 -4184 BRISTOL I ANTON ACAOSSFAOMS COASTPLAZA 1· ··, • ,, • • ru11 _,, mm ''Pff.lftf'I • UftlTWf'' (PCJ 1111, ... ..... ..._ · urr111111• ~···· ....... ~ ...... ,. oanm 'N..wrf "TW ... ~ If CUll" (PCJ lrll. llM • ruas *'' 1m11 "UCI Tl TW fUTUlf" (P'CJ 1:11, 11 II, I01JO lml l LllM "111.VEUOO" <rt-UI !;10, "" ''CCJCa'' f PC-111 1.00, ,,,, edwards BRISTOL 540· 7444 BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR SANTAANA ll•UL ,,Fil "Tiffi .. ,.. IPSI 11 II .••• t"" "IMHICAI NllJA" (I) 1:10 "C.ZW 1111" (PS) ~ 1121 1lt0t .. .._. llEITll" (PSJ •• "RUl GflllUI" (Pel 1:00, 10:0 "IT. ELMO'S FIRE" lltl l 1M "lllEAIFUT ClUI" (Ill l :iO, IOliO / eowards CINEMA 546·3t 02 HARBOR BOULEVARD AT ADAMS COSTA MESA UCltsm oua..-r "1111 Of TW .......... llJ .... n11u l "· .... edwaros HARBOR TWIN 63t ·350t HARBOR llOUL(l/ARD AT WILSON COSTA ME~ "PEf-Wff 'I IC UftllTIMf" l"J ............... •Tuel MllflTHH ··ucart .. Fm." IPCI frll. l!H ""'~ "Cl• 111111• - NllTIMI" Ill 1111. ltH, 11111 llMIWUMI '"Cl•llFI IM ,.,. .... ,., ll>I. ,,,., , •• ,. edwards FOUNTAIN VALLEY 939-t 500 BROOllHURST AT ED•NGfR ~OU~ICNVAUEY ... ftUW'IN-111 .... '1JBM.1~· .. , ...... ,. ''ftUl'f'HU'' r11 ''" .. IUmtfl IHTAl" IP'CI IQ. lllH edwards WE STBROOK 530·440t ~l , • 111 "'~'IR I & '•(ti l'll'l1 "l• "VII!.• u lROE H C,R011( ·~uncar•" WtcN UI ··wt•SC.ICl" eawaras UNIVERSITY 854·88,, ':AMPUS [)R WEST OF c.u. ;ER a:RvS<, f P';,lo'I .':. ltlMlua... "Clllflll IM Niil-· lll .... , ...... "IUl ..... '(PC) .... "E...U.HCATlS· I i•. llM IN-U1 ''ta.Wiim'' (f!S.11) ... "flRALI fWST" lll ....., .. 'II I Hlll." tN\ .. ,, ' WTWlidl"' '"' .. , ...... edwards WOODBRIDGE SS 1 ·06SS AAURAN( A PA•IN ~'\A' f A "'' I I' • • • ..... ··t 'l'ff-lftf'I m Uftl'TUIE" f P'CJ I -JO. l1JO 19 at .... ,. ...... ,,., "" "&mllCU ...., .. fl) tin. ... "TEEi WOU" IPCJ 1:00, ..... ·ut--'' "IEll Gf'"'I" f PCI 1148, ll:U "~EMUa'' IPSI U I "TUR Of THE DIUOlll" IR I t ·>O I 1'. tO-•O 'AMEIUCAM NII.IA' (RI 1:00, 1100 ·wuao saEllCf" 1"-111 . ,. ,.,.. "'HOITIUSTHS" (PSI .... ·;oozw 1Nfi" IPSI i:JI "FLEH ll.GOD" (II l10I. 11:1• edwards EL TORO 58t ·959,0 El TORO RO AT TWtNPEAKSPlAZA EL ORO "fMfHLD fOIEIT" Ill ll:JO, t •la, 10:00 ''EUIOPIAI HCA'fm" NO, •:21. I .. " ( .... ,,I "IRVEHDO" (PS-111 'IUMMfl MITA&." l"l '"' 1 )f "ST. ELMO'S f llf" 1•1 "lllUlfAST ClUI" Ill "f'ff ·Wffl "' (PC) ADVENTUllf " 11M •:U ltJI ll . lnlfl "COCIS' (N-11 12 ..... )111. ,,,. •• 1•1• .~':!: ~ "CIUfl l'lllM ' fUel mm ~ •• ,.., NIJTlla'' IRJ r• Miii ,,,,_ ,,. "YGl•1ffn" II ' ..._ ~1111 I''·,,,,,. 1' ,, ... , .. ...., t• --'1•. ,, --,.... ,,,, .... f'll u .. ~ ·~' "' -hi .... u .. eawards CINEMA WEST 891 ·3935 ESTMtNST(IUT GOlDltcW(ST 111[ !> •w1to1STlR .,... .. ,,ma ''IACI fl TW FVTUM" rPCJ ..... ''" , .. ,. -..n ~ '" 'ttH Wtll" IPll , ..... ''?ff Wlf'I • ~"IPCJ ....... , .... ,. AU 9'w'89 C.-.. DA.IL Y PILOT /Monday, Sepwnber 9, 1986 THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane "I feel like a paper doll when you do that." MARMADUKE e ' ' J- I .. Well, Prtnc•aa -•ren't you going to wave to your aubj.cta?" DENNIS THE MENACE SHOE BLOOM COUNTY 'POIR MIUJ /WP~. Mf HAVIN(, ~c,t'.. 11Me HEKe IN New 'ff)f(I( .. PEANUTS o by Jeff MacNafly by Charles M . Schulz by Brad Anderson by Hank Ketcham ........,....-~~----..----~ "Before you start, I'd better e~plaln that one woof means 'no' and two woofs mean 'start running'!" DRABBLE Wf.U.. OAO l'M ~AD'i' 10 (,0 q q \ ' -I 1)100 ASK TO 8E ~YAIW:N.J I" I JU?T 1~'/ NOT 1'0 01"6RACf.. 'f~E rAMIL"i AAME.,OK~~1 'TKERE'SAIKJl#£R ONE TAAT OOESNT ~ AH'f tYORE: by Kevin Fagan TUMBLEWEEDS BRIDGE THE DRIVER SAYS ~E CAN'T TAKE YOU .. YOU~ NAME ISN'T ON -rnE COMPUTER UST ... 1-lE WA!-JTS TO KNOW IF YOU'RE SOME KIND OF TROUBLEMAKER .. by Lynn Johnston &J l?M St-KWtN' HER li1!1 OFTHEM ~ by Tom K. Ryan ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ GARFIELD HOW ABOUT •'NINJA GRANC7MOTH£R •? MOON MULLINS JUDGE PAJlKER 1 by Jim Davis Q.1-Neither vulnerable, u South -...-----------~ you hold: HERE IT 15!'1ME ANGRY +AKJ85 ~K7 OJ983 +54 MAUVE PLANET" The bidding has proceeded: South WHt Nortb Ea1t l + Pa11 I NT Pa11 ? What action do you take? A. -You have a minimum hand that is going nowhere. Nevertheless, it Is still your duty to find t he best part.score contract.. One or the reasons that you opened this hand is becau1e you were lwo-suited. -.-=;..._ ________ __.Therefore. rebid two diamonds. by Ferd & Tom Johnson Don't rebid your 1padea-in this auction lhal virtually guarantees a 1ix-card suit. Q.2 -Both vulnerable . as South you hold: •KJ65 ~QJ987 •AK108 The bidding has proceeded: Soath We1t Nonlt Ea1t I ~ 2 0 Obie PH1 7 I What action do you take? A. -A difficult problem. You should be wary of passing partner's low level doublP wilh a void in the enemy 11uit, but there is no attrac tivt> alt("rnatlve. Partner rat.es to be by Harold Le Ooux short in . ht'arts. and to bid either black suat. would show value11 you WHEN WILL YOU LEARN d~n'l J>OHt'lll. Your overall defen ~i WOMEN JUST CAN'T !lave as.'tf'U •hould compensatf" for RESIST YOU. th• fatt thal you will never tw> able COUNSELOR? to lead a Ltump J.hrough detcJuer. Q.3 -As South. vulnera hlf', you hold: •e <:I Q9S4 0 A10M3 •AQ9 The bidding haa prOt'eeded: s .. tli WHt North Ean I O PaM I NT Pau ? What at'llon do you takf"? A. -Wear• not going lo fault you if you cho e lo pa11, but that I.a Lhe ( second-best action. Logical analysis will show why~ North has denied four cards in either major suit. Unless his di11tribution is specirical ly 3-3-3-4, he must have either five clubs or four diamonds. We would opt for two cl~bs and would not be surprised to find we had hit part ner's five-or aix-eard suit. Q.4-Both vulnerable, as South you hold: +AK98 ~A9 OJ5 •AK1092 OMAR "' SHARIFF !--1 The bidding has proceede<j.; South W eet NortJI f.Ht I + PH1 I ~ 'Pa11 ? What do you bid now? A. -Even if partner's respoMe was shaded. you wanl to be in game. The way to announce that to the world is to make a jump" ~hlfl -In this cue, two 1pades. By showing your strength Im mediately, you will b4' able to probe for the be~t Apol without having to worry aboul part ner dropping you short of ~amc. Q.5-Both vulntrable. all outh you hold: +KQIO 1;')132 0 AK78 +Qts The biddfog has proeeeded: s .. 111 Weit Nerd! Eaat l 0 P... 1 ~ Pu1 1 NT P... 3 0 p.., ? A. -Three no trump is tert.ainly a pos1lb1Uty. but with your iehaky stopper in clubs lhtr• is no rt&1on to preaume that tbatu the only. or •• indeed the best, spot. Bid three spades. Since you didn't bid one spade over one heart. this must be a concentration of strength, not a gen· uine suit. With values in clubs, partner can bid three no trump: with a (ive-card heart suit. he might. try four hearts; or , if he has a . minimum jump preference and nothing in clubs, he can retreat to four diamonds which, in this case, would not be forcing. CHARLES GOREN Q.8-Neither-vulnerable. as South you hold: •5 ~Q9S4 0 AQ9 +AIM4S The bidding has proceeded: South Weit North Ea1t I + Pa11 1 • Pau ? What do you bid now? A.-You have no reaUy good action. Had your club suil been better, lwo clubs would have been a viable rebid. Now. although you don't like rebidding one no trump ,with a singleton in your partner's suit. you rf'ally have no alternative. For laMnaat6H ai..t C...,.._1 a ...... ·1 .. w ... .a.u.r .... _..... playere, wrfte Gerta l..WC. Leu.er, llOt c1a ... 1 .... A._., Cie••la· .... N.J.09017-. ' , ' -· llily Piiat MONDAY, SEPTEMBEA 9, 1985 Barona, Edlaon ranked aecond, third .In Dally Piiot s)oll. 82. A look •I where area pl•yera •re competing In college. 83. RaIDwinhas ·cardinal and gold flavor Ex-Trojan White provides heroics - in 20-16 victory By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR Delfr,... c.? IJ I ...... Two old college pals got 1ogelber Sunday to relive some old umes. And when they finished, the Rams had themselves a 20-16 win over the Denver Broncos 10 open the 1985 NFL season. But for the 52 ,522 in attendance at An~e1m Stad1um u musl bave looked hke the 1979 USC Trojans all over again. You had the USC marching band and song girls performing at halftime. ·You had past Trojan and present Rams Coach John Robinson waJk1ng the s1del1nes exhon1ng his troops as they bludgeoned the oppos111on with a punishing ground attack late in the game to pull out another close one. And you had Charles White, USC's 1979 He1sman tro phy wanner doing the hammenng behind a dominating offensive line to break the spant, af not the backs. of the defe nse. back memones. · Whale, who has been foUowed by mjunes and drug-related problems the past few yea rs, was loolc.mJ for a new stan with the Rams and h1s old coach. And with the current state of the running baclc s1t uauon on the learn (Enc Dickerson's holdout and Barry Redden·s ankle inJury), '!Vhne's resurgence might present himself with future opportunmes 10 top his latest and what he calls his greatest (as a pro). effort. "A lot of people had Charles White buned," said Robinson. "He con- trolled the football game in the fourth quaner He's a fa vonte person of mme. I wanted tt to happen for him." Robinson said. After not playing in the first haJf(he d1d play o n special teams, but not the offense). White got 10 5how his stuff after Redden's ankJe became sore and stiff at the half ''That was defin11el)' my best game since college,.. said Wlute, who finished with 83 yards rushing on 18 cames. caught one ~ss for 12 yards and returned four kickoffs for 74 Dellr ..... ,......, ...,. ldlw..U Nolan Cromwell bUndaldee John Elway, forcing the ball to pop looee, but the offlclala ruled It an incomplete pa.u. "It was lake deja vu," sa1d White, who hadn't expenenced the best of llmes 10 the pro ranks ··11 brought "It feels great to do 1h1s. I'm just glad Coach Robinson sttll had con- fidence an me I knew I could sull do n. and 1f anyone else would le.now 11 would be coach " With 7 38 remaining 10 be pla)ed. (Pleue eee ~8/82) For Rams' White, it's ared-letterday ' Sunday's NFL scores By CHRIS MONAHAN Delfr ~ C..ri II I ... ii Go back in your mind for just a moment. The date as Jan. I , 1979. The setting is the Rose Bowl packed with more than 100,000 and millions more watching on television. ' . The USC T rojans are play1Dg the University of M1ch1gan Wolvennes, with the score tied at I 0-10 late an the fourth quarter. O n fourth down from the three, Trojan Coach John Robmson calls Charles White's number and the junior tailback vaults over the line to score and give the Trojans a ·17-IOvictory. White is named Player of the Game, rushing for 99 yards on the day. The following year he pcrfonns a similar feat, scoring from one-yard out with 1:32 to play to give the Trojans a 17-16 victory over Ohio State. White rushes for 247 yards and the senior Heisman Trophy-winner is again awarded Player of the Game honors. Now come forward in tjme. The date 1s now Sept. 8. Is tonight the night for Rose? He'll try to brea k Cobb's record after (Ty)lng it Su~day CHICAGO (AP)-The lights went o ut on Pete Rose's latest opportunity to break the 57-year-0ld record of Ty Cobb, sending him back to Cincinnati with one more hit to go. With two hits in five at-bats Sunday against Chicag~ the Reds player-manager tied the record of 4,191 lifetime hits.set by Cobb m 1928. Tic became the order of the day when the game was halted after nine innings because of darkness with the score tied 5-5. "I'm happy he tied the record," Reds shortstop Dave Concepcion said. "And I'm happy he will break it back in Cincinnau." Rose aot his second hit of the game, the tying hit, off emergency starter Regg.ie Patterson in the fifth inning. Like the first-inning hit, No. 4, 191 was a line single. Rose had two more chances to break the record, but he arounded out to Cubs shortstop Shawon Dunston in the seventh and struck out swing- ing at a Lee Smith fastball in the ninth. 1985, the settin~ is Anaheim Stadium before 52 ,522 and a regional television audience. The USC marching band performs at halfti me and when the Rams offense takes the field in the second half, It is not Eric D ickerson or Barry Redden that Robinson sends into the game. it is instead White. The fi ve.year veteran, who was signed as a free agent 1n July, had been placed on waivers by the Rams Monday, but recalled Tuesday 1 n tame for Sunday's game against the Broncos. White responds to his old coach's confidence an ham by rushing 18 times for 83 yards (21 m ore than he had all of last year with Oeveland), includmg an eight-yard run around right end for the game-winning score with 2:07 to play in the Rams' 20-16 win. If you can see the sim1lant1es in the previously mentioned situations then you are thinking along the same lines as White himself. Said White of the winning run. "!just reflected back 10 the pme against Mic higan when I scored the winning touchdown with the crowd and everythmg. It was like deja vu." ., ......... Clnclnnad'• Pete Roee amacb bia 4,19l•t hit at Wrtcley Field Sanday to de Ty Cobb'• all-time record. For the record, the touchdown play was .. 29 pitch," a play designed for the man he was replacing in the lineup. Dickerson, who today begins his seventh week. as a holdout. 9R.am8 20. Denver 16 •Raiden 31 . NY Jets O San Otego 14. •Buffalo 9 •Mtnnesota 28. San Fra n c isco 2 l Detroit 28. •Atla nta 27 The other man he replaced was Redden. who started the game and played the entire first half, bur was unable to conunuc because ofa sore left ankle. Redden rushed for 46 yards on I 3 cames. Robinson said that Redden would su U be his starter next week m Pb1ladelph1a 1fthe ankle 1s better. Whne said •New England 26. G r eer. Bay 20 •Ptttsburgh 4 5. lndlanapolts 3 Kansas Ctty 4 7 . •New Orleans 27 •Houston 26. Miami 23 that's the way at should be. "Enc and Barry, they're the guys," said Whne "I just came 10 in the situation and hoped l could do well "I le.new 1t could come down to m e playing. Barry 1s not 100 percent and Enc isn't here. I'm here and I'm still •NY Giants 21 . Philadelphia 0 St. Louts 27. •c teveland 24 (ot) Seattle 28. •c tnctnnall 24 •Chicago 38. Tampa Bay 28 •denotes home team. healthy. That's what's 1mpon.ant. "At halftime he (Robinson) said be ready, that Barry's ank.Je was kind o f sore Then he told me 'You're going · .. Tomot'• Game Washtngton at Dallas lChannel 7 at 6 ) The dec1s1on helped White and the Rams. Being reunited with Robinson after some down years •NFL roundup, pqe 8 2 (Pleeee eee WH.ITE/112) ·------------------J It's showdown time! Angels host Royals after getting past Baltimore, 7-4 >\ft er dropp1 ng out of the .\ menca n League West D1' 1s1on lead. the Angels return home 10 try 10 pad. up some ground on the Kansas Cit} Royals tonight at at >\nahe1m Stadium Bre1Saberhagen ( 17-5 ) wall take tht• mound for the Roval'>. whu have a 1111-game lead o n ihe <\ngels John C'andelana, 4-1 , as scheduled to stan for the >\ngels. The three-game )(!rtC!> runs through Wednesda .. unda)'. h owever the ~ngels tound persistence not pnching paid o IT After fnw~nng awa~ frequent '>(:Of 10g chances and ha-.1ng numl·rou' lane dnves caught, the A.ngel\ rallied for a crucial 7-4 v1l'to~ O\ er thl' Baltimore O n oles 10 11 1nn1ngs The tnumph, keyed h~ at\ 1ng l\\.O- run rally 1n the ninth, enabled them ll' keep pace with the Ro~al!> "It takes more than o ne g.ime · said Bobb) Gnch. who rnntnbuted three hits. ind udrng a doublt' an the ninth and a single ID the I I th ··'he·, l' got to scratch them out as "e gv ·· The Angels dad a lot ol scratl'h1ng Sunda). "1th Manager (Jene Maul h cmplo)1 ng 2J oft he 43 playe~ used an the struggle which required four hours and one minute to pla' an ho1 and humid weather A prnch do ul.'lle b) one of th<' \ub">. DaT)I Sconiers. laun,hed the ninth inning upnsang and a SIDglt b\. ( ru\ Pohdor an ha~ first major league at bat. 1gn11ed the winning rail~ o\fter a 10glc b' Gnch Pohdor ~ored the t1e-break1ng run on 3 Sconten Ortcb throwing t'rror h~ Baltimore '>l'lond baseman A.Ian'-" 1ggan\ and t"o more came aero~ on single-. b' Darrell \.fa lier and Bob B.i0ne Balumore fir\t ba..eman Eddie Murra\." ho dro' e 10 '"" o runs ""1th a duuble and ha<, 2bth h11me run a') the Onoles built a 4-2 lcad "a" 1nH>hed an t"O >\ngel'> ~onn~ pld" First. Muml\ madl' an mer.the· shoulder catch· ot a high foul h\ Cieorge Hendmk deep Jo"n the lint' an the ~l\th. and 1t turned into a \acntice "'hen Juan Beniquez ta~ed .ind scored to break a ~nrrlt''iS 11e Then after the .\ngels loaded the bases an the ninth lollo" ing a n R Bl single b} Beniquez Murra~ thr<'"' '' St'lOnd 10stead of home altt>r \h1'n hopping a h ner b\ "11 llt'r But the attempt tor c1 g.ime-1.·nding double pla' failed and pint h runnn l)e,on White ~ored 11 111~1· a 4-4 11e Ralt1more Manager l ,trl \A.ea,er defended the deu'>11>n 1.t\ntending 1he double pla) ma\ h.t' e tx·1·n turned had rehe,er Tapp\ \1Jf'1 1nl'/ ,,\\t•red tirst 'He should g1l 1l\Cr ''" thdl pla,:· \\ea\er..a1d "hut 11',undC'r\landabk Tonight'• Game 1'.an!>J~( 11\ 15aberhagen ,-'I at Allgels H JndelJna ..i..1 Time , '' pm T\' \.one Radio 1-.\fP< 1"'IU1 "'h' hr d1Jn t tx•(au'<' no one ~Ol'"' If Eddie caught thl' h<1ll 11n the .ml or not·· The "inner D11nn1e Moorl' 8-11 perm111ed t"-o h1IHl\ er the linal thrt'e annmg\ L l''>t'f \1dft1M1 ~·I alk>"-ed onh the )1ngk h' Polador dunng his l"ll·lnn1ntl '1101 Rl·&g1t IJ f..'•'n "'ho hit the ball deC'p nl\1 tht• h1llc which V.1ggin' thrr"' d"'J' n the 1 lh claimed the \\d1•r. ml'Jnt J' mu~h 10 thl' .\ngrl' p5H hol11gi. .11h .l, 11 did in tht• stand in~' fhl'' 1ht 1)nc1lcs) had handli.'d u .. lor J ••urk ol d.n .. and 1t loo~ed h~t' 'h<'.'' "'''uld Jga1n ·· JJ,~\1'0 \aid ·But ,,.e hJllkJ baci.. ·· Thi' "-l helps us mor<' t•mu 11nna lh th.in JO\ thing .. Jal lo..<ion Yid ·v. t' H g111 .i \!\·hour planr nde hall.. h1'mt: anl1 "'c haH· ~an"3~ <. 11' S\Jnng u' 1n the lace But nPw lol>t' ha1.t' .1 hllk 'am and' 1nt."gar ·· Rutt rnt h \31d hr d1dn'l lh10k the: rt' \\11uld tx· JO\ Lam off from tht' uimt'hat " \,,ton V. r re d' l'teran '"luh an,! wt• ~no" 11 ' J "ho!!' ne" gam<.> tomorro" · lrnth \.ltd 'It'\ hi..l" \OU tum a pagt' 1n a ht><.>~ 1t'<i a hrand ne"' <;tun It "-.l' <,1mph a [lOod "in but that 'all thC'r<' I\ Ill II The Reds a lready had soored a run to tie the game when Rose came up in the ninth. The game had been delayed in the bottom of the eighth by ram for 2 hours and 3 minutes, and when the teams completed nine inninp, um- pirina crew chief Bob Engel halted the pr~if!P at about 6: I 0 p.m . CDT. W ithout hghts at Wrigley Field and under I heavy cloud cover, 1t had become too dark to continue. '!.I thought we would win it riJht there," Rose said of his ninth-inning at-bat. "It was getting kind of dark. but I could see the ball." Mets wear out the Dodgers, welcome mat in 14 innings Normally, wlten a game 1s halted because o f darkness here, it is re- sumed at a later date at the point of suspension. The Cubs, however, said they had been told bphe National Lea&ue that the game would be decfarcd 1 regulation draw and that all records would stand. Should it become necessary to determine a pennant, another game would be played. Rose hadn't even expected to play because the Cubs had selected left- hander Steve Trout as )he startina pitcher Rose, who shares time at first bete,l[e1tricta himself to stan ap1nst rfaht·ll•ndcrs. with Tony Ptrei iet- lina the call •inst left1tt. fPl ...... •08&/810) J • LOS ANGELES (AP) -When the New York Mets return ho me Tues· day night for three bi& pmes Wlth the St. Louis Cardmals they JUSt m1&,ht be ttcd for first place 10 the Nat1onaJ Lca&uc's&stcrn Division. The Mets clipped the Los Anaclcs Dod&en 4-3 Sunday on Mook.le Wilson's home rurl ID the top of the 14th innina to surac to within one- haJf pme of the lead. And while they take today offi. the lint-place Cardinals play a makeup pme apanst the Ch1cqo Cubs. Gary Carter, who cracked bis 26th homer of the KAJOn an the second 1nnina -and his siAth 1n five pmcs -attempted to temper the 1mpon. anoe of the series with the C'vds .. 1t~s not the end of the aeuon.~ he gud. But. he ad<kd. "now as the time to provt' to these gu}s we can ht'ut them." The Mets took two of tht' three pmcs from the Dod&ers, "1nnina in 13 inn1nas on Fnday ma.ht and 1n 14 innings on Sunday. The !>odien won on Sllllrday , 1n the mnth •nnuli- "We can play with them and the~ know they can play with us," said Dod.aer naht fielder Make Marshall. whosedramauc two-rul\homer an t~t' bottom of the eiahth tted the score and sent the aame into extra mninas Doua ask, 4-5, the fif\h New York pitcher, earned the Wln, thankj to W11Jo n's stunruna blow off l~r Cmos Dlu, 4-3 Wllson was stanlll& for the first tame sanoe June 28 -he had anhroscop1c shoulder suracry on July 3 -and. aa1d arter "It was gru1 to Toa'6ht'• Game Dod1ers (Welch IO·') c1l .\!Ian.- ta ( McM urtr; l). ') T1mt' 4 40 pm lV None Rad.Jo. ~8<. (7QC)) see ham bac 1n e 1ncup c ve said all along to get hi"1 back will bt a bag , plus" Wal'°n ,.1d he wu surpn~ - and happ)' -to be starung, "1 wa, lake. rookie ar•n ... said tht' 29-ycar-old Walson .. W&.'I a httle J 1 llt't') .. But ht wu pttaSt"d mort' that thr Mcb won to close o ul a 7 • .l tour ot thc West (out "We W1ntC'd to pick up around on this tnp and \la\ do\C ..aid \\ 1l~m "To1.ome bad. and a "an a gam<' lake th1 af\er &•' 1ng a"a' tht' lend \IH a 101 about the ~ hanh lC'r 1lf 1h1c, dub Heel wt d1dn 't .:arc h1l"' long the game went · D1a1 descnbe-t1 tht' home run pnch to \\ tio.on as a "han ing '-hangcup " He p11chcJ Y>t'll following 'ltaner Ort! Herc;ha\Cr and reht'' t'r 1'.t'n Howell to tht mound But. a\ I o~ A.nat lC\ mana~t'r T om Lasorda notl'd. "Ont bad p1\('h rn'lt him the pmt .. •\fkr Carter'\ homC'1 ofT tknh1scr an the second mn1na. the Dod&cr; ued the ~art with an unt'amC'd run an the lifih inn1na The Met' l lmt' up with t-.i.o unearned run'l in lhc ciahlh. lhc rl'Sult of t-.o of lhrtt Lo An,cle'I error\ tor a ' I lead 8ut Ma~hall "'1th h1\ I ~th homt•r a 1wo·run bla ,1 1n lht' hollnm 1\I lht t'1ghth t1l"d thc- "mt' aµ1 n \\hall' th<' '-Mt~ art hallhng thl' ( ardinal\ the.-Dodge~ "ho lead the ' L V. ~1 h\ eight gamt'~. head in lo thc.-1r rought\t pan ol their schedule -tQ gamC'\ an P game". and I" ot tht'm 1)n thr mad "'\ ou got to win, whetht'r 11 ' at home m on tht road." \aid La\Orda "The other 1cam<J have to pla\ a ft'v. on tht r1lad 100 " But the Oodgrl'\ a"' mmu'i' two nt their h1gc<11 ofTtn 1ve .,.,.t'apon\ Ptdrn < mtrrtro 11nd a 111 Madlod. < 1utrrtro hanlt'<l uf> his ldt wnc,1 cn1.m1 down 'I foul ball m \a&a1dn'~ pme and didn't pla) at all on ~unda) I J Reda' fans happy lloae tied mark ... but didn't break it From AP dl1patcM1 CINCINNATI -While Pece Rose ii wu in OUcaao ae1tina ~1s.record-1rlna. hit, the IOOrd>oard at Riverfront Stad1um announced the feat with less than a minute to play in a National Football ~ue game between the Seattle Scahawlcs and the Cincinnati Bengals. !be crowd of S 11625 responded with a loud, long ovauon and ended with chants of "Pete, Pete, Pete.'' . pte ~i~ was nearly empty when Rose. the Cincinnau Reds player-manager, came to bat in the seventh inning in an effort to break Ty Cobb's all-time career mark of 4., I 91 . The Reds prne was piped into the stadium dining room. where about a dozen fans gathered around a smaJJ, color television set to watch Rose aim for the record. "Don't get it," one man yelled out. "Get him out," said another. The aroup jumped for joy and broke. into applause w'ben Rose grounded out. Rose batted again in the the ninth but reliever Lee Smith struck him out. The game, tied S-5, was suspended after nine inning.s because of darkness. Rose now will have the opportunity to break the record at Riverfront Stadium when the Reds open a homestand against San Diego tonight. _Quote of the day Bob Cosw, NBC sportscaster. after consum- ing his second bratwurst, complete with sauerkraut and red sauce', during a visit to Milwaukee County Stadium: "You know, I've got so much gas that a bunch of Arabs are following me." Lopez wins In sudden death Noey Lopei converted a five-foot !I birdie putt on the third hole of a sudden- dcath playoff Sunday to win the LPGA tournament in Portland. Lopez, a winner · for the fifth time this year. finished the regulation 54 holes ,tied with Lori Garbact at J-under-par 2 J 5, after sbooung a 2-undcr 70 on Sunday. Lopez, the leading money winner on the LPGA tour this year blew a chance to win on the first extra bole, the par-5, 485-yard l 5th, when she missed a two-foot birdie putt ... In the PGA Boston Oassic in Sutton, Mass., veteran George Baru ended a fourth-round hex with a 5-u nder par 66 and won with a 72-hole co1.1rsc record of267, 17 strokes under par. Burns broke away from a tie with former course record-holder Job M.Ualfey early in the final round an<i:. after 8!1 eagle .3 on tbe fourth green, pulled away for his first VJctory smoc 1980 and only his second individual title in 10 years on the PGA tour ... American Crail Stadler shot a S-under-par 67 Sunday to score a come-from-behind victory in the SWiss Open European Masten tournament at Crans-Montana Switzerland. American Lanay Wadkl.Da had Sunday'~ best round, a 65, but only managed to finish 12th. Dally Busy scores Del Mar win DEL MAR -Daily Busy drove to the lead in m1dstre1cb and held safe longshot ~ Eastland in the final yards to capture the Ramona Handicap for older fillies and mares Sunday at Del Mar. Ridden by Bill Shoemaker. Dally Busy finished a length in front of Eastland, a 23-1 shot ridden by Chns McCarron. Envie De Rire, with Russell Baze up. finished third another head back. · The 7-5 favorite, L'Attrayante, piloted b)" Eddie Delahoussaye, never got into contenuon and finished last m the field of seven m the Grade J race for 3-year-olds and up. Italian Grand Prix to Prost MONZA, Italy -France's Alain • Prost triumphed in Sunday's Italian Grand Prix and made a strong bid for his first~ver world title by fighting off a hostile crowd and a sensational comeback by Brazilian runner-up Nelson Piquel ~ The 30-ycar-<>ld aoc from St. Charmond drove his Mclaren-Tag car to victory amid whistles of partisan fans on the home track of their idols, the Ferrari team. at Monza. Hts fifth Grand Prix win this season -the 21st of his career-gave Prost 65 points in the world Fonnula- One dnvers' championship and a 12-point lead over second-place Michele Alboreto of Italy. Balboni'• blast barlee Brewen Sttve BaJboaJ hit a two-Nn homer just ii in.side Lbe left-fieJd fouJ pole in the bottom of the I Ith innina Sunday, liftina Kansas City ov~r Milwaukee, l 3-l I~ for the Royals' ei&htb stral&ht victory. Kansas City, which swept the flve-~e series from the Brewen at Royals Stadium. remained I 'Ii pmes ahead of the Angels in the American LeaJUe West entcrina the sllrt of coni&ht's three.pme senes at Anaheim Stadium ... In other AL action, PM! NlU:ro won the 299tb pmc of his career and Roe Buae7 drove in four runs wilb two double' and two &ingles as the Ne"'-York Yankee~ won their ninth straight game, beatina Oakland, 9-6, at Yankee Stadium. The victory kept the Yankees 1 lfJ pmes behind East Division-lcadin& Toronto ... At Exhibition Stadium. hot-hitting Uoyd Moteby hit a pair of two- run homers, Jette Barfield hit a three-run homer and Damaao Garda added a two-No shot, powering Toronto over Minnesota l 0-9 ... Ahia Davit doubled and scored twice and Jtm Praley drove in two runs as Seattle completed a three-game sweep by beating Detroit at Tiger Stadium, 6-2 •.. At Fenway Park, Tim LoUa.r pitched a five-hitter and Toay Armas rapped three hits, leading Boston past Cleveland, 8-1. Armas singled home a run in the first inning with the 1,000th hit of his career, and scored later in the inning on a single by Mike Easler ... Carl&o• Flail stole home during a four-run fint inning and Tom Seaver won his first game in more than a month as the Chica,o White Sox beat Texas in Arlington. 7-6. Seaver, 13-10, had not won since Aug. 4 when be beat New York for his 300th career victory. Cards dealt second loss in row Bob Horaer'1 pinch triple with the a bases loaded in the seventh inning and a three-run rally in the ei th powered Atlanta from behind to a 7-f1triumph over St. Louis Sunday at Busch Stadium. Homer's hit shackled St. Lows with its second straight defeat and helped trim the Cardinals' lead to just a balf-pme over the New Yorlc Mets. St. Louis and the Mets open a three-game senes in New Yorll: Tuesday ... In other N.ational League action, Lida Apayo hit a two-run , homer in die sixth inning and added a solo shot in the eighth to lead Philadelphia to a 9-7 victory over San -Diego at Jack Murphy Stadium. With the Phillies traling 6-5 in the sixth, Jolua RHteU led off with a single and Aguayo followed with a drive over the left-field fence against Ed Woju, 1-3 ... At Candlestick Park. Tim Ra.l8a and Tim Wallacb scored on San Francisco throwing errors Bomer and Terry Frucou added a two- run single as Montreal scored four runs in the I 0th inning and beat the Giants, 9-6 ... In a game in which P~te R~ae tied Ty Cobb'• major league record of 4.191 hits, gomg 2 for 5 at the plate, Cincinnati battled back to score a run 1n the ntnth to tie the score, S-5. The game was ended because of darkness after nine full innings and will be replayed after the season ifthe outcome has any bearing on the pennant race. It is considered a compl~ted tie game regardless, and Rose·s ht ts Sunday count m the record book. Waltrip claims NASCAR win RICHMOND. Va. -Darrell Waltnp • took the lead for the fifth and final time six laps from the finish and went on to a narrow victory over Terry Labonte in Sunday's Wrangler 4UU NASCA R Grand National stock car race. Waltrip. of Franklin, Tenn .. snatched the lead from Labonte wtth an inside move on lap 294 and sped to the checkered flag for his second win of the season. Waltrip, who captured the World 600 in May, earned $35.300 for Sunday's race, which he completed with an average speed of' 72.508 mph after staning 22nd. Television, radio TELEVISION 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Washington at Dallas. Channel 7. RADIO 4:40 p.m. -BASEBALL. Dodgers at Atlanta, KABC (790). 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Washtngton at Dallas, KNX (1070). 7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Kansas City at Angels, KMPC (710). WHITE .•. From Bl RAMS OUTLAST BRONCOS .. tn Cleveland (thanks tn part to involvement with cocaine) has dcfi- n11ely helped White. "It 1sa f!eat feeling(coming back to 101n Robmson). It feels like the old days," said White. "He was the guy who recruited me lo go to USC. He hasn't lost confidence in me and I haven't lost confidence in me either." White says he has no bad feelings about bctng placed on waivers by Robmson. "If I got picked up by a team, it would be because someone needed me. The Rams picked me up (in July) because they needed me. 'Tm not dead yet. I wanccd to go show everyone that a good back can do well tn a good situation." Said Robtn<K>n on the wruver deal concem1ng White. "There was never any doubt (he would be back). It wasJuSt a calculated manipulatJon. "There were a lot of people who would have loved to bury Charles While because 'he t!> not 1ha1 good.' He is that good. "He controlled the game 1n the fourth quarter. He's JUSI good people " White gamed 50 yard~ 1n 1he final quarter. 1nclud1ng 32 on the aame-winntng drive. Also on that last drive, While c.au&ht his only pass of the gam e, a 12- yard gain earty on I hat gA ve the Rams a tirrtdowrr. Both guard Dennis Harrah and tackle Bill &.tn, each of whom have opened a lot of h<?lcs for Dickc™ln. we~ 'pleased Wlth White'!\ ocr- fonnance. ••Half the ttme I didn't know who was back there;· said Bain, another former Trojan "but Charlie had a fantastic day." 'Tm• proud of Charlie es I cnn be" satd Harrah "He JU'l kJ>t lieiUn& up on them .. • /.\ From Bl White and Robinson gave the Bron- cos a blast from the past. Starting at their own 20-yard line. the Rams. trailing 16-10, embarked on an 1 l- play drive that consumed over five minutes. White was 1n on seven oftbe plays and accounted for 36 of the yards and what proved to be the winning touchdown. On. a first-and-goal from the 8. White bounced up the middle. spun off a few tacklers. and tumbled mto the end zone to put the Rams on top for good with 2:07 to play 10 the game. "Our defense was on the field a long ttme," said Bronco Coach Dan Re- eves. "And when that happens, they get tired." "We just wore 'em down." said Robinson with a smile. After the Rams got their offense untracked (it sputtered through the first three quaners). the Ram defense kept the Broncos at bay to preserve the win wben comerback Gary Green picked off Denver quarterback John Elway's dcsperatJon heave into the end ione with no time left. White's effort almost over- shadowed the regular season N Fl debut of new Ram quarterback Dieter Brock. the 34-ycar-old veteran from the Oanad1an ranks. While 1t WM no smashina success. Srock did show improvement as the game progressed. He finished with 16 completjons in 29 auempt~ for 174 yards. one touchdown (a rour.yarder to tiaJ'lt end David Hill). and two 1ntercept1ons. "Overall, I wasn'l sharp at throw- ina the football," said Brock. "I feel if I thr~ the ball more. I could obi.in a comfortable rhythm. The only pa I forced was ont' of the intcrceiuions." Brock had trouble hookina up wt th hts wide receivers on any dctp plays, but took. what the Denver defense a.ave him, which was \hon dump offs to backs and ti&htc.nds. --While the 01Te11se wa nruglmg, the Broncos helped out wt th a enough mistakes to give the Rams their first 13 points. -A muffed punt return by Denver' Vance Johnson at the Bronco nme was recovered by the Rams' Nor- wood Vann at the four. From there, Brock htt wide open tight end Hill fo r the score. The pass was almosl overthrown. but Hill made a diving, o~e-hand grab. "Dieter threw behind me and all I was trymg to do was get a hand on 1t," said Hill, after giving the Rams a 10-3 lead m the second quarter. Another Bronco fumble, this re- covertd by safety Nolan Cromwell, and a roughing-the-kicker penalty, resulted 1n two Mike Lansford field goals. The Ram · defense. which looked sharp throughout most of th'e game, had one rocky stretch 1n the second quarter. when Elw.ay found Butch Johnson and O mt Sampson for easy touchdowns behind a badly-beaten Ram secondary. The scores came in a three-minute span and gave the Broncos a 16-10 lead at the half. "They caught us I.I\ a blit1 ont' ttme (on the 28-yard pass tqJ9hnson). and the other time (lbe 2S-yarder to Sampson) Nolan and I were talk1ng about an adjustment when they snapped lhc ball," said Green. "But m the second haJf we c-0mmun1~ted better so we wouldn't malce those same mistakes." Green, afona Wlth White. received pme balls for thcar effons. lllAM NOTIS: Irk Oldl-wlll ,,,_, wllll lltemt mt~I lodav I" A"-Nt4m ~ DlflW lnclr ttartecl at QI ~v to 0otn ,,,. lltetl'lt' ~.. 'tltOll. "' lleCAllM "" IOvrtll ouwtwMck 111 n,,. -n IO be9111 IM Met.Oft IOf' !?le IMl'll Tlle last llll'lt Otnver camt to Allt'*"" 11'\t l ronc.ot 1eortd • 27·l'l will 111 ,,., o.n.,., cw~ Tim Folirv Md two 1nl9rceotton1, rUfllllno 1111 carw total 10 41 fr,_ lltalnl Ire_... IO f'tlllacltW!la ,..XI ~v Tlie S'ff IOtt ff\tlf 6"'ltf SUlideY To,,.. )4- YOr11 Giant\ fl-4 Daily Pilot Top 10 ORANGE COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL SERVITE (10-2) 2. FOUNTAIN VALLEY (9-3) l'Nntlln Val.v NHh wt• aram In vtmlalV W«"t ...i, lltWf by .. Pr•MllC• ..... ~" ~n ... "". z..--~dt JeM .... t't. 4. 5. 3. EDISON (8-3) 6. (lfM,...,... --~) FOOTHILL (10 -2) EL MODENA (13 -1) ESPERANZA (12-2) I(""""' ... tur. • ....... •tvtd bY llMDa<*• Ttm OUWt anct a.,,.....w.., Pd ta .. ctr Jtfwl "ldlNdl and fulbadl JIM McTa_.,., retum. aaet lfttw's v~ ,.... Y.-w'1 Al1K1 .,. NW Wiii ~ Cl11 1eul!l9f1I Jill. ....... 8 ~ af C~• erewn -. ., .. , twa , _ _..., .... ...,... Ollar· YNrl and " •PIPM" ...,._ la na ~ GN9 INdt,,_ IM4ll 11 ....,. In "-"'· ,........... ... ,..., 7. PACIFICA (8-3) PRO FOOTBALL 8. VALENCIA (12-1) All•Clf' runner Rav ,...'"• wltll -1.000 \'Mcb In twa YNn, "'-' 10 At11m1n9 , .. ,... •nd 24 ~ flW wlfll ll·IMtue "-'- 9. MISSION VIEJO (8-3-2) 10. NEWPORT BARBOR (9-1-2) "'-........ --.. Selers -......... __, ......... CH'~ ................... ....... ,..... ......... Raiders crush Jets Allen, Plunkett key 31-0 rout; San Francisco, Miami upset From AP dispatches LOS ANGELES-Marcus Allen ran for two first-half touchdowns and Jim Plunkett passed for 165 yards 1n the opening 30 minutes Sunday as the Los Angeles Raiders took command early and rolled to a 31-0 victory over the New York Jets in a National Football League season opener al the Coliseum. The rugged Los Angeles defense made life miserable for Jets quarterback Ken O'Brien. sackmg him 10 times. The Ratde~ scored louchdowns on their third. fourth and fifth possessions of the game. moving 62 yards in eight plays. 80 yards m seven plays and 61 yards tn eight plays 10 take a 21-0 halftime lead. , The Raiders made it 28-0 on a 76-yard mterception return by Stacey Toran wtth 11:38 remaining in 1he third quarter. A JO.yard field goal by C'hns Bahr with 8:29 left m the game completed the sconng. Allen, who gained 76 yards on 20 cames, made 11 7-0, scoring on a I-yard plunge with I: 13 to go in the first quarter. He also scored on a 3-yard run with 5:08 left before halftime. lo other NFL openers: VlkJ.Dg1!8,4ten U : Ted Brown's I 0-yard touchdown run with I :49 to play lifted Minnesota to the upset over the defending NFL champions in the Metrodome. as Viking Coach Bud Grant made a triumphant return. Brown's sweep around left end followed a fumble on a kickoff return by Derrick Harmon. the second of two San Francisco bobbles in the game's final 3:27. Viking quarterback Tommy Kramer shook off a poor start to complete 12 of25 passes for 191 yards. With 3:27 left, Minnesota defensive end ~art in scooped up Wendell Tyler's third fumble of the e and raced 29 yards to the San Francisco I-yard line. w plays later, Alfred Anderson's I-yard dive tied the score. 21-21. Olien H, Dolp~1 U : Houston's Mike Rozier scored his ftrst two NFL touchdowns, the second with 25 seconds left in the game, as the Oilers rallied for a victory ovt"r Miami's SuPf:r 86wl finalists in the Astrodome. Rozier's game-winner came on a I-yard dive after backup Miami quarterback Don Strock replaced Dan Marino in the fourth quaner and threw a 67-yard touchdown pas.s to Mark Duper. giving the Dolphins a 19-16 lead with 8:43 to play. Houston quarterback Warren Moon hit Drew Hill with a 48-yard J)Ms to start the winning drive. CMrcen lf; Billa t : At Orchard Park. N.Y .. Dan Fo.uu hit tight end Eric Sievers for San Otcgo's decisive score in the second quarter, and the Bills were unable to put the ball in the end zone as the Chargers beat Buffalo. Glu11 U , Easies I: At East Rutherford, N.J., Phil Simms threw a touchdown pass. Joe Morris scampered for 1wo scores and the Giants' defense unleashed a sack attack agaiAst Philadelphia quarterback Ron Jaworski in routing the Eaales. "" Morris scored on runs of I I and 8 yards and' Simms fired a 23-yard touchdown pass to Li'Onel Manuel as New York defeated Philadelphia in the season opener for the second straight year. Stffltrs 45, Colts 3: Mark Malone thrcw five touchdown passes. including three to the fleet Louis Upps. and ran for another score as the Steelers built a 21-po1n1 halftime lead in crushing lndianapolts at Throe Rivers Stadium. Malone completed 21 of 30 passes for 287 yards and Lipps tormented the Indianapolis secondary for nine catches as the Steelers ruined the head coaching debut of the Colts' Rod Dowhower. Seauwb U, Beagala U: Dave Kneg passed for lhrec first-half touchdowns and Cun Warner celebrated his return to the NFL with a scintilating (ounh-quan~r sconng run that gave the Seahawks the victory at Ri verfront Stadium. • Warner, who suffered tom lnee ltgaments in the 1984 opener, evaded three tacklers on an I I-yard TD run that put Seattle ahead 28-24 with 7:07 to play. The running back finished with 66 yards on 17 cameson an oppresively hot day, with the on-field temperature topping 100 delUCCS. LIODI u. FalcODI !7: In Atlanta. Eric Hipple overcame a shaky stan and hurled three touchdown passes as lhe Lions edged the Falcons. Hipple, who threw two interceptions and was sacked twi~ as Atlanta took a 14-0. lead in the first quarter, engineered ~o touchdown dnves w1th1n a three-minute span of the third quarter. giving the Lions their first lead. 28-21. Patrlotl H , Packen %0: Tony Eason passed for 241 yards and one touchdown. and host New England sacked Green Bay quarterback Lynn Dickey seven times as the Patriots held on. Eason. the league's chird-rated quarterback last season. completed 21 of 28 passes. including a 3-yard scoring toss to Cedric Jones eight seconds before halftime. giving the Patriots a 19-6 lead. Bears 38, Baca U : In Chicago, Jim McMahon passed for two touchdowns and ran for two others to spark the Bears. Chicago, which bad the No. I defense in the NFL last year, was ripped for four touchdowns in the first half as Steve De Berg passed for three scores and James Wilder ran for another. C1tJef1 0, Salata %7: San Clemente High and Saddleback College product Bill Kenney, making it look easy from the outset, threw for 397 yards and three touchdowns as Kansas City defeated New Orte.ans in the Supcrdome. . Card~lt !~, BrowD1 U : In Cleveland. Neil Lomax htt Pat Tilley ~th a 5->:ard touchdown pass with four seconds to play tn ~ulat1on, then drove the Cardinals 46 yard; to set ~P Neil O'Donoghue·s winning JS-yard field goaJ tn overtime. Lendl sheds image of loser He finally c laim-s U .S. Open titl~ after 3 straight setbacks NFW YORK (AP)-"l'm).USt so happy that I'm not even going to try to descnbe it,· Ivan Lcndl gushed af\cr a ptunng the U.S. Open men's s1naJe tJtle Sunday. Even John McEnroe. who was demcd his second stra1stit and fifth career Open championship. aatted. "I 1uj)PQ5C that 1t's more fitun that M won it~ he hadn't won II btfore," McEnrot ~Id af\cr h1~ 7-6. 6-3, 6-4 loss. The thnuhmg of McEnroe con vmcmgly destroyed the label ofloser that has hAunted Lt'ndl, who lo~t in the finals the three previous years A ll)SS co McEnroe would hRve lied the U.S. Open rttord offourconsccut1ve final defeats. sci by Wilham M. John\tOn a~ he lost to Bill Tilden from 1922-2S. But unday belonged to Lend!. who emergtd a winner, only his second Grand Slam utJc In eight finals. He pTeviou~ly h11d won the 1984 French Open -beattng McEnroe "I J'11t took• d1flttent app1oach to th1' )Uf\ Oprn than ever before." Lendl \aid "I tned to le11d nortftal hfe and try 10 do everything like I would do e~ry other day and Just go for my matches. "I wenl to.a couple of aerobic classes. I went to play golf. I played with my dop-anything. r just tried to keep myself relaxed that w.y He said the fact he quietly slid throu&h the tw~wcck tournament while attention wa' focused on McEnr0¢ Jimmy Connors and Boris Becker also was a help. • "Not too many people expected me to w1n •• l.endl said. "I wa n't ~No. t seed. I wnn'T UR No. { ranked player. I wasn't the defendina champion, and I bad lost to McEnroe the last two times Wlthin a month, and on tht same surface. "So. I had only to gain, rully." What he gained was a title, one of the moSl coveted'" tcnnt\ And. he pJned a lot of pnde ··1 think the worst thins to do ,, to be uf'ra1d of someth1na." Lendl said. "I have been thro~ 1t so many times that I JUtt say to myself. 'Keep tryina. u I did latt year 1n the French. ••r SIJd keep tt)'lna. One of these days you have LO &et 1t no mattcrwha• ff you act LOlO 75 finals. you.have to 'Vin some 0(1hem, no matter how bed you play or bow p-cat h~ plays. Sometimes you're 1()1111 tO tel IL" , l I • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Septemw t . 1985 .. Where they're playing_ o.tr ........ .,""' De, .... Will Jordan golf tournament wbaner Richard Greenwood followa throuch with •hot durbJC... Sanday•• final round. Greenwood shuns pressure in victory His 8 -foot putt.on 18th hole clinch es Will Jorda n t ftle By HOWARD L. HANDY 0.., .... Ce11 IJ t •1 :I Rich Greenwood showed nerves of steel on the 18th hole as he sank an 8- foot birdie putt to capture first place in the City of Costa Mesa Will Jordan Classic golf tournament Sunday at Costa Mesa Golf aod Country Club by a single shot. Greenwood. an I 8-ycar-0ld out of Encino. became the youngest player ever to win the tournament in 13 years when he topped veteran Dave Sheff with a finaJ-rouod 74 Sunday on the Los Lagos course. He was 3-0ver- par for the round. 5-under for the tournament with scores of 62-74. The two players had entered Sun- day's final round on equal footing and it took: a spectacular trap shot and an eight-foot putt on the final hole for Greenwood to claim the victory. "The greens were really hard todar, and it was tough to hit the baJI close. • Greenwood said. "I think things turned around on No. 15 (a 190-yard. par-3) when I had a par and Dave bogjed the hole. That put us even and t~en I birdied the 16th to go I -up." Greenwood hit a drive and a 6-1ron into a trap on the par-5 18th hole. then watched as Sheff put his third shot two feet from the pin for almost certain birdie. "When I saw his ball get that close. I thought about a playoff but for- tunately. I hit a good shot out of the trap and I was eight feet from the pin." Greenwood then sank the putt to erase any funher thoughts of a playoff. Sheff. twice the age of h1s1ounger opponent and a resident o Irvine. recently regained his amateur stand- ing with the USGA af\er 11 years as a professional including three on the pro tour. "I butchered the par-3 holes today," Sheff sa1d. "I think: l was six over par on the five holes. (Actually. he was five over including a double- bogey on the treacherous 206-yard seventh hole.) Wll Jwdaft ClliSMc (at CMta Miii G.et 6 C.-trv Out>) ,INAL IHSUL TS ~--...... MeM Linda KO<t flr11. Lot Le1><>1 second) l~ldl GrttnwOOCI C62·74l 137-0.vt Stieff '62· 7S) 1»-Cllt'lt WOOCI 1•7·71), Ktnl TevlOf (6S·n> 1»--&oo Al'denon <67-nl. Markt! TevlOf (6'·73); ROiier! Parker (66-nl; Cllrll t<tvte l6S·74). 140-<>ave UC111I 161-n l. Frlti Neu!'Tl411 (67·731, Rav Vanvo 1"4761 141-0..n PaulM>n (61·73), Ed Seu (61·731 JOM Snow (61·73) 1'2-Tlm Siad! (61·H). S CarM>n (71·711, P Pa11191' ( 73·'9). IQ-Greg Tu to (67·161, Jim RHm, Jr (66·n) 14t-Tom C'41rk (77·72), Mark Harding ('9•75); One Slmot0n (7074), Cllrl1 ward ('7-n l; SColl AlmGo.11" (11·731. KS Kodlar ('97S), Alex Galven (71-711 14s-Krl\ Smllll ('9·7'). Paut Koerner 161-nl; Frid Hanover 16976); Oave 0.H91'n <6'·761, a. aor0tn (61-n>. Jim Georve <67·71>, O..n ltamoo (66·79) ""',..... Lot La00t flnt, MeW Linde second. twtnot-cap lhl<d 12t-Oaw Cor,_ 1n -61-.1 131-oavld CrM.,,...n ln·n-tl, David E--.1e1n <n·J0-41; Al AIOav lto-6......,1 1~trldl C•ntv (11·7'--9), Petrick Cantwell (76·...-SI, John Cullt 179·6,._.l l~Jfl .. Garcia (7'·73-9), Tom Pfllcn (7S·7.,_.), 13+-Art Welda 111·71-fl. Gonion Von . Jr (7t·n l; JOfln Sloal ln ·71-71. Ken Ron (71·6'--61, Jim H.iniv tlO-n-91 lls-L_, &Hnka 173-1.-..1; Oer• Dunttr (11·7~) S.-.d ....... ~ Linda !Int, LOI l~l lKOnd, llandl cap llllrd. 12'-.Joe Falc•lll (7 t-n-101 130-6o«> McGuire (76·76-111 133-Ed Bonn (76·1:)-lll. SIN Surntll 1n -11-IOI; 8oO Timm• ( 7S-l?-121 I~ wa"lno <71·76-101, Jonn Mave< <n-n-101. Mlct1111 Ma nnino (7S·l3--111 IJS-Jav Troilo (77·1C>-11l 136-Jettrev Allen (73·13-10). Joe Flcovlc 171 -87-11), Warren Clark 177·11-11) Tlllrcl l'llM Lo• -l.aGO• nru , ~ Linda ~on<I Hendl· CI D tlllrd 12s-Eowaro Cl\aoman llM-7S-171 ,,,._.,old Harri• llS-76-16) Sttollln HO (17-76-17) 131-8trt Moriwaki 1'4·77-ISI. Bot> B1tu 111·7.,_11). 132-Mlck O.Ple<ro llS·79· -16). Sob Hanson (IJ·n-14), Al Sall llS·7S-1') 133-fllctiard Diiion (11·77-16), Sot> Hensen (IM·IS-111. L Grttn (16·7S-14) lls-Lti Do1metl (IM·1'>--141. R Seaov (11·1:)-11) 136-Tom Cllllndter (16·1C>-IS) Coast area players abundant on rosters of college football te~ms Arca football pl ayers have M:attertd across 1hc country lo pursue their spon ln the collq.iate ranks.. 1nclud1ng local powerhouse teams and far-away small coUegcs. While Pac-I 0 squads, spc<:1fically USC .and UCLA. enJOY area recruits, so does small Austin Peay CoUcge in Tennessee. The military academics also prosper from Orange Coast-area products -from E<hson's Ty Thomas (Air Force) to Mau ~ymour of Woodbndgc (Arm y). Several local players have clunbcd their way to the Ivy League, with Joel Seay (fountain Valley) on Harvard's roster, and Ke' 1n Armstrong (Woodbridge) ready (or play at Princeton. Cal State Fullcnon and Long Beach State will also sport Sea View and Sunset leaguers. The four-year college having the most area players 1s USf w11h seven. UCLA follows with six. Here's a rundown of area players Pacific-10 Conference Name, Scbool Jeff Benson. Edison Jeff Brown, Corona def Mar Paul Dix, Fountain Valley Brad Leggett, Fountain Valley Kennedy Pola, Mater Dci Troy Richardson, Edison. GWC O ms Sperle, Fountain Vall~y USC UCLA Mike Beech, Newpon Harbor Greg Bolin, Fountain Valley Andy Miller. Uni versity Billy Ray. Hunungton Beach Mall Stevens, Fountain Valley Danny Thompson. Hunungton Beach Arbona Jim Birmingham, Mater De1 Kirk Swanhout. CdM Bnan Lopkcr. Mater De1 Chip Rish. Manna Harry Bill ups, Univers11 y Ed Stnnger, Estancia Rex Brown. Ocean View Enc Ory, Edison Dwayne tan. Edison Art1ona State Oregon Oregon State Sta.nlord Mike Newton. Fountain Valley Andy incla1r. Edison Wasblagton State John Mar-;hall. Sadd Col PCAA Poa. Ht. OT I I FB 5-' TE 6-1 OG 6-5 FB 6-2 p 6-5 p 6-2 LT 6-6 TE 6-2 QB 6-2 ()( 6-3 Q B 6-0 TB 6--0 DT 6-3 WR 6-0 OG WR 6-2 5-10 SE 5-11 OT 6-6 CB S-lS WR 6-1 TE 6-4 DB 6-0 c 6-5 WR 6-2 Cal State Fullerton Kevin Bradle}. Orange Coast Chip Dickerson, Orange Coast RB NG OT LB 5-8 6-0 6-7 6-1 Hank Goebel. CdM Jeff Hipp. Edison Long Beacb State Jamie Craft. Fountain Valley Jeff Graham. Estancia Greg Locy, Mater Oct Enc Nickel. Woodbndge Troy Ory. Edison Nevada Laa V egaa Jerry Blakeficld, Ocean View Rod Emery, Fountain Valley G~ Koperk. EdJSon DaYld Lopez. Ed1son Dennis McGowan. Edison Pacific UtaJl State Brett Stevens. Fountain Valley Rick Moser. Ocean View Other schools Air Force Mike McGunchey. Ocean View Bob Rose. Westminster T> Thomas.Edison Army Mark Ph1lltps, Woodhndge Matt eymour. Woodhndge Austin Peay Greg BenJamin. l!nl\·erm}' Kevin Burke. Woodbndgc Boise St.ate Kc.-1th Jarrell. Edison Brigham Young David Hick~. Wco;tm1nster Joel Pinckney. Estancia Cal Poly SLO Lance Manin. ( dM Claremont Ron Ratcliffe. Unners1tv WR QB TE O L WR OT RB DB LB (' 5-10 6-5 6-3 6-2 6-1 6-5 6--0 5-10 6-J 6-J QB 6-0 s 5-11 TE: 6-4 LB 5-11 ( 6-1 OB 6-1 DB 6-2 RB 6-0 QB 6-1 QB b-1 LB t:-2 ( 8 ti-0 RR 5.q DR 5-11 Wt. Yr. 280 r 21 0 w 215 Sr 250 Fr. 240 Sr 220 Sr n o Fr 250 Fr. 231 Jr 185 Fr 207 Fr 191 Jr 194 Fr 237 Fr 185 Fr 251 r 160 Fr 183 Sr 27 3 Sr 160 Fr 180 Jr 240 'ir 190 • 0 260 So 180 Jr 175 Jr 245 Jr 265 Sr. 21 0 Fr 175 Fr 205 Fr 201 Fr. 230 Fr 170 Sr. 265 0 175 So 175 Fr 220 Fr. 260 So. 185 Fr 180 Jr 225 Fr 190 Fr 225 Fr 180 Jr 180 Fr 210 Fr I 5 Jr 14'\ Fr 205 fr I I l Jr I ~II f r 11<0 ~r DuuaJ Tbompeo11 UCLA AndJ 8lncla1r Sta.o.lord B•l•m• Goba.ra UC De:ri• Jeff On.ham Lone Beach State Mike YcGlln cbey A1r Force Joel SeaJ Ha.rYard Colordo Reid Long, Fountain Valle:) UC Davls Kalama Gohara UmvcrSlly Harvard Joel Se.A}. Founuun Valley HawaJJ Bnan fklchcr Founuun Valle) lclallto Ultaola Mike G1ddtnp. Nwpt Hrbt OCC Sandy McGee, GWC ~b Scbnng.. Sadd Col Alan A1sana. Estancia Navy Brett Batchelor Hunt Beach Nebr HU 811J Macias, Manna Rob Phemc1c. Edison New Mulco Rich Mendo.aa. Hunt Beach Nortlilena Art&ou ~1ke Berg. G WC John Uernle. Ocean V1ev.- Cal Stale Nortlilrhlge Blake ~mllh, Sadd H1~ Kell> ~tO"al. Ocean Vie" Notre Dame Occldenw Brad Arnold. lJnivcrs11y Princeton Ke' 1n Annstrong.., Woodbndge Rice Ken MaJOr. Edison Sacramento Si.le Thc:o Langford. Ed1 w n Brett Blanchard. Edison Richard Browo . Westminster Tai Tamamasu1. V. stmnstr OT 6-4 235 So RB (>...() 185 Fr. WR 61 OLB b-3 1..8 6-2 WR 5-11 WR 5-1 0 LB 6-2 (, 6-3 DE:. 6-2 OT 6-6 TE 6-4 180 Jr. 225 Fr 220 Sr 175 Sr 180 Sr 220 Sr 255 Sr 200 Sr. 230 So 220 Fr. \ 6-0 185 Jr OL OB DE OLB b-1 6-2 6-2 6-3 225 Sr 200 Jr 205 Jr :!20 Fr TE 6-2 215 Fr DB ti-I 180 Jr TE 6-4 20 1 Jr RB 6-0 215 Jr 'WR 6-4 LB b-:! DT 6-0 IQO Jr 220 So 265 So Sonoma Ken Batie). 1Jnl\ers1t~ OL 6-4 220 Fr Soatbeni Utab State 11ke D1Bernardo Edison V. R h-1 I Cl Jr Carl Harry. Fountain \.-alle~ Bob Jenkins. Capo Va lle) Enc Wheelwnght. Edison l'tab Weber State Phil Cooper. Edison Craig Dum1ty. Edison Mike Powell. Ediso n WR OT DB 5-10 6-3 6-1 QB t>-2 OG b-2 LB 6-1 165 225 I "S 255 210 Fr. So Fr Jr r r GWC volleyball team tough again It'll be a difficult act 10 follow for Golden West Col\qc volleyball coach Alben Gaspanan m I 98S ln 1984. hts Rustler women finished wtth a ~1 recxm1cn route to winnrng the stale champ1onshlp. Later m the tea.son, his Golden West men's squad finished second m Southern C"ahfc;Jt~na (thctt 1s no men·~ state tournament) Th~1n Jul> he "a~ assist.ant coa'h for the "o men!. V. est squad which won Lbe gold medal al thc-Na11onal Sports Fes1n·al in Baton Rouge '"The~ is always room for improvement no maner how successful your teams arc.·· said Gaspanan "Once you start believing you 'rt' a""esome. someone wtU come and lnod: ~ ou do"-n 10 earth lfan~1h1ng. 1'11 "ork harder tCI get us p~pared for · 5 .. v. ith three all<onterence plaH·rs ret urning and a I number of incoming freshmen h111ers coming 1n v aspanan sttm~ tO--h1l''e a s1rong-m:rdeu~ fonmothrr barrrrcr>eason Sophomore seller Julie Boland. a first-team Jll-s!4te and .\ll- outh Coasr Conference choice heads lht' l1neuri .\1'10 returning .... 111 he.· all-'1( ( pcrforn1t•r, 1-..Jren "-night and ( ece Ella'> Jlong 14 llh '>Ophnmort· oul\ak h1m·r \.1an na \Jn l\1elk .\mong tht' <Hher pJa,er\ l'\petted to r,ee plJ' ng 11me "'I II he treshmen 1'.ath' V.1se man 1 &' erl~ Hill<. H 1gh1 Jen n1kr La Pagila 1 Esperanza>. "-elh V. in l ier I Ed1\l.m 1 LaRond.1 Do' le < 'orcol and \1cphan1e L<.x~art Pal 1faa Lisa ~1anfrc-J 'i-' freshman !mm Lo~ .\m1gl)\ High "'" he \1dellnt>d for t"l' lu three "'t'el!> "'th a k~ 1n1ur: ~ut she,., npcctcd tn pla' a ma1or role t11r 1he R ui;tkr'> upon her return ·v. care a m ul h ml>rt' hal j nu·J unit Jnd "'' v.1~n·1 rel~ on one or 1"0 girls w lam us a' 1n \C:.il"'i pa<.1 · ..a1J ~ras~nan "V. e are not that far from being "ht•re v.c v.c-re 1n 4 Attractive prep openers set 1 Creative Cuisine Recipe Contest Non-league openers are usually just Westminster, Estancia vs. El Toro. e,1ancta v• Et TOfo 111 Minion v1a1o High f h. b' d C I M H · lrvlM vs Unlverlltv et lrvlne Hl911 the start o somet mg 1gger an orona de ar vs. untington Santa Ana 11, Newoort Herl>Or better to come later. but for the 1985 &.ch and an mtra-ci1y showdown Sadd1at>ac1o. o Santa Ana va111v •' sa"'• .-.,.,. prep football season, this week's between Irvine and University. ao-:'"4l11tlm •' Fuiier:on openers for Orange Coast area teams K.Jckoff is at 7. 30 in each instance Bree·OUnde .,, "'"''' may go a long way in determining . Capistrano VelleY "' Foollllll el Tu1lln H11111 . . The schedule: Ctrl'llo' "' Cvl>f•u ., we""" Hlg,, future status in the rankings. Dana Hiii' vs Sonora •' La Heore Hlgri Among a loaded schedule arc such confrontations as Fountain Valley vs. Mater Dci, El Modena vs. Edison. Esperanza vs. Marina, Va lencia vs. Girl debuts. prep team loses, 50-0 L VONS, Ga. (AP) -Sheila Gaf- fney became the fint girl to play m a h1gJl school football pme m Georgia. but her team lost. SO-O. The S-8, 135-pound fullback. a senior. played one quarter Friday ni&ht for Toombs Central in the defeat to Lyons. but did not carry the baJI. .. hc'Btrona and quick and I think she played pretty well for her first time out," uid Toombs Coach Fred Aiken. Toomb5, which has only 20 play- ers, lost iu 29th straight pme UCI women 1VbJ SAN OIEOO -UC lrv1i'le's women's soccer team lK San Otcao 1n Its in~gural match, 3-1, unday. •Lori Heinselman an<1 Kelly Gnmm 9iCOrtd sccond·half ioals for the Antu rs lo break the I-1 halt\i me tie THUttSOAY Fountain Vallav vi Mater Dal et Santa Ana Sowl Ktnntdv vl. ac.an Vlaw at Huntington ee.cn Hlgll Valencia at Westminster Laguna Hiii• vi. WOOClt>rlo~ el lrvln• Hl9'1 PIClfka YI. VIiia Park at El Modena HIQh Werren at La Habra ,.IOAY Corona dtl Mar 11 HuntlnQton 8NC" Costa Mew at 9 0IM Grandt Et Mooena Yl. EdllOn at Or11191 Coatt CDlteoe E.-anra Y'I. MarlM at Wtitmlnster HIDll La Qulnte v\ El Dorado at Velen<:la High LO\ AtamllO\ Yl LOl Am1Qo1 •' Gallr HIQ,, Ma9nolle Y\ Kattlla ., l a P•lma Stadium Rowland "' Sunnv Hiii\ et 8ueN Part.. High Santin o YI OranQI at El Modine Ht911 Savenna at San Clementa Servile at Collon Troy et Gardin Grovt> ,,.. SA .... DAV Buena Perk at l e9una B•ec" COf'ona at Ce1won Loera et Wfltern San Dla9o Mona e: Mlu1on "'''° Orange County's ~ easy listening radio station K Enter Your Favorite Recipe 4.nd Win! , CATECORIE 1 QUICA. A \JD f "H no .\.Ill '\O Dl ... llL-Rec1pe~ ro \ <>l>k' LlrJ tht' i:l' <11 •hose (dU/lhr "'-lfh unexpected gue~r~ 2. REGIONAL-RPCIP<'" featunnt.: o\m PrtcJn ( 111~me /'l>fl' rht lJ•r r,11h1, 'outh\.\C'H Jnd p.u r~ tn between J MASCULl"JE TOL CH-\ ft'n °"'ho are en1o~tnlil, ttll' l..1rl hen ,hdrt' 111ur t,H onre r el 1Pt' 4. G0(.,Rf\,1fT-Rec1pe' ~ou "'"~"hen ~ou ~<1nr t1l ''fl'<''' rh1, 1,rtt urt>an n ~our lite 0 \ TE~ T RL Lf_ lntr.1nh '"''"' ·""" '•'' .. ,.,,,. '' ,f . .-t' '· ' ., r cw , •• ,,,., t11.dl ht-.;,, ("ptt'CI '\ 1•ntru''" "'.J'' tlf f\Pf"'\1 t.,111f\lt "·""-' t '' ., """'"' t'f J~ ,,_ (h·r t {);,tit; Pik•t l'mp1.,, f',.• J r• fl<'f ""'' t>Jr I,,, ,.. tw• •-r • •rw •t• • ,.,,. fl.t•I• P11<>1 .1nc1. •ffl"<'I f:t<- ,,.,.,,,,,.... I f' r' ""'.,,, tltttl" .•,Ht""l.4 •'""' .. , 'r• ' •••tw l~tr-1"'-'~ O' rlf"'lt'\-16 t"d to 0,1h 1"101 I lfl • r 11 (I '''' Ill N I '' 'f' 11; ~\ 11.11 ( 1'1<1' '-'fC"\I ( ~ 'U6l6 IH '00 r \I Vtllrmt>fo• 1~1;, ·~~ >\ ,,. •,. ''< 'Nl.i'"'' <1/()11~ ..,,th lh,.1• tf'Clf)e r ·h~ < r t1' rt",,.,,,,.'""' tr.-r ... ,,. ,,, rf"t , ~ ' r lt'f '" Wfltt(Jn#"l-\d.f, r>t to,.,,_f .) JWJ( .. , """ t Tittt ,.,.,,,. '"•",.. 11'.1 ui,.. ''''tri' ' t.J•,., "'"''" """~'ht-••• ,~mp,,,tnrrrl '°''" ,.,,,, lt>r'Tt ,,, , °'P' , t ~ 1 r-.,t, 'ol"'I •" ""' ''I' ''ft'if"'f1 ""'~R'#I'" "''Pl.Atn1n11 ~"• ,.,t taftf'-'"•I /,4,... ,,.,,. ,., '1¥-, .• ,, .. "''" .,., "-'°'" t.r• ' ,.., ~1', ""''"'° "hirt• 'n4I ,·~"' / ~ f /)p\,.f1 ft) p,1t ••4 111,.ilr ,., .,,_,.,, 1 '"' f""t...,~ 'rl'',.""1" .. •• r~~ CREATIVE CUISINE RECIPE CONTEST ENTRY FORM NAME OF ENTRY CATEGORY ENTRANT $ NAME ADDRES S DAY PHONE t: EYENING PHONE. ll- I -· . ' MAJ0tt LaAGU• ST AN DINOS ~L .. eiue K.al\M1 Cnv Mei* c 11ic..10 Ollltena ... " .. MlflllffOll TtxH TOl'onlo N-Vork llttlmore O.trOlt aotton Mll'#lult.M Cleveland WHT OtVIStOM W l ~ct. Oa 71 $1 5:10 1' '° SJt l!Jt .. ,, 504 , .. ,, .496 10 ., 73 .463 14~ " ,.. 452 ,, 49 " ,.., 21 •AIT DIVISION IS 51 '3 S2 11 " 11 ... 67 " '° 1$ 49 .. ~.,.. s.c.... .,..... 7, lattlmort 4 01 Innings) Kansas Cllv U, Mllwauk" 11 <l 1 IMIMtl kellle '· 0.lfOll 2 TotOl'llO 10, Mt1Miol1 t New Yorlt. t, 0.kland • eot!Ofl t, Cleveland I Clllcaoo 7, T1111t 6 T .. V't OINl"ft Ka nM1 Cltv (S.Otn\eoen 17·.Sl a t "'*'" (C111011art-4·1), n o.trolt 1~11i., 0-01 al Toronto IKtY 11-6)," lalllrl'IOl't 1800d1Cklf' 11· 14) 11 801lon IMllNI 10-lOJ. " Ml1111ttOl1 llutclllr t • I') 11 Chle"'o llaMltllf' 6·121, n New York (lvtlrom l ·2) ., MllWIUkM (Vuckovlcll 6·10), n Clevaland (We00.11 1·61 11 S1111te (l.111911on 7· 1'), n TellH llluu11t 1·5) 11 01•1ana (Sutton lM ),11 T"'"4111V't 011mt1 Kat1M1t CllV el Allelh, n Detroit et Toronto, n l elllmore 11 lotlOll, n MlnnKOll II ClllC.oo. " Naw York et Mllweull.M . n Clev1l1n<1 11 S..1111. n Tex .. ti 0.kla nd, n Netteftal LNeue w•n DIVISION w L f'ct. oe ~ 71S5 516 Cincinnati 10 '3 576 I Sen Oleoo 70 6S s It 9 Houston 6S 69 4'5 13 , Allenl1 5' 1• 4.ll 20 .... Sen FrencllCO S3 11 396 2S , SI. l.oul1 ~Vorlt. Mont rte I Plllltdtf Piila Cl\lc1110 Plllllluro" I AST DIVISION 12 S2 ., S3 7) u "' .. 64 70 4J '° SIHICll ..,,. k.,.., 612 601 S4 1 493 ~,. l23 .. 9., " 11 ,. . .., Ntw York 4 ~ l 114 nn.no1) Cincinnati S. Cl\ke llO S II e 9 ·~nln111 oarkne.11 Allanll 7 SI LOUii l Plllt1de1Pllla 9, San 019110 I MonlrH I 9. Sin Fra ncisco 6 • 10 1nnln1111 TadlV't Gemes ~ (Wt lcn 10·31 •' Atlante I McMumv O· 3 >. n Sii\ 019110 (Orevtekv 11 9J •' C nclnn1tl (MGGeffloen H J. " Chlceoo (Fontenot ~-et a l St Lour, I KIPthlre 10·11. n S.11 Frencl1Co (Hammuer ' tOJ 11 Houalon (SColl 15·7), n TlilldlV'I Glmtl o.dtW1 er Att1nt1. 2 •·n SI LOUii t i New Yor• n MonlrH I ., Pllll1def Plll1. " Cnk:ellO er Pllllburon. n Sin OltOO al Cll\Clnnatl n ~.£renc1Ko er Houtton n AMERICAN LEAGUE An"4s 7, OrtcMt 4 CALil'OtlNIA BAL TlMOttl eb rllbl ab r h bl 5 0 I 1 Wl1111ln\ 21> 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 LI CV rl S 1 1 0 1 0 I 0 RIC>lltn u S 1 2 I 0 O O O EMurrv lb • 2 2 2 2 I I 0 Ml( Yono" 5 0 I 0 A 1 2 I Sl'lffl• di\ 1 0 0 0 010 di! 2011 I 0 I 0 0 0 130 SOlO 3010 S020 2000 1000 1001 0000 1 000 0000 21 1 2 1000 5 0 ' 0 6 0 t 1 2 0 0 0 I 0 1 0 3 I 0 0 OownlnoH ~l<ln Carew Ph G.,btf n ScOlllfl lb llnlOUI lb DWllfre rw Polklor n Grk:ll 2b I.Iner•• di\ lllJktn dl'I Htndrck rl ltJonea n OMll!er Pll Pettit cl eoone c JKHowf 3b DtCna pn Wllfono 111 Ttta11 44 7 1' • Tot•lt kort bv IMlnOI 404 1\4 Clllfemle 000 001 102 OJ-7 aaltllMfe 000 OOJ 010 00-• y emt Winning RBI -NOM. E-Ol•on, WloOll\$ OP-Celllornle I Bettlmort r L08-<:ettlornre u 811rlmort I 211-Benlquez. llntrH . Lecy, Murrey Roenlcke. O.Clnce\. Sconlerl, Gricl'l HR-Murr1v (26) ~B-Ptllft 2 ('6). Sn1fbv (•J s--Grlch, Wfgo1111 01mP1t11 SF-H1ndrlctt Cellfoml• SlllOll ,,. H R ER ea so s 1 Holl1n<1 Cor11e11 OMoorew l ·I 1·3 I 22 3 I l 2 3 0 I 0 3 0 I 0 2 0 I 0 2 0 3 2 88ttlme<t Flanaoen 6 • 2 2 4 3 SStewerr 2·3 1 0 0 I I Haven' 1·3 0 0 0 0 0 Olaon 1 I 3 4 1 1 I 0 TMertnar L.2·3 2 I 3 l I l 0 0 Snell 2·3 3 , 0 0 0 Slaton Pftcl!t<I 10 3 batten In Ille 6111 l=>1nao1n ottcl'led 10 1 118fltr 1n "" 1111 T_,.-01 A-21,<m NATIONAL LEAGUE Mets 4, Ood9tlrl J NIW YORK LOS ANC.ELES MWiltncl 8ckmn 2t> Hrnnaz lb Cerrer c Strwbrv rt HH Oll Ovltatre c1 HJOll•n lb S.n11na u Frn<lez o Sleull O~ Oro1co o H11r<11t Pl! McOwlto P1clor1t P'1 Aounera P Knl11n1 on S11~ o ab r 11 bl lb r h bl 7 2 2 1 Ouf\c1n u 1 1 0 1 6 0 2 0 Whllfld Oii 1 0 0 0 I 0 l l B1llor 311 1 0 0 0 6 I 1 I BRuu1ll II • 0 I 0 6 0 ? 0 RWlllm & If 0 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 Len<lnt cf 1 0 0 0 7 0 t 0 Cet>ell lb 6 0 1 0 ~ 0 0 0 Mer1ll1f rl 6 I 2 1 1 o o Medlcll lb r O 0 o 1 0 0 0 Ande•n lb 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Mldndo cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 Q 0 SlubOI oh I 0 0 0 1 O 0 0 COlu P 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pdtrtn p/I I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 VH 0tr C 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ma luk pn 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 Powell o 0 0 0 0 0 0 :> 0 )Qtln1ln Oii 0 0 0 0 JGonJll it 0 O O O 8rvan1 o~ 1 0 0 0 S.a 111 l 1 I 0 Btot' 111 1 0 0 0 .. .,,,.,,, o 3 0 I 0 Sc•OK ll C 2 0 0 0 Sf • tl J Taot.11 44 I 6 > k er• bv lmlftel New Van 010 000 010 000 01-4 Ltt A,_.. 000 010 010 000 00-l Gema Wtnn1no R9t -MWllton (l) E-8 eck"'e" A'ldlf'son. Ou~n Caban. OP-Ne ... York 1. LO• """'" 1 l.08-NI W York 13 LOI Allllt tff • 28-ltuu tll, Htrne t\Otz HR-<:1rter (26t Marlllall (191 Wllte>fl (0 Sll-Strawtierr~ 1141. Madlock (I), Sa~ <231. Wllt0n <111 ltekman 1'71 Ovl\alre 1121. H1<naf\dt1 (3). S.-Ancllf't0n 81ckm1n. SF-Duncan Hft Ytf11 ,rnoea Oro..co Mc Ow II Atulltfl Sisk w,•·! Ltt AlllltMt Hlf'thftar Powell C:Ol•a I.• 3 WP-Her1n1,., A--Olll lfl' H It llt H SO ) I 0 ? S I 1 2 1 1 I 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 J 0 0 0 0 0 9 6 I 1 1 1 2 0 1 I ) • I I I S &11~-Powtli T ~ MAJOtt L.8AGU1i L.liADIRI American L .. tue .... rTING c»S •• DllU •ooo.. IO•ton J62. arell, Kal\Mt (llV, ).46, It Htndtrtof' Htw YOfll, ,DO Malltf\OlV N..,. Vor• »6 lodt•t . 0t111eote1, l ll eur~ C""'•'•~ .Jll ltUNs-ll Hendt'Wft New Y0<• I 11 •IPllfll, l•lllmor•. " Wl!Jf'-"d N-Yori! t5; I Mvr,.v ltltlmof• ••. 8re11 1C111ta1 Cltv, fl ••~ttlf!O'fv. New voo 111. f Mi.JrraY. lalllnwt. IOI, ltl~lll 8t1111'1'10tt 11. WI~ • ..._ VOf-t1, telne•, C111 alll. fl HIT5-eooo1. lk>\IOll, ltl, M8111ntlV. ,..._ Yn, 176, l udtlltt, IOtlOll. 16" lalnel. Ollcato, 1'3; COOOlt Mllwt ulllt 1'3, P lrMllY, ... Illa, 1'3 OOUILE$-Mettlnolv, New Yort., >t, a 1.1C1P.11W, lolton, 31; atH•. aoaron. M. c:-. MllwaUk .. , ls, •ren. KMMI CllV, :n, G W111tw, Ollceto. l2 Tit ll'LE s-wuaon. KenMtt Cltv. 19, •ut· I«, Orlelaftd.. 12; Pudlt lt. M.IMMO!t, U. Fernandtt. TorOtltO. '· larfltld. TOl'onlo, ., Cooe>tt, MhwelAM , t. ~ l rldtev. S..tlle, . ~ HOMI! "UHs-fCIUI Cllfca90, )S; lalbonl. K811M.I CllV ll, 01 l!!veM. Detroit, 31, G. Thomt1, SMllll, 191 M811lno· IV. New Vork, tt. STOL.EN 8ASEl-4t. HlflOMton, New YO<k, 6'1 ~ ,.,..._ .. , WlltOll, l(ansu Cl111, fO; l utlar, C1tvela11d. •· I;. $mllll, Kantu C:llv. U. PITCHING (l1 CltCltlont l-Guldrv, Ntw Yorll, 11·5, 3.01, Sabtrllalltfl. KanMt City, 17·S, 2.77, lllrt1a1, Oaklancl 10-.S. ) 7•; 8urn1, Clllc•oo. 16·1, UI, Cowltv, New Vork, 10·5, ~.16, Hlou.rt, MllweukM , 12·6, 4 1'; Lt l1>r1no1. Kl f\HI Cllv, 14·7. 2 ... STlttl(E0UT$-elvlt v•n. MlnnH Oll, 170, Morris, Detroit. 1S9. F. 811111l11er, c111caoo.lS7; w"'. Aneett. 1s1. Hur11. lot• ton. 14- SAVES-OUIJ.tllOtrrv. Kentt• C:ltv, )2; H1<nandl1 Detroit, lt. D. Mttc't, """"'- 25, ll191\t111, New Yorll. 1~. • J1met, CllkaOO. 24, J Howell, Oakllncf. 14. NetleMI L....,. I A TTING (3lS at Cleltl-MCGat, SI LO\lli . .l6t. o~ ~ .»1, H1<r, • SI l.o.;11, .311, R1IMt, Monlr .. I, .)11, Sanabtro, Cllla!10. l09 llUNs-MurPilv. Atlanta, 101, lt1lnet, MontrN I. "· McGM. SI. LOUlt , 94, Sano· lltl'O. Chlcaoo. 93. COlttl'\811, St '-01Jl1, f'2. OllWT'tn. Oedltn, n. llel-Perker. Cincinnati , 101. MurPhY Atlante, 92, Herr SI. Loull , 901 G Wiiton. Pllll1de4otll1, 17; J. Clark, St. Loula, '4 HITS-McGft. SI. Lout•. 179, Gwvnn. Sin DllOO, 162, Plrklf', Clncl11111ll, 160, Sandt1er11. Chlc•oo. 151, H.,r, Sr. LOIJlt , 1S7 OOU8LEs.-Plfklf, Cincinna ti, :M; GWUtan. P11Uadel1>11l1, 31; Herr, St, Louis , 31. Wallech, MontrH I. 31, Cruz, HOUllOn, )0 TRIPLES-MCGH . St. Loura. "· Samuel, PhlleeltlPlll•. 11, Coltman, SI. LOUii, 10, RelMt, Monlrtal, 10, Gerner. Houlton, a HOME RUNs-Murpl\y, Alla nt1, SA, <*llWT'tn, C>eOten, l2; Parlier. Cincinnati, 27. Cerltr. New York, 26. Schmidt, Pllltt · dtlOllla. 26 STOLEN 8ASES-C01tman, SI Loula. 91, ll•IMI, Montre1I, "'· LOC>e•. Clllc100. ... Samuel, Ptllladltllflle, ... McGM, SI Louis, '2; Sandberg, Clllcaoo, 42. PITCHING (11 Clteltlont)~ranco, Cln· clnna ll, 11·2, 1.90; Gooden. New York, 20-•, 1 7f, Htnll!Mr, De01en. 14·l, 1.17, H1wkln1. Sat> Dfeoo, 11-s. 2 91, Wlldl, DMten. 10·). 1.a. STRIKEOIJ.Ts-Goodtn, New York, nt. Soto. Clnclnnell. 199. Rven, HoYtton, 117. Valt!Uue61, Ded9fn, Ill. Fernar>dt&. New York, ISO. SAVE!.-4t11raon, MonlrH I. 33, Lt Sml111, Cllkaoo. 2t, Suiter, All1n1a , 22, 0 Smllh Housron. 21, Goua0t. San OlflO 21 Bo.ton Clauk (al Sutton, Mau .) ,,., Geor11t Burn1, $17,000 VJ JoM Mana H•v. 126,-'00 Gr911 Normt n, 126,400 Jodie Mud<I, 176,400 Ltonlf<I ThomoM>n, $26,400 V• Ce tvln PH I•. $1•,ol()() v s l.•MI• Ct-nil I 11,461 Bred F1t1el.117,467 Joev Sl~er 112,467 176 Wevnt Levi, S9.200 Frank Conni<', 19,200 Cnrl1 Plf'rv, 19 .200 Steve Pelt, 19.200 l=unv Z.oet•. S9,200 717 Chip Beet<, U ,200 Howard Twlttv. U .200 Bred Fu on. 16.200 l.ortn Roberts. U ,200 Mike Nlcolt1t1, U ,200 DonP~.u.200 VI JoM Foullfll U ,480 Pel Lln<lllV, $4,oll() Da vid Froll U,4 0 Tim Norris • '3,2ol0 David Tnore, $3,2.0 BIH Sander. $3,2ol0 279 Ml1<1 McCullouoh. '3,240 David Grel\am, '3,2.0 Jn HHI, Sl,2.0 ao Bud<lv Gardf\er, '1,3n Ro~I Wrtfln. s2.377 Victor R911et1do. U ,377 Oevld Edwerdl , 11.Jn Ken Brown. S2 ,377 Brett Upper, 12.Jn 8111Celf"·12,Jn 211 s11v18owrr141n,$1,120 s1tve Etklf\Oton. 11.no Fred COllOlft, ii.no Jim Hallet, '1.720 Georo• Arehtr, s1.no Roa Curl, I 1,no Ktf' Grfffl, Sl,710 lt2 Jack R.n11tr. \I 190 TtrrvSnodoreu $1,190 L1rrv Rini...,, sl,180 on Sireci.., s I llO Me rk Heyn, Sl,1IO Tlm SlrnPM>n. 11 .190 Robt<'! Lollr Sl, 190 213 Me r• l.ve. S931 Kermit Zertev, S93 I Curt Bvrum, 193 1 Gr911 Pow1n . S93 I Gene Sauen. s93 I Bobbv We dkln1. S9Jl Clertl\CI ROH , lt.ll Ronni• Bleck, 1,,1 Mike Ooneld. '880 8 111 Baroln, '880 Me rk Pfeil. ll80 67-66-68·66 6S·10-66·72 61·68·68·70 69·'7· 70-67 66· 71-69·67 71·6'·68·66 74·'3·68·70 •~71-68·70 70-.. ·67-10 68·61-n-61 69·'7·n ·61 6'·61·71·7' 61·70-61·10 11 • ..-.. ... '9·69·67-n '9·69·71·61 71-6e·6S·13 70-69 •67. 71 1S·•S·68·69 71·70·6'·67 1•·65·70-69 11·69·10-68 12·10·70-U 70-61·69·72 10·61·69·72 7G-6f·73·61 61·70-73·6' 69·71·61·71 10· 11-10-19 6'·67· 11·,. 6'·70·70·72 72·67·69·72 10-69· 71-70 10· 70-61· 72 11·69·67·13 70-71·68·70 67·69·72·73 65·13·70-73 67·71·72·71 6'·72·69·74 6'·11-n-10 73·67·71·70 70-71·6'·11 67·72·73·70 11-61-n-11 n-6'·•~n 6'·n·n-10 67·73·72·70 72·70-6'·71 71·66-7S·70 6'·'9·71-15 72·61·72·71 1?·69·70·72 73·69·6971 70·71·1l·61 70·72·13·61 69·73·69·72 n -6t·n ·69 IO·Tl·l0·13 61·73·70·73 7Hl·tH1 L.P~A tournament (II fl'.,,._no) 21S •·Nency LOPfl. 126.2SO Lori Gerbec1, I 16, 117 21' Slll11 Quinlin S 10,SOO Calhv Mont 110 •" 111 J0An11t Ce rner lS,471 Pel 8 r1dltv U ,417 F>111v S11H11an, ss.•n JudY Clerlt., IS,471 S1tlll\a11le F•rwlo lS.•n 211 8Kkv PH rM>n, 13.lSS lto11t Jontt, '3,lSS Jent 8 1t l0Ck sl.JS4 21t l'40lllt Sr1cv. n .439 Muffin ~r-0.1111'1, S2,0I Kt lllV Potlltw1l1, 12,4.le l(e111v WriltwOl'lll, 12,Qt Martl\8 NIUlt. 12.439 •mv l enz, 12,431 9tlh Dania!, 12,431 Pie Nllu .on, tl ,.,7 Jtr11v" 8 rllt . S 1,..,7 Offdal Latller, Sl,147 $1>1rrl T Uflltl'. I 1. .. 7 Dabble MHttV. I 1,146 221 Mvr• l leckwetci.r. 11,594 l»t nn11 Pulz, s l,59) Krl1 Moll1011e 11. S l,~t) m Sonnie Lauer, s 1.34~ $utan S.noen . II .342 C1nctt i:1110 s I l41 Cotletfl w1*er '1.l61 C 11<1'1' t1tD Jl.l61 Joe~ .lovce ti ,341 m 8 er1>tra Mo•neu SI 11, Kertl'I ll'tfr"nt&t' 11 117 ~•nev k renron t 1 I )2.. JliU 1ri11sr1r ti 111 Ela ,,. Cro\Ov 'I I II D4 1..a """ ltlnk~ '911 Su•le 81<60v •t 16 Kathy 81ker 1tl6 L.tnOt• Mut 80ll•. "f' ns Jan S•toMntOfl. 1710 M8rr ltttl t tmmerman, s710 Mll1t l!011e. '7 .. larb T'lloma1 11•• 69·16·10 1He·n 10·11·69 6'·7S·72 7S 74·6e 14 11-n 6111-n 73·71·13 70-72·7S 1S·11·11 73·72·73 11·13·1' 7'·73·70 73·7'· 70 T2·1H2 73·72·7• 77·73·74 11 1•·1• 11 11 n '3·71·70 11·11·12 7t·61·7' 13•1J·1' 16 6NS 1•·11·10 16·7M1 11•10 13 13·1'·13 n -11-1' ,..,, ,, 73 ,. 1j 7S-7H6 72·72·71 ,,.,, n 7S·74·7f 77·7H5 ,, 72•75 '' n n 1l·1t-1J n·n-n 1t·n ·1• 1S·7S-7' 11·1•·1'3 71·73·7' n 7>-75 1'•1••1S ; Pr ep F ootb<lll Pickford MUner fl<Ht TH& frtlC<HtD ,..untllln VllW Hltfl fiMtbll .,. .. ,. C:.Cll lt-.1 lk6-aruc1 Plcllford 1·1 1M7-eruoe Plclltor<f ' 2·7 l~ruce Pickford 4·5 IM,_.ruce Pickford 6-2-1 1'70-eruce Pkkforo 5·• 1'71-ftruct Pickford S-4 1Jn-8ruq Pickford 7·2 1,,,_lruc::e Pickford 7·2 1'7.,_lruce Pickford l-4-2 1'1So-eruce Pickford "6·S·l 1'16-lruc• Pickford •10-2 1m-arvct Plcllwd • • • • 10-1 1'7t-eruce Plcltford • • • • 12· l lt1'f-Mlk1 Miiner ' 6·4· 1 1~.lkl Miiner ••• 11-l 1" I-Mike Milner • I· 4 l~lkl Miiner ••• 4·7 19'>--Mflll Miiner •• 9·3· 1 1"4--Mlk• Ml!Mr •••• 9·) Totals: 125 wlnt. 11 lottts. S lle1 • CIF Pllvo" tfllrv •• CIF 4·A ttmlllnalll l ... CIF 819 Fl111 llnallll • SIUIH I LHOut lrl·cllamolon • • SUntal LHllut co·cllamPlon Item a • • • Suntal LNOut ClllamPIOll • CIF 1111 Five clla mplon N'L ,..,,... NATIONAL CONF•ltllNCI' Weal W L T 1 0 0 f'ct. ~pr PA 1 000 20 16 Allenta Hew0f'llan1 Sin FrenclKO 0 1 0 0 I 0 0 1 0 000 27 21 000 21 •7 000 21 28 Caftfral ClllcallO O.trotr Mlnnetol• GrHnlev Tempe 8111 I 0 0 1.000 3' 21 I 0 0 1.000 2t 21 I 0 0 1 000 2t 21 010 000 2026 010 00021• ... , NV Glenrs l o O I 000 21 SI. LOUlt I 0 0 I 000 21 0 11111 0 0 0 000 0 W1111lf\gton 0 0 0 000 O Pllll1dttonla 0 r 0 000 O AMERICAN CONFlltlNCI Ile Iden San OltOO KenH 1 Clrv S.•1111 Denver HOul lOf\ PlllsO\iron Cincinnati Ctev1tena New En111af\O Bvffelo 1nc111naP011i Mia ml NY Jeh Watt I 0 0 I 000 31 I 0 0 1.000 If I 0 0 1000 41 1 0 0 1.000 28 0 I 0 .000 16 Ctntnl I 0 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 I 0 Ent I 000 26 1.000 4S .000 2• 000 2• 1 0 0 1.000 26 010 000 9 0 1 0 .000 3 010 000 23 010 000 0 SUndaV'I ktrfl ltema 20, Oenv., 16 lllldtn 31, NY Jell 0 San Dleoo 1•. BuffelO 9 Detroit lt, Atlante 11 New Enoiano 26, Green Bev 20 POtat>urell tS, lnCll1naPOll1 l K1n1a1 Cltv f7, New Or1tan1 21 Hou11on 2', Mleml 23 NY Gl1nr1 21. Plllledeflllll• O SI Louis 77, Clevtlend 24 (oil MlnnH ote 29, San Frencltco 21 Stlttlt 29, Clnclnnerl 2• cntcaoo 3'. T1moe llv 2t T'"""t't Geml 0 24 0 0 21 0 9 27 24 10 23 3 ,. 27 Wallllnoron 11 Dellt1 (Ch1nnt1 1 at 61 'Tllunclll'f'I Game ltllden el ICaf\111 Clt11 IChenMI 1 a l 5) SUftda V'I "'""' llem• et Pllltedetpnia IC'l\en11el 1 11 IOJ 8 utfalo at NV Jt11 Clnclnn•ll 11 SI Louis OallH II 011rol1 Houlton 11 W11n1n111on New E noleno at CNce110 Mlnne•ote at T amPe Bev lndlenaPOll• al Miami Naw Orlwtlt11-aT Oenver NV Gia nt' ti Grff11 Bev Alll nll at San i: rencl\CO s .. 111e al Sen Oleoo #Mnday. s.ot. 1' Pllllburgh e t Clev•tena ICl\enntl 7 al 61 R•m• lO, Bronc°' 16 k-bv Que~ 0 16 0 0-16 3 1 0 10-20 F Int OUarfotr U-Le n\IOfd )7 FG. S:20 S«tnd OUa..W Oert-Kerll1 14 FG, .59 L.A-0 HI~ 2 Pan lrom Brock ILan\IO•<I kkk). 10'26 0ert-JOMton 2t PH I from Elwav O"CI' felled!. 12.39 Oan-Samoson 2S oeu from Erwav IKlfth kkk), 14-01. Ftur111 Ouener LA-Le nstord 33 l=G. S·29 LA-While I ru" (Lansford lllc1t1. 17 Sl Artend•nc-s1.s22 TEAM STATISTICS Den Flru aown1 13 Rullltl·Vlrdl 18·63 Paaalno verds 214 Return 11ardl 28 Comp-All IF39· I S.Ckl bv f·36 Pvnl$ 1·•1 Fumot•a·LO•I 2·2 Penallltt•Yard• 8·46 Time of P05ttulon 23:35 LA 19 l7·U7 131 11 16·2'·2 2·1S S·JI 1·1 •-25 36•25 INDIV1DUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Denver Wll'lelt<, 13· SS, Etw1v, 1·7, Wllnlte, 1·6, Lef\O, 3·1or·mlnus S Rema. W11l11, 11·'3, Redden, 13·46, Brock. 4·1. Gum1n, l · 10 .PASSING-Oenver Elwav, 11·3'·1, nt; Wllhll1, 0-1-0, O Rems. l roek, 16·2'·2. 17' RECEIVING-Oenver S Welton, 7·14, 8 JOllnson, 3·S7, Wlllllle, 2·23. Wlnotr, 2· 13, S.mc>son. 1·2S, J w r10111, 1-11, Sewell. l·I Lef\O , l·I. Items· Hunter, 4·56, O Hin •·'1. Ellard, l-31; Gumen, 2·21 Whlll , 1·12, Ridden l·S. Caln, 1-1 MISSED F IELD GOALS-llama l.e nttord 47 NY Jt h Raiden ........ Jl, Jetl 0 ktr't "" OUarten 0 0 1 ,. """' °"',.,... 0 0-0 1 >-31 LA-Alltll 1 run Clallr lllGll.), 13 '1 s.ceM Oulf1W l..A-Wllllema '1 Pall fforn PIU11k1t1 "'"' 11.lck). 2 so LA-Allen l r1111 llellr kick I. 9'S2 TilirCI Oulr1tr I.A-Toren 16 lnterc:eollon r11urn (8111r Ille•>. l·n ,._.. OUafW' LA~a.hr 20 FGJ. ''ll Allendenc.-51,12) UAM STATISTICS NV F rrtt downs 14 1t111111t·verot 2•·'2 ~'"'"' ver<11 u 1 "•turn verd• O Corne·All 14 1t•2 S.d t bY f•24 Pvftll 1--0 F umOlft L.o• r 1-0 Penalllft·Vardt 2· 10 Tl,.,. of PottHtlOll 11!21 INOIVIOUAL STATltTICS L.A 1' 3S-122 2:M m 1M2-0 10·61 •·l1 0 0 1·.0 JI 39 ltUSHINo-N-Vorlt McNtll, 17·t.t, Hector. l·l2, Piiiot. J-5, O'ltltn. H lt•ld«"• Allen, 'C>-76, (lno. •·1•; Ha wllln• '""-~t 2-t, JanMl'I, H or·mlnut S ,.AUINo-Hew Von. O'ltltn, l~-2 1'1 ll•ld9n Plunktll, 1'•21•0, 2'2, Allen. 1+0, 1• ltlCllVING--H.w Yortt SlllW. M t. Townta1. 4·0 , ,. ..... ,.,., ra.w l·tt llalderl Cllrltr~. 6·t 7, Wllllamt. S-1J1. Alltll, J·JO, Hftlefb H , ~Wk~. l·J. MIUIO Flf L GOAl.$-Ntw v.,,. lam. $6, 1' ltalW\ .. llf. '2 • c ...... SATUllDAY'S UT• ICO.I Nofllltfll ArlJOl'e 2•. Sou111 Oekota St. 10 Hft ... 10 .. ,.., 1 Oki.tloOtl'\I (0-0) diet !IOI PIH Neal s.ttr 2t el MIMH Otl 2 AllOufn 11•0) llffl Soulll-1l1<n L.oult lana • .,., Neal. vt. Soutw11 Mlult· JlNI. S Soullltnl Melhodltl (1·0) bMI T ..... l!I ~to. u -n Hllll; S.Ot ,. •• T•••• Chrl1t11n '-Iowa (CHI) did not Pltv Nt11r vt Drake. s. Flor Id• ( J.O) *' Ml•ml. f'lll • U ·n . Ntlll. Ill, ltul~. 6. UK (l·O) Otel flllnola, 20-10. Nut: s.tlt, 21 YI, llYIOr. J 7 Mervtend C0-1> Iot t to Ptf\11 Siii•, ?Goll. N••ti 11 l0tron Col~. t. IYU (HI loll lo UCL.A, 27•'4. Ntlll; 111. W1thlneron. t Olllo Sl•I• (0-0) dlo nor Plev. ,.. .. ,: vt. Plll1bur9ll. 10. Nlbrlllle (0-1) IOtl IO l')orklt $lel1. 17·13. Ntlll: s.ttt, 21 va. IMlnolt 11, INlnofa (0-1) IOal lo U$C, 20·10. NeJll' vt SOUtlltrn llllllOlt 12 WHlll1191on (0-11 IO•I lo Oklahoma Stitt. 31-17. Neat: al •Yu. 13. I.SU (0-0) did not N V Neat ., NOl'lll Cerollna l4. Notre Di me 10-0) did nor Plav Htal er Mktll .. n. IS. Al1l•l!Mt (CHI) dlo not PlaY N1111:.,., Mlu lu f'9f 11 Jldlton, Miu 16. Olllalloml Sllte 11·0) bMI W1tlll119· Ion, >1•17. NHI: va. Nortll TtJlll Sl1i.. 17 F~ldt $1t tt 12·0) bMI NtbrHll8, 11· l). Nut· Seo! 21 va. Memoftlt Slel1. It South Cerotlna (2•J>) *' AP· P91Kh)•n Slate, 20-ll . Nt111· Stol. 21 va, Mtmroan. 19. Penn s111e (1·0) oear Marvleno. 20-11. Nelli; Vt. T etnPlt, 20 UCLA (1-0) bMI evu. 27·24. N1a1· 11 Ttnn11 .... Dee Mer SUN DA Y'S ltHUL TS C41•t tf 42-dav lflwtu"*" mwllllel P'lltST ltACa. 1 lurlono1 YI Dlo <Plncev) 1.00 Buen Chico CMtn > Mr Hotlvwood CCrou ) Time. 1:22 4/S HCOND llACa. 61n furtono1 ).00 u o 2.60 , 40 ltO Gra v Pln•trlPe (Vlnzt) 4 20 3.00 2.60 lncwlt lllve (PlncavJ 3 40 2 90 Scripture (Stevens) •.20 Time 1 16 2/S U DAILY DOUaLa IS·f) Paid 11140, 12 CONSOLATION DOUaLa (S·71 oeld S1.60 THHlD ltAC•. I 1116 ml1t1 lmPUltlvllv (St1ven•l t 20 T1bvter (Otlv1ret) Jovlll (Pinc av J Tl"'-· 1:'1 1/S. S.S ax ACT A (4·?) Palo 1123 SO P'OUttTH llACa. 1 rur1ono1 Lill TH I CSl1ven1l IS.00 8 111v'• 81ck (D•l•llOuOIVI) Ulllm111 Ptta•ur1 (Mt11) Time· 1·22 llS 4 IO l.00 s.tO l . .O 3.20 l'IP'TH ltACa. 1 1116 mltel on 1Ur1. Atter 8rlleln (Plncav) 8 .O 4.20 3.90 Ellmlnert I01t1nouuavel 9 IO 6.20 Plnledor (Stev1n1) 1 20 Time: 1.43 21s. U llXACTA U·3) oald "''SO SIXTH llACll. 6 lurlonos Oon 8 lltut (S1tv1n1l 20 10 Et Core&on (Toro) Au Bon Marcllt (Mt11I Time· l 10 21S Sl[VllNTH ltACll. 6 lurlOllOI Nuclear Winter IV1!111l 6 20 4 00 260 Not AM Footltll (Mlle) I 40 3.tO M11 Vlrolnle RMI (S11v1n1) 2 60 Time 1:09 )/~ U UC.ACT A (6· 7) Pl lcl I lO~SO n ll'tCK SIX (1 or 7+11+2•6) pelO SJS,120.20 IO 1S w1nnlno tlcktll (lhl llOOtl) S2 Pick Six C011tol1llon 01!<1 U13.IO lo Sle wlnnln11 tlcilllt (five horttt) llGHTH ltACE ...... mli.& Oii turt Oallv Busv (SN>fmekar l 13 40 6.60 • 60 Eu t1en<1 IMcCe rron) 11 .0 1 20 An11l1 0. Rlra (811e> 7 40 Time 14 1/S NINTM ""CE. , lurlono1 RePulellon Miu (Toro) 2' 20 8 40 4 90 Slu lln' Sueian (Pll\C•v> 3 40 2.90 Sltl'1 Prlf\CeU (Srevt nt) 310 Time 1'23 1tS U l[XACTA CS·7) Petd '2'8.00 n DAIL v OOUILE 16· S) Pela 1240.60 Allendance 2S,23S U.S. ()pen (II New V.,W) Mtn't ~ l'INI tven L•ndt <C1ecnotloveklel Off JOlln McEf\rot CU S ), 7·6, 6·3, 6·• (Lendt wln1 \ 117 soo. McEnroe wln1 S93,7S0) w.,._., Dtutl6tt P' lnlil Helene Su11ov1 (C11c11011ov1kl1 l- :::rau<1la KoMt·ICllJCll (Wesl Gll'manv> de! Merline Nevretllova ·P1m Stlrlv., (U.S ), 6·1 6·2. 6·3. Mlatd~P'INI Martine Na11r11llOv1 (U S.)·H•lnz GUl'I• tll•rdt (Sw111trlan<1l def Ell11t1e111 Smvn .. John Fll10tretd (Aullr1fl•I. 6·3, 6·• Deep ... ftlhlftt N•Wfl'OltT I.ANDINO (New"'t ... di) -93 lllGltl'I 101 tend ball, 5e callco 11tu, 17 bonito, 3 tellowlall, 10 rock lltl\, 12 ICUIPln, 12 Whltl fltll, 171 mackerel OAVIY'S l.OCK•tt <.......,., a.di! -219 1nolff• 21 bOlllto, s ve41ow11n, 1 bullll tuna. l llallOUI,) c.lleo bau, 406 .. nd ban, l,276 madlar.4, 10 rock fl•ll W*'*"I MCC'M COL.LIOI UC lrVtnt J, UC Sen Ol"9 l UC lrvlM K orl"9. Cu1lm1 no Ht lnHtm•n 1. Grimm I WMlleM tnlftll~d a.AHaAU ~~ MINNISOTA TWIN5-'lrtd Jol'lmv Podrft. elldllnt coadl Nemtd Didi Such oltcf\Mt (09Cfl T~ONTO 11..UI JAV~tc9lltel Stan ClarU, ottd\Mr, frOl'l'l S...recuta OI Ille 1ntern1tlonal LH t u• Slontd lton Mut~. ~""" ffKllee Ol!Chtf ~ALL. ............ '--IN HOUSTON OILl~,_.lilltltllCI l..ar1v M«lartv, r-unnlnt Mell. W1IV9CI C:.n How- IWd, Mfet\I, Rustlers, OCC impressive at • scrimmages ~ach team's QBs get passing marks in preseason tests By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS Of .. .,.., ...... ..., Last weekend's football scrim· maaes aave the coachina staffs at Golderi Wes1 and Oranae Coast a final opponunitr for evaluations before Saturday s openina ni&ht showdown between the Rustlers and Pirates. And each took fuJl advantaae to not only take a look at who is eApected to be playing most of the downs this fall, but also see what the rest of the squad could do against outside competition. Golden West met Citrus Frida)' night, giving Coach Ray Shackleford a chance to see his team for the first time against outside competition. .. I was very J>leased. everybody really bustled and there were no real injuries," said the Rustler coach. ··we wanted to give the players a chance to go under the lights and there were a lot of positive things from the scrim· mage. "Citrus approached it lilce we did, ta.kin& it as a chance to look at all their players." Each team scored one touchdown during the ~play exercise. with the Rustlers having a second potential TD nullified by a penalty. The leadinr rushers were tailback Sl:tawn Massey from Marina High (7 carries, 44 yards) and fullback Carl Satterfield from Huntington Beach (6-33). Both arc freshmen. All thrtt quanerbacks were ID action, with Tim Hanson compleung 5 of 7 for 60 yards and a TD: Bill Marler was 2 fo r 7; and Eric Lawton 4 for 8. .. All three threw the ball very well with good timing and to the right people," said Shackleford. "I was very pleased because they evaluated the coverage well and made the proper reads." Freshman receiver Tim Malloy, a Fountain Valley High prod uct, caught four passes for 5 I yards to lead Golden West in that department. T~ week'• dedale GOfditll Wffl e l Ol'•llff CC.•I El C•mlllO et S.~ Fullerton vt. ~etlChO S.lltle@O 11 S.nt• Ana eowl S•n OltOO Meta ti Carrilo• Ml. Sen Antonio 11 Clln11 L.ono IMctl Cllv ,, LA 5.outllwatl I.A Velit'f 11\. ltlo HOlldO 11 Wtlllller C:olltOt. 1 :)0 WHI LA 81 S.nl1 Monie.. Pllf'Ce el Glendale. l:JO lll11ertlelt CC •I Ml. .sen Jldnto, 1 o.m OrollmOlll 11 San OltOO CC, 1.30 o.m. sour11w .. ltfn t t AnrllOot Velltv. 2.30 o.m LA HerOCI' 11 MOOtoerk. l.lO FrttllO 11 hktftfl.cd ColltOt of IN DeMrt 11 Eur LA Compton el S.n llf'nerdlno 1moer111 V•kY 11•V111ture H•ncocil t i PorltrVlllt, 7 D m PtMHMne ., Tvw. T111. Watt Hiiia 11 S.111a laf'Oare AM Olmff al 7:30 o..m., ""*' 11\dlc.lllCI.. The one Rustler score came on a nine-yard pass from Hanson to Andre Shourds. Orange Coast matched up agafost Santa Monica, a team which finished 7-2·1 last season and is ranked No. 8 ID the preseason Southland pol~~ a 60-play scrimmaae Saturday at ucC. Each team scored twice, with the Pirates moving the ball well in each of fi ve possessions. · "We played everybody and it's going to help us decide on our lineup," said OCC Coach Dick Tucker. "Ken (quarterback Lasilo) ran and passed the ball equally well. With the new (wishbone) offense, it g.ave us a chance to look at how some of our hnemeo are going to do." Laszlo completed 8of1 2 passes for 128 yards and one touchdown. a 34- yard strike to wide receiver Leon Phillips, who was the state javelin champion in track last year. Laszlo earned the ball 12 times for 75 yards. The other score came when 6--0. 270-pound fullback Tom Cortc1 shook off a number of tackles and rambled 23 )'ards for a touchdown Returning starter Chris Mendenhall rushed for 52 yards on 8 carries. Overall, OCC gamed 268 yards on the ground and passed for I 56 to outgain the Corsairs, 424-234. Other highlights incl uded the kick· 1nggame where Corona del Mar High product Gordon Moss punted four t.i mes for a 53-yard average. 12-meter skippers open competition By ALMON LOCKABEY Delly l'tltt hetlftt Wrlttf Fourteen sk.ippers from six coun- tries start competition today ofT Newport Beach in the world cham- pionship for the 12-meter class. to be , followed by the Scandinavian Gold Cup Challenee Regatta The event is being hosted by Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club where col· orful opening ceremonies were held Sunday. Under the direction ofBCYC vice commodore Roy Studor, the cer- emonies got under way with general chairman Jim Emmi introducing Orange County Supervisor Tom Riley who welcomed the visaung teams to Orange County. Newport Beach Councilwoman Ruthelyn Plummer issued the wel- co me on behalfof the cil)'. Al Cassel ofBCYC. presjdent of the 5.5 International Association. and winner of the King Olaf Cup in Norway two years ago, led the procession of visiting skippers and crews and their national flags. Skippers and the countries 1he)' rcpresen t are: Roben Symonette and Gavin McKinney, Nassau. the Bahamas: Felix Bibus, Erlinbach. Switzerland; F. Hornberger, Geneva, Sw1tzerland; A. Monnier, Scsby, Switzerland; Colin Ryan, Sydney, Australia; Amie Lenstrom. Helsinki, Finland. and Finn Ferner, Oslo. Norway U.S. skippers arc Robert Mosbacher, Houston; Alben Fay, Houston; Tom Omohundro, Costa Mesa; Bruce Chandler, Balboa Island; Al Cassel. Ncwpon Beach. and Craig Chamberlain. Newport Beach. Challenge Cup to BYC A hot team of Balboa Yacht Club sailors, skippered b)' Tom Willson, brought the San Francisco Challenge Cup back to the BYC trophy case Sunday after a year's absence. Willson and his ci&ht·man crew. which included owner Ron Melville. sailed the Andrcws-39 Impact in a sudden-death race on San Francisco Bay Saturday against a St. Francis Yacht Club crew skippered by Tom Blaclcaller in Irving Loubc's Benetcau-40. Coyote. h wasn't the fi rst time BYC had captured the coveted troph)'. the oldest of its kind on the West Coast. h came south the first time in 1983 aboard John Arens· Tomahawk. but was returned to its niche at St. FYC in 1984 by Carl Schumacher in the yacht Wall Street Duck. Others on the BYC crew were owner Melville; designer Alan An- drews. Geoff Davis. David Johnson, iloger Ritzdorf. Bill Mais, Keith Kilpatrick. Randy Miller and Jeff Madrugah. Gobbell wins Ficker Cup LONG BEACH -John Gobbell of Huntington Harbour Yacht Club appears to have a lock on the Bill Ficker Match Racing Scnes. Gobbcll won the cup, plus a berth 10 the 1986 Congressional Cup for the third time Sunday with five wins and no losses 10 a regatta sailed off the: Long Beach breakwater Despite his wins 1n the Ficker Series. Gobbell has never scored high in the Congressional Cup. In this year's Ficker Cup sencs, Gobbell bad to sad two extra race" against Bill Huber, Shoreline Yacht Club, Long Beach, and Mike Ehas. Hawaii Yacht Cl ub. and won them both. The final races were sailed because of a protest. Run!ler-up in the scoring was Ehas. 4-1 . third was Huber, 3·2, founb was Mark Gaudio, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, 2·3. and fifth wu a tie between Rick Briggs and Bob-Gib- bons. both represenllng Seil Beach Yacht Club. 0-5. Balboa YC victorious Balboa Yacht Club defeated three otber. contenders Sunday in the bid for Lido Isle Yacht O ub's William Moms Team Racine championship The ~ncs was sailed in Lido-I 4s. Other contenders in order of fi nish were Mission Bay Yacht Club, Lido Isle Yacht O uband Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. There were four boats on each team. Skippers on BYC's winning team were Rowland Lohman,_ ?aul Blank Craia Fletcher and Dan v ordale. · The William Morris Team Race has been sailed every year si nce 1961. Parker next on stand PITTSBURO H (AP) -Dave Parker of the Cincinnati Reds is eitpcocted to be the next 1n a series of m~or lcque stars to tc tify about baseball's allcacdly wtdcspread co- caine problems when • federal dru1 trial resuaMS today. Parker wu alleacd in testimony Friday by EnOJ Cabell to have shared cocaine with the Los Alles Dodacrs infielder in a Pitubu hotel room when Parker played or the Pirates and Cabell was with the Houston Astros. It was the first nmc t.bat Parker. the 1978 National l..eque Most Valuable Player, bat bteo publicly accueed of usina drup. ''Hepve il to me. Heand t ulCd u:· Cabell said of Parker. "That's true, and I aueu l'IJ be 1.&Llun.a about that in my tcsumony:· Parker laid In Chicaao where the Redt played !he Cubs thlt weebnd. More •pol't8, JM4e BJO ' ' I j ( Retail sales up slightly in August By COTTEN TIMBERLAKE ,,, .......... Retail sales picked up a bit Last month, the ma~~ retail companies reported, and · er-price depart- ment stores apin fared better than the'mass mcrcbandiscn because their customers were less affected by the recent slowdown in the economy, analysts said. "I would characterize the results as quite encouraging. They do show improvement from the preceding months," said Jeffrey Edelman, an analyst with Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. However, he noted that s&les in AuJUst I 9S4 were weak, making it easier for the retail en to record gains this year. He added that this year's four-week rcponing period also fell closer to the first day of school, which helped the sales comparisons. . Jeffrey Feiner, an analyst with Merrill Lynch, Pierce Fenner & Smith Inc., said, "Despite a minor improvement in sales trends from that rcaiste~ over the last several months, we believe the results of the mass mercbandisinJ chains remain relatively weak again, reflecting the fact that the lower income consumer has been more adversely affected by high debt levels and slowing trends in the economy." Sean, Roebuck &. Co., the coun· try's largest retailer, said its sales for the four weeks ended Aug. 3 I edged up I .4 percent from the same period a year aao. Kmart Corp., a discounter and the second laraest chain, said its sales increased 6. I percent, but sales for stores open more than a year fell I .6 percent. J.C. Penney Co., the No. 3 chain, said its sales rose 2.3 percent. Sales at higher prioe department stores were much stronger. SaJes rose 10.8 percent at Federated Depart- ment Stores Inc~ 16.5 percent at Dayton Hudson \Arp., 15.9 percent at May Department Stores Co. and 13.8 percent at R.H. Macy & Co. Ch1caao-based Sean said its Auaust sales totaled $2.19 billion. compared with S2.16 billion a year earlier. Scan' sales for the fint seven months of the ~tail fitcal year inched uf 0.2 peroeut to SU.46 billion from s 5.42 billion wt year. K mart, which i1 headquartered in Troy, Mich., II.id itl four-week sales edaCd up to S 1.6'4 billion from S 1.54 billion. Iu ~ear-to-date sales rose 11 CilU:~ to Sl2.l billio~ from $1 0.9 New York-based Penney said its sales for the month came to $998 million, compared with $976 million a year aao. For the tint 30 weeks of the year, sales rose 0.8 percent to $6.35 billion from $6.3 billion, it reported. Federated, which is based in Cin- cinnati re~rted its Au1ust sales rose to $749 million from $615.5 million. For the year-to-date, sales increased 7.7 percent to $5.12 billion from $4. 75 billion, it said. Dayton Hudson, based in Min- neapolis, said its four-week sales totaled $659.7 million, compa~ with $566 million. For the 30 weeks, sales rose I 5.4 percent to $4.34 billion from $3.76 billion. And Macy, of New York, reported its Auaust sales came to $349 million, compared to $307 million for the period a year aao. For the seven months, sales rose 5.4 -~rccnt to $2.25 billion from $2. I 3 billion. \ You are here Don Warkentin of Etak Inc. of 8UD.DTf'ale panchee hla deettnatlon Into a Yldeo d.taplay naTtcatlonal ayatem hla company manafacturen for can. The ayatem ta fed map Information by a C&Mette, and the on-board computer lDdlcat• the fthlcle'• location lD relation to the map, which cJaanc• u the car ta clrlYen. Group buys control of Famous Amos LOS ANGELES (AP) -An in- vestor group including former U.S. Sen. John Tunney of Cahfornia and a New York clothing executi ve purchased controlling interest m Famous Amos Cookie Co. from the wealthy Bass family of Texas. The price for the Los Angeles company, which makes and markets popular chocolate crup cookies, was undisclosed. The Basses last year bought their SI percent stake, which Famous Amos President Donald Sawyer said was worth less than SS million. Tunney said the investor group bought "significantly more than SO percent" of the company but didn't elaborate. OTC UPS & DOWNS ; _,, .. elly'a" OPEN FOR LUNCH & DI Monday thru Fnda 11 AM to 9 PM ER Or.no• Coaa1 OAJL. V PILOT /Monday, Sept9mber 9, 1986 88 --- Questions on tax reform cloud investment planning By CHET CURRIER "' .......... NEW YORK -It's becom1ng more and more apparent th.at Presi- dent Reapn's vaunted skills as a salesman will be severely t~stcd this fall on the subject of tu refonn Nobody expected the plan put forward by his administration to sail swiftly and smootb1y through Con-F and into law. The power of the 'speciaI interests" to obJect, obstruct and delay was well known. n But according to pollsters and legislative leaden of both parties, the proposal ha.s failed to stir enthusiasm among the general public, whose backing it was hoped would give great impetus lo the p_usb for overhauling thew ~m. ln a typical rcadi~the accounting firm of Ernst &. Whinney found in a survey of 2,500 people that the great majority-63 percent-want a new, simpler tax code. But only 37 percent said they liked the one Reagan has put forward. Leading lawmakers ranging from Rep. Thomas P. O'NelU Jr .. D-Mass., to Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N .C .. have said in recent days that the plan has. engendered little CXC1tement. .. The people on the street -they never mention it," said O'Nc11J. Reported Helms:"( have not heard RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. for Tht Rast of Your lite 1922 HARBOR Bl Vt> • COSTA M£SA--S48· l I ~6 MAKE A FORTUNE 25 t at a Time • Put l'lme Buean Av11l1hlt ln Your Ntlahborhood Collect Money trom Video Game• Vf1ntMtlC Eatnlnp 1n C'Hh .,..Crut 1'u Adv1ntq.- ., Muat t>. 21 A "mploytd NO MONEY DOWN Call '1r Wolftr (1141 one penoo U1 North ~roluu mcn- tton 1t exoept ln a deprccaung way." "I don't expe<:t we will Stt 1t 1n its final form th1s year," Helms added. ApprttSUlg the outlook. the Value Linc Investment Survey, tbc nation's Lariest investment advtsory service, said: "We think that tn reform efforts will not resul t in the passaae of any lcg15lat1on until, I 987 at tbe earl.test, "Passing the annual budget has become so ume consuming that CollJI'CSS would probably have trouble bringing about such a sweep- ing change 1n the tax code in a single year. "Few in Washington now think there's any chance for passage in l 985, and 1n I 9-86 theclect1ons will be prominent on the minds of those ln Congress. We doubt that our rtp- rescntatJvcs will be inclined to offend such broad swaths of their const1tuen· cics in an clecuon year, even 1f f'he overall plan benefits the maJOnty of them." · It may, in fact. look like a sensible idea to take some extra ume to weigh the consequences before cmbarkmg on any drastic change in the tax rules. The trouble 1s. the debate does not ta.kc plaoc 1n a vacuum. h creates uncertainucs fo r businesses and 1odt- viduals trying to plan for the future For that reason, Jonathan Frank.. Value l..Jne's ass1sta.n1 research chree- tor. suu.cru u ml&ht be bencfic1al If the admin1strauon backed off for lh.c ume being, perhaps tum1na the question of tax rcfonn over to a biparusan commmion like the one that bet~ produce some m&Jor changes in Social Sccunty ln 1982. "We thmk the sooner the president pulls the plan off the table for modtficauom the better." Frank S8ld, since unceruunty over tax reform '"1s already crimping economic activtty 10 areas that wouJd be affected (parucularly real estate), to the dctn· mcnt of the o"erall economy." But ts Reagan at all disposed to consider such a suggestion? Most dcfiruttly not. to JUdg( from the way he IS talk.mg. "We may be starung lhts battle for tax fauness as underdogs," he sa.td Last week 1 n one of a sen es of planned appearances aimed at st1mng up suppon for his proposal. But, he added, "Thts 1s Amcnca. and there are oo hm1ts except those that we put on ourselves " So for a while longer, at least business dec1s1on-makers and savers l1)'1D& to prepare for college twtioo btlls and rtUTCment will have to do thclf long-range planning whtJe keep- ing a close eye on the struggle over tax reform Orange County's ~ easy J , listening ,z --radio station KDCM 1DB.1 FM SIEREQ ) I I °'"' "' iale• 1.•tt C"9 • 9 •llAY'I OLlllM Pl•I Olv. ,., ~· I.A•• ci.. WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Orn AMEX LEADERS NYSE LEADERS GoLo QuorE s Dow JoNES AvERAGES NASDAQ SUMMARY famous la b<il,s ... f~t. bux.h '+.If fOehion ~lond. 71it/&ti+·5070 ~ "1llo9z. l001~Max!bl-..d'21Y2C&327~ po~ 5~~t.h 1o)t.4tNf&. ,818130't 9~~ mon t.h1'\Jfh 10t.o9. ~t..ul'doy 10t.o0t eundoy noon to~ , --- Oranoe Cout DAIL y PILOT /Monday, September 8, 1a'a5 .., ---- • ~. Ltt-. 5 1}&)'1, 16 Oollara. • Ad• tnav • •tu·rl l'.uh l1u1 llu purHoH •>f 11•vrnN11 tA ,,.fwid.blt • Addit:ionU U-may be purchaaed for 12 I.)() each Pr1ct•• lnllJt be included Ill IM •d • ()\,...,not apph '" 1111' rt'tll r•l•ll'. rl'ntal lit ht>lp wanttd c~tionl 0t au1ocnobi)e. priced onr 12000 Call 6 2-5678 • \,111l•bll' unh It• pma1r p-rtv 1dvn11M,. wlbflfl mercbandile . ... HI ter Wt ...... ~f.ale t:::lwlw1l1ile4 J!!!rtanh II Ji[--~It, 1eaer.1 11n --~ a111 11 ma c..ta... lbii __ "... na.1 ~u ...... ,.-.. -.. -~--:;;;_n_4_• ';;;,;;~--....;;;.;:;;:; LIWUT ,.. • 26R DX. Xie. eondo M... VenSe 38r 2Ba lalllM Pn.la ... , 1..-o 8Ctl tum; MO/mo. Kit 111 111111... . wtqarport, n .. r s c. Ci.an. M•-utraa. 2~1 2 onn. 1308 .If. Steoe M20 &Ide lg 280 19a, IUWlll YIWll ~~1.~~:..=~252!;'° THI DAil. Y Pfl.OT I l A >~•fll 0 C'llf IC c '11 llJft' '·~~s. .. "'' 800AM lltll o.t _, 111111 lltarh IMM TIM Int Plaza. Front + r.., yard -..,/-. botl 28' 1ea 1750-S800 PQOI, CM patio. 2 pars ""' Frantic owner married rich Pelati.f FRENCH COUN· Peta. OK $895/mo =~050/mo ST"~~ Wntr No P91• 831·5187 mu No peta 646-5137 lettlt .... tlt ~ Can.CSlan 8ll(j wanlt to TRY TUDOR, mot9 than Credit cMc:IC requlfed Mon thr Fri an 4pm or (818)9e&-0352 Wll llft 1 aaiiiiiia -·-.... ,,,,....\ l <A••I .. ~ f 80(,lAM ~IJO I·~\ CHICK YOU!' AD Tr-. 0.~t~~~.~~~ot •tt (1..,-W:y .,,Cl ACft;te\ y t"iOWtlllV .. f O(.(IMIOl'IAJI• l "OI"\ O<) ~t. yt ~·~ .. ,,.~ '#t\ifl\ f'W ' .0 \ t f.O OaO •'oft "11\...: • ••)\,' •d O••IY -""""' f flt'tc-4 \ ~ •T<Of'd ••• .., to ... , \tie ff\e 0 • -P 1tOI e l fflll' rio Oab·t~1., f('lof •''V tho, 1" •" edv•t 11\•"~'"'' ,Of ""'"£" 1 "'•• °" '9'00"\ ~ '''"" , " *"-CO'' I '""f' \W • ,Ul J• y ONv °"" • (1.-ed •or 1~ t ,,, move north NOW Mu11 ....i..n t ... ,... .. 11 Drive by 25 11 W ... IS I I -~ fl Id .,_ -NII 2·ttory. 48dr~ nome ;"~ · ~ aca4 "·c1 Sunflower, •T ""'· then 0401 un al day. Beaehfron1 on Bal Penlf'I ••C&l Ill! Live wri.ra ~ l\avti •TM• overloolclng ecentc Goll Llgtlta view •tale ty call Fred 831· 1298. Im.-MeM Verde Exec Hm 2 28R 2ba Nic.ty tum * Spec1acular apu CourM. Owner w111 help Must liquidate for out 01 media ta avallablllty, •'Y 4 Bd 3ba + ~ Gar·i Winter rental Garage ~ * 1 & 28r, 1 & 28a 1t.11t" l ~kly 5 f';'1~ rw\ow bat• finance. Price reduced 10 area Miier. Seertflce at Petri<* Tenore. denlng eervtQ9 & water $1000 213/498·3388 Like bfand MW! All utlltlM •Splt0iou1 townhouMI T~• m••d P ..,~, = $215,000. 751-3191 $909,000111 Last of the pd. Sf450tMo s.46-9950 oc 8 x tum 2br'W/trplc In dpht 1:;:'mPool. gar, no ~5 !~1;:::-balconias or coffee l'lealed PC>OI 4 • SELECT Hatbof Ridge batgalna. Aeuorl to move E-llde r• llM lo Bey W~ 280 m t s. $690 Garden pett0t ''ep. 10 ocean Knc:ti' For pertonal Pf~ call treat 2t>r baalc bltlna ter S750tmo 871·9•87 301 ~ VOCAOO 6'42•9850 avai1 fl85 N Cout Hwy PROPERTtES Patrick Tenor• 831-1298 S575 83M190 a..1 fee I w inter Rental 2 BR lba Wll llU L•o~m• Beach 414-5~ or 7eo-t702 VHta Bal~ Condo 28' dpl1t gar 1/2 blk to ocn BACH 1510 & 18R $610 •3 Ughtad tannll couna EUii •m ......... --Dllllftl HITALS or t>8 No~ta $625 mo PRVT patio, c.atpor1 •2 SW\mm1ng PC>OI• "5 ' 0 --• • CORONA DEL MAR: "' 2 Ba w Io ca a n v I aw Y POOL SPA quiet no peta S Nkly fet11ala now avail lllTllTl1U,MO bed 1ownt1ouM,OCEAN Sl350/IJIO.&e0--0922 Rae ISTS-'142• 1~793..()()38 TOPAREA ~PINM !~~~~&=d• s1t01w11&up 2274New Beautlfully dacor1ted --'"----------VU Frplc; 2 car gar. WANTEO-FAMIL Y C.r.M .. J 1111 BU 2&50 HARL.A S4S.-2«7 •Furnlll'llngt avau P0<1 Blvd C M Ma-7445 home with a loft. Hidden ....,.,....,. ... LIDO ISLE· 2 bad 4 Bd. 2ba nae · No eo.1a besidNER's furnlsl\;i IUll llW 119LD SU I Sii LONE L-···---· OC(UOof'd b• 1 1 • f"'(•• (r•d • c.a" .. ,,....,"''"" Af'I, • ,, I •• ••• • "' Iii cleo "' ,,,..,,,.,"' ~, b""'' 10 0.of ""'i •m1tfiJ tQ *·'\AM I lf'~.1~\ .CJll lt.j,Jlf<f ti ' I t)f 1"4J ........ ~=~'°:~·:~:,• .:' •"~;;:)O=d •Olot •''""nf:\I \ .... , ~ ........... ~, ..... ·~·-· ... ·-' ~s l~~:~ng~ Only~2~ new. 3 bdrm :=.R,~~;:0 & flr• ~=· ~;2 ~~~c::t Townh<>uM. FrplC & PoOI 62 8aau111ul Uni ta + WHY NOi CALL 3026 w Coat Hwy ,..__ Elttra wide lot In a 1t.1perb + """'• ~ beth Highly OCEANFRONT &-3 bed lge encl yd S 1000/Mo S 11951mo 573-0ate enclOMd garegea 18t lll·l ltl Por1 Beecn refrlg TV neighborhood. Better upgraded with high cell-furnished Mo 10 mo thru Avt 911 $51-374& C.ta ~ 24 lBa s550tmo 28' 28a SUWlll YIWIE S 1"° wt! SOI no depOSll Ing•. wet bar, llreplaoa + S675tmo 867 W. 19th St ~~~17~n t his Onell much m ore Pro · ~J~;~~:T~ Corner. 5 Ftutala Full:; fUrn 28A Home In 645-174-0 15~5 Huntlnglon v111age 1VacatiH THE REAL EST ATER le11lonally landecaped bed 2 ttory home Quiet Vall!f W4 Ouplelt Clean & quiet o. ...... & ,..._.., 1 encl Lane rrom San Diego leatala 2t01 With "~ yard, PoOI + be 8 ch P 8 r 11 , 11 ElbOW room p1u;tll 4-.. Cple. n/smkr 6'48-2323 ... "V'.I --7 t bf ..,_,. Freeway nonh or Beach apa Price reduced to • Y "" gat no pelt, rig, -. to MoFedden we11 on Rancho Lu Palmu CC $399,995 wlle<rNI Call lumllMd, 3 car garage ricf! hm fprle dbl gar S.50 Mobile home. No range S.60 642·596' McFadden Reserve Now• Designer'• Patrick Tenore 831_1268 $3200/mo Ida/pats S900 c all pets Mature Adults CLEAN EASTSIOE STU _ . _ norne 39, • Oen 2Ba W•rtr........ .... 539-&190 Best Rlty lee 1991 Quiet, aecure. 7 OtO $375 INCLS UTIL: lrrial 2744 S2t00 mo .. 20·3912 • 111·1411 111-1111 But. ltac~ 0 Newport 846-93 ~ mEs Ca!l 548-8814 fUAfLf ROCK AtOGE lteatab to onaer prkled 26( 26a two • ..,.. .... ~ .. , Eastllde 18< small but Coooo 2br 2 1ba ~din S~art not LANO. LORDS/REALTORS slry wtpQOI 100 s7oo·a 9eachifn1/w 1n1er 2BR cozy wllots 01 nat wood 2r~1~1~ ~_:u~~on~.12 Bdrm, b11nou.e 1n Lag NO OOWN-WHY RENT? Fast tree tenant provldra re n 110 P 11 0 n 1n 10 $900/mo. Avatl no~ M 65 No pell 990-2962 crts S 1300 mo s.46-5921 Beecr-.. 1th ocean view Need credl1 worthy part· Info 53S.-&194 Bell Rlty 539-6190 Best Rtty fee ~9&.42 213/S.5-1384 Newly decotated 2Br 18a ---S.450 mo 497-2967 ner for 50% ownerlhlp & PROVEN RELIABLE lmat 44 DECORATORS beautiful $575/mo NO PETS Cati Walnut Square Condo 3B< 100% tax benefits for 2Ba 8-UM Supet clean 12BR 21:111 CdM nome to s1" Verullles 1Br Condo Overl0olc1 NB 2 stry 2br 2Br 2ba fCd yrd, gar, gym. tum Condo on 11\e wate< ~ttet 3pm 63 l-6155 _ •'C encl gar '350trno wltl"i M or F n·,tmlu Prof R&'M~R d .• •• • l ...... lf Wltll l Yltw OPEN THIS WEEKEND ..2ba ~ kltch gar & tennis, poOl;1>atlo. patrol. S 1795/mo 673-0896 E·stde 1 Br Ouple.11, 1ga led Ava11 Ocl lat 854-0529 SA 75 mo 759--0281 ...... Ill Salt ...... Ill Salt Rare 3 bdrm, 2 beth, great 646-1252 view S630539-6190 no pets $975 S48-72a. ExceptlOi\81 1 bdrm ''t I yrd encld gat comp ty -It k 2741 2 Br Cortdo c05111 Meaa .. • view Very apeelal touctl· ---• Belt Rlty fee IEITlLS block to beach wmte< remodel $695 380-049 1 ••• IC pool iec 1n1c w o S.25 lnflal l 6 lnttal lM2 ea dark room, wrap NPT HGTS 4 PLE.X, new --* * * * 1 $550 6s'o-6039 ------1 tum '" =-------------1 ar0und patio, very clean cond $2100 mo. Income Largil 3 Bdrm unit wlencl ~ _mo _ E Slde 2BR Iba. 119 Del r • aG· utt inc 645-3568 •TIEILIFFI• -wma•n $395,000. $229Kagt759·5060 pallo.$1200 yrty CALLUS REGARDING Niee lg 2 & 38< Opllt Mar $660/mo 1va11 = ~~4!':Sn2 w•••t/1.1 "FAMILY HOME" That's rlgttt, this 3 bdrm ~ IULn IRVINE LEASES Across from bet\ $750 & 1mm«:1 Agt 675-4-000 O _ - Lrgsl mdl 4Br + bonus rm, home on fabulou• Balboa U,_. l ()tJ l t1C~ S SUYIEW If IWIEI P1• 1&1&11•1T lnltt Otad ltalty $950 Winter 722·6419 E'11de 3BR 2ba dul)le11 La HI Ii Ml f752 P~~'t~~a~~ ~~~~' ~ 3Ba.Magnlloc.LJte.brlte Island has 2 baths. fire-Real10fl,675-3v8~'1r~ll~t.l~~l:::.s 114/llMllJ lH·lHI OCEANFRONTDelure Pv1 wd beam Cella, oar. Lov«y2br baapt wlp()OI bell ciuPOn $A001mo - & airy Offered a1 $218K place In the llvlng room & secu Yty Reduced 1 Turtle Re>cac 2Br Condo. winter llJrn spottesa qut91 WtO llkup Otwsnr yard & disnwasner 290• t uul No pets f'-Smoket (LH) Land avt at ™·000 PLUS • 2 bedroom uoll Ctrlll ..... , 1022 1375 ~ 2131430_36is° lalMI ltlad 2 hlgllly upgraded, vi...,, pl. 675-46881675·9603 Quiet $975 631·3646 Aloma Av 1W•95-8221 Evs 675-8006 • Wonderful opportunity IU_..ll .. IS Water1ront dpl1t 4br+ 2br ""'ance I n ' Ult r • • _ ·ocEANFRONT Sharp 2Br, Huge 28d 2'"iBa Oplx Obi I COM GRE..-T !oiOME FOR ... =a " for • great extra Income. . • Ei..... bou d I 3b ac s, 400 85• 2043 -- ------ UO-a.,tt .. I Call for financial lnlor· ......... "' doek l/p SlOOK equity nae woodlglus design Woodbridge 3Br 2"'tBa garage. No Peta $875 gar, xtru Ftyd S&40 Pet 1 2 & 4 tu y MAN $A~5-Gee. Av .11 llLLllll•I matlon 759-1501 tredetseil 67l-2722 ' plush landscape frplc Townhome. Ale Localed Wlnte< (818)795-3018 Ole 673-63381642·966& W • ' ,'" rty now 6'0·425' • ---75g..1501 So of Hwy. newer lrg $850 539-6190 Best tee near the lake Af1 5pm --inter No ee Bkr Cullom lot $285 000/ofr home Tranaferred va ·~ilt ltaH 11 559-8291 Avt Id Oct Ocean View spacious 4Br IUT&IT II 67 5-4606 CdM Sn1 2t.• apt .., n Incl plan• Ford~ pay-cant Flnancl avaliabte. So Bayfront ipaclous m 38a tulefvlly fumlSl'led, 2 8dl28a Condo. WIO -smkr proteu1ona1 Poo ment owe cash ptu• [ l""'""l! •'J Appts call 7 ~1675-1404 c M s295tmo sp rent upper Oupl1t 28r 3Ba -ta··· ltack • lrplc, lndry & gar Com· llkp poOI, apa. 2 car oar. 2Br 2b• frplc; OIW P\r ~n I turn 2 blk5 10 rx;n $425. trades can ate Call -.I. ..& or 675 5163 Lovet; prk, new cpt, lge small den. S2500l mo -tor1able for family or trpl mtoro $975/mo lower untl w P• 10 u111 673-2796 eves 759'-04&9 Own/Agt 1\1 • rms tor kng. u furn Only yrly lfurn?) Elevator & 2Ba Arch BMch H1a adult• No pet1 Avl tll 7B2 WESLEYAN BAY S950imo Ag1 673-9060 ii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiii DUPLEX 1Bd-1ba ea $17,995 Call 636-7870 boat slip Agt 673-4062 Panoramic Ocean View June '86. $1475/mo, uUls t•• •llT a.11• 1••• Lido lsie lg 38< 2ea trplc CdM stu apt $432 50 mo I $210,000 717 FERNLEAF lal'"·· ------Lge spacious room1 pd ALSO lro llJrnlstted --· ... Ba vlffW nr p\11 bell & S2ico mo income ~ •T& mu ITUU ua• ~ 6-40·8182 by Owner Darling 12115, porctll patlo -Clean & fresh $ 1400 2Br 2Ba $950/mo Avl Iii --llST&IT II --t~n Lse s 1250 No pets I to Qu&llfy 760::,!267 - 11H,llO --Ill 11&1 l-DUPLEX·2Br lba .a-L~~~I o~5~g:t~tC:M:-Pt1latal1 2217 49~-3672 ~ 494-8457 June '86 631-8569 550/mo 1 8dl18a, gar 540~1871(619)753--0719 C M Sllr 2or ap1 n·tmkr E1tceti.nt South Co11t Located on tree llned I So-of·PCH $275,000 $20.000 &tS-8292 IJICeiY done 3br ocean;&; W,.u 111•11 2252 AJU1mtall Ual ldry rm, ell to sl'lops ••Brand nu custom 28r N• OC1' $325 • '1111 Plaza ar... Upgraded Poppy Ave. Two 11ucllo 521 Carnation By owner of Co11t Hwy frptc ~ lU1t-spaciOUs 28r & _ « • 1923 POMONA 2Ba Ct\()ICe araa Fr?te. Ava11 now 650· 1743 end remodeled. Large unltt; 3 & 2 Bdrm. wllh1 673·024 10!'673-15•1 UllUllUS 153nc9d,!1P90rv~_YRdlty$f!,_50 den 2'.'1ba twnhse. Frplc •·•'"··1-1--.1 27M TSl-Tl42·1103 oar,pa11o S900 No peu \Fem n-!mkr de..,otee ot 1 A $53 000 private patios. fireplaces, I_ BEST BUY IN TOWN ..., ..-t ..... _._ ...._ 160-64 ~~;%. ;i,~e,_, mo. Pl:.t all bulltlns, carpets and Cfttl .... 1m 24x60oncornertot. wetbar, poOl/spa. vleW, 1 Bd fy iPPitm llSl&IT. 1713 Of 2·1539 JOM Norman 10 Sl'lt NB .,... drapes Motivated OU1 of C.rtu ••l .. , sundeck 2 car gar Steal lncirm~ainat S 675 apt 2 olks hom bcr Call formore tnlorma11on town ... 1_s ••e a•"ing 2 Stry Glant 3Br. Bonus Largettvingrm,dlnlng& S\195 2'131458-2912 ·• • · · $595/mo. Goll Course .._••ya••-~* w1cpt 67'3·2020 s.46-2313 ....,.., ... '"" Sl37950 s7K d kltchenareewlthfamlly 28r/2ba spect~lar oen ' 673-8293 view Deck 2 Br 1 Ba. ... ---•• THE REAL ESTAT&:RS $325.000 ~is GarY. Bkr 559. ;1 :~ rm. Young adulta view, patio, tr?te. 2 car l.aJit ftrtlt US 28' 18a, garage. 1 ~ Quiet Tennant1 NON.:SMOKERS OHL y Fem SI\• 38r Gonoo Prot (714) 673 ...... 00 welcome $29,500 Agent gar Sl 550l mo 673-7197 Wate:fl!ont Eltec Home to bMC:tl. Yrty $625/mo 558 JOANN Eastbk.tt1 Stunning lrg 28f ';;,r':,;tk~r!2·:1s..~ ,.,. EXEC Elslda PQOI Home. s.40-5937 3BR. 2ba, walk to ...... ~... C•·stom•-.....o plus" crpts No pelt 769--0685 ,.., -28 f Low main yrd, 3br, 2ba .,......, "' ~..... " •--• a twnhM loorplan Sep1 18 $310/mo -1.11"9 s167,500 Agt e7s-3887 C ... •i•i... lZ'IS hi t>Mm cells, aundeck. French Doors, Pv1 Boat N. Baytront-Oraet Vl9'#1 U2·1MIMM2·1111 ~~1~o;:v;',; Fam atv 3& conoo ~ot NmllllU A t9Ch neatbCtl MWlgl $1300/mo,avt now.Mant Dock $18501mo7~220 2br1ba$1200mo.yf1y.no L ARGE BACHELO R S1075LM640""~9 nl smkr 22-27 ~ Lovely 3 Bdrm 2 ·~ bath. fHtasfft hlM Yin ~nbr + d.n. 2 "~ b.. air. 261•241' or 673""'243 I rt INc~ 2 I gar., Incl urn 673·5"29 w/LGE PAltO $385/mo ...,.,... c, .. , area 6-45-2417 Avl executive home wtth for· w/cool breezes 38R vpgr eded Sacrifice •BR 3ba, avall now. H.V *"'l!LK TO BEACH 28 lalMa &S9 w 19111 CM •CUlE 18r t Ba yl'ly SeQ1 18 $310 mo• utlla ever back bay view l "•bl, lamlly room $1te000 ~ Hllls.Qi>enSunday 1·5 •1 :wA'L1 r S6001mo Per1 U1ila pd --• Greet home tor antef· $139,900Ca11Pat Cobb, • 2700 Lig hthouse 28a, den, bltlna, new Pnlatala 27tl Lge3bf2bafrptc petiO 157!>-49t2754·1792B~f Fam1t1rBa1Pan •brhw ,.,,.___ 675-2013 or s.46-2313 laet8t-U Sl900/ a,.1875-4000 drpstcrpts. wld, trplc,w encl gar nr SA Ctryl -I $21~ rno ist 1as1 deO talnera . .,,,.,._ wtn carry ---------v mo..... back yrd. gar S995/mo 'BR, earpor1, new drpa & Club Avail 101e $175 •3Br 2S.. garage trplc 673~782"' 875-6916 large second. Asklng 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij •Uftl•PI• 2H ,C.M. OesloMr built Of MW yrty Dys 75NM74 or crptt. 1124 W. Balboe mo yr lM S4-'-1936 CIOM 10 b .. cn Yrly ----$525,000. II Xlt c:orld Inc s 19,seo. 15% watli to beectl. 2BR 2ba: eves/wttnd• 731·3126 Blvd. $600 mo. 573--5198 s 1100/mo 675-41112 "' HM !O stir 8acti Bayl NB llUD WAITS Mn L•r-!,~~ tot. dn s 176,500 497-&287 frplC. bltlna. e1tceptlonal --Oceanfront $700 mo yrty Lrg 2Br 1 a. Clean Upp&< 754-1792 Birr I r .ti~~ ~d avaM Traditional 1111,llO 3Bdrm, vaulted cetllnga, 6 Unite, CdM, 2 blka to stOfage space, 2 car gar 3Br 2Ba. 2 car garaoe. 1 I Br. 1007 E Balboa Mgr Unll No pets 1595tmo -OPEN HOUSE Sepr 7-8 500 · Realty Try Closing oosts down. new crpts. cozy trplC. wltet, sharp, 4-2br + Ideal tor oouple. Avail ~~'~ bNCyrty ~~6::; Apt 6. 548""'049 SAO<> dep 8'41 ·9352 6306 w OCEANFRONT LUXURY CONO(. Lad) wttl asaume 1st T 0. Seller 1 2· 1br, wtll trade. $7951< 10/1, n-O pela Yrty IM S 1------Near South Coat Plaza JBd 2be ber gar laun Ip snr lN 2 ~ t>a w ""atvre 631-7370 Wiii c:airy 2nd or try a i~~J>o~w~r ~9:i Lie.Ila lnveet. 831-let 1 S 1500/mo Agt &7S--0088 38< 28a, lg lam rm & llvtng YRL Y BALBOA PENIN 1 Bdrm S 5 6 5 t mo 1 s 1600 Sep! 1s.June · 15 P•OI t~m ' M1n ro So lease option! Counlry Valerie 261-7653 Dpl1t· 38D 2B• high rm. 2 trplcs Many xtras =~ dec6;~ pets 556-1817 AP tor Dave j (6191944-0030 Cst P•zia '-!'-'" clean family room with tire-t>eained ceilings.' 2 car S 1500 No pets 831--0262 --mo. POOL PatlO trpte X·lge & PY' 6"'' '41 <1 Fiii l&lllT &UL Tiii If Tiii ll&L IST&TI IT llLTl-llLLlll I Plllllll. O&LL P&Tllll THiii place Large formal din-Dau Pilat 10 OIST&.Ullft.O car.S1300/mo 760-9020,BAYRIOGE CONDO 2Br Ctrtal ••I •11 27H 2Bdrm Apts Euts1de •WlmlHITllS• M11ie 6'-.,.,. • ..., ~1r1ug11• Ing. Four huge bdrm.. •••a --·•-• 11M.... -----2b 2 dt "d g $680 C 11 557 2 ... 1 3Br 2Ba Oceantront S 1500 5,.,, rinmP .,, HB Likt' Master suite with nre--~· _ _.. ,._ Here's a patrt CllOlce 5 rm • car c.. ar. sec. 1Br Duplex Bllln range a · -•Br 2Ba 0cean1ron1 s 1100 J •Nn :, fl O<I", place 2'.'1 b1 bath•. Pool Perteet 1tar1er home ASl=ell~~ P~~~ w/frplc oar & more ~ $1150 mo 7~~279 refrlg Nr bell $700/mo SP&otlll 2B• •Ba Oc@anlfont S85CI Vil .• and spa Executive Walk to Marina from 11119 Backs up to Costa Mesa $700's or unique 3br Incl Beaul NB Coodo 2 story Call for appt 640-7089 S725tmo 2 Bd t, ba Property Mouse 642 3850 M r: "'l' '-c. :io •·::irr bCr nelghbOrl'IOod Call for lmmac. 2BR 2ba home golf co11rae with 2 loll kids/pe t $970 2''1rba. 2 btg Br, flp pool 607'-t Carnallon. 2Br 1Ba. lwnhse encl gar lndry 3Br 2 Ila DPUC 1 2 Olk re Par1c ' se ,, "'h' & more Into. s.46-2313 wlfrplc. ManJi upgrades. bedrooms. fl replace. 539·6 190 Bes~Rlly fee 1ac 2 car gar no pets OIW W/O 1 car oar rm patio all blt-4ns ocn 'Qt' 1.1ps1a11s ""'' '13'' S '·a ,.., t ·r,..,: '. U1-1211 R&'M~n .. ~ :. . ~ . . .... lllT&L •IUllLIYm 2 bdrm. 2 bath/ 1 bdtm, 1 bath. Bo1h With llreplaoa THE REAL ESTAT&:RS & cathedr al celling SPYllAll al All(ays rented or llvti In llH Aftll one and rent the other to ,... help w/paymenta Would Beau111ul cuatom home alto be good MUOOll designed for a large lam· rental• DOROTHY Uy Upside-down floor HARDCASTLE plan guarantees privacy GE hQ-QlOO IOf all GOl'geous putoral View A Bes1 Buyl ....... ~~~t°c:m w:.'ut~~/~~::'k patio and garaoe tor each Cuti .IN 2 24 S 1150 evl 9115 786-1914 '375 863-1390 wlldys 763 w 191n S ioso :>ownstai•s """ M , ~· t B• <1p1 ino • fighting Move incond unit A reaaonableprlce 2SOOWMecArthurbix 2Brl BIG CANY~N CONDO Ophc 38f'2ba OIW W tD fSL MGMT 642 1603 $900 53!'»'106 D "°' ., )C. S3•5 ' BY OWNER. S 132,000. ll.l\li HI H< '" 2ba condo A/C. Frptc, I View 2BR. 2 .-.ba, 10il den. S 1195/mo 151 & sec Studio cott~ near 0 C 3B• 2Ba 08, ••pie ~.be" 1 11.s 'low f.•2 .i \o: Evs/Wknd 493-7006 llUMI.., •-· W/D llkup Mstr BR & w/bar, patio, lrple, W/O 424 Po1nse1t1a 673·8476 College S225 mo Gior1a '"'~ S, •50 6'5 '" ': or 'llea1 ~ .. ,•Ole women to I V' lk I Oblerfg,2TVs.2cargar 171418323353 ,.4 '9 B• Baal. ltack Of AEAL ESTATE pal o o er g p oo Pool/tennis Furniture Entire 1st floor 28d den. • ' 1 ~ ~r v • .,.,, •,,rr tiomP .,.~m~• 131·1400 S 1050Yr lse 998-0082 I avl SHOO/mo 675-7277 trplc Steps 10 ocean I TIE "...,.llWI 38• 2 be ,0_ vni• 1 S'100N S.?''>mC'I "'O·• "9 t Ideal Fam. Horne. 3br 2ba s 12951 720 9422 '"' 1 rec rm end of cul.Oe-uc 2BR 1b8, avl now, no pets Clean 1BR 1b8 oar. lg mo • 2BR wtoar New crpts Ollo. bCl'I S800 mo. S-l".IO P·e• ._,., '""'' • ~ IC' Srlf S 1291< Agt 759-5060 la••atrial P~rt 1375 Lg bckyard 2158 Charle yrd on Catalina St Kids C11t1 Nt11 2724 1 drP• blt1n1 tenG4MS yrd <.:tean deP 536· ''1" :>t • ""' ' ""B $360 _ $625 mo, Agt 646·3627 and pets ok SiOOO/mo lB 0 1 N bu j!I et wtp1110 Water pA•d $625 llAo , 8d ,0 8 f'N"I ....,, ,,., ti3' n416 lm1t l 044 3500 slf hne Office 1 2Br-1ea. gar. no pet• j .... 1593 r P • r s r 636-4 120 Call 1-5PM r , .. • .,...,.. meture lady wtt!loul car 1667 V1Gtor1a 1 S635 gar c1~se io oc P• 1 ,.,,... "' '" >urn •u• 4 II Fa.LT.. 70% warel'louM Xlnt toe 2178 Pfecentla, Apt E E"l>lff 3 2' I 220 E 201h S1 10·6 only Quiel '°' bd•' ·~1.1,. '-•P\do ·n "4B lmmecllat...., evall1ble 4 lmmed aeoesa 10 405, ~ $625/mo. s.45· 7983 I est u br ~ ba, n Ge -----U111 PO Be<:'1 w patio no '480 llo4om.,~·11 -.,..~ B· Be oa• .., o ""' & 73 Frwys. Airport Coo· --------greenbelt/view. partly 2Bdrm 1Ba $615/mo • •·oo y•• llllT 1•2 1•03 bdrm, 2'h bath, dining tact Paul Seymour 3Bdrm 2Ba Montlcello turn S 1400 mo 759-0435 S 00 2020 F II pets Avail immed --• • • • xi '~ S52' ·50 z6<i6 f fly ti ep1 + " sec d9P u • Can bet noon &40·53' 1 ~~0cf"10~·10~ '04:i1y 760-9073 or 754-6492 twnhme Wshrl dryr. gar. 11 Harbor Vi4iW' Knolls Condo enon No pets 631·8427 1 BACHELOR 4PT Vatv•" "'•eo' " r"'&n Sl'\1 2o• 'b• 't'""Cl<lf' l"O ~pl N( ~l'I i '\'>1· .., 6 .... "1680 S 159,995 Calf Patrick I I -----patio $850 Agt 5~· 1 15 for Lease 3Br 38a 2 car fer 1'<'188 Studio enct WI IFFEI l ClltCI s•ngl@ no ~ts S \~~ .,._i1•,, Tenore 63l -l266 tall I 3Br-2Ba. dbl oar, nice gar $1795/mo 640-5324 ar~ s7ooimo 20251Want a ae1ec11on_ ol great ut1I 64::' 3669 yard no pets 906 W HS900' -beach 3b 2b i omona 6"6-"559 living? We can otter any· B1yndQt! ]Br .ondc ••~· ltalll Fuait~.. Wiim $975 545-7963 ey s ' a th•~ from a sma11 apt ro ioc _ ·pgrao~ ~·1 ' frplc gourmet k lt Ch 2B 18 571 Joann 2 pe< -w 0~ • lalMI I I d UM son1 mu $510 No pets CM NB or HB tl"l1nll ol us qm~· <11'\f 3b 11'@ on Bal ~ 1 "" I()( 1~1 1ast & '"' s lJ3 .... c fi .. 5.9, 45 Rl '" c,. ~ It' stir 3Br Ilse. air. grdnr Incl., 539~6190 Best Ally tee r 8 • 8 4 d h&e 11 IOOktng tn Asi. tor L~ 642 \'140' I I pets ok No Clllldran HVH Seawtnd 48r 2Ba S1erra Mgmt 550-1015 tirst fOf thal chotOe of Oceantron1 JB.: .t. .. '• -;;~~======J.:=;..::==~=,_--· Turtle Rocil 4br. 2'M>4. Wntr RntCEieg 3£. Odm ~ ~50 557-6063 Montego New crp1 & --$6 5 •deal 11v1ng I gar •au" S1JOO St"OI' lam rm, antrlum, tgl tam hme. FP. 2 patl01, 1tpa IJ L•SJI p 8 1n 1 s 16oo1m 0 2:~r~tbat~~v ;.11:11n~~1 TSL MGMf 642· 1603 June 1c. 15191944 ,111y ,,.., El• 1 ba iiCll ..,, ocn ri "'r 1 1258 m, u111 hm Qwnr $2251< 854·9347 beh. $6751m_o_646-633 __ 3 1 " " • I 558-8525 Dy, 644·8190 newer Trlplu Res NB REAL n 675 18'42 OPEN .. OuSE q -1 ' lalMI & It .. IHtll • Newport Sl'IOres tlouM 957-25651 Bus 759-5.48" wesioe 2Br 1Ba N-6306 v. OCEA~rqo .,· Gu1911 l o1 Ptaiaaala 2107 • _ _.,, Ttl 0•1 3BR 2ba lrplc, gar $1200 2BR 2ba condo Frptc crp s d(?s $680 1s1 4BO ]ba 'P _,.,. vea ti•1 ltat 2911 _," mo lease 650·8639 S6 -a-el)oalt water & ' 1n~ ~Af 11un S2000' '• ~Pooio--..---"'""'.-. Wlntarrentalllee, 2 br, 1ba F I &t .... Wltta Wasnelldrye< trig air VI"'' 269 9tl"I S1 Ba•t:>oa Pen1n or3br2ba,lovetypatlo& " Exceptional Lkso Ille 4Br pool vu tennis security gupaid 5'&-2582 t:o•Cl!il"'4 ' s.;1a sma .'.lb s125 Mc garden. park 4 cars Adi ElERENT 2•..,Ba home for 11e 2 S650tmo 831-60811 laat. loc~ 2740 •WATEA~Ao.,• ;>OB • 673_0•08 !i·s 3002 to bay 7141873-1568 Of T t lrplca, lg garden & Jae f er Aptups1a1rs, garage 2 I HR 2ba. cptsJdrps dish ._ 1~1 :""''0 J~•;,c>•\• ~· • .: S70 S.noi.-ga BQf' ·~, ..., 818/79S-4941 Full alarm aec sys nowsons miu $550 111 w••.._ diann••I ""·c• ~ ~"3001 673 3526 .,... ._..,. ...,..-.,..,. " S ·c,o me ,.,, c.~ 8 ·;i~ 1811' S• N_, " Cost• Winter Rental-38< 28a •WldeltSelectlOl'I 1-~-~ . IUI 'sec:S"S-4260 coin lndry. Ql•age llAeM f•\ .,8 • .. , l HYI A v a 11 ' s. pt , 5th • Updated Dally Newport CrHI Condo 28r 1Ba gar new decor I 5725, mo e.46--6451 "" B CCIOdC. w•• l f\• .Almo1t 1eQO tQ ft of IMng S975trno. 675-9229 • ~Ml7 0 & p~ 7 Walk to baacll 38R S6ro1mo No pets **-LO "Bi 2"· Walll. 10 : ~lu"~ .• : ~~~-"ns~Q'-"il~o Ga•agto Ea5l,•df'E 'IO<&g~ space In ttlla 4 Bdrm 2'..\ • .,.,... aya .am-pm 2'.l\ba 2 car oar end unit 7 6 753--0719 ' ... ~ u ~¥. ~-~· .IV ... 51ng~ w ~~ nc• sa .. bl IOWnhom e 0 In ....... ..... lf 675 8860 Pool/tennis $1300/mo 54()-6!8 /( lg) bCt'I 8alc. gar S-50 No • $500 ~ 1flPOSl1 ~6-0988 Smoketree. Air cond .. mm= right on • 11 Bartovento 770-8725 .Nice 28' IBa-nr Wiison pell 760-171316-42 1539 644-9•8• O• .t•t> 1066 Offict ltatalt %t14 ctoM to pool Lovely the sand In No Leguna Of St09 By ...__,.,, H...,.1111 2 bf 2 ba & Harbof Avalllbla Sep! 3B1 3''18a 3 SIY 181 OCEAN \.lfW, ~t.1'1•• ap1 largil yard a.nd 8 two car Fully rum Including dll-21M ...,.,.11'4 ·~ iOa fr~t room w l 101h $550/mo 760-8862 w pvt entf nterc.:im '1f'(>$ 1(1 '>itfl\l IW\ll ga1 •WC111YI nms "< ~mk f11'> 64b ~1148 let U1 llel, Y• garage • you can't beat ha/linen•. H~ cleek, Balboa Penlnaula F• bayvtew. lrplc, bltns. ige •STUNNING Lg 1 & 38r I w 10 l"lkup roman tuo 2 $595 "''' -.gt !19 r.oso 1 MONTH FREE RENT this tor the price ample Pfk'g, t>Mut. vu gar, grdnr lnctd Avl 2Ba Garden Apl POOi lrplCS _, bar •llMl'I B 881 Oovtw Or Sune u for informatl'on S134.000 Wlnterrantel1111June 1. CHECKTHESEI 9 t l5 s 1 4 oo i mo $555&$725710W18tl1 oar i~:4~~2 "" ~:n,~o";,~S~1 il,~ Newt'<l'18eacn6..l136"1 lnhtthattltlltr $1500/mo. 4~1838 or Low -1 ....-1 v .... -2br &46-8t02 I ~ Q"' "''"" s~2sqF1 S""" _,.. •124c··' Ot 1 213/273-422e ·-· ... -_,. S525 1BR. clean. carl)et. c .iu~ 1~1.,1 •• ,.44 .,,,..... '""' '"" & Isl I 10 "'* . rv basic bungalow bltlnl NPT CREST CONDO 28R drps, retro no pets 724 HUNTINGTON REE" SP-.-.1ous APl J 975 Birch Nl'WPOtl Sell Y •• p,.,.,,,1 C• Clu111W, 642-5671 surpr ng lll•llOI l;irt!:IMc -irD lel1Yt'epatlOS510 at 2''\ba •ecurllylvlew JameaSt ·D 673-7787 APTS Lu,urious I A Beact1$4 1503.i'Ag1 -II ~ 28drms A.....,. Bacl'lelors • '-' ( f Cl OCE Al'li low Cost 1 .... rt ltac~ 1 2 WJb. 6ik rrom •NM1 * $1150tmo Agt~2235 $5M-S7i51Mo Lga t>Mut a vt Starling $850 f.42 13~· •N 8 Otto<'f'I 111 0 C air • .... ... Winier rent., M50 1700'• 3br nt OCC crptd ....-=:. -L -1-2b 1" .. & 2" .. -•1 bit 1n• a ... 6 ... b 9 5 Por1 a l ('v1 flMI') avail ""'' ........ n cloM tenta I f DV DU ... • ... v4v·' '·' TWn • on!\ v .11• B•I""'• N-, ......... :=~====~;:::::;;;=:::;:=:.:;:=::::!~= ., t 3 f 2 5 5 . 0 a 5 4 0 r dti004' 8'>PI• gar Jae too & $700' frp"' ••• , ...... ~ ~ "" ..,_ w w.. nnw s 1q" ~t 4 •4• 1111 •Ill H&LWT 2 1 3 / 2 5 7 . 7 1 O 5 or other• av .. t 539·& 190 w/upgradel gar 1 "' ... u ....... Onf'r 1 M to bcil beSI Sf.. tond(l • ms1• BR 2 NI ':!~~•~' S(l:\\.~~-~~~· :!!: BIQ CynCondo.~bt +den, 875-7859 S..tRlty l.. or lu1' 3b' 2b• lrplc l&eAvOCado on~e 1 ~2Br SUP«•gt! "'''°"" ~,~ 0 ' l~9 .. 1Ut1ll1Ttn! ....., .. cu.~ • -..... 2~b Ir: .. View dtnwtllr 2 oar much Tl&. llllT M2-1MI unl11 12131 862·8596 Ot Oe•u'fl off•C.fl w f#l¢flpllor. 1 l '.I\~ 24 .. ~°':5s.-9242• College Prk 38r 2ba. pool more I 1100 at 539-8190 1714 8,0 2337 Snt~ Ct11t lttrl . arN vlf!W c:""'tral ,0 O~.=ro;:-.,..:::;-:..,~, :,-• • • -WAITD RefS req S 1200/mo Incl Beel Rtty tee $635/Mo 2 Bd 2ba frplc 2715 cat Ot11r f' f'Qul()t '°"'.., ,.,, ... 1..., """''° -d• •IY .t.a. P11111* 47 yr 04d retlfed bu.Inell pool/yard ~ Cati ...._., = C:.,,:'·lnt Nr lsCl ~ •di~ •lflm-• 111 11 2 8dr"' 2ba Coodo • ffpte m1>n1 \ltc'"'""" •up I 8AYRIOOE 2 matt bdrm• man frOM Wyoming loote· Jo.ti e7s-7gee t f..... d . a 10 ,._,., Oa11-t PtlOI Cl&Wloe<J Ad I I\ 0•1 S« Qllf!IS POO' OOtl 100 4-.(\ '4) 11 ., L ( N V Y ( t Oen & 38a *229,600. Ing for a l'IOme -4th bOat Darting ~2-8• re L7e:~ •• 0 b;'~ I .... 0 T"';~•.1••• 111:_11 ..... ""Z4 S'25 MO 832 31 l!t ITIQS 9Sc ~ M Wit m1tcn an, I' r I I I Ownr/Bkr 1eo~e2ae ellp tor 43 ftMJl~1 Wiii· modeled Prlln9 ., .. of Wlntet ren1at avell $e9t ·---.... --64 0111~· flt• l 11 M•l>4' . · · · . • Wllll Ing 10 take care Of l'IOtne MeM Vetde Need• ntce 7 tllru June 1 No pell - --28R ?b• coodo CarPQrl S!i 1 &'i!i" 0, ~ , 2 1 r I ~. R ( 0 p I sr!1ou1 ~rm hlgn*ne. ::-.,~~ ~~() tamlty •;g~/~ VllefMI 1518 w ~~!·!'~nl ··--·~··-VILLAGI "5~~,fr! r~~1t,g&0 1 CdM a bfKI (lrll<f', S42 .. · I .. I I'. J' C<lodo. Sec. au~ne H~ ~ fl'om OllC i __ __: WayN. Agt .,....,..00 '0 .,,.... $ t 100 1t1et ull• A C 11 g ...._ ..... _... _ _..._ ...... _, 1 sup 1v•t1 /t; Beauty •85 to July 1 ·ee ~· EASTS10£ ser 18&. Mw SEAWIND 5. BR 2~. ~ 2 DAllTMINTI S. G. PUZ& AIU 1a11110t "''"" E L""'' I S260,000.IUUdOParlt cat>te ,..~ Cell Cfl)ta/palnt l.gyrd Smt IT'pa,.nlght l'Oht..,... \l argelBRlba 1vall9116 1 Hwv&7~·b91.'lC'~nY11,.,,. r__,, ... R_C.--W..,O,....,N,..-41 .. ~ Dr Ownar81&-.3007 3071832-&HS dlY9 Of pet ok Utlls pd Qrdnr Prtv•tepootl tipa •comm "''l tnl\ll ·~·••'·''\hf •oh Qw•t Oated comm POOll 'PU II I I' I -Wtd••Ot~IOC)Ay .. we u~-307-636-3691 911/ltlltlndl 19'1&/mo 846·&4S3 tennl • $24 00/mo (f I ''"f•hl & v (\J\! FU!•"" .. , ..,.., ., & taflnla YHrty ..... • • • • 9(1 "only we (OUICI '"''"' PIY°"O tr......... Al6' fOt ~oe Hain Eaatsilde 39R Gorgeovt 780-e:lee Of 790-6978 tw.t<h ~¥~ ... ~ NI f't I~ l't I~ I SSH m~to-mo S6'& .--------.•<>'.net•--·· L~~%~V:~::..:: LIOOBAYfRONT3802ba '~ l'IOme with unheard of sioo 3br ..... ., .... ~,..... CaJ1P91• 83 1 1266 I 0 A H I L E I .. to "'°C)a a reet.a.uranu a f\lrn. WINTER RENT AL ounlt• .,., new '1)t, new 1 nothln fancy bY1 *'9'>t -UM I·~-' I j j I' j 0 r-r~ ..... •i.• • j mark.. eo.1 111p, tee 87M118/(l18)211-te>l2 ~. :,i A"'t... ~ • ..,... Mad rtte tenant PM-•H:~i '-· __i..--1.1--.1... --1... --'·---'· , ~.~ ..... -;i.,_ ::;..~...:1.::.:· bldO ldMl for-'*" Chair LIDO l8LE· e.eu1 tum :..,!'"';i' w":c,t>fldOe .. , I 63M190 Beat Alty,_ ••lttl ~ ~~ • . " ... "'"""' ' II• 1(1\ ••l )\JOI cJ::t&:.::::~75-8416 3bf 2b9. $2000/mo 8'1'-"-"Y &51-3000 IT~ l11a1 Bti -----&OM, 81•n92•7271 ~ E--. anr 18f a;Mt""1oe VllfvaitW UH FllH\ rm Ua hm 600i Ltwnt ...... m LIOO ISLE 28r 2ea. dbl Yrd. grdr Wtr pd ~'fownhou u In Co11a ...... n-~· '4H lf'llO SA29.SOOtM-S250KL/H gar. w /d Wi nier cri>i,pelnt.pt!ven~ .,._.,2brl'~t>agar-oe '1l.......ul l .._..t MJ·tliU uUflnc:i190-41'0 3bf 3ba 3car PP &t+-7070 $1150/mo t7S-' t 43 No pet• SSH 76 I ~ 4 ,,, tw ,..~ .. •ou1nua 1tt ftl'l(of •1 ... ., t!tl C~•' Hw~ • od 'l•.inrno Jll\llW•I -· ,111'\.J 0 ampwi P"'"'''ll a•ICl viii lh•~ 1• m llHHllUln 11J~4400 L -- , ' J .. > • _ .;. __ CoMt DAIL V PILOT /Mond.y1 See>Mmber 8, 1915 \' "i! liiitU ltlt ltlJ ...... llM .a. -· · 1111 It.Ir...... 1111 ltg !u... !IM ltlt 1y.,; 119 1t1a ...... llM ltlt Wu!tf l lM f!lt Waa!!4 llM ltll lu!tf llCIC. Of'Me; dOM to ADVERTISING ua-1111at... ...,. ... ITTUIT lnarenoe M«IJcal p15m1D , 1nUT1111n UUIPBlllP/t 11• =~ 2:ootq. ft. 2 ~ '"'. ~,..;.. ,D,IC.loeelttnaf\.ll!Ume Nlquel Hair , .. ,,Iona .... Ul.1111/PILIL " mtur PAAT TIME WM1<end1 -:.c::. i::..~:eoc!.~ 11 mo tltne. lllO Pl'9f. ~In oolteetort In tM ltvlne needt all aroutld Hlllr IOllalTl'Aftl Mon-,rl t-t, ft.Ill time In POlltlon ev9~ 5 deyt A.! ontoe In NewpOt1 """""' In 1411 W. Ilk•, Sutte 3, IDTIST '*'°"' Ke;m AkM ~ ., .. to perform conttnu-Stytjet lot ~ ..ion. Nwpt 9oh Good worttlng pl'Wtl 1nclda &atl#d•Y· Center. ld9lll fot 9tudent. le9t 11"'*'1 .._.., ~ ~ T" M Mt&. Hie Hwbor •· C.M oue coleetlon effort on 49'-5728 or 411-2221 c:r~c~:·==· cond a "'*"a. Rick or Art/Drafting bact(OfOUnd Cell CarOI Van~ Mon ~· 83100 w. CoMt Growing deity ,.,.,.IC)ep9r •• .,. .. ftHT ~t aooounta. Aa AdaptatMe to growth en· Rhend1. &46-<>2111 hel?M. Muet be pro--'""' P:n. &44-. £0£ 1-.-.:..:.--· ----~~·-~_.ii0rooJ1;1i1ooo;o(fiQeq on tr-.. Oranoe COMt --1 •-• part of°"' liqUtd•tlon you •~/--l /M wonment. _.1__ ducuon oriented. wur u•Pl•lllT /lllTY IAUI lllllTllY n. w/5 olftoee. 1795/mo. need -~ ...,., llllT Mf wit! be~ with con-_ Newport Cent« -.-" -·-train. Aol>IY Pennyuver. ·-F G bb& E.IU9 Newport Avlll Oct. 132 11th St ......... ~-"j-net .... ~ taotlng borrowera by pa _ _.... JlmStrnmona.NewPon hardworking Ulf· 1880 Pla-c•nUa Ave, O.C.Publlahlng~.needa CorenruleT. Real' Eatate C.M.. Ml-4Sn COltMn ~ ~....... phone to r...otve ~ i'-4 --• lftteratat.-"*-anc. moUvatfd furniture COJtLM... d•P•nd1bl•. 1ccurat• background prehlrred. -• Ing, 1:a":V::1t1no ....... I ~=•= cetC ~~i ::: ::nv:; Ao-ncy. 714*~390 ~::1= ~~~ NISllML DUii = (g~i Good typing akllla. Con· ....... 2tll tor • of ctlenta llLL IY & recom"*"' ectlon ae of humor a muell Call Oml. Wiii 9Xl*· pref. s1ar11ng Would you Ilk• to i.arn dHk. 3S hr wa•IC . tact Mra. Netland Our Mtl~ mar ~ You ~ Stephanie, 760.1981 Pltlme AM S&7~ co1i.ae Moving~-about th• pereonn•I S1000/mo ' benefltt. 84U200 ......... 11t "°°' offloa onOO..t Highway. GOOd algnlng. Janltorlal, air cond'g, ample !*king and utll· ltlM. &750 '* mo. •••w.n 111 .... ICet demand• qual ty and TIUPlllll kn~ ot COMunW Hoephal 84 t·a.427 field? Are you ..-1no Call Suaan a 250-1840 atyte. PIT ,,.., FfT. ,. .. _,_ _. credit o0l*11on l)fact'°9 -UI--a 11 1 -I,,... 111110 -"'·-part Um• afternoon UlllYA-llT IALll tUmll N d 1 "' ..,...,.... "' & proced'"9 aa we41 M __. reapon. ffuhlOn 1111/N.8. *ls ..... 11* work? Then" have the """ lmmed. oe>enlnQ fOr HIOh •w•P•P•r pro UOI on hOurt la youra Cell T H lamlll.nty with oollectlon mallllf .. Ull r .. t.uranl. Hrt a.m-2J)m Needed 10 run errand• IOb for youl Wa are • Full TIIM ReMrvatlOnltt School 9rad. rooking for knowledge helpful. Ablll-Auool atu Tai•· lawa. Thl9 l>Ofttlon r .. Cotta Meu Medlcal Mon-Fri. Fo/ app1. art phit llQhl office work. major so. CaJlf. Savino• for Private Club In New-nret tt9P '"a rew•dlng ty 10 work u;~ dMd· marketing. 053-t&70 qulrM 1dnt vttbal 6 writ• Center Hoep., 301 Vic· 3pm. 840-8390 , f;rom f0-3PM, Mon-Fri. Bank located In Cotta port ~h. Data Entry• oar..,. Full tltM entry ~:,8 :';!;. !n°'.::;::. lllf, •Ill lllll ten Piiie. Prevlout bank-tor1• St .. Cotta M.... $&/hour + mllMge. Mutt M .... 9Mklng a part lltM plut but not ..aentlal. level poeltlOn. Requlr• tage. Poalllon It lull ti~. 12231 Chapman Ave. Gar-Ing or finance •XI*. • &42·2734 LllMh11M • ., .... , have preHntable oar. '*'°"net clerk 1vall•bte Wiii train. Call 075-0900 menta: GOOd driving r• Oood benellta. talary ... _ Orove 071•5517 plus. Salary wlll not ex-111f1•• Eng. tPN~lng 6 e)(J>rd. Can Fred 831-1288 to work Mon-Fri. 1·5pm. ll•••IElllT cord, hard wor1(er, neat commenaurate with ex-.,..., CHd S 111,000. p/yr -S•lary open. F/tlm•. lndlvldual wlll uatat the ....,. app .. ranc., eagerneaa petlence lnqultlee and CHILD CARE Wanted M· PIMM Mnd your r.-UIM Pit. Ft.x hOurs. Apply In 845-4835 btwn 9am to NEWPORT DOMESTICS & pertonnel ttatf In a var-IPPHTllltl to ~. Pr.aM bring ,. __ ___._1 rt•umu to: Sleva W·F. 8:45-4 My Balboa to ,.D.l.C., attn: P«ton-penon. Reuben•. 261 E. noon or 1·3Pm for Nancy Janitorial Service Agency i.ty ot cleflc•I functlOnt SI. PASO CANTINA OMV printout at II~ ol "__..... Hough, Art Director, lthrne.Att5pm875--2681 nel.P.O.Box7M9.New· ~UI Hwy, Nwpl Sch y-aTlll'LllUI lalnneedof: lncludlngllghltyplng,fll-leeeel(lngexp motivated appllcaUon. Apply •t ....... ltll Oally Piiot, P.O. Box OUllO&l p 0 rt B •• c". c.. Monday lhru Sunday 3-5 UI. -I· • EM p L 0 y Me NT Ing, dale lnpYI. acct• en«getlc lndl~ualt for 21oe Harb« Blvd, C.M. i OL/siuv./storaoe* 1580. eo.ta M .... Ca. 92858-744648 EOE Hot9t' 12~CGh9'>f'"ro-at,:1A1ve5.i.011.,. co, .. u~~e.L~.!!:· ~lllnoauutoal payable tuand ,other,~-, Mgnt. QPP<>rtunlty In our SECRETARY·LEOAL ,..,... • c. 82826 Buty Newport 8aaeh .. •II II.Ill ......,, ... • · " w ... "st.I .. · sonnet net one. .,.. growtng So. C•. r•taurant P«m PIT MCr•t for ~.':JJ2~~· '1:2_..·::C, Ill• IUIT 17•=C• o~~! 1h~= Fett brHkfa~t Cook. Full & Pert time. LIFEGUARD (certified) ~n~~~,,;·600·~=~ :"~~da~er~~I ~= chain. Xlnt aalary. benefit• N.B . Atty. Nd :lture, 5000 8(1 ft 8ulldlng on t:,. ci.r°r" typttt Dutlee Exp'd, Start lmmedl Park .snllPll r .00/hr ~O~~ Cell endt off. ground lncludlng typing pr°j"ram. ~ for •w:~ take-charge lndlv, gd Sup.,lor . Ave, C.M UIL.f Pl.If wtll Include all typee Of Ave Car.:501 Park Ave. Full time. Apply Lido yron or Ill fl·• RECEPTIONIST•. Bii-of 40·SOwpm. GOOd writ-~~ <>;,layan rm~w. typl,7~~1aomeL90al eso-2828 or 831_..884 330 W. Bay 61 gen offlc;e el«lcal dutlee. Balboa lalenct 875·2888 ShOf .. Hot ... 817 Lido 1ngu11 w/lal•• 911per. ten & Ofal eommunlca· Sepulveda Bl. Torranoe 1_•x_P_·--------~-- 5000 Sq n Build!~ on _coataM .... Ca.02828 Exp:~-but w111 con-Of87W830 ParkOf,N.B.873·&800 lllll.Hn. Rapid advancement op-uona sklllt -dealred. CA9050T(213)53o-8781 lllllTAIY Su .rlo. r ·Ave, • .M. AIDE F. llv.ln. Teec. her In sldef aggretalve. am--1 -• l!ll!!I .alll&TM portunlty Call Im~. Prevl oua peraonnel Part UIM Hou'1 flexible ~up f ti /b d 1ou rndlvldual F 11 ------Newpor1 Beach tnveat· 842-0142, Or aft . ...,.... exper. a plua. Ol.latllled Retell . · · e.&0-2828 or 831-4884 Whlehr. ..,,, "· rm r l>lt 1 · u Full or part tlrM. Some NMded Good pay, Gbod Matto 546-2380 appllcante pleHe call •LOH ~~ptur ~1.put24!!. UJ*. +StOO.mo. 845-2357 eompany o.netltt. •JtP« MC Good work-......... Call Robl>MI'• D... m•nt Firm requtret 0 a .. ·-..., ....., Waterlront Bldg. 13SO e/t Call Brandl Manao-t 1 · ·vi · Ideal I ,...,,.... · •-v mature lndlv. 10 coordl· lll lEI' &1111 631·8380 ext. 424 lor an NATURAL FASHIONS I-_:_-=·~~-:-=:=:=:=::-avall 3333 W Coatt &PllTlllT 1111110 955-9033 blwMn 1-4·30 no en ronment, or & Mop M8..Q757 nate dally opwallon• of Interview ~I. 11 "OU would Ilk• 10 ""n a llNna•y pa-nm · · · N · atudenlt. Salary neg 11 Wanted lor Day Shift In P"CIFIC AVINGS 1 ,.,. --• Hwy. NB Mon thru Fri 9.5 21 Unltt, ~·~ M.... o C"'1Cal W/u.f*', Benefit• avail Houaecleanlng Service mall dept. Prev. ma ernall pvt Conveiaoent " . growing company a are for taro-national firm In l .... trl •. l peta. EJipettetteed, eeml-OLJU~ Apply In peraon. Ruby't Tues·Frl. SS/hr. Mutt dept. opwallOna •KPer· Hoapltal In Laguna BANK a1tJ)9r ln Hlllng women• Newport Cent«. Hours rellred.855-0885 ••rN• DI #1 B-'bo ... ~ h1veownear850-4118 req.lndlv.mu11poaaeaa Be·~h. GOOd *•'•"' 6 1901NewportBlvd fethlont. apply at 280 ...-.11able.AakforJeff . ... 1 •. 11 --If you're a Mlf·atarter and ner, ., a ...... . etrong organlzaUonal & """ ..,_, Suite 221 Cotta Meea .. ....,-....... 2 .. 2 ••-Apt Manager Coupl• tlextble about Job ••"""'n-Balboa. --·-•i _. -1 bonut. Cell 484-8075 • · Forett Ave, Lag."Bctl. Full ...--.. •5000 ..... sq .... ""'R"'.-8.u""lid-lng_on_ W/9XP for beeutltul 06 mentt. IM F.0.1.c"."ha;. COSMETOLOGIST Aaal. c:i:::OO:::~per. ~~~,.:,:~:i~111~,:c:i btwn 8am-3pm. Equal Oppty Emptyr & pen time position•. 1---.. -.. --n=u=,-- Sup•rlor Ave, C.M. Unit Garden Aptt, CM Job lor you. Our dlvlelon 107 Main SI. Balboa. ton.3.momlngtperwe.k polntt for dally OJ>9r· Nurtlng Piii.Sim Retell word Proc:.aalng, General 850-2828 °' 631""884 Salary+bonut+Apt. No ot bani< llquldatlon cur-875·8412 to keep Corona del Mat allona. Xlnl company II I 'I for 11 Qrowtno N.B. Travel 11&1&111/IAUI Otfloe. for tmall North Aaanaceat1t1 JIH pet•~~-•9HWkdyt0-4 renllY81h:..ic~·~~ apartment In top shape \benefltt & working con-Med·Surg, 'c~ttlcal care, ~9~en~81~1 ~U::,':;1: succ.eetulbu9.lnDanaPt. Laguna Conaultl~ Firm. A~t!ITPX~1M:B~NdS a ~~,i s1~rter. !4'~eraoe typing tpeeda OllUELHI ~~~f.';.!: ~'.iri~· ~~-d 84:u~~'. 5;:g:~ M~ :~= 759.1~91 ' ~~.~~.P:odnu'::~~ ~:i ~~n::i'!'~~~~. c:,-:::; n at.,. Career Oriented? 50WPM. Th9 f'.D.l.C. of-Part time carrier c:ounMI-write to Ad. 132, Orange Newport Beach, Ca. Center Hosp, 301 Vic-Plal .. aGy GUiii retell exper. 40 Hrt p/wk, oriented, Mtt-motlvated CounMllng. 1815 So. El AND DO YOU· len • great benefit• ora wanted H.ift ..,..... Coaat Dally Piiot ,P.O. 92858 alln S Ch,.k c " -/wk d s1 lary lndl 497 4•37 Camlnlco'dA~8·2S7e2n88Clem Enjoy MeetlnYi People? pecil.,... fncludlng dental an"' glrla 'aotlc I ""ne'w"' ·.,, . • . . tori• St, Otte Mesa N.B area. 9-5:30 Mon-Fri, tome evet n •· a v. • L .. -.-" Box 1660, Costa mesa, 1111111/•-tf-A...A 842-2734 ew,,..r. Man .. ·--flt• Cell n90. Send rNUme to: The 1--.-m-/_OUl ___ ~ .. -,"".""&1 ----------Like The Flex blty & vision covertQe. tt you aubacrlpUona on their Ca. 92626 ------.,.... ~ ... v Y uvo.. ~ff 1 port / Choe - SCRAM.LETS Of wonc1ng In Outalde would Ilk• more lnfor-paper routM. Muet anJoy for aelt atorage. Coate * Ifft• lnllL * (7 t4) 892-528 l for appl. olat:' :'otdl•9:.' 3453; Pan time potltlon lor SeJN As Well As lnllde? matlon call pertonnel. at working with 10.13 yr ,_., IPlllllSll M .. a. Retlr•d perton credit, cotlecllon, genl ofc, PUil GAii Golden Lantern, Dana Pt. energetic peraon with ANSWERS 875·5400 EOE olds. Early evening hourt 18.05 •tarting rate P1~~al~S02_~!!822 for In-FfT or PfT, eome wknds great oppty for Hortlcul· 02029 Attn: Margaret good" typing akll!!-'-~· THEN we WANT Cleflcal work days/ lleldble hrt. Sewrat position• avallabl9 .......... .., uvv & evet. Kovena Jeweler•. turallst -Plant Tech. UM eral ottte. knQWlWU~. To Talk To Youl CommlNlon only. with local corp. Mutt be Mr. NlelMn. 6'46-45!0 own car PfT 10 32 hrt/wk 1nllL IALll Houra nexlble. Salary Eventy-Probe BRUENERS RENTS . FU DUlll Call 8Nee Em= 18 plu1, artlculate, 3 yr IUlllD • TUlllH -exper 'pref 845-0587 Full-time poaltlon In Nft· bued on quallflcatlont. ~E ~fe':' Celllornlu Largetl 1::,.~~~ .c::, 842-4321 ext. ~=\.:.u8:~~~: FlllTIATllf Pert Thu/P1H n.. eslc tor Mer~ or Susan port Beach Fine )ew-Send resume or apply In W•'d 811 be happy 10 pay Furniture Rental Comp•ny OP9"lnga for nte clel1ct. H.B. 884-2890 or S.A. ookl 1 challen Prt.ltt Pett 1ffiff erly /Glfl •tore Ex· perton, 1733 Monrovia u "go, If onty we could 111 d'"'l ... d11ng 1mo1 II~~~~ To quality you muat have .... I llAIT 641•6878 for appt. ~~. gr~h ~uni~-FIH hrt typing & A Mt • Plantacape Malnt. Plant perlenee In China. Crytlal Ave. Suite Q, Coat a ftnilhpaylngforwhere n v 1 u1110-...... 2 yrsexper.lnftllng,aon-IAl.YPl.IT •Wanttoworkwlthlhe muttMonthFrlJW expreq'd.25-30hra/Wk. & Sliver preferred. M .... Ca.92627 WE'VE B~E~. our Costa Mesa .,.. Ing & checking all torm1 lnauranc9 lnduttry IMder ? Airport area 766-SsOe Own trans 751·2271 673-0334 :--.....-:---r--rrir.; Showroom• ot documentatlOn. Exper. Ill. n• I IUll * Ar• expetlenoed In POOL CLEANER Needt Retell Sal.. lllllm Hiii Liit I Pna• 310t Salary plut commlMalon In a bank'• not• dept. la a llUftlY lllYll !The Irvine otnce ol the furnltur• rental? PUT TllE own truck Very gOOd f llE JEWELRY Pan lllM. Sal/Sun, 18 hra. ;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;iiiiii $l8,000.·S20,000./yr plu1. The F.0.1.C. offer• a 4 Hrt p/day. Urgently Federal Oepo11t In-* Tired of no Inventory. potlllon• avallebte 81 tl\e pay. Part-itme or Fun. grave yard l day thlftt Xlnt beneftta. grut benefit• peollaoe nMded by Huntrtlgton euranc9 Corp. hat Im· no growth. no manage-0 11 Piiot newapaJ)9r 485-8100 Looking tor tull & part llme avall. $4.26 p/hr · Job IOC. Call Tuesday Sept. 10 Including Dental 6 Vision a.ch City School Dia-mediate opening• In our ment aupport. • Y d aalet people. Xlnt aal1ry O.C. Airport ., ... C.M fOlJI) ADS ARE FREE Cal: M2·HJI 9am·12Pm only coverag• Pt .... call trlct. Good drMng record lnturance Dept. The working Saturday an PllllOTlll AISllT, & company benefltt. 839-1(10 Iv meo Ask for Kay Stacy, peraonnel. EOE required. S7.80 •H.05 entry level INSURANCE BREUNER RENTS ANTS Sunday mornlngt. Earn $4. p/hr. Apply In peraon. Please call Ml. Alanna &m .. -a- (7t4J 873·6005 976-5400 p/hr aalary. Apply 20451 CLERK r-ulret the fol· TO TALK TO $4.SO per hour plul ou Books on Tape . 720 Erker, 844-2800 ellt. 708 .. -C L H a """ YOUlll allowance. Mull have Farad SI, Colla Meaa. Prof. Smog Lio Mech. Etf• llTI Tiil lllYIOI OUIJUl r •Im ~8 · · .'°;1yp1no,;x:'~ tar~ car or plck·uP and Mon-Fri 7:30am-4pm. lllll Ollll clent a fl phaaH, all and fight repel,.. Newport Newport Development 6 o..dll,,. 9112185 •Familiarity With pollclec BREUNER RENTS, Call· be al leat1 18 yeor:i old. llll--..•llT Full tlm•. Lighting lh<lure maket, SO/SO epllt or Tire Ctr, 3000 E. Coat 8ulldlng co. looking for & premium•. fornlaa largeat It Melclng Call Bruce 842~333 r 11-showroom, Cotta Meaa. $30.000. comm. Alto Hwy. CorOf'la del Mar. help. 752-0163 llUYDY /PLllllT • Xlnt verbal & corn-1 Manager In Training for PIT. l9mp. for vacation r• No exJ)9r nee. 648-9341 I e I and Attendant• Banking ,., .... u P/tlrM, nd good d. riving munlc•llon alclll• the Coat• M ... area.)(lnl PASTE' IO llef. Mature, non-1moker needed. 873-3320 -------• lllln AllllfllT ---rod. NB 833-1N1 M·F e Muat be conaclencloue ealary plue eommlltlon. ur Al, 752-7903 HLfl OHllflHTll SOLICITOR Sta1e Farm -Fou_n_d_V-la-la_o_r_yel_low_L_a_b •. 1 PIT Knowledgeable In & attenllw to detall1. All lnqulrlee conftdentlal. 0J)9nlng avallable In our 11111-llll - -Ina. Gold book Tuff· approx 8 mo• vcty L"""'* group medical. 848-7853 llUYllY P11111 ~· a TECHNICIAN In our Call Tueaday Sept. to. book puteup area. P«· n.. 01ttt•er ltmH Thur• ev91 pm. 553-1115 373 n-H WANTED Full·tftne Call b I w n 9 am -1 2 pm manant part time pot-Front otflc:. appearance Growing dlitrlbutor _., Redhlll/Brltlol 831-8 --Al ••1 ...... •T · lnturaric:. O.,,t. you wlll •73•800., Equal Op~ tor bu"" otflce near John ----=--..,..-::,--A aelf·atarl« to ualat In _.. nr.. 281·1881 be reeponllble for: u " ltlon. Monday 2:30pm to w .,Al Pie nt energetic J)9rton. tlart L09t Nanda~Parrot). See-the development & con-to ualet In typ~. tlllng BTIL. .... • VertncatlOn of port unity approx. 7:30pm. Tueaday :': vol:~a· hi ':i'no. rvrt llme. full llme lalw. ward/Morning Cnyn CdM trot of budget for owned and ott.er clerl dutlet • lnturance on all real EmployM M/F/H 10am-to approx. 5:30pm. r'IT Call Pola i41-~ 111 yplng, a ple8Mtll pho,,. Grn bod'f,blk hd 780-!029 Real Eatate propenlee. Typing 80 wpm req. Own 1111111 TIUTmlT aetate loant No a•per. nee. Apply · manner • mutt. Salary ITITilllRY p l HU Needt to Independently ear • mutt. Cati Judy, llH•Tll • Placing coml)fehenllve IUUIDI (lllJlf) penny u v er, 1 88 O llOIPTlllllT baaed on quallflcatlone. tn!U L reeearch & control of 842·4321• ext. 3 t8 tor Highly qualtfted In appt llablllty lneurance on Pf•fer retired C*eont lor Pl•c•nlla Ave. Cotta for exciting position In a Send resume or apply In EWE IU oanm budget lor owned RMI app!..·-· _ .. , echedullng , practlc• F.D.l.C. owned property Mini-Storage tit••. In M.... growing N.8. Travel Co r:'v':°'1su:::3 Q M~r:~: ltMHt M /tlttr Ll•&1 I llWITUI &late propertlee. Need• - -promotion & ooli.ctlont • AeYiew of l)foperty for Santa Ana, Huntl~lon SenH of humor a mutll · C 82827 M thru F, 3 to 7 pm. $4 hr. Store In CdM needt SalM Peraon, FIT. 5 Days. Xlnt working condt. Eapeclalty 11,,. Cllentele. 875-1010 -to Independently re-IAILY Pl.IT needed for• quellty prao-adequate COYeflQe. Beach, Coat a Meaa More tamlllee are getting Call750-l691 Mesa, a. Muat haw car. 850-1400 Bank Cards Avallable ae.rcn & complte data. 330 w. Bay St. tloe In NB. tt yOUr're •Maintaining tick!«• ., .... otnc., t>kkpg, & the camping "bug" ltll9 1---------l=-============- Aegardtaa ot Credit You'll alto b9 reapontlt>le Cotta Meta. ca eearchlng tor a take In a currant etatu1 let.phone Hper. helptul year. If you h a ve a llOln/llG P/T Ill.II ii"ave you read today'• Hltlory 731•7658 fOf eatabllafllng tlci(lef 6 charge poeltlon that Wiii • Preparation o1 monthly Wiii train Part tltM work camper that't not getting Sm RE Office, Ille typing, TlrM, and Auto s.rvtce. Cleaalfled Ade? It not, Ptntul flttng tyst9ma for the GUii nPtST develop your growth t9C>Oftt. C •II 7 5 1-130 0 or u.d, Mil II now with 1 phonea. S5/Hr 10·3. Newport Tlr• Ce nte r. )'OU',.. mlMlng the beet ltm lOH budget department. •Ylll potential call: 644-0032 • CompYt« Input 557-3700 for appllcatlOn. ClaMlfled Ad. 873-5410 Aak for Ken. 3000 E. CoMt Hwy, CdM ber98IN In townl ffl • Minimum 2 Y*I,. bank· Cornpan paid ben9flt• for S 1800 to atan If qualified. Cendldatea mutt heve ap-~ .... ~-IUll lngexperlenc:.ln a note ~OffloeCl9rk who proprlate experlanc•· 11 ~ mmr!!ID ESCORTS dtot. °' IOlln dept. can accurat•ly lyp• llTllPlmll Banking 11 • plua, Mui-j ..,. l na-2355 •MU.. be c:onadentloue & S!wpm & 19 looklng for to men-oe dletr1butl0n of mum aaJary la &18,000.. J'' 1 1 I 1 1 ·-. 8119'\tlve to ~all. van.ty Call 883-1655 new prOd~. PIT. Self-p/yr. The F.0.1.C. otlwt. • •t ::;r . la1lan1 On. 4014 •Strong verbal & written Human Ruourcu' ttartar. 846-7063 grut benefit• peollage. • -·~ · IUl&lliiillulll • ~~=·~~'.·· E10 1e M/F/V/H FLllllT/"'" ~=~-~~~& = Mftltlda1 lattt lrUal 1u•ta1.!1 Jaalttrtal .. • ... •er-...l..,•t._ ____ 1 II lllfY llWI eortlng & gathering In· GUii nmT P/llme/counter aalee Ilk• mor• Information, ltnlct fiEES JANITORIAL CLEANING ExJ)9rt wancoverlng In •formation 19 •mutt. N.B. Synagogue ... ka Npt Ben. 833-1687 pleaM call pertorinel, •1 $2.17 per day IRIBXC bllUNERV. Topped/removed. Clean-Commerclal·Aeald'I Btdga, 11a11at1on. Reu. Conaull· H'ti.ti~.'::,~·PLa~l~N F GOOd typlnfi ~kllla. 11 ••P· FfT clerk typlet for •ui-I 075.5400 EOE Hate, Uaraa. veil• & ac-up, n9W lawnt. 751-3478 GOOd reta. 831-8194 ant Aaalgnmnt 581-8590 or more n or ma on small friendly office xlnt w -• • 5 That'• ALL you pay for eeuorlee 830. 1188 1 ; • la No Employ .... No pteue call F.D.l.C. P«· typing phoneaklllt,eq'd GrHI opportunity for T ~ 3 llnM, 30 day minimum · Complete Clean·Up gen'I 11ea ICll I Call THE PAPER LADY Overhead. No Selllng. t0nne1 (714)976-6400 6111 873-8348 amen attractive female o . :JC:'~ In the C~u ; malnt, trM lrlmmlng, frM LXN688 PE·MASONRY P9rfectlon at r .... ralM Mr.GwreaolfteTr ax(71~)8n3e8f~'!.20 Banking atyll1t. Confidence In rMdlng pvbllc. DAILY w1 s; ice n ta. Mauro. 831-4997 Landecaplng, all Ph.... Frea Mt. 873-2519 '" uv your work Very buey ex-ar,... .. ry "' d B 1 k bl k t ne ~llllTlll Thia winter, buy your own clutlv• ~en't talon In phone Repalr·Remod'f·Addltlont Garden Service, exper, Of'le. r 0 • OC • • 0 · EXPERT PaC*hanglng at Janitorial Aectt ~uarnt'd. TIOlllOIAll ekl equipment lnttead ol Newport BHch. Call ~ Piiot PILOT Doort-etc. 548-4980 deJ)9ndable. prof. For ~= :';.~:: 490.4072 RMa. Ratee. Work Guar., ~!,'~·~:001599;~. The lrvl,,_ otfloe ol the r~~~~~sitie~ ~~-~~red 11 MlchMI at 844-2580 or Cl '1-42•5878 BUILD OR REPAIR FrM .. tlm1ta 648-2572 Callfor ft .. eet. 983-7531 Federal Depoalt In-759-8138 tv meg. SERVICE Walle, etalra, ralllno• n11••111111 Profealonal Landacaplng Pl11t11/lll&~ l1mta11t turenc• Corp. haa doora window• moldlngt an Incl. eptlnk1«1. new lawn, -:-"-prlaaltin .. 011 lmrned. onanlng1 fOf nar. '1478t,_. "--..,,:.2 •""·2 Lawn & Garden Malnt , ... rate. Menu 432-8681 lnt./EXt. pate Ul9'1ng, :!!_ , ,._.. ,._. ... DIRECTORY vv """' .., -..~v &41-8780 .. cuttom texturing. quality FlllllOIAL PAITllR tont with lhe followtng Cuttom Reeldemlal Work ~ work. Problef'M.No Prob- .II.I.I :-:f:2 yra banklngex"""'r. CALL TODAYll Patloe-0.Ck•R9m0dellng Malnt. ctean-upe.J mowtng, INickWORk. Smail )Obi lern•I #3288&4 554-7831 Builder has Turtle Rock ,...... I "' All Fii Liii RC Conatructlon 846-4031 lrM trim. FrM t:.atlma1 .. 1 . ~~•9n~?.~ PL•~i~.rn•f~~ • ::~0:;;:wp1 ;,--lj l'UJlt1''1M ' SYDNEY ~:,,~..=, ~~~r • .=~~!: ,fu]=• ,. ..... , ~.or~J:.O~·I :S,¥':1 ~Jr~. conatlperm loan Call -"" o Repreaentativ. Specialty. llcM38a.32 XD@RJCXN HANDYMAN --.-.-~~ .... ---P"I _ .... 9.5, 851·0336 •Strong ~bal & wnnan MARR Ml-41!1 Ht. lot COfuM conet. 831·7975 Carpentry. fenGlng, win· t All...... ...,• .. -..-.. •~•-----I communication tldll• Repalr·Doof9..Alt«atlone dowt, plumbing, marllla, QUICK & CAREFUL 24ltrDf111-1110 RtlJ W11tt4 Slav Bankln~ •xper 1• r9tlred Remodel·PaMl·Lock .... c tub end, hl ullng, 91c. LO RATES, T138048 •Good Jobadone rlgh~-* Wor king f•lher for th 1 potlllon u l· •---utlat Wln .. ~·Fen-~ "abl-t And Yea Jeaua la Lord 111-8 .. 10 WaterhMtwt•DI-·"" w/cl'llldren nd1 malur• mum aalary wlll not ••· ---vvw ......-•... 636-8 ._ ....,,_.. woman to uve In room 1:.-d S20,000 p/yr end T11ndaRylES, Sep(tMembehr 2 10 1 .1 19) p . . h cd Franklin Xooto. §;:;tee U yra exp.Jerry 842-0se7 (llc•30405> CO e:: •&-1 llYIH* DRAINS CLEAR Frt>m S15 brd & "'''Y Lv m.G wllt be baaed ttrtctty on A arc -Apn : eraptJveness 1s on to razor-But & PertOnat Income Ct•tat Cncrett DECKS-WOOD V . CLEAN & EXPERT F•UC91•. 0t1poaat, Heater. 951. 7•22 Dtene ~rlor ex per & educatlOn. sharpness. I~ IS hkely th~t you'll spot a ba~n -you could even locate Tu Preparation 648--0345 bft:;;W;ya, paUoe, patht. tO ;;:J'r.!:• ~~~920 Over 25 yeart experience 861-9804 M6M 722-0088 he F.0.1.C. otf«ta great valua~lc mincr~ls or 011. Focus on secunty, future prospects, land, Anast(cal Ctlllql etc. No )ob too tmell. . Lie. T· 118,428 130-1353 Expert Service & Repair Al II ~~. ~~~~ lnclu~· basic lifestyle. Pisces plays role. -Reaa. Mickey 53&-0653 •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. .. ABC MOVING •• 32 yrt axp. Reald'l/Comm. RYIOH ::.. If ~ou w!':/'ifk; TAURUS ~Apnl 20-May 20): Fund~ that had been withh~I~ ~ Exqultlte Ac0ua1lca ~-Paint. e>rywall .• Cat~try Quick careful. T138048. Lie #409035 984-8~19 r~~01~;~~~:1n~~~~1h~;1:X more Information. pteaH now made ava1Ja~le. E!1'1phas1s on ~eadhnes, pressure, respons1b1hty, :;.rJ::,:rr~~~·901 C~UUJ!t etc. Gary 845 527 PTL LO RATES, 552-0410 NEW/REPAIR. Ouellty. No 111 Ad Services Dept. call peraonnel al strong love relat1onsh1p. Short tnp may be necessary to complete CHILDCARE.Byaxp.Art GEN.HomeRepalrt,elec., na•f1•Aa1••1t Jobtloernall,reaaon1bl9. Re1pon8lblnt1e9 Wiii In-975.5400. EOE unique mission. Leo plays significant role. · M .. tital{ ..... 111 teacher, educ. toya/gard· carpentry, plumb, aheet All ....... FfM Ml., llc'd. 831-2345 elude pick up I nd de-GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You receive credit long overdue. * NEED T!5 REMODEL? enlng program. 49 .... 248 rook r~alra. 547• 1112 mo•r·~meo•. })1•1na°'1 • P1yek!11 llverv of eds pulling IAI 11111 p 1 h · l t · ·u be F Mtl tM Chlldcare my home, trana HANDYMAN LARGE and vr .,._.._ ______ •1 taarsheeta. proceas1ng Fun & Prr. Lotut Room. ersona onzons arow lflCr, prospects are grca er, income wi rM ma · to achool & back. CM·NB 1mall. 1 DO IT ALLI Studtlf' Movers. neured European Paychk Torot ads. and a variety of Sufi• F. 1848 Adame ave. increased. What you require is made available. You'll be rid of * t~t~~'lK area. Call 850-0258 531-5579 Pat or Ive mag. Lie. T124·438. 84t·8427 Card & Palm AMd«. r.111 other duties C1ndl<111ta c M. 754-9955 unnecessary burden. • Beach Cltlee Rem0de4Jng NEWWe'9houaeStorage Peat. Pr..ent & Future .. must be extremety or-CANCER (June 21-J uly 22): Stress independence, creativity, Phone 873-e 122 · CHILD RENS CORNER HOME REPAIR. Carpentry Advtoe on all mettera. appt g1n11ed responsible 8nd IAll• 1..U willingness to _pioneer a pr_OJect. In roma,ncc, ~ou'll get to heart of Lie. 20740 t P::CY .. ~. 20 4 y0!V::Pr~r~ dfenoeeump ru&noaa. tc".M· t.r~N'.'a'm. · la1l1 Ltueaa 850-2758 or 831-8984 able to wl)rlr wel' with Pan time openings. Be d tr h gh Leo '""'• ·• • Pl t=:::: il21 218 11:--.~------1 olhers Call Bob or Kim 875-9101 maner:s. irect.l state v1e~s an iort n t, onest manner. • Cuetom Realdentlal Work avall .. toe. near Ptacenlla area. Jim Whyte 842-72oe ario ........... ..... ... lettl!t Send resume Attro ~'h lllT ya•1 WlllU Aquanus persons rtgure promt~en~y. Ctean-Tlmely·Reaonable & VIC1orla. 722·eC>87 Plumb.-Ei.ct.-Carpentry Ll:.~ t~'tn~~A. "w .. e""3""o .. roott .. _. ""aJ .. ( typee--. c•a•jj Smith to -LEO (July 23-AuJ. 22): Ft~t 1mpress1ons prove correct. _Fol.low 751-8943 lle-441543 Chlldcar• My N.8. Home. f)alnt·atc. Dependable. ut tor phone quot ... HUH COAST Wanted. Starting P•Y through on hunch, be 1n touch with family member. You'll be invited •REMODELING Marlrw• echool dlttrtct. RMI Paul 720-0139/ave Palatlat 842-6151 UcenMd IAILY "LOT !!~~t~~~~ ed· to dine 10 ~ourmet style Secret m!ellng provides spice of romance. •RESTORATION Wiii take/plekup S48-780'J lb ill FtNE hiNfiNd a; RI£ lttrttafW p 0 IH lHO Cancer native plays significant role. •REPLACEMENT Lie. NurM a Loving Mon.-•<!! w ard Sinor l8yrs of happy It_. ' ' IHllllPll/llm VJRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Diversify, h1ghJ1ght versaulity, keep & REPAIRS Avall for cnlldcare. my l T HAULING · MOVING 04.latomera. Lio. 2eoe44 . .,.. .. m--."'....,,,_--1 0•••• ..... Ca. UUl lfor NB Law Arm. Mull options open solidify travel plans. Lona-dtstance call provides (FrM .. umat .. 24 hrt) had C.M Npl area. Garage & Yard Clnupe Thank-Your 983--4114 XIC m;;iai SY$. c;t. nave law office exper. 11 ' · fi Ge · ba · I bli h 1 Prloe fot deelgn, plant, Call Kay &42·6843 Jon 845-8102 lert reeumee reportt Little Mi .. Muttet .. , on • s2000 mo .. a•per. exce ent news concerning nances. nuine rpan avaJ a e w ere englnMrlng conatruc-. G T NG M vi RAINBOW PAINTING 910;.:.... ca11 '&4e-M38. Tullet •lono c i mt • bonu• 833.3101 wardrobe is concerned. Sagittanan plays role. uon can aav'.e you US QUALITY chlldcar• tn my L~H HAULI di o ng Quellty I• our po11cy ep1d1r ano , .. 0 in the LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): MaJOr domestic ad1ustment could affect 831-lo45 842-0288 Costa M ... home. toya/ 7 dmp "b' (ya&,.5.~~:191 850-6848 JEFF Lie Ma8 ltnr-"t 0 111y P1101 C11u1f1eo basic: lifestyle, including residence o r marital status. Lunar position ••HOMET!K•• tearntngt/lunl 84&-2008 *Y• •ve A.A.A. PAINTING 1nt16t ._"'c"6ill""Q1'111"'('111/R11f11s"'IB"'l,..._ MC11on a1>ou1 Mt .. Mur 01111111 biJhliahts career, business. general standing in community. You'll Architect• & Contractor• C.atr1ctt11 TRASHBU~TERS LOWEST poeat~a. Flr•Burg'·Med~Penlc ::~ •11u:;1 ~: ~11:.1,\ R~~~n~:O: n=::~~ receive unusual 11n. IAlr ~--..11a.1eataf lneral c,:;t;.! ~~2r:or.;~0up. 10 st.,, Servlc9. -3238 ~o'o:/feoved M:~~ your lultel end 1011 Of t U hlar 6 llOCk high SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21 ): Focus on d1aJogue with o ne whose c X.8 Svt co a 2:U27 otm HOME IAc I i.. •......a CUSTOM Painting by Jim 01,,., 1111no1 1t11o"o" luh 1on European ideas may clash wnh your own. Provides excitement, could lead to Htg AIC. Ref rpre hi EF llPMlllLI ..n..1 tal ~re ......-1ff Low rat .. tor lhuttera, hwla1/Alttr1dea1 Dally Pllol C111u1fted I boutique GOOd pay ~ cha.nae, travel and variety of experiences. Dia deep for mformation, Aman• A/C eyt IC 4&9283 3a;t\;ea w/2 car oar Cle. PriV. Rome'°' ma;;t; louvle, petlo fur!'.;· .. ''~ r• csua; wCd Xt m AO• Cell a..2 5678 b$Cce. 84"·2052 check source material. Virgo plays ro le. la •ult YOU FINISH YOU sAve WMlc/Month. Amb. or •tor. fr .... t . ...,._243 • Price . Newpor1/C.M. SAOmAJ\JUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Go slow, play cards close to P !~ X -... j i On your 101 from S39,999 non-amb. 5'40-4101 Kathy DAN SALYUI PAINTING ar ... Nann.1-. 831-4810 I a.,,, P1·1a1· h . lh .. rs to )t the"r v"ews Yo ate ao·na t" learn m o re ., rea • ._.,.. 100"lt Financing 0 Ac ·=-, "' ·-· Lio #425924 -~ • c est, perm110 .. e press i '· . u ' v Atau 11etno • Aooflno a 958-5610/(800\~2&-ei&O -•11 ... Hug Call An ..... llM 984-2011 :• •• •• •••t : about mon~, how to get mote of 1t, how to use tt 10 your best waterproofing• 83t-4199 ,. • FiollR'i ctbNIRd ,. ·rm • • advantaac. aurus ~lays sianificant role. fi . h-..i =e'"~~ liftllf ' Sl!RVICI!: • throoughty lo .... '~'~ =T~~:_ Flnel'olal, Leoai, Etc • • CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Period of indecision is 1n1s """ ~e&nmerdal o;:y:.11 clfft1 houM. 540-0957 0 ~tty woril ·na-a7se · ca11 Anne '41-t233 • COLLEOT • Sense of purp0se and direction will be restored. Break from past of base? apec1=::J 1n eomm·r ~ you tooktng for • a. u • ~ • OR WAITEI • patterns is imminent. Terms will be clarified, you'll know where you ~bf;oe'!.,~:! M~ arid 1 'r" eat. pendable c1ean1no ..,. LADY PAINTl!R .... a.at., • • ·-aotn~ andwby Piscesglaysrole ' ......... ty ...... ,;_,.,.1 848-8823He•383924 vtce?Sh«t 7eo.M<t5 1n11Ext.11 t::!ieno.. ~wr;;ao:;c;;n1 • Part tlntf' O J>l'nin~ In l.AllllOa Bu<'h • .... -. f I . . . . fi ... run• on .,__...,.. I • FrM .... ... Balboa W\ndow Waafllng • aru. Earn up 10 16 ()()flt'' hour for • AQ ARIUS (Jan. 2().fe • 8). Focus on practical 1ssues1 sa e~y IH ty ltnke ll11trleal CLEANING ijy WAY 180•1924 or 987.aeo1 803 lalboa It tTw135 • II . r hl • measures., security peu..dependcnts. employment. Love relat1onsh1J> • , ..... -1• LrHRU SCHOO&.. '-Oc. ,...., 1 -.. _ : co ectlnll or moot Y 111uhs<'riptloru. : entail\ additional .:CSJ>C?nsibility. funds W111 be made available, you'll LOM we!Qflt NOWI a. tllm l Oualltywor\~~:.t. Oe9end•b19. 548-6a57 1~~~~:::._~~!'.~. ~~: ~'1;~ • Upf'rltor,. prtftrrf'd bu• n ot rr· • be asked to meet dcadhne. ror....., lfew "'"°" #4255 t3 Mt-7401 HCHM & otnoe otMnlnO by (28) yruxp., ~/3:3 ~.ena. Call 1 : ~eto M~;1 htlalt>t~·4~1~8 k::~.o~::-: aao ~~e(~b~~~~l~~=·:fa~~i:o~~~l~t~:ri~d~~~~ H~~c":~~·a ~~~o=·~~~ ~~a~2:,14rl,.. j~::e:":AtNT1H0 1,.1 <l::'~t~= : 642·•321. Ext 207 : l~~~~~ns~Ert:J)~li~~~~.~~~e.can ruch beyond p~v1ous ... ~·· _•27"'41 Al 8484124 H!!"=.N~i g:cs e:c1=N~1~bt.1 Ownr/()penst9d83W370 • ... UTill Rn. • JP SEPTEMSEJ\ Jt 11 YOlJR BlllTRDAY you a.rt independent. JJXNIAI &;;I WWW •·---tranap Gtactys, 54~155 ••• ! Ml-4lll DI i ~~~~~:,~:=.:::.~::r.;r~;E~J!n'!ij~%?E1 a==~~~~s ·:::~.:~£~.~ \~iJh=r ·e~~::= ~;fi..~~ • ORANG! COAST OAILY PILOT • best alone you love lM public, bul you can not do well whtn asked to CoMtruct/Aepalr/Matnl .. A • ., Aealdentlal ee2.sm VISA-MC 111-1512 reed\ tM OJanoe COMt : "!°N ~=I ~~~~o'v~' : be part 0f~ committee. Your father very likely had mo~ tnOuenoc than Wood/'glw ?30-0520 CIMn Upa•TtM Trlmmll\g JANITORIAL CLEANING AHOY• WALL"°Vl"1HO nwtl~ 142-<Se11 • e did )'Our mother.~. Aquanus penons play important roles in your 111nd w"•' yo.1. went in YMClMalnt..•HaullnO SEBYJCLJ..r.191 Or.a IM1..,.•tlon & ~al L ~· I • • hk-. Nov embe-r wrtl bt iruua.J1dtftJ R)r )'OU rn T98S. Delly Piiot Claaaltlede MIKE 850-3263 831·58e 1 8111335-688' lnt-s*ltlng J41:.1Gll 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••••• -J-~~ . ~ .~ --------~----------~------------------------------~--------~-:-----~-·~~~---~----------~~~~--~r----~----~, • j I I r J 1e1, ...... SliilR JOBS EARN MOf(Y PRIZES TRIPS THIS SllllR =: ........ ,. If you are IOO\lilg-for elltre apen<:tl119 money, °' Ilk• to go pleoea Ilk• Magic Mountain, Knott• a.~ Farm, °' win Prii .. and Awarda, Call ua nowt We have MYeral opening• In C.M., H.B. or I= V 842--4333 RUPllllW.11 Experienced artlculate phone person to Mt ap- pointments with ex- ecutives IOf" our com- puter atoraoe eervtce. Salary · + commlHlon. Medical beMflta avail- able, 7&0-1145 IUMllUIT IM.TPILIT 330 W. Bay Street Coata Mesa, Ca. 92927 142-4121 hnltsn MU 11 dotb SOFA wltR MATCHING CHAIR Both S125. Mt-1~ •t1JllSLllW Smoke-sllver/belo• In I tock 1111 ... • tax eo moa om.-. ewey cott $2350 Total pyrnta 1 35,847 80 (Serlal 11~) •mDLW. -112·1Jll NABERS CADILLAC LARG!ST SELECTION ot 11te ~. towmrteage Cedlll.ct In Ofange County! S.. ua today! 140-1110 2eoo HarbOr BIYd COSTAM!SA C~nreltt t U ·Ki NOYI i cyi • & euto p/t 1495 845 7 !I 7a -·79 CHEVY MONZA SWOOl or beat off 120-, 759 1n a om MARK ~ c.m.ro Z21. a IOd HO. n._ loeOedt ..,_ M60 " ftM-5513 Ot 1&3-&el t X2t6 Pf' PACtRC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery • Mortuary Ch pet • CrematOt y 3~ Pacific View Ortve Newport ~ach 644-2700 HA"80..·LAWN- MT. OlJVt Mortu ry • Cf!meltry Cr ematOf)' 1625 O•slef Ave Co.11M ... ~0-555• e Orange Coaat OAtLY PILOT/Monday, 5ee'8!"~ 9, 1985 - ACROSS 'Sn1our ~ Bra••~ ~ T .t~t' ~d,,. '4 Grat)4!0• • 1 !> Pf'OOlt> \I ' 't> ~•S"'•S' t~ EQu•n• f(\(ld 18 Siege ~"""'' 19 81000 •et~• ;>O Pro 1nr ' QIJeSl ... 2 1 Tl'loro..ont" • ... 22 Peep•~ mo ... ,l j Grazinq "'"" l!> S. o~"""O c• ~.t. P11iv1'l._,., '-b Cault1• • !t"" ~ O(\f '\t1• .. '\ ~R \" rk " """ ~"' E .. r Ot'•r · oo t :vJ • "'.: ~'·s~ ~·· r' E •D'~'"' f:>4. • .,,fl,~~' 63 B·"'09Qt"· no' P n. f•Ath,.,.. OOWH .... .. . •• 1 • • -• \ .\..,,. .... • ' \j .. ..,,, ' "''"", .. " t 5~ ... ' r '• . ' aao "°'"IOUe _, 11 ... U..ITA~ ni. tolOwlnt pWtOne .,. dOioe ~le: "MM.oft" Auto o.ttlll Of Cotta ...... 2-..o ColleGe AV9., Coeta ..-~rie. ...... CAt2'2t ~ KnlQM """'9ll, 2715 8Mrrow Clroi., Coste ....._CA9212t Wllll•m Larry MHon, 24112 ~ V\9nfoe, El Toro, CA 92930 Tt111 t>ueineee le con. Oue1ed by. • oenw• 1*1· ~L.Muon Thie~ WN Ned with tM County Clan of Or· anoe County on AUQUtt ao. 1t85 h tM County Qerti of Or· ,..... County on Aug14t ao, Publlthed Or~ CoMt 19 5 Dally Piie)( Sec>*"bet 9. 18, ,..... M-740 23. 3o, 1986 PublWled OfMge Coeet M-748 De.Ny Piiot Set>tember 8, 18, flta.JC NOTICE 23, 3o. 1N5 1------------------------M-748 1 _ _..rtaJC..;,;;.; ___ 11)._TIC(___ f11Cnnou8 IUeMll rtaJC ll>T1C£ f'ICnTIOUI .,._.. NAm ITA~ ACnnoue ..,..... rta.IC NOTICf um ITATllmfT Tile to11owtng pertOn• ar• MAm ITA,.....,, The fo11ow1no 1*90t11 lfe d~ bullneM H . IVR The 1o11owtng I**-we Aennou8 ...... dolfla buelr'9ll 19: If hollow Umlted, A C.U.- OOlng ~ M : lnterlot um ITATPmJff THEME AHO VARIATION, lornle Uml1.cl Partnenhlp, ConttNC11on Systeme, 1184 The IOllowlng penone -2908 Pepper Tree i.-"D", 8rOOkhOltow Ap1rtment1. W. V*'J View, Of., FYI-dOinO bullnell ... C & M Co1t1 MeH, Callfornta Hl552 M1cArthu• Blvd., erton, CA 92933 Ent«Pf'I-Co., 3400 w. 82829 #440, lrvlne. Catlfornl• Ronald M.,c Kl111palrtclc, Mec:Arthur "M", Santa Ana, Cynthia Sperry Hart, 2908 ~2715 ..,,,. 11 aOOV. CA 92704 Pt91*' Tree Line "D", Devtd K. Lamb. 18552 Dwrtlt L. Mill, 830 W. Chien-Chang Lu, 432 Co1t1 M111. Callfornla MacArthur Blvd • #440, Palm #44, Orange, CA ~on #201 CO.ta MeM, 92t2e IMne. c.llfomil 92715 92M8 CA 92827 ' Thl9 buline11 t1 con-J'ohn Minar. 11552 Thia bullneu 11 con-Mel-Ping Lu 432 Hamtl-ducted by: an lndMdual MacArthur Blvd.,· #440. ducted by:t ton #201 eoeta Meea CA Cynthle-Sperfy Hart Irvine. Callfornta 92715 Dtlrrlll L Mix 92827 ' . Thll etatement WM flied Mehrdad RllMkll. 18552 Thl9 ltltement WU l1led Thi• DUllMll .. con-wtth IM County Qerti of Of. MacArthur Blvd • #440. with the County Cleft! Of Of. ducted by: co.partners 1nge County on.~UOI* HI, IMM. cellfornll 92715 ange County on A·--30 Mel-"'-Lu 1915 ., All Razl, 18552 MecArtnur 1985 -.-· • Thia, .t:iernent wee filed Plll111 lltvd.. 040. lrvtne, Clll- ir-.a with the County Clerk of Or· Publllhed Ortnge COM1 fornll 92715 PuDlllhed Or~ Cout Mge County on Auguel 30, o.lly Piiot Aug14t 28, 8ep-Thi• Du1lne11 II con· Dally Piiot September 9, 18, 1N5 tember 2. 9. 18, 19U !ducted by:• tlmlted partner· 23, 30, 1985 ,... M·718 "'tin Min. General p M-744 Publlened OfMge COM! I . .,._ ________ Dally Piiot Sec>tember 9, ta. rtBJC llnTICf ~hll ll•tement WU hied rtllllC NOTtCE 23. 30. 1985 M-742 ~ with the County Clerk of Of. ACTITIOUI IUeMll tnge County on Augu1t 28, RCTITIOUI _,..... •-ir 11n'IV'r um ITA.,....,,. 1985 NAm I TAT'lmNT r~ nunw : The fotlowlng peraona.,. ~ The following penona ara ftCTITIOUI IU-ll ng bu11nee1 u; Publlehed Orange Cout OOlng bullnell u; Turner & MAim ITATl..-wT NEWLY HATCHED, 3-4042 Delly Piiot s..>temb« 2. 9, Prizio, 1200 Quall Street. The follow!~ peraona are elltta Drive, o.na Polf'tl, 18. ~3. 1985 Sulla 1eo, Newport BMch, ol"" t>ullnea ••: "VW 1111orn11 8282' M·729 CA 928e0 .... Ninette F. Laraon. 3-4042 Rutty Turner, 2588 Arbot peellltlee. 1918 ~tla It• Drive. ,..___ p ........ Ye , Colla Meea. CA 92627 ..,_,. ""'" Or1Ye, Newport BMch, CA Rot! WOOd, 18571 Wood-lllfornl1 92&2Q 92M:I nd. Anaheim. CA 92007 Thia Du11n... 11 con- Oevtd PrtDo, Jr., 1781 Thi• l>ualnell 11 con· ucted Dy: an lndlvtdual 1-------- Terry Lynn Lane, Sant• Ana, ucted Dy: •n·lndlvldual NINETTE LARSON rta.JC NOTlCE CA 92705 Rot! Wood Thll llaternent WU llted Thia Du1lne11 11 con-™• ll•tement wu hied th the County Cleft! Of Or- ducted by • general part-th the County Clerk ol Or-County on AUQU91 28, nenhlp Cov "" Rutty Turner nty on August ..,..,, Thia 1t1tement wu ftted 5 f'8IMI with the County Clel'k of Or- ange County on Seotemt>er 3, t985 ,..... ,...., Publllhed Orange Coat Publllhed Oringe Cout ally Piiot September 2, 9, i lly Piiot September 9, 18, 18. 23, 1985 . 30. 1985 M-733 K·,_, ITATIMDITM A.IMD()IR•NT CW UMMACTI110UI ....... um The lollowtng pe r1on1 have abandoned the uae of thl FtcUUOUI Bu1lne11 Name DOW AVENUE PubUlhed Orange Coul Deity Piiot Set>tembet 9, 18, 2'3. 3o, 1985 llllDl fC 11nyu-r PARTNERS, 28.41 Dow Av-r~ nu ~ --------enue. Tu1tln, CA M-747 M·743 __ ..__..______ rtllllC NOTICE Tile Flc:1ttlou1 Bu11nea1 FlCmtOUI ., ... ,, Name r...,red to above wu 1 0 f ~TH Nol1cls KINCAID JOSEPH K . KIN- CAID, re.tdent of C.O.t.a M_.j Pilled away September 6, 198&. Bom October 26, 11H3, in La Veia, Colorado. Survived by hia wi1e Joan: 10n,Jociepb Kincaid Jr. of lrvine; daugh- ter, Kay Howard of H\mtington Beach; 4 grandchildren and a brother, Dr. Robert Dan Kincaid of Den- ver. Colorado. Fu- neral eervice. will be held Wednesday, September 11, at 2:00 P .M. at Pacif ic View Mortuary Chapel. In· t.erment Pacific View Memorial Park, New· port Beach, CA. In lieu of Oowers mem- orla l contributions may be made to the Shriners Crippled Childrens Hospital. Pa cific Vi ew Mortuary, Di.rectors 644-2700 SHAFER Teresa Margaretha Shaler, born Sept. 8, 1960 in New Mexico. \ Pasaed away Sept. 7, 1985 in Newport Beach. Survived by huaband, Bradley Shafer; father Donald Glenn ; m other Kristina Glenn; brother Jon Glenn: father-in law James Shafer, mothe r-in- law Patricia Shafer. Visitation Tuesday 12-8PM, Pacific View Mortuary, 3500 Pa- cific View Dr, New- port Beach. Services Wed. 12noon, Pacilic View M or tua r y Chapel. Interment Pacific View Mem- orial Park. Pacific View Mortuary, Di· rectors. 644-2700 N~ ITATUm.NT f lCTITIOUI ....... ftled In OrMge County on The lc>llowlng ~·are NAm ITA,.._NT Oc1ober 7, 1985 FILE NO. 1--------- doing bull-u . Century The followtng pettonl we F-146773 l'tllllC NOTICE PtllUC f«)TtC£ RCTITIOUI IU ... 11 NAm ITATl..-wT Sign. 1835 Wlter I.I\. Untt F2. doing bu*'-11· King Cooper, Jr . u Truat-1--------- CM 92827 BANSHEE KITES. 28851 te of the Cooper Living I FlCTTTIOUI IUIMll The following pel'IOlll .,. dOlng t>ullneaa u : Porache- Haus, 3042-C EnterprlM St • Colt• Mau 92826 Robert Stitnley Smith, Top of The World Drive. Trull. 13950 Monte v1111. NA• I TATl•NT 2206 Rutger Ln #C, Colt• Laguna 8eec:n. Callfornla Chino, CA 91710 I The loltowlng peraon1 are M .... CA 92827 92851 Duk• Tlmbef Conatruc-doing bullnesa u Aqueous Wllllam JONPh Shed, Frenk Grant Parka. Jr.. tlon Co , Inc . 13950 Monte Solutlona. 403 J11mlne, Frant! R. H8nrl'111t1, Jr., 826 San11ago Rd . Colt• M .... CA9262e 10282 Kukul. HB 92&48 28851 Top of The World Vl111. Chino. CA 91710 Corona del Mar, CA 92825 Thia bu1lne .. la con-Orfve. Laguna BMch, Call-Jarrold Cote. 4000 Scott Wllllam 01mua. ducted by: • general part· foml• 92851 MacArthur, Newport Beeon. ea.me•• above nerslllp Thi• bu1lne11 11 con-CA 926&0 Thia business 11 con-Thia bualneu Is con· ducted by an lndtvtdlJll Frantt R, Hanranan. Jr. Thll 1t1tement w.. ftted wtth the County Clerlt of Of. •noe County on August 23. 1985 Wlltlam Shed. Robert S. ducted by: an lndlvtdull Thia t>ullneaa wu con-ducted by an Individual Smith FRANK G. PARKS. JR. ducted by. general partner-Scott Wiiiiam Osmus Thll 1t1tement ... filed Thi• 1t1tement WU ftled lhlp Thi• statement WU ftled with 1he County C.. of Or· with the County Clertc Of Or-Thia 111tement wu tiled with the County Clerk of Or- ange County on AUQU91 30. ange County on Auguat 28, with the County c....-of Or-ange County on Augu1t 28, 1N5 _......., 1985 ange County on Juty 22, 1985 r-~ 1985 ,21U41 f'2IM1t1 Publtlhed Orange Cout Dally Piiot September 9, 18. 23. 3o. 1985 Publlahed Orange Cout Publllhed OrMge Coat Publl9hed Orange Coeat Put>lllhed Orange Coest o.ity Piiot s..>tember 9, 18, D81ty Piiot s..>ternb« 2. 9, Delly Piiot AUQU91 t9, 28. O&tly Piiot September 2. 9. M-74 1 23. 3o. 1915 18, 23, 1985 September 2, 9. 1N5 l18. 23, 1985 M·745 M-732 M-701 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Por8Che • Audi W E. hast hJ., ..... rt ltHlt 171-0llO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 NABERS CADILLAC @ 2100 111111111 IL YI., OISTI 1111 (714) 140-1100 (211) 111-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location e Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People WE'RE IEW Salts Leas lac le1tals WE'ii IW.IR Acroe1 from •le 'A' on Ket• fuet .... of f1 (Of ... ),,.., -" 0 CRE VIER BMW ~ \,II SALES • SERVICE • LEASING 'II' "V:fhJK'S_Professional Attitude Prevails" 8pec:l•liil'ng In EuropMn Detfffry. E1~t 8e1Kttoft of New •nd caretutty prepared UNd llMW't etways In atoclc 835-3171 208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana Corner ol Broac:fway & lat St Closed Sunday• G STERLING SAUS -S£n1CE -lWllC -PUTS Overseas Dellvery Specialists BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 JamborH Ad. Newport Beach 840-8444 G) JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1301 Ou•ll SI. -Nflw C•r Location 1001 Ou•ll St. -R•NM DIYl•lon 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales. Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 2110 larhr lh4., Oest• ••sa ••2-0010" 140-1211 GARDEN GROVf -o COMMONWEAL TH VOLKSWAGEN • ROSE •.. 1'1'0ID81 Bul Trout fell off a bicycle Saturday night and hurt his &hou.lder and cl6ow. So the Cubs went to r\aht· bander Regie Patterson, who came into this season with just JOO days major league service, a.nd Rose started Rose. "It's all part of lhe aamc," the 26- year-old Patterson said of the rec::ord· tyio.a hit. "h's just another hit to me." No. 4, 191 came on a 3-2 pitch from Patterson. a 6--foot-4, 185-Pound beanPole, and went into riJbt-<:enter field, where it was scooped up by Keith Moreland. Morcl&nd tossed the ball in to first baseman Leon Durham. who gave it to Reds first base coach To mmy Helms. Rose said he didn't speak wtth anyone after lhe hit, but be said Durham told him, "Don't move. I want to get some TV exPosure here." Patterson said Durham came over to him "after the hit and said, 'Pete is going to buy you a steak.• " "He's the greatest ballplayer that ever played the game," Patterson said of Rose. "It was ..a history-makmg event, and everybody wanted to sec him do it here." Everybody, that is, except Rose, his teammates and the fans waiting in Cincinnati. Rose said he was sure lhe fans in Cincinnati would be "revved up like the fans were here. It was a very nice reception they gave me here." Each time Rose came to bat Sunday, he was greeted by a standing ovation from the crowd of 28,269. With two out in the eighth inning1 Reds pinch-hitter Wayne Krenchicki wa$ cheered when he singled, ensur- ing that Rose would be the lhird batter in the Reds' ninth. Gary Redus, who ran for Krenchjcki., was subse- quently booed when he was thrown out trying to steal second, making Rose the fourth man up in the ninth. Three straight singles and a game- tying run preceded Rose's final plate appearance. With lhe crowd cheerio~ for the other side, Smith, the Cubs big reliever. threw two balls to Rose. who faked a bunt on the first patch. The next pitch was a called strike on the inside com er, and Rose fouled off a pitch for a 2-2 count. Rose swung without making con- tact at the next patch. Smith, d isgusted with has own performance, was asked if he was relieved at not giving up the reco rd hit. "Truthfully, it didn't matter whether Pete Rose got a hit or not," Smith said, "because they had already tied it up. "The pitch o n Rose was a fastball away, not a good fastball, but I think he got out in front of 1t," Smith said. Rose said the fake bunt on the first pitch was j ust a decoy; he never intended to bunt wi th Dave Parker coming up next. "We try to play the game with the philosophy that we don't take the bat out of Dave Parker's hands." Rose said. "If I bunt the runners up, they walk Dave." Now, lhc real history-maker could come any time. Pete Rose Statistics ~ It ... c;.,.... St9ttltka ...... , ... .... (,,..... .... •> VN r Al R H HR Rll Pel 1"3 Cill 623 IOI 110 4 41 273 '"' Cln S 16 ... 13' 4 l4 269 19'$ Clft 670 117 209 ll 11 311 INfCl11 6$4 f7 20S 16 70 313 lt6> Cln 5'5 N 176 12 7' .301 1"8 Cln 626 94 210 10 ., .lU "" C111 627 no 211 16 ., .341 lt70 Cln 649 120 205 IS 52 .316 1'71Cln 632 M 19'2 13 44 lCM 1972 Cln 645 107 191 6 S7 307 1tnc1n "° 115 230 s '4 l3I 1974 Cln 652 110 llS 3 SI ?14 1975 Cl" 662 112 210 7 74 317 1t76 Cln 665 1)0 215 10 63 313 Im Cln 6SS tS 204 9 ... 311 197' Cl" 4SS 103 '" 7 S2 .J0'2 197t Pnll •n '° 2'0I 4 5• ,331 lflO Ptlll 655 tS 1t S I M .212 "'' Ptlll 431 73 '"° 0 J3 .325 19tl Ptlll 634 to in J $4 .271 1913 Phll 493 52 121 0 4S 2~ 1914 Mon-Cln 374 43 107 O 3-t 296 ·l"S Cln 352 SO 94 2 '2 267 Tolab 13763 21.0 4191 160 IJOt .30S ~lllllP S«Ws YMr "10Cln 1972 Cln 1973 Cln 1915 Cln 1976 Cln lflOCln 1913 Phi Totell Al It H Hit Rll f'c:t. ll I 3 0 I 231 20 I 9 02 450 21 3 • 2 , ltl 14 3 S t 2 357 14 l • 0 2 429 20 l. 02 400 16 3 • 0 0 375 Ill 17 •S 3 II 3'1 Wtf1d~ YNr 1970 im 1975 1'76 1990 1913 Toi all Al It H Hit ltll f'ct. 20 2 S I 1 250 2t 3 6 I 2 114 21 J 10 0 2 .370 16 1 3 0 I 118 23, 6 01261 16 1 S 0 I 313 130 12 JS 2 9 269 Al-St9r Ge1Ni Ytar Al It H HR Rll f'ct. 1965 , 0 0 0 0 ,000 1967 1 0 0 0 0 000 1961 '"lured, did not olav 1969 1 0 0 1970 3 I I 1971 I 0 0 1'73 l I 0 1974 2 0 0 1975 4 0 2 1976 3 I 2 19n 1 o o 1971 4 0 1 1979 2 0 0 19'0 I 0 0 1981 l 0 I 1982 I 0 0 198S· I 0 0 Totals 33 l 7 Rew Recercts 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mel« l.Mtue ltK«dl Games -l,474 At Ball -13,763 Slnglu -3, 161 Hits bv • swllcrH'lllttr -4, 191 0 000 0 l33 0 000 0 000 0 000 1 .500 0 ·"' 0 000 0 250 0 000 0 000 0 333 1 000 0 000 1 712 Tolal beMI t>v a lWllCh·llllltr -5613 Most '"'°"' 100 or more hlrs -10 Motl conMCullve MtlOnl 100 or more ""' -22 Molt , .. lOlls 600 or mora et beh -17 M<Kt lttlOlll 150 or more et games -17 Hlgllelt li.tdlng oercente'" ov an ou1-flet0er. tW.llme, 1,000 or more 11tmel - "' Plavlnv In mol l wlnnlnv 11tmH -lh O Only !>li ver lo P11v SOO or more 11emel al five POSttlons -flrll bue, Second best. llllrd baM, left tleld a nd rloht field • ...... LMeue lt-m CarHf' doublft -7lt Longelt consecutive game hitting llrtek -44 (June 14-Julv 31 1971). HefteMI LAe9118 S..aen I.MW Avert'": 3 YNfl -.33S. 19"; .34. 1969, .m . ltn. Games: s YMfl -154, lfn; 163. 1974, 162, ins: 162. 1m; 1'2, 1912. At .. ts: 4 YMn -670, IHS; 645, 19n , "°· tm; •ss. 1m. ltunl: 4 YMt'l -120, IH'; 110, 1974, I 12, 1975; 130, 1'76, Hiia: 7 YM" -m, 1965/ 210, ''"· 205. mo. '"· 1tn; no, 1m. 2u, 1976, 140, .,., Dou-. 5 Yff" -4S, ,,, .... , • 1'7S. ,,, 1'7•. Sl, 1'1t, '2, 19'0, Aw.,. Rookie of the VN r -196> Most V•k.11* Pltver -1m World Serie• Moll Vak.llt>le Plever - 1975 Malltfl APl'll Mn June July Auguat Seotemt>er October Tolll Cotlb·ltMe c;.,..,.. ( TIW9Ulll '-'· • > c.-... It-ltM Vear a Gamet Al Bala Hiia SlnOIH Ooublel TrlPlel HomeAunl Aun' Aunl belled 111 Waiki Slrilltouh SIOlen lltiel Avafallt Hllllng Slreak 200-Hll Seuons ConltC\.ltlv Gms Total la5ft .300-olul *'°"' .400-Dlul S.Honl Slugging Pct Long Hiia 24 w 3033 (4) 11429 (4) 4191 (11) 3052 (2) n• (41 291 (21 111 C-1 2244 (1) IHO (4) 1249 (-) lS7 (-) m m .367 (11 40 (6) ' (2) NA (-) Sl63 (4) 23 (1) 3 (It) Sil(-) 1139 (t ) '23 (51) 3474 (l) 13763 (1) 4191 (II) 3161 (I) 731 U) 132 (-) t60 (-) 1140 (<t) 130I (-) 1Sl9 (10) 1109 (-) 194 (-) .JOS (-) "(211 10 (l) 74S (10) S6n <6> IS ('1) 0 (-) .412 (-) 1030 (-) , ... Rew Mlestene H"' I -Aorll 13, 1963, trh•le, 8oo Friend, Pllllburgll • SOO -Sept, 16, 1965, lll\Vie, Al Jacillon, et New York 1.000 -June 26, 19", alnglt, Olck Selma, New Y~ 1,SOO -Aug 29, 1970, llnvt.. Carl Morton, et Monl .. t 2,000 -June 19, 1973, slnoll, Aon 8rvant, el Sen FrancllCO 2.SOO -Aug. 17, 197S, llngle, 8ruc1 Kllon, Plll1bur1111 l ,000 -Mev S, 1971, l lngle, Steve A-s. Montr .. 1 3,SOO -Auo IS, '"°· llngle, Tom Haull'Nn. al New Y~ 3,631 -Aug. 10, 19'1, llnolt. Mark Llllell, St. Louil (1M-tlme N.L record) 3,n2 -June 22, 1982, double. John Siu-. SI. Louil (mov9d Into Meond Dlace on •"·time llsll 4.000 -Aorll 13, 1914. Ooutlle, Jtrrv KOOiman, f>hlle~P'lla 4, 191 -S.1>1 t . 1915, 1ln111e. A811111e PallerMI", ChiC<tllO. lteM vs. NatteMI lMtiUe (Tlw'wtfl s..t .• ) Allen11 C11lugo Cincinnati Houlton LOl A""81n MontrMl New Yorlt Pllll•ci.IDlll• Pltlll>urllh St. Louis Sen Diego Sen Franclico N L EHI N.L.Wesl Tolels Al Hirt AVW. 1457 .. , .m 1279 390 .JOS 257 74 .218 1~17 444 .31S 1354 llS ns 134 2S3 .303 12'S 390 .303 992 l31 .334 mo 371 .m 130 I 390 .300 967 m .m llSO 403 .291 6961 2125 .lOS 6I02 10U .304 1376.:J 4191 .lQ5 OCONNELL CHEVROLET ~ 2121 ""'" lh4., 011t1 .... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 546-1200 MONDAY-FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY Special P1rt1 U1e 546-9400 8:30 AM -9:00 PM 8:30 AM -8:00 PM 10:00 AM -5:00 PM .. ~ SALES e L EASING e SERVICE • PART •SUBARU OF ANAHEIM We'r e Not the Biggest, But We're the Best! VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU CALIF'S :t1 & LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Parts Open M-Sa1 8 -5:30 Sat 9 -4 p.m. Service m-Frl 7:30 -6 p m. 11711 IEACH 8lVD HUNTINOTON IEACH 714/ 842-2000 0 HOUSE O F IMPORTS INC. ,. LONG TERM LEASES • COMHTITIVE ,URCHASE ,RICfS • HUGE INVENTORY dial MERCEDES 213/714 837-2333 Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester/Beach Blvd. 0 BILL VATES YDLllWllEI • NllOIE • PEHEi T • lllTlll SALES e LEASING e PARTS • SERVICE 12112 Y1ll1 11114, 111 .1111 01,l1tr111 ••1-•111 111-•100 G> ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 /11 Tiii W11t For #1• 1,,, Salls For I r11n . 001n2e. SALES -. coast • sERv1cE ,.,. MU-·~VO • LEASING COIU .... • ACCESSORIES DEPT 549-8023 , G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE J HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coate Meaa 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of ~05 Fwy. G BOB LONGPRE PONTI Orillnge County's Oldest & Uirgeit Pontiac C>Nlershlp at le11<h 8Mt. & th• Garden Grove Fl'ffWlty 1714 HZ-MSI f7t4J 6a6-ZSOO We perform all Pontiac wuranty work. ~"Ueu of """'•re you orlglnally pYrcNJe<I your"''· OPD llCNfDAY ...,_ .... ""'11. .... P.M. tr\ World 's Largest Sftleetlon of 0 ' '<::/ Mercedes Benz A 833-1300 ~ 'FAMILY STORE SINCE '53' ~ Salff -S.rvice .. Leasing " -,. at 9 1 ft'rwy an d Harbor Blvd. 1221 N. H1:trhor Blvd. (7 14 ) 772.9800 Wes · ....... · Perts · S.... W, .. Mt·OllO Anaheim , CA 92801 (2 13) 924-2367 ; t a • - r. • CLOUDY FORECASTS ON A2 Serving Newport Beech, Coate Meta; Huntington Beach, Irvine, Laguna Beach, Fountain Valley and South Orange County O HANGE-C OUNTY C ALIFORNIA MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 9. t98~ 7~ CENT S ,, ree e e e 1e1nacc1 en ts e e ID reewa re a1rzone California Many Callfornla Re- publicans want a crack at Sen. Alan Cranston's seat, but the competition for lesser state offices ls sllm./A8 Nation President Reagan an- nounces economic sanc- tions against South Africa because of Its pol- icy of apartheid./ A4 World Government troops turn back a revolution In Thai- land as two NBC news- men are killed./ A8 Features South Coast Repertory supporters celebrate 21st season In style./ A7 Sports Charles White's touch- down run with 2:07 left gives Rams 20-16 season-opening win over Oenver./81 Entertainment The Stop-Gap drama therapy troupe Is plan- ning two Orange County premieres for this season./ Al .. A Ty for the record Eight persons injured, three seriously. in t_!1ree-carcrash-on Ortega Highway By ROBERT BARKER Three motonsts wert' killed earh loda) 1n 1wo ~parate accidents when the) crashed into the back of truck!> being used to repair the Costa Mesa Freeway. a Cahforn1a Highway Patrol officer said. The fatal accidents occurred about 35 msnutes and six miles apart in the southbound lanes of the 55 Frecwa). according to the C HP's Paul Caldwell. who added the closed lanes were clearl) marked i\pparently, both dn"ers ignored Ltaffic cones and hgh1e0 warnings • In another ma1or accident Sunday afternoon. eight people were injured -three senoush -in a three--car smashup on Orteia Highway about a m1Je west of Caspers R.cgional Park near San·Juan C ap1strano In the first of 1he fataJ freeway accidents. a 1980 Ph mouth pickup dnven b~ a .2.2-)ear-0ld Newport Beach woman smacked into the rear (Pleue eee REPA.lll/A2) Legislators issue oil drill warning to Interior chief Hodel told to honor compr omise to save California's coastline From naff and wire repor\s More than two dozen C'a11forn1a lawmakers have issued a wamsng to U.S. In tenor Secretary Donald Hodel that he had better honor a com- promise reached this July protecting much of the st.ate from offshore 011 dnlhng. "\l. e intend 10 honor our commit- ment and e'~t \OU ~111 do the same ·· the telegram stated. ugislators sent the telegram Fn· da' tn response to statement<, Hodel made the da) before Hodel said he suspects a tent.au' e agreement reached with members of the st.ate congressional delegauon will place · poten\\all\ 'ast energ) re- sources. be\'ond the nauon's reach for 100 long a penod of ume." The compromise proposal. which wou'd protect all but I SO offshore tracts unt1l the year :moo. has been cn11- nzed by 011 interests for no t offenng pnme 011 dnlhng areas Hodel'~ sw1emenrs "en: "·ontained in .i letrt'r addressed 10 Rep. S1dne)' R ) att"S. D-111 . chairman of the House <\ppropnauons subcomm11tee work- ing on rhe comprom1st leg.1slat100 INDEX Clnctn.nad '• Pete Roee luha a •tncte aaalnat the Chlca&o Cabe Sanday to tie the ~r teaaae record of 4, 191 hlta met by Ty Cobb. He'll ha•e the chance to break the mark ln front of hU home town fan•. See •tory ID Sporta, Paae B 1. "We are convinced that the prchmmar) agreement )'Ou reached \\1th members of the California congress1onaJ deleg.auon represents the most balanced approach to me dtvelopmen 1 of CaJ1fom1a ·s coast.al resources." said II telegram signed b~ 15 merrlbt:rs of the House of Rep- resenta11, es. ~mocrat1c Sen ..\Ian Cranston and Republican St-n Pete \\ 1lson Hodel barg.aintd "1th legisla1ors to open 150 different "-square-milt tra" 1~ lll cxt•an flo\)r for l1il e>.plo- (PleaK eee OIL/A.2) Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlson Weather A10 A3 85-6 8 7-9 A10 89 Sgt. York's troops face uncertainty Lagunan flees boat explosion 810 A9 B8 AS A8 A7 A3 89-10 B1 -4 ~9 A2 By SUSAN HOWLETT Of tM Delly ,... ..... Ford Aerospace & Communica· tions Corp. officials said the remain- ing workers on 1he canceled Sgt. York baule gun project are feeling belier about the future following a mass1' e JOb fair Saturday, but 11 remains uncertain whttber they will be hired within the company or forced 10 seek employment elsewhere. "They feel more comfortable and mo re hopeful that there are jobs out there," said regional spokesman Further charges pending against Stalker suspect From 1&aff and wtre reports LOS ANGELES -Investigators poring over evidence in the "Night Stalker" serial k.jltings expect to nle added murder counts against the drifter who has been charged with one of 14 slayings blamed on the stalker this year, officials said. "They arc still investigating the cases to ascertain whether further charges can be filed," Los Angeles County Sheriffs Deputy Rick Adams said Sunday. He could not predict when additional charges might be filed. Ramire?.. 25. was captured I 0 days ago in East Los Angeles and was charged last Tuesday with one count of murder and seven other felonies stemmins from two early morning attacks m May in Los Angeles County. No pica was entered last and Ramirez was ordered to appear again today before Murucipai Court JudRe Donald Flamm The gathenng of 35 separate com- panies representing vanous d1' 1s1ons auracted l,OOOemployeesand recent- ly laid off employees from Ford's Orange Count) plants. Flamm said. "The obJeCll' e was pnmanl) to make contact. and that objecti ve "as definuely reached.'' Flamm said The s«ond installment of la)'offs came last Fnday. when 600 salancd workers were given 1wo weeks to find new JObs. Currently. 1.200 of 1he 1.900 employees work.mg on the g1 Richard Ramirez Elva Soper. who refused 10 grant hail 10 the case. The charges stem from the May 14 CPleue eee CHARGES/ A2) York ha'e been laid oil The emplo)ees who rele1,cd 1lw1r notice of termination Fnda' were mostl) from the mechan1cai. eng.i- neenng and log1st1c!. section) of the Sgt York project. Flamm ..aid Flamm said the \alaned t•mplo)et·~ will recene one wed.'c, paid' acation for every year of ~nice to Ford i\erospace up 10 lhe ma'(1mum ot I~ \ears He added the la1d-0ff em- ployees \\111 be able 10 ma1n1a1n 1hc compan) in!>ul'<lnlc di 1he group rjlt' for one to four monlh'i. deJl('nding on -.<n1ont\ But the 61)(1 hl1urh "llr~l'r'~ lhat spent their lasl da' "i1h Ford F-nda' \I.Ill not rel.'.e1,e i'uture bent·tit'> he explasned -\n 1ntt•rnal J<.lh fair ,1fl("nn~ cm p(O\ men l lrom f Md \ hrjn\. he<. I 0 Pahl -\Ito. Hou\ton. u' \ rg.i' ,rnJ (. olorado pn ngs \I, 111 t'-1.· 0tft>rcd .ill 1h1<o "eek di the "e" p<.'n Eka"h plJnl Flamm '>aid rhe I 200 rnmhsneJ IJ,otl\ \l,ert• pH1mp1ed h\ the -\u~ ~ -1..it'n\llJO ti' (Plu.eeee SGT. YORK/Al) -\ I agun.1 !ka, h mjl' t>5'.i~·J 1n;u,..1n, hu1 1,,, h1' "1ilt'll1.:11 \unJ.i' "hen 1,a uttll' fin.· JnJ "4n~ I~ mile '1..luth.,..nt t 'e"P"": Rea"h •hr l Od~t (1UjfJ rt·~1Ml'l1 h'hn \\d~· "a' ·rJrhternng •uel Jt-..•arJ h, :' 1 •ot ... 11IN•jt \1ari.l.a1er \\ hl·n thr !Ul'I n.'P\lMl·dh 1ttn11ed jnd 'pre.id uJ11. kl\ ...i1d <. 11a<,t l ruard 'Pl-'i..t'ST' j T PO Hl·t11. ~ \>.1lhl." "h11 "-J~ dll1nt' ,1n thl' Nlat e-..a~·,! 11 ..ir 1n11J1a"'lt" dingh' .rnd "3<. r1 l..1.u .. , .._, .1 P.i'-'>lntt t'll1.H the JPleau eee BOAT/ A2) Mesa 's Arts on the Green , draws. 3,000 culture lovers City. merchants sponsor second cultural potpourri by county's artistic organization By TONY SAAVEDRA OllM~""''t"" About 1.000 peopk gnl .1 tJ\ll' 111 cul lure. Orange Counl\·St~ il' '>unJJ\ as ~7 mm1c <l.incl' and thl'jtt'r troupe' took the c;1.ige dunng l l1'l.t Mesa's second annuJI An' on lhl' Green fest1' al Howe,er. lht• tinJI tw.)'" '"t'nt lo J partnership h<'twt·en the l it). jrtS organization~ and ltxal hus1ncc;<.<'c; lnr ramng the SJ0.000 needed to l)ITer I ht' tn•t• r:ntrru1nmen1 on ll'Ur q,li;tl'' in the \outh < oast Plaza jl"('j The fern' al "'as a rcpeJt rx·r rnrmanu:• of la'lt 'ear <. ~llth an nl\eNU"\ celehrat1on tor \outh <. oa!lt Reperton theater B.irhara l 1 ra1.h \pt)l..es"oman for the the.Her ..aid ti \l.t'r~cd \O wC'll 1hat the ( ,1c;ta Mesa <.. hamber l)f (. ommt"r\(" re' 1q•d the .itlau a' part 01thl',11' <. -\n <. \,on1h 'S5 l olnrful bannt•r<. \\ i:rc hung. along a thrce-m1 k 'IH'l"h l'' Harbor PlcturH on A3 Rt,ule' .1•J .,n ,.,, ,n~ :hl' "11' ' month 1 :i~ ""'1 · l h1.' l"\'rtnrm1ntt ,\rt'i (. ('I\{,! \' '-' ·, 'r I (1ri\, IJllTH'lj l ll\ •'I ''"1. \ ' · "'"1~·t1ntt 11' ~ta tu' ,1, thl 1n1. •ll'" 1 )ranttl' l ,1unt\ Pl'rl,irr• n~ \ ;, 1. 1·n1t•r The,, rr-r ' ,, h.·d1.. t•d 1 •'tll'f'l in Oc111hcr I 4~t " I ti·'' hn,1111 \l.11rld cla~' 0pt·r.1 rap'"'' h.1llc1 Jnd ffiU'illJ thr ti • 1• I,, \'II he\11ml· the huh ,,1 f" n. r'i1 n~ .in' .i. '" "' 1n lht' 1.l'lJnl' Pleau~ ARTS/A2) Land_ swap for hotel is latest wetlands dilemma Mills Land & Water Co. president sees 'j)iecious little' in offer by conservancy A proposal to settle a dispute that's stymied plans for years to do an ythina with the oceanfront in southeast Huntinaton Beach has been unveiled by repretentatives oftbc state Coastal Conservancy. The comentone of the plan is an exchuae ofland lead1na to construc- tion of a thl"CC'-story1 180-room luxury hotel at Beach 8ouievard and P1C1fic Coast HiahwaI. The Coasta Conservancy's Reed Holderman said he is "cautiously optimistic" that the plan. or some· thin& similar to it, ultimately will prove acceptable. But Roben L. Moore, p~ident of the MiUs Land & Water Co. that owns much of the land. finds "precious little" in the proposal to a&JU wtlh. He indicated that development plans are not ambitious enoulb. Two facton appear to be chiefly responsible for the stalemate -, Ont 1s that about 150 acn:-. ol the property lying inland of Pac1fil ( oac;t Highway between Be.ch Boulevard and the Sanm na R1,cr wcrc desianated wetlands b) the ~t.11c Department of Fish and Game in 1983. A second maJor obstacle'f'items back to 1he m1d-t 960s when thc statt' took part of Mills Land & and Water Co. propeny for a Pac1lk C oas1 Frttway which was never con· structed. The land was not n:'tumC'd. promptina a lawsuit by Mills In 1973. the state lqislaturt paned a Speclal act calhn~ for tht' rTtum of 1hc prol)(rty to M1ll5 when and 1f the company P"ll apl>J'()vat 10 t Ro BERT BARKER Focus ON THE NEw s build something on the sue Last Mareh. ctt\' otTtc1als cnh,tC'J the help of the ~latt' C oa .. tal C l1 n· 'IC'rvanc\ to brtak the 1mpa'\C Thr ron~I'\ anq. a pubh( •l en(.' tonn<'d 10 pre<;('n t' \\t"tlands. pla\C'd a promi- nent wk in a nimpro m1sc dt"C1s1on to prcwn.r ~I ' 3l'll'S of wc-tlands in Rol-.a ( h1la 1n un1ncnrpora1cJ tern ion to thr n")nhrast the rnn\Cn ann 's Holdcnnan ha'I ou1hnc-d a plan that would call for the \tatc [)(panment o f Trano;ponat1on to ~II a ~ 1-a re pan.-el. The Con ~n ann would bu) I~ acrts and rt'ltMC' tht'm as a ~'t'tland~ for the hah1tat of manne wlldllfe. Mill' which *Ould drop lcpl actton a,a1n\t the ( outal romm1ss1on. and t allran<.. aCC'Ordtng to Hotdermdn ' ~·t'nano. would bu) fivc &lrn ot frontagt' pro0trt'\' at Bea h Soule' ard anJ f'J, , l 1\j\t I ll~h"·" "'' thr h,•tt' l he t rr.J1'tal ( nnw r. anr' "1luld hl'lr \I '~ct Jll nl'"t''\."ln rrm111' h' hu1l,l 1hc h111l' .\nd tht· \.11n'('nan, \ ~11ulll p:\\ tor the rnhanc-emt•nt nf the \l.("tl:uhh pn1pc-n' • n a rt'a hi tv , •" rret1 ti' v..ue1 111 \Uf'fleln 'et. \ C l3IH1n and prn\ 1dt' a h,ih1tal hH \ hirJ, 1t1,t\ .1nJ Jnimal\ . Rut \11lh I and and V. .11cr l o ' \tnnrt \aid lnlt" 11\\t "C't'I.. lhat tht ll)mpan' 1i. n''' al'Kll1t to rt'purcha'( the frnnta.gc prnpc-n' and "3' tucs on 11 "'1thou1 a'l~umncr<. nt ..... onh- "' h1le ltlmmC'"'1al de,clupmc-nt (Pleue tee COA. T AL/ A.2) I CHARGES PENDING IN •sT ALKER' CASE •.• ·Prom A l "8)'ina or William Doi. 66, and tbt attlek of bis wUe in lbeir Mootetey Park bo~ and the May 9 altldc on Cara Cecilia Hadsall. as. wbo was robbed tn her Monrovia home. District Anornoy Ira Reiner has ~ more cb.&tteS may be filed qama Ramita.-a drifter f'tom El Puo, Texas. whose penchant for heavy-metal rock music and referen~ ccs to devil worship has been dc- ICribcd in court documents and detailed by mends and relatives. "ASIWriina the evidence warttn~ ..-e wiU be lilina additional ctw-aes wnhm the next couple of weeks," Reiner said before the eiaht felony counts were filed lut week. ThoK counts alone could make Ramirn eliaib&e for the death penalty. About 30 Niaht Stalker victims and witoeues viewed Ramirez in a jailhouse Uneup last week. but authoritiea refused to say if be had been identified. Ramirez has been served with an arrest warrant stemming from the Aua, 17 Niabt Stalker slayrna of ~ter Pan, 66. in San Francisco. TI\e wave of Niaht Stalker attacks, including 14 kiJJinp during doz.ens of assaults since Feb. 8, ha vc been tinJed with satanism, evidence of ritualism and the use of devil worship symbols. A San Francisco police affidavit said such a symbol was found on a wall at the Pao home, but in- vestiaators in Los Angeles have refused comment on news reports that simil~ symbols were found at Southern California crime scenes. Last week. Loa Angeles sheriff's spokesman Lt. Richard Walls said property allegedly stolen by Ramirez LO Southern California had been recovered durina searches conducted in El Paso, Sao Francisco and the Los Anaelcs area. Ac would not specify the locations searched, but said many items had been provided voluntarily to law enforcement authorities by people who said they had purchased them El Paso attorney retained to def end Stalker suspect EL PASO, Texas-An El Paso lawyer said he bas been ret11ned to defend Richard Ramirez. the man arrested m the "NIJht Stalker" serial kJllinas cue, and another local laW}'er is considerin& helpina in the case. Lawyer Manuel Barraza said he will ao to Los >.naetes this week to talk with Ramirn at lbe request of bis familr,. He said he hopes to associate with El "Paso crimjnaJ defense attorne}' Jo11eph .'Sib" Abraham in the case. Abraham confirmed late Sunday be is considcrina joinina the defense of Ramirez, 2S, an El Paso native who moved to California about seven years ••o· Barrau said his first prionty would be to seek to have Ramirez' tnal moved out of Los Anaeles. "That shouldn't be much ofa problem," he said. "The public sentiment there is just too pat against this auy. h's the classic thina about free press apinst fair trial." He said if it would not be possible to move the case out ofealifom ia, he would seek to move it to a community where the coveraae ha$ not been as intense as in Los Anaelcs. BaJT&Za said he was retained by the Ramite2 family because of has ~putation for defending others m the Centtal El Paso neighborhood where Ramirez lived as a child. He said he has spoken tolhe suspcct's sister, Rosa Aotts, who told him her brother wants bjs help. . . "The sisteF is there right now," Barraza said, "and she called and said he as interested." "You can imagine, the wax he was chased and everything, he feels like nobody is on his side out there, • Barraza said. He said be could not say what the defense might be based on because he docs not yet know the facts m the case. "All I know is what I've read in the papen "be wd, "I need t6 go out there and see what the facts are. It mi&ht be worse thll J thmk 1t is. I hope it will be better." Barraza said it will be necessary to retain a California attorney in the case because he is not licensed to practice law in that state. from Ramirez or had received the items as gifts from him. Authorities also blamed I.be Ni~t Stalker for an attack in Mission VieJO. Bill Cams, who suffered gunshot wounds and whose girlfriend was sexually assaulted in the Aug. 25 attack, remained hospitalized Sun-day in serious but stable condition, wd spokeswoman Olivia Tankersley at Mission Community Hospital. Last week. authon ues in several western states said they were combina files on unsolved murder cases to determine if there were any links to the Night Stalker. Los Angeles Police Chief Daryl Gates said Ramirez' fingeJ'J)rint was found at the scene of a June 28, 1984 slayina in which an elderly woman was repeatedly stabbed and her throat slashed. Suspect in Belushi death in court today LOS ANGELES (AP)-Three and a half years after John Belushi's drug overdose death, the Canadian woman charged Wlth killing the comedian faces a coun hearing that will determine whether she should stand trial for murder. Cathy Evelyn Smith, 37, a former rock singer for such recording artists as Gordon Lightfoot and Hoyt AJtton, was scheduled to appear in MurucipaJ Coun today for a preliminary hear- ing. She is charged with second- degr« murder and 13 counts of furnishing and administcrinJ narcotics to Belushi. · Belushi, the zany star of tele- vision's "Saturday Night Live," died at age 33 in a rented $200-a-day bunplow at the Chateau Marmont Hotel on the Sunset Strip. REPAIR ZONE CLAIMS 3 LIVES ... Jl'romAl of a Kenwonh dump truck north of Founh Street m Santa Ana about 2: I 5 a.m. The woman, whose identity hasn't been released because her family hasn't been notified, was pronounced dead at the scene with massive head mjuries. ln the second acc1dent at 2:50 a.m . BOAT ••• Prom Al Subchascr. The crew aboard the Subchaser radioed the Coast Guard and reponed the tire at about I I: I 0 a.m. A 41 -foot Coast Guard c utter and a Huntington Beach lifeguard vessel responded to the fire. The blaze was extinguished by the Coas1 Guard just as the sailboat burned to the waterh ne and sank, Hc01ck said. the loss was estimated at S20 000. W1lbcrwas taken by the oast Guard to Dana Point Harbor. at the 55 Freeway north of Lincoln Street an Orange, a motorcycle ndden by a 25-year-old Santa Ana man and has woman companion slammed "full speed" into the back of a flat bed truck that had its li&hu on, Caldwell said. Both suffere<f major bead in- juries and died at the scene, according to Caldwell. There were indications that the couple, wbo were not ident- ified, were retum1na from a party, he said. The freeway repair work. which has been under way from I 0 p.m . to 6 a.m. for about six weeks by the Y cager Construction Co. of Riverside, was marked clearly wi1h orange traffic cones and lighted warning signs, Caldwell said. Investigators found that warnings of the closed lanes had been checked and found to be working. Caldwell said. In the accident Sunday on the Onega Highway near Caspers Park, three vic_t1ms were Oo~ Meil hospitals by emergency helicopter. Kent Sharp, 18, of Indio, was arrested at W estem Medical Ccn ter an Santa Ana on suspicion of felony drunken dri vmg. He was reported in stable condition with moderate head injuries and a broken arm. David Davis, 30, of Santa Ana. whose car was struck bead-on by Sharp's Volkswagen Sirocco, also was listed in stable condition at W~tem Medical Center with bead injuries and a fractured pelvis. Darrel Woods 19, Palm Desert, a putenaer in Sharp's vehicle was listed in serious condition at Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo with major abdominal injuries. Five other victims suffered l~s serious injuries. CHP Officer Ken Daily said Sharp was driving about 70 mph when he apparently lost control at a curve and struck Davis' car head on and then spun around and struck another vehicle driven by Herbert S. Blair Jr .. 48. of Mission Viejo. Ihc speed linut is-posted-at_ 55 mph, he said, with numerous wam- 1 ngs to slow down for curves. SGT. YORK EMPLOYEES UNCERTAIN ... From Al Defense Secretary C a s par Weinberger to dump $1.8 balhon project. "We're trying to do everything posSlblc to ease the burden o( these people and help them to findJ'obs as soon as possible," Flamm saa . Personnel representatives from five d1Vlsons of Northrop Corp .. and vanous d1v1S1ons o f Litton. TRW, Magnavox. Honeywell. McDonnell Douglas. Aerojet-General Corp., Lockheed Corp. and Parker-Hannafin were among those present at the JOb fair Saturday. The layoffs came on the heels oft~e decision by Weinberger, who said independent tests on the Sgt. York concluded that the weapon did not measure up to Anny 'pccifications and the growing needs of the military. The project was canceled after 64 of the guns were delivered. Flamm said. The government ongmally ordered .... 146. It was named af\erWorld War I hero Sgt. Al vin York. and consists of two ~mm guns linked to a computer and radar, Flamm said. Ford officials are work.ing with a federal termination officer to sort tbrou&h the red tape involved with canceling the immense contract, Flamm said. He said some of the remaining workers could stay with the project a few months until the termination 1s complete. COAST AL CONSERVANCY PROPOSAL .•• l'romAl Moore claim\ the plans for re- storing part of the property into wetlands. free from development, is not compatible with commercial prospects with the area being a prime v1s1tor-serving commercial because "Beach Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway arc the most densely traveled thoroughfares an the c ity." Malls Land & Water. a land Just Call 642-6086 DeUy Piiot Deltv..-y te Qu.renteed ORA NOE COAST development company, has owned property in the area since 190 I when n was an effective tidal marsh, according to Moore. But he said that when the state took property in the 1940s to develop Huntington State Beach, the wetland features were destroyed in efforu to tum the area mto a bathing beach In a se<:ond, and far less con· troversiaJ proposal, the Coastal Con- servancy's Holderman is negotiating another land a,areement with Caltrans. It would uu;:lude the trans- fer of 17 acres south of Brookhurst Street to the Coastal Conservancy. In return, Caltrans would get ~r­ mission to Wlden Pacific Coast High- way from four to six traffic lanes. What do you like •boot the Dally Pllot7 Wbat don't you llkt? Call tbt nom!Hir at left and your me1sa1e wlll be recorded, truacrlbed and delivered to Ute appropriate editor Tlae aamt U-boer a.n1wuln1 service may be uted to record lette" to tbe editor on any topic. Contributor• to our !Atttra column must Include tbtlr name and ttltpbone oamber for vertflutlon. No circulation calla, please. Tell 111 wbal'1 on yoar mind. Dally Pilat Clrcutetlon 1141~~ Cleeelfted edwertletng 714/tG·Mn All otMr depwtmentt '42""*21 MAIN CW,tel nn WWI .. , SI eo.1a Mew G" Moncley , no., •• ,. ,. I "'11 ,...... yout IJl'(!M l!y 6J0o.ACAll-• 1 om •lld "°' GO(>)' .... "' --ecj Keren Wlttm« Publlshef MAI .oclr-to-l)tO C.,.11 ..._ CA 9211211 Copy<IO'll 1983 C>•ryt C...t1 fl'lllllWlltlQ Company ~ -.,~ !llUflllliOnl IOl10t18l INll191 °' ~­,, ,,.,.,, mey be "°'~ "'""'°"' tlOllCloM '* ~ot~tow-S.1\lfOllJI '"° ~. If I 'fl"' 00 nat ._ ,rv CoPY IN t •,., • r"''"'" 10 I "' *'Cl 10>i COO• ·-tie~ Cltculatfon Te•pMn9• -. - frenk Zlnt Roeemary Churchm•n Editor ContrOllf'r Robert l . Cetttretl Donald L. Wltllemt P•OduGt•cin C1rcu1a1ion M11nager Managtr Howerd Mullenery Peggy ... vine Wclel () .... CDJ'tv .,_ .., ... l\d111>rt1s11"lg OirectOt Cl8aSltred Olteelor ~"""'""---VOL n , NO. 212 l .. Showers may dampen Coast ~•bit ~ from a weet!W 1ystem moving down the oout Wiit bl'tng a .,lght onenoe of ahower9 to Southern Calltornla ooutel end mountlln region• tonight and Tu.day. The N9flonlf Weettw SeMce Mid an upper tow pr...ure IY9*" off the Nofthefn Calltornle cout wa moving etowty eouthw1rd todey and ileicpected to llnget' th«• Into Wecfnetetay. The -va1em wttl <*JM Souttwn California'• daytime temperetur• to be a 1"11e CO<>* u w.11. AJong the Of~ Cout tlW• WM! be con11d.,tbl• ~lneu through Tl*dty Slight chenoe of aho"rs late tonight end Tueedey. Sllgtltty CO<>* days with high• aa to 78 and lowt57to~. · From Point ConQeP11on to the Mex~an Bor~ -Inner watert: Light vwtab,Je wlnda through Tueeday exoept IOUthweat to wttt 8 to 1e knot• In the afternoon and evening houra Southweet aw.II 1 to 2 fMt. Conalderable ctoudln ... through • Tueeday with a alight chance of 1howera tonight 1nd Tuesday, 1----------=-.,-----....,'----i melntv northern watera. • G ~ ~ '"OHU ...... ..... 91 .. t ~ .. Wt1rn -ColO..,.. U.S. Temps ~ •1 4t Sr.ower• j:I,,,, Flitr•t Snow Occluded....,. St11oon11y Ay ~Olly ri ~ lq~1 NN ,.... S.-e NOAA V S 0.0. 01 C-et t::=: 93 70 ------------------~-------------= :,2 1 1 ;,! Calif. Tempe :::::~=. ~: :: .. IA AlOMy .. 93 93 .. MIWl\l IMoll " fOtf.,_ •1 12 ........... 79 ~7 Htgll, IOw, IOf 2• f\Ovft WIOlnO II 6 a,,, YOMtnfla V1'f t7 4t ~'*llW .. ., Ntdt« ... .. ao Mj>la-81 PIUI 84 " hkertl1alcl 10 a2 NMlllllll el : w•• M 52 ----------- Atlenta et 71 AllMtlO CllY tO 14 =~:• :: ~~ =:,., ~ ~ Surf Report Mot'olll.11• " lOe Mgelet 1• .. ""9111\ 97 75 lllftlrMr• .. 71 .. ,, . .,_ " .. ~ IO •• IOlla 11' ao Ololallotft• Olly t1 72 Olit!MO ' ee 51 L.OCATIOte 8119 IMAN Ome/18 N 547 .. P-Aolllee 75 &4 ~on IMoll 1•2 poor Ot14lnCIO • ' .. Red 8klfl .. &4 AMI' ~. ~ 1·2 poor ~le It 10 Aect.ooct en; a 57 40tll 9tr•I. Nto#pOfl 1.2 poor lloelon .. 81 lultWO ... 10 ""-"'• " 14 •--•o 12 u 2211<1 a1r-. H9wl)Of'I 1-2 poor Pttt!IOIKClll 89 el 8•Hn&1 841 & 1 a.lboe WedQ9 1·2 poor c:.., n 44 CNl!eMOtl,9 c t4 78 PrOYIOat\OI 17 M ten OiaOO 17 ell L.aQun• leecill M poor ~ n " SM fr_.aco ee eo 8M ClemenM 1-1 1111r ~.w.v. 83 70 011ettona. M.C t l .. ~ ~ C11y 54 47 Santa llelw• n &4 we1er tantp ee IWlo 70 44 8100k1on ee ae a .... cllr1C110n -.111 ]4 50 g:.!:.., 1M .. 81 ~1 L-~ t4 ~05 Hlgfl. IOw for 24 llOur9 en<llng et 5 p m .. ...... t4 eentow ee 61 70 ~ ee .. Columllul.Oll 92 70 "Pe1 .. rempe 92 ~~ .__,,,, 19 65 Tide• :::~~ :: 18 = : :~ ~.MH ee aa Dlrl9-1"1 WMl'I 100 78 San Juan,P A .. 73 C.!llln• 75 93 TOOAY S.nll 82 62 Meryellttle 71 69 8-low 12'03 p.rn. 3.J ~ 91 70 DeftWf 78 56 TOC*I• ee 69 Monrovt• 87 &a Second hlOfl 9:06 P.m a. 1 Tuoeon H rs Monterey 71 e I O.. MOIMI 1M e2 o.troll .. 81 83 50 Dulutll Elll'-89 68 f*11Mk1 at 4& ~~1on '~ 75 Ml Wlteon 63 45 flff1 IOw Wlc:Ma 101 U ~ 9-:11 ~ : ~ TWIOAY I.Sie m 1'21Lm 12a3prn l .'3p,,., 03 40 21 OI 47 -•8erre IO 11 OntatlO 81 e 1 8-IO ~ .. ----------P.,,,. ~ 83 ee . ..,... 1'8f90 eo ~~ 72 37 15 81 ONie4 , ... .. .a Eztended p...,.,,_ 81 59 "'-~ 79 5a Sun .... 100ey •1 1 Cit p "' . ..... San 8emerel!N> 78 eo Tlie9dly 11 8 U •"' end Mta ~•I Sen Ollbrtel eo eo 7·01 P "'· """'°'° '7 ... Hlllet'8 62 44 Pertly CIOlldy Md cool wt111 • tllght San Joee a 1 5' MOOfl Mtl !Odey at 4.06 O m , r11ee oNnoe Of --· •• '""-' HIOlll .,, Sant• Ant IO 63 Tueecley •• 1'4'..Lm. end -· ~ •1 Honc*ilu .. 12 Houaton 92 n ltldlelM!Polle .. 10 J**-t.Me. 92 .. 111e 70.. Low. rnoetty aa 10 ea 4·M p.m -Separate suits set in chemical blaze A lawyer representing thousands of people evacuated in a June chemical fire said he will drop a $I 00 million class-action lawsuit and instead tile individual cases in small claims court. Howard E. Hirsch of Melvin Belli's law firm said he talked to about 20 potential ht1gants and found most were seelunJ reimbursement for los- ing a day of work or having to buy a change of clothes . OIL DRILLING WARNING ISSUED •.. From Al ration, largely off Northern Cali- fornia's coast1 while protecting 6.310 tracts from orilling fo r the next IS years. Jn exchange, the legislators agreed to drop efforts to renew a four- year congressional ban on oil explo- ration covering all of the 6,460 tracts. But Friday, Hodel revealed he nas directed Interior Department staff to pinpoint I SO of the most promising tracts in preparation for renewed ncgotiationJ with the congressional delegation Tuesday. Meanwhile, a contingent rep- resenting three Orange County coastal communities arrived in Washington on Sunday to meet with key legislators who crafted the ong- inal compromise. Coa1tal communities oppose ex- panded oil dnlltng otTOrange County and hope to impress influenc1al congressmen with their position, Denny Freidcnrich, a spokesman for the cities of Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Huntington Beach and San Clemente, sa,td. Rep. Bob Badham, R-Newport Beach, is also opposed to the com- promise as Iona as Orange County tracts arc included. Badham· is trying to arrange a meeting between White House staff and members of the congressional delegation, his aide Bill Schreiber, said. The congressman will also testify at a Wednesday subcommittee heanna on the drilling qu~tion, he said. The hearing will be the first opportunity for (.ongress as a whole to e:umane the compromise crafted by the state delegatfon. Schreiber said. Badttam did not sisn the telegram to Hodel "for obvious reasons." Schreiber said. Because of I.be coun- ty's specific interests regardina the matter, "we're not going to deal with either of the extremes.'' he said. "Somewhere in between there's some common ground." Schreiber said. Frcidenrich agrees. "I don't see (the telegram) as a major threat to Orange County," he said. "We've always supported the agreement... We think Or:anJe Co~nty tracts can be (ehmanatcd) m the fine tuninJ of the compromise," Freidenrich said. ARTS ON THE GREEN DRAWS 3,000 ..• From Al Costa Mesa also has been the longtime home of the renowned South Coast Repertory theater. Grady said she as hopeful the Ans on the G reen fcsttval at Town Center Park will continue throughout the ~a.rs;-with efforts to eventually hang banners along every major street an the city. She aJso applauded Costa Mesa for ··putung ats money where its motto as" by donating SI 0.000 for Sunday's festival. ''This was a taste. to show the breadth of what's available an Orange County,'' Grady said. "It was to tickle peo ple's imaginations and help get them mvolved " With blankets stretched on the park lawn. nestled between a ho tel and some office buildings, fans were sing:te age26 serenaded Sunday by the Orange County Master Chorale as well as other 1roupcs. Inside South Coast Repenory's Second Stage, artisans read ethnic poetry, played classical guitar and perfo1111ed-m11T1e forth~ !Udi?ncc. "What a special thin.J, for all these people to enjoy thl5 free entertam- ment," Grady said. A person afraid to face the world is frequently the victim of a men · tal crisis. No one is immune to the stresses of modem life that can cause abnormal behavior. Each sit- uation is different. That's why law-student there are different sleeps lB hours a "a .. r ways to help. The ~ Information Center at Capistrano by the Sea Hospital has a free book- let on mental crisis. It outlines the many options you have available. Hospitalization is only one of them . Call (714)831-1787. You'll receive thi s useful book· let in absolute confidence. We've helped people cope with the problems of today's society for over 25 years. We understanc1. How co Handle a Mental Crisis a I I 'I • I