Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-09-16 - Orange Coast PilotTOMOMIOW: LOUDY N FORECAITI ON A2 S.rYlng Newport Betch, Cotta ...... Huntington leach, l. ~1ne, l.8gun1 Beach, Fountain V1l"1 lftd South Orange County (JR A N G f '~(JU N T 'f C. A LIF ORNI A MONO A Y SEPTEMBER 16 1985 . · ~ E 11i, r S Passenger train to .s~op in Irvine City's 2 .3 million station approved-, will be t h e first local depot in 38 years The 7.000-squarc-foot bu1ld1 ng 1s scheduled to be built JU St nonh of the intersection of the San Diego and Santa Ana freeways an the city, Wiener said. The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Co. has approved a stop in Irvine, paving the way for the constructio n of the station. . edness and close cooperations be- tween the pn vate and public sectors," Weiner said. She added that Santa Fe approved the sto p after previously denyinJ Amtrak's request because of feared impacts on their freight oper- ations. passengers. interstate buses, Orange County T rans1t Distnct vehicles, taius, van pools. shuttles and pnvatc vehicles. Weiner said. It will consist of a wa1t1Qg room, baggage room. luggage lockers, auto rent.al countel"5. operations offices and a restaurant, Weiner sa1d donated mo re than seven acres of land valued at SI 0 m1lhon center, she added. Irvine Public Works Director Brent ~ucbow said that construcuon on the structure could bcgm in 1986, and that 1t has become one of the city's top pnonties By SUSAN HOWLETT OfhDelr ........ Ir vine Ci t y Councilwo man Barbara Wiener announced today the long-.awaited approval of a S2.3 Constructlon worker killed at Marriott One worker was killed and two others were inj ured today when a 3(). foot high steel column collapsed during constructfon of a new wing at the Marriott Hotel in Newpon Center. The idenuficauon of the three victims in the industrial accident that occurred about 11 :20 a.m. was un- available. Officials from the Newpon Beach Fire Department said the steel column was being lowered into position on the third floor of a new hotel wing. The column crushed the dead victim and struck the o ther two men. authorities said. T he cause of the accident is under investigation. Coast Everything from crumbl- ing french fries to medieval monsters arose from the sands during the sand sculpture contest at Seal Beach Pier .I A3 California Los Angeles' Guardian Angels have been ar- rested for blocking traffic In a drug-troubled Holly- wood neighborhood./ A4 Wor ld Reports that the Rev. Benjamin Weir, one of seven Americans kid- napped In Beirut, has been freed, remain un- confirmed .I AS Sports The Rams made It two In a row with a 17 -6 victory at Phlladelphla./8 1 The Angels put Texas away, 12-4, to cut Into Kansas City's lead ./8 1 Entertainment CBS Is beaming up to the Twilight Zone again, hopeful of catching the spirit of Rod Serllng./ Al INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlson Weather A 10 A3 85-6 87-9 A1 0 B9 890, 10 A8-9 B8 A9 A6 A3 89 81-4 A8 A2 million transpon.ation station an Irvine, making it possible for a passenger train to stop in the city for t he first time in 38 years. "I'm very excited about 1t. It's definitely historical," said Wiener. "The resolution of the if>sue under- scores the imponance of open-mind- A page out of the past 8eTen tall abtpe lncludlnC the Pllgrlm (foreground) and the Bounty attracted thousand of apectaton along Pacific Cout RICbway Sunday u the ahlpe, accompanied by eeTeral ha.pdred amaller aail and power boata. raced from Newport Beach to Dana Point Point. The race, won by Swift of Ipewlch from An.Io n, wu •taced to celeb rate the 150th ID.terior denies new oil venture F rom 1\aff and wlrc reports ln tenor Department officials de- nied published repons today that Secretary Donald Hodel plans to propose new tracts Tuesday for 011 driUmg off Cahfomta's coastline. The San Francisco Examiner and the Associated Press repon ed that Hodel would hold a closed-door meeting Tuesday with members of Congress to discuss a plan that reponedly would open about fi ve times u many tracts for lease than was previously proposed. But spokesmen for Reps. Roben Badham, R-Newpon Beach, and William Dannemeyer. R-Fullen on. talked with Interior Dcpan mcnt of- ficials today and were told no such meet ing is planned. "I just got off the phone with the lotenor aod they have no idea where that story came from," Danne meyer aide Duane Crum b said this mom i ng. Crumb said Dannemeyerbas heard of no new proposals for oil drilling off CaJjfom ia and what changes might be in store for Orange County's (Pleue Me OFP8HOU/ A2) Ha t in the ring Orance County Superri80r Tbomu F . Riley announced today that he will aeek a fo urth term ln office nezt year. Riley. a realdent of !f ewport Beach, wa• flnt a ppointed In 1974 to fl11 a ncancy caued by the death of Ro n Cupen. He won e lection In 1978 to fl11 out the unezpired term and then wu re-elected to four year term• In 197 8 and 1982. "We a pplaud Sant.a Fe Railway's seos1uvity in a mving at 11s dec1S1on " the counciJwoman said. The terminal will serve Amtrak rail The city apphed state Department of Transpon.auon funds 1n the late l 970's, Weiner said. The lrvrnc Co annlvenary of Richard Henry Dana·· arrlm in Dana Point aboard the Pilgrim. Tall abtpe participating ln the race were the Arau from Newport, Bounty from Loe Angelea. Californian from Sacramento, ot.covery from Newport, Pilgrim of Newport from San Pedro, Reaolatlon from Newport and Swift of lpewlch. Lifeguards rescue two from tides By ROBE RT BARKER OftMl>eltyll'llol tllifl Two men were saved from dro"n· mg 10 separate inc1denb SumJa) afternoon b) lifeguards v.ho leaped from rescue boats into the "ater!I ofT Huntington Bealh In both instances.the v1Ct1m~ had been pulled out to sea b~ hea') npt1des. lifeguards said toda) In the first rescue at about ~ 30 p.m .. Tom Campbell of Covina wa~ reponed in a scm1-consc1ous con- d1t1on 1n the "'ater about 200 \ards 'be)'ond the shoreh ne oppu~1 te Magnolia Street at Hunungt6'n State Beach .. He appean·d dose to dmv.n1ng and "af> tloating in and out of consciousness "'hen we got to him ... David Perry. the operator ofa J2-foo1 lifeguard mot<>rboat. said. Perr) and h1!> deck mate. l:nc Bloom. attached Campbell -be- lieved to be 1n his m1d-20s -to a resuscitator 10 keep him breathing and ssxd towards 1he "1ewpon Beach Pier There the) ~ere met b't para- medics v.ho continued emergcnq treat ment "hlle transporting ( ampbell to Hoag Memonal Ho\p1- tal in Newpon Beach Hosp11al offic1ah \a1d toda) Campbell 1s in sa1o u\ but stable cond111o n The S«ond rescut· took place about 20 minute~ later 1n about the ~me (Pleue eee RESCUES/ A2J Weaner stressed that the new center .. 1s much mor.e than a train stallOJl" (Pleue eee Dlvunt/ A2) Homes coming apart in Mesa Resid en ts to ask counc il tonigh t t o probe d a m age By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. ~....... ' A few north Costa Mesa residents arc wondcnng wh) the walls and foundations tn their Reddrng A venue homes are cracking faster than the} can keep up with the damage The ground beneath the three homes at I 070. 101 I and I 079 Reddmg Ave. apparentl}' has started settling at a fast rate, buclchng concrete pauo floors and turning once-level walkwa)'s into small ramps. homeowners sa" "Mother Nature is on the rampage somewhere," satd David Leighton. spokesman for the ~onh Costa Mesa Homeowner'$ AsSOC1at1on "We're not tr) 1ng to blo"' something out ot proporuon It's there and we'rt disturbed .. .\s tesumon) Leighton said he will present a '1deotape of the damage to Cit) Council membe~ tonight. ask- ing for an 1mmed1ate anvest1gat1on. ~ Cit) building inspector was sent this m~mmg to etam1ne the horn~ built re than 10 yea~ ago Let ton ~1d crat h appeared per- 1od1call) o'er the past few years But the\ v.ere nothing the residents (Pleue eee MESA/A2) Aquatic park due at Lion Count r y --------· 1 -----1 l' step fo~c '()().acre park. wh1lh ha~ Irvine Counc i approva paves way 10r endured ltS share of had luck {)\Cr transformation of ill-fated anirl)al park PHIL pa~~~~mc1als also are processing ---plans to build a 20-acre ~Oball center 1n a section ofl1on Country formerly It's a aood thing there aren't any hons lef\ a t Lion Country -hons don't like to swim. ~The fi ve Irvine City Council mem- bers lined up last week like birds o n a wu'C and paved the ~y for coosfru~ Lion of IS new water ndes and aquauc attractions at the former wild animal park. The council dcc1s1on came after a year of tetbacks and proocuina delaya. The dovdopcr had hoped to complete the sli~ raft tides and other amutemenu 1n time for the •ummcr tc&SOn thatjust ended. Perhaps no one was happier and m ore relieved about the vote than Harry Shuster, the Irvine park's founderand board chairman. Shuster is anxious to transform the one-time anim al preserve to aquatic rec- reational perk. · Chy pl~ninc offi~als had a11~ed that an extensive, um~on1um1na review wu necessary before the water rides could be built at Lion Country. But proponent• oftbe project cl11med the park·a cJtiatina city permit allows such rides without that review. They said ao additional delay would pre- vent an openina next spnna -and problbly kill the project. S occupied b> ch«tah~ and chimps. IEIDElllAll The m lighted fidds will pro\lde add1uonal playing spa~ for teams that can't be accommodated at rny-Focus o~ l HE NEw s Tbe City Council unantmously ovcn umcd the staff dccuuon. allow- in& the wa ter amuSt'ment proJctt to proceed. "fm very pleucd," hustcr 1d. "I'm deltahtcd they l&J'(ed With us .. The Uon Country pre 1dent said the introduction of water ndc '..!.which Wlll be built and operated by \. olton- b38C'd Amencan Sponsworld. 1<1 a kt)' owncd ballfields hustcr. claim~ the local demand for new wf\ball fields 1~1trong He \aid he ant1c1pate!Q no ~1aJor prob- lems in obtaining cit)' approval for that pro1«t He's less etrum about a proposal for motocro s rncm& faciht1es at Lion Country This prt>J('('t could en- counter some hitch~ •n the cu' (Pleue eee LION/A2 ) Arrested for jaywalking s.-n Pope of I.nine mut ban thou.cht abe wu ln Florida wbeo ahe •potted th.la calman -a cloee relatl•e to atli,aton -croeaU.. the at:reet ln frollt of ber car. She aa.m.moned I.nine poRce, who called f oT Animal &emcee 8apertnten t Carl f»aCano (above). wbo took the jaywalker Into cu•todJ . T h ey were to tmu It over to the State 1'1.ab and Game Dep&rtment today . Story on Pate A2 . I. , j I A2N80rMQe0o.t DAILY PILOT/Monday, September 181 1985 • 'See you later, ·wally Gator, ' Irvine cops say after struggle By SUSAN BOWL£TT Wally wu di1COvmd July 6 by & a. .. ...,,..... (""'-... sroup of ~onstruction worke~ w~o Services djvision arrived, Bowman said. He said tb•t the officcn at the scene said Wally was ~ut into an animal control vehicle • after a brief struaalc." . . ~ clcanna out some ~tauon 1n Wally Gator, tbe lDfamous resident \be back b&y area., aocotd.ing to Fish of Upper Newpon Bay,,. was captw;ed and Game officials. by more than a half~ozcn .POlioc . • officers and animal control officials The Valley Ef\glneers empl~Y,eet af\er an Irvine resident spotted him took pictu.res of the toothy vmtor taking. a midniaht stroll down a they affecttonately ~lied Wally, and neiahborbood sidewalk. sho~ them to Fish and .Game "fimagine be wouldn't have gone alona peacefully." Bowman aid. The five-foot-long cajman. a close official~ who h!lve been I.tying to relative to alUptors.. wu sponed in catch him ever 110ce. tbe . mi~dle or San Joaquin near With an unlimited food supply. Uruvers1ty Dnve by Susan Pope caimus can lfOW a foot a year, Fish and Game officials said be was probably a pet that became too large and was released by bis owner in die muddy waters of Upper Newport Ba~. •People don't realize that they get bol"lly_ after 1~:30 a.m. Sun~y. according to Irvine Animal Servi~ accordi.na to Irvine Pohoc S'gl. Rich· spokesman Dennis Ruvolo. He satd ard Bowman. . they are considered American Pope was driving on ~ J~quin crocodiles and are classified as "aa· and saw the wayward repute 1~ the gressive.·• mjddJe of the street, Bowman said. . · ffi as bia as thcr do when they buy them as babies. It s really sad, they end up getting killed or let loose. some· where," the spckeswoman said. Although slinking around in the water near exclusive Newport homes seems a m ore posh existence for the scaly reptile than the Florida Ever- &lades. Fi9 and Game offficials say Wally does not belong there. "Concerned for tbe alligator's safe· Bowman wd scv~n pohce o 1cer:s ty, she honked her horn," Bowman surrounded the a_nunal so ~.t It said He got up 00 the sidewalk after would not 10 back into the San Diego bearlna the noise, be added. Creek Channel. Wally probably came Fish and Game officials have been out of the creek, ~ed across the looking for the caiman that they think Rancho San Joaquin golf course bas been skulking beneath the waters betwce~ bot.es 14 and l S, wbei:e be of Upper Newport Bay for years. But found h!111selffaced by the headlights they expected him to go toward of Pope s car. . But the future home of the suspect identified as Wally Gator on the police lot at Irvine Police Depart- ment is is uncertain. "We'rejustJOing to bang onto him until we find him a home. .. an Animal Sevices spokeswoman said. Huntington Beach instead of Irvine, -ryie oflicen encircl~ .the _.tor said spakcsman Pat Moore. until membcn of the aty s Animal OFFSHORE DRILLING PLAN DENIED ••• From A l coastline. Badham aJde Bill Schreiber also said no new plans have been dis· cussed. "I was told that 1f anything at alJ happens, it won't be un~I at le~st the end of the week," Schreiber said. According to the report in tbe San Francisco Examiner, however, Hodel planned to propose leases to be offered in such tourist areas as Mendocino, Santa Cruz, Santa Monica and San Diego. The plan would replace an earlier preliminary l&J'CCment for I SO off· shore tracts approved for leasing that Hodel accepted July 16. That proposal included six nino-squa.re- mile tracts off Orange County. La.st week. Hodel repudiated the ~ment, and now be is proposing new oegottations aimed at ending the ' decade-long controversy over Cali- fomia 's offshore oil. Talk of new plans has outtqcd state members of Congress. They say they will listen to Hodel, but are agatnst oil drilling off environmental· ly sensitive ocean-front areas. Con&ressional opponents say they hope to bypass Hodel's plans by winning congressional approval of a one-year drilling b&n while presaina for passage oftbe original agreement. MESA HOMES COMING APART ••• From A l couldn't repau. However, Within the past few months, the detenorallon accelerated as the ground underneath the homes apparently become more and m ore unstable. "Before a person could tolerate it, but now ... well, bedroom walls are cracking at the comers and a bathtub JUSt started pulhnj away from the wall," Leighton sai<t-"Concrete walk· ways arc sloping toward the houses. Where water onoe drained away from the house, it's now draining into it." He said one living room wall was craclced across the middle, while a sliding glass door was left askew - closing at the top but leaving a two- incb gap at the bottom. Residents pulling back the carpet· ing to ex.amine the floor slabs, found deep cracks in the concrete foun .. dation, Leighton said. He added that homeowners just rcc::cntly discovered that more than one house was having problems. It appears that the earth beneath the homes i~ scttJing. ~ut the q~estion is why, Leighton said, addmg the association plans to survey some J ,500 households nor;th of the San Diego Freeway to fin<l out if more homes are cracking up. · -Burglary suspect shot by HB police By STEVE MARBLE OfllleDl!lr,... ..... A 29-ycar-old Fountain Valley man was shot in the face early today by a police officer responding to a reported car bWJJary outside a Hunt· ington Beach apartment complex. Randy Lee Howe is listed in fair condition today/ at UCJ Medical Center in Orangc'after a bullet pierced his check and struck bis teeth, authorities reponcd. Howe and a second man, identified as Robert McDonald. 32, of Hunt· ington Beach, were arrested on suspi- cion of auto burglary following the 3 a.m. episode at 8392 Saro Circle. Police would not identify the officer who fired the shot nor wouJd they explain what led to the shooting. It was not clear whether Howe or McDonald were anned. The Oranae County District At· tornets office will investigate the shooung, according to a police spokesman. Officers were summoned to the apartment complex near the inter· section of Newland Street and Warn- er A venue by a resident who reported- ly noticed two men attempting to break into a parked car, police stated. Police provided few details on what happened at the address beyond a general statement that " ... upon ar· riyt) officers captured two suspects ind one of the suspects was shot in the face during the capture," It was not known how many officers were at the scene at the time of the shooting. Howe was first taken to the Foun- tain Valley Community Hospital trauma center fo r emergency treat· ment and then moved to the county hospital, which has a jail ward. In addition to auto burglary, Howe aJso is charged with resisting arrest. He is being held in lieu of SI 0.000 bail. McDonald is being held at the Huntington Beach city jail, also on $I 0.000 bail. LION COUNTRY TRANSFORMATION ••. From Al review because of safety concerns, and it may have to be te(.()nsidercd, Shuster said. He said Lion Country is fielding other recreation proposals as well, such as a plan to develop SOCOCf' fields at the park. Shuster is anAious to transform the park because there's limited time left on his lease for the Lion Country acreage. His 28-year ~ment with the Irvine Co. expires in 1997. "lfwe wanted to make chanees. we had to make them now," he said. Lion Counlt)' officials are hoping the recreation activities will meet with more success then the drive- through wild animal preserve that was the park's initial drawing ca.rd. The animal park bad several suc- cessful seasons after it opened in 1971 , sometimes attractinc more than 1 million vis1ton annually. The park made national headlines 10 early 1972 thanks to Frasier. an aa:i ng lion who sired 35 cubs amon,a the eatk's seven lionesses. The Cali- fornia Legislature honored Fruier with a resolution naming him "Animal Father of the Year " But Frasier died later~ year. Just Call 642-6086 lo the mid· 70s, an oil crisis sent the acreage for construction of the Irvine price of gasoline soaring and hurt Meadows Amphitheatre, which tourism. Attendance at Lion Country opened in 1981. Shuster said Lion slipped at the same time the company Country rcce1 ves a percc~tage of the was financing new parks in Atlanta popular arena's gross r~1pts. and Dallas. Financial problems One year ago, the drive-through ensued. safari was halted, and the pa.rye began More recently, several animal inci-scc;king new hor.nes for its ~()() dents at the park ended tragically. J-an.1mals. At that time, p~k offiClals Jn 1978 a runaway hippo nam said they planned to begin construc- Bubbles ~luded a search by park tion in late 1984 of aquatic amuse. rangers for three weeks before the ment ccn~er similar to Raging Wat~rs anuna.l suffocated when tranquiliz.ed. 1n San Dimas A May 1985 opening More recently, a 2-year-old boy was was project~d. . . mauled by one of the park's tigers. But a h1lls1 de location at Lion and an elephant trampled a park County was ~etermined t~ be un- zoologist to death stable, prompting the water nde plans Shuster, a former attorney from to .be.scaled doW!' and relocated to an South A~rica, said be~ faith in the • extstmg ent~r:ta1nmei:it are~ at the wild animal attractJon and kept park. ln add1t1on, a city rcVJew took pouring money into it. But ultimate· longer than the developers expected. ly. he said "We cou.ldn't afford to The 1985 opening never happened. kc'.ep it." ' Following last week's council de- He said most zoos are sponso~ b)' cision, ex~utives from Lio n Country ciucs or non-profit sroups. H1ston· and Amen can Sportworld expressed cally, he said, privately-owned confidence that the water rides will be animal parks have not been com-compl~ted before. next summer. More mercially succcisful. r~t1ons projects arc on the As the safari's popularity declined. hori~on . at Lion Couo~. perhaps park officials bcpn branchin& ~ut ma~ng 1t a JUSt matter ofllm e before tnto non-arumal-rclated recreauon Frasier and his furry fnends fade even activities. Lion Country sub-leased further from memory " Wllat do yM like abM& IM Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call tbe namber at left ud yo.r mes .. 1e will be recorded, transcribed and dellvered to~ anroprlatt t4Uor. Tk ume U·laffr u1werta1 service may be ustd t.o record leltert to tilt editor on uy 1..-e. C.trtllle .. tt to oar Letters column must lndade their name ud telepMee Hmber ,., ~trlflc11lon. No rlrrulatlon <'alls, pleau. Tell H wllat'1 011 y•r mta4. Clrculetlon 714/142...USS ~':':' 110_., ....... ORANGE lllily .... COAST r•I Clenttled ..,,.,.tetng 7141142·917'1 Aft other depertmen .. 142-4321 MAIN OPFJCE ...... , Ffldfy " yGIJ 00 ll04 ..... '°" ~ by SIOp111 C)ljlbelot•7pm tNI yo.JI coov .... .,. ~ »O w..i Bey St C:O.ra "'-CA , Ma.I *'Or-&cu 15e0 C.0.1a ""-CA 92626 Setur1My "'° ~y ,. 1°" dO not ·-y'VI ttlO'f ~ 1 a ,.. cal ti.lore frenk Zlnl Editor Roeemery Chur' -.men COnlrollor ~· '* Ol'atlQt C0.•1 ~ ~ No ,._.., flCW• -...111ttant eOtlon.I .... u. Or ~- lfttf't• -.... ....y 119 ...,. oouc.o ""'"°"' "'**" I* ,,_ ol c:opyr'Cl"I - fO • "' #lo Vol OOCly --ii......, ClreuMttoft T ... p.._.. ~ ()11t1g9 Ccounty ,.,_ ..... L..-~ .... ' - Aob9rt L Centrefl ProdVcllon M11nager ttow ... d Mul*'8rf AtJV@f11~•1lO Director Dontld L.WIM&ema Cwcutatlon Manage1 Peoor ... ••n• 011~SlflfJd Ot1ec10f VOL 71, N0 .251 Clouds coniing t o cool off Coast Coat., etc._ wMI doud up tonight and the OYen:eat wtll apreed Into the velteya Mrly Tueeday, bringing cooler ttmpefltlnt to SOuthem C.UtOfnla. the Netlonlf WMtner s.vtoe Mid. ' . Wtttl afternoon C6Mt1no. ru.day'• ~ wt11 reech the low 70t along the bMchea to the 80a In the warmer Inland velleys, the NW8 Mid. Overnight loW9 will be In the 50t and 80a. Ak>no the Orange Coeat t"*-wll be low elOudt lncr .... t)Q a6of'9 the oout tonight and ~Ing Into the vll9ya Tueedty mom1og °*'1no by Tueedty afternoon. Cooler daye wtth high• ,~ irom the low 70. along the bMct'98 to the low and mid 80a warmet lnltnd valteya. Low. In the lower 50t to lower eOt. tJ.S . Te m ps .. Le uttll AoClll 74 64 ~ 70 4.t ~ 76 .. ,. M ........ T1 .. 74 .. MIMll9-cfl M 76 t fOf 8 p.m EDT. Tue , Sept ¥ 0 '"011ns ~~ ... , . W11m-C0t0.....,. Ndlof ... to 47 ........ .. .. Snow era Rain fl.1111.. Snow Occiuot o..,.. s11hon11v -. ~·~ .. 72 65 AllMCa 711 u Atlenno Cily 71 IM .......... n 41 Nt~I WMN< S.-t NOAA U S °"" of C-<t AIMllll ~ .. NtwOl'!Mne " .. ......_. 74 41 NtwYotll 77 66 a.nta Cr\IZ r2 .. alrn•..,,.., n 90 Norfolk.Va.. 74 : Calif. Tem ps Senta Matt. 71 .. llianw«* 90 41 Olilahoma Ctty OIMlle ,. f-ll\09 IO 5t ... ... " 74 12 Yo.mlj•Vly 13 .. 8ollon °"-"Oo 15 72 u ee :t:r low. !Qr 24 ho\lf'9 endlrlQ 91 .s • m ..__ .. 41 ~ 73 61 elleld 71 M "'-1111 IOI 11 Eur•• '3 S4 ~VI 10 42 Surf Report c...-12 $3 ::=r ..... .. 41 f,_ 64 M ~.a.c 1• M 72 44 I..-87 90 ~.w.v 78 42 Potllend, Or .. 50 L.o. ~ IS 03 LOCATIOM 9ID '""" Olwlottt,N.C. 73 ... PrcMclenoa 11 4t OMIMCI 11 5t Hutlt~on 8-11 2-4 ,., ~ eo 41 ="Clfy 13 47 P-~ IS 50 ""-ty.~ 3-8 ,.,, 71 <12 aa 53 Aid llufl e 1 55 40ln Slrt91. Newpoft 3-a lllr Atrlo 74 ~ 74 43 17 Aedwood C4ty 78 5e 22t'ld8trMI.~ 1-6 ,.., .. 41 Aldwnoncl 75 _.. a.cw-to 11 56 Btlf'-WedQe 4-8 """ .. l.oula 71 54 ~ 74 !18 ~Oh. 72 42 ~8-11 1-3 ~ ~.N.H, 72 It 81,....f9npa f1 11 a.n oi.eo n ea SM\C-te 1.3 poor ~tWOtlll 70 .. 8tll Uil• Clfy 11 50 8en ~Wldaco 74 68 .... Mm!> ... = 72 42 8enMlonlo :1 70 8Mlallerbw9 71 M s .... dlt9ctl0n ..,.,.,... 12 a Sen .,__,.P.R. to 75 8IOdllOn to 64 -0. Molf'9e 75 M ... .....,., 11 11 ~lowlof24 "°"'1~111 6pm lpoli-. 9044 ow Nl2 Dtlroll f1 41 Tides ~ • Q ·)'!'-.. 41 ~ II 6:1 llP-12 13 fopelta 78 90 llllhop 16 40 ,.....,., 62 31 T-tOO 75 lllyltlt 106 M TOOAY Tutlll 90 64 Cetl!IN .. 81 feroc> 72 a s.c-dlow 5:09pm o.a ,......,, 75 .. WMNngton 75 62 Long llMc:ill 11 68 u Wldllla S«oncl"""' 11"42 pm Gtetld~ • 44 76 83 ~ IO 61 w.....,.,.. .. 41 Monrollta 92 56 .... , ... 12 46 ~ 71 42 Montet'9f ., 52 lWIOAY .._... tOS 15 l'nllow 514&.m °' Hl9IM ... 44 Eztended NRpotl 8-:11 75 12 ~low 1t.2ta.m 10 ....., 93 n Ontat10 81 57 104 p.m 0.3 Houllotl 12 f1 P*'Sprtnge 106 15 .......... n ~ NIOfll _, "'°"*'O..,...,. OU.· p~ .. 67 SUtl Nie today at 8.51 p.m • tlMI ............ ,. .. wlN fall. Cooler then normal ~ to 5t f..-cley at 1:37 a.111 and -eigelrl M leallt onYll9 78 64 ~ HlgN .. °"' -70 al Sen a.m.0tno to 55 1.67 p.m """*"' 53 41 tM IO 1'lt low etlCI mid 90e In Sen GaM1tll .. M Moon NI• today at 1:23 p.m . ,.._ ~Clly 76 •1 1..111111..-.. 70 "" --Inland .,...,.. l"9 In 5o. San JoM llld ..... eo.. Sant• Ana 11 51 T....a.y at 1:52 a.m. and Nia aoain at 13 eo 1:67 p.m. Victim in jail razor attack files $1 {)million lawsuit By tM Alaodated Presa A man who was slashed with a razor in theOranaeCounty Jail flied a SI 0 million lawsuit against the coun· ty, two police departments and the inmate who alleaedly attacked him. Daniel Ea.rt McBee, 33, who was in the jail on a May 27 Disneyland Hotel trespassina arrest. contends in the Superior Court lawsuit that be re- peatedly told jail deputies that he feared beina harmed by bis cellmate, David Ray Willington, but was ignored. As a result. McBee suffered mul· ti pie lacerations and abrasions on his head, arms. torso and legs. according to the suit. McBee, who said be is a manic depressive, also accused the police departments of Huntinston Beach and Anaheim of negligence for failing to ~ his medical condition and treat it appropriately. McBee said in the swt that Hunt· ington Beach police in an arrest a day earlier were nealigcnt in not placing him in a bealt6-carc facility for 72- hour observation. They released him the same day 'even though police should have known that be "was a danger to himself or others," the suit said. After the May 27 Disneyland Hotel arrest. the suit says, Anaheim police also failed to make sure he received proper medical attention, which he said led to the problem in jail. On May 28, McBee was placed in isoJation after Jail officials were informed of his need for medication. He was transferred to a cell housing Willington and two other inmates the next day. The other inmates were removed from the cell before the attack occurred, a sheriff's official said. McBee was released on his own recognizance May 30 at University of California-Irvine Medical Center where he was treated for bis injuries without ever having been ar'ralgned. Sheriff's records later indicated that he had been "too ill to go to coun." RESCUES .•. From Al IRVINE TRAIN STATION ••. area. Asam the victim had been pulled out to sea by the severe riptides. No other detaJls were avail· able at press time. From Al because of its potential for casing traffi c snarls in the city. "With buses, vanpools and the train serving Irvine, the MMTS bas the potential fof relieving the traffic crunch on the Santa Ana and San Diego freeways," Weiner said, "It's another way to reduce congestion on our city street$." Warren Weber, Chief of Rail Services for Caltrans in Los Angeles, said last week while visiting the site - that the approval represents a positive sign about the relations between Caltrans and Santa Fe. He said Santa Fe bu agreed to stop two trains in Irvine, and said it would participate in a study of the Los Angeles to San Diego Corridor to develop an improvement plan for it. "We are very pleased at the progress being made m this area as.we all plan for future transportation needs," Weber said. Perry said lifeguards on shore bad requested assistance lo save the swimmer when Perry and his partner were patrolling in their boat near the Santa Ana River Jetty. It took them about a minute and a half to reach the stricken swimmer. Deck mate Bloom Jumped into the water, attached a flotation tube, and then brought the victim to the rescue boat. Perry said water temperatures were about 65 degrees and that there wasn't a lot of beach activity Sunday. :married age46 housewife Ob sessive behav ior often ts the first sign of a mental crisis. As 'with other medica l problems. early treatment improves th e chances for a positive outcome. But. every situation is different. That's at 3 00 why there are differ -V8CUUJDS : &.JD.. ent ways to help. The In formatio n Center at Capistran o by the Sea Hospital has a free booklet.on mental crisis. It out lines tne many options you have ava ilabl e. Hospital iza lion is on ly one of them. Call (7 14) 83 1-1787. Yc>U 'll receive thi s u ·eful booklet in abs.olute confi · dence. We've help ed peopl e cope with the problems of today's society for over 25 years. We understand . How ro Handle a Meneal Crisis Newport fir01s aid hospital run In an effort to help raise funds for Childrcns Hoseital of O~nge County, Fieldstone Company and Perry Moms C'orporaho n have become two of the 18 co-sponsors of CHOCs South Coast Oassic SK and IOK Run. The Newport Beach companies will be contributing a tot.al of $7,000 1n this year's race. The event, which raised a total ofS 189,000 last year, will be held Sunday near the new Orange County Performing Arts Center and awards will be given to the top 330 divisional finishc~. For further race information, ca ll charlene at 997-3000, ext. 5084. Autbor to speak T.luuwday Laguna Beach author and lecturer Phoebe Mc~nald will speak ~hursday at a 7:30 p.m. meeting of Laguna's Fnends of the Library. A previous announcement had listed the event for Friday. McDonald will talk about .. types and tempera- ments" at the session, schedul ed for the Laguna Beach Library. 363 Olenneyre St., Laguna Beach. The public is 1nv1ted. Marine planes set practlce The aircraft noise level near the Manne Corps Air Station, El Toro, will become noticeably louder today due to field carrier landfog practice. Other heavy noise days will be Sept. 23, 25 and 30 and Oct. I, according to the Mannes' Public Affairs Oflke. Senlors' movle program set Golden West Colleje's weekly Tuesday Social program for senior citizens resums for its ninth semester Tuesday with a movie matinee, "Adam's Rib," starring Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn and Judy Hollida:y. · The movie will screen at 3 p.m. in forum II on the Huntington Beach campus, and dinner is available in the college cafeteria after the show for those who wish to stay. Admission is free to Gold Key card holders and information on other movie programs may be obtained by calling 891 -3991 . Speech therapy offered The Assistance League of Huntington Beach will offer fall sessions of speech therapy beginning Wednesday and speech therapy evalutat1on on Sept. 28 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For information on either the fall sessions or the evaluation, call 968-6302. Senlors' study group slated An international and domestic affairs study group for senior citizens will begin Thursday from 3 to4:30 p.m. in Room I JO of the Business Building of Golden West College in Huntington Beach. The nine-week program wall be conducted by GWC instructor Charles W. Muser. a former ncwman. The discussions will focus o n events of the week with a view toward studying the function of the federal government. The fee for the nine meetings is S 13 and additional information is available at 891-399 1. Muslc saga at HB llbrary Pianist and mu$1c h1stonan Frank French wall premiere the music program "Gottschalk of Lou1s1- ana,". an Americ-an music saga, Sunday at the Hunt!ngton Beach Library, 7111 Talbert Ave .. Huntington Beach. The 3 p.m. program will consist ofGottschalk's most colorful compositions for solo piano with c~mmentary t.aJcen from the composer's d1arv. Tickets may be purchased from the library or by calling 770-0274. Pre-natal classes ln HB A free pre-natal class for expectant parents to learn about their baby's growth stages and common developments will be offered next Monday from 6:30 to 7: 15 p.m. at Pacifica Community Hospital in Huntington Beach. The classes arc designed to allevaa le some of the fears new parents have and to educate them on w~at to expect during their baby's developmental st.ages. Cont.act Cathy Colwell at 847-1367 for reservations and more information. Monday. Sept. 16 ~- • 7:30 p.m .• Huattncton Beacll City CoU11cl1, City Council Chambers, 2000 Main St. PoucE Loe Or~ Cout DAil V PILOT /Monday. September 16, 1985 NEw s Nous Fires quelled in Orange ~and Riverside counties By tlle Auoclated Prets Firefighters hampered by heat. wind and dense thicket of brush controlled two weekend blazes that charred ntarly 400 iliiilill!lllliillllt acres 1n rcmott' sections of Orange and R1vers1de count1t'11, officials said. Aames feeding on bn.ish and . oak- studded hillsides in the Cleveland Na- uonal Forest in Orange County. wCfc controlled at 6 p.m. Sunday. U.S. Forest Scrvact spolceswomao Cynd) Akao wd The fire. stancd Saturday by children play10R with matches. blackened 75 a~s. she said. No structures were th~tened llnd one minor uvury was ~ported Nearly 200 firdighters from the t '> Forest Service, the California Department of Forestry and the Orange C'oun1-y hrr r~nment battled the bla1e A Wlldijre on C'DF land in R1 ver~1de Count). nonh of the Pala Indian Re'lCr· vat1on 85 mile southeast of Los Anseles destroyed one bouSt and burned 320 acres Forest') spok:eswom.an Janet tern said lht' arw n blaze. which began Saturda) at 2 pm . was controlled at 8 am Sunda~ Tour bus kills girl, 7, at Dlsneyland By lbt AH~laled Press A little girl who was lulled when she fell beneath the wheels of a tour bus in the Disneyland parking lot wa!.1dent1fied as 7- year-old Jennifer F Reid of Torrance. authorities said. The girl was pronounced dead of head inJunes at the scene of the Saturda\. e'ening accident, the Orange Count\ coroner's offic~ said · Jennifer and her uncle wtre looking tor their car when ~ht' foll under the "heeh. ol a bus belongrng to Melin1 Bus Sen ll<' I nl ofSanta Barbara. pohct' Lt Del \\ adt' -..i1d The bus dnver "as not cued, \\/ ade -..i 1d ,,,.._..... Crate WaWna of tbe Chenon aa.nd cutle team apraya water on bl.a company'• prbe-wlnntna Orien tal n llage eculpture at Seal Beach Sunday. Glass chapel set for Crystal Cathedr al Pagoda tops array of sand sculptures By tbe A11oclated Preu year-old contest. By lbt Auodated Preu The Rev. Roben H . Sch'uller c.e lcbratcd his 59th b1nhC1a~ and 1he fifth anniversary of the opening of the Crystal Cathedral 1n Garden Grove by unveahng a model for a S20 m11l1on glass and granite training :enter and chapel Schuller. whose "Hour of Power" tele- v1s1on broadt·ast marked 1t'i 15th an- n1versary Sunday told ,,IXIO ix-opk 'Tlw Crystal Cathedral say~ w<· tx-lu.''<° 1n celebraung. This nc"' stf)Jcturc \3\~ "'~· bd1eve in future generation., .. The 110.000-square-loot I (.·adt'rsh1p Training ( t'ntt'r "'111 huu..e d theater g~ mnas1um . kitchen Ii bran anJ classrooms Creation Chapel "111 ha' C' a glac;c; tloor with fish c;w1mm1ntt ht•n t•.i1h Nearly 3,000 grownups fashioned sandy ::reauons ranging from medieval monsters ro corporate logos and even a giant hamburger. Coke and crumbling frcnch fries in what sculptors calfed some of Southern Californ ia's best sand. "Oriental themes are the most d10icult things to do," Chevron sand sculpting ::apt.ain Craig Watkins said. "There's a lot of detail that's not on some of these other sculptures. It took a real team effon .. Pot harvest seized ln Orange County A team from Carl Karcher Enterpmes 1n l\nahe1m built a hamburger, a Coke hottle and an order of french fries, but team members were dismayed as the fries crumbled at the last minute. Orange ( ount:r ~henffs Depanment narcotics ollieers have hanested 160 pounds of high-grade manJuana found growing 1n rural W1lhams Canyon. Officers removed 45 mature smsemalla plant'i whose buds and leaves 1f dned and sold would ha"e had an estimated street value of S 100.000 Satunla}' d <lt'panmrn1 spoke'iman 'Ml1d No arrests were made The manJuana planb were found gr u"' 1ng in a field in a brushy area near Santiago Can)on and Jackson Ranch roadc; thl· spokesman saad An es ti mated 14,000 spectators wa tched the 70 teams try frantically to outdo each other Saturday near the Seal Beach Pler in a contest kicking off the 1985 United Way campaign in Orange County. Intricate castles, sea serpents. hfe-saze dolphins, computers, the Statue of Liberty and a full-siz.c Volkswagen emerged along the shore, but first prize was won with an onental village crafted by Chevron Corp. employees. Contest Judge Kent Trollen ~1d the sand at Seal Beach was the best qual11y for sculpting. No one hurt ln Fullerton chemical f ire The heavily detailed pagoda featuring footbridges and arches was Chevron's second consecutive victory in the four- "This 1s some of the best sand in Southern California." he said. explaining the sand grains are "a wedge shape, whereas in other places it's more round ·· "Compacting round sand 1s like trying to compact marbles:· he said. "But this sand has smaller grains and 1s easier to pack.·· By tbe Associated Press Aerosal cans shot into the air hke <;kyrockets and drums conuunang deaning chemicals exploded when a fire erupted 1ns1de a Fullenon storage bu aiding housing sannauon suppl} and scn·1ce firms The building's roof caved in but no Laguna pursuing changes in Canyon Road widening plan I . By LISA MAHONEY four lanes and taking the 500 degrCl' curve \a fer for motomts and tht• gn.'<'nl·r. would OttM~,....,.., out of Big Bend would s1gmficantl) alter help soften the iamng !'lfrt t of tht road Laguna Beach Ctty Manager Ken Frank wants st.ate highway officials to make some changes and concessions in their plan 10 widen Laguna Canyo n Road. For one thing. Frank is not so surt' Caltrans should take all the bend out of Big Bcnd.a treacherouscurve thathasbeenthe scene of many fatal traffic accidents. And the state's proposal still tacks provisions for a raised median that cit) officials believe would help reduce col- lisions on the wind1ng countr) road. Frank noted an a memo to the City Council. Studying alternat1 ves to straighten ing out Big Bend and building a landscaped median instead of a painted one are two of the seven recommendations for which Frank will seek council suppon on Tuesday. That's when the council 1s also expected to choose a spokesman to explain the An Colony's concerns over the road w1d en1ng proposal to Caltrans at a Sept. 30 heanng on Its recently completed draft En· vironment.al Impact Report. Widening the highway between Canyon Acres Dnve and El Toro Road from two 10 the appearance of Laguna ran) on. wideni nit Fran!.. "'rote Caltrans en~neers concluded. Deep hill-Other rl'lommenda11on' thl' counu l side cuts and the removal of more than 1wo will cons1<kr indude m1lhon cubic yards of earth ""ould be required to widen the road to four lanes w11h a painted median and bac)ck paths. the draft El R said. Engineero; said widening \\Ould reduce accidents on th e road and 1mpro\e lravd limes on the h1ghwa~ which I'> com1dcrcd Laguna's main l1nl.. "-Ith central Orangt" ( ount) When (all ran-. sought comment\ lln possible widening of Laguna (an} on Road in I 983. Laguna Beach ~nt a letter asking h1ghwa> officials 10 consider alterna11 vc' 10 plowing straight thro ugh the rock outcropping at Big Bend. The> al-.o suggested some kind of road d1' 1der was ncccssar) to p~ven1the1nc1denn· ol l wss median accidents on the road But the draft EIR addrcssc~ ne1t hl·r ~oncem. Frank said 1n the ml·mo Hl· urged Cit) council memhcr; to recommend studying the possibtltt) of reducing thl· bend'scurves without cntirel) removing 11 because ofesthet1C\ and cost fla.,ing a land<.la~d median "0111,t he •Putting all u11ht~ lines along tht• pro1ect area underground •Fun her studies to acertaan thl' efll'l I road widening "'111 ha' e 1111 ca"' on llood1ng prohkm<. •Providing Jcl.'r m1gra11on u1rnJor, l11 pre,cnt being h11 b\ \Chicle' • ln stallat111n o t' a trallil \lgn.il Jt Broad"'a~ and Beath and J ~·dt•,t nan '>lgnal di In 1nl· Ho\\ I to heir , unlr 11l tratli. llo"' intu thl' l It\ •Donating din rl.'mo' l'd Jun ng. "•lkn rng to thl' lit) tor U\l' aboH' In 1nr Ho" I The cit} ha~ long urgrd ( al1ran' to mJl..t 1mpro"ement\ on the l.Un 1ng ro.t<1 th.11 sees heav' commuter .ind rcu\~;11wn,11 11,l fraffi1.: c'ntenng Laguna lkal h h' lhl .:an} on road bad~<; up tor rn1k' dunng !ht \ummer and the road" the , •. :cm· 111 mJn\ acndent'> )l'ar round Caltrans l'ng1neers c;a~ thl· "1Jt•n tn)l prn1ec1 " in line for h'deral llitth""J' \dm1nl\tra11on funding ( um .. •nt dt'\llH,, "-OU Id lO'it hct\\l'l'n $I' and s 14 ~ m1ll1o I 1n1unes were reponed 1n th<.' 111 J11 a m blaze Sunda) on l\rtes1a A.' enue Twen1 ' live workers had to leave a nearb' Hughl.'' A.1rcraft fac1ht) as a prt.-caut111n ag.a1n'1 poss1bh harmful smoke I he eau~ ot the blve 1s undl'r in' c,1111..1-uon. (10\ ne said. - Teen girl ~ets 27yearsfor county murder By tbe Associated Pren .\ 15-~car-old girl luund t11J1ng r, 1 doghnusc in her back)'ard after ht r stepmother was shot to Jl'ath h11' bt·t·r s.entc.-nced to 21 ~ea~ in JU't'n11c' l U'ihllh ( annamon Bro""n of < 131\lt'n < 1r• ', "-CPI as upenor C oun Judgr Rohl· : Fitzgerald .allang rhe '>hn<.111ng J "hc11111u' act .. ~nten~ed her Fnda' art rr J non run tnal .\lthoug.h F1t1gt•r.ild •Hlk rnl J _. 'ear <,entenn· \!1s'> Hr11"' n, '•ulJ h..· t• •1 ltht·ar\or k <.,.a,,he,A1 nn11I tx 111 1J t" It t al1h1rn1J) 11uth ..\ulhnnh ,Jlh 'hl •u H r \tl'rm .. tht·t I 11 ,t, \t.1r1 t Ii· • ~ \{ "'J\ \hut in ht·1 ,Jn p t"' ' "1 l t . .i :-. .. a 1hcr n."' 111\ a \l,u1 h I" -\ltl•r thl' l..dlrn~ pol1,e ln1111J .i ,,,.Jxl,JUghta h1d1nl( 1n .1 llogh11u,,· ht:I n 1 th<' tJrn1h ·,home 1ln C )l1·.1n Hn·1·1c I h 'lutt ht·J 1n her han1! "" 1 hJnJ "'nlll n1,11· th.11 real! 'Dt'.tr C 11\ll pk.t'l l111L \l nw I J1Jn't mcan h hurt h1·1 ·· \ hand"'n t1nii. l'\('l('rl tnt1l1t•d Ji r ni· 1hl'mal th:it1 t "'.l'"nw·1 h th1 ~11 1 1•11 1-l I 11111t ra id r1·1nmnwrHkd thl' lt'l'n •W• 1 tx llT1f'rl'4 1nl·d in J I.It tl tl\ Ill \ l'll l I I 1\l)l'll \hl \A. Ill ft'l l'I \l' J'''' h 1.11 f h ( •1 I rTh nt tnJ ht• hnu'><'.'J "'1th 1-urJ, hl'I 11\A. II •'P Girl, 17, raped at knif epoint at Irvine Meadows concert H1gh"a' alltl1r'"· th{' "llllm l\)ltl police ~unda' Fountaln Valley .\ 1h1l'frrpontdl) d id~ 11JtldamJgl· to a "'h1t1· 1'185 Volko;w:igtn Jetta • whtn ht' \tole the car''i stereo Sunda\ The tnl 1dcn1 took place in the 171 l~) block of Brookhu~t treet par~t'd 1n th~· '>4t)(l hh1\ ~ "1 .t .. .-h,, l "nr \11nd;1\ • • • \ Motobccant' 111.,1wt·d "''' ' It "a" reported \tolrn 1iiin .1 lt011111 along Oal 1 re~ L.!nl' \un,t." f ht bike wa<, estlmatl'd ll• h..· '4 111111 hetwt'en S200 and $400 • • • \ \ \1 1t , .11 \tl'rt'o "J' rcr-1nt'.I ,., l i Ir• •m an unl111. l..t'l1 'rhi. Ii p.1rl..t·d 1n tht• lti' l hlod 111 <•rt1n111 \und 1~ • • • "•m l·t1mt· in the pa'il 1hrl't '4l'l ~ ,,,n '"'nl' rt'portedh hr11l..l int•• .1 h•tn h in tht• :~()ti hhx k ol I l1111d.i .1n.! ,1,1ll S 1011 1n rao;h .ind 'I""' 1r.1m .1 ,h.tn(I.<.-hnnl... the \l\llnl 1old f"•l1<1 A 17-year-old girl was raped during a rock concert at Irvine Meadows Ampruthcater late Saturday by a muscular. knife-wielding man, police reported today. Irvine Sgt. Jim Broomfield said the girl was returning from the restroom when sbe was accosted by the knife- wieldina man and forced into a seat at the back of the arena where she was raped. Dctwecn 50 and 100 conccrtgocrs l'f ewport Beacb A $2,000 boat telephone was re- ported stolen from a vessel moored at a slip in the 2100 block of Wcat Coast Hi~way Friday. • • • Someone reportedly stoic a -backpack contain in& S 10 1n cash. a wallet, a watch. and a jacket from the beach near Colton Saturday momina. • • • An Ontario sheriffs deputy re- ported Sunday that tb.icvcs stole four hubcaps wonh $380 from his blue 1983 Chevrolet Caprice parked in the Reridcvous lot last Tuesday. • • • A $2,000 inflatable ltfc raf\ was reported stolen off a bolt moored at a slip an the 1800 block of Bayside [)Tive unday. • • • Jewelry valued It $4,SSO was reported stolen from a home alona Jasmine Creek over the weekend. Coeta lleM were seated not more than 30 feet from where the attack took place, according to Broomfield. Sec urity gu ards at the amphitheater told Irvine police tht'y saw the attack but did not inllally realize the woman was being raped. police said. The assailant was later chased by security guards who said th_ey lost the man in the crowd of 6,200 people. They dC1Cribcd the assailant as being A rtsident in the 400 block of Fair Drive reported that $46 in cash and two aold watches valued 11 S7SO were stolen from his home over the weekend. • • • Officials at the Sun Time USA. Inc. reported Saturday that a $900 office copier, two S7SO typewriters, two S4S addina machines, and a $40 clock radio wcrt stolen. • • • A resident in the I 00 block of C'lcarbrook Lane reponed Saturday t.hat a S6.000 color araphics com- puter. SI OO lo food and S6 in coins wert stolen from bet Mme. Soat.la Coanty A M1ssfon Viejo rei1dent rcponed Wednesday that someone stole a S 100 portable TV /radio and a SSO telephone ftom hts home in the 2~ block of Barents. • • • Someone rtportedl> 'tole a girl'' about 20 years of age and having light brown hair cut in punk rock fashion. The attack took place dunng a c-0nccrt by X. a popular Los Angeles new wave group. Police said they don't know wh} other oonccn-t ocn did not &I) to halt the attack or summon help. The victim, who is a resident of Orange, was talcen to Western Medical Ccntt'r in Santa Ana, where she was t~ated and released. Murray 10-specd b1qcle from an front of an El ioro home in the 24200 block of Twig sometime Tuc'lday or Wednesday. La&un a Beach An Aster Stttct resident callro pohcc Sunday ni&ht Wlth complaints of a prowler 1n the area. The suspc-ct was dcscnbcd as a 2S-ycar-old male. stand in& 6 fttt tall with medium build and darlc, curly hair. wcarina a short leather jacket and white pants. Of- ficers were unable lo locate the suspect. • • • Camera equipment val\Jcd at S 7 0 was rtportcd stolen undl)' afkr· noon ftom a South oast ti1ghWB) home, the victim told poh~ • • • A SI SO tree was stolen from a planter unday momina on South Coast H1ahway. • • • ~ wollet w11h IS credit c~rds ..,., n:portC'd ~t~n from a ~uth (' '' - • • • Someonl' reportedly brokl' 1ntu ,1 lcx.ked. tan 1981 Volvo and stoic an en..clope contarnmg S4.300 in cash The 1nc1dcnt took place ~turda) in the I R800 block of Palm • • • >\ hurglar reported!~ broke into a homr 1n tht' HDOO blocll. of 4\anta Bchnda on aturday and -stoic s 14.100 in JCWCll). s I. I()() Ill t'a'>h. and S2lXl 1n audw/ .. 1dl'<1 r~u 1pmt'nt 1.-.tne ( a\h totaling lrs" than $50 "'a' rcpont'd stolen from a locl..C'J "ch1 l k T oddler h i t by car, hurt .\ 11'>-yrar-old ( O"I\ Mc..a ho' ~une~d a skull fracturt and internal 1nJunts after ht coddled into the po.1th of a car unda' evC'n1na. pf>lll'<' reported Jcn.-m' Robct'l (1u1llt'n was rt'· poncd in stablt c~nd1t1on this n\ory- 1na 1n the intens1' e carT umt et Wt,tt'm Med1C'al C rnter 1n Santa Ana at Ron Smith '81d yo ung Gu1lltn wa~ w11h his father in lht' front yl\rd of their home on Wal'°n . ll"«'t when ht suddrnl walkC'd into the l'Oldwa}. near 1onro., 1a •\ vtn\,c about 6 \0 pm .. • • • .\ car \tert'o wa' f l'J)(•rtl\I 'l"k n lrom a \Chick par ~l·d 111 thr ''1 w block of M1chd\on n mc \1111.t.i. The thief al-.o Jill J,1m J!H' "' th\ con' t'n1bk top T hl· 1,,~, ,ind 1!.1"1.1>'' amounted to more 1han \~ • Huntington Beac h lluhcap-; and km ~'"l'h ""rth SI 00. were ""lklrtl'J 'wkn Ir• •m .1 I "PO Por;chc IJ 14 pM~l·d 1n lrnnl "' Manna High \\.ho~•I lt111: • r.ll!l \unda' • • • ·\ S ''O l M \lt'rt'll "J' ri·1~1rlr•I stolen lrom a gra' l<J\'I \ nll.'"J~l·n Rabb11l·lln,cn1hle p.11l.1·d 111 1hl· .l\JIK1 \ 111Ja, • • • l1·"elr. "' 1nh SI noo anti .1 ,1rt1 \I I \\Onh S~ll IN('r(' n:fl(1fl('J \h•lt O 111,n a h1"'rTil' in thr 14 ~oo hit 11. i.. , ,, '""a l\unJa\ P11l11r f'tJ)Ort' -..'lid the 'l"Pt'~ t al,t1 rnnYl l.C'l1 thC' rt''\llkn11· • • • < J\h 1nt:1lintt S I '\: "".!' n·rtfr1.-d 'h11c.'n !H'm lht· '>tilt' 111 .1 hu\rnt·" u I '!\hi" &:h h Rh '' 'unJa' . . . I "h1nit C'\Jlllf'mt·01 "' •n h<.' ~ .11111 S 'll(l ~·~1'h \\ .l\ fC'fli 1n l•d 'h 1(1 fl I< Ill I l al..leland '1nrr '>11.1 \I .l1n!{n \\ 'unJa, County j ail inmad s t abbe d i n shower \ 1.lil 1nn1.\I<' ~ii' ,1.1hh<'d "htk taking a c;h111Arr ,rntl li\l" othr1 pn\f•ncrc. wcrt 1n111ml 1n .1 h-.tli(l.ht 1n scplrete 1n< 1tk-n1, ot "11tlt."r'k c.-\unda' n1ah1 at the Ora nae< nun1, J.i1I 'Ra-. -\ Pen;i a :i \ \t't1r -old inmate 1n cu,l<.'Kh on .in Jtl<'mptC'<.I murJt"r charge llUt uf\unUl -\na. wa' \labht"d in the bacl . upper lcf\ arm and O('('k at S lO pm 1n a 1111 \hower aft'a Al'C'ord1ng to Ornnse < ount\ 'hmfl lt 01d10lc;on Prnn \\8\ trt'atrd h\ P3film<'\11 <.' h1:h1r<.' h<-1na ta ~cn I<' I ~ I l\h d u .ii l \'ntn in Oan~e He " 111 ..i.ihk \11ndtllllO hll.J,l\ I 1,~1nmate1> v.eft' 1n1 urr<i <'4'tht'r in the r'rning "'ht"n a h\tfi.ih1hrol..r11u1 in a ~4 man dorm at the wunt\ 1a1l I ho\<' IOJUred v.C'r~ \1e't Pa,nt' htftd lat·era11<,n, RC') t (>q,40~. brokt'n I•'" Rohm \ A~UC'1. t\roken wn'\t Jllmc' Hopn N\dr. •n)un. and 1.<iv.tt'nl < Jaffe 1n1ured nRJlt hand l )l'lon '81d hnth 1 nn~nh arr un1kr 1n' e't1ptmn • L I I ... Or9f9 Ooelt DAILY PtLOT /Mondty, Septtmber 18, 1985 Truce drafted in Nicaragua Guardian Angels jailed in LA flap LOS ANOELES (AP)-Guardian were released late Sunday on SSOO "We'retalkinj_!)eavydruas-heroin, Anael• founder Curtis Sliwa. arrested bail each, be said. cocaine and PCP. They are usina the for bloc~ traffic in a dnla .. troublcd "They were b&odcina traffic and youna kids i.D that block to be the Hollyw neiabborhood, said from throwina brochures at pasaina can° runners. The residents have bad it. Canada: U.S. should foot its share of acid rain bill PANAMA OTY, Panama (AP)- A new pace plan drawn up by the Contadora po\lj) auarantees the lef.. tiat ~me of Nicat11U& the riaht to exist tn peace~ aod calls for the withdrawal of U.S. and otbtt fOTei&n fol"CIOI from Central America. AOQOrdina to the draft. made avail- ab&e to the Aslociatcd PRn Sunday by a diplomatic tounie wbo db- manded anonymi~ .for protooof reatons, foreian mUitary adviaers in Central American arc to be withdrawn and foreian bases and other installations closed. a jail cell that tesidents were fed up on a buty thoroupfate, Lowry said. About 30 Ouatdian Anael• were in with police inability to curb crime. ·•Officen ukiMcdSlth:em to ~d t .. ~~~~ ~the neiabbow~,20<'~, pauall sina on.utOunyet o"f BJ......._ .a.---......l-... Prea The Guardian Anaels were called street, but r. 1wa llU mo~ .... deale -- in to petrol the area last week by the publicity and wanted to be borh . Off the block ... or MINETT Ontario _ u .S. citizens shou_ld view ·~.increase of' ~P' t~ 2 residents diuatis.ficd with police tmttcd. We effecicd an arrest." elae." nt in meir electric bills as a "small pnce to pay 10 fi~t ~id ~n. res~nte to an etealation ln dru& C&llina the neiahbotbood "truly a "We wereuked by the neiahboruo perce rdina to Canada's environment minister. "We have 10 do s1m1lar thinas l1'1ftickin£ Sliwa said Sunda_y. mutanll nest of cfrua dealin&." Sliwa be here and we will be here until 3 = .. the minister, Tom McMillan, told a news co~fe~nce Sun<?,y, on the eve Sliwa. -31 , and fellow Guardian said the pretence of 30 Ouatdian a.m .. and we wiU have spot petrols of a 'muaive conference of scientists studr.in• ~c1d ""n. <;anadian anCad U.daS. Anaels Wayne Villafranco and Scott Anaels was delianed to put the dNa lh.rouabout the week in thit area," tcientilU that about balf of the acd ram falb_na LO ~stem na McK.eown were booked for invest!Ja-uafficken on notice. Mid Oanny Lewis of the Wettaide Lot orl.inatet ~r pollution in the United States. McMillan sa1~ the best cost I.ion of disobeyioa a police officer, s,t. "They ( drua dealers) have Anaelet chapter of the Guardian ~timatet be had seen of u .S. measures n~ed to c:ont~I the chief poll~tant - Jim Lowry wd. Sliwa and Mc Keown saturated the nei&bbotbood," he uid. Anael1. sulfur dioxide emitted by power plant arid tndustnal boil en -wouJd increase ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l thea~~u.~cl~ci~bill1~1 .s~~nt~2~~nt. - - Join Now and Get One Month's Dues Freel THE SPORTING HOUSE • T ne Soo•hno Houu ... ,yt1>11>9 you n .. o to 'UP .,Ou• bOdy ht •nd be1utllul ftiat1i1rinq •N1u1thn • L 11e Cyc•e\ • 14 Aacqutlb•ll Co1."'' •Yotlewb•ll tnduo•i •lnOnflduet E ••'C'••• P1091em& •S•un• Sr•u" J•c u111 •lu•UHOii• Lock•t F•c1uht' ····••tblll •n 1111•••• S•• l•ne l•o Poot & Sun DK• •2 S•nd Yo4leyb1ll Courl• •A.@c,ObtC' •Ciani St•Hn t V •SOC••f ACl1w•t1e1 •Ae,ttu,ant •Crutd Cate •tnquir• About Out COfpCH•t• Memoe•\n10~ Tl>t Sp0tltnq HnvH Where 8Hutitul 8od1u lh9on 3601 Jam oree, Newport Beach (714) 752·0565 SU RGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Smoking By Pregnant Women May · Re sul t in Fetal Injury, Pre mature Birth, And Low Birth Weight. 12 mg "1ar." C 8 mg mcolm!! av per c1gare11e, FTC Report Feb ·95 • Pl"'°C> Morns Inc 11111!1 THE PE ECT DO YOU HAVE HYPERTENSION? We are .investigating ·a new medication shown to be effective in. treating hypertension •. · Participation in this study includes M.D. Supervision, lab testing, E.K.G.s, medications, a n d is free t o all part icipants. For more information Call After 2 PM 640-7412 Parliament CESS Re·cess (Webster): A break from activity fo r rest or relaxatio n. Re·cess (Pa rl iament): A unique fi lter for extra smooth taste and low tar enjoym ent. . •, "'61J~ klll• 28 people ln f!'~ll BEIRUT -Moslem militiamen battled with artillery, rock~ts a~d monan in the nonhem port city ofTr:ipoli, for a .second day today. Poh~ sat~ 28 peop.l11e died, includina IO soldiers killed 1~ their sleep when mortars ht! their barracks. Sixty-eiaht people, 40 of them S?ld1ers ~rom t~e Lebanese army s 2nd bripde alto were wounded in the fighllng. {>:Ohce wd. Two ~ortar rounds cruhed into the bripde's barracks on Tripoh's outsk.i~s ove_m1ght, and later four more mortan and six rockets llit the complex. Pohcc said that the shells I.bat hit the barracks probably "'.ere strays because the army has been on the 1idelinet durina the militia fighung. Duarte dalf61Jter'• releaae negotlated DALLAS-The Salvadoran government is negot~ating for the release of PretidentJose Napoleon Duane's k.idnapocd dau~ter an excha~ge for at least one imprisoned guerrilla leader, the ~las Mo~nmg_ News wd today. The Newt attributed the information to a diplomatic official and a Salvadoran official neither of whom was identified by name. Ines Duarte Duran was abdu~ Tuesday as she was arriving for an aftemoo~ class .at the New Univenity of San Salvador. No one has taken credit publicly for the kidnappina. More oU at leu ca.t aeen ln deal NICOSIA, Cyprus -Saudi Arabia ~as co~clu~ed dcal_s w1th thr~ major U.S. oil companies that couJd lower the pncc of tts oil and nusc ~r~uctJ~n. the MiddJe East E.conomic Survey reported today. The autbontallve 0 11 and economic publication, published in Nicosia, said the deals on the basis of "netback price" with Exxon, Texaco and Mobil have been "confirmed beyond doubt." Netbeck pricing relates crude oil prices to market prices for refin~ ~troleum products in certain markets. M.iddle East ~on_omic Survey said that using such a scheme could lower the pnce for Arabian light crude by S2 to S3 below the $28-~r-bam:I official OPEC pnce. _ L.-- NATION 1Vorken llglJt to%1c •plll ln Te.as SAN ANTONIO, Texas -Emergency crews built a dam and dumped tons oflime into a river to neutralize highly corrosive sulfuric acid that spilled from derailed tanker cars, ltjlling thousands offish and fordng the evacuation of 300 ~ople, officials said. At least seven workers were burned by the acid today. one seriously. "It looked like beer cans just tom apart," Carl Mixon. Bexar County fire marshal, said of the 29 cars that crash&! down an embankment in the Saturday night derailment. UA 1V vota on General Dynamics pact WARREN, Mich. -A United Auto Workers official says a tentative agreement between the union and General Dynamics CofP-. Wlll be ratified, while local leaders argue that the pact offers few gajns and will be rejected. The contract agreement was reached at 2:45 a.m. Sunday between GeneraJ Dynamics, the nation's third-largest defense contractor, and the UAW, which re~nts S,000 workers in three states, company officials said. "We expect it will be turned down," said Sandy Jasmin, financial secretary at UAW LocaJ 1200 in Warren. She said UAW bargainers forfeited three floating holidays and agreed to reductions in cost ofliving allowances. Fugltlve. IJunted ln trooper •laylng SPRING CREEK, N.C. -Police used tracking dogs and a helicopter equipped with infrared sensors today to search rugged mountain forests for two "woods-savvy" fugitives suspected of killing a state troo~r. and said they believed the men were surrounded. "The area has been contained by road blocki and roving cars. We'll be adding to the road blocks and roving can, and we're brinaing the helicopters back from Asheville, and we're puttina some fresh dogs on it," Highway Patrol Sgt. George Dowdle said today at the manhunt command post. Dowdle said about 200 peo_ple from some 20 qcncics were taking part in the search in western Nonh Carolina. Safety valve blamed ln clJemlcal leak SOUTH CHARLESTON, W.Va. -Union Carbide Corp. officials blame a ufety valve that o~ned accidentally for a ~trochemical leak that fired off wami~alarms .. The Saturday night leak was the seventh reported in Kanawha County a "chemical valley" 1n the past five weeks. Carbide spokesman Mike Lipscomb said less than 100 pounds of mono methyl amine, a raw ~trocbemical ingredient, leak~ at the com~ny's South Charleston plant when the safety valve o~ned on a piece of equipment. Lipscomb said the leak wa1 contained and no injuries were reported. Battle .clJool• up ante to teaclJen The Seattle School District sweetened its contract proposal by S I million in an effort to resolve the nation's largest teachers' strike, which has idled 43.SOO students. but a union spokesman still recommended rejection of the $7.2 million peckqe, Elsewhere. striking teacben in Pawtucket, R.1., were expected to apin defy a judae's beck·to-worlt order after 2S houn of weekend nesotiationt failed to settle the dispute. Nationwide, about 8,000 teachers were on strike, atrectina almost 11 S,000 students in seven states. including Michipn. Penntylvania, Ohio, New Yorlc and Illinois. RMIU to IJold ne ... conference Tue.day W ASH.INGTON -President Reapn will hold a White House news conference Tuesday nisht. bis fint formal meetina with reporten since his colon cancer •WJCry f uly 13, it was announced today. Spokesman Larry Soeakea Mid Reapn wiU meet with the press corps in the East Room at S p.m. Pl>T and the event will be televised. The president's last news conference was held on June 18. At that time, he answered questions about the TWA hostqe crisis. LA HeJJ u leader ln ne11r teclJnoloD LOS ANOELES-TechnoloCY will continue to have a sip ificant impact on employment opponunitics and Los Anaclcs will lead mljor cities in new i9bs over the next decade, a study sponsored by the DeVry Institute of TechnoloCY show.. lo the Lot Antcles area, JOb openinp for elcaronict and elec:uical technicians will po1t an inmate of 6,620 by I 99S, QC>mputer proanmmen by 6,160 and computer analyaU by 6..s-00, the study releued today uid. As a result, the ttudy said Lot Aneelea wiU account for nearly 2S percent of the 7914SO Jobs upccted to~ aenerated in the thote three catqories throuahout CaUrom1a, ~n and Washinaton. S''• BamanJ•t Party omce bombed SAN f'llANCISCO -A pipe bomb e~oded today at the local office or the Humanist Pany but cauted minimal dam• and no ntjuries, aooord.i.Jla. to police. Theblastdamqedadoorand window,taid peny1poketwoman Nicole Myers. Two party members were lntide when the devk:e went off. she said. Police said no anall have been made. Mym said the pany hat bra.ncha thfOUlhout the world. The orpnlzation'a aims include an end to ditcrimination, jobt for aU, and free health CIR' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, s.c>tember US, 1985 A.a --------------------------------~--------Hostage JewslashBradleyover Farrakhan release LOS ANGELES CAP) -Mayor in Bel·Atr. words, but \be lld U'\llb at that there white Ameria a.nd Israel and called Tom Bradley's behct that his reluc-The_y predicted lona. ·ttnn damqe were PllNaFS that contained stron.. for black Americans to forp their tance to condemn ~u1s Farrakhan from Bradley's llr&te,IY of silence. daiw:rous undercurrents of antt· own eoooomy r1thcr than rely on U.S. helped free Sovtetdtsstdents t • 11 t contributed to a toned-down speech "You and a hott of our black Semitism. whites. by the Muslim leader was not shared brothers have chosen to remain silent The mayor also said his pubtjc During his speech, Faria.khan ac-s 1 n 0 by Jewish leaders, who called the at the very moment wbeo every silence on the controversial black cusc:d Israelis of oppress1n1 the BAL TlMORE (AP) -Prnldent Reagan has privately told some st.au: legisbton that the Un1&ed St.ates arranaed an cxcbanae with a top Soviet leader lo wtn the releue of Soviet d1ss1dcnb. a published report said mayor's stratcay irTCSpons1blc. moral imperative requires you a.nd leader wu partially sua:cssful in Palestinians. . ff• • 1 Jewish leaders, angered by far· them to speak up loudlr,. clearly and dissuadina Farrakhan from cngagin* "I have a problem wuh the Jewish 0 le la rakban's speech calling Israel a in a fortbri&ht manner1 ·Allen Free-in the "rhetoric of racism and hate' people and not becau~ I am hateful "wicked hypocrisy," attacked btm hlini, rabbi at Universuy Synqogue, he had used elsewhere. of the Jewish people but becauK I The Baltunore Sun reported 1n today's ediuons that Reapn ma.de the statement late La.st week 1n a closed meeting in Ta.mpa, Fla.. wtth 12 member$ of lhc conscrvatJvc Amencan Le11sla u ve Exchanac Anonymous call says kidnapped Amer1can set free in Lebanon BfIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -A U.S. Embassy official here said today he could not confirm the claim by an anonymous telephone caller that the Rev. Benjamin Weir, one of seven Americans kidnapped in Beirut, had been freed . The caller told a Western news agency in Beirut Sunday that Weir was released Saturday night. The caller claimed to be speaking on behalf of Islamic Jihad, or Islamic Holy War, a group which claimed in previous calls to be holding the seven Americans. He spoke in Arabic and hung up when asked for details. Cameron Hume, political officer at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, told the AP, "We have absolutely no such information." Senior police officials in Beirut and officials of Amal, the dominant Shiite Moslem militia, also said they had no word Weir was freed. Weir, 61, a Presbytenan minister oriJinally from Salt Lake City. was kidnapped in Moslem west Beirut on May 8, 1984. Weir was named a missionary in Lebanon in 1953 and worked in pannership with the Na- tional Evangelical Synod of Syria and Lebanon. The last word of him came when Islamic Jihad distributed color Polaroid photographs of six Western hostages to a Beirut daily in June. Weir. the oldest of the American ludnap victims. looked extremely drawn and haggard. The other kidnapped Amencans arc: Former Huntington Beach resi- dent David Jacobsen. 54, adminis- trator at the American University Hospital: William Buckley, 57. a political officer at the embassy in Beirut; Peter Kilburn, 60, a librarian at the A111erican Uni versity in Beirut; the Re v. Martin Lawrence Jenco. 50. a Roman CJlthohc pnest; Terry A. Anderson. 37. chief Middle East correspondent for the AP; and Thomas Sutherland. 54. acting dean of africulture at the Amencan Uni- versity. Colleges 'must fan creativity' WASHINGTON (AP)-Amenca must develop an entrepreneurial spirit and a sense of civic respon.s1 - bility in its college graduates or nsk losing pre-eminence 1n the worl.d's economy, a Carnegie Foundauon report said today. The U.S. system of higher educa- tion 1s "the best in 1he world," bul needs to change "to encourage creative and chaJlengjng thought and 10 stop stifling these characterisucs." the study said. The report by Frank Newman a.lso sharpl y cri ticized the "excessive loans" many college students now are being forc.cd to shoulder. "A student who leaves college wnh a large debt burden may well feel he has already assumed all of the risk that he possibly should." said New- man. who charged that the trend toward loans may "inad venently undercut trad1t1 onal values" and make tt harder for graduates to buy homes or c.ars. The repon aJso cited graduates' emphasis on matcnal1sm and lack of civic involvement. saying, "By every measure we have been able to find, today's graduates are less in.terested in and less prepared to exercise their civic respons1bilittes." . Newman's report. "Higher Edu~: tion and the Amencan Resurgence, is the latest in a volley of rcfo~m rcpons that began 21h years ago with "A Nation At Risk" by the National Comm1ss1on on Excellence in Educa- tion. Newman. a former president of the University of Rhode Island, .w~s the author of two studies comm1ss1oned by the Department of Heal.th Educa- tion and Welfare that influenced federal education policies in the early 1970s. South Africa vows to halt apartheid WASHINGTON (AP} -South Africa's white mmonty government plans to dismantle apartheid and p-ant blacks the npit to vote, acoord- 101 to that nation's Ambassador Herben Beukes. Bcukes dec:li ned to discuss specific ste~ durina an interview Sunday on NBC-TV's "Meet the Prns." but said, .. The decision hu been made. yes to move away (rom apartheid. to dismantle apanheid." He said the South Afncan parha- ment would take up pro~s.retard· ina cimcnsh1p for th~ nation s black majority and nqohat!o.ns Wlth black ica<tcn for furthu pohtic:aJ refonm. Sunday as an anti-Semitic dema-said Sunday in a letter to Bradley. Rabbi Marvin Hier. dean of the have declared to the world they arc goaue and said Bradley's failure to Durinaa City Hall news conference Sunon Wiesenthal Center for Holo-not the chosen people of God," he speak out harmed black-Jewish rela-Sunday, Bradley criticized Farrakhan caust Studies, said Farrakhan's said. . · Council. tions. for generatina "danaerous under-speech was "sheer demaaoguery." Farrakhan p ined national prom1- "We mourn the lack of black currents of anti-Semitism" in "He did not tone down his hatred," nenc.c last year as a supponer of the fonitude in the face of bigotry," suburban lnaJewood the night before. he said. Rev. Jesse Jack.son's bid for the Rabbi Isaiah l.eldin said, referring to "The harsh languaae ... and the lo his speech Saturday night to presidency and gamed notonety Bradley in his Sunday Rosh Hashana tone of hatred were not used," 14,000 people at the Forum in when he called Judaism a "gutter service atthe Stephen S. W 1sc Temple Bradley ... ~il$. "He toned down his ln&Jewood, Farrakhan castigated reh&lon" and Hitler a "great rnan ... Participants in the mccuna told the Sun that the president wd he had promised not to boast of lh.e U S. role in the release 1f the d1ss1dcnts were allowed to emigrate. # Get Advantage Checking~• from Great American. $300 minimum balance. No service charges. No kidding. That's it. Just keep a low $300 minimum balance m your Advantage Checking account and there are no scrv'icc charges. You won' be charged for a lot of other tim! and money saving services. either. More free services with Advantage Checking. You'll have 111.,~ 10 Money l....ine':"' part of Great Americm' telephone banJang system. You can aut<>- JTI.1tically transfer money from your checlcing acrount to~ Grca1 American accooncs. And vice versa . You can al~ use Money Line to check your balaoce anytime you want to. You can ~thonz.e any Great Amencan loon or credit card ~ym:n1 to he made automaoca.lly from yoor account. No check to wntc. No~ to fllY· .. • • ens1ve. 24-Hour banking. Your Advantage Checking Pm.\<Ylrrl'-pu~ 0\ er one huroreo 24-Hour Teller-at ymr hngert•P' With c.irnw money. [)epol-11 1nonc)' Do 11 .JI an)1tme. an) day. Sllll nn charge. ) Your P.A'-~ ah.o plug~ you in111 ili.: STAR'~ SYSTEM l'ldWOrl. Ul-C 1t to get up tu $200 a dJ) at any of over UXXl ATM!> 1.lL'J)laytng the STAR SYSTEM !>ymbol. Some checking account optiom. Perllap. you want a cherkmg lll"\."Otmt ll"ll ~t)' interest. Great Amencan ha.' t.hty..c, 1111> Interest Chee.king pl)" 5 '• 1'f 1ntcn."1 oo \our lx1.lance And there Me m -.cf'\ k.'C (~ " t..·n \\'Ill mamwn a SI .cro m1mmum rolafll.'\' lmured Moneymarkec Checking JXIY' high moneymarkl'1 mte~ with lW ) a I .CO) t'Wanx Y<Ai'U earn even tughcr tnlC~ "1th J t'<llan..'l' oJ SS.CXX> or rn,)O!. Lf your l'lalanl.,-e 1a11, hcl<"" Un l. you'U -.till eam 51.4 'l-inte~ And )t-1'11 h.t\t' unlmuted chcckwrn1ng pnv~ Opell wur J(WUnt h\ phone. t aJI toU-fr~t· 1-~M)..4~ '-B \' ~ f ht.· hrun \. t.i.I Lull: \~, 1.111-.t "111 • irx·r ' >tll .J\.u 'lint 1"1 ~ phone. then -.c.•111.I '• lll .tll th· 111.-. l""''r' h 'ml.' h\ 111 • .ul A ll th.if, kit I' ·' ~UI\. ~ \,,II Ill UK.' I ~h\."t• lll'..lf \\ lll 'Wlll ,to.'\.\ llllll u ti h.1d .. l'\.I h\ (m·.11 Am1.'rl\..JJ1' 1n 1 \t'..if' ,11""Ill"1111.tf"-IJI 111.in.l~l' nlt"nt.11\1.•r S"' h1ll1Pn m ·•'"''" .md I \I I< m'llr.lfll.c ....,., I O\,lllt'f \\ hl1 ti h. '11\1111 \'"I 'I!<"...,., ,ti ( 11\'.ll \ll)l'l"l\..lll "' lll'\l'I l••l~l'I '•"Ir\' Ull tU'~'lfl-. . .'r t 111t1n.1f'll.1.tl '4.''' h.l'' h•r I"-f'4lf\..tl 'Ol'r\K1' \1~J ,l11A.I\' h,J\l' till .11.h.1111.l~'l ...... . . . . " . I . . I \ . • • • Ferguson should let apology slip from 'lodse Ii ps' Rambo speaks. And his constituents along the Orange Coast blush -with emba.rranment. Newport Beach Assemblyman Gil Ferguson has certainly made bis mark in Sacramento. It won't be easy to erase. No, the fresh man Republican legislator hasn't been shy. Too bad. Perhaps if Ferguson had listened more and talked less during his first term in the Legislature, the rest of the state wouldn't perceive Orange County as a haven for Neanderthals and Nazis, where the poli ticaJ mean (or is that mean politics) falls somewhere to the right of Genghis Khan and Benito Mussolini. l=erguson's latest faux pas -in the grand tradition of Orange County's famed statesmen John "Machine Gun" Schmitz, Bob "Macho" Doman, and Robert "Ay Mc to the Moon .. Badham-is to condemn a proposal to take .. ~payer money" and give it to a .. non-public use." The taxpayer money is $750,000 requested by state Sen. Art Torres, 0-Los Angeles. The so-called .. non-public use" would be to help build a museum to honor the contributions made by Japanese-Americans in the development of California. "I would like to remind you that after World War II, the U.S. Marines paid for their own memorial with their own nickels and dimes," Ferguson said, before uttering this monument to insensitivity, bigotry and dull- headcdness: "If the Japanese can't afford one, they don't deserve one." . As Ferguson took his seat after denouncing the bill as an .. improper expenditure'' and insulting Japanese- . Americans everywhere, the ex-Marine Corps colonel was hooted by. his colleagues. who were chanting "Rambo! Rambo!0 The moniker was awarded earlier this year after Ferguson tried to have former anti-war radical As- semblyman Tom Hayden, D-Santa Monica, drummed out of the Legislature as a traitor. Hayden remains and the unflattering Rambo nickname stuck on Ferguson. More unflattering were the remarks from As- semblyman Richard Aoyd, who caJled Ferguson a "racist" and 0 a disgrace" for making the remarks on the Assembly floor. It's hard to deny the charge. Ferguson does, of course, but in the same breath he labeled Japanese- Arnericans a "speciaJ interest," singling them out as somehow different from white taxpayers, or black taxpayers or Mexican-American taxpayers. Ferguson in his narrow-minded way forgets that he represents all taxpayers. The assemblyman is out of step. Orange County residents would lilce to dispel the myth that John Birch is alive and well here. Conservatism, with a healthy dose of fiscal responsibility, remains the order of the day in Oranse County. But there's no room for bigotry or jingoism in that philosophy. Perhaps the museum is not the best use of taxpayer money. Maybe the money could be better spent. But there's no question Ferguson misspoke when he questioned the appropriation. Ferguson's "non-public use" phrase infers that somehow Japanese-Americans are non-citizens or, worse, non-people. Let's hope Mr. Ferguson is only guilty of gross carelessness in his choice of words and that his offensive statements on the floor of the Assembly were not what they sounded like -the xenophobic babbli ngs of a white supremacist, superpatriot. Fel"Juson owes Japanese-Americans an apology and his conlltuents an explanation. After that, Rambo should should apply a military lesson from an earlier war: Loose lips sink ships. Quiet sort of culture ln Japan To get a Job in Japan's pearl industry, you've got to swear an oath you won't tell an)' outsiders how their panicular cultunng process works. The colder the climate, the smaller the ears. The colder the climate, the shoner the tails. You can make these declarations about such furry critters as foxes. Ears and tails give off heat, that's why. • The landsi tes under Salt Lake City and Reno used to be a couple hundred miles closer to each oth er. We're talking 15 "'!illion years ago here. 1 Among the Tuarcgs of the ahara. n's the men, not the women. who wear veils. But for no uotic cause For the ~me reason cowboys wore kerchiefs To keep the sand out of their noses Q If you tr;-to Quit smoking and ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat . fail , doesn't that make 11 even hardet to quit the next time you try? A. On the contrary. Make'i 1t ea51cr the next time, according to the psychologists. ft starts to build the foundation. Q. If diamonds can only IX' formed 80 miles beneath the earth•s surface. how do they get up to whet~ we can find them? A. Volcanic action. Explm1ons, sort of. They're shot towar<.I the surfaoc almost hke shrapnel. Our Love and War man note, th:\t latest f'esearch into the pnvatc li ve~ of amorous individual, ,hows 45 per· cent of the mamcd nationwide admit to ex tramantal affairs. L.M. ll-.yd I• a 1yadlr•1td col11maJ11. Frenk Ztnl 'd•IO< Tom hit 1,1~f1t•lor Don ,en .. , C•tv (O•!o< ~, ... , ,..., ()I, ... ~· •• l.lCl "'""' 1111; SI Col!I ~ •<»-""'"'"''""'''"''0 . & • ·~ Ccl1• ....... (A <1;11/8 CreJe lheff Sc>a<lo , Oll()f i "I'm not afraid of flying. you understand. but those things do go up In the air with no visible means of s upport.·· Trip to Vancouver Island begins on ominous note · Small mechanical problem unnerves intrepid traveler When God made Vancouver Island, he was in a good mood. Ann and I recently took two weeks and went to the thriving community of Campbell River, on the eutern shore of Vancouver, BC. Around Orange County, BC is generally accepted as meaning Baja California, but in this case it means British Columbia. and two more different designations for the same initials probably don't exist. I suppose that Baja is beautiful to the eye of some beholders, but to me it always looked more or less like the desert that you find within a few hours drive ofourcounty. h's hot and dry and hard. Vancouver Island. on the other hand, is cool and soft and hea vily forested with a great variety of trees, though the members of the coniferous variety seem to dominate. Our trip started on an ominous note. We went to the gate at Los Angeles International Airport where we were to board our plane, and sat. Our plane was late. We wCTC finally dispatched to another gate at, more or less, a full gallop. As I lumbered aJong, I managed to nearly panic rnyscl[ What was wrong? Had our plane broken itself and were we being dispatched to an older standby that might.. or might not be airwonhv? I'm not afraid of flying,. you understand. but those things do go up in the au with no visible means of support. After we boarded. we sat some more "There will be a slight delay while a mechanic takes care of a small problem. We expect to be airborne momentanlv." Om1god. I was right! One of the cngrnes 1s probably hanging by two B1LL HARVEY wires. Packages of free peanuts were distributed to the passengers in an attempt to placate us. I would have much preferred a package of free Valium. The mysterious mechanical ail- ment was finally disclosed to us. The pilot couldn't get his window closed. and he allowed as how it would be "pretty breezy at 35,000 feet." Until that moment, I had bttn unaware that a pilot had a window that would open and, granted that he did, why the hell would he want to open it? So that he cold talk to the mechanic who was reattaching the engine that was hang- ing by two wires? We were finaJly airborne, and after a major bean attack brought on by the "Ker-thump crash boom" of the landing· gear being retracted (I had forgotten that they do that), I sat back and pretended that I was very bored with the whole thing. Actually, that movie screen behind my eyes was maliciously, and totally without my a~proval, replaying every major air disaster that had occurred since Wilbur and Orville were smitten with the absurd idea that man could fl y. Far sooner than I expected, we started down. Either that, or the earth was coming up. neither of which pleased me to any great degree. Because 1t seemed totally impossible that we were over Canada, I assumed we were about to expcncnce what the airlines euphemistically refer to as "an unscheduled landing." I cinched up my seatbelt to a degree that cut off all blood fl ow to my lower extremities and was frantically searchina for the httlr plastic card that tells where the emergency exits are. when the pilot announced that we wett about to land at Vancouver. I looked out the window and, sure enough. there was a runway. What was even better was that we appeared to be ai.med right for it. There was a screech, a little swerving, a mighty roar as the engines were used to brake our speed, and we were in Canada. We were to transfer to a smaller plane there, and we had two-hour layover before we were sc heduled to fl y on to Campbell River. I figured that would _give me plenty of time to personally inspect the plane that we were to depart upon, make sure that the pilot's window was shut and such, but the airport people were downright unreasonable about the whole thing. They insisted that we use the time to clear customs. Despite my somewhat unsavory appearance, we were waved through customs and went to the waiting area to sit out the time till we boarded. I was a little disappointed. It seems that they only Jive you free peanuts when you're waiting on board a plane. I liked the looks of our second airplane. It was sleek, but at the same time appeared very strona .and bus1- ncsslilcc. It also had four {>ropellers, which I much prefer to JCts. With propellers, Jou can look out the window an sec that something is working out there, as least lending some sort of credence to the fact that that bus.-like conveyance is 2,000 or 3,000 feet above the ground, and belongs there. I mean, did you ever see a bird take off without flapping its wings? Anyway, we took off, were given more peanuts, and landed. The only disquieting part was watching that beautiful green carpet below us be- come 90-foot pine trees as we landed. Ann's mom and dad. Al and Marie, were waiting for us at the terminal and we loaded our luggage 1n10 their car. Our Canadian adventure had begun. ColamDJJt Blll Harvey llVH ID Hutin1ton Beacla. Ms. Magazine'sfeminists showing changed attitude Ads for sexual aids out numbered by those for d iamond rings, makeup, hose I must confess that I never would have read the magazine if Eastern l\1rhncs hadn't provided free copies as I boarded the shuttle at LaGuardia airport. But as I thumbed the pages of Glona Steincm·s Ms. Magazine, wait- ing for my plane to take off. J was fascinated at the chanac that has come about an this magazine since I last read 1t. Fourteen years ago. the magazine featured premarital contracts oblig- 1 ng husbands to do half the dJshcs and the diapers, and housewives' declar- at1ons ofi ndependeoce from essential housework. Today, there aren't any husbands or babies to complain about. The fim article that cau&ht my eye wu tlllcd "Leaming to Flirt at 37." It was the confession of a mature feminist with a good job 1tnd ;in apartment of her own, who arcw up in the '60s behevmg that flining was "V1ctonan in the midst of the seitual revolution." After all those years of buying her own flowen, o~ning her own doors and cooking dinner for herself after &0101 tO the mOVIC\ alone, She actually answered an ad m the locaJ ncw,p,aper hcadbncd "Learn to Flin · She called the number listed, and the n1mna teacher convinced her that even a femm1st can n1n. 1( she u~s lime-tested arts. The teacher taught this feminist such simple techniques as do cros\, uncro~\ and recros5 your leg\, but don't cross yo ur arm~. and ..do 1m1tatc the 1Cduct1vc ilan~ on wap operas. but don't m1t1ate con· versat1ons on toxic waste removal. Next there was a tear-jerker article by a female author commiserating with a friend who was still mouminga breakup with her hve-in boyfriend a year after it happened. As he told her when he casually signed off a two-year relationship, he "wasn't looking, it just happened; so don't take 1t personally." The author then interviewed 87 victims of breakups of live-in lovers She found that the ave rage duration of these extramantal relationships was two years. The typical breakup occurs when the man wants out; but instead of saying so, he makes signals that the thrill is gone and leaves 1t to the woman to define the relationship as ended. I turned to an article called "Star Wars" but, alas, st wasn't about President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative It was about how men feel threatened when women's careers move faster and hiJ)\er than their own. The illustration howcd the man with a vacuum swc~per while the woman goc out with her briefcase; the unhappy look on the man's face 1s a sure sign that he won•t ht sticking around that household very Ion&. Another article confesses tt\at the main topic on the convcrsa11on agenda o(bra1ny. suctenful women 1s "the man shonaae." The author acknowlcdgc'i painfully that, "after I ~·plu, yea" of con~ousness-ra1s­ tna and Jenera! feminist hell-ra1s1ng. most m1ddlc-cla\s women who a~ single and heterosexual sull confine their search for mntt1 to men "'ho are ' PHYLLIS ScHLAFLY well u~lc of them an income and status. Feminists since the 1970s have been trying to fore~ us into a gender- neutral society and bring about sc:it- role re versals. Their ideolog>'. is based on the notion that gender differences are ca•Jsed by stereotyped education and an oppressive male-dominated society So 1t was fascinating to read the article called "Designer Genes" which admits that men and women are naturally, biologically different. ft proposes that "a committee of repu- table biologists" enaa~ In "genetic manipulation" to change human nature so that men and women will have an equal motivauon, desire and enioyment of the seit act. There arc still, as in its early rears, ads in Ms. Mapzme for ac-xua aids mailed 1n plain wrappers and for lesbian contacts. but, m1rab1le d1ctu, there arc b141Cr ads for diamond enpgcmcnt nnp, makeup and heer panty ho~, plus a larae color ad for a $1 9S doll called Scarlett• O'Hara. It looks like "voices from the posr- femint.St gcncra.uon," proclaimed three ycan •Jo by the New Yonc f 1mcs Mapzme, have even in vaded Ms.Maga11ne. • Pty11J1 Sdqfly It a 1y.dJ~•IH NIUJ•hl. 1 BILLHARV&Y colu.mnJ1t JACK ANDERSON and DALE VAN A TT A Spy dust tracked U.S . spy ·in 1959 bust aided capture of Col. Popovby Soviet intelligence WASHINGTON -Apparently the KGB has been sprinkling .. SP} dust" on diplomats, dissidents and other susp1c1ous characters for years. As far back as 1959, an infernal chemical was reportedly used to track one of the CIA 's most valuabk ..moles" inside Soviet intelhgencc. The story ofhow he was caught wu~ brought to the CIA bya KGB defect.er in 1964. Yet. Adm. Stansfield Turner. director of the CIA from 1977 tu 1981 , sajd he'd never heard of "sp; dust." Neither had Malcolm Toon. who was U.S. ambassador 1n Mo\cow from 1976 until 1979. While ther were kept in the dark. the chem1ca dust was used to trace the movements of U.S. diplomat, around Moscow. It has been detected several times since I 976, but 11s USl.' against U.S. diplomats has increased greatly since last May: The worry is that the stuff can be harmful to their health. It has been identified as nitrophcnylpentadienal -or NPPD -which can caus~ cancer. The diplomats pick up th~· surveilll\ncc ch•mical on their skin from , say, a car steering wheel. Then they leave an invisible trail on every doorknob they touch or hand they shake. The KGB simply administers another chemical to a suspiciou, hand or doorknob, and the tclltak NPPD becomes fluorescent. This is how a U.S. mole, known a\ Col. Popov, reportedly was detected The story, which was both a triumph and a tragedy for the CIA. is locked 1n the agency's .. top secret .. files. Bui here arc the essential details: · Popov was an officer of the GR lJ. Soviet military intelligence. He madt' contact with the CIA while he wa<; stationed in Vienna in 1953. Later ht' was transferred to East Berlin. whert· he continued to pass secrets to the CIA. After he was called back to Mos- cow, Popov continued to providt• imponant intelligence to the C'IA through Russell Langelle, an in- telligence officer working under diplomatic cover. On Oct 16, 1959 while exchanging a note on a Mosco"' bus. Popov and Langelle were ar - rested by the KGB. Langellc was interrogated and k1l k- eel out of the country. Popov wa., executed. Not until 1964, when KGB MaJ Yuri Nosenko defected in Geneva did the CIA learn how the K(,U monitored Popov's movement~ Among the wealth of information Nosenko ga ve his debnefers was the disclosure that Popov had been caught through the use of a chenucal N"osenko didn't know the exact chemical agent used, but he reponed that Langelle's Russian maid hall dusted the diplomat's shoes with 1t The KGB. using a sniffer dog, tracked Langelle to a mailbox where the police found a note he had mailed 10 Popov. Footnote: We interviewed the CI A case officer, Ge.orge Kisvaller. who handled Popov• in Berlin. Now 7S years old, he said he couldn't com- ment because he is still employed by the CIA. K.Rt.M LIN WATCH. The flurry uf press reports and public figures· statements suggesting the Soviets ar(' allo"'.ing more Jews to emigrate ha1, womed those who have been acti vr 1n the fight against repression of Soviet Jews. The figures cited -166 Jewish ~m!~s in April, 174 m July -arc 1ns1gmficant compared with the thousands who were allowed to leave five years ago. Our source~ believe the Soviets will insist on major concessions from the Unll<'d States and the West before they will let Jews emigrate in any large numbers. The Kremlin thinks ll has a strong card in the Jewish emigration issue and intends to play it for all 11 can get. MI NI-EDITORIAL: If the Reagan adrn1nistrat10n is really serious about cuttina aovemmcnt waste. maybe 11 should start ri&ht at the top. The latc-.t repon by the Federal Procurement Data Center shows that the Ex«ut1ve Office or the Preaidtnt has ~n shirkma its responsibilities under the Competition in Contractma Act uf 1984. Out of 114 contracts involving a total expenditure of S5 776,000, only one JOb was put out toe wide open biddina ($I 03.000). Fif\y weft' nqotiated among an undisclosed number of 1ovcmmcnt.selccted su~ plien(S2,S76,000), while the remain tna 6l were sole-!SOurtc contract\ (SJ.097.000), J1ct ,bdeno. H4 DIN Vu Alt.41 •" •J'lltl/c•tftl col•m•l•t• -' Weinberger raps Soviets alter East Germany incident Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, s.ptember 18, 1N5 * A7 Britain ousts 6 more Soviets in retaliation ... LONDON (AP)-Brita10 ordered Foman ~ t-ice 11.Jd Gordicvsla bad 140elder Red China leaders quit Army truck rammed; Soviets hold U.S. \heexpullionofsu moreSovltl.5. two defected an\. "ccn rnted asylum. PEKING (AP) -Mon1 than 1490 of them diplomata today. 10 an The Soviets. •t.afiated to the Bntish senior C.Ommurust Party ofticwa eacalatina confrontation sparked by move Saturday t. ordcrina 2S Bnt1sh resianed today, Plvina the way for a !Y nmc houn and .acne~y bebav«?d the defection of the KG B's top diplomata, busine~smeo and journal-transfer or power from aaina revol- 10 the 11me way m wh1cb they did operative in this country. ists to leave the country. utionariet to a younter teneration when M~or Nicholson was killed and The Forc•ID Office said the latett A Foreian Office statement wd lbe c~ with promotina China's new murdered." be said. expulsions were in retaltauon for Soviet c~ d'affairu. Lev A. open~oor policies. troops a t unpotnt However, another administration what it caUed "a totally unJuSllfied Parsbio. was told that the sut Sov1cu The rnianations were announced official later said it was unclear if the response to the British government's muist leave the country by Oct. 7J. and lD letters to the party's Central W ASHINOTON (AP) -Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger is ac- cusina tfie So'viet Union of failing to control its troops folJowing a new mili&ary confrontation in East Ger- many in which a U.S. Army truck was bum~ and its occupants held at auopomt U.S. vehicle wu where it should be1 expulsion of Soviet pcnQnnel who also that the overaJI ceilina 01 the C.Ommittee, which was meeting 10 a and said the Soviet commander hao had been actively enpaed m in-number of Soviet officials in Britain plenary seuion. subsequently apologized profusely telliacnoc activitJc:s de!ianed to would be reduced from 21 l to 205. Most of those who rcbrcd an Red for the incident. · undermine the national secunty of The Soviets expelled last week have Anny veterans who fouabt wtth Mao Under a U.S.-Soviet pact, a limited the United Kingdom." unttl Oct. 3 to leave. Tse-tuna number of American soldiers are It was the third move in a round of The latest deportees include a first Amona those who announced their permitted to travel in East Germany Cu.,.r Welnber&er tit-for-tat expulsions that began secretary at the Soviet Embassy. an retirement were Manha! YeJian}'lng, m return for similar ri&hts by Soviet they arc going to do and that 15 Tbunday, when Britain ousted 25 assistant air attache, two embassy 88. who res'&ned from the six- soldiers in West Germany. discipline their troops and control diplomats, journalists and trade of-clerks, .the director of Analo-Soviet member Politburo standina commit-Weinberger offered the ftnt public wo~ of tlie Sept. 7 incident in southwestern East Germany Sunday. He said the American unit involved wu from the sarpe unit as Maj. Arthur Nicholson, an American of- ficer shot and killed by a Soviet guard Jut March outside an East German base. Most of the trips -described for their troops," facials. Shipping and a correspondent for tee, the most powerful party orpn; years u 'lcp.lized S{>ying." are to He said there were repons that the The Foreign Office said the 25 had Novosty, a Soviet news qencv. and Politburo member Dena report on military acuvities on each Soviet mission had promised to look been named as spies by Oleg A. The BntlSh media had speculated Y10achao, 81 , Cluna's highest-rank- side of the border. into the latest incident, but "we have Gordievsk.i, who tbe office 1dent1fied that Mrs. Thatcher would announce 1ng woman politician and the widow Since the March 24 shooting of not had an apology." as the KGB spy chief in Britain. The further actions. of Ptcmier Chou En-Lai. Nicholson outside a ~ near i-;-;::-::-::-:;;-:;;~-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-..;=;;;...----------.;;;.;========;.;;;;;===============:;;. Potsdam, East Germany, the United The defense secretary, who for months bas been denouncing the Sovieu over the Nicholson shooting, dcman&d a Soviet apolOJY for the latest incident, which be said was pan of"a cootinuina series of episodes." A~ on C~TV's "Face the Nation," Weinberger mentioned only the driver of the truck-like vehicle. But the '1)efense Department, elaboratina later, said two Americans were involved. "The Soviets bumped his truck deliberately where we were supposed to be, and doing what we· were permitted to do under a treaty that is some 40 years old," Weinberger said. "When he attempted to get out and fix the truck·they pushed-him back into the truck and held him at gun int and detained him for rough- States has held a series of meetings with the Soviets to complain of harassment apinst members of the U.S. missions. During that ·time, there was another incident, involving the collision of U.S. and Soviet vehicles. "We have had promises by the Soviets that they would tell their people not to use force," Weinberger said. "Either they're not keeping their promises or they arc very poorly disci tined." As~~ why the incident had not been announced by the United States at the time it happened, Weinberger said: "We're trying our best to get the conditions corrected. We're not interested in publicity." He said a protest bad been lodged with the Soviets and "we hope that ultimately they will do what they say Not alcoholics Some do it with <'ap- • sules ~ncl pills. tlJli · Sedat1 ~t'> .., _, . tra nq tw.I 1ze~ .. hypnotirs. nar-- colic .. an1pheta-_.,,,,, ~ mines and -r · anti-depressants. .,., . . All of then1 <'an be abusc•d to tlw pop1t of add iction. And. whe n takru alorn· or with a chaser. ran he lethal as wc·ll. But there·s a way oul. It: ('a iled Carel in it. Carctinit su"c·<·~sfulh treats n1ore peoplt· f(,r al<'ol1ol and cl rug . problems than any other private prof_rra m ava ilab le. Anrl it:~ available al a lo<'al com - munity ho pita l near you. But before treatment ca n l-w~in. you haH ' to rare rnough to <'all. And to do that you havt· to recognize that you or someo tw you love nred. help. If you don "t., you ran tw sn re of one thing. T he problem wi ll on ly ~et worse. 'TI> talk persona ll y with a Carel 1nit coun!Wlor, call us t0<lay at thr number li sted below or ca ll us toll-fre<' at 800-854-0318. CAREUNll Nobody cares the way w~ do: (714) 650-1090 OSTA ME A MEDICAL CE fE R 110 PITAL 301 Vl<:"mRIA STRf:t:T • I WEEKDAY DINING Early Bird Dinner Specials $6.25 Complete d inner including soup AND sa lad, garlic bread, sherbert ar.id coffee. Served 3:30 to 7:30 M onday thru Friday 17502 Bea ch Blvd. at Slater Huntinston Beach 23¢ Will Get You AT Reubens OF NEWPORT BEACH 251 E. Coa1t Hwy. 873-1505 Build your own sandwich bar Choice of 4 fresh breads dnd huge variety of condiments Tuesday thru Friday 5-7 pm For lounge customers only LUIGI'S. Wedaeeclay La .. 9•• Specl•I *3.65 Tlaar.-d•y Spa.laettl Special *2.65 Bot• l•c ..... ...a..t A .... He ........ ho• t PJI Lunch Specials 11 AM-3 PM S V•n•U.. of ~be 12.66 Ss>etihettt l.uef'u •s.u Ma•kottl or C.nn•lo•I l.dlvkt .. t P\aM •us •t.75 •S.25 •2.00 Off L•rge or Media• Plzu wltla tlal• •d 1861 ... ceatla Coeta •- 6S 1 -StSS Cloeed llo•d•v ~~@@It§,, Nm«: & RESTAUWT cafe with a continental fla ir LOUISIANA SPECIALTIES lM MAii S..·Tlln. ~--LOISTO 995 DINNU 1LB Happy Hour r. 3:30-6:30 M-Thurs. r' TGIF •i.oo Happy Hour ~ 3-6 p.m. ~ 130 E.17th COSTA MESA : HOURS llam to 2am (114)646 -88 55 Country Goar•el Breaklast Plaa yoar lta1ia111 aHtia11 ia oar private t~eae rMas. LASAGNA BUFFET l"kn One ... at Dish Every Tuesday N ight 6-1 O P .M •S.95 Includes ,. salad, garlic bread and fresh fruit Dinners 6-10 P.M . Tues.-Sat. Lunch 1 l-3 P.M . M on.-Fri SPECIALS DAILY Monday Night Football Footlong hot dogs and chrlr Uve Entertainment Friday 2 Saturday Nights See Us At>ouc Pflv~ce Pames & Cacermg Amat~ N'9"t-W~nesd¥ Ladies Nlght- S•turd.tys 9-t t P.M. Well~ St.00 Newport's Cannery Village @fe·lido present Late Night DINNERS .. . Co•plet e Dlane r M••• a va ilable 6 PM all tlae w ay tlno•gla iiiim~ ..... 12:00 •ldnlglat Entertalment nightly 9:30 PM to 1 :00 AM Gourmet Food with Gourmet Jazz 2900 Newport Blvd. Newport Beach 675-2968 t=~.--~~--~~--------~~---~--------------~"'"-------------~--------~--~~--~------~~--~~--~~~~~------- ' ' J eal governors 'are funnier' LOS ANGELES (AP) -A.re the ''Our pohttcians are funnier." rc- ·life aovemon of the SO states es plied a staff official from Wisconsin. nny u the make-trei eve 1ovemor Another from Illinois, wrote, "This pu ABC• ''Bensoor" is the silliest thiria I've done all week 1 T be producers "Benson" -but it's only Friday." the aovemor("'OffiOC$ and Forty-eiaht percent of those rc- ot replies from l 6 state\.· spondin,g said they believed their .,_ _____________ aovemor could "cut it" as a com· •ccn1: It's cla11ili .. ! edlan. accordina to Boots LaBaron, a Cal 642 -5678 spokesman for Win-Thomas-Harris Production s. Twenty-nine percent said "no," 1 l percent said "he as," and 14 pcroent had no comment Oth er results: 88 percent said t~ere·s ••a little bam in every poli- tician," 97 percent said they are convinced that "humor is an import· ant incredient in politics.,.. and 66 ~rcent said their governor bad a 'treat sense of humor." "Benson" stars Robert Guillaume as lieutenant governor and James Noble as governor of a fictitious Midwestern state. TV LIST INGS I_ - -_..._ 80NEWI MATTHOUITOH di NF\. FOOTIAU. ~..,~ 1ll&"I OOWNtl Dlf'NNT fT'fO(d ••UIAEPORT ~UNYfM( CllNEWS 8NICNIW8 I LAYBINI TIW'9 FA*. Y HOT SfAT HOTUNE MOYIE (Q)MOVIE •••• 'H 11 (19791 John Savaoe. T rtal W1111M11 MCMI • • • "Stay Hungry' ( 197SI Jeff Bndget, Siiiy F le4d -7:30- 120HMTOWN PflCl. NC»fT tWt'YDAY8~ i --~™ Wl.D, Wl.D WON.O OI Ai9Ml.I • MOTOfM'f:EJ( -8.'3G- G TIC TAC DOUOH (!) LOVU OA T -t:OO- • KAT£&AlUE 0 MOYIE "MttfOtl. (P1tm*•I Ma1guer11e Hie- ~. Aolooy Hlflll!lon 8 HAAOCAST\.E AHO MOOOMtlCK I = FOATHE KIUERS SUfMYAL ltl ~AEPOAT -10-JO- 8 NfW9 G CAPITOL JOURNAL GD HEAlMG FOR TOOAY -11:00- 1• •(I) Ill al NEWS TAXI G LOUGAAHT e 11AANEY MUER e OHL Y WH8f I LAUGH II> IUI ... REPORT I HENTAOE 9llOfA8 ...wrs~ (lj)MOW • • ''The Wtld ule ( 198•) Ctwlst~ ptltf Peon Eric Stolz •tt "Kll'IQ OI Comedy' (1982) Rober1 0. Nwo. Jef ry Lewis (fl)MOYIE --------------'----------------------------....... •;The Bugs Bunny I Aoed ~ MovleA ( 1979) Anlmatfd (0) El.Y9: ONE NGHT WITH YOU <I> rra 8HOWTlilE (I) IAH DEGO AT L.AAGE IB M)PAllJY ll'MOYIE I PMm THE LOAD CAI.UNO AU SPORTS (O)MOVIE ** •., "Revenge Of The Nerds" ( 1984) RC>be<t Catradtne. AnthOny Ectwaids {O)MOVIE "Bodies In Heat" ( 19831 Annett• H•· ven, Herschel Savage • .. GEAR UP FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL ... ~ "Cobed DenlmH Aultwf'lltc LSIAs °'1glnol 501. In NM colors. 1~ cotton. s1ro'ghf leg. 8~~~ 56 FASHION ISLAND · NEWPORT BEACH · (714) 644-5070 •11111--~ "UCITIT1E Futm"INI 1•112t edwards LIDO 673·8350 ... [ ... P(JI<' B.-~ A' ""° ,100 oa..w•n ·--"WHIHIY"llJ ......... 11111 edwards TOWN CENTER 751 ·4184 BR1S !Ol & AN'O"' AC A:JSS f ROM S COAST Pl Al A , . , ' '•' ' • I• • "*·WIT nall ''lall -fllm"IPll Ml.•1t, 11dt edwards SOUTH CO AST PLAZA 546-2711 BA1S'0. & s1 ,... , :."'E"' cosrAucsa ',--, ',,, , •• -.-. ..... ? 11•m.. ··~· (N-111 IRIS'tpt.11) .... "H .. MI fmlT" (I) .... , ... "IT. HSI Fm" Ill ... .__,All CUii .. fl) 1 eawardSCINEMA 546·3102 HARBOR BOUL VARD A T ADAMS :OS TA MESA o~;a;•.=1 . ........... ) ... Tw.s 1.1 ..... edwards HARBOR TWIN 631 ·3501 HARBOR BOULEVARD AT WILSON : OST a ME~ ll&T111_,..'I .. __ " llNICflCf" fN-11) ''"· ""· , ... ........ Jill,l rtl edwards MESA 646· 5025 N(WPORT BOULEVARD AT 19TH S' COS rA UESA .... ICHQ" fP'S-111 l tM au '"" U M .... ............. ldt, ... ,. edwards HUNTINGTON 848-0388 BEACHBOULEVAAOAT UAIN&lu1S .. ,.,·,,..c,ro1111taCH • TIMI MllT 111111 "UCITt M fl'flm" .... ..... ""· '"" edwardsFOUNTAINVALLfV 839·1500 BROOK HURST AT [OtN(,l A • ,,,. & ,._ & l' ... RUii'' IN-111 ... "IT. flSI ,_ •• llJ ltll,ltrn '"Pll·Wlf'I• ... ....... -.n.•11.•11. ... edwards WESTBROOK 5J0·4401 1111!\'UtNS'(A(.t~· 'Jf BROOK><',"'. ,, ... ,,, .. ,R· ·[ ..... ,._. ... , , ........ ''f-.J mil" llJ .... " ....... .... ......... "M.llTftll" (I) 1111 eowaros UNIVERSITY 854·8811 ':AUPJS DR w'l[S' QI ~v,<[~ A':.~';'.)', IA(,¥ •.1( ---............ 11) ·n•n1111• .. ,...,_ .. Ill "fMlUll FmlT" 111 ., ....... Wl,11dt "Tllf CICl-CIU ·'ffAl .-m .... •'HI'' (IJ __ ,... ... Tl, ..... 1111. 11111 1.-, 1•11 "IHl If.a'' (PC) "waumEll'' llJ Ml 1111 "f...ul WM:An." • ._llEIHl"(PC) "" we, 1wt<N-ta> Wl,1•11 ..J edwards WOODBRIDGE 551 ·0655 r1AH'•A~f A ''A~~,.~··~"" f A' , r)~ ( '· • j, ~, •• ,, 'ftf·Wff'I • Alfmm"INJ ....... WI, l!JI, , ... . .._FlllT _,.,_ r· 111 -. .... ., ...... "THI Wllf" (NJ •'lflfit . ._ .... ) "ST. HSI F•" (IJ ._.AST l!M, ... .......... Tlll•E• llllf" CL•• Ill ..J edwards SADDLEB ACK 581 ·5880 EL TQRQRQADATAC':H1L:; L TOR( .............. ...... ,.,. ....... '"' 1141 "YfAl• TIE ......... l rM,1111 .... lllCAI ..,. .. llJ llll, 11111 "DllflT w.-.· 111 \,., ... edwards EL TORO [l T()l~UrHJ Al TW1l1l'f A~ "fMEUll FWIT" llJ , ... "11.VfUll'' (fll.11) l:ll '1Ul..,"IPIJ .. "¥a9THll'' 111 , wt.1•11 "Wfm ICIECf" IPl-11) .......... "WTMIEll'' (Pl) 1111 "fnmTmR''(IJ ., .. , ... '1111MUlffm ... '' li11(N-tl) ..J l (1.: :. 581 ·9500 f ,. 1•4 '~IACATS' Wl,11111(N-'Ple. "at•DB IBITAl" ... "IT. fl.MI'S "Pff·Wff'I l t• mM• .. (NJ Fm" Ill "~'(N-11 "llHlfAIT AIWflllm" WI "-CUii" fll ....... ,llJt ..... , .. ,. ~ edwards VIEJO TWIN 830·6990 SAN DIEGO FWYTO LA PAZ & CHAISA"'l& 1ViS'0", •L'J "C ... 11111• ""'-" Ill ... Tl. ........ 11111 MITll IRF llM'I ·---.n Ullll ~lm" IN-111 ........ , .. edwards MISSION VIEJO MALL 495·6220 SD FWY TO CRQWl'j YAllEV 8ETWH" Pl0•"'","~ & ¥A • sue •• ...... ,.. '1ftl -!" c11 war '" l,>.i,l,t ,, ..... ~ ............ ,. edwardsSOUTHCOAST LAGUNA 497·1711 SOUTHCO&STHWV A"BROAD'ollA' &, "'!HA·• "WUllT&ll'' (IJ 1111,1 .. "WTMTEll"(N) "" "IT. BMl'I .... lll ... ..... ·--All cur· 111 .. eowards CINEMA WEST 891-3935 csru1~<;·[A A 'GOlO(NWf'," tNfS'~tN~'(~ • .__.ITWI "UCI Tl Tll fl'Tlm"N ...... , .. fldt . .._Fmf -PT.!''(IJ ..,.. ..... , ... edwards ~I) CA, .A,j1.' .. A"1 .. : YA.. 768-66 11 St.1 '~~ ',(11,TMQ~[. 'rJr1i..,,i11_,!J~A•i,l\te'Al, -.ti·• ,f&u•, "Pride Of-The Blue Grass" I 19391 Edith Fellows tllMOVIE lZ)MOW • • Comes Of Passion" ( 198-4) -U0-FMOOl.E AOQ( 0 NIC NEWS -8.-00- t t • · Tiie Th.el 01 Bagd&d (I~) John JusM Coniacs V81dt Kalllleen Tumer AnthOny Perlllnl -11:30- • (I) 8litOH & SNON 0 8 IUT OF CARSON 8 SATURDAY NIGHT -1'.30- ~~RT 1 TOO Cl.OU FOR COMFORT 1J (I) SCAAECAOW AHO MRS. Sl'NIOY KING • MACNEJL / l.EHAEA G IB AU.STAR HOUR NlW8HOUR 8 MOYIE G PttOTOGRAPtlC V'9tON • ** A Tooc11 Of Class (1973) •*'•"Modesty Blaise ( 1966) Mon- ica V1t11. Terence Stamp 8 0 MC NEWS NIGHT\.M • tllEflN GAlmN eHAWAI~ (I) NEWS Glenda JIGltson, Geolge Segll a WHEEL OF FORTUNE a JOKEWS WILD GD SHOCKWAVf.S OF • MOVIE (II ENTERTAINMENT TOMOHT (C)aHEMAX COMEDY ElCPEMtEHT e LATEMGHT AMEllCA ID MOOEAH MATUNTY GD PtW8E THE LOAD &>PAUL.AYAH (S)MOVIE AAMAGE.OOOH **'• "Dynasty" (1980) Jotvi FOi· m TIMMY NllJ LASSIE Sylhe, Linda Evans. ,, (I) MOYIE ' e titOV1E • • t ''i · The Righi Stull" ( 1983) Sam Shepard, Scotl Glenn -12:00- • THf& THAE£ 0 GGONG SHOW • • "Metlist()(m The OestrucilOll • t lnspec:IOI Clouseau" (19681 Of Jared-Syn ( 1983) Jettrey Byron. Alan Arton. Frank Finlay Tim Thomerson I!) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC -7:00-G QUEST FOA THE KlU..ERS -10:00- • Cl) CNWE'f & LACEY eeNEWS 8EYEOHU. G FAllT A8Y l8lAHD 8 CIS NEWS G!> PRAISE THE LOAD II ENTtRTANIENT TONIGHT (Cl MOVIE e HAPPY DAYS AGAIN ** "Alphabet City" (19~) Vincent G 8IOflC WOMAN Spano, Kale VetllO(I • nRFS Cf)WAJtl MOVIE • NOH-flCTION mEVISIOH C\l INTEANATIONAL EDITION ltll twl>CASTl.£ AHO lilOCOMICt< (!) INDEP£NDEHT NEWS ®l MORE AEAl P£0PLE '9 700 CLU8 -12:30- 0 IB LAT£ NIGHT wmt DAVID LETmlilAN D AlFAED HITCHCOa< PN!IENTS e WHEEL OF FORTUNE * • • "The Seduchon 01 Joe , 8!,) IUSINES8 AEPORT Tynan ( 1979) Alan Alda, Barbara Cl) P.M. MAGAZIE Hams. Gil IEHll> THE 8CEJe II' RACINO FROM ASCOT (C)MOVIE f)MOVIE • * "The Coekeyed CowbOys Of CallCo County (1969} Oan Blocluw. Mickey Rooney IB HEADUHE CffA8EAS CS) MOVIE G!) PMl8E THE LON> ..+---"Murder In Space" I t985) W~fted ••• "Home From Tiie Hiii'' ( 1960) Robe<t Mitchum, Ge9f ge Peppatd m lAS8IE Btrmley "4arttn Balsam l U.IUMY fHIAflfS \&)'ALK· INS * hst Twe Mitt .... Sllt'#lllf' * "' 0111 L v SU S u•s ••tel CITY cenTEA 0 ST. u..J'S f'•R Cit> AT J 1SO 6 7 :45 "11n •re•lefH t Club (Rl AT 1 :25 5:40 .... 5 ........ -~, .. AT J :40 & 7 :30 "1u1 Ollo1tbu1ten ("°)AT 1:401:30 .. 1 :20 91.ACK CAULDllO• .. , AT 1•11 J :IO 5:4"'5 7:4 0 l :JS/ln 70MM lilEM.8UMUStfl8> AT 3:35 6 7tl 0 l'tu1 Sul'l'm•r Rental (ll'G) 1:J 5 5 :50 & tO:OO cenTuAY cineoome [:l 134-255l/C111tm1<1 I S.11u A111 Fwy C:OMPa'XJJll_. ~~J 7:40. 1 :10 ... Mm'S_ '" kca ... ) AT U 10D 2:0~ 4 :00 1:00 1 :00. 10:00 MCKTO,.._ f'UT'UllC .. , ':10 31S0 5 :10 1:10 t.10 :30 or THR DtlA80 ca) SHOWS AT 12100 2:3, S:OO 7:45 & 10:25 ~ P'laST -.OOD Mlt'T ti (II) AT 1:H 3:40 5:4 5 7 :10 6 t :SI SLvallADO .... 1st AT 12:00 2:40 5 :20 7:55 & 10:2S/ln 70MM STEVEN WAIGHT DRIVE -INS :~~~'.: STADIUm a Ill l lll/!1111t!f !tf! Std "'"' s .. ~~ .. t':adt Tll• Comet 1"0 ·13) ltAlllmO P'laST -.000 PAllT It .. , ....,. Mad MllC .. eyond Tllundtfdome t..a·t 31 ~ ......... , "'"' Co·Hlt My Science l'foJ1ct l"Q) 80DZILLA1 .. .,...,. Phi• l!mereld ,,.or•ll CR) wm1tDSCHP•c:• ........ tus F rltllt Nltllt (R) 'Big Three' of networks take stage By JE RRY BUCK U T......_...., BEYERL Y HILLS -In the blase television industry, nothing draws an audience like the "The Bud & Lew & Brandon Show." It's an annual event at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. where the program- ming heads of the three commercial networks engage in an hour of jokes and patter and a little soft shoe as they sidestep hard questions from the audience. Every mover and shaker in tele- ~ °' vision was there recently to applaud ~ ... _:::=::::=::=:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;-I the performances of the three men .. Orange _County's easy listening radio station •' KDCM IDB.I FM SIERED who have the final decision on whether to buy th · series, movies and miniseries. More than 1,120 peo e filled the hotel ballroom for the Hollywood Radio & Television Soci luncheon presenting B. Donald 'Bu " G rant, president of CBS Entertainment, Lewis H. Erlicht. president of ABC Entertainm ent, a nd Brandon TartikofT, president of N BC Enter- tainment. A question from the a udience asked the three executives to reveal what program on the other networks made them the most nervous. TartikofT, who once was host of his network's "Saturday Night . Live," confessed, "The natural state for a network programmer is complete paranoia." Another question asked them to reveal what secret ambitions they had after leaving t heir current ~obs . TartikofT said, "This job seems hke a jumping off point to get out of i..:=~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====~~ television. But I love television. I'm 1 (11.'tlW~I *PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES* looking forward to the new season. Of .<11111 course, what I really want to be 1s a BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Ptrformanc• Mon•y shepherd." Thru S.tur•v (Except Holi•ys & Spec. E•eernents) One question that did not amuse LAKEWOOD Center f>uu1u1 w-1tt s. c....•• DOUT ITUSO ITIYIH '"'1 .... l'UNNTI IACK fO THI FVNll , ... 12JM 11IO ''" 71U INI ibllf ..... MKMAA CtMINO'I TIAI Of THI DIMON,., It.a allS So4t l 1U 10:;41 LAKEWO D lrnh.or South IUJll M 1111/hntty !.Ool ''"' u. IJTIA 19MSTIW (N I ,,, ... __ IUMMH llNTAl '"" ...... ,_ PllOHT NtOHT 111 ·---llNIN Of TMI LMNG DIM ,., ... , ........ AMlalCAH NINIA 111 _ .... 'ALI 11D1a .., ............. LA MIRADA . . . . . "- SUMMIR RINTA&. !NI ....... -GMOITIUSTIH 1N 1 ,.. ... , ..... UMIO PllST ILOOO 'AltT 111111 121a1 21ae 4t11 ... •·• "'" llAi GINIUS !N I ···-l.f. U llA TlllllTIW IN > 1'141 •••• lloJI THI IMFULD FOltlST 1111 -.... ,ALF l lDll I~ ........ ,_ . ,._ a 11a ~ DOll T n wo COCOON ,..;.,,, IMJ aM JIU 1141 I .... GATEWAY OIOlAl IT INNOCINCa.-u i IM J 2o41 41U ... Ital 10.iO ,.. wn·s MO MMNNa 1N 1 •OOUY .,,. 112S .,,. .. u ''" 10.IJ AMlllCAH NINJA,., ............ DIF.CON 4 1111 ltt• ., ...... DOllT ITH IO ITIVIN PlllMIO PUllNfl UCll JO ntl fUNll INI ,,,., 1111 •• u ....... u *PACIFIC DRIVE·IN THEATRES• ANAHEIM 1) IUMMll HNTAl1Nt 2) YOlUNTIFll 1111 J ) OHOtTIUITIH ,,., llVllll Y HtLLI COP 1111 llTUIN Of '"' .. ~. * anuaN °' Jl1• LMNO DIAD 1111 WlllD ICIFNCI ~'" 't ) ST. ILMO'I Fiii 111 2) M FIWJAIT ClUI ,., J) THE ltO CHILL 1111 CMllMUNI 1Nt lo HABRA ... "u Ull:L!~.. . •. UM80 •tUT M.000 'Nlf .... PAUatOO,. UM10 PlllT ILOOD 'AltT H 1111 AMlllCAN NtNJA ~ IUMMH llNTAl ,,.. VOlUNTIUI ._, U. UTU T9MITIW ,,.. UAL OINIUI ,,., "I Wll'I llO AOYINT\Htl '"' THN WOlP1N1 .. CBS' G rant was whether be would "buy a lot of shows from MG M now that Ted Turner was buying the studio." Turner made an unsuc- cessful attempt to take over CBS . Grant answered that be would buy the best shows fro m whatever sources offered them. TanikofT revealed tha t Jack Klugman, three-time Emmy-winning star of "Quincy" and "The Odd Couple.'' will star in a new comedy series for N BC. He will play a divorced father who is forced to renew his relatio nship with his son after a long separation. RUFFELL'S , UPHOLSTERY INC. For The Rest of Yoor life 1922 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA MESA-548-11~ ''···A lively fil~ of both substance and laughter ... " -KEVIN TMOMAS. ... .....,_ .... ,... ~ ---UA ....... .,., ---r.... ...... ,...,., LOS ANGEL'fS Tl/14£5 ...... ~r-c.. 7'Hll .. ........ =.-.::r -f ..... Ulloftlt ••11 I J -- It's hard to play t h e Conn. game DEAR ANN LANDERS: Yes. it's true, a1 your correspondent wrote, th~ are lots of op~rtunities for employment in the buJldina trades in Conneajcut. We need carpenters cJcctricians, stonemasons, plumbers' roofers and brick.layers. But before anyone decides to load up a truck and head this way, several facts should be considered. s~.na from m>: ow~ experience, housina Jn Connecticut 1s expensive and· hard 'o find. Very small apart- ments start at about $450 a month - and they arc at least 45 minutes from Danbury, where my husband and I work. A decent apartment costs $750 a month plus utilities. A plain, tiny condo starts at S 70,000 and is poorly constructed and expensive to heat in the winter. The condos in Stamford Greenwich and West port cost a whol~ lot more. In fact, they art out of sight for average-income people. The homes that start at S 100,000 arc put together with chicken wire and glue. Five yean ago the same house sold for $60,000. And it's getting worse, not better. FO<?<i sto~s here charge -.:ending machme pnccs. The cost of hving is Al• LAIDEIS ~Icy high,. The ~nery in Connecticut 1s bcauttfuJ but It's too expensive to eat. You pay through the nose for everything you sec. -Disillusioned. DEAR 018: Here's aootller fellow wllo Ila• tome latere1cta1 comments oa Ille same stlbject. . DEAR ~ LANDERS: I'm get- tJng P!'CttY.brcd ofh~rinJ people say there ts no mcomc tax m Connecticut. We've got 'em, Honey; they have another name. The language is: Capital gains, dividends and interest. Also, Connecticut has the hilhcst state sales tax in the nation. ft's 7 pcrce~t. Play lha.t one on your harpsichord, Petuma. -Not Buying Baloney. DEAR BALONEY: Neltller am I. Read•. DEAR ANN LANDERS~ Want to hear 1 few facu about Connecticut? Listen up real aood. In IY76 we bought a ho me 10 Danen for $60,000. A year later we were transferred and sold it for $74,000. Wo uld you believe this house was ih the bluc-<:ollar section of town? A recent repon out of Washington, D.C., labeled those of us makin§ under SI0,000 a year "YUFFIES.' (Young Urban Failures.) I guess we are considcTCd the dregs -the bottom of the barrel. On the other hand, the Yuppies (younA urban professionllls) of Connecticut have beauttful horn« lll this beauttful state. They send I.Mar beautiful chil-dren to beautiful 1ehools. They wear beaut1ful clothes to beautiful pertics and everyone dnves beautiful cars. The truth 1s that the Yu.ppics can't afford to. h vc tbat bi&h. They arc 10 o~cr th~ar heads and not saving a ~1me. Either they have to start livmg hke the rest of U$. or in the immonal words of Marie Antoinette, "Let 'cm fi.x their own toilets." -Long Gone to Texas. DEAR GONE TO TEXAS: Tiiie caltue 1llod mest llave beea ler- rtflc. 1 llope yoa're bppy dowa tltere. RE-ROOFIN Don't · ~~ - compromise your home and family with . imitation . -1'•.f, tiles ... New 'Twlll6ht Zoiie' seeking old magic By JERRY BUCK ~, .......... .,... LOS ANGELES -After a 2~year absence, CBS is hoping that it can navigate its way back to that "middle ground between li.lht and shadow, between science and superstition." That's how host-creator Rod Serl- ing described "The Twilight Zone" at the opening of every show during its time on CBS during the late 1950s and early '60s. "The TwiJight Zone," which has its debut Sept. 27, joins three other anthology shows in the fall season. For years there were no anthology series, but this year CBS and NBC have two each. C BS also has "The George Bums Co,ncdy Weck" and NBC has Steven Spielberg's "Amaz- inJ Stories" and the return of''Alfred Hitchcock Presents." "I think what sets 'The Twilight Zone' apart from the other shows is that it focuses on identifiable people you can relate to," said the show's executive producer, Philip DcGuere. "Likeable, ordinary people. Then they're thrust into the 'Twilight Zone' and we sec how they cope. "Television is a personality me- dium. People invite it into their homes. The ke y is f Ctting a hook on people. Our show is not gimmicky. We don't have to have a monster or a Oying saucer each week." The original "Tw1hght Zone" made its debut as a half-hour show in 1959. but in its fourth year 1t expanded to an hour. It returned to a half-hour the following season. 1963-64, which was also its last. (Some of the hour shows were rerun -. in, prime time in the summer of 1965.) -J "The Twilight Zone," of course, has never really disappeared from the home screen despite its cancellation by CBS. The show is as big a favorite in reruns as ''Star Trek," "M-A-S-H'' and "I Love Lucy." The old half-hour programs pres- ented just one story each week, but the new one-hour show will have anywhere from two to fo ur separate stories. Serling was the host of the earlier shows, but as of this time no decision has been made about whether the new series will have a host. DcGucre has decided, however, he will not go the way of"Alfred Hitchcock Presents," which is clcctronic~lly colonng earl y black and white Hitchcock appear- ances by computer. "Serhng's comments were too specific about that week's story. whereas Hitchcock was more gener- ic," he said. The new edition 1s presenting all new stories, except for two rema kes: "Dead Man's Shoes," which becomes "Dead Woman's Shoes," and "Night of the Meek." On the other hand, the Hitchcock show largely will present remakes from the earlier series. "'The Twililht Zone' is in the language," DcCuere said. "We hope 'The Twilight Zone' itself is the star and rea,son enough for people to watch.' DcGuere, who also produced the quiclcJy canceled "The Whiz K.Jds." said be has gotten away from regular cpisodk television because "it's no longer fun. So far this has been lake a busman's holiday. People have such a fondness for this show and arc so interested in bringing 1t back that I think we'll have no trouble getting good people." The show bas attracted well-known film directors, including William FriedJcin ("The French Connection" Gnd ··The EJlorcist''). Wes Craven ("Nightmare on Elm Street"). Peter Medak ("The Ruling Oass" and "Zorro The Gay Blade") and John MiHus '("The Wind and the Lion" and "8'-Wednesdav"). Landon, 'dad' r eunite on TV LOS ANGELES (AP) -Lorn~ G reene and Michael L.tndon, who were father and son in "Bonanza." will be reunited for the first time in 13 years on L.tndon's "Hiahway to ·Heaven." Greene will aucst star 1n an episode of the NBC series written for him by L.tndon. He will play a "ham actor wbo writes a bit pla1 -and even Ood comes to watch tt: Greene was Ben Cartwn&ht and Landon was Utlle Joe durin1 the 14 years "Bonanza" was on NBC. Scienee-fiction author Harlan El- lison is executive consultant, and the writers include Ray Bradbury, George R.R. Martin and Richard Matheson. Elliott Gould. Robert Klein, Annie Potts, Bruce Willis, James Coco and Melinda Dillon arc among the actors starring in various segments. DcGucre also has a contract for several projects at Walt Otsney Productions. "Nothing is active right now," he said. "I'm kind of glad. I think this show deserves the full attention of everyone involved." Manufacturers of Southern California's Best Selhng Roofing Tiles Dare to be More. 17 mg "tar". I 3 mg lllCotine "' per c1g11ette by FTC method Warning The Surgeon General Has Determined Th~t Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health J Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Monday, September 18, 1986 eUy't" OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER Monday thru Fr~ 11 AM to 9 PM 8 Mllllon Suffer From Mlgra~ne BY DR. JAMES McEACHERN Dear Doctor: I have been told that migraine headaches cawie brain damage. Ia t.hia t.rue? My answer would read a. fol.lows: "U you suffer from rnigrai.ne, you have enough trouble without worry- ing about brain damage-end~ i.a I evidence that no brain damage ever resulta." Migraine acxounta for a friah tf ul number of headache.a, and the number of sufferers in the United States alone is estimated at from 2 million to as high aa 8 million. Knowina theee fact.on can be help- ful in avoiding migraines. But, once 1 ~ has sta.r1ed. theft ia little to do but rest quietly and try to rel.ax. DR. McEACBERN Migraine is the ''sick headache .. type--cluaically, oo one side of the head, but generally, ao aevere aa to leave you no choice but to suffer through it. There la nau.ea, extreme tens1tivity to light, aometimee a dis- turbance of vision, occasionally head noises and other odd aymptoma The only truly effective coune i.I to I besides th headache ·wu try to prevent the9e heedaches in-e I . •lead of trvina IA .,_ ... a ---'y _ .. _, A3 many as half the children of -J--a.., uuu n::uJeU ai..: migraine suffe.rers a1ao have th.la they have at.arted. Chiropractic car is trouble to some extent. It is a1ao the choice of an ~er-increasing obeervt:d that sufferers usually are of number of migraine suffer-era. intense perfectionist types, and • And you know, ..ne of the most penods of stress trigger attack.a In thrilling and truly rewarding pro- some cases allergy aemms to be ln-femonal experiences I've had in voJved, and IOrDt' patient& aay that Chiropractic have oome when an ex- ::hocolate bothers them migraine sufferer tells me that he or In addition, if a pel"IOn feels she has kicked the rnignune hablt. tumself beconung tenae and ''all wound up," a deliberate effon to I Dr. McEacbern mailltaiD1 a relax and let th.inp slide. instead of CltJropractic office at 1755 Or· mamtai.ning the pressure ot ac-uge Ave., Salte "E ," Costa Mesa; ::omplish too much, helps. l ( 714) 131-00U. -PaW .... ..--., (/) 8 I I .. • I .. I • I J I • ~ORY W1"DRBEAN ~~ ~~.A1 ~~ _.,. ... ~ ...... -"' THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane "Kittycot likes dresses 'cause they make better lops." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Now. who does that paw belong to? ... As if I didn't know." DRABBLE 1 ll>IU. !>iRll(f. 'TUf. '4f.U..OO Mu. i.ltT" 1 ME. OJE. Mu. .. GARFIELD CM(CK TM( MAil FOR. M(, WILL YOO, uARFIELP? MOON MULLINS MAKIN~ WAVES ... 9 ,. JUDGE PARKER J, by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY fW.J Maf}fEJt ~ UOO IJEJtl.J H~W ! BJG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) -, filJI .. The c•t doean't aHm to want to be put out tonight." DENNIS THE.MENACE t .. J I by Hank Ketcham OE ~ CCfE. '1tllJ W£4J2 'TMAT 511.U( AAT EVERV TI~E '(OU Fl)( CUf< S!JPF'aZ? PEANUTS THIS PROGRAM NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT .. r IF WE DON1T HEAR FROM YOU. WE'LL ~AVE TO 60 OFF TME AIR ... by Gary Trudeau by Jeff MacNally FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston • .. '-.. --·-·-.. ---·.. -----·· • SHES MAKJN1 A CAKE FROM A KIT." by Kevin Fagan by Jim Davis JOSTTMl5 PAC~AO£ l"MAT CAM£ AIRMAIL by Ferd & Tom Johnson HARDER WITH T~' LIFT FOOT! WE.1~ DRIFTIN' OFF COURSE { OK,ALL '/CXJ L~­ BAUS!! yoove. HAO A SLACK SUMMER AN.\TS1iMEIO \OUGHE.N UP U TUMBLEWEEDS BRIDGE -------~- Q. l -As South, vulnerable. you hold: +J7 <;::>QJ92 0 Kl06 +J876 The bidding has proceeded: North Eatt South Welt l + Pa11 l NT Pa11 2 NT Pa11 7 What action do you take'/ A .-Your first reaction might be that you have said all you are going to say. However, your hand is ac· .tually better than its 8 HCP might Jsuggest. You have an honor in part ner's suit. and good intermediates. We would venture on to game. Q.2-As South. vulnerable, vou hold: · + AK874 <::>63 0 A105 + KJ6 The bidding has proceeded: Nortb Eaat outh W eet 1 + Pa11 I + 2 <::> 2 + Pu1 7 What do you bid now'/ A. -If you routinely bid four • spades. you do not appreciate the full value of your hand . The fact that partner has made a free bid ~ - -means that he is likely to be better L_~...;:~::-~~::_--c_'.:::::!~rg,-~-!::;;;e.:~;:;;;;;.----J ~~:~ai~~ni;e~:ta~~:. ~~~~t h!~:h i: -· / "-' .... ___ bid of three clubs. When partner by Harold Le Ooux learns that his suit is solidified. he mil{h t be able to cuf' bid the entmy .I. WAS AT THE CITY c::uAt FOA u.A«:H INC> 1uit., w hi eh could propel you to a I OVERHEARD HIM A.9~1NG ™e ~ laydown ~lam. eoAR0 ~RA'TOR ~~ ~ UNl..ISTl:O PHONe' ~A! HAO ~ , ASKeD HIM TO GET IT FOR VOU? NOi I'O HAVE NO REASON FOR WANTING IT! Q.J -East Wut vulnnahle, u South yol~ hold: •10763 ~9352 OA83 +AS The bidding has proceeded: Nortll Eatt oat.t. Weet I + l <;::> Pa11 Pa11 Obie 2 <;::> ? What a<"tion do you take? A.-Your hand should develop at leaat. three tri<"ka defensively. possl bly more. Partner qullf' probably wlll produce four trick1. That lookit • BES\DES HEAi~ F\ND e~HAUS\iON ­Yoo HA'JEONL'{ ONe T~NGIO FE.Rf\ IN TH\.S I CbURSE· by Tom K. Ryan ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ like a sure l wo·trick penalty to us, perhaps even a bonanza. Double. Q.4 -Both vulnerable. as South you hold: +652 '7Q762 0 853 +Jl02 The bidding has proceeded: Wett North Ea1t South 1 IV Obie Pa11 7 Wha t do you bid now'/ A. -It behooves you to get out of the auction as cheaply as possible. OMAR~ SHARIFF -' .. {. That means you should bid one spade . A pass is too bizarre ·for words. and you would deserve a life sentence for even thinking of bid· ding one no trump -that shows far more values than you havf' and in· vites partner to double any further competitive action by the op· ponents. Q.5-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold: +AK8 OAK 7 OJ93 +Al076 The bidding has proceeded: outh Wut North Ea1t 1 + Pa11 I + Pa11 ? What do you bid now? A. -With 19 HCP and good support for partner. some sort of jump 11 called for . The choirf' lits betwun two no trump and thrte spadH. &th art flawed -you don't have a diamond stopper for no trump and you havf' only thrte card support. for partner's ault. We feel that the jump to two no trump i1 thf' better choice -it certainly paints a more descriptive picture of you r hand. Q.6-Both vulnerable. as South you hold; +KJ <::7 9872 OQ9 +J8542 The bidding has proceeded: Nortb Eatt Soutb Weet J + Pa11 l NT Pa11 2 0 Pa11 2 + Pa11 3 + Pa11 ? What action do you take? CHARLES GOREN A. -Points. schmoint.s. This isn't the time to worry about whether you have 7 points or 9. What. mat· ters here that is that you have three honor cards in partner's two aults. and he is looking ror game. If he needs more than that on this auc· tion, it's his bidding that needa scrutinizing, not yours. r., 1a1 ... u.. .._., c.__ o.,. ............. u.r fw ...... playen. wrtt. G.,... BtWp L.UW, Jtot Claa•wla'" Ava., Cla ... Ja- M•, N.J. 08077. , . I MONDAY, SEPfEMBEA 16, 1985 S.•ttl• wine • wlld one In NFL Ktlon In S.n Diego. 112. Aru high echool footlMlll coechea l•k• • look back.. 81. White's reward: He's headed for bench Ex·USC star runs for 144 Ycirds. but Dickerson will take his place PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Charles Whne knows lus reward for his best game 1n the National FootbaU League wiJJ be a seat on the bench. White gained 144 yards on 36 camcs and scored a touchdown Sunday to help the Rams beat the Philadelphia Ea.ales. 17-6. AJthough White gained more than I 00 yards 1n an NFL game for the first time. star running back Eric Dickerson has returned to the Rams and figures to be back in the swtina lineup when Los Angeles faces Seattle neJtt Monday ~· t. "1 mi t as well enjoy 1t now," White said. "because neJtt week m ight be running down and covenng kickoffs apin." Rams' defenders aJso contributed to the club's second victory in as many contests by. collcct1ng five sacks, intercepting four passes by rookie Eagles' quarterback Randall Cunningham and recovering thrtt fumbles by the sputt.erina Ea&Jes' offense. Philadelphia ha~ yet to score a touchdown whlle losing its first two games. White almost wasn't on the field Sunday. Waived by the Oeveland Browns after four years, he was siJlled as a free aaent by Los Angeles before the Rams waived him Sept. 2. Because there were no claims. he was called back. The former Southern California standout, who gathered 103 of his 144 yards in the second half after pin.ina 83 in the Rams' opener against Denver, 1s the club's third-string runnmi back. The second-stringer behind Dickerson, is the inJured Barry Redden. · Dickerson ended his holdout by rcponing to the Rams Friday. He was on the sidelines Sunday. Last year, he gained 2, IOS yards to break the single-season rushing record of OJ . Simpson, who ran for 2.003 yards tn 1973. Linebacker Jim Collins said the Rams' defense was determined not to let Cunningham beat them by running in his starting debut for the Eagles. "He's really tough in the open field and as touJbasany 9uarterback in the feaguc to bnng down," CoUins said. ' That's why our game plan was to keep pressure on him and contain him as much as possible. We had fo ur guys in the lanes so he couldn't scramble and make big gains." Cunningham completed 14 of his 34 passes for 2 11 rar~s with the fo ur interceptions. and he ran for 90 of the Eagles' 120 rushtng yards. "I have to improve o n urning." said Cunn1n~. "I have to get the ball off sooner. That was my problem. I was loolung for receivers and someumes It was too late. Sunday'• NFL score• .... 17. •Philadelphia 6 SeatUe 49. •Sen Otego 35 •San Francisco 35. Atlanta 16 •Detroit 26, Dallas 21 •c hJcago 20. New En~and 7 •Mtarnf 30. Indianapolis 13 •Denver 34. New Orleans 23 •Washington 16, Houston 13 Green Bay 23. 9 New York Giants 20 •st. LouJs 41 . Cincinnati 27 Mlnneaota 31 . •Tampa Bay 16 •New York Jets 42. Buffalo 3 •denotes home team. Ton1-bt'• Game Pittsburgh at c reveland (Channel 7 at 6) •NFL ro undup, peac B2. •Standinp. Rams statisucs, page 84. . ..He's yo~ a helluva ~ent and has a good future with the EaaJes, Campbell said after the game. ''I ltke his arm movement. He'll profit from what be did today." Los Anseles took a 10-3 lead in the first period on an 80-yard punt return by Henry Ellard and a 33-yard field goal by Mike Lansford. The f.qJes made it 1 ~ by halfumc o n field goaJs of 50 and 45 yards by PauJ Mcfadden. But the Rams blanked the Eagles 10 the second half, and drove 8"1yards in nine plays m the final penod. with White scoring from 17 yards out. Tulsa player 'stable' TULSA (AP) -Marcus Anderson, Un1verstty of Tulsa safety, was in stable condition toda} at a hospital after beina earned from the field 1 n the final mmute of the Humcanc's 21 -17 loss to Texas Tech. Anderson, a senior from Topeka, Kan .. sustained two brok.cn vertebrae in his neck an what offic1aJs said was a career~dina iajury. I Anderson was expected to be released from St. Francis Henry Ellard loob downfteld on Illa W&J to an 80-yard pant return wblch pat the llama ,,,..._... bl co••aad bl the ftnt qaarter. The llalu ballt OD Illa nm to ncoJ'4 a 17 ·6 trlamph. Eagles' Coach Marion Campbell sajd Cunningham would stan again nellt Sunday against the Redskins at Washington. Hospital later in the week and shouJd be able to resume classwork next week. football coach Don Monon said. Drug trial becoming 'historic' Baseba ll's great s becom ing human under scrutin y PIITSBURGH {AP) -The trial of a Philadelphia caterer accused of beina a cocaine pipeline to major league bascbaJI players is becorruna "an historic coun case," according to the prosecutinit attorney. U.S. Attorney J. AJan Johnson said that because widely known athJctes are being forced to reveal the prob- lems that the easy availability of cocaine bas had on professional sports, the American public is becom- ing more aware of the dangers of drugs. "Cocaine is a problem not just in baseball, but in society," Johnson said. "Twenty million peo~le in this country have tned coca1nc. Five thousand people try it for the fint time every day. It is a major problem in this country. "This case has shown what hap- pens to some people when they use cocaine." Seven major league players have testified to date in the U.S. District Court triaJ of Cunis Strong, 39, of Philadelehia. Strong is charged with distributmg drugs on 16 dates from 1980 to 1984 wben the Pittsburgh Pirates played home games. No players are expected to be called as witnesses Monday as Johnson wraps up the government's case, but defense attorner Adam 0 . Renfroe Jr. plar:is to call • five or six players" beginning Tuesday as the trial enters its third week. Amo ng the players Renfroe said be may subpoena to testify arc former Pirates captains Willie Stargell and Bill Madlock, who were accused last week of routinely distributing amphetamines in the team's clubhouse. Johnson, in his first lengthy inter· view since the case went to trial Sept. 3, acknowledged he bas received criticism for granting immunity to the players in return for their testi- mony. Renfroe has charged his client is not wealthy and has become "a scapegoat" for the highly paid ath- letes: none of whom face charges. "1 ve thrown the first punch and r vc been criticized,'' Johnson said. "You aJways rislc cnticism when you try a hiah-profile case. We sought immunity for the rlayers for a pu~se -to compe somebody to tesufy. We didn't act any volunteers ... these guys (players) weren't run- nina over here voluntccrina to testify. They weren't runnina over here sayinj so and so was dealing drup at the Hilton. "I didn't like granting immuo?ty to these people. But my contclence didn't let me walk away ftom this cue. We had clandestine mectinas with a buyer and a teller and no one else present You had to put immun1t,Y to either one or the other. Sellina '' a felony. buyina is • misdemeanor. Given a choice. you'll aJways ao after the seller rather than the buyer." I • I -------- Mauch: Now maybe we can g~t rolling Angels clobber Rangers. 12-4: trail by 2 112 By JOSEPH DUDEVOJR DlllJ,...Cc:ae c a 1 Time is of the essence and the Angels know it as they hit the road with a-precious flake of momentum that they ho~ will snowball as they continue their punuit of the Kansas City Royall. Sunday's 12-4 win over the Texas Raqers, coupled with the Royals split ofa doubleheader with Oakland, cut Kansas City's lead in the Ameri- can Lcaaue West to 21/J pines with t 9 games remainina (20 for the RoyaJs). "It's time to get aoina." said Angel Manaer Gene Mauch. "The players are on their own. It's theirs now. That's the lineup we've wanted in there aJJ aJona. And now that every- one's back maybe we can act rolling." In their ,,.atina of the Rangers, the Anaels aot rollina in a hurry. The Anaheim Stadium crowd of 30, l 77 hardly had time to settle in before Rcgie Jackson unloaded a tbree·run homer in the first innina, his 24th of the year, to get the Angels off and runniq. "It's important for us to score early," said Jackson. "It takes the pressure off us and gets us in the right frame of mind." The onJy time the Anaels might have fe lt anr p~uurc in this one was in the sixth innina when the Rangers hit back-to-back homen off Angel starter Kirk McCaskill to make the score 6-3. McCaskill then had two on with one out in the seventh, but Stewart Cliburn came on to get a double play to act out of it. "McCaskill wasn't dazzling." said Mauch, "but he needed to go out there and win the pme, which he did." In runniDJ his record to l 0-11 , McCaskill wd, "I'm still tryina to get some consistency. I was sailina aJong. then a couple bad pitches and I'm out of there." ToqlJt'• fame None scheduJed. TU~DAY'S GAME Aa1el1 at Chicago. Time: 5:30 p.m. TV: None. Radio: KMPC (710) Including the two homers Sunday, McC.askill bas ~ven up a total of JO home runs in his last five starts, and 22 for the year. "In -the back of my mind I can't help but think about the home runs," said McCaskill. "But I can't worry about them." He didn't have to in this one. The Anaels pounded out 14 hits to make thinp easy before they head into Cbicqo for a three-game set starting Tuesday. The Royals, · meanwhile, return home to meet Suttle in a four-pme series. bcainning tonight. AJong with Jackson, center fielder <;iary Pettis bad a bigprne, going 3 for 4 with three runs scored, two stolen bases and an RBI. · The two steals gave Pettis 51 on the year which is second best in the league behind Ricky Henderson. No Angel has had more than 50 ste.als since 197S. when Mickey Rivers swi ped 70 fo r the club record. "I'm being a little more patient at the plate," said Pettis. "I really can't say what I'm doina differently now. rm not a scientist when it comes to hittini. I just hope I don't forget what I'm doing so I can keep domg it," he said after raising his September averqe to .38S (20-52). "When a JUY like that fets on a roll, it ilJlites the whole bal club," said Jackson. "It's going to take him and everyone else to pull this thing off. There's not a lot of time left. The younaauys have to produce and so do Lhe Suttons, the Candclarias, the Jacksons and other veterans." Another Ansel who might be re- (Ple&M ... ANOSL8/82) Bob Boone .corea on Ja.an Beniquu'a pinch atnale u he a penda catcher Geno Petralll. o.-y,... ........ ~ ......... Gary Pettla wu Mfe, too. (lneet) beatlJli oat IJ'Oa.Dder to third ln Aneet.' ii-4 Ttctory. :,a{!0~!'::J8 Reds prove it, anything' s possible NEW YORK (AP) -Veteran slugcr Don Baylor1 unhappy at bcina platooned1 has apm asked the New York Yanxccs to trade him. The 36-ycar-old Baylor confirmed Sunday that be talked with general manaaer Oyde Kina . "It's nothina new," Baylor wd. "It's somethina that's been bwldJna for three months." Baylor, who was the Yankees' full- time deS!IJl&ted hitter at the start of the season, bu been playina mostly apioat left.handed 'pi1Chen over the east few weeks. Rookie lluaer Dan Pasqua, 1 left-handed bitter, plays apinst riaht-handen to take advan· lalC of Yankee Stadium·s sbon right- fteld fence. Baylor is bettig .235 with 21 bomen and 83 RBis in .OS at-bats. Puqua, who q,ent most of lbe aeuon in the minon. is hittina .209 in 13" tri~ with nine homers and 25 R8ts. ·1 sec wbe.re it's aoina." Baylor laid. ••t won't IO throuah another year like this.·· 9 -run explosion against Valenzuela wins it, 10 -6 CINCINNA Tl (AP) -Pete Rose. the statistic.minded player-man~er of the C'1nc1n- nall Reds, was at a toss to put his club's dramatic victory Sunday into numerical perspective. "What are the odds of sconna nine runs 1n one innina .,ainst Fernando Valenzuelar' Rost said, after the Reds did just that to beat the Los Angeles~ t~ unday. "The odds must be very hi~. "A million to one," tucssed outfielder Gary Redus. wbo closed the rally with a thrtt-run homer. "And that was the one." lbe odda of ICOrin&. o.ine run.s m a pme apinst the Dodeen' •WY aren·1 very cncouraa- ina. mucb leU in an inn.ins. Lot Anerks took a 2.91 stall'earned runavenee lntoSunday'spme. the best an the NationaJ ~· Valermaeta"p2.24 ERA wu only the third· best amona Oodaer starters. and he was lowcnna it with a f~hitter th.roup I.be fint five 1nn1nas Meanwhile. Los Angeles wu taktnA advan- tage of 3 rare ~d outing b Reds' rook1e left hander Tom Browning, 17-9, who allowed ~1 \ runs over the same s1>3n tostt his personal S<'"en pme wmning struk all but snuffed out Dov. n 6-1 10 t~e sixth. the Reds h11 thc 1ackpot. Dave Parker's RB l sma.tc and a two-run double b) Nick Esasky got the Reds v.1th1n tY..O Da'e Concepcion and 8o Dtaz hit one-<>ut run· sconng singles to ttc 1t and bnng on rehe' er Carlos Diaz with runners on first and third Ron ()(ster hned a sin'1c to left to put the Reds ahead. and Redus lut bis suth hom<'r to put lhr pmc out of reach In all. t 2 batters went to the plate for thC' ~tub's sccond-b1aacst innina of the 5eason tra1hn1Just a I 0-run cffon aaainst the Nt1it. ' ork Meu last May. "Our chan~s ~~ shm to none." said Brownin&, the lea<hna rookie winner 1n the m.,on this year "I felt very fonunate I'm not 101~ ro' compl&Jn He (VaJen7Uela) was JU t cnhs1na alo~ I'm amazed v.e came bad .. Th<' 1nnina also left Valentuela. 11.10. wtthout c'planatJon "I threw a lot of pn~hes that 1nn1na. · Valenzuela said "The) JU t hit the ball ·· Oodaers 1 R"us' I ~-Q) at \an Diego 'hov. I). ll l 1 Time ~ o~ pm TV None Rad.Jo "-AB ( "NOi Th" Dodgl'r left hftnder \Std he felt ~trong 11. hen the mnmg \l3nC"\I He said 11 d1dn •t bother him 10 go L)n 1u'1 thrt"t da' ,. re 1 after his pre' IOU) start "I've pitched good ~all on three da\i.' ren ·· h" said · · Prt-sSt'd for an e'planatton for the bad mruna, Jle \Jmpl) shru11tcd. "ih~) JU~t h11 the ball good ... f'te !latd. The VlCtOf) p' e the 5CC'Ond-p~ Red a spht of their four-pme wncs. lcavtna them 8i,., pmcs behind the Dcxtie" tn the National Ltague West The Dodgen· number for cltn tung the divlSion is I' "" "lt'' not over )'tt." 1d Red first batcman Ton) Pn'ez ~·1t·~ not CIS\ but you never t.now .. -----....... ------------------~~ • .I. c: - I • .... ' \ \ 0 tJ.S. loses ;-No rest SealJaw.ks win a wild one for awe, -.. He was booed when be t1rst trotted pirate S RyderGup SUTI'ON COWF1El..O, Ena~ Land (AP) • Sam Tol'1'1lnce of ~tland scored the clincruna ~unday as Orc:at Britain· ended 28 years of frut- tratiou and dcfca~ the United States 10\h.1 tvJ in the biennial Krieg' s 5 TD passes oversh adow Fouts ' 4 yar s, 4 T D passes in-49 -3 victory R~ Cup aoJf matches. European captain, Tony From AP d.lspa'°'e• scored his second touchdown ot lbe same on a 1-yard plunae with I' IC(l()Dds remaining in the period to live the Scahawks a 42-29 advantage. Warner scored earlier on a J.yard run. Jacklin, bad tears in his eyes as he rushed onto the 18th en at lbe BelCty Golf Oub and uged and CODIJ'tulated Torrance ·on his cllnchinf• comeback I-up victory over U .. Open champion Andy North. "Unbelievable. h 's history. We SAN DIEGO-Quanerback Oa ve Kriea threw five touchdown passes four of them to wide receiver Dary( Turner, and rurutina back Curt Warn- er rushed for 169 yards and a pair of scores Sunday as tbe Seattle Sca- hawks roUed to a wild 49-35 National K.rica. who completed 22 of his 32 passes for 307 yards, threw a 34-y&rd touchdown pass to Turner in the second quaner and oonnected with the fleet wide receiver on scorina throws of I ~l ¥> and 7 yards in the second baJf. IVica also tossed a 6-yard to~bdown pass to Steve Larpnt. made history today " Jacklin said. "It was a dream finish. You ·Football Leaauc victory over the San Dieao Charaers. dream of winnina a Ryder Cup that way." The British-European team, which took a two-pomt lead into lbe last day's play, won six of the first eight singles matches and Tbe Seabawks. who arc now 2-0, p(Cvailed convincingly despite a brilliant passing pcrfonnanoc by San Diego quarterback Dan Fouts, who completed 29 of his 43 throws for 440 yards and four touchdowns. Elsewhere in the NFL Sunday:· 1Joa1 H, Cowboy• U: In Pontiac, Eric Hipple passed for one touch- down and ran for another while a firt.d-up Detroit defense foreed five Dallas turnovers Sunday as the Lions held off the Cowboys. b&Jved the other one to take an unbeatable lead. The Americans won three of the last four, but by then, it was all over. After trailing 2 3-14 at baJf\Jmc, Seattle exploded for four touchdowns in the thtrd quarter as Krieg com- -plcted 12 of 14 throws in the period for 192 yards. Tbrcc of his comple- tions went for touchdowns. It was the Lions' second straight triumph under fint•year Goacb Dar- ryl Rogers. Warner, who carried 28 times, Minnesota finally hears from Howe after three days From AP dJlpatcllet CLEVELAND -Pitcher Steve • Howe, who was suspended.from baseball last year while recovering from a ·drug problem, was absent from ihe Minnesota Twins for the third straight day Sunday, the team disclosed. "Steve Howe has contacted Andy McPhail (Twins' player personnel director) this morning," Manager Ray Miller said as Minnesota was complctillJ a five-game series against the Qevcland Indians. "He 11 OK and will meet with the manager and club officials tomorrow (Monday) afternoon." Howe had been given per- mission by the club to report late for Friday night's doubleheader against the Indians. due to an illness in bis wife's family in Detroit. But Howe missed the double-header as well as a doubleheader Saturday and Sun- day's single game. Bowe "We will reserve judgment or comment until we have met with Steve and had the opponunity to discuss tbe circumstances surrounding the absence," Miller saio. Howe had a 1-1 record with a 4. 91 earned run average and three saves in 19 games for the Los Angeles Dodgers this year before being released July 3. The Twms signed him Aug. 11. In 13 relief appearances with Minnesota. be was 2-3 with a 6.16 ERA. Howe was suspended by former Commissioner Bowie Kuhn on Dec. 15, 1983, for violation of baseball's drug rules. Howe's grievance over the suspension was settled June I, 1984, when it was agreed be should sit out the rest of the season and concentntte on his rcbabiJit.ttion. He signed with the Dodgers for the 1985 season last October. Quote of the day "I am happy to go to a club like the Yankees and play with a guy r truly love, Phil. I wanted to sec Phil win bis 300th game but I thought I'd be in the stands and.notj1uhc dugout," -JM Nleuo, who was picked up by the Yankees to Jive New York a brothers pitching combinauon. Phil Niekro has 299 career victories. Kansas State fires Dickey KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Kansas State has fired football Coach Jim Dickey after the Wildcats opened the season with two humiliating defeats. Yankees trail Toron to by 4 1h The Toronto Blue Jays did what they • had to do. They went into New York, won three of four games at Yankee Stadium, and left town Sunday up by 41/i games in the American League East. The Blue Jays scored six runs in the third inning and went on to beat the Yankees, 8-5. The Blue Jays knocked out Eel lftl'IOD, 1().8, in the third inning and went on to an 8-0 lead. Cllff JoblOD, an ex-Yankee, singled home two "'ns in the third and finished with three RBI ... Elsewhere, ~r1e Brett hit a three-run homer ancfBIHI Blad! pitched a four-hitter to help Kansas Ci ty salvage a doubleheader split in Oakland with a 7-2 win in the nightcap. ln the opener, Mike Heatll'1 threc- run homer broke a 1-1 tic in the fourth and sent the A's to a 4-3 victory. The split left the Royals 21h games ahead of the Angels in thc-A.L West. Bren tied a career high with his 2Slb home run ... Brett Detroit dealt Baltimore a 4-1 setback as Cal Ripllen'1 throwing error allowed Barbaro Garbey to score the go-ahead run from second ba.se and Luce P arriatl followed with a two-run single as Detroit scored three times in the eighth. Mike Vou1 hit his 27th homer for Baltimore ... Minnesota applied a 4-2 verdict over Cleveland as Bert Blylevea, facing Cleveland for the first time since be was traded to Minnesota last month, got the victory in allowina seven hits over eight innings. Blyleven, 14-15 overall and 5-4 with the Twins, struck out seven and raised his Air leading total to 179 ... Boston took a 4-2 decision over Milwaukee as Jeff Sellen won his major-league debut by scattering eight hits over 61h innings ... Carltoe Fl1k and Harold Ba.lacs drove in two runs each and Dave We~el1ter pitched 41/J innings of scoreless relief to lead Chicago over Seattle, 6-3. Baines picked ue bis 98tb and 99tb RBI of the year with a run-scoring single in the second and a sacrifice fl y in the fourth. Fisk got his 95th and 96th with a double and single. Ceden o'• 5 -for-5 leads Cards Cesar Cedeao went 5-for-5 and drove Iii in four runs, two with a homer, as SL Louis maintained its one-half pme lead over New York in the National League East with a 5-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs. c.cdcno, who also bad two doubles, is 19-for-36 with 12 RBI since the ~rdinals ac:quired ~im from Cinc_inn~ti in late August. H 1s two-run homer m the seven th 1 nning broke a 1-1 tic ... Elsewhere in the NL. the New York Mets got past Montreal 6-2 as Dauy Heep bit a three-run homer in the first inning, Meotte WU.O. homered and doubled twice and Howard JolmlOD added a solo home run to lead New York. Roa Darlla&, 16-5, won his sixth strai$bt decision. He gave up 6ve bits m 71/J innings. Jes.e Oroece finished up for his 16th save ... University (Irvine) H i&b product Tim Wallaclt homcrea for Mon- treal . . . Pittsburgh stopped Philadelphia, 5-4. J.._y flay Poa .. Hipple, who completed 10 of 23 paSSC$ for 141 yards flipped a 21-yard scoring strike to Jeff Chadwick at 4:24 of the first quarter and ran I yard for a TO at 2:33 of the third quarter. fhn H, Faleotat 11: In San Francisco, R<>&er Craig's 62-yard touchdown run, his fifth TD in two games, highlighted a JS-point, sec- ond-half explosion which carried the Super Bowl champion San Francisco 49ers past Atlant.t. The 49ers trailed Atlant.t 1()..() at b&Jftime of their first home game of the ICaSOD, and they heard some boos from the sellout CandJcstick Park crowd. But the boos turned to cheers as San Francisco s~urted to a 28-13 lead. Qra.ia ran nine yards for the 49en' first touchdown and Joe Montana scored the go-ahead TD on a one-yard quarterback sneak following a big play by Bill Ring on punt coverage. Vlkiq1 SI, 8 11CCUeen 11: In Tampa, Minnesota safety Joey Browner returned an interception 15 }'ards for a touchdown and Rufus Bess blocked a punt to set up another score to lead the Vikings to a victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Dues, also rebuilding under fint-year Coach Leeman Bennett., dropped to ().2 despite a 113-yard rushina v.crformance by tailback James Wilder, who aJso caught 13 passes for 71 yards. DolpMa_1 SI, Colb U : In Miami, Dan Marino, ignoring his first Oran1e Bowl boos, passed for 329 yards and two touchdowns to lead Miami over the Indianapolis Colts. In his first home game since a controversial training camp contract holdout, Marino hit 29 of 48 passes. ooto the field, and qain when his first ~ wu behind Mark Duper and fell incomplete. But he connected on the next two attempts and the 53,693 fans were back on his side. RedtkluJI, Olien U: In Washing- ton, D.C., the Redskins. buJldina an early 16-point lead behind tbe power runnina of Oeorp Rose~ and John Rigins. held on to defeat the penaJty- plqued Houston Oilers In an inter- conferencc game. The Oilers. who were penalized 13 times, saw two touchdowns and a S 1. yard pass play called back for infrac· lions in the second half. Bean H , Patrtoca '7: in Chicago, middle linebacker Mike Singletary, lead.Ina a ferocious defense, registered three sacks and intercepted a pass, firin& Chicago to a victory over New Enaland. The Patriots were able to cross into Bear territory only once until Tony Eason bit Craia James with a 90-yard touchdown pass in the fourth quarter. Jet1 fl, Bil• J: In Ea.st Rutherford, N.J., Freeman McNeil rushed for a team-record 192 yards, including a 69-yard dash on the first play of the 9CCOnd half, leadina the New York Jets to a rout of Buffalo. McNeil, who ran for 1,070 yards in only 12 games last year, used bis ample speed and shifty moves to run thtouah the Bills' porous defense and break the Jets' smgle-pme rushina record of 180 yards, set by Matt Snell in 1964. Card!Dal1 41, Bea1a11 U: In St. Louis, Neil Lomax threw touchdown passes of 27 and 25 yards to Earl Ferrell and Roy Green, driving the St. Louis Cardinals to a triumph over Cincinnati. Paeken U, Glu t1 !O: In Green Bay, Eddie Lee Ivery ran I yard for a touchdown with 4:07 left as the Packers defeated the New York Giants. Broaco1 34, Salat1 %3: In Denver, John Elway threw for a career-high 353 yards and four touchdowns. including a 65-yard bomb to Butch Johnson, to spark Denver past New Orleans. OCCmust ace ---h ungry Fullerton; Rustler s host Dons By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS °' ................. Frctb from its frusmting 7-7 tic with arch-rival Orange Coast, the Golden West Colleae football team wilJ meet another long-time foe from Orange County1 Rancho Santiago, Saturday ni&ht m a 7:30 cootcst at occ. The Rustlers, who open Pac-9 play next week b_y traveling to meet the conference favorite Taft. will try to cam their first win of the season against the Dons. Rancho SantiQo, which was for- merly caJled Santa Ana, stunned Fullenon, 27-24, in its opener Satur- day. Meanwhile, Oranfe Coast figures to have its hands fu l again when the Pirates hit the road for the first time to play Fullerton, which is smarting from its loss to the Dons. The Hornets were expected to battle Taft for the Pao-9 Conference crown. Oranac Coast will open Mission Conference warfare the following week apinst Saddlcback. Saddleback, wruch extended its home-field winning streak Saturday with a 48-14 victory over El Camino, has its finaJ conference tuneup Satur- day! traveling to San Bernardino Val cy College. San Bernardino is also 1-0 after handling Compton. 19-14. Saturday. seturd9Y'I Gemes lhnchO Santleeo vs. Golden Wn• at ~noe co .. 1 Oranoe Coaat •• FulllftOl'I ~••Sen l«nardlno LA Pierce•• Secramanto cc, 7 Taft al W•f Hiib, 7 Portlf'Vllle al Ml. Sen AlllOl'llo, 7 Mooroant •I Wnl LOS"""'"· 1:30 S.1111 Bartwtra CC al EHi LA Vt11tur1 at l akerafleld Glendale at LA V1tltv Comoton II LA Southwnt, I LA HlrtlOr I I El Cimino L.one a..c11 CC at RlvwilcM CC Citrin 11 Anlelol>e V1lley S.11 Oleoo CC 11 Mt. Sen Jeclnlo, 7 Grosamont at s.11 oi.vo Mesa Southwesttrn al lm-lal VelltV AM oemea 11 7:30 p.m .. unltn lnCllcatld. Assistant athletic director Lee Moon was named to replace Dickey. Moon was an assistant coach at Mississippi State last year. Dickey's dismissal is not a surprise. Entcnng his eighth year at K-Statc, be was known to be under intense pressure to post a winning season at one of the losingest programs in major college football history. Wallaell tied the game with an RBI double ai:id Deuy Goa.u.le1 hit a bases-loaded, infield siQlle as Pittsburgh rallied for two runs in the ci&hth against Philadelphia. Winner Rid! Reaad1el, 13-7. pitched his seventh straight complete game ... Atl~ta's Steve Bedro1lu scattered five hits in a S-1 decision over San Francisco. Claadel WulahaJ!on drove in two runs to !ca~ Atl~nta ... Gleu Davl1 home run broke an ei&hth- mnmg tac and J ose Cn1 collected the 2,000th hit of his career as Houston beat San Diego, 2-1. It was the I Sth home run of the season for Davis and set a team record for most homers by a rookie. breaking the mark of 14 set by Joe Morgu in 1965. 0.-,,... ,...._, ... ....,_ Guy Pettla •teal• aecond u Wayne Tolleton takee throw. Ca.rtia Wllkenon watchea. Season-<>pening upset losses at home to Wichita State and Northern low" seemed to make a wanning season nearly imp0ssiblc. Dickey, S l. became head coach m 1978 following a recruiting scandal by the previous coaching staff. His 1983 team finished 6-5-1 and made tbe only bowl appearance m K-Statc history. a trip to the Indepen- dence Bowl. He leaves Wlth a 25-53-2 record, Yanks reunite Niekr o b r others NEW YORK -The knuckleballing Niekro brothers were reunited Sunday when the New York Yankee.a ac:quired Joe Niekro from the Houston Astros for minor-league patcher Jim Deshaies and a player to be .named later. Joe, 40, who has won 202 games in his ma1or- lcaguccareer. 1sexpccted to join the Yankees in time for a road tri1,> to Detroit and Baltimore which begins Tuesday ntJht. Manager BiUy Martin named him as Thursday night's starter in Detroit. · Phil Nickro, 46, will pitch Wednesday night. his second attempt at his 300th victory. The Nickros, who pitched together in Atlanta in 1973-74, are the 20th pair of brothers to pitch on the same major-Ieaaue team and the first in the Amcncan League since Gaylord and Jam Perry hurled for Cleveland m I 974-7S Tborpe,Ca rnerwln tourney• MILWAUKEE -Tour veteran J im n Thorpe played steady, unemng golf to cbalJc up his first tournament cham- pionship Sunday. scoring a three-stroke victory over Jack Nicklaus in the Greater Milwaukee Open. Thorpe, 36, of BuffaJo1 ronowed his ~ord­ settmg round of 62 "Satu~y Wlth a l ·undcr-par 70 1n sunny but windier cd'ndit1ons Sunday to finish at I 4- under 274 on the par-72. 7,0 I ().yard Tuckaway\ountry Club ID suburban FranJtltn. Nicklaus. aolfs 111-time money-winner from Muirlicld Vtllaae. Ohio, fini heel second, at 277, after a final round of 71 ... JoAne Ca.rMr birdied four h Jes, includ1na the first, as she set out on a bogey-free round Sunday to win 1n LPGA tournament at Kent, Wash. Her cloSIDI 68 save put her 9 under par for 72 holes on the 6.202-yard Mend11n Vallev Country O ub course. Shake up in store for Gian ta SAN FRANCISCO -The San Fran-• cisco Giants will have a new manager and general manager by midweek, according to a statement attnbutcd to Tom Haller current general manager, in Sunday's ~n Francisco Eitam1Dcr. There will be a news conference in San Francisco on Wednesday !O announce the changes, Haller said in Atlanta, according to the newspaper. The team will end a road trip in C!ncrnn~ti on Tuesday. But Duffy Jennings, publicity · director of the National League baseball team, said here that be was unaware of any scheduled news conference He added 'Tm in an awkward position." · ' Haller, who has been general manager four scuons, al~ was quoted as saying he won't be the man replacing Jim Davenport, manager of the team which stand\ last in the NL West. Al Rosen, recentl~d1smissed as Jenera! manaaer of the Hou~ton Astros, h~s been mentioned prominently asacand1datc fortheG1ants' front office job. There also has been newspaper speculation that Roacr Craig, former. San Diego Padres' manaacr. will become the Giants next manager. Televlalon, r adi o TEL£ VISION 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Pittsburgh at Cleveland. Channel 7. RADIO 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBAI.L: Pittsburgh at O eveland. KNX (I 070) 7:0S p.m. -BAit!:BAU: Dodaers at San Dlcao. K.ABC (790). Gant w ins Delaware 500 DOVER, Del. (AP) -Harry Gant broke away from the field after his final pit stop Sunday.racing off to an easy victory in the Delaware SOO Grand National stock car race. Gant twice came back from a lap down to win the race at Dover Downs International Speedway for the sec- ond straight year, while heavily_ favored Bill Elliott wound up far off the pace because of mechanical problems. Gant's Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS moved into the lead for the final time in the SQO.lap race on Dover's one- m ile, high-banked ovaJ on lap 406 when Bobby Allison completed a series of grecn-fl13 pit stops by the top five cars. Gant, who picked up his second victory of the season and the eighth of his Grand National career, emerged from that round of pit stops with a 15· second lead over the Chevrolet of Darrell Waltrip. The Taylorsville, N.C.. driver, fighting off the flu aJI weekend, easily stayed out front the rest of the way. crossing the finish line 28.8 seconds ahead of Waltrip. Gant averaged 120.538 mph, earn- ing first-place money of$44,950. Waltnp, who ran out of gas halfway tbrouah the final lap, coasted across the flnish line. He made serious inroads on what had been a 153-point lead by Elliott in the Winston Cup point chase. Hanauer's win streak snapped SAN DIEGO (AP) - Chip Hanauer WT'8pped up the American Powerboat Association's national championship in Sunday's first elimination heat of the San Dieao Thunderboat Regatta, but Jim Kropfeld easily won the final race when Hanauer s boat developed en- s.inc trouble. The win, worth $26.000 to Kropfeld's team, was bis second of the season and snapped Hanauer's strina of four in a row. Hanauer, or Seattle, hld won five of his last six races before Sunday. Kropfeld, of Cincinnaii:... took the lead for aood ID his Miss tsudweiser boat when Ranauer•s turbine-pow- ered Miller-American boat u.· s>erienccd compre550r pr'oblems from the salt water in (he backstretch of the 1eeond lap. Krop(eld averaged 124. 7 miles-per- hour for flve laps around the 2V>-m1le Mission Bay course. The race was the ninth and final one of the year on the Amencan Powerboat Association circuit. Record fal ls PHH.ADELPHIA (AP) -Mark Curp pos(ed a half-marathon world reoord of I hour and SS seconda to beat 61SOO other athletes Suncby in the Philadelphia Distan~ R~n. Olympic marathon champion Joan Benoit Samuelson finished 10 I :09:44 to win her third straight women's title here. Curp, of Ue's Summit, Mo., used a strona ki ck in a neck-and-neck race to finish 10 yards ahead of Make Muayokl, a native or Kcnja now Livina in EJ Paso, Texas. The8rcvious record for 13.1 1 miles was I: I :321.run by Paul Cumminas of Provo. ut.th. ANGELS. • • From Bl emerging just an tJmc to be a factor is third baseman Doug DcCinces, who had been sidelined with back ail- ments for a month. DcCinccs clouted a two-run homer to get himself into the hat parade. .. Doug makes his presence felt even when he's not hitting," said Mauch. "When he and everyone else arc in there, you just go like that," he said in reference to the offensive outburst. With the stretch run at hand, ¥auch will jua&Je hi.s pitching rota- tion to try ancfget has best anns the most starts over the next three weeks. 'Tm going to try and get (John) Candelaria and (Don) Sutton at least five more starts," Mauch said ''CM ike) Witt will probably aet six and (Ron) Romanick three." "Sounds intelligent to me," said DcCinces when hcarina of Mauch's intentions. "We have to win every pme now, so we need our best arms out there. One game could be the difference in this thina." Jackson not only knows the im- ponance of every game, he keeps track of every mn1ng. "We're all watch1na the scoreboard," he said. "In fact J don't cv~n need to look at the scoreboard. I'm list.enjng to the (Royals') pmes in the duaout. I always know the score." * ANO•&. MOTIIS-Tiie A,..,, have ab mof'I llOme Mrnet Mel 13 Oii 1111 ro.c1 They ., • .,.,. I I llOl'lle, JS·>S •••'I' .. ~ "·* ,_ 00!"9 ' ~oueh Ille Ille et Anaheim SladMn tttencl• •~ •Ill 1'tec11 2,4 mtlllon, mee111ne ,0 cem• 1 lleket fOr ...... Jedi-. . , Wiien ltll.ld It IN ... .,.,. Mt I flft OUI Of J~aoft'I llOmtr't ~ ... ~ Nl4, "I dOll'I kllOW eeouf lfll •v'"• lllut I Mt I 1111 Of 1 llft OVI If '-." • · WIW de !tit A,_. at• to tCOte ftratt ~ ...,.,. •11 wtMlll 11\ey •••• _.._. tClt .,_.. -.. IM MCOlld MM!'nell ....., .,... ...,. tofll hWad ....... fOr 1f111r record•W...1111 "'1orm.nc.t Moor. tor llrMlllftt IN dul:I rttwd fn .. .,._· ('7), and 'Orlctt "' "''"""""' I PIOlftt ""' .. ~. ( 14') ' J Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT /Monday September 1e, 1985 -----~PREP FOOTBAL L Mesa loses key player with broken arnI Linebacker Szyperski ou t for season ; Workman: Score should have been 40-0 8yRJCHDUNN a.., .... e... 0 • ii Weck No. I is in the books for Orange Coast area prep football teams -and here's how the coaches look at it, now that they've bad a chance to catch their breath and look at the films: Costa Mesa'• Tom Baldwla, follow· mg bis team '5 I 0-6 victory over Bolsa Grande, the first for the Mustangs after a 14-tmc winless streak: "We lost (Mike Szypcrski (a 6-0, 200- pound line cker.running back). He broke his left arm pretty severely. He had surgery on it Saturday morning. When you have a school as small as we do and you miss a player like that, you're going to be hurt. He'll be out for the season. the most imoort.ant thing is that we won -we needed a win and we did. For most of these k1ds it was the first Wln for them. Some of the kids told me that next week is Super Bowl II. We don't have that great ofa team, but I don't think we're going to get blown out. We have super kids that play hard. It was a total team effort." Foutalo Vallef'• Mlke Mtlaer, following his clubs 20-lO win over Mater Dci: "I was pretty pleased, for the first game. We had a couple dropped balls and a couple turnovers, which I think can be attributed to first-p.mc jitters. The ones Dennis Arey did catch were big plays. We think he's goina to be one of our big play guys this year. I was pleased with how our defense played. Our second· ary, a QUC1tion mark 1oing into the season, proved that they could play. Our offense is goina to be better as the season goes alonf., but we did score 20 points and possibly could've scored more." 8Htl•1toa Bcaci.•1 Geor1e PaSCM, following his team's 23-7 victory over Corona del Mar. "The surprise was how well we adjusted to their new defensive scheme. The kJds picked it up well. Franco Pagnanelli had a very solid performance at outside linebacker. Randy Hatch had Daily Pilot Top 10 ORANGE COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL . 1. SERVITE (l-0) ~·-Ml~·- ~· 2. EL MODENA (1-0) v_..,.rcts ..... "61NV·re· ....... ._ _,, "' 14·0 ~. -"** " c9Uld llaW lillMll bV I ..._-martilll.. • ...._. ... lit. 4. 3. FOUNT Am VALLEY (1-0) ...... ~.~ In.di 1111 W• lt wtder-, -Metlr Det, Wiii MCI ... Y ....... ltMMtdlt tit MY. El ,.,..., a..r.n .. ~ 5. 6. CAPO VALLEY (1-0) MARINA (1-0-1) MISSION VIEJO (1-0) c.,..,.. ...... '#Mf llad beef! N .. 4·r.-ld ,._... 2'·1 deMtllll ....-,.,.... •1'1nd9ut ............ c..w.... ,.., .. Vllllrl9I sMdled N.. •· ,...... E1"1'11ftU W1'tl JI· 1 .... di, llut !here's ... """" M IWMNIMl -Ne.l~b ,..,.,.. DiNIM Stiedred wlltl •• • ......__. ..... Md It Viewed 7. 8. lft 25-11 YICtwv -San Ole.-MerM.~ Ille---. l'rtdlty, 9. 10. PACIFICA EL TORO NEWPORT ELDORADO (1-0) (1-0 ) HARBOR (1-0) (1-0) Al·IMwe ,._,,_ Callen Third s..1911 C..st L.-.ue Salen c-ll"em .,_, (;IMleft Hana kneclr.cl LA CMN Md Sc.ft '"9tttt !rev.cl •i41il ...... ltW ITYllH ~ trad9 llelfltlM deAdt ,. tuni Sanhl Qulntll euf ef T.., 10 ~. 17." ----• 9led vm. ...._ ... 21 ·> win wwEstuKla ..... badl, 22· 11. lfVtM, wtlldl IO· If. Trrt, a >4· 10 wlnMf' - "" di*. .., ...... ..,.. _.., ..._... wa1111111c11 . ,..,,.... "' 1'·• 1lktlfY -~rdln (;rwe, II MX1 M h .......... .,_ .... 2 l'VMX1. IJlll¥W'lltV, la MX1 . ~ BaJdwiD two interccpuons. one for a touch- down." New~rl Harbor'• Mike Gl ddlq1, after bis team's 22-17 victory over Santa Ana: "The marn d1sappo1nt- ment w.u the slow start we had. We had some errors that hadn't surfaced before. We made some fundamental errors -like not knowing who to block. We didn't know what Santa Ana was going to be (on offense). Overall, I was Just kind ofhappy to get more pomts. We land of won 1t on special teams I thought, but we could've lost it that way. too. The ability to shut out Santa Ana m the last half was a positive note They're going to score some pomts this year ... Marilla'• Dave Tllomp1on, after hts club's 21-7 victory over Esperanza: .. The key factor in beating them was our defense. We put a lot pressure on their quarterback. Our defense played put for the second week ma row. We rust took advantage of It with our offense -a couple of nic.e long throws really helped us. We didn't have a great amount of offense." Oceu View's Karl Gayla.D, after his team's 2'.l--14 victory over Ken- nedy Thursday mght: "I thought that we would control the game a 101 sooner than we did. A lot of the lods that we have out there playmg don't Olddla.C• 'GaJtail have a lot of va~1t:r e.xpcnence (for lhe varmy's Juniors. It was their li~t wm ever m an Ocean View uneform They were Q. I 0 as freshman arld sophomores). On~ we shook ofT the first-game Jilter\. we were fine Ken - nedy was well <.:oached. and the~ didn 't make too many mistakes" Edison's Bill Workman, following his team's 14-0 loss to El Modena. .. I've never had a team tllat gained 25 yards 1n a game What went wrong was that we didn't hit anybody and they did The score should've been 40-0 (El Modena). m1n1mum We were neve r in 1 t and we need an an1tude adjustment I can't explain 11 an~ beuer, there'<> nothmg that we have to work on We dtd nothmg and they did ever) thmg .. Estanda's Ed Blanton, lollowrng his team's 21-3 loss to El Toro· "It was really a hard-fought game There was some good h1nmg going on Bui fonu nately we came out of It wt th not very many IDJunes. I was proud at the way our kids played. we hit 'em good. But we JUSt couldn't get the plays we needed 10 get " Lag1toa Beach's Cedrick Hardman, following his team·., 33-24 come - from-bchrnd \ 1ctory over Buena Park: "They were a lot tougher than I had an11 c1pa1ed I thought they were well<oached team and their quar- Barons, Diablos vie; Vikings eye Servite Weck No. 2 on the prep football non-league schedule is on tap this week and it's back to the drawing board for some. back out of the clouds for others as they conttnue prep- aration for league actton. On the high note -Five Sunset and five Sea View League teams will be trying to make it two straight. en add1t1on to the South Coast League's Irvine High. Among the maJOr attracuons Fountain Valley tnes to protect 11' No. 3 ranking in the Daily Pilot Top 10 against up-and-commg Misseon V1eJO. which has moved into the No. 6 slot. Manna. breakmg into the Top Ill with a 21-7 victory over Espera nza. goes for It against No. I Servile Saturday neg.ht Servile lo<>t JUSt t" ice 1n 1984. and both were to Manna THUltSDAY Damien ar Huni1ngton Beach Laguna Hill1 vs Estancia ar Ntwi>ori Harbor HIOll Saddi.Daek vs Santa Ana al Santa Ane Bowl El Dorado vs Trov ar Fullerton Hlg!I Foothill ., Lii Quinta at 8 0l\a C.ran0t La Hat>ra et Celltornle Loera vs Ana~lm at 1...a Palma Par• Mlttlk•n vi Los Alamitos at Ganr NOf"lt Vista at Fullerton Or enve ai Norco Sonora • ' v •let!<•• Sunnv Hlffs vs Don Luoo at Cnono H•G' WHtlf'n vs l(.tf\Mih at Wt\ltrn '11gr> S4TVRDAY Marina vs Sarvlie at Senta Ana Sowl 8r ta·Ollnoa vs Walnut at Mi San An•on•o :o41egt , (ti gamea et 1.-"'°'"' notecl) terbaclc ( ott MtlliPn) was a real compeuuve guy. Tbeu turnovers kind of took lhcm out oftbc pme and put us into 1t.'' lrvlH'• Terry Heat1u, foUOWUll .h1s team's 29-8 victory over Uni ver- s11y· "Well. we're happy. because we're Uleitpencnced. For a first pme, you can't ask for anyih101 more. Our guys got their feet wet and suU aot a Wln. We were really pleased. A lot of mistakes slowed us down, but we were happy Wlth the offense 1n general .. Mater Del'• Cllieck Gallo, after hts team's 20-10 loss to Fount.a.in Valley: "We were much happier Wltb our performance this year ap,tnst Foun· tam Valley then we wctt last year. We feel we're much further advanced. We got a quick reference to what n takes to be the best. I think Fountain Valley 1s a better football team than 1t was last year. I also feel very good about where we st.and. We had a lot of gu ys who'd never played en a varsity game before Defensively we ran around and hu people-we didn't play 11 the way we should've, but at least we wt're h1tung people " Wooctbrid1e '1 Gcae Nojl, following tus team's 7-0 shutout over Laguna Hi lls: "We had some errors, mostly mental offensively. generally tn the bloclungarea. but 1t was the first game and basically tt was because of our 1ncxpcnenced players When it got Ilg.ht at the end. the k1dscame through 1n the clutch." Saddleback'1 Jerry Wine, fo llow· ing his team's 7-0 shutout agarnst lianta o\na Valle}'. "first of all, we were pleased wnh defense, being able 10 gel the shutout. Wt' weren't able to senerate much offense , so our defense was on the fidd most of the second half Twice Valley was ms1de the 15- yard hne and d1dn 't score Their total offense was about 130 yards We were real pleased Wlth our defensive per- formance. The other thing that we were happy about was that nobody got hun." We1tmlnster'1 Jim O'Hara, follow- ing his team's 7-f> win over Valencta Thursday night: .. I don't think we'll -.eeas b1ga team as Valenoa was unul we get to Fountam Valley. Valencia 1s a well-coached football team. And tf Lhey kick that field goal at the end of the game. then. of course. they Wln. Mike Sparn IDJured his knee arid will ha\C surgery on 1t I was happy wtth 1he composure ofSteve Gulley Three :>f his passes wett dropped, so he ~ould've been 14-14 · NHYC's Omohundro wins 5.0 race C.araen Grove vs Cvor11n at Wt\tern Hlgn Katelle vs Ville Per~ el EI Mooene High Magnolia vs Los Amigo, at Garoen Grove High RetlCllO Alamlloi vs S.vanna al 1...a Palma Park I 111 • .~ ' By ALMON LOCKABEV 0.-, ............... Tom Omohundro of Newpon Harbor Yacht Club won \he fifth race of the 5.5·mcter world championship regatta Sunday to move into third place, only six·tenths of a point behind second place Bob Mosbacher of Houston, Texas. Francois Homberger, the defend- ing champion from Geneva, Switzer- land still had a commanding lead despite a third place finish (his worst of the series1 Homberger's finishes have been 1-1-1-2·3 for a score of 8.7 penalty pomts under the Olympic scoring system. Mosbacher has 36.4 penalty ~ints and Omohundro 37 .0. In the nal scoring each skjpper will throw ut Dell.Dia AreJ S TDcatcbM Ilea Pudae Jeff Camm~ 9()...yud TD rec~OD IS catcbM,2 4 yarda Game-busters Coast Area high school football highligh ts Last week'• plays of H yards or more 90-Ken Purdue (Huntington Beach), TD pass from Joe Naoolt 89-Dcnnis Arey (Fountain VaJlcy), TD pass from John Pean 70-Chris Warner (CdM), TD pass from Tod Bcarbowec__ 65 ..... Steve Jennings (Marina), TD pass from Rick Vandem et S8-Jeff Cummings (Laguna Beach). TD pass from John Kimball 55-Randy Hatch (Huntington Beach), TD run with mtcrccpuon Last week's n1,ta1 lcatlen I. Terry Re1chen (Fountain Valley), 20-99; 2. Glenn Campbell (Saddleback), I 5·90: 3. Marc Ohm (Ocean View), 12-85;4. Scon Elliott (Huntington Beach), 11·80; 5. Scott Anderson (Costa Mesa), 16-80: 6. Jonathan Todd (Laguna BC3ch). 20-80. Last week'• pa11ba1 leaders I. John KimbaJI (J...tauna Beach). 18-27·1, 310 yards. 2 TDs, 2. Todd Mannovicb (Mater Dc1), 21-43-3, 224 yards, 1 TD. 3. Tod Bearbower (Corona del Mar), I 0.18-1. 177 yards, 1 TO; 4. John Pean (Fountain Valley), 7-23-0, 167 yards, 3 TDs: S. Joe Napoh (Huntin11on Beach) 9·19-0, 157 yards. I TD; 6. Shane F~ley (Newpon Harbor), l S-28'.-0 IS I yards, 2 TDs; 7. Rick Vandcmet (M~nna ). ~9--0. 142 yards, l 0TDs: 8 Steve Gulley (Westminster), 10-14-0, I I 6 yards, I TD. • La1t week'• ~•vta1 luden 1. Jeff Cumm1RJS (Laauna Beach). 13-22-4· 2. Mark C'nua (Newport Harbor}. 7-88: 3. Charles Anton (Mater Oc1)1 7-62: 4. Tony Rocco (Mater Oct), S-78; S. Paul C.ardena~ (Mater Dci), S-24 Last week'• ~rtac ludert I. (Oe) Al Div (Irvine) and Denn•• Arey (Fountain Valley), 18. 3. (tic) Jcf'f'Cumm•f\11 (J..aauna Beach), Jonuhan Todd (Laguna Beach), Steve Jenninas (Manna), JefTDarlina (Ocean View), I 2 each. I his worst race. The regatta cont1nucc; today and winds up Tuesday. Top seven finishers 1n Sunday·~ fifth race: I. Tom Omohundro. NHYC; 2. Gavin McKmney. Nassau. Bahamas; 3. Francois Hornberger. Geneva, Switzerland; 4 Bobbie Sym- onette, Nassau. Bahamas: 5. feint Bibus. Erlenbach, Swit.ccrland: 6. Al Cassel;. BCYC': 7. A. Monnier. Sesb~. Switzerland. Standings. 5 of 7 races: I Hom berger, 8. 7 penalt-y points; 2. 'fUDAY Costa MtH va Santiago et GerCMn Grove H•gll Edison at Collon El Toro vs Fountain Vallev al Oran11e Coall ~Ollellt Fontane vs Oc:H n View er l1untln111on Beec~ NtwDO<t HerbOr el lrvli\f! Leoune Beacn ai Er,1nort Mattr 0.1 n Santa Ane Vallev er Santa Ana Bo wt Pacific• er wormlnster Sen Clemente vs Corona Oel Mar er Ntwoorr HarbOr HIQh Unlversllv at M lu loo Vlekl Woodt>rldllt al Tu1lln Bolwi Granoe ai Buen• Par1' Canvon at C•'"'"•no Vati8v Dane 111N\ et Toaev PIM\ E\~ranra at Er MoOena -· DON'T J UST GO T HROUGH IT - GROW THHOlGH I T! DivoKe'' Recovery. Workshop SE~ll~AR FOR DIVORCED AND SEPARATED PERSONS OF ALL AGES Six Thursday Evenings Sept. 19-0c t 24 7·)0·9:30 pm Over 2,000 have ,mended 8 previous workshops ST. A~DREWS PRESBl'Tt:HIA~ CHl'RC'll Newpo rt Beach -St Andrew'> JI 1 'lth St Ac ro.,., tro m Ne"'porl H<11h..H H1Rh .:,2 • Rt'R"lf,ll''"' f or more 1nform.l1inn c,1110 31 -288<; ·1 c, \I •n ~r Orange County's easy listening ~ radio station_ -- .~-.. ~ CATEGORIES ROOM WITH A THEME-ls vour • •tchen counir, Hos your den gone nOul1CQf2 t . .., .• nur I h01 • r On" jeS g ned QrOund J portrculor theme HOBBY DISPLAY-A,. •(I hove displayed your ..:; »C' in your home th ~ ,1t1• 1 \.... ., 1 >rs and Hobt-.,, srs• It you or "Ot"b-. 1S 0 pan of lt-e decor CREATIVE FLOOR & WAUCOVERING-'\lon r•od•tronot use ot carpet 1 ie "' entry 1n thrs ca1eqor, ' • r qs QuOlrty vou for on BUSINESS OR OFFICE -""S ,~ ,1n • ''\de ure now a necess cry function of ~us n.,.,,. designed e•ther or "c'~ " s open to o ff ,ces CONTEST RULES INTERIORS ENTRY FORM ENTRANTS NAME: ADDRESS. DAY PHONE NUMBER fVfNING PHONf NUM&a CATEGORY \ Send entrte1 c o The Do ty Pilot lntweon c.it .. t • 330 W &ay St Cotto "'"°· CA 9l626 l TOf'onlo New,vor• leltlrnort Detroit lot ton MlwaukM ClewlMd •UT DtvtlM>N " u " ,.. 75 " 11 " 11 n '2 " 52 fl SllMllY'• ket'ft At119111 12, Ttul ' Delf'Oll '· lelllrno<e I ~s.~2 Toronto I, New Von f lolton '• MllwaukM 2 OU.lend .. 2. 1(-1 Cltv 2·1 ChlcaeO 6, S.tlle > T...-1 Clemet Ga 2~ ' I) 1' " )0 ...... 15 17V, 20 2' '° ClitYtlelld (EMterlv .. 01 el New Vort. (Cowtev 10-S) lelltmore <D. MMtl . ..,.1 12·91 el O.troll (Ttrftll l)<f), (II) S..1i.. (MoOft l•~t) al ICMMI CllV • (Jedlaon t)<f), (n) Teo• (Meion 7· Ill el M!Melol• ClmllhlOn 1 .. 121. Cnl 9oston (Oledll 7-fl et Mllweul<M (HMl 1·7), (n) °""' ..,.,.. ICMdUled ,..... ......... ._... el Chlee9o. Cnl New York el Oetroll, (n) Oealend et Clewlend. (n) Mllw~ el hltlmof'e. (nl TOf'onto el eottoll. In) S..lflt el ICenMI Cltv. lnl TeHI •• MlnnMol•, (n) NatleMtL.Mtue WIST OlvtMON W L o..srs 14 SI Clnclnnell 7S 6' Houston n 10 Sen Dteeo 71 11 Alllltlll 60 l'l Sen Frenclsco S6 M St. Louh Nlw YOf'k Montrffl Pf'l:ladelDhl.t Clllceeo PlllSOWIJll •AST OCVISION M SS 16 S6 ,. " " 71 .. 75 •1 '2 ~· k>cr'n Clnclnnell 10, o..sri 6 New Yorit 6, MonlrMI 2 Plltlbl.lretl 5, Plllledtlohl• 4 Attente •. Sen Francisco 1 St Louil S, C11k:eC>o 1 Ho1.11ton 2, Sen Dllllo I TllllY'• GelMI l"d. .S'2 .m S07 soo .423 ..194 610 '°' S3S .493 .... .lJI GI 'I) 1011) 161'1 20 31 .,.._.. (Ill-. 12·91 a t Sen Dltllo (Show ,_10), (n) SI. LOUii (Tlidor 11·1 end Morion 2·2) II PlthOurOf'I (DfUon 2·11 and ltlloOtn (9'-13), 2. Ctwl-n) ClllcallO IAbree>c> C>-01 11 Monlreel (Gulli<*IOl'I ll· 111, In) , Pf'lli.dclPflle (K.GrOSJ 14·91 11 New Von (Gooden 20-•I. (n) Sen FrencltcO (Goll 7· 101 •' Clnclnnetl CTlbt>s 1-151. (nl Holl\ton (HMttlCOCk l·ll •• Atlenl• (Jot\Mon 4•0J, (n) ,....Y'•O-~ et Sen Dleoo, (n) San Frenc:Jsco at Clndnnell Cflk:eC>o et MonlrM I. (11) PlllladclPhle al New York. lnl SI. Louis al PlllMlurOl't, (nJ HouslOn el Allel'ltl, (n) AMaRM:~N LEAGUE ....... 12.R.._,..4 Mc:Dwel d Werel" ToMeM>n" O&rlen lb LAPrlll di\ Wrlllht r1 DWelkerlf Petrdlc 8uedlle lb Wllkrsn 2tl CAUl'ottNIA tlllrlllll 4 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 I 2 0 4 I 2 2 4 0 0 0 ' 1 I I 4 1 2 0 '0 1 1 4 0, 0 Pettl'd •~rt 8enlqu1 rt DMl!lef rt Car-lb JecklOll dh Downing If DWllllelf Deena 3t> Grid! 7t> Schoflld u •rt1tll 4 3 3 l 3 0 0 0 2 I 2 I 0 0 0 0 S I I I 5 I 2 • 2 l 2 1 1 I 0 0 S I I 2 2 2 0 0 4 0 I I S I 2 I l oonec )6. 12 . htcb Scw't IJy ...... ll 12 " 12 Tens •••1-4 ~ •1111Sx-U Geme Wlnntno Rl!ll -JedllOll (lOl DP-Teu1 I, Cellfornle 1. L08-Texes 6, C..llfor'nle l<l. 2&-0ownlno, Petretti 38-Wllllenon. Hlt-Jldlson (24), Pe"1sll (14), Welker <•>. O.Clncfl (14). S&-Pellls1 2 (S1), Downing (SI. I .. H Rllll H SO T .. es G111rnen L,0-2 s 6 s s s 5 StOt-• I 2·3 7 , 2 3 I W•11 1-l 1 0 0 I 0 COOk 2·3 s s s '2 0 ~ 1-3 0 0 0 0 I c......... McCelltll W, 10-11 '1-3 ' l 3 0 3 Cllt>urn S,6 22·3 3 I 1 0 I Hl!IP--Orldl bv C~ P&-f>•tr•lll T-3:00. A-30,ln POllclor 8tn1Qutl Mii.., Cerew Gerbef' Downing Sc:Ofllers Ptlllt Jecluon Jones 0.ClncH Grlal Boone Herron Liner es Schofleld Howett Wlllono Hendrick Wllltt ICMdV T.-. dl.lllCHI Moo,. Hollaf\d Cllt>utn Wiii "$ullon Luoo Romanb Sleton C""'81•rl1 Z.M MCCH klll Col'tlell s.nc11e1 $/'nllll l"Owllln T .... A"9lt • .,.... ... BATTING AB It H Hit I 1 1 0 369 46 110 7 3S 6 10 O lt9 62 IOI 2 .. I t3 0 •SJ 6' 171 II 76 12 20 2 llO S9 99 I G SS t04 24 359 " .. 11 3S1 41 17 14 411 6S IOI 10 401 30 96 4 129 " 29 s 27 3 6 2 317 •2 IO e 133 11 21 s 211 IS lt • )9 s s , 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 4AOI 61' I IN 113 '°"'CHIMG ltBI ""· 0 1.000 3' .291 3 .2" 31 ,211 6 .214 76 266 ' 263 2S 260 n 2SS " 2• " 2 ... C2 ,,, " m I• 22S • .m 17 .209 17 .203 12 llS s 121 0 000 0 .000 m ·* "' H IB SO W·L•ltA 7 2 3 2 1 ·0 0.00 t9 11 19 61 l ·I Ul 22 16 10 I) 0-1 1,6-C 11¥» 76 2S l9 1·2 1.13 ~ 19' 90 15S 13·1 l IS 201'".I 196 ~ '3 14.... l.7S 7S''I 76 21 lt )·4 "1 175'1) 190 62 S2 13•1 <l.00 147'1) IS9 63 S8 6'-10 "21 ~ ... 16 l2 S-1 U3 37 ... 14 1• 2-2 UI 164\'.I 161 S7 .. 10-11 4.'2 423 •1 19 24 2·3 S.23 S6'h • 1 2) JO 2-0 6.07 5 S I 3 0-0 1.70 7 I • S H 9.00 1m nas • 1 "" ... ., u. Seves Slelon I Mo«e 77, Clll>utn 4. Senche1 I, .-Wllll Antell 'S..ton 101e 1, MAJOtll LEAGUE LllADllH Al'IWtcMI LM9lle IATTING rm et t>eta)-a-1, &otlCHI, .JM; Brett. Kansas Cltv, m . Henderson. New York, .l2S, Melllnetv. New VOl"k, .n•. .. ,.,.., CflleeOO, .314. •UNS-llendtrson, Ntw vor11. 126; .-loken, lelllmote. 101; Mi¥rev. lelllmote. '9; Wlnfi.tcl, New York, '9. lrell, l(enM1 Cltv, fS; 8ulltr, Cleveland, 9S, Evant, eo.1on, •s •11-Melllt!Ol'v. New Yo<I<, 12S, Mur rev, lenlmMt, 111, Wlnflllcl. New York, 101, .. Inn, Cflk;ffo, '9, ltlce, Boiton, " H4T$-9000t, lotlOfl, ,11, Mellltloly, ..... Yori\, IH, a.1ne., Cll~. 116 Puckett, ~le, 114, c-. MM· wMM, 171 OOUILEs.-INltlnolY. Nr-VO'll. 41. Boen. lolton, 39, luotlner. ~ton. 31. COOllW, Mllweut!M, l7, Murr•v. 1a111more, ,. TftlPl.fs.-wllton, 1t;en1e1 Cllv, It, l ut· "'' C~, 13; Puckett, Mlnnnote, 12, ht1ltlcl, TOfOftfo, 9; l'tr'netldtl, Toronto. t HOMe •u Ns--Fltlt, • cnic.oo. is. a.tbonl, Kenu s Cltv, J2, Ev•na. Datrolt, )I; TllotMt, S..ttte, JI STOU!N IASES llelldotrtOll, Ntw VON!, 10, ,...,,., .._., SI. Buller, Cll¥tleft0, •I, WllMll, K.nMt Cltv, 40, Smlttl, IC811MS City, )I, MoMOY. forOlllO, ,. ........ u.we IATTINO (S>S et bel1>-MCOet, $1, L.oull • .Ml • ...,....~ .121; H.rt , st. Lout1. alt; S.nclbWe, ClllC.HO. Jl2: ttelnes, MontrMI, .)10, ttUN$-Murpfly, Ar,.n11. l011 ltelt!es. Montr .. I, 102; """°"· SI, Louis, 1001 S.ndb«"e. Cllkffo, "'' Coltr!\fn, SI. Louis. ... ttl,._Plrker. Clndnnert. 1113; Murpny, Allelll•, 97; Herr, SI. Loul1. N ; Wt"°"· Pf'lt~i.. 90, 4 ire ti.d wllll M. HIT~, SI. LoWI. ltt; CwvM, Sen C>Moo. 171; Parker. Clnclnnetl, I.,; S.ndber9, Clltc.OO, 161, Herr, SI Louis. 161 OOU8LE$-Pll'ker, Clndnnell, 36, Wiiton, ~le. JA, Welleell, MontrNI, )4, Herr, SI LQW1, 3); Cruz, H01.1$1on, l2. TltlPLEs-McGet. SI L0\111, 16; lite'"· H, MontrMI, II, S.rnuet. Pf'l~le. II, COiemen, St. Loul1. 10; Ge1ner. Hou11on. t. HOME ·1tUNs-Mun>llv. Al\enle. JS, G~ ... o. LOS Anoelel. l2; Sdlmldl. Pnlle· Oelellll•, 2'. Certtl', ,.._ York, 27. Pel"kw. Clnctnnetl, 17 STOLEN 8ASES.-C~n. SI. Louis, 95; blnet, MonlrMI, 511; Sendbef'g, Chi· ceeo. 46; McG.e. SI LOUl1, AS; S.mutl, Pllll.oelOtli.. •S. PITCHING (I I decl1lon1l-t=renco, Cln· ~IMlll. 12·2, 1.8'/ Gooden, New Yorit, 2Chl, IJI; ...,......., ~ IS•I. 2M1 W9ldl. o.1i11r9. 11·1. 2.17; Smltll, MonlrMI, 16-S, Ul; Dettkle. New Von, 1'·5, 2.14 STttllCEOUT~. New Vortt, ~; Soto. Ctnclnnell. 700; ltv8fl, Hovtton, lfl; V ........ DMllr't. "'' Femenck1, N1w Yorit, 152. SAVEs-ftMrdon, MonlrMI, U ; Smlltt, Clllceeo, 21, Srnlttl, Hou1ton, 24, S4Jtter, o\llenll, 23, Gouaoe. SM! Ole9o. 22, Po-. Clncinnell, 11. NATIONAL L•AOUE llledl 10, Ded9lr't ' LOS ANGIL.IS CINCINNATI llltrlllll .. , .... Duncanu Lendo cf Caoet4 lb Brodi Dfl MarlNlt rl JGon1l1 rl MelUSJk" Medic* )b ScloKle c MldndOlf St\IOOI pl\ RWlllm1 If Sex 2tl Vetenile P CDlu o WllllfldDh TMllll • 0 3 0 Redul ct s 2 2 l 3111 e.tllO •100 4110 Perker rf 4 12 2 1 0 0 0 APerei 11> ,) 1 0 0 2 I O O Esalkv" 4 l 1 2 0 0 0 0 EDevll If 0 0 O 0 2000 CncPCnu 4 111 4 0 I 2 8 01111 c 4 1 2 I 2 I 0 1 lt~Of 0 0 0 0 ) I I 1 VenGrdr c 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0..ttf' 2t> 4 0 I 1 0000 BrownnoD 1000 4 o 1 o Rowdn Dh 1 2 O O 3111 Humee> 1000 0000 Powere> 0000 1 0 0 0 )4 6' 6 T...,. k9"1Jv ...... JS 10 , 10 La~ cm cm•-' ~ -"' •-ll Geme Winning R81 -Oesltl' (4). E-A Perez. ~. Duncell D~IN:lnnell I. Loe-Los Al\NIH 7, ClncJnnetl 3. 28-UndrHl.IX, Penter, Cet>ell, Medlock, Duncen, Esalkv 3&-Meldonedo HR-lttd<n (6) S&-ltedus (40 S.-~ IP H • ER ea so &..etA ....... V•lenzuela L, 17-10 S 1·l ' • 6 2 6 COIH 2 2-3 3 'l 7 0 3 Clftdllnel Browning W, 17·9 ' 9 ' • 2 4 Hume 11-3 0 0 0 2 I Power S,22 7·3 0 0 0 0 0 H8P-ScloKle b\I 8rownlno. T-2.2•. A-2',I04. fttmlM SUNDAY'S ltHULTI (4'11 ef ll·dllY lllr mMftM) A""ALOOSAS l"tltST IJl\c;t. • lurlonQs. Ttn Times Ttn (N0911ez ) l.IO uo 2.60 Werx>v 8ov !Smith) S 20 3 IO Sol.1111'1 Oellllht (Seville) 2 IO JEX.ACTA (1·2) Dlld W0.00 OUAAT•RHoaSU lliCONO ltACS. 350 verds. Goldrnlne IDldcrldtsen) 51.20 '17 ~ 10 IO Semuef PMk (8 rOOkJ) 1140 l _IO Rlchllo (Hermon) UO U EX.ACTA !1·41 oelcl Sl,261.SO TH•D ltACE. JSO verd1 FecalnCrowd (CrMOtf') 6.IO •.OO l.AO Jttadoll IH•,.•> 4 • .o no Suni.et Jonn (WerdJ 3.40 U EXACTA (3·11 Peld JIS.00. THOltOUGHIUtliOS l"OURTH ltAC•. I 1116 miles Siiier 8onnlt (Hensen/ 6.00 uo 3.IO Air PlslOI IOrteoel 6 '° S.70 Jot'I Follv CGerclel I IO Time: 1.49 2/S Fll'TH ltACE. 6 turl0nv1 Sin Adlo1 (M«\e l 9 AO HO l 20 8 . lnvlncltlle (Olivares> 3 00 1.tO EllOenl Kellv CCestenon) l.60 Tlme. 1.11 vs. n DAILY DOUBLE (5·1) oeld U260. SIXTH ltACE. I 1/16 mlte1 Ledv Hlllllrv (Ortege) u 40 4 40 3 20 Rtd Frencllv (Ollverest 2.IO 2.60 Quftn's Ruling (SOlll) 3.40 Time; 1.47 l/S. U EXACTA (9·41 oeld Ill.SO SEVENTH ltACE. I> l11r1<>ng1 Trtndv Preu (H•nMnl ,,00 1 . .a 3.40 Nol A Srrew (C.111nonl S 20 • 60 F e'1'110n Knowteooe (Oof'nlngue1 I 9 20 Time I. 19 l/S U •XACTA (2-IJ Pel() 53900 llGHTI4 ltACI:. 6 turlonQt W?lv Z.nlhe CH1nsenl 1170 6 60 ._20 Med Al>endon (Solh) • 00 l 00 I'm Gunnee>ettven (TroelKh) 6 60 Tlmr 1 II ti S. $.S UtACT A 19·41 oeld t 160 SO NINTH ltACE. 6 lurtornn Moulllwe.n (Soll1) II 20 9.00 • 60 G ... lc Rullell IV el<MZ) 17 60 6 00 Sl1ff Decision (Hel'lwnl UO Time: 1.17 4/S, $5 IXACT A 19·11 oeld SS66 00 TINTH RACI. 6 lurlonQ' Rl1l119 Chum (Sollt) I l 40 1 70 3 IO C.rrlOHn Soni (CH•enonl lO IO I 20 i.lnc;oln Perto; (()llveretl 2 IO Tlme I. 16 41 S U EXACTA (1·71oeld 1t,S26SO st "9CK SIX (1·9·2+9· 11 \llOwed no wlMlno lld<ets (Jlll horsasl ,, PICIC SI)( cQ!ltoletlon Dlkl U ,793 00 wlln 13 winning llc'keh (five hOrMSI •LIVINTH ltAc;a, I Dur 8flt Tell C~I 8ebv Grace CHerrlt l Queells Darlin (Ward) Time: 1.4S. 1116 ml~s 16 "° no s 40 1340 1240 7 70 U •XACTA 17•21 Ol ld Sl,466 00. TWllL.l'TH ltAc;I. I 1116 mil" Gelle'll Soec:l•I (CHl1non) 26 60 13 20 ) 10 On Your Own IDornlnoue1) 11 60 s 40 Thetlerd's WllCll (Ollvereil ) 60 TllM' 1 4S 4/S U IX.ACTA tS-11 e>eld V99 SO 12 DAILY DOUBLE 17 5) e>eld S179 40 ,. hencsence 21..-0 Prt•p Foothill! lnrlD Ra:nter N•W~T HAJl80ll HIGH POOTaALL y..,...a.y.yeer Y•r, GMdl tt--. lfll-lteloh Reed 2·4 1932-lt 11Dh Ried 0-6 l~lllllh RMCI 3-3-2 l~11oh RMd S-S 1'3s-flelllfl RMd •·3· I 1936-«•lllfl It ltd 3· 3 l'37-«11Df1 Reed 6·2· 1 l,.._,.elPtl ltMCI 3-2-3 Inf-Dick SHuldlno S-l IN>-Okk SHuldlno 4-3•1 INl-Wendell Pldten' 4·2·2 19~enci.ll Pldlen' • • • ,. , 194.>-Us Miller 2 ·• '~" Mltwr 4·2· I 1'45-t..ft Miiiet l>-6· I 1'46-Wendell Pickens 4·4· I 1947-Wtndefl Pickens 4·• 194t-AI l""'ln S-4 194'--AI lrwln I · I l~AI Irwin 6-3 1'51'-AI lrwln 2·7 l~AI Irwin 3"" 1Kl-AI Irwin 2·6· I lfS.-AI lrwln S-3·1 l~AI Irwin 6·3 1954--0on aum, 3-6 1"1-0on 8urns 2+2 lttt-<Oeor .. Munier 3·S·1 l~ .. Hunter 1-1 ~•vne HuehM S-2-2 IMl-WeYN HUllMs )·S lfU-WeVN HUIMs 1-I IK>-WeYN HUIMI 4·5 l~evne HUIMI 2·7 IMS-Wede Wetla , ... l~edeWet11 6·3 1M1-wede W1tt1 4+ 1 IHt-WMI Welti 6-) 1,.._Wede Weth 6'-) 1'70-Ernll ~ • • 1·2 1'71-0on Uni ... , 1'7t-Oon Lenl 4·S lf7>-0on L«ll • • ,._2 1'7-elll Plo!Q • • • • 10-2 1'75-911 Ptu!Q ._S 1n......a11 Pina S-4 19n-e11 PfulQ •• ,._, 1'7t-91M Plulce •• 1·$ 1'1'-+4enk Coctnne 2·S-J l9IC>-+41nk CoctnM >-7 19'1-Henk Comrane 1·9 1912-Mlk• Gl<ldlnoa •1-s 191:)-Mlke GIOd""' • • • • • 1·3· I 19M-Mlkt GIOd1"9' ·• • • 9·1·2 Totels: 237 wins, 221 louet, 1S ties • CIF Dlevotf entrv •• CIF 4·A ..mlflnelllt' •Sunsal LH-co-d\emOlom • • Sunw t L eeoue co-dlelTIOI • • • See View LH9ue co-dlernos • • • • See View LM9Ua ct1eme>1 A,....vRau NEWf'OttT OCEAN u 1u.- (fMW"'1 9Ncll .. LM ~ H..._I PHRF·A -I N-seov, Jeck 841110•, 81100. VC, 2 Oeflence, Rid! Nowllno1 SOl.llfl ~· YC. l. Bolero, Tim SltDfttnS, Vovee>en vc. 4 W""', Cart LH I, VYC PHRF·8 -I Aveni! II, Fred .M111lno, VYC, 7 00$eulon. 81" />PP\, VYC. 3. Tlgrtu, Gii l(nudMf'I, ssvc. 4 Ruov L.adv. CUtl Jetlrle1. SS YC ORCA -I. Wild Wind, Cll SumweM, S VC, 7. lml Loe, Vic Stern, Seel 8"ch YC, 3 8FT, 80C AnOerson·Dldt Kelev,t ABVC. ( L" ~ Her11er ta Nflrpert' 9Mcll) PHRF•A -I. BoMro; 2. o.or •. Jt11s· Reutl, SSYC, 3. Reseal, Lull• HlxsonMerll 81111ngs, SSYC. PHltF·8 -I. Ot>senlon; 2. SorCMer, Dennis Rosene, SSYC, 3 Tuc.ene, Amv and Ed WhM!OC11, o-Polnl YC. OltCA -I. S41111narlus, R•l9tl Morrll, Rtdondo e .. ch YC, 2. Wiid Wllld; 3 lml Loe LaMr lrMtll,..,.. HUNTINGTON HAltaott YACHT CLUI LASER -I Chudt ~. Alemlloa Bn YC, 2 TOdd Pelerton, Sen 019oo YC. 3 Jim Otis, A8YC . ./ LASER II -I. Peul a nd 1Cenlf':Ot'l"9, HHYC. 1 Geoff hckef'•01n 8unc:a. C•Plllreno 8•v YC. c.-... MCctr M9M <--=--· UC WW. 2. UC Dew 2 UCI SCOf'lno: St•. Gunn UC D•vlt \Corino Rico <21. Note UC Irvine record: 0-3· I WOMmN (-·CC fl lllCt) UC De'Wb J, UC lrllM I uc1 1corlno: ....inMtmen. Note uc Irvine rtcOf'd: I· I ,.,.. bMdt ,, ........ (•t ._ ....... 9Mdll MIN'S ,tMALS Tim Hovlend·Mlke Dodd def, Andv F=l,'1t>urn·J•v Henwtll, 15•1 (Hovtef\d• Dodd sllare 11.150, Fltllt>urn·H-lh INre M.7SOI Ttllro 111ece e rent Frotloff·Scoll Ave1<e•ub0v shere '3, 12S, Fourth Piece· Sie ve Ot>redovlcll·ltlccl Luvtln ~re Sl.250 Community Scoreboard CJTY 0, NllWftORT BaACH R~C· R•ATION , ........ 1tafldlnts MONDAY l.8AOUIS ,_,,c.~ Dove SI Allllltlc CloD 2 0 JOlnr Ven•i.r• l l lt8F No 2 I I l(Olf I I Wt doll'I bow1 I 1 Feldene Fel~I 0 7 INr!J CC·~'*' Smurf l>ewo1 2 0 RIF·Tflt A IMlll 2 0 Crv•t11 Pool• 1 I lludlo Cele I 1 Knockers 0 2 Tllotr1111t • ••kllnoer 0 2 c.-.c ....... c1111rc11 Eno I 0 The Ntwoorter I 0 ,Ce nntrv Vllle9t I 0 ~' 0 0 ""'°"' I.Ano. ton 0 I Jusl·Us 0 1 C>uf't n ' • lllRIDAV LIAOUIS MtM ......... Olltmen'' Irv Co 44111 St 81d 8o'f' Olvt el Gun' Pwe111c Nu•urno.1 Pumoeh HumP' MIN C·41Ma1M Verney AOtnev Local COior The PrOMCVIOi'\ Cr.ca1r1 The ...... PM! Metwlc+. IA,,.DAY \.8A0'61 ,, ........ ~ ~ ROIW\ IMC> I Pi111 Irv HlltOll 8ceo.ll'\ Pio.on• Tiit ~1191'1 Gflslenlne .Slk.111 I 0 I 0 I 0 0 I 0 I 0 I I 0 t 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 I 0 I 0 1 0 0 I 0 I 0 I NPL NATIONAL CONl'tR•IKt .... W LT t 0 0 I I 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 c..er'lll "ft. "' .. A I 000 )7 n 500 5' " .000 ., ., .OOI SO II Clllcefo o.iro11 Mlnnet0te Orwna.v T8mN .. V 2 0 0 l.000 SI 1 0 01.000s.t 2 0 0 1.000 " 110 SOOC3 020.000" . .., $1, Loul1 2 0 0 t.000 .. Dlllet I I 0 .500 6S NY ~lenl1 I I 0 .500 •1 W1.tllnoton 1 1 o .500 JO Pflu.o.tPhle 0 , 0 .000 ' AMaltlCAN C0N"ltlNCI PlllMl\M'IJfl Hol.ltton Clevelend t -ClllCIMlll Mlernl ~EntJlend NVJeh lulfelo lndleneDOlts Wtll tOOLOOO Q , o o 1.000 n 11 050050 I I 0 .500 SI 110 5004' ~ 1 0 0 1 I 0 0 I 0 0 2 0 ... , 1.000 4S .soo lt 000 2• .000 SI I I 0 .500 Sl I I 0 .500 33 1 I 0 .500 47 0 2 0 000 12 0 2 0 .000 16 SuMllW'"s ktrM ·-11.~6 Ntw VQt1( Jets '2, 81.fftalO 3 SI. L0\111 41, Ctnc:lnne II '17 Dtlroll 26, Oelu 21 We"*'9ton U, Hou11on 13 Mleml JO, lndlenee>olls 13 Chlceeo 20, New En.etend 7 Mlmelot1 ll, Teme>e &av 16 Oenv• l', New Orlien• 23 Gl'Mn 8av n, New VOf'k Glents 20 Sen Fre11Clsco is, Atlent• 1' S..1111 4'. Sen DleOO JS T ........ aO- JS • " ~ ., 51 40 23 S7 31 47 s• c l6 SI s 39 27 " lt 40 ,. S6 1S Pl1111>1.1r11fl et Cllvelencl (Chennei 1 al 61 llwrMIY'• 0- Clllc•eo •• Mlnnesote S4MlllY'• 0-S.n Frenc:llc:o et • ....,.. Cllvelencl el D.._, Oenvw el Al\ente Detroit et lndlenlPOlh Houlton et PlthOl.or!lfl N-Eftllllilftd et 8ulfelo Pf'llledtlllnlll 11 Weshlnoton T•mN &av et Nlw OrlHns St, Louis et New Vont Glenls Sen 01e9o 11 Clndnna ti l(ensas Cltv et Mi.ml New York Jets va, GrMn Bev et MllWll.ll!M MIMlv • ...,., 1.J 'Geme llel'fta et Seattle CChennel 7 et 61 Rems 17, ..... , ~...,~ ...... ...._, 10 0 0 7-17 3300-4 ••rn.--Ellard IO DI.Int rtllK'n IL•nsforel klcll), 2M ltetm-FG Lensforel 33, 6:?9 ~G McFMOen SO, 11:)1 s-=-...,.... Pf'll-f'G McFeddcn 4S. 2:4' ..... ,..,_. "'""-wtille 17 run (Lentlord kick), sa1 A-.0,n<) GAME STATISTICS Items ""' Flrtl downs 16 16 1t11111n-verd' 33-tn 2'-120 Penlno 161 Ito Return Verch 12' 21 Como-All 11·2'·1 14·34·4 Sadcsbv S-31 2·10 Pufttl 7 • l'l ,. '5 Fumlllei·LCKt 2· I 3-3 Pcnaltlft· Yard\ 3·2S .. 35 Time of Possenlon 33:'2 26: II INOlvtOUAL ST A TtSTICS RUSHING-Rems, Wllllt 36· I._, 8roc:to. l ·IS, Caln 2·1, Guman 2-6. PllltacMIPtlle, Cunnlnpllem 10-90, Maddi• 4· IS, E.JldllOll 11-14, H.Hunter 1·1. PASSING-Rems. 8rock 11·26· 1-111. PlllladetDflie,' Cunnlnlltlem 14·3A·4 211. RECEIVING-Rems, T.Hunltr 4·3'. El- lerd 3·69, 8ert>er 1·29, Duckwor111 1-17, Celn 1-13, Hiii l·S. ~le, Quick 4·64, SHlltlole 3·21, IUldlson ?·63, Hecldlx 2-6. E.Jldlion 1·23, Gerrltv HS. MISSED FIELD GOAL.S-4ietnl, un1ford 4S, 31. Plllledetollle, McFecioen S3 Cllleel s.NNllY's Int K*'e u1a11 29, H•w•ll 77 Cllleel HOW THE TOf' JO l'AltlD No 1, Aut>Ym 12·0-0l tlffl Southern Mlnl"lrx>I 2'·11. Nexl: Seot. 21 •I Ten- ""'"· No. 1, Olcllllloma (0-0-0l wes Idle. Neat· S.01 21 11 Mllll1ft01a. No, 3, Florlde (1 ·0-11 lled Rut-• 21·21. Next: S..t. 2t at MlsslHIPOI Sl•I•. No. 4, Southern Cellfornl• (l·C>-0) wu Idle. Next: Bev!or. No. S. low• (1-0-0) l>MI Or•kt 51-0 Neal· Northern llllnol' No 6, SOl.ltnern Melh0dl1I (1·0-01 was Idle. Nei11: Seo!. 21. 11 Texes Chrlsllen. No. 7, Florlde Stele (2-0-0) WIS Idle. N .. I Meme>nl1 Srele. No, I, 0..lehomt Stele (2·0-0) beet NOf'lll Tues St••• 10-fr· Neill: Slot 21 VI. Mleml, onto. No. t, onto Slllt (1-0-0) DNI Plllst>ureh 10-7. Next: at ColoredO. No. 10, UCLA (1-0·1) tied TennesMe 26·2•. Next: Sen Dlello Stele. No. II, Penn Slete (2-0-01 l>MI Teme>te 27·2S Near· EH1 Cerollne. No 12, Loulslene Sl•I• (1·0-01 l>MI Nor111 CerOllne 13·\l, Next: Coloredo SI No 13, Notre Deme (0-1·0) '°'' 10 Mlchloan 20-12. Next: Mlcflloen St No 1', Ar11enstl ( 1+-0) l>MI Mini~· 1lool ,4· 19. Nul: Tulsa. No 1 S, SOI.Ith C.,Ollna (7·0·0) WI\ ldlt Next. Mlchloen. No 16, 8rlohem Vouno (2-1·01 l>MI WeshlntlOll 31·3 ..... ,. el Temote. No. 17, Mervtancl 11-1-0l Deel Boston Con.e>t 31·13. Nexl· West v1rolnl1. No. 11. NebresU (0-1·0) WIS ldlt. Next: IMlnol1. No. 19, tnlnols (1-1·0) tlMI Southern Illinois 21·25. Neat; •I Nebr•lk•. No 20, A.letleme (2·0-0) l>MI Ttx111 "4.M n -10. N .. I: ClllClnnell C«nmUftltV c-... SATUltDAV'S ICottlS Golden Wtsl 7, Orenoe Coest 7 SeddclleOeck ... EI Cemmo I• S.n1e aerben II, Wnl H"" 1 Glendell 31, LA Pierce 14 Mool'1>11rk 31, LA Hert>or 3 LA V•lleV 20, ltlo HOl'ldO 1• Groumont 32, S.n Otego 10 SOlltllWfltw n 3'. AntelODI V1llev o Wftl LOI Anoelft 22, Senle Montee '1 Ventur• 2'2, 1"'"'111 Valley o Sen 8ernecllno V111tv 19, Comt>ton 1' Tyler T .... •5. Pnedene 33 L.A Soutllwnl 21. Lone a..c11 20 Ml Sen Antonio 21, Cllrus ,, lt•ncllO Sent1100 '17, Fullerton 2• Ofter! 21, Eest Los Aneelet 20 Cerritos 26, Sen Dteeo MeM • Ml Sell JKlnlo IS, ltlvenlcle 14 H.,lnell .. , FoottllH 0 MMtlO II. Contr1 Cosle ' Sen Meleo 53, Allltrlcen River 7t Soleno '1, ~In 1 s.cr.~10 '1, Sen Frenclsco l2 Dette 21. Chebol 20 Gavllen 34, 81.111• 20 Redwood\ 11, Sllesl1 '1 lent• ROM ... Vube 0 MMC*! •• ~lo JC 22 Sen .IOM 46, MMrlll 0 Cet>rlllO 13, Wnt V•llev 7 Klllfl River >6, Los Mard•no• 21 8ektl'1fltlcl 2•. Fretn0 17 Hencocti 2', Partwvllll f4 o.. .. ..... DAVIY'S LOCKll• ( ......... 9-dl) -102 eneflta, )6 berr80.lde, 23 bolllto, I .,1111ow1•n. a rocafltll. ~ ""· 1.t00 ll'lt(llerfl NIWP'OtlT UMOIMO -1'0 .,....... 107 allco lllllu, It tion110, J 'ftllOWl•ll, t2 MftCI lle6t, '1 roek llsll, 10 KUlllM. 4 "-'-d, ,,., meek .... DenPoN.Un sieve JOl'lft. a.Jn Jim 0en1, un Bin Krettert, 3.312 Dcvlcl Tllore, 3,372 .. Cfll Clll ltodrloue1, 2, 14U1 PelLlndlev,2,144.67 ltlcllerd ZolkOI, 2, 146.67 a.rrv JMdltl, 2.14'.•1 8111 S.nder. 2.146.67 8111 B«'oln, 2, 146.67 Steven 8owrnen., 2, 1'6.6' 1to0er1 wr-, 2, 146.66 ••• C.ld'Hll, 2, 1'6" JU • l(e(tll F•eus. IA.M Howerd Twlttv, l.4f2"6 Tommv Vetentlne. t,•2.16 Jim COibert, 1,412.16 Mike Gove, IA.16 Victor lteNlado, 1,412.IS Pnll Henc:ock, 1,412.I S - ,, .... ~70 10-6'·61·/I ... n-6'·69 10-71•6'-12 ...... 70on n-n-.,_.s 61·70-.. ·71 n-10--66-10 10-11-10-n 61·1•·71-6'1 70-11·'7·7) 61·7MHO 12·66·12·71 71·61·70-72 ... .,.10-n 61·71-61·7S •t-.e-n.n 74·70-71-67 72·6,..71·70 n-n-6'·69 ,. .... ,. . ., 73·7119-10 ..-73"'8·74 70-69·6'·75 72·71·70-71 71-73·69· 71 1'·70-71-69 11-12...6f-n 69-71·70-74 70-71·70-73 74·67·69·74 n -Jt-.61-11 n -69-10-n n-11-6'-n 71·7'· 70-70 73·71·69·12 66-69-75-75 72·71·72·70 70-7'·71·70 11·72·69· 73 Gerv Heltotr11, 1,050 71·73·61·7' 8obbv Cteme>ett, 1,oso 69·70-71·76 Bred Filion, l,OSO 69·69•74·74 Peter 0o11.mu1s, 1,05013-10-10-n Roetr Melll>lt, 1,050 il·70-75·73 J.C. Sl'IMd, 1,050 71-74·61-73 Mike Hiii, 1,050 73·69·70-7' Rick Detoos. 1~ 70-7l·69·75 MerkMcCumber, 7~ 7S·i1·7,t-n e111 ,.,..., 7SA n -10-12-12 JoM Nlellaffev, 7 SA 7 4-67-n-73 Tim Norrl1, 75' 71·10-61·7t-2t7 Pw A1lnoer, 7SA 10-1s-10-n -G•rv ICOCh, 611 71·12·70-7S Rldlerel Fthr, 611 69·12·75·72 LOf'en Roberta, .. 1 61-76-11-73 Gerv McCord, ill 10·70-75-73 $1tve LleOler, .. 1 1s-10-11-n Jev H•••· 611 7'·61·74·72 lit Devlcl Derln, 657 10-73·61·11 Gerv Groh, 657 n -n-15-10 ,,. Jon Slnd91ar. 6'5 61·69·7S-71 Mike Morlev, 6'S 75-69-72-74 291 8ob MurDhv, 633 10-n-69-79 Rob Commen1, 633 1S·69-7'· 11 292 George Arcn.r, 621 73·71·72·76 Nl<:lt SOll,'71 10-7S-73-70 1U JOhn FOl.lllhl, 606 74·71·76·72 Ronnie Bleck, 606 n -10-73-n Ed Teresa, 606 61·74·76·7S 1" LM Rinker, S91 75-70·76·73 O•v• Devis, Sfl 73·71·72-71 MM'I twmement (ef ....... '-1 Tetto Oteltl·x. Ja11en, 67·71·7H7-27S Lerrv Nenon, U.S., '7-71-67·10-175 Motomasa Aold, J1oen, 6'·10-72·71-277 Cl'len Tz•·d'll.lnO, Telwn. 6'·66·72-n-m Kok:tll Sui"''· Jepen, 6'-10-n-..-m 8rl4tn Jonet. Austrelle. 71-10-70-1o-2tl Cortv Pavln, U.S., 71-70-69'-71-211 Grellem Mersll, Au11re1, 77-69-69·6,_,... Twrv Gilt, Aullrelle, 61·11·71·69-216 Ix won Ollvoff): Wemen'I teunwmeftt 18' Kw, W• .......... ) m JoAnne Clt'ner, '30,000 71·11·69·61 111 JenSltf:>htntOn, stt.soo 71-10-71·'9 Jl1 Betsv Klno, I 12,000 Pit 8 radllv, I 12,000 Jal e.111 D1nlll, 11,500 Pennv Pu11. SS,400 Hollls Stecv. SS,400 Allee Rll1men, '5,400 Jene ei.1ock' $5,400 Clll'IS Johnson. '5,400 as Jenel Cole1, 13,534 Roat. .i-t, '3,S33 Marv leffl Zl~nnen. 13,$33 JIN Nencv Looti. 13,100 117 JuCIY Clerk, lUOO Pennv Hemm.i, '2.tOO - 7•·61-14·6' 71-69'-73·69 70-70-72-71 n -7'·70-61 14·10-11·69 71-72·72·69 n-61-11-n 71·71-61-7' 69-71-76-69 10-14-10--11 11-11-n-11 n -11-n -10 n -10-14-11 61-n -n-1s C•ttlv Merino, 12,400 11·6'·10-71 Steotienlt Ferwltl, '2,400 61-n-n-11 LtAnn cassaoev. '2.AOO 70-49-71-71 Muffin SP9ncer·D9Vlln, '2,400 11-n-n-n AICHndrt ltetnllerdl, 121400 67·71·7'·76 -Mint. Mc:Geofge, 12,017 AlllM>ll Finney, $1,017 e.111 Sotomon. sl.Ol6 lM Val Sktnn41', tl,llO '" C.therlM Ouooen. 11,61• 8evertlv Devi,, Sl,614 Petti ltluo, 11-'14 Cettlv IW:llfM, "-'" S.IY Qulnlen, SI .614 Jo Ann Wewrn. s 1.61• S.ndre Pelmtf', Sl,613 Jerltvn Britt, 11,613 2'1 ICethv Wllllwortfl, I l,220 D•ll E11Mtl1111. u.no Sherri l\lrnet', Sl,220 Oeborell Slttnner. 11,220 DMdM Leiker. Sl,2'0 Ketflv 8ellM', I 1.220 Leurlt ltllllctr', $11220 74-73·73-6' 71·69·71·71 69·7s-n-73 74·73·70-73-190 76-n -n -10 69-73-71-71 76·7'·69-n 7S·7o-7•·n 76·70--71·74 7S-n-.. ·75 7S-'7·74·7S n -11-11-16 7S-72-7S-10 n-73-1'-n n -12-10-13 11-n -n -14 7S·70-72·7S 70-n·74·7S 72·70-7S-7S s.llrl ............. (It RlcMleM. Ve.I -Peter Thomoton, 137,.a 211 G_.ge LeMfne, S1',000 214 Gev e,....,er, 11',SOO aob Goalt>v, SIS,900 21S 81Mv Cetl*', Sf.)90 Den Slkn, t9 .m BlllV Mexwell, 19.J'O Cllerlft Sifford, 19,390 Orvllll M«Jdy, $9.lfC) m Atnotd P•lrner I U,2SO Mhler 8ertltr, M,2SO 111 Jim FtrrM, SS.250 Jldt Fleck, U11SO JIM Hslflelcl. 11,HO 6 ........ 71-70-70 72·7'·67 74-n·6' 75-72·61 71-74·70 15-69·71 n -12-11 71·73·71 11-n -n n-11-n a-n -69 n -10-10 n -n -n Boycotts m a y n ot be prevented lf.S., Soviets reach accord on sports exchanges rNDIANAPOLIS (AP) -An agreement to promote spons ex- changes between the Soviet Union and the United States mi&bt not guarantee boycotts of future Olympic games. representatives of both sides said. "Tbe agreement is a great step forward,'l said Robert Helmick. president of the U.S. Olym~ic .Co.m· mince, after the agreements s1gru ng Sunday. "for the first time we have on paper a statement that we will do whatever is within tht realm of our abilities to support the Olympic movement.'' But Marat Gramov, president of· the Soviet National Olympic Com- mittee, avoided making a pledge that the Soviet Union would send its athletes to Seoul, Korea, for the 1988 Games. Gramov, speaking through an in- terpreter at a news conference Sun- day, said there were "some problems concerning this question. This (agree- ment) concerns the whole Olympic movement. Our decision (whether to attend the Games in South Korea) will be made prior to eight months before the Olympics." In 1980, the United States led a 62- natton boycott of the Moscow Olym- pics to protest the Soviet invasion of Afgharust.an. In 1984, the Soviets led an Eastern Bloc boycott of the Los Angeles Games. Gramov said the agreement was "not linked with the Olympic Games of 1988. 1992, 1996. It expresses a general desire to participate in the whole world sports movement." "[ have not commented on any political relationships," said Robert Helmick. president oftbe U.S. Olym- pic Committee. "I have not discussed this accord with any member of the government. "As for any one Olympics, it's no1 time to enter that (question) yet." Juan Antonio S&naranch, presi- dent of the International Olympic ~ Committee, said. however the agree- ment "will be a great help for the next Olympic Games in 1988. We hope that this will create an atmosphere that will bring all the countries together again." A clause of the agreement, how- ever. 1ndic.ates that "both parues agree to make efforts to ensure that their teams participate in the Olym- pic Games." Major ~ints provide that both nations will: -Encourage member organiza- tions to establish and expand· spon exchanges, including dual and multi- national com petitions and joint train- ing camps and exchanges of coaches and officials for seminars and climes. -Exchange information related to Lhe respective sports organizations, construction of sports facilites and sports equipment. sports medicine and science, drug control and re- search and coaching and training techniques. Hovland, Dodd win volleyball tournament REDONDO BEACH (AP)-The to~seedcd team ofTim Hovland and Mike Dodd defeated Andy Fishburn and Jay Hanscth 15-1 in the finals Sunday to win the~orld Cham- pionship of Pro Beach Volleyball tournament at the Seaside Lagoon. Hovland and Dodd, both from Manhattan Beach. breezed through the three-day. double-elimination tournament with.out a loss. The ~ir. which won the event in 1983. divided $8,150. Fishburn and Hanseth, the defend- ing champions and the founh-secded team in the eighth annual tour- nament, split $4.750 for linisbing second. The team of Brent Frohoff and Scott Ayakatubby finished third and split $3, 125. The· team of Steve Obradovich and Ricci Luyties fin- ished fourth and divided $2.250. Hovland and Dodd had to play only two matches Sunday. First. in the morning, they defeated FrobofT and Ayakatubby I S-11 in the finals of thcwinner'sbracket. They didn't play again until meeting Fishburn and Hanscth in the afternoon. Meanwhile, Fishburn and Hanscth had to play three matches Sunday to cam their berth m the finals. They qualified to meet Hovland and Dodd by topping FrohofT and Ayakatubby I 5-10. A total of 37 teams entered the tournament. A crowd estimated at 13.000 watched the championship match. Prep football player dies DANSVILLE. N.Y. (AP)-A hiah ~hool football player who com· plained of chest pains durina a aame died the next mornin' as bis mother drove him to the hospital, authorities ~Id. Frank R. ttocrncr. 17, of Dansville, died S11urday ofa ruptured aneurysm on his aon.a, the m11n artery tcadina from the hean, said Llvinpton County Coroner Richatd C. Johnson. Hoemcr's mother, Betty Hoerner, said her son had 1 m inor heart problem, but never had suffered chest pejns... She was unable to providt detail~ of the ailment Johnson wouJd not provide detaHi, but u1d lhe bean problem had nolhma to do wtlh the bo\''s de.th . I -- J i .. . • . 1· • NEW v~ (A~ -ft: ·~wino "~' lfM>ws I W ortc I IC t~' •~ w1~n ' thlf ~v• ~": "'°'::!.~n lhe ='er= on r::~~ reoar • v Ur'nl =~urYI~ trltdl~ o.to~ 12 1r1 I~ . . ''Jt ""~'" c =·~I def '# MVI $ PrlC.-= r o.?."2 P.m. pr,ce. nil ~ r~~r.!ff.. ~~ c~ Per t · Mp 1·1 v. p 6. --------1 . I Money market mutal funds 1 suffer drop NEW YORK (AP)-Assets of the nation's 350 moner. market mutual funds fell $520.6 million in the latest week. according to the Investment Company Institute. The decline, to S208 69 b1lhon followed a $563.9 million dr~ in the funds' assets the previous week. the Washin~ton-based mutual fund trade group said. The funds' assets hit a record high $232.6 billion in the week ended D« I, 1982. Meanwhile. yields showed little change in the latest week. The seven-day average yield on the money market mutual funds slapped to 7.05 percent from 7.07 prrcent the previous week. according to L>onoghue's Money Fund Report. a trade joumal based 1n Holliston. Mass. The 30-day average yield was unchanged at 7.08 percent. Separately. the newslener Bank Rate Monitor said its survey of 50 leading commercial banks. savings and loan assocat1ons and savings banks nationwide showed the effec- tive annual yield a variable on money market accounts wall 6.90 pcrc-ent. l 11'1 AMAZING Home Improvement \"';~= 'ti lAI \l.I buUd yow cultom r.dwood d9C;k .tz Replaa. that fence 1f Oroanise your elC>fft 1pace -tt You telJ u1l W•'U do AO AMAZING Jolt Call u1 -yot1'll ... t 548-2562 I i ~~ ~I=c~ :~ rr 'l! ~ ontr ~11 1 I "=:I r; 2'1• ~ ~~-.... p y ~ p .... p ~"' 'It ~. 8: 01 r =~ 'I• ~ 8~ lf :~ ( .... = 1Q f 1 .... ~·~Ins~! 'I• Uo :\(, -1)) OTC UPs & DowNs N~ °&WllN5 Cl'lg Nova rm w1 -~ Nov• rm wl ~ Wtt>bO.I ~ ~ F~um w1I! '" -~ lnfor~I Ye -~ IA I ~bb ~=~ ec:ti 61/.o -1 ~ rads 1/4 -~ llHllh WI 'h -' 11'2 rdvwS.t ~ -'h '1'.'~J::'.. IL = I~ ~;tronlnc 1~ -l'h VJeJP.tClnv 2 S~ -"4 ~~·hr~~~ 171· 16 =s-~ Le• v -'I• New~ ds -''• Quenlronl• -I Radvllt -"• ~urTav -1/4 •d -~ lorouo J 1-16 -~ erberon8 11.4 -l Pct ~i 141 14 l~· 11 9 j 1.f 1l ~ tl ~ H·l 111 ll I 11 1 1g.9 1 .I 16S1·1' 'r,, " 1 ,, • 1 • -~~3; I ~,' ~ .... " ... , •• l ·µ· 1•. 1 1 ~ I '> 1! i. L; ~~~: ,.~ ~· ,. ~ ~ d ' • tlil , ~~~= t· ' '• '• , . .. • .~ .. J. ~ n , .. ~r .. I J1 9~ '. iL~ •• ., ) fi'~ 1 -. I ..... 't .. 1 •• l 1 - w'&iNI 1sp11n Veit. ff ; rrt ~~.~/!' • • 16 ./('ICr M .. "Kite~ • , 1 ., ~:.1t 1 I J lb 10'. ... 'N&'f'~h . tl; ff~ INOee'-W'<O•CI """"°'' .... .,,. n-. J?•~ 11¥1<:1• ... '~ Wo()(O'T" r, ......... l 1 • ll '-NIH•O ·r ,,,, Wo•vTc I 1' 'J~ NronttN J(eO«, J(l(;O< f' VtowF ' 1 ... lf'-> ZenLo ' '~' INTEREST PAID MONTHLY • FULLY SECURED ; --J. Government Securities • Fast liquidit y • 12 · 36 mon t hs Bonus Rates on Jumbo Acc oun t s !it S R G F I SASCI AL (714) 759-8484 ____ /{)_ I I $ • 0 ___ 1 ~/kJlaw \ YOSEMlTE E~<· RA Yl:°'IG. CIRCA 186-0 • @Ymw _____ _ Interest checking just got more intere ti11g. No\\ through Octohc.:1. thl' :\ml'n~ .111 ~'" ing~ ~1~L'<in1um C:hL:t king .tl'l·1 nrnt utkr~ L '\ L'l1 more.: th:in interc.:"t tnt'<>lllL' " .u1d one ( lf tht· lu\H'"' mininHim h.1Ltr)LL' rl'quir\·nit·nt-.. in thl' "1:1h.:· BL't<lll:-.L'. in IL'O>g11111u11 nl our n ·n ll:nni.tl lwn .. • in C:1litCm1i.1. ~n"n' ntkring nL'\\ ~md e~bting 111tt.'r'\!:-.t dH .. '<. king .tu .. ·t llllll ~ ru"\tonll·r'-100 frcL' <. lwci..., •• Hut nnt ju~t an~ d lL't'k' · Aml'rk:rn "'' m~" h.L, • 1~00 llllllll\111"1 I • i.., llllllH,,ll llH:d .I 'L'rll'_' 11f h >lll u llllllll 111 t ll .111 \ l' "llt'l i.._,, l<.'.lllll llH~ II)()\ l'.11 I 1ld l11ll .1n :L'll~J.I\ 1ng' 1 >I 1111p1 1;1.1111 l.11 h.l111 .u "' 111 L.rlitu1111.1' 'tP'L'lll lh .. • '\.tt1lln.1l 1'.t1k lh1. \ ''ml)( )h it' tilt.· m.11n1 c( llllllllllllt'nl lh.11 .ill t1I l 1' .It \Ill<. 'rtl .111 "'·''mg' h,I\ t' n u dt · 1t 1 lwl11 IL''to rt• \h,cmilL' tn rb ni1~1n.1I ,1.1Tt \\t.: rt. . .' ,tl'°" l tl),lkll)~ ,{\ ,111.thlt • .I 'j"\l\ 1.tl L"<.lith>ll )tl.'°\<..'lllllL' j)(>.,11.·1 h' rdch1 .llt\.I n:tt urt.:, pht )l• 1~r.1p 1c1 <rt ·nrhtt· 1'i '"l' II ' \1H11' .rt \nw111..1n '°l,l\1n~' ft ,1 .t d111u111 '11 •t .... _ I I I • • 1 , I 1,, "' I .Ill d I• I,, l ), ... , II I~ ll I I I 'l'''' 11.1111 •II .llllj'.11~'.ll '• ll ,, \ II I It ! l ,, h\ \ i . I • l ,1.1.1 ... 11 ! I 111• ,, I 11 1 11 HI 'I ... \1 h I [I 1.11... l. 1 111 I 1,!ll'.11 1111,•11·,t I . I l tit!• 11111.111' l 1 " I I Due to tranamlulon problema. today'• tln~l New Yot1c atock 111t1na1 were IOl l lY'I 11 LI . (PIT) PllOES notavallebl9. + '"' ~+"" ~1 ~ ~ti ~r \'t ~ ~ ~ "" ---• "" "" t t Olw ... f. Sale• l...HI Cht Stock market mtxed NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks were mixed and showing little moyement in ~f\emoon trading today followina their broad decline las~ week .. The Dow Jones average of 30 mdustnals, having skidded 28 points last wee.k. recovered 1.24 to 1,308. 92 two houn before today"s closing bell. Declines held a 7·6 lead over advances on t~t' New York Stock Exchange, whose composite index fell 0.13 to l 05. 72. Big Board volume totaled 4 7.18 million shard at 2 p.m . EDT. agajnst 78.35. million at that hour Friday. Some traders were said to~ absent today because of Rosh Hashana, the Jewtsh new year. Much oflasi week's setback was attributed to futures.-related selling by brokerage houses. The firms bought futures contrac~ on st~k inde~es and simultaneously sold the mdexes uoderlymg stocks to take advantage of their price differences. The so-called "program selling" is likely to buffet the market again this week but then should abate after Friday, when September contracts on index futures, options and various individual stocks all ex1>i~. analysts said. On tlW economic front, the Commerce Dcpartmeftt said the nation's broadest measure of foreign trade the current account, registered a near-record $31 .8 billion deficit in the second quarter. The department also said business inventories inched up 0.02 percent in July followtng a 0.3 percent June gain, while total business sales rose 0.9 ~rccnt in July following a 2.3 percent June decline. Richardson-Vicks jumped 21/• to 51 and topped the NYSE's active list after receiving a sweetened talceover bid from Unilever NV of the Netherlands. UniJever said it would ~y $56 a share, up from the original $54. if R1chardson- Vicks' directors approve the offer, and $48 if they don't. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index fell 0.73 to 223.86. WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Orn NEW YORK. (AP) Seo. 16 Toda I A~':r 1 . ¥~~ J1 ~·w~ hs ' ew WS 19 AMEX LEADERS Due to transmission prob- lems in New York, today's listing will not appear In the Dally Pilot. GoLo QuorEs Prev. .. m ' 22 8MGted wor1d gold ptlOlt MonOey. L...-.. rnomlnO 11•"'01318.85, off 12.46. ~ all•noon lllClnO 13 lt.30, ofl u.oo .. .,.. llft.-ftlllnll t:s1uo. o1113,oe ,, .. '-t filling 13 uuo. of! 12.30 Zwtdl !Mt .m.-bid 1319.00. of! $2.110; 13111 50 Mked . .......,a iw-$31U6,0ff $175 ............ 13 UI 70, of! '2.00 . ........... ~_, $335.118, oll 12 10 WfC-. gold ..,otmonlh Frt.1318.70,ofl '2 10 NEW YOfU( (AP) Seo. 16 f>Ja•v. T~&, ='~ 1ffi ¥=fFs m, ;-~ew ~ tis u ew WI NYSE LEADERS METALS QuorEs NASDAQ SUMMARY famous la bq,ts ... ' ' • ' • \ . \ • ' • . ' . . \ ' ~~t txux.h '+'i feehl011 l'!)\oro, Wt;&itit 5070 ~wood V'll1'°9' 1001 ~t>M:X:Xi bl\ld . 21.Y~·~7~ ;x>oodo~ 52~~~thlel44ow. ,818/304! 9m m· n thT'\J rh 10 t.o9. ~Lur~ 10 to 6 i !!Unday noon to !l ' • • UM•. ~ Daya. 16 Doliara. • A<h ma\ 1 •111 rl ,..,i. liut r.11 portt<m 111 l'•\IMnl " rrlundable • Additional l&nee ll\IJ be purch1~ for I:! !HJ n 1 h • Pric«'• mutt be incl~ in tht ed • lw. nu1 ~pph 1u thr r .. .il r 'd'" rr nt•I w ht'lp w1n1C!d t la..ricatioN or automob1k pnrt'd o'r r 1.wou Call 642-678 • -\v111l.ih~ unh Ill f'll\jjU• p<j.rl\ .td\f'rllM!ra W'lling ll\trchanc:IUe. .. ...,,..,.-.·--~ .. • -'·· -· _.'L.-...--~~ ntl DAil V "LOT ctA~1riLO OfflCr 11ovns T~!,e<•o<to "41 8 00 AM b 00 IM BuM"'M Coun1.. "4 I II 00 AM ~ 00 I~ Aftv arno"'"' nvt o• o "' " " )0 dat'\ •' •toJ+r.O w ,, o. ,.,o .. t ff,) OU• '°IO" rr ltd tu I a""• Cru.r9'f\ \ Of""•Owlff Ji! t # !)I '"f uno.e-o °"' •"'-,. "" rfte;U'I'"' • (04 H t.on l •\l \ •NI .,,.., ,._.,,,,. •t>'e •"Of"•'' .,,., 1 ..... ltt lal• ...... I• lilt Ult ...... Valuai.W ...... Oaf..U.W Apttatatt, Vu. .,.,,._ .. , vu. I Apttata11, oa.1 . lturaJ l012 am.. llM X1tconcs.1nci1e.seo. m~ c..ta... DM ltwJMt llMk mt c.w Al.., nu C..ta ._. 27M·••et llM• IHt WE IDT HU..... dn. 1178,500 497-t287 211 1L'. get. no peta. '975 ,.,, .. ;..., q'*lty 2 BDRM XW .. a. c;: Hugie 28d 2~ Opbc Obi *• UITll Ult• 3 Bdrm, lam-rm, IMng rm, BY OWNER-EMtlkM 2178 Ptecanlla, Apt D 3br 2ba home OOMn INat eluded, 1 walk to bMch a ger, •lrM. F/yd. S$40 P.c L unoua 28 Apt ..._ COllOS lam•rm, atrium, Ille root. Coete MeM. 3 Untta, $826/mo.·~5-7983 rom..,,tlc fr~ newer kit lhoe>t 1700 494-332'4 ok 873--83381842-Mee :no.. 1 14~ to ,1;95. redWood d.c:klf'lil and 1179,500. 845-3802 2BR 2BA eondo. pl, gar, S3Ml90 Beel Alty t.e eorn Carnation, 2Bt 18a -·-· A Pf•tlgloul ~ JUST LISTED patloeowr. Showa like 1 fd A:J:tl( 9 a/o 1 450 If UPP« unit O/W W/O 1 oar get •-•-• Bwh addr .. wtth • Flawteet Condo. 38drm, model. By Owner. Prine. UllMI fn l.a7 Prl,;_1eSC Pim IOc. 1900. Beautiful '4 bed famlly rm, S8s0 883-1°390 wl(dV-2 8d/28a Condo. W/O aweeplng Faltwev vi.ta 2'~ Betha, 2 ftreplaoM, only. 832-3787 -.n&AL/ Agt 5-40--0810 861-13&0 formal dining Mc:urtty nkp, pool, b ' 2 car gat. AdJacant to faahlon g:'0n:c>~ t:'.';1~~=-•II HMY.. llllllllAL 11•11 •SPACIOUS 2Br 1~. 2 ~!',~~·.1.s2~ ma. [)pix 3t!n!~1 ~/f,,:up 4 1~2":esLdi~~Y ~~ ~~ : Owner tranafartad lml'Mdlatety avwlal*. 4 Great Coeta Me9a aty Twnhme. Gw. frplc;, Fashion Ill Lovely V= 424 POlnMttla. 973-8'478 TSl ~ M2· 111a QkKMd Pleaae cell for &224,900, bdrm, 2'J\ bath, dining locatlon, 1400-2000 aq. It. pool, S800, 3 bed n,_.809 com u 28d 1 .. • AA~1L appointment •t ~ '"lo family rm nrepiaoe + Pr1cee aten et s 130.000 YIU& IDTW • · ·.... · m. Pi* r..,. DO ~"' mtlll • FURNISHED good toeatlon. Only Perteet for amall bu.I: pool & tennla 1 1880 Halltrope SHO Ag! 5501mo 1 Bd/IBa, gar, _d_•_ya_on_ly _____ _ Profeulonatly decorated $159.995. Call Petrick ne11man. Owner wllf lll-4112 tr lW..1112 -\.\Alt lo H(>"I 720-9'422 ldry rm, ell to anop1. •WATDflllT•· .. and beautlfully furnllhed. Tenore 831-1268 flnanoe ... ~ f0< Jim or 3Br 2 ba w/frplc, 2 09I' get, llOMI., 1 ta 1923 POMON" Beaullful 28r 2ea & den Contempo<arydecor.s.···~~·~\:·P Meryann. $1000. mo. lneldg utll ~ REAlESrA7f.. r . . g, TSL-TM2·1111 apt Enc1,,gar.0age0 S21e5 curtty bulldlng. Own« 1111 •,, ,,-2223 Pactne Ave 831•1400 may lln~. 182,500. " Traditional 831-8300 ~. rti,w,Bt°c ~~ lllTllT • 1 2 or 21>a 11395 LOWEST PRICED $950/mo 3BR 28A. exh at $500. mo 979--1911 1595/mo. Golf Courae * AUi lYMl. * "-·on• ,,._, Mar ConcSo ~ •-·-L lMI Realty __ ... No ..-1 769-8187 8..,. c anyon Con"'-. 12~ View, Oecle, 2 Br. 1 Ba, tBr saso ~ no ~ """. ~ r. mlr·· -• ""'"' ....... 'V "" ~ 28drm 1'~8a 810 Joanne Qui.I Tennant• 1 7eo".-09~9 ~i'!:· prt~~ P•~~ ~l'frnt Hm·tri:de 631-7370 0< 240-22'42 ~lce!}~i:!~ 7~~7 St $650 Adutta prefd &58 JO ... NN ----- Bank owned • Submit $200000. Eqty Lale• Ar-AT LAST! Small pet ole. 845-8453 Tll ~ 3Br 2 ba '.+blk bch your t8t"ml 1135,000. rowtld 213/277-6069 ...... u s B~AC·~~ :~.dot'en2~R 2S0rm, 28• Trlptex with M2-1MI tr W -1111 2$80011 o'mo~$.4()()530.7~n25dep OCEAN VIEW •uaita VII& 1617 PRIVXfE PARTY & .... IHt.a wl d." a 12001~ ~ ~:S ¥ar & dlhwahr $875/mo, LARGE Baeh Apt w/ r~ _.,. .:_ Spacious VIiia Balboa llHID,. PUT WIU llSllE ltntM Yt1 laa Cottage 28r 181 $900 51"3191 "lie for Pete. patio, gd toe $395/~ $625/M o 1 Bd 1ba. encl 18drm Untl wwlth flneel UL1J Mortgages, Comm . fHl&t ... Wfttl oc:eanview 67~9629 .SELECT 859W 1911'1 CM gar. Cloae to bd1 niee oc.an and = vi.w Properttea, Apt .. Motels, ~RTIES Quiel loc Flreptae., au , nice-A .. t>eaull~lly kept 3Br Hotels, Units, T£LERENT Eutbluf1 3br 2'.'i ba. nice ....-~ l ge 3bf 2ba frplc, patio I 1480 Montovta ly decorated $222.500. Custom home. Large R•. Homea, Condos, Etc. oreent>ettlvleW, partly 2Br 1Ba, 571 .so.nn 2 per-encl gar, nr S.A Ctry T1l 9111T MJ 1111 ROOMY family room, air, lire-OEFAUL TS·No Problem! turn $1400 mo 759--0435 sons mu $510 No pet1 Club Avail 10/6 $775 • 2 SOrm, 2 Bath extra large plaee, extra atoraga, Cati f.IOW 8am-10pm • WldMl s.lectlon Harbor View Knolls Condo Sterr• Mgmt 550-1015 mo yr IM S48-l93e IAOI UY AIU V«Mlltea with large private backyard ( 1) 337.5959 • Upd•ted Dally for L!MI. 3Br 2,~Ba. 2 car 28r 2ba. 1725 mo. Nice qui.t 2br 2t>a, 2 patio, 20 102 Birch St. 2Br 2Be outetandll'V'l gourmet Belt t>uy In the area at • Ail Ar ... & Prloes ....,.I g•r M-utll 1nc1 llro b-·---$700/mo kltehen O~t-of-Town $139,900. And out more. ltatalt •Open 7 Days 9am-7pm gar 11695/mo 640"5324 l.t3 Melody ln Judy $125 822 HAMILTON 756--0«";';'b-3363 owner aayuelll S 124 500 (714)681-1000, 837-9500 675-8860 lido Isle, 3 br 2 ba home. Move In 11/ 1 861..()4.« S48..Q.477 Ron All, WI llT lllit MISSION VIEJO REAL TY ...... ruai... llv-rm w/frplc. evall Oct 2Br' 2Ba. patio apt. w/end I .... IWPT IUTS Wutml FM A Or Stop By 7 Walk to bct1 & tennis gar, nr S Cat ptz new paint, Npt Hgta l ge lBr Opt• 2BR 1BA. w/b/flreplc I •-• (714) 673 4400 llln••••t •-•L--ltlu• 21-IUI •nwrt aL...i on same street, no pet• ca.rpets. drapee, no peta, Fenc:ed Yard Utils Paid beam cell, gar. atove lealH tr .ut -----~ .,. .,.... ..-.. Children Ok $1800 tchild o1C $850.845-7321 SS45mo 646-5.426 2100 Haven Pl 1795 Gnttal 1002 Ctatral Beautiful '4Br 28a home. §AR FXBX. furn, ffPIC. gar, Ball>Oa Penlnall• Fee p/ mo I ea n C •II 2Br apt gar lndry rm 1/2 NPT HTOS Lux 3BR 646-9794 Prime .,. ... Formal din· wntr IN $900 675-9589 •21111111 -·· Cl'lrlStlne (Bllr) 499-3400 m• 10 .:.,.h s' 700 mo ~"51 2'hba. tam rm. patiO, f/p, IEutblutf Twnl'IM DelYxe *TIE .L.nl* Ing, AIC, patio. Hot tub or 818-357-1208 --' ""' • · °" tt S925 5.48-0397 w/dec:ll & great vlewl VA $725. 18a. dlnlf'lil arae, Newport Height• 2 br 2 ba. 4~652-818. /380-3879 • ·gar · newly renovated 281 "FAMIL y HOME" mWPllT TllPLll t>uyere OK. Full price only Baytront 3br $2500. mo lndry hk--upa, pvt yard. gar. den, lge front room w/ POOL Petto frplc X-.lge 2',.,Ba, frptc. dbl o•• Lrgat mdl 48r + bonua rm, ..... llLIW 1&110 s 1'4 l 900 HouMS lllle little Isl 3Br wtnte< No Peta. Wtr pd. 548-5195 bayvlew, frplc, bltna, lge 28r A_pt upatalrs,~arage. 2 2Bdrm Apts East side w/opnrs. PYI comm pool 38a. Magni loo. lite, brltai Juat off of OCMnfront tl'lla 'ace· acaree. Call IMM S 1000 181-B Santa laabel. C.M. gar. grdnr lncid "vi 9/ 10 persona mu. 550 1st, $680 Call 557 -28-4 t No pe11 752 Amloe» & airy. Offered at S218K1 beach. no atreeta to tod•y ( 714 )837-9500, 3Br unfurn. Vrly S 1200. 8acicba Twnhm 38r 3 ba S 1350/mo &46-840<' last • MC 5.46-1865 W•y AP1>1 only 675--006E (LH). Landavht $34,000. CfOM. A nice 2 bdrm, 2 581-1000. MISSION WATERFRONT HOMES trpl, dr,. get s12oo. mo , RENT-LEASE OPTION 28R w/gar Crpta, drps, ~1 ~ ~t~· g:'vf8:y or 644-"258 $975/mo lattltpllt. ba beadl eoltage, and VIEJO RE.ALTY 873-6900 730-5559 or 730...()355 Harbor Ridge Townnouae Olllns . fenced yrd St $~95 650-6357 Elegant BAY FRO N l ....... a.,fflttl two batc:helor units, neat WTll• 11111-I IHck Mt Bayf ont a all for 30 days . 38' 38a, den, 2 car gar-w/patlo Water paid. eondo BayalOe Or , 1 bf and cteen with nH 1111.IM nprt I 48~. ~ Hm 645•8787 Best E aide nelghbortlood age. teonls:-pool, spa, se-63fµ 120 Call 1-5pm M-F Quiet 2Br 1'~8a '4-PleJ., 1.,, b• tp bfiCk petlO 4 .... ftl ... carpet & root. A t~rlflc light and &f,Y-ne>«p1an orWk7525181 201, w/d l'lkups. Ir~ lat-cur1ty $2500/mo Mary 667Vlctora "E" ... $635 Utllspd$600No pets, deck 'boat slip pose Gateway to Meaa Vet ~.:n~~ ,rim C:,' with family room and for-Wllllff Wntr Rnti-EJeo 3Br. Qdrn =,=. 6.1' :.:r.3~8;t 751-7884 __ 2619 Santa Ana "I" .$650 343 Cabflllo 760-8083 s20001mo 67>1909 Country Club. &Bdrm, Ju S • · mal dining room. Quiet Cloae to CdM lntermedl-nme FP 2 patloa atpa Spacious 2Br 1Ba gar •llU .Mllll IPll * Sharp w .. tslde Duplex. Garage Apt 1 br stv family room. den & f0<mat -Wi\TI HI HO' 1 locatton aero11 from eta/High School. Thia bch ·.1875/mo 84~ Bike to OCC 3br 2ba 2 1try frplc w/d hkupa w tnt9' 2Br lBa, ~I gar, p\11 rear I Up1talr1, 2Br 1Ba, encl refrlg, p\11 patio. sgl onl) dining. Over 3,000 IQ. It. ttc IMI., •-· small park. Come ... thla 3Bedroom 2 Batl'I family · · upgrades tl'lrv-out S775 tae. 0$950/mo 875-4912 patio. frplc, washing fae gar New dips, crpt1 $580 $650 mo 673-3914 ofeleQeanoe.Reduoedt REALESTATE out1tandl ng value. room l'loma 11 aur-L!tuahac• 214 e v a ll m i d month or 754_1792 ekr $675 S400MCS4a-M75 -csep Mu11atand crad1t $309,000. 751-3191 831•1400 W-2j13 rounded by lush garden• §P;C10U, 1eaa ;t;;; 2 or 3 539-e190 Best Alty fee • ' I ctwek No pet• 770-5829 SPACIOUS APT • SELECT on rolllng hill• w ith bdrm. Near town 'beach CIOM to IChla & shopping A,.rtanta Fuautat4 -~~1~8:c:. ~ r~ Tll YllTlllAI 1 Mt~;-~3~EAN ~ATIES apacloua view $245,000. $1350/$1550. 494-6930. 3bf 2b• time V.cant Monrovia ~8.0336 2BA w/ger New crpts v~·-•1•~ 1"Arm ~ Corne and aee today! Frpt, Lg yrd, 2 car gar "'_."""' <>U .... S..U, 1·1 l!WJ!!! INcW-21 1242 Belfast St. btwn lalM. •2Br 18• nr Wiison & I drps bltlns, fenced yrd Plaza Location $725 llftlTIU Ill Tiii • f I I I • '. 11 T 2141 Arella 1lll llUIFIMT Fairview & Harbor. $900 ...... 26M Hrbr Nu cpll, drpa, e1C. ~f!t\~ c~~.,~~p~•ld l Agt 631 .. 9&1 O&IUUI IY IWlll 142·1280 SBr upper dptx. 2'nba. mo + aec dep. 969-3820 iBr compt furn. down· "vi Nowl 1550· 760-8862 \ 687 Vlc1on• .. , .... $635 WANTED· Mature Prof 1c Vacant 4BR 2B" In nnaet &IALIE&LYlllEITl&fTEYIHIY s 1800. Avitll 6/15/86 Rel Cute clean llttle 2Br, w/d stairs dplx W/d, grdn ct •STUNNING Lg 1 & 3Br -lfFU a_. rent ocean view 2br I ba arM. Walk to ach0011, • 818/285-2281. 87~9932 l'lkups, garage, encl yrd, yd $685 mo yrty 67~28 208 G11den Apt POOi i •H • _._ 51050 and/or Oeluxe 3bl lhopplng. New earpet, llL Tl·llLLlll I grdnr See 366 Hamilton L ciean 28r furnished $555 & $725 710 W 18t.h Want I Mlecllon of gr .. t 2ba & oen trig $1875 paint. Over 1700 eq It. I O LL *2 Wllll FIEI IEm 646-« t3 $745 tat & -.. g • llvlng7 We can o"• any Both h•\19 w 10 DIW POOi llH yard w/country PllllOE • A Beautlfully decorated 1Br. . ..,.... frpl. gd clOMta. gar 1975 '525 1BR. clean. c:ari>et. tt11ng from • small apt to encl gar 67~7522 view. Aeautne new 30 yr ...,. ,,.-..._ ____ URIE PATllOI Tlllll lBa, VIiia Balboa Condo DRAMATIC 3br 2'nba, all Yrfy avl now 837-8547 drps, refrg, no pell 724 a 4so hse If looking in fl•ed FHA 11t ol '85 000 _,.RM 111· 1211 lg• mirrored Uv. rm.1)111 ameri111 ... Jog to bch. xlnt "-·· • 24 James St -D. 873-ll.87 I CM NB Of HB think of "'' Westclltf area lg t Br 1 Ba at 11%. owe 2nd T.D. lnHarborVtewHlll•(luea). ---------patloOCE.AN/BAY VIEW area.$1150/mo.646-1035 -• ... Ss50/mo 2 so 1ba apt. flrsi to< that Cl'lo+oe OI MUSI ~and credit cheCti w/mln S 15 000 dwn at 3 bdrm, spotleA, aunMI 1.-""e"'ii_,.,. ... ;f""'\:8....... Wshr /dryr /ref rig l nel. E.ASTSIDE 2 BDRM 1250 Moblle home No upper unit, lndry, lmmed ideal ltvlng l S-45-9 52• 12%. Ren11' 1n area $850 views, 3 car i:age, large • • r w: EDa.l SRllOSIT $975. Act Fastl 6-4-0-4775 Collage Patio, 1tove, pets. ~u·~~r~~:· occupancy. TSL MGMT 642-l603 tBdrm nr Dove< & West· +.Excellent buy II y•rd.$385, . -r=f-stic7r~~~~:t~:..e,. Charmlngeottage2br, frplc,$695.646-0988 1991N~rt646-8J73 ' ~~.A:2LE •A• NB RE.ALTY 67>16'21 cliff POOl.btttn.,no pets $129,500. Ownrl •gt U~l()Uf t l()Mli looklngpark.completely pll1bcl'larM.$950 mo E.ASTSIDE 381 lBa. new Tll-• ~ ·1-• Westslde 3Br1',,8a ~llO Avail 1mmed $650/mo : 1~i~1~si ~Jn1on~t r Realt0<1. 875-6o00 I•-------• redec. Ready to move Ir. (714) 842-3315 or Cfpta/paint Lg yrd Sml La1au hack 2'41 $565-$745/Mo Lge beaut d/w btttns Kida ok nc LY Msg 64>66<l6 Lovety ":l:S~!' bath, ll&IM UlllTllll executive home with for-•11& • llAI ever back bay view. SOuth of the CO.-hwy & GrMI home for entet· zoned R2. Greet location, talners. Owner w111 carry w~I( to etorae & bMctl. large eecond. Asking Super rental propert~ S525 ooo completely lurnlahad ' · Single story. 2 bdrm Traditional Realty. 631-7370 home. Many l>()Ulblllt•. Can add MCOnd unit $202.000. SALLY SHIPLEY JOYCE DABOL T ~ ~59-_?IOO -' -' . lft .. llTIEllTI Call Hazel 631--0680 (619)323-2781 pet ok Utlls pd Grdnr Studio. gar. :;c;:, aeck. n-1SO & 2SO atl blHnt1 pets Aull immeo Wlnlllf· 3b<-2ba Duple• lllT llY S1H,llO ... W&ITtl $975/mo. 64!>-8453 smkr. no pell $525/lnods frple Must tee 1725'mo 645-6646 steps 10 ocn 2 car gar Beautifully decorated Ullll llME 47 yr -'d re1lred buslneu Elkle new SUP« 28R 2BA utlL ~vall now 494-3580 368 Avocado I Dau P.iit 2721 $900 mo 650-2493 home with • Iott. Hidden Dhar~ lMH Dt lttt "' Tll •llT t•2 1tO• man from Wyoml~look· Great loc. Pvt pkg, upper l l~rt hacL •.it.it9. ~· • • Attractive 1Bdrm nr •·-ta Aaa 2710 among tall treee In • Palall FRENCH COUN-level Od ,.... rvi II I • ~ ' , --~...,.,,... •• ·~1c Mttl~ TRY TUDOR. more than Ing for • home wit boat nr _,r I""• •ep · 2 1 b I t I $595/mo 2Bd 1ba. patio, I Ma' 1 n • S 4 6 O / m 0 b!! .• ,,r.1 Park Brt•lot Loi'! '""vv ...,.,,, allp for '43 fl aallboat Wiii· ion. all a.ppla, amenities. r a w nter ren a · 496-9482 N 5 30 °"""' '" ra wide lot In I ltlPflt elegant. ~ SQ fl, 11 1,.,, 10 take care 4 f l'lome No pets s985. 751_389S steps to bcn $850 p/mo pool, ldry room, E/slde oon-pm condo. mo-10-mo S525 neighborhood. Setter rooms. Oeean & City l ··• -----------Avall. now 818/8-4().-0919 location, elOM to all 1 8....--lfac• 27401 Agenl 675-8099 hurry on th la on et Lights view estate_ whlle preparing boat 10 *~NEW PLUSH I 3Br l -t49 E BAY ; 846-7171 Must Uquldata for out 01 sall around the world 2'~Ba 2 stry Twnhme. DECORATORS t>eaulllul TSL •Ill .. 2•1103 2BA 2ba cptsl drps. di.ti-1ilf!e;,;.;;,•;;;.;• ____ rn~ area Mllet S8C1lflce 81 Horne needed trom Dec I g•r Avl now Sl200 turn Condo on the watfll' washer 01sposa1. porcl'I 2 rooms •vallable 1275 4 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS $999,000111 Lut of Ille '85 10 July 1 '86 lmpec;-YIW am•'S llC $1795/mo 673--0896 $600 2BR adults pref coin lndry garege s265 eaon Utlt tnd n~ c•bte references. C•ll -' -refrg no pets, 731 w $725 mo 846-645 t area 01 c M 979.9656 HForar~dgepr~~a1:1 3071632-6823 days or lll-4112 tr lM-1112 ICWFHIT 18th 's1 •B. 673·7787 --,,-~ .. al c .,. 307-635-3591 ev/wknds Beau t ifu l 3 Br 2 Ba ---••Lg 2Br 28• Walk tc For Rent-Npt Pen'"11u1a •-•L--fi'-.. lftAlt Patrick Tenore 631-1286 Ask for George Hain. Lrg 3BR 2BA. dbl gar, furnished lower Duple• 1$620 Eslde lg 2Bd tBa, bch Bale gar S750 No room . oath turn or ur ... _ w vvv or 760·8702 lrplc, patio, E/stde New On the sand patio. enct poot, p\11 p•tto 2 pers pets 760-17131642-133! turn An 642--0289 7 Bdrm older Balboa i •!.: -.. -~-3br 2ba $2000/mo 675-~950/mo. A;;i; ~gtier adlls Winter Ren1a1 S63S/Mo 2 Bo 2ba trplc 3,CX:::,S ~o 1 oc.;~ -~: L~~· ~n ~'::i P:.,~: .. NEW 2 ST~Y 1100 IQ.ft Condo. $101.990. Xlnt lln. below MK. rates. Call btwn 12-5. 891-5128 IOUlnMT • ·~"~~~ ,? LIDO ISLE: Beaut turn I carpets, paint. bllnds gar Nl smkr matu"rt max. No pets 646-5137 B L home. Priced at lot value. ti · 5068, 8181792-7271 eve eave mag • $1350/mo 650-9499 or enct ger, 111 btt-1ns Nr 1n<;1 u111111es 960--0294 emplyO l&dy 494 7346 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim 126 E. Oc .. nfront Oceanfront Houses 2Br Meaa Vetde 4BR 28 .... fam 982-4214 Sl'lopptng Centet ••ft M ,.25.000 PLAY A REAL lowes1 price In Big Cyn. tBa gar patio no pets rm. frplc. covered patio OCEANFRO-NT Oalulle 8t0 Center 48r Conoo nr t>cn 2·., ba LQ •m Pvt entr & bth tr19 1--wumt ESTATE,873-1900 S249Kl 0ver2000eq.fl. Utllstnot'Av1111'June'86 New carpet, d rapes, wtntet turn spotless qulet TILIHTU2-1IOI encJ gar trptc patio g•r indy patio $3"75 Their ~ • Your galnl 8 Ctrtaa ••• ar IOU 7 Rue Maraelltea 759-SOSO $850-$750. 631-8569 paint $ 1295 5.49-9823 67>46881675-9603__ $675 2Br 2Ba, 2 patios. gd ~ggo sec:m~ep -~~ :~! sec Reis •eQ d 499 "193 For Ad Action nearly new condo• Two DUP EX 1Bd 1b ...,.rt lh4era.... I llfl 1-L .. Mesa Verde Exec Hm 2 OCEANFRONT Sharp 2Br ' loc ldy fae trtg sto~ AvaJI now 968-303 1 att 6 Lido Watertront bedroom and 'one 121~000717 FERN•l~~Only4yearsnew,3bdrm a:n••1 rw-•iioz sty~Bd 3ba~~-.G~r-garage, No Pets $850 1 5AS-2750 ati s Av10c1 1 DELU)(E2BA2BA 4 PLE.X '~';'~~~;~"' Cal a Daiy Piot AD-VISOR 642-5678 bedroom plua loft 840-S182 b Owner + den, 2'~ bath, Hight) atH · den ng serv wa er Winter (818)795-3018 -----Crpt drps bltlns. nkups models. Excellent 30 YMf Y upgraded wlth high cell· LANDLOAOS/AEAlTOAS pd.$ l '450/Mo 546-9950 48,' S 73s i mo 280 l '"tBe inc gar $695 -$700 dep wes1c11tt prol tem p•t 10~% fixed fln•nelng. DUPLEX·28' 1ba •• Inga, wet bar, fireplace • Fasl free tenant provldrs STOP LOOKING ~. Bant.;',':ru~~·~~~ 1 Townh~: ~:~de Int': No pets 540-4484 rm ba enl 325 • $200 Bargain priced at only So-of-PCH $275,000 mucl'I m or e Pro -Into 539~194 Best Alty Rather rent a l'IM7 S400's N room. 0 M s r:HIP N-smkr 646-3524 S 110.000. Call fut theM 521 Carnation. By owner lesslonally landscaped PROVEN RELl ... BLE tam slarter basic kttcl'I & ~· ~~~{i1 Ju~ar 86 ~ Tll262•9 OllTRA~~: ~~I nty 1 1 to t>eh best area 2904 wtn not last. 5.46-2313 673--0241 or 873-15.41 with huge yard, pool • Rare flndl S600 3br hse decor nr Sl'lopt /tcl'lls at ma1ure adults or femlly • of H B 1 & 2 Br supe< lge Btttla,Jbttla .na. Price reduced 10 •••• lltO• ---units 12 t3) 862-8595 OI •••&WC• THE REAL ESTAT&:RS 1.111 llLI , S 1,111,llO Exceptional 5 BR bayfront on north channel. Large country kitchen/FR. huge master suite + rumpus room. Three fireplaces. tall ceilings. 1/,/ N l:WPOR'f f -£N TC ,l 6 44 9060 I ':~=' S<t\\4liX-tt£trs· -----._., .. , QAY I POU.Alf----- • ·--....... ol ""' ,_ "''°"" .... -d• t. low IO '°""' '""' -lo -ch CO H JUE I 11 I I I' I RUQAT I -,-, -1 -41' J I s y T T E I . --J,....,.1-1'_..I_ ' Too many 1*1919 111 loc*tno _ _ _ _ ,;. lot llC)tCttcutcw NlcJpf""' ,__ .__ _____ __.__ rMltH ltlM fhty att rMlly - " E It L [ N I ........... ,-r-r..--1--1 -. • ~--:::; ~...:":.':~a:= ......_ ..... _ _...,_.._._..__ ___ ---'--Ne , ....... • :~k'tiW~s'"''~ r r r r r r r 1 • r;i<!='· 1rn1" 10 I I I I I I I I t•W LITI la••"' la •••••11 _, I 'f ll.I •11& •L .U $399 995 w/lermal Call practlcalty on the wa1et at • • Ullls Incl S 14 SO/mo a 14 8-40 iJ37 U - Steps to bMch. HouM , Patrk:k Tenore 631•1268 539-6190 Best Alty fee Flat won't last S595 2br -631-8569 I ~teld lllTll 111 iueat l'IOUH . A11um1 Others Unadvenlsed complete kltcl'I shady yd LgTer 2Ba gar lndry nc sr ·w111 YILUltr Wkly rentals LOW rates 27'4.000. 2 • down. • r ' Large 3 Bdrm unit w/encl. Bell Alt fee pets Avl to mature AOlls -5 14"i 4 Up Wto.ly Cotor S 5 000 I .~,. kids line detalls 539-6190 ' ' ' I ap••lll(ITS ~ ~ Owner/Broker 548--8040 11----patio. s 1200 yrly. Y I tll June '86 $975/mo Like orand newt All ut11t1es WMY HT? T\I maid tetv1ce tre<1 ta .... l 0 : aoeu IUL" Under $800 cnerm 2br E· 1 63 1-8569 plllO POOi gar no tM!IS -.ottee neateo poo• ~ •••-IT.... side nghbrhd E-Z Int -18drm $585 l 1ve w"t'fe vou have "f'PS 10 ~n K.1cn <1 ._,... PllP lllll&lllllT 539-6190 Besl Alty lee Steps 10 l>Cl'I, comp turr 2Bdrm 1Ba $690 •SP9Ctacu1ar apts a11a11 985 N Coa'lt HW\ 2 St1 Giant. 38 1" Bonus 3 Br 2'h ba + famlly room. l1'/llM1lJ -2br 1 Oa Wlr & gas pd 301 AVOCADO 642·9850 * 1 s 2Br 1 & 2Ba suites Laguna Beacn 494·529" rm, 137,950 7K dn to View. Lrg lot. Poolltennl1 ftaatai1 W/O tnclo Oct-May ---*Spacious townhouses Veta. Gary, Bkr 559-1111 & aecurlty. Reduced to iifMI ltlaa• Vall!J 22l4 $950 mo 525-6040 AHIUIU HW * FtreptacM SUUll •Tll E.CM Fantastic 38' 2Ba $375,000 213/430-3829 38R ava.11 now Garage l FV 4b 2ba at<>M WINTER RENTAL 5pec. I 1Br frig. range taunelr) * Prov&tf' oa1con1es or Wkly rentals now •vall l/p, fruit tr .... desperate. Waterfront dplx 4br+ 2br l $a0o/mo Hm 84>8787 ~~le ~e~ar r kids pets tacular 3Br 2•.,01 on tl'le pool c•rport No pets u drOto" ;..illOS S 140 wto. & up 2274 N~ 12'4K. Agt. 759-5080 dock, f/p, l100K-eq\llty. or Wll 752-5181 $900's o1her s av all aan·d nr 4511'1 St Decor· 1 S5501mo wuy ltt• pon Blvd C M 646-744 lniaa 4 trade/ ... !. 873-2722 539-6190 Best Alty lee a I or I u r n I s 1'11 n g • 931 W 19th St 548·0•92 " ' SU I Sii LOllr So Bayfront spactoua -----_ _ $2500tmo • ut111 Agt I TOP ARE.A MESA p NES • 1 LIQl'll90 tennts courts ~ lt1tk tHt ••trt I upper Duptx 2Br 3Ba + Biat. hac• -nfi 544-2484 M·F 9-5 lSOrm like new ro~n * 2 -.w1mm1ng pool& 3026 W Coast MW'f N...., IMS to ocean 1225 ped YrJY IM 19 1br down•t•lra I trple. encl p1110 Carport *Stream' & • nds port Beacn retrig f\I 1"!1"18P16PIR"Jl....,t"'0"x"'u•A"Y,.cl'!ol'IN'l'l60~ ptd decor ooe.n view new decor patio gar poo1, ac>a. BBO Ou1e1 •So•"r 0 ot>19 '14o· wtt 'OI nooeoos•• (St. Alb1n1). By Owner lid tine otl'lert 1v111 tnClry S1eps to bch 0& ba) I $595 No pets 549~1•4' * • '"''snino\ wall ltatala te 01838-0'405 E/731~7528 9-6t90 Best Alty lee $900/mo 714/67>750e 3Br 2Ba 1027 v111enc1a WM' ""0' CALL St.are 2tol •• ult l•n 11 --' --44-or 6191376-3571 I Nopet1 S72Smo Ca11 an 1t•-&1tl 91 nalt A-t t U I 3pm 631-6 155 • •ON THt SANO 1" small den $2500/mo yrty (turn?). Elev•tor 4 Blk boal lllp Agt 673-4062 I er -Cl'I .... 53 umLUF Piii 2ba fed yrd, gar. gym, fl' ••• 1, • • SEAWllD YILUIE Newport Sch Oceanfront Illa.Am NW FLEETWOOD Hi...hty up-enn11, pOOI, patio. palrol. laJL--I I 4 27_ DELUXE NEW CONDO 1S650 • Jtm 64>7557 mso t eond I lu 'V pell $975 5.46-7234 I -I aa .,. Ea.ttSlde. 2Br 2'tBa dbl 15c.c,~ Huntington VIiiage i eat ltlano-Pro! woman Ufeetyte o omn m graded with large mutei ---------Bal~ la, IO'IWel' 3Br 29a. gar w opnrs lrptc ~ Lane rre>fT' San Dleoo shr 2br tba apt No peta Ptai11ala 221711 Obi gar. fi>rlC l 2 bath ac-Mr oent 3br ocean els hm updeted kit pvt t/yo I ~o ownerthlp wltl'I thla 2 bdrm With own bath. Uv· •llEITILI* * trplc. 1 patklng. p\11 patio. spa No pets S900 mo ''l'f'w•~ "0rt" 0' ~" $350 mo 675-3680 ~~ 2 ,~·· ;u?:: l= ..'ngR-~?°'"DOl·lkHltouchenMI .,... ALL us REG ... ROING yrly s 1275. avalf now 875-9797 IC> McfadOfl" west °" s 1100 539-6190 Beat Alty fee * 1222 ..,,..,.,.. " -E "•SES •~•5 75• •"20 McJ 111.lCle! Bal Pen 1 bll<. trom .... ,,,.. Htghlandl Townhomes. Agt 540-5937 IRVIN L""" 675-<><><> or v-vv E.ASTSIDE 1 BDRM 110~ w vu 2 rmmts MIF tl'lr Certaa ••I •ar c 2BR 18X DU~JI. Bh·l~I fr'Plc, Cf~.~ crnr un , Lower Unit. Quiet lo-• .... n llt had ltaltf BAY ONT/BAY VIEW I retrlg . frplC ulll PM1 L11111 lt1cli 2741 nugn Jbr 2 ba hae $338 cation with view and attt17 .,... lll-llOO j Stu<11o apt yrty Utlllttes tn-$550 646--0988 1i(, apl 1550 mo 1 t! p mo.•-, utll 673--0607 I ~ht etieery S1000 privacy. S188.700. C.anta 1229 --eluded. no pet, no amok· I~ decorlled ;>Br ,81 Acac111 ALSO Small;» Br 548· 7696 Don or John lniH ....... ..., 2 c;;oic; I011. Maaonk .... hack 224 Ing s7ootmo 873-6840 I $575/mo NO PETS Cell H~ $600 PLUS ArtlSI t Bill 10 beh'bay on Bet •Single 0< eozy Cpl Small La -61 10 eve/wknds I 18124Cutv.Or,lrv eectlon In Pacific View. athm,OCMnv\..3bdba laJMa --attet3pm 631 ·6t~r, Stuel10 S300 mo 111 Penn stir Jbr l'IM Pf"IY 1Br. frpl, no gar. utllt pd Cu $875 No pet• 722·801 1 m lM-1111 Muat Mli 819 SM-e004 :~,~~~~1500 Pn.luala 2711 JEASTS.IDE tBR pflvate =~· s~o;:,610 main bl $400 Mo 673-8127 , let U1 ..... Y11 Sell Y .. Pr1ptttrl c. Cla11tlW, 642-5671 for Information & surprisingly low cost. -... ----s ii Se le Quiet &490 uti•s PO • 8091'11 trg room in CdM merald Bay 3Br 3Ba, I ma r •. gar 631 3646 Llflll latHI 2752 Non smkr 19"'1 onl~ OQe•n view Lg yard $750/mo ~m 873-827E _ _ _ 3Br. 28a. charming SI Walk to bch 2 aty raer, E new appt1 S 1250. Mark 2e 1-2• 1• or 673-42'43 ()pix 38r 2ba W/D hkup & bltna Sl 175/mo 11t1MC 424 POlntetttl. 873-8478 ~··· • chotce $400'• cozy bungalow on PCH frM uty or 5 rm hOme w/lrplc & gar $775 63Mt90 Beat Atty fM The VlbM are Rlgl'lt In thla claaalc Old WOfld CdM chennetl Stained gl .... loll of WOOd, ~ bfldt frl*>ll'I onty 28t but oh ~llltCINnla wtthall~ bttlN. Prive,. ~ oft Bdrm, varaga. I 1600 mo Avt Oct 15th. Call HOiiy Ao1 87M111 Lv l'NIO .. 2200/moOlc720-7403.I or0fc979'-637 1 E·llde delul!e twnhte ;» Lc.wety2br2b••Pt w/pool Av111now$37~ ·59.914J vea/wlend 494-5648 YALY BALBOA PENIN ' bdrm. 1'' IHI $715 254.'l & dtanwasl'lar 2904 1 F 2S . non smk.r 1263 I Newly dee !BR no peul Orenge •A·1 &4<'·<'520 Atom• A.,, 714!495-822t mo 2Br I B1 1n C M •vi Ill s E ..,.,, hack MOO/mo, 8?s..e8o6 "EXlRA NICE Lg 1Br Apt ·~rt hack 2719 end tlf Nov 863 1262 (l m-tO eEXcH 2BR ,,,, ........ No pets $495 .. ' t>a, oan, t>ul1tln1. ,,.... 1 c .. ta .... -24 ~ 18 ,.,, 3 30 ,., ttc• 10 &h 3br 2b• "em '"r ,t>, t>• 7 ,," •• "-'f'ldecio. gar S 1095/mc C M ao1 'mok•~ I w 2 p•1crpt1, flreplaca. •vi 10 1 Agl 759•5080 trl>IG "'IC'OWV pool 111e R>** yard $975/mo yrty -~ a S5!IO net utll !>45-0494 dr ya 7 5 2·8474 o r ~llD YILLAGI 2Br 1 ,ea pa110 gar n1 ~1wtmd1 7~-3 128 _ a• ••TMlllTI H04tQ $75"0 "'° No pets ,. yea M ? Sngl par..,.1 t 2 0 , ........, -A, nr ...__. Oat ...... Avl 9 15 731--0595 e. olt '"'' bCfl pie S3()() 28 .. .,_. ,.... ""'' -Quiet non·tmkr 989 7!1()(l hlld Oii S900 yrly (,,m, & tft~·· '1\jt a•r~n \h ,,,,, 0111,l "'' • •: , • • Lido Isle lg JBr 2Bll. tfl)IC I 73-5'&8 or 7S2·9&23 riow to lrttwiy\ I. °'-' , ,.,1 ~'ltil • ,.~ .. , •, • • , Bay view nr p111 bcl'I 6 ""1•M U. c 8 , 2.-+a. t>Nulltut b-v 1111~ h c. ,, ,_,,,,('ol, ,,., "'•\ • 1 t t ~;6 ~;; ~~~:;:~~r;-,~ mU. nm~ view Condo Av1111 now P'ltlS •SIU. ~y 1 .. S 1400/mo 8y Ownr • •Bfand 11\1 2Bt 28t ' 1 Ill Tl llUI II 73--0344 IMmlJI IMO-llH en~ ar .. Fr~. oar + ITl.tll-ll11 38 • a 3 It Im " d • 9! Cf\Kd pet wMoOfne ewer crptO decor ~ yfty 19\My ottlen veil 63t-e1to S.t t.e t •1111 llK-P10 patro $850 $900 No I....... .. ... ., 11 Dell 8!17 1776 &47 t339 1"' conoo 3bf pool Jae. • Pfof n-.amtcr wtcommon ..... E T' .. , IUTU llCl. FtM COIOf TV 10 ttlflten MnM S300 mo 562 «SS Ml P&IUl99 lor thl.1 c~ 2 t>Orm "' I l -O 8Ch oonc!O ocn vu n&. P"M..-IT 7...._ 1 Ul· lllJ b<:n $820 Avail 9, It 100 yrtS bct1 tum '49$ 673 62 t I AIOI< 497 1002 497_.'33 .. I I· I 1 ... .~ ...... a.tab 814 Led a ,.... ... IN Ju... HM l!I! laa... I ll! ltlt ...... 11! HI l•!!f Ill! ltlt Wu ... SIM l tJt Wu... 1111 •It ·.:.~. Ill! ~~~~:w~:.."""'l!"'~ .. .,--::·=-.·.1 s:E:,~~f;ort =.-."=a ADVERTISING 2=1ure11 -~ Pel1~=-~·~ ICSl)ESALES M:a.n:-IOOl~:rz s.o:.,~ ~N= -----..•--..,.. -•'t~t ... • ARTIST ~~. • _,. l.l.IN1TE Mu9t~OW1catllne. AlllUfM..,.POllltloneln '831 Pleoen · Centtr 1Hklng an T":-:"':"M,......,.""'T!~-,__-1___. CdM e ti.-_. ... t Ml-.oeee ~ Ape>ty btwn 2-4, 2830 W the rMdw ed dept. tak· Medic ....,ikl. ntal P«90fl lo * tbe ,...,.,., I 1100 lncf utl. A/Cc= = Wit ea... Hwy, Nwpt Bot\. 1ng phone/ couni. ad• WI operet• tn a prof...,Ori'lal ......, ..... 1321+~ tenttor. 2165 e • ·~'. .. ... """" PtelMnt oomfof1abte of-p-.. ti-... "~ ol bueln... atmo.phere. u& llO.a71 Hwy 175-teOO ~ OrowlnO dally ~ lor ~ IMctl ~ lllTIL llWT flee. GrHt Job for 0 (: ;;;;._ 'O';;dd'f1v1ng Multlple ~blt1 ... u--~d ............_,_ ....... • on m. °'~ eo.t ~ fWnjey wl3 ~ lnt....._..ig now for the For bu9Y Tu.tin otf1oe mature, Mendty lndtvld-rec Nwpt Ben area. lo Include tn-HouH ;;:• ..,-, ... ~~ .,_ U.. need• lrMginatlY9, ~ dren. Mon-Jrrt. •Int followtng poeltloN; t32-6190 uel. A.pplyln pereon, Pen-· 840-0t40 Countllf' Salel, l<odell ~""" llllM•• .... , .. aa11 IM:ttv.,leyoutertltt ... .., .-,Y,,,_..hew~ nyNY9t, IMO Plaoentle _ Et<TA print operation, 64J.la00 tv fNO tee ftoof oMoe on CoMt ''? ._. undtntandl~ lie.. 7to-.3e08Ot121-5301 JA. TYPIST • 40-46 wpm, mflL ~ A Coeta Mw blndet'f light pMt~ Meu-. ..._ '245 28' Hwy Oood •lgnlng. Ml .... .,. Ing, to~ adwtttalng 0 DETA F~e. Wiii treln on Full/Part ttnw. "9ed4MI v.. · ..... IPl Ablffty to WOf'k ..,1 with a., pool, nt bctt, ~ JanltOflal, air c;ond'I: Lo1t Oolden Ooolter for • y.ntty of cltantl. AUT ll ' RT. ·50• M.50. lmmed. Great O.C. 10c INUl'9n0e k • O C othere a muet. Ex· eeo .... 9332.IO+dep& ...... peri(lng ano ut 8'**" ~ Onn.oe • Our dl8ctlm1Mtlno ":ci ~~;:r"' ACCOUNTING ClEAK -ROH-Matl• 957-8000 mw. p~:'~~ ;... perltnce pr.,.,,ed. An ~ uill. MIM210 ltlee. a150 per mo. Broadway. An1wre to kM demanda qualfty ' Flllna, llght typing, 10 ext. 211 llPllmJlmD ~d· luay fMd. Ith. In appllcet• ai>c>ly PIP, 298 Mii' 3ld dpllc.,,.,,,,. lllnt llRRll IUl.n 'Hc>MV' Red oolar w1N8 etyt9. CHtlD CARE.=· key. l»eyroll dept. te.oo. -AL~ Client oontact. rnatkettng, NWpt 8oh ., ... 840-0140 I!. 17th St, CM. loo. f W/O ll~ tage (Prevlou1 owner) New1paper produotlon pereon tor 2 glf't8 In -• rating ry.,_ 40-llO wpm, _..;... __ ~===--Sfe. '~· Avt Call 50-0190 or k ~helpM Ablll-my lrYln• home. a SECAETARY·Ptrfonnall G.P. nr So. COMt Ptul Adaptabhitogrowthef\• llllUL.... P/TIE•m111n now &utttl 3"-144i IH-7574 ty~ work undtr'dMd-dye/Wt<. Oy 251-2447, routln• dutle1. Goo4 ndechwf\11,anthulautk vlronmant need part time pereon. Wk Buey,.., or 17&-2417 EXEC OfflCe· dOM to irnee • mult. Prb ,,.._. Eve 854-7141 lyptno. and gramma~ hygjantllt fOf TUMday ~ c.nter. eicp. In bac:k office & In-2!Jl•rt•aP«offlce: Mon-Fri. M/F nlemkr ~ lttr 2Br Appx ioo f't, paper ~. an edven· UIT llTTll se.oo 11o.oo. M5-4553 Jim Simmon•.~ aurance. 5-43-9319 ';2:6. Muat be rallable llPt nr OCC *325 mo. r,:r:. ofc furn 12r:Jmo. laga. Poeltlon 11 !ull 11me, Mature & IOYlng tor Infant RECEPTIONIST • Type 50 ll"1J Ull 1 lnter•tat• lnauranc. Motor~le Mechanlcl and pr ... ntable. Wiii 64 5-30 74 1491 W. a.kw, Sult• 3. f Olll) ADS good benefl11, ••lary & 5 yr ofd. SS/hr. tor Sat· Wpm, front lobby, buey HabOr Munlclpat Coun naa Agency. 71~390 we train. Call Fred train. Expw priff, c.tt M/F etw tux 2700 llf 3 1ty eo,te ~ Ca 92828 cbmmeneurete with ex· urdaya. Muat be patient I boefd. Wiii train exper'd o~nlng1 for Men a 11111WlfWlll ...... at 492-7753 Jo.ti 831· 12M twnhae. 1 11r alls.· tg '* 568-3900 '* ID~ fRE£ pertenoe lnqulrlee and ex~rl•n*· Nawporl oi>«•tor. Laguna Hiii.. Women, It YoU type 40 CondUC1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii bdrm aulta, MP . rm Sut>-laue llPPf'OJt 1000 aq Ml. re1umH lo: Steve Beach 751-8003 S'r.00 • Sl.00. wpm and are tntar•ted Wane at ,h°":9o0at pet llTll & bth. N/Smkr MllO mo. tt. w/5 omc... 1750/mo. Hough, Art Director, • In xlnl beMfltl and itatt· au~ °' IU : 75it-t911, (213)311-t337 "Yell Oct. 132 181t'I St. Cal·. Dally Piiot. P.O. Box BABYSITTER NEEDED In TRC Temporary 8eMoel, Ing Mlary of se.99 p/hr. market Ctlaln and natl I 11m " 15e0 Coate Meea, Ce. W•tellff arM, N.B. Tuee 4500 C.m~. #124, NB. 40 hra p/wk Cell bfandl (within yOUI' cal-M/rmmt lht Sbr w/2 other C.M. 642-0377 ~ MJ ... JI 9282G & Thur• 1-8ptfl fOI' two 952·t424 933-0411 ext 3s0 fOI' In· Ing ar .. ). We'" train. If PtOC>te In CM. pool, i.e. SU&-lET fum pyt ofc on Ctllldren. Cell tor more t9Mew 4801 JambOr.. you hev. • plMlant ettl· A~•ll•bl• In Newporl lllTllf llllllJ '400 Ind ut. 641·7011 Quall St. 1400. mo. •I• OUST Info. ~4 ILlll Blvd N.B EOE ctant phone manner and Buch. experience FUii time Rental ~t NEWPORT BEACH ahr trg Spedail llltuatlon. lndd1 lllL.Y Pl.II V' D.IT ~ Tobacco or magazine ' · · .,. Mlf-dteclpllMd, cell prelerred, but not needed lor wall •tab- HOMl! yw rnd, non-etr*r eometyp1ng&p1c'lol .. ,.Lane. Found lg vng mate 330 w. 8-Y St. -·---y Wlop exp. ~r. .llJYll CROlclhL. E&9T18) 572·4015 ~ ....... 'tr~~: ll1h•d ~Y,,.!!.~:~totfl fem 1376+ utll 64$-2108 Xlnt fl), A-tty. L)'n L.eb/1M9 ""' ,.,_/rfld Coat Meea Ce 92828 •m:wr.--_..._ ..,......., """ ., . .,.,..... ' ' Bea<lh Om'"'' ,_...,a a · · Reynoidl. 152-0740' _.... • • ' · 2am-8am, Itta van neceu-W ::;"!:=lot-=·::: LM= 1.,...., and be '1Y« 18 yeere old. lie. req. Call Shlney, N-«Ncg'9mtowtumttv. •ht hr. curled tell. AIDEF.ltYe-ln Taacher ln ary.NewportBMCtlar ... Con't'9nlanoe Store exp. CX>fd """hte553-t940 8....-n day deltvery with 876-4630 Condo, 1325. mo. lndda 642-1185 wtlk:tlt. Faw nra, rm/t>rd Call 759-0630 anytime. pref. PT, "-YI.,.., 250 '""' Eng. lnO & exprd no COllec11ng, Call 10AM utN. 652-82.23 ....... 1111 ....... +1100.mo. 64>2357 .,....... Ogle St, C.M. Hatold, llMl-P/1 lftw ::~'b5°Pb•~ :~m~o ·•PM ~~ Friday. N/emlcr et'tr tuxurtou. 2Br COUU/6FC aptX i888a.i. lenle• lilt • WA.NT TO BE A need• Sut>-<:ontrac:1ora In 850-64e3 Mutt be neat appMl'1ng & noon or 1-3pm ror Nency ----......,.,....,..,,,-=-=,--~=·1~~~~ ~29:-or &.:"201~tvd ~ W llAa HANNY? Need loYlng all ateu ol repair. Min. 5 1&.111 lTPllT lite• ~~50 ~~.:'1: LlUL lllll'TAIY llllEIY IAI BURR WHITE REAL TOA . INC . 6 7S-46 JO ... 1_..,._ e.,.,,_,_ cer. fOf my 19 mo. old In yra exp w/tool1 & trensp. Entry leYel 9l"Nlll Ofc In COL.""._... · u-..o.-.. by ,.~ta M ... Eicp. or norttcultural "'" .......,,. e.tboe P9nn. Comm/Ofc ~ ... <MH•v my .. 8 "e~~·or· 7-!!n,•30tt7•. &4&-«lM C.M. Min.' 45 wpm. Gd -• ............ l .... ,..___ ~manent l>Ckgrnd. H.B. 942-88&8 ----.,..----Prof male 45+ Falr<ltew & .cappnt 2500 eq.tt. __. ~-.. u · work'g cond. ~70 -H-... vu,..., .._ RMI Ettate U>ane 405. SC Plza. daarl 58', Very nkl4H>n Bt't'd. 4114 Aeoounllng H~ ~ti, Pn ·~.... v:m~ltJWICh~~ ~~.~ d~~n~/ N~:~~ A:~E ;.::ad PUUW. CM 1325 + S50 432-73ee 649-2950or649-20 14 TIAml c .--. ... ....,. nee. Fr .. tralnl,.,, worttera comp., exp. pref. help on"'. Ute hou... .. ..... temp help. Hhlera Typing, nttng and other ,........ .. ., •1 1 Prof mM ehr 28' waW· c....ntll ticket tekera, parking clatlcal dutlee. Own car 1 1tart1 Sept. 19, Wedne. Mu1t be excellent typt1t. kHplng & cooking. Sharp pereon w/e~. n lront Udo ..... Muet be Int.ala Jiii Entry 1.w1 poeltlon In attnd'ti. etc. Apply In mu 1 t . Ca I I Judy, day. Bonueee paid to Call Kathy 432·7811 49-4-7983 Debbie peci<eglng & prOCMeing dean, n/lmkr. no-seas Newport Bwh Advert. pe!'IOn Mon-Set btwn 842-4321, ext. 318 '"' oer11fled drMwl. Apply In LITERATURE OFC ASST PIT entry i.v.i large commetclal & ,,_ •omo.181\09/St~ Aot;y. We w111 train In 2-a. 3432 Via Opono, appt. pareon. Laldlaw Tranett, COORDINATOR B 1 Mon Fri dental loan• lor New90r1 Rmmte eflr nr SC Plu 1315 ~ utllt, carport, quiet llvlng 549-023-4 264 aq ft & up, r .... C.M. oomputer -try. L~·t Npt Bch Cell btwn 2003 Laguna Canyon .,_ .. __ ,1 c-•......., St poi. In N. · l> c. • & Beech firm. Mu1t be C-2. 548-7249 832 .... 190 ,... . 8 MllUIUIT Rd 1 ... Bctt 497·2151 High~""" .,,._.. u-9·2, gen'I ofc elCp r•nable of crMtlng CUh typing & apptl1ude f()( 8:30-12. 675-777 .... , - -.. ..._. · dent, part time, collate 50wpm. Beth 851-2050 ..._ . ...-.1 wfth d6- CDM. 1 blk to beactl, noo-urea • rnuat. Xlnt oom· -r-1 EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI literature In Corona del .... -flows & ""'" ng Room In 3br hM w/gat & amkr, 2BR 2BA, trplc. Mr. Watter (7 14~5e20 pany banaftta. lllllllPEl/ULEI 330 w . Bay St. seoo. par 100. Guwan-Mar. $3.50 p/hr. OWn MRI llP1'/ ---... veloper1. Salary com· yrd So. SA $270/mo plUa. S3aO 873-7439 BEER BAR· lotue Aoom, U.111WllT FIT PIT for amall car ac-eo.ta Meea. C.. teed Payment. No Ex-tren9'). 64.4-4022 4 Day Wk. 8-8 hr p/day. No menlm-'--' w. ~~th. In:~~~ Craig 175-0402 15.48 ,,. .. __ ... _ •· ....... F •-I P.I. OMeOrle lhop. 631-7189 perlanoe/No ...... 0.. night• or wtcnd1. Perm. """" .-.-50 Shr 2 bf hM. Walk to bdl. Fem, 2()..3(), lrg 2BR 28A .............. -' _.._.. 11•111.111 talll MflCS Mlf..-cldreued IUllT, fMW part time fob. $5. p/hr. 650-59 1350 + utll 873-0220 apt, 1 mite to bch. $350. Coeta MaN.. 8Y w · 111-1.. · US-_, Ull.... 11arnpad enYelope: ELAN No eiq> nee. Wiii train. FOf C II Dick 9-11em dally I Avall 10/1. 983-7421 ~~· ... bu2.!;...!k-H5S, Part time night lhlft, S VITA. l -"O 3 . 3 4 18 detalll, CM1 641-1079 ! .. 8-9409 Coate M_.. IEll~Y ......_Weekend• anytime. ""'""..,. _ ,Hllllli _,AIU penclng struc1u,., Nwpt hlft work, co-educ•· • .,.., w•- Shr 3t>r NB hM v. blk to Prf~~~~~~ 200 Fr.. c...tta Tape on Part time, t1oure ftaa.16.llO 8Gh S4 p/hr 875-2790 =· pr=t~ t= ~=;e Rd, Ft. Pierce. UINAGER Plff Tiiie/, .. n.. EJcp. swttet1t>oerd. Min. 2 bdl, $300.+ 'It U1H. Fem to 5eOO i .f. evall. From $1 N.-In Homa 8ualnw. ltart. Apply 0 T Stying, ...-11111PT abYee vtctlma. 831-993e ""' Prtt• Pett lfllee yr1. Type, ord«t/lnvoloe . 645-3757 p/lf 873-8004 873-3777 ~ 8-11pm. 796-n~ ~~ cw. Hto FIT PIT hetp wanted for 9AM-3PM llmll. lfflll Immediate I tor full Flex hra,tyJ>lng & AMI • prooe11lng. Computor ;::: .. nu Matu,. M/F, apllt houM ... , ...... 11• tllT NlllU... ~:~~~n J~~~ndb•R•!~·~ llllid..... p~'7·J:::1r," ~: llme Dlltri::.~ A.7:~ ~: ~~~ IX'\~2~ 3BR 2BA;,~· J:t~ Jar 16:,..., unit. ~ par1anee, neat & ~-NMd no exp. w. train. pnon... coat• Mau Muet enJoy WO<klng with IE·•ml•IT $f50. Doob6e ~. yard. HB ...,.,. evall lrnmed lmmad. • 1 keyb) Cell tor ~tmant F 11-tlnw 1am-3 30pm eeo-0470 hlld E I e PUT Tiii 724 Jamee St. C.M. Wet---ont AIAA 1350 _,, $450 mO 87s.o3&9 toueh, good com-.. H ..,,. 0 E.O E. ~u In~ .:... _,..; ~ .. ~len. xper enc ...... ..... lit• typing. pl••Hnl 873-1787 .., " ...._. ., · · murQtlOn & good In~ _...., · •• ,.,._ ... M -·-P•u · pQeltlOna avalla...,, II '"" ""w Yoloe, 15 hr. 9-5. •Y•ll. 3333 W. Coa1t _., -A ' E. 144-4421 -_.r_ Delly Piiot new1peper .,. ......... 170 Sir 731 W ....._. NB Mon thr Fri 9-5 1r __.... _.r-* urH. ccountl ra· Ill M•I LT..... ' ParMJme, bright, nat, We offer an excellent ban-~ ... 1no Saturday and T~Frl. 87&-5800 Balboa ' · garage. ' .... ,. U Ct9d1t. cohctlon ganl ofc oefyabta and/Of general •• good t9'ephone YOlce Id '""'" --------~-18th t. No. 5, Coat• ............. Fn or PIT eorN wknctt accounting. crerlcal For 2 email c:Mdren In my •••n.m Some · eflt program, pa ..... Sunday morning•. Earn IEIPT/TYPllT Meaa. 873-7787 & ...,.. KoWna Jawatera ~· • plue. 11000. mo. Newpott Height• home. -----typtng. Nr ""'F cation• & holldeya. bonU• S4 50 pet hour plus gas Newport Ct Law Otc DOUBLE GARAGE SPIRITOXL READINGS Mr N.....,, 54&-4510 • •tart. Cati Mn. Badger, Thur/Fri. 845-10M Part time carYW ClOUnM6-~~~l:s':r tu-program ands 1dentet 11n· all~ance. Muet haYa IOme legal~. prel. Sal'. Non..commarclal S 125 Advice In All Matten & · • 846-8&43 Mon-Fri 10-4 ore wanted. Halo boy9 · surance. • ary P u1 large car or pldc-up and w/e~ Call Newport 8Md't 6'o.e379 CounMtlng. 1815 So. El ... • --' •11.11111 and gltta eollcft new .... ll lfflll mlteege relmbYrMmertt. be it least 18 yeere old. ~&40.8900 · Camino RMI, San Clem. llUI My home. full time, Mon.-~ptton. on their Entry leYel, varied ottloe Applicant must apply In Call Bruce 642-4333 Lg agl car uw.. Nr O.C Uc'd. 492-7296 Twoaaleeopportunlt)'poe.. 11111.... Fri. lam-6:30pm, In paper rout•. Mutt enjoy dotlee.Computer&war• waon at Dal~ PllOt, 330 -{OPT/TYPIST Fairground•. Completety ltlon1 open for th• The Or--COMt n... Hunt~on Baaotl. Fl'-WOtklng with 10-13 yr fu .,..... PAST['llD P ti anent ,.,__ ............. n...4 ----·-. .,,......... scn•M-LETS agreulve and motivated, PllOt ,,'7.~~-..:'1n' 7 --.......... IC'...... Ing houft houM •xper. help I. Welt Bey t., Coit• t.ur art me. perm ......... .,,....., "" 7 -·· ~ M who t t the """' "' • ...,.. call 64 ~ 4 aft«_...... .__ _,,...,.. Call Krf1tln 545-5279 M ... Ca. Apply 9·11 ltlon. 8am-1pm. Mon-Fri. trlctty. $85/mo. 751-3531 wan ° get on 1t1 Ad ~ wont dayl/ ftaxlb6e hra. · a.m. Or 2_. p.m. (Clrcul• Polltlon IYallable 5 deya e x p e r w / p u 1 1 e AW~ lntah 1914 ANSWERS ~~~~ ~ ~:~ cl~~lltlee .!!!' ... _ M d'UL Commleaton only. ....... lfP• lion Dept ) p/wl<, lncld1 Saturday. awttchboard ptef. Paul VlllW elude i....... up •iv ur Anl phonae, type, gen Ofc, Cell 8fuca fmetev PIT, WIH train, flax. hfl, r• ' ' Art/Ofa"lng ba.ckground Doller & Aaloc, 3050 1 U6NTR FREE RENT Jounoe ·Quart ml .. lon schedule and llYery of ad1, pulling conlt exp.Irv 562-5300 842-4321 ext. ~ taxed atmoaphara. Good MANUFACTURING helpful. Mu1t be pro· Redhill, C.M. 556-7075 wtth 1 year IMM. FUii ..,. T•ty-Kennel ~:"~~•'m:nvlr~;i tear.thfftl, or.cx<.•amg .. -.... •• Ml•i -•-phone comm, lttyplng, tll· •POWE~ BRA.KE duct Ion oriented. Wiii .,... i iu-. vice exec:uuva eutte1. ~ CONTENT · 640-48M • ad•. and • vartety ot "~"..... -• Ing, Yatled lnt•ntlng OPERATORS train. Apply Pennyee ... er, IEOIU, _ __.. Word prOOMtlng, T•x. ToomanyS*>PlearekX*-other dut .... Candidate BuayNewportBMd't IU.YPl.ll dutlee.842-8339 1660 Plecentla AYe, YMCA After echool pro- Telefax, Raoapt., Cont. Ing for apectaeulat happl-* IM.D-TUYIL * mult be extremafy or-1n1urence office ha1 •SPOT WELDERS Colle M.... gram 2pm-8pm Monday Rma. Secty't, Kitchen & ,,..., Few rMllze that Boyl-Olf'tl 19+ Fun fob ganlzad, reeponetble and lmmed. opening for • full SHIPP=RECEIVER .( PHARMACY CLERK tnru. Friday 19 yr• old. more. Comer MecA.rthur theyarerMllyCONTENT. Salary. Trevei U.S. & able to work well with time clerk typlat. Dullea .-U/&llT llllS M regor vagi;; PIM hW It lrewht&J bpw. Nwprt Beec:h .,.._ Exp d pr:id;)}:I Renee & JambOr ... Executive Letti,.... 3iM HewaH. FUt1dralelng for other1. w1C11 '1~a::c..~ .... tor Coat• Meea Apt. Com-1631 Placantla, . . We are.,, lndu1try leader Mon-Fri, 9-5pm. Call • Row lnct 3901 MecA.rthur ltt youth eport•. NMt only. Sand reeume Attn: Liu ..... .,, but Wiii con· plex, call lor Interview HOUSE CLEANER want· In the manufacture of 411'1· 640-8584. Alk ror Bob. Bt't'd. Sul1a 211, Newpor1 Found eml gray k en, Ytc Mr. Tracy 941-8764 Smith, to: .... Sal / t 979-5290 ed. Mature, experlellCed, "lneet'I"" and draftl"" restaurant BMCtl, 752·7170 Harbor View Home1. • M••l llUT sider eggr ... tve, •m-ary ap · dependable. Car eaen-:qulp,;,-:nt. lncreHed PllTllUllY OllllU 1111 *lllll'Tlft lllTll 840-1857 or 850-2105 &WI. lllPfTAL IAl.Y Pl.II ~=Y":_· FUii •Tl 111111'911 tlal. 648-2342 aft 3pm demand for our produe1• B/W & colof pr1nter w/mln W1nted eoergetlc, Mlf· 1 MONTH FREE RENT L091 orng/wtu ltrlpe M Full-time. All DutlH, P.I lea 1111 Call Branch Manager -.al PllTfm •lllllDO hue<eetedMvetalopen-2 yra exp. For -Wt cell motivated P4JOple 881DovwDrSutt•14 C.t. No tall. CM aree lront & badt 14/hour. A--.&... ri-.. la. 1-H' 955--9033 btwean 1-4:30 s: .... lllh .......... Ing, metur~ lngs on our 2nd SHIFT. 714/241-7313 Pleuant working con· Newpor18Md't131-3e51 773-0240 D, 979-8829 E 754-1396 -__, aw I The Dally PllOt ha rm. ~"' ~~ PWTI dltlon1, no experience mediate opening for cu.. woman. U'Wl-al houee-We are kX*lng f« people needed, Wiii train. Flex· tomer S«vlca Clerk to work, laundry, t•k~ With • becitground In Interior malnt. lor land· table hour9. full or part wane In our t>uay Clrcui. phone~ ~or cou-aheet metal or • mectilne acaplng Co. need• exp. time. No night•. grMt op- tion Department. Mutt be r,c:,,,,e,~Cat & .~1~~ shop. E~perlence le par.an or wilt train, own por1unlty ror college llu- dependat>te and able to ....,._.......,,Send,~ to preferred, bUt ~ Wiii tr1an1. Jerry, 557-0150 dent or houMwtfe. "Wly: handle heavy phona1 ·~i train the r\ght candidate HONEYBAKED HAMS. wtth a ple:uant telephone Dally Pilot, Ad# 875, .0 . Only eppllc&nt1 who can 3700 E. Cout Hwy, C<IM ~!;;;!!~!!!;;;}iii.-.'-iiiiiii:iii:lli..-----11iiiiiii-miiii,.. ____ llaMUJ ______ ._ ____ -t voice. 20 Houre p/Weetl Box 1580. Colt• Meaa reed, write and IPtlJI ~ BUILD OR REPAIR Getden Sefvtoe, exper, BRJ&MbRk. Sm;JJ fobl Expert Servloe & Repair M~ey -Friday. Call CA 92828 Engll1h need apply. lttlll f /1 P /T Wall• 11a1r1 ral~I • .._.._,. bte prof For N9wpor1, Cotta M .... 32 yra exp. Reald'l/Comm. 642-4321 '"' """t Aek --mu Depend peraon ror am ao-. ' ....._,iva ' • lrvlne. ~t·1. 87>3175 Lie #"°9035 964-8919 ...... ,. · --• Excellent 1alar1 .. and · lh 63l 7l89 $2.17 per day That'• All you pay lor 3 llnea, 30 day minimum In the door1, wlndowl, Inga FrM •tlmate 5.48·2572 for Traoey. llYe In/out. f« Hwpt Sch benefits. Apply In peraon, oeea car 09. - #476106 Don 962-8202 Land1cape-Gardenlng •m.. NEW/REPAIR. Quality. No DllTMI IDYlll profeealonal farnlty w/3 Monday through Friday, Selee DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIECTORY Complete patloe. eo....,.. Trim TreH-Haullng-1 .... ....,•._ ______ fobs to amell, reuonable. of ct'llldren. Mon-Fri. xlnt 8:30A.M . 3:30PM Oec:ks. Concrete waUc-Clean upe. Leo 557-4508 • All llwm• Free eet.. llc'd. 631-2345 Growing Tuatln baMd • Mlary, mu1t haw driven llOIHY Fllll Bl .. H Room QUICK & CAREFUL flQe, needl uelllant to lie. 780-3805or821-6301 PLAN HOLD CORP. f or Clmifi~ Ad Opportunity to iell weya. oc .. wa I . TIE UIHIEll p.-L'n Cu1t---o-"~ M·~-ACTIQ"' eddn115yrexp646-483:t LOA.ATES. T1380.46 .,... eger~typlng~~racy-a 17421VonKarmanAve ,, gourmet looc:t1 & gift• Cuitom Reeldentlal Work Lawn & Garden Malnt. 112·M 10 European Psychic Torol attention 10 detall req. -. IPIWIU Irvine, CA 9271-4 Ca.U Flex. hre. Wiii train, W•t· Patloe-()aci( ... Remodellng 841-8750 -~------Card & Pelm Reader. Tell1 PIMlant tetephone P«· 18.0S:ltartlng rate Equal Opportunity A ~~·-~~~~OT ctltt Plaza, Mr. Munz. RC Con1tn.1c11on ~31 -------..,..-•&-1 "'111* Pait, Preeent & Future. eonatlty. We will train for Severe! poeltlon1 evaltable Employer MZ-H'll 642--0972 Melnt, CIMn-upe, mowing, CLEAN & EXPERT Advloe on all matters. appt thl• unique poattlon, with local corp. Mull be =========.JL_~~~;;:;==~======== QUALITY FINISH WORK tr .. trim. Free Eaflmal•I Over 25 yea.re exoertence 650-2758 or 631-8964 p-.. call Mre. Grtml. 18 plu1, artlculate, 3 yr CALL TODAYll ASIF• Liii Your Dally PllOt 5efvloa Directory Repreeentetlve M2..U21tat.Ht '* NEED TO REMODEL? Fr" eetlmetes. 100'% Financing * QUALITY WORK Beach Cltlel Remodeling. Pnone 673-8122 Uc. 20H81 Entry & French Doore our Mr. Ettreda 645-3381 lie. T • 118,428 730-1353 IMfblt 730-0888 bet. 10arn-« reeldent, etudent1 OK. Specialty. lle#389432 .... r,;a ABC MOVING -aft. tpm. No exp. req, Call 3-6PM. Corum Conll. 831-7975 ••• •-•• H B 964 2890 or s A AME N HANDYMAN Ou1ck careful. T1380.48. ,.,, _.PDllf--:•. DELIVERY OAIVERS · · • · · ......... W..... Carpentry, fencing, Win· LO A.ATES, 552-0410 H v. Now hiring Perry'• Ptu.a. 541·8878 for appt. KJtc c.b .. alee. plumb. dowa. plumbing. mantte, IT&nm 111.1111 (11•) ...._nll NB. Must be 11 & own ... ------lmmed •t. (818) 965-7832 tub encl, haullng. etc. ITl ... TI .,. • traneportatlon. 873-13ee To place your measaoe And Vea Jelua 11 LOl'd • We do roofs, Ill typee. Call _ -y --before the {llc#30405) 63&-82« Orange Co. Original u1 f« phone quot•. -..w-r--reeding pubUc, Student Moverl. lneuted 642-6151 llcenMd PIT 10 deliver documant1 hone DECKS-WOOD COVERS. Lie. T 12...:J9. 641·6427 • Npt 8ch WM. 720-1042 D:,ly Piiot 10 ~.:; ~~e20 NEW WarehouM Storage ltcntuiaJ llUftlJ PRiii Cluailled, &42-5678 --------Pa1atla1 len!cn 281-1ee1 1--------GEN. Home Repalra, alee., ABC Secretarial Sva Lat--------- carpentry, plumb, lhee1 ANE PAINTING By Rk:tl-ter1, reeume:a. r-Port1. I •1 p·1 • rod! repairs S47· 1772 •rd Sinor. 18 yra of happ) etc Pleua call 846-983& II y I 01 cu1tomer1. lie. 2806« • e •• • e • e • e e • •GEN. HOME REPAIRS Th1nk-Youl 983--411-4 BEA Sec'y Serv. Typing. • • Paint. Drywall C1tpentry Dictation Word Proc • • etc. Gery 645·5277 PTL RAINBOW PAINTING In H B Linda 840· 15l0 a e Quallty II our policy · · • · ~ HANDYMAN LARGE end 650.u.46 JEFF Uc 8688 llftri •. OOLLEOTll WUTEI : smell. I DO IT ALLI e e 531-5579 P11 or Ive meg. A.A.A. PAINTING Int/Ext • Part 11'me opening in Laguna 8 euh • LOWEST poeelble price. Flr•Burg' ·Madlcal-Penle HOME REP,t,IR. Carpentry 10 Step Servlca. 882--3235 U.l. approved Monitoring •. area. Earn up to 16.00 per hour for : n fen<l81 & gate•. lree trim. #()003.49 54~ ( hi b · · S 0 d · 1 ..,, dump rune. C.M & NB. CUSTOM Painting by Jim e collecting or mont y su script ions. • up, 1 •y In my ..._una atea. Jim Whyte 842·7208 Low rat• for lhutt.,.., -~Alttlltint • Experience preferred but nol re· • Bch home TLC. 494-4246 louvie, patio turn., Iron ,. -• I • Chlldc.re my home, trant Plumb.-Elect.-Carpentry ator tr .. nt. 834-4243 ty one At l.owae1 e quired. Mu1t be at l east 18 yura o d . e to school & beci< CM-Na Paint-etc. Dependable Price. Newport/C .M. • Call 10 AM . 4 PM. Mr. Kirkland. • ...... Call .. ..,, ,.258 Real. Paul 720-0t39/eve DAN SALVER PAINTING araa.. Nannette 131-4810 • l • ... _ """'"" Lie •426924 • 642·4. 21, Ext . 207. • CHILDRENS CORNER laaliaJ Call Anytime. 964-2017 Tilt e • Preechool & Daycare. In Cf HAduRd . boV1Rd LADY PAINTER Rnldantlel/commarclal : OllMUTlll lln, : my home, 20 yr1 exp. refe Garege & Yard Clnup1 Int /Ext 11 yr expat1al10e. BIG JOB CANCELLED • ••2 ••21 Ell • CU9tom.Reeldentlal Work evell., loc near Placenlta Jon 645-8192 Fr .. nt Rauoneb6e. ChMp prlcee. 642-2079 • _. -.. • Clean· Tlmely·Reuoneble & VlctOfla 722-8087 850 751-8943 lie•« ts.43 Chlldcere My N.B. Horne. LIGHT HAULING·Mo...tng ·1924 ()( 957-5801 ''"..... : ORANGE COAST DAIL y PILOT : THE CONST. CO G C Lie Marinara echool dlltrlct. Dump rune (yerd/gar:'r) PAINTER NEEDS WORKI dUXtffY TREE fRIUINd • 330 w a.., srr .... Cott•......_ CA nm e Comm .• reaJd'I, fl9'#/rmd'I. Wiii tue/plclcup 5-43-7900 7 d•YI 0·~ 54s-181 Int/Ext, celling•. raftn cab. Trwe root>atumpa l'9tT\OW • AN EOUAL Of>l'Of'TUNITY EMPLOVlR • Call UI l11tl 364-512 t TRASH BUSTERS (28) vr• exp., work ~· Clnup9-4et. Carl 722-1171 • • ~~~~;~;i:::-Conll. & AelJd'I ctean-up, Devi• Pelntlng 964-3837 I • ~· -,. lree eat. Vie 722·6240 SOUTHERN PAINTING a '""' ltntM ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ x, .. R;p;J,. ' lwtll lentet DECORATING. Int/Ext. tr:= typing rm I I ·1 p·1n1 Raeurlecing •Roofing & Lie lneured 831-6430 Ananolal, t.agal, Etc II I I Waterproofing• 831~ 199 Str ... Mane:gement, et09 p Call Ame &4M233 • • • • • • •• • 1=---:-::,-------amotdng, ~ht contrOI •terbL e Lhllttia1 Lloyd, 545-8828 lor Appl nR+AING lNTERtORS ' ...... a.. • .... •• TUii • e"irr.tfan 1"other .111-~ ........ ~~ ... ""'!"I! llANOING/STRIPPING : mu LIM•,.. ·•-nm•' : babytlt Mon-Fri CM/SA . VISA·MC 873-1512 ... our • -wn• Liii • ... -., • ., ... e.-1-9314 IHlt Clta•'rf lalboe Window Wutilng ... • - ROBIN'S CL NING ANDVS WALLCOVERING 803 Balboa 91. e73-3135 • .L e 1n11111at1on & Remo ... a1 • 1f you are in High School or Jr. • SERVICE· a thr0<>ugn1y Int. painting. s...~13 RICCO'S Window W .• Hi'gh and would like to eam *25.00 .• clean houM. 94&-07 41 Ing. For ~11clfng & c ~ Expert Wallcoverlng In ecr_..a. Call 5'41-0e21 e to $50.00 in commission and more e Home & 01'lce Cleanlng by 1t1Hatlon Rea. Cori1Ult· e call y e JODI Pleua call !or tr• ant AU!gnmnt 511-8590 Tom'e Window CIMnl • each week-give WI 8 · OU can e eatlmata. 142-67-48 Guar111taad WOf'km • work PART' TIME ln the aft.er· • RESIO/COMM'LllNO 28 HOUSECLEANING. Oood p~:J: :,A,: ~~ Ownr/Oper8tad 83&-337 :. noons and evenlnga and still have : •llparlenoe & ref•. Own FrM ••· 873-2510 • ume to enjoy. We offer complete • tr9n1P. Glactye, 545-3165 Plaster ' • training and provide lransportatJon • ma W ...,_, n ~t ng : plus great priza, tripe, and plenty : For raflab6e'detaled work ~e.om·taX1urtng, ~e1tty0 • of MONEY! Thll lJ not 1 peptt • CA:ll t<Jm 94().."30 tv meg WOf1c. Probterne-No Prob-• route help us get new customers for .• uJ temat •32tM4 554-783t : our newpe~r and haw a good time • !IP.I!""'"--lXHifoRIXl clEXAIAd Homa Of Apt'•· Int /Ex1 • while yov're doinllf ll. CorM out and • SERVICE. Fr• •t. Greg. Patch work UC & bonded • ~.. e 831-see11111~ 1t.oeo1 "41-1424 • tee what we~ talking ebout and • up. new l..na. 75 t-3-478 JANITORIAL CLEANING • you'll be gi.d you did c.an coday • Commtrcitl'-Aaelcrt ~ : And 1urt tomorrow! Call Mr F.arJ : ClMn Up .. TreaTrtmmlng QOOd raft 831-8194 f or O.s•irlfd Ad • ~8-7058 or 241-8432 e Yard Main! •Haullng AC TION ~~~~~~; MIKE 860-32 83 tUt c.11 " : ORANGE COAST DAIL V PILOT : .; ry plate Cleen·Up, gtn'I Proi..,,Ot:Fc:anr.;;tnO A OAR. T f"ll.Ol • 330 w eey &lr..t eo.ta ......_ CA tm7 • Aapalr-Aamocn-AOcmton. malnt. t,.. trlmml~f,.. Ind IC)f1nklart, ,-.1ewn, !:;~ : AN lOUAl OftPOfmMITY EM'1.0't'UI : Door.etc ~NO eat• J.4auro, 831..4 1 ,.... rete Menu 432-Ml 1 •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • Taelday, September 17 SYDNEY OaiARR ARIES (March 21 ·April 19): You learn more about basic requirements as well as resources of others. Romantic involvement is featured but not necessarily permanent. Give yoursdf plenty of time to examine, to think, to decide and to analyze. TAURUS (ApriJ 20-May 20): Emphasis on basic changes. adjustments, contractual obligations. Financial offer is likely. but you need not necessarily accept first bid. Patience and diplomacy represent twin allies. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What appears elusive will soon become available. Know it, respond accordingly. Emphasis on basic issues, health, pets, dependents. employment. Terms require further clarification. Pisces plays key role. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Relationships are strong, responsibilities increase. Emphasis on specula1J.on. attraction, char- isma, loni-range commitment. Reward factor increases -financial picture bnJhter than originally anticipated. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Project begun weeks ago can now be completed. Emphasis on sccunty, property, publ ic appearances. Initiate your own style, display courage of convtctions. What appeared a lost cause 1s due to be revived. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 21): Stress mdcpcnd~nce. creat1 vtty. w1lhngncss to make trip if necessary. Get to heart of matters, be direct, independent, state needs 1n frank manner. Leo and Aquarius persons figure prominently. LIBRA (Sci>t. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on rq.aining what had bc(n lost. locating art.Jcle that had be-en m 1ssing or stolen. Lunar emphasis on paymenu. collections, adding to personal possessions. Family reunion 1s also featured. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Cycle high, you'll be at right place at crucial moment. Po~ularity increases. you'll receive invitation 10 travel{ to attend special event. Be awatt of appearance, body imq.e. Take cad rather than follow . SAQJTTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): What appeared to be rcstricti6n is actually rule that eventually works in your favor. Check details, read small print. You have advantage yet to be discovered. Taurus, Scorpio persons play paramount roles. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): l='avorablc moon aspect hig.hhghts ability to win your way, to. pers\13de. to make financial gain. 8C ready for chanac. travel, variety and a special relationship. SaaitlArian will play interesting role. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18): Lunar po ition highlights business. career. prestige. fulfillment of ambition. Money picture is good domestic adjustment is made. iif\ received which could include luxury ftem or 1n object. Libra fiaures prominently. · PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): -A void sclf-dca:ption. Look beyond the immediate. Emphasis on lof\g-ranae prospects. Travel LS h1ahJightcd, open lines of communication. Romance wtJI not be a sttan&t'f. Another Pis.oes plays feature role. fP S!PTEMBER 11 IS YOUll BJRTHDA Y you are due to be on more $Olid emotionaJ.fina.nc1aJ ground. You are a natural leader you are capable of makJng executive decisions. you worlc extremely \1vell ~nder pressure and can !flCCt d?dllne Your relationships w.sually a.re intense, you arc romant1c, tentJmcntal. and you seldom do an)'Ulina m halfway manner. Taurus, C.anoer, C..pncom s>crt0ns play important roles in your life. You'll tnvel in October, roman~ wall~ rca1un-d t0tn1rio will hiahliaht chanac ftom recent restriction • · ' I AFTER SCHOOL JOBS EARN MOff Y PRIZES TRfS Lounoe chr, couetl w/dn plllwl. solabd 3 cdttl tbls 8«-7220 Of 250-1022 Oriental Rugs. 8x9 $300 .. 0 80 780-8792 Solld birch Din Rm Set w/hutch. S 1100. Book· cases & Bdsprda w/mtg drapes, mltc. &43--5001 rat• Sain •lactllaa ... 1 1211 ,,..,.,... t1t1 '77 VW Ribb1t U50. 15' 1111.Y Pl.IT macrame for wall S100 trig S75. golf clubs $75. ......,.,. guitars $45-S75. 999-2928 It you are loolclng for extra1---,----=----=~ tpendlfl9 money, or llke lrvlne Cout Country Club to go p1.oee Ilka Magic memberahlp wanted. Mount.in, Knotts e.rry John 552-3488/835-5235 Ferm, Of Win Prlzee and Lane Cedar chest S 175. Awetdt, call u1 nowl We Oak cabinet w/mlrror ha..,. MY9fal openings In $200. Wedding dreH C.M .. H.B or F V. w/vall, size 9 $200. &42~ 979-8898 Alft.llTTUI Telepl'lone Appt. s.ttert Stl+comm. 850-1318 TYPIST SECRET MEIS ' '85 Muatang Ft1bck, '63 Karman Ghia?. '68 K an Ghia. ~5974 '68 UST.ANG, orig OWT"MW, lo ml, gd eond $4300. 850-9802 Orang• Cout OAILY PILOT/Monday, September 18.. ,_ ---- TODAY 'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 • t . ~ ~.Ju' .. ut 'a11n1 ~ r-e,•c·'"'f!'J' ..... , '"* ·s Oeall'I notiGf' 52 Well!< '00'' c;s weaoon ~ ~ °"'9'9"' .1n1• 'l8 Aul hOr Wh•"'"' h() ~OP-OS·lf' C1 ·-··~· f, • Eve part o: T~IP. f;) Tl'\.r\I •o• 6• "iOt' 1\~~ "" llilll\f\ '°"" M' T fl""'' ,,. " DOWN , ~'v~•., """ ' ,,,~ lyl'(' J St••mp~ ~ P1c~e<I 1ul <, 1..('Mff>(to<:-0'1 n. ... ... ~ n-.-"""'"'f"• ,., t!" Slu•lh ~ '., f' • t ·o Pan•cu11 1' SIOCW" !;' St•e> ... °"" ' .... ' ... t("t""" ,. tlv< .... ; ~"1"" t • .,. .. ,., ,)f1 . ~~ ·""··~ ll'tllVlOOS l'VZ:ZU SOLVED JC "'"0 • l • <;1'rpl•c ~;' C:ubmr~ •I' 13 ConsM,,.t<> \4 Et.Ml"~ ' ,c. 'UM .If, r .,,.,ry th•i:>' 19 s ... ~,..,. .. , •O CuCul"Jbf!'\ ., Dt11•'' •• ~0111 ... •f .. us1•es •8 PrK 1p1tahor •9 Alp•l'\t' ar9a '-0 rO'm ••""' ~ sm .. oec :1\11 5: E'"'l>'~' 53 NO'~ 01'<1• 5• Roe" svt• S6 Bea1 '' 59 H .'.I' MR .. I" I 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 E. hast hJ., • .,.rt lt1tll 111-0HO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 NABERS CADILLAC §1 ... 2100 1111111 ILYI., OOITA IEU (114) 140-1100 (211) lll-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People Salts lmilC l ntals WE'llE IULlll Au-trom •It 'A'°"'~,_, .... eif f7 (Ofllft99) P:rwy ~ 0 CREVIER ·eMW n \ilJ SALES • SERVICE • LEASING \;lf11 "Where Professional Attitude Prevails '' lpeclellzlng In EuropNn o.tlYWJ. la~t a.Mellon of New end carefully Pf'9PMM UMd aMW't always tn stock 835-3171 208 .. wi 111 St., S•nt• An• Corner of Broadway & 1st St. Closed Sundays GSTERLING SAUS -Slblct -WSllC -'U TS Overseas Delivery Speclallsts BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. 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 HIO larMr IW., lestl .... 142-0010 er 141-121'1 GARDEN GROVE ,ACIFtC v•w •MCMUAL ,AM c.m.tery • Mor1uery Chapel • Cremetory 3500 PtclftC: View Ori~ Newport e.tch S.4-2700 HAMOfl LAWN- MT. OLIVI Mor1uary • c.m.tery Cremetory 1625 Glaler Ave Coat• Mesa 540-5554 N RCI IROTHIRI HLL MOAOWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Cotta Men S.2-9150 A I 6 4 L 2 y p I • 5 6 L 7 0 8 T Doctors pursue cure, not cause, report charges SACRAMENTO (AP) -About 2,000 ~mcri~ns die each ~y of 10 di1eaae1 that biah·tech science computcnzed wisdom and billions of rcteareh dollars a year have failed to cure -or to prevent. Accordtna to articles published Sunday in the ~cnto Bee, the diseueure f'liinc out .of control largely ~use sc1enllsts have focused on trcatina or cunna. an stead of prcventu1a. But the public and the govemm~nt are. also to bl~me, t~c ~ repo~ in a series of stories concJ~dina a n11;te-m~nth mvest1aat1on into such lethal ailments as heart disease, which k.ills 2.170. people a day, and cancer, which kills 1,206 people a day~ . The di.uses are fed by modem bad ha~·~· sue~ as CJprettcs. alcohol, inadequate nutrition and urban hv~na. _wd Or .. Les~cr Br'C$1ow, a disease prevention expert at the Univen1ty of California, Los Anatles. 'fi .. "We are talking about diseases that arc a product of our h estyle, Breslow said. , At the same time, the fight ~inst ~C: diseases b~s ~n c.np_plec? by unpredictable research fioancing, p0ht1cs and 9C1cntJfic mfigbung, accordin1 to other medical experts. The United States s~nds $2 billion a year searching for a cure for the medical professions top 10 enemies -cancer, stroke heart rusease emphysema, chronic bronchitis, pheumoma. influenza. cirrhosis. diabetes and kidney disease. It spends 100 times as much money, $200 billion, on treatments_ Some of these treatments arc banning patients more than diseases do, such as highly toxic drugs used in chemotherapy that can ca1Jse leukemia, doctors say. Others, namely such high-technology devices as the artificial bcart, are expensive but only temporary. Or. Paul Wisner, who heads the chronic-disease ruvision of the U.S. Centers of Disease Control, said the government once tried to move the health industry toward preventative medicine. It considered establishing chronic disease centers, where unhealthy life habits would be addressed, be said. "But the government was told that it was dictating to private medicine, and that it was trying to take patients away from doctors,'' Wisner said. Today, only 5 percent of the Depar\ll>ent of Health and Human Services' budget is invested in trying to frcvent chronic disease. The rest aoes toward treatment and b1ologica research. Lobbyina bas also shaped JOvemment health research spendina, doctors say. For example, lobb1ests helped cancer researchers grab 25 percent of the $5 billion budget of the National Institutes of Health, even thouah progress on the disease has slowed. Or. Jerry Bishop, head of the cancer proaram at the University of California, Davis, believes people criticiZJng cancer researchers expect too much, too fast. GoinJ to the moon was easier than finding a cure for cancer, Bishop s&ld. "We already knew how. We had the technology," he said, adding, "We're still not there with cancer." Other diseases have eluded scientists in search of causes and cures. Emphysema. cirrhosis, and chronic bronchitis cases arc on the rise and diabetcl is hitting about S00,000 people a year. Most of the chronic disease, including cancer. arc not vet well understood. Heart recipien t w ea t h ers cris is TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Heart transplant patient. Michael Drummond, who showed mild signs Saturday of re1ccting his donor heart. remained in fair condition and was "resting comfortably," a University Medical Center spoteswoman said. Drummond's doctors weren't overly concerned about Saturday's rejection signs because "this is considered nonnaJ for a person at this time after transplant,'' said Nina Trasoff, a spokeswoman for the bospital said Sunday. Drummond, 25, received heart heart of a Texas traffic accident victim Sept. 7 after be was kept alive for nine days with a Jarvilc-7 artificial heart. His own heart was close to failure after it was damaaed by a viral infection, doctors said. OCONNELL CHEVROLET 2111......,lh ... , ........ 0 sOOth Coun~~ YOLKS AGEN/ISUZU Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leaajng S,.a.I PllU Ult 541·1411 541-1211 MONDAY-FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM 8:30 AM -8:00 PM 10:00 AM -5:00 PM CALlf'B ir 1 Ii LARGEST VOLK WAOIN DIALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Parts Open M-Sat 8 -5.30 Sat 9 -4 p m Servic.e m-Frl 7 30 -6 p.m. 117U H ACH al YO HUNTINGTON HACH 714/ 142-2000 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC • • LONG THM LUSIS • COMnTITIVI PUICHASI H tCIS • HUGI INVIHTOIY dial MERCEDES 213/714137-2333 Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester/Beach Blvd. 0 BILL YATES YILllW"'I • NllOll • "81111 • 1111111 .. - SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 Vall• ••14, IH .,, .. o.,1ttr ... en-a 11 111-4111 G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 11 TN W11t F1r ,,. "" Slll1 ,,, ' ,,., ~' O.Dln2e • sALEs coa'"'St. sERv1cE -uu HAii.Oii •lYO • LE ASING -s.QG • ACCESSORIES DEPT G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coata Meaa 540-0713 Newport Beach 840-8444 ,,__,.,.__ _____ ~...__~~~.-....-:..;....~....,,_--~--... ........... ---~-------............_, 3 Blocks So of -405 Fwy. e JIM SLEMONS IM~ORTS 1301 Qu•ll St. -INw C•t Loc•tlon 1001 Qu•ll St. -,....,. Dlvl•lon World's Largest Sel.ctlon of 0 ~ Mercttdes Benz ,,,,.,..._ 133-9300 · ~ -'Itta · Stn6ct · W, SM, ___ ... _ .. o COMMONWEALTH · · VOLKSWAGEN &J':\ 'FAMILY STORE SINCE 'S3' -~ Sale• -S.rviC\ -Leaalng ~ BRUm>L A'! !DllfOiR • Ml ~bllO IN BANTA ANA -The Best Car Buys In Orange County Are At The Dealers Listed On This Page 8 BOB LONGPRE PONTIAC Orange County's OIH tt & L.lrgen PontJac O..lershlp 1 •• 8H<h llYd. & the Gans.n Grow P:rtew1y 111• na-w11 'fJt•J •••a-w. perform •II PontJac warninty wortc. f'e911td .. u of wn.rw )'OU or1g1Mlly pyrcnaMd your car. --llO-AY .,,_ .... UlfT'& .... PM. ...,.. mw. a Genlleft Gr.w ...,. WnlMINMr,Cal ...... ' ' , --· ---. --- TOMOIUtOW: FORICAITI ON Al Serving Nftport leach, Coet1 Mtii, Huntington leach, a. vine, Laguna leach, Fount1ln Vllle1 Ind South Ortngt County ORAN(,f COUN r Y C AL If OJ~NIA MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 18. 198!> .''•Cf N TS e oreo1 . e ans1on I I an oast e en1e Coaat Everything from crumbl- ing trench frle~ to medlevai monsters arose from the sands during the sand sculpture contest at Seal Beach Pier./ A3 California Los Angeles' Guardian Angels have been ar- rested for blocking traffic In a drug-troubled Holly- wood neighborhood./ A4 Jewish leaders come down on Mayor Tom Bradley for his reluctance to condemn Lou I$ Far- rakhan In advanee of his speech.AS Nation A newspaper report says some 2,000 Americans dleeachdayof 10dls- eases that high-tech sci- ence, computerized wis- dom and billions of re- search dollars a year have failed to cure -or to prevent./810. World Britain may expel more Soviets In response to the Russians' ouster of 25 Britons./ A7 Reports-that the Rev. Benjamin Weir, one of seven Americans kid- napped In Beirut, has been freed, remain un- confirmed./ A5 Sports The Rams made It two In a row with a 17-6 victory at Phlladelphla./81 The Angels put Texas away, 12-4, to cut Into Kansas City's lead./81 Entertainment CBS Is beammg up to the Twlllght Zone again, hopeful of catching the spirit of Rod Serllng./ Al INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlson Weather A1 0 A3 B5-6 87-9 A10 B9 0 90. 10 A8-9 88 A9 A6 A3 B9 01-4 A8 A2 A page out of the put SeTen tall ablpe 1Dcl11cUDf the~ (foreiroand) and the Boanty attracted tboaaand of epectaton alone Paclflc Cout Blfbway Sanday u the ahipe, accompanied by ee•eral hundred amaller Ail and power boata, raced from Pfewport Beach to Dana Point Point. The race, won by Swift of Ipewtch from A •alon. wu •taaecl to celebrate the l 60th Valley man shot by cops probing burglary in HB Su s pect hos pita lized , said In fa ir condition : compa nion arrested By STEVE MARBLE Of lMO.ily .......... A 29-ycar-old Fountain Valley man was shot in the face early today by a police officer responding to a reponed car burglary outside a Hunt· ington Beach apartment complex. Randy Lee Howe is listed 1n fafr condition today at UC'l Medical Center io Orange after a bullet pierced his check and struck his teeth, authorities reported. Howe and a second man. identified as Roben Mc Donald, 32. of Hunt- ington Beach, were arrested o n suspi- cion of auto buralary followina the 3 a.m. episode at f392 Saru Circle. Police would not identify the officer who fi red the shot nor would they explain what led to the shooting. It was not clear whether Howe or Mc Donald were armed. The O range County District At- torney's offioc will investigate , ~ shooting. according to a poli ce spokesm an Officers were summoned to the apanment complex near the inter· section of Newland treet and Warn· er Avenue by a reside nt who repon ed· ly noticed two men attempting to break into a pi(rked car, police stated Police provided few details on what happened at the address beyond a general statement that .. upon ar- rival officers captured two suspects and one of the suspec ts was shot in the face d uring the capture:· ft was not known how man)' officers were at the scene at the ttmc of the shooting. Howe was fi rst taken to the Foun- tain Valley Community Hospital traum a center for e mergency trea t· mcnt and then m oved to the county hospital. which has a Jail ward ln addition to auto burglary. Howe also as charged wtth resasttng arrest He is being held in lieu of SI 0,000 bajl. McDonald is being held at the Huntin3ton Beach cat)' 1a1 I. al o on $I 0,000 bail. It is now standard proc~ure fo r the District Attorney's office to in· vestiptc au offi cer-involved shoot· ings an the county. anni•~-~f Richard Henry Dana'• arrival in Dana Point aboard the PIJlrlm. Tall ahipe pardclpetlnf in the race were the ArlU from Newport, Bounty from Loe Angele., Callfomlan from Sacramento, Dlacovery from Newport, PllCrlm of Newport from San Pedro, Raolution from Newport and Swift of Ipewlcb. Lifeguards rescue two from tides By ROBERT BARKER Of lMO.-,l'llol lWI Two men were saved from drown- ing in separate 1nc1den1<1 Sunday afternoon by lifeguards who leaped from rescue boats into the waters off Huntington Beach. In both instances.the v1cums had been pulled out to sea b) hea") npttdes. lifeguards said today. In the fi rst rescue at about 2.30 p.m . Tom Campbell of Covina was reponed in a sem1<onsc1ous con· d1tton in the ~ater about ~00 )'ards be)'ond the sho rela ne oppos11e Magnolia . treet at Huntington ·1a1c Beach "He appeared close to drowning and was lloaung 1n and out o f conscio usness when we got to him." David Petr), lhe operator ofa J.2-foot li feguard motorboat. said PerT) and his deck mate. Enc Bloom. all.ached Campbell -be- lieved to be 1n has m1d-20s -to a resusc11ator to keep him breathing a nd s~d towards the Newpon Beach Pier There they were met b) para- medics who continued emergency treatment while tra nspo rting Campbell to Hoag Memonal Hospi- tal an Newpon Bcarh The second rescue too~ place about 20 minutes later in about the same area !\gain the victim had been pulkd out to se.i by the se"ere (Pleue eee RESCUES/ A2) Interior challenges publis hed report of fivefold in crease From 1&aff u d wire report• U.S. lntenor Secretary Donald Hodel will present a new ofTJborc drilling plan for California Tuetday thlU would open about fi ve umes as man)' tracts for lease than was prtv1ously pro posed, a San Francisco newspaper reported today. The San Francisco ExaminCf' rc- poned that Hodel will presen t the new pla n m a closed-door meeuog wath mem bers of Congress. But lntenor Dcpanment officials are denying that such a mecung 1s planned and know of no new proposal, according to D uane Crumb, an aide to Rep. Wilham Danncmeyer. R-Fullen on. .. I )USt got off the phone wath the In tenor and they have no idea wbcrc that story came fro m ," Crumb ~1d th1s mo~ Crumb said Dannemeyer has heard of no new proposals for 0 11 dnllin& off Cahforn1a and what changes m1gbt be an store for Orange Count y's coasthn~. · A reprcscntauve for Rep. Robert Badham, R-Newpon Bcacb, also said no new plans have been discussed A«ording to the report io the San Franetsco Examiner. howeve r the proposal calls for leases to be off crcd in such toun st areas as Mendocino, Santa Cruz. Santa Moruca and San Diego. The plan would replace an carher preliminary agreement for 150 off- shore tracts approved for lcasmg that Hodel accepted July 16. That proposal included sax nine-square· mtle tracts off Orange County. Last v.eek.. Hodel repudlatcd the agreement, and now he 1s proposing new negouauons aimed at coding the decade-long controversy over C.ah- forni.a's offshore 011. While specific Jucauons of tracts to be co11Sidered would not be f'C'leased. (Ple.ue 11ee OP'P'SHORE/ A2) Aquatic park due at Lion Country Irvine Council approval paves way for t ra n s ormation of 111 -f ated animal park lfs a j ood thing there aren't any hons left a t Li411 Country -lion11 don't like to swim. T he fi ve Irvine City Council mcm· bers hned up last week like birds on a wire and paved the wa y for construe· tion of IS new wa ter rides and aquatic attractions at the former wild animal park. ~ The oouncal dcc1s1on came af\cr • year of setbacks and /rocesaing delays. The developer ha hoped to complete the slidcs1 raft rides and other asnu~ cnts tn time for the summer season at j ust ende4. Perhaps no one was happier and \ mo re relieved about the vote than Hany Shuster, the lrvane park's founder a nd board chairman. Shuster is a~ious to transform the orie-t1me animal prnerve to aquatic rec- reatio nal park. City planni1t4 officials had •r&"!cd that an cJtten11ve, ume-consum1na review wu nccesury before the water rides could be built at Lion Country. But pro90nent,1 oftbe project clajmed the park'• exit\ina city permit allows such rides without that re view. They aajd an additional delay would prt· vent an openina next spring -and probably kill the projca PHIL S1£1D£llAll Focus ON lHE NE~s The City Council unanamou ly overturned the staff decision, 1llow- in1 the water amusement proJCCt to proceed. "I'm very pleated." Shu tcr said. "I'm delighted they qlttd With us .. The U~n Country pretidcnt said the introductjon o fwatcrrida, which will be built and operated by C'o lton- blled Amencan ponp.ootld 1s a kev step for the 30Q..acrc park. which has endured ltS sha~ of bad luc~ over past decade. Irvine officials also are procc smg plans to build a 2(}.acre softball ~ntcr in a section o f Lion Country formerly occupied ~t~ectahs and c himps. The sax h fields Wltl providt add1taonal playing sp;ec for teams that can't be accommodated at city· owned ballfield s. Shuster claims the local demand for new softball fields 1s trona He s&.1d he anucipatcs no m&Jor prob- lem s 1n o bt1101na Cl ty approval for that PfOtec\. He'' less ctnam about a proposal for motocross rar ana facilmes 11 Lion Country l"hts proJCCI could l!'n· counter '°me hatche in the l'it\ {Pleue eee LI01'/A2 ) \ Arreated for jaywalking Saa.n Pope of 1"tne mut ba•e tb?s.t abe wu ln P'lo.,tda wben e.be epotted thla aUJaator croea tlae •treet ln front of bet cu. She •ammoned lntne pol ce, •lao called for Animal Semcee Superinte:n• ca.rt Pafano (aboft). wllo took tbejaywalker lnto cutody. They were to tvn lt onr to tbe State Fleh a:n~ Game Department today. Story on Pace A2. ) , - A9 0Nnge COiet OAJL V PtLOT /Monday, September 16, 1985 'See you later, Wally Gator, ' Irvine cops.say after struggle .,IUIA.N llOWLBTT __ ..., ...... Wally Oaiot, the infamous ruident of Upper Newport Bay, was captured by more tba.o a half-doz.en ~Uce offieen and animal coouol officials after an Irvine resident spotted him tatina a midniabt atroU down a neitb'borbood aidewalk. Tbe five--foot-lona caiman, a close relative to alliaators, was spotted in tbe mjdd.Je 01' Sao Joaquin near University Drive by Susan Pope shortly_ after 12:30 a.m . Sunday, according to Irvine Police Set. R.ich- ant Bowman. Pope was driving on San Joaquin and saw the: wayward reptile in the middle of the street, Bowman said. "Conoe:rned for the alliptor's safe- ty, &be honked her born," Bowman Mid. He got U{> on the sidewalk after bearina the noise, be •4d:ed. fish and Game officials have been lootiaa for the caiman that they think bu been &k:ulking beneath the waters of Upper Newport Bay for years. But they expected him to go toward Hwiti.ngton Beach instead of Irvine, said spokesman Pat Moore. Walty was discovered Jwy 6 by a p-oup of construction workers wbo were clearina out some v~tation in the back bay area, aoc:ordina to Fish and Game officials. The Valley Eqjnccn' employees took. pictures of the toothy visitor they affectionately called Wally and showed them to Fish and ~e officials who have been trying to catch him ever since. With an unlimited food supply, caimans can arow a foot a year, accordina to Irvine ArumaJ Services spokesman Dennis Ruvolo. He aid they arc considered American crocodiles and are classHied as ••ag. gressive." Bowman wd seven police officcn surrounded the animal so that it wouJd 001 ao back into the San Diego Creek Channel. Wally probably came out of the creek., walked across the Rancho Sail Joaquin aolf course between boles 14 and 1 S, where he found himself faced by the beadliahts of Pope's car. The officen encircled the ptor until members of the city's AnimaJ Services diviaion arrived. Bowman said. He said that the oflicen a1 the scene said Wally was P..ut into an animal control vehicle • after a brief 1t:ruale." .. flmaaine he wouldn't bave aone along peaCefully," Bowman -.id. Filh and Game officials said he wu probably a pet that became too larae and was released by bis owner in t6c muddy waten of Upper Newport Bar,. • People don't realize that they act u bi& u ther do when they buy them u babies. It s really sad, they end up setting killed or let loose. aome- where," the spokeswoman wd. Althouah slin.lcing around in the water near exclusive Newport homes seems a more posh existence for the scaly reptile than the Florida Ever· &lades, Fiab and Game offficiaJs say Wally does not belong there. But the future home of the suspect identified u Wa11y Oator on the police lot at Irvine Police Depart- ment is is uncertain. "We're just JOin& to ban& onto him until we find him a home," an Animal Sevioes spokeswoman said. Israelis assess Per~s at start of Jewish new year TEL A VIV, Israel (AP) -Israelis Oocked to synagogues to celebrate Rosh Hashana, the start of the year S146 on the Jewish ca.Jendar. They alto assessed Shimon Peres' per- formance on tbe first anniversary of his tenure as head of a coalition tovernment. The holiday Sunday, which was New Year's Day on the Jewish calendar, begins a 10-day period of introspection and resolution that ends with Yorn Kippur, the Day of Atonement. All businesses are to be closed today and Tuesday, and worshipers will be called to repent of past year's sins by the blast of the shofar, or ram's horn. Police cautioned worshipers to be particularly careful in light of Palesti- nian terronst attacks in which at least 13 Israelis have been killed since Jan. I in and around the occupied terri- tories. Thousands of police will remain on duty throughout the holiday period. The holiday coincided with the end of Peres' first 12 months as pnme minister and head of a coalition government joining two rival oarties -bas own LAbor and Foreign Minister Yitzba.k Shamir's Likud bloc. During the year, Peres has withdrawn Israeli troops from leba· non and slowed the country's raaina inflation. Most newspaper editors inter· viewed Sunday by Israel army radio nominated him as "Man of the Year." A poll published in the daily Yediot Abronot reported that 49 percent of those surveyed said they were satis.- fied with the coalition government., and 42 peroent said they were nol The coalition partners have not been able to agree on improving overall relations with E«Yl>t. peace overtures to neighboring Tordan and Jewiib 9Ctt.lements in the 'oecupied West Bank of the Jordan River and Gaza Strip. Peres said in the conservative daily Maariv that a May 20 exchange in which Israel freed 1, I ~O prisoners for three lsraeli soldiers captured in Lebanon "will not be a precedent." The swap, which many Israelis fear contributed to an upsurge of terrorist activity, was probably Peres' most controversial decision. Year-end editorials Sunday also addressed the arowin& popularity of Rabbi Meir Kahane, who wants all Arabi out of Israel. and the rise in tension between Jews and Arabs. Philosopher SbauJ Friedl.aeader called in die daily Y cdiot Ahronot for Israeli society to rid iuelf of K.ahanism before it ii too late. The New Year also focused atten- tion on bow to deal with thousands of Ethopian Jews whom Israel brought .out of famine.stricken Ethiopia last year. Rabbinical authorities refused to accept them u fully le&itimate Jews without a formal ceremony of ritual immenion. Te Ethiopians. who claim an un· broken tradition of Jewish fiith since Kina Solomon's time 2,800 years ago, were outrqed. Terrorism was also discussed Sun- day, u Israel deponed 18 Palesti- nians freed in the May exchange. RESCUES ••• From Al OFFSHORE DRILLING ••• riptides. No other details were avail- able at press time. Perry said lifeguards on shore had requested assistance to save the S'Yltnmer when Perry and bis partner were patrolling in their boat near the Santa Ana River Jetty. homAl the new plan will call for drilling on tracts that comprise about 25 percent to 30 percent of the state's unleased oil reserves, said Steve Griles, In- terior deputy assistant secretary. An earlier agreement would have allowed leasing on tracts that contain only S percent to 7 percent of the state's unlcased oil reserves. In the new version, only 14 of these tracts are included, the Examiner said. The plan has oulfa&ed state mem- bers of Congress. They say they will listen Hodel, but arc against oil drilling off environmentaJly sensitive ocean-front areas. Congressional opponents say they hope to bypass Hodel's plans by winning congressional approval ~fa one.year drilling ban while pressmg for passage of the original agreement. It took them about a minute and a bal( to reach the stricken swimmer. Dec'k mate Bloom jumped into the water, attached a flotation tube, and then brought the victim to the rescue boat. Perry said water temperatures were about 65 degrees and that there wasn't a lot of beach activity Sunday. LION COUNTRY TRANSFORMATION •.• From Al review because of safety concerns, and it may have to be reconsidered., Shuster wd. He said Lion Country as fielding other recreation proposals as well, such u a plan to develop soccer fields at the part. Shuster is anxious to transform the park because there's limited time left on his lease for the Lion Country acrcaac. His 28-year ~ment wtth the lrQne Co. expires an 1997. "lflre wanted to make chan~es, we bad to make them now," he sa.Jd. Lion Country officials arc hoping the recreation activities will meet with moTe success then the dnve- tlµ'Quah wild animal preserve that -U ttie park's initial drawing card. Tbe animal park had several suc- oeuful seasons after it opened in 1971, sometimes attracting more than 1 million visiton annually. The park made national headlines in early 1972 thanks to Frasier. an a&ina lion who sired 35 cubs among the e&rk's seven lionesses. The Cali- fornia Lqjslature honored Frasier with a ~lution naming him "Animal Father of the Year." But Frasier died later that year. Just Call 642-6086 lo the mid-70s, an oil crisis sent the price of gasoline soaring and hurt tourism. Attendance at Lion Country slipped at the same time the company was financing new parks in Atlanta and Dallas. Financial problems ensued. More recently, several animal inci- dents at the park ended tragjcally. lo 1978, a runaway hippo named Bubbles eluded a search by park rangers for three weeks before the animal suffocated when tranquilized. More recently, a 2-year-old boy was mauled by one of the park's tigen, and an elephant trampled a park zoologist to death Shuster, a former anomey from South Africa said he bad faith in the wild animal attraction and kept pouring money into it. But ultimate- ly, be said, "We couldn't afford to keep it." He said most zoos arc sponsored by cities or non-profit groups. Histon· cally, he said, privately-owned animal parks have not been com- mercially successful. As the safari's popularity declined, park officials began branchina out into non-animal-related recreation activities. Lion Country sul>-1eucd acrcaae for construction of the lrvine Meadows Amphitheatre, which opened in 1981 . Shuster said Lion Country rccieives a percentage of the popular arena's gross receipts. One year ago, tbe drive-through safari was baited, and the perk beaan seekina new homes for its loo animals. At that time, park officials said they planned to begin construc- tion in late 1984 of aquatic am~ ment center similar to Raging Waters in San Dimas. A May 1985 opening was projected. But a hillside location at Lion County was determined to be un- stable, promptina the water ride plans to be seated down and relocated to an existing entertainment area at the park. In addition, a city review took lonaer than the devclopen expected. The I 98S opening never happened. Following last weck'a council de- cision, executives from Lion Country and American Sportworld expressed confidence that the water rides will be completed before next summer. More recreations projects are .on the horizo n at Lion Country, perhaps mak.ina it a just matter of time before Frasier and bis furry friends fade even further from memory. Wllat do you like •bo•t tlle Dally Piiot? Wlaat doe't y .. like? Call tk aumber at left ud yMr mu111e •Ill be recorded, traascrtbd ud delivered to th appropriate editor. Tlte 11mt U ·llotlr auwerlag ltrvlce may be ued to rtt0'111 letters to th editor on aoy topic. C..lrthters to oar Letters col•m• mast laclwde tllelr name and ttltpllOH nmber for vtrtflc:atloa. No clrcalatloa c:al1s, plHM. Tell us wia.t's 01 yoer mi.d. Clrculetton 714/Mt-Gal °::h~ leQ.arMIHd °c~'A~~E D1ily Pilat CIMetfled ~ 714'/IG.-rl All other deper1meftta ta-4111 MAIN OFFICE ....... flldlty II 10\I do ,.,.,..,.~~°' ,.,._Ill ....... 7pfll WI y(i.11 ~ _. be -.-cl Selvdlty ""° ~ " 'lfN do noc -.,,,.,, COPr oY 1 • m C.-Detore 10 • m end 'fOJI OOPY ,... 1111-...ec1 Chetatton T1llphonee .... or.,.eo....., Ne9 ..... ~--.... ..... K..., Wtttmer Pvbllthef Frank Zlnl AOMmary Chur~ man [t11rrn COn1r<>ller flober1 L. Cant'9tl Donald l . WHftame Pr<>Outhon Circulallon MM11gnr Manager Howerd Muhnary Pegg1 lentne Ad\'tfl1$1ng OlrectOf ClnSSlfied OlrecCOf 3'° Wet1 Sey 51 Coete MeM CA ..... --lllclt 1se() Ooel• ...... ~ ~ Copyflglll 111) Or.noe Coe11 ~ ~ NO newt II-lllut!l"lliotlll edHIW'91 IM!W Of ..... "*"'• ,...,..,, -· "" '~ Wll!'OUI "** pet ..._"'~- J I • U.S. Tempe .. Le ,un."«>c« T4 54 --~~ ,f!ONTS &.-TO 42 ~ TO .. .,. .. MemclNa TT M W11ll'I -COid....,. T4 .. Mllml lellall .. ~ ,..ICllWll ... IO 4T --....... .. Sriowers R11t1 F~mH Sl'IOw Oecluded .. S111t0nary a.. M1*-81Pu 72 56 AlllMW 74 M A ..... Clly 71 .. ......... n • •• NellOf\el w ....... Sel'K• NOA.Jo US Oeo4 ol C-c:e ~ ., .. .... OltMN 71 96 ....,_. T4 .. ..... Yortl n as 811111 Cn.cz T2 .. ..,,.,.._ n IO Nomll,l/a. T4 ~ Calif. Tempe SanteMwle 13 .. ea.-1* IO .. ()!(~Olly Tl T-IO " ... .. • OfNN 74 12 Y~Vly n .. = 72 51 Otlenclo Ill .. =·tow. !Or 24 "°'" trlding el 0. "' .. 43 Pt' fu'~lllot 13 51 erl4lllO 7t 51 ........ VI. TO 42 ,.,_. IOI 71 Eurek• '3 54 Surf Report ~ 12 r.s =::r ..... · .. ., ,_ ... 5t ~.c. Tl 15 72 40 Lancmw IT eo ~.W.I/. ,. 42 ~.Or .. 50 Loa~ a 13 LOC~TtOM ea9 ... AN Cilwtotte,N.C. 71 •• PrcMdenoe 71 4t Oelllena n 5t Hun on 8-11 2~ llllr =· .. IO 47 ="°'1 .,, 47 PMO Aotllee Ii 50 111f¥w ~ NewpOtt w flllr 11 42 90 sa Red ..... 11 56 40tll sn.C ~ M lair Qnollw.. 74 43 Aello T4 31 "9dwood a.., 11 se 22nc1 au.M. '-Pot1 l-& ,.., ~ .. 43 lllclwnond 75 44 8ecr~o t 1 M &#boa Wedge 4-6 ,.,, ~Oii. 12 42 th LOUii 71 54 8ellflM 74 55 U.0.-8Mcll 1-3 pOOt o-,i,N,H. T2 ae 8t ..... TMICl9 IT TI 8an DlleO TT 6e s.n QemeM• 1-3 pOOt o....f'tWonfl TO .. s.llLMeCl!y 81 ISO Sen ffWIClleoo 7 4 51 _1., temp: 114 = 12 42 Sell Antonio 3 70 a.ma ..,.,.,.. 71 54 9'#911 ciw.ctlon: ~If>. 12 u Sen Nell,P .R.. to 75 810c*lon , IO 54 _. °"~ 70 oe ~ 11 ·I 1 HfOh, low lor 24 ,_.. trlding a1 5 p,m. Olllrdt 17 .. ~ 8045~ 9112 °"1Mfl • 53 ~-.. 43 8-Mnont ., 52 Tides .,_ 12 13 T°'*'a 71 eo llellOP ao 40 ,.,_.,.. 52 36 T-100 75 lllyh 106 ae 'ereo 12 13 TMM9 IO ... Cel4llne .. II TOOA'r ~ ' 76 52 LOtlOe..otl 11 " s-.dlow 5.otpm 0.3 :::n• 76 .. IO 52 8eoond Ngll 11 42 p.rn. 6.3 • 46 75 83~ .... , ... 12 45 Wllll.....,.,.. oe 41 Monro'ile 82 56 ~ T3 42 Montetwy a7 52 TUHDA'r .... 64 44 .._... 103 90 f'.lM IOw 5 14 a.m 01 HefleMy ., n Extended *-Porte.di 76 a2 ~tow 11:29 a.rn 1.0 .......... 82 ., Ontatto ., 57 a:04 p.m 0.3 ............ n .. P-89""0I 106 115 .-.-..... 79 M Hlgllt Md "*'*'Cl IOw dOude otrler-P--... .. 57 s..n •• lodey •1 a.lie P"' . ...... .... 1rw11e ~ ... .... tw. ~ theft normal ,._.... to 5t Tu.drf et 1:37 ~rn and llM• egelrl Ill ,...., ... ~ HlllN "°"' ,_ TO et 8an BerrwdlnO to 56 1:57 p rn. ic-Clly 76 II Ille beediee to the tow end mid IOa In San Oebtl9I 61 M Moon .... todey .. 8:213 p "'·· ...... LM"'--.. 70 IN_._ lnl9rld ~ i.-In 609 San JoM 81 51 T~ M 1:52 ._.... end -9'fl at Md io.. eo. Seftt• Ma 13 IO 1:67 p.111. Victim in jail razor attack files $1 a .million lawsuit .BJ CM Aaeda&ff Preli depressive, also accused the police depanments of Huntington Beach A man who was slashed with a and Anaheim of negliaence for failing raorintbeOranaeCountyJailfileda to recognize his medical condition $10 million lawsuit apinst the .c.oun,. -and treat it appropriately. ty, two police departments and the McBee said in the swt that Hunt- inmate who aJJeaed)y attacked him. inaton Beach police in an arrest a day Daniel Earl McBee, 33, who was in earlier were nealigent in not placing the jail on a May 27 Disneyland Hotel him in a heaJtJi-care facility for 72. trcspassina arrest, contends in the hour observation. They released him Superior Court lawsuit that he re-the same day even though police peatedly .•old jail deputies that be should have known that he "was a feared beina harmed by his ccllmate, danger to himself or others," the suit David Ray Willington, but was said. ignored. After the May 27 Disneyland Hotel As a result, McBee suffered mul-arrest, the suit says, Anaheim pohce tiple lacerations and abrasions on bis also failed to make sure he received bead, arms, torso and legs, acoordjog proper medical attention, which he to the suit. said led to the problem in jail. McBee, who said he is a manic On May 28, McBee was placed in isolation after jail officials were informed of his need for medication. He was transferred to a cell housing Willington and two other inmates the next day. The other inmates were removed from the cell before the attack occurred, a sheriffs official said. McBee was released on his owo recognizance May 30 at University of California-Irvine Medica.J Center where he was treated for his injuries without ever having been arraigned. Sheriffs records later indicated that he had been "too ill to go to coun." lo addition to the SI 0 million in general damages, McBee asked for an unspecified amount to reimburse him for medjca.J expenses, lost wages and court costs. Convicted rapist surprised at ruling PALO ALTO (AP) -Convicted rapist John Vasey says he can't believe a judge dented his request for a new tnal after his allCfed victim recanted her J 980 accusatJon against him. "When I went to court Friday morning, I thou&ht I'd be breathin§ the air of freedom Friday night,' Vasey said. "I can't understand it. I'm stunned and I can't believe what"s happened to me. It's all a cruel joke that fate bas thrown my way." Va.sey made the comments in an interview with the Peninsula Times Tribune on Sunday at the San Mateo County Jail, where he is being held prior to his transfer to the state prison m Vacaville to beg.in serving a six- ycar term. On Friday, San Mateo County Superior Coun Judge Thomas McGinn Smith refused to grant Vasey a new trial and ordered him taken into custody to begin his prison term. He had been free on baiJ since his arrest. Smith refused to believe SuJieli Malimali, now 23, who testified during a two-Oay hearing last week that she lied when she r;lajmed in an April 1982 trial that Vasey forced her to have sex with him. "I feel completely devastated," said the 58-yea.r-old Burlingame real estate broker. "This has been a nightmare ... My business, my family, everything has been destroyed. married age46 housewife Obsessive behavior often is the first sign of a mental crisis. As with other medical problems, earl y treatment improves the chances for a positive outcome. But, every situation is different. That's -..a~ .. ums at 3•00 a.m. why there are differ-v~K • • ent ways to help. The I ' Information Center at Capistrano I by the Sea Hospital has a free booklet on mental crisis. It out - lines the man y options you have available. Hospitaliza· tion is on ly one of them . Call (714) 83 1-1787. You'll receive thi s useful booklet in absolute confi - dence. We've helped people cope with the problems of today's society for over 25 years. We understand. Howro Handk: a Mental Crisis I I\