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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-09-23 - Orange Coast PilotTOMOftAOW: FAIR FOR£CA8T8 ON A2 Serving Newport Beach, Cott• Meta, Huntington Beach, Irvine, L.gune Beach, Fount1ln Vellty ind South Orange County O RANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23. 1985 25 CENTS .1 Driver sought after cyclist dies Rider. 4 7. knocked to pavement by car.- ts run over by ~am per that flees scene By ROBERT BARKER Ofho.9r ........ Huntington Beach police arc trying to find the driver of a Chevrolet Wiiiiam Daniels and Tyne Daly won best lead actor and actress In drama aeries awards at Emmy ceremonies crashed by an lmpostor./BI Coast Irvine Valley College stu- dents have collected $10,000 for a homeless paraplegic./ A3 camper who sped away after running o~cr a 47-year-old bicycle ndcr who had been knocked to the pavement by another .car. · Pat Ph1Uip Barron o( Huntington Beach was pronounced dead at the scene of the 2 a.m. Sunday accident. Police said Barron ran a red light on his bicycle and was struck by a westbound car while he crossed Pacific Coast Highway in the crosswalk at Brookhurst Street. Coroner deputies are attempting to detemUnc af Bam>n was luJled when struck by the first vehJclc or was stttl alive wbeo run over by the camper. Police Sgt. Bruce Kelly said Barron was beaded oonb in the CTouwalk away from the beach when the accident occurred. The dnver of one car was able to slow and a void him. But Edward E. Henson. 34, of Huntington Bcaclt-apparcntly didn't see the bicyclist and struck htm whale goana about SS miles an hour Kelly said. Barron was draged about 90 feet before the camper ran over him again as he lay on the highway Henson stopped and later was al'TCSted on suspicion of dnvmg under the influen~ of alcoholic beverages, Kelly send. Bttt he was not the cause of the accident and onl)' <1 misdemeanor chargr is ~ndmg Two other w1tnessc•. who were dnving east on Pacific CoaM High- way, confirmed that th e bicycle nder was tra veling against the red light and gave pohcx the descnptlon of the h11- and-run vehicle Kell y said the bicy1,lt' had no hght\ or reflectors. Political rally .draws protests at Valley park Clashes averted as police keep eye on both factions By DON FENLEY Of ... Dlllly ..... l\9ft Fountain Valle) ·s Mile Square Park was full of either freedom fighters or terronst S) mpath1zcrs Sunday -depending on "h1ch rail) you attended. wnhout 1nc1dent and amid discreet but v1s1ble police sccunt) Demonstrators were warned before their rall) to watch for people who seemed hostile Jean Bernstein. a coaht1on spokeswoman. said the group held a s1m1lar protest dunng the Reagan. campaign kickoff and several protesters were tnJured dunng 1nc1dents wt th "some peoplt' who dtd not share our ded1cat1on ot non- ' 1olent protest." Onl~ one small group of protester!> ventured across the park to picket at the entrance to the freedom fighters' rall\ The'\. were met with chant~ of "Comrade. go back 10 Moscow ... The protesters lef1 v.nhout mndent California ltdl.On lllCh Prhiclpal Jack Kennedy lan 't ready to eat crow -yet. At the same spot where President Reagan launched his re-election cam- patJO. :\mencans for Freedom Fighters, a newly formed Orange Coun t) group. was pra1s1ng and ra1s1ng funds for groups fighung communism around the world. The crowd of about 3,000 was made ot mostly refugees from Vietnam. Laos and Cambodia :\cross the park. at the interse<:llon of Heil A\enue and Brookhurst ~akcrs for the coahtton argued that the acll\ 1t1es b' the freedom fighte-rs·roup are in1t.'rfenng v.1th tht' nghts o indt\ldual na11ons to dc- tennine their own de'ittntes Father Lu is Olivares. La Plac1ta Church 1n Los .\nge-les said the !i.pon!>Of\ ot the freedom fighter rat!: "are not con cemed "uh human hte e<.onomtl nghu.. acute povt'n~ star-auon • malnutnt1on. maS'>l\t.' unemplo\.- ment of the lack of education anJ health care facilttte'> OeJ?artment of Interior offlclals wonder If buying a condor home Is worth- whlle./ A4 Nation President Reagan has outlined a refurbished trade policy today that focuses on opening foreign markets./ A2 Edison High School gets something to crow about treet. about 300 people part1c1 pated in a protest staged by the Orange County Coaht1on for Peace and Jusuce. The coalition contends some of the so-called freedom fighter groups are nothtng more than murderers and terronsts Both rallies were conducted Rep Ro~rt Dmnan R-C1ardt.'n Gro' e lt.'d lht" rail\ tor trt"edum li~hter. "hie h tea1urt"d '>oeai.el". (PleaM: eee RIVALS/A21 The cash harvest from Sunday's Farmald ben- efit concert Is $10 mllllon and growing./ AA World Nancy Reagan visits Mex- ico City to extend sym- pathy to earthquake vic- tims as search for survivors continues./ A5 Sports The Angels are In first place as they head down the home stretch./81 By ROBERT BARKER Of h o.lly ,._ 1W1 A crow with an insatiable appetite -for eating, not learning-is getting his fill at Edison High School. He's mooched bananas and straw- berries, chewed and apparently digested several ciga rette butts and has put away countless sunflower seeds. When that diet go1 a little mono- tonous, he tned to add a little fla vor the other day by dipping the seeds inlo some yellow paint being used to spruce up the Huntington Beach campus. He tried to take away and eat Assistant Princi pal Bnan Garland's ballpoint pen twice. Friday he walked un10v11ed through the door of Princi pal Jack Kennedy's offi ce d~A-"heav)" conference. And after someone brought in some sunflower seeds, he turned Kennedy's desk into a dining room table and the offi ce into Grand CentraJ Station. The visit. some observers said. gave new dimensions to Kennedy's "open door" policy. Garland dropped by. He thought his boss wanted him to eat crow. he said. A couple of guys from the Dail)' Pilot came to take a look. adding to the confusion. And then vanous faculty members and students came by. The postman even dropped in to sec what the flap might be about. "I couldn't believe 11," Kenned} said. "(Dean) Ron Woot~ and I were having a heavy meetmC"about some problems on the campus and the crow just walked in. He was kind of shy about it. We sure didn't get much accomplis hed ... Horticulture teacher Jim Hoyland sa1d when he first ran across t-h~ crow 10 the parking lot on the first da} of school. 11 was eating ciga rette butts. It seemed hungry and he gave 1t half a banana from his lunch bag. He thre" in some strav.bcme5 and the bird ate them too When not eatmg. the crow hangs around with other birds 1n a small sanctuary on the campus. It ~Its on a rail and allows itself to be stroked b) students It also v1s11s the girls o n the tennis courts and frequently checks 10 at the wrndows of the attendance office where 11gets1ts ma an supply of seeds. The crow may not be 100 smart. according to an attendance clerk. It seems that 11 comes to the L-Z wmdow. If 11 were reall)' intelligent, she said. 1t would go 10 the A-K window because its last name starts with C (for crow , of course.) Assistant Principal Garland said Frida} he held out his ballpoint pen to the crow when rt-was getting a dnnt; from the water fountain and the black-feathered bird tned 1cr fl~ awa~ (Pleue eee CROW/ A2) RutbNelaon Ruth Nelson , ex-CM police aide, dies Of t!w 0 ... ) ""°I Slell fiirnwr ( '"lj \l '· n .. ht'\\01mJr1 Ruth 'c:l:.un v. h "' 1rkt"J 1111 : ~ ''J" " •ti lht' JrpJnml'nt J1l'(l Fnda' Jllt'r 1 'l·H hnut "-1tll l'anll'r '°lhr "J' '' -\ funeral -.rn 11.l "11 ~ hl•ld ..11 p m Tut·..Ja, JI 'rv.pon \.1t·,.1 Chn\liJn lcntt.'r :'\lN '-cv.ron Bhd 1n l ,l~IJ \-k<.a -\ lull r<•liu motMl.tdl· v.111 a1..u•mpan~ 1ht· tu· nt•ral rr ~.-es~1on '" a gra \ l''ldl ~l·r emnn' Jt Pa1. 1ti1. \ 1<'" \1 emonat PJr~ ;~011 Pacifa \ 11.·v. in "l v.pon (Pleue eee POLJCE/A2) Eric Dickerson makes his 1985 debut tonight In Seattle./81 INDEX Bag brigade cleans up beaches Mesa picks four finalists for city chief Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Police Log . 1 Public Notices Sports Tetevlson Weather A10 A3 A7-8 05-7 A10 87 87 A9 87 A9 A6 A3 87-8 81-4 A9 A2 County volunteers join anti-litter drive on coast between Canada and Mexico By SUSAN HOWLETT Of ... o.lly "-' ,..,, Volunteers along Orange Coast beaches did their part for a massive anti-litter campaign Saturday. toting trash bags U{> and down the sand in the conclusion of the week-long beautification effort. "I think it went fa irly well." said Laguna Beach City Councilman Bob Gentry, "We hada numberofci11zens picking up Styrofoam cups and wrappers and so forth through out the city.' The campaign. which stretched from the Canadian 10 the Mexican border, was led on the Orange Coast by city representatives. local c1t1zens and sunscckcrs in an effort to pick the coast clean oflitter. The Newport Beach contnbuuon to Coast Weck was led by Jeff Nichols of the Newport Beach Police Depart- ment. Volunteers combed the New- port Beach shoreline from the New- port Pier to the Wedge, and on the north side to the Huntington Beach border. Thecelebrauon of the coa~thnC' "a~ sponsored b) Cahfom1a ns .\gamst Waste. the C'ahforn1a Department of Fish and Game. California Waste Management Board. the California Coastal Comm1ss1on and SC' era I businesses and c1v1c groups Saturda) marked the first annual California Coastal Cleanup, accord- ing to 8111 Shireman. el'.ecut1ve d1rec· tor o( C'ahforn1ans Against Waste Foundation "We're extremely pleased v.1th thl' overwhclmtng suppon ( ahforn1a civic and business organ1za11ons haH' gi ven to this clean-up." hircman said. The Hu n11ng1on Bearh l'Oastal trash colle-ct1on campaign "a~ lOn- ducted to n'IOrd1n.ttt0n "Ith thl reo pen1ngolJhe Cit\\ r•~c. "h11. h "J' "ashed out b' the swrm-. thJt h11 thr coast in ~tarch 14~' "":e 1h1nl. 11 ~a" Jn ,1mh1t11•u' effon. and "e hope 11 "111 ~· .in annual one .. ..aid Hu nting1c1n ~l'Jl t- coordtnator l\.en t<-.eh1mtan · But the message from Hu nungton fk.1lh 1' that we hope 1he state "Ill gl 'l' u' al least a month'~ "arning nn1 \l'Jr Keh1m1an ..a1J .itx1u1 l\'11 J,1,l·n \Oluntee~ from the Bu' ~\1u1' Jnd Girls Scouts of .\mt.'nca hdpcJ l'Ut' r Huntington Beach l'tl\ Jnd B11l-..1 Chica statt.' ht'at ht.'s Th e Fall Crt"ei. area 1n Dan.i l\11n1 ''a!> cleane-J up 1n dn t'th1n ll~I ti' (Pleue eee VOLUNTEER/ A2J B' To'\ :\AA\ EOR .\ Of 1"4 O•"r """4 Slit!! h•u• J 'hi1Ja1t'\ 'l mJ n 1n !ht' runntn~ 1 r ·he tt1h 1111 "'·' \ll-..i 1. II' '11<1nag1. .tltl'r tht• ''"' r '"'nJ 1•t .ntl't' ll'"' lx•lnn· 1h1 l 11' ( .1un1.1l lhr 11n.tlt'" 1.h11\t'n .1ttcr .rn ro;11 'l1Jh0J I\ hour' ot tnlt'n l'"' I hur' ,!,t\ 111,l1Hk Jt lt'.l'I ,1nl' .lpf'ltl.ln& 1 •1 1 1' Hall l •'Ulh 1lm,tn l)a\ 1d \\ hn l r <.a1d l ~ 1hunl1<1r J \U1.1 '"''' 1<11 rrt1r1n~ m.ir1.1t1rr Fred '°IM\.lh.11 .i 1-. l.t~1n~ ~h ')J \l'hedull' Jl1.Md1ngt11u,un1.ll nu·intx r-. "h11 had h11rt•J 11' !ind ,, 1t'r "1·mrn1 h' l'arh 1),. h'ht·r (Please eee MESA I A 2 l Apathy, court decisions drain water supply What's left caniiOtsustain Southland during dry year s By DON FENLEY Of ... .., ........ As surely as earthquakes rock Southem Cahfom1a, water shoruies will parch the Oranie Coast unless new water supplies are found. And. while most people here arc preoccupied with llvina the aood life and workina to act a biaer slice of it. there is already talk of: •lncreasina water rates dramatically to force COOlef'VllJOO. •Scttina fuH.1re water rate in acoordanoc with the tremendous costS of bualdlna new divenron and transportation systems. • Ptacin1 a moratorium durina drought ycan on new water hookups in both the res1dent18I and commC'rc1al sectors. •Placinaa moralonum on new development in areas w1tl\'out a natural water supply to support the dc\elop-mc~t. Neal Cline, secrctary-manqer of the OranJc Coun t)' Water District, isn't a prophet of doom. but he 1s quick 10 admit, "We face a water shorugc ifwedon'tdosomt thing about 1t." There $houldn'l ~ a water shonqt 10 Cahfom1a There's more than cnoua.h snow and rain falhng on the state for an adequate water supply. But two-thuds of that rain and snow falls in Northern C'alafomia, while 60 ecrcent of the state's population hvcs an and Southern califomia, which owes its e~plo 1vc arowth to 1mponcd water. Tbe problem O n1c and ott'lcr offio als art' wrestling with irthat tarac portions of Southern Cahfomaa'~'\\tater source arc bcin' lost throuah eoun dcnsions. and what will be left can t suppon future arowth or $U~t.11n the .. cumnt populauon dunng di) }ea~ The paradox of wattr problem~ 1n (he 'West ha~ bttn d15CUS5Cd b} mlln} C\J)Crt , but JO('I (.an-cau ma\ hav(' defined tht 1uut bc5t 1n "The Nine Nations ot 'forth Amenca " Ganuu \ltd th3l. de1pttt JTOW1h trTnd,. thr thin stnp of land bctwttn th<' Pacific (~an and lh<' Cascade Mounia1ns from nonhtm C'ahfom1a to ~outht"m Alaska 1s tht onl)' place in thC' 'W r\t v.1th enou~h "atn -_,, First of• aeries on water auppll•• fvtn thin t'I'" rnr a th1111\3nli mile' " h."1\,11~.k'"'rt .rnd mu<,1 1k()l·nd on 1m 1'll.1rh·J Y.:llt'I '' 11nl' " ''t'lll ran her C'\platncd the !l1tll.'l11un 10 l1am-.-u "\' \lU n mal..C' ga\ lfllm manul\' hut \mt 1an 1 nl.l ~r ".tier But the '°l(lUth..,.c t ~pc'\. tall\ 'K1u\hcrn l .il11u1 ,,, " "'hert J)<"t1fll<' v.an1 to II\<' Thr la(t th,11 tht Im -\n~lll'' Basm hn' onh enough natural 14Uttr to "llflf'<'" '01111111 1 prople h.hn 1 d1'suadt'd mort" 1han ~ n1'1llt<'n J'l'Ofllt twm \ettlin,g h<'~ ..\nd, v.h1k 1mpoti<'d "'aitr from tht ( olora1fo Ri ver and '°llorthtm <. ahfom1a ha'e ma,k 11 po~\lbk 111 '>Uppon mu'"e and m{'1d P'""th alnna the OranJC ( l'l&St and the rt.,I ot \outhc-m < ahlnmi:\' thC'rt", no l'>'>Uranl~ that a rt ha hie "a1e1 \<lun.r "'"ht· found tnr the IUtUrT . (PIUK eee WA TltR / A31 I ... Reagan seek.Ing to open trade Prest ent unveils policy to balance world commerce W ASHINOTON (AP) -J>resj. dent Reapn, declaring "we do not want a trade war with other nations," outlined a refurbished adminis- tration trade policy today that focuses " on opening foreign markets to Ameri- can goods rather than pro~ting domestic indu.stries battered by im- s)orts. . The president said he~uld ask Conaress to estAblisb a S illion war chest to help provide lo st loans to selected exports. He aJso announced formation of a aovem- ment "strilce force" to devise strateaics for deaJing with unfair trading practices against U.S. prod- ucts. "I will not stand ~ and watch American businesses fail because of unfair trading practices abroad. I wjll not stand by and watch American workers lose their JObs because other nations do not play by the rules." Reagan reiterated his frequently expressed commitment to "free and fau trade" and opposition to "protec- tionist" import restraints. "Above all else, free trade is. by definition, fair trade. When domestic markets arc closed to the exports of others, it is no longer free trade," Reapn said in an East Room speech to the Export Council. an industry group. Other than the proposed "war- chcst," however, there was little in the way of major new legislation. a move that seemed likely to provoke fresh criticism in Congress, where support for import restraint legislation has been buildi~ steadily. Reagan did offer to work with Congress "to put into place any necessary legislation that would help us promote free and fair trade and secure jobs for American workers." Such legislation, Reagan said, could include bills that would strengthen existing trade laws, speed up action in unfair trading cases and offer more protection against "dump- ing" of foreign products in U.S. markets at artificaUy low prices. But he said be would continued to .. strongly oppose and will veto measures that I bdieve will harm economic p:owth, cause loss of jobs and diminish international trade." ' Oktoberf eet begin• The annaal Oktoberf• celebration at Old World lD BmatiJICton Beach ~n 8madaJwltbapuaderemtnl9N!Dt of thoee •~ed darlni the nmcnrned OermaD celebratlona. The parade featanMI .. oom-pab-pab" buada from Weat GennanJ and ae.eral folk~ IJ'Oape. Old World wlll celebrate Oktoberfeat ~ ai.ld·PfOTember. Enter- talnen wlll oerforma Wed.need&,. tbroqh 8madaJ8 lD the feetl..t bat.I while the restauant m.ahital.na lta reftllar homs. POLICE AIDE DIES ••• From A l Beach. A Costa Mesa resident, Nelson was the first fulJ-term police officer to retire from the department in June 1978. She served as dispatcher. desk officer, investigator and matron for the de~ment that boasted only three night officers when she began. With such a small staff, Nelson quickly became a renaissance woman. "If they needed you in the field, you went." she. said in a 1978 interview. "Even in the middle of the nighL" While she never went on patrol, Nelson was often called to the field to help with contacts involving women or children. She also helped transp0rt female suspects to Orange County Jail. But Nelson's main tAsk was com- mander of the ~rds bureau until 1967, when she became a staff aide to the police chief. She also taught police science at Orange Coast College and spoke to local community groups. Nelson held a bachelor of arts degree in education from Southern California College. She is survived by her husband Carl, daughter Nancy; father and mother Fefu and Mary Mattia of San Diego; brothtr Armand Mattia; sister Grace Brunswick and sister Ada Bruno, all of San Diego. MESA MANAGER SEARCH NARROWS ... Jl'romAl Instead. the council wilJ conduct a second round of interviews early next month. SorsabaJ, who intended to leave his $78,800.a-year job on Oct. 25, bas agreed to postpone his departure, Councilwoman Mary Hornbuckle said. "Fred has said he will stick around until the end," Hornbuclcle said. The JOb search attracted about 70 applicants from throughout the state, including four Costa Mesa officials: Allan Roeder, assistant city manaiter: Doug Oark, development services director; Bruce Mattern, public ser- vices dfrector: and Victor Newton. assistant development services direc- tor~ Twelve candidates, inclurunit the four internal applicants, were inter- viewed by the council l;:lst week at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel. ··we were very impressed with the people and I must say our internal candidates stood the test very well. It made us proud." Hornbuckle said. Wheeler added, .. All of them arc real hot It makes our job real tough. Any one of them could do a com- petitive job." None of the council members would identify the finalists or say how if more than one City HalJ candidate wa.s still in the running.. However; it would seem that Sorsabal's protege, Roeder, would be a likely contender. Hombuclcle said that the politicaJJy divided council did not haggle over the finalists. In fact, the individual council members ranked the appli- cants aJmost identically. Sorsabal, Costa Mesa's city man· ager of 15 years, announced his retirement in May to work full time as potentate for the 5,000 Shriners in Orange County. Sorsabal would be donating his time to the philanthropic group, with the one- year tenn beginning in January. He later plans to start his own consulting firm. VOLUNTEER CREWS CLEAN BEACHES ••. From A l Orange Couoty representative Mel Hazen who saJd members of Save Our Shores also contnbutcd to the cause. · According to the Associated Press. beaches in Los Angeles County were not left out of the clean-up. Members of RecyCAL and the Boy Sq>uts picked up trash from Malibu to Santa Monica and Manhattan Beach. Sixty RecyCAL volunteers and Boy Scouts passed by the Will Rogers State Beach lifeguard tower manned by Tom Viren. "Anytime the community involves themselves in any kind of cleanup action we applaud it," Viren said. The Malibu Surfing Association. which was holdang a surfing contest Saturday. made a trash sweep of the beach from the Malibu Pier to the Malibu Lagoon after the competition. CROW 'ADOPTS' SCHOOL ... From Al 1 RecyCAL said the campaign was tamed to coincide with the last day of summer. It also celebrated the season's final weekend of a $200,000 beach patrol cleanup program on 30 beaches from Morro Bay to San Diego. Sohd waste disposal cost California taxpayers S 1.6 billion every year, Shireman said. wilh it. He dangled has pen before the bird again to dramauze his comments and damed if the crow didn't grab the pen with its beak and start pecking on the pen. Nobody seems to know where the bird came from, but Garland believes at was tamed before it most likely flew Just Call 642-6086 Deity Piiot o.ttvery la Quarenteed MOl'l$y r .-v If you "' -!left ~ -t>r ~ 30 p .., '411 ti.tot• 1 p m &I'd YfN" W0y Mii 0. --!Id S.1""°"11 1M Suttclotv II ,au CIO -,_ 'f°" the coop to find a new home at the school. "There is a lasting message we hope to communicate through theis clean- up: Stop littenna and start recycling," Shireman said, "Californians must heighten their environmental aware- ness of solid waste. or we·11 be buried by it." It tried to get into some yellow pamt the other day and the painter got down from his ladder and put a hd on the can, according to an observer. The crow then swooped down and re- moved the lid. What do you like about tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you like? Call tbe numbtr at left and your me11age will be recorded, transcrlbtd and delivered to Lbe appropriate editor. Tbe same 24-bour answering service may be used to record letters to tbe editor on. any topic. Contrlbeton to our Letters col•ma m111t lnclade tbtlr oame and telephone number for verification. No clrculallon calls, pleast. Tell us what's on your mind. Keren Wittmer Publisher A~•ry Churchmen Cr>r ,, .11er Clrculatlon 7141142-4333 ClaHlfled edveftlelng 714/142•5'71 Alt other depertment1 "2-4321 MAIN OfflCE :UO w.si e.., St C-a ...... CA I.Ill aoor .. 8o• '* C-1 ...._. CA 9111~ ~Y'•Olll t983 O.llllQll Coeat Pvblo!nlng ~"I' No ~ ~ ... ilull••t.on& --me11 .. or _,,.. .....,,. .,.._ ,. •• Ill' reorooucea ~ "'*'"' c:.. ,,,,....,., C:! topy•~I - c.opy o,. 7 • "' u• oetotr 10 • ,,, al'CI 'ffJ'.11 '°""' .... ~~.o c~ TalaphonM Aob«t Jr. C•ntrell Pr~uc11on M11n11Q~r Oonetd L. Wllltem1 CircuiatK>n MMflget ~~.,.·o .., .. poeln~ ""'° u Custa M"" Ca~•~'"'" 111PS 1u l!()C)) Svbtt.•o(tl.,., t>y (.,,,., ·~ '~ montllly l>V ..... s 1 00 IMnlNy ~ Orroo-Countr ._ ~ ~--..... I Howard Mu lenary Merl(ettng O.rtctm Peooy Blevtn• Cllt~~tfl90 OltfllCIOf VOL 71,NO.• AU1Umn cMbutild -.rm and dry over the weet<end and the pat1tm of wmlnQ folOwed by tllaht cooling wiU continue fOf the next eeverel d~ In Southern Cillfomla, tfwt National WMther SeMceM6d. High ctoud• etteemlna notthward from the remalne of ~ Twry, now about 250 mll• eout~t of the eouthern tip of 8-Ja CaUfomla, wlll drift OY91' Southern Callfornla for the ,,..t -daY11. The poeelbfflty of any anowett thll W.-wu uncertain. but WOUid b9 relatlvely ftght tt they occurred, the weather eervtoe Mid. U .S. T empa TOOAY 12:2ep.m. .. ,. TUHOA'f n• Lll'I 1:12 8-m. 1;1tp.m. 7:10p.m. u u O.J • •• 2.4 6.1 RIVALS RALLY AT VALLEY PARK ••• From Al from aroups supporting anti-com- munist efforts in Nicaragua, Afghani- stan, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam. Cuba, Poland and East Germany. Doman read a lener from Reagan durina the ralJy. Reagan wrote that he felt a kinship with the people at the rally and that the United States owes its life to freedom fighters who fought for America more than 200 yean ago. Olivares accused the freedom- figbter groups and the Reagan admin- istration of playing upon t.he Ameri- can public's fears of communism to "repress nations that want to be free." Olivares, who said he had just returned from CcntraJ America, claimed groups like lhe Nicaraguan Contras arc really terrorists and calling them freedom fighters is the "bijgest lie." Gerry Pedersen, pastor of the Mount Olive Lutheran Church in Mission Viejo, told the protesters he is seeing a change in his area of conservative Orange County. People arc becoming suspect with the con- cept that "mooey makes you happy and bombs make people free," he said. Dornan, in an interview on the other side of the park1 said that Pedersen is "talking tnrough his clerical hat." Doman agreed that money won't always make people happy, but said bombs have made people free. "Look at the end of World Warll," be said. Even the atomic bombs dropped on Japan during World War U made people free. according to Doman. He said the twin atomic blasts at Hiroshima and Nagasaki set up the rebuilding of Japan into a modem nation that economically competes with the other nations of the world. "That was Gen. Douglas MacArthur's real legacy." Dornan said he bas been to CcntraJ America nine times and "none of those trips have been communist tours" where only a select part of the country is seen. Gen. Vang Pao, a Hmong leader who was a leader of the CIA's army in Laos, told the cheering crowd that that Laotian peorle have watched the extermination o their race and "arc now rising up in a burst of patriotism against North Vietnam." Dang Cao Thang. a former rear admiral of the Vietnamese Navy, said that Vietnamese organizations in Southern California arc determined to stand and work together "for the liberation of our count.ry from com- munist rule." On both sides of the park speakers told stories of atrocities. Hasan Nouri of the Free Af&hani- stan Alliance demonstrated what be caJled toy bombs which he said are used bx the Russians in Afghanistan. The devices arc small bombs de. signed to look like toys. He also held up posters of children who have bad their arms blown off by the devices. The coalition bad volunteers pin the names of people they claim were killed by the Contras toa wall made of black cloth. Bernstein said the coalition's protest was "a success in a sense because we established a presence. It proved there is a voice in Oranaie County opposed to the intervention in the affairs of other countries and the efforts to raise funds for military operations against countries we arc not at war with." At the freedom fighters·s raJly booths and tables with brochures and photographs illustrated each group's cause. Petitions were also passed amid the crowd at both rallies. At the freedom fighter's rally Assemblyman Gil Ferguson, R-Newport Beach, sought support for his drive to remove Assemblyman Tom Hayden 0- Santa Moncia, from the state i'...eai.a.- lature. Rusty connection causes blac kout An overhead connectton break- down triggered a power failure late Sunday that affected 2, 150 Soul.hem California Edison customers in New- port Beach and Huntington Beach, a spokesman for the electric company reported today. Jim Kennedy. a Edison area man- ager. 511id the 11 :42 p.m. blackout. primarily in rcsideoual areas of West Newport Beach and Southeast Hunt- ington Beach, was cuascd by a corroded overhead connection near the ocean. He said power to all but 40 customers was restored by 12:34 a.m. Remaining users bad their power back by 8:20 a.m. divorced age42 real estat.e agent Abnormal or antisocial behavior is usually a cry for help. It can mean the person is experiencing a mental crisis. But, every situ- ation is different. That's why you need to know the different treat- shOplifts COSJD.etiCS rrrent alt~matives. The Information Center at Capistran o by the Sea Hospital has a free booklet on mental crisis. It t)utlines the many options you have available. Hospital· ization is only one of them. Call (7 14) 831-1787. You'll receive this useful book· let in absolute con- fidence . We've helped people cope with the problems of today's society for ove r 25 years. We understand . How to Handle a Mental Crisis BU LLET IN B OARD --- Unusual photos at OCC's gallery A collection of unu~ual hand~oloi:cd photo. fl'Phs from ~~ senei ent~ded "Tomato Farm" and Reflections '-ocs on exh1b1t Wednesday in Orange Coast ~ol~eie s photo gallery. located in the Fine Arts Bu1ld1na. The photographs. by Marie Bergstedt, focus on her growtn• ycan as a foster child .. Tt he exhibit will run through Oct. ~2 and the gallery hours arc Monday through Fnday from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Jolnt tenancy dl11euued A workshop on joint property ownership wall be offered Wednesday by the Women's Opportunities Center of UC Irvine Extension at the center on the U.CI ca~pusat ~bccorncrofVcrano Way and North Circle View Drive. . Attorney Joy Dickerson wi ll discuss the nsks of J01nt tenancy laws and premarital and cohabitation agreement~ at t~e 5: 15 p.m. session. Call 856-7128 for pre-rcgJStrauon and parlUng information. Dusty Wlnga recraltlng Dusty Wings, an organization of former and curren.t fli.ah t attendants, wi ll hold a membership reception Thursday at the home of Ann Callahan of Corona del Mar. The event is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. . . All cu~nt or former flight attendants arc invttcd to JOm the group. Prospective members needing fu rther information may call Callahan at '640-0241 or Ellen Nelson at 997-4967. Junior Ebells to meet The Junior Ebe l.I Club of Newport Beach will hold a general meeting Thursday morning at the Ebell Oubhouse. 515 W. Balboa Blvd .• Newport Beach. Final arraniements will be made for the Wishes Afl~at fund raiser harbor cruise at the 10 a.m. session. For more information. contact Eileen Delany at 645-0521 . Model railroaders convene The annual convention of the Pacific Southwest Region of the National Model Railroad Association will be held Thursday through Sunday at the Pasadena Hilton Hotel and Pasadena Convention Center. Events will include clinics. movies, demon- strations, tours, contests and a banquet. Contact Gale and Pat Irwin at (21 3) 326-7040 for registration and infonnauon. Jewish society sets talk The Jewish Genealogy Society of Orange County wall hold its monthly meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the hbrary of the Jewtsh Community Center of North Orange County, 1218 1 Buaro St .. Garden Grove. Guest speaker Joseph Melito will talk on lhe "Marranos," a Spanish tenn applied to Jews who were forced to embrace Chnstianity. The public 1s invited and further infonnation may be obtained by contacting Irv Wenger at 827-8243. Basketball program at Y The Newport-Cost.a Mes.a YMCA is beginning a pickup basketball program on Sat1.1rday mornings between 9 a.m. and noon for youngsters 15 and over. The c-0mpetition is free to Y members and costs SI for non-members. The YMCA 1s located at 2300 Umvcmty Drive in Newport Beach and more information is available from Dave Steinhaus at 642-9990. Garden party slated The Laguna Beach branch of the American Association of University Women will hold a fall garden party Saturday morning at the home of Connie Orgonas, 1771 Thurston Drive, Laguna Beach. Information will be available regarding pro- gram plan~ a.nd other activities during the year. Membership 1s open to any woman graduate of a college or university and those interested should cont.act Jane Berry at 499-51 SI . Monday. Sept. 23 • 6:30 p.m .. Cotta MeH PlauJn1 Comml11lon . City Council Chambers, 77 Fair Drive. • 7:30 p.m. Hutlnrton Beacb City Coancll, City Council Chambers, 2000 Main St. Tuesday. Sept. 24 • 6:30 p.m .. Irvine City Coucll. Cu y Council Chambers. I 7200 Jamboree Blvd. PoucE Loe Ora~ Cout DAJLY PILOT/Monday, Septemb« 23, tNS * Al Most drought relief gone after 1990 By DON PENLEY °' .. ~ ......... Oranae Coast and Southern California water aaencicsare now involved in a pme of catch-u_p to re pl~ water supplies that have or will soon be lost. Water sou.roes Sou them California has eojoyed in the patt are beina lost: •The Supreme Coun hasauthorized Arizona to reclaim 600 000 acre-feet of water from the Colorado Ri ver-water that is pte1Cntly aoing to Southern Cali- fornia. •Another defeat in court is resultina in a loss of l 00,000 acre.feet of watertbe Los Anacles Department ofWater cl Power was plannina to pump from the Owens Valley system. These two examples add up to a loss of 700,000acre-feetofwaterthat will not be ava.Jlable to Southern California some- where around 1990. Since one acre-foot of water is 327,000 gallons. the state faces the loss of228.9 billion p llons of the precious flu id. To compensate, area officials ar~ trying '"'"I) fll'w w11tl"r \Ources: •The federal 1ovemment'1 Ceotnl Valley Project and the State Water Project both store water lo dams oonh of $1crameoto and tend water to the Delta. But the two projecu are oot formally coordinated by 'Written aarcement. The federal project bu morc water than it presently can ute, toifa means existed for the state to b_uy surplus federal water, about S00,000 acre-feet could be available for Southern California in thene1tt 2S years. •The Imperial lrription District is neaotiatinawith the Metropolitan Water District ofSouthemCalifomia to have the water district pay for conservation pro- arams within theirription district ID excbanae for the water th.at ii saved. This conservation prosram could deliver 2SO,OOO acre-feet of water to urban areas atona the Southern California Coast. These two potential new sources of wa let could deliver a little more than I million acre-feet lo otTset the losses from theColotado River and Owens Valley. That would leave 3S0,000 acre-feet to meet ~n1tthl'm CAiifornia's needs for growth. W A.TER DILEMMA ••• From Al Stanford University professor Joseph Franzini, an expert on water problems, recently posed a question that has become common amona some critics of new state water transportation projects: "Docs it make any sense to have millions of people living in Southern California. where the water has to be brought immense distances at incredible costs? If you keep providing them with water, the millions will continue to grow, and the problem will only become larger. Maybe the time has come to put a moratorium on any further c1ttcnsion of water supply to new areas in the desert." - But Oine, like most Southern California water officials, looks to the north as the most logical water source to keep Southern California arcen and vowing. Durina some years, there is enough water flowing past Sacramento and into the sea durina one day to supply Oranae County for a year, according to Oinc. But Nonhcm Californians have linlc patience with dams, channels and diversion of water to the south. Many of them thinlc plans to divert surplus water to the unquenchable maw of the south is insane, if not blasphemous. They have backed up that attitude at the polls by soundly rejectina water divenion projects and letting politicians who advocate such projects know they had better never need votes from Northern California. Bucd on the m~nservatJve growth forecu1 by the Sou California Wat.er Committee, that wo Jd mean that Southern California could withstand a dry ytar thro\llh 1990 without severe econ- omk pein. A.Ad,~ to the same forecast. the populttion of'SoUt.betn California will pow by another 2. 2 million from 1990 to the year 2000. That will require another 600,000 acre-feet of water. The ~te~outlook, 1CCOrdin1 to the comm1neet1: •Between 198S and 1990 there 1s no real danaer ola water sho"'* in a s1n&)e dry year. •From 1990to 199S,asbortageofabout 300,000 aero-feet in one dry year would create a farputer problem because of the drawinadownofpoundwatcrbasins durina the first year. Those basins furnish one-half of all water demands in Southern California and about 80 percent of Oranae County's wateuupply. •From 199S to-20001 a sinaJc dry year would require scattereajurisdiction toplace a moratorium on new water hookups for homes or jobs. A seoood dry year ID a row could mean permanent plant closuru for those 1ndustne1 l\eediq 1arJc constant waterdelivenes. However, water officla11 warn of th.tee 1i,uations that could brina the impeodiaa walercrisiscloterin tbe future: •Southern Cahfomia aeu about ooe- balf of all ns water from wells that are supplied by around water -a souroe vulnerable to cootaminauon and pol· lution. · •Growth 10 Nonhern California, ao- cordina to estimates. will just about niatchgroW\h in Soutbcm California. Thal p-oW\h will increase the demand for water 1n Northern C&lifomia-a demand that could compete with plans to tra.nsport surplus water to Southern California. • Plarinen assume that the dry-year predictions will not cover the entire state. In the past, iftbe nonh had a dry year, the south e1tpcrienced a year ofnonnaJ waler supplies and could help the north by reduc:ina water transporation. If a dry yeai hit both cods of the stale, there's only a question mark. Dlllr ........ " Dell,...., Dry Santa Ana RlYer bed •bown Saturday near Ad.ama A•enue ln Bunttncton Beach . about 327 .000 gallons. The water dilemma along the Ora.nae Coast and in Southern California isn't just a nonh-south conflict - there is an cast-west battle line too.California's water wars with Arizona ha ve a history equal in ferocity to the north- south conflicts. And, as with new diversion projects from Northern California, Southern California is losillJ the battle. California lost a long and bitter fi&ht with Arizona in the Supreme Court in 1963 when the court ruled that Arizona could begin diverting Colorado River water that formerly went to Southern California. Fortunately for Southern California, delays on the Central Arizona Project and heavy rainfall into the Colorado Ri ver, the complete loss of about 600,000 acre-feet of water will not be felt until 1988. or even later, aecordiog to lhe Southern California Water Committee. One acre-foot of water is But that's only a brief reprieve from the parched fate facing Southern California unless reliable and adequate water supplies are found. Some p~ict the problem will never be solved until there is a crisis and the issue 1s forced upon government. happens. But, be admm that those prcdtctmg the worst may be ri&ht because while the region's population is arowing the volume of avulable water ts evaporating. A writer for Time magazine once wrote. "Cahforrua' bas everything -usually in the wrong places." The statement 1s proven wtth Cal1forn1a's water resoun:es. NEXT: Water wars: How close to• cu•~flrr'! Cline said he hopes the issue 1s resolved before thjlt Minority students post large gains in school test scoring NEW YO/lK (AP) -Led by a strong upsurae by Mexican-American and Puerto Rican students. average Scholastic Ap- titude Test scores posted their biggest gains in 22 years, the College Board announced today. Average combined math and verbal SAT scores in 1985 rose nine points to 906 -the largest year-to-yearclimbsince 1963 when scores rose nine points before beginning a 22-year slide. College Board presiden t George H. Hanford said at a news conference that scores for the Class of 1985 rose five paints on the verbal SAT to 431 and four points in math to 475. SAT averages had leveled and turned up slipnly in the past several years. but the gain in 1985 was the first that could be considered a decisive upturn. ·,"There's stiU more good news." Han- ford said. "All minority groups showed improvements on the SAT in J 985. and nearly all states had increases in their average scores. There was also a continued rise in the percent.age of 'high scorers' - those students who score over 600 on either pan of the SAT. Nearly 77,000 $tudents did-so on the-verbal half-of·thc SAT and I 6 7,000 on the math section." Puerto Rican youngsters showed the biggest year-to-year gams. up 10 paints in verbal to a 368 average, and up s11t points to 428 on the math. Mexican-Americans gained six.points on both math and verbal scores. averaging 426 and 382 rcsocctively Hanford said the pubhc should be encouraged by the tum-around in SAT scores and other signs that Amencan high schools are getting tougher. $10, 000 raised to aid homeless quadriplegic By PHIL SNEIDERMAN or 111e o.er,... ewr Campus and commun1t) dona11ons ha\t~ ra1 cd mort' than S 10 uor tl• help Rick ~ost. a quadri_PICglC Irvine Valle} College studrnt "ho lost mo~t ol his possessions ma r«ent Irvine apanment tire C'oHegc otlic1<d~ are no" tn1ng to find tem poran. housmg for the displaced student Pfost, a 47-ycar-old Vietnam \Cteran. suffert'd .i nel ~ tnJUf"\ 1n a JQ81 traffic accident. He 1s now a computer science ma;or at II"\ 1ne \ alle\ former!\ Saddleback College North. · · • Last Tuesday, I rvme Valle) st~nts and staff members conducted an auction to help Pfost. raising $3,500. One college employee donated SJOO for a weekend at a Lake .\rrowhead cabin -She e~plamed that she had received $300 seven ~cars earlier from her church when she was in need and saw the current fund-raiser as a chance to return the iuf\. The handicapped student's plight was the subJC'Ct of se,eral nev.s articles. and colle&e spokewoman Susan Clark satd that b> the end of last week communm and campus donauons raised the Pfost fund to more than SI 0.000 Oark said college staff members nov. arc tr)ang to find a two-bedroomr apartment fo r Pfost near the campus. She said that \tnCC the fire, Pfost has been lrnng in the Veterans Adm1n1stra11on Hospital in Long Beach and has had d1ll1cult\ commuting to Irvine Valley Colleje. · Clark s81d people wtth information about tcmporar. housing for Pfost can call Irvine Valley statT members Bill Hewitt at 55Q.9321 or Pam Davis at 559-3238 Border Patrol chase ends in smashup fatal to two from a South Coast Highwa} lo- cation, the v1cttm told pohce Sunda} afternoon. • • • Operators ofa store on North Coast Highway reported the theft of two 12· packs of beer Saturday morning, The suspect was described as a white male. 5 feet 11 inches tall, wearing bclge was reported stolen Sunda) from the Newport Mesa Chnst1an Center 2599 Newport Blvd South County Someone reported!} stoic S25ll 1n cash from a yam store and S I 50 in cash from a hair salon located in a ~n Juan Capistrano mall. 3195:! Camino Capistrano. last Wednesda~ morn· ing. l enter 5t unda) night Police rcpons ~1d the man had b«n trYlng tli ~II the car and was wa111ng in's1de the restaurant for the prospect.ivc hU\ er "'htn the 10Cldent occurred The .ar "'as reported to be worth s' 11)(1 • • • ~n area resident reported unda} RIVERSIDE (AP) -Two people were killed when a 45-minute, high- speed chase by police and .U.S. Border Patrol agents ended in a crash in Riverside, authorities said today. Two passenaers - one of them ridina in the trunk -were iajured when the Toyota attempted to tum left at a hi&h rate of speed. left the road and overturned in a field at the intersection of La Sierra and El Sobrante avenues. said California Hi&hway Patrol spokesman fohn Anderson. All four people in the car were ejected when the Toyota rolled over and came to rest qa.mst a tree about 10:4S p.m. Sunday, Anderson said. The female driver and one male passcoaer were declared dead at the scene, said CHP dispatcher Jean Cobb. Their identities were not released. Frank Carrillo, 2S, of East Los A~,eles and Ramon Mendoza. 46, of Mexico were taken to Riverside General HospitaJ '4ritb moderate in-pants but no shirt. The suspect juries, Anderson said. Mendoza wu reportedly was driving a beige-and· rid.in& in the trunk of the car. he white Toyota t~c~. • added. A vehicle buralarY occurred Sa1ur- Cobb said the hiJh-spced chase day along the 200 bfock of Broadway, bcpn on Interstate 5 just south of San the victim said. The loss had yet to be Oemente, about 40 miles from Riv-determined. erside. · • • • . Two ean 140• 11 illeaal alien~_ P~h~ arrest~ .two mo1onsts on were Med dunng a Border Patrol susp1eton of dnVln& under the in- 9bue when their automobile. speed-fluence of alcohol. Shawn ~nthony 101 00 a stretch ofHiahway 86 called Storm, 18, WI/> all"eSted at 3.~S a.m. "Blood Alley .. crashed into 1 truck. Sund.a)'. on SC>uth Coast H1Jhway. • • • Four chrome hubdaps 'aJutd JI $400 were reported stolen T uc~a' from a Porsche parked at an apart· mcnt in the 23700 block of Manner • • • ~ $600 lawn mower was reported stolen last week from the garaae of a M1ssion VieJO home rn the 2 WOO btocrSpring tr~l somellnll" 1n Jul) Bantlqton Beach night that she 'law a man l)'lng motionless under a truck to the side of a Tc,aco sen ice 'it.atlon at the corner of Beach Boule' ard and Elhs 4. venue She called paramedics fcanng the man mtght bemJured Pollet reports sa1d paramedics discovered the man to be a sleeping transient • • • '\ thief reportedl) stole S4 000 1n d1 .. 1na watches and a $400 spear t\ln from a Sports Chalet store. 16~42 Beach Blvd .. Saturday cvcnin1. -. . . • Jorie Sierra Ayala, 24. was antstcd at --------------------------------------6:40 p.m. Saturday alona the 100 block ofNyes Place. The owner of 1 black I crq Po~chc 930 Turbo reported that someone stole the car from tht parking lot of the Old World restaurant. "'~61 Tarps valued at Sl,430 were re- ported stolen from a blue and white tractor tra1 ler parked in the lot of the Fncndsh1p Inn. 18112 Beach 81-vd .. SundAy Foantaln Valley VandaJs set fi re to a mailbo1t in front of a home in the 16100 block of Harbor Boulevard Saturday night. The da.maae was Htimated at $100. Police reports also said some mail was burned. • • • A resident in the I S900 block of Overton reported Saturday that someone stole a praae door opener and tools, worth SSS7.30, from bis prqe sometime si nce Wednesday. • • • Someone reponedly stole a car telephone from a brown 1985 Ma~ RX7 parked in a lot in the 9800 block of Warner Avenue Friday ni&ht. Polioe repons said the windows 1\ad been left open. • • • Enterina throua,h an unlocked front door, a burglar reportedly stole an $800 vi deo cassette recorder from a home in the 8 00 hl ock of Amazon River sometime tut week. Intne A thief reportedly stoic a computer from a bu11neu at 2227 Michelson Drive Sunday niabt Poli« reporu said a lot of blooCI was found at the scene. The suspect should be easy to identify bcc:aute of the cuts he rccdved smuhfoa the front window, the rtports Slid. ••• A woman. at\er chuina two purse snatchers in a park.ins lot at 14400 CUiver 1'Pive. was struck by the thieves' car u they tried to ete:ape. Sbe was not eerioualy iojured in the i.ncldent, police said. Polic.e reports II.id tbe woman wu 'unloedina ~ritt from ~ lNftk when the 1nddent occumd. • • • Coins and JC~lry totalina S20S wert reponed stolen from 1 home alon1 C'obblew1ne Sunday • NewportBMch Jewelry valued at $2,100 WIS reJ)Orted stolen from a tiomc in the 200 block of Via Ouito Friday. I • ~-. A resident in the SOO block of Park re~ned Friday that someone stole St,267 ln aolf clut>., 1 $4SO camera and a S250 typewriter from her Coetalleu prqe. A 2 l ·year~ld Sant.a Ana woma.n was anuted for allcsedly shoplifting at a Nordstrom's depenment store tn South Coast P1aza Saturday after- noon. Thu-Van Thi Nau).'en was booked at Orantc County JIJI and the S60J.98 in clothina and mis- • • • cdlaneous items w 1tok were re--Thieves reportedly stole a boat covered. PoUce reports said they owner's sill horxpower dinthy en-1uspected &he bad also taken items ainer;o~S l~\~tudrJ; Po:: from an I. Mqnin and a Bullocks = ..A.out.~ ,2 .i... Y • ckpet\l'Mnt also in South Coafl me U!l;MMOll~ n vm \1)11; mans P1a.za boat while he was motorina in ' · • • • Newport Harbor near Padfic C.oaat A ma_n wearina a Rowe,red .shin .u,hway. Wl\en he finally found the reponM!y pumped S3 of rqulat boat the motor had been taken. be p.aoline at a O>evron terVkle station told poli«. aod drove off' without JJ9Yln&. The incident 'oot plact at 2 S90 Newpon Blvd. • • • A S 1.2 SO video CMsc:ttr m-ofd~r Lap1aa Beach A dreu valued at $340 was ~tolcn A cy d spill prompts eva cu ation An aad sp1U ~prompted the C' acu- auon of about SOO employee from 1 Huntinaton Beach manufa tu.nna plant ca.tly today. but no iajuncs were rcponed. Huntinaton Beach Fire Dn>an· ment sPotcswoman Birsit 0.VlU&ld tl)e spill •'1.S detected at 8:1 S a.m. b)' two employca at We iser Lock, SSSS McFadden Ave. She sajd five to 10 ll)Jons of an aad wu ptlled an 1 &uement area wbert indtimnal wutewateT from the plant tS treated Davis Aid Weiser offiaals wc:rc conctmed bee.au~ of the ~na of a ~·yan1de pov.dcr 1n the plant he said a mixture of cyanide and 1c1d could have rt'lcaS<'d a deadly ps >\f\er the emplovtt"S were evacu- ated. haz.ardou materal se>«tabsu ftom .the Hunt1n1ton Beach and Oranae C'ounly fire dcpanm~t ente~ ID protttt1ve 5UIU and breath· •na equipment Davts sa.td ~" tau indicated there was n<> dadly cyaot<k p s 1ns1de F1reft&hters then ntutralued the acid with hme. and cmployttS WC1't citproted to rtturn to work lat.er todn, Davis said ~-'--~~~1~--~------~-----+~----------------------------------------------------------.:--------------~----~~------- • FarmAid raises $10 million CHAMPAlON. Ill. (AP) -cuty ioday u be bouded bis bua to ticket aUe1 &Dd corporate dooationa. fin= tU'aPPed Americ:ao fann.. ._._ tbe st.dium after tbe maratbon Concen orpaiicn hid l&id earlier en publicity !tom FarmAicl. CODCC11. i: they b<>P.'d to rai1e u-p to S50 millioa but the immediate cash harvest was Nelton Mid 1elephooe oled9tt dur· to &etp the nation's ltnllllina farm. leta than SI 0 million ftom \be tq. in& Sunday'i cooeeruot.aled about 15 en. name benefit concert that rocbd the million, accordina to Walt Adam• or CoMert ,PUblicists said they ex-~ with country, blues and the Nub ville Network. a cable •r.s-pec1ed the now of FannAid money to rock 'n' roll. tem th.at carried 12 boura or the continue. by telephone and mail, for "h weot pat I'm raJ happy. Jt concert live to 25 million tubec:ribina weeks or even months. Eieeded my expectations.'' Willie bousebolda. An audienoc of more than 78,000 the drivina force behind Another S• million was railOd pecked the University of Illinois d, told the Associated Press before tbe fint note sounded. throulh footbe.11 stadium, weatherina houn of jiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"i rain with aood bumor. The] da~ OLD-WORN-CHIPPED-HARD-TO-CLEAN ::~ ~dra'::f~":itS,! b~~k BATHTUBS & SPAS REFINISHED ~~~eB=~0:,~.;;~1nJ:I.; PORCELAIN • ENAMEL • FIBERGLASS Jones, the blues of B.B. Kina_ and the concert started, but most of the audjenoe shruued it off. RESTORED LIKE NEW ~:O':e '60s rockabilly of Roy Or- "A once-an-a-lifetime thinJ like this, bow could you miss it?" said Ken Lewis of Bloomington. "What's a little rain? We'll dry out tomorrow." WITHOUT REMOVAL More than SO performers and aroups donated their talents to Farm-The downpour stopped in time for prime-time performances. CAll FOR Ajd. ESTIMATE "Thank you very much for coming 5., 51 _4124 to tbe conoen for America," Nelson Organizers and artists said the concert would make city folks more aware of .problems down on the farm, but some of the fans weren't so sure thev'd been enlightened. shouted u the show began on a staae flanked by huae banners rcadina WRITI"EN WARRANTY ''Keep America Growiq.." The mn n soon after the EKDAY DINING 'Summer Crowds are Gonel Time to Come to Dlllman·s for Rib .J•rty llrd Dinners prtme f eaturlng fresh flsh 1 s 7 .so or . choice of T~complet~0~;~~~a~~~i;: ~e:;;~ ~, -~"'eekl . . 7 oays Aw ~ 801 E. Early Bird Dinner Specials '6.25 ' Complete dinner including soup AND salad, garlic bread, sherbert and coffee. Served 3:30 to 7:30 Monday thru Friday 17502 Beach Blvd. at Slater Huntinston Beach 842-5505 David Rakes is Back at of Newport Beac.. ..r-~a~U~3-" With his popular pinao bar entertainment Wednesday thru Sunday ,, 251 E. Coast Hwy. ~ 673-1505 LUIGI'S ) Wed••ecl•v IA .. gna Specl•I •3.65 T•arecl•v Spaaglaettl Specl•I *2.65 Bot• l•cl•tl•• ..... a .. rue 1w ......... ' •• Lunch Specials 11 AM-3 PM s Varteo .. of Sut.. •2.u ~ 'l.71 ..._.. •S.15 Maakottl or Cannelonl •J.n locllvtd ... ,.... •J.ll •2.00 Off 1Ar9• or Media• Plau wltla tlale ad .. 18,2 ... cell. Coeta ·-0611-ltll Cloeed llo•d•v Nm CLUI I lfSTAURANT cafe with a continental flair LOUISIANA SPECIAL TIES [!!]• UW .... ~=--IPEClll • LOISIR 995 ._ · 1 LB Happy Hour 3:3().6:30 M-Thurs. ~ TGIF *l .00 Happy Hour ~ ·3-6 p.m. r 130 E.17thCOSTA M ESA .,, HOURS 1 lam to 2am . (714)646-8855 Coaalry Goarmel Bre1kl11I Plaa year ~a1ia111 •Htia11 ia •• , •ri•••• ...... , •••. • Cu.tom Omelffll • 30 itema to chooM from • Homemade cinartlmon rolla • Hearty breakf..u au,. to pt..MI LASAGNA BUFFET ""'One --DWt Every Tuesday Night 6-10 P.M . •s.95 ln<:ludes salad, garlic bread and fresh fruit Dinners 6-JO P.M . Tues .-Sat. Lunch l 1-3 P.M . Mon.-Fri. SPECIALS DAILY Monday Night Football Footlong hot dogs and chlli UVe Entertainment Friday 2 Saturday Nights St!t! Us About Prlvatt! Partlt!s & Catt!ring atva64'. RESTAURANT Amat9Ut Nlght-Wednesdll)'S Llldte• Ntght- s.turdays 9-I I ft.M. \I/el Drtr*I s' .00 Newport's Cannery Village @fe -Jido presents _ La~e Night DINNERS o•plete DI•• ... II••• •v•U.•le ' PM all t .. ••Y tlaro .. la 12iM •ldal9lat Entcrtalment nlahtly ~:30 PM to 1:00 AM Gourmet Food with Gourmet Jazz 2900 Newport Blvd. Newport Beach 675-2968 Alling,jalled Mandela· to be seen by own doctors .. By Ge A110dated Prett JOHANNESBURG -Imprisoned black leader Nelson Mande~. who requim suflCfY for a swollen prostate and in~l ~·ta. will be examined by doctors chosen by bis family, one of his dauahtera sa1~ today. In teattered antJ- aoartbeid distuJ'bances Sunday and earl)' today, pohoc reported the deaths of three blacks. Rumors that Mandela m~t. die tn custod)' have touched off sporadic black rioting aro"!"!i So~th Africa, tom by 13. rt:\Onths of a~ti­ apertheid unreel. Though Jailed Stnoe 1964 on a ~n~1cuon. ~f plott1na sabotqe, he remains popular among many of South Africa s 24 mllhon blacks. NA TO plpelbJe bombed In GermaJJy WEILBURG,.. West Germany -Suspected le~ist terrorists ~m.~ a NA TO pi~line this momina. ~usina. a large !oss of diesel fue~ ~ut no 11lJur:.ies, police wd. There were no immediate clatms of ~spons~bµity. M~nfred Lanaendorf, a spokesman. fo~ the H~sse state ·1ntenor M1ru1try, said the explosion took place near this city 24 nules northwest offrankfurt. Lanaendorf wd that the attack was discovered at 6 a.m. By the time the !eak WJS pluged several hours later, an estimated 2,600 gallons of fuel had sptlled. German pubU•lalng leader dle. -BERLIN -Axel Sprfuaer, the conservative publish!na m~te whose ma•s-circulation daily Bild revohu.ionized the European mdustry, 1s dead at aae '73. An aide today said he h;ad suffered f:om pneumo~ia, a heart condjtion and hjah fever. However, the atdc, Klaus--Dieter Nagel, ~d an ex.act cause bad not been established i.n Spfinaer's death Sunday night. Spnnaer's company, the Axel SpriJl&er Publishing Group, anno~n~ only that tb~,West Genn~ press baron bad died after a short and senous illness. but gave no details. The statement from the company said Springer had converted his assets into a joint stock company several weeks ago "to safeauard the future of his holding." 19 more till~ In Lebanon fl6htlZJ6 BEIRUT -Rival militiamen backed by rocket and mortar salvos battled in the streets of Beirut an~ Tripoli t~y . .Police ~d 19 peo~le wer:e ~led ~~d 32 wounded in the f!lhtina. Ovemiaht clashes an west BelJ'Ut p1ttm1 Shute Moslem Amal militiamen against bruse fighters left nine dead and 17 wounded. police said. The fighting was the heaviest to date between the aroups. allies in Lebanon's decade~ld civil war apinst the Christians. Amal and the Druse forces ofWalidJumblatt's Progressive Socialist Party have been at odds for four months over control of the Moslem sector of the caoital. Sov1eta redefine toxin weapon WASHINGTON -The Soviet Union, attempting to avoid. mentionin• a weapon the Reagan administration claims the Soviets use illegally an Afahanistan, changed the definition of tox.in weapons in a recent mihtary publication, U.S. officials claim. The "Soviet Military Encyclopedia" chanJed the definition to exclude mycotoxins, which had been included in the cat~ory of toxin weapons in previous editions of the publications, said the offictals, spea.ldna on condition of anonymity. The officials alleged the chanae is an indication the Soviets will soon assen that use of mycotoxins in not in violation ofa 1972 treaty banning biological and toxin weaponry. Mycotoxins are a type of fungus that can be lethal to humans. Nutrition report ral•lng concern NEW YORK -A committee of the National Academy of Sciences has called in a draft report for lower recommended levels of some vitamins and minerals needed to maintain health, the New York Times reported today. The report, which will not be issued for several months. raised concerns in some nutrition experts who feared it could be used to justify cuts in food stamps and school lunch subsidies. Hurricane mlue8 Caribbean l•land• MIAMI -Hurricane Gloria bypassed a string of Caribbean islands today, but forecasters said the fifth hurricane of the 1985 Atlantic season could pose other problems should it strengthen. "The threat (of Gloria) to Puerto Rico and the Leeward Islands has diminished." said Hal Gerrish, a forecaster with the National Hurricane Center in Coral Gables. Meanwhile, a tropical depression that fonned Saturday south of Cape Hatteras. N.C., strengthened with winds veater than 38 mph to become Tropical Storm Henri. forecaster Bob Case said man advisory from the hurricane ~nter. Burford, llu•band face drunk rap• WASHING TON -former Environmental Protection A&ency bead Anne Burford and her husband, Reagan administration official Robert Burford, face charges of drunkenness following a highway stop in Arlinston. Va. Robert Burford, director of the Bureau of land Management, was booked for investigation of drunken driving, {><>lice said, and Mrs. Burford was arrested at the jail on suspicion of pubbc drunkenness aftt:r police said she cursed and yelled at authorities. She was detained for four hours at the jail Saturday morning before the officials let the couple go ~nding court dates, which Anne Burford can forgo by paying a $30 fine, said Arlington County Sheriff James A. Gondles. Vietnam vet. prone to breakdotnJ• ATLANTA-A study of7 ,OOOAmericanLegion members who served in the Vietnam War found more than a third of them either have had an emotional breakdown or fear they will have one, officials say. Almost 10 percent, 663 veterans, have sought mental health treatment from the Veterans Administration sin~ the war, John F. Sommer Jr., deputy director of the American Legion's National Veterans Affairs and Rehabilitation Com· mission, told reporters Sunday at a meeting of the Society for Traumatic Stress Studjes. The study, co-sponsored by Columbia University. also indicated those Vietnam veterans who experienced the most intense combat had the highest risk of experiencing mental problems. Nearly 40 percent of the stud) participants said they had had a breakdown since their service or feared the) would have one. Ranch buy worth uv1ng condon? LOS ANGEL~ -Hudson Ranch may represent the California condor's last chance for survwal b.ut with only six birds still io the wild, some officials in the Department of .In tenor wonder if purchasing the land is worthwhile. The 13,820-acre parc:e.1 m southern San Joaquin Valley is a primary foraging area for th~ nea!fy extJn~ cond'?~ and biologists believe it to be an ideal spot for releasing birds bred an capt1V1ty. ~ ~ Jlurder plot conviction o,,«rtarned LO~ ~OELES-A man ~ho fac:e<f an eiaht-year prison term on charaes of conspmna to murder a key witness in a Super Bowl ticket scalping scheme wo~ an appeals court ~ctory when his conviction was overturned. H. Daniel Whitman, 54,. was ~nVtcted an March 198~ of conspiring to murder ~ymond Cohen, a m1.1or Witness for the prosecuuon in the ticket scalping case. No attack was ever made on Cohen, however. ,. Bl61Jer 6•• price. predlcted . LOS ANGEL~ -llie price. ~lpsoUne at the pump dropped slightly dunna the put two w~~ but~ oll 1ndustry analyst expects an l I-week slide to stop and pricet to ss>in:J at su cents a piton by the end of the year. The ,u. cent per a:UJon prophecy as~ on. the lraq-Iran war, risina crude oil prices, faU andwinter~mand forheatmgoil and the cost ofreducina the lead content ofleaded ps, saad analyst Dan Lundberg. Tree Umb t11i. hro at Ya.emite YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK -A survivor heard "a bia crack" just before ~ laflC limb from If'! oak tree broke free and crashed onto a tram at Yo_sem1te National Park, killlna two 1ourists •nd injuring 12. The limb - estunated at 2S fect lona and two feet thick -kl lied Robert and Greta Rou of Pleasanton, Calif., in their 20s. Femlnl•t., conHrntlve.jom porno f161Jt SAN 01£00 -Femi.oists fiahtina atiempu to censor pomOIJ"lphy warned tex rnearchen that other femloists have fortcd an allianclC with conservatives who are promotina a "tel P'Jlic that'11wecpina the country " The women uraed opposition to local ordininoes which would allow pcopie who believed they wen: injured by pomoera~y to sue mak:era and distributon of. such ~teriaf. Such laws have ~n "'~ in Lot An,elea, vetoed in M1nneepoh1 and voided by • court an lnchanapolls .. Durina a peneJ 1ession Saturday at the annual meetina of &be Society for the Scientific Study ofSe~ the feminisu Aid such meuures amount to censorship and could 1;(1 to hara~ment of women's boobtorcs 1ellina 1exually explicit education matenals. l ' \ - Mexicans bufy dead, search . for sUrvivOrs MEXJCO CITY (AP) -Survivors of the two kiUer earthquakes that left much of this ci~ in ruins buried their dead and conunued the desperate search for survivon today, but hope of findina many more alive ebbed as the houn passed. Mayor Ramon Aauirre's office said Sunday niaht that f,9S2 people were known to have died in the quakes that jolted central 'Mellico last Thursday and . Friday topplina buildinp and leavtna the heart of this capital city in shambles. Spokesman Humberto Romero said the number of missing is esti- mated at 2,000, many of whom are believed dead and t ntombed under collapsed and crumbled buildings. In Wubinatoo, State Department spokesman Dan Lawler said four Americans-bad been confirmed killed in the quakes, which measured 7.8 and 7.3 on the Richter scaJe. Nine Americans were missina, he said. Over the weekend" rescue workers from the United ;:,tates, Canada, France and West Germany flew in to join their Mexican counterparts, many who have been working non- stop since the first quake struck at momina rush hour Thursday. World leaders including Pope John Paul ll sent condolences and offers of aid. First Lady Nancy Reagan was scheduled to fly from Washington today to inspect the shattered Mex- ican capital. Under the eerie glow of arc lights, rescue operations continued over- night in the ruins of the Hotel Rcais. Firefi&hters, soldiers and sailon heftcc:f crumbled blocks of concrete, seekina bodies or signs ofLife. "I suppose there might still be I 00 people still in there," said one firefighter, who refused to give his name. "Nobody really knows for sure bow many." As the teams worked, wisps of smoke from smoldering fires beneath the rubble wafted into the air. Mayor Aauirre has said more than 400 buildinp were destroyed or damaaed by the two quakes. There were unconfirmed reports from news.- pa~rs and rescue workers that of- jkials lanned to raze hundreds of structures feared near collapse or believed to contain 4ecayi0f bodies tha~ mi&hftriaeT an epidemic. . Six ~ousana people were inju~ ID the JOits that devutated much of the downtown area and destroyed homes and buildinp throuahout the CAP.ital city's metropolitan area of 17 million. President Miauel de la Madrid bas acknowlcdacd rescue efforts had lack- ed coordination. But be said, "The action will be more orpniz.cd in the cominJ days when the capital of the repubhc bqins to return to normal and the services are re-established as soon u pouible." However, despite any lack of orpnization, rescue workers, most of them volunteers ri~ their lives to sa'\tC others. aoufcd their way throuah rubble to reclaim bodies and bunt those who survived. "Still, there are those who live,' marveled a six-inch headline in Sunday's Excelsior newspaper. At the pile of rubble that once had been the 14-story Nuevo Leon apart- ment buildina, crowds waited in silence Sunday as rescuers broufllt out a woman who bad been buned alive for more than three days. "She lives!" the shout went up as the weary, dust-shrouded woman was brought to an amb\llanoe. Vaccination clinics have been set up to immunize people apinst the possibility of disease. Red Cross officials said S,000 people in the heavily damaged Tiatclolco area alone bad been inoculated apinst typhoid and tetanus since Saturday. For many, Sunday was another saddenina, tiring day of searchina temporary morsues set up throuah· ou' the city to find loved ones. Thousands, many wcarina masks to filter out the smell of death and possible disease, filed slowly past decomposing bodies packed ID dry ice, looking for friends and relatives. Sunday was also a day for many Mexicans to aive thanks for surviv- ing. or to mourn their dead. At the basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, thousands clustcTed to pray and hear the priest's words of comfort .. Join Now and Get One Month's Dues Freel LAST CHANCE FOR SUMMER RATESll THE SPORTING HOUSE • Ttw Spotting House • lnCIMduM EurclSC • GI.-S<rttn TV f'Wrythtng you IW~ 10 l're>grMTIS • So<la Ac!Mt~S kffP yout body tit ¥1d • Sliutv, SIHln. J«UU I • llHl-- bHulftul • lu•urlOUJ locker F.cmues • Chll<I Care • a.tk~~ • Inquire l\llOoJI Our • lS ~ltt Sia I.MW uip COlpo<Mt M~mb4'r11>rp • N-llU~ l'ool & Sun Otclr • lh Cyc~s • 14 11.tequtC~ Courts • V~ lndoOl"S • l SM>d Volt'~ Couru r~ Sporuno HOUlt' WhtrtBnutlf\JI Bodlts Bt91n • AtroC>10 3601 Jamboree. Newport Beach (714) 752-0565 H111th Nlws ... Pain Is The Slgnal: Bursitis Is The Problem BY DR. JAMES McEACHER N Recent sports stories have in- dicated that an ever-increasing number of athletes have been side- lined due to bursitis. Ia this a new diaeMe caUM!d by modem day diet or atl'e91? Of coune not. For a long time baseball players, golfen, etc., have been taken away from their games becal.Ule of 'eore annli' •tro.n elbows,' and 'stiff knees.' M any of the dif- ficulties were,·in fact. bunltis. It'• just th.at only recently the sports- men have begun to call the prob- lem by It.a right name. Of ooune, bunitia isn't a con- dition expetienced only by ath- letes. Penona ln their thirtiea and forties, specially the hou.ewife, are partk:ulai'ly vulnerable to at- tacks. And lt lln 't a condition that an The long and abort of it is that bursitis can affect almost anyone. And once is does, treatment is necemary. Untreated bursitis can lead to a aerious, permanent dis- ablements auch as arthritis. DR. McEACHERN individual can effectively telf-ln other words, don't take a treat throuah time and inactivity. chance with bunitia. Left untreated, bu.nitla .ieta Let the pain be your reminder wane with ectivtty and the pain that you need effective treatment. can become 10 interw that throb-We wp bunitla aa.f f ettn to con- blne dilcoo\fon can occur even tact a Doctor of Chiropractic. when the limb la at rM\. When penona who are tem ac-Dr. M•Eaehera ••ia1aia1 a live than athletee encounter the Clairopnede offltt •• 1755 o.-.-. buniU. problem they are more A•e·• Sahe "E:' Cetta Metai prone to eertoua difficulty. (714) 631--0085. _...,,. ... ..,, .. -- ,., ... , ....... Reecae worken accompany a woman carried by a crane from eutbqaake wrecuce In llmco City. After three daya bl the rabble, •be remahled all•e. Nancy Reagan in Mexico as a gesture of syrn pa thy WASHINGTON (AP) -Nancy Reagan, volunteering a gesture of U.S. friendship towards Mexico as it seeks life amid the rubble, is meeting the country's president and survivors of its twin earthquakes in a three-hour visit to Mexico City. The first lady left Washington today on a direct flight to the battered city, where heT first stop was to be a visit with President Miguel de la Madrid. She was carrying a letter to De la Madrid from President Reagan. Then, Mrs. Reagan and Paloma Cordero de la Madrid, the Mexjcan first lady, were to tour an emergency shelter and a hospital. Mrs. Reagan was accompanied by Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, and M. Peter McPherson, director of the U.S . Agency for International De- velopment. - Orange Cout DAIL v PILOT /Monday, s.pt.,,w 23, 1N5 Aa Five nations seek to devalue dollar NEW YORK (AP)..-The United States and four other m~or industrial nations have qreed to try to drive tN value oftbe dollar down and to fiaht protectionist pressures in their coun- tries. U.S. officials and the finance ministers of Bnta.in, West Germany. France and Japan did not announce specific steps to revise currency tradina procedures. The officials, who met here Sun- day, said "excbaJlle rates should play a role in adjustin& external im- b&la.ooea." and pled&ed to cooperate on that score. "We do believe that intervention an the foreip exchanac mark.ct, in particular relation to the foreian exchanae value of the dollar, which is still hiab. althouah not as hiah as it was, may have a usefW pan to play," Niaet Lawspn., .British Chancellor of the Exchequer, said at a news con- ference. West German Finance Minister Gerhard Stoltenberg a&fCCd that "we all aive areater emphasis to exchanac rates and we have discussed funda- mental policy and other means to come to a more beJanced situation." Still, he said, an order for the dollar to decline there must be "many developments and many means of cooperation. ... Maybe our di .. eussions can contribute bu~ they cannot really command matkeu." Followina annouDCCmen1 oi the aareement, the U.S. dollar plum- meted 4-S percent today apinst Europca.o CWTencies. As a result, sold bullion prica soared about SI 0 an ounce. European currency dealers said markeu were extremely nervou.s fol- lowina the mcetina, and that was reikcted in wide buyina-aeUang spreads on all major currencies. The strona dollar bas made foreian aoods sold in the United States· cheaper and Amencan r.oods sold abroad more expensive. As a result, the United States ~stc~ a record S 123 billion deficit rn foreian trade last year; and this year the adminis-- tration projects a trade deficit of$ I SO billion. France admits its agents blew up Greenpeace ship PA;RIS (AP) -FoUowma more than two months of bmer accusations and scnsauonal news reports, PrcmieT Laurent Fabius said F~n~h aaents were responsible for blowmg up a Greenpeace protest ship in a New Zealand harbor. Fabius unexpectedly confirmed Sunday reports. in the French press that ~e attack July IOwa.s the work of French agents. . He wd the aacnts should not be put on tnal because they were acung on orders when they sank the Rambow Wamor at Auckland New Zealand. He did not say who gave the orders. ' However, Prime Minister David Lange of New Zealand 11 would be "absurb" not to try the sec-ret agents. He ac:cuscd France of committing a "sordJd act of state-becked terronsm." Two French agents arc in New Zealand Jatls awa1une tnal on ch~ of killina a crew member of the Greenpeace ship m the explosion. They also face arson and conspiracy charges m a tnaJ set for November. . Tb~ other agents, who arc now in France, also are wanted on mtcrnauonal arrest warrants. Warning The Surgeon General Has Deter mined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health Kings. 17 mg. "tar". 1.2 mg. n1cottne. Menthol 18 mg "tar" 1 .2 mg mco11ne ughts. 10 mg. "tar". 0 .8 mg OttOlll'le av pel t1gare1te by flC method (50 FREE PER CARTON!) 25 great tasting cigarettes for the price of 20! ~:------~~------------~------------~,--------_;_------------------------------~~~-- • ,o Z!l ! ... 11 A ··uarmacontrol were a sclenuncexperlment. tc u·ould h&\"e been abandoned loDgagoa.sa fallure. ·· T win victories ' t r anslate into progress for OC Proarcss meam different thin&I in different placel under different cireumatanoes. SOmeti mct it means addjq; other time• it means subtractina. Sometimes it means Cacilltatina; other times it mcana blockina. la.It week. proarct• for the On.nae Cout meant a li ttJe of each of those thinp. It meant add.in&·• ~~r ratl station in Irvine and aubt.ractina several oil drillina tracts off the couts of Newport Beach and La&una Beach. Both were real victories for the quality oflifc and the quali_!y of business here. The commuter and freiaht terminal, to be built in the "Golden TrianaLe" where the San Diqo and Santa Ana freeways join, may, in the short term, offer some mimmaJ relief to th~ traffic oonaeation that turns that stretch ofbiahway into a parkina lot d'"1n& the evening ru h. Off.ar more imponan~ however, is the lona·rangc effect. Once the ''Golden 1 rianalc" -now bereft of anything more arcbjtccturally challeQ&ing than an imgation 1y1t.cm -mcell its fate, it will be a gleaming forest of steel and &W• buildinas housing high-tech and bio-mcdical induatriaJ itii'ants. It will be a concentrated center of research and employment. . The commuter rail service into the area will allow m~y ·of the thouaand1 of people who eventually work there to park their can and take the train. Without the rail service, the additional impact on the freeways could be cripplina and the additional air pollution would take Oranac County a 1tepcloaer to the smog that piques Los Angeles. One rail line, of course, will not solve our freewa y problems. But it may buy us some time until the politically sensitive isauea of funding and building the sorely needed new freeways can be resolved. The question ofleasina tracts off the Orange Coast to oil and ps speculators took a dJ1\m&tic tum for the better -from a local perspective -last week when the state's conaressional delcption proposed legislation that offered an additional measure of protection. This, of course, is essentially the same deleaatfon -with a few additions -that only two months aao announced a compromise with the U.S. Interior Department that would have allowed exploratory drilling in several areas previously protected by a moratorium. In the ensuing 60 days, the legislators were deluged wi th complaints about the compromise, primarily complaints from Orange County officials who argued th~t our coastline deserved to be included among those that would retain their protected status. The bill is only one of scvcraJ strategics the Cali fornia deleaation has undertaken, in the event the renewed talks with the Interior Department fail. But Bill ' chrciber, aide to Rep. Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, called the proposal .. the first official recognition of the Orange County problem. If the legislation were to pass, it would be a stunning v 1ctory that can be attributed directly to the mobiliza- tion of opinion in both the public and private sectors. And the result will be a reasonably good assurance of conunued clean beaches,. clean ocean breezes, an unbroken Pacific horizon, a thriving tourist industry and a quality of life rivaled by few places in the nation. That's progress. Opml'OTTl"TXJITTIH•d rn m11 IP.-Ci are ffloH or tti• Dally Pnot~ Other vfewt- Hpreaaed on thl• page are lhOH of th.ir authora and art11t1, RNd•r c.omn1•nt 11 invlled The 0111y Pllot, PO Box 1660, Co1ta Mua, 92828. Phone ' &•~&& L.M. Bovo Physical attributes only a part of Canada's allure Has som ething to do wt t h Hf estyle, peop le living t h ere Second m a ~nes. Havina arrived at Campbell River all in one piece, we were met at the airport by Al and Marie, Ann'a mom and dad, and their "town car." Al is tall and slender, a very strona and capable man, and Marie 1s not so tall or slender, but learned to Oy her own airplane at about qc 40. They're retired now, and spend their summers 1n Bntish Col umbia, and their win- ters 1n Arizona. Their "town car" 1s a family joke. They have a very comfortable 36-foot fifth-wheel travel trailer that Al moves from place to place with a heavy-duly pickup truck. The "town car" is a Chevy Suburban, a son of ultra- hcavy-duty station wagon that Marie uses to hauJ their 23-foot cabin cruiser about. An)'1ime that J talJc to anyone who has been to Vancouver Island, one term 1$ repeated over and over: "h's beautiful up there." And so it is. I think the beauty oftbe place has somewhat to do with not only the physical ap~nce of the place, but with the lifestyle and the people. We left the airpon on a bumpy, two-lane road, and the first sian I saw said "speed limit 30 km." That translates to about 18 mph. The road was a narrow strip of asphalt cut throuah dense forest. We turned riaht on a somewhat better road. still two lanes, but much smoother, and the speed limit rose to SO km. (30 mph). This was the main nonhsouth road on the eastern side of the islands. and -the-spud lim~l-wat typical ot the whole place. There were no billboards nor any ~rash a.long the road. Canada has a bottJe law. We arrived at' Salmon Point Re- son, a fish camp/campina ground cut into the forcs1. but with as much of BILL Hann the natural surroundings left as possible. The following day, we went salmon fishing. We had, by the way, arrived in the middle of a heat wave. The local newspaper announced to the world at larac. in the headlines. tha1 the temperature had pea.Iced at SS degrees! I'd never been salmon fishin'-and 1t has been a good many years since I did any sort of fishing. l decided to do what I was told and see what happened. We left an the boat at 6 p.m., which seemed somewhat late to me, but we soon discovered that at the SOtb parallel, it doesn't get dark until about 10:30 p.m. Durina the-time we wtrc there, Ann and I cau&ht 17 salmon between us, most ofwfiich weighed 7 to·9 pounds, and one monster that was 16 pounds. Canada is, for Lack of a better word, one of the most natural places it's ever been my pleasure to visit. The people arc open and friendly, with no pretensions. The women arc very pretty, without feeling that they need to be clones of Christy Brink.Ic y or Brooke Shields. They do knuckle under to fashion to a very small degree. I saw several women with shon, pixie-like hairdos, but they wear feminine clothes and aren't overly impressed with jeans with names emblazoned on the seat. or clothina that looks as if it were dcs1aned for the Incredible Hulk. I'm happy to rcpon that the mini skin is definitely "in" all over Vancouver Island. The financial aspects of Canada are ofimponance to anyone who plans to vacation their. It was great fun to tum in a dollar at the bank and receive a dollar 36 cents in return, but we learned a few things about Canadian stores very quickly: ~me things arc less -even much less -than they arc here, bu t some things are much more. For eumple, a canon of Canadian cigarettes costs CS I 7 to CS 19. A bottle of Canadian whiskey costs CS22. One cantaloupe costs CS2.80, which works out to about $2 American. ll's a little tncky convert- ins Canadian pnces to American pnccs in your head, but the sales clerks arc perfectJy willing to stand there while you count on yo ur fingers and mumble to yourself. My overall impression was that if you stay away from lullury items like cigarettes, whiskey and cantaloupe, prices were generally lower than they arc here. We did some sightseeing while we were there and, during the middle of our trip, I was perfectly prepared to go home, buy a chainsaw and move back to Canada. II seems as if that's all you'd need to set up housekeeping. Any piece of land that you might buy would have the naturaJ building materials for at least five houses growing on it. Cut down the trees, build a house and plant a garden. What the beck, that's what our pioneers did, didn't they? II finally occurred to me. howe ver, that I'd need S9m~thiDJ to do while my garden was npenang, and un- employment is pretty high. at least in Western Canada. But, what the heck. It's fun to dream about. 1 still may do it, one of these days. We always enjoy visiting with Ann's folks, and all too soon it was time to leave. We still had about five days left on our vaca Lion, but we had to go to Ann's (horrors!) high school reunion, an4 we wanted to stop an Sacramento to visit with her sister and brother-in-law. We boarded the town car and went to the pub fo r lunch; I took one last look at the mini skirts. and we climbed aboard another airplape. A few hours later. we were in San Francisco. and 1 suffered a major case of culture shock. Colamal~t BJ/I Harvey llves la Hutlo11oa Bead. You will recognize h er horse ifyou'req~ick on t }JeTrtgger U.S. pr ssure keeping lid 11 wu cvcnC'c » I V ru n ol thr 193~ Reahzc it doesn't look that way lllll\IC',,"lhc •\thcnlUl'C'S of Robin alona the sack of the road, but it's a on Pak1· stan' s n ke effio t tlo1)<l, llUlC the hom• nddcn therein scient1ftc fact that diny snow melts u r 0) C>1tv1a de lla'lll»nd It was faster than clean snow T 11uer Ko> Roi£rr~· renowned steed. "\\hale Hara'l"nen1" 1) a fo<lC'ral , 11me puna\habk o, 11 SI0,000 llnc Q \\ h) did .\lhc1t bns1e1n rtt\1)t Ill Wt'IH \l)d,,s'! .\ th: d1tin't rcfu<ie '\od.:s were JUM tuu much troubk H1~ big IOe'i k.tpl pll~1ng hole'> tn them, he \atd In lht' hcyda) of train travel. the J11lert"n~ between a "station" and a ··1crm1nal'' was the difference be l"'ttn a 'top and the end of the hne I he d1stan\:'t1on Jasappeared "•th air tra"el tklb 4-ubrt) ol Ottit"a had been Mmd tbr ca,aht vears. One day he tnppcd over hlS dQ& and tru<:k has htlld on the floor and h11 vision came ba k If you sa" 1t on ''D)n& t)." \Ou'd SI) bunk or 'omt'iU h Ottp "1ttper 1hc badaer If ou llmputate a lq ot'habematlna btdaer. 1t "tll ha..01 even blttJ .\ itc-cl ball "'111 bounce htal\er tban a~ ball andaa&au ball -.all bounce hajhtt th.an a Nbber ball ORANGE COAST lllJNlll ... Colon11ts who fou&ht for thC' Bnt· 1sh outnumbered colon111s who fo uaht apanst the Bnush dunna the -\mencan Rcvoluuon Q ln diamond talk, what's a "porn1"? A. A hundredth of a carat. Avcraac diamond 1s two-fifths of a carat -40 point Q In what aae bracket as a woman most likely to be on a payroll" . From 4S to H lf)'OU beltevr the Stal'plen Bolb the Libra and tbe ~ao love money. but the ubra is a natural buyer, happ1ett wbt"n spendina, while the Scorpio is a natural seller. ha~ piest when tamina. Our L&nauqc man reports that s non)'m for ~n. tbe word "sty," as unknown to most yo~OJ peopk, ahhouab it's common to the vocabulann of JUll about t \'tf)'bod) ovcr-.r40. L.JL ~ 16 • l]'Niffteff Ciff •fet. ,,... JJlW . ..., r .... r .. ............ 0..,,..., .... f:!'.~ What k eeps Zia from testing nuclear device ts destreTo keep U .S. aid coming WASHINC°'tON -If Paklstan's activity of Dr. Abdul Qadar Khan, dictator. Gen. Mohammad Zia ul-the Western-trained Pa\istani who Kaq, decides tomorrow that he wants allctedly stole nuclear secrets from to explode a n\Jclear device, it will be the Dutch in the 1970s and who now only "a matter of weeks" befort he heads the nuclear bomb development can do 1t. Proaram at K.ahuta. This 1s the secret asstssment of a In the past year. Khan has di- top CIA official. tn fact. tht onl) versified his miht.aty work to include reuon Zia bas not taken the final few such ~t PfOJCClS as development UIPI and aiarted prodocina tbc Iona-of a Chinese-style hand-held anu- druded .. lllamac bomb" as his d-'re aireni\ missile. He mu Sl>fl\ds ... a ..... ,reat deal of time" on the nuclear to keep U.S. mibtary a1d Oowtni an. bomb p~m. bowt:\cr. s\lgettcd the hi&h·level CIA sourte. From hiahly senlilive intelliJcncc Zia knows that planes and other documents and other souroes we've sophisucated American weapons pieced toaether this ditco~rqina would be cut ofT1f bc tested a nuclear picture of the Pakistani nuclear device. weapon cf'fon: A candid pnvate letter ftom ~1-~•Technolosyexcban&e wath Chana dent Rcapn la t September made f tince at least 1980 1w brouaht tb11 clear to ~ -~.na that the \ Pakistan to the point where 1t could a~lear wapoos tssue could under-havt a small nuclear arxnal in less mane all that we are tryina to than two yean. Chinese tctenust ac~ve." The JM'Hide~t \U,ed Zi~ to bav. t.n to Kahuta to study ~ Umtt the uran.ua.m enrichment btlna ccnuif\Aae technaque that Pakistan done at lhe PatiscaniJ' beavll)r au.a.rd· tote m>m the Europeans a dec:ade ed Dla1u at Kaluna to the 5 percent of .,o. And there ts evidcMC that China U-235 ~ry tOr ml!.Ctor f'Uel. pve Pak.istan infonnataon about the Tbb wo'°'1 be well belo• the actual dtsip of a Hiroshima-1zcd ~rccnlQf needed for weapons. Last bomb that the Cluncx ha•t su<USS- Novcmt>er, tht Pa.k>stani fort\ln Mly ttsttd. mnu tCf v1s1\ed utunaton and What makes this pan1tu.l.arl> ass~ Reaean that tbe cnndunent alamuaa 1 that the bomb ..,.ou1J be lkl was ~I'll Up( oe u bit bad \&l'led. ldn.l foi deli Vft'Y b> F-l 6s -40 of Our antdl~ toWttS C'Olllitm whach Pakt \UI ,, bu)'lnJ from the that the Pabstaru auckar Pf011*m ru&ed tali has '' ~ d .,-n SHK'C Reqan's •The Paka!tan1s· o~n nuclear letter fl\(> ke to the utuauon •~ the bomb 1 d&nbcd a~ ~'1"U<le hut • Jaci AIDEISOI .md DAU VA N A TT A cffcctJvc. It consists of a sphere of enriched urantum about 6 inches in diameter. suspended within a steel sphe~ about _ 13 inches in diameter Th.is 1n tum is surrounded b_y mort than 100 pounds o( conventional "shaped CbaJ"leS," and the whole dis.astC1' is encased in curved metal plates to form a 21-inch sphcrt. •Pakistan's ~b builders have tritd to modernize their wapon thro\.llh the illepl acquisition of Wettem matenafs. They su~cd 1.0 buya.naa hlah·spttd wedish X ·r&) machine that IS CJUC1al to the im- plosion tC'Cbntquc they're us.ina. But the ac~u1s1uon was discovered in time to stop delivery of the O.ptralina manual and the dispatch to ls.lamabld or a SwMish expert who was supposed to hdp \b.enf use 1he machine •Perhaps mo t scar) of all IS Llbya 's involvement lo the Pa.kist.an1 bomb. Libya's pettodollan have helped finance \be ctron. ud the CIA is alraid Pak.J.sta.n would be oblieed to share 1ls nuclnr t.tcll.DOIOIY With Lbya as compcn .. tion .lad~ Utl.Dt* Vu .tna ..,.. 6T9fllatftl ~ PBTLL18 8CBLA.n. T cola•ntst PHYLLIS ScHLAFLY Arms control a failed attempt U.S. gave up its superiority. gained nothing in return "Oh, but ii wiU tntcrferc with arms control!" cry the liberals at every event that might cast a cloud over the Rea~-Gorbacbev meeting in Gen- eva an November. But the real truth 1s that arms control 1s already a fat.lure and we should admit 1t. Ounng the dozens of conferences over the Last 20 years, in which our announced objective has been arms control, 1hc military balance shifted from U.S. superiority to Soviet su· periority. If arms control were a scientific experiment, at would have been abandoned long ago as a faalurt and, worse, as life-endangering to those who believe in it. The SALT I Aveements of 1972 were our magnammous offer on the altar called "arms control .'' The Un1tcd States agreed to abandon the strategic nuclear superiority on which our national security had been based for the preceding 25 years, and we offered the Soviets the oh ve branch of nuclear parity. But that didn't satisfy the Soviets. They went mto SALT I negotiations with nuclear superionty as their goal, including a first-strike counterforce capabifity and a strong defensive system. They used arms control as a tactic 10 achieve that Objective. Dunng the decade following SALT I, U.S. defense spending decli ned until it 1s only 5 percent of our gross national product. Soviet military spending, on the other hand, steadil y increased to become 20 percent of the U.S.S.R.'s gross national product. During this period the Soviet Union spent three times more on strategic nuclear forces than did the United States. That's why President Reagan. using electronic chans. told a nationwide television audience 1n 1981, "The truth of the matter as that the Soviet Union docs have a definite margin of supenority -enough so there .is risk and there 1s what I have caJlcd a window of vulnerability.'' Today the Soviets have four times more strategic nuclear dchvery ve- hicles and warheads than when SALT nctotiations bern. and they arc on the verge o major def cnsi vc capabilities. Thrce-founhs of the Soviet nuclear systems arc less tban fi ve years old. The United States now has 8,000 fewer nuclear weapons than when SALT began and we have reduced our mcgatonnagc at least threefold. Threc-founhs of our weapons arc more than IS years old. The Soviets agreed to enter into the SALT I negotiations and to sign the SALT I ABM Treaty an 1972 primar- ily to stop our ABM program which was then read) for deployment. The Soviets 1n 1972 were deeply e~gCd in a crash program to catch up with us m offensive nuclear weapons. They couldn't afford another crash pro- Jrlm on ABM. so they used treaties rn~tcad of technology to catch up with us. In 1962. the United States had nuclear su penority over the Soviets on the order of 8-to-I. It as obvious that the Soviets could not have achieved today's nuclear superionty o'er us Without two concurrent movements: they built additional weapons at a rapid rate, and we draaged our feet. Our foot dragging was done in the ~a!'flc of arms ~ontrol. U.S. poh· t1c1ans sought the illusive tqal of arms control much as the medieval knights souaht 1he Holy Grail. Only those who pursued arms control were considertd "pure" cnouah (pure, as 1n Sir Galahad) to receive respectful treatment from the media on foreign and defense issues. h's clear to anyone who hu the wtt to see that the primary and pcrbap~ sole reason why Gorbachev 1s aoing to Geneva is his attempt to stop tht deployment (and even the research) of our anti-missile technology of the 1980s, namely, SDI. Arms control Utttaes are always a bid deal for the United tatcs: (a) the) doo't restrain the Soviets. \ttlbO use amb1auous laniuage and loopholes to conunue bu1ld1na whatever they already had planned. (b) they do rcstra.in us because our tate Depart- ment bands u to the mterptttauon most advantaacous to the Soviets and (c) the Soviets (as Pre11dcnt Reapn has formally rt-poned) an 1n manlve violation of the trcallcs. '.Ye should be hone t enouah to admit that the ObJectJ,•e of arms control cannot be l'a(hed b) the routc1 •'t have traveled 1n the last 20 )'Hn. Out obJecttvc should not be anns control an "I) 1t bouJd be ~mencan 9tC'Unt} and indcllcn-dcna n,w. SctJ.afl1 ,. • .,-....,r1 ~I. ~----------------------------------------------------,_.Q..--------------------.?.:-----~~------~----tr----------------~---l r~-------L Space expo opens today More than 3,000 manufacturina cng1necrs, technologists and CA· C('Utt vt>i. arc expected to auend Space Tech, the Space Technology Con· fen:nce and Exposition, when it debuts at the Disneyland Hotel Convention Center today. The event as the first of its lund to foc us on the Unated States' proan:ss an space as 11 ~late to engincenng technologies and industnalilataon. Runnitli through Wednesday, it 1s being held to famalio.r ize manufac- turing finns worldwide with appli· cations for space tcehnoloay. Nine engmcerina orpnizations arc sponsorina Space Tech, includina the Society of Manufacturing Enaineers scrvina as secretariat. the Aerospace & e1ccironic Systems Society of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Enaincers, the American Society for Metals, the Amencan Society for Quality Control, the American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers, the Computer & Automated Systems Association of SME, the Computer Society of IEEE. the fndu strial Elcc· tronicsSocaety of IEEE. and Rooottc~ International of SME. The conference, fcatunng some 7 S speakcn in 13 baJf-day technical sessions, will focus on recent develop- ments in artificial intelliaence and robotics, space structures, l\Jbitataon. communications. stmulation and software, material applications, ma· teriaJ processana. composite , and auidanoe, controls and sensors. Exposition houn are noon to 6 p.m. today and Tuesday, and noon to 4 p.m. Wednesday. -mi111mm~------------~--- NEW YORK (APJ -The foll~wlno 1111 •Plows lhe New York Stock Exchenoe slocks and werrent1 that have oone uo the most Jnd down the most baud on percent of Chenot reoerdltU of volume lor Frldev. \'.tNo •~urllle~ trading btlOV' $2 •rt ln~I· -ed. Net end percenteoe Ctl•ll9ft 1re 1111e d erence betwMn the ortvlous dos no orlce end Fr'ldev's 2 o.m. orlee. U,.$ Leal crit 11~ i l.~ m~ + ~ ~ ~ 'le ~ ~ ·= 1'1 ~l·~J~~: t. ~:irn~, 1n iom to wt .• or~J> tMOOCP -liilliliiijiililiiiil~------- RICO .. DITIONID COPY MACHINll ~46-3875 RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. For The Rest ol Your life 1922 HARBOR BLVD , COSTA MESA-548-1156 440urly Nelly's" OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER Monday thru Friday 11 AM to 9 PM INTIRIST PAID MONTHLY • FULLY SICUllD covernment securtttn • Fast Uquldlty 12·36 months Bonus Rates on Jumt>o Accounts NRG FINANCIAL ---.-... (714) 759-Q4{14 ,/ Coming Sunday October 20, 1985 In the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT t•- • -~--__,,_ -...... -- A Tribute to the Orange Coast's SUCCESSFUL WOMEN in Business Or an~ Co11t DAILY PILOT/Monday,_ September 23, 1916 A.7 T t C lr.ln ~t C l•H r-. "'u1.. '-e,qul Bu sine~~ P·l>lt','111.Jn.il<i Ot l ~ This Is the Actual Size Ad For best reproduction. a clear black and white photo o f any size can be used Your message w ill accom- pany the picture in the space If you choose not to publish a oicture. fill the space with your message '\ 1• , • 1 \\ I ,r-' t'I \l'\C''~ ) \. k {\lt'lc! ~II :~r1•1 L ~ I 1 • 111."r •rt'a wumC'n in Daily P1101 " !'i... ' ,, 1 • \pt'1..1.i, mhutc c' 'I •• l.11 c i. 1•h< r •• eJ1t11..1n \ l . P·, "". ·" \\ umt"r ' .ln C''\CC'pt11..1n,tl ""~ •• ·, 1ntr••dult' .o ne~ ,11 ,, 1.. ( '"'''"1.1.tt' t\1 the pt°'•plC' 11! d c- l k t o.'< c 11.1\t ill t11 h1..mlH 4warJ, I ' t\t f1 t' (\\.IT 1..\lnfr10\ltll>n' 11 ' t "~ ,1mer .1.lutC' n<.1t11.. C'' \\ f•<" •u.1..1 u)lllll.'1 b\ t~O 1nch~~ till! "th .i r..,1lf1l \\lU prtl \.tJC' ThC' .i\f ,1t eil1.h n11t11 c· "1.nl\' S\c,·• [),1n: rn" ht1n~ p.Hl 111 thl'- 'P<'' ':u ,,he-rt ,uH: , •pp1..1rtun r P t.i.iltn<" f\11 ec.t'r' 1n.~ 'P"u:· " \hir.J.;i., \ )1..:"hcr I \ PIC'.i~<' m.l1l 111 hnn '"" rtillr pllt1t11 11 nJ .h h1r'\('fl f'fl:\ :.i THE ORANGE COAS T Daily Pilat 330 Weet S.y St. Coate M•••· Ca , 1211t 642-5678 • I ... ,.. , -m· ,_., ~ln-,tii: f • 111111'1 OLISlll Plllll DtY l'I JM• UU CM Stock prices increase NEW YORK (AP) -Stock pnces rose sharply in active trading today in response to the dollar's steep decline on world markets. The dollar's slide - its worst one-day loss since being devalued in 1973 -was triggered by the announocment Sunday that the United States, Britain, West Germany, Fra nce and Japan would wo rk in concert in a bid to lower the dollar's value. The effort is meant to curb growing protec· tionist pressures caused by the dollar's strength, which economists say has led to the record U.S. trade deficit. WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Orn NEW YORK (AP) S.O. 23 Pr NEW YORK (AP) Set>. 23 ~m"· dv~;::' s inw:-1~ ~=~w~1 NYSE LEADERS GoLD QuoTE S Dow JoNES AVERAGES METALS QuoT£s NASDAQ SUMMARY famous la b<ils ... ncwp:iirt. btoch 't'I ~ehion eltind., Wt/&t't ~o ~ V\\togr&. 1001 \lrCZabM:x:d bl\<1 '21}'2Ce ~7.) ptoodlmo sz~~leNi~.et8/30't 9~3 mon tilT'\.I fh 10 t.o9 . .!Mlt.urdcy l0 to6 e. &vndoy noon to!> TV LI STI NGS £\If.NINO -l'OO-·~OH OJ NF\. FOOTMU. HM'TTOHMT OMATUT AMfllCAH HEAO TMME'S COIJllPNIV Dff'IBT STAOKES .... MJIOA'T fllllOJECJ UNN£ME <*NEWS ..CHEWS LAYfANE TAIPP FAMILY tia.Wl'S COURT MOYIE t t "Reno And The Doc" ( 1983) Kenneth Welsh, Henry Rlmtf -8:15-cm MIGHTY MOOSE ANO ™E ®ART'ENACK KID I ~=·:-COMFORT JIJJ/PAfll(JY MACNB. I i..EHRER NEWIHOtJR I =OORAPHIC VISION WHEEL OF FORTUNE IHOCKWAVES Of AAMAGB>OON !~Of HOT SEAT t t t "My FIY001e Wilt" ( 1~) ClfY Gran1, Irene Dunne -7:00- 0BSNEWS ENTERTAINMEHT TONIGHT HAWf DAYS AGAIN DAUAS NlWS THAEFS COMPNIV WHEEL Of FORT\JHE BUBINESS~ P.M. MAGAZINE HEADUNE CHASERS PfWSE THE LORD HOT SEAT HOTLINE MOYIE t • "Roadhouse 66" (198-41 w1uem Dafoe, Judge Reinhold ONCE UPON A MIOHIGHT OflEA/lr{ (%)MOVIE t *1~ "I Married A Shadow" \ 1983) Nathalie Baye, Francia Hutter -7:30- 120H™ETOWH PRICE IS RIGHT WHArS HAPPEHINOlf u•A•S""H NEWl YWB> GAME WlJ>, WILD WORLD Of A*W.S ID MOTORWEEK (]) SAN DIEGO AT LARGE Cit M:IPAADY e MOYIE tt "Smuogle< s Island ' (1951) Jeff Chandl«, EYetyn Keyes FRAOOLE ROCK -8:00- • (])SCARECROW AHO MRS. KN) D Qt TVS BLOOPERS AHO PRACTICAL JOKES 8 ALFRED HITCHC()Q( PRESENTS Ci) JOt<EA'S WILD Cf) COMEDY BREAK WITH MACK """ JAMIE Meredith Bazter Birney and Michael Grou take a bicycle tour of London on .. Family Tlea" tonight at 9 on NBC, Channel 4. lH.1MOVIE * *'"' "Ten From Your Show Of Shows' (1973) Sid Caesar. Imogene Coca S. MOVIE • Jaws 3 ( 1983) Dennis Quaid, Bess Armstrong -8:30-D ALFRED HITCHCOCK PAESEHTS 0 TIC TAC OOUGH LOVE BOAT CD P M. MAGAZJNE -9:00- tJ MOVIE ''Izzy And Moe (Premtete) Jacille GleaSon. Art Carney O QJJ MOVIE "Family Ties Vacatt00.. (Premtere) Me<ed1th Baxter Btrney, Michael Gross D ALFRED HITCHC()Q( PRESEHTS D HARDCASTLE AHO MCCORMICK ONEWS CD DYNASTY fD QUEST FOR THE KILLERS €fi> Bl.ACK MAGIC @)CHARGER REPORT al) PRAISE ™E LORD mBOLD ONES (!JMOVIE * "Pnvate Scl\Ool ' ( 1983) Phoebe Cates, Betsy Russell ZJMOVIE * * * * "King Kong" ( 19331 Fay Wray, Robert Armstrong -9:30-D ALFRED HITCHC()Q( PfeEHTS MOVIE ** * "Inside 081$y Clover" {1966) Natalie Wood. Christopher Plommer @)ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT ClMOVIE * t •.; Spjil Image .. ( 1982) Michael O'Keefe, Karen Allen fij)MOVIE * • "Richard Pry0< · Here And Now" (1983) -10:00- D CD «I> NEWS D EYE OH LA. OMOVIE • ''r 'Bruce Lee The Man, The l eg. end"(1976J fD COHNECTIONS: AH Al TERNA TE VIEW Of CHANGE €fi> INTERNATIONAL EDfT10N ®l HAAOCASTlE AHO MCCORMICK Sll BEHN> ™E SCEHES m RACING FROM ASCOT ~ MOVIE • * t '; 'My Favorite Year' (1982) PeterO'TOOle. Mark Linn-Baker -10:15-m RELIGIOUS AAOGRAMMINO -10:30- U NEWS m CAPfTOL JOUAHAl al) HEAL.ING FOR TODAY 0 MOVIE • * 'Boarding Sctiool" ( 19831 Nas- la&Sla Kinslu -11:00- 1) a Cl)@) a NEWS 8 CAROON'S COMEDY CLASSICS CD WKRP IN CINCIHNATI «I> BARHEY MILLER LUXURY THfATHS MOVIE t• "Klpp«l>Mg" (1982) JoM Al· bulny, Allton StMdmln -12:00- • ALFRED HITCHCOCK PfUEHTS 8 WAHDflEU &STERS AHO FAMl.Y ~er~ l100cLue . -12:15- MOVIE * * "C.H U 0 .. ( 1984) JoM Heald. O....Stern ©)MOVIE *'" "A Night In Heaven" (19831 Cllflstophet Atkins, Lesley Anne Warren -12:30-D at LATE HIGHT WITH OAVIO l.ETTEAMAH 8 RAT PA1"0L (!) lNfE GREY THEATRE I) COMEDY TONIGHT l~NEWS ®l ENT'EAT AINMEHT TONIGHT G!l PRAISE TIE LOfU> -12:40-11 Cl) MOVIE u •.; "Something So R19ht (1980) Patty Duke As11n James FarenllnO -1:00-DMOVIE • * * "Hedda" ( 1975) Glenda Jack- son, Timo1hy West 8 AT THE MOVIES Ci) MOVIE •••.; "Assignment: Munich" (1972) RlcMrd Buetlart, Roy Scheider (!)MOVIE * * "King of the Bln<:lns" ( 1947) G~­bert Roland, Ange£a Greene G)MOVIE tU~ "Guadllcanal Diary· (IS.3) WilllMI Bendix, Lloyd Nolan eMOVIE • t * "McCabe And Mrs Miller" ( 1971) Warren Beatty, Julie Christle ®!NEWS '1'PAUlRYAH 1: * t "Humcane" (19791 Mia Farrow. Jaon Robards. WALK· INS * fun r-M111n11 Sllowinti * O'H Y SZ.15 Unltn Noted DRIVE -INS :~~~c; I NATlONAl GtoGRAPHIC QUEST FOR THE KILLfRS PfWSE ™E LORD MOYIE **~ "Boshn Loose" (19811 R!Gh· ard Pryor. Cicely Tyson ''Avery entertaining film. Comedy of a high order." -\.1 .... l I'' I \'In ... , ~~ \()fl/\ //\fl .... R •. A PARAMOUNT PICTURE ~ NOW PLAYING lllCA COSIA MfSA LAGUNA HlllS ... Jt"'\ tj1,, p UI fJAi·d I " 11 .. ••0 ... ~d S?9m~ ,.1,,. . "' ' '"""' ~ H: .... IUfllA ,Allk fOlllllAIN V,\~lfl '"-' 116" u•....-• .,. "A 1 I IA lACllM IUQt 'Y.>1499• I~'• .'\N ~ llw.1tlb So.ti> C....1 COSTA 111($A lllVINI 011111 f O•JtO\ ( ~" 11 tj1111•''' . 1, OMllGI t• " •lN •••· 4"• llll'. C-·•f3' 7\~1 ., ........ ,(:, .. ,, •• °"' ...... ~,.,J "'CREATOR' IS AN AISOLUTELY CAPTIVATlNG MOVIE. I REALLY LOVED IT." -Gene Shollt, . THI TODAY SHOW, NIC·TV .... ptObabty 11'9gat, potentlaffy •*i*N••.ond~ cr(ll\li. •N,..,.~,....._ ... (!I. 'f3:·1 l\ L Ir Jf'vfR•\f\,; ll»I< ,..., ~ f 0 .. - NOW PLAYING ...,. -·•111•0 "-... .. .. ,.,...e:i,-..~ .... tili ~, \1'\1 ..-.Wftlfl I t P --"'~.. -..... ....,., ....... ~,,.. ,.,. ' ·~ .. .... i.> .. I. ~ ........ ""° Mlltl-~llllU•-•• IMMll ,..._ ......... ~ .... -..... , __ c•11• .... ••11 0• "" ............... _ ~--~­ll•• ._ ........ ~ ..... C11T••u•·--,...,...,.f .., - .. ... I CITY CEnTEA D 634 2SSl I 1901 J ORANGE I Mt11opol1tan ST. E.LJ90'S P:IRE Pl) t :20 Plu s! Co-H I( Breakfast Club IA) Sho ws At 7 1~ IM..ACK CAULDRON (PG ) S l'IOW I Al 7·00 &. I :!>!> QlltlE.llUllS CPG~1 S) RA1190 II (fO t :20 Ptu•I c=o-Hlt t : 15 Ptu•I Co·Hlt Ol'lo stbu ston (POI RHI Ge nius (PG) Sh ow• A t 7 05 Shows A l 7:10 C RIEATORf'Q 12·s o 3 ·10 S-:1 5 7 :SS &. 10:15 NE WE.K'S ... A-. ..... (f'QJ AT 12:00 2 :0 0 4 ·0() 6 :00 t :OO .. I O·OO aACKTOTHE FUTURE (f'Q) 1 . I 0 l 30 S·50 t tO 1. 10 3 0 AGNES OF GOD fPG·1S) 1·20 3 ·25 5 l 5 7:45 .. t .55 COllPlllOMIS ... G POSITIONS (JO 1.15 3 :20 S:3cJ 7 :4 0 &. t :SO stL V£RA 00 (f'Q· I J) AT 12'1)0 2 :4 0 S.20 7 55 &. IO· 25/ln 70MM JTADIUm tJ TIUUllCEllS (RJ P lu1 Co-H I! R un Away (PG·13) ftAMeC> fl'lllST a&..OOD PART II (llJ Phu Mad Mu lleyond Thundord omo (PG·13) •H:AL QUetUS (PGJ Plu1 Co-H it My Science Project (PG) PEEWEZ'S~ ADVDnURE~J Plu1 Police Academy Part II (P G-1 31 TEE" WOLF lPGJ Plus Co·Hll Godzilla (PG ·13) BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Ptrform1ncn Monday 1 Th1u S.turdly (Except Holidlys & Spec. En•ttmtntsJ 1P?SA~·r•]1 ll .Puu1u 11sa0/fec•l1Y s c .. ,.-~ DOlH STIHO STfVlN 5'1l!aHO l'tll$lNTS IACK TO THI fUTUH 11et1 IJ1>0 21SO 1110 7l•S I010S YIAl Of THI 0«AG0N c11 h OO ltlJ t°'110 AMlltlCAN NINJA 111 .... l U COMNOMl$1NG '°$nlONS 111 I 00 )100 UO 7.00 "00 I I 00 AK W (t',.tt'r South (! t>IU4 llll /h rel!y fl Doi A - u . unu TIRRUTIW (N ) I J~JO •.tlJ ., ... SUMMH HNTAl IN 1 , •• 1 •• .0 , .. ,0 fllGHT NIGHT Ill ............ tn"URN Of THI llVlHG OIAO 191 .... ,, .. It ... LA MIRADA SUMMH HNTAl 1,., , .. ,. ...... OHOS TIU STIRS CN I 11JO ., •• 1Chlt THI 5TUff 1e1 U1>0 112! 41JO t<)O 1110 10:10 HAL GINIUS CN ) a-1• .... l.f. unu TIHUTIW , .. , , ...... JJ).I •• ,, THI EMlllAlD POttHT t•> J1M t1t i PAU llDH 111 1110 ,,,, 101 ... GATEWAY OIDIAl IY INNOCENCE ,_,,, 1210 Jt40 •1U ... l :>O 10:>0 PH WU'S 110 AOVENTUll CN I •• Oellly 12.>0 J Jt 4·10 a.IS l:IJ lO:U AMlltlCAN NINJA 1•1 td I •1IJ t1JJ t.At OttlY hU UMl().flUT M.000'All11 111 ) ••• ,. ... ,. ... , ON\f ~·· ocxn 1nuo IT1VIN l"ILIHO l'lllllNU IACK TO THI fUNH c,.1 I JtSt )olS t1U 1100 I01U CIEATOl c., 1-00 ) It ,.,. ,,., ' .... *PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES• * CINE-Fl SOUND ! At t!Mst symllols ... , sound dirKt to your AM '" * r1dio. If no 1td10 with eccmory po11t1on, llnnt your own AM pot11llla. OPtN Start Dusk Chlldrtft Under 12 ALWAYS Fiii 1) IUMMll llNTAl ,,.. 2) VOlUNTUU t.i i ) OHOSTIUSTIU !NI YIAI °' fNi DIAIOOH II) nnntN °' THI LMNO DUD 1• l~im@A!I .,..,,.. .............. Mat TO ntl PUNll'"' llYIMT •U COf w THI IN"• CHILDlllN Of THI COltN 11t ' BUENA PARK TIANCIU ,,..,, IUNAWAY 1-111 CllATotl 1111 IT1CK 111 ITIWNlf'tll ... ,....M'I Wit TO 1'MI NNll 1Nt OUMUNS rNt loHABRA ......... ... -. . . 1.lllVllADO 1-••1 J.AMlltCAH NIKIA 111 i .DllllT WAlllOI re1 IUMMll llNTAL !NI VOlUHTllU1111 T'HI ST\IP' 1111 CHtLDltPf Of THI COIN 11t "' Wll'I alO AOYIHTUll CN1 mN wou"' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monda!, Septem~ 23 198' If you don't like children, you shouldn't have them DEAR ANN LANDERS: I JUi.t returned from shopping and apan l wi tnessed motheri. and fathers Jttk.- ang their youna children around telling them 1n loud and threaten1n1 tones to shut up or .. you'll act another spank.mg." ~nd "hurry up or 1'11 leav(' vou he~ ... AllN UllDERS He looked at me and asked, "Ot<I you pay for them?" I rephcd. "Of cour\C .. He sh<H ba1. k, "Then they a.re yours Forget 11 " r hat taught me a le~n Face up to v.hutever as bothenng )OU and gee n over with. What a tool I was to fret "llbout a "problem" thal turned out to be no problem at all -Sm1hng a Lot in Kentucky If the~ parents behave like th1<; where dozens of people ob~rve them , can you imagine what they do 1n the pnvacy of their homes'> ano~er letter oo ~e aobject: DEAR SMILING: Wlaal a Dice story -u .d wbt a sweet man yoa lulwt Lucky yoo! Children cost a lot of money. Tbt) demand a great deal of tame and energy and they rob parents of their fr'C'Cdom. Couples who don't want to make sacnflces, and do so lovingly , should not bring youngster'> into the world. I realize for many 11 1s too la te, but those who are childless and debating the issue, I beg you to listen. Don't ha ve kids 1fyou aren't walling to give up a lot. There are too many abui.ed children already. We don't need more. -Concerned an Columbia. Mo. DEAR ANN LANE>E RS· (an )OU stand another saga about faJsc teeth'1 I went wnti Ute man to whom I am no\\< mam cd for several months I was ~luctant 10 tell him that I had worn dentures ~incc I was 21 (lost all m) 1ceth in an accident). Finally, I decided I simpl y had to face the problem. and J rehearsed my line!> carcfull) I told him, '"John. I believe I should tell you that m} teeth are-not my own" · • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS J read a bumper sucker an "Je.,., Jc~y that wal> both funn) and v.1se Plea~ pnnt 11' "Don't lend Mone~ to >Our fnends. ll causei. amnesia " -One Who Dad It. DEAR ONE: I have dooe It, too, but I never got atlffed. I was lacklu tbu 1man. r advise olil~rs to g~t u IOU . DEAR CONCERNED: I bope every parent wbo j erked bis cblld aro11nd today wlll take your comments to heart. Orange County's Dlsclplllle should be firm bat centle. Children tend lo treat otben H tbey themselves a re rre.ated. You cu be sure tbat child abusers were abused by tbetr parents -and so it goes, from generation to generation. • • • DEAR ANN LANDE RS: This as for "Pearly White," who 1s afraid to tell her boyf n cnd she has false teet h Go ahead and tell him. It won't be news. He already knows. I'm on the other side ofthef ence. M)· boyfnend wears dentures. I knew 11 the fi rst time we kissed. His lovemaking 1s wonder- ful but I wanted to }ell. "Open your mouth and kiss me. I don't care 11 your teeth fall out!" If two people love one another 11 doesn't matter. I hope this will give courage to the &1m1d ones out there who are se tting up tb1s art1fic1al (and senseless) barrier. -West Poi nt, Mass. DEAR W.P .: " ... and the trutb shall set you free." Amen, Slater. Here's edwards NEWPORT 644-0760 NEWPORT CENTER BETWH H JA~BOREl & lilACARTHUP • TUii .. , ITml ... ,_ .............. ,11 ...,..,,NI. edwards u oo 673-8350 H(WPQRT Rl wO AT w1()Q U DO .....,.., II , .... _.,. ............. ........... , ''ftm." (IJ ........ , .. edwards SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546·2711 BRISTOL & SUNflOWE F; COSTA MESA ' ' . . .~ ... NTarrM.I "CIUTll" (II 1:41.HI. ....... ., 11111 CDCf" (K-U) ll•llUH ··~· (N-111 , .... "" t:a, I: 1L 11: 11 edwards BRISTOL 540· 7444 BR~TOlATMACARTHUR SANTAANA "THl..,"INJ .. "IUl __,.. IPCI ....... "r. ITUff" (I ) llM,1141, lflH ''TIAICfU'' , ... la) 1111. .... 1"21 "IT. fl.111'1 fllf" l•I Wt. 1MI "U.VfUll" (PC· 111 1121 eawardSCINEMA 546·3f02 HARBOR BOULEVARD AT AOAMS COSTA MESA ......... , .. , ''1111 • TW -. m11 .,.. __.. (II M l, llM edwards HARBOR TWIN 631 -350f HARBOR SOUl[VARO AT WILSON COST UllE~ ''UCI n m "'° ~ ftnm" fPCI "CIUTll" Ill .... "IW. ...... (PSI ..... 111Jt ''T'IASf:ll'' (K-Ul "'" ..... lltJt "wuatm·· (K-11) , ............ , .. .... Tl 1111, llM ''Pff·lft'f'I Uft.._ .. WI (N l "Cl• I IM Niil." wt. lltll(I ) edwaras MESA 646·5025 NEWPORTBOUlEVAROAI 19"HS1 COSTA MESA ·--.1n.,. PAil !"Ill lc11, .... tu aun ,,.. "YUIWTW ....... Ill .... edwards HUNTINGTON 848·0388 !H A( H BOUl £ VAAO 'I MAIN' Ell •S "' 'N'LH(, ·oN Btac H "18..,... "'C:IUTll" 111 ... ,.... ......... edwards FOUNTAIN VALL EV 939.' soo 8MOO• .,,,A\' a• I O•NGE R ' ,, N' a", a I , ........... 1 .. ... '?llZZrl _ .. ... , .. <•> ''ftf.wtn ••at•" wttN ) 'Clfm I I I,_, ... ..... Mlllll l 1 .. .... _ ... '"' ....... easy listening radio station KDCM t D!l.1 FMSTERED ... (I ) "IUl .... '(Nt .... ,... ll • I TUii...., ITDH "~'IN-lit .. "h it. 1111 "UCITIM FU'r." (NJ ...... 111. lNI "rtl.9Ttfll'' (I) 1..- "llZVlfl lflTAl" INI '"'· 11111 edwards WOODBRIDGE 551 20655 llARRANI A l•Al<I< WA• f A-, T 111 l Jl ,/f I• •R J IN( "PH·WH'I Uftllm" ..,. '"' "l tfl Wlll" IPSI IM. Ill II "ST. fl.SI Fm" Ill 1 ... ,..,. "SllWfHOO" fl"C-111 .. ,. "fllll ATTUC· Tm .. 1•1 ''IUlll" '1ltl l'ttll.f "CIUTOll" Il l ~·· JIM, ti ll I : II, 1111, .... ,,..IJI '"'· lt4' IOtll edwards SADOLEBACK 5812 5880 EL TORO ROAD AT ROCK FIELD El TORO "IUl emus'' !PSI ......... ......... (..CJ ..... ''TUICfU'' ,,._,., .._Tl M •. l lM, 111»0 ...... LOVE" IPC· 111 ..... ""· 11111 ·-u.e 11T -t'' Ill ... "Tllf IT1lff" (II ..... ,.,,. "WfflD IClflC(" fPC-111 1111.1 ... ·~"(Pel .... "TUI ft.f" (!"Cl 1111 "Vll.u.THIS .. (II . ........ edwards EL TORO 591.9soo El TORO RO AT IWINP£ AK<.P• \/A Cl TO RO "fMfUl.D f.nl" fll l lM, 11111 "lll.VfUIO" (PS-111 1"6 "PH-lftf'I Uftllm" ""''" .. ~. Blll" (!"Cl 1• 1tlll "1T. ELMO'S Fiil" Ill "llUlfUT CUJI" l•I 'fATAl ll • 1m 1t A TTUCTIOI" "COC." (PC-11 •• T, t. ll!U ••46, ..... 11111 edwards VIEJO TWIN 830·6990 SAN DIEGO !'WY TO LA 'Al I CHlllSAHTA MISSIOfol VIEJO oanm OUllSIT "r. mTJI c.FICUIUTill" (Ill llJI. l1M. 1a120 ... TU-.1'11"1 '-..ullY INllC81Cf" (PC-111 .... ""· ,... . 'fTtl n•u 'CIUT9" &•I ,.., ,,, ....... "IM:ll TO Tllf fU'TW" lNI lt1M. Jlll, l1M 1 ... , .... 1141, Mt edwards SOUTH COAST LAGUNA 497-1711 SOUTHCOAST HWY ATIAOAOWAV ,A~UfolA BtAC" "Cl• 11111• Nial." ltJI 111 "YIUITftlS" (II} ''"' 111 ,, "JUI. ••1111 . ...CS) ''lllAI IQU .,.,,_ .. a ... lllH(K-U ) eawards CINEMA WEST 891 .3935 l STllllHSTlR Al GOlOf NW(S T WES TMINSTHI 4 RMI ... , IT'llfl "UCI Tl Tll FUTim" IPCI -.Tl "11. WI "TEfl Will" IPCl .,.. '~I IUTAl" IPCI 1 ... ,..,. .,....,,.. '"MCI n t11 mm··.,.. ...... lftf" (N-11) ....... II II CllCI" IK-111 -.n 1:11 •1• ltl~·-.. ,. ,.._Ml ._ 1•11 HCATim'' .... 11 -......, ... l'IL....._..1 ••111 -.na • • f THE FAMILY CIRCUS "Miss Bunn said that 'cause today's my birthday, you're allowed to make cupcakes for the class." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson f;f;~ /1an&a.i~ Q1taurclJ"lt "You misunderstand! This is where yuppies eat ... not puppies!" DRABBLE ' by Tom Batluk DOONE8BURY l BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) ) "The tide muat•ve gone out while I wa1 1noozlng." DENNIS THE MENACE ' I J I u by Hank Ketcham ~EME\1£.R 1 ~1 TO 6f.i Cl.o?f. IO u:t.NCN l'U..~~ OMf. MlU(:- !>AAKf. AAO IWO !>TQAIU&. ~ 'H~ by Kevin Fagan "°' 'tQJ "' S4L,IJUST (,¥lOJpff) '1()1) I Off! BLOOM COUNTY PEANUTS TUMBLEWEEDS J}/; ·~/ .. BRIDGE ) MV 8ROTI4ER 15 601N6 TO BE GONE nus AFTERNOON by Gary Trudeau Jeff MacNally by Berke Breathed #OJ. f#ltP(JN Me ltJlf m'>W61D SHMEAttme fl/! lhtKATflfM AfMrJ /6E.fi, Jv-I ' ..__ °i).! (.\. ~ by Charles M. Schulz I '1AVE 10 BEAGLE -SIT! by Lynn Johnston by Tom K. Ryan I SOME1)Mes WISH WIS HAPrl'T ~'710 KIO(·IW~ FflPM SU~ VAL.£; SANl~~ltJM. GARFIELD ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ [ HAiE WALKINC:I TMROUGH TALL W EEl75 (/.~~~-0 MOON MULLINS FLAT FL :TTERY... ® IHi ,0'fl1ER k lt>S ,ALL <e;or RAISES oN TH~IR ' ,ALLOWANCES JUDGE PARKER _ __.., 6.A.M WANTS 'tOlJ 'TO KNOW THAT "1'0U ~~STOPS AT JU~ ~Ke'R'S WON'T HAVE TO \NORRY AeouT ™CSE CRANK CALLS,.-----._-.., ANYMORE I HOME TO TeLL HIM r--""T-.__.... Ml! ~ DtSCOV'EAED WHO MAOE THE IWONYMOVS PHONE c.AU.S,T'He JUOGE ~9'r8H6reUS ~THl!li'INe I .. by Jim Davis Q.1-East West vulnerab le, as outh you hold: +K106 <:7 K9 o K763 +J854 The bidding has proceeded: North Eaat South J <:7 Obie ? What action do you take'! A. -Your choices are obvious - either a redouble or a bid of one no trump. A redouble suggests that you might want to double the op· ponents, which is certainly not the case if they bid spades. Therefore, we would opt for a free bid of onf' no trump, which shows a fair hand. '! Whal do you bid now? A. -You would like to makt> some jump bid Lo show your s trength, but all are nawed.1 You need a fourth trump to jump to three hearts; your diamonds are not good e nough lo jump to three diamonds; and your hand ill not strong enough for three club". While we would not disen by Harold Le Doux franchise you if you cho~e. thr"" diamonds. we prefer a wa1t1ng bid AS I EX~INEO TO TI-E JU06E HE'S A POOR MISGUIOEO SOUL I I 'M NOT GO•NG 10 TELL 'l'OlJ HIS NAME , KAll-ERINE •.• Bl.Ir HE REGRETS IT 1 NOR SHALL I TeU. YOU THE REASON! IT REALLY ._.AO NOTHING TO 00 WITH 'f'OU OR THE .JUOGe ! of two clubs. Partner won't pa•" without four clubs and a very weak hand a nd. should he hid anything el!lf', you will be id4"11ly plat('<! to d1r~cl the auction. Q.3-Both vulnerable.1111 South you hold: +QI087642 r:J A7 OA107 +9 Tht biddinK has procreded: Nord1 F,,aet South Wut I 0 Pa• I + Pa11 I NT Pa11 ? What d o you bid now'! A. -lf you take your di tribution"I - values into account, you have the equivalent of an opening bid . There· fore, you want to be in game, and you know where you want to play the hand. Bid four spades. Don't worry about the fa ct that your suit could be better -partner surely has al least two spades for you. Q.4 -As South, vulnerable, you hold: +95 <:7 Q873 o AK52 +764 The bidding has proceeded: OMAR f) SHARIFF ... -~ North Eatt outh We.t 1 + Pa11 1 NT Paaa 3 <:7 Pua ? Whll t do you bid now'/ A.-This is simply a matt~r or whether you have a slam in hearts. and Lhere is a simple way to tell partner or your Interest. You have a maximum no trump and excellent support for partner'" "et'ond suit. so <'uc bid four diamonds. When you later retrf'lt to hearts. partner will know th1H you have strrngth In diamonds and fine heart support. Q.S-Neither vulnerable, as Soulh you hold: +AK1066 <:?9875 0 8 +AKJ The bidding hu pr()('l'f'dt d: outh Weet North £a1t I + 2 o Dbt. 2 V' ? What action do you t1ke? A. -ft sounds u 1f the opponents a rf" in troublt. 90 don't let t..hem off the h~k. Double. Even though you have only four low trumps, East will surely have difficulty managing the hand, and your solid defensive tric ks more than, compensate for any weakness you have in trumps. Q.6 -East West vulnerable. as South you hold: +S. <:763 o KQ1097642 +J6 The bidding has proceeded: South We1t North E a•t CHARLES GOREN 3 0 3 <:7 Paa1 3 + Paaa 4 + Obie Paa1 ? What a tion do you take'! A. -Don't try to save partner from his presumed folly. While you miitht have opened four diamonds, •till your opening bid told him that you have a weak hand with long dla· monds, and that is exactly whd you have . Your extra diamond doe1 not justify further action, which will ruult In a sure los~. when partner ha8 told you that ht txpect!I to beat four spades. * llily Piiat MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 23. 1985 Charger• win a wlld one over Cincinnati, 44-41. 82. Leguna Beach'• Cedrick H•rdman unl0Mt1 on ref1. 83. Angels get defensive, I 0-9 Halos in first place all alone after win over In tans By CHRIS MONAHAN Deir .... C.111; ..... , Over the course of a 162-game baseball schedule, the thinp that get the most notice arc the bitters· pmc- winning home runs and the latc- inning strikeouts by ace relievers. Often lost amona aJI those bitting and pitching highlights is the play of the defense, a ractor that was very much in evidence Sunday in the AnJels l 0-9 win at Anaheim Stadium. The most glarina appearance of defense, oim this case disappearance of it, came in the 12th inrung when Rod Carcw's ground ball shot under Oeveland shortstop Julio Franco's glove, aJlowinj Rufino Linares to score the winmng run. "We'll take these (wins) any war, we can get them," said Carew. 'He (losing pitcher Bryan Clark) threw me a slider. I hit it right at Franco and he didn•t come up with it." The one-run victory, the Angels' 29th against 12 losses this year, cen.ainJy gave the 47,895 fans in attendance on Fan Appreciation Day something to appreciate, but more importantly it gave the Angels sole possession of first place in the American League West. 0., ......... lllf TW De PNM Bobby Grtch acknowlectcee ht• flnt-lnnl.DC &rand alam home nm with an unldentlfled fan ln the crowd Sunday. The win. combined with some help from Minnesota, which defeated Kansas City 7-3. put Lhe Angels one game ahead with 13 $"lrnes to play. Included in those 13 IS a four-game series in Kansas City to start October. The win was also their 11th against three losses in extra innings (8-0 at home). their 11th in 12 decisions m 49ers make their point: they're No. 1 in the NFL San Francisco takes no prisoners in 34-10 victory: Plunkett ~njured LOS ANGELES (AP) -Take it from Coach Bill Walsh -the San Francisco 49ers arc back. That's assuming. of course. that they were ever really away. The defending S.uper Bowl champions were at their best Sunday, rolling to a convincine 34-10 victory over the always formidable Los Angeles Raiders. The 49ers had been beaten 28-21 by the upstan Minnesota Vikings in their season-opener on Sept. 8. a shocking development at the time, to be sure. However, the Vikings have since shown then that they're pretty good. and any team that turns the ball o ver seven umes as the 49crs did that day are going to have trouble winning no matter how good they might be. Then, on Sept. 15. San Francisco trailed Atlanta I 0-0 at halftime. The situation looked pretty bleak. But the 49ers roared back to wtn a 35-16 decision, and they looked mighty good doing it. San Francisco played its third game of the 1985 season Sunday, challengin~ the Raiders, who figured to be better than either the Vikings or the Falcons. But it was no contest as the 49ers performed ltke champions before a disappointed crowd of 87,006 at the Los Angeles Coliseum. overwhelming a team who, like themselves. has won two Super Bowl games this decade. "This game puts us back as an established. competitive football team that can be considered as one the people seriously think of when they think of the top teams in the National Football League:· Walsh said afterwards. "People bad written us off briefly. but I think we're back to make an impact on the NFL." The 49ers scored two touchdowns just 24 seconds apart late in the third quarter to tum a compet1t1ve 13-3 game into a 27-3 runaway. "They outplayed us," said veteran defensive end Lyle Alzado of the Raiders, who fell to 1-2. "It was as simple as that. "We didn't play very well at all. It didn't make any difference who they were." Said safety Vann McElroy of the Raiders: "That out there today was Just a total embarrassment." The 49ers went ahead for good after only 3:06 of play when quarterback Joe Montana fired a 20-yard touchdown pass to Roger Craig. The TD was Craig's sixth of the year. Sunday'• NFL .core. San Francisco 34, •Ra.tden 1 O San Otego 44. •c1nctnnatt 41 •1ndtanapolls 14. Detroit 6 New England 1 7. •Buffalo 14 Phlladefphla 19. •washlngton 6 •Mtaml 31, Kansas City 0 •Ptttsburgh 20. Houston 0 •New York Giants 27. St. Louis 17 •Dallas 20. Cleveland 7 •New Orleans 20. Tampa Bay 13 Denver 44. •Atlanta 28 New York Jets 24. •Green Bay 3 •denotes home team. Tom,ht'• Game Rama at Seattle (Channel 7 at 6) •NFL roundup. B2. •NFL standings. Raider stats, 84. Field goals of 22 and 26 yp rds by Ray Wersching and a r<t:yard three-pointer by Chris Bahr of the Raiders made 1t 13-3 at halftime. The 49ers dro ve 80 yards in nine plays to take a 20-3 lead, sconng on a .-1.4-yard pass from Montana to wide receiver Dwight Clark with 2:27 remaining in the third quaner. Then. on the game's next scnmmage play, the 49ers blew the game open. Quarterback Jim Plunkett of the Raiders was hit by defensive end Jam Stucke y and fumbled. Linebacker Milt McColl picked up the bobble and raced 28 yards to score, gi ving San Francisco a 24- point lead. The sack was one o f nine recorded by the 49ers. Another, by defensive end JefT Stover with I 0: 14 to go in the game. was much more costly because Plunkett suffered a dislocated left shoulder on the play and 1s expected to be sidelined for at least six weeks. "We got beat by a Sood football team today, an excellent football team," said Coach Tom Flores of the Raiders. "We're a good football team, too. but we JUSl didn't put it together today. Things didn't go our way. "h wasoneoftbosedays. We have to bounce back. We lost a quarterback, Jim Plunkett. So that made 1t a worse day that 1t already was .. Sunday home iames and eJLtended their current wmnina streak to five games -the lon~st streak since they won s1Jl in a row m April. The Angel defense was also a factor in Sunday's game as the American Lcque's leading defense turned its league-leading l 90th and 191 st double plays, t~e latter to end the the 12th mning. T1\e 191 double plays set a team record. "The defense has been steady all year and it has saved some games for us," said Bobby Grich. "Defense often goes unrecognized because it's not as exciting as a home run or an RBI double. ·but day-in and day-out. it's there. "We can take pnde in the double play record because even ifit doesn't get recognition, we know we have a good defense." That fact was lost on the large crowd early in the game as the Anjels. trailing S-4 in the fourth, committed three errors. allowing three Oeveland runs to score and putting them four Ch1~0 (NeJson Aa1~l1 (Suuon 15-8) Time: 7:30 p.m. TV: None. Radio: KNX (1070). runs down. 9-10) at But the Aniels have been behind many tlmes this year and have shown tb~can come back. e Angels scored three runs in the fou h. all coming on Doug DcCinccs' three-run home run and two more in the fifth, including Juan Bcniquez's single to put them ahead 9-8. They bad come back 1n the first inning. Grich erased a~ deficit with one swtng. hitting his fifth career grand slam (third as an Angel) off Jamie Easterly. "When I stepped 1n. l felt Like fate was wt th us and that I was going to b1t a grand slam." said Gnch. ··Easterly had thrown fastball' Lo (Bnan) Dowruna and (Doug) DcCtnces on the first pitch. so I knew exactly wl\11 was coming. "late in the game I didn't feel like fai.e was wt th us. They (Cleveland) arc a pcslcy club. They have notlun& to play for, but they didn't lay down for one minute." Mauch, when asked 1f this would have been a tough game to lost. rcphed. "I know this (a w1n) 1s good. t.0 why even speculate. It wasn't a real easy day. but I was impressed with the way both clubs battled, playmg an a.m. game after last night'' "It was no easy game by any means. but we JUSt kept scrappmg the whole ume," said DeCmces. "I had a fcchng that nine runs wasn't going to be enough the way the game was going." Ore1nces was nght, for in the ninth. w1th the Angels leading 9-8. reliever Donnie Moore surTCndcred three 51oglcs. the third by Andre fi"hornton driving home Brett Butler (Pleue 11ee ANOELS/82) But Grich wa, aleo down da.ring Sunday'• •ame, when thla pound ball eluded him. .,.....,_.. 49en defender Jeff Stover takee Jim Plunkett down, re•ult-ln& ln a dlalocated •boulder for the Raiden QB. Rams try to make it· 3-0 Dickerson-makes his season debut; Seahawksfavored E.\ TTLE t .\P) -.\Iler a t"o- game ah~nce hel.au~ ol d contract holdout En~ D1d.el"'>On the !'iauonal Football League ., ~ingle-sea:,vn rushing ~cord hold<.'r rt-turn., to th<.' Rams· hnc:up 1on1[1.ht aga1n.-,1 \c,rnle andScaha"J..' C 1alh(hud.J..n<.1\' "~)rned "Enl l>11.J..er,11n '' •n!' Lll tht' gn:atestrunn:ngha,J..'>n rwplJ' in the '-.a11onal Foothall l l·a~Ul' .. fl.nM. said .. He II tx· a trl·mendou5 , hallenge for our Jeten-.e Wt> v. 111 Oa TV tonight Cban.nel 7 • t 6 ha\C:' to tad.It' a lvt tlettn than we ha'e the past t"-O weeks·· The ~ .11 ')eaha" J..s are St'' en-point fa,onte~ o'er the ~-ti Rams for the na11onall' tele' 1 ed game -Seattle's IQ 5 regular-season home opener But the Seahav. J..., ha' e not been a good defens1'e team this season The' ha'l' allowed 'i4 f)\)lnt~ 1n two games v.1nning .i4.,5 a1 \an Diego last unda\ In thl' tv.n &a me' the ~aha" J..s ha\t: g1,en up an a-..erage nf .i-,11 'ards < harger. (!U.ir1erl'-ad.. Dan Fouts 1)3\"4..'d tor tour tl1u1. hdo" n' against \eattle D1d.l·r.on ended a .i ~..Ja, holdout before the Ram .. gamt· at Philadl'I· ph1a la'lt 'unda' He "-3ll:hcd from the ~1deline' a\ the Ram' "on , ... f) "He"ll hJ' ( lrl'\h ktl' · J....nn\ ,.ud 111 D1, l..l'r\••n '> fl'lum 111 the.-Ram\ It d1lec.n t 1.1J..r 'rn long Im a running hall.."' t11 1n ·• Yankees taking a beating off the field, too D1l!..l'~)n kd tht lc:.igul' 1n ru~hing tn his f r't t"-l' \l'a,un'> 1n the' Fl He 'l'I the ru')hing record ot 2.1 O'i ~ ardc; 11n P\J la mes 1n 14X4 and gained I ~ 1 'a rd\ on WO l amt'" a-; a rookie 1n \J:-, I He 1\ hu.Jding It' 101n Jam Bro"' n Jnd Earl ( am pht-11 a., the onl' pla't'r' in ~Fl h1<.tnn to lead thl' lt'ague in ru~hing 1n Cdlh ol their fir.t thr<'t' '<'a\t)nc. Martin sporting a broken arm following a wild brawl with pitcher Ed Whitson BALTIMORE (AP) -Billy Martin. the embattled New York Yankcermanager, suffered a broken riaht arm •iq a fight with pitch.er Ed Whitson~early Sunday at a Balumorc hotel. Martin held an impromptu news conference when he reported to Memorial Stadium for Sunday's pme qainst the Baltimore 9noles with his arm in a cast and a sbng. ••t think it happened when he (Wh1tJOn) kicked me," Manin said of the broken ulna bone in the forearm. "He kicked me once in the groin. and once in the arm." Wh1tJOn, who reportedly suffered a cut lip, was sent home. His ap:nt, Tom Reich. said the pitcher wouldn't comment on the incident. although Reich indicated that Wh1tson·s ver- sion differed somewhat from MartJn's. The latest in a scncs of brawls involvin• the fiery Martm was de· ICribed by a 11CCuri1y auard at the Cross Keys Inn as "one of the most bru\11 fiants I've ever seen." Manin had a patch on his left elbow and assorted bruises, which he said came from those tryina to rc1tra1n him. --- Members of the Yankees' traveling .party said the brawl started in the same hotel bar where Manin was involved in a shoving match with a patron Friday night. Players and members of the media tried to break up the fisticuffs. But onlooken said the fi&ht continued each ·time Whitson broke free. and continued into the hotel lobby and the parking lot, finally ending with a shouting match on the third floor of the hotel, where they yelled and cuncd loudly at each other. Martin contended that he became in volved after trying to act as a peacemaker in a budding fight be· tween Whitson and an unidentified patron.. "I was S1ttin1 at the end of the bar. talki~ with (infielder) L>ale Berra and his wife. and Whitson was in a booth.'• Martin said. ··A guy told me. 'You'd better get over there. Whit- ~n·s in trouble.' "Dale and I went over." Manin said, .. and he had a auy straightened up, like he was 'oina to bch him. l told him, ·Hey, don tact 1n trouble ... you don't need 1t • "I don't know what he ~1d. but he turned on me '"d went cra1y," _ .. Manin said. "He kicked me a couple of times. That's when I got hot. and tned to pop him I don't deny that. "I tried to fisht. but I can't fight feet," Martin said. "l don't think I hit him. but I know Dale popped him. "I wasn't tryan~ to fight, I was trying to break up a fight," Martin 1ns1sted. "If I was fighting, he would have been knocked out from the be~nnmg. .. Reich said he d1dn t want to comment on the fight because "there's so many discrepancies. But (Pleue .e Y AlUUtES/83) .. , don 't know whac he said. but he turned on m e and went crazy He kicked mea coupleoftlmes. That ·s when I !{ot hoc. and tried to pophlm ldon 'tdeny that I tried to fight. but I can 't fight feet T don 't think I h it him. but I know Dair (Berra} popped h im I wasn 't trying to fight .. Yankee Manag er BJlly Martin "1ean"h1le the \cah<1v.l..s \ urt \\a mer has demoMtratt·d in °'<.'allk ' l"t"' gamt"~ this '\Ca!>on that he" lulh fl'l'<"ered from a \t'\C're l..ne<-1niun ' ht• \ufferc·t1 in th<' I Q84 rcgular-'-<'a..,11n 11fl('n<'r \\ am<'r tht' n<'\l running Nd~ Jraf\<'d atirr D1d .. erson in I ~8 '. It'd tht· o\mem.:an Foothall ( onftrrncc tn rushing a~ a roul 1t' with I 44q )ard o;, Dodgers finally give Lasorda a birthday gift AN FRANCJW () (AP) -Los Anaeles Dodgers' mana.gcr Tom Lasorda likes to have a aood time with the best of them, but the players have a habit of spoiling his b1nhday parties. 1 Since he became manager tn 1977. the Dodaers have been very suoccss.-f~a..they were a homd 0-6 on his b1nhday. But Lasorda. who turned S8 un- day, watched the Oodsenovercomea 3-1. first-inning deficit to soap the 11nx wtth a S-3 victory over the San Francuco Giants "That was the most out~t.and1n1 prncnt the auys could have 1t1 vcn me." said Lasorda. who also rt"CelH'd a congratulatof) telegram from Prc,1 dent Reagan LasordA wa, rtwarded on a da\ when a cr right-hander O rt .I Henh1scr. 17-3, admittedly "d1dn'1 have much S\~ff " Yet the Dodie" ralhcd off Vfd3 Blue. 7-7. to ll"f' Henh1~r his ninth straight victory "It looked like Tommy war. •o•nA to lose ap1n after the lint 1nn1na. said Hersh11er. who )'lelded a two-run homer to Bob Brcnly 'Tm aJ1d he broke the streak. No-.A, he can enjoy a happy birthday .. The Dod~" actuall ~me to hfe followmg a prt~aam<' m~una callt"d Dod1<'n I Ho nl'vcutt 1'1· I~ 1 Jl I h1u<. ton t ott I · 7) Time. 5 JS p m TV None Radio KAB< 17Q01 b\ veterans Saturda~ ,Rcttntly ac- qi.urcd Btll MadlO<'k and Enos Cabell theo ~tan exampld'I' pov..~nnia 16- , h1l. 11 -2 romp ( abcll enjoyed his tint 4-h1t game with the Dodatn and MadloclF~dcd thrtt hit' -Madlock rontinucd h1'I hot huuna unday HIS leadpO homt run 1n t~e -------·--·--- "'<"'l'nlhlrcatt'da '\ 't1t".and<'\ten1ltd h11o battmg strtal to I~ games Cand' Maldonado ~1 nglt'\1 "'1th ont o ut "-COi to third on Blue·, throlol.'1ngtttm on a p1cl ofT attrmpl. and 'i.CQfe'd the ~\'.'ond run 1"11 the tnrung on , tcve Su ·,. S('rnnd ~l nfice th of the pme ln th<' m~lmJ I JU<.t 1old tht'm to go out and ha' e fun · ..aid Madlock. ~tttnf 'hq "'"cc Jo1nina the Oodaen .\ug. I "bel'\onr knoW'. v.hu we have t<' do .. .. I\ lot of u1v ha .. c bc(n 1n thts ~11uat1on bcfort I 1u~1 wanted to he urt th<' pl1 rn undc11tood tha1 the Rcdsart < hasing uo;, and that w(rt not chuina them .. Mexico tops Peru Annacone:/Stroke of good fo!! .. ~.~:.h.th~ .. d Youn ro has decidina tiebreaker. A~nacone1~mp­ ed to a 6-2 lcad but again couldn t put 0,000 pay ay, Ed!1t'!a~ 10 convert bis suth thanks 0 McEnroe and seventh match poinls, Annacone LOS ANGELES (AP) -Paul Annacone turned .a stroke of Jood fonune Into his fint prof~1onal tennis title. . Annaconc advan<:ed into the finals of the Volvo Tennia.-Los An&elet men'a tournament wben John McEnroe, the top seed, withdrew with a stomach ailment Saturday ni&ht. Onoe in the finals, the 22-year-old utilized a boomina serve to outlut second-seeded Stefan Edbcra <?f Sweden 7-6t 6-7, 7-6 on Sunday for his first championship. "We•rc all aware J had some good fortµne last niaht." said Annacone. " opponent wasn't feeling too good. l can't really say I'm sorry now." Jt took Annacone two hours and 56 minutes and ei'1't match points. including five in the second-sci tiebreaker, to .~nally chalk UJ? µic victory preva1bng lD the deciding tieb~er 7-4. finally prevailed on his eiJhtb try by passina Ed~ra with a forehand volley down tne hne. .. "l feel great1 a liule tired maybe, Annacone saio. "We both cover a.lot of court and hit a lot of ao&les. I think we both did that very wel['' Edbera said that Anoaco~e.'• tcrVe kept the Swede from pm1n1 the l.\P~hand. I had my chances aod I thouaht I bad him for a while, but he tcrved well," said Edberg. "Jn all the tiebreakers, I'd come back and then be done apjn ... c-0mc back, then be down qa1n. It's hard to come back all the time. I did all I could do. "He's very hard to play. Hc'a comina in.on every shot. There were a lot ofshadows and I couldn't sec very well." Annacone loaaed eight aces in the match and added f\ve service win- ners. Behind the strohg serve, be wu able to control almost every point he served. In the second-sci tiebreaker, An- nac,onc jumped out to a 3-0 lead and led 6-3 when Edberg nened a volley. SAN JOSE (AP) -Carlos Hermosillo's divina header from four yards in the last five minutes of an international exhibition soccer match a1SpartanStadiumgaveMexicoa 1-0 victory over Peru Sunday. Home plate ••Dlre K-Kateer 1oee rtaoat bato tbe Clnelaact ctaco.t to arpe wltb 0.-, ....... _,""'De,,.... Menacer Pat Corralee. Corralee loet the up.meat and wu ejected from 1eme. For the victory, Annaconc, the eiahth seed. earned the tournament's SS"0.000 winner's purse, while Edbe11 came away with $25,000 as 1hc runner-up. Both players held se.rvc throughoul The 22-ycar-old then failed to convert three straight match points, dumpina a drop volley into the net before Edberg evened the tiebreaker. SPORT S BREAK Conners unveils Stars &: Stripes against Liberty SAN DIEGO -Yachtsman Dennis ~ Conner, hoping to regain the America's Cup wilh a newly designed 12-metcr yacht, took the craft out on San Diego Bay Sunday for a practice run ~inst his old racing yacht, Liberty. Conner piloted the new yacht, named Stars &. Stripes, around the seven-mile course to a 30-foot win over Liberty in an exhibition race that was the feature of a local "Bring Home the Cup Festival." Liberty was the yacht Conner used in 1983, when he lost yachting's most coveted trophr to the Australians in the Amenc.a's Cup race off Newport, R.l. In Sunday's exhibition race, Liberty was piloted by Sail America Foundation presidenl Malin Burnham. Sail America was founded 19 months iyto to sponsor Conner's 1987 bid for the Cup. Challenier trials for the Conaer America's Cup wilJ be held in Oclober 1986, followed by a series of match races between the trials winner and the Australians. beginning Jan. 31 , 1987. Both races wiJl be held in the lndian Ocean off Perth, Wes1cm Australia. Ahhough Conner won the exhibition, be admitted it m1gh1 have been Sccause he did a slightly bener JOb than Burnham of dodging the estimated 800 boats that paced the yachts around the triangular course. "It's a good thing we both know how to sail a 12- metcr in light corners. bul we didn'I ~cl in too many compromising posi1ions," Conner sa1d. "h's hard to sail in a straight line and evaluate anything. but everything seems to be operable after one day of saiHn " ~e 65-foot yachts now will be shipped to Hawaii, where the windy conditions arc similar to those that are seasonal to Wes1ern Australia during the racing periods. A third yacht. Spint of Amcnca, is being rebuilt. and Sail Amcnca plans to build two more experimental boats as 1he design team searches for the besl size. shape and keel design. Ahhough 1h1s partJcular Stars and Stnpes 1s unlikely to be used in competition, Conner refused to discuss the sptt1fics of its secrc1 underwater keel design. Quote of the day "(believe we were beaten at our own game. h came down to what we lhmk is our streng:h -to play physical and stop the run, and run the ball when you have to. "They won that war. so lhcy won the football game." -USC football coach Ted Tollner, following his team's 20-13 upset loss to Baylor. Rahal takes flag at Detroit 200 BROOKLYN, Mich. -Bobby Rahal II held of a late charge by Rick Mears Sunday to win the Detroit News 200 Indy-car race al M1ch1gan lntcmational Speedway. Rahal, who started from the pole in the 200-mile race and now has won two of the lasl three CART-PPG series events, drove his March across the finish line just seven-tenths of a seconds ahead of Mears' March racer and m oved solidly back into 1he season point cha~ with three races remaining. Drag racer killed in c rackup BRlSTOL, Tenn. -Don Young, a II leading amalcur drag racer, was killed Sunday when his dragster crashed follow- ing a run in the lntcrnat1onaJ Hot Rod Assoc1at1on's Fall Nauonals at Bristol International Raceway. YounJ.. 38. of Carrollton. Ga., had just completed a quarter-mile run against Eric Hinderberger of Cincin- nati when his en1ry in the Top Sportsman category smashed into th~lcft guardrail and Young was thrown from the dragstt!f. Yount whose dragstcr was travelina 14' mph at the ume o the crash. died in<;Ulntly No other inJuncs wue reported Atulrre'a 42 lead1 All-atara Guidry racks up 20th victory Chargers pull it out Rom Galdry became the first 20-pme Ill e ' winner in the American league whi le • th 'L • ttl Train Rickey Ha4enee and &ea Griffey home- red on consecutive pitches in the third ioning to lead the New York Yankees over Baltimore, WI I e S-4, cuttin.a Toronto's lead in the East to S'h games .. Guidry, 20-6, gave up five hits throu&h eight innings, but left after Mike Yong doubled leading off the ninth 'and Flo7d Rayford followed with his 16th home run of the season. Guidry is the seventh Yankee pitcher to • • reach the 20-viclory plateau in three differen1 seasons . . . Elsewhere in the American League, PHI Molitor extended his hitting streak to 13 games with a run-scorinJ double that broke a seventh-inning tic and Ted Wpera pitched a five-hitter to lead Milwaukee over Toronto, 2-1. The Brewers finally went ahead after stranding seven run- ners over the first six inniop 01WlrJ against Da vc Stieb, I 3-I I. Higuera, 14-7, set a team re<>td for victories by a rookie ... Fnall Viola scattered eight hjts for his 16th victory and Mark Fuderbm drove in three runs to lead Minnesota over Kansas City, 7-3, dropping the Royals a game behind the Angels. Viola, 16-14, struck out four and walked one in winning his third straight decision .. . Dwtdlt Evu1 hit Daa Petry'• first pitch of the game for a b orne run, triaaerioi Boston over Detroit, 6-2. Winner Deul1 Boyd, IS~ I l ~scattered six bits through seven innings to earn his fourth consecutive victory, with relief help from Brace KJaoa. Wade Bogs, leading the major leagues with a .374 average, went 2-for-4 in his 69th multi-bit game of the season. tying the Boston cl ub set by Jlm Rice in 1978 ... La.ls Salazar hll a two- out, two-run homer in the 10th to give the Chicago White Sox a 7-S win over Oakland. Salazar, who bad four hits and drove in four runs. hit his ninth homer of 1be season after a 1wo-out single by Ra4y Law. Dave KJapiu's 28th borne run pulled the A's into a 5-S tie in the eighth. Cardinals• lead s wells t o three Tommy Herr'• dramatic two-run home run with two out in the ninth inning gave the St. Louis Cardinals a 6-5 victory over Montreal, enabling 1hc Cardinals to take a thrcel-gamc lead over the New York Meis in the National League East Sunday. Wlllle McGee rapped his 200th hit of the season, a single. to set the stage for Herr. "If you play the game lonj enough. somcthinJ like 1his 1s bound to happen," said Herr. "Even a big leaguer fantasizes about things like that I'm jusl a.lad it happened to me. It's the biggcs1 hit 9f my career. I never had a hit hke that before." ... Elsewhere in the Nau'Oriif League. Bob Kipper gained his first major league victory with late relief help, and Sammy Kllallfa'1 two-run single capped a 1hrec-run sixlh to pace Pittsburgh over New York, 5-3 .. . Slaawoa Du1ton hit a two-run homer and Leon Durbam added a solo shot as Chicago defeated llen Philadelphia. 9-2 . . . ClaDdell Wa11lla1ton and Gleno Habbard each knocked in two runsas Atlanta ended a six-game losing streak with a 7.5 decision over Sao Diego. MIU Tbomp1on'1 two-out RBI single broke a 2-2 tie in lhc seventh and Atlanta staged a three-run ralJy in the c1gh1h to pm the defeat on Andy Hawklll1, 17-8, who is Q..j in his last four starts. Sutton, Skinner in tour wins Hal Sattoa rolled 1n a IS-foot birdie !I p1rtt on the first hole of sudden death to beat Mike Reid for the $72,000 first-place check in the Southwest Golf Oassic at Abilene, Tex. Sunday It was Sutton's 5«and victory in extra holes this year. He defeated David 01rln in a playoff at th~ Memphis Classic. Reid, who has finished second twice in his nine years on the lour but never has won. missed the green on the 398-yard, par..4 No. I bole but chipped to Wlthm a foot forace~in par. utton hJt the green in regulation then canned b1s putt to earn his fifth victory ofh1s PGA Tour career He has now won $362.560 on the tour. Sutton has been 1n three playoffs on the tour and won all of them ... On the women's tour Sunday, Val SkJuer of Nebraska won her first LPGA event title when she beat veteran Pat Bradley on an extra hole of the San Jose Classic JOlf tournament "This is very special to me ~ausc this year r vc closed the door on myself." said 1hc winner 5:6 Lionel James·Ieads 44-41 win with variety of big plays From AP dispatdltt Diminutive Lionel James, the San Diego Charger( "Little Train," saved "Air Coryell" from another second- half crash Sundar. in Cincinnati. The S-6, 17 -pound running back sprinted 56 yards for a touchdown on a third-quarter draw play and booked up with Dan Fouls on a redeeming 6()..y~d scoribg ~mb to give the the defense-poor Chargers a wild 44-41 vic1ory Sunday over the Cincinnati Bengals. Fouts' TD pass to James, his fourth of the ga~c, ti~ the score at 4 I with 3:45 to play and pul San Diego in position to win 1he National Footbal~ ~gue game. Bob Thomas kicked a 34-yard field goaJ with JUSt four seconds left for the deciding points. "He'sjust a thrill to be around," Chargers Coach Don Coryell said of his h1tle running back. The smallest man on the field produced the biaaest thrills, including a I 00-yard lc:ickoff return nullified by pcnaJty. James' 60-yard TD reception from Fouts stoic the Dickey Elway m omcnlum from winless Cincinnati, which exploded for 28 second-half points. Larry K.inncbrew's 8-yard touchdown run, his second of the game. put the Bengals ahead 41 -34 with 4:39 left. Fouts connected with James 1wo plays later for the tic, and James Brooks fumbled the ball back to San Diego on the Bengals' 43-yard line to sci up Thomas' third field goal of the game. "II was another one of those games where whoever has the ball last, or gets the last break. wins the ballgame," Coryell said. Fouls completed 25 of 43 passes for 344 yards to help the Chargers improve to 2-1 . James caught five passes for 118 yards and rushed 12 ti mes for 12"7 yards on a hot September afternoon that left him weary but smiling. Elsewhere in the NFL Sunday: Dolpktu 31, Qief1 0: In Miami, Dan Marino tossed touchdown passes ofnine and 27 yards to Bruce Hardy and Woody Bennett, rcspcc1ively, as the Miami Dolphfos broke away from a scoreless haJf\imc tie to roll past the Kansas City Chiefs. Marino, who completed 23 of JS passes for 258 yards, directed scoring drives on five of Miami's seven offensive possessions in the second half, white the Dolphins defense held the league's highest-scoring team without a point. Eaglet tt, Rtd1kta1•: In Washington, D.C., four field goals by Paul McFadden and a 17-yard touchdown pass from rookie Randall Cunningham to Ernest Jackson, the Eagles' first touchdown of year, carried Philadelphia to an upset victory over the Washington Redslc:ins. Cunningham's fourth-quarter touchdown pass the first of his NFL career, coded a Philadelphia touchdown drough1 1hat had extended back to Dec. 16. 1984. Steelers %0, Oilers 0: In Pittsburgh, Mark Matone threw two first-period touchdown passes to Louis Lipps, and Pittsburgh's defense manhandled a punchless Hous- 1on off cnse as the Steelers defeated the Oilers. Donnie Shell set up one of Lipps' scores with an interception and his fumble recovery halted Houston's only scoring threat as the Steelers recorded their first shutout since a 24-0 victory over the Rams in J 98 J. The Oilers crossed midfield only once in the second half. Colt• U, Lloa~ •: In Indianapolis, reservt fullback GcolJe Wonsley, pressed into service by injuries to other running backs, rushed for career-high J 70 yards -the fifth-highest ever by a Colt -to spark Indianapolis past Detroit. The victory gave Rod Dowhower his first tnumpb as an NFL head coach, while Darryl Rogers suffered his initial NFL setback. BroDCOt 4', Falcoas ZS: ln Atlanta. John Elway fired three touchdown passes and Rich Karlis added three second-half field goaJs as the Denver Broncos took advantage of costly errors to trim the Atlanta Falcons. Gene Lang, who had had only th.rec carries in two games this sea.son, scored Denver's go-ahead touchdown on a 2-yard run early in the final quarter. Kulis' 47-yard field goal midway through the quarter gave the Broncos a nine-point advantage. Glut1 n, Cardiaal1 17: In East Rutherford, N.J., a battered Phil Simms .tossed three touchdown passes, rookie Jess Atkinson kicked two field goals and the New York Giant' defense grounded the potent St. Louis offense. Simms connected with Bobby Johnson on touchdown passes of 8 and 16 yards in the first and fourth quarters, respectively, and he hit Phil McConkey on a crucial 20- yard 1oucbdown in the third quarter that broke the game open. Patriots 17, BU11 l4: In Orchard Park, N.Y., Irving Fryar returned a third-quarter punt 85 Y!lrds .for a touchdown that insured a New England Patnots victory over the winless Buffalo Bills. The Bills, trailing by only I 0-7 at the time, ~topped Fryar's ori~nal punt return, but Buffalo was penalized for having an ilJcpJ man downfield and Fryar got a second chance to return John Kidd's punt. Cowboys %0, Bron1 7: In Irving, Texas, the Dallas Cowboys scored on their first two possessions and added a 1hird-quartcr touchdown on a flea-flicker pass from halfback James Jones to quarterback Danny White in a verdict over the Oeveland Browns. The Dallas defense kept Cleveland scoreless until late in the fourth quarter, when Browns quarterback Gary Danielson combined with Kevin Mack on a 56-yard pass play to the Dallas I , selling up Earnest Byncr's short touchdown run. · Jets U, Packers 3: In Milwaukee, running back Tony Paige scored two touchdowns and the New York defense overwhelmed an error-prone Green Bay team as the Jets downed the Packers. An ineffective Lynn Dickey was replaced at quar- terback in the third quarter by Randy Wright after Dickey threw an interception which led 10 Paige's l 1-vard touchdown run off left tackle. Sat•t• H, Bacauers 13: In New Orleans, Dave Wilson threw two touchdown passes and Terry Hoage led an opportunistic defense as the New Orftans Saints notched their ftnt victory of the year with a triumph over the Tampa Bay Bucanneers. Wilson, operatina behind a patched-up offensive line for the final two quarters, was 16-for-25 for 246 yards and the two touchdowns. Gayn or l eads 4 9 ers, 33-30 Mexico will still hold World Cup tournaDlent 4iONOLULU (AP)-Long Beach State raJhed behind the passing of quarterback Doug Gaynor to defeat the Univenity ofHawaji, JJ.30, in a non<onfercncc football pme Satur- day n1Jht. ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) • The International Football federation (FIFA) announced today thal the World Cup soccer tournament will take place in Mexico next year as scheduled despite the earthquake which hit the country lalt week. FlFA Secretary General Scpp Blat· 01her reports are not official." be said. Thirty-five of the .S2 pines will bqin at noon Mexican time and the 17 others at S p. m. The openina pme in which defendina champion ltal.Y will play a team yet to be deiip\ed is to stan at noon at the Aztec Stadium in Mexico City, accordina to Blau~r. ter said the m fonnally was ~Dallu Maveric.k.ucored..41poan.t and ~ LOS ANGELES -Mark Aguirre of m Isiah Thomas of the Detroit Pisions added Televtalon, radio TELEVISION The 49crs trailed the Rainbows, 23-0. midway through the second quarter. bcfore<.iaynor bepn clickmg with his rcocivcn. He was nine for 19 in the second quarter when·thc-49cn cut the deficit to 23-16. pproviOif"I rou inc session today which was attended by Guillermo Caneda, president of the Mexican Orpnilina Committee and Rafael de c.~tillo, president of the ~exican Soccer Association. Caneda said the stadiums ha~ been carefully chcciced, includina by tbe architects who desipcd them and that their "safety is auarantecd.:. 39 to the lead the East to a 153-1 51 v1c1ory 101bc East-West ummer uague\hamp1onsh1pspme Sunday. Dominique Wilk.ins of llu: Atlanta Hawks scored 1 pmc-h•sh of 47 points and Byron Scou of the Los Anaelcs l..aJcers added 34 point for the West an the pmc played at Loyola-Marymount Umvers11y. In aJI, 11 NBA players p1nic1~ted in 1he benefit ~~orpruzcd by EarV1n "Magic" John50n of the \' 6 p.m -PRO FOOTBALL· Rams at Seattle, Channel 7 RADIO .S:JS p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgen ai Houston. KABC (790). 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL Rams at Sca1tle. K.MPC (7l0). 7:30 p.m -BASEBALL ( h1cago White SoA at An.sets. KNX ( 1070). G aynor led the 49en on sconng drives of 73 and 26 )'ards 1n 1hc third quaner. each time hitflnA former Edison High !lanker Troy Ory With scoring pasws The fim one was oinc yard~ and the <;ceond five yards In the four1h quaner, after the 49ers' Curtis Cumming.~ recovered a fumbled punt. Gaynor auidcd Long Beach tate 10 the U H 6-yard hnc C"aylor then kicked a 23-yard field aoal for th<' winning p0m1~. Caneda said l detailed survey showed that none of the World Cup st.adfoms suffc~ any damage 1n the disaster. Blatter told reponc11 thal there was "no need for any change in the 1ehedulc" of the tournament set 10 run from May 31 to June 29. "All , He also said there wu no damaae at any of the hotels where the teams. sooccr officials and the media rep- resentatives arc to be accommodated . durin& the tournament. He said that SO pcrocnt of all tickets already were t0ld and that there were no more ockets available for the pmes in 1he two main stadiums. -· f DB.ilyPilotTop 10 ORANGE COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL F OOTBALL 1. SERVJTE (2-0) ,.,..,.. • ....,....,._n.o tlO·O •• ~ io.o u ............ ). MerWI ....,...,.. l'Nllctl -~ Meld "" .. Demi.n. 2 . 3. ,-,·--~1-DllJ-•• EL MODENA (2-0) Vefteu•r4• h•ft 4t 4 ·----,.., ..... , Wlltl F OUNTAIN VALLEY (2-0 ) -CllM!will'llt ..... FMC•. ,.Ktlk.A, -..a.; wt Irv W'*f· mlilllW, ........ .............. 9Wtl .............. "__.,.,. .. .....,.._,._...II T-..._ i4-7, .... s Mk.-vw. It ..., ~ 4 . CAPO VALLEY (2-0) 5 . 6. EDISON (1-1 ) c.u .. ,. ltt u• "" acer-....d ellllft .., 1ltt MaM MJSSION - VIEJO (l·O) O......•l'M4fw•f'-· talll Vf/llW Wtlll 42-l rwt el UIWenltY. ~ .,.. Olet'eln reealMd -~ ..... lS-i4,..,. ., ................... ". ............. .......,. Saitt C--. K.._.. C:.W.-1 142 .,.,... "',. ~ .......... '"'"'· -~--........ -TM4 Vert& c .. ""'--· 7. 8 . 9. 10. WESTMINSTER (2-0) LA HABRA (2-0) VALENCIA (l-1) LOS ALAMIT OS (2-0) L.leM ,_....., MC.,_, ltr9llltt Vktwv -....... tMlft. wlWI 10· l Wiii -hc:Nka c...-. ...., 7 _, Wiii " .......... •' """*"' eemt. ,...,....... .,..... ., . ....,... a.dlW•tllen,....., ......... Tl9ln. .... ~ w .. tmlM,., _,.., i-1 111 GffflllM ........ 17 • 10 'lk1wv -• llllHV·,....,tlM M9M. ...... IC.•~ !Mid '"""" llMYWY 19verecl -c.t• Mete. -V~ ll~T-Miit. ,. ..... c........ """ --·· 27·0. .,.,..., ,.. "'* lrlmr•*" wt '" s-a, U ·O. II Deredt next. Sailors tune up with Oilers Non -league sla te fi n ish es t his week in Sea View circ u it Newport Harbor High's Sailors and Huntington Beach's Oilers renew a rivalry which dates back to 1931 - although interrupted three times - to highlight Weck No. 3 of non-league prep football. l Newport Harbor holds a 27-16-4 edge in the series. with the 1984 game ending in a 24-24 tic. For Newport Harbor. along wi th the balance of the eight-team Sea View League, it's the fi nal tuneup before league play stans next week. Roee Estancia's game with Los Amigos, originally scheduled for Friday at Orange Coast College, has been changed to Thursday night at New- port Harbor High . * TillSWMll'I~ (7:l0) TI4utlSOAY NtwPOl't Htr~ et Huntington Bttc" LO\ Amlvo• "'· E\lancla a l NtwPOrt Har~ Geroene "''· Of.ttn VI .... at Wntmln"tf' HIO" Tu1tln at Irvine S.nlt Ana vl Mate< Del at Santa Ana Bowl 8vtNI P9rll "'· Ma11no1r. at La Palma Para L.a Qul11ta el Ga"' lt•nCllO A .. milO\ •t WHttf'n Katetle VI. Orenge at El Moden• Hlgl'I f'ltlDAY Corona Oii Mar al Ce1>htrano Velltv LO\ ... rnltO\ "''· Co\!• Melt a l NtwPOl'I Harl)Or Hlol'I Edison v\. Banning ti Veteran• Stadium (LC>nQ 8ffcll) FootlllM "" Marlr1e a t Weslmln"tf' Hlg" Todd Game-busters Laat wttk'1 play1 of 51 yard• or more 82-Jimmy Raye (Irvine), interception return for TD 81-Sean Magula (Marina), TD nm 69-Bill Brosnan-Jimmy Raye (Irvine), TD run 55-Jonathan Todd (Laguna Beach), run 52-Chns Ross (Huntington Beach), TD pass from Joe Napoli 50-Glenn Campbell (Saddleback), run Laat week'• naalllDJ leaden I. Jonathan Todd (Laguna Beach), 22-162, 2. Kaleaph Carter (Edison), 24-142; 3. Glenn Campbell {Saddlcback). 12-127: 4. Sean Turncr(Coronadel Mar), 24-12 1: 5.,lan McDonal~ (Estancia). 28-120. 6. Bill Brosnan (Irvine), 9-117; 7. Jim Miele {Irvine), 19-117: 8. Sean Maaula (Marina). 8-103. Laat week'• pa11la1 leaden I . Shane Foley (Newport Harbor), 25-46-3, 326 yards, I TD: John Kimball (Laguna Beach). 17-31-3, 283 yards. I TD; 3. Joe NaJ>:<>h ~Huntington Beach), 12-22-0. 225 yards. 2 TDs. 4. Todd ~anQov1ch Mater Oci), 18-33-0. 201 yards, 4 TC?s: 5. M1~e An~clov1c (Edison), 2-18-0. 184 yards, 3 TDs: 6. Sean Kinkade (Estancia). 12-23-0. 118 yards. 2 TDs. Laat week'• recetvta1 leaden 1. Jim O'Bnen (Mater Dci), 8~ 136; 2. Andy Sheppard (NcwP?n Harbor), 6-111; 3. Chris Ross(Hunungton ~ch). 6-94. 4. Rick Justice r·son), 6-73: 5. Jon Hernandez (Estancia), 5~6; 6. Mark Craig ewport Harbor). 5-59: 7. Dennis Arey (Fountain Valley). 5-45: 8. evin McClelland (Newport Harbor). 5-39. Laat week'• acort.1 leaden 1. Jim O'Brien (Mater Oei), 18; 2. (tic) Bill Brosna~ (lrvin.c). Jimmy Raye (Irvine), Bryan Wil<f:man (Newport Harbor). Rick Justice (Edison), Terry Reiehert (Foun~1n Valley). Scan Magula (Manna). 12 each; 8. Gary Coston (Mater Oct), 11. YANKEES BRAWL ... P'romBl before anythina is said,'f want to fi~d out all the facts and then meet with Georae (Steinbrenner., the tc~m owner). The di9Cf'Cpancies start with who started the f~t. ... There •!'C serious di1Ctcpanon as to who dtd what to whom." . There was speculation that Whit· son may have been sccthlna over IOlina a startint tu m ~nday ru&,ht. when Martin replaced him Wllh Rich Bordi in the fint prne of the Baltimore series. Martin said he tokt Wluuon of the awitcb before the Yankees l~ft Oc- tro1t, aft.tr the pitcher told ham that h11 arm was tender and he "miaht not t be ready" for Fnday's f.'me. "I can't 10 with that,' said Manm. contcndina that the trainer told him there was a SQ.SO chance that Whit- son could pitch and that pitchina ooach Bill Monbouquctte said the riaht·hander couldn't start. ""Martin, who reportedly threatened to suspend Whitson af\eT the fiaht. said later he would not make a decision untd he talked with Stein- brenner. Alked what his status would be with Stcmbrenncrr Manin said: "I don't a« where I'd navcany problem. In one.. I was a pcactmakcr. and the other one involved a kook " Min ion Vit lO Vl Fou111a1n Vtlltv et Huntington S..Cll Hio" L•ouna Beac" a t Dana HI"' San MAirco' vi Wooelbf'ldllt et Irvine 111111'1 Fvtltrton v' ic:enneciv ti WHt~n Hlon Don LVOO "' Sonon •• L• H•br• Hkln CvlM"eu n Sunnv Hibl at Buen. Park Hlgn Sannna at &olw Greoo. Garden Grove "''· Loera •I Le P11lme Perk Servllt ti Oamlt n WHtml,,.te< V\ El Toro at Mlu 1on Vl•IO Hlgn EKOt\CllClo at San Cltl'ntnte C~tfev ti CanvOll Lovola v,. Santa Ana V•li.v et Sen11 Ane Bowl VIiie Pa rk el Brea·Olinda Valen<:le v' El Dorado et Veltf\cle Hi11" E '°" • n 11 • • ltlvtf'1l0t Potv SATUllDAY L•ouna HIN' v1 Unlvt<l ltV et Irvine 111on La Ha l><a Y\ Sa<klltbacll et Santa Ane Sowl Sanlltoo at Pionee< Trov "' AnaMlm at Lt Petme Park El Modena v' Peclflc:e et Bolw Grenoe Hlo" MAltade al L11>trtv C"rl\tlen !E111nt ·men I P.m .) Big Beer "'' Treouco HIH1 al M1u 1on V1eio Hkl" CanBucs, Rustlers rebound? o c c·s 54-9 loss to Fullerton ranks as No . 3i n history It's only the third week of the season. but conference play will begin for the three Orange Coast area community colleges Saturday nigh t. Two area schools will be pitted against each other as Orange Coast visits Saddleback in the Mission Conference opener. The Ptrates. who fell to 0-1-1 and are licking their wounds after a crushing 54-9 setback to Fullerton last Saturday, will meet a Gaucho team that has crushed two non-conference foes by a combined 9()..24 count following a 42-10 win over San ~rnardino Valle) OCCs defeat to Fullerton was the third worst 1n the 36 years of Coast fooball. A 64-7 loss to Santa o\na in 1961 and a 53-0 belting by Saddle· back 1n 1980 rank as the top two humiliations. Uolden West faces ats toughest test of the young season Saturday. travel· ing to Taft to face the Southland's top- ranked community college squad 1n the Pac-9 Conference opener T he Rustlers will bnng an 0-1-1 mark into the contest, the first they'll play away from home. Golden West bas yet to get its offense untracked and despite the fact the Rustler$ defense ha bttn rMpons1ble fo r y1cldtn8JUSt 14 pomts, tht>y have yet to dent the W\n column this SC'ason Taft will have revenge on its mind when it meets the Couga rs. The Rustlers. in the highlight of their season. shocked Taft last year at occ. 21-17 Both the OCC-Saddleback and Golden West-Taft match.ups have 7:30 kickoff: * letunl9Y'a GMMI l"AC•t CONf'l•INCI GOIOtfl W..t et Tt ft Ml k n AnJOnlo '' a.1>.er1llelo lone IMCfl CC 11 I t Camlno CllTllOI •• f'\illef'lOll ~c:o.t,•••NCI °'""" Coe11 t i s...t•e1e11 IUvenldl CC at •MC:fle *""° 1 lO ~tern et l"~r. 1:)0 S.n Ot.-o ~ at Ct!Nt MOlle·CC*l'••INCI MMCO<k II WMI l.ot A....... I Ml $et1 ~tO •I Com.ton. I MoOrMfl>. ., Plw<'a LA Valln e l S.nt• htOeo CC Alll .... VelltY ., ~II k t1te ~ et Gt"eUrnont V.,,l\.tf• al l A ~ ~Mlft (-Iv. TH el Pe...oeM LA Souttl-1 al o...t'I s.wi lterMI'_... 9' 1 111 LA All """" al 7 JO • rl'i Ul'llft• NI~ ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT IMondey, Septem~ 23, 1915 * .. Artists escape with a win, but Hardman still fuming ElSinore · s officiatin g squad criticizecrby Laguna coach -- By RICHARD DUNN get away from us and we were scratching. We played a really good second half. We j ust didn't make mistakes We had two new Juys who played really good defense. Jim Niest and Bill Anukovich-both linebackers -they both scored way in the 90's on the performance ch.art." o.1tf P1191 C.1 J I ...,,, Laguna Beach High's surpnsing Artists rcmam unbeaten this football season after two weeks, but their coach, Ccdri.fk Hardman, feels hke he was run over by a truck following Friday's venture at Elsinore. Here are his comments. along with other coaches from the Orange Coast area: Lagua Beacll1'1 Cedrick Harclmaa, aft.er his team's 17-14 win over Elsmore, which put his team at 2-0. 'Tm going to go out on a hmb and say this. the officials called back two touchdowns and penalized us for 150 yards and we're not that uosound. They took away all of our big plays, it was tcmble. .. I can take calls against me, but that was tcmble. Some of the penaltucs that we saw on the fllm s never existed. If they ever showed up at our game again. I don't th.ink I'd let my players go out there. I'll challenge anybody to watch the film s with me. I do know something about football. Some things they just created in thetr minds. Wh)' would they want to do this to kids? "I don't know 1f 1t was me they didn't hkc or the uniforms. We had a first and goal at their 2-yard hnc and wound up with a founh and 45. "We're not that bad. we·rc a well-d1sc1phned team. I do believe. These people. I've n~ver scen anything like this never. ever. They tned to take the game away. and we suit won." HuntlDgton Beach's GeorJe Paacoe, following h1\ team's 21-1 4 v1ctol) over Damien Thursday mght: ··ttow effecti vely they threw the football and the level of intens1t} on the field from both teams 1s what surpnsed me the most. They came out and smacked us around. the k.1ds adjusted vef) well and rose to their level ofintenm}. 1 was surpn~ by their level and surprised at how we adj usted and put 1t back 1n their face." Foutain Valley's Mike Mllaer, following his team's 14-7 victory over El Toro:" Although we've playcdJUSt two games. we really haven·t played a complete ~me yet We've played El Toro for the past five years, and 1t'salways a tough match. The key was pressunng their quancrback. we held him to under 50 percent. Demck Munck had a big interceptipn to end the game which eliminated the El Toro dnve in last quarter." Marina's Dave 11lomp1on, following his team's 24-14 loss to Sen 11e: ··The biggest disappointment was that we didn't adapt to the heat they were putting on us. We JUSt didn't respond well, didn't throw good when we had to. Bill Craft. all-county last yea r. had another 1ntercept1on. which gives him 1wo for the year. He was 1n on nine tackles. four solo and five assisted, and also had a fumble recover). The d11Terence in lhl" game was not being able to overcome Serv1te's aggressive defense. Greg Lesser. our tack.le. 1.1. ill be lost for season wtth a broken leg and tom lt:giments ·· lrvllle'"s Terry HeDlgan, after his team\ surpns1ng 36-26 victory over Newport Harbor "You alwa}!> hope that } ou'll do the things tc be successful. \\ e dtd Our offensl" 1s a little bit more d1 vers1fied. 'W e're a bigger club ll's hard for one team toke) on one pla}er no"" Our pa<;s coverage was OK, It wasn't spectacular For the first lime physically we were able to pla)' with Newport The) beat us up pretty bad last year. We felt like we could mO\e tbe ball against them. Bobby Hameltm was 1ust oumanding He dominated the ltne ofscnmmage for U). 11 1.1.a\ a real team VtCtOl) •• Ocean View's Karl Ga ytan. following his team's 1~-0 loss to Fontana. the No. I ranked team 1n the c IF Big Ft' c Conference: "We had ome kids that got stud. pren~ good but nobody got hurt. Most ofthe1r players that the} had on their team played in the Coliseum last year 1n the < IF finals. They"re an awesome machine The thing that Fontana did so well was 1ha1 they came to pla~ Pia} 1ng a team like that. 1t gives our kids a v1s1on of what the~ need to become They didn't destroy us. and there were some 11me in the game that we played real well Bui our rncons1S1ency 1s our problem " Corona del Ma r'• Dave Holland, after his tc.im 's 16-I~ '1ctor) 0\ er San Clemente~ "I v.as d1!.appo1nte<l because we had good field pos111on earl)' and we wen-n't able to score. We should've had a coupk (score)) earl} We k 1 11 National team rolls to wate:r polo crown C Irvine, needing 10 win three games \unda' Ill capture its own water polo tournament. managed onl\ one victory before being ehm1nated by Stanford and tinl~hl'd in third place in the 15-school toume~ The Anteaters beat l 'CLA. ·"I. then lost 10 \tantord 11-7. before the Cardinal was tnpped up b\ thl' s1rnng United tates National Te.am. 8-4. in the finals The Anteaters were kd h\ Jeff Campbell. 1.1. ho tallied four goals in lJ(Ts lo s to tantord and one against l '<. L .\, and J R. Salva1ore. who scored one 1n earh con1cs1 Against UCLA. the Anteaters. who led al halfl1me 5-1 received 11 goalie sa\es from Mark Ma1zel But 1he" had 10 hold on as the Bruins rallied for four goals in the second half. including two late 1n the fourth quancr. bdore l '\I posted the v1ctol) II wasn't so caS) against 'tan ford a\ LJCI. dov.n 8-' a1 halftime. blew a l-2 edge at the end of thl" fif)t quancr Stanford scored six tt mcs in the S«ond quarter to take a comfortable l<'ld and nl"vt'T looked bad. when the Sl"'Cond half began I UCI v ictorious. 2-1 John Gran's aoal with 20 minute~ left 1n the game lifted UC If"\ rne to 1\s firlt soccer victory of th<' ~ason Sunda). a 2-1 verdict 01. er Cal late Baltl"rsfil"ld on the Anteat<'n' fi<'ld Ken Gunn scored fint for LJCI (I ·3-2) midway through lht fi~1 hall r•••••••••••••••••••••4 : IE•I Pll IASEl&LL • 1 : TIYllTS : : U TUN>AY ""· 21 : • 11 NOC* • e 8AU. Jiil HeOH e . , ............ ~~.• • ' ... .,... DlMx ;""4) • : 810..00 T'ryout ,.. : : ...... : • -11 ..... 11 • • lll·IHl • • • --=='-. • ....................... Ecllto1a'1 BUI Workmaa, following bis team's f1nt victory of the year, a 35-14 decision over Colton: "We did what we wanted to do. and lb.at was to play a tou&h. physical game. Other than the long runs (that Colton had). their loosest p.in was 6 yards. We were pleased with that considenng wh.at we did the week before. We passed- blocked very well, and we didn't get sacked, in fact, our quancrback was h.itJUSl once the whole ni&ht. and that was JUSt after he let the ball go. We were a rcaf football team. I don't know who It was that first week. We're JUSt trying to get better after a disasterous bcgJnning." E1tucla'1 Ed Blut.oe, after bis team's 20-3 victory over Laguna Hills: "We're 1n pretty good shape, nobody got hurt. The key to our victory was our offensive hnc. Scan (Kinkade) had good time to throw the ball, I was real happy with that. Defensively, that's where we're trying to improve. we played pretty good They had JUSt 117 tot.a.I }ards on offense. Ian Mc0ona1d had 118 yards rushmg. and senior hncbacker Bnan Sherrard played a really good game on defense. In some aspects. I don't tbmk we played with the same rntens1ty as m the El Toro game. but nevertheless, we won:· Mater Del's Claack Gallo, following his team's 41 -20 victory over Santa Ana Valley ··As we wcot into the ball game, we knew they were fast. They took the opening ltickoffand went fora touchdown and probably had five or six long runs 1n the game We never rcall) cootatned th~m. We're not used to that kind of speed. and we needed a half to start playing to their tempo Things have a wa> of looking better on Monday than on Saturda} morning " Woodbrid1e's Gu e Nojl, following his team's 14-0 loss to Tustin: .. I thought we played better ofTens1vely, mainly blocking. But we ·re very )'Ou ng on the hne. and It takes a whale for young lineman to get 11 down. The) 'II come around, rm confident in that. The pass blockmg in general (is the problem). and it'll come with lime. The) had some good layers. too." Unlversl ick Carti1, lollowing his team·s 42-3 loss to Mission V1ejc : "Their wide receiver. Bobb) Doran. surpnsed us with 1s speed, he rcall) hurt us. The) opened wnh kickoff rctu for a touchdwon llnfortunatel} 1t set the tempo for th entire game. They're a real good football team. They're like No. 1 or 2 in the count} The) 're a scn1or-dominated team. with cxpenence. The anual score was ugl). but we improved and did a lot better We JUSt have .to put 11 together·· Saddlebaek's Jerry Wltk , tallowing hts 1eam·s 20-1 ::! victory over anta .\na ··Santa .\na had scored on their first two possessions. so we could'\c ~onen blo1.1.n out of the game. But our delense hung in there V..e held (quarterback I Enc Turner to some good numhe~. fo r us He completed onl) ~'' out of .23 passell The v.a' the lsd\ came back from be1 ng down I 0--0 ""as e \.Cept1onal ·· High Roler makes it b ig By ALMON LOCK.ABEY 09!y"et .............. ~1x o ut hem l all turni.i 'al hh -tour tr om !\it'v. port Bea,h ~acht d ubs -\l..orcd high 1n -,, Franl·1s 'I al ht Cl ub's Big Boal Sene' v. htl h 1.1. ound up Saturda' on \an Franc1~0 Ba\ Winner oft he .\1lanll( Troph' the 1h1rd largest gftlUp in thl'.' 56-boat neet 1.1.as H 1th Role-r S~lp~rcd b\ Hill Power of ~cwpon Harbor 't a,·ht ( lub H 1~ Rolcr 1.1.a<; head of tht• l 'i team rn tht' ret·cnt .\dm1ral\ Cup in England Winner ot the l tl\ ot \jn han' 1~0 Perpt"tual tor tht' second largest group 1.1. a) wm Haf' n 's l ra.1' tlor-.c out of San D1l"gO 'I acht ( luh Runnerup "'a~ fohn o\rt'n\ Tomahawk. Balboa 't ach1 l luh and third 1.1.a) Bladt' Runner. skippered h\ Bill T1.1.1<.l \t F-ram'1) 'I < >\pair of Santa Cruz· '1U' <lum inall'd the large\ I sa1ltng for the S1 Franc1'i Perpetual The 1.1. inner v. a' Blundtl' sk1p~red b~ Pat \<tonrz V..a1l 1l 1 'I 3(ht <. luh .ind senmd wa!. Ka thmandu. ~1le-d b} .lnhn l .rnd11n ~an Diego 't jch 1 Club Third Y..as Pnma. a "'jl,on-\tard. f!X ..ailed h' I t'lm Blal e 'it Franm 't ( Le1.1.1'> Beef'\ ' It\ n "-R.tlhua 'I .11 hl l lub plal e<l sC\':ond in the bid tor thl' "-l'llh·"-ilhom Tr1lph' heh1nd Roger Lr' rngston 's Loho ~attic 't < John Mad..aunn"' Pendrago n l .11tt11m1J 'I al.hi l lutl v.as the 1.1. innt'r ol thl' Richard Rhl't'rn T m ph tor tht 'mall boal'i. but bareh act"d out Ron M el\ ilk.\ I mpJl t whu, h h11 a rock 1n ont• race and Jamagl'd a rudder \'. eatht'r cond1t1un) 1.1.-i:re moderate tor tht tall l 13<.<.tC 1.1.-h1ch <lra1.1.' ooa1i. from throughou1 the Paci til l oos1 Gold Cup race delayed Light tl1 mrn-<Xl'ittnl v.1nJ~ bt-twt"Cn tht' "'<'""port P 1t•t and the Santa .\na R1' tr Jell\ <\und.a~ <;tailed the sn ' ' ml"ll'f ~achh lO mpcllng tor the Scandina\ tan (.:old ( UJ' The Bahia C1mnth1an Yat'ht Club ra~t' 1.·omm11tCl' alll"d th<' r011.t" 1.1.h<'n none o l thc \.3l'hl\ we-re ahk to tin1"h v.11h1n 1he ltml' ltm11 I he reg.an: "-111 l·ontinut' t00a1. Orange County's ~ easy ' i listening radio station KDCM 10!1.1 FM Sta-ll!D .. foR I H! R1c0Hn ~ . ' MAJOll L8..U. ITAlitCMHeS ....._._.LW Toronto ~voni hltlmorl Detroit '°''°" Mllwtllltll C:lr<ltlend wtllT Dt\WON W L IS "' .. u ,. n n n 70 " .. " H n '"" °'"""* n IS . " 1' .. n n 1S 74 u &l S4 f1 .....,,,_... ..... 10,C~t ~1 7, KMIM• City ) M11weuat1 2. Toronto 1 Nelli Yorlt $, lelllmore 4 lot IOI! 6. Oetrolt 2 Clllcffo 7. 0-lend S Teaea 6. S..ttle o T.-y10e!Mt ut Bl .SU .Sl7 .sos ·"' .,. .. Cfllc.e90 (NelMHI ,._10) II ~ (SytiOll IJ·I), n MllwlullM (LMl'Y 1·1) e l TorOl'IO (ClellCY 7·S), n Otlrolt (8-ll\tlue< •·SI at ao.1°" (~7-101,n s..111e (Laf'l9Sfon 1· tll er T••H <Scl'lmldt 5-S), n Cleveland (Waddell 1·61 et 0.klllld lltllo 4·3), n ()Ny ""'" ICfllduled T""49v'1~ CllfQoo at ~. n aotton at TorCH1to, n Oetroll at New Yorlt, n Mlnnetota e t TaQI, n &alllmor• at ~UkM, " K111111 Cllv 11 S..tti., n Ci.vtlend 11 O.ldalld, n ........ LeffUe WISTDIVWON W L ~ 17" Clnc:lnnall I I 67 Houtton n n k n Olloo 7S 74 Allenta 61 • Sen Fr1nclK O SI " $1. Loul1 New York Monlreel ~,. Chlcaoo Pft11Dur011 IA.STOMMON ,, 5' fO Sf n n 71 " 70 71 SI H S..v'•k.-OMlwl S, Sen FranclM:io J Ptllll>Ur9'1 S, New York 3 ChleaOO t, ~· 2 St. LOUii 6, MontrMI S A1lant1 7, San Dlloo s Clnclnnell 6. Houlton s T.-'1'10- ."'<'- Sl4 ,5.47 .. $17 .503 -,,., .624 .604 .517 .413 .m .347 Ga s .... 10 1' 2' 2't DMIW'i <H--..cutt 1·121 1t Houston (Scott 11·71, n MontrMI (Liii<.., S-HI 11 Clllcaeo (Trout 1•6) Naw Yorlt. <A11ull1re 1·6) at Pllllaci.tphla (Dinny 11·12>. n PttlablJr'eh (Wallt h l) 11 St LOYla (Fonctl 1-6), n San FranelM:IO (Hammell.er 4·121 at San OllOO !Thurmond 6·101. n Only 111me1 1d'llduild T..-'1'1 Goamlt ~ at Houtton, n Mol'llfMI al Clllc:No New Yorlt. at PllnadllPnla, t·n Allent• at Cincinnati, n Pftttt>uroh 11 St. Louta, n San Francltc0 11 San Olloo. n AMS•UCAN L•AGUe ~10,lndleftlt CLIVILAND CAL.,OltNIA l utlerd Francou JICOOYJO Thrntnon H1rorvlD Nixon" FIKNlft lb Ctrtlf" Vuil ¥Cl'I rf 8¥nrrd2t> Wllllrd c Mrlli.1 _.,,,., 6 2 2 0 Certw ID S I I 0 S 2 I I 9enlQUl rf S 2 4 I 6 1 2 2 OWlll11 rK I 0 0 0 6 I 2 3 Downing " S I I 0 4 0 2 0 OMlller rf 0 0 0 0 1000 1Uon11pn 1000 1010 DICnca lO 6 1 2J sooo JIClllOllOl'I 6 11 0 6 I 2 0 Grlc:ll 211 4 I I 4 4 11 0 Sc:hoflld u 4 I 2 0 S 1 1 1 Sconln pn O O O O Gerwn 0000 Llnarff lltt O 1 0 O &oonlc 6 11 0 Pettis cf 4 0 I 1 .. f 1l 1 T..... 47 1114 t k_..., ...... ~ Jl2 -., __ , CaMw1* -J1I -•1-10 OM ou• wri.n wlnnlno run s.corld Game Wlnl\11111 lt81 -N- E-Car-7, P1lll1, eoon., Franco OP-Callfornla 2 LO&-clevlland 7, Call• tornla I 1 21-Franco, Har11rov1. It•· Jacbofl H Ill-Jaco«>v I 111. Tl'lornton 1191. DIClftcll ( 16), Gr left t Ill s-<:er-. C1rter SF--f>tlllt I~ H It llt II SO OW.lld E11trly ltuNe JltMd I Clark L.3·• ~ 0 •3 II 9 11-3 I 0 :J l·l 1 0 I 1·3 I I 9 0 0 0 2 0 , , s 0 3 I Witt I 6 I 1 Luoo O 0 0 2 OMoor1 I I I 2 CMl>unl W,t-2 0 0 0 I Wiii oltehld to l oattert In 4tti, Luoo oltc~ 10 1 ti.lier In ltll WP-E11ttrlv, Wiii T-4·25 •-47,'9S POfldor Miiier lhnlClutl Cerew Sconl..-• Oownl119 ~ Pt1!11 Jeck*Ol'I Boone DIClnc;n Jonff Grich Nerron khOflllcl Liner•• Howell Wllfono Hlf\drlcll Whllt KM<IY T ..... .,.... awra ... IATTINO Al It H Hit I 1 I 0 31 6 11 0 117 SI 111 7 405 66 Ill , 14 13 n 2 "' 15 130 20 IS I 73 O 4D" 6A IOI I 4?9 " 110 76 424 3S IOS S )IO .. 94 " Jn 6S 90 ti 436 69 IOS II 12' 12 ,, s 401 4S IS I " 4 6 2 Ill 19 27 S 113 IS 40 4 41 s s 2 ) ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 S,o21 W 1:116S 141 mCHINO ltll ~Cf. 0 1 000 4 316 3' l09 36 77' " 274 11 2n 6 .271 19 .267 13 254 so , .. 10 247 " 242 47 241 " ns 39 212 6 N1 ,, 203 13 111 6 in 0 000 0 000 .... 2S2 I~ H II SO W·LlltA ""'>Ore ff•f) 13 21 67 1·1 IS9 HOfland n 16 10 1J 0· I I 64 X SUiton I~ ' l 4 2·0 I 9' Cliburn '3 11 2S ., t ·2 2 Ol Witt 132\'> 210 tS 1'1 13·1 l.37 c.no.i.rla SWJ SO II ll 6-1 l.St Luoo 1'11'.1 79 21 41 3·4 U3 • Sy11on 2oe 203 S4 9S 1 S·I 3 16 lt0tnanlc1o 19011) 194 62 S4 13·1 4 04 Sitton 141'1) 162 '3 60 6· 10 U7 Z.1111 11 .. " " 2·2 4. McCH lllM ln"i "I 62 19 IH I 46' COf'bltt 44 47 20 24 3·l S.11 S.nc11t1 S.'"I 61 n )0 2-0 • 01 $flolltn S S I ) 0-0 7 20 ,,_...... 1 I 4 s 0-0 ' 00 T..... 1)'6 ID4 4" 611 &S·'4 U4 S.¥11. Moore 21. Cliburn 6, St1ton I. ..sancri.L L ,-w11'1 Anllllt •-aaaaon tot•t' C....,...._ 4.1 Wlliol\, l(l!'MI Cltv, ~ L. lmltfl, KIMal Clrf, P , ~'tCHIHO (\t 41citlOnt>-GuldrV, Hew Yet\, JIM. UOJ .... rfleNn, Kanaa' tt111, lt--t, u1i i<w, Twtflto. W·•· i.111, c-••· ... Vtni. U•I, 411. l'OtllCllOUTt ...... ~en. MIMI.Ott , 1'7; Morr'I!.:. °"'""· 11$, '" ...,.,,...,_, ~. 1111 Hunt, lklslott, 170; lurnt, Ctllcet0..1. 16). SAVll~, IC.-11M1 CllY, 34, Hernendl1, o.tretl, ~ I ._, Clllc.leo, •• 0. ...... ...... 1IJ J. Howll, 0.11 .. no. 1'.i.:i':;'~ ~.,._ 2'. IA TTINC l)'° al INll,1-McOet, St Louil. U7; OWt'rwl. ~ .121; ltaln• •• MonlfMl, .J11; SanclDert, ClllcNO, Jl), Hert, St. LOul•J 312, Partltt, ClnciMlll, .J12 • ltUNs.-Mur,nv. Atltftta ti); McGM, St. Lou''· lot, ltelnet, ~tr'MI, 10.; COiiman, St. LOI.II,, 101; Slndblf'o, Cl'llcaeO, IOI. ltl~arw. Clnclnnlll, II); Hlft, SI. Louk, 102; Ml.Kflflv, Allenlt, 100; INIO!u, MonlrMl, N1 G. Wilton, ""laCJllPNa. to; Mofeland, <:hlcffO. '°' HIT~. $1 Lout•, 200, Partctr, ClftCIMlll, 1'2; OWVM. ~n DlleO. 1n. Sanclbll't, Clllcaeo. 17'; 1t1ln1t, Moftlt'MI, in DOU8L.Es-f'arlt.er, Clnel~tl. .ii Herr. St. Loul,, 371 G. Wll•on. 1111\lladelOf'tla. JJ; WtllKfl. MonlfMI, ~; Crua. Houtton, ». TltlPLEs-Mc:GM. St Louis, ''· Samuel, Ptllladelc>tll1, 13; ltalnes, Mon1ree1, 11, COlll'llln. St. LOUii . 10, c . lt•Ynotdt, ~ton. I; Garl!lf', Hou,ton, L · HOME ltUN$-Murflfly, AIWtnt1, J7; ._.,..., ~ n. Canet, Htw Yori!, 2', ,_,...., Cincinnati, 29; Scnmldt. fl'lllll· delPhla. 2'. STOLEN 8A$E$-<Ollman, St. Loul•, 101, 1t1lllft, Montreel, 65; Sandbero. Clll• C.llO, 50; McGll. St. LOUii, ff; ltlelua, Clne!Mttl, '7. 1. PITCHING 112 dec:ISIOftt,_.... IN..,, ~ 17.a, 116; Gooden, New Yori!, 22·4, 1.st1 Franco, Cincinnati, 12·3, 2.31; 8. Smith, Montrttl, 1'·5, 3.01J Oerllno, Ntw Yori!, 16-5, 2.IS. STltlKEOUT'l-Gooden, Hew YOMI, 2'1, Soto, Cincinnati, JOO, Vlilllllulll, DM91n. 1'4; Iba"' HoY"on· 1'3; Fer111ndl1, N- Y'orll, 163. SAVEs-RMrODll1 MOntrHI, 35; L•. Stnlll'I, Chlceoo, )O; 0 . Smith, Houalon, U, Goueoe, San Oletlo, 23, Power, Clnclnnell. n. Syttw. Attan11, n NATIONAL L•AGUI Declllers S, Glentl J LOI ANO • ._.I SAN 'ltANCllCO etHlllM a•rlli.I Ouneanu Lllldr• cf C.tllll lb ) 1 0 0 Gleddtn Cf • 0 0 0 4 I I 1 WOOdrd 2t> 4 I 1 0 3 0 0 1 L~rd If 4 1 I I Ma"""" rf N~o Madloctl lb Sclotcll c Mldndo" Sax 2tl 8altor 2b HION11 o JGon111 rf T .... 4 O O 0 8rentv 3b 4 l 2 2 O O O O DrllHn lb 4 O O O 4 t I 1 ltCMnckl rf 4 0 0 0 4 I I 0 Tr1¥lno c 3 0 0 0 4 11 0 Trlllooti 1000 I 0 0 2 Uribe H 4 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 e1ue 0 0 0 0 0 2000 0-0l'I 0000 0 0 0 0 FWlllt'no 0 0 0 0 1' S 4 S T.... n ) S ) lat'IW..._ L.• ~ 1• 010 210-$ .... ,r...mce JOO -000-3 G•me Wlnnlno RSI -S.11 UI E-<tbtll, Madlodt, llul, ltoenldl1 o~ Anollls I LO~OI Anoetll 2, San Franclaeo S. 28-Scloscl• ~lt-1..AndrllUX (121. 8renty (19), Madlock Cm . Sl-Ouncan 12tl. 5-elue. SF-51• 2 II' HltlllallO LM~ HenN_. W, 17·3 S 3 2 2 N i.cllnfulr S, 16 0 0 0 0 ..,.,,-*' ,llUI L,7·7 4 4 l 2 6 F.Wllllama 2 o t 1 1 1 WP-t1ersnlser. T-2:2S. A-10,m '~ SUNDAY'S lllSUL TS (1 1111 .. ll·•'f ~) A~AL.OOSAS , .. ST ltACI. 4 turtono,. Go EH Y Turl tcrurl 6 40 LOOM Cl'lanOI (1t11•ln) Tt11 Times Tlfl (NooU11l Time: 46.), U •XACTA 13·21 Plld 164.SO. OUAJtTlltHOtUH SIGOND ltACI. 110 vard' Saint or Slnntr <Gerclal 5.40 Two Notff (YOUllOft!\) Oovouthlntllmcute ta1rdl Time: 4'.7. U •XACTA (1·21 01ld SS4.SO THOlltOUGHMt•os TH•D ltACI. l 111' mllli , 40 2.10 3.IO l 20 300 100 720 460 260 2,60 lt-tft• (Holllno1wor1111 1J 20 HO 3,60 ()u( Gllll (NOOutll 340 260 A&uc:ountll lJln) UO Time: 1.44 3/S. U IXACTA (2·S) oeld tl06.SO 'OUllTH llACI. I 1116 mllH Sw .. t 0.. 0.. (Mani) I 40 S.00 3 20 Syaumu <Ctst1non) 7.00 4 20 Shullll Ona IOoml1111ue1) 2.40 Time: 1;45 J/S l'lf'TH 9tACI. I 1116 mllli. Crystal Eaote (H1nllfll 4 40 LIM1ann1 (EMICIUI~) Ellllant IC.l b IC11tanonl Time: 1.44 3/S. 300 ,., 4.20 3 00 2.IO n DAIL. y oouaLI (2·6) O•ld '11.00. SIXTH llAC•. 6"turl0nlls. KHO Oall119 1Croa1> 11 40 Sier Clllnotr 10t1oal Sl119 A ~"°' I00tnlllllU1ll Time· 1.11 1/S, 6.60 S.00 4.00 4.40 660 U IXACTA (6·101 oeld116700 SIVIN'TH llAtl. ' funono\ Exci Orl!Nn (St1Ulno1> 1s..i 7.2 U O Gttt 800lt (Cruz) II 00 l.tO lt1t>r1nOar IEnrkluerl 3 20 Time· 1.11 315 U IXACT A ( 1-3) oeld 5171 SO llOHTH ltACI. 6 fl;r10n111 Ooullll Oeflclt tH1n1111) 920 620 00 Sureln On IEstraoa) 14.AO 7 00 Foroet Tiit PocMtl IC11t1nonl 1.00 Time: I 17 l/S U IXACTA l4·l > o•ld "4St 00 NINTH ltACI. 6 fuf1ono1 lrllll Guard (Kllflltl 47 20 14 IO • 40 JOl\n Jerry (Oomlnoue1) s 40 • 20 One Sold Move tH1rmon) 4.00 Time. I. II llS. U IXACTA '6·21 Plld 1693 00 TINTH ltACa. 1 1116 mlle1 Iron L11dlr (Olivares I 10 .i 4.00 3.20 Flttv Sl11 In A Row ISOll1) 3.00 2 60 !>1trlclt. McF19 (Orlffll 3 IO Time 1.42 1/S. U IXACT A IS-31 oeld S74 00 S2 ~ SlX (6·6·1·•·•·SI oelo 10 wlnnen lflvt hOtllt) .-.114.00 OUAltTlltHOllSH ILIV•NTH ltACI. lSO verd• A1ur• Hooe (Lewis) l 00 2 IO 2 40 F~ LOYI Of ~y (Cf-) I 20 6 00 Won Wlndllller (EdW••dl) I 20 Time 17 n U IXACTA (4·~1 oald '101 QO THOtlOOOH9"1DS " TWaLnH ltACI l l f l6 ml,.. Terdv c~ (Men•I • 00 4 IO ) 20 Eertv $tttllf IEMklutrl 4 IO 3 00 ltanOlt t$tallln111I 2 60 Time• 1 4J 315 U IXACTA 15·21 Olld t9l SO Att~nc.: 20.tlO NHL •XHtal'TtON CMUdra •· K"-J locwtW~ .... ~ 0 1-J V"'""'1YW J 2-• ,.,.., ~.,... I l.,o\ Anotlll. Selluln I (Olonnel. 2 49 2 LOI A,_..1, 8-tt I llttclmondl. 1~.Jt (N I J V1ncovver, 1<1"on 1 ISl\rlkol 16.34 Plnl"ltt-W~, I.A (llHl'llftll), 4,19, I.A ~. (loo many men on le•), US; Co11.1. Ven lttloolnOl, t.11. P111t, Ven Cllolellfttl. 10' 10, Oudlnllt, LA ltflOPlnll >. 14'27, Tuer, I.A (tOVOl'llftll. 107, Petit, Van (rOUllfllnt). 1427, Wllllam1, LA lr~l. 15'?9, Srnvt. v an (routlhlntl. 15'19, Petit, Van doubll rnlflof' {l\ooltlno un•OOf'ltm1n11111 condUCll, 18 ,, • ~,..,.... 4 ve~ LOWfV I (Sandllll .... tttl H f S V1rcouver, LMNV I CL~. Lldllerl. •·" 6 YlllCOUVlt. Kirton 2 !Skrllt.O), 12-0t Ptftell ""'"''· LA !Int• ltrtl'C•J. >~. C111t"k 1. Van (CllllY of ""'91, 6 12, Wllllm1, U. (flOICllllll, Ul, OuefllMI, LA (,..,..,_), 7':19, Coxe, Van • IMl-'tlfltl. 9:20, Co11.a, Ven lflOOlllflt), 14-fl 8"'""4111. LA ll'IOOl!lflt), 1•-.5'. Pellt, Van Pr t•p F outh.111 HUNTINGTON IRACH HIGtt "00T9ALL y.., ..... , y_, C.dl ...... 1'21-+iefrv Welker 2•• 19"-Harrv Wllller 2•6 1tn-+4artY Wtllllf 0.) lft+-+iarrv w1111er 2·2 ltU-C1t Slltul 3· 1 1'2'·-<111 $1*11 • I·• 1'21-<.-$1*11 N -1 1m-c111 $1*11 •• ,.3 1'29-<10 SlwUI S.-2-1 1~10 SlwUI 6-3·1 1'31-<ao sntue S·l·2 19J2--<:ao $1*11 6·4 lm-<:ao sntue 1+1 lf'U-Cao SlwUI 3·4 1'35-<ao Slltul S-3 1--AI ltlbolft 2•4· l 19'7-AI ltltloln 1-6 l,..A, lt.001'1 3·3 Int-Al It t001n 3· S l~AI ltltloln 4•4 1'4F-AI ltltloln 0-S• 1 190-AI lll«IOlll l+ 1 lto-cao ~ 2·4 l~•o $1'111.1t 3·4 lf•S--Cao SlwUI 4·4 1..._~ltlCloln ••• t-1·2 1'47-Shlue-ltlC>oln 4·2·2 l~ltltloln ,., l~lydl FrltMQf1 1-1 l~tydl Frl1Mo11 1·1 1'51-Ed Goddard 6·3 1'52-Ed Gocldlrd 3-S-I IK>-Ed Gocldlrd 2·7 1'5'-Ed Goddard 2•7 ltSS-Ed Goddard S·4 1'56-Ed Goddlro 6·3 ltS7-Vern Vallercamo 4· S· l ltst-Vern Vallercamo J·6 19"-Nldl Ulllltleh 4·5 19'0-Nldl u.tnldl 6-2-I IHI-Ken Motts 5·4 l~en MollS S-3-1 lHs-tcen MOlll s+ I 1"6-i<en Moth •• • t-2 IN7-Ken Motts ,., lfft-¥.en MoelS 4·S l~an Moira 7·2 lt7o-tcen Moll• ~ l·I 1971-fC.en Molli 2·S·2 1972-ltoy 8rumme11 2·7 l~oy Brummett l ·6 197~ov arummett 2·7 197~ov lrummett 3·• lt76-0av• Van Hoorlbllle 1·1 1tn-oav1 Ven Hoor~• J·6 197t-01ve Vin HoorlOl!l1 0-1· 1 lfn-On1 V•n Hoore1>1111 0-t· 1 19'0-lloO IUlerWOOCI 1·9 19'1-Gr" Henry 3·7 1912-Gr" Henrv • 1·4 1913-(;IOf'Ot P1aco. • • 7·3· I l~Ot P1K01 2·7·1 Totata: 214 wins, 2" IOHll. 27 "" • C1F ollyofh entry • LllllUI trl·Cllamotons • • LMeul Cflln'IOlonl Note: 1976 lflcludel one forfeit win. (rouot1l1111), 16:5'; Tuer, LA melor lflllt'tt· lnol. 19-.AS; P•llt V•n ma lor mlsconctuct 111ont1no>. IN S. TNr4I ,.._, 1 Lot Anoetff. 8r1Man I <R.omonc:t 8enol11, S'26 (P01 I, Vancouver, 8111and lun111l1tldl. 11.19. t Vancouver, Sm't'I I 19!27, Pcne1tlls-Co11.t . Van (l!Hhl1111), 1:44; Lowry, Van mlnor·me)Or (rOU11111nO-fl9f'll· 111111. 1 44, Svkll. LA mlnor·melof' (rouo11- l1111-fl9htlnol. 1·44, Skrltlo, Ven (holc:llnol, 3•44, Sl'lero. LA lholc:llnol, 6:17, EllOllUI, LA (rrlooll'till). 7!23, Enotlsh, LA (tr~lnol. 17'12; Eno11'11, LA melo4' lflollllno>. lt-..SO; Co111. Van m1lor lf\tlltlnol. lt:SO. Sholl on ooa~V1nc0Yver t• to-.-21 Los At'1111111 13·1-t-2'. GoaJIH-V1ncouver, C1Ptfat, 8 r0dlur LO' All9ttff, Ellot ,·+taaty Attlndl~116SO. MMt'I NurMment (atLM~) s...... , ...... P1ul Annac-def. St1'11n EdOer'O. 7·6. 6·7, 1·• (AnnacOM •lr1t SS0,000, EdberO win• US,000) MIWa '9Umament tat ~x, l"tllftell S......l"INI Dleoo Per11 (Uruouevl dlf Jimmy 8rown (U S.J. 6·4, 7·•· W.men's~ ,,, CNc.Nal MMlls ....... aonni. G1dulell IU S.} dlf 1(1tr.y Rinaldi (U.$.), 6• 1, 6-3. Water.,.. COLL IOI UC lfVlnl TIUnllmenf Ste,_. It, UC INN 7 Sl1nford 2 6 '1 1-11 UC lrvlne 3 2 0 2-1 UC Irvine tcorlno· C.moblll 4, Oet V111t I, S.lva tOf'e I, Wltaon I. UC INIM I, UCLA 1 UC lrvlne 3 2 I i--t UCLA I 2 2 2-7 UC Irvine acorlno. 8ell ), o.i V1t1t 2. ~lv1tor1 I, Wiiton 1, C•l"l\Pl:ltll I OtMr SC«'ft C11 9, PaclflC • Frffno 11, LOYOia ' Long hacll $t1lt t , USC I Peooerellnl f , UC Sen Olto0 5 • Air Force 7, Cl l Sllll Fullerton s U.S. Nallonll T11m 19. !JCLA l Claremont·Mueld 12, UC Irvine '8' 4 Lono a.acfl Sl1te 10, Paclfk 4 Cat 7, USC S U S NII~ TH m t, $t1ntord 4 ............... I U.5 Netlonal T11m, , Stanford, l . UC Irvine; 4 UCLA; s Cel; ' Lono 8Mcll St111. 1 use. I PKHIC, ' .,_dine. 10 UC Sen Oletlo, 11 Frt\nQ Stitt , 12 LOYola, 13 Clar-t•M\ldd; lt. Air Force, U Cal Sla te Futwt~ C ..... NCCW (M!l·cec•-> UC tntM 2, Cal .................. I UC lrvlM ltCOl'lflt OVf\11 I, Gran I o... ......... N•~ LA_,.... -lJO .,,....,, Ito utllll bt'I, ltO ctlleo MM. 111 K'Ulolfl, "' rock 1111\, • ~. 2 l'llllbvt, 1 blaclt. ... Alen lralleM<I), 1 ceoeron. 47' madurtl DAVIY'I '-OekH (...._,, a.di) -a 1 ene11r1. > oarracudl, 17 Mtllto. 101 roo ""'· I llelll>vl, 204 bin. 2 Dulllt ,,_, 1, leO IMUlerwl -- ...,....,aa.-c••....,rau> an 11.·Hat S1.itt011, 1n .ooo Mike lttld, M),200 174 Howafd 1'wtttv. ll7,200 S7S ltleflatd ZOllOI, I 1',200 11'7 Jeff Slumal\, tl•MO Andy ... n. 11•1'00 Jaek """*". 114.600 t11 Wayne LIVI, 112,400 "' 0 1n Pohl, Sll,.00 .. Chlrles aolllno, s 10.400 Pal L.lllOMY, 110,400 112 l lM S.nder, 17150 Wlttlt WOOCI, 17, lSO Tom Purtzer, 17, 150 Curll• Str111111. 17, 150 hn Crtnlllaw, S7, 150 ... Ca~. s7. ISO unov Miiter. 11 .1 so llH 1u11ner, 17, lSO 011 Mor111n. U,000 Ken 8rown, lS,000 .. Tom Lehman, ..... -Douo TIWtll, 13,MO Tom W1tton, l3,MO Matll Calea vecchla, '3....0 .. 9oO Glider, '3AO JIY Ollalnt, Q,OIO Oevld Tl\Of9, U,OIO ., JOllMY Mllllr; l2,"60 Keith Ferwa, 12.660 $t1ve Jonll, ''"'° Mark LYI, st.660 -Steve Etlll1111ton, S2,01S Frid COUO!ff, S2,02S Ron $trldl, 12,025 Mar11. O'MMre, u ,02s Chrl1 Perry, 12 ,02$ ClarlllCI ltOM, tQ,025 OIOf'Ot Archer, U ,025 01111 Ec:twerd1, U,025 .. Tony Slits, Sl,520 It elotl Lendrum, SI ,S20 J.C. Snead, $1,520 ltod Curl, Sl,S20 "' Devi L.undstrom, Sl,104 8oO Twi y, 11,204 D.A. w111>r1no. sl,204 JOl\n Fouo111, 11,204 1'1 Nick Price, 11,010 "'""Mehl, Sl,010 Peter Oo1terhul1, s 1,010 2'2 MA>rrl1 Htl•hkv. sm JOlln Adam,, Snl Tom Jenkins, t'21 uonard ThOmOaon, sm Jim Gallloher, sm Mlk• Hulbert, sm Mac O'Gredv, ... Steve 8owman, .,. Kennv Kno11, .,. m 2" V•nca H11fner. sen m Charlff COOdv. MS6 8hl GlaHon, •5' e m eareln, •54 Miki erloht, tll6 Pat Mc:Gow1n, tll6 lt7 Len Cilf'neftlS, "24 -Ron Commen1, Sll6 O•ri Mllovlc, SIOO Chlo 8Kk, SIOO Frenk Conner, MOO >01 I JOS ........... ·~-10 ......... ,. 71 ......... 71 10-n·••·6' ... ,Ml-76 *"·71·73 70-.. ·6t-75 70-6'-•t-7• 6M3•n•70 6'-71-.. •74 71-71-6 .. 71 ,,..n-'7-n 71·n ·65·7S 70-70-6'-7' 70-72·6f·71 69·6'·n ·7S 71-67·70-71 74•10-70-71 70-71-10-15 10-11-.,.n 10·73·66·n 6'·73·66·7' '°'""·n·n 66·U ·70-n 70-74· .. ·75 '9·12·/S-73 7o-71·'7·IO ,. .... 71-75 71-72·70-75 7'+16'·76 11-11·•9·11 .. ·74·70·7' 13·6'·'7·7' ,. ....... 77 n·11·6'·n 75·67·73·74 ... ,..72.74 '7-75-74·74 12·12·71·7S 61·7S·72·74 74·6'·70-77 71-70-72·71 n -n -11-16 77·71·70-71 73-67. 76· 76 71-70-72·7' 73·61·75-7' 11-n-10-11 74·70-12·7' n ·71'7Ht 7Hl·7l·71 :~:::~: 1 70·74·IO n n-12·79 1 ·76·76 7H3·7S·77 73·71·74·71 n -11-n -n 71-70-75·14 13·71-71·16 73·70-74·14 10-73·12·16 Stuert Smith. 1714 70-74·71·'7 <•·won In first hole Of wdClln O.llh PlaYOtf). Sen '9M0Htk .. v1t Skinner. 137,500 P1t 8'8dllv, S23, 125 211 8 "" SOlotnoll. s 1$, 000 Nancy Looer, '15,000 212 ~llY Little, S7..125 SIM• "'10lacclnl, S7,t2S Marv 8111 Zmmrmn, S7,l?S 81tsy King, 17,125 JoAnne Cerner, 17..125 JU Laure 81Ullfl. '4.IOl P11tv Sllllhln, 14,IOO Pennv Pul1, 14,IOO 214 MlnclY Moore, Sl,'20 K81hy Saker. Q,420 LlllOl'I Muraolt.1, U ,419 8et'1 01nlll, U,41' Cindy HIH, Sl,419 Amy AICOtt, ~,4 19 Mlul1 MCGloroe, U ,419 ~Y Hammel, Sl,419 21S Donne C1oon1. S2,642 J .. 11 lnksler. u ... 2 Jae111e ear1K11. n ... 2 21' J1ne Cratter, 52,213 Olenne Delley, S2,213 Jan $1aolllnM>n, U .213 CllldY Madlev. 12,21) Lindi Hunt, S2,21J Mitri Edlll, S2,21' Stll)ft1nll F1rwlt, S2.2 IJ 217 D1wn Coe, Sl,711 71·11·67 61·73·61 n ·11 ... 10-n-61 72.72 ... 73·70·6t 11-n -'9 11-11-10 70-70·72 73·71 ·•• 73·71-69 72·7<1-71 75-70·69 13·n ·'9 73·72·6' 70-75·'9 13·11-10 10-11·13 69·71·74 6'·74·74 73•75·67 ,. .... 71 74·69·n 7S·7H O 72·74·70 71·74·71 70·7S·11 72·72·12 12·7'1·12 71·71·74 Muffin Soencer·Ovtn, S 1,7" LIAllfl C1uadlv, Sl,7" 76·70-71 71-75·71 71-75·71 71-74·12 n -n -11 Lori Garbact. s1.111 ) 8tcllY Pearaon, 11.717 211 HOflll Stacv, S l,)OS Colleen w1111er. sl..JOS 0t0ot111$1111nner,S1,JOS Jo Ann Wawm, 11,JOS ClndY Flom1 11,>05 t< Im Slllornan, '1,)0S Judv Cllrll, 11,JOS 0 111 Efflllllll, ti.JO$ Sandf • Pltmlr. s 1,30$ AIM ton Finney. SI .JDS Marv Owver. ti-* 21' Su11n S.nden, t913 Chrl1 JOl\llton, Stl) lerb ""*owtll Y, 191> JtrllYn ar1u, 1913 m Merci eo1erth, sn6 Su•ll McAlllater. sns N1ncv ~1ter. ans Pam Glllten, 1725 J1111Mtt1 KoNt\111, sns 77•71·70 76·71-71 n-1s--11 7o-77·71 74·n ·n 70-76-72 74·71·7> 73·71-74 71·73·74 73·7CHS n -6'·n 7S·72·n 73·74·72 n·n·14 71·73·7S 14·14··12 72·15·73 71·7S•74 71·7S-74 n -n -1s n1 Marti Flll\ilfH ·Ootll, SSS7 Serb n1oma,, US7 73·74·74 74·72·7S 6t·n ·1S 71-74·7• Amy lenr, $55' Pat M.-,1r1, US. m Laurie ltlnt<et. t-419 1(1thy Pottw11t, t-419 AleKlndra lttlnhlrdl, "419 AllC1 ltll1man, Mii Julie Pyne, M II sn.tllY Hamlin ... 11 7S-7l·74 73·75·74 7$-n•7S 1s-n-1s 72·7S·7S 71-76·75 .................. (tt~N.C.) VI Mllllf larwr, uo,ooo 72·67•67·11-277 "' GIY I r._, Sll,000 61·'7·n ·77-27t 8oO T0tll.I, t U,000 Jim l'errM, S 11,250 LM Eldll', ti 1,250 -., .. ltootrto DIVlcen1, S7,500 ., Jlmmv Powell, '7,000 -,..,., TllOmton, SJ.HO AtnolO ,...,.,., , IS,9'° .. Chaflll o..n., t4i..UO Waller Z,,_,., .,."42-50 l lltv Ca._. M,6C2 50 DOii J.-rt ... ..., '° '" Peta lfown, U,$JO C... Lannlnt, IU50 len $mllll, U ,HO Ken s111, a.uso lH Orvlfl ""'°'°"". n .JOO 61·70-71-71-HO '9·6'-75·70-1*3 ,.. 71·61·10-m 7$• .. ->S-6,_215 74.,,.,,..,,_,.7 n., ,,.,._.,. 1s-u-n-1.....,. 1H1•14•n-m 1s n-6t·n-m 7MHt·n-m ,..,..,,.,....,.. 14•'9•7'·7.....,,.1 74·n ·7.Ml-?fl 16-10-11 ,.....,., 71.,,.,,.,~,.1 7S·D-Pf.1t-m 15 n·n-1'-m 7Ml·71·~1'1 IH HS·71-"4 7t·n+1~ .. , .. NATIONAL CONPl••NCI llAllM S.n ,,.nc1.eo Ntw Orlaan1 Atlant1 c~ Oelroll Mlnne•o•• Greenlav Temc>e lav .... WL.T~ct. ~' 2 0 0 1000 37 7 I 0 667 to 110 .m10 Q I o .ooo 11 c...... l 0 0 I 000 fl 210 .66760 2 1 0 .66713 1201334' OJOOOOS7 ... , OallH 2 1 0 """ .. .$ NYGlant• 2 I 0 ~,-.. St. L.oul• 2 1 o .667 8' Phlladlfohf1 I 2 0 .J33 2S w11111no1on 1 2 o .m 3' AIMltlCAN COH,.lt.NCI Seattle Olnvet Ka nMt Cllv knOlloo ltt*n W"t , o o 1.000 n 2 1 0 .667 t4 , 1 0 ,"713 2 I 0 667 t3 I 2 0 W 61 ~A n ~ t4 107 ,, " 70 70 19 41 .0 71 ... ,, Sf 71 71 " 70 PlllM!urOh c i.1111anc1 Houiton Clnclnnall C'""1ll 2 1 0 .6'1 n 20 1 , 0 t 1 0 0 ) 0 .33.3 .. ~ .m 3' S9 000 ., Ill ... , , 1 0 667 .. .,. Ml•mf Ntw E1111l•nd NY J1t1 llldl1111ootl• Buffalo 2 I 0 .667 SO S4 2 I 0 .667 66 37 120»33011 0)00002,73 ,_..,., OelMI ~n Frenclsco 34, It-*" 10 D1lll1 20, Cleveland 7 Denver 44, Allent1 21 1na11neootl• u, Dlttolt • Pltllburth 20, H011tlon 0 New Enetand 17. luft1lo 14 Plllladllohla 1'. w11111no1on 6 New Ortean1 20, TamH llv U Ntw Yori! Gli nt' 77, $1, Loul' 17 ,.n Dlloo 44, Cincinnati 41 Miami 31, l(an111 City 0 New Yorlt. Jiii 24. Green llv 3 TlllltlM'• Game 'l.llM al S..1111 (Cha Mll 7 11 6) SUlllMY'• °""" Atlanta et 1tam1 lttldln et New En91and Cleveland 11 San DllOO Dallas al Houaton Green lav at St. Loul• MlnnetOlt el 8uHalo New YOl'lt. Giant• 11 PllllaclllOl'll• Seattle at Kanw' City Tamc>e 81Y 11 Detroit W11n111111on al ChlcallO New Orlaan• 11 Sen Frenclsco Miami at Denver lnc:tl1111ootl1 1t New Yorlt. J1t• Ml!'*Y, '-'· JO Cincinnati al PlttltlufOh 4'9rt M, Raiden 10 kw•..., Oulr'IWI ~n Francl\co 10 J 14 7-34 Ill*" J o1 o 1-10 ''"' ~"*' SF-<reto 20 oeu from MOntena (Werac:hlllll kkk), l~. LA-FG ee11r 24, l:ltl SF~G Wersd\11111 n. 10 SS S.C.....1".nM SF-FG WerKlllnll 26, 1.-St Tlllnl~ SF-<lark 14 oeu from Monatana 1wersc1111111 kkkl, 12::33 SF-McCOfl 21 lumbll rtturn (WerlC\11111 kick), 12:57 ,111'91~ LA-Wllaon 1 run 181hr klekl, 6.45 SF-ltlno 9 run (WerKlll"9 kkk), 13-56 A-17,006 GAIM ST A tfSTICS • t' LA First down• 17 20 1tu1hls·v1rd• 30-11$ 23·tl Paulno 237 1'7 llleturn Verd\ 125 24 Como·All IS-2'-0 24·40·2 Stell.I bv 9· 71 4·2' Punh S·4' S·lt Fumblls·Loll 2·2 J·I Pen11tlas·Yerd1 1·7' 9·69 T~~PolMnlolf 27:11 32.4' INDfVIOUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Sen Fr1nclsco, Tvtet 14·4'. Crall! 10-34, Mon•1111 4·23, 1t11111 2· 12, Lo• Anoelff, Allen 12·5t. H1wkfns 6· 13, Jansen 2·9, Kine H , Wll10/I lol, Plunt111t 1·0 PASSING-Sen Frenclsco, Montana 14·24+2SS. Cavanaveh 1·7-0-ll LOI An· 111111, Plunll1t1 :D·34+2SI. Wltton H+ 10. RECEIVING-San Francisco. Crelo S•'1, ltlce J·t•, Francia 3·41, Clark 2·34, Harmon 1·15, Soloman 1·14 Loa An9eln, Allen 1·53. ClltlstenMn S-4', WIMlams 4·55. Hffter 3·17. H1wlt.ln1 )·2', Smltll 1-1 MISSED FIELD GOALs-San Fren· clsco. Wertd\11111 21. LOI Anoelff, 8•ht 42. COLL•G• Une ~ S19te JJ, Hawaii JO SQr9 11¥ Oulr'IWI Lone e.ac11$tett o 16 14 >-33 Haw1ll l 20 7 0-JO UH-i=G V1tverdl 31 Ul+-Tlolon I run (V1tvar01 klekl UM-<>YH I OIH from Tloton !kick DIOCllldl UH-Faaola 12 run <Valverde kid!) Le-FG CIYlor 4J L8-S.rtln I run (Caytor kick > L8-Loc:k11t 11 OH\ lrom Gevnor (kick btockld) Ul+-Tloton • run tValverdl klcl<I L&-orv f oeu from GeYnot tCavlor klcll) L8--0rv 5 oau from G1vnot ICevlOr kick) L&-FG Cavto<' n A--43,076 INDfVIOUAL L.IADlltS RU5HING-Lono Beacll Stall, 8 rownlno 12·4', ROC>erll S·2S. H1wall, F11ola 17-f?, Crowell 6·21 PAUING-Lono 8MCll Sl•I•. Geynor 26·44·3, 313 Haw1!1. Tloton 12·21-1, 151. "'"' ao-n• R UIM ·Ylf d' '•nl1111 ord1 lteluNI var<K , .... , Punta Fumbllt·tott ...... lllli·verd• rime Of Pot 11111on COLL•GI Hew AP'-1D'9rN No I, AubUtl'I (2·0-0) Wll ... Nllll 11 T--. No. f, Oklll'IOml 10-0-0) WH ldll NU I el MIMllO!t. No. >. tJSC ( H ·O) IOll to l a vlor, 20· I) Nellt; .t Art1one St11e, No.. 4, low• 12+0> Mii Norttlern IMlnoll, 41·20. NHI: 1t Iowa Stitt. No. S. SMU (1·0-0) Wll ldll. NHI. at TCU. No. '· Frorldt $111• (3+0> belt M8tl'lohb Stet• I,. 10. Nut: v., l(ttnua No. 7. Ohio Sl•I• t2·0-0) *' C:O.aclo 36· IS. Next: "'-WHhlnl!ICHI $t1i.. No. I. Oklahoma Slat• (MHI Wll Idle Nut: "" Miami, Dl'llO. " No. 9, LSU 12·0-0l bMt COIOfNO St1t1 17·l. Next: Oct. S ¥L No. 11, F•kle. No. 10, Pinn Sl1t1 ()·H) bMI EHi Caroll~ 17·10 Next: "'· Rutoen 1t Eall ltulllet'ford. N,J, No. ll, Ftorlda ( 1·0· 11 w11 Idle. Next: 11 Mln lu lool S1111. No. 12, UCLA (2·0-1) bell San Dlloo Stell 34· 16. NHI! a l WHhlftlllon No. 13, avu 13-1-01 belt Temote 2 .. 24 Nut: Oct S 11 Colorado St111 No. 14. Arlt.1'1111 (2·0·01 bell TulW 24·0. N•••: "'· New Mexico Stal• al Lltttt ltock, Arlt.. No IS, South CarOllna 12· l-0) IOll to NO 19, Mlenloan ,.., Nut: 1t 0-ol•. No. 16, At11>ame 13-0-01 belt Cincinnati 45·10. Nut. al Vandlf'blll. No. 17, MarVllnd (2·1·0) *' Wilt Virginia 7'·0 Next: ti No If, Mlcillllan No. "· llf*Hlll (H -0) bell No. 20, IUlnola S2·2S. Next: va. DrlllOft. No, 1t, Mkllloan (2·0·01 belt Ho. lS. South Cerolln1 34·3 Ne•I· 111 No. 11. Mar viand. No 20. llllnols 11-2-01 Iott to No II, Nttlrellla S2·2S. Next. Oct. S vs. No. 7, Ofllo Sllll Satvntlv'I letit ~ Lono 8aach SI. 33, H•w•ll )0 Arizona St. 27, Paclflc O C1I Slate Havward 7', C14 POIY ISLDI 17 Cat Sl1te Nortl'lrfdlll •S. St. Marv'• l Menlo Collffl 27, Pomona·Pll1er 11 S•nll Clara 37, Humboldt SI. 0 ldahO 27, Nonhefn Arl1-3 SaMtl HLM>A YACHT CLUa Utlll OW LM1M ........ CLASS A -1. Jane Kenny, San Diieo YC; 2. J1ctllt Smlllv·PllYMIS Drayton, I YC, 3 Nancv Klollk1, NHYC, 4. Sutla Karllla. ave , s. Pam Llndllv. sovc CLASS I -I Audrev McGlfltv. SOYC, 2 P1ttl O'Offlty, Lieto IUI YC; 3. ltll1 Moller·Gwen Jaclt.son, SDYC; t. .. rtiere 8ernerd, NHYC, S. Meroaret Llul>scher, Alamllot Say YC . CLASS C··I S.ndv Mllll, llhla Corlfl· 1nl1n YC; 2 Marltvn GlbbonlDlanne Clarlt., l 1hl1 Corinthian YC, 3. Gerl Cleero·JoYce MOll•ller, I CYC. 4 C1ttiv Carolherl, C1t>rlll0 8aacll YC MEN'S DIVISION -I. Dalt t<arlela, IYC; 2. 011t hrllhlMr, A8YC. A'*'"'9ll Mf1" IAHIA CORINTHIAN YACHT CLUa ltaet s.¥en I 19.5 mllt race1 around Ille oll Islands off Ntwoor• 8eec'h •nd Hunllnoton 8"ctll CLASS A - 1. Temerity, Tld Kwr, 81hla Corlnlhlan YC; 2. Sidewinder, Terry Mulfloan, 8CYC; 3. Olf11nc1, ltlcll Nowtlno, Soutll Sllore YC. CLASS 8 -l $11)1olh01. Duma•· Murrev, Caotstreno eav'YC', 2. Showdown, Pet• Mladl, Caoo ave. J. CtnnonC)a•. JOl\llton·Soerlt.ulll, 8altlOI YC. CU.SS c - I. Marloo11. H1ydln·FIUhltm, 8C'Y'C, 2. F1ylno Colors, Miii• H1yoe, acvc. 3. OC>wsslon, 11111 Aoe>t, Vov1111r1 YC. ltac• lllM CLASS A -Ttm1tllv; 2 Cr.tltlooher ltOOI"' BrUG• H•nWlll, VVC; i. Wtnot, Carl u11, acvc. CLASS 8 -I. Showdown, 2 Frtc1ll11t, Frid lt•tld Syndicate, <:too 8 YC; 3 Veltntlnl, Merv l..onotlfe. ecvc . CL.ASS c -I Ftvlno Colon, 2. Dev· braalt.. 8oO G1tff, C-IYC; 3 Vuloar 8oatman, Dleto. Amtower, Caoo eYC w..erend.,.....dlel• IASllAL.L Arnerlcall LM9UI CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Actlv1tld Sert Jonnaon, oltmer 'OOTaAL.L. ........ , ..... a..... MIAMI OOLPHINS-Slontd 8ob 8 rud1lni11.I, Qneoacker, to • lht'N·Yaar contrect. R1t11M<1 Fulton Walker, dt- ltntlvt ti.ck , and ~OI $t\orl!IOll, wide rKelver. HOCKaY N8tllMIHadteota....... DETROIT RED WINGS-Slonld ~ter Kllme, left wino, to • mulll·y11r conlrKt NEW Y~I( ltANGEltS-Slonld J1y Caufllld, ~n. to a free 191111 contrect Community Scoreboard aASkaTIALL City .. c ... Mela THU.IDAY MIN'S LIAGU• Meler DM\llefl 8 unnvmen I 1 Jldl Knlglltl I I Roolllll 4 S No Sltmme J1me 4 s Slemmer1 l t Wlll1111t COl'lll 0 t llec.lt Sc#ft Wlll•tltr Conti. 75, 8 unnymen SI $l1mmen 74, ltOOklft SS Jldl Knlohh IOI, No Slemme J1me S7 'lllOAY MIN'S L.IAGUI ,._ DM\llefl Hooo Sus ter s I 1 E • ten1lont 6 ' FOYrO~ 4 4 City SlicJl•n l s 1Sar11 , • tone l u111n 1 7 lllalll kwft Hooo 8 u111r1 67, Four OUl(li •7 E •tenllont 10, llrt 44 Cltv SllCll.ert 71, .Zont a u,ten 42 IOf'TaALL Qty .. c ... Mela MONDAY CO·•D LIAOUI MMrDMla. Vool ~ loo loos I 0 larmtc.hMI .. t11V, I 0 Pierce SI AMI• I 0 llUI Otmotl• 0 I Oondlfo Coociv11r O I k.lttertlMnt 0 I ·--lcer'ft Y091 ~ loo loos 1', llul °"'*'' 0 ~St Annex II, Dofldero Goooclv11r lermlct'lall aantv• II. k 11terbeln• 6 Mll.rDM'*'_L """' ltlbll• I Ca!ll C>rffmln HotUll Hwott Outton laM Cadltti JC Carter~ ..... kilr'M ltOMn lteo.11 15, 8111 CtOll• I I 0 1 0 t 0 0 I 0 I 0 l Call! OrMmtn 7, JC Cartw Pumo• I HOllVlt ...,°" 14, Culton • TUHDAY MIWI D UIAGUI MIM OMiillll "'"'"' ,,,.. ,._..,..., Olnmen CUllClll\ Taootr• ·~· """"~ °"' -~ ..... ltlM'tlo Crtw 11, Junllyar• Ooel • ,._,..., Oef M'l'!ln t , T~ J C~ IO, landtl• 6 I 0 1 0 I 0 0 I 0 I 0 I 8111 '"'"" ROien lt1t1111 TreM Com.Tl91" l •utr MA)t()(. Din'' Mercedls Miii lttc9Mk- ''" '"' ,.,, 1>. Mall , I 0 I 0 I 0 0 I 0 I 0 I Trent Com Tlolts lt, 81uer MA>tor1 4 ltown Rlbll• 12, Dan'• MerQldff l VOLL•YIALL City .. c..-Mela MONDAY CO·ID LIAOUI • OMllM T11ttt Gr111 Goon In Mlx·uot Votll\lbllltn Slltfl No K • DI N11ty Haoltt Generation Geo Totel Air TUIS04Y CO·ID L.IAGUI c~ 12 0 10 , - 7 s 6 • ' . 4 I ) ' 0 17 Snllk1t1 IS 0 Po-Olnu 11 4 Slammers 10-~ MOCK 1 1 H•oev C..m"r' ' t Lot Attot Chur¢11 o4 Cl'lrlst S 10 Mln lne Llflll• 4 II Whll Klclt , 1l WIDNISDAY GO•ll) L.IAGUI llencla Crew Off "" Hl1 H.I ltOOflno Y11100t Able Ones lt•ldlf• T~A OMHZ D DMlilll I) > 1t l 10 s . ' I 7 5 10 > lt ' 14 ~ WAJlNlll '00TaALL *"' C..1t u..u. ~ • .:: ........ > ,...... ··-~·· QI ICevl!I KelfOll ,,,,_ t TO Mun, to Mlll.t MIWt •nd lta!Md Cramm ~ l'rwnn r111 1or 1·vare1 to anci lllttw TD oau to Manni. "·,...... 0.... 11 •• ~ 6 Steve 11'1¥1110 '""" lot J ~ ltY1n O'LHf'f ren lor > PA h JICOC> ~ hid an lfti.rc..tleft ,....,..0.... ,,. ... ,.__, QI J.rf ~ r111 lor IS-var• TO. JOM AttlU ran for •YarCI TD "· P9I ... ~ ... ·~' Troy NWVWt llKll• lll#lt a..i r111 It 111 tor TO Jft• 'OWier cau.M a ""'*-· 111C1 lt•nf'f Stt\1111 rllw• II to 1-Ytr'CI "'-QI OYlell ~ rt11 II In on M•I .... • 4 Llnee, 6 .o.y., 16 Qpllan. • Ada aia c J • AddJUonaJ Uoee may be Y •nc. early, but 00 portion of payioeot" refundable • Doe. oot apply to the rt&) i. purcha.ed for 12·00 each. • Prlc. mU1t be Inc.Jud~ in the ad. · THI DAl.Y "-OT Cl.ASSIF1£0 OFFIC( HOiJAs Tlitollon9 S..V.Ce Mr IOOAM 600PM' ~Count• MF I 00 AM • 6 00 PM WM~A I '~ .... I T ., • • .. tt, rental, la.ta(• Nie or help wan~ la.•n • Available only to prlvatt •party advert'·-c ,,,' icatlone or •utoinobilea priced over S2000 men Mrunc mercbandiM, DIADUNH e lCATIOH Dlil~IN. ' '" . '"' ll ,_.... • •"" ....,, ... .,· ~. :: ..... l. • ...,. .. ... •Iii'.' i:J :: -. ' .rJ .. ~ ... ·~ i .~ . -- ,. I let Us Help YH ' . ~-------1 ·a·a rz.:s Orange Cout OAILV PILOT/Monoay. 6-ptember 23. 1888 L l AR S Call 642-56 78 but phOne 841-8180 M/F rmmte wen1*S to lhf 28R 1'"'-BA twMM, CM 1350 +IA utlla. 548 4484 M/F ... .,.. 38drm, 2be W>nr•tlWl. ·'18. Nr 8eectl & Ellie 1350/mo + 12 utt1 9e2-~2 N.8. '/\ blk bctl, nu ~· vu, ~ WOf-~ M/ $400 mo. 1150 dep. 7224472 NB Streight ma, ,,....,.,, Mele• aame 38R 38A, 1460 sf twntlm. POOi, )ee, tpk;. $400tmo 722-9510 NEWPORT BEACH ll'lr ltg HOME YM1 rnd, non-emkr fem 1375 ... utll 846-2108 NEWPORT lerge Nduded tiome, non .mttr Nmlonty 1375 ... 'I• utll M4-H52 Nwi>t Bctl 1 bite to bc:fl. Fr'P'C. w/d, d/W, rrncro. etc 3er. Aaf>t"UOf n/emkr 1395 831 Ooeanfrt N.B M/F ~ ...... 4br 2'"t>a tip, d.c«a, --=--- • 1· I J I I .. ,; . •. ar.,. 0o.t DAILY ~LOT/Mo;nday, ~tembet 23, 1"5 'i1 ... -11 " .. Lilt I,._. ..... W.W 119 .. ..... It• 1!1t Waa ... __ lltl HI !!f!!f lltl ... ...... lltl leli Waat.. SIM ltlt Wu... Utl1ltlt ...... Ill! ~~No~c.~.~M ~1:;:=· !.!...•~. ...,.111111 Ill..... •OWL ... ,, ...... _ ···-....... "° TRUH,_DlE,r ...... "D·,o:::'."'e ._.. t11L ~ ---.... • -......_ Ml I --... 'I .._ •t .... tmmed. opening for w ,._, ..... -PSYCHIC 173-0240/0.. ITl-illlt/E Sl80 111-0Ut a '~':":.o, 2 .:i 3..::.:::.. = ':.:ir"o~~ ~~ flllng.n/=~t P9tt tJme. &AM·IAM Mon-oertln.d achoo! bUa drfv· 1200 1ec>04M bel. 8'm Lott whit• Shepard * *** ,...... firm 1e All P"• ... of boot!· ptlonM. ln..,eellnQwottt . .-,-be ~ ~ Fri. al lhltta. Fut! time en eomp.tlt"'9 w1Q99. hnltut 1111 ,.,,_,$'bl! ool-fOf a NW twn k~ pM ...... wttt1 ....... c;ell 145-4t11 fOf Wettem ecWo. Cal Wknd9only,woftelngW1th Plue bQnu ... Cell for READINGS lar, YCty ._, ~ IMfB memt>.r. Outa~an-= ~Mal,_,,,..IO ~. ~1851-oa11 Mlchele de\'ll°""*'ttv d!Mbted. Info. °' eppty In JJet1 • 10Pe. ~'T,:00-.!:: Wdl 142 (ltnll Prw) opportuntty fOf 8ey !n~ 838-5450. 1$392 Taft eon.Laidlaw Trant t, Bdrm · · .... 1. Jiii •,.,,..OK • wtMr wtttl '-'· proftdenl HO . , c.ntet Dr llmAl,... HOSTESS PIT poettlon for Aw, Garden Or0\19 2003 Leguna CanyOf\ Rd. $35. •ORANOOPENfNO• ~ Excellent opportunity. reportOl1al •Iii. o.or-....pof1~ 82tl0 ' TyplnQ, flllng tnd other et.gent 9'hnlc rett. N.8. p a • .a.. Lag. Bctl. 481-2151 S5t-e9t8 or 842""4338 Rogulttl Genttwnen 55 Hice working oond!Uolw. In toumeMarn a ,..-... !~1 ~ clut ... °""' cer 1 CWI Prewen 752-5200. .., '-" ...... fTAAV -t b9I09 tthr -Our llMt '40 Aeedlna, Milka tmcy 1..ty 40+ for EX~t baneftta. ,.._, with 2..:t yra ,..._., •· IOOKKHPI! Full mu at C a ll Judy FIT. t..in-arraele llltth on S!CA Cott $350. 8' ;rMiuotai2Ji U"*9cl time °"'Y 121. tun & lllMntuta. AIC>IY o.c. AlrpOrt. (55 & 405 peri.no. ~ r.ume chefge bkkrw In 142-4321. UI. 311 '°' •TD.1/WAITllll the )ob training. Mu1t be P&r1·tlrne W pm • N9ttte er.-Bedapl'Md. AcMoe In All Mattera & PO Box 1~ HP8 t2e80 F~~ Witt pey top .. wlttl M6ery ~ etlUrdl ofte. Melntaln alt appt. ~per. Futt or part time. nMt, enjoy detaM wortc M .... 131-23-48. blue green ftofal 16(). CounMllnO-l.0¥9, "*• .. 1 for meture. IOOUl'•ta. de-to L9'end Otlwt Co. Inc. financial record• & ••• llUT ACl:J In peraon. w/hand1. No arnokera or llllPUY Swtvel rocker a12a. rtege, h~, bueli-• ... ...a -at pendable Departm.nt 2107 No. Broadway, pt~~· :'op-111,y--1 ·12 Noon Sor grumps. 7~tvmeg P•rt time typing 50wpm GrMtl upti<Mter9d ct1a1r n...&IUCOela.Splrttuei, -n1M1 ._ Mantger. LMI talk.Cal 8ulte303 hntaAn& CA erst""'' · NV-~r 2:30·llPM. 30H o. PlnN/Plllll-wtll tNCh comr1.; $100 875-6292 ....a & d --.. --·~ • 2,.,. '"2l2 • .... ,... ' • tnoa .ccount1. 330 W. 8ey St. 8rlatOl 8t. Co.ta Meaa ••• ._. :__·__,,~-=--:-:-:-..-m cat ·-._ .,_lflUll --~ H"" .oeounta ~able, and Co.taMeaa,Ca. Now Hiring Part & full· operation. Shoul be 4 Po Sol• Group. er n~t= ~;:: M"~t ~~ --A;=.lchr,oo'·.·mo....,, .... !i-:;'7/br~ e:r: '~==~~ "= -····L•I Mat~~ to ~~':' hOu~~t .. '1:,"t°c; .. ":~: ~n~r.'"~~r~ ~~-1~~: ~:.~1s-0~~5 ~ -··-·-· ..._. --,.. _.,..,..., c:ount~ty8tem. Calf Art VW9'"'5 work F'ui..tlrne In Fine 3857 Birch St. OC Airport 8-40-5500 .,.. for the PMt 111 ---•.--~ 4114 pearanoe. Mu8t bring ... t ... 1 2..... DI 1 Room ,,_ ~ 7 ... ..,,.. Bdrm furn. eampalan yearL Uo'd. $4204 Coeet ........ !!!: current OMV report. iAJ09 & lhop pert time for ..,..Int a ..., " .....,, p_,, time C#rler couneel• n ng '""'peHerl09 ...,.......,a llm /lfl lfl twn bda HWy, Ow P(Mnt 1U ... iiiiiiiii St.rt S4.50 per hr. 3112 dllebted ledy. Cell .tt.· "BUSINESS MAN". :,~ -;;::\o:f: = ~~~!ts:7 ~~~I Typing. filing~ hHv' =t~::':'ner tbl, ; ...... ., aJ.JJll • ~ ... Pullman St. C.M call noone & ........... 763 Own your own Steel &.tlld-11Jb1Crlptlon1 on their Noon • .flereonMI Dept. PUT TIIE phonH. up Wor c:hee11. lhelYee & delk. High Profttt. Locel AIM 751·2980 , TIU.-*"" Ing Cle•larJhlp. M~or P94*' rout• Musi tnjoy 11o7 JMlbOfM Rd NB. llTllYllWDI wtcndt, 2 daya off during $295. 81Wtl3 WM n-.. a,111 •-•~ wortc '4-7/hr manulecturef Mlect ng wortclng wtth 10-13 • wk. $900 .• a1100. Mo. Beeutlful Wlllnut StalMd 111 Trtlln. Pwt '"""' a --•-•• ~ , awn . ~ 1n avelteble.,.... .:-.. --i.... yr -. .... llD E.xoellent oPPOrtunlty tor lnteNtew by appt. only ..... room S.t: Kl"" elJlt9/ W.t I,.... MM No Em~ No I am a <>r.,. Co . .,.. Cefl eao-1311 High potentltll proflta • = "':'..:!.;"·,;;-1* ~ S8.051tar1lng rat• well drMMd out;olng In-Mon-Fri. 848-7441 ~ ,__boetd ............ •ouND x1111n ..--i ~ No Selllng. ~loner wtlO __., • 1.a. ... ornottw P.rt Time or Full Time. _,_ • i.._~., -ion. aveHable dMduu to tu• credit 1----~===--W'1V'I ,_, .. .,,... r~ at P.r..! Mr.~'=.iax(71~!.-~ aooountent to..-·.......... Wed9Cor Ace.9plane• ~:':°" ~~ ~,,~~p. Mutt be 1?pllcatlon1a1 Ma)ot 0.-ITITlllEIY draa«. nit• ltendl. mlf· .,.,. , ,.,.,.,--v wot1' In my prectlc:e, lmmed ~ tor ~ Corp. MOO E. Hempden, 842""43~ ut. 208 18 plua, W11culate. 3 yr pertment Stora. All Or· Store In CdM Med• s.... r0<1, lamJ)9. rnattr;' .;· cant' !dent..., na.6499 M--W ... rm d~t~.:c,.own~ ta-.. g;;'.:;''!-..... =~ Denver. CO. 80224 Call · f911dtnt, ttudenta OK. ange Co locatlont. Fi..,. P..on. FIT. 5 Daya )(Int 1 y.er old. coet • · 0 .. ,. =' U ..,,_ -· ... ---w .. ,,. HOYra • "''-...-(303) 751-3200 ext. 2407 •'•I llAIT No exp req Cefl 3-SPM Ible day/evening hOura. !working cond• E8')9Clalty ucr. St.900. 780-2Mt Fotll> ADS ARE FREE Cal: Ml-1111 ~ r.n Ing-=· " quelftad, ~rl ~1=: UlllB/u.T .. , PUT H.8. eM-26o or S.A: ~:'~r!~18~:1·.= nne cllentele. B75-t0t0 CHINA HUTCH. PECAN. ~~~~~~~ ~-:c"'~ Cell&renda.fOfappt. FIT PIT help W9nted for 641..e879 forawt. Toaecuptocallntlt'Mw. 1fT£R ~~.'a.9~0.~!·5. U7!1 (7141 7eo.. t383 C.J He9tW tot! ,,.._ et llMll llN 161 Feahlon t1land Ret•ll INSl)E SALES n 1~8000 2eOO HwbOf BNd, •tore. Muat • ~.~-USSIU.. PUT Tiii SCHOOL COUClnH a~· eo.ta Meta patlenoe, nMt • ·-· P/tlm. mature ,...l•ble Full time N'9e PQattlonl In Orange pt t, Ml-11M Cell for appointment peraon. Payteea CIMnera th9 rMdef ad dept. talc. Poaltlona avallable at tti. condition 11 · I 'r the-Daily Piiot ·---844-5070 E.O.E. NB 842·28)'1 Ing phone/ counter edi. D•lly Piiot new1paper JOBS 963-4719 9Yelllnga fa,1 Rt>sul! !>l'r v1t'e The Ofenge COMt o.lly Bri"'l__ _ __ _ I .... J.••• Wiii P*uent c:omfor1able ot-working Saturday and COUCH 9• contempor-v. Piiot ie ~help In llLLDI~ ,-11111111 Ill'* flea. GrHt Job for Sunday mornings. Earn EARN c:ond. 175 01 dtrertor) Your ltt Ad Oeot. p-a ..__ Fltlme, WHkend1 In· ILUl PllT Tm mature, friendly Ind~-$4.50 I* hour plus gu =f~VCR,,;? or \t>rvtt't'" our Aeaoontlblfltlea _. In-.. , ,... eluded. Cell 644-4480 u•I. Apply In peraon, Pen-allowance. Mull h1v• Call 645-lM88 ~Pl'nitllv elude P'ek up and de-bolllent OCIPOttUnttY for clerical TM o.lly Piiot haa Im-nyuwr, 1660 P19C*!tla large car or plctc-up and MONEY Found: Rln!p, In lrvlne. llv9fY of ed1, S*lflng ---'bttlnciMdu9leto medlate,._lnn for Cu .. A-. "-ta...... be 11 leal1 t8 .-,. old. CRYSTAL CHHtnELIER !~....... _...._) c-•1 t l ;ill &42 ~78 ul JZZ t •"'-t ~• ,_...,.._ ..,..... ... ., •• vv. "" •-~ ,,,_.,_.. r_,. • o ..,.,,_ •· pr-no wottc 20 hoUt'I per .-. • FU OLml tomer Service Clerk to 1 Call Bruce !42-<4333 PRIZES exqultlte, 8 lltff. 82 demlfy. 857-8780 ada, tnd a v.n.ty of Prevloua benklng ex-• m .. ft work In our bU1y Clreuta-nauranoe t-:: crystal tear dropt, 33" lcL--Ji I ScLMll a other dutlet. Cendldete per'9noe Pf•red. Com-• -tton Department. Mutt be AlmY M..111 Pit-HY Oltlt I.I high on 8' brw Chain, -• mutt be extt«Mty Of· S)9ttttve ~..... • U~ dependable and able to Huntington BMch. part Good benellta. Mon-Fri, JRfS pert. tor entry hall or din. lutnctlea 3016 la1tr1Ctita lOH ~. r.aponatble tnd e.it ~ecMiOOO· handle hHvy phon .. time, 30 hra wkly. 9-5pm 640-MM f0< Bob room. 1800 obo 8-40-5222 r--------------, ~:,:o wont_,. wl\h (7 14)7 ~·o~t~nt~ ~~~ wtthapteaaanttelept\OM 1 "3-5847forappt. PllTlllflUlll ............ BIG CANYON I POST AL EXAM Send wne At11'1: LIM Int• ....,...ig ly pantet. Mult ~IV9 ct.-~O:,:a:O. H~~.~~ I .... TUllll F•IUD lllLY Pl.IT Dining table, traditional, I _1,,.,._1o_.,_.._..,.,._,_c.,,,., .. _ Sm"h,to: Appolntmenf0nly pendabletr11\9P.&good 642·'4321 ror eppt. Atk'PIT.StateFarmA.Qer\Cyln Hooaewlla, col~ ltU· ........,, 6 chalr1 llltth hutch, CU. ™' .. -----. ••• • ...... .-. --"' ... c.... •••.at ~ ref«encee. fOI' Tracey Co.ta ~ 5-46-9222 dent etc P/tlme "hrs flex If you eie loc*tna for extra tom pada. 2 fllla H711. I ?-.3.~ ~-.:>a~:::· .E'E?::; = Ill.' PUT ~ We offer paid vec:atlona, IOTA&. Us.nm W#elry N.W 'Hun't Beh 897 -338 t' ~~.=7• ~:~ 832•5388 =:--=~ .......... ---... --, ...... 1111 ~ Bank wet«ly p•ychecl( and top General o.nt.try Exp'd 4 ...... , uua PIMlacap9 Main!. Plant Moon111n, Knott• Barry Frig, uaed 6 mo $350. Sofa POITA.L EXAM WORKSHOP .......... la. IJIH :i ~•· pay tor your top lkllta. day wee«. x.,.y Ileen~. Seti the nneet cuatom Jew-exp req'd. 25-30 hr1/wtt. Farm, or win Prlnl tnd :scio;~Ts0 ~= __ ---___ .,. _.. ... , _ (JI Apply at PIMMnt turroundlngt & elry&SW1aaWatchettoa Own tl'Wll 75t-2271 Awards, Cell ua nowl We becil50 142•77ee :...=::-::..===-..::..-=:.:.=.:=-...= 1 L Nt•w port ~~T~wy-~. f~~\~t=tonNol=~ :!,,'°::. &u:Z:a':: APll·lllHL ~ ~~:.~ir.~.°':'11~~ Gold v~tvat & wood ADYANTAQEI OF ATT!NDtNO ADVERTISING EQual()pptyE.mplm/ffh 852 9424 • · Call 840-4 tO O or port Beactt ftAe jewelry ;d Teech« Alele. PfT or 642-4333 armenlllr $30. Kng a u "'"......, 1.-.,. __ c--· IM.....,~ • 953-8473 Mlon. Benenta. EJtper. I T. Hours llaxlbl• -•-as wate<bed w/6ft I><><>«· -1iPM • •ri '"'" -.. -.. _ ..... -r _.. _,_, llt.11911 Tum to today's cJualfled req. Graduate Gem. pref. Salary negotiable. Near •-eaM. compl $200, 3 oek :-:.=.or:":u~:::..,,.,,.,_._.,.. ARTJSJ OrthQdonttc:offtoe. for th• but buyt Dental 644·8325 Inquire for Adams & Brookhurtt, lor excltlngworlewlthchll-et90«e$50M 240-704t 't °"' ---" .... ..,_, ~ .. ....,.... PIT. 72().11'45 842.se78 · •mlllTll &SSaST. mena;er. H.B. 964-4223 dren. 6 mo'• to 5'yrs In a i---::-:-:-:-::==:':'."::-= = =::"'.,,..":.. ~~..:C.:.. ~ ! ~ I ..,TllmT 11-.. y positive. caring environ-I llY ,..,.I __ .., -.-. - -·---... '""'" ·•-""'"' FIT & PIT ~ I ___. -r ,,_.. men!. New facllltlH, LES 957-8133 .._ I ·1 p·1 • · ,_ m .. _.. lEntry ,...... Npt prof. ofc dynamic staff, lrvtne ~ ::,-., ~-~.':"! .=, ':-~ Growing d9'1y ~ II y I 01 Fi.x. hra. Benefit•. R.D.A. MQBQCQ lmmed. FfT opening, r• 552•19$7 t..rge dining hUtch a1200, -•....,."-'•Cl...,._ ---" -.,, "' .. o1-on the Ofenge Coat • • • • e •. • e • • e pref. 786-0717 O< aft qulr• j)Masant phon• table $20, Chalrl a 15, ~;:: ,::' .=-_: .. ~~. c ........ _"' _,.. _ Med• lmaglnt1t"'9, pro-• • 8/wknda 8'40-4292 flet '9w•"-I.... personality. lite typing. & TIU ... llUTllll conv. aota S 100, couctl IN -· -°"' ..,,_ --..,.,.,...., -h..,... duettve, layout erti.t wtlo • • Orlvet _ .. ' common HnH. Cell N•tlonally known hotel $75, dreaaer $50, chelt ...,,~ _.,....,,.., __ ,...,.,, .... _...,...., _..,_ underatandamer~i. e e HIGH SCHOOL GRAD Jewelry Suzy, 833--2850 M·F chain, part Um9 appoint-$35. Prlcet negotlab ... ~c~::,."' !: ::::=: :!' ---vu. --. Ing, to deelgn edvertlalng • CILLEITll WUTEI • (FEMALE OK) •EWELEl/Sll!"l'9RI P/T 1111--ment setters. $4-$10. 64().2308 ---'°-.. -...... ,.,., '0wt·c:-.... ....,_. for a variety of ~ta. • • • '"I I'" r ,_,., 1 -.( .... ~... Our dlac:rlmln•tl:.Yi mat· • • EXcellant Job f0< raeponoc· FlneJewelryStoreln New·•niawo .. ..._.D..,..ulre~ood pl hr, comm uloni. Set twin mattr....._ box u w. ....... _,,,,_,,...., __ ,... __ E~-.,_,."°" • 1> . • . La B t • alb .. ~. ......... ,. __ .... ..--... •~-• ""'"' • ._.. bonuMa, leadaj.rovlded. springs/frame. New, .,...~J"ll!I-~,..~,,.. --~Jn....-.. ket demand• que1 ty and art 11mt> opening m guna .-ar 1 ,......_.. ·-port ......... ,.,.... ,,.,.._ ty 1 nd h 111 t1 Tits UCUl9'ft ....C ~ CIUNWtHL "'.,. -., e S e Airport (55 & 405 Frwyt) elef I All typea a9' sr ng a P one I . Mon-Fri 5-9, at 10·2. excel qual, mint c:ond. :..":!.":":.!=.!=::.:"'"-=: ~.;:._-::;:.=:-_: ttyte. • &r ea. Earn up to 6.00 per hour for • Must be over 2t wtth •x~ tlng:a9:brtc.tion. wu.: c!J~·~~~ab ... P1eue Cell Doug, 571-5150 hatdly uted. Pd MOO. ---·'°"'"s,.,_.,_,....,..._.,..__ Newtpaper production e c·ollertingformonthlysubscription,,. e eellentdrltlrecord&t c:aattng. GrMt working nLllUllmR Sacrlflce 1300. 1U ;m'tHort TUITION ia-.. ,. .. _ ............. -...c... lenowtedge helpful. Ablll· • Experitnrt preferred but not rt'-: proven A· average environment. Call Men-IEllPTillSST /TYPtST Asalatant 10 Nleeman. Off 759-3456 Iv mag f:--~~::.=-...:i"';:.....Z:.;.1;:~=:.::: ~~ .~~= = : 11uirt>d. Must be at l easl 18 years old. e ~o~~t.!'~:::upDr~~~ a;er. 844-8325 ~~r smsi; N.BM ExT~tve by noon. Call btwn SOFA & LOVESEAT ---""-'""""'" ·-* __ ,..,,_., paper axper. an edvan-• : Call 10 · Al\1 · 4 PM . M r. Kirkland. • Print Shop Good ban· JR. SECRETAfW u"e hr. on. rt. ~acn-1pm. 722-1245 EXoel oond. earrtone :..:::, :..:-• --.., ... "",.. °' ,_..,"" •-. 1909. Poaltlon la part : : M2· l32 I. Ext. 207. : ettt1,1tart naw. $700/mo. H~t~~'u':'Tor8d:. onl~atl~y~°n'2~~~pm. nlllillmll ColOI'$ $1:i~ M -537t c.... ..... c ........ .., c-.,... ,wti •-tlmtt, good lnqulrte. and • • lei'• talk. Call Bruce del M $3 60 p/hr. IEllPT/•a1 •.s H•teT Nationally lenown Hotel 111111 .... n , ........ ..._ re1umea to: Steve • OllOIUftAI lln • 250-3212 ~· · _ -· chain. PIT appt. .. 11.,. I~~-~~~~~~ T--.,,1 ,. • .... ,,...,,,.. Hou;h, Art Director, • 11• ' e DRIVERS Croaa Country, ~ rellable peraon for J.4-$t0/Hr Cornmltllonl "~ti... llM ,.....,,.,o..o.,AM ,,__, Dally Pilot, PO. Box • 142 4121 EH e , ••a. ---uy new Newport BMChboll F "" s .,.. C.tU NOW'°"•TMTWOMattOf'~ATIOM ,It-,...__. M c -no exp.nec:.Callf.llc.req. ---· ,._.. • &bonu .... M •• ..-... at· z~ c =s,.,. !!!!fl!! Tofl free 1~.-. ._.., ..,.,,.,a .... a. e • MICGregor Vacht1 TO S23001MO neat. v u by noon. Wiii urdays 10-2 Call Doug ..._ _..... . .., ,.,_.m,. ......... ,0 ............ __ _.... _____ ._,_..,_ 92826 • • t6ll Pl..,,_tta C M P alt'-_,,_ .. ._ 1 Utl-train. 722-1245 751•5150 45. Adding machine -.. "' ,._, ,,. -------"' -e ORANGE COAST DAIL V PILOT e __., · · · o ""''' av-..,.., n $35. Men't & woman't ...., .......... ci.nc.r.u.., ..... ~ -1•rlhftlltd la no w e.,s ..... Co•t•~.f~w C•92627 Factory ;etlon.&Wlkruptcy.Cor-1n&1L n••••erUT-c:lothea l2·$5.S48-701t -..,. ... lab. .. ._._, ...... _ S.~00 (~ht •••I .at • AN EQUAL 0PP()RTUN1T'V EMPLOVER • portte. Real Eltate. We fl LedlM .. .._.. "-=---· -=--::---.,...,...,..., :=-.::_,-.. ~-=:i::.,Eaa::,~!':;'.':<~!'! • •. • A~--tDS are an Agency 8')9ClaJ. ne .eppar ator• lmmed. OJ*tlnga In oor I~ INC~ ilit -· -·-1 .. _ 111.f Pll.IT e ---f In C.M. Shipping, rtlClev-Newport BMch office ..... --..--pm-...,. ==::-..~r~ .... ..., .. ._..,..,_ 330 w. eay st. I • • P•m 1z1ng 1~~-,~p.2..?.. 1ng.se111ng&mefcnand11-Lloht typing a 10 k.Y '~iorerm:JIQ -Cost Meta Ca. 92828 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •• • • 11/llYI ILDll ~-r.'or A'P;'t -M-:;y Hk*'i: Ing. Part-time Ev.e 5·9 knowledoe req. Wllllng to NW 1x 18 $30. 4" predalon • A 1 to'1 Dow Sutte Some WMk9nd1. Call train. Call Jim Hoplelna at totnter $50, gr1nder on Immediate opening• In 2~Newport BHeh M. onday-Frlday t t -4 (71 4) 673-5630 EOE M/F stand $20, lepldary equip lrvlne, Fount.in Valley, • 7 t4/476-8134 . 71 4/5-48-2822 SOUTHERN S 100. 1727 Candi.tic*. •nd So. Oran;. County. -"ET AIL SALES CALIFORNIA SAVINGS ~2878. Set/Sun ~2 Mutt have gOOd tranap.. UYE-11 •llEIEIPU ULLllUI STOIE w•-stw•,_•-•• Taatla llH phone end local refeten· SkY8(11UI, 5 days a waek. OU•all r___, ut 12• r •~ ~~!!L!la1~trea;.iiiii .. laUyw !1!!!!f Pl ..... oea. Spanllh tpMklng okay. 'ulltlmeaateuulatant,. nvu, w yrs exper. IEIPIUTllwm Ii Complete patio.. vovera. MW RXRDYUXR •A-1..... EXpart 8etvlc9 & Repair We otter weelely P•Y· Exper. pref. 759•1188 ~~~~ 'c:'n10~n~~~,~~ g:;;~::· ,re1~·· N:~':':i IUll Tl aw $2,17 per day Decks. Concrete walk· Carpentry, fencing, win-CLEAN & EXPERT 32 yrs exp. Reaki'l/Comm. cheek• and top pay fO< MAN•GER Beach, Cotta Me11 Blvd, C.M. ~5-9858 2 BR. 2 Ba, flrepleoe, ways. Bloc:kwallt. Room dowa, plumbing, m.,.llte. Over25yMraexper1«loe Uc#40t035 964-8919 yourtoplklll1.Applyat: n border. Previous exper. Pool/spa. Security. In That'• ALL yoo pay ror eddna t5yr exp 64M83-4 tub encl, hauling, ace. Uc. T·1 t8,428 730-1353 NEW/REPAIR 0 allty N an advantage. Xlnt rtteof Wiii PllOlllll VIiia Balboa $149,9015 3 fines, 30 d1y minimum Cui tom Aealdentlal Wort< (~~~~t*'8) la ~24-4 •• ABC MOVING •• )oba to email, ~~.bf.~ !~ T~:ry. # ~.' Immediate opening fOI' full pay. Call Helen, 983~064 For Law Offlee. Nwpt Bch. Let's T. T trml In the Patlot-Declet-R«nodellng Quldc c:weful. T138046. Fr• eat .. llc'd. 831-2345 852:9424 time District Manager. E Non-smoke<. Send r&-Joan Howe 675-78t8 DAILY RC Con•tructlon 64M031 DECKS-WOOD COVERS. LO RA TES 552-0410 u_ Mu•t en Joy working with RET Ill SIL S = J~~~~,t~sr.•=: iilHtllu'"' 1111 Competitive Prlee9. ' flJCun F• IEIYlll children. E)tp lence PUT 91-8ch 9 11uu ... • ........ w..... 10 ,_ ... )IW . 75'4-t820 n--I -Eu-r""""'"'" S:::Z:1c Toro! E .____, n--"' I er . ··-Nwpt 2vvv· Antique pool table, xlnt PILOT •-· ...... -•-...--vy-•, .,.... xper ... ....., rm• Uln ng helpful. Con1clent1ou1 people ~~..::..~(818p)~"!b7832 •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. lflmfl --... Catd & Palm Reeder. Ttlfl• Food S«ver• needed for needed to wort< llexlble JtM W1att4/ ~ .. n ~ ..... ' .. 2..9 07° 0 b 0 ........ -· .vor Paint. Drywall. carpentry Orange Co. OrlQlnal P .. t. Preeent & Future. La Palme at the New· We offe< an excellent ben-hOura for Mlt•nlty Shop ... ntlc Slfl .,_,..~""er pm. SERVICE Repalr-Ooora-Alt•atlona etc. Gary 645-5277 PTL Student Mowrs. Tntuted Advice on all matt ... appt porter Reaort. Apply ent program. paid VI• In H.B. s .... exp. pref'd. NURSJNG CARE Da • Complete gu nreplaoe Remodel·Panel·Locka-.tc Lie. T124-'436. 841-3427 850-2756 or 831-898'4 Monday through Thurt-cation• & holldaya, bonus Call fOf appointment. · Y logs 30 lnchel wtcM hO DltECTORY Wlndow·Fenc.-Cablne1 HANDYMAN LARGE and NEWW 9houaeSt day 8;30-t2 Noon, Per-ptogram and dental In-........ only.Owntranap.Good& ' 720-3912 35 yrs exp wry 642-05e7 small I 00 IT ALLI ., °'909 Psychic Palm RHder. aonnel Dept. 1107 Jam-1urance. Salary plu• -' kind/good ref• s.42·5156 531-5579 Pat or Ive mag. • .. Leatas Helpa In all ptOblema. bor .. Rd, NB. mlleage relmburMment. IUTlllfTIU ,. h SSfS CRVST AL CHANDELIER ..... T.-b 673--8896 2t3/68s.-0Sle0 llOll ..... _.11 .,1 exqul11te. 8 111 ... 82 Paul 557~7S"e":,U. HAUL-A-WAY Hllndyman Pleno ~ 1542-3215 * llllUl ..... Appllcent mu.t apply tn •llnat • FREE R8Jtoween kittens. c:tyttal 1.., drope, 33" Your Delly Piiot .,,,-----..-----":~ ~ carr:"~.. Salon Cle Muatque a..ftat Cfedtt, collectlon, gent ote, l*90n at Dal~ Piiot, 330 114-1117 bl.ck w/yenow eyee, 2 high on 8' brm c:Mln. Servtc:. Dlr9ciory C..nt C:.acrttt et:i~"PJJ! &4&-7830 p, LIM A. Zeedllnl, B.A. ..... FIT or PIT. aome wkndl wM .. t Bc•Y ~t • C901tt•1 ""ALES ASSIST Pltlme males. Call '°' Interview pert, for entry hell or dtn. Repfeeentattve Pala~ SIPPllllF OI >.. a evea Kown• Jewelera .... a. • ~. · · · 969-5.428 room S600 obo 8-40-5222 142-.4121 tit '" Ortv9Waya. P•tlOI. paths, Plumb ·Elec:t ..(Mpentry 42&& • l-Mr Nlelaen ~6t0 . a.m. or 2~ p.m. ( lrcul•· Type. 10 key. Gd phone ~-..-----~C771.,--.,-,,-----,--.. -----··--•I etc. No Job too amall. Palnt~~tc. Oapendabl•. FINE NTING BY RIC£ en•> Mot-Hll . . lion Dept.). mannar. lndutt. S11 .. Anuu... till Drexel dining .... 4 cheiltt. Reu. Mldcey 536-05S3 Reaa Paul 720-0139/eve ardSlnC>f.18yraofhappy a.twal FOOd ServlCe EX!* prftf. 980.e398 $195. Antique dbl bed tla uPh It d tv.. · cu1tornera. Lie. 280644. We do root•. all typ9. Cd 1 .... 'I Pim .... lllT Sales I llY anua.I frame w/matt. & bo)t •I wa~: r9p18091w1~rete 11..U!f Thank-Voul 863-4114 u1 tor phOne quotM. Pert-time Dey & Evening. EXpr for new oen view .... I Wftti h LES 957-8133 aprl,$150.1501 Authln. ·n~= .~!~'i.~x:~ brlcktblocic wr1c 539-0345 Cf HAU'LING -bOVIRd RAINBOW PAINTING 8-42-6151 Ucented Catt 788-46t2 Alk for ~ t!.i~~~~or "' rtw *SAUi SAUi* N.e .. •ttSun. 64>8515 al•t with obtaining er. edit klW Cart Gar11ge & Yard Clnupt Quality 11 oor pottcy ltcrttuial Mary or Joe. Lanz of Callfonla. a leading Refr"'-at0<• $ t2SI & Up Fully elec. Hoepttal Bed Jon 645-8192 650-6646 JEFF Ltc eus . ..-.. lfflll 11·T1El'l llllln llldie.wear 1tore, 11 look· """' $500. Wheelchalr SllO. 11'* & loans. 5-48-0345 "'c~1H!IP'9IL.U(;!'!IP'!'A ... Rt'"'!New~'"'!bor!'-n-'P & • ltnicn ---Ing for an EXPERIENCED WUher• 199 & Up Bedside Commode 120 OW«COll bookkHplng, up, 1 10 day.In my Laguna Hauling. ci.anups, paint-A.A.A. PAINTING lnt/EXt ABC seoretartal Sva Let-Needed to run errand•. and Kltctlen ,, aooeptlng SALES ASSOC IA TE to Drywt. gaa/elec 199 & Up alke< $ tO. All xtnt accounting and data pro-Beh home. TLC. 494-4248 Ing, welding, odd Jobe. LOWEST poaalble price. 1 reaurnee r · 1 ll;ht office WOf'lc & smell 1?pllcetlon1 for c:uhlef1, work on 1 full-time batla All APPLIANCES oond. &4&-~ oeaalng State of the Art movtng. 7 days 494-23-41 tO St9P Service. 882·3235 er&Pleue call ·64$-~6• handyman Jobt. 10·3, dell aerverw, cold line. In their Fuhton lll•nd ftDJ l1areetff4 Jo"n Wauna T-nlt Clu"' t D ·, 979-055l • Chlldcare my home, trane I I L .___. •tc 15/hr & mlleege. Mutt and rMt•urant help. Full t 1 ...__,.,. BMch •-11 ..... Ot-"'w--" , .. _ .... ., 00· er a, to achOOI & beck. CM·NB 11 t. _...,,ce CUSTOM Painting by Jim a • s.rv T 1 have prea.nt•ble car. & pltlme poaltlon1 avail. 1 ore n ........ .,.,.. · s..aff -· _.._ Family Membership, -·111 Ctilla11 area. Call 650-0258 Sir ... Ma:;Et ltop Low rat .. for lhuttera, 2 ~ YW d.ffyp ng. Call J .. Au 831·12M Apply 225 E. 17th. CM. Mull haV9 •minimum of UNIQUE FURNITURE $700/tranafar. J•rry • louvle, patio furn., Iron r• .,,..,a · or roe. .. ... , 6 mo. •x.perlence Mlllng t947 S. M•ln St. DeAlnu 213/614-8998 Exqulllte AeouattcS,,... ~AROUND THE CLOCKT tmoklng, ht contrOI. itor. fr .... t. 834-<42'43 In H.B. Unda, 8'40·1570 ·e~111· . ladlM clothing & be wlll~ Santa Ana or 7141854-9557 llPfeyed or remoV9. Dry· 7 Deys.-Large Verdi Lloyd. S4 28 for appt. L::L ~·· a.1 4' Ing to work aome eve-Btwn Edinger & Warner on pm ~all Aepal,.., 647-7901 Saf•H.althy·Free Envrm. I 1_ DAN SALVER PAINTING ...._, aaltrlulU ~.... llfll ntng1 & weekend1. Main St S.. 1h9 S..rl Like new GE refrigtr1tor ~-----~-Respite Carel 648-15.4~ ...... Lie #425924 au;my &k Xt Coweat -... 1211 S175. Aleo nMI ~ w.itleas/ ..... tll ,.__ H~Oflll-1111 CattAnytlrne."'4·20t7 Price. N•wport/C.M. lllllAL..,. lllTE Waofferexcettentbeneflt• Open tM:Sun t 2_6 couct1a125.8'4. 2·2144 • NEED TO REMODEL? ttr hnim •GoodJot>adonerlg.,,.-J.O. INT/EXT PAINTING .... Nannett• 831~810 oeneral ot'loe du11M, " & good ltW11ng aalary + SOlofl9x Exeretae Machine Fr .. •ttmat• computer T ·-ng. HOUMe & Ap1. Reu. ratM. Tilt typing. fifing, errand•. ~=~~ror.~~~= ADMIRAL REFRtGER· ssoo. 675-959t 100% FlnanclnQ State of the Art accounting IMH Clt1aiaH OUellty work. 895-5755 Mull have own car Av•ll•bl• In Newport tervlew come In or call· ATOR $175 •nd MICRO.. '*QUALITY WOAK software modutea. ROBIN'S CL NING LADY PAINTER Raaid•nttar/Commeretal Mothert hours (9•31· Buch. Experience LANZ OF CALIFORNIA WAVE OVEN. $75 ,_._u-"!!k~ral~la~1~t.!!'!!'!~1liiiiiiij4;,; ~ ettlM Remodeling, Dat1a, 97i-0551 BIG JOB CANCELLED 851-83lS Maty ' preferrad, but not CALL 720-8730 1· Ptlone873--8t22 Dmrall =~.•thr~~1 lntlr:'~t~hi:::::a· ChMpprtcee.842•2078 --.... ~·,~~~:-1~h=l:a:, AMANA FREEZER: 16 cu Dir~~~()() Ue. 20746 1 150-1824 or 957·5801 frtt ltfrict --....,.... _,.,,.,._ ·Newport 9Mch CA 92880 ft upright, almond color 845-0104 ' _. . RTG Commercial urywan HouaeclMnlng, carpets & Full tlln• EmployH and be over 18yeeraold. (714,644_:..t1 UMd once Uk• new ... ~ CO':!Tcs·fO· ~ O ~.1 Speaa11zJog 1n Comm'I upholstery. wtndowt. etc. PAINTER NEEDS WORKI dOXOW TREE TRtbiNd w/bo<*kaaplng & typing $9veflno _ _.!!f~del· ~10111ttAMh EOEIM/F '375/flrm. 5.48-1000 · 1ou1n fvalnn/ """"m., • new rm 1nd Reekf't, Frae •t. I..,. ... U 1-IJlJ lnt/EXt, celtlngl, '-fin cab. Tr .. roo1 ... 1tumpa r9m0Ye axperil>nce. Wllllng to .,.,....,, .,.., •-• Profwlon.i e aM-6l2t 548-892311e#333924 Comm lnq lt'IMweleome (28)yrsup.,wortc;uw. clnupa..est.Car1722·1171 IHrn/eomputer. Call -<4PM M aey ·Friday. Ul.ll N0<09 Elec Dryer 150. =r=f!•t 112' lllr.. ..., •--u Davia Painting 914-3137 -~ Mary~ Kathy 9111·t800 &42-4333 Exclultve Toy Store. SC 1938 38' Me;tc Ch9f • ltlllfrt • llectrieal HotM& C>moectMnlnQ by "' .... ,..,._ -, -Ptia. FIT. PIT. 75-4-t58t atow . s too 875-8588 Excellent --=ion .......... C.A.S S"t Co 492-8827 JODI. PtMM call for lr• .-• 1 _,_ Servtc. ""'"'" ....., Htg AIC. Ref rpra hi EF Pllllll ILll'Tm •tlmate. M2-e74e Serving Onnge Co. 22 yr1. Flnenclet, Legal, Etc : • •• ••• .Jlai•!J.!P1•111... UL.II 111.P =~= 756-9193 It.min• A/C IYI le: 459283 OU.Illy work. fr .. ett. HOUSECLEANING Good Prompt I Awonable ret• Cell Anne ~233 Full time peraon w/prtoc U21013.® §;IQ lttrtia• .... llH ....... ,425513 888-7401 I ref' •. ~ Refei•qa. ~L~UO i= = WX¥*11'11C910f f\ln niim:. SuperlofCM 831-3197 Pn Area Aanatre a RESID/COMM'L/IND 28 tr=.~~ 64;,1\55 * IJl-1111 * ~··, e ..... .. e cal gift & CIOthlng store. Retr"'•200 W.__/d •:,:.,:A~~~llllt • .-.--yr1 Do my own work Lie ' re our rrnaowa c..nt e e CHARLIE'S LOCKER ""'" • ~ ooat $428 -· · eclng e Roofing & #278041. Al 848-S129 YOLANDA HOU8eCLeAN I~ \. Balboa Window Weatilng • STILL L•• .. PAIT·Tm •t • Newport BMch. 67M230 1411 HOh. dlthw .. her 83•1.3'324'V ~lt•ptooflng• 831·4 l99 SERV RHI., rellable, ,~ 803 Bal.Ji" 8t. 673-3135 e WILL, a.. II fllJmJ e S 100. Port Cir TV S125. li;;:;;.--..--.::------IUftlttlu Gar•nlila exper .. refa. 8-42-0405 HANGING/STRIPPING ~·s Window Weah-• -• ULll PllMI (all reconditioned) TY t, ~omer of 2 wm ba...,..t In Ell Jaal&-.1.-1 VISA-MC 873-t512 Ing. For apar1cllnQ & elMn : If you are in High School or Jr. : c:n,,:'t,[:f · 1r!~.: 845848 6ttr11 IUI ·-·-... .., ac:reen1. c.i1 a.a.oe21 H1.,h •·nd would like to eam •2 .. oo • G · ..... Seate Ooldapot refrloer· her Coat• Meta home TOQl)9d/rernoved. Clean· JXNffoAIX( c[ElNtNG ANDYS WALLCOVERING • • • .,, round iev .. potltton. ator/lrHzer 3 door COLOR TV UKE NlW 8etMe wetcofM. Mon up ,,... lawn• 75 t..$476 Commerelal Retld'l Bldo• 1net.,.etton & Removal Tom'• Wtncto. Qeanlng : to ~0.00 in commission and more : Call B.J. 882· t033 almond trottlMa 1375• Beaut c:ond, orf01na1 coat thl'uFt1onty54&-50et ,..·.8 s Goodr.ia 831-e1~ · tnt.pek'tttng.M&-'40l3 Guartnteed woncmenehjp. • eachweek-mveusacall. You can e ...... * 'as2-63ee · · a10. aaklng •111 """ LAWN ERVICE · °""'rl ()per•ted 1138-3370 e· _. 213-4M.25M ...,. • ean Mow-.dge lwtce mo. 120-Expert WallcOvetl"G In • work PART TIME ln the after-. NH! •PPHrane• & Ww i12a. Gaa dryer1a;;:---z:--::----...rTT uc """ !10fTWTOI' t.HMnY 125 645-5737, 873--512t ........-.. atalletlon. Reaa. eon.ult· Window WMNno. ,..,.,, : noons and evenings and still have •. pteqant peraona111y ,.. 1100 Good condition Ptw1 ..... Jill w .e-1M0nth. Arnb or Clean Upa•Trae Trimming Yr°'89!0Nlh:;n<&;lng ant Aael;nmnl Mt-85'0 comm·i~ • lime to enjoy. We offer complete • quired. Mutt have good 83t·i731 or ~7852: if\"' s;:;y 172 'if ii tion-ttnb. 540-4tO1 l<athy Yard Malnt. •H.ultng Incl. 1pr1n1tier.. new lawn, Cal THI! PA PEA LADY & Mui. tree ell 538-7800 • training and proVlde transnnrt•tion • driving record. Back· t70 C.brlllo. CM axtr... lmmac, uioo ... ..-•. , MIKE 650-3283 . , ... rate. Menu 432-Mll 1 Pertectlon al,...., rat•. ~llF1e=• 1;: • l .,.,. -• t,ound In drapery help. ot>o, low Nder, ~ t -• ,..~~-,..,__ , "NDSC•PE M"80....... Free ett. 973-2618 ---• Pua p-e.t prizes, tripe, and plenty • . but not nee CuMtu I top, tr1r. 175-aH ....... .....,. .. _.. ..._..-Up, gen'I ~ .. • " ... "' . • f MONEY• This ,_ • COIT Will TRAIN ~ Mll ~mnnim"'l'!lllm:,..,I ma1n1. tree trimming. ttea ~. a1 .,._.. ,._.~ tor• 'fO'.X WOid Prooea.-0 · .. not a paper s.0-1see 1297 Logan t ·111 10· ~ Cl'1f\ (loec "'v.oW' DMHU !::-._..u ·~ eet1 M11.1ro. 831-4te7 ~ &ridt. bloc*. 1tone, Fnt/Ltp;;ct;pie;;;;e;; Ing Medi. Marte 497·2171 : route help ua get new c:u1tomers for : Coat• M9.. · ~A RikoA only) Aoed9t• too.~ _ ~· Hull~ ,,_ •t. Miit• 489-4072 cuit 'taturtno que1tty' • our newpaper and have a good time • Ntkonoa rv-A uu NW UM. 975-Hlt I& Maint. t 7&.7 o:;::d.~ot'~ RIOk Mt·MM '1l'OftlomPr~ Prob-: whH~ you're doing it. Come out and .• tmW• ._ 1225 Cell t?M7H IMll WI lilt ._!SHIPWRIGHT SUMCO Fr• •tlm•l• 548-2572 ......, ..,,.; •3"8M 554-7131 For Ad Action • lff what we are talking about and • F~a!:: ~=· :..~ c.. ..... Mll ,,. -~· -~ .... WOOd/;-Qt~~~· Lend1c•p•·Gl'tde11tng WWW8AR s;n;a JO& Home Ot Apt' .. fnt./Eld •• you'll be glad you dJd. CtlJ today-! lnCI ouhletlng, ~I e w/trff. >Ont .... to .. I Trlrn TrHt·Haullng· HwpOft Cotta ....... Patctlwont Uc.&bonded Cal a and i.n tomorro , Call M Earl . making, pre~r~tlon .... ~IM-..to-=-,., QeM11pa.Lao557~508 INtne A9f' .. 875-317& '#1"°907 441-1424 : .,.8_7 6 0 .. 80r 2AJ•S4w32.. r. •• WOflc,Ofelef~ .14.50 &Mll~oornputorl Af<!OffEAf ....... f ,. -•1 . -.i OJy D:l...l '" ., , hr to a tan ,..., & 2·800 Kb OIOO Aoopya = A;;od·~~ Tll ..... ,.. ~ • • rlU • • Btker. Co.ta Meta. Cell ,... Otaple:y8tatlon 1MI ii I I IU ~ 64J..4MO j l..9wfl&<brdel'IMalnt. HWD~lll-1• AD VISOR : ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT : Jo• 988·'174 from' w/Ke;TtOflficKI. JI' .. c 141·11750 • •••• ~~donertatl_. • l30 w eev a1r1e1. Colt• MeM. CA m21 e..11arn or t-3pm oniy 9"& IGtw ,,,,,., ~. a BUILD OR AEPAIA ---outa<.' CARf'VL : AN l!OUAL Of'POATUNITV l!MPLOY[A : w/ OM Pf"'*' & ltllnd ..... cueNoM. !'Mr\ld1a cto!..~t=-·11~=~E-1~~i LOAATES. Tt3f0.'8 ~~=,~~ 642-5678 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• M:~v:r,,:w:·~lly~ Apt)ltcat.!!=...xtta f:OC,=,=~ .... 78toe Oon 9t2.a202 Mt &trad• 84&-3381 .2 ... 11 851·H04 M&M 722-toee lot Cle111fled Adi. "4-tU2 842-et81/d9ya I • CALL TODAYll lllFllLlll ll i -\ .,.lllliili.._ ............................................................................ ________________________ ~~-~ .. \ SOllTll,~ ........ Mint cond. with helmet, 3 monlht MW. Muat Mii, buying car. $800 842...aiS ltttr..... IOU 172 EXPiOf'W 201• low mlt; age, xlnl cond. $8.500. 875-3083 ·73 Mini St9Y9Cr1f1 20' 81K ml. Nice for wtlndal Real nice $8500 Nvwptt II 842.0795 Evee 546-8823 .... ........ 10 HOlll·llT$11 ~ *'11HH Beige wttan Int., xlnl. eate. (Serial #'018130). 110,111 .11111r·111 .... TS 1001 QUAIL ST .. N.B. 833·9300 '81 CADILLAC SEVILLE clean, new tlret. low mllee $9000. 722-8071 NABERS CADILLAC LARGEST SELECTION of late model, low ml!Mge c.dlllact In Orange County! See ua 1odayl 140-1880 TOYOTA '78 280SL, allver blu•. ALL MAKES! auto. ale, stereo c:au. 2800 Harbor Blvd. s 199 Down. CIOMd end both lopt, 43K ml. (SUper comm'l IM. OAC. clean) S19,995. Wlh lake ~-c_o-ST_A_M_ES_A.......,.~ Dellvera Any L.... ltade. 213-~1937, Ive Clinnltt l ••L·••-• 1 •&H! msg, 714·521·8539 ett 3 --••-..-..,,..-....,....,.~__,..,-----,----, ·a.. Camato Z28, 6 IPd 11•1a2-1H1 '84 380SL Meroedea. 13K HO, Ttopt, loededl Blue ml. ahowroom cond. mid· $9950. PP 751-5583 or LllllM Tl LWI night blue w/gtey lthr, 983-5&81 X286 pp Centte chrome wllle, 1-------~-­A •flLD Pl•llT1 Plrelll 1 tlrea. Thll wee!( '85 CAMARO 5 IC)d, 7,300 0111 ... fer only S37K. 61917•&-3300 mllee, x~~S $7500. HUNT~=EACH TIP ••• Piii IEW Oii SAUi CHRYSLERJPLYMOUlH For Pampered 1111 •••••• •s 842-0&31 54-0-51CM Mer<*SM e.nz Vllft......, -.an 1&111 WI llY .... I Top Mer<*SM PrlcM Paid Putt MU c .. P9ter or Rav ILlll 1111 t6U Ct;; tna. I K ... If ••TS UI TllOll dump bed. ~ ltf1 ..... . get• , °"* part• '°' 21301'714837-2333 •r~JtrJiiiiii.!'. ...... Me-6848 p..,u iH'f ht11 Wu... Ati 73 P8RiRt 614 cm .. "' Ill 111111 $5,500 Of beet on. USED CARS & TRUCKS Xlnt cond. 640-51-M COME IN OR CALL FOR FlllAPPUIUL O.LILLO .....it 1821 1 BEACH BL VO. HUNTINGTON BEACH .. 1-llllsMl-1111 WIWAITTe. IWlllDUIJ S-Tony~ CHICK IVElllJON PORSCHE AUDI , CHEVROLET Htthttl Quallt11 s.1 .. 6 S.rvlo -Orange Cout OA'L Y PILOT /Monday, September 23, 1N5 9'1 PWUC *>TICE n. •1111111 , _., PWUC lllDTa: NI.JC lllDTICl PWUC MJTJCl W ll>TU ~ mncr ----------1 .... 0.... .. ,,.. ..... 1--------------1----..... --------_________ ..,. _________ , ________ _ ..... 1 t1f _,... llOTICIO# MOWO# ~-Hl1m mTm .._11911 .......... $r telf ~ .... ~ ~MU ,_,..Ml.I ~'f ITMTOlt ....,, __ "11 ... 11111 e..-D1 J8 1 tlO. ,.,., -T.& .... llfn eTe .... -_,..._, .. ,AMMVf ~---~M u••.,. ................... ..... YOU AN IN ~fAUl.T •IW Ml.I UW._.,olf""'911ol ... MOnCIOP .................. 0. l«RIUOW. ~AOUDO#TillUST l'w.lqOW. MOTICaO#MLI• ~ ~ e TRUe'1'W .. U&.I ... _, -le .... YOU AM IN OVAUU DATU> APM. MO tt7f YOU AM 1H OUAUl.T .-AL "'°"Mn AT ~ of °'*VI . YOU AM .. DOAULT n. l f I '& I ~ UN0P A 000 Of' TMJl'T. UNU.N YOU TAii At:,. UHOI" A DUO~ TA\JeT. ..WATI U&.I ~ .. ,...._. UllDDAIMllDOP,.,.T ......... tilO.-..-KTIO. OCTOH" .!..t.J TIOH TO "'°TEOT YCXM DATKO, HOV!MH" 21 ....... COUllTO# eel Didi yp to but"°,.., DATID llUllL --.... _._ le W .. '9 ,.. 1112. UNLUI YOU TNUI ~. rT MAY N 19'2. UH1.U1 YOU TAK£ ~ tNn t0'30 LI!\., T~. YOU TMCI ACTION TO ............ ....., .._. CTION TO P"OTICT IOU> AT A PUk1C 8ALI. ACTION TO PAOT!.OT COUlfn OP Oct. 8, 1tN 11 tfllt ~ "'°1WCT YOUR flROP· ...... ......,_ .. ......_\'OU" PAOHRTV, rT MAY If YOU NOD AH !)(Pl.A. YOU" PAOHATY, rT MAY UM ..0 Ing Decwtn••t of ... ado 1"1'Y,rTllAYMaou>AT OAT'l2tlillll 8E 8<X.0 AT A PU9iJC NATlOH 0# THI NATUM I( IOU) AT A PU9UC NOTICE 19 HUU!I\' ieoe~loomd• 1110 A "*.IC ........ YOU c~ ••••AL "YOU NEID AH EC· OF THI PfllOClEOIHOI &Al.l.lfYOONUOAHO.. ttwt on OctOfMt 22. Ad•m• Alleft\19, Co.t.a NOD AM DPUMAnoM llO•TeAel H•YICI, LANATION OF THI AOAINIT YOU, YOU Pl.A.NATION 0' THI 1M6. Oir thlr....., wttHn ...... ~ 11 ~ Of' TMI MA~ Ofl TMI ..C .. _.. .... a........ AT U A I 0' TH t 8HOUU>COHTACT A LAW• NAT U " & 0 F TH I tilM llowed by lllw, lit ttme Mid Olde w9 be ,_. ~ .....,. ......_. cee,, CA-.• P.-OCllOIN08 AOAIH8T YEA. PAOCUOINOI AOAIN8T Of'IOlll of the l'ubllc Ad· 1iCtY OI**' end,_.. for: YOU, YOU IMOULD COM-_.., ...... ,.__ Cttt) OU, YOU SHOUl.D 00K-NOTICe 18 HIAHY YOU, YOU IHOULD C()N. tetOf. &201·A Allfflll PuACHANM~ TACT A L.AWYa •1 .. llft, er: llert L. ACT A LAWYIA. GIV!H, fhet on October TACT A LAWYER , a.n Diego. Cellfomle. ING COH80U AHO llQ. ON Wtll• 1t 10ltl ....,_,Me&. ....... , CALIFORNIA MO"T • 154f\ IM6, .. 11:0o o'dOck CAl."O"NIA MOAT. ~. Jwne NAL "'OCUll"Q "/Iii:#, A.Ill,. C....,... ca-.e1 Publlehed °'*'Oii CoMt 01 S!IMOE. A CALI-a.m of Mid o.y, • 1M GAGE IVMCl., A CALI-, Put>lc ~ AO! OOl.DE.H WUT C04.--..._ _ .. *"' .-Delly Plot 8ec>'-"'* 23, FOMA ~TION. • ~ A_. .,,.,.,_ FOINA OOAPORATIOH. • at0t.#ublk: GYwdlen of l.fOI ~ ,,_... _., _, 30. ()c,obef 7, tM6 uly et>POlnt.cl TrultM ~ tM CMc c.Mr 8Uldln9. duly appoint~ TtultH 0..00 County, Call All tl6dl are to be lfl-. ,.,....... .. 0.-.. n-t. M·7U net. the fo!IOWtno CS. !om* .. 100 EMii Ot\tp-un6w tN followlng CS. ....... et~.... OOfd9nce wttt1 IN llct OoaY-~ • 1111111.,... IOrl'*9 dMcj °' tl'Ullf WILL men A-. In -Qty °' eor'lbed diMcl of INlt WILL 0 UMI :: end beet '*"" rnente "'*" .,. now In .. ,...... M. .. 111111 II Of.. rtaJC fl)TIC( I.I. AT PUIUC AUCTION Orenoe.ln the County of Or· KU AT PU8UC AUCTION . eub to conflnNltton and mey be._.... In the ... ,...,_ lft ._ .,._ 0 THE HIOHUT 910CXfll enge. lfl the It.Me ot Cet-TO TH! HIGHEST 91DO(A the entltted Coun. oflloe of tN Dnctot of II h "' '"_, II Of.,.._ .... OA CASH 0t • Mt fof1tl lfl ..,,,,.._ ~ TRUST '°"CASH 01 •Mt tMt1 In of the l'tgM, ttttl and P\itdlalllng of 9d OOlega COtHHf, C1lltornle H · NO'nCll OP IOn 2924tl of tl'll CMI DEED ~ INC., a 8ectk>n 2t24tl ot the CM1 ot lhe ...._ llilWd dlltt1cl MlllM i.,; ICAT11 OP , IM '1ght, mt. Ind Ce11tom1a oorRC)retion, • Code. 111 rigM. ttue and lfl end to thatt oet1aln E.afl tM001r mtfll 1UOm1t WILUAll "AUL MACA. IUZA8mTM P. L.AMO tweet coo..,..cl to and duty eppolnted 'truttH lntereet oon~ 10 and oper1y thet.inen. with tile bid 1 Gellfller'• A llnate .._, I "AUL AND 0# H ii hON held by It unct. Mid under and poreuant '19 the now held by " urldef Mid '*9 Wrtnen bide mey ctlec*. C*1lftecl c:Mdl. Of MACO, A lllent.d llilllfl TO .t.11•MtT'llt of Trull In 1he proper1y pow of .... coc ... t'td In Deed of TNet In the~ ~on tN d9Y ot the b6dder't bond meOe ~ ~ llU. AT ~ llTAft tlO. A·,_, ttlr** deecr1'*9: ttiat ~ Deed ot Tl'\llll ............ ~ Of t.tor'9 tNt ~ by to the Ofdar of lt'8 COllll AUCnott TO TMI ...._ To IM ...... .,............ TAUSTOft WIUJAM f. eicecutedbyCHAISTOl'HER TMJSTOA: OONAl.O I lnlheOfbofttlePub-~ Co1eOe '*"1cl HT ..,.,... POii CAaM, c:tedll°'9 end contingent y AHO l.AETITIA e. MAY. A. WHEEU.R ANO IMHOA ENRIGHT AHO KATHLEEN Admlnltttetor Of the 8oetd of T~ "' an (per.W. ........ .,, .... .._ oredltort. and pw.one who U88AND AHO WIFE J. WHEELE". HU$8AND v. ENRIGHT, HUSIANO of ttie Super1or eoun. emount rlOt ... "*' tM leWM ..-, Oii tM UNled may be othetwlee lnterelted IENEFICIARY: Cellfomla AND WIFE A8 JOtNT U,.._ ANO WIFE wtlldl 1he proo.dlngit -peroent (5~) of the tum bid 1 ..... ) AT TMI MORnt In the will end/Of aetete ot. SeMoe. a call--ANTS. tecorded Mey Httl, IENUICIA.AV: CellfomAe lnQ, M 1QIMen'-ttlet1he b60- ""*11'""4NC9TOTMI EltzabMhP.LanQakelEJtza. ~IOn 1971,ln&c* 1M7fof0f. Mott0909s.Mce.acorpor· TERMS AND C ON· der wtll enter Into tlMI COUNTY COUATMOUM, beth P. Mtc:Mallon Me RECORDED OCTOBER ftc6ll Aeoor~ of .-S Coun-etton OOIOHS ~SALE: Ten r>er• procx-ct COntrect If thl 1'0 CMC CIN'TU DNW Ellnbettl M. l..eng Ike Eliza-7, 1912 u l~ttument ty, et Peo9 01, Aeoordet't RECOADEO OECEMIEA t of 1he purc:tleM ~ -ii ewtlfded to Mr!\ In WllT, IAMTA ANA, CA ell beth 1..eno Ma Ellz.al*h 82-317414 ot Of-Instrument No. 17108, by I, 1982 H lnltrum•nt NO lfOm UMI ~ the -t of f9llunl to 9"W f1ellt, ltttl Md.....,...~ M.eMehon Aeoordl In the Office of reeeon of a br..c:tl Of 1 ct.-Number 82_.21064 of Of. •I 11"11 «al bl6-0fT: 1n10 tuell oontrect, llMI "'" .. Md"°" ...... .., " A 1)9tltlon hM been flied Reeofder Of Ofenot fault "' IMIY"*'t Of .,.,. llClel Reeofdt In UMI office of belenot 10 be peid ~ ~·of 1he Qtleclc wlll be under Mid 0.-d Oii Trwt In by Peul Oevld MacMlhon. fonnenol of 1ht ot>llgetlone tM Reeorder of Or9nQe flfmetlon of ..... Of upon eel, 0t In the -of a h PNP9'tl •uee.d In .. Jr. In the 8uptt1or Court of DMcl of Trwt, 0. eecUrecS thertby, lncludlng County otn.r tenn• M we ..,_ bOnd, the full *"" tMreol Cftf. Olf lntM, C....., II Of-Oranot County tequalllng the followtng prop-that br..ofl Of cMfNI, ~ Seid 0..0 of T Nit, o. 1-* to lhe UNStl liQI *' .aa be ~ to Mid OOI-..., lteM Oii C...... that Pu Oellld Mec:Mtihon. . tlce of whlOtl WM reootded 1Cribe1 the fo11ow1n9 prop. IOP'oved by the Court tegt dlirtric1 dilecMM4 tN leftd tMrelni Jr. be appointed M per90MI LOT 3 OF TRACT NO. June 111.h, 1915, of Offtdlll eny: undtralgned ,...,._ Mo C>lddtr mey ~ "ARCll 1: r8'>f'9M1'1tettw to edmlnllt• 11172, IN THE CITY OF Recotde ot Mid County, At-LOl 86 OF TRACT HO. lhl rtohl to r9ject eny encl ell his bid tor a~ for~ UMtT 10 Al IHOWN AND the .. tell Of tho dteedtnt. OSTA MESA, COUNTY OF c:o<der'1 ln1trum•nt No. 21173, IH THE CITY OF bld1. nw (45) CSeys aft• the dell DllC ... D .. TMAT CM· The petition requ .. lt RANGE, STATE OF CALI-115-211620. WIU SEU AT COSTA ME.SA, COUNTY OF FOR FURTHER INFOR-NI for the ooen1nC1 IMttOf TAIN CONDOMINIUM IUthority to ldmlnlllet the ORHtA. AS PERM.AP RE ... PV8UC AUCTION TO THE ORANGE. STATE~ CAU-MATION, eontect K E Tho Board of Tn..... r• ~ MCOfllDIO ,...._ ..ut• under !ht lndepin-ORDED IN BOOK 63, HIGHEST BIDDER FOR FOANIA AS PEA MAP RE· (11\9) se6-6492 _._theptMlegeof,.... AICY f1, 1tt1 .. 1001t dent Admlnlltrltion of &-AGES 47 to 49 INCLUSIVE. CASH, lewful money of the CORDED IN BOOK 1111, EST A fE OF SHIRLEY Ing eny end all Olde or to 1 .... "AOH 111 TO 111, lat .. Act. 18CEl.LANEOUS MAPS, UNted Stetea, 1M peytlt* et PAGES 22 AND 23 OF MIS-RAE DEVENEY STINE • waive eny Irr~ 0t ~ INCLUllVI, M OfflCIAL A hearing on, .... 1)9tttlon N THE OFFICE OF THE thetlrneofNle.eirlghl, tltll CELLAN£0U8 MAPS. IN PROBATE NO 13"el4 . TO tormalltlM k'I My bid CK In "ICO .. DI 0, O"ANQI will be hold on 10-10-86 •t OUNTY RECORDER OF end lnlerlt now held bytt, .. THE OFFICE OF TME WIT· \ht blddlnO COUNTY, CAL"O .. •UA, 9:30 A.M. In Def>t. No. 3 et AID COUN'TY. Tn.t•. In and to that tMI COUNTY RECORDER OF PARCEL 1 LU A. I~ vtoe AND AMa~ MAY 14, 700 CMc Cont• Ortw Welt, MAY ALSO BE KNOWN !>'oC*tY lltueted In Mid SAID COUNTY. Unit 280 u lhowf1 on that CMi 1•1r, • ._ » 1"2, IY INIT,.UMINT Senta Ana. CA 92702. : 1110 Vlctorie St'9et, County encl State. daecr1bed MAY ALSO BE KNOWN CondomlnlUm Plen ,... c .. t C 1MM11 tty .sD •1f7m M Off1CIA1. IF YOU OBJECT lo the MeM. Cellfomle u lollowl· AS · 1135 Darrell Str .. t, recot<*I In Boolt 12331, c..._..,...,... .. ICON>I. granting of Ille petttlon, you (tt a ltreet ~ or LOT 21 OF TRACT NO Coete MtM, c.ltt0tnla Pegeil 708 10 741 I~. Pulilllhecl Orange C0Mt ,AJtCll. t: lhOuld tither appear II the ommon dHlgnatlon II 42116, IN THE CITY OF (If • llr•l lddr... Of Off\clel Atcofd• of Ofango Delly Piiot Stptemblr 23. AN UNDfvtDID tl11IT hearing encl stet• YOUf ob-aboYI, no wwranty 11 COSTA MESA. COUNTY Of common dHlgn1t1on 11 County, Calllornl1, on 30, 1N5 INTIMIT Al A TRNA.NT jec;1lonl CK ftll Wl'ltttn ot>jec· •to ltl comcitet.,_ ORANGE. STATE Of CALI· lhOwl\ aboYt. no warranty 11 AUQUlt 10, 1977 • deftt'ltCS .. COMMON .. THS Fii tJone wtlh the COUt1 befOte corr.ctneae). FORNIA, AS SHOWN ON A g1Wt1 u to Its coinp1e1.-In tfit Oec:Wauon of Re91'1c- INTIMIT .. AND TO THS the hMttng. Y~ llPC*lf· Tho benefldety under Mid MAP ALEO IN BOOt< 149 0t eorr9Ctneae). 1lon1 ttc:OtO.cl In 8ooll COMMON AMA M LOT 1 ence may be In ptt'lon CK by of Trwt. by rwon Oh PAGES 29 TO 32 IN· Tho btolflc*Y undtt Mid 1178". Paget \3~ 10 1431 CW TitACT NO. 10IM1 Al your lttomey. tecll Ot dllfauit In the ot>f. CL US IVE. 0 F M 1 S • 0..0 of Trull, by teuon of e lnolu•lvt, of Offlc:lal Ae-ACT1TIOU8 ...... Nfll lllAJt "LID .. IOOK IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR aUon1 MCU'9d thet:ftlY, CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN brMct1 Of default In tho ot>ll-c:orda. and In 8<><* I 178", ..,._ ITAW C, PAO.I • TO t 11 ... Of a contingent cndltOI of etof0teexecuted end de-. THE OFFICE OF THE gatlon1 eeeured tfler9by. Paget 1432 to 1485 tr.. Tho to11ow1ng CI. U I IV I, 0 F M 11 • the dec111ttf, you rllUl1 flll eel to the ~*1 • COUNTY ~ROEA OF htretotor. uecuted encl o. diullw of C>mclal Rtcotdl of doing bull~ 1~~ C~OUI MUI, M · your claim wtlll the COUt1 ex tn Daderatlon of 0.-SAID COUNTY lt¥ered to lhl underllgned a Mid county and any amen6-Broolth<Mlow Umlted, A Call- CORDI°" IAJD COUNTY, pr-t It to the peraonal and Oemend fOf s.ie. Tho .. , ... addt .. Of wrttten Oec:lw•tlon of 0.-mtnll of ~uuona ltler• lomle Umtted P.,,nerthlp, Al MICH TaMI II O.· ,.-eeentaltw eippolnteel by wntttn notice of br..ot1 other common deelgna1IOn. teult and Demand for Salt, to. encl loc:eted on tt1a1 Cler· Brookhollow Apartmente. ~IN THS ARTICL.1 IM-the court wllhln tour monlhl electlOn lo ceuae the If etr/. of the r1Mll pr~ and wntten notlol of brtecti tlln rMl ~optrty cMectlbed 111552 MacArthur Blvd . TITl.ID "Ol'1NfTIONI" M from tho date of fltll ... to Mil Mid harelneboYe dtectl'*9 It and tltc:tlon to c:euae tho u Lot 1 of Tract llOQ2, M ,.440• ltvln•. Cellfornle THI DICLAftATION 0' au.net of...,.,.• ~ovlded ~ lo utllfy Mid obi-purported to be: 9711 "'ES-~ to NII u ld etlOW"I on a map recot<*:l In 927 !5 COVINANTI, CON· In Sec:Uon 700 of the tlont, encl theteaft• the IOIODRIVE.COSTA MESA, pr~toutllfyUldot>ll· Boolt407,Paget 30ancl 31 OeYIO K. LMnb. 11552 DfTIOMI AND MITNC· Probelt Codt of c.llfomla. aigntd c:.uMd Mid CAUFOANIA. getlona, and thereat\• 11"11 of Mlletlllneoul Mapa of Mac:Ar1hur Blvd . u4() TIONI "ICOfllDID IN Tho tlmt fOf ftllng c:lalma wlll tlct of breech and of al9c-Tho undtrt6gl*1 hlt.oy Ullderalgntd c:auMd ealO Or~ Coumy. Cellfomta IN1,_., Calltomit 92715 100K 1.a. ,AO. 111t Al not •JIPK• prlol' lo lour Ion to be Aeoorded JUNE dl9dallnl 1M llablllty fOf 9lt'/ notlol ot brMC:tl and of t1te-PA CEL 2 John Miner, 19 652 IUf"Pl.IMUITSD M Of'· montl\I from the d1te of lbt • 11MM AS INSTRUMENT ~-In Uk1 lltMt tlOf\ to be Atcof<*I JULY 2, An Undivided 1/120th MacArthur BlvO . 1440. ACW. MCON>I °". IAID w..r1ng notlct llbow. 0 . 84-256003 of Mid Of· ~ Of other common 19&4 AS INSTRUMENT HO lnt9'91t 1t1 and to ell of 11"11 trvtne, Caiffomla 92715 COUNTY, INCLUDING ALL YOU MAY EXAMINE the el Recorda. Oealgnatlon 8A-27208e of MIO Offtciel ,_. Pt'OC*'tY deacril>ed u MeflfdeO AMeeah t&S62 I M ,, " 0 V I M I N T I nit kept by ll'lt court. tt you Said Mltd be rnedt, but Seid .... wlll be "'*'° Aec:ord9 lot I on thl m-c> of tl'lt M1cArthur BlvO , U40 1.0CATID n.MON IX·.,. a pet90r'l lnt.-ted In oownent Of,... wlttloutwwranty,axptWOOt SalOMltWlllbttnldt,1>1.111bov•-r1ftrencad tract. lrv!ne,CllltCKnla 92715 Cl,,TINQ THl"""OM the eat.at•. you mey ..,.,,. anty. •JCP'-Of Implied,,... ltnpllecl, ~Ing title, SIC»' wtlhout coven.Int °' Wat· logetl'ltr Wllh all l!TIP'~ All Rlzl. 18552 MacArthur cONDO•IUM UMrTI 1 uc>on1heextc:Ut0t0tedmln-ding lttle, pci1uult~· Of ...ion. °' enQ.lmbraneel. ranty,exP<9110t lmplled,,... menh llf lt1"eonc. dexcop1 1uno Blvd .• ,440, lrvlnt. CeM-- TO 11, INCl.UllVI, lstralOf, °' upon tho 11· mbranot1topey ,,.,... to Mtl9ty the Pftnclc* bel-gerdlnQ tttll, pn111elon, 0< t era rom on om n um tomla 927l5 1.0CATID THSMON. tOtfleY '°' lhe elltCutOf ex Pfindt>al """of the ance of the Not• °' other onc:um~ to pay the, .. Unit• 210 ltlfOUQtl 32t In· Thlt t>u•\neu It con- IXClf'TINCI ALL OI., Oii. ldmlnl1trat0t, and Ille with .. aecur.i by MIO Deed otJIQetlon aecurtd try Mid l'Mlnlng ~ eum of tl'lt c:lualvt, located th«eon Clucted try 1 \lmited ~-WTI, ...ulALt, ... the court wllll proof of ..,. Trull. with Int ..... In Deed ol Truet, wtltt Int.st not .. aecured by Mid DMcl PARCEL 3 11111> IRAL NOKTI, MA'l"URAL vlol. I written ,.qu.t 1111· note prov\cMd, ed· and other 1Um1 • ~~ of Trull, with lnt...i M In An 111Clu""9 ..-nen1 Jonn Minar Genfrel p_,. QAI NOKTI AND OntlA Ing lha1 you deWt ~ ""°"· 11 any, under the therein: plul ldvancll. 11 Uk1 noll provided, ad-apQUrttnant 10 lllCtl untt '°' net HYD,.OC A"IONI IY notice of tho ftllng of an In-'""'of said Deed of Ttult. eny, undtt tlMI term• th~ vanciea. II any. uod« the the UM and occ:upency of Tiii• tlltemertl ... "*' WHA TIOIVlft NAiii ventory and appral""*'lof , c:har9411 and expeneea encl lnt•t9t on .ic:n Id· terme of Mid Deed ol Truet, thoel pontona of ll'lt rellf\e. wtth tl'll County C1trk ot °'· KNOWN, QIOTHl"lllAI. tetate UM\I Of of the 1)9tl-f tho Truet• and of tho vine... 1nd plu• IMI, ..... c:tlltgea encl UptnMI ttcl common wee ~ ange County on Auguat 28 ITIAM AND ALL "'°°" tlonl Of accounts mtnllonad Nila c:rMttd by MIO DMcl c:Mr9411 and·~ of the of tho Tt\111• and of the 11'1 thl o.c:&er1tton of Aeet.ne. 1985 UCTI Dl".IVID THSM· In Section 1200 and l200 5 °' Trwt TNlt• end of the tnm• ,,...,.,. Cteeted by Mid DMcl tlon• and"'°""" on ll'lt Con-~ "'°"'• WITHOUT, HOW· theCelltoml• Prot>eteCodt. Said Mii wlll bt hlkS on c:rMled by Mid o..o of of Truat domlntum Plan I« aucn unn Pul>ltlhed Orano-Cout IVI .. , THI .. IQHT TO MMet MCI MIMI, At· UESDAY, OCTOBER I, Tl'Ult. Tho lotel atn0unt of Said .... wlll be hold on A condominium located a1 !Dally Pllol Secnornt>tt 2. 9 DM.L, .... , ITOM, IX·~ ,_ .......... 10M 19115 11 11:00 A.M .. el Ille Uld ot>llg1tlon, lncludlng TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, ~ ltmon Grove lrvt,,.. 16 23. 1945 ,,1.0 .. I AND O"l"ATI.............. ............ d Slttel entrance 10 ~ebly eetlrnated ,_, 1985 at 11:00 AM .. I I thl California M-729 TIMOUQH .,.._ IUllPACI AM. CA lll701 he building toc;eted a1 1670 c:hargM and ftper\MI of the Concord St1'99t enlranot to P\.lb4ilhtcl OfanQt Cou1 M THS ~ -f'llT P\.ll>lltl'led Orango Cout 17th St,_. Senta Ana. Trust•. at the tlrnt of lnltlel the building located at 1570 Daily Ptl04 Septemt>tr 23 M TMI .... 14.WAca M Delly Piiot Stptember 23. Cellfomla 92701. publl<:lltlon of tl'lll Notice. lal&91 17th Slreet. Senta Ana, 24. 30. 1985 l'\lllJC fl>TICE IAID I.AMI), Al MURVID 24. 30, 1985 Tho totel amount of tl"ll 134'.IM&.llO. !California 92701. MT .754 .. 0.10~.,......,.. MT-7fl&~pald btllllnOe Of lhl obll-0.tld: September 18th, Tho tote! amount of the •IDlll' W\TV'l" ACTITlOUI.,._ •• COlil'AlfY, A ~ gattoneeour«ttry-'dprop-1M6 unpeld ba6ance of the 9bli-r~ "'•mw. NAMI ITAftmWT co .. ,,O,.A TION, "'· PtBJC M)TIC( arty to be IOlcl, togettler with •XICUTIYI TRUIT gatlon-=ut9d by Mk! prop. flCTITlOUI eu9MEll Thi lollowlng ptt'lonS .,.. COW.D "MUA"Y 11, lntereat. 1et1 ~ end DUD lmWtCU, INC.. e larty 10 be told, logetl'ltr wtlh OOinO bu11nW M 1t11•100K t.a, ,,.. ..:~1t0fl Mtlmetecl C:OOU, axptnW. C •1 Mt ......... • lntereat, Ill• c:tietvee. Ind ~~=are BANSHEE KITES 28851 ,... OP OfflCIAL MCOM>. APflUC TO end ecto•ICM •• of the dlall9 ...... lair: ~ L eetlmeted coa1•. open-. d bu IT op of Thi WO<ld OrM A&.aO IXCl"9NO ALL. AnoM lltr«lf.ll M 1.2te.11. ............. 1ancllldvanc:el.Moflhld•t• 0:.1st ~~~L FtAe lL.agun• Beec:ll Callfornl• w AT I" "I 0" TI . MU. M.COHOUC Oete: Saptembef 3. 1915 ~ ..._ Q. ......... l"llrlOI, It $40,772.53 9~1 WHl1'HR9' 1UCH WATP MVWa.t CALIPO .. NIA 110 .. T· V'loe " I I It, 1221 W. 0.W. September 3. 1985 r~~TE~TION.Al5SIH~h~ Frtnll Grtnt Plfkt ..K .. IQHTI IHAl.L II ..... GA• tlJWtCa. A CAO-,.,. .............. AM. CALl,ORIUA MORT· ....... anti ,,. ....,, s 28351 Too of The wono MIAftlAN, OVHl.YINQ, ~~~~~M~,OMIACON'ORA .... ou~ .. ~ C••·-•nn1r11"** OAm llJMCI, A CAU-~11.~1"'N!~:~~.l 155' Of'yt Laguna 8MGh Calt-.,,,"0"flllATIVI, "'"· • _...._... •: -(71')~ POflMAC~TION.• S An 10<111192651 COi.A TING. ""HCflllfl· ~~ ·~o.::= TMllT .,:.-0 ~ PublllMd Ofano-Coelt _... .._... IY: GUAICOtA.N ,~~h~~ ~!i':omta~~·70~ 1 rr111 l>Uttnm 1e con TlVI 09' CONTlllACT\IAL. t ol to .. 42 .. On Salt S-I ~ \~.!_ ~,· · •-Delly Piiot Sap1ember 23. jTWUIT a.ID MftVICll. I Thta ouatneH ,1 CO"· oucted t>y 61'1 ondlllldUAI WfTMC)UT, HOWIVI ... THS r r _.__.,., _., _,.. 30, Octobef 7. 1985 ~--1, ..... bf: Tllf1 F'AANK G PARKS. JR NGHT M INTRY FOlt THI Wint (Pub Prem.) 10 Mii ii· reterJ, 1170 le1t 1701 M·785 ldlMilfl. Anll'tMt a.c,. dueled l(blN ~~~~~~~J Th111 tl&temtnl wu n1tc1 IXlfllCIH 0, IUCH,~s~~t!'~~=llreet.~l.)~11T7AM. ,.,.,,, 1170 ... , '7th Tht• 1111-'I WU liltd wttn1neCOunryC1tr1t ofOf . NGHTI Al MMRVU>.. " • •CA mot,.~ -· ltreet, ..-1. ._.ta AM., c °' ange County Ol'I 4..guet 28 DUD niOM THI lftYJNI CA 921129 PublWled Orango eo.t AMO tht cl .... fled ede lor CA am (7M) MM1TT 1Wl1" Ille County lerl< or 1985 COWANY A MICHIGAN P\.lblllhed Oraogo Cout Dally Piiot Stptember 9, 18, tho belt <'Mis In apart· Publllfled Of•nge Cout 111~ County on Augull 28 ~ CO ft,, O it'A TIO N, fll E. Dai~ Piiot Stptember 23. 23. 19115 ment rent•• CM2-6678 Dally Piiot Stptemt>et 9 16. 19 ~ PuOlllhtlel OflllQI Cou1 COM>ID ,.IAUA"Y 11, 1911 M·J071 M-7:\A I 23, 19115 Put>lltntd OflflQI Cour Dell) Pttot September 2 9 1•1 .. llOOIC ,.,,.,, ,,A~1 M-737 Dally Piiot Sec>1emt>e< 1 9 16 23 1985 101 0' OFFICIAL Rl· 16 23 1985 I • COM>I. M '3• PUCIL J; CHICK IVEaSON '4$ E CoH I Hwy Nn•port lklKh IAllMINTI Al HT '°"TH IN THI! IECTIONI I '14 Pinto. gd c:ond , nu lltet I NTITL l!D "ClfllTAIN & ctutch, stereo w/ceu IAllMINTI FOlt OWM-1 $985 obo CM&-7383 Ifill" AND "IU""O"T, '74 Mu11. II. 6 cyt. auto. pe/ec. lo ml. very CIMn. Excel cond. Mull tac. $1300/obO, 754-6458 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE L:::-:i:-•--:-l:-a-----z:Tar llTTLIMINT AND I N· _.., C"OACHMENT" IN THI ~~!!!!~~~!!!!~~~l=~;::===::;9;;l;:;l~lJlr71 Town Car. wM wired UOVI DICl.A"ATION. velCKe Int, 10 ml, gar• ::~~:r. Al IUCH Tuesday, September %4 SYDNEY 0MARR 'II.... · kept, axll cond. $4750 IAHlftNTI Allll ,,,.... ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19): What had been a dispute wtll be .. 111141• ~~000~~~3-~~ obo. 774.,.224 TJCIJl..MLY MT FO«T'H IH settled. includes relauves, clo se fnend. You m1~t ~called upon to ~· Thia 2 Or comee with pta. ••rca.. S THS UTICU INT'ITUD a referee Focus on populanty travel, communacauo n and opportuntt~ I T ".! "IAllMINTI " 0, TH! . . ' xtta cep fuel tank, ale ~ta 'H Mercuty Sta lion DICl.UATION M cow-for hither educatio n. . prep & more (Ser#0002) 'fioyo1e eorOiia, belt ,Wagon 9 psnger, ·1u11 NANTI, CONOtTIONI AND TAURUS(April 20-May 20): Adhere to factual matcnal. Empham ..... o ff or. rune gteat. power. 1 ownet , exit RI I TflllC T IO N I • "I· o n reputation. prestige, abiltty co handle detatls and to meet dcadhncs ORANGE COAST 432.0184 cond S785 54-0-6942 COM>ID .. 100K 11111, Be aware o f source material also be willing to revise. review and co Jeep/Rena It ,AO. ao M Off'ICl.Al M · ' c;oe't M '81 Toyote SAS tan pt1-11p Couo•r '84. 111111111 opllon• CORDI M tAID COUNTY, rebuild where necessary. I 252-'HarMIOO:ll!I• eea Xlntcond.Sldrearwlndow 10.M>O ml. Top oond. AND ANY IUPf'LIMINTI GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ): Fav orable lunar, numenca! cycles $3000. 854·7098 '"" $9500. 845-7781 AND AMINDMINU h ighli$hts.ignificantchanges exc itmgcontactsanda vanctyoflecltngs. I b-d-.-... --,-----Toyote ·1• Coron• St. wa .. ~llt 7 ~=~~~~· ~:=.':aiT~= Gajn indicated thro ugh rca'ding. wnting, eitpressmg ideas in frank. ClaaUn 9049 Wegon. Good cond r :;;e in(f IUCH UTICU 1Jf1TTUD c rcauvc manner S 1 2 o o I o b o . Ce 11 83 CYtl upreme. • At FOLL.OWi; "0.,.,_I CANCER (June 21-July 22): Money wtll be forthcoming for hom e 'IJ mY• Wllll. 842·2940 or 842-7150 !fr~ ~~·7~~/;~5 caea AIOHTI AND DUTlll, repairs acquisitions which aid in beautifying domestic surro undings I Monza eng .• v.ry tare. y ,.._ l'J UTll.ITlll AND CA•ll j • • · di 1 II 1 1 very ct .. n, 1 owner ......... OLDSIOllLE TILSVlatON". ..~ Don t ~ttempt to force issues -p omacy W1 get you a m os S2000 oao. 875-9783 180 VW.1Sfl'O. own«, new AND HTTL.I...,..., 1w.1everyth1ng-you need. A ... :::A::I paint. llrH. uphol • 1111 C ROACHMINT", AND LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): It's ume to create your own tradition \ a ~ bumpers. etc. V.,y ~~ 'AC"-mH Stress individuality, perfect techniques. get nd of superfluous matcnal I ... ,112 s1111p. $1500. 846-5715 S199 Down. Cloeed end ,,~•1.1:' M ystery is solved if you look behind scenes. Spotlight o n pubhctt). ---.~ ... """!"ll'IPl.--·e1 vw c amper. Euro pop commercial...... UHMINT 'o" IN· possible partnership legal documents . '70 BMW 2602 top. new motCK, b<ak•. All..UYlll I.JAii ~=:~.:TN~~ VIRGO (Aug. 2J-Sept. 22): Responsib1ht1es increase, you can no I Aune good. neecsa eornt good value. s11150. ~1 l1•/a2-1ffl LOTl.Of'TMCT1GllM.AI longe rafford tobedoing someone elsc'swork. M eansekv atr yours(lf wortc, S1500 oao. Lynn 78G-7800 p lat S ""...,. ~ .. IOOlt above red tape, petty annoyan ces. office pohucs. Relat1o nsh1p I H/84~1 O/CM2.0148 ·ea B•I• Bug. 11100. tat ..,.. "A•I •TO•• intensifies chance s for increased earnings arc b1~hghted. '77 53()1, 1lnt oond. 4 IC)d. 831-8131 Of 54&-1gs2. -' ~i~:U1 ~~: LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): A~de~ recoan1t1on due -prrsonal r~ ~rt, bleupkt. 170 Cebrllto. CM. ...._ COM>I ~,..,COUNTY, horizons broaden. you encounter tnd1v1dual who ado res you Brtak 94K ml 731-0595 •11 VW Convert. New eng. l •78 5301• BEAUTIFUL $3150. oeo. 542..37eeor Al IUCH IAMMINT 11 fro m past patterns 1s imminent. Focus o n travr . commumc.auon. SHAPE. $8500 OBO. 9Y9e. 839_.235 ,::.:;~v,':; ab1hty to reach w1der audience. 7eo.oeff THI IU,,,LllHMTAfllY SCORPIO (Oct. 2J.Nov. 21): Stms indcprnden~. c rcall"ll), •83 BMW 833CSI. ShoW-DICl.AllA110M lW COVI· WillingneSSlo make ncw·su-ntn diffennt direction. You'll get chanct to K I IN.utra. COM>ITllOMI MD erase past mistakes. to recover lost arucle. lnd.Jv1dual ~ho o ilers ~ ~ 1~ ~ Ket .... at 57 FrMWaY ~~~t~T= ~ counsel on stock market is s1nCC1C. tnht, In WlllT. 121.000. 111 ,A• 111. OP °"1Ct.M. SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dcc. 21 )' l ntu1t1o n sc~es a s reh ablt' 78()..8850 « 4M-3387 11• MCORDt. auide, especially where relatives are concerned. Reunio n highlights **LllllY** TM..,... ......... MCI scenario You'll be invited 10 aourmet dmner -stnvc to k~p rccrnt ..... ...., ..... I...................... . d. . ,.......,. ... , ,.... "..,,.,.-.,...,.,..., ret0luuo ns conccnuna 1et. nutnt1on. L.CW. •r. top S1400 ••••rlhd eh n 11 CAPRJCORN (De<:. 22-Jan. 19): Look behind seen". d1vers1f)'. ask ·111 P1n1ow19. auto s1eoo ~••a -n qucsuoru.. satisfy curiosity Tnf that had bttn deta~ c~n n o" ~ :~g~r..;r~tr,400 TM~~ planned with confidence. You'l be more aware of appearance. bod ·14 ope o.vi11e t 1400 •11••• .., ......, • 1maac. acneral health. • •75 ep. O.Vllle $1800 .., 11twwwt:11 • m -' ._ AQUAIU\JS(Jan. 20-Feb 18): Puzzle pieces fall into place-~ou II ·11 ff<l'd Ltd Sdn t1100 ..,... ~ -=-.---= ictcomplcttstory, and you'll k..nowc:xactJy howto handle 1l Focu.so n ·73 Mot« Home N500 :;::=,.. .:!,::' chanmta.. ucitement, phY'1c.al attractlon. lndavtdual who prcvt0usly ...... • • ...._ ignored you n ow exprnses more than m11d mtcresL NWPQrtera 11 rweee tooo w .....,. ... .,.. ., PtSCa (Feb. 19-Ma~ 20): You learn a tecrCt thJt can prove 1--------::.~ ..:';::. profitable. Do some penonal detective work. You oould be on bnnlt of llliili-::::::::--•i•~1 ~11~1 ~z. • '"''*•.., important d.Jtc0Vn). Member of oppostte ICX f\sures prom1ncn1ly • a· • • ....,....,..._, Vi110, Sa&i~~~rwns play s:&ID•ficant roles. •••••11. •4 -.... r...... IP Sit u u a YOUR BlltTBDAY )OU an: arustec. ~;.:en t:"*'~ ="~";"~., apprtdatcm~sic. scnloiuvuo.tmldu~cyclcs. Taurus. l.Jbra,Scorp10 ,.Not c1 .. ;riecs "'\o, to -. ,...,...._."'""''~ penon.s play important ro~ in your life. ~( sanaJ~ man I.a.I statu.' could NMf\ lbe Ortnoa CoMt -., .. _... .....-chantr If mamed. there ml&ht bt an lddiuon to famtl> You could So ~.. L,--:::':'.!.,_..:::: into bus1nns for youncl( Vou have unusual vOtCC. ldore lu•IJJ')' and Ptiorw ...a-1171 ....._ .,.. .,,,.. .. could han a swed tooth. You contaantly stn~ for balance. arc ~~~~~~~~':.,.,.~~-,. -• 1ensitivc 10 needs of thow Ins fonunate. You could hit flnanetal :;: ... ,.._.Ill .......... '= JICkpot. AC.-OIS .ouo ;ianl> b qa ir.I' An•,..,. 10 Con gamt 14.\s10 , ~ "'•oust 1ana .,.. .ava1 1"' M••O\>a.tn HI Sl•l•Onfl•y 10 Put' M!rvtnQ l • F \Cl•mat•O" 12 ~rut! lJ AC•Otl~ lS Or, guoel'le' 1' S•e OM\ JO StOdO••• J 1 S11aiper>e0 )(' Pr Otf'Ctf'O pe.sons Ji Btlal'l1e J6 w~· r '1•1>•t•IS J8 8 1H O I~~ J9 P"'•l l• t~e 40 WH S•C~ •I Short tomf' 4~ T .. MO we>'>' '' E•t"ftf •S 1nt()t<1$ • 1 Cul>IClf' •e s~,., ,,n.1~ •9 Ouatt 5• Mll,,'h-·•' tl ~"' ,...ouW ~-''' N ' (.. """" !>8 'lll~Sler,, Pol• • !19 lily~ •81.ll .~ 60 • ~"''u~a1" f.• WV. I ' ,,.,3,,, f,, 1>2 5,,,,, fo.1 L•OS DOWN 1 4u(l•r" "'°" '' • .I Ou1v@• ~ "'l"'l""(tt'' •• •o ··"'"'"' 4"'-........ ,, "--' .. . ( -·~ fll ' ~ ' \~,,~'"',"'' ;/4 I '"° '"' • 1 o\opena< •• Vo11vco110.,. ,&Y: P._"\l'\tr.1e\I 't ~-I~ Jit.1'11"'9\A ••'" r ~ .. ,, ,, .. ,. ~f w" ,..,~\ ...... ', .... • 1) • • "=-=·"'1 ·rr. ,JllC'ftftOUa .. !!!M "°""' ........ ..c=:~ .. "°=91;1· •. 'Cosby,' 'Cagney & Lacey' ,,.__ ... na•-"' ... .,..] r MAim.,..,_,. MMm.,.AW TIT --,..-"!'9"'-.. n.. ........ ,._.,. The..._..,._..,. TM~~ .. TMtolllMI ... ==----. .•l::":: ......._. otne ,_,.1.,. .. H ; .... ....._.~ ....._::,,. di t ' t k E C.-.. ClllMw CA ... • YHA~MOU 67 'Wu• · ....... ~ .............. Ortler~ .. 1 Wemet an mpos or a e mmys ._.. ::fi O.W•. =,::.i.ow ~. ~.~oa~~. Tariq °'=-"': ~-'..!. "!·· ,,:;,.,':t :JAt'"'*""°" . ..,,. • ..... '· \Anon, MG&Z MlihMOod. 17 Wood'Mf, llt ..,..._ M ., ~ ~· .,.---... Yet• TIMI ltul!MM .. con-C..• ......._ ow ~ .,..,..,.. CA 12114 ........ CA tfl2I ,., ...... • 'd I de .I .t. ··de fro dUOted =~ ~-· TNe ~ .. con-.,.. ~ 11 oon-1111 • LA,. Hunt· kid in the Friday niabt block, di n t ve1op. 1'M rt 1oaet o..u TNe ..,.... It ducMd b'f: "'lndMIMI clue* 11oy. "'~ "'C: e.ot1. CA 12t47 IJ BOB THOMAS its three teehnical awards, the show wu cited only for tht wtlft"':..'=:~ ~ dUtOted ~rf ttMtoMullloon-ch au ci u ry . h rt q ,,... ll Hwehan. Jr. .,~x~oh~:: ~!!.:! • ,, r ,_...., supportlna performance o,f &t~ James Olmos, the oo- .,. eouney Al.9* ti ~ MaMIOOd TNe .....,..,.,,. wee ~ Ofo¥t. CA taM1 PASADENA (AP) -"The Cosby Show" and nonseote lieutenaot Martin Cas~o. 1M6 on • TNI .............. tllld TNia .....,,...t .. fled ~ tM County Ctartl °' , TNe l:IU8IMM I• oon-ur,. .... e~& ' .,..,..., .. took top Emmv honon Sunday at the In acce-•n• his Emmy, the Haspanic actor remarked. ,_.1 wtltl '*-County a.ti°' Or· wlttl die eounty a.tc °'Or-.,. County on Auouet H. cluCWd W. oo-1*''*' _,,.... __ , < "I'm tom be.,~n •"-ca• .. stroph• ,· n Mexico City •nd th~ ~~ Coall.,. County on~ 11.: County on Auouet ao. 1t1& ~ ~88 fi. v..,. 37tb Te vilion Academy awards in a oen:mony marked .... ""' UK> .. .. .... oe1y PtlOt ~ 2, t. ,... ,_ 1 ..M• ~ OfW"'9 eo.t ~·c::;-c: of~ by surprise winners and an onstqe impostor. honor of this award." . 11. t3, 1MS ll'utllllhed. 0r-. COMt Publllhed 0r.,. c.-Oe1y NOC a.p_.., •· 11 . .,. County on ~ Tyne Daly of"Capey &. Lacoy" and William Daniels "At the present time, appr~x~mately 300 o~ m) M-121 1>e1y PtlOt ~ 2. t. Oe1y Not......,.. •. 1t. n , to, 1te1 6. , .. 5 of"St. Elsew~" were named outstandina lead actors in relatives are in Mexico City. This '' ~ very . emouooal --------11. h . 1• n . 30, tMI M-7•1 ' ,_ a drama eeries, and Roben Guillaume of"''Benson" and moment for me because of the traaedy, h~ ~d. ftaJC llJncl M-?S3 M-740 Publllt*' 0r.,. Coall Jane Cunin of "Kate & Allie" won 11 lead actors in a The blue-ribbon committee o(the television academy f'ICnnGUe .._.. .PmlJC M>TIC( ~ PtlOt 8-f.mber 18· comedy series. sel~ "Cag.oey & Lacey" for the first time. . . .-l'YA~ P.l8.IC M>TICl 23' • October 7' 1':.151 "The Jewel in the Crown,•• PBS' paaorama of colonial "Cqr\ey & Laocy" is a rare example ~f • senes rcvlVed TM foloMne per10M.. N nnoue .u••H India, was dee~ outstand.ina limited series. The Emmy by public insistence. Cancelled after a bnef tow.rated run ~~-MAm8TA~ umn•,_y TtiefolowlngP9'90N.,. . for best drama or comedy s---' .. t went to "Do You in 1982 it was restored to the CBS 5'bedule after an CL A I, 0 "NI A CO · TM 1o11ow1ne perlOM.. TM~ penont.,. dolr'O ~ -.: Mercon Ml.IC M)llC£ R • • ~.., · · 'I d woN<!M, K-AnctlOrao-dolr'O ~ -.: "VW ~ ...,._ • intertor ~· 2531 ~ I emember Lover , C.BS story of an 1ward-wt0ru..na poet avalancne of letters an press comments. WfW/, NllwP«t e-oti, Ce»-Specielt•. 1111 ~tie eon.tNC1ton s~ , 1M eww LMw. Co«• MeM. CA ..cTmOUe ..,... ... {Stnlck down by Alzheimer's d.iseue. For tbe third sttaifht time, Ty_ne ~Y won the Emmy tomie 92113 A¥e.. eo.te....., CA 92127 w. V*"I vi.w. Dr.. ""'° t2t2I um 8TA .... •rr 1 Joanne Woodward wu cited with the Emmy for her as outstand.ina actress 1n a dram•Uc senes for her role as• llelWey A. CJould, K· Aon Wood. tM1i Wood-enon. CA tM33 Men. JNI\ Conry, 2531 The follOllMO ~ .... leadinarolein"Do You Remember Love?" The Em~ for New York detective trying to be both wife and mother at ~ Wsy, Nl!wpOrt wind,~. CA 12807 Roneld Marc K~. Of'tienbtitr 1..n., Coete MeM. doln9 bulirlele • ~ l--..t · 1. 'ted · . • · · Tb --a-4 nt d 9aaa11., Clllfomle t2tl3 Thie ~ 1e con-..,,. • ebove CA t2t21 ~ Coneultanta. 163 ~ actor ID a inu senes or special went to Ri ard the same ume. e actress a.,.,....~ very pregna an TNa ~ It con· ducttid by. en lndMduel o.rr.-L Ml-. 830 w. Martt Spen~r Conry. i.~ trvlne, CA 92716 I Crenna for "The Rape of Richard lleck... said: "I'm the luckiest lady alive." duOt«I 11oy."' lndMdUel Ron Wood Palm .... Ofenoe. CA 2531 Greenbriar L•n•. TrenaWOf'ld Oet• Corp. <A NBC which drew more than double the nominations She thanked her husband, director-actor Geora STAHLEY ll GOUlO Thia ~t wee lllJ9d t2MI eo.te ......_ CA t282e Ce 111 . o or p.), t U 11 ' · 'th h Thia 11111,..11 wee tied wt1t1 tN ~ c-t of Or· Thll 1>ut1MN 11 oon-Thia 1>u11nea 11 ~n-Mc:Durmou, 1r11ln•. CA of ABC and CBS combined, collected the most Em.mys-Stanford Brown, and her children -' e ones ere wt1t1 tt1e County Olertl "'Or· : County on AUOI* 30. ducted by.I duc:1ed ~: 927 t4 2S, includ.ina 12 technical awards banded out two weeks already and the one that is coming soon, I hope." : County on August 21. 1 ,..., =-' ~ ... fled ~ -~=t ... fled ~ ~=:o!1onc:on-ago. CBSAm f~!~wcdthwithE 18, PBSh 17 and ABC1 dJ· .th.· . William Daniels, Dr. Mark Craia of"St. El~here," .._., Publi9Md Oreng41 CoMt wttt1 tfl8 eoumy a.tc of Or-with ttie County ca.rw °'Or-Sid vuqum. CEO Tr..-m . ..,y, e mmy s1 ow oonc u ~ wt m its surprise'A the audience with his victory as outst.andina lead PublllMd Orange CoMt Delly Piiot s..,temt. •· 11. anee County on~ 30, anee County on Sec>t.mw WOf'ld o.ta ' scheduled three-hour time limit. actor in" drama series. 1>e1y Piiot a.pi.mo. 2. •. 23, ~. 1915 1tt5 8, t915 TNia etaterMnt ..,. filed The m-.jor happening came when Betty Thomas was Don Johnson, the bot new star of "Miami Vice," had 11. 23. 1M5 M-7•7 ,.... ,... wtttl tN County Cwtl of Or-announced u best su&f:ru:· ..... --·for her role as Lucille been considered the favorite. Daniels also won over M-736 Publllhed Orencl9 CoMt Publllhed OranQ9 Coel1 enge County on 89ptemb9r . . __ .. ._..., ·-.,. Ill\~ o.11y Pt10t SepMm&er •. 16, o.11y Pilot _..,,.,., 18, e. lM5 Bates ID .. Hill Street ues ... A tuxedo-clad man appeared previous winners Tom Selleck P.f"Ma,pum P.I.," Daniel --------nlllM'f ""'"" 23, 30. 1915 23, 30, Octo«Mlr 7, 1N5 ,_ onstage to claim that Miss Thomas could not be present J. Travanti of "Hill Street Blues,' as well as "St. ACTmOUe .,.... M-?+4 M-?5e Pu~ Oranee ~ and be was aoc:eptin& the Emmy for her. Elsewhere" co-star Ed Aandets. um ITA.,....,,. ·-.,. 111\TIH' ~. Oci~= 8· As a m~ner of fact, the actress was approachina the "I fisurcd I was a hundred-to-One shot," Daniels um 8TA.,....,,. Th9 fOllOWln9 .,.,.ona.,. ~ ""'"" M-755 stage at the time. . remarked later. "NBC was patient enouah to see the show ~ = ~.~ e:f::::,;:: ei~>v:= ~e:=• P1Cm~ .,..... The impostor, identified as Barry Bremen, 38, an through two roclcy years, and I'm gratefUI for that." Sign, 1135wtter1..n. Unit F2, umoue1ne. 4570 Cempue TM l*'80M.,. um l'YA'W-PUlJC M)TIC( insurance executive from West Bloomfield, Mich., was led Asked if he thouabt he was as sexy as Don Johnson, 0~'::7 Stan'-Smith ~ NewpOrt Bw:tl. CA dOlf'CI ~ ee: c & M ~=~8: ..cnnoue..-.. away in handcuffs and booked by Pasadena police for Danielsreplied:"Areyoukidd.ing?" ......... ..... , -··1c ,. ..... · E.R. u~-·-(CA E11Wp1W Co., 3400 w. 1191t"*'t Club· 2. wau um ITAW investiution of attempted pnd theft. He said he was a Bill Cosby was the much-talked-about man who •.C'Aer:rea.; " · .,...,, COfPI. 2053'E:"'o,.;;g,ow, ~ "M". Sent.• Ana. StrMt w.i. 203e iaerc:tey TM foloMne ~.,.. professional impostor, presenter Peter Graves said. wun't there. He had turned down consideration as lead w1111am JoMph Sheet 0mga CA92917 c .... C"' L .. 32 1t.,Sent•Ana.CAt2101 doing~•: HllllnQ AcademyofficialssaidBremenbadbou .. "'taS300ticketto actor inacomedfcseri-'"""1inathatactingshouldn'tbe 10212Kukul,H892&48 . Sc:oit C•rt•t Inc. (CA H...: ... onn-,20 .. an1o,.~~:......:.... TllomH GM"•" Hiiie. Ent~ 811~ Aceda. ... ......-.~ Tllll bulineaa 11 c:on-c:oq>). 3707 s.eenore . ..__ cA''92e:r7 .......... -203t8erdayC1.,s.ntaAna. Corona o.e ....,, Celtotnl9 the show Saturday, posing as an employee of a Michigan like track and fie d events. 0uc:ttc1 11oy. • 09Mfal l*'I· port BMch, CA 129e3 CA 12101 12e2s TV station. Guillaume, the oft-nominated sw of "Benson," ,,.,.,,Ip Thll bull,,... 11 eon-ton~~c:f:it. ~ JoeePI Peter P..,,_, 7 Huyg~ Hllllng. 811~ BremenbadpreviousJycruhedaSuperBowlfootball remarked when he received his Emmy: "It beats aoina w1111em sw. Robert s. ducted by: a llmtltid partner· 92127 · CMmpealn, !MM, CA 12114 Ac8c1a. Corone Dlil Mw, CA championship o'"me dressed as a chicken in 1982 and home empty-banded six times. I'd like to thank Bill Cosby Sml1tl 1111p Tiiie bu91MN II c:on-92125 -™' mtement wu flied eay va1e1 SeMoea. ey: ~ t!;'~ c:on-ducttid 11oy. co-partnert Thie bullna• 11 con-posed in 1979 as a Dallas Cowboys cheerleader. In both for not beina here." Actually, Guillaume bad won an wttt1 tt1e County Clerlt of Or-Scott eemr ....._P!nQ Lu ThDmM a . ...._ Joa9PI ducted br: en lndMdulil cases, be was discovered before be could make it onto Emmy once before, assupporuna actor in 1979 for his tint anoe County on Auguet 30, ™' atat«nent wee lllJ9d Thie ltMlllMnt ... flled P. P..,,_ ~ Hiiiing national TV. incarnation as Benson DuBois in the zany "Soap" series. 19&11 with ttie County C1er1t ol Or· wtth 111e County Cwtl of 0r Thia 1tatement ... llll9d ... ,..,,.,,, ... tied "Well, it is definitely bard to foUow an act like that," M•rcv Caru>v, one of the producers of "The Cosby ...... ange County on AU91* 30. -wlttl IN County a.nt of Or· wtttl tM County Clerlt of Or-:---f '-1 Publllhed 0ranoe Coelt 1915 : County on Aueuet 30, 8"119 County on s.pt.rnMr 8"119 County on a.pt.,..~ said Miss Thomas minutes later when the show returned Show," said: "We can't leave out Bill Cosby. who gives us Delly P1101 s.pt.m&er 9. 1e, ,..... 1 ,_ 8, lHS 8, 1Mll · from a station break. such great pleasure every working day. He ls the heart and 23,3o,1M5 PubMahed Orange CoMt Publllhad 0r.,,ge CoMt ,_ ,_ Tbeexoectedswee for"MiamiVi "the · new " M·745 Delly Pilot Sept9m&er t , 18, Delly Piiot September t 18 PubMahed OranQ9 eo.t Publllhed Orenge C0Mt 23, 3o, 1985 23. 3o 1915 · · Delly Piiot Sept.mw 18, Delly Piiot Sept.mt>ar 18. I Delly Pilot s.ptem«>er 23. dolnQ bu9IM9a u : c P ,._ ~ed by: en lndMdual --------M-741 ' · M 742 23, 3o, Ociober 7. 1916 23. 3o, Octooar 7. 1M5 NIJC M)TIC( 191$ M-781 re .. nt atlon , 9084 Robert G. Smj1tt rta.JC NOTICE • M-7N M-7112 LaGAl. MOTICa canoi.tlck Ln.. eypr.u, Thie 1tet111Mnt wu flt9d ACTmOU8 ..... N NlJC NOTICE NlJC M)TIC( __ .,. ~ NOTICE IS HEREBY NI.JC M)TIC[ c~eo:olM Pugh 9084 :::;.~~~:i~ MAm 8TATWmlfT ..._ ""'"" Ml.IC M>TICE GIVEN ~ the 1~ P1CTmOU8 .,._.. Cendi.tlck Ln., ~. 12, 1915 , ,__ HARBOR LAWN-MT. OLIVE Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory TM tollowlng peraone .,.. ACTmOUe ....... P1C~ --=-· ..cnnoue ....... f'ICTmOUe .. ~ ~.: N6d by um l'YA.,....,,. CA 90830 Publllhad Oranoe CoMt dolnG bullMU u : um 8TAW um am ff um 8TAW ..... -n.8',...rT IN Poltoe Dapertm9nt o1 ttie TM ro11ow1ng l*'9Qne ere TI111 bu1ln•11 11 con-o.11y Piiot s.s>ternt>er 18. NEWPORT BUSINESS The lolo'#lng l*'9Qne ere The tolowlng perlOM are The fo1ow1ng per10M ere n:;--~'f'Y¥F Cfty of Coeta MeM tot 8 doing bullMN u · TM duc:ttid by. en tnclMduel 23, 30, October 7, 1915 1625 Gisler Ave. CENTER. 31111 A¥Wsy Av· doing bullMM ae: Tumar & ::!:8::::: ~~Mu-tt" doing ~ •: Onty ~ ::aona .,.. per1od In Uceel of nlMty Other Guys. 1530 Pt9c.nti. Cwot le9 Pugh M-7eo enue. Suitt 0-1, Coe•• Prtzk>. 1200 Quell Str98t, 2940 ~ ....... Olletl, n• w... 11ttt 81., ~NCHO 39 MOBILE (IO)dey9• A\19., Newpof1 BMct'I c.llf. Thie ltatament ..... flled __ .,. 111\TICE ......, Cellfotnle t282e &llt9 1eo. NllwPOrt e.c:n. Aw., eo.ta eo.te ......_ Caltf 92927 ._, Whit Motob«:aM t2M3 • wttt1 ttie County Clerk ot Or· rua.n."" Costa Mesa 540-555• Boatm•n/Olmac:h •ld CA 921eo MeM. CA ~ "'-811. Clement p~~7~~-lO,_,Spdl e Glr1't 841'8 1No9 Rlc:tlard Miine. 903 ange County on AUQUlt 30, l-_..;.=;;.;..~~~ .. - Propertlae 111 a Calltomie Ruety Tumar 2518 Arbor w-.n Kn6ah1 Au9Mll. ne .....,_ 1-St ,._:.. d9n ....,.,.., •"""' 1 ~· W 17 ... S ,.~ .. __ c 19811 '1CTm0Ue .,_ general pert~, 3151 Dr1w, Nl!wp0rt0 BMch, CA 2715 Soerrow CWcle, Coeta ........ "C; .Hi7 '• ..,._.. Jac:k 8. Kemp, 2595 1 ·Bicycle end tie2j" I.,....,.,.,_, A ,_.., um ITA,....,.,. PIERCE BROTHERS SELL BROADWAY MORTUA"Y Airway Awnue. Sult• o-1. 92e83 MeM. CA 92121 Aemorl MurQlle Mon• ~ DrtYa, N9WP0'1 loY• 1 . lkown Open Thie bullneu I ~ Publllhed er.,. eo.t The folowlng perlOM.,. Co1ta M•H, Celltornle Delltd Prtzlo, Jr.. 1781 Wllllam Larry Me1on, 11403 Corby Aw. Nonw9llc a.it\, Celtotni9 82e83 20? ~~is FU RTHER ducted by. en ~c:o Dally Piiot s.pternber 2, t, doing bu9IM9a u : PMA 92821 Terry Lynn Lene, Senta Ana. 2•712 Calle Vlentoe. El c.11f toe60 ' ' MairgeNt l.amC*1I. 8nlC9 Ft MllM 18 23 1915 IEnterpriMa, 1131 See Bkltf, Thlt bullnell 11 c:on-CA 92706 Toro, CA t2t30 Tr* bullneaa 11 c:on-W. v• Loop, ll"Me. Cello-GIVEN::: " no °::" llP-TNe ltat9IMn1 wM filed ' ' M·727 Coeta ......_CA 92e27 ducted by a 09Mfal pert· TIMa bullneaa 11 c:on-Thie butlneu It c:o1tr duc:'9d by. • 09M'., pert-lotn6e 92te3 = of~°"""' owr.-wtttl IN County °*" of Or-Mery Ann Wltaoe. 1131 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 ner'lhlp ducted by. • 09Mfal part· duc1ed by. a ganer.i pert-~ Thi• butlneu 11 c:on-?) "'-~ wlltllrl.,. County on s.ptamber NI.IC NOTICE See Bluff, C<*a MeM. CA Rlc:Nrd c. eoetman, Pen-,,.,.,,Ip ner9hlp ~ Clament duc:ttid by: • general part-Mll9rl ( -T• ·~ .. the 11 1915 92827 '* Ruety TIWMI' w-..n L Maeon TNia ••• •t wee lllJ9d nereNp put)llc:atlon of thla Not1o9. • ~nnoua .,..... Thi• bu1lne11 11 c:on· Thie llatament ..... ftled TNe atetement ... filed TNe Matement ... Mad ~ tN eour: Clerlt of Or· JACK 8. KEMP tfl8 tm. therwlo aflall VMt In ,..,.. lllAm ITAT'llmNT du01ed by: an lndMdual with the County Clerit ol Or· h Ille County Clerk ol Of. with tfl8 County C*t of Or-•"91 County Zi s.p1.,,._ Thie etatarMn~ _... ~ :-~~'=-be..:::: ~~ ~=ber ~ TM followlng per90nt .,. Mery AM Wltaoe PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAM Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 3600 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach 644-2700 anee County on Auguat 28 8"119 County on Sec>l.mber anee County on Al.9* 30 6. 1916 with tM County.-.. "' ..,.. ""'T 23. 30 Ociooar 7 1H5 ' doln9 ~ u: UnU Thie atat9merlt ... "*' l9811 ' . 19111 1Mll ' ,_, = County on August 21, =be C::, :9-.f:...os:': . ' ' • M-?st Freight S)'91em, 2301 e. 15th with the County Clerlt of Or· PublllNd 0ranee ~ PublllNd 0ranoe "= PublllNcl Oran09 ": Pu~~-=-~ 1 ,_ 11on .. a ttme ~to be =~Newport BMc:tl, CA :.T9111County on ~ Dally Piiot s.pt.mber 2. 9. Deity Plot $99tamber e. 18, ~Pilot s.ptem&er •. 18, ~. Ociober 1. 1915 · Publllhed~ c;-r ~9118185 ftll.IC M>TICE Robert G. Smith. 2301 E. Publllhed Orenge Coat 18. 23, 1985 . 30, 1915 23, . 1985 M-?4' M-751 ~P~ • • U.. ..-TM, a.If CW P1Cmt0Ue WM 15ttl St., Nl!wpOrt e.c:n. CA Delly Piiot Sept.mber 18, M-731 M-743 · • M-?30 Pal.a lllAm 8TAW 92M3 23. 30, Ociobtlr 7, 1985 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 4'I E. Otatt ..,., ..... i't leMll 111-0HO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 NABERS CADILLAC fit 2100 11111111 ILVI., OllTl IEU (114) 140-1100 (213) lll-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People WE'RE IEW WE'IE IULlll "' 0 CRE VI ER BMW "' \IP' SALES • SERVICE • LEASING \IP "Where Professional Attitude Prevails" ~!ting In European l)ett.ery. Ex~t a.tecHon of New end cerefully prepared UMd aMW'• always In atock 835-3171 208 W. 11t St., Santa Ana Corne< ol Broadway & 1st St. Closed Sundays saus -SEftlCE -W SlllC -run Overseas Deli very Specialists BMW -ROLLS ROYCE' 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 840-8444 G JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 20IO laner lh4., Oest• 1111 M2-0010 tr 140-1211 o COMMONWEALTH VOLKSWAGEN ~ 'FAMILY STORE SINCE '53' -~ Sal•• -S.rrice • Leaaing ~ 0 PublllNd Of8"09 COMt TM fo110w1ng perlOM.,.. Thle bullMN 11 c:on-M-76'4 OCONNELL CHEVROLET _. 2121 • .,.., lh4., Gett• .... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 54&-1200 S,.cill Parts U.. 541-MH MONDAY-FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM 8:30 AM -8:00 PM 10:00 AM -5:00 PM The Best Car Buys In Orange County Are At The Dealers Listed On This Page 0 South County * VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZ.U CALIF'S #1 & LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Parts Open M-Sat 8 · 5:30 Sat 9 . • p.m Service m-Frl 7:30 -6 p.m. 11711 MACH ti.VO HUNTINOTON IEACH 7141842-2000 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC. • LONG TUM LIASES * COMPITITIVE "'ICHASE NIClS • HUG,l INVINTOIY 0 dial MERCEDES A 213n14 137-2333 Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester/Beach Blvd. 0 BILL YATES YILllWAlll • PM•E • PlllllT • 111111E SALES • LEASING • PARTS e SERVICE 12112 Yallt lea4, S.. .I•• o.,htr .. ••1-4111 111~ G> ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT #1 J. TN Wnt Fer "'" 1,,, Salls 111 I y,., 1 0[Jln2e. SA LES Loa--st. sERv1ce ,.,. ltA~IOll •~vo • LEASING ~ • ACCESSORIES DEPT G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coate MeH 540 ., 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy . BOB LONGPR• PONTIAC Ora• County's Otden & Largest flond« O..•nNp • 1e.m lhd. a .,,. G9nMn Grow flteeW91 f71• .. a ... •1 17141 • ... a- \lfe _,.rform •H l'ond« Wllmlnty wortr. ,.....rdieu of wMf9 10" ottglnalfy purd\QN '104" car. ____ y._ ........... ., ... . "' I TOMORROW: FAIR FORECASTS ON A2 Serving Newport Beach, Cotta Mela, Huntington Beach, lrvlnt, Laguna Beach, Fountain V1lley 1nd South Orang•County UHAN<,f COUN I 'f (. AllF O HNIA M O NO AV •,( P Jf MHf f1 IJ l'lh'• /', '.I ~4f '• e 1 OD · e ' e river sou Entertainment Wllllam Daniels and Tyne Daly won best lead actor and actress In drama series awards at Emmy ceremonies crashed by an Impostor .. /88 Coast Irvine Valley College stu- dents have collected $10,000 for a homeless paraplegic./ A3 Bike rider struck by two vehicles after running_r~d light crossing the highway By ROBERT BARKER Of .. 0.-,,.....,, Huntingtoo Beach police are trying to find the dnver of a Chevrolet camper who sped away after running over a 47-year-old bicycle rider who had been knocked to the pavement b) another car Pat Phillip Barron of Hunungton Beach was pronounced dead at the scene of the 2 a.m. Sunda) accident Police said Barron ran a red light on his b1ycle and "as struck b) ct westbound car while crossing Pacific • Coast H1ghwa) in the crosswalk at Brookbu.rst Street Coro ner deputies art anempung to determine 1f Barron wao; killed wht'n struck by the fi rst vehicle or was sull alive when run over b~ the camper Poltce gt Bruce Kell) said Barron was headed north in the crosswall away from the beach when the accident occurred The dnvc of one car was able to slo~ and avoid him. But Edward E Hen~n. 34 of Hunungton lkach apparent!) didn't ~e the b1cych">t and ')truck him while going about 5S miles an hour. Kelly said. Barro n wa!> dragged ahout Q() feet hcfore the camper ran over him again as he la~ on the h1ghwa~. Henson ')topped and later was arrested on suspicion of dnv1ng unde r the influence of alcholic beverages. "-ell\ \aid. But he was not the cause ot the accident and onl) a m1'>dtmeanor tharge 1s pending. ac- cording to l\.dh Two other "It nesses. who were dn\tng ea~I on Pantie Coast H1gh- wa} confirmed that the bicycle nder was traHhng aga1mt the red hght and ga\.e police thl" 1k'><.npuon of the htt- and-run \t'h1de Kell) said the b1C\cle had no lights or reflector<; California Department of Interior offlclals wond~r If buying a condor home Is worth- whlle./ A4 ut.on HJ.&b Principal Jack Kennedy lan't ready to eat crow -yet. Political rally draws protests at Valley park Nation Five nations agree to drive the value of the dollar down.I AS Edison High School gets something to crow about Clash es averted as police keep eye on both factions of the SCM.Jlled tn:edom fighter group., are nuthtng. more than murderers and terwn<.t!> Both rallJe., "l'rl· \.llOUul'lt'd v.1thout tn\. ldent anJ amid d1'iUl"Ct "1ut '1'>1blt" P< Ii c "><' un'' The cash harvest from Sunday's Farmald ben- efit concert Is $10 million and growing./ A4 World Nancy Reagan vlflts Mex- ico City to exten~m­ pathy to earthquake vic- tims as searcn for survivors continues./ AS Premier Laurent Fabius admits French agents blew up Greenpeace ship./ AS Sports The Angels are In first place as they head down the home stretch./81 By ROBERT BARKER Of IM 0.., l'tlot 8tafl A crow with an insatiable appetite -for eating, not learning-is getting his fill at Edison High School. He's mooched bananas and straw- berries. chewed and apparently digested several cigarette butts and has put away countless sunflower seeds. When that diet got a little mono- tonous, he tned to add a little flavor the other day by dipping the seeds into some yellow paint being used to spruce up the Huntington Beach campus. He tried to take away and eat '\ssistant Pnncipal Brian Garland's ballpoint pen 1w1ce. Fr1day he wal ked un1nv1ted through the door of Pnnc1pal Jack Kennedy's office during a "heavy" conference. And after someone brought in some sunflower seeds, he turned Kenned y's desk into a dining room table and the office into Grand Central Station. The visit. some observers said. gave new dimensions to Kennedy's "open door" policy. Garland dro pped by. He thought his boss wanted him to eat crow, he said. A couple of guys from the Dail) Pilot came to take a look, adding to the confusion. And then various faculty members and students came by. The postman even dropped in to see what the Oap might be about. . .. , couldn't believe 1t.'' Kenned) said. "(Dean) Ron Wooton and I were having a heavy meeting about some problems on the campus and the crow JUSt walked in. He was kind of shy about 1t. We sure didn't get much accomplished ... Horticulture teacher Jim Hoyland said when he first ran across the cro" 1n the parking lot on the first da)' of school. 1t was eating cigarette butts. It seemed hungry and he gave 11 half a banana from his lunlh bag. He thre" in some strawbemes and the bird ate them too. By DON FENLEY When not eating. the crow hang'> °' tM oe11y l'llol ti.n around with other birds in a -;mall Fountain \ alk' ·, \1 11l "-llUj'l sanctual") on the campus It Sll'i on a Park wa~ full 111' ellha 1ret·d1 m rail and allows nselfto be stroked b' fighters or tt:rromt "mpJlhlll"' students · unda~ -depending on w h1\.h rJlh It also v1s1ts the girls on the tcnn1~ 'ou attended courts and frequent!) checks an at the · ..\t thl' same spot w ht•re Prt''1Jrn t windows of the attendance offitt: Reagan launched h1~ rl·-~:kllton tam- where 11 gets its main suppl) of seeds pa1gn. .\mencans tor F rel·d •m The crow ma\ not be too sman Fighters a ne"I~ lorml·d <)ran!Zt according to an ·attendance clerk It Count~ group. "as pra1<.ing anJ seems that 1t comes to the L-/ ra1s1ng funds for group' lig.ht m~ window. If 11 were reall) intelligent. communism around the "orld fhl' she said , it would go to the ..\-K crowd of about 3,000 "a' madl' 111 window because its last name start<; mosth relugees from \ 1l'tn.lm L111' with C (for crow. of course l and C ambod1a Assistant Pnnc1pal Garland said .\cross the park at thl· inll'r'iedlt n Fnda} he held o ut ht'> ballpomt pen to of Heil ..\ \.Cnue .ind BrookhuN the cro" when 1t was getting a dnnk litreet. a~ut 100 fX'Opk pJniupJtnl from the water fountain and thl' -1n a prott•\t ~tagt>d h' thl' Oran~r black-feathered bird med to Oy awa' Count' C naliuon t.1r Pl'Jl.l . .:ind (Plea.e aee CROW/ A 2) Justice Tht.> rnalit1on lnnlt•nJ, '>11nw f)('r >r ,,. ' r, "lrt' "J'red ht·h1r1 thl'H rJ!I' to v.at\.h lor people "ho 'eemt'd hP\tllt• kan Aem~tc1n a .1)J l1 t111n 'l'•>lo.l'lo"·iman ...i1d tht• ~rnup hdJ .1 'lm1lar protnl dunng thl' Rl'.i)Wn •Jr.1DJ1gn Jo.id . 111 anJ -..c.'\l'ral ;u 1.-,•t·r' ••l'rt· 1n1un·1t Junn~ in, 1Jt•ni, \' 11 • .. ,,1me ix·4pk w hn did ·wt ,hJrl u1 ,frJ1,,i:, •n •I niin· 'IPknt f'rt•lt' 1 lnh ,,n,· '>nlJll ~rou;', I pr1•tl'~ll·r~ •t'OIUfl'd .It r '" :t.t' p.v ... Ill pi, lo.et 31 ttw l'n:r;.in•t' •, thl 1rr,·J,1m rilf)ltl'r; • JI(\ r nl'\ •t•rt• lh l "'I' h l h.lnt\ lll l 1mr.1Jl· .?1• hJ II. h \111'\.llW Thr rrnte,ll'n kit \lo 1th1•ul 1nutknt 'ipealo..cr' !tH lhl' 1.1)jlitwn argued that tht' a1. ll' Ill.'' l'n thl' treedum 1'1ghta' ~rtiur Jrl' tntl'rtl·nng "'tth the l[l.hl' ,,. ndt' 11.Jual na11,1n' t1) dt:- ll'ffi)IOt' lhr1r ll V.I' dt'c.t1n1<'' F-ather I UI' n11 .. .Hl'\ [ .J PladtJ l hurth in l ('I<. .),n[l,clr' -.aid thl· '>POn\Or\ ol lht• lrt'l'J11r" f11l~1,·r r.1lh 'J.rl' nnt llln· (Pleaae aee RIVALS/ A2J Eric Dickerson makes his 1985 debut tonight In Seattle./81 INDEX Bag brigade cleans up beaches Mesa picks four finalists for city chief Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlson Weather A10 A3 A7-8 B5-7 A10 B7 87 A9 B7 A9 A6 A3 87-8 B1 -4 A9 A2 County volunteer-sjoin a nti-litter drive on coast between Canada a nd Mexico By SUSAN HOWLETI Of IM 0.., Not,._., Volunteers along Orange Coast beat hes did their part for a massive anti-litter campaign Saturday, totmg trash bags U{> and down the sand in the conclusion of the week-lo ng beautificatjon efTort. "I think it went fairly well ," said Laguna Beach City Councilman Bob Gentry, "We had a number of citizens picking up Styrofoam cups and wrappers and so forth throughout the city.'· The campaign. which stretched from the Canadian to the Me"<1can border, was led on the Orange Coast by city representatives, local cit11cn~ and sunscckers in an effort to pick the coast clean ofhtter The Newport Beach contnbut1on to Coast Weck was led by JefT N1chols of the Newport Beach Police Depart- ment. Volunteers combed the New- port Beach shorehne from the New- port Pier to the Wedge. and on the north side to the Huntington Beach border. Thecelebrauon oltht.'Coasthnt' "a ' sponsored by Californians ..\gain't Waste. the C'altfom1a Department of Fish and Game. California \.\ a\tl· Management Board. the Cahforn1a Coastal Comm1ss1on and se\ eral busines~s and ClVlC groups Saturda} marked thl' first annual C'ahforn1a Coastal Ckanup, accord- mg to 8111 hireman. l.'Xt'Cutne dtrCl · tor of Californian~ .\gamc;t \.\ a\te Foundation "We're extreme!\ pleased ~Ith the overwhelming o;uppon California ci vie and business organ11a11on'i have given to tht'i clean-up " Cih1reman said The Huntington Beach ,<'J~tal trash collect1on lampa1gn "'a" ltln· ducted 1n u>ordin.i111in \'1th th• reopen1ngol the .:1t\ \ pa'r w hi. h ";.i' "ashed out ti' the <;tMnh th.11 h11 111, m ast 1n \1ar\. h I tl!-' "\.\e th1nl.. It "J' J n Jmt-11 "u' elTon. and "l' htipc. 1 '' 11 "'I. 11 annual om· ·· ..aid llunt1 nFtcm fk.h. h coordinator l\.cn l\.1.'h1m1an "Aut ltfl message trom Hun11ng111n lkJ, h 1, that "e hnix· thl' '\tall' "111 ~·" ... , ,11 lesst a mnnth'' warning nnt ,,.,11 1'.eh1m1an ..aid Jhnut '"'' J, / 1 'oluntccr. lrom tht' R1" '\1.1• '''JI.•' Girls~'OUl'-t'i .\ml'nl.I h1•lpc.·ct 1•ut ••f Hunungwn Beach '11' .ind H<'b.1 Ch1ea stall' heacht's The E1ll <. reel.. JH'.l 111 ().rn.1 t'1 11n· "'as clean<'d up in an l tl11n t·,1 .., (Pleaee see VOLUNTEER/ A 2J . 8\TO'\'t "\~.\\EORA I Qi 1119 OaJ'• ll'llol Ital! I .1 1J11!.1ll'b r1'lllJ1n r th ... 111.1n ~. 1r thl' l••h ,,, { 11'tJ \.k ... 1' II\ m.in.1.:t•r .11h r lh1 lir't round 11! :'l:l'f' ''' ~·t1•fl' lhl' ( II\ ( llUnl iJ l lil' ' n.111'1' , h1•,en .lltt•r an r~t1- 1.1 t'd ~ h11ur' 111 inter. ll'"., fhurc.- 1.1 n, 11.k .11 lt-.1,1 •lOt' Jpphlant ., • ll.111 1 i'u•i. 1lm.1n Da' 1d \\ 1'l'l'lt ,.\Id l hi hunt ll•r .1 ''h, t'\\Or lnr n·11nnp. •t '1J~t·r I rl·d 1.,,.,r,,1h.11 J ~ "lal!Jling ""'" nd "-h<.'dull 1" t•r,\1:i~ I••• l•un, I T , rnher<; w h11 h.td .1pc:d !11 hnd .:i 'l,h.'t'ffit'nt ti' l'.lrh I~ 1!1h<,•r (Plea•e see MESA/A21 Apathy, co~rt decisions drain water supply What· s left cannot sustain Southland during dry years By DON FENLEY Of .. Dellr,......, As surely as earthquakes rock Southern C'ahfom1a, water shoru.aes wtll parch the Ora.nae Coast unless new water supplies arc found. - And, while most people here are preoccupied w1lh Jivina the aood life and workina to act a biaaer slice of it. there is already talk of: • Dtncreasina water rates dramatically to force oon1ervat1on. •Scnina future water rates in acoordana: with the tremendous costs of building new diversion and trans1>0rtation systems. • Placina a moratonum durina drou&}lt years on new , water hookups in both the res1dt'nt1al and comme~1al sectors. •Placing a moratonum on nt'w de vcfopment in area~ without a natural water supply to support the develop- ment. Neil Cline, secrctary-manaicr of the O rnn$e ( o unt) Water Distnct, isn •ta prophet of doom. hut he is quick to admit, "We face a water shortage 1fwe don't do wmething about 1t." There shouldn't be a water shorta~e 10 Cahfom1a There's more than enouah snow and rain fal hng <>n the state for an adequate water supply. But two-third of that rain and snow falls 1n Northern C'ahfomia. while 60 percent Of the State's popuJattOn h VC'I tn and 'iouthem Callfom1a, which owe 1t explosive irowth to imported water. The problem Oinc and other officials arr wrcstlina with is that large portion~ of Southern Cahfom1a·~ ~atcr source arc bcinf lost throua.h coun dtc1s1on~. and what will be lef\ cant support (uturc groW1h or ~u,1a1n the . ) current populauori Junna dr\ )ca" The parado' of water probkm\ in the \.\ e-.t ha' het•n d1 u~ b man) t'\pert!>. but Joel G arreau m.' haq• defined tht 1~ ue be~1 in .. fhe inc Na11 0M of ,,nh •\mtn('a .. <.iamau !Hltd that, dt'~pttr gm" th tl't'n\h. thl' thin slnp of land between th<' Par1fi1.. ()\'t"Bn and tht• Cascade Mount.a1M from northern< ahfornu1 tu '\(1uthcm '\la\ka 1" tht' o nl" place in thc~\.\c'1 "1th rtlllugh ".itcr Flrat of a aerie• on water 1uppltea l'l'r\th1n11 rl\I.'1,,, .1 tht'U--.lnd 0111,·, "h:t\llalh dt•\t'rt .tn\I 11111'1 ,kpen,1 1111 1m p.•rtl·,1 "·••n '' nm ""<''tt•rn ran, her npla1n,·J lh< '1tuat11•r , t •JITl.'j u ) nu , ,tn mal..t• tta' lh1m manun· hu1 \1111 .ir t m.1kt" ".lh 1 Rut tht" "'louth"t''I 1.''rx'' 1.1lh '\uuthl·m ( alit11rn1 d 1\ v.hrrr pc.•11i)I( "'ant ll' hH Thr 1,1\ 1 that thl I ,)., \ngrlc'> 8ac;1 n h,t, 11nl\ l.'nl'U@.h n:n11rt1! \\ Ill r hl \Uf'p0r1 ~()(,)_()()(} r<,1pk h.l\n t Jt\\Uildt•t1 m,1n." th,11 m1lh11n r><'ople Imm o,ctthnti ht'rl.' \nd ,. hill n pnn<'d .... :llt'I trom the l olnrad,, R1,er and "'°"rthl'l'll ! -.lttnrn1o1 h d\.t' madt 1t JlO"s1hk to ""t'~"lrl ma,.,1, c a ,I rar111 1trn" th along tht' Orange C "'·"''anti the n.·,t·,,1 "-•11thr1n < dhlorn1. then.-·, n<1 ""'urnnt-e that <1 rcliatill' '"JI<' "'11r,<' "'II t'tC' lllund tm the fut urc (Plc&M eoe WAT&R/A3) • Or-.. eo.c CWLY PILOT/Mand~. Septemw 23. 198! Reagan seeking t~open trade Prest en t u nvei s poltcy t o a ance world commerce W ASHlNOTON (AP) -Presi- dent Reqan, dedarina "we do not want a trade war with other nations, .. outlined a refurbished admini~ tration trade policy today that focuses on openina foreign markets to Ameri-~ aoods rat}ltr than protecting domestic industries banered by im- ports. The president said he would ask Congress to establish a $300 million war chest to help provide low~st loans to selected exports. He also announced formation of a govem- tnen• :·stri.k.e force" to devise strateJies for dealing with unfair tradina practicts apinst U.S. prod- ucu. "I will not stand by and watch American businesses fail because of unfair trading practices abroad. J will not stand by and watch American worken lose their jobs because other nations do not play by the rules." Reqan reiterated bis frequently ex~ commitment to "free and fair trade" and opposition to "protec- tionist" import restraints. Oktoberf eet beiln• Deir .... ,.....,~ ...... Warming, cooling to alternate Autumn ~ wwm 8nd 6ry O\llW the weetcend lll1d the pettem Of wflm\lng fOlowed by lllgtlt c:oollng wlll continue for the next ...,.,., daya In Southern California, the Netlonal WMthef' S.W.Mkt. High cloud9 etreemlng nof1hwatd from the remains of Hwrloene T wry. now 1boUt 250 mll• aoothwest or the southern tip Of Baja Cellfom ... wlll drift over Southern Celltoml• for the natf9Wdtya. The poeslblllty or sny showa thla week wu uneertlln. bvl would be reletfvefy fight If they occurred. the weather eervlce Mid. U.S. Tempe "' Le Llttlll Aoc~ .. 70 ~ 76 68 L.OUllYllle 87 13 71 .. ~ .. 73 " 43 MIMll llMdl 17 71 Al'lollotll09 44 •1 .......... 73 84 Alltinla 84 .. Mpl9-81PIUI eo 64 AllMtlo City 71 .. ........ 87 .. Au9tln 11 72 .... ~ ee .,, SelllMote n 84 ,._Von 76 .. ·-~~ "'ONTI: Wttm -cOld- SllOwttl "*" l'klfrlH Snow OecllldM..,.. SlalloNt't a. ---WMlll9f llMet HOM. U I Dlol OI ~· =-87 71 NOtfOlll, V• 73 :: Calif. Tempe SarfReport 64 31 ~Clly .. ... 16 38 o-n. 84 .. '°"°" 70 eo on-to Ill 72 =·low· IOf 2• llour'I ~ 81 S Liii LOCA ftOM .. ....,. .,.,., IO 11 ..._,._ IO 96 .,.,., ., 18 ~ 8-c;ll c_. 2-4 ,.., .. 31 ..._... 12 71 Eu•h 16 60 "'-~·~ 2-3 ... CNrteMon.a.c IO .. ==r .... 11 57 ,_ 84 to 40ltl ............. w lelr Cfwrtelilon,W V .. 11 84 60 .._. r4 63 UN ...... *'"'POl1 t-3 ... ~N.C a N ~.Or 74 60 l.09~ II M ---=· 1-3 ..., ~ llO :lt """"'*-13 eo Oell*'4 11 11 ~ t-3 ,.., • CfllOlleO 73 1 1 ="City 72 12 ,._ ~ 51 .... a.m.. 1-3 ..., anariMll .. ., 61 32 AM llufl 11 M -'• -.: 16 ~ 12 11 ""'° 76 31 Aedwood City .. 57 ..... ~ -CclUNMa,8.C. 87 51 ~ 71 13 a--eo 51 =~ I& eo It LOU. ~ 71 ....,_ 75 64 70 63 81 "'-T 1rnc1e 74 ... DlleO 82 :: Tldee o...AWonll 111 • lahlal•Clly 84 44 a.n FtWIClllloO 74 = IS eo s.. AntOfllo 80 71 ..... ..,.. 80 51 151 33 9en Juln.P A. Ill 78 Stockton 93 .. TODAY Del~ 70 64 a..ttte 16 41 Hlgll, low. preclpl\lllon '°' 24 ._,.. 8eoonG ,... 12.:ftpAI. 2.t D9lroll " e1 ~ 82 ee ::::V .. a p,111 ~ 1ow 1:14 5.8 OUllldl 5e llO Spok-e1 3e Apple ., .... 'BP-84 54 Syr-711 st lknlow 82 151 TUUDAY e...... .. 12 TOC*la 19 53 lllyVle t1 86 Atw!IOw 1:21Lm. o.a ,...,.,... 42 ,. r_, .. ea c.t111ne 14 e1 ~ 8:12Lm. 4.8 F"90 941 42 f ulM 119 e1 Long 9lloll IO M 10w 1:'9 p.m. a,4 AleMaft 10 31 WllNOgton 711 ... MoMMe 1111 ri 8-nd ,... 1:10 p.m. 6.7 Otend "-Pd• 72 eo WlcNte 80 61 Monlerey 7S Ot.-F• 60 31 w1111-a.rr• 71 13 Newport '-" 78 M lull _. todlly It Ml p..m.. ..-. IWttord 72 67 ~ 93 et ~ 811:42 Lm. end .... ..-i Ill ....... 411 S3 Palm apnnge 101 ea l:.47P."'· HonoMu 80 76 Extended PIMdlnl 80 84 .._. ..... IOdly .. 4:18 p.m., -"°'*°" eo 14 ,.,_... t2 at f~ Ill 1: 13 Liii. end rllle ..-i lit ltldlllllPoll 13 11 Penly ClouOy -Wedneed_,, end SM 9'l'lwcllno eo 57 4:67 P-"'· .-..on ..... .. 73 112 M .._.... 17 70 Tllut9dey. Wfttt fllr .... llOl1tl. ,.., :: =-11 IM ""'-.. 45 • ._ .. ..-Fttdey. ~ In IN 70. 9ar11a Ma 16 N ICMw.Cffy n 116 _., .,.. 10 Ille tOI lnlMd ..,,.. Cna 12 St i..v-IO 12 ~ L-. In Ille mid 5Clll end 80L T.,_ V_, .. S3 "Above all else, free trade is. by definition, fair trade. When domestic markets are closed to the exports of others, it is no longer free trade," Reagan said in an East Room speech to the Export Council, an industry group. The an.naal Oktoberfe.t celebration at Old World ID ,!ilm--------------------------------- BantlnctonBeacb beCan&andaywtthapuaderemlnlecent RIVALS RALLY AT VALLEY PARK.•• of tho.e 8taCed d~ the nmowned Gennan celebrationa. Other than the proposed "war- chest," however, there was little in the way of major new legislation, a move that seemed likely to provoke fresh criticism in Congress, where support for import restraint legislation has been buildi~ steadily. Reagan d1d offer .-to work, with Congress "to put into place any necessary legislation that would help us promote free and fair trade a.nd secure jobs for American workers." Such legislation, Reagan said, could include bills that would strengthen existina trade laws, speed up action in unfair trading cases and offer more protection ap.inst "dump- ing" of foreign producu in U.S. markets at artifically low prices. But be said be would continued to "strongl y oppose and will veto measures that I believe will harm economic p:owth, cause loss of jobs and diminish international trade." Some 300 bills arc now awaiting The parade f•tuecr •.•oom-pab-pab0 b&nda from We.t FromAl Germany and MYeral folk da.nctnc IJ'Oape. Old World will ccmed with human life, economic celebrate Oktoberfeat ~ mld-Noyember. Enter-•rights, acute poverty, starvation. tabaen wl11 performa Weclneacfaye tbroacJa Sandaye ID the malnutrition, massive unemploy- feetlftl laa1J while the reatau.rant malDtalna lta recuJar ment of the lack of education and boan. health care facilities." Rep. Robert Doman. R-Garden congressional action, establishing im- port quotas and tariffs on products ranging from textiles and footwear to waterbeds. Such measures. the president said, "arc purely protectionist in nature .... He said enactment of these bills would raise costs to consumers, invite retaliation by trading.J>Cl!lners, rekin- dle inflation and strain international relations. "Our commitment to free trade as undiminished," the president wd. "We do not want a trade war with other nations; we want other nations to Join us in enlarging and enhancing the world trading system for the benefit of all" The war chest plan, which would be used to provide interest subsidies to help U.S. productscompetein foreign markets agajnst products subsidized by other governments, had been disclosed by administration officials. The war chest would be adminis- tered by the U.S. Export-Import Bank and would subsidize loan rates to selected manufacturers having dif- ficulty selling products abroad. The subsidy would amount to the difference between the going U.S. interest rates and the lower rates that some foreign countries can get to help them merchandize their exports. ·Grove, led the rally for freedom fighters, which featured speakers from voups supporting anti-com- munist efforts in Nicaragua, e.fghani- stan, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Cuba, Poland and East Germany. Doman read a letter from Reagan during the rally. Reagan wrote that he felt a kinship with the people at the rally and that the United States owes its life to freedom fighters who fought for America more than 200 years ago. Olivares accused the freedom- fightcr groups and the Reagan admin- istration of playing upon the Ameri- can public's fears of communism to "repress nations that want to be free." Olivares, who said he had JUSt returned from Central America, claimed groups like the Nicaraguan MESA MANAGER SEARCH NARROWS ... Contras arc really terrorists and calling them freedom fighters is the "bigest lie." From Al Inst.cad, the council wiJI conduct a second round of interviews early next month. Sorsabal, who intended to leave his $78,800.a-year job on Oct. 2S, has agreed to postpone his departure, Councilwoman Mary Hombyckle~d. _ "Fred has said be will stick around until the end," Hornbuckle said. The job search attracted about 70 applicants from tbrouahout the st.ate, including four Costa Mesa officials: Twelve candjdates, includinJ the four internal applicants, were inter- viewed by the council last week at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel. "We were very impressed with the people and I must say our internal \:3ITCtidatcntoodthe1est very well. It made us proud," Hornbuckle said. Wheeler added, "All of them are real hot It makes our job real tough. Any one of them could do a com- petttive job." Sorsabal's protcgc, Roeder, would be a likely contender. HombuckJe said that tbe politically divided council did not haggle over the finalists. In fact, the individual council members ranked the appli- cants almost idemtca11y:----- Gerry Pedersen, pastor of the Mount Olive Lutheran Church in Mission Viejo, told the protesters he is seeing a change in his area of conservative Orange County. People arc becoming suspect with the con- cept that "money makes you happy and bombs make people free," he said. Doman, in an interview on the other side of the park, said that Pedersen is "talking through his clerical hat." Dornan agreed that money won't always make people happy, but said bombs have made people free. "Look at the end of World War II," he said. Even the atomic bombs dropped on Japan during World War II made people free, acco.di to Doman. He said the twin / ·c blasts at Hiroshima and N t up the rebuilding of Japan o a modem nation that economically competes with the other nations of the world. "That was Gen. Douglas MacArthur's real legacy." Doman said he has been to Central America nine times and "none of those trips have been communist tours" where only a select part of the country is seen. Gen. Vang Pao, a Hmong leader who was a leader of the C IA 's army in Laos, told the cheering crowd that that Laotian people have watched the extermination of their race and "arc now rising up in a burst of patriotism against North Vietnam." Qang Cao Thang, a former rear admiral of the Vietnamese Navy, said that Vietnamese organizations in Southern CaJifomia are detennined to stand and work to~ether "for the liberation of our country from com- munist rule." • On both sides of the park speakers told stories of atrocities. Hasan Nouri of the Free Afghani- stan Alliance demonstrated wfiat be called toy bombs which be said are used by the Russians in Afghanistan. The devices arc small bombs de- signed to look like toys. He also held up posters of children who have bad their arms blown off by the devices. The coalition bad volunteers pin the names of people they claim were killed by the Contras to a wall made of black cloth. Bernstein said the coalition's protest was "a success in a sense because we established a presence. It proved there is a voice in Orange County opposed to the intervention in the affairs of other countries and the efforts to raise funds for military operations IP.inst countries we an: not at war with." At the freedom-fipten's rally boot.hs and tables with brochures and photographs illustrated each group's cause. Rusty connection causes blackout An overhead connection break.- down1 triggered a power fai lure late Sunda¥-that-affected-2,-J SO Southern California Edison customers in New- port Beach and Huntington Beach, a spokesman for the electric company reported today. Jim Kennedy, a Edison area man- ager, said the 11 :42 p.m . black.out, primarily in residential areas of West Newport Beach and Southeast H unt- ington Beach, was cua58d by a corroded overhead connection near the ocean. He said power to alJ but 40 customers was restored by 12:34 a. m. Remainina users had their power back by 8:20 a.m. Allan Roeder, assistant city manlJCr; Doug Clark. development services director; Bruce Mattern, public ser- vices director; and Victor Newton, assistant development services direc- tor. None of the c-0uncil members would identify the fi naJists or say how if more than one City Hall candidate was still in the running.. Sorsabal, Costa Mesa's city man- ager of 1 S years, announced his retirement in May to work full time as potentate for the 5,000 Shriners in Orange County. Sorsabal would be donating his time to the philanthropic group, with the one- year term beginning in January. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ However. 1t would seem that He later plans to start bis own consulting ftrm. VOLUNTEER CREWS CLEAN BEACHES ••• F rom A l Orange County representative Mel Hazen who said members of Save Our Shores also contributed to the cause. According to the Associated Press, beaches in Los Angeles County were not left out of the clean-up. Members of RecyCAL and the Boy Scouts .picked up trash from Malibu to Santa Mon1ca and Manhattan Beach SiJtty R«yCAL volunteers and Boy Scouts passed by the Will Rogers State Beach lifeguard tower manned by Tom Viren. "Anytime the community involves themselves in any kind of cleanup action we applaud it." Viren said . The Malibu Surfing Association, which was holding a surfing contest Saturday, made a trash sweep of the beach from the Malibu Pie~ to the Mah bu Lagoon after the competition. CROW' ADOPTS' SCHOOL .•• RecyCAL said the campajgn was timed to coincide with the last day of summer. It aJso celebrated the season's final weekend ofa $200,000 beach patrol cleanup program on 30 beaches fl'om Morro Bay to San Diego. Solid waste d isposal cost California taxpayers S 1.6 billion every year, Shireman said. F rom A l with it. He dangled his pen before the bird again to dramatue his comments and damed 1fthe crow didn't grab the pen with its beak and start pecking on the pen. Nobody seems to know where the bird came from, but Garland beheves it was tamed before 1t most likely new Just Call 642-6086 D=t .. QueNnteed Mor>Otr't!Qey " you 00 "°' .... 'ff/Al' ~ Dy 6 30Cllll ~be!Oft 7pm the coop to find a new home at the school. It tried to get into some yellow paint the other day and the painter got down from bis ladder and put a hd on the can, accordtng to an observer. The crow then swooped down and re- moved the lid. "There 1s a lasting message we hope to communicate through tbcis clean- up: Stop httenng and start recycling," Shireman sa1d, "Californians must heighten thetr envuonmentaJ aware- ness of sohd waste, or we'll be buried by Jt.'' Wbat do you lib about tbe OaUy Piiot? Wbat don't you llkt? Call tbe number at leJt aod your messa1e will be recorded, transcribed end delivered to dte 1ppropriete editor. The same U ·lloer answering service may be used to record lttters to tbe editor on aoy topic. Contributors to our Letters column must Include their name and telepllone number for verification. No circulation calls, pleue. Tell us wllat's on yoer mind. Karen Wittmer P\Jottsl'lef Clrculetlon 714/142-4333 c ._elfled echwttalng 71"°'/142-5171 All other depertmente 142-4321 MAIN Of flCI 330 w .. , s.1 £• C:O.•• ..._ c~ M-.1 •!JOI-8o• I~ en.11 M"'4I CA 926"6 end 'ff/Al' CC9r ..... lllo ~ ~ .,.., luncMy " )IOI.I dO -rec..,. ~ ~ ., 1 • "' c4ll Deb• 10 •111 end ~~ .... be~ ·frenk Zlnl Editor Aoeemary Churchman ContrOl!ef ~y>I 1M) Or•1'9" c-t ~ Comoeny No ·-"°''" .,., .• ,.,,,. tOll0<4' .... " .. Of ~­ ""-" """" .... ,, Ile ·-l'IOuc.O """"""' _ .. , o.r .._,.. ol Cll(JY"IQI>' - c ......... T1l1plloftee .. or-. CouMy ...-.-,.,_ -- Robert L. Cantrell PrOduC.Jron M1naoe1 • Howerd Mullenary Mtrke11ng D11ec101 Donald L. W1Ha.tne C1rculall()(l Manager Pegg1a1eYtn. C'I :i;q1f.,.d Olrlff"f()r ~ Jf1l'I \ "' l/001119" DOid "' G<"lto -l'.'•~kw- 1\lf'S tU NlOI 5uoe< ""'"" Dy "* i~ 1!> _..., IN -17 00 "oC>t•....i, , VOL 71.NO.• divorced age42 real estate agent Abnonnal or antisocial behavior is usually a cry for help. It can mean the person is experiencing a mental crisis. But, every situ- ation is different. That's why you need to know the different treat· shoplifts COSJD.etiCS ment alt~matives. The Information Center at Capistrano by the Sea Hospital has a free booklet on mental crisis. It t)utlines the many options you have available. Hospital- ization is only one of them. Call (714)831-1787. You'll receive this useful book- let in absolute con- fidence . We've helped people cope with the problems of today's society for over 25 years. We understand. Howto Handle a MentaJ Crisis .. _,_ • • • I