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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-10-07 - Orange Coast Pilot.. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1986 OUR WINNEI ON A41 TODA Y'S NUM8ERS ON 3 .. 0r.idlock ballot Claims rejected But both sides claim victory over b~llot - arguments or Newport Center election By STEVE M.ABBLE °' .. ...,,.. .... Newport Beach city Jeaders emerg- ed panial victors Monday in a Superior Court fi&ht over a ballot argument written by a slow..growth a:roup opposed to a $300 million expansion plan for Newport ~nter. Penalty trlal for Theodore Frank, convicted of the torture..murder of.a 2- year-old glrl, has been delayed./ A3 California Directors of alllng BankAmerica Corp. are reviewing a $2. 7 bllllon merger offer frem First Interstate Bancorp./ A4 Nation Senate begins Impeach- ment trial of Imprisoned federal Judge Harry Claiborne./ Al INDEX Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Death notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police log Public notices Sports Televlslon Weather 87 A3 81-5 CS-7 88 C7 86 AS AS A3 C4, 7, 8 C1-4 86 A2 But the most controversial claim in the argument -that lhe expansion will bring more traffic to Corona del .Mar despite road improvements - survived the legal challenge. Following a brief hearing, Judge Harmon Scoville ordered the Orange County Registrar of Voters to strike Capture of U.S. adviser claimed Sandinistas say they downed rebel pla_!:1e. killed 3 Americans By ANDREW SELSK Y ... 1111 ... ,,_ .,..., -MANAGUA:-Nicaragua--The leftist gove rnment cla1mecj_ 1t cap- tured a U.S. military advi"F,r and killed three Americans when it shot down a rebel plane. But Secretary of State George Shultz said today the plane was not connected to the U.S. government. Shultz! speaking to II Washington news conference, said the plane "wasn't an American cargo plane," but was hired by "pri vate people," including Americans. A CIA j pokeswoman said the agency was not in volved. The Sandinista government said 11 shot the plane loaded With n0eS and ammumt1on down Sunday in the Jungle about 35 miles nonh of Costa Rica and 91 miles southeast of Managua. The-Defense Ministry said the survivortold his captors he was a U.S. military advisor based in ~I Salvador and his deaq companions wt!re Amencans. A ministry official claimed today the man was ;> CIA operative. "We now have Americans dying in Mr. Reagan 's dirty war being waged against Nicaragua." Alejandro Ben- d an a-secretary.ge neral of Nicaragua\ Foreign Ministry, said on ABC's "N1ghthne" program. .. This &rings us closer lo a direct Nicaragua-United Stall's confronta- tion." He later claimed on ABC's "Good (Pleue see CAPTURE/ A6) two -tatcments and a third rcferrenct from the 250..word statement penned by members of a a:roup called Grid· lock. Oddly, both sides declared victory after the hearing. "The thrust of our argument re- mains intact, .. sajd Allan Bee~ leade of the opposition a:roup. "I'd say we were the winners.'' Mayor Phil Maurer, who favors the development project and was named as a plaintiff in the lawsuit. said he is only disappointed that Scoville did Painting the town red not delete all four portions of the al'f.ument that were challenaect. 'These were false, misleading suuements," said Maurer. "But we won three out of four." Gridlock is an activist group op- posed to the Irvine Co. 's plan to expand Newport Ce nter with office towers, TCStaurants and four residen- tial tracts. Throu&h a·signaturc cam- paign, the group lorccd city officials to put the development before voters in a special election Nov. 25. The chaJlen~ ballot argument. to Dtlr ..... pM4o ~ ... ._.. John Sullvanof LakeJrorm put the cherry on top of a Tutee Preeu u he painted the eatery'• roof on Briatol Street in Coata Meaa lut weekend. Reagan to Video politics claim rejected; stuinp ln oc I . TV tor zschau HB p anners remain on From staff aad wire reports President Reagan will travel to Orange County tQ stump for Re- publican Senate hopeful Ed Zschau in the days before the Nov. 4 election, the candidate told a Costa Mesa audience Monday. Zschau. a congressman from Los Altos who hopes to unseat Demo- cratic incumbent Sen. Alan Cranston. told Latino supporters that Reagan's visi t is intended "to reflect his feelings about the importance of this race." Thomas Fuentes. chairman of the (Pleue Me UAGAN/A2) By ROBERT BARKER Of 1M Delly Nol ltalf Hu ntington Beach officials Mon· day night rejected a plea to pull the plug on TV cameras covering Plan- ning Commission meetings despite a claim thaLa commissioner 1s pla yi ng video politics. Jay Stout . a candidate for the Nov. 4 City Council election, told C11y Council members that ca mpaign rival Grace Winch~ll played unfair when she urged voters in her cam- paign literature to tune into Channel 6 and watch her in action. Stout, an audttor for Metropolitan Life Insurance. said that Winchell showed a lack of judgment and opened up equaJ-time demands for other candidates. But City Council members declined to either discon- tinue television coverage of the meetings or to give more time to candidates who aren't com- missioners. There were suggestions. however, that planning com- missioners should resign once they decide to run for office. Winchell said today that the invita- tion to watch her on TV was a sincere effort to enco urage openness in goveroment. But she said la ter that "in the spirit of cooperation" she has ordered her printing company 10 delete reference to the TV coverage on about 15,000 hando,ut!. ~till to go to voters. Winchell\ literature asked: "Want to kno"" more about Grace Winchell? See for Your~elf: Tune to cable Channel 6 C\ cry first and third Tucsda} of the month at 7 p.m. and watch the Hun tington Beach Plan- ning Commission. These meetings (Pleue ~ VIDlt0/A4) be mailed to all rqi1tered voters 1n the city, sutcd that traffic conditions throu&bout the entire city will worsen if the project stands. Ci ty leaders did not challenie the claim because they considered it an opinion, not a 1tatement of fact. But Scoville did uphold the city's request that the court delete a reference to environmental documenlJ prepared f~ the Qplnsion. City Attorney Roben Burnham said the environmental documents fail to back up the contention that traftic will worsen it the exp&Mion it pennitted. "SO we Jost there ref ere~\" said Beek. "The imponant th.Jq 11 t.nat tbe statement itself stands. .. In another portion ofthea.rpuneot. Gridlock· stated that there will be more traffic in Corona del Mar despite a multi-million doUar bYDUI the lrvint Co: has promised to-6uilt around the seaside community. Scoville rejected the city's request that the statement be cut from tbe (Pleue ... BA£LOT/A2) Me.sa to pursue senior center at Mardan School Council weighing repurchase of old city hall f acJlity By TONY SAAVEDRA Of ... O.., .......... he-Costa Mesa (uy Council committed itself Monday to provide a recreauonal center for senior citizens, potentially on the sue now oecupied by the Mardan School for the educationall y handicapped. In a series of unanimous votes, council members agreed to spend ~1ty money on the senior center prOJCCt and create a non-profit corporation to plan and manage the new complex. Additionally, council members or- dered their staff to examine the poss1b1hty ofbuying back the Mardan School property ~ thc,,-buiJdinif that previously housed Costa Mesa C11y Hall. The propeny at , 19th Street and Pomona A venue was sold to the non- profit orpniz.ation in 1979. Mardan officials are now considering movina the school to Irvine. The council's actions followed the adv1ce of an $18~000 re.oon com- mi ssioned by the city in April to assess Lhe needs of Costa Mesa's elderly. The three-month stu.Qy, by Bette L. Davis and Associates, concluded that scmors needed a place of their own instead of sharing the city's limited recrcauonal facilities with the aeneraJ public. · According to the study, there arc I 1.591 people in Costa Mesa &&Cd 60 (PJeue eee 81tlflOR/ A2) City to spend $45,000 for traf fie flow studies By TONY SAA YEDRA Of ... ...,"-' 8talt Costa Mesa officials allocated more Lhan $45,000 Monday towa rd efforts to relieve traffic on the we t side of town. In separate votes. Lhe City Council ordered environmental studies on pl,11ns to widen Vicroria Street and to close an adjacent res1dent1al neigh- borhood to general traffic. The city will pay up to $25,360 for an environm ental report by Ph1ll1ps' Brandt Reddick of Irvi ne on the V 1ctoria Street w1cjemng, between Canyon Dri c and Harbor Boulevard. Jay Stout Victoria is one o f only rwo streets bndgina theSanta Ana River between Hun11naton Beach and ~osta Mesa. It is chronically jammed by rush-hour 1raffic as motonsts ventur~ cast from the beach city. Some of that traffic cuts throu&h lhree residential streets to reach the industnal areas in south Costa Mesa. The council is attempting to block tha t shortcut by barricading Monrovia. Continental and Federal streets. Monday cit y officials allocated $7,000 to place temporary concrete bamers on the residential streets and (Pleue eee TRAJl'FIC/ A2) $11million claim filed in Newport fatal crash Officer was speedin . charges widow of ---collis ion passenger By STEVE MARBLE °' ... Delly ..... ltefl Offici&ls hold their tongues on Prop. 63 The~ 1do" of a man killed when his car was rammC'd b) an oncom1na police car fil_cd an $11 m1lhon claim Mond:i' again'!t the city of Newpon Beach. alleging the o fficer was spccd- 1ng The claim alleges that Officer Joe Thrasher was dn vmg at eAcess1ve and reckless speeds without emcrsency hghts or a siren when his patrol car struck the 1986 Buick ln which Jake Finney was a passenger OC's politicians won't bac k measure designating English official language --------- Orange County voters may be surprised to sec Proposi tion 63 when they go to the polls Nov. 4. Tho proposed constitutional amendment, which would proclaim English the official languaac of Cali- fornia, has been largely overlooked amid the furor over more high-prome propositions dcaJina with aovem- ment salaries, tollic qulations and the identification of individuaJs in- fected with a virus tha1 causes acquittd immune deficiency syn- drome. Thouah opposed by Gov. Gcorse Dcukmcjtan, state schools Super- intendent 8111 Homa and Los Anaclcs Mayor Tom Bradley. only two Or- •• County pohuc1ans. senators Paul Clrpentcr, 33ro District. ~nd William Campbell, 31 t D1s!ryct. have pokcn aaa1nst the proposmon wh.kb would require the late lqJ latutt to pttterve and enhance the role of English and permit any 1, resident or business owner in the state to file suit over laws they believe diminish or ignore En&lish as the common lanruaae of Cafifomia. None have spoken in its favor. And, though denounced as divisive ~Y the Orana~ Gounty Human ~~la­t1ons Comm1ss1on, the propos1uon wasJgnorcd by the Board of Super~ visors last wtek when its members voted to oppose three other ballot measures. For the record. the measure 1s favored by Thomas RJley and OJ>- posed by Harrieu Wi~r. Bruce Ncstandc said he is undecided and supervisors RaJph Oark and Roger Stanton refused to return telephone inquirie on the subJCCt. Ncstande. who suucsted vote$ opposina tbe Gann ln1ttat1ve, the LaRouchc ID lmt1at1ve and the To ics lmt1at1"e -propo 1t1on 61 . 64 and 6S -said he did not bnnt up the Enahsh only amendment because. unhke the others. 1t has no effect on county government. Proposition 63 opponents say.pass- age of the amendment oould result in the elimination of county-hired bil- ingual social workers, health person- nel and others. Wedged as it is between thrtt loudly debated propositiolls, Prop- osition 63 has only recently attracted orpnized opposition in Oranae County. less than a month before the Ckncral Election. The Oranae Count~ Coaliuon Apinst Pro~sition 63 1ncludes the American Civil Liben1es Union. the LequcofWomen Voters., the Lcaauc of United Latin American Citizens. Los Amiaos of Oraaaic County. the Latino Womtn's Network and the Oransc County Human Relations Commission. It has no bud&ct to speak. of and organizer Lee Po<Jolak ofOranae said she hopes to raitt enough money for an informational nycr. Thouah a few ·~o· and 'no· brochurn. bumper shelters and i&ns from lite-level campaian aroups arc sutt to find their way into Oranac LISA MAHONEY Focus ON THE NE~s County. the only schcduJcd activity on Proposition 63 1s an Oct. 14 debate sponsortd by the Human Relation Comm1ss1on at 7 p.m at the Corbin Center in Santa Ana. The lack of interest ~urroundm1 Propos1t1on 63 suits its ~upporters JUSt fine. Buoyed by the cast of collecting the 600.000 s1anatures rcqu1rtd to place tht'mea ~on the ballot (the actual number of s1paturc'I topped I miUion) ahd by a Sept 13 Lo Aoaclcs . Times poU 1nd1cat1n& 70 percent of voten upport it, there's no reason to launch an c,pen 1~e promotional campel&f\ here or anywhere else m the state. sajd C1hfom1a English Cam· . ' pa1gn Chairman 'tanley Diamond In the unlike!~ event those oppo~­ mg the propo 1t1on mu ter enough money to grab voter ancnt1on, Ca h- fom1a English has the resources of its parent, U.S. English, to wage it s own media campai&n. he said. Those on opposi na SJdes of the proposition ha ve different idea as to why it has gcnerntcd so little con- troversy. Diamond suys it's beca use mos1 voters, including tho~ who come from non-Engl1~h sprakin3 back· grounds, aarcc that the f:.ngl1'1h language is becoming diluted b) bilinaual ballot • b1hnaual education and other well-me mna but ml'i· guided govcmmC'nt cffon!> to ll'ISl'il non-Engli h speaJuna < ahfommn11 and that somcthma .hould be done about 1t But David Hamlin., ~uthcm C'al1· fom1a Campaign coordinator for Cahfom1ans Un1tcd gain l 63. )''i vote~ ~1mpl) haven't looked bc)ond the propo 1t1on's lltk to w-e how racist and d1~nmmatory 1t 1'i , 1n{'e on the 'urtacc, 11 m onl) (Pleue eee PROP./A2) Finney. 39, was lolled in last Thursday's accident and the driver of the cqr. Kent Hindes. was critkally mJurcd. Hindes subsequently was arrested on suspicion offelony drunk- en driving and vehicular man- slau&hter. Tflrasher. a former traffic safety officer who was on routine petrOl at the time of the accident. was seriously 11\)ured in the 12:25 a.m. collision on Balboa Boulevard. The wreck 1~ being invcstipted by the:' Cahfom1a H1gbwa) PatrOI and results of the IOVe tirttOr\ art not c111pected for 5evera \\ctks, wd ewpor1 Beach Traffic lnvcsttp_tor 8111 Mclnni . Police dcchntd to comment on the claim bteausc of the onaoina in- ' e t1pl1on. The claim wa tiled by lrviot attorney Ted Went'INOn.h on behalf of f mnc) 'w1fc V1cktc, and tbetr three teen· t n' Finney, a 9aJboa (Pleaee ... WD>OW /Al) .. J "' A1**°'"'99 Coelt DAILY PILOT/ Tue.day. October 7. 1Me SENIORCENTERVIEWED IN MESA ••• ,..,_Al · aftdover. That number is projected to hit 16,18S by the end of the century. -Wh1~ city officials are aencrally in favor of' rcnovati°' the Mardan Scnool site f'ouhe seruoroenter. there are a few potential flies in the ointment. The sale of' the propeny appears to be oontiaent oo whether the city will pay ~ardan enouah money_ to buy a new s1te in Irvine. School officials say they need somewhere in the nciah- borhood of$2 million to relocate, and have received offen in that ranae for the property. Mardan paid SS20,000 for the Costa Mesa site in what some thought at the time to be a sweetheart deal. As part of the sale, restrictions were placed on the deed givina the city first crack at repurchasina the propercy and t>rcventina Mardan from sut>- dividinl the land for commercial or residenttal uses. Councilman 03, e Wheeler said the propeny. on the comer of a main thoroughfare.~ ould only be worth $2 million if the cit) removes the deed restrictions -which he would stronaJy protest.· The resulung scenano 1s a suckS> one in which Martian won't sefl unless Costa Mesa agrees to pay . substantially more than 1t rett1ved for \he propeny seven years aao. While Mardan bolds one of tht Po~ntial trump cardJ. the city ho&da another beausc it can make tbe property unattracuve to future bu yen by lcavina the deed restrictions 1ntaet. Mardan official& 11~~ muai have an answer before ber or their fund-raisin& capabilities will~ damqed by the school's unccrwn status. . City officials, who also are look:ina into other Potential sites for the tcnior center, let a 30 to 60-day deadline for evaluatina whether. the agina Mardan scbool structurct could be remodeled to ICCOmmodate .en\or citizens. Meanwhile, the council laid the foundatioft for the center by ...-ina &o provide an u-yet-undetermlned amount of seed money to ~tablilh the DOA-orofit corporation. Cit~ Mansr Allan Roeder Mid h would take at leut aix months for the poup to be incorporated and recieive its tax· exempt statvs. Meanwhile, the council asked its ..Uor citizens oommjttee to 1tt the auidelines for the would-be corpor- ation and choote it• board of d~ tors.· REAGAN COMING TO OC ••• From A l Orange County Republican Part~. said he, too, had been told of the vis1t which would be made on or around Nov. I. E'ucntcs said it is most lilc:cly that Reagan ·would appear at an indoor venue, probab1y in Costa Mesa, Newpon lkacb or Irvine. "This is Reagan country and the people of Orange County have never said 'no' to President Reagan," Fuentes said . Rcapn plant to spend about four days in California campaianjna for Zschau and possibly for other Re- publican candidates, said Scott Hart, an aide to U.S. Sen. Pete Wilson. In addition toOranae~ Hart sajd the president probably would speak id Los Angeles and San Fran- cisco. The latest . California poll finds Zschau gajrfing on Cranston. TRAFFIC PROJECTS BACKED IN MESA ••• From Al agreed to spend S 13,000 to study pedestrian patterns af\cr the new mall fiscal year in a special reserve ac- whethcr the closures should be made opens at the end of the month. count. permanent. . Councilman Dave Wheeler voted Th . In other action. the council voted against the proposal to spend lhe city e city has until June 1988 to 4-1 to use up to $15.000 in developer funds -reserved for traffic improve-decide whether to return the money, fees to investigate whether a ped-men ts-on the bridge study. Accord-potentially by offering a break in estrian bridge is needed to link South iog to a city staff rcpon. the expen-propeny taxes, or ask voters fot Coast Plaza with the mall expansion diture does not indicate that Costa pen:nission to spend the funds on dty across Bear Street. Mesa is willing to pay for construe-projects. A city task force. including rep-tion of the pedestrian overpass. The reserve account will earn an resentatJvcs from six South Coast In other matters. the.council placed estimated 8 percent a year in interest, Plaza department stores. requested the $54 7,046 thatsurpasscd the voter-depending on the market, said City • H~ w. on .. rt. and light lhower9 and thunder· ~..,. forecMI for the mounleine and deMrt• ttwough Wedneed•~ bet'.-... ot wi uC)p« i.vet dl1turbanoe off the coaat of Southern Ceflfofn&a. Temperaiur...,.. eicpectect to cMctlM a bit becaillM of the aloud cover. aicoordlng to tM National WNthet a.Moe. PwtJy cloudy llclel were fONCMt f« coutel region•" end morning tog WM ~ed to extend farther Inland th•n u.ual tor thl• time of YMI' Wedneldey. Mong the 0rtnge Cout th«• wtl be ~ let• n~ht and motr*"t row e1oue11 end toe ,,.., ..,. oout •. 0thttWtM peniy cloudy and mote humid and llahttv coo6er Wedneeday. HlgM at the beect*1Wedneeday87to1S. Lowe tonight 61 to~. Hight In the v111tey1 WedneecSay 71 to ee. Lowt sa to IS. FrC)fn Point COnceptlon to the Mexican Border -Inner wateta: Variable mo9tty aoutheut wind• .... than 10 knot• through Wedneeday except becOmlng aouthwe9t to w.t 12 knota with 2-foot ... , Wednaaday afternoon and evenlnga. U.S. Tempe. ~tPu A .. ~ 12 q NewOrlMN 80 .. "' L.e NewYOf11 ~ 83 41 Albucluetciue 13 62 OllW!Ome 75 64 AncNlf• 45 SI OIMl\I .. 12 Ademe 79 51 ~ 13 .0 A~Clty 13 44 ""-llll t2 75 9elllmot• 64 ,. ~ M H llrmlnOhem IO 64 ,MlllM 57 st ... 72 47 P«li.ncl ,Ore. 74 4. 9o911on st J7 =rCllY 75 6a lllftllo $0 ,. 74 41 °'**Ion.SC 81 " "9nO 15 M OlwlMton.W lie ., SCI Sil°'* 12 44 et.1ott•,N.C n " Sell Lake Cltt • q CNceoo 5f st Sen Antonio 17 eo Clnc:lnnall eo· 3t S.llle st llO ~ 53 3t ~ 73 44 Columtlue.ONo 51 M sl"-53 n Oeilee-FI Wortll S3 5f T~IPtflbg t1 76 ~on 51 ,. T~ .. 51 o.n.... 70 3t T-.. 17 O.MolnM 82 48 TUlee TIS 13 Detroit ~ ,. W91Nn9lon.D C. .. 0 Dululll 51 q WIONle 70 IM Calif. Tempe. lrPieo 13 $0 Ttdea Elle 47 43 f*tlenlte 37 21 l'lllgel•ft 51 aa TOOAY OtMCI AAplde 53 M 8-wllllgll 1131•m. 11 HonoMu .. 71 8-lellow 7~/m 0 1 Houelon 72 .. ftDNllOA llldlellClolle e1 a7 Rrll lllgll '·~"' 3.4 .-.-i.MllM. 74 1 1 """'low a· "'· 27 ~ •2 .. =~ 12:28 p.m. u ~ 41 45 8·21 p.m . 02 ~City ., $0 LaV80M ., 51 81111 .... IOCley ... .,.. p.tn., .... Ullle"°°' .. '5 WeclneeOeyM1:62a m -MllallU Loulllwlle 13 42 p.m. Mempflll e6 .. Moon Mii Ioele)! al t: :!f.·"'·· ntM .....,,.. 8etcll 87 11 W.on.clity al 12:33 a_m Mii agelfl ~-64 41 • 10:0lp.m Extended the monc to monitor traffic and • imposecT GannJ pendingJ imil Last Manager A!lan Roeder -----------------PROP.69FAIL STOGETSUPPORT ••• WIDOW SUES OVER CRASH WITH COP ••• From Al resident. was a commercial developer who apparently was cel~brating his first ~ig bJJsincss deal at the time of the accweot. Wcntwonh estimated the police- man was traveling at speeds reaching 65 mph when his car struck the Buick. which was in the process of making a U-tum. The anome) described the officer's dnving as "grossly negli- gent." "The amount of damage 1n this accident 1s so substantial that the officer had to be going at least 65 mph." said Wentwonh, who said he will have ex pens perform an indepen- dent investigation of the crash. The attorney said the sobriety ofh1s client ~nd Hindes has no bearing on the officer's alleged actions. 1n initial reports, police indicat*- lhat Hindes pulled abruptly into the path of the oncoming patrol car. Police have not indicated how fast either car was traveling. Thrasher was trapped inside his squad car and a police officer who responded to investigate the accident had to smash a window of the patrol car to free him. One of Hindes' relatives said the two men probably were returning from a late dinner and may have been celebrating their first big break in the commercial development business. Michelle Bnnkman. who identified GAME 4 I WEEK 4 / DAY 3 hcrselfas Hindes' niece, suaested her u~clc was making a U-turn to stop at a '1ore to purchase--a-pack of cigarettes. "Herc's a IUY who was 39 years old and most of those years had been secnt preparinl for this moment, for has big break. ' said Wentworth of Finney. "And suddenly, his life's snuffed out." • Thrasheri a seven-year veteran of the police rorce, sustained bead and facial injuries. Police said be was released from the hospital Monday. Hindes, who ·suffered head and chest injuries, remained at Fountain Valley Regional hospital today in stable condition. 20 62 84 55 43 24 30· 17 ~ A YEAH ... Al FLUENT HERE. ( CHECK OUT OUR LATEST WINNERS ON A4. YOU COULD IE NEXn HERE ARE TODAY'S NUMBERS. .. Ru es and how ro pio~ rhe gome ore 0" yOu' game cord, or coll o.,r HOTllNE. 642·4333 9.5 M.f OS~ for WI .GO nlorml'.)'10f1 llilyPllat & TWA m~o o~ HOW GOCD :.E Pf All'( APf 1 From Al to reinf orcc a fact -that En&)ish is the primary l~uage in California - it's not surprismg that "everybody tends to suppon Proposition 63 on first blush1" Hamlin said. Wfiit they on't rcafize is that the amendment could bring an end to bilingual emergency telephone oper- ators, social workers, coun inter- pr.ctcrs and non-Enf)ish instructional brochures on subjects like school enrollment and children's vacci- nations, said Randall Wick, president of the Orange County Chapter of the American Civil Libenies Union of Southern California. "Any individual or group that doesn't like what the government is doing can file a lawsuit and cause the government to spend a lot of money defeodins its actions," be said .. Though the wording of the prop- osition only gives general directions to the Legislature to preserve and enhance the role of Engh sh, Diamond says the passage of the proposition would not cod emergency services - only bilingual ballots where not required by federal law. It would also permit changes in bilingual education programs, he said. Suggestions that it could do more arc the result ofa "campaign of deceit, of diny tricks. of scare tactics and of fear," he said. Diamond said he worked with ~~~~E Daily Pilat ·MAIN OFFICE former state Sen. S.L Hayakawa on the EnJlish only amendment because he believes the English language is .. under very serious threat. ..There is a_possibility of a second official language in this state. I sec this as a terrible, terrible danger." Diamond says that bilingual as· · sistancc to non-English speaking im- migrants does them a disservice by eliminaung the need to learn English.· His opponents point to a 1985 Rand Corp. survey on Hispanic households that shows that over 95 percent of first-generation Mexican- Americans arc proficient in English and only 50 percent of second generation Hispanics even learn Spanish. Critics aJso say the proposed amendment doef nottrina to hetp recent immigrants learn English, thop~ there is a crying need for more English as a Second Languaac classes. ''What arc we goina to do," asked Oranae County's Podolak. whose grandparents were Russian immi- grants who spoke only Yiddish when they arrived in the United States. "Say you can't speak to us until you learn. English?" BALLOT ARGUMENTS ••• From A l argument. The JUdje indicated the statement was an opinion and that the coun was not in a position to determine its validity. A statement concerning the amount of open space at Newpon Center was also drdered cut from the argument. Scoville ruled that Grid- lock's claim that the expansion plan would result in a loss of open space was false. The judge also deleted a final statement, which claimed that the $40 million in road imorovcment promised by the lm ne Co. consisted ofland value and not actual construc- tion costs. Beek. however, admitted the state- ment was incorrect before the city filed its suit. He described it as a stupid mistake on his part. "I consider that a victory for us because we were the ones who asked for i110 be removed," he said. Be!k declined to say how much his group spent defcndin.a its ballot argument. A city offic1al estimated the cost to the city at about $6,000 D=t / 330 Wftl S.y St Coll• Mft8 CA Miii llOd•-Bo• 1 560 Costa Mne CA 92626 ClultttO lldl. 142·587., ~ & edllorlel. 642·•321 Just call 642~6086 la OuarM tMd MOnoey-Fricllly tt )'OU 00 not ....... '(OJI ~ by S 30 p m cal lllllOI• 7 p m end 'fOll copy .. tie _.., Copyr~I 1983 0r""9' Coest Putll"""'G ~ No ntwS 11--1111101W eotor .. 1 man .. °' '°""''" """'" ,,.,..., may tie rep<ooucecl wlll\OUI tll9Ci81 Pt< mllltiOl't 0C COl1YTIQl\1 - S.C:on<l t:laH pollaQe peid •t Coel• MeM C.'1l0tn .. (UPS 1'4-8001 ~hon by cam .. SS 75 oe< l*IOO oy ma• s 7 oo mon1N)I VOL. 71, NO. 2IO What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your message will be recorded. transcribed and de- livered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hqur answering service may be used to record lettef's to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for verification. Tells us what's on your mind. s.1 ... oey Ind Sunday. " )'OU do nol ,_ Y'O"' cooy by 7 a m c.al belore tO am_ and yo.. ~ .. be~ Clrculatloft Tale~ Moec Olange County ....,_ ..... lagune Nlgl'9I ....- Fall Tweeds A fresh interpretation of updated colorations and patterns distinguish our sujjerb selection of tweed sport coats. Pictured is a classic grey herringbone interwoven with subtle shades of green and lavendar . We invite you to view • • our collection. Gentlemen'• Oothina lAspired by Tradition j Council· forums slated In Mesa Costa Mesa'• campajan trail wiU take Chy Council candidaaa lhrou&}\ a eeries of polit.ic&l forums, the fint Friday at 7 p.m. in lhe TeWink.le School multi-purpose room. The forum •• sponsored by the C.O.ta Mesa Republican Aasembly. Tllere is no charle. For more information call Dennis Skupinw at 6)l-7tl6. A hancblime fprum is scheduled next Tuesday at the Captain's Table restaW'lnt at Oranae Coast Collqe. The S6.SO fee covers the 0011 of the lunch sponsored by the Costa Mesa Civic Association. To make reservations call .S4.S-S027. , A third forum will be beld Ott I S at Estancia Haah School. The 7 p.m. propam is sponsored by ~e Mesa. West Homeownen Assocition. For more 1nformahon call Denise Curry at 6~20960. ~ Senion plan trlJM The senior citizens of Indian Summer Homes and Laguna-lrvine Adult Day Care will be takin& two trips this month. They will visit Heritage Hill in El Toro. Thurs'day and the. bird sanctuary in Modjeska Canyon Oct. 23. Volunteers are needed and those interested should call Claire Coleman at 380-1 703. Open hou.e at center The Center for Crcauve Alternatives, a non-pr~fit mental health aaency, wtll hold an open house at us ~ntl~ cxl)anded Mission VieJo office at 2826 1 Marguerite Parkway, Suites 135 and 22S, Thursday from 3 to 1 p.m. A buffet dinner will be offered, and further information is available at 84 1-8770 or 364-1066. Singles dance In Meu The Orange County Catholic Alumni O ub w11l sponsor a mixer for singles Friday at the Westin South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. The band Good Company will play from 9 p.m. to I a.m. and the social hour starts at 8 p.m. Tickets will be $9 at the door and further information is available at 951-0125. Dream workshop planned A free workshop entitled "The importance of Dreams" will be presented Friday from 9:30 a.m. to noon at the Santa Ana Library, 26 Civic Center Dnve. Dr. Ellis Wayne will discuss the origins and processes which form our dreams. Call the OranJe County Mental Health Assoc1at1on at S47-75S9 for mformatioo or reservations. Women'• club to meet A "gong show" will be presented by the members of the Mesa Harbor Club at their meeting Friday at 6:30 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Women's Club, 610 W. 18th St., Costa Mesa. Proceeds from the event wilJ benefit Casa Teresa, a home for ba11ered women. Call 557-5127 for details. Iuues forum scheduled The first meeting of the National Issues ·Forum, a nat1onw1de program, will be held Friday at IOa.m. at the Oasis Senior Center at Fifth Street and MatJuerite A venu e in Co rona del Mar. A non- pan1 san. moderated discussion on 1mm1gration will be held. Schafer salute set A poolside salute to retinn' C'osta Mesa City Councilwoman Arlene Schafor will be held Friday at the Holiday lnn. 3131 Bristol St. A S I 0 donation 1s requested for the 6 p.m. pthenng to honor Schafer. who 1s leaving the council 1n November after taking a JOb as executive darcctor of the Cos&e Mesa Chamber ofComi'ntrce. R'c~rva11ons can be made Wlth the chamber, at 650-1 490. The party will have a luau theme. Tuesday, Oct. 7 • 6 ~p.m.. Laguna Buell City Council, C'11y Council Chambers, 505 Forest A venue. • 1 p.m .. HutLD1toD Buell Plann1n1 Com- mission. City Council Chambers 2000 Main St. • 7 p.m .. Hu tLDgton Beach City (elementary ) School District, 2045 1 Craimcr Lane. • 7:30 p.m., Irvine l!nlf~ed Sebo~! .District Board of Education,· D1stnct Adm1nistrat1on Center. 5050 Barranca Parkway. Wednesday, Oct. 8 • 7:30 p.m . Lacuna Buch Recreation and Soclal Services.. Recreation Conference Room. SOS Forest A venue. Pou cE Loe Jalla Harta..na. a •ohuateer for R~bltcan Senate caadldate Ea Zechaa, ta1U wt,tb Democratic coniteutonal c&Ddidata Bnlce hmner at rally on UC Irrine campu lloDday. Democrats push registration By PAUL ARCHIPLEV Congressman Robert Badham in the 40th CM ... .,.., .... ...., District, 69th Assembly District candidate Jack Baldwin, Orange County Democrauc A Democratic rally on the UC Irvine Pany Chairman John Hanna, Irvine campus attracted a smattering of Mayor Larry Agran and Laguna Beach interested students Monday as local can-City Councilman Bob Gentry. d1dates prodded them to register and vote. Speakers focused on ballot measures Sponsored by the Sumner for Congress ~nd their oppoi:ien~ as well as the campaign, the Voter Regi stration Victory amporunce of regi stcnng. Fund and the Associated Students of UC l, _ __;;:.G:..:::cc.:..:.ntry urged listeners to reJCCt Prop- the rally's main drawing cards faileato ostt1on 64, the so-ailed AIDS in111ative, show. saying. "It's one of the most irresponsible Sen. Alan Cransfon, gUbcrnatofia can-pieces oncgjs1at1onTve ever seen.,.. didate Tom Bradley and Lt. Gov. Leo He said Democratic maverick Lyndon McCarthy were among the no-shows. 'LaRouche, who sponsored the initiative, McCanhy and Bradley each sent reprcscn-"is a political extremist interested in ta1i ves. keeping lots of groups an an oppressed Those who did address students in-state ... eluded Sumner, who 1s running against Baldwm, who seeks to unseat Nolan OCCilames new dean of students By G. JEANETI'E A VENT Sharon K. Donoff. 43, has been named Orange Coast College's dean of students. She replaces Da vid A. Grani, the new director ofOCC's marine programs. A Laguna Beach resident. Donoff has been an OCC staff member for 15 years. She Joined the facull y as a physical education instructor in 197 1. was ap- pointed ass1stan1 dean of siudents in 1973 and rose to associate dean of students in ~-~;!Iii 1975 Sharon K. Donoff As OCC-s associate dt"an . she bu1h the college·s scholarship program into one of existing facility was built 1n the 19SOs the largest 1n the state. according to school "hen OCC had 2,000 srudents. The college officials. In J 975. .DCC d1stribu1cd in Costa Mesa now enrolls some 25,000 $1 2,000 in scholarships annually. Last students each .rear. . . year more than $105 000 was awarded. "I am exc1Led with th is new-ca reer rn· her new posiuo~ as dean of students. challenge.'' Donoffsa1d. "I am a ·p1oduct of Donorfs long-term goal 1 to develop and a comm unit~ college_ and am a Lremen- oversee a fund-raising campaign for a new dous ad vocate of the community college student cen ter. According to Donoff. the S)Stem ." Frizzelle in the 69th, said the incumbent 1s among a handful of legislators who are ignored by both parties an Sacramento because they arc too extreme and refuse to compromise. Baldwin als0 lambasted Fnzzelle for refusing to partici pate io any community forums prior to the election. ''He knows what's best for the public," Baldwin uict-4'haT son of attitude is obnoxious." Sumner urged students to register, telling them without the vote "you're eff ccti vely disenfranchised." An organiUll. said about 50 to 60 studentsofelistcred durina the rally. Mon- day was the last day to register in time to vote in the November aeneral elccuon. Marine gets 27yearsin QC slaying From •t•ff and wire report• A JOdge has sentenced an El Toro Manne to 27 years to hfc in pnson for murdenng a Los Angeles woman, who~ dismembered body was fou nd on railroad tracks m Anaheim a year ago. ' Orange County Superior Court Judge Kathleen O'Leary imposed the maximum sentence possible Monday on James Let" l Parker. 24, a corporal stalloned a1 the El Toro Marine Corps A.ir La11on. for the October 1985 slayi ng of Kelly Devon Tucker, 22. Parker, a Texas nati ve. adm111ed shoot- mg Tucker. bu1 contended he thought she was trying to rob him. A coroner's repon said she was shot once sn the back of the head and dumped on the tracks about six hours before being run over bv a train. Deputy District Attorney Wallace Wade sought the death penalty for Parker. alleging he killed Tucker while raping her. but defense attorney George Peters con- viced Judge O'Leary to di miss the special allegauoos. Missing boaters drift ashore unharmed By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of 1M Delly ll'Mol II•" The U.S. Coast Guard called off 11s search Monday fora m1-.~1ng boa! after the two boaters drifted ashore at Huntington Beach. Coast Guard Peu~ Olliccr James MacPherson said 1he t"o men -Mike Agnos. 28. and SteH~ Pearson, JO. both of San Clemente -"ere apparenll> in good health after their 14-foot ou1hoard ran ashore shortl y af\er noon The search \\as rallcd ofl , but Mac Pherson said the two men nc' er called toex plam what happened or extend thanks for the Coast Guard'~ eflom. MacPherson <;a1d he did not kno" whether the two men e' penenced mecha n- 1cal problems or ran oil cour~ The Coast Guard \t'arch began at d3" n Monday following rcpom thaL 1hc t"'o men had not returned as C\pcctcd from a day trip Sunday to C atahna lslJnd. Accordin~ to the mother of one of the me n, rhe pair left Dana Point Harbor t"arl~ Sunda) with plans to v1s1t the island When Chey had not am' ed home b> 9· JO p.m.. however. th e C oa\t Guard "'as notified . ".Coast Guard helicopter and Falcon Jet began a search earh Monda> of about 1,300 miles of ocean ·bct"'een Dana Pomt and Catalina Island. The Orange Coun~ Shen n's Department 3!.Wited b~ ~arching the count) coastline Penal trial for killer delayed Defense lawyer asks court ~pare Frank, keep him tn prison • Convicted murderer Theodore Frank must remain in priion, but'be 1h,puldn't be executed for the 1978 torture-murder ofa 2-year-old Jirl, Frank's attorney.insists. Dcfen~ Attorney Willard Wik.sell con- vinced Oranae County Superior Court Judae John J. Ryan Monday that he needed more time to stud y the pr<>t- cculion's wnnen responses to scveraJ pretnal mouons. so the start of Frank's new penalty trial was delayed until Monda y. Frank's death se ntence was overturned by the California Supreme Court wt after he was convicted for the March 14, 1978, abduction, molestation. torture and 1tn1tp· lation of Amy Sue Seitz, whose body was found two days latcf' in the Topanga Canyon area of Los Angeles County. Ryan also qreed to Wiksell's request that Fr-ank be aJJowcd to wea.r civilian clothes at future court appear- ances. The gray-haired, ' bearded Frank, SI, weannJ. a must.ard<ol-Praak ored jail jumpsuit, answered affirmatively several times as the judge asked whether he undefStood that hi~ ri$h to-~ speedy proceeding was being waived. Frank , who had a history of child molestation. abducted the Seitz girl from her aunt's home in Camarillo. Outside court, WikscU said he agreed Frank must remai ned confined. but would present reasons at the penalty phase retnal wh> Frank should be kept alive. ..M) pos1uon 1s that he shouldn't be released from pnson. but he shouldn't be executed, .. W1ksell said. ··1think1fhe was let out of Jail he would probably molest agam " <\bout feelings of remorse on Frank's pan. th<' attom<'y said: "Yeah. he realizes that he's hurt not onl y his v1ct1ms, but the family of v1ct1ms. Yeah . he·s sorry." The tnal was moved from Ventura Count ) to Orange Count) because of puhllc1tv about the case Ventu ra ( ounty Deputy Distnct At· tom<'.,. Thomas J. Hurchins has saJd he hopes 10 prt"sent I 0 w11ncsses who will sho" Frank's h1stof) of child molestation. W1kSt'll said he will prescnl about six w1tne!>St'S bur he wouldn·r descnbc the nature of their testimony. He did say 11 could include psyc hological 1es11mony regarding Frank's life preceding his acrs of molestation. Frank wa~ !)Cntenced to dearh in the gas chamber. but the Ca hfomia Supreme C'oun oH·nurned the sentence lasr year on grounds chat Frank's wnungs about molesung children were seized 1llegally from his home and used against him. The high coun. howt",cr. upheld Frank's conv1ct1on Hutchins said 1he "nungs are unncces~ ary in the ne" penally phase. "We interviewed a number of the Jurors rhat part1c1pa1ed in that first tnaJ and each of them mentioned that the wntings didn't pla~ a "Cf) important part at all ," he said. ··The.> were really looking at the nature of the murder and the lorture of this little girl·· Hutchins \aid the prosecution wtll again seek 1he death pcnah~ based on 1he facts.of the murder and a hastol") of child molestauon h\ Frank formall ) branded a menralh dio;orctered St'' offt'ndcr.'who was released from '-\ta'>cadc ro ta~ Hospital about two month-; bdorl' the St'11z lolling Boy stricken after eating rock cocaine in LA school llu{'nce ol alcohol. Dubois was ar- rcs1ed a1 1n 45 pm along 1he 11 00 bloclo. ot '°louth Coast H1ghwa) Hun tington Beach omeone stole doth1ng wonh S400 at an apanmcnt house laundry room an th{' 6400 block of Warner Ave nue. Entrnng 1hrouiti ~ ~ar l(k.ked \ltdang glass door \Omeone burglamcJ a home Tucsda) on the 6600 blod. of .\bhot The loss 1nd11ded a coin collc..1111n ,.orih S3.000 and-e ('ltfflera ,.onh SI 'iO ' ... Th1t' es \ma~hc-d a side ,. indc•'" tu burglanzeagra' 1q86 Volh,.agl'n ~1roc­co parkc-d Tuc~a' on 1hc '600 bloc~ •ll Bravata The included \tereo cqu1pnwn1 valued at S l~O "a~ p\HLnttJll) made through an unloclo.cd ha1hroom "ando". • • • ·\n unJl•term1ned am ount ofprop- cn' "'" rcponcd stolen from El C'hatann \11."\11.an restaurant, 2063 Harbor Bhd berween 2 a.m ~and 7· 30 a m \unJa, LOS ANGELES (A P) -A boy went into convulsions after eating rock cocaine that was brought to school by his fourth-grade classmate. and a man who allegedly gave the drug to the classmate was arrested, authorities said. The 9-yearii<>ld who ate the drua Monday was relcated in aood con- d1t1on af\er being treated at Cedan- Smai Medical Center, said Los An- geles Unified School District spokeswoman Eva Hain. She didn't identify the boy. Several other children who handled 1he crystalized cocaine at Manin Luther King Jr. Elementary School were checked, but all were unharmed. Hain said. Rory He1delbera. 22. was booked Newport Beach A man wcanng woman's panties and a bra exposed himself to a female resident in the pool area of an a~rtmcnt complex on Discovery Drive. ••• A typewriter, calculator. cookbook. a wok and nine knives were stolen from NewpQrt Harbor High hool. 600 Irvine Ave. The Jo<r;s came to Sl.660. • • • meonc tole a purse from Our for investigation of furnishing narcotics to a minor, said police Cmdr. William Booth. Heidelberg lives with the mother of the child who brought the drug to school, Booth said. The child's mother was questioned and freed, said an officer at the Southwest police station who refused to give his name. Her two children were turned over to juvenile authorities for their own protection, he said. Booth allcacd that Heidclbera gave his girlfriend's son a plastic baa coniaining about 20 °rocks," br cryitaliud pieces of cocaine, and asked him to hide it. The boy took the drua. wonh an estimated $500, to Lady Queen of Anaels Churth, 7SO Do mingo Orive. Th~ loss was put al $125. I • • • A bricfca~ and a stack ofS I 0 bills were stolen from a re idcncc on the 3200 block of West Ottan front. Th<' victims were home at the time and the loss came to $70S. · • • • A P1a1et watch wonh S 12.000 was ~ported mi 1na by a 46-year-old Lona Beach The woman said he lost the watch somewhc"' in tht C\t bul was unsu"' whe~. -,. . ----· school, and shonly bcfore noon the bag spilled out ofhis knapsack, Booth said. However. school principal L.M. Jenkins said she was told the boy passed rhe bag among about 10 students while the teacher was oc- cupied elsewhere in the room. The teacher noticed the bag and con- fiscated 11, but by then, one student had ingested some, Jenkins said. School off J$:ials sugges(ed to the parents of the boy who swallowed the drug that they take him to a hospital, but they dt'Clin<'d. Hain said. At home. he went into conv.uhiOM and wa treated for a cocaine overdose. Sht' said. Rock cocaint" nom\lllF s smoked. La.funa Beach A silver flute valued at S32S wu rcponcd stolen Monday from tht iop of the World School. • • • Officers were called to Woods< ovc Beach followina rtPort$ of a jct kier caus1n a disturbance tht"rc The ,kier 'was aone, however, pnor to the ofli~n.· amval. • • • Pohct arrc,tcd John &ldwtn Dubo1 , '6. of South Laauna on usp1c1on of dnv1ng under the in- • • • Two OO\S riding double on a bicycle JUm.ped a Colle~c View pupil. stole has "nst "atch. npped his shin and took h1!. hike ... ••• Burglars stok 14 golf club!> valued at $700 from a rear patio in the 19000 block of\' ermont • • • mcone used a Pr\ tool to ge1 into a 197 CheHokt pickup truck near Golden \\e~t tn.<c1 and Pacific Coast High" a.) and stoic a wallet rnn1a1nang S50 cash and another $50 in mis- cellaneous items. • • • i\ lod. was cut off wmrt1mr within the pasl month bL~omeonc wlto t>u.fllarllcd a praar-on the 800 hloct Of A.rabama. The lo\~ included liquor score sui:>phcs \'Blued Bl Sl2.000 Ca.ta Meea <\ S200 bile was rcportt·<l \tolcn from a porch 1n th{' I 00 bl<X lo. of Santa Isabel. bet\\,{'en 45 p m .ind M (I p.m unda} • • • Two gun were reported stolen from a home 1n the.:!()() block of Ce{'1l Place, bctwCt"n 8 p m. unda)' and 12:30 a.m. Monda) Entry "as p<m- 1bly made throu~h an unlocked door. 1 he loss was es11matcd at USO. • • • tereo cqu1pmen1 "'onh S625 wa reixmed stolen from Lee Roofing lnc:- on Superior venue. between I p m Sunday and 6: 'O a m. Monday. Entr. Bike victim still critical '\ Hunungton Beach girl rcmruned 1n cnucal cond111on today aft" sh<' coll ided w11h a car while ndm& her bicycle Monday. Ococvtcve Craft, 14, wM ndin4 her bike south on 9rookhur.1t trttt at about 7 a m when she bcpn CT'O'l~ma the street to ht'ad we t on In dsanapoh .\"t'nue, ":ud Hunun ton Beach poh~ L1 Clar) Dav1\ • Crafl wa struck b) the car bcmg l dnven sout h on Arookhur t by Rich- ard S. Asdell, 41. also of Hunungton Beach. The tccn-agc1 wa~ rushed to the Founuun Valle\ Rt'g1onal Ho'lp11al Crauma centt'r whcrt ~he hsted 10 critical cond1t1on A~c.'11 'ii.I not IOJUrNi o charge'\ h3\e been filed in the accident "h1\.h rem31n., under in· \C'illgllllOn Irvine .\ th1d ~tole a VW Sc1rocco valued at <1llgh11\ more than S 12.000. • • • .), "all{'t (Onta1n1ng about S 100 was repont"d mis mg. Bandit robs bankin .HB A Hun11ng1on Beach bank wu held up ~fonda} b) an armed robber who e apt"d Wlth about $4,000 in cash, police \3td The uspcct walked into BarkJcy's Sank at 6952 Bolsa A"e at Golden West t at about 11 a m.. "'d Hunun ton Beach pohce Lt Gary Da,1s He d1 pla)'cd a \slver colored hond un and demanded ca h He wa last seen headina east of the bank on foot The \u~pe"C't wM de~bcd as a male Latino. about ~7 to 32 years old, 6 feet tall, between 170 and 190 pound'>. "uh brown hair and mU)- \ache He was "eann' a dark blue Ni~Nll cap. \unglas'!C\, a brown plaid \h1n and blue 1can • Oa' said. l Or-. c0at OA1LY PILOT/ T"91dey, Odow 7, 1111 p1CK-UP yoUR RD IN THIS CA ,5 suNDAY pAPfR ~TfWSSTANDS & sroRES ONLY There must be something !udy about the number two. The second week ol The Doily Pilot/TWA Win.Go contest b<ooght double winners Zello Mcll<oyer ol Costa Mesa ond Jim Niemann of Huntington Beach got the word Thursday that they were headed for the wild blue yonder "I WOS bound and Oeterm1ned to win SOid "\.... McBroyer, o secretory for o cerlllred public occoon· tent. When the coll come though, Mc Brayer said she and her 16·yeor·old son Coin thought 11 waso 1oke ot first. She hod never won onythrng bef Ofe Mcll<oyer said when the Pilot reprerentoftve told her she won, she couldn't soy anything I was 1us1 in shock." When the shod wore 011 we called every- body I'm surposed I con 101r I ve been so hoarse ' Mcll<oyer soKI she onel Coin hove been to the Corribeon arr<! the Hawe ion lsiorr<ls, so Europe is next. "We'd like to go 10 Paris 1n the summer " Although McBroyer hos her heart set on seeing the E1ff el Tower and the museums, Coin hos some more procttcot cons1dero11ons ·1 wont to get o hotel with a big swimming pool ' laughing, hrs mother said ' s to keep up with hrs I .(. water polo " Com io1ned the Costa Mesa High School water polo team this year In the meantime I thin I'll to~e o French class," said Mc8f oyer Europe is also the destino11on for the Niemann family. ''I'm looking 01 Sw1tzerlond," said Jrm N1em0Rn "I'd like to go sk11ng • "We comped out for five weeks" dunng o trip across the country, said Sve Niemann. 'Now we'd like to go ob<ood · so·d J,m o sheet metal worker and o seventh generation Colilorn1on Niemann sold he was surprised as anyone that he'd won. He'd never won anything before except o bollle of champagne and a $2 lotrery ttcket. 'I thought 11 was a hoo1 I thought my fr1err<ls would be outside the Pilot Friday morning soymg 11 was on October Fool s 1o~e " Just to be one the safe side, he d1dn'1 coll anyone Thursday night "We wonted to make sure 1t wosn'r o 1o«e." Sve said they weren'r sure whot Swiss city they'll go to, but they hope to go m the spring They wont to get 4-veor·old Jenn1ler and J.yeor-old Toro up on skis next yeor YOU COULD BE OUR NEXT WINNER! CALL OUR HOTLINE FOR INFORMATION, 714 642·4333. FllGHTS AYAll.AaE FIOM OIANGl COl>ITY TO I.Al WA GOtOEN STATE AJttNS .. • .. • BOfA weighs me~ger bid by_Firstlnferstate bank AN FRANCISCO (AP) -Directors of 111ing BankAmmca Corp. say they are rcvacwina 1S2.7 billion merger offtr from Fint lnters&atc Banoorp. The 1pproxim1toly S 18-••hatt proposaJ, unveiled late Monday. would join the n1tion'1 steond and ninth· largest bank comparucs. The undisclosed .. golden par1c~ute" payments woul~ be triuered in the event of a ho ulc takeover, but not an a friendly merger. • f Ba .. .. . , Under the buyout proposal, each o n~menca 1 Bank.Amenca. plagued by problem IOAM that have contributed to nearly $1 btllion in losses durin1 the past year, had S 118.5 billion in asseu at the san of the year while Los Angeles-based Ftr'St lnters&atc has used ~ aggressive expansion proaram to bujld its assets to $49 billion. t 54 million shares of common stock wouJd be cxchanacd fos: 0.22 of a share of First lntei:statc common. stock and one stfare of preferred stock with a value esumated by First lntcrstate's investment banker, Goldman Sachs cl Co .. at $6 per share. BankAmerica stock closed up 87'h cents to $12.25 a share Monday on the New York Stock Exchanae before the announcement. First Interstate fell 371h ocnts to The announcement came on a day in which BankAmeri~'s board of directors appointed Frank N. Newman vice chairman and chief financial officer to replace John Poclker. who resigned last summer. N~wman bad been executive vice ~jdent and chief financial officer of We Us Fargo & Co. in San Francisco. $54. 75. . h Ba kA . Based on current market pnces. t Cf n menca shares would be exchanged for First ln,terst!lt~ shares vaJued at approximately S 12 each. or $924 mi llion, and preferred stock worth S6 each or SI .~5 billi~n. San Francisco-based Bank.America also announced that lucrauve severance packages have been approved for president Samuel Armacost and 10 other top executives. John Keane, a BanlAmenca vice president, would say only that the bank company has asked for fusther information from First Interstate be(orc It takes a position. County pilot ina y face action in air tragedy Airline pioneer Robert Sb: dead LO ANGELES (A P)-Robert F. Six, a scarf-and-goggle aviatfon pion- eer who transformed Continental Airlines from a one-Oight puddle- jumper 10 a major carrier, has died of natural causes. He wa.s 79. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Federal Av1auon Administration is considering acuon against a pnvate pjlot accused of flying recklessly in airspace where another small 1>lane collided with an Aeromexico jetliner. An FAA staff report claims Roland Paul Furman of Buena Park piloted his cran into restricted airspace without obtaining clearance from air traffic controllers at Los Angeles International Airport. This took place shortly before the Aug. 31 accident an which another small plane collided with the Aero- mex1co plane over the communuy of Cemtos, killing at least 82 people. LA dentist, nurse face charges in boy's death The stall's report was turned over to the FAA 's counsel, who 1s expected to decide by next week whether to talce a~tion against Furman for al- leged careless and reckless 0) ang.. agency spokesman Russ Park said Monday. The crash during the long Labor Day weekend involved an Aero- mex1co OC-9 and a sangle-<.'ngine Piper Archer and occurred in the aJr about 20 miles southeast of down- town Los Angeles. The restricted area 1s within the region overseen by con trollers at Los Angeles International Airport. His fam1h said Six died at his home Monday. SI\ began his airline career in 1936 when he borrowed $90,000 from his former father-in-law -he was mar- ned to Broadway star Ethel Merman at the lime -and bought a stake in the Southwest Division of Varney Speed Lanes of El Paso, Texas. A1 that ume. the airline had only one route between El Paso and Pueblo, Colo. Just a few months later, he was named general manager of the carrier. Wom.an sentenced after $5,000 adoption swindle By tbe Associated Press LOS ANGELES - A woman who offered her unborn child to three couples and swindlw two of the couples and an attome) out of nearly $5,000 was sentenced to nine months 1n jail. Sue Ellen Mitchell. 25, will serve the sentence at Sybil Brand Institute where she has been Jailed since she was extradited from Arizona in July with her common-law husband, Ronald B. McElroy, JI . McElroy and Mitchell each pleaded guilty Sept. 17 to three counts LOS ANGELES (AP)_ A dentist o£grand then. all misdemeanors. McElroy was sentenced that day to almost and nurse anesthetist are accused of three years in jail, and he was to be sent to Monterc), where he is wantw on a gross negligence in the death of a J-$400 bad check charge, a felon y. said city attorney's spokesman Make Qualls. year-old boy who lapsed into a coma The couple had contacted three Southern ( ahfornlil couoles and promised while undergoing dental treatmmt each couolc that the\ could have their unborn child. and later died. , Dr. Jacquelyn Williams. 32. ana Dukes war chest doubles Bradley's nurse C'hnstine Lee. 40. were ex-S • peeled to surrender in Los Angeles . ACRAM~~TO-Gov. George Dcukmejran s re-election e:ampa1gn has Municipal Court today in response to raised S 11.7 .mil~1on, nearly double the S6 m1lhon of Democratic nval Tom involuntal) manslaughter charges Bradley. their aid.es report. The financial filings pr:epared Monday for the filed Monda\, If convicted. each secretal) of states office showed t~at the Ref?ubhcan governor had ~3.8 oould be sentenced 10 up to four years m1lhon 1~ cash on ~~nd. compare~ with Bra~ley s S633,000. The Republican in a state pnson. governors top po_ht_1cal aide predicted that Deukmej1an's campaign would Johnny Gray was 10 the dentist's spend up to~ 19 million ory the election. DeukmeJian's ca mpaign reported that chair when he suffered a heart attack the S 11 . 7 mllli_on was raised ~u1:10g the. 20-month period ending Sept. JO. and stopped breathinj at the Dr Br:a~Jey had raised about S6 m1lhon dunng the current year. and about S 1.5 Beauchamp Western Dental Cente~ mil hon for his successful mayoral re-election in Los Angeles last year. in Vernon 1n April 1984. He slipped into a coma and died one month later. D1stnct Attorney Ira Reiner said the dentlSl and nurse failed to monitor the boy's vital signs while he underwen ueatmenl-on several teeth . "Because of this lack of attention a little boy died." Reiner said. "Their conduct was unconscionable and led to predictable, tragic results." In a prepared statement. Reiner sa1q the nurse was attending other patients. includmg the boy's older hrother. whale the younger Gray was under anesthesia. Deputy District Attorney Robert Dawson, who 1s prosecuting the case, said that as Williams worked. John- n) 's gums were already discolored from lack of oxygen. but she failed to notice the child's condition. 2 die in copter crash STATELINE (AP)-A helice pter taking wildlife experts to observe bighorn sheep crashed in a deep ravmc above the Mojave Desert. killing two people and injunng two others. authorities said. The pilot, James Donald J..andell of Deser1 Hot Springs, and Jim Bicket of Mohave Valley, Ariz., a U.S. Bureau of Land Management wildlife b1olog1st, were killed • Landell. 59, a veteran helicopter pilot and native of Canada, was well- known for rescues of stranded hikers and flood victims. Sclentlsts dlscover seven new quasars LOS ANGELES -Seven new quasars of the type that throw ofT giant ~lobs of cosmic material at nearly the speed of light have.b«ndlscovcred b)lan J_ntemauonaLteam of sc1en11sts, u.e-gro-up announced. The find. announced Mo!'day. dou.bles the number of such objects k nOwn to send out Jets of material tnllions.of miles long and adds sul?port to the tht·ory tnat at the heart of every qua.sar hes a black hole. The sc1en11stsuscdjl nclWork of radio telescopes in the United States and Europe to study 67 quasars and radio galaxies during two rece nt periods of observations. A third penod 1s slated for February. Drugs llnked to blast, flre kllllng four FO~T ~RAGG -Four people died 1n an explosion and fire that authont1es said tod~y may be connected wnh a drug operation. The fire on the southeast e~ge of this coastal _fishiniand lumber town about 160 miles north of San F~anc1sco was t?e1ng investigated as possible arson and homicide. acc~rdang to Mendocino County sheriffs gt. Rich Wiseman. He said the ~1ct!ms were a man and a woman, both apparent!} an their JOs. a )'O ung male an his teens or early 20s. and a female child. Autopsies were planned. VIDEO POLITICS .•• From Al are broacast (IVE and you can se~ Grace working for you." Three other commissioners - Tom Livengood, Rack Rowe and John Erskine also arc arc in the field of 21 City Council candidates. Livengood, Winchell and Rowe have been endorsed, along with Norma Vander Molen, by the slow-groW1h Huntin~ton Beach Tomorrow or- ganization. Stout, who was defeated m election bids 1980 and 1984. said today he may ao to the Fair Political Practices Commission to try to get plannin,g comm1ss1on~rs barred from pro- grams ofTenng televised interviews with candidates because of the com- m1ss1oners' biweekly coverage. Reuben . Ortega, a Huntington Beach resident and a Los Angeles C~unty Sul?Cnor Court judge, urged .City Co uncil members Monday "not to embrace that h11r-brained scheme'' to pull the plugs on the TV cameras. "This 1s the Untted States," he said, "where freedom of infor- mation 1s acceptable. A standard of censorship is not acceptable." 1 WINNER$ ALREADY!! ''YEAH ••• PACI YOUR BABS. YOU COUlO BE NEXTJ'' Check Today's Numbers on Page A2 . And Name. Your Destination! TWA & THE DAILY PILOT -See How Good We Really Ar.el Daily Pilat & TWA FIND OUT HOW GOOD WE REALLY ARE LAX/ORANGE COUNTY CONNECTIONS VIA. GOLDEN STATE AIRLINES WIN.(;0 Hotline: (714) 642-dss ' ' Auctions, parties on Orange Coast By VIDA DEAN Of .. ..., ........ A silent auction, hosted cocktails, cajon hon d'oeu vres and entertainment by the Jerry a ... J111 band ... and there's more ... dinner and dancin1 to BanJ Cele and the Sounds of Musk with a live auction foUowina. Supporters. of the Cystic Fibrosis Guild of Oraqe County ptherect at the Newport Marriott for a party to di1eu11 the many facets of the Oct 2S "Bourbon Street Beat" fourth annual Investor's Ball · .. "Last yea.r we netted just under S 1 S0,000," said a...e W•&. chairman. We are work.ina.vel')'. hard to make this years event biger and better. There's a lot of very special kids out there dependina on us " • To help assure this, Renee and hulband 1.e...;. (Newport Imports) have donated a 1987 Jaauar XJ6 11 an auction item Amo!'& t~ose partyin,were CedUa Stra .. ..._, wbo will be ted the orpruzat10!1s's ~86 realh of l;Afe ~ward, and Rey a--. ~­J.._, assocaate-dfrector of Cyruc Fibrosis Foundation for LA/Oranae County Chapter. • • · ~ore info~ation on the Investors Ball, also at the NB Marriott, may be obwoed by calhna 520.9671. · · ...,._} . . . . Helea ud '-'11r11 Mel~ eotert.ained in their Newport Beach hoine for thE patrons party of Carousel Chapter, The Center. Hors d' ouevrcs and desserts were served patrons who have helped the chapter in its fund-raising benefits. .To add additional glamour to the evening, Wards Furrierers presented a fashion show and patron Dr. Paal J .... 1Mjoined in by modeling his own full-length coyote coat. Among the guests were Carole ... Barry Steele, Dlua ... Lee Bromllty Ka~y ud Patrick Smida, Bev ud Carl Wlllprotaa, J .. y ud S&evn Sml~· Barbara ud P11I Jobsoa, Skrl ud Jim M...,.y, Joua ud Job Vu Dyke' B.J. Howe u4 Dee u4 Roy Plakle. ' • • • Dr. Glyau aad MarUya LllllDey hosted an" All Star Brunch for Fitness" al their Huntangton Harbour and the group attending wrapped up plans for the Oct. 16 fitness gala to be held at the Irvine Hilton. Glynn is president of the Satellite Systems di vision of Rockwell and was associate administrat<?r of NASA. His st~dy is loaded with memorabilia from NASA days and getting a lot of attention from guests -especially from longtime friend and former astronaut Bau A.ldrl.D. Others there included Tom UNI Emma Jue RUej, Harriett Wieder, Bit ud Mariutlll ~e • .!fom Tleney, BUI (&ala cb.lrmaa) ud Harriet Harris, tile Rlclt Salais, ~ert Pklpt, Praak ud Paf'Mlcllelea1 ud Noey Kualtall. The group learned that Art Ll.Dk.letter will be emcee for tbe upcoming gala and he wi11 be joined ~n stage by athletes including llnce Jeuer, 'Anold Scltwanneuer, Jaclltl.aLaue, Tracy Aa1tlll u4 Rater J ........ During the evening awards will be given to Rams ownerGeogla Froa~lere, gold medalist Edwla Mota, Carl h rclaer, Tem R~y ... Paal Zlmmermaa. Proceeds from the gala is the kick off effort to rajse funds for a Fitness Academy to be built on a 190-acre site on Aliso Creek in Laguna Niguel. · Ticket (SSOO each) information is available from party. planner Nalley Dooley, 770.2040. ~ Remember famdy or friends with Special Occasion. Get Wei or MemonaJ cards. Vv'ffiE FIGHTlt\G Fm 'OJRUFE American Heart ft Association V RUFFELl'S UPHOLSTERY INC. -.r.w.c....lllll mt -•• .. ctna IUl-541-llM .. Ell ROLL ... 110.W "for the right start In life" HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL . A LL DA Y KINDERGARTEN Katlly Smith (center) with patron• 81aerl and J im llarplay. Award winn er Cecilla Straab-Rabena with Roy Rabena and Helen J oluaeon. Board preeldent Boward Bland, Dr. J oeepll Pu8cla and· Coacla GeoJ1e Allen with Marilyn L1lllDey and Harriet Cal'blyn Slaea were amonc the & ...... belplne New BarrU. Dlrectlona forWomen celebrate lta nlntla blrtbd&y. Kindergarten thru 8th I FAU SEMESTER STAI TS SEPT. Ith "" Door to Door Transportation Now, 20 extra reasons to open a Time Deposit-at B of A._ Where Possible "" Reasonable Tuition "" Arithmetic, Reading, Spetllng, with Phonic Emphasized o(t Before & After School Care for Students of Working Parents (6:30am-8:30pm) A FffJATE SHXl. a= ~ FO..tilDN 1942 IN ,., .. ,II.UY 1 ... •1101m (11t)ID.-1U1 ~---...--~ --J • . GET A CASH BONUS OF $20 FOR EACH $10,000 YOU INVEST lN A BANK OF AMERICA TIME DEPOSIT. lncere t i ju t one of the reasons tn inve tat Bank of America. Because for each cmd ever\' $10,CXX) you put into~ Personal Choice Time Dcpo~H for one year or longer. you 'II also receive nn rxtrn 20 m ca h~ Over and al:xrwc regular intere t. The mon.· y, )ll inve t , the more bonu you get. There' no limit. And you can re ta urcd knowing that more Calitnrm:rn-.. -..,1\'e at B of A than an\-ocher financial 111::-imunnn Add tn th.u ou r unbeatable com·enience, .md vou 'II -.er wh\ there are all kind of reasons to open a Pc™-mal Choice Ti ml' Ocpo~ it at B of A** But d0~'t delay ACT NOW. OFFER EXPIRE OCTOBER 31st. L1h· mo::it opportunme-... th1~ ofter won't la t forever. !)(\\\;,the ame to stop bv one ot our nearly 9l.\) branchc and rccei\e your cash bonu~ It y0u want an investment that delive~ interest -::md a Int m<1rc we want thr job ... m 'Oifn~,..rcrn .. ~ .• '""'f"ll"tl'"11'"n"t!.!r"'f' m.l "'"''"' ~111ti.il rm-liin "" f.triv .. '"""""'Ill \ - Bank of America We wC1nt the job:" .. _ --. '-' ..._.__ _;~-- Pentagon has no interest in raising Soviet nuke sub WASHlNGTON (AP) -The United States has noplans to attempt tbc ~ovcry of a Russian nuclear ubnwine lyina 3'h miles beotath the Atlantic and doesn't believe the Soviet Union could raise the vcsJel • either, Pent.aaon officltls say. Moreover. btcause of the a,c of the vessel, there 1s httlc of any military sian i ficani:e tq_bc learned by ra i ina 1 t. the officials added. "It would be quite a feat (to raise it)," Vice. Adm. Powell F. Carter Jr .. the staff' director for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a briefing Monday. "I don't think you could." Carter and Lt. Geo. Richard A. Burpee, director of o~rations for the joint staff. discussed the fate of the Asked 1f the sunken submarine Yankee-class submarine after the oosed a threat to the environment, PcntAton announced it bad sunk Caner responded: "Really, 1f you'rt more than 1,000 miles east of Nonb t.alkilll abdut radjoactiviw or a Carolina before dawn Monday. nuclear explosion. none." Its crew ha~ina abandoned shi1P for Burpee said the United States had a nearby Sov1~.t merchant vcssc • th~ already conducted some samplina. in sub sank to a fairly rocky area. the vicinity of the sunken submanne about 18..:.000 fee~ below the oceans "a.nd the initial or preliminary results surface. carter said. of the air sampling and the water T~e sub was believed to . h~ve • sampling have proved negative re-carncd 16 nuclear-tapped m1ss1les It .. and was powered by.two nuclear su 5· reactors. The warheads atop one of Brian Gonnan, a spokesman for those missiles could very well have the National Marine Fisheries Scr- bccn blown into the sea and sank vice in tbe National Oceanic and when the submannc experienced a. ;\tomOSP.heric Administration, said fire and explosion whik submerged the pos51ble effects on marine life arc nn Fridav C'artrr 'laid minimal at that distance and depth. CAPTURE OF U.S. ADVISER CLAIMED .•. From Al Morning America" that the plane was on "a ClA operation with CIA operatives." The Defense Mm1stn 1denufied the man as Eugen Haferifuf. 35, but said it was not sure how the name was Farrar said in Wa ina.ton, "There is s~~~iaaon s~man Capt. Jay no one by that nam in the active U.S. military today. W arc still checking to sec ifan indi ctual with the name given served 1 the U.S. military in the past, but so far the results are negative. Texas plane crash, Contras tied? W SHI NG rON (AP)-A Texas congressman is claiminJa cargo plane that crashed aturday at Kelly Air Force Base near San ?:'nton10 killing three people was on a CIA mission carrying we.apons to Contra rebels in Nicaragua. Democratic Rep. Henry Gonzale1 first made the accusation on the House noor Monda\' and repeat11d 11 in a telephone interview following repons of a crash 10 N1ca.ragua 1n which the Sand1n1sta government said three Americans were kiJled and one captured. Gonzalez said both crashes indicate the depth and danger of Reagan administratiotl military in volvement in Cen tral America. . Gonzalez said the plane that crashed in San Antonio before dawn Saturday was owned by Southern ~1r Transpon Co., which he said hH a history ofC!A involvement. · Amadou y •eow UNESCO's director will ':I . retire in '87 PAR IS (AP) -Amadou Mahtar M'Bow. "'ho has been accused of leading UNE CO into the worst crisis of its 40-year h1stol)J. announced he will not seek re-election as director- general when his term expires in November 1987. The move, announced Monday at a closed mectine of the V.N. organiza- uon's govt'rntng Executive Board, took man~ dele~tcs by surprise. M'Bow s decision to step down at the end ofth1s. his second term, clears the way for a wtde-rang.ang search for a c~ndidatc who could bnng about "And we also have no record of missing U.S. m1htary personnel or aircraft in Central America.'' Farrar said. suppons the rebels and a bill authorizing $100 million in aid is pending in Con~ress. . . enough change to get the United band was thcsurv1vmgcrcw member .• States and Bri1ain to return to the he would ~ot say ~~ether he was agency. Also in Washrn'gton. CIA spokeswoman Kathy Pherson said. "The guy docsn 't work for us and CIA as not involved. ... There are con- gressional restrictions on assistance to the Contras and we do not break those restrictions." The Menominee (Mich.) Herald- Lcader said a local aviation source said the surv1v10g ere"' member's correct name was Eugene Ha!>Cnfu~ and that he flew for the C'IA. connected wi th the m1htary. The United States withdrew at the "I only know what I sec on the TV , end of 1984 and Britain left Dec. 31 . 100, and I reaJly don't know any plunging the I 59-nation U.N. Educa- morc " she said. t1onal. Sc1ent1fic and Cultural Or- .· . ga nization into financial crisis. Wilham Hasentus, of Oshkosh. Between them . the two nations SeveraJ rebel g.rolJps known as Contras have been flghting to over- throw the leftist N1caraguart govern- ment for 4111 years. The United States A woman who answered a tele- phone listed 10 the name of Eugene Hasen us in""Mannctte, WiS:. and '>'-hO 1dent1fied herself as has wtfe. all~. told The Associated Press her hus- Wis .. who said he was the survivor's provided nearly 30 percent of the brot~cr. said Eugene was ~ fo"."cr budJet. The Amencans and the Manne who worked foran an freigh t Bnusll maintained UNESCO had company in Florida. He said he dldn't become overly polttical, was m1s- know the name of the com pany. managed and did not curb spending. Senators begin f edera~ Judge Claiborne's impeachment trial WASHINGTON (.\P)-1 hl' "ien-~car'> aio at the first impeachment at all ume~. ate chamber turned into a courtroom tnal of 3..fcderal Judge· The House. which unanimously loda} for the impeachment tnJI of "All person~ are commanded to approved four an1clcs of impeach- 1mprisoned federal Judge Harn E lecp silence. on pain of 1mpn'>On-men1 against Claiborne l;ist July, Claiborne. a convKled ta\ l''adcr _rucn1. while the HouscofRcpre~nta-argued that the chief U .. dmnct who refu se\ to resign. 11ves IS exhibi11ng to the . cnatc of the JUd~c for Nevada "has earned a mark In a drama unseen on lhl· .\cnatc l ln1tcd States articles of impeach-of infamy" by his 1984 1ax fraud noor tn more 1han half a cen lUI), ment against Judge Harr} t.. CQnviction and should be removed Claiborne accompanied b> a ll.~. < la1bornc." from office. marshall. thc ~na1e sergeant-at-arm'> Vice Pres1den1 George Bush shool ··An tnd1vidual who has been and his lawyers. took his seal in the hand'i with Claiborne and with the convicted ofa felony, in a proce~ding '>'-ell of th e chamber. facing 'c:nators House prosecutors before he took his that was fair and su pponed by who are serving a\ Juro~ for a tnal scat to preside al the first impeach-overwhelming evidence, does not expected to las1 two da~ s. mcnt tnal since federal Judge Halsted deserve to be a federal judge." House Nme member\ of th e Hou..e Ju-L. Ritter of Miami was convicted of prosecutors said in a legal brief filed d1c1al") C omm1ttee. ser\ang a\ pro'>-1ud1c1al 1mproprieues in the pre-last week. ccutors sa1 al a long table on lhl' other 1clev1\1on era of Apnl 1936. Claiborne's lawyers plead that he 1s \ldt' beneath the rostrum for the Only 10 senarors were on the floor the innocent victim of vengeful nauonalh televised tnal when the proceedings began at mid-government agents and careless Then Ernest Gama. the \Cr$eant -morning. Senate leaders have scrvad eri:ors by tax preparers he hired to al-arms. recited this proclamauon 1n notice that a quorum -at least a 51-complete h1'i 1979 and 1980 income language 1s1mllar to that used 18:! member majority -must~ prcsenL tax returns. i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ··The reco rd clear I Y hows I ha I Judge Claiborne 1s a hard-workm$. no-nonsense. salt-of-the-canh 10d1- v1dual." said a brief filed by defense attorney Oscar B. Goodman of Las Vegas. Goodman said the House was attempting an "end run" by asking th e full Senate to reach a verdict without calling any new witnesses or hearing testimony at a full-blown noor tnal. ~ Tall children fare better on IQ tests CHICAGO (AP) -Tall children tend to be do better on IQ te~ls than short children. s.a) researchers "'ho arc at a los'> to explain the phenomenon . But the Stanford Un1 vers1ty re- searchers, wrttmg in the October iss ue of the medical Journal Pediatrics. said the> didn't think growth hormones would make kid s smaner. "Until careful clinical studies ex- amining this issue have been co m- pleted. an} efTcct ·or such growth- promoting therapies upon 1ntcllec- 1ual developmen1 or academic ach1c\emcn1 must be considered unlikel>," the anicle said. About five years ago. the re- searchers began examini.ng data from the National Heall.ti Exam ination urvcy of 14.000 children conducted during tht 1960s by the National (enter for Health Statistics. "They were a specially selected group to represent the entire U.S. population of children .'' said Dr. Darrell Wilson. an assistant clinical professor who headed the research team While not the focus of their study. family s1le. income and birth order also afTectcd youngsters' IQ scores. the data indicated. Now erving Fresh Local Lobster "IF YOU WANNA WIN. 7 Nightt A Week Complete d inner including soup or salad and choice of potato or rice pilaf YOU GOTTA PLAY WIN-80l" CllHlt Tod11'1 Num6111 on P1g1 Al. Daily Pilat & TWA FIND OUT HOW GOOD WE REALLY ARE. ' LAX/ Orange County Connections Vie Golden State Airlines WIN-GO Hotline: (714)642--i333 r, Beitut's newspapers print sister's appeal By ~ An ocla&e4 Pre11 BEIRUT, Lebanon -Bc1rul' lead1n1 newspapers today ~nnted an ope.n letter from kidnapped American Journalist Terry Anderson'· 1ster to hi~ captors ofTerina to travel to Lebanon to nc-got1atc her brothers release. Ar Arabic tranllation of the letter from Pepy Say appeared on the fron t ~so the independent An-Nahar and the leftist As·Safir dailie$. Staie 1rnd pnvately owned radio stations in Beirut's Moslem and Chnst1an sectors al~o broadcast the appeal to Anderson's hiite Moslem kidnappers. '"fell me who you a.re willina to talk to about Terry's rreedom and the freedom of the other Amenc.an hosiqes. Please name the person you would be willing to negouote with. I will ask that person to meet with you." Mrs. :;ay wrote. Senior cleric aaaulnated, 6 mllit1a Jdlled BEIRUT. Lebanon -Two masked men on a motorbike hot dead a senior Sunni Moslem cleric with s1lenccr~qu1pped pistols today near a .~est Beirut mosque. police said. Jn Christian east Be1ru1. sax bullet-nddled bodies ~f Christian militiamen were found in a dry riverbed, police reponed. They ~1d they believed the dead wercamong SS militiamen lis1ed as m1~lngaflera failed attempt last month by an ousted pro-Syrian m1lnia commander to.rtgatn control of Christian-controlled areas .. "Tbe slain clerg}.man. Sheikh Subh1 Saleh, 53. was shot three times in the head 1n the Sak1et el-Jan11r d1stnct at 8·45 a.m. and died en route to the mencan Un1vers11) Hospital. ~)()lice s.a1d. Ka•parov keeps title in drawn 23rd game LENINGRAD. U.S.S.R. -Though one gamt stall remain~ between them, world chess champion Garn Kasparov earned tbenght 1okccph1scrown when Anatoly Karp<>¥ offered a draw in the 23rd game of their title rematch . The draw in Mondafs game, which the 23-year-old Ka sparov 1mmcd1ately accepted, gave him 12 points to 11 for the challenger. A win b) Karpov m the 24th and final game on Wedncsda~ w~uld even the score at I ~-12. bu~ under match rules, the champion keeps his utle in the event ofa 11e. Mondays draw came after Karpov, who played the while pieces that ga'e him the advantage of makrng the first move, made his 32nd move-. p • Italy, Libya uchange prisoners ln nlght. ROME -Libya freed four Italians during the night in C'\C'hange for three Libyans convicted of killing or trying to k.Jll fellow Libyans in Italy. 1he Foreign Ministry announced today. An International Red Cross plane Ocw the Italians to Rome, the Foreign Ministry said. The Libyans left Italy late Monday. but 1l was not immediately clear whether they also were Oown home aboard a Red Cross plane. Two of the Jtalians)lad been held sin ce I 980 and sentenced to hfc on charges of plotting against Libya. The other two were ~erv1Ag IO-}car sentences for drug possession. Pope reminds Cathollc clergy of loyalty ANNECY. France-Pope John Paul II today ham mered h<>mc his urient call to Roman Catholic priests and nuns to remain firm i'n their religious beliefs, saying the church "counts on your loyalty" The lc:adcr of the world's 800 millton Cathohc.sam.\'Cd in th1 lakeside city in the ~I~ on thelasr-dayof his four-day visit to France. Once again he in voked thl" c'amplc of a French saint, St. Francis de ales, as a means to 1nsp1re a Frl"nch church that 1\ wtakentng steadily and losing ns clergy. More screening 111ay help poor lower cancer rates By tbe Associated Preu NEW YORK -More scm·ning for hidden cancer and bc11er care for those with early symptom!I might help poor people lower their high rates of d)'lng from the d1sea~. says an Amcncan Cancer Society report issued toda). It concludes that lower soooeconomic status. rathcrthan race. largel> explain\ wh} blachgct cancers and die from them al higher-rates than wh1fl's. said Dr Harold P. Freeman. chairman of the commm1t1ee that produced the report .. It's very 1mportan1. I think. to aim your guns correctly 1n tr)1ng to ~olve such a major problem," said Freeman. director of ~urger) at Harlem Hospital Center 1n New York. C1gare11e smokmgand a tendt'nC) for canter~ to be caugh1 tn later. less curable stagt's among the poor are among the reasons lur the h1ght'r rate~ scientists said FBI: Bombs were robbery dlverslons COEUR D'ALENI:.. Idaho -Three wh11c supremac1m 'ct off bombs in this resort community as di versions to pla'lned holdups at t"o banks and a National Guard armor). an FBI agen1 53) s One man. >Aho has offered 10 cooperate wit..b aulhontiC-$. told the FBI tha1 he and his tv.o co-con'\ptr~tor<> planned 1he robbcnes because they needed mone) for food and vehicles, and weapons to wage war agamst the government. But last week's blaslll started 30 minutes la1e, and only three oft he four bombs dctoru11ed. F-edcral end IOC'31 ls" enforcement officers responded within minutes. JournalJsts' trlbute opens at Arllngton WASHI NGTON -A new, li ving mcmonal graces Arhng1on National Ce me1cry. hononng 228 war corre'lpondents who gave their lives on 1he fight mg front so Americans could know lhc truth and brutah1y of battle The memorial to be dedicated today 1s a Darhng1on 0.ak. chosen so tha1 its vcar- round foliage will represent the conttnuing commitment of1ournahsts It is thl' onl) Darlington Oak among the 8,000 spc-c1es of plants at the cemetery ~This tree grows in memory of JOUrnaltsts who dtcd while covenng war<> or conflicts for the Amencan people." says the 10scnp11on on a book-\hapcd ~tone at 1hc foot of the tree. "One who find s a truth hgh1s a torch:· Thousands remaln evacuated after floods Thousands of Mid westerners remarned out of their-water-ravaged homec; today as offietals lobbred for federal asmcance" to help pay for damage--from more than a week of rain and Oooding that killed at leas.t 21 people. "We've looked down the barrel ofa water cannon. and we've been shot," s:ud Missouri Gov. John D. Ashcroft, who was heading to Washington today. The Ooods have forced up to 50,000 people from their homes atone time or another: 30.00 in Oklahoma. 16,000 in Ilhno1s. 2.000 an M1ssoun and 1.500 to 2.000 in Kansas. About five feet of water swamped East t Louis. Ill .. where a broken floodgate allowed the rising MtSSI s1ppi River to now into the Cit} Icahn bids $7.97 blll1on for USX NEW YORK -USX Corp .. the troubled \tccl-e'nergy giant 1s facing a $7.97 billion cash purcha~ Offer from Carl C Icahn, the takeover \pec1ahst who purchased TWA earlier th ts year. The ofTcr. disclosed Monday ts among the biggest acqu1s111on proposals in U.S. history and the largest attempted leveraged buyout , a transacti on fi nan ced largely by borrowed money that 1s repaid with the target company's earnings or sale of assets. The \31-a-share offer for USX's 257.3 milli on shares outstanding came amid widespread speculation that the Pittsburgh-based company might be subject IC>-<t rakcover attempt. FBI agents seize LaRouche offices LEESBURG. Va. <AP) -Federal and state investigators delved funher toda~· side the multimilhon-dollar emp1 fpoht1cal e111rem1st Lyndon H. La ouche as 1hcy examined financial records se1Lcd in bag. sur· pnse nuds on his hcadquaners. A 117-count federal ind1ctmcn1 char~1ng a nationwide scheme of c~1t--card fraud and other viol· at1ons, handed down Monday by a arand JI.Ir)' in Bo ton. struck at the hean ofLaRouche'11nner circle. At the same time, an a.nny of 300 state and local police. FBI, Internal Revenue. Secret Service and oth er federal qcnts seized two office build- 11\15 here where LaRouche·linked groups operate. · The qenta, armed and M>me wear- ina bvlkt·ptOOf vests, moved before 7 a.m. under sutc and federal seatth warrants tcekina financial m:onb. They remained in 1de thro"'ahout the day and n1~t s10ma throuah recordL ,_ 1 • • Iceland talks 'b8se ~mp' tor a lull u:'C:r..U:!,~J~AP> -~ datebtbebrOldlrw~mitwou&dbe 111iD11 .. falte bopel• of an arma wt IUOClllf'\al but on.I" u -=--=--.Ck&~ . .,..., .. =-~-,. ot ....:..._ n.....o-P. . ""f _. • let at the Iceland meetinp trol ... _ 1 .... _.... · · /. ~ 1 • ........, --:-".'"9! tull-ecaJe summit wt Soviet "That'• 'ble b . · Id be con PKt at """"' celllllU suaunat, arauon 1or rutwe summit coe-Sbubl ... ,...IO~._.,tom Uaion aext mon• .. _ __._ .. " '( ... , .. _ ~ • ut u cou while oledD .. no letup in eftoru to felences," be said. • ..... summa't to 11...:~ onb~··--·;.. weetenc1•1 arms-:C.~~nU:!..~1 "' 1 t ... t we would J.uat •Y.· well, let's * tet tbt SoVieai to put bumaa rillall TillN ..,... odiler U.S. deve.__ u.; W1IR ........ twep Prelident Ra;;' wt-Sov~ ~ow ou~tbneac>ha~on tn .Geneva ~t and ICOp their invotvement in c:oo-meaaa OD tbe ro.d to the summit.....,.. T....ay ~·lioa NPfll Wiv• a.din' Mikhail Ootbilcbev OQI wt new •natructlons ~ if flictt m'OUDd the world. . •la llll~llwilb tbe U.S. view &bat ~ ha.-at Reapa· tial Otief of Staff' ~::!I ,.they-can~~ ~ dalOme ~11 .._ UltODI .. It would be limply unthiabblc tbe 1rih wiD be all .oft Md ao~ IMlllNJ. llid today atlierC'y, toe; te w1 uoi; sooner for world le9den to meet ia aplendid w;eun ... Nancy Reapa llid·abe •H0ute Democrats heeded a. ~epn. intervaCwect on NBC-TV's ra~ if~ter;: ~saifud. isolatio~ even u tbe ~ . of woa1 IO to Iceland, even thou&h ....,·1pleaandlliddleywouldaoftal "Today" show said be expected . b anndtictpef ~ a U-acale Af&han11tan, Central America. A&ica Oorblcbev•1 wife, Raisa. will &e ~~utp to'"..~!~ .. _ llisv ....... arras, ...... Reepn and Oori.chev to meet race 1um.mn '!!Y l e e 0 lJ""' year, ~ ua ~U~lt Alia u~ terrible tlaere. uuuu --UVI~ we U5 tofeCebwveralhourstbiaSaturday replied, "fw~uldthuythaUt.tberewiswilTbe suff'mna 111 result of Soviet iaeer-•Leadenoftheanti·nuclearpoup entire U.S. pemment i a united and Sunday in Iceland, 'ust h a summ t I~ e. n1~ tatea. vention," Reapn told a busineu SANE and other Western peace behjnd the president did lut·year in Geneva J 11 t ey Wben .. .I do'! ' know. We could be aroup at the White House Monday. 1Ctivi1t1 uid they will fly to Iceland to "I believe we will be able to find a The administration · · prepared for U as early u ~ove!'lber The president called the Iceland try to press their case with both t · " H Ma- kiavik meetin as a ~ews t~e Re· ~r Decembe.!r b~t th~ date 1ttelf 11 not meetinas ••a base camp before tbe deleaationa, but acknow&edfed that ;:fty te:"Jr:':riaht. 00.'texu, ! (ulJ-scale sum~it. R:..r~~~~ ~ imponan'ed ne !~~·can we actually ~ummit~ a~d not the ~~on for the ~ort notice and the complicated uid. "We do aot want to make his possible -but not certain _ that 1 ae~d: uctRion. ....... treaty s11runa. •and pubhaty. ·· lC)liabCt would keep their numben task more c:tifftCUlt. We want to make a nt eaaan ,._ warned "I expect these talks to be useful small. it easier." r ••11.0•1•1r '· ----· A:=~·~~~ that leelwtic oftlciall ",., .. 'ZV' comproaule ........ .... ..... allow 10 U.S. HwWl c:am::r.., iJno the~ ............. _ ... .. ....,,ower ...ma. "Jerry ... &::•=~~ ...... N...., • IOviel Jewry,llid ... ..,, .. m•Ulb• rd him that it liPwed to I propGlll wbeftby tbe poup'a liJ.e WU acaled down and Mulct tBOUnt no pue.lic demollauationa. lnlfad. they would bold a news conference about the pli&bt of Soviet J~ Several proteai PoUP1 from Europe aDa lbe United States are teekina to enter rcetand for the summit. .. • Everyboay ... every person. every family. every group. ".is different. and we all have different health coverage needs. That's why Blue Shield. California's health coverage leader. offers a variety of choices. Blue Shield of California has contracts with more doctors and hospitals than any plan in the country. A choice of deductibles from $250 to If you have to pay for your own coverage, you know how low these month!Y rates* are for the Blue Shield Preferred Plan in You're special. You want to decide who your doctor is ·going to be: you want to decide how much you're going to pay for coverage. and how much you'll pay when you need care. Blue Shield offers these choices. $2 ,000. a choice of plans for individuals of all ages. families and groups of all sizes. The Blue Shield choices mean you can select a plan tailorea to meet your needs. Discover for yourself how Blue Shield is right for you . Blue Shield. The Choice Is Yours. ... -Orange County. If you're buying for a company, call your agent or return the coupon below to see how much a ·PreferteCJ-Plan can save you. $250 Deductible •Thes. monthly dues are billed quarterly. 1111.GO S218.30 AU.45 S126.0S SHO.• •• 15 ·-· S295.75 ..... . S1aul S220.00 St&ll S175.30 Sltt.90 .. . S154.10 Call your broker or agent or call Blue Shield at I 1-800-624-SlSO ,_ ... /. A few short words about --height, smarts It's time to rise up and dispute the latest so-called bit of wisdom to emanate from the hallowed balls of Palo Alto. We shall not tiptoe around this issue. Those on high, the so-called researchers at Stanford University would have us believe the tall tale that they have found a link between height and intellisence. Stanford University researchers, writing in the October issue of the medical journal Pediatrics, concluded .. a significant association" between height and scores on the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children and the Wide Range Achievement Test. For those of you who get tripped up on long words, let's translate. In other words, the research nerds think tall kids are smarter than short ones. These $UYS in the white smocks are probably aU 6-feet-l and skinny. ~ 'It waan •t the arch-conservaUves now ba hlng Bird with the death penalty Issue who made the state's htgh court poUttcal . · · It was Bl~ an< the polltlctans who surrounded her before her 1977 appointment. 'f'H£RE De's J,; ISL. , Ref#tERllil:: .• Tlaomu EIJaa. qacllc8t1 I coJtUDnt.t WALTER Bu11ouc1s Great ladies on the Coast Less than a month now until Orange Coast voter go to the polls and c.ast th eir votes for governor of the )\ate of California, fo r members of the Orange County Board of Super- visors·and for four city councils. Earl ier this year I referred to t~1s as the silly season. I have seen nothing to make me change my mind That has vm httlc to do with the candidates that are running except in Newpon Beach and Costa Mesa. But let's be big about this. We don't want anyone thinking this is a self-serving editorial comment. We wouldn't want anyone to conclude the editor was short on stuff like self-esteem. This particular piece of intellectual study deserves equally thoughtful comment. Bunk. Baloney. Hooey. . We've always suspected a link between height and intellisence (have you ever heard a basketball player interviewed?) but the Stanford folks got the results backward. U.N.bureaucracyspen~s and spends and spends Jn Costa Mesa there's not a great deal that can be done. By far lhe best candidate. who finally decided not to run. was Norma Henzog. he finally got to the point where sbe felt she could n't afford to neglect her own business any further. • In Newp<>n Beach, where &hey have seven members of the City Council instead of five as they do m Costa Mesa. by far. in this reporter's opinion. the best of all of the candidates that are running is a lady. A lady. You bet.Very much a lady. And she bas done an outstanding job as a member of the Newport Beach City Council. Of course. I am speak- ing of Evelyn Han. Lest you think we are being shortsighted on the topic, we offer as evidence several prominent people or history who were short on stature yet towered above their contempo,raries. Albert Einstein was a runt. Mozart couldn't.play hoops. Napoleon probably needed a step stool to mount his horse. Bob Dylan's feet don't touch the floor when he sits up straight. Now. can you think of a tall pe.rson who embodies intelligence? Quick. Just one. OK. so everybody knows Abraham Lincoln. Name another. Can't think of one. can you? Give up? See. . The researchers at Stanford would probably conclude you were short as a child. Tom Tait Tbe (5•foot·6) Editor Opinion\ c'prcssc.'d m th1\ \pan· art' tho~ of the Dail) Pilot Other' 1c~ exprcs\Cd on this i>a$.e arc those of1hc1r authors and an1sts. Reader comment 1s tn' 1ted The Dail) Pilot. P 0 . BoA I 5o0. Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone 642·6086 Mob11e home overlay zone needed ln Newport-Beach To the Editor Park residents asked ourCtt y Council \everal times for an overla y and they recommended working out our prob- lems with the owners of our park. We did negotiate for many months and so far. have assurance ofa fi ve-year lease 1fwc accept and agree to the owner's cond1uons Namely. g1 v1ng up our nghts. plus another unreasonable rent increase which we can't afford. WASH INGTON -In a bizarre twist of policy that has outra~ed Ronald Reagan's most conservative fans. the White House is fighti ng to persuade Congress to Jive more money to the United Nations than it wahts to. The Reagan administration has Ion& been at least a rhetor'ieal re- pos1tor) of cnticism aimed at the United Nations for its frequent anti· Amcncanism and its extra vagant spending. So 1t 1s pan1cularl y discom- fiting 10 hard-hne Reagan supponer.. that the United States has actually been defending the U.N. wastrels against drastic budget cuts proposed b} &he Soviet Union. The main reason U.S. conservati ves detest the United Nations 1s they believe that it is a Kremlin puppet. All the panisan budgetary b1cker- 1ng has tended to obscure the in- contestable fact that the United Na11ons is as irresponsible in its spending as an some of its poli11cal policies. The U.N. bureaucracy is dominated by rep~sentativcs of small nations that contribute only a tiny share of the U.N. budget; the bigeest chunk is provided by the United States. so the U.N. bureauc- raq has little 1ncent1ve to tnm ns costs. Our associate Lucette Lagnado has interviewed current and former of- ficials of the U.S. m1ss1on at the United Nations. and compiled a long list of the .organization's most outrageous extravagances. Here arc a few of them: • The U.N. Secretariat began life in 1946 with 1,546 employees: today. th e number 1s close to 13.000. parceled out among a dizzying array of depanments. offices and divisions. The number of member nattons ha!!. grown an 40 years. of course. But no part of the U.N. bureaucracy ever seems to die. even if its reason for !i ving has. long since vanished. There... 1s an entire department lo oversee "decolonization," for example. More than half the world was under colonial rule in t 946. bur there inr bare handful of such dependencies in the world today. Yet the department lingers on. •The United Nations is e.x- traordfoarily top-heavy, boasting 28 undersecretaries-general and 29 assis- tant secretaries-general. All of these su~r-diplomats are handsomely paid. even by the U.N.'s heady standards, and their pensions make retirement truly the Golden Years. An understtretary...general. for exam- ple. gets a lump sum of $350.000 when he totters away from the U.N. trough after 30 years. • A huge, overlapping structu re of informal or ad hoc U.N. bodies has ~rown up over the years. like some incredible bureaucratic monster. At last count, there were more than I SO com mittees, commissions, subeom· mittees. subcommissions and "work- ing groups" drawing U.N. salaries and expenses, with new "subsidiary organs'' springing up almost daily. • Like seasoned bureaucrats any- where. the U.N.'s time-servers are adept at creating mountains of ~per­ work to justify their jobs. But the United Nations has a builHn cost escalator that other bureaucracies are spared: Documents deemed wonhy of printing and distribution to the general membership must be trans- lated into the six official U.N. lan_guages. One knowledgeable source estimated that. by the time it has been translated and printed.:. a single page of U.N. wisdom costu558. . • Bloated as it is. <the U.N. bu- reaucracv still needs outside help to accomplish its job. The result 'is that SS m1lllon a year is paid in consulting fees. -' • In the gjgantic U.N. burcauc- JACll AIDEISOI and JOSEPH SPEAR racr. duplication IS the rule, COOrdl· nation the exception. Informational and public affairs operations are conducted by at least three depart- ments and one office. with predict- able overlapping. No attempt has been made to consolidate th ese compe11ng m1n1-empires. CARTE R-REAGAN CONNEC- TIONS: When ell-President J1mm } Carter needed an architect for his presidential library, he Oew to Hawaii to consult hotel developer Chris Hemmeter -a frieod of Ronald Reagan's. Carter named Hemmeter and his wife to the library board. and hired a Hemmeter associate. Herb Lawton, to design the library. On the other hand, Warren M. Christopher 1s on the Reagan librllry board and 1s board chairman of Stanford Univer- sity, where the Reagan presidcnttal library will go. Christopher wa s a deputy secretary of state under Caner. WATCH ON WASTE: Joseph S. Ochounek. who grew up in Blandburg, Pa., wrote in to call the blufTofRep. Bud Shuster. R-Pa .. who said a four-lane. federally funded highway in his district would im- prove safety in a mountainous area. Nonsense. says Ochounck. the stretch in question is about as mountainous as the gently rolling land between Washington and Baltimore. J•cll ADdersoa aad Josepb S~ar are syadlc•ted co/amalsts Mrs. Han 1s a glutton for punish- ment. After com pf ct mg two tenns on the Newpon Beach City Council she has acceded to the picas of some of the voters who, like me, have urged her to be a candidate once again. r am both ' happ} and proud to recommend that she be reelected. Unfortunately ~omc members of the Newpon Beach City Council attempted to depnve the Assistance League of some badly needed park· ing. This was on land owned by the Assistance League which has done so much good, not only for Newport Beach but for the entire south coast area. E' el)'n Han qu1etl). but forc~fuly. blocked this nd1culous cffon. She did the good thinlcing and the quiet but forceful insistence that the city had a duty to consider ttle best interests oi all j1s ci tizens. not)ust one, two. three or four groups wsth a highl y selfish campaign I wish I could tell you the names of the indi viduals who closed ranks behind her and forced the City Council to a horse-sense decision. No matter about that. In future Search- lights I hope to gi ve some of these 1nd1\'1duals their due rccogn1t1on. The big argument apparently 1s going to be about admitting ad- d111onal residents to the Caty of Newport Beach. That seems to be a big issue in other cities of the Orange Coast -ex- pansioni st versu, slow growth sup- por;iers. I was a retired fi reman on JOb- rclatcd d1sabil1t) who mmcd to "lcwpon Beach into what I thought .... ould be m) ··Shangn-la." my mobile home on the Ba). Now my world 1\ beginning to crumble I he Lido Mobile Home Park has been 1n cx1stenu~ for man} year~ and has become a haven for many ~cntor C n11cns .\t the 11mc. many re\1dents moved into the park. rent was less as cena1nl) was the cost ofa home. The city qf Newport Beach lacks l~w. cost hourng for 1ts seniors. "We can't 1ust p1cl{ up and move becau'iC I. Parks won't accept any mnb1lc home older than 3 years. 2 It coc-.t<. over S7.000 to move a mobile home We can't sell the way things are: we fear redevelopment of this park. but most imponant of all. Mayor Maurer. Councilmen Cox. Plummer. Agee. Heather. Strauss and Han. PLEASE HEAR US!! We are the OLDER RESIDENTS. the senior cit11ens that need your support. Give us the "Zone Ovcrla}" and pre<,erve one of the very few areas left that did provide Politics, not death penalty, main issue of Bird campaign In (o~ta Me~ a few years ago we had an exam ple of gross stupidity, 1f not genuine dishonesty. After having an outstanding planning com- missioner for years. I. as senior trustee of Jefferson Trust, ran into a situation which was all but un- believable. The Planning Comm1s~1on voted to allow an ind1v1dual who had no ownership of a piece of commercial propen) act as a principal 1n a petition to allow a change o( Lon1ng. 3. Moreover. home parks arc not a-.a1lable anvwhcrc near here and. 4. Who would pa) our inve'itmcnt (nest egg) under these certain con- ditions and high rents An overlay protects the mobile home o-...ner. 1n that It provides compensation and or replacement. In fact. several mobile home park'l have been granted zone ovcrlay'i. The Lido By Tbe Auocl•ted Prtu .., Today 1s Tuesday. Oct 7 th e 280th day of 1986. There arc 85 day<. left 1n 1he yeat. Today' Highlight 10 History One year ago. on Oct 7. 1985 - Palest1n1an gunmen h11ackcd the Italian en.use ship Achille Lauro with mo~ than 400 people aboard 1n 1he Mediterranean and demanded the release of SO Palestinians held by Israel. An Amencan pas~nger, Leon K.Jinghoffer, w8' killed. On th1~ date· ORANGE COAST llilyPilai Pu~ """'f dey C' ,.,. .,.J• •' :no w a .. , st IJ°''" M .. .r.11 A0•1•tt' C<i,,.,_,~,., I' 10 A • 1 a<> Gen.la Iii ,, CA !I, l),t moderate income housing. Until All over America. Cali fornians arc \pace rent increased 300 percent. a ·5· being vilified as ogres hell-bent on year lease would be a 54 percen t destr0}1ng the independence of their increase, plus an unreasonable reloca-state's couns and turning its Jlldtcfal 11on dollar amount'. system over to opponunistic right - DON'HUNTER wing poht1c1ans. Retired Fm: Fighter and Tired The reason for this new portrayal of Associate Director of the a state here1ofore regarded as one of Golden Slate Mob1lehomc Owners _J\menca's most progressive. or at League least one that's made up of a fairly representatl ve cross-sect io n of Amenca') Rose Bird. Every poll shows that voters here are unflagging in their determination to nd them· selves of the state's chief j ustice. In 1954, Manan Anderson became the first black singer hired by the Metropolitan Opera Company in New York. In 1849, author Edgar Allan Poe died in Baltimore, Md .• at 1he age of 40. Today's B1nhdays: Actress June Allyson 1s 69. Singer Al Manino ts 59. Thought for Today: "There's many a mistake made on purpose." - Thomas HalJbunon. Canad1anjunst- humorist ( 1796-1865 ). °°"' ... , Ctty fOltor r.,,.c..,_ Newt [d11or Cr ........ Sl>Ofl• Ecltlor Tom Taft Ect11or 9'oMrtCenlrel Production Ottector ......... , Advert1""9 Owtc1or ,.,.,_~.·--­ClfCUlahon Olttcror That's been seen elsewhere as one of the worst things ever to happen to an independent 1ud1ciary . Bird is repeatedly ponraycd as an 1deahst1c. competent Judge attacked solely for herunwilhngncss to sustain any of the scores of death sentences on which she has ruled. But as wuh many popular media ponrayals, th1 1s not completely accurate. for om: thrng. the ~me voters who appear certain to oust Bird arc not nearly so dead-set to cast ballots against the three other liberal justices also on this fall's ballot. Cruz Re- ynoso. Joseph Grodin and Stanley Mosk. And th ey have voted with Bird in all but a very few of the death penally cases fo r which she's pilloned. That 1nd1cates there's much more to the anti·Btrd fervor than mettly a lust to eitecutc convicted murderers. The root issue, in feet . is one that national commentators have focuse<l upon -the poltticwna o(the coun. But at wasn't the arch-con- servatives now bashmJ Btrd wi th the death penalty l~ssue who made the state's high court poht1cal. Rather. the shoe is on the other foot. It was Bird and the politicians who surrounded her before her 1977 appointment who did that. Some decisions of the Sitd coun have been so blatantly political, so predictably supportive of the liberal Democratic poht1cal agenda, that the Democratic speaker of the state Assembly, Willie Brown, could say, "We don't need to worry. Rosie and the Supremes will take ca~ of us." The speaker hasn't used that phrase for almost two years. but the memones of conservatives arc long. They remember the falJ of t 983, when Bird and her colleagues used convoluted legabstic logic to knock a Republican-sponsored rcappon1on- ment imtiative off the state's ballot. More than half a million voters mad signed petitions calling a special e1CC11on that December for the putati ve proposition, but the justices wouldn't allow a vote. They didn't have to rule on that case 1u all. Since 1948, theircourt had refused to rule on the constitution•li· ty of other initiatives truat were at least as problematic until the voters h•d a chance to say yes or no to them. Such restraint once pvc the court a certain distance from politics. And if they'd waited in the 1983 case. frustratfoa Speaker Brown1 a.he JUS- uces m1&ht never ruave neeoeo to act. After all. the voters turned down a similar GOP proposition in 1982. But such restraint in the face of political issues 11n't 1n the ~ttt of the apl)01ntees or former Gov. JcfT)' Brown. THOIAS Euas Our young lady attorney went lO the Cny Council and asked that the decision be overruled. The City Council refused. The result was that this sman lady petitioned the court for a Wnt of Mandate which. 1n effect. ordered the (1ty Council to obey the When he was president of the state law Public Utilities Commission under ~far as I know they still continue ex:-<J~~· Brown, John Bryson on~~o obey 1t. But that's a ndiculous said, I serve at the pleasure of HR iength to have to go. governor.'' That statement was true only in Bryson's mind and perhaps The Costa Mesa City Council had his governor's. For PUC members one lady with some horse sense to serve five-year tenns deliberately whom they refused to listen. That was designed to overlap governors and Norma Hcnzog -later mayor but a make them independent thinkers. person who fell the city should obey The same is supposed to be true for the law without a court order. judges. But Jerry Brown's top judicial appointee , like former PUC boss Luckil y, in Newport Beach they Brvson, ha ve demonstrated a slavish have had for ei&ht years a lady niln-d·set. They've remained devoted member of the Council with not only to the political aacnda oft he governor the abilitr«> think but the courage to who appointed them long after his make he r decisions known. departure. Unlike Norma he is willina to try It's that record which has made to serve her fellow citizens one more Bird's court ~litical, more than time. Don't misunderstand me. anytbina her cntics have done. Nonna Hcrtzoa is still a person I No doubt her clear-cut poht1cal •dmirc trt'mcndously. She 1ust can't bent h&s played into the hands of afford to run again. She hu a business conservatives like state Sens. H.L she can't afford to nq)cct anymore. Richardson and Ed Davis and CAm- pei1n manqer 8111 Robena. In Newpon Beach we arc morc But C•li fornja voters resisted the fi>rtunate. Evelyn Han apparently efTons oftbose sa.me conJervativcs to has no 1ucb problem and 1he is oust Bird 1n I 978 and if they 10 alona detmnined to help protect our cuy this time, it j ust may metn tut many •inst the few who wifh to eJ1pfoit it. &A: tired of havina a politic.al court Fortunately therc &1' sotnc otbcn and beheve the best way to end the w111ina to follow bcr lead. potitaca thert a1.by IC'""I nd or Bird. __ ..__ ~-:--t.,,_ • ,_ _.._~, n.... £llal Is • ...... ltf.eb• • ,,,__ ..,..,,....,,.. .. IN n ... • ....,, ~·-..... ,...... h•-,.,,...,.. • l"EVEll Dows.~y Sli Vls.gs tells proijJotlos.s Costa Mesa-based DoW11e)' Savla1 .. u4 Lou has appointed JolaD Dlllavoa as vice president and dij'ector of management tnformat1on systems and named Harry Ffler as director of marketjng and advertising. Dillavou, a certified public accountant, formerly was man-aer in Price Waterhouse's ma~ment consulting services 1n Alaska, New York and Northern Cabfomia. f or 14 years prior to joining Downey, Feuer was president of the Marketing Commmee which specialized in direct mail and new product marketing for consumer products. • • • A11oc:Jated lmporter1, the new division of Hiram Walker, Inc. will have Mlcluael Ferris of Costa Mesa as distnct sales representative in Southern California, responsible for the sales of Swan Lager in the state. • • • / Lo&br Ballesbacla, with over 34 years in the hospitality industry, joins the Reliatry Hotel as director of catennJ. European- trained, Bullcsbach held positions at the Waldorf Hotel in New York and the Registry and Fairmont hotels in Dallas. He spent eight years with the Bonaventure Hotel in Los AnJ.eles and comes to Orange County from Opryland Hotel in Nashville, Tenn. His accomplish- ments include President Nixon's inaugural ball in January 1972. • • • BULLESBACH PHILLIPS F ITZPATRICK Bringing more than 20 years experience to her chentele, Betb PlalWps, LSJ.D celebrates the opening of her offices at 33971 Selva . Road, Laguna Niguel. She offers a broad range of services including: residential design for new homes under construction and remodels. commercial including office and retail space planning and design, executive offices anti medical suites . . ·-. DamH & Moore, environmental and engineenng consultants in California since 1938, has opened an Orange County office to be headed by George Fltlpatrlc~ of Irvine, a haLardous waste management specialist. The branch at I 541 Parkway Loop, Tus11n. in the Koll Business Ce nter, will provide assistance to clients on undervound storage tanks. landfills, remedial invcstiRllons and stte screening related to property transfer. Fi tzpatrick formerly served as director of environmental markerinfl. at Fluor Technology, Im • • f Charles R. O'BrleD has been named director of marke11ng and sales for Custom Software, IDe. (CS I). the 8-year-old Irvine-based software enginecring/consullmg firm spec1ahzing in IBM. DEC. PRIME. WANG and HP mini and micro computer S}Stems. Previously O'Brien was director of corporate marketing for GNP Development in Pasadena. • • • Mlcbael H. Vo11, fou nd er and former managtng partner of the law firm ofVoss & Cook. has been appointed executive vice president of national finance at Blrtcber, one of the I 0 largest developers of commercial properties 1n the United States. The announcement was made by Donald B. Talcott. president of the Laguna Niguel-based development. investment and property management firm . Voss. who resides in San Juan Capistrano. will be responsible for developing financial resources for projects through out the country. . . . -..--------J MACE DllDD Properties Corp. has announced the appointment of Tbomas N. Mace of Dana Point as assistant development mana~cr for Southern CaJifomia. He will oversee all planning and marke11ng for current proje<:ts in the region and prospect and acq uire future industrial and office building developments by Dunn. • • • Llnda J. Gallcb of Huntington Beach has been promoted to assistant vice president 1n the operations administration department ofUnJoD Bult'• Orange County rcgjonal office in Oran,e. A member of the National Association of Bank Women. Gahch Joined Union Bank m 1971 and most recently served as an administrative ofllcer at the Long Beach rcgjonaJ office. Union Bank an S8.6 b1ll1on bank headquanercd in Los Angeles. 1s the fifth largest bank in Cahfom1a. MONEY SENSE Marketers Dack America's Cup· Australians· v!ctory_ raised competition· s status for sponsors By 8KJP WOLLENBERG " ,,, ..... .,..., NEW YORK (AP) -For more than a century, American sailors called on patrons at the New York Yacht Club for money to defend the America's Cup. The appeal was low- key, and they usually got ·what they needed to win. · But Ausmllia's surprise victory three rears ago rekindled interest in the races. and enhanced the competi- tion's attractiveness for some mar- keters. A brewer, an airline, two com- munications companies, rwo wine- makus and three car companies arc among the companies helping pay the estimated $64 million cost of putt in& six American teams in the water to compete for a chance at reclajming the sailing trophy. - A four-month competition beg.an Sunday near Perth, Australia, , matching six American and se~en foreign teams. The lone survivor will face a defending Australian team for the America's Cup starting Jan. 31 , 1987. The marketers arc hoping their invest ments will pay off by raising their profile, helping them win some new business. Corporate America's fasci nation with sporting events is nothing new. Companies have long viewed sports as an effective way ofreachin$ peoJ)le at thc1rle1sure. Some companies have gone beyond k1mply buying com- mercial time and are sponsoring events themselves. John Hancock Mutual Li fe In- surance Co. rectn1ly 1eached an agreement that will attach us name to the Sun Bow l college football game on each of the ·next three Chn stmas Days. Companies like Hancock, Pillsbu ry Co. and Manufacturers Hanover Corp. have sponsored marathons in their home towns. .. ,.,~ Stan and Strlpee ayncllcate from San Dle&o led Italian A&&ura ln lmpreu!ve 3 .19-aecond win ln Monday'• trial•. Sailina, ho.tievcr,. has never b.- biab on corporate Amenca'• baa ol sl>(>Mto sponsor. At least not .-ntil an American team lost ~ America•• Cup in 1983. That loss was blamed on a ltc'bao- l<>11cal breakthroll&h by the Auau» Wis, a1td 1t forced ffic American• IO inv~t hcavLly in t.ecbnolOI)'. In additton, the shl.f\ of the racr IO , A~st.ralia from its former home off ii Rhode Island meant added JIUIPOr-I tation and housingcostus well Ron Young, general m&Olltf' foc the Golden Gate Challenge, one of tbe • ,;,.. American raci ng syndicates, esti- mated that Americans spent about $9 million in preparina to defend their title in 1983 -or only about 12 percent of the combined budaetJ for this year's chaUengc by 511 U.S. teams. That's a lot. even for the yacht club set, so those planning to cballeoae for the cup turned to outside sources. Thctr first task was to convince potential sponsors that the public would be interested in the competi- tion. They invoked patriotism, sayin& the races would stir nationalist passions as the Olympic Games did in 1984. Theyachtclubsgavethcirboats names such as America fl, Stars and ' Stnpes, USA and Heart of America. .. The America's Cup is more than 1ust a yacht race," argued the Sail Amenca Foundation, the San D1ego- based aroup that is mounting one of .si~Amcrican bids for the Cup with its Stars and Stripes entry. "II 1s an intemationaJ battJefield -where a na- tion's reputation is put on the line." One of Sail America's major spon- sors, Ford Motor Co .• is memonal- 1zin$ the boat by producing a limited ed1tJon Stars and Stnpes model Lincoln, Town Car Not to be outdone. General Motors Corp_'s Cadillac divrnon 11 building a hm11ed ed1t1on Amenca II modcJ Cadillac Eldorado, named after the boat and racing syndicate from New York. And the Buick auto dealers of Northern California have con- tnbuted to the Golden Gate syndica te (Pleue aee CUP/82) Corporate group to hear Comarco 's chief Dr. C.,lcnn D. Buell Jr. will descn be the tactics he used to build Comarco Inc. of A(lahe1m into an ·$80-million- a-ycar government conLractor at a seminar sponsored by the Orange County chapter oflhe A11oclallon for Corporate Growtb on Thursday. The session. will start at .5 p.m. at the Irvine Marriott. 18000 Von Karman Ave: Comarco 1s the No. I defense company amQng all businesses with less than a sroo million revenue base. according to a survey by Forbes magazine. The 1.300-employee com! pany re'9Cntl y completed three ac- qu1s1t1ons thal added $20 million 1n new revenues. Comarco su pplies weapon systems. le>gJsllcs assistance. (Pleue eee LIBRARY /83) Americans adjust to new tax law_ Clearly many people are not con vi need that the c hange is a good deal for them_ By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID and H. JO EF HEBERT \ ou v.on't find builder John K1ti- cannon of North Little Rock. Ark .. cheenng for the new tax bill that's about to become law. He says 1t will force him to clo'>C down his 2.5-year- old busmc-;-; and lay off his 300 employees. Farml'r Johnn} Bowen of Table Rock. Neb . 'ia)'i he's tried to do his homeworl.. on the new tax law but e'en h1,. rnngrc<>sman can't tell him what to C\J)CCt Tom (inx·ning of Wilton. Mame, "'ho pa11J S540 1n feqera l income ta'<e \ on h1c, 198.5 earnings. will be exempt from the federal income tax. thankc; 10 the nc"' law. "It'll pu t me over the hump and let me pay my h1 Its," he 'ia} s. Lav.) er Gal) Altman of Bethesda. Md . about to be married. bemoans the nev. ta'< code's restoration of the marriage penalt), which will cost him hundmJs of dollars. But the wedding 1s mll on E'en before President Reagan puts pen 10 paper and signs into law the re.,,olut1ona ry 0 ' erhaul of the coun- t I')·.-, ltl'< law.-.. 1t'i fallout 1s being felt across Amenca. Some people hope 11 will be a boon with lower rates. others fear 11 bodes onl} trouble. could upset carefully crafted financial plans and e' entuall) cost them more A West \'1rgin1a retiree. C Leslie Gol liday. took pains to carefully plan his retirement. Now he feels betrayed by the income tax changes Random interviews found a substan11al proportion of Amencans who \ 1e..., the change w11h m1sg1v1ngs or dov. nnght hos11l1t> Regina Cowles. struggling to make a ne"' business go in Denver. believes the tax wmers are making 11 more difficult for her he "'on't get an argument from Bill sher, who has been running a small trucking company in Kentucky for 2.5 >ears. He says the tax law will make 11 tough for his company to continue to grow But business 1s going to boom for accountants and tax specialists like outh Carolinian Ri chard Cox, who sa) s the rush for ta>. ad" ice 1s gou\i to be a nightmare -but probably tine he'll ...,elcome. "Poli11c1ans may have removed some loopholes but they substituted pothole<> and boobv traps." said Connecticut tax consult4nt Conrad Tei tell. "I am giving 47 lectures by the first of the year on th e new tax law." he said. By the calcalauons of Congress· Joint Committee on Ta'<at1on. the new law will result in an income tax cut for the filers of 76 m1H1on tax returns but an increase for 20 m ii hon . Many Wiii no longer be able to me advantage of hundreds of tax loopholes and deducat1ons. Here 1s how some average Amen- cans think the tax law wtll affect them. Eight years ago. C. Leslte Golhda> decided to sell the radi o sta11on 1n Martinsburg. W.Va . v.h1ch he founded in 1946. But he arranged to spread the profit over I 5 years and he continues to get monthly check!. from the new owners There comes the rub. Because of changes lfl t~e tax lav. capital gain~ no longer \a.Ill get special ta'< treat · ment "and Golhda). 11. will lu'ie considerable money bccau<1e of high- er taxes on the remaining monthl} payments. "At half\1me the Co ngrc'!> 1!. going to change the rules on me:· \8)S Golhda}. the former ma~or ot Martinsburg and former head of the: city's Chambcr of Commertl' With the loss of other dedul11ons and the change m the capital gains treatment. C1olhday. v.ho had thought he had caretull) planned h1\ retirement income. figur<''> he .... ,11 pa\ 6 or 7 perl'ent more taxes under the ne..., law He say~ he has nothing ngamst trying to ease the ta'< burden for low- mcome tu payer~. but thar significant tax changes sh ould bc phased in over a number of years so that carefully laid plans arc nol '>hattercd 'Tm not ti) ing to make out that I'm a poor man I'm 10 reasonably good hape." Goll1da) says. "But I worked (form ~ mone)') for a hell ofa Ion$ time and this capital gain business is 1950 and 1960 dollars. With 1nOat1on . the dollars I put awa} don't begin to buy what they bought then " For Regina Cowles this had been the year"' hen her tledgling recruiti ng and placement sen ice 1n Denver has begun to tum the comer She sa \"' she often tak es clients to lunch. but soon those lunches will no longer be f\.111} deducttblc She also ~ .. ~she will ha "e to use credit cards les~ both 1n bu<>1ness and for personal purchase'> because she no longer will be able to wnte ofTth c interel>t. Those items might not mean much to some, but she sa~s to a new, o;trugghng business every small tax ad \ antage "'a' a help Other Oedglmg entrepeneuro; ha"e had those advan- tage~ \he "1'"> "I feel a lmlt' g)ppcd b\ that ·· · "1~ Cov.lc<, and ht.'r husband will fatc otht.'r ram1ficat1ons of the tax cha1te'> a!> v.cll (Pleaee eee COMl'NO/IM) Tickertape la~guage relatively easy to decipher Every mommg, many thousands of investors rcnexively tum to the financial pages -as much a part of their morning ritual as a cup of coffee . A glance at the tables, numbers and abbreviations tells how the stock market -and their own investments -fared the day before. MARY RUDIE How do they interpret what the) find? For our purposes. we'll start wtth •••••••••••• the b1a picture -how the market fared as a whole -and then move to determining the dJ v-to-day performances of individual stocks. The most widely cited barometer of market health 1s the Do\\ Jone'> Industrial Average. sometimes abbreviated as DJIA. The average covers 30 m~or U .. 1ndustnal stocks that account for a significant portion of the market value of all New York Stock Exchanac issues. ,. People around the world generally consider a ns1na Oow lndustnal AvcraJC to mean a aood stock market day and a falLing averaae 10 mean the opposite. Cnt1cs of the l)JIA argue that 11 Jive an incomplete picture of the market, since it only measure• 30 "blue chip" indu tnal compan1e . Other stock market md1c6 measure a broader market perfonnancc. The tandard & Poor's ~00 ( P SOC)) 1~ a WJdel y followed 1ndc11. of SOO stocks reprexnunia I mlior tndustncs in approximately the umc propon1on to their reprnentauon on 1\]lc New York Stock Exchanac. Other indices include the tandard Poor' 100 lndc~ { P 100), the New Yori.. Stoc~ h chan1e lndc' {NY E), the Amencan tock E chanae' Market Value tndc' ( \MVn and 1t~ Ma1or Market Index (MMI ). The "points" of the Dow index represent the total dollar "alue of the stocks in the group. di vided by 30 and adjusted b) a comple'< S)Stem that cmers stock splits and stock di vidends. among other factor.-. The closing figure and point changes are neither dollar amount'i nor percentage changes, but rather the products of an arithmeucal calcula11on Hcn!'s how tht' financial hstmgs in a ne'-"spapcr dc\4.nbc a t\.ptcal day's trading in a hypothetical company. Sleeping Giant lndustncs (SG I). The table headings may van 1n c;hghtly different publications .52 weeks When e'<pert refer to t he "Dow Average." they usuall) mean the Dow H~ Low Stoel.. Div 'l Id% PE I oo, I hgh l o..., I~ .. , ( hgc Jones lndustnal Average. But Dow Jone also calculate~ a 20-tock 13 V• 8 GI 40 31 6 115.5 I''• 11'~ 11''\ 1·1 TrnMportat1on Average, a t 5-stock Ut1hty A 'erage and a 6~-,tock Composite I\ "crage as well a!> thr~ bond average Reading from lef\ to nght, the table shll ""'> that 0 ' er a I ~-month penod Bc!11des the averages. financial page cntnes that ment 'our ~ttenuon Sleeping Giant sold as hiAh as 13'.\ and as low as 1 he com pan} currcnll) pay s include the figure for the total market volume and the numbcr of advance<; an annual dividend of 40 cnet on each hare of its stock The current yield 1 versus the declines. You also m1aht want to cht"ck the hs11ngs for the prtv1ous 3. I percent -computed by dividing the annual d1 v1dend b~ the last pnce of I ded · d r k II d h h I the day The PE 1s the pncc-to-canunas rat1om which 1 the pnce of one $hare da) 's most active Y tra issues an ior stoc s se ing at l't('Or ig , or ow, of Sleeping Giant stock d1v1ded by the earning.\ per hart for a I 2·month for the year penod. The next ftaure -115.500 hows how man\ \h. re' were traded dunna With the averages firmly etched m your mind, n's 11me to tum to the "ltoclc the day h\ting to sec how particular issue fartd. Before )OU start. 'iOme helpful hints· Dunn a the courw of the day's trading. the stock'\ pncc rang ;d trom •hi h 11 h ~ 11 .ofl3~.orSl l625a h.rt-.toalowofl 2'·•.orSl 2 75 lhe'ltockd~at 12 •hrst, 'llDt'C financial paaes do not have the space to ·.PC ,out l c u or S 12.875 -half a point. or 50 ccnt"I. lx'low the d o .. 1n1 pncc (\ 13 375) of 1bt name'! of the h led companies, newspapers abbreviate them You 11 be nblc to preV1ous day -· de<:1pher mo t of the abbttvtallons you11Clf. • local brokerage firm can help Perhaps 1hc b(si way to get a firm handle on financial pn,ge shonhand 1 to ~ou with the others p1ckacoupteohtockund followtbcm fora while \l\cr ou pend a couple of •\ccond. the pnccs and advances or declines of S\OCks art-usuall\ weeks nock-watchmt. uckenape lanauaac will become second nature. measured tn 1 ofa point ( 1211, C'Cn\~). or e'ampte. a ,tock ·up '~·· ha~ men Mary J . R141le 1 vltt prttWol .., maaaaer, co1111mtr taferaaU. b n• 1 cent per share 1trvlcn, al Mtrrlll Lyad1, Pitttt, Ftutr a mil~, lac. ,__ \ _____ _.. t ' A few short words about height, smarts It's time to rise up and dispute the latest so-called bit of wisdom to emanate from the hallowed halls of Palo Alto. We shall not tiptoe around this issue. Those on high, the so<alled researchers at Stanford University would have us believe the tall tale that they have found a link between height and intelli~encc. Stanford University researchers, writing in the October issue of the medical journal Pediatrics, concluded "a significant association" between height and scores on the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children and the Wide Range Achievement Test. For those of you who get tripped up on long words, let's translate. In other words, the research nerds think tall kids are smarter than short ones. These euys in the white smocks are probabl1-all 6-feet-I and skinny. But lets be big about this. We don't want anyone thinking this is a self-serving editorial comment. We wouldn't want anyone to conclude the editor was short on stuff like self-esteem. This particular piece of intellectual study deserves equally thoughtful comment. Bunk. Baloney. Hooey. We've always suspected a link between height and intellieence (have you ever heard a basketball player interviewed?) but the Stanford folks got the resur'ts backward. Lest you think we are be)ng shortsighted on the topic, we offer as evjdence severaU>rominerH ~ople of history who were short on stature yet towered above their contemporaries. .... Albert Einstein was a runt. Mozart couldn't play hoops. Napoleon probably needed a step stool to mount his horse. Bob Dylan's feet don't touch the floor when he sits up straight. Now, can you think of a tall person who embodies intelligence? Quick. Just o ne. OK. so everybody knows Abraham Lincoln. Name another. Can't think of one. can you? Give up? See. The researchers at Stanford would probably conclude you were short as a child. Tom Tait Tbe (5-loot-6) Editor Oprnron~ CJt presscd in th rs ~pace are those of the Darly Pr lot. Other vrcw~ expressed on thu ~arc those of thcrr author5 and an1sts. Read« commcnl rs rn\ rtcd. The Dail)' P1lo1. P.O. Box I '\60. Costa Mesa. 92626. Phom! 642-6086 Mobile home overlay zone needed in Newport Beach To the Editor I ...,as a retired fireman. on JOb· related d1sab1lity who moved to "lC'Wport Beach into what I thought '-'OUI~ be m) "Shangn-la," my mobile home on the Bay. Now my world l'i beginning to crumble. The Lido Mobile Home Pan has been m e~1c;1ence for man) years and has hccomc a haven for many Senior ( 1111ens At the t1me. many residents mo .. ed into the park. re nt was le'>s as cenainl) wa-; the cost ofa home. The city of Newport Beach lacks low cmt housing for its seniors, We can't JUSt pick up and move because· I. Parks won't accept any mobile home older than 3 years. • 2. It costs over S7.000 10 move a mobile home J. Moreover. home parks are not available anvwherc near here and 4 Who would pa) our in vestment (nest egg) under these certain con- d1t1ons and high rents An overla) protects the mobile home owner. 1n that 11 provide<; compensation and or replacement. In fact. several mobile home parks have been granted zone overlays. The Lid o Park residents asked our(11y Council ~veral times for an ovcrla ) and they recommended working out our prob- lems with the owners of our park. We did negotiate for many months and so far. have assurance ofa five-year lease 1fwe accept and agree to the owner's conditions Namel)'. giving up our nghts, plus another unreasonable rent increase which we can't afford. We can't sell the wa y things are; we fear redevelopment of this park. but most important of all , Mayor Maurer. Councilmen Cox. Plummer. Agee. Heather. Strauss and Han. PLEASE HEAR US!1 We are the OLDER RESIDENTS. the senior c1t17ens that need your su pport. Give us the "Zone Overla> .. and preserve one of the ver; few areas left that did provide moderate income housing. Until space rent increased 300 percent. a '5' >ear lea~ would be a 54 percent increase. plus an unreaso nable reloca- tion dollar amount! DON HU TER Retired Fire Fighter and Tired Associate Director of the Golden State Moh1lehome Owners League -111]1},lil!lm-------- By Tbe A11ociated Pre11 Today 1s Tuesda)'. Oc1 7 the 280th day of 1986. There are 8.S days left 1 n the year. Today's Highlight in History· One year ago, on Oct. 7. 1985 - Palestinian gunmen h1Jacked the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro with more than 400 people aboard in lhe Mediterranean and demanded the release of ,50 Palestinians held by l srael. An American passenger. Leon KJinghofTer. was k1lltd. On thi~ date: OAANQ.E COAST l1ilyPilat Pur~~d ,..,~v '111 ot '~f' ,,._.. •• :no w e11v s1 t.~•• """~·' • ,.. Aek.JtH' C:OffHPQ1~11c .. to f\O• t~ Ca.t• M~9!1 CA 916i'6 In 1954. Manan Anderson became the first black singer hired b) the Metropolitan Opera Company 1n New York. In I 849. author Edgar Allan Poe died in Balttmore, Md .. at the age of 40. Today's Birthdays: Actress June Allyson is 69. Singer Al Martino is 59. Th.ought for Today: "There's '!:lany a m1stalce made on purpose. - Thomas Haliburton. Canad1anJuns1- humorist ( 1796-I 865). Don,..., CIJy !dtte>t T °"' C 1MM Newt fdttOf Cr ... IMff SPOn1 E'.d1t0< TetNMle J. IC_.. Cwcutetlon Olrktor ...... c ....... Production OW.Ctor """111111..,. A~l91nt Oif'ec:lor Cl:&,~'=or .... ,.... C«itrollet .. 'It wasn't the arch-conservatlves now bashtng Bird with the death penally issue who made the state's htah court pollttcal. ·. lt was Bl~~< _the polltlcJans who surrounded her berorc her 1977 appolnt~cnt. .. bHl;RE N-" HE ISL . "'-s BIG ... R<IN1ERIJ'1Jl:: U.N.bureaucracyspends and spends and spends WASHINGTON -In a bizarre twist of policy that has outfa$Cd Ronald Reagan's most conscrvauve fan s. lhe White House is fighting to persuade Congress to Jive more money to the Unlted N'alions Uianlt wants to. The Reagan atlministration has Jon$ been at leas1 a rhetorical re- pos110I") of criticism aimed at lhe United Nations for its frequent anu- Amencamsm and llS extravagant spendUlg. So it is panicularly discom- fiting to hard-hne Reagan supporters that the United States has actually been defending the U.N. wastrels against drastic budget cuts proposed by the Sov1e1 Union. The main reason U.S. conservatives detest the • Uni1ed Nations is they believe that 1t 1s a Kremlin puppet i\11 the parnsan budgetary bicker- ing has tended to obscure the in- contestable fact that the United Nations is as irresponsible in its spending as 1n some of its political policies. The U.N. bureaucracy is dominated by representatives of small nations that contribute only a tiny share of the U.N. budget: lhe bi~est chunk is provided by the United Stales. so the U.N. bureauc- racy has hule 10ccn1ive to 1rim its costs. Ou r associate Lucelle Lagnado has interviewed current and former of- ficials of the U.S m1ss1on at the United Nations. and compiled a long list of the organization's mos1 ou1rageous extravagances. Here are a few of1hem: •The U.N. Secretariat began life in 1946 with 1,546 employees, today, the number 1s close to 13.000, parceled out among a diuying array of departments. offices and d1vis1ons. The number of member nations has grown 1n 40 years. of course. But no pan of the U.N. bureaucracy ever seems to die. even if its reason for living has long since vanished. There is an entire department to oveTSCe "decolonization," for example. More than half the world was under coloni.al rule in 19461 but there is a re handful of sue oependendesln the world today. Yet the department lingers on. • The United Nations 1s ex- 1raordinarily top-heavy, boasting 28 undersecretanes-general and 29 assis- tant secretaries-general. All of these su~r..<fiplomats are handsomely paid, even by the U.N.'s heady standards, and their pensions make retirement truly the Golden Years. An undersccretary--general. for exam- ple. gets a lump sum of $350,000 when he totters away from the U.N. trough after 30 years. • A huge. overlapping struc1ure of informal or ad hoc U.N. bodies has ~own up over the years, like some incredible bureaucra1ic monster. At last count. there were more than 150 committees, commissions, subcom- mittees, subcommissions and "work- ing groups" drawing U.N. salaries and expenses, with new "subsidiary organs" springing up almost daily. • Like seasoned bureaucrats any- where. the U.N.'s time-servers are adcp1 at creating mountains of paper- work to justify their jobs. But the United Nations has a built-in cost escalator that other bureaucracies are spared: Documents deemed wonhy of printing and distribution to the general membership mus1 be trans- lated into the six official U.N. languages. One knowledgeable source estimated that, by the time i1 has been translated and printedJ. a single page ofU.N. wisdom costs >558. • Bloated as it is, the U.N. bu- reaucracy still needs outside help to accomplish its Job. The result is tha1 $8 m1ll1on a year is paid in consulting fees. • Jn the gigantic U.N. bureauc- AIDEISOI and JOSEPH SPEAR racy. duplication 1s the rule. coord1 - nat1on the exception. Informational and public affairs operations arc conducted by at least three depart- ments and one office. with predict- able overlapping. No attempt has been made to consolidate the~ competing mini -empires. CARTER-REAGAN CONNEC · TIONS: When cx-Pres1den1 J1mm} Caner needed an architect for his presidential library, he flew to Hawaii to consult . hotel developer Chris Hemme1er -a friend of Ronald Reagan's. Carter named Hemmeter and his wife to the library board. and hired a Hemmeter associa1e. Herb Lawton. to design the Ii bra I"). On the other hand, Warren M. Christopher is on the Reagan library board and is board chairman of Stanford Univer- sity, where .the Reagan presidential library will go. Christopher was a deputy secretary of state under Caner. WATCH ON WASTE: Joseph S. Ochounek. who grew up 1n Blandburg, Pa .. wrote an to call the bluff of Rep. Bud Shus1er, R-Pa., who said a four-lane. federall y funded highway in his district would im- prove safety-an a mountainous area. Nonsense, says Ochounek. the slretch in question is about as mountainous as the gentl y rolling land between Washington and Baltimore. J•ck Aodersoa •ad Josepb Spear •re syadlc•led colomalsts Politics , not death penaJty, main issue of Bird campaign All (ner America. Californians are being vilified as ogres hell-bent on destroying the independence of tbe1r state's courts and turning its judicial system over to opponunistic right- w1ng poh11 c1ans. The reason for this new portrayal of a stale heretofore regarded as one of Amenca's most progressive. or at least one that's made up of a fairly representat1 ve cross-section of Amenca? Rose Bird. Every poll shows that voters here are unflagging in their determination to rid them- selves of the state's chief justice. That's been seen elsewhere as one of the worst things ever to happen to ani independent j udiciary. Bird is repeatedly portrayed as an idealistic. compe1ent judge attacked solely for her unwillingness to sustain any of the scores of death sentences on which she has ruled. But as w11h many popular media portrayals. this 1s not completely .accurate. Foronc ttJ1na. the same voters who appear certain to oust Bird are not nearly so dcad-5et to cast ballots a&a.inst the three other liberal justices also on this fall's ballot. Cruz Rc-- ynoso, Joseph Grodin and Stanley Mosk. And they have voted with Bird 1n all but a very few of the death penalty cases for which he's pilloried. That indicates there's much more to the 111ti-81rd fervor than merely a lust to execute convicted nturdcren. The root i 'ue, in fact, 1s one that natio'nal commentators have focused UPofl -the polrt1cmn1 of the coun. But n wasn't tfie arc:h<on- scrvalives now bashm& Bird with lhc ., death penalty issue who made the state's high court political. Ralher. the shoe is on the othc:r foot It was Bird and the politicians who surrounded her before her 1977 appointment who did th at. Some decisions of the Bird court have been so blatantly political. so predictably sup~nive of the liberal Dcmocrauc political agenda, that th e Democratic speaker of the state Assembly, Willie Brown, could say, "We.don't need to worry. Rosie and the Supremes will take care of us ." The speaker hasn't used lhat phrase for almost two years. but the memories of conservatives are long.. They remember the fall of 1983, when Bird and her colleagues used convoluted lcgahstic logic to knock a Rcpubhcan-sp<>nsorcd rcapponion- ment initiative off the state's ballot. More than half a million voters had signed petitions calling a special election that December for the putative proposition, lfot the justices wduldnTillow a vote. They didn't have to rule on that case at all. Since 1948, their coun had refused to rule on the constitultonali- ty of other initiatives that were at least as problematic until the voters had a chance to say yea or no to them. Such restraint once pve the ooun a ceruin distance from politics. And if they'd waited m the 1983 case. frustrttina Speaker Brown, the jus- tices miaht never have needed to act. After all the voters turned down a similar 00.P proposition in 1982. But such mltlint in the face or poUtK:.1 i ues itn't in the spine oft.he appointees of former Gov. Jerry Brown. THOMAS EUAS When he was president of the state Public Utilities Co mmission under ex-Gov. Brown. John Bryson once said, ··1 serve at the pleasure of the governor ... That statement was true only in Bryson's mind and perhaps has governor's. For PUC members serve fi ve-year terms deliberately designed to overlap governors and make them independent thinkers. The same is supposed to be true for judges. But Jerry Brown's top judicial appointees, like former PUC boss B~n. have demonstrated a slavish mind-set. They've remained devoted to the political aaenda of the governor who -appointed them long after his depanure. It's that record which has made Bird's coun ~litical, more than anythina her cntics have done. No doubt her clear<ut poht1cal bent ha played into the hands of conservatives h)(e state Sens. H.l. Richardson and Ed Davis and cam- paiJD manlJCr 8111 Roberts. But California voters resisted the effons of those same contcrVatives to oust Bird in 1978 and if they 10 alona this time, it ju.st may mean that many arc tired of havina a political court and believe the best way to end the Politics tl\ttt lS by jlettt "I rid Of 8' rd. ,.....~ ........ ~. .,,.. t'MFWtr • ,..., ,,,.. l ' Thomaa&Uu.~ colamniat WALTER B•nuc11s Great ladies on the Coast Less lhan a month now unlit Orange Coast voters go to the polls and cast their votes for governor of lhe state of California, for members of the Orange County Board o~ Super- visors and for four city councils. Earlier this year I referred to 1~1s as the silly Season. I have seen nothing to make me change my mind. Th~t has vef) little to do with the candidates· thal are running except in Newpon Beach and Costa Mesa. In Costa Mesa there's not a great deal that ca n be done. By far the best candidate. who finally decided not to run. was Norma Hertzog. S_hc finall y got to the point where she felt she couldn't afford to neglect her own business an) funher. In Newport Beach, where they have seven members of the City Councd instead of fi ve as they do in Costa Mesa, by far. in this reporter's opinion. the best of all of the candidates tha1 are running 1s a lady. A lady. You bet,.,Ve~uclr a lady. AndShenas one an outstanding job as a member of the Newpon Beach City Council. Of course. I am speak- ing of Evelyn Han. Mrs. Han 1s a glutton for punish- ment. After completing 1wo terms on the Newport Beach Cll)' Council she has acceded to the pleas of some of the voters who. hke me, have urged her to be a candidate once again. r am both happy and pr(Uld to recommend that she be reelected. Unfortunately ~omc members of the Newport Beach City Council attempted to depnve the Assistance League of some badly needed park- ing. This was on land owned by the Assistance League whkhlUB done so much good. not only for Newport Beach but for the entire south coast area. Evel) n Han qu1e1ly, but forcefuly. blocked this ridiculous effon. She dad th e good thinking and the quiet but forceful insistence that the city had a duty lo consider the best interHts of all its ci11zcns. not just one. two. three or four groups w11h a highl y selfish campaign. I wish I could tell you the names of the individuals who closed ranks behind her and forced the Caty Council to a horse-sense dec1S1on. No matter abou1 that. In future 'Search- lights I hope to gi ve some of these 1nd1v1duals their due recognition. The big argumen1 apparcn1ly is · going to be about admitting ad- d1t1onal res1denti. to the City of Newport Beach. That seems to be a big issue in other cities of the Orange Coast -ex- pans1onis1s versus slow growth sup- por;iers. In Costa Mesa a few years ago we had an example of gross stup1d1ty. 1f not genuine dishonesty. After having an outstanding planning com- missioner for years. I. as senior trustee of Jefferson Trust, ran into a situation which was all but un- believable. The Planning C omm1ss1on voled to allow an individual who had no ownership of a piece of commercial propen) act as a pnnc1pal in a pct1t1on to allow a change of zonina. Our young lady attorney went to the City Council and asked that the decision be overruled. The City Council refused. The result was that this sman lady pet1t1oned the coun for a Writ of Mandate which. in effect. ordered the City Council to obey the law. So far as I know they stjll continue to obey 1t. But that's a nd1culous length to have to go. The Costa Mesa City Council had one lady wtth some horse sense to whom they refused to listen. That was Norma Hcnzog -later mayor but a person who felt the city should obey the law without a coun order. Luckily, in Newpon Bach they have had for eight years a lady member of the Council with not only the ability to think but the courage to make her decision$ known. Unlike Nonna she is willina to try to serve her fellow citizens one more time. Don't mi1underatand me. Norma Henzoa 11 still a person I admire tremendously. he JUSt can't afford to run aplo. She has a busines she can't afford to ncalca anymore. In Newpon Beach we arc more fonunate. Evelyn Han apparent!)' has no aucb oroblcm and she 11 determined to help protect our city apina& the few who wish to exploit it. Fortunately t.hett arc some others wdlin& to rouow bet lead .................. " .. ~ A, ... ,........ . • PEUEll _Downey Savl~gs tells proiaotion·s Costa Mesa-based Dowaey Savi.qt &M Lou has appointed Jou Dfilavo• as vi ce president and director of management information systems and named Harry Fe.er as director of marketing and advertising. Dillavou, a certified public accountant, formerly was manager in Price Waterhouse's inan~ement cbnsulting services 1n Alaska, New York and Northern California. For 14 years prior to joining Downey, Feuer was president of the Marketing Committee which1 specialized in direct mail and new product marketing for consumer products. • • • Auoclaied Importers, the new division of Hiram Walker, Inc. will have Micllael Ferrlt of Costa Mesa as district sales representative in Southern California, responsible for the sales of Swan Lager in the state. • • • Locur Balleabacll, with ove~ tht ho!>plraliry industry, joins the Re1i1try Hotel as djrector of catennJ. European- trained, Bullesbacb held positions at the WaldorfHotcl in New York artd the Registry and Fairmont hotels in-Dallas. He spent eight years with the Bonaventure Hotel in Los AnJ.eles and comes to Orange County fromJ)pryland Hotel H1 Nashville, Tenn. His accomplish- ments ind1.1de Presjdent Nixon's inaugu ral ball in January 1972. ..-----... BVLLESBACH PHILLIPS FITZPATRICK Bringjnf more than 20 years·experience to her clien tek. Beth Pllfillpa, l.S .. D celebrates the opening of her offices at 33971 Selva Road, Laguna Niguel. She offers a broad range of services mcluding: residential design for new homes under construction and remodels. commercial including office and retail space planning and design. executive offices and medical suites . • • • Dames & Moore, environmental and engineenng consultants in California since 1938, has opened an Orange County office to be headed by Geor.Je Fitzpatrick of Irvine, a hazardous wa te management speciahst. The branch at 1541 Parkway Loop.Tustin. 1n the Koll Busi ness Center, will provide assistance to clients on underground storage tanks, landfills, remedial invest1ga11ons and s11e screemng related to propeny transfer. Fitzpatrick formerly S<'n ~as director of environmental marketin2 at Fluor Technolog:r. Inc: . . ' Cllarles R. O'Brien has been named director of marketing and sales for Custom Software, ID~. (CSI), the 8-year·old Irvine-based software engjn~ring/consulting firm specializing m IBM . DEC PRIME. WANG and HP mm1 and micro computer s:rstcms. Previously O'Brien was director of corporate marketing for GN P Development in Pasadena. • • • Michael H. Vo11, founder and former managmg panner of the law firm of Voss & Cook. has been appointed execullve vice presiden t of national finance at Blrtcb.tr, one of the I 0 largest developer$ of commercial properties in the United States. The announcement was made by Donald B. Talcott, president of the Laguna Niguel-based development. investment and propen y management firm. Voss, who resides in San Juan Capistrano. will be responsible fo r developing financial resources for projects throughout the country • • • O'BRIEN VOSS MACE Dun Properties Corp. has announced the appomtment of Tllomaa N. Mace of Dana Point as assistant development mana~er for Southern California. He will oversee all planning and marketing for current projects in the region and prospect and acquire future industrial and office building developments by Dunn. ••• Linda J. Gallch of Huntington Beach has been promoted to assistant vice president in the operation' admimstration department of Union Buk'1 Orange County regional office in Oranse. A member of the National Association of Bank Women, Gahch JOIDed nion Bank in 1971 and most recently served as an adm in1strauve officer at the Long Beach regional office. Union Bank an $8.6 billion bank headquartered in Los Angeles, is the fifth largest bank in Cal1fom.vi MONEY SENSE Australians· victory raised com petition· s status for sponsors By SKIP WOLLENBERG ,.,....._.,.., NEW YORK (AP) -For more than a century, American sailors called on patrons at the New York Yacht O ub for money to aefend the America's Cup. The appeal was low- key. and they usually got what they needed to win. But Australia's surprise victory three years ago rekindled interest in the races, and enhanced the competi- tion's attractiveness for some mar- keters. A brewer, an airline, two com- municati6ns companies, two-win~ makers and three car companies arc among the companies helping pa y the estimated $64 million cost ofputtin& six American teams in the water to compete for a~-chancc at reclaiming the sailing trophy. A four-month competitjon began Sunday near Perth, ·Auslfalia, matching six American and seven foreign teams. The lone survivor will face a defendin&_ Australian team for the America'reup-staning-.f~ I, 1987. The marketers are hoping their investments will pay off by raismg their pr<?file. helping them win some new busmess. Corporate America's fascination with sporting events is nothing new . Com panies ha ve long viewed sports as an effective way ofreachin$ people at their IC1sure. Some companies have gone beyond simply buymg com- mercial time and arc sponsori ng events themselves. John Hancock Mutual Life In- surance. Co. recently .reached. _an agreement tha1 will attach..its name to the Sun Bowl college football game on each of th e next three Christmas Days. Companies like Hancock. Pillsbury Co. and Manufacturers ·Hanover Corp. have sponsored marathons m their home towns. .1 TUESDAY, OCTOBEA 7, 1986 ' -· "~ Stan and Stripe• ayndlcate from San Dle«o led Italian Assura in lmpreulve 3.19-8eCond win in Monday'• trial•. • S.ihna. however, has nner 9- hiah on corporate America'• ma ii 1pon1 to aponJOr. f\t least nol until u American lelm Iott tht America'• Cup in 1983. That lop WU blamed Oft a ~ l()lical breakthrough by the AUlll'll- iana, and it foru d tbe Americana IO invest bcavlly in t.echnolQIY. la addi1.1on, the shift o( the rliCe IO Avstralia from its fonneT home off Rhode Island meant added umnpof• tatjon and housing coats u -at. ! Ron Young. general mautef' for the Golden Gate ChaUeoae. OQe o(tbe six Amencan racing syndica~ esti- mated thar Americans spent about $9 million in i:ircpanna to defend t.beir title in 1983 -or only about 12 percent of the comban~ budaets for this year's challenge by six U.S: teams. • That's a lot, even for the yacht club set, so those plannjng to chaUenae for the cup turned to outside sources. Their first task was to convince -potential sponsors that the public would be interested in the competi· tion. They invoked patriotism, sayina the races would stir nationali11 passions as the Olympie Games djd in f984. The yacht clubs gave their boats names such as Americ~ (I Stars and StripH,Y. . "The America's Cup is more than 1ust a yacht race," argued the Sail America Foundation, tbe San Diego- based aroup that is mounting one of six American bids for the Cup w1th its Stars and Stripes entry. "It is an international battlefield where a na- tion's reputation 1s put on the line." One of Sail America's major spon- sors, Fora Motor Co., is memorial- izing the boat by producing a limited ed1.t1on Stars and Stnpes model Lincoln Town C.ar Not to be outdone. General Motors Corp.'s C.adillac d1 vis1on 1s buildin&.a hrmred. edinOICJ\mCriCa model Cadillac Eldorado, named after the boat and racmg synd~ate from New York. And the Buick auto dealers of Northern California have con- tributed lo the Golden Gate syndicate (Please see CUP/82) Corporate group to hear Comarco 's chief Or ~ D. Buell Jr. will descnbc the tacti~used to build C'omarco Inc of Anaheim mto an $80-million- a-)ear go"emment contractor at a seminar sponsored b the Orange County chapter of the A11oclation for Corporate Growlla on Thursday. The session will start at 5 p.m. at the Irvine Mamou. 18000 Von Karman Ave. Comarco 1s the No. I defense compa ny among all businesses with less than a $300 million revenue base. according to a survey by Forbes magazine. The 1.300-cmployee com- pany reccntl) completed three ac- qumuons that added S20 million in new revenues. Comarco supplies weapon systems. logisucs assistance. (Pleue see LIBllAJlY /83) Americans adjust to new tax l~w Clearly many people are not convinced that the change is a good deal for them By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID and H. JOSEF HE BERt A-t.t..:t ,., .. , Wnt.n You won't fi nd builder John Kin- cannon of onh Little Rock, Ark . cheenng for th~ new taJ( bill that's about to become law. He says 11 will force him to clo~ down his 25-year- old business and lay off his 300 emplO}ecs Farmer Johnn) Bowen of Table Rock. Neb .. sa}s he's tried to do his homework on the new tax law but C\ en his congrec;sman can't tell him \I. hat 10 e'<peCt. Tom vrocning of Wilton, Maine. who paid $540 1n federal income taxes on bis 1985 carorngs. w1U be c'<empt from the federa l income tax. thank<; to 1he new law. ''It'll put me over the hump and let me pay my bills." he sa} s. La\l.)er Gary Altman of Bethesda. Md .. about to be married, bemoans th(' nc"' tax code's restoration of the marriage penah). which will cost him hi.Ind reds of dollars. But the wedding 1s still on f \en before President Reagan puts pen 10 paper and signs into law the ~ttOmll)ovcmaul of the coun· tr.·., 13\ laws. its fallou t 1s being felt across America. ome people hope it will be a boon w11h lower rates; others fear 1l bodes onl> trouble. could upset carefull> crafted financial plans and eventual!) cost them more A West V1rg1n1a retiree. C'. Leslte Golhda). look pains to carefully plan his retirement No\!, he feels betrayed b) the income ta'< changes Random interviews found a substantial proponion of Amencans who" iC\I. the change with m1sg.ivmgs or downnght hosulit)'. Regina Cowie<;, struggling to make a new business go in Denver, believes the tax wnters are making 1t more difficuh for her. She won't get an argument from Bill Usher. who has been runnmg a small trucking compan:r in Kentucky for 25 vears. He says the tax law will make it tough fo r his compan y to continue to grow. But bus1nes'i 1s going to boom fo r accountants and tax specialists like South C'arohnian Richard Coll, who sa:rs the rush for ta'< advice is going to be a nightmare -but probably one he'll welcome "Poh11c1an~ ma:r have removed some loopholes. but they substituted potholes and booby traps,.. said Connecticut tax consultant Conrad Tei tell. "I am giving 47 lectures by the first of the year on the new tax law ... he said. By the calculauons of C'ongrcss' Joint Committee on Taxation. the new law will result an an income tax cut for the filers of 76 m1lhon tax returns but an increase for 20 million. Many will no longer be able to take advantage of hundreds of tax Loopholes and deducauons. • Here 1s how some average Amen- cans think the tax law will affect them Eight years ago. C. Leslie Gollida> decided to sell the radio sta11on in Martmsburg. W Va.. which he founded 1n 1946. But he arranged to spread the profit over 15 :rears and he continues to get monthly check~ from the new owners. There comes Jhe rub. Because of changes 1n the tlix law. capital gain'> no longer will get special tax treat· meot and Golliday. 71, will lo'>c considerable money bccau'ie of high· er taxes on the remaining mon1hl) payments. "At halfume the Congre\s 1s going to change the rules on me." ~)S Gol~ida). the former ma~or of Maninsburg and former head of the city's Chamber ofCommerl'e With the loss of other dedull1on-. and the change in the capital gain!> treatment. Gollida}. who had thought he had carefull} planned h1" retirement income figure~ he "'Ill pa' 6 or 7 percent more taxes under the new law He says he has nothing against 1rying to case the ta'< burden for low- 1ncome taxpayers. but that significant tax changes shpuld be phased in over a number of years so that carefu lly la1~plans are not 'ihattered. 'Tm not trymg to make out that I'm a poor man. I'm m reasonably good shape." Golhday says. "But I worked (form} mDne}) for a hell of a lone ume and this capital gain business 1<; 1950 and 1960 dollars. With inflation . the dollars I put awa} don't beg.in to buy what the) bought then ·· For Regina Co\l. les this had t>cen the year \I.hen her fledgling recruiung and placement sen ice an Denver has begun to tum the comer She sa}s she often takes clients to lunch. but soon those lunches will no longer be full} deductible he also ~H she \I.Ill have to use credit cards le~s both in business and for personal purchase<; because she no longer will be able to wnte ofT the interest. Those Items migh t not mean much to some. but she sa\s to a new. struggling bus1nes~ e,·ery small tax ad,antage \\as a help 0 1her fledgling entrepeneurs have had those advan- tages. she ~~s "I feel a little gypped b' that " Mrs (o\.\-le., ar_\d her husband will lace other ramiffcauons of the tax cha11.e'I as well (Pleaee see COMmO /84) Tickertape language relatively easy to.decipher Every mommg, many thousands of mvestors reflexively tum to the financial pages -as much a part of their morning ritual as a cup of coffee. A glance at the tables, numbers and abbreviations tells how the stock market -and their own investments -fa red the day before. MARY RUDIE· How do they interpret what they find? For our purl)Oscs, we'll start with ••••••••••••• the big picture -how the market fared as a.whole -and then move lo determining the dt v-to-day perfonnancc of indi vidual stocks. The most widely cited barometer of market health 1s the D<>w Jone Industrial Average, sometimes abbreviated as DJlA. The avcragr co"crs 30 major U.S. 1ndustnal stocks that account for a s1&JUficant portion of the market value of all New York tock fachan1e issues. People around the v.orld aeneralJy consider a nsing Dow lndutttnal AVer&Jt to mean a aood stock market day and a falling average to mean the opposite. Cnt1 cs of the DJlA araue that 1t gives an mcomplctc p1 tu re of the market, since it only mcMurt1 30 "blue chip" 1ndustnal com panic Other tock market indicc measure a broader market performance. The tandard 8' Poor's SOO (. P SOO) is a widely followed 1nde~ of 500 tocks rc.prcscntJQJall m"ormdustnes 1n appJOl.imatcly thuame proponion to their fCl)racotatJon on the New ork tock Exchan~. Other mdicc include the Standard Poor' 100 Index (S&P 100). the New York LOCk L'<Chonae lndc:' (NY E), the Amcncan tock F.xchangc's Market Value Index (AMVI) and 11 ~ Ma.ior Market Index (MM I). The "points" of the Dow index represent the total dollar value of the stocks 1n the group, divided by 30 and adjusted by a comple' system that covers stock splits and stock dividends, among oth er facto~. The closing figure and point changes are neither dollar amount'i nor percentage changes. but rather the products of an arithmetical calculauon When e'pens refer to the "Dow Average, .. they u~uall)' mean the Dow Jones Industrial Average. But Do~ Jone!> also calculates a 20-stock rransportation Average, a 15-stock Utility Average and a 65-'ltock Compo•ute Average as well as three bond averages. Be ides the averages. financial page cntneo; that mcnt ~our attention include the figures for the total market volume and the number of advances versus the declines. You also m1&hl want to check the hsttn&-'1 for the previous da) · most actively traded l'l'iUC!I and for stocks ~lhng at record highs or low for the )'car W11h the averages firmly etched m your mind. 1l' time to tum to the stock hstings to sec how panicular issues fared. Before )'Ou tart. some hc!pful hints. •First. smcc: financial pages do not ha ve \he space to spell out the full n.ame of 1he h tcd compan1e ne paper& 1bbrev1atc them You'll be able to decipher most of the abbreviations yourself. a local brokerqe finn can hc1p you with the others • cond. the pri~cs and advance or dcchn ., of tock'I arc usualh meuurcd 1n "•S ofa pomt ( 12''1 cent'I) For C'<amplc, a $tock "up '.~ .. ha\ men b 171, cents pc:nhare Here's how the financial hsungs 1n a newspaper descnbe a 1~p1cal day's trading in a hypothetical company. Sleeping Giant l ndustncs (SCi ll The table headings may vary 1n slightly different publications. '52 weeks • ales Hi~ Low Stock Dav \Id% PE: IOOs Hurh lo"' Last Chge 13 Yt ~ SGI 40 31 6 11~5 n'~ 1~'· 1r~ _,,, Reading from lefl to nght, the: table 'lhow'i 1ha1 mer n 12-month pcnod. Sleeping Giant sold as h1&h as I 3'1a and a'> low as The t·ompan:r cu rrently ~ys an annual d1vtdend of 40 cnet on each share of 11 '!tock The curren1 yield 1s 3.1 percent -computed b dividing the annuaJ diHdcnd b\ the la t pncc of the day The PE 1s the pncc-te><arn1ng ra11om which i the pncc of one share of Sleeping Giant stock d1v1dcd by the camingi. per 'lhare for a 12-month penod. The ne'<t fiaure -11 S,SOO 'iho~ how man~ 'lharc'I were traded dunng the da:r. Dunna the cou~oftheday' rrading.1he '>tock''I pn,cnangcd from a h1&h of 13'1\. or S 13 625 a 'Iha re, to a low of 12' •,or S 12 H The ~tock clo'>Cd at 12\. orSl 2.875-half a point or SO cents. below the do 1na pnce ($13 375) of the prev1ous day Perha~ the best wa y to act a firm handle on financial paic shorthand 11 to pick a couple of '!tocks and follow them for• while f\cr JOU pend a couple.of -~~• w~ek l~k-watchtl'li-hc'-crtape language ~It become ond nature. Mary J. 1\14'le 11 vice preshlnt ud mua1er, ttenmer lal•naaU. 1trvltt1, at Merrill L~ll. Pierce, Feuer Ii ml~. tac:. • 14 • -_-~...;.... . ~------'-~ -------- .. -Or8nQe Coaat DAILY PILOT/ Tueeday, Octob9f 7, ttee ------. · CUP SPONSORS ENTHUSED ••• Vacation pay holaBl and 1ts ' bolt m · ~mKuco. . Domau~c Chandon w1ncries . eaeh sponsored -"ftftt1111t~B~h Inc made a mulunullion-4 promottons that hnlccd contnbut1ons to wine sales. dollar...,.. of ac:h""1W\& uppon and C'l.Sh to Sail mC'f\C'a oo ~half oa •t Budv. e•Kr brand. \ ·e.J \: :\ITIO\m:'lal shov. the Ct'CVI 1 and hi.t a roH-fttt telephone '•lUt torontributc to the tan ~ hou hold produ ts d1 • . \h<il., as badang the Amen ca ~ Vl .t SC'nf'$ of progTams ranging ~ " t ' a full hou.r in whicb which :t' (. • • ol \)fttl.&D Walter Cronkite will '' ""''-"" mstnthe mcnca'sCup :>11 (\1.,'\l\t't dt~ttlr Thomas F. Ehman· ~.a 1nJ \lntnca II h3ve the biggest \'Of the u'\ l . · S)OdJC'~tts at SI S .. 'Cl ·~~ v.at<. bu~ted at SI O million. and tbe "°"' Ch:sllenge. b:l~ in Chi cago and -ur nh a budjet ofS7 m1lhon. have received ')4'1 • ~"'llnl suppon from regional sponsors. Pa"·tfi · Tc-le 1s Group. the regional telephone ~"'mp.kn' W in n Francisco, contnbuted SI m1 ~wn to the Golden Gate C'hallenge. MCI Corp.'s \hJ..,,f'St d1'' ion ga' e mo~ than SI m~lhon 10 Hl'a.n of .\m~nca Goldl'n Gate al o got some help from lls wrne H'Untn neighbors The Roben Mondav1 and The Courqcous ChalleOJe, backed by the Yak Conntruan Yacht Club in New Haven, Conn., and the Eaate ChaU~ngc, launched from Newpon Beach. arc each OJX'raUnJ on bud&ets of about $8 .S million. Courageous' m1.1or corporate backers were those that donated tran portatfon and housi!1J during trainioa: Eagle ha aouen ·90 percent of ns funds from individuals. Same eompnnies shied away from the prospect of picking only one o f the racing synd icates. Some fen.red such a choice could alienate people who live in areas of the country backing a different boat. There was also the possibility that thc:ir choict: would be eliminated from competition early on. Un~ted Airlines. avoided that problem by spoosonng a promouon that could help all of the syndicates generate contnbut1ons. Workfog through an umbrella group, United agreed .to provide a cenificate good for $50 in domestic travel for every $75 contributed to one of the parucipatina syndicates. The program could gen~rate up to $6 million for the racing syndicates. Untied s~kcsman John Devona said. The only U.S. syndicate that chose not to participate was America II. he said. statute back AN FRANCISCO -Employees who have not been p:ud for vacation time they had earned but not taken before their employment was terminated may now file a wage cla.im with locaJ offices of the State Division of Labor StMdnrds Enforcement. St~1He Labor Commj sioner Lloyd W. Aubry Jr. has announced. "Since October 1983. our agency has been under a federal court injunction· which prohibited us from :accepttng and processil\8 claims for vacation pay," Aubry said. .. This injunction was lifted Sept. 8, and we are again allowed 10 enforce California's vocation pay statute ... The in1unc11on that had been tn effect was issued after a 1982 state Supreme Court ruling that vacauon pa) accrues and 1s earned on a day-t<Hfa> bas1sand that an) unused vacation must be paid on a pro-rata basis to an employee at termination. Aubry explained. However. state law does not require that employers furnish 'acat1on benefits. Employees. -who had wnuen contracts for emplo} ment wh1ch• 1ncluded vacauon ben- efits must file a claim for the unpaid benefit!> w1ttun four } cars. of the termination date. Employees. -who worked under an oral agree- ment haH~ 1wo ~cars to file. The Great American 6-Month CD October 1st through October 31st get Y2% bonus interest over existing rates. Great American Minimum balance $1.000: rate_and yield above are for $50.000 balance. Your advantage bank:- 1·1\l' Jlltcn:nl r.111:' for fi,c Llilt~l'\.'111 hulancl' h:\L·l ..... 111cn: .1n: mam n1hcr rcnn .... a\ ail.thk'. fl\ 1111 l~ <lly ... to 10) l'.11' And i r you aL·t 110\\ hi..:fnn: (ktol1':r :\1. 198 ), ~l>U L'.lll ~:.1-.h 111 on a'·'' honu ... h~ hnn_!!i11g 111 Tll'\\ rrnsnl'~ tnClr\'al AmcriL·an\ I ,1.1t>l1,l11.·.J '"''. "I' tit I '"Ill \• ' MfMtt• I kpo ... 1t ~Plu' 6-\ 11111th CD. t\nd tkpm1l-. at Gn:at t\nll'nL·an an: lih un:<l up lo \ l(kl,(X ~I h~ .111.!_!!l'llL'~ toll till· li.·tkr~tl !!ll\l'n11lll'lll \\ult 11 11U 1,c' -.i.-n 11111 ( tr.rn~e l oUnl\ \n.1hl1m Hill, h1urllJ111 \JllC'\ K.ilhu,11,1,mJ Humrn~111n tw • ..-h K.ilho.i l\>nin,ul..i I .1~u11.i lkudl Hn.:J L..ti.:unu I lrlh l .1phlr.m11 lk .... h I I 1,.,,. l..i111111.1'11111d "'"''"" \ ...... \lunan.:h H.1\ 'C\4 Jlflrt lk.idl 'l°" pu<IC cllkr 'l~ port Bc.idl Do\C~f \hofl'' 'l"V< pi1n Be.1dvl 1011 Or .111)(• i...J1ell..i I )r Jll!!l' 1 u'llll JI I k1m \,m { k:mt'lllt' "'111 Judll { Jp1,1r,rnu \\uvt.lbn~ ..... ...,. .. 1.111--•t ... SMlfJ lnJWN 11 $100 (XXJ CT Open your account today. CaU the toU-free Financial Line now : 1-800-423-BANK. "' •I ' I ' •I • ' •I ~' How to seRarate yourself from the crowd. fo gt'I 11011ct-'ll amid all of to<la~ ~claim~ and counterclaim~. \Oll Ctn1flcatcs of L.lt"f)()Sit for examplt.> Our 'lh111orrm\ ~:l\'lllY,.' ' Cl>-. are tiered to he ~HL'll\t.' to \Ollr 1mll\1dual 11t1.-tb 'l11t" h:1\1· lo 'l'l \OUN'lf :Lfttr1 ll\ ~m 111~ !'i<m1ethi11g a h1tl1• d1ftt•rt.•111 lur a d1a11gt: Arn.I ,how111~ \OU heht'\t' I[ ; \t lmpcnal Sa\111g.-.. >rm 're #I \\t• '1111 h;t\(' ,1 clear \l~ of ~ho' Mtlh #I '"u .1~ \\ton· 111 htNllt"\' to ~"e \'OU . not llllN'I\~ \nd \1111 11 lt't'I lilt' <.hffere11Ct' \\he11 \nt1"'alk111111 all\ lrnpenal ~l\.111~ hr:111rh 111 tlw wm \H' 11t:'t'I \OU 111 1111.· wa\. \H' h.,1t·11 fam 111 the hun111~ \OU 'it.\' u' 'l't';.tnll~ 'lure. '~c could rm1kt· 1l l."J..\\ and Jllll ouN·h~ Ill\! l~ut 111).tt-ad. we II keer 011 pu11111~ H>ll Iii\! Hec.t~ 11 kL'tf"' u' firit \\-Ith rnu ~t.tk11lJ.( wur mon<'} \\-ork harclc:r aren't merely a ~ne. of om· 'lli't' lit' .ill :1cco1111L' hut savm~ opponu111t1t~ ~h1ch .m,,H·r \01ir ~al h11a11c1al pnonllt~ lmpenal ~.1,111~' 'lo111om1\\ ~am1~' (~\ ~lid. .,;de. a>lllJll'llllH' r.H~ But '*ll.11 ~>arates th{'ll\ fn>m tlw I\."' '' 1ht '1'M.'C1.1I ;ul\-Jn!Jy,t' of allO\\ 111~ \ ou lo cl 111o•o1.· from 'hort or Ion~ trml'i \l.1kt· 'null or large depos1~ And e1tlwr t>n1m l1q111d1t\ or lo11g ll1111 Vf<M tJ1 To IC'Jm more ahoul thl! l1mo<l u I nw11 lur \OU. c.all ll!l toll -frec JI' 1-800..CI IEK-M>W ( 1 -800-l-i.S-~669). ~:parnt<.~ u' from dw cm\\cl, too • 'I 11 'l t' how wt• pul ~ ou tirst. I lL'il look al our pmduc~ Ta kt Ketter ~el, ''~it the lmpenal Sav111~' hr:111ch rwan~ ~ou <it·ttm~ #I 1re:t1mrn1 15 alwa~~ heuer 111 per.,<m D ~Savings Association ' ' I Wben1 Tomorrou 1 Begins TOllay ... H ....... lrxh 19011 kid! RMS HIV'~ 8tadl CA 9lM8-li<K <714) M7-3.S86 lltt"Wp0r1 Btarh H66 \ " l.ldc1 V.'J>ltt'1 Reach CA tJU1M i~l- C'"l +I 11·~·\I ~ "'"f0'1~ ~$() Ntwpot1 C'.tnltr DrM !WWpOn finch. CA 92660--011 ('I I) 6H·l461 ) MAIMoe Vltjo B482 AJlda Pvkwty Vlcjo, CA 92691 -269Q ('"14) ~I 8 f1 • ' i 6 7 ~ ' l . ' .. __ LmRARYT ALKSCOVERINVESTMENTS ••• l'roaa1 · /. computer sot\wate and o&ber cn11-C!Jru Schwif!Ck from Cunis omtnaltt'Victs to aovemment -.en-~!/stems wtll tell tbc •••u• CJes. Wer A.nedaU. ··why You Under Buell'1 leadenbip..t the com-~n·i Need a Computer .. at noon pa_n~·s Illes increued rrom SIO Friday at The Seventh Aoor rn- mdfion to $80 millaon in five years. taurant in the HomeSavi0&1 Butktana Tbecostofthu~m1narisS20at the on El Toro Road in ~una Hilll. door. for reservations, phone 1:h~ luncheon cost 11 SS.SO. As- 752-8900. soc1auon mcctinas arc open to pro-ACG provides its 2.400 members fessionals, bui.incss ownen Clt- with a forum for ideas rclatioa to both ~utivcs, ~an~gcrs and saJ~ People · ~.xttmal and internal lf'Owtb, includ-Lnterested In IOCt'C&Sin& their busi- !nJ acquisitions and div~titurcs, ness .. Phone 581-1106 for more infor-JOIOt ventures and new products. matioo. --(1J llll%1:1 '1'1$$11•,__ ______ _ Oraqe County llD&ll bu.lints& Ownnl and ma..,. wbo will> IO increue tbe l&lCCell or their bulioeM are invited to he bulineea con· ftreDOet 1pontored by the 8entee c.,,. ., &etlre4 EHClll•H (IOOllE) and the U.S. Small Busi- ness Administration. SCORE counselon will lad the ses1ion1 from 2 to 4 p.m. Tuadays at the Fidelity FcderaJ Buildinc. 2700 N. Main St, Santa Ana, Suite 4001 Topics this month include "Franchise -.A Way into Busineas" on Oct. 14, "Home Business -· Opponunities and Requirements" on Oct. 2 J and .. REWI Stores - Tamina the Taskmuters" on Oct. 28. Arttte~ Jrl f '-UP 111 To make required reservations, NB~ft~x:"ld 1 ,:1 S: : · phone 836-2709. fdTote V. ' Up • • • DOWNS • Free proarams on investments arc ~=obot~ 2 = l . . Tuesdays at the Ebcll Oub, SIS W. - ~"'~~ IAJ~ -or 'I bcina presented at 7:30 p.m. =tk wlA i"' -ij : Balboa Blvd., bJ, the Newport !Seacl tAfJ~~:.,." ~b,. _= 1 .· hbUc lJbrary.. lease pre--rqjstcr by .... ..... ..•1. callina 644-3171 or 49S~S. MR trwt 3 -'h , i:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiim:iiiii:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiii:.;;i:iiiiiiiiii;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:=:=:=o::iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiilll ... &;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;::;;;;~ lnnov•Wtr •~ -1,4 • ~.~~r.,~~ nt = it l : ~~~re. 2 3-u ::s-11 I : ~Mell jv. -~ ~~~: ' 2 '~~ =s~tt 1 : lmunoNucl 4Ye -'h 1 ~ i<•JTI•nsleln ~Ye -v. l JlttvLube 'h -2 l · Vlr•tek s -61h . HOSPOS WI it/• -~ l : ~~J~ri ~~ = v. · s rrzsv~o ' 24 -2'h i:. ouslnHme 3~ -~ .• brn un 3 -S· 16 .4 ~w• the New York Stock Excn.noe Advan~SI stocks •nd warr•n.. llwlt ha ve oone up Horlz p NEW VORK (AP> -The. followlno fist ~ C.abolC..P lhe most Jnd down the most based on • vJM-nvll e f::C9nl.~ .... ~noe reoardless of volume s Pa~dvne No ~inn tradlno below ~ •r• Ind· Name -~. Net I nd percenlH• c.h•noH .,. ,he 1 8erktY Inc d ence between the prevl01Js clos no 2 SSMC Inc n Pr ce 1 1.nd Mond1 v's 1 .p..m_ 3 NotP.l:ivd n P r c • 4 vlTowle U" S Armcolnc N1me Lu i Cl Pct. 6 Ravm•rk i Sun$t\Mn ·~ + UP 9.• 7 Equll~Fn Transworld ' i''I• + 2 lfp 9.2 I ICN Phar.m YIRot>lnsAH + :\14 Up 9.1 9 SavlnCp J ~vcRJIOUr ';. i 1 ·~ Up 8.3 10 CornPW( ~1l1Ceml \..\41 Up 7.1 11 vlLTV CP msnSesn 'I• Up 7 7 l2 Navstr wt8 olllnsEnv s l'h UP 7.0 13 Qu•nex I ~orp + 1 Up 6.1 14 Anthem ' ntp I "'• UP 6 a 1>E1R1 Au« 10 orp • •1• UP 6.7 16 Le•rPetrl 1 1 LLCCorP • 11• UP 6.7 17 Alrbn Fri 2 PanAm wt W. . \le UP t.t-tt--Monwk Oet 3 ~~""Eng ,.~+I ·~ ~~ bl: N rnr'::811 ~ =~St~' ftl ''• '~ 8~ :j Ill ~,~:~f~th~~ N.~:.w~:filrd~n ' 'i4 I 11• Up . 4 nnl18 llt 21ie UUPP . 5 ocl'I asE Ame HS pf 106 Sl/1 s. 26 ToscoCP Italian Restaurant Mention seeing rhis ad in the Daily Pilot and you will re ceive 1/2 Bottle Fetzer Barrel Select Chardonnay included with Dinner For Two Sunday thru Thursday Open 7 ~ights • Resen·ations Suggestl•d ('\LL fii':>-H:Jr>r> for Reser\'ations & llir .. ,·lifln' lHL~ Villa Way• ~ewport Beaeh • " <..,, .. • • •• • • • fl We're throwing a month-long Happy Hour party to celebrate the opening of Duke's Entertainment Lounge! fl Join us for $2 specials on all your favorite drinks . ~ Plus shrimp, crab and other fresh seafood-compliments of the house . .. And the sultry songs of Cissandra, Duk e's own cabaret chanteuse. ,. -'~ 4 to 7 pm weekdays, it's the beat of Newport Beach. ~ THE NEWPORTERRESORT ~ • 1107 Jamboree Rd t? l4) 044 11pa '-· 8 Coml)l1m111111 ry v11e1 ~111°n9 ~)~·--·-·-·~·~----~~-----------· \ -FR~EE TWO-PART FINANCIAL UPDATE SEMINAR Michael DATES: TIME: PLACE: LOTIERY TICKET FOR EVERY A TIENDEE Oct. 9 & 10 2-part Seminar 10:00 am -12:00 noon Newport Beach Public tibrary (856 San Clemente Drive) RESERVATIONS REQUIRED -PHONE (714) 832-2900 • Call Today -Seating is Limited -No Cost or Ot>hgatlon • Please asl< for Beth SE INAR TOPICS Willst Pi:obat&, How to avoid it Trusts: Revocable and lrrevgceble Ronald Koenig, your Co- Host 1s a Certified Financial Planner fisted in MONEY magBZJne by the Institute of Certified Financial Planners as one of the top financ1ar professionals 1n Southern California. Mr. Koenig is licensed by the National As- US Government S.ec~ · Banks Tax-Free lhvestme x-Oeferred In "'-• .. ~ ('µ socratiQn of -Sectmty Deal- ers and is a registered representative with 01- vers1f1ecf Securities. Inc. and special guest speaker, Suzanne M. Tague, Attorney at Law INSTANT CASH BONUSES 2YearCD 3YearCD 1% CASH BONUS 4¥earCD 2% C~SFI BONUS 5YearCD 3% CASH BONUS 10YearCD 5% CASH BONUS Now, U>lumbia makes earning high rates instantly appealing. At Columbia Savings, our CDs can show you more int erest in minutes than some can show you in months. How? Instant Ca h Bon uses. When you open any of our longer- tenn certificate , we'll deposit up to 53 additi onal intere. t to your account , instantly. Better yet, your bonu will also start earning our hi gh rate , instantly. Of course, financial gain isn't the only reason to own a Columbia CD. There's also fin ancial security. We're over three times stronger than the government require~. Plu::.. your avings are federally in ·ured to $100.000. Then there's the confidence that comes ,.,,·ith knowing Columbia is the number one managed sa\ings and loan in the nation accordjng to Forbes magazine. See how much more Columb1a'· high rates and ca h bemuse ca n mean to you. Call our Convenience Banking Center: 1·800-652·BA 1 K. Or visit one of our local branches . After all, it's not everyday yo u find this much instant appeal. COi I llVIBIA --lE .. O(A SAVINGS Ar')JO LOAN ASSOC(ATION One of America's large t savings and loan association . \.\UEl,Ulll\ llnwk~uro1,,..w!Wl .,..lll\•~ O!N,l•tt ~·1n LAU rotfST I.a••,,,,..., 1"'1•••"4 ~•V...i.1 "111~t1 • • ~-~ .., ___ · --._ - --.. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tueedayf October 7, 198e l'alk Business with Tokai Bank COMING TO GRIPS WITH NEWT AX LAW ••• ' "WE'LL PIT • EXPERE• "A customer needs to know he'll be talking to the same person when he calls his bank. Someone who · knows his .name, his busi- ness and his problems. That's experience ... you get it by rollfng up your sleeves and working with your customers. That's our way. And we'll pit our ex- perience against any bank." Bob.,Bordwell V.P .. Manager. Newport Beach AIY -BAll(." Bankers like Bob Bordwell speak for Tokai Bank. They speak plainly about what ~rowing business Like you.rs needs. And they do more than just talk. We're a hands-on-bank. 'Ne're used to working closely with you to implement-and keep updated-a complete program of financing and business banking services. We're small enough to want to take an active interest in you. And as a member of the worldwide Tokai Bank network-with over $100 billion in assets-we can be a powerful fri~nd to your growing business. Talk business with Tokai Bank ... and see. .. -. ,~~ IDKAl-BANK OF CALIFORNIA -.JEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 18831 Von Karman lrvlne California 9271-4 714/752-llSS HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE j 19006 Brookhurst Street Huntington Bellch California 92646 714/965-5651 ,.romBl . Her husband is a plaintHT lawyer whose income in recent yea11 has been la11ely based on contingency f~s. Some years are aood and others bad. ·she says. So the couple ~ad considered income avera.ing, which k~ps a taxpaye r from bcina pushed into a higher rate during unusuaUy profitable years. Under the 1986 tax overhaul lhat option disappears. On Nebraska farmer Johnny Bowen's desk a slogan is posted: "The power to tax gives the power to destroy." Bowen also 1s worried about the new tax bill. He has tried to find out how it will affeci him. He's talked to his tax adviser and his congressman. to other fa rmers and farm equipment dealers. to his wife and to his sons. even to his agriculture extension agent. After the homework he 1s pretty convinced he'll be worse off than under the old tax laws. "I ha'"c never yet had a,pc.rson tell me how it's going to help me ... Qf course, basically. the idea or a tax ball is to raise money ... sa id Bowen. who has spent a lifetime raising hogs, m1lo. ~orghum , beans and th(ee sons on I 700 acres in southeastern Nebraska. ' Bowen worries that he'll be hurt financially because he will no longer be able to use income averaging. T here's also the loss of the inves\ment tax credit. which allows businesses to reduce their taxes by wriung off some of the cost of nc"' equipment and faciht1es Bowen says farmers who m1_ght have bought new equipment are now discouraged from doing so. And when Con~esr. made the 10\lesfmenttax credit changes retroacti ve to last January it prevented Bowen and his neighbor-; from trying to save on taxes b} rushing out to buy new equ1p_ment now. Bowen. who for years has kept a weather eye on fedcr~I taJt laws, says changes in capital gains tax will a!so affect manv farmers who ha ve Hl- vested 1n land wuh the idea of selling 11 off slowly as a source of income. Now profits made on such sales will be ta,ed at a higher rate. "I ta lked to my ta>. man on Fn day ... Tused to think thenarder I worked the more money I could make But 1t J.S.D.'t. that wa)' today:· he srud. Over the last 26 years Wilham Usher has built his family-owned trucking compan) in Paducah. Ky .. from three trucks to a neet or 80 tractor-trailer ngs and an annual gross income of about $6 m11l1on. The tanker trucks haul .. primaril> chemicals across Kentucky. Ten- nessee, Indiana and southern Ohio. It's \till a relatively small company b} industr) standards, but IJsher. 5 7, a former fighter pilot. ha\ dreamed of 11 becoming bigger That \\Ill be a lot harder no'-'. thanks to the new tax prov1c;10n\, he ~ays. . U~hcr "'clcomcs the lower tax rates. but the biggest bugaboo for ham -as 111\ for man} <.mall bu'iinessmen ~ Introducing. The • • I MERI CAN· -., .. - PATRIOTS CLUB IF YOU ARE 60 OR OVER IT PAYS TO JOIN, TODAY! Minimum deposit only $2,500 (That\ half what some others require) BONUS INTEREST ... 1/2~ over t:urrent rah' on dl'po.,it ' of $5,000 in one year term account. e FREE INTEREST CHECKING No Service Charge~ e UNLIMITED FREE CHECKS Corporate St)IC Onl)' e FREE MONEY ORDERS Lim ited e FREE TRAVELERS CHECKS American Expre~s (Unl imited) e FREE NOTE COLLECTION One Per Year e FREE DEBIT CARD No Fee e FREE DIRECT DEPOSIT Retirement. S. S .. Trust e FREE PHOTO COPIES Legal Document' Ont) e FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX Small. Wh ere Avai lable PLUS CRUISE TRAVEL DrsCOUNTS UP TO 50% •.. on the ~orld\ f1n1:,t Lru1~ line .... to exotu.: porb LAND TRAVEL DISCOUNTS ... eiu;Ju,1\e package' for Amem:an PJ1r101' Cluh Member' unly CAR RENTAL DIS- COl..i~TS ... -..ivc 109f each time you rent a lJr! H<YfEL. MERCHANl>ISE A~D t-:NTERTAI NMENT DIS- COl lNTS ... offered quarterly 10 member' only. PRI E CLUB ELIGIBILITY ... ~ave even more when you 1111n the Pnlc Cluh a' a Patriot\ Member QUARTERLY NEWSLETTERS ... outlining Jll1V1t1ei.. d1..count<;. travel and much more' COMI G SOON •.. no fee Ched. Guarantee Canh. f-rct· \.1mple f>-Jt.~Jgc., and more Look for our newest branch in: ONLY AT A SPECIAL BONU. A snor Cil\ 11\1.i Fl 11 ("()I OR '0RMA1' MOC K~l 11 PRl''d\ I NI I Newport Beach 3300 \\~'' Coa.'t Highwa\, 9l6M near ~e\\ port Boulevard (714 ) 631-92()1; ERICAN SAVINGS , Af\JD LOAN ,ASSOCLATION • ~ Richard Coz and farmers -I'> the elim1nat1on ol the 1n1.c<;tmcnl un credit Th1u will make new truck and equipment purchases more expensive and. hl' says. not offset the gain" from tht· lower rates. He 1s quick to illustrate Under the current tax la" Usht·r says he pays $71.750 1n federal corporate taxes. Wi th a lower rate his taxes wo uld drop to $56.450. a saving of$1 5.300. But trucks regularly need to be replaced and the} co'>t S80Jl00 apiece Ten percent under the old tax laws could be written oil through the investment tax crt•d1t. "If I bought t\\O unit~ a >Car that take~ care of the difference in the ta' rate," he ~)'S. adding that routinl'I} he has replaced about 10 percent of his 80-truck Ocet annuall} "This 1s the" a\ "e'\-c been a hie to expand and gro"-." he 'ia}S .• 'o" Usher says he wtlt-btty ftwcr Tiew trucks. run the truck~ longcr. put more emP.hasmng on building trurk!> from canibah1ed parts. "With this new tax bill I'll have $30.000 less money to put back into (the compan}) '-'Ith little room for expan'i1on." he says Gary Altman. a lawyer and fi nancial consultant in Washington''! Virginia suburbs. says he 1s sta ll planning to marry his girlfncnd. Gail Guttman, this year, but not without cost. "If ! make more than S5.000 a }ear . we pa)' more mamed_.l_han ~parate. and under the ncw--cix"'1aw that will only get worse." !>aid Altman. alud1ng to the new law's restoration of the '>O- called marriage penaJt)' Under current law couples 1n upper-income brackets where both work can deduct as much as $3.000 from their JOint income. That prov1s1on 1s bein$ eliminated. 0 1d he and his fiancec scnousl} consider changing tl}eir wcdf:l1ng pfans'> "Oh no." he said. "I don't believe that you make a personal decision like that on the economics. I tell m)' client!>. an )'1hing they do has to make them sleep well at night ... that's how I feel about marriage, it will make me sic.en well at night." The tax change'> arc causing trouble fo r John Kincannon 1n North Little Rock, Ark. He says 11 means the end of h1'1 business and a loss of JObs for 300 construcuon workers. ' The much harsher dcprec1at1on rules and other changes wi ll dry up the source of investors fo r the subs1d1zcd housing projects he has. been buildtng;K1ncannon believes. When his current projects fini sh up "I won't be doing any more I will be shutting down I 00 percc-nt ... he said. "When all th1'> gnnds down I will have to lay everybody off. There will be no rental projects. or commercial. T here Wiii be no construction unless I go into single-famil y houses and that market 1~ satura1ed .. .'.fhe problem. h-e---says;-1s-ttranh ne"' tax pro\ 1s1ons change how rent; propeny can be depreciated, lim deducuons on interest on debt an SC' ere!~ hmll the way in vestors ca wn te off investment losses. He explained that the apanmcn1 he builds are generally ta• sheltc'r sold to people looking for lossej the can be writt en off against otht'. income. a maneuver that will no1 face severe restrictions. What about the future'> He pauses and replies: "You don ha\C aJOb. do )'OU7'" The benefit'> of the ta' bill will b bigger and' more 1mmed1atc fo Richard Co'\. an accountant wit C.C. MtGregor and Co. 1n Columbia \( "I can \Cc lot\ of 12-and 14-hou da~ <.comrng up through the end of th• year» said C"ox. who reports lha clients have alread} begun askm1 how the new law \\Ill affect them anc "hat thcv should do about 11. "From a planning perspective, I sci October through November as bc1n1 a nightmare ... ( o'< ..aid "Probabl~ w11h10 the nc't 10 day: .. we will sec people scurrying arounc tryi ng to do lots or things before tht end of the year. try111g to fi nd gooc honcst-10-goodnc!>~ tax shelters to ea· up some of the losses they can•, deduct." C-0x said. ''A lot of legitimate Questions arc being ra ised. and I don't have a lot o magical answers." he said At Pepe Motors. a Mercedes Ben. dealership 1n White Plain<;, N.Y, : suburb of Manhattan. salesmc1 Donald Gunn and Rich Castcrella an noticing more people in their show room The) also have been doing som• homework on the tax bill and make 1 point of telling potential customer: that 'iOOJl \he deductibility of the sale: ta'< on a new Mer<;edes -as muct S2.000 or more on a top-of-hnc S65,000 sedan -Will be history. "It's been a to pic or conversation The salesman 1s goin11 to u~ it as < selling tool 1f a person as looking for < car 1n the near futu re." say: Ca!>terclla. Congress in rcwrit1 n~ the tu law: has eliminated deductton-; for sale: tax. a significant tax savings whcr buyrng expensive items such a! automobiles. It becomes even mor( s1gn1ficant for those in the U{>pet income brackets where deductions arc translated into greater actual tu savings. Gunn said he has talked to a number of customers about the tall laws and some who arc thinking ot buying a car next year arc planning to speed up the purchase to take advan· tagc of this year's tax benefits. While Gunn and Casterella m1gh1 reap additional sales this ~car. how· ever. G unn says there·s stall a catch. He womes that sales might drop ofl dunng the fi rst half of 1987. Coming Sunday Oct. 19, 1986 1n ... ' . .,.,.. • ._ ... C'OUt lllllyPlat .. - e ,, I j , s r r ' . . ,._ Tradtr:ig dull, restrained NEW YORK CAP) -Stock prices varied in dull trading today. supported by strenath in a few bia-name issues but restrained by 1 late shde in blue-chip leader Jotematiooal Business MachilkS Corp. . .. The big feature's IBM." sajd John J. Smith of the anvcstmcnt brokerage Fab,oestock & Co. "Without that we'd have a preuy good market. .. IBM. h1stoncally a stTong influence on the mar~et. dropPCd more than four points af\er the computer gtant's executives wd business was softening. The Dow Jone averaae of 30 lndunrials. down fract1 onally most of the day, firushed at 1 784.45, unchanged from the prev ious session. , Losers outpaced gainers by an 8-7 mar&in on the New York Stock Exchange. Big Board volume totaled 125.1 million shares. aga1ns1 88 2S million in lhc prcVious !ieSSIOn "'- T he N YSE's composJte index totaJcd 135.14. O'WTlir.tS- At the Amcncan Stock Exchange, the market 'alue index was 262. 96. up 0. 78. People NEED classifieil Daily Pilot classifieds work for you. _ ca11 642·S678 for quick cash sates. WH AT AM EX DID W HAT NYSE 0 10 NEW YORK (AP) Oct 1 NEW YORK (AP) Oct. 7 Prev. Prwv A1fvenced TOdey d•ta T°11 ~ m Adv~nceo ~ec~ned ~1 r.i nc anoed m h n9ed ttis 01111risues o a11ri1ues ~ewh ghs " 1f ~ew h ghs 17 ew lows 11 ew lows 22 AME X LEADERS I NYSE LEADER S . r' NEW YORK (AP) -s.i... 4 o.m. TUffdav price end net change of the 10 m O S I active A,,,.,.lcen Stock Exchange lu ues, l r adfng na llo n allv al mor e I h I n S 1 Name V tAst CM. TexuAlrCp 961. 33~ -11.l.i HornHar s1?S• 1111• + l'/• w1c11.r ,1 ."' s~~~rJ m" 1 .: ~ t 1 ~ Hut>ro s 2S + ,_,. G'""'nMktg n 9'"' 8AT Ind 6 7·16 + • Wl!Olgllal 14._ +1~ lnlThOrbd • 1~ GoLo QuoTES Dow JoNE s AvERA GES , METAL S QuoTES NEW YORK (API -Flrtal e>o.·Jones fir•r• for t~~ Oct. 1. a.. 1 1,,,..ls ~19 45 . lf':'n ,~m.so ,1 .. 13 ,5t.'>-I. 6S Slk U:ll . IS '05.17 1 ld-11, Indus , Tran • 00 Utlls M Stk , , • 00 NASDAQ SUM MARY li...arr YWOOOeou-• !.~MOY Ki: WU> WOfllD 01 l ntlOU>~ 1.0.ATLAMI NOMIMONG :.--·M.Y THINIWI -&'00- 11:~ * **14 ''Thet't Enterteln!Mflt, Plrt 2"'(1871) Fl*! Allin, Gellt Kelly. 1 •100.000 PVMMW) !C.., .. l .... l SllM Martin, CMl1et Grodin. et«:NA I PRIM[ TIME SOAPS --. (!)MOW *** "A Fine M**'-" (1"41) Seen Connery, Joennt Woodwlrd. ·Krystle-unconscious after car smashup MClla.DMN Of' A La181RQ0D"(R) 11:411, 1:00, 10: 15 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO une.NAMEOF THI RON" (Al 7:16, 8:30 4 TRACK OOL8Y 8TEAEO .._..., fllOTID" (PG 13) e:oo. 1:00 t:45 8URT L..-NCASTER "TOUGH GUYI" !PG> 7:30, 9:30 $2.00 TllD i E "LINK"(Rl 11:00. 11.00. 10 00 •2.00 TUES & WED "Pl.A YING FOR KEEPS" (PG 13) 7·00. 9.00 "2.00 TUES & WED. .. TOP GUN" (PG) 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO e·oo. 1·00. 10 oo "THE •OY WHO OOULD FLY" (PG) 7 00, 9 15 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO .. .._UE YEL VET" (R) 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO 7•111. 9•30 "ST AND BY ME" (A) 6:30. 9:30, 10:15 "CHILDREN OF A LEISER QOD" lR) 4 TRACK DOLBY STER£0 7;30, 9:46 FOUNTAIN VALLEY R l'~ 1 500 --T AT- "KAM Tl Kl> r (PG) 7. 15, 9·20 '1 00 TUES & WED "PLAYING FOR KEEP8" (PG13) 11 oo HAll>IODEI F (A) I 10. t'50 '1.00 TUES & WEO U~J IVF RS TIY 8(1·l 88,, ~ "TOP QUN" (PG) 7•30, 9:45 '2.00 TUES & WED "PLAYING FOR KEEPS" (PG 13) 8:00. 11· 15. 10·00 '2.00 TUES 6 WED 118TEAMING" (RI 7·00, 9.00 • '2.00 TUES & WED "ffW Ml LP" (PG 13) e:oo. 9·45 "Ml'T'HLEll PfOft.E" (RI 1:00 '2.00 TUES & WED .. CROCODILE DUNDEE" (PG 13) 8 15. I 30, 10 20 NO BARGAIN PRICE "CROCODILE DUNDeE" (PO 13) 8: 15, I 30. 10·20 NO BARGAIN PRICE IAfltGAIN WED u..::::.:::.==:.::.===--11 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO "THAT'S Uf£u (PG 13) 11: 15. 11•30, 10:20 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO "ST AND BY ME" <R> 11.00. 8:00. 9·45 "HALF MOON STREET"!RI 700. 9:00 "BLUE VELVET" (RI 7:30. 1000 "HAJlOIODIES If" (RI 8:30. 11:30, 10. 10 11.00 TUES 6 WED "PLAYING FOR KEEPS" (PG 13) 7·30. 9•30 •1 00 TUES & WED. "CROCODILE DUNDEE" (P t3) 1 15. 3 30, 5 45. 11'00. 10 OC NO BARGAIN PRICE "TOP GUN" (PG) MON-WED 7·30. 9:35 Thun. dOMd l0t 11\ldio pr!Mlw "TOUGH GUYS" (PG) BURT LANCASTER KIRK DOUGLAS 7.00. 9 15 ucffOCOOll£ DUNDEE" (PG 13) 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO 8;00, 1!30, 10 15 CINf MA <'OST A ME SA 5·lh J 101 "CROCODILE DUNDEE" (PG 13) 11.00 8 15. 10 15 NO BARGAIN PRICE '1." MON· THURS "Ml1ll.Dt Pf()tllF' (R) I: 10, 10:05 "NOTI..o IN COMMON" (PG)8:00 HARAOR TWIN ,, l 1 3 '.JO 1 ~ ...... "TOP QUN" (PGI 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO 7 30. 9 45 '2 00 TUES & WED "THE BOY WHO COULD FLY" CPGI 7 00 9 15 '2 00 TUES & WED "THE FLY" <RI 12.45, 2:45, 4:45 "CROCODILE 11:45, s~es; 10:30 DUNDEE" (PG 13) '1 00 TUES & WED. 11:15, 1:30, 10 20 "ALIENS" (R) NO BARGAIN PRICE 4 TRACK DOLBY ~REO "RMll IUEtlER" 8 00 1·00. 4 00. T:CfO. 9:4S "RUTHl.ESI PEOPLE" fRJ 11 00 TUES & WED 1110. 10 00 "EXTREMITIES" (R) , .. __ •_1 _oo_Tu_E_s_a _w_E_D ___ 1:60. 11;00. 10:00 '11ANHUNTER" (A) 3 40, 7 45 11.00 TUES & WED "HARDIODES I" (R) 12 30, 2:25, 4;20 8· 15, II; 15, 10:00 '1.00 TUES & WED "TOUGH GUYI" CPGJ 12·1s. 2:15, 4:15 II 15, 8:30, 10:20 SUOOO &E "TOP GUN" IPGl 7 15, 9 30 1 1 00 TUES 6 WE D "LINK" <Riii oo 1-...a::c..::.:..:~.,....__., "INVADERS FROM MAH" "HALF MOON STREET'' (RI 7.00, 9·00 •1 00 TUES & WED. "NOn.Q INC~ (PG)8:30 "IAC« TO tcHOOl." (PG 13) 6:35, 10 40 '1 00 TU£S a WED ''ROOM WITH A VIEW" (RI 7·30. 9•45 '2 00 TUES & WED "MANHUNT!R" (RI 6·30. 10·20 "EXTREMITIES" (Rl 8 45 '2 00 TUES & WED "HALFMOON STREET"<R> 7 00. 9.00 '2 00 TUES & WED "ST AND BY ME" (A) II 30. 8 30, 10 10 '2 00 TUES & WED. "CROCODILE DUNDEE" (PO 13) t :OO, 1:00, 10:00 NO BARGAIN~ "LINK"CR> 7 111,. 15 '2 00 TUU I WED (PG) II 10 10 00 •1 00 TUES 6 WED "FERAtl IU£LLER" 1130, 10 15 "flUTltHS PEOPLE" tR)8 30 '100 TUES & WED '0LINK" (RI 7 30, 9 45 12 00 TUES & WED "TOUGH GUYS" (PG) 6 00, II 15, 10 05 S7 00 Tl.(S & Wtl> "ST AND BY ME" (Rl 11 30. 9 30, 10 10 '2 ~TUES & WED "IOY WHO COULD FLY" 800 1100 1000(P0) '2 00 TUES & WED "HALF MOON STREET" !RI 700.900 •2 00 TUES I WED "TOUGH OUYI" (PG) 1·30. 0:30 '2.00 TUES 6 WED 11THE a<>Y WHO COULD ,LY" (PG) 700,9'15 '2 00 TUES I WED. r.~ I 1 ) 1 l ! I ) ~., • 1 f ) • • • '•, I ~ ' • I ~ ST AFIFIED SCREfN _S;;_..--"""1THLUI "OP\.I" (R) .. IT AND •Y Mr '"' 12 16, 2 16, 4 11 UM MA flNUS MON FRI II 10, 10 00 SHOWS 8EF"QAE 5 00 PM .,_ IUll L8"' (PO 13) ""'°' QUN" (fl'O) I 00 '2 00 TUH & WlO * t~.a •s "TOUIM Mr l'°l 7.~ .•• 30 IUlllD&• e oot• oo. 10 oo "200 UU&W!D .. 'TOUGH GUYS' IS A SPARKLING COMEDY with Lancascer and Douglas proving that star powt'r Ot'VCr £adts.'' _. lo&-·•a:lt &TOllO ~ ---lll -U.t\\l •-OAAHOI By LYNDA HJRSCH THE COLBVS: After able passes out, her doctor orders her to rest an bed for one week Al the insistence of all the children. Juon says Sable can stay at the mansion indefinitely but he plans to marry Fran~e and hvc there. In return for letting Sable stay, JaJOn ask~ for an uncontested d1vorec, to which Sable agrees. Frankie, distrustful of Sable, tells Jason she won't live under the ~me roof w11h her. Fallon and Jeff plan to go away for awhile. She tells him the) must be honest with each other con~ming their fcehnp about their unborn child After Dominique sells the c«ord 1:ompany and hotel to Zach, Monica resigns. JaM>n tclls Oomlnlquc fie cannot break his contract with Alexis and only do t>vsincss with Blake Miles beds dov.n with Channing Miles admits to Channing he sttll cares for Fallon. • • • DALLAS: W11h Donna conunuing to death ofh1s wife Evelyn 1n the La Mirage fire. Alellls threatens to get Blake on arson and murder charges. Krystle gels report which shows Blake had kept La Mirage up to very strict building code. Blake decides to get this story printed in the competing newspaper. Michael returns 10 work as Blake's GhaulTcur. s~ven Ines for rec· onciliatlon with Adam, who aarccs tQ 11. Adam then immediately goes to Alexis, telling her Steven is betraying her. Adam becomes director oflepl affairs for Alexis. CI;i> and Sammy Jo bccomina close. Alexis buys out Denver Camngton. Blake turns down Dex's offer to buy out 011 leascs or buy out newspaper from Alexis. Thorpe follow~ Blake's car an<! bumps him over embanlc-ment-. -Following acciOcnt. Michael and Blake are able to move but Krystle 1s unconscious. • • • FALCON CR~T: Aller the earthquake. Father Bob opens church to the surv1vo~ Emma on vc11e ofh)'1tencal collapst over the death or Duane 1n quake Angela survives quake Ma111e sends for her daughter Vicki to come home aflcr wamng to hear how scnously Chase was shot JefT Wamwnght remains on the loose. K.it nmvcs tn Tuscany Valley -·-· ~·""-' ... ""..,,. • .,, ttit -"-,._ --_.,. ... 1&1-UU "t LA---... HMTOll -1L1-. (-V-C- lobby in Washington. a lonely Ray seeks comfort from Jenna Jenna findins 11 harder to deal wuh Charlie's rebellion Cliff goes 10 Jack, trying to buy his shares in the company. J R. also approaches Jack with the same deal Sue Ellen dCCJdcs to io into the sleaz) ne&.hgtt business in attempt toembarrassJ R Mandy td'fffied • • • .. when shc·s almost struck dov. n by a car HILb STREET BLU~: When an "'''" -•111lte1 "' 05el • e COSl Allll.llA •LA -AllA WU-lUI u ....... c.--_,_., UAIWO-. ............ ~corr•~ l .. --r-"""t 1 ~Hiil he tells J.R. she thinks 11 was a deliberate airplane crashes near a c11y school and the attempt on her hre. Miss Ellie gets upset two occupants arc killed. iuthont1cs when.she.1"aroundWc.L.Wcsconllnucs to believe drugs may be 1nvolved. f8unt1 and fecreTly tootc at ap1cture ofM1ssElhewhtn -si<fthe snitch-becomc1nvolvcd·1n coca1nt she wu a young woman. deal. Sid suggests that Buntz take the 80 • • • pounds of cok:c and run. Bunu pys no DYNASTY: Alexis pnnu Thorpe's ac· way. When Buntz and Sid attend cocaine ______________ _._c_u_sa_t_io_n_s_t_h_at_e_1_ak_c_i_s_rcs_po_ns_1b_t_c_fo_r_·1_h_e_ auction, they barely escape being shot to death. When the suitcase filled with cocaine 1s impounded. Buntz spends half the night thinking about 11. Betker becom· cs a "bag man" and learns a hotel which gets mone) from the city 1n exchange for housing 1nd1gents really buy\ Lhc receipts LUXURY WAlt<.IN THEATRE OHUXE ORIVE·..S *fltOWl llEAl IUTTfllfO rc>PCOllflt AT All WAlK·lfltl* * ~2T°'Hlts * ~~~,, * Ali::-r:.~ EM·ml?M6J " iijihiil;ijiMfaUj6lft4u1 e:f'f. i~ ) m •1?!/!!!111 • .... TOUQH GUYS (1118) OtlLD•U. OP A •wrt un~1ter (1:05) (3:15) 5:30 L~IUM>Df") TOUSHeUYSCN) 7 :~O • t : 35 11 :00) (l : JO) I 110 Alto l'letcll C..C) --~~~~~~~ ... ~.....,a.:1-0.a.....,.1-0-:3•0~- THAT'S Ul'E C"Q·t• (1 :20) (3:30) 5:35 7 :41 .. 10•00 STNlllD av 111E PO PIGGY SUI 11 : 101 (3:20) 5:20 GOT MA••HD 7:20 &o t :JO (I 10)(> 2SHS•H )(7 4St(t UI AUDIS(W) 5:50 .. t ilS -No Pano- TO_.eUfl(N) 5:30 .. 1:50 -In 70MM - c•ocoou..a DUNDEE ..... U) Ount Ho (fl'tl-13) KA•Aft IUD II (N) fl'lu1 Runnlnt Sc.red (R) THE P\.Y flt) Nltlltmue On l:rm St. 2 (A) •UTHL.m f'llEOP\.a CW) ~. fl'lu1 Armad &o •• D1n1arout (fl'O·U) ~MA~• MONDAY THAU 9ATUAOAY 18T 2 PEMOAMANCES taC«PT HOUOAVa~ arA.-M01 • ll'IATV"I& LAKEWOOD Center LA MIRADA lllJIUI t\t01Fe ... 111 S. t-·· . . DOUT ITHIO'f'Mll MOeAl't ~ NUl't CIOCOOtLI DUNllll ~111 a..H oi A I.Diii 900111 ,, .. bU 4M .... WI II• titJJ,... ....... , ... WIUJAllll NU4" C"'LOllN Of A lUMI GOO 111 lllM•••·•• ... 1 ... DOl.H tnlltOIYOM (IKllll TOft GUNtNt 1J1M bM IJIS 7 .. 1 IMJ DOUT ITHIO ILUI VllvtT Ill I ... , ........... .. AKEW Cini•• ~outh 1z1111J1tll1'fu•Hr1lf Ori AMe ,.. MUa1 .. , °"~Ill lb» Wt._,. •UTHLISS ttl<Wll 11J "" ... I .... IHl'I GOnA HAVI IT Cll I IO ).» ., .. ..U 1<M ta.• -.aT ITIMO IUll' ~ IOUllM TOUGH OUYI IN! 1Mti.a1 .......... II .. ANAHEIM f'14Jl1! !llltJ.1mao a ft11ft ,.,., Hrlllfl~l("~ .. "4.\ J4!, .. TOM CIMtl fOP OUN l"f IACK TO ICHOOL r ... u1 HMNOOtll 2 1111 ,_...., ., °" ,....,, ORANGE (7'1•) .,._.,.,,, • .., • Cll!pMll M IOT WNO~ RTfNI COCOON.,.tit OOUT mMO ..,. ........ ITAND IY Ml ftll 12'» ,,. •.at .......... .. TOM cau1H TOf' GUN !NI I"° lilt l tH 1111 1•11 TMI IOY WHO COULD fl Y !N I lilH ,. ...... , .. Mt ILUI VILVIT 111 h ltJ· ......... , .... THI PLY ltl 1 ......... lllHTMMI ON U AWi •MT 2 PllOOY'I lMNOI Ill " ..... , .... BUENA PARK lfl•ll11 •trt l •octl• fl ti •••n -.it:r 'NH ...,..,. tflttt-.. IUflT IMCi"'.,..,. IOl*M TOUOH OUYI INt fllTCH !NI ..,. ........ ITAHO H Ml P•IOHT MGMT LoHABRA ...... iJ.aJ c-n -·----ToueM MIYl4"'t ""'" .... GATEWAY .OUT S..-0 MTIMU.,._W TOUGH OUYl lNI ......... ,.u lliei DOlH snno LINK1•1 ltU >1U t14I .... 10.IJ DOllT lftUO ,1.AYINO POI Kii" t,..U) ,, ................ .. ,_ ..,._ CIOCOOtLI DUNOH '"°IJI 1 .. IJ.U .... IJU , ... -*" ~' WIAVll HMP MOON I TilllT C11 IM a.• ... ,,. "" ,. .... HIWAY 39 ,Mii. MOeoAH CllOCOOIU ""911 t"'llJ GUNO NOf ,,....,, ·A charming good time movie that's impossible to resist ... • ..,..,,., Slit.¥~ There's o llttte of him In all " us. jPO·tlJO AFW?MO.NT PCTWE:"~·: ;;'T,....,.. C' ..... ~ ~' '11 .. "' ..-i."'"'°" ~""" .... ~: .. ...-. 1.f11lvf ....:-# NOW PLAYING •MU .-.1 ~ ··~~· , ...... .,, .. t \:19\Jll ...... .. IMIUll• MM:ll , .... ,."' ..... ..,, ~ ' .u~ ...... ,r.--... ~ YI '6• ·--.... ~ ail. .......... »t.ni-·--.... &MN:! • HAMtOll , ••• t " ., ,. ,. "'M • Wtlt-IU• • ... 1 ... .,... ...... OMllll '"" - ,. # "'' -0 #U_,_ .. . ;.~;&.1: .. .... """"""' t '. m---. --. ........ ete ....................... , "Francis Coppo!a bu made aclwmic~ f,1\1 'l\k[l Utl(,[R UERT &THC \Ill\ I[\ "Kathleen Turner is a marvel~ [1411~ ~""" 'l[W\" tr~ for $4, which the meet people U!it' to buy liquor A druJ \tore becomes target of someone putting poison m ofT-1hc-shclf druss. Leaming that his old girtfnend 1s gctung mamcd, U.Rue attends her wed· ding .. ,. KNOTS LA.NDING: Phil Hobart. who was once aSkcd by Ma<' to testift to committee against mob, vmts <.rrca Sumner Sumner is unaware that Phil " holding· Karen hostage. At Lily Mac's tnSIStcncc. Mac decides It's time he arcw closer 10 Paige. Paige talks to Mac about her late mother Ann. He discusses how much he loved her Sumner thanks Ben when hc suppon~ Peter for his race for . state ~naror Ben warns Surnnet ~s going to keep an e)e open to make ccr1:11n that he rcall)' 1s cleaninJ up Lolus Point. Jill longs to be with Gar). while Abby continues to play the duttful pohucal wtfc Hobart becomes violent when he finds out Karen 1s trying to dig a tunnel to freedom Karen, who ft.els her s1tua11on 1s growing more hopeless. panics when the apartment v. here she's being held 1s cngulre<t by smoke • • • ST. ELSEWHERE: Jae~ has trouble coping with his stepchildren. e'pcc1alfy has wife's daughter, a well-devcJopcd 14-year- old who run\ around thc apartment in skimpy clothing. much to Jack's em!>ar· rassmcnt. Elliott 1s thnllcd when he thinks JotmMcEnroe1uommgtGl»dc:vpa~~f his X-ra)s. HIS elation turns to depression when he instead rcee1vcs a rettim vis11 from John Doe. who still can't recall his 1dcnuty. Jackte. a surgical resident. •~ anguished when she learns her husband of seven years wants a divorce Mark Craig·~ attempt at surgery fails when his hand doesn't show enoush dextcnt) and he must 1um the operation o"cr to Victor and Jackie "Brilliant!" -~~ CttfCAGO TlllBt;NE SYNOICA Tl. WILLIAM HURT ~ow PLAY ING lllU ~ ...... _..,.. ...... VtUJt -lllllAQI ---.. _ .... f ..-111'.AC~ """"',. .-.... "-'• IA-....... _,, . ......,. ... :q; "'Peggy Sue Got Married' is marvelous. I was absolutely entranced. One of the best films of the year. 'Peggy Sue Got Married ' will very probably get Academy Award Nominations for Best Picture and Best Ac1ress. Kathleen Turner:· cc,£ 'IWLu oc.cRtscRu rnr\4()\1[\ "Francis Coppola's film is delightful and ~ N~ C.'s cpricy Olarlie has depth and poignance -he's an original. Who wooJd t.iqm a timeb'avel movie to tell us so much about marriage, compromise and coming to terms with the past?" -0..'4 4,"" \[V., .. E£ .. "Funny and stylish. as heartfelt and joyous a movie as we\ie seen all year. ~athleen Turner is gloriously good, JUst a.s amazing as the movie's terrific screenplay'.' -Ori> •• r1111··~ cas.n .. * * * *· It's Francis Coppola's best film since 'The Godfather''.' Rn ""'1 AT Tl1C MVVID \ • I. W~ Oclehr I own "detective work." Rambunctious as50Ciatc lets off steam, requires 81!LP.fKP08ED PENALTY. (March ~l·Apnl 19): Spin-sympathy. tual values unfold, you .. gain enlighten-Di fi . fi . · . Both vulnerable. North deals. _______ ..... .._ __ ... , ment, sense of perception is hei&htcned. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): & deep or in onnauon, be analytical. 'NORTH Emphasize communication, be "in utilize "psychic abilities." You'll locate article that nad been lost, missma or •A Q 10 , touch" with those at a djsiancc. those who SYDNEY stolen. Member of opposite sex is dra":n to you, admits it. . appeared indifferent will now be com-SAGm1'ftlUS (Nov. 22·0ec. 21): family member seeks approval for <;> Q J 5 pcllcd to look and listen. o what mi&bt appear to be bizarre plan. Be pau~nt, provide counsel without ¢ A K Q TA.,RUS (April 20..May 20): You MARR passinajudament. You get good news regarding health. Taurus. Libra. Scorpio • K 7 8 learn more about finances, you gcit peopJc play key roles. · WEST EAST realistic view _of money as ii relates to , _ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Perfect techniques, streamline • 8 7 6 3 • 9 5 2 possible. ~~incss parthcr or mate. You'll meet de~31ine, you'll have moJle proccdwes, get rid of superfluous material .. M':'ch that occurs could be V> 9 6 4 2 V> AK 8 responsab1htr, r.ou could get promotion. "mystery." Wait for clouds to clear. Secret meeting 1s proposed by one who has O J to 9 O 8 7 e 4 3 ~~ . (~ay 2 1 -Jun~ 20),:. Fjnish rather than stan, reach t>exond your best interests at heart. , • 3 2 • 10 5 prey1~us .. 1tm1ta~1ons. Relat1onsh1p 1s tested, could end or achieve 'new AQU~IUS (Jan. 20.fcb: 18): .Focus Qn pay~ents, coll~ct1ons •. ab1~ity to SOUTH bclln~ng. Nothang occurs halfway-It will be aJI or "forget it." Aries figures fortify rcl,auonsh1p. You'll wan_poant of law. yo\J II also galn adm!rauon °' • K J prominently. • . peers, superiors. You'll get credit long overdue. <:;> 10 7 3 CANCER (J~ne 21-July 2~): New employment opportunities arc present. . PISCES (Eeb. 19-March 20): Some Will accuse you of being "'matenal-0 5 2 You11 attract people who shar~ your basic beliefs, ideaJs. Love is present, you'll istic." Ignore envious people, tic loose ends, fin ish what you start. Ambition •A Q J 9 8 4 get lO heart of matters. You will receive and provide inspiration. can be fulfilled if you pounce on present opportunity. Libra nat19e plays • The bidding: LEO (July 23~Aug. 2~): First i.mpres.sions prove correct. Emotions, outstanding role. howevc.r, tend to d~vert logic. Kno"'. ll, count your change, refuse to give up IF OCTOBER I IS YOUR BIRTHDAY major domestic adjustment figures North Etit Sooth someth10g for not_tung. Transform.at10"! takes place at home. prominently, could include actual change of residence or mantal status. 2 NT Pua 6 NT VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): D1vers1fy, check travel opportunities. realize Cancer, Capri corn play important roles in your life. You are decisive, capable Pua Dble 7 • you ~~e unusual c~an~ to reverse rJ!cent setback. Accent publicity, ofhandlingrcsponsibility, mtcnse, sentimental, creative, romantic. You could Pua Dble PaH ?dve~sing, CC?m~unicauon. wh?t .. had l>een evasive is now available. ex hibit talent as composer, musician, artist, author. Whatever you do, it is all Pua including genuine propcny bargain . . the way, nothing in-between or tepid. During October, -¥-OU learn di fference Opening lead: Jack of 0 Wea.t Pua Pua Pua ~RA (~pt. 23-0ct. _22): Define meanm~ .. clanfy terms. check source between wishful thinking and reality. November will be memorable, matcnal. ~clatlve maybe sincere but could be m1s1nformed. Know it, do your profitablt";. producti ve for you In 1986. We've said It before and we'll say It again: "Bill Root is acknowl- edged as the L .. •ntry's best bridge teacher." If we had any lingering doubts. they were dispelled by his new book. "Commonsense Bid· Anyone planning an escape? Take me with you. 'Shopahollc' needs toK.1ck costtyhabit 0 ~eorro"9e len•tS of •h• four acrombled word> be- low •o form four lirnple wOf'dl I TESHAW 11 I I 12 I \ SUROY I CHA1L£S Go1E1 011R SHUIF . DEAR ANN LANDER~: We are all aware of chocoholi!>m . work- acoholism and alcoholi sm. but 10 my knowledge, no one has foc used on "shopaholism." Unfonunately, my lovely wife 1s affiicted. ~ "Carol" has always enJOyed buying gifts for friends and family members, as well as going on shopping sprees for herself. Before I retired. this posed no problem. l viewed her spending as a hobby and it was OK with me. Carol didn't drink or gamble and I decided her "vice" was quite harmless. But now that m> income is considerably smaller it is necessary that we curb frivolous expenditures 1n order to It vc within our means. .___._I '_.._I _1· ......__.I l r---.T_I...,.....D..,0,,.._T....--.\ ""~·! 1 have lhrM pairs of glulee I Is I' I _ One pair is tor outs.Ide. one for in- . . . . side and the third pair Is to find I have mentioned this to Carol several ttmes but she doesn't seem to ---------.. the - - I VREOOG I 1--.-1 --..,--..:-,? -.-l _,,,,,:--i O Com11le .. '"• chuclle QuOled -_ Oy •1f11rt9 fn fhe tlHUfng WOtds ....__.____,,_,,__~__..___. fOY d""•'°" from >l•P No 3 below ANN UNDER$ TODAY LS C:ROSSWORD PUZZLE Daily Pilat & TWA , FIND OUT HOW GOOD WE REALLY ARE fflGHTS AVA/IA.BU FIOM OIANG£ COUNrY TO fAt VIA G0t()EN STAT} AltltNES #Al • -J get the picture . In fact. she Is more out of control than ever. Last month sbe charged in e'\ccss ofS2.000 over and be> ond DCCCSStllCS. We are a "cry happ> co uple and I do not wish to upset her. What do you suggest? -ANONYMOUS IN PALM BEACH. DEAR ANON: You'd better upset ber, and soon, before you find yourself with a serious c11e of credit cardiac arrest. The woman is a reckless spender and yo\J are obviously putty in her bands. Unless your banker or lawyer can get her to cut up those little plastic demons by explaining that she is bankrupting you, I suggest pro- fessional help. Spending money can be as serious an addiction as alcohol or gambling and just as b.ard to give up. Aussie bird an interloper Am told mO\ 1cmakcrs put the call- of the Kookahurra h1rd onto the sound tracks of almo\t all their jungle films, whcrC\'Cr \hot But that bird li ves only tn .<\u\tralla 6 .-Whcre's "th~I lHhl•r" (;olden Gate Bndgl·:' A. Aero.,!> the l 1gm 1n Ponugal's Lisbon. A co p) of the ong1nal but not L.M. Bo YD ACROSS 1 Lang syne 5 King of the Huns 9 Played parts 14 Singer 15 NeKt 10 Turkey 16 Want badly 17 Fabulist 18 Secular 19 Radium un11 20 Making do 22 Overtures 24 The Fox 26 Tingle 27 Achieves 29 Central to 30 Crevice 33 Lessening 37 Amalgamate 38 Swords- 39 Lifelong 40 Informs 4 1 D1sregaro 42 Erie pon 44 NeKt to Sept 45 Dandy 46 Deckhand 47 S1t1y ones 49 Scold 53 Preclude 5 7 Art gallery 2 3 14 17 20 24 33 34 35 exact. One lane less each way. 11l1tcrate'i 1n the lln1tcd States 38 outnumber all the pcopk 1n England. 41 Q. "No. you 1d1ot' Mmnew13 is nol our Triple D1v1d.c State. where ~aters 44 drain to the Pacific. the Atlanuc and the Arctu: Tnplc Dtv1dc Peak in Glacier Park marks fl. Only one other Triple D1v1dt' c~1!il\ -1n 1bcna - where you ought to be sent tf you don't pay attention to your notes." A. You're right. The nation's illiterac~ grows. Even It\ columnt\h look at the word "Montnna" and writ~ "M1nnewta." L.M. Boyd 11 11 tyadl<'•led col1m•l11. 58 62 65 4 58 Incident 59 Par11allty 61 Ace 62 Cakewalk eg 63 Eight pref 64 Imitation sull 65 Sneakier 66 Stumble 67 Grass stem DOWN 1 More wan 2 Comparable 3 Pigment 4 Storms 5 Distress 6 Allurement 7 Retrea1s 8 Hinders ... 9 Harmony 10 Pie part 11 Source of tannin 12 ln1qu1tous 13 Letters 2 1 Rum drinks 23 Suffering 25 Goddess Lat 28 Some farm 6 7 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED work 30 Be effusive 3 1 Italian c1~ 32 Colombian coin 33 Showroom car 34 Narrative 35 Surplus 36 NeKt to Ind 37 Runner 40 Euro~ans 42 Wild P8r1Y 43 Besmear 8 45 Promote 47 Engage in swordplay 48 Goll problem 50 Having wings 51 Cake 52 Terminated 53 G· and T -men 54 Woodbine or P1ml1co 55 Kidney prel 56 Deparled 60 Our sytem s star 10 11 12 13 ' • l ." ., . , . TBS PAlllLY CIRCUS by Bii Keane "This is the salt and this one is the ... um ... the dirty salt." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson 10-7 "We have to find out what he's been up to before mom comes home .. .he can't even look me in the eye!" PEANUTS HERE'S THE WORLD WAR I FLYtN6 ACE SEARCHING THE SKIES FOR HIS ENEM'i', THE REO BARON .. GARl"IELQ TUMBLEWEEDS BIG GEORGE by VJrgll Partch (VIP) /e. y "I decided to p•lnt It 111 blink so's we c1n 'tart again from scratch." b~Charles M. Schulz PEEKABOO, I SEE '1'0U ! ACTUALLY, WORLD WAR I FL¥1N6 ACES ·VER'r' 6 1_ SELDOM SAID, ''PEEKABOO, I I SEE '(OU!~ f • ~ ~ 1 ~ ~ by Jim Davis ~RIVE-TH RU RE5i AORANT5 ARE. 50 CONVEN1£.N1' ...,--~.,.--~---r "'FMIS (1t)V'S ~(\) CONl'Jll\IG FtX>R i--~-------_., SOCKeRS IN10 "-lYlNCS SKARE:S 11\l -me Ul\lt-n:i;' S"T"A1l:S Mlf\11"! ~rl DRABBLE by Kevin Fagan R08El8R08£ by Pat Brady lGJ ! 1Hl6 CW£ fNlll6 ~ KJP4P CJ ~fWfHr R> alllftR ~emfR~ l{AJ~~V~? CDllR iMM (Xgf i ,, ' . ---= =~-------.:1 ,---...--'I BLOOll COUNTY U.S. ACRES FOR BETTER-OIH"OlrWORS PLf\Nf R30SC. ?l WHR\ I 1VE HAD SO MAN'{ f1JWIR01JSE.? 1 <rosr 1FtiNG50N MY MIND ~lOWA~ 1fiAT I THEM···lHATSALLI aa~~ JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WJNKERBEAN "!'UE (J)ME 10 "rnE ~5100 iHAI Liff 15 AN EMPfl,' I ltDIOOb £'f.PE.RJ~ OEOOID OF ALl MEANING OR HOPE! ' 1 I I .. KIM'S AT THE! TAeLe , PLAYING CARDS! YOU CAN EITHER VISrT WITH HER HERE OR IN HER ROOM ! WELL ... IF ~ COULD WlbH rQR ONE -rn1~6 ... WHA1" WOULD Ii BE ~ by Berke Breathed 11IJ #JU Ml' IY ,__.._ 1111 IWA/f:t(, 6Y ~ut ~:. 1¥ Rf5Nl(MI ~y ~/BVU.* 11W« )CIC/ Ai. S4 ~ / by Jim Davis · Dyeynn Jonnston by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batluk 10 ·1 DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau OH. CQIAE WHYWTZ (HIT, WHY aYPE ... HOT~ \ \ , AN() 7Hl: lKH5 7HJNK.. Sile!> VERY, ~ Vl/t.• /l/EMBl.E, ON 7H5 [)f?J,6 ft/AR.ISSU6. IN FACT, Jt6'Ve CJUJOEI) TD f.l5E IT ASMY CAMPAIGN THEME' ' llf:IJ., f()f( ATaJ!iT! $TA/l:ff,RS, 1){Ar;A lQlvstP 'tf.RYIM- 105a.L lf)l(.TANT Cf)l(S. PISTINCTKl/1 I ' .. - I --~ --- eleme_.s says el~ow '.l is ·1.00 percent r~aay Ul111n1m1e Re,ile-~acbon bola up bla recently ln-_per Gene Mauch durln.tl Monday'• battllul -jarecl bamhrblle Wlffiiiwltb Aiijil• eklp--pracdce for tontcbt'• AL playoff• opener. Re ledeclareshe'll l>e ready. too, despite , ls brulsea left hand BOSTON (AP)-Roeer Oemcns, the most dominant pitcher in bQeball this seas<>n, said hi.a injured ri&ht ·elbow was "I 00 percent" ready Monday as the Boston Red SOx ~pared to meet the Angels tonight 10 in the first of a best of seven sene for the American league pennant. AL ,,1~z~ ::!'eda.1,e T ...... .,_.. 11 htlon, 5;25. ......... v ~ II ao&lll\, it;OS P/'ft p,...., BollOll II .,._, S10 Pm ao.1on 11 ..::t:"tlo\.m. ~ 9oslOQ II ANlh, ,_ (H 'lllUIWl'V) · • T..-w, Oct. i4 ......, 1 1 lollon, S:20 Pm (If nl<:fts- ery) w....-v,Oct.IS ~ 1 1 lollOft, ~ 0 m. (If necftJ• IN) All Nmet 10 bt ltlevlMCI bv ABC {(lleMll 7) Clemens, who was 3--0 against the Angels this year. admitted his elbow that was hit by a line drive last week was still "sore to touch." r. · But the right-hander, who led the Jackson got upset a1ier making an ALwitha24-4rccordand2.48camed ou~-rays on Jackson's hand were run average, said he would be fine to · negative , and he took batting practice start in the opener against Mike Witt. Monday. "My arm's 100 percent," Clemens "I think by tomorrow(today) I'll be said. When pressed for details about IOOpercent," Jackson said. 'Tv~ hurt hi s recovery, he firmly replied, .. I my hands a lot. bu1 my hands have don't want 10 talk about my arm always come back .. anymore:·-Mauch said he would wan un11I Witt was 1-8-10 this-yearand .. -1--..... 2-c"'o .... n<+>tg11.n..-1 befOre t1ec1d ing on a lineup. against Boston. Overall, the Angels "A lot depenas on Re~e," Mauch won the season ~nes 7-5. with the said. "He says he's a quick healer." teams splitting six games at Fcnway Jackson, despite his "Mr. October" Park. reputation, has a career average of While Clemens· problems may only .234 in 10 playoff sencs. How- have cleared up, another injury ever, in the World Scnes, he has hn doudcd1heuutlookforthe SUlrt of the .357 ~with fO home rurls 1n five best-of-seven series. appearances. thereby gaining his Reggie Jackson, the Angels' des1g-nickname. nated hitter, again was in the post-Two other Boston pla)'ers who had season spotlight. nursing a left hand ~n slowed by mrnor tnJuncs. third injured when he hit a dugout wall baseman Wade Boggs and catcher Saturday night during a game at Rich Gedman, were ~pcctcd to 1tart Texas. Angels Manager Gene Mauch Game I. '\aid the incident occurred when Boggs. th e ma1or lea11.ues· batung el\amp1on at 3S7, did not play 1n Boston's final fourpme.s becaute of a nght hamstnna i_njury. "Four days off and sittint lD the trainer's room doina the therapy drove me t'razy,"·Boas said. "I just hope the lhenpy worKi:d. ·• Red Sox Manager Jobn McNamara said Gedman was fttli~ .. some discomfort" from bc1ha hit 1n the shoulder by a foul tip Saturday, but was ready to play. · Chilly temperatures in tbe upper 40s ~ere forcca t for Tuesday nipt. Clemens said, "The weather is not going to make a ditTerence" to him and Wm sajd he had the .. type of metabolism I work up a sweat no matter how cold it is." Both teams worked out at Fcnway Park on Monday in brisk S<Hlcgrcc temperatures with wind gusts up to 40 mph. Boston coach Rene Lachemann pitched batting P.racllcc wearina a red stocking cap while McNamara ftad on heavy &)oves. An&ds coaches also bundled up as they bit fun1oes off the amous eft held wan, giVing cir outfielder.1 a chance to get ac- tustomcd to the bounces. Outside the ballpark, occasional mu ffied cheers and chants could be heard from fans who bou&ht the remAtnjn& tickets to..lhe-playofT5, Officials esumalcd Che line was nearly two miles long. starting at tbe Red Sox' ticket office along Yawlcey Way and wrapping fully around the COZ) baJipark. About 2.000 uckets went on sale Monda} for each pme. an<i fans were. able IO-.buy two uckea-to jus\. one-o the games. Houston vs. Mets Summers proves a point: Tars deep . Quarter back's steady effort typifies Satlo~ · overall look By RICHARD DUNN -After alt: Newport Harbor has been known to breed some prelt) good quanerback'i in the past And after last Friday night's 21-7 v1ctol) over previousl y unbeaten Costa Mesa (3-1 ). Summer~ may begin to have thoughts of filling a big hole created by his predecessor.Shane Foley. Prep Player of the Week in a word It's pitching, top fObottom for both NL title winne r s De11J Net Com 1111Nefll There could soon be a quarterbatk con- troversy at Newport Harbor High. Foley. wpo's now at USC. put up some imposing numbers dunng his career at Newport Harbor. Summers isn't expected to duplicate the two-year effort of Foley. He just wants to win and give the credit to everybody else. Wrong. BreJtfus. remember, was Brinkley's starter when the bell rana in September and completed ~•x of 12 paso;es for 67 yards before he was inJurcd. ( BreJtfus was Foley's baclcup last Senior Vince BreJtfus. who opened the season for the Sailors as first-year head coach JefT BnnkJey's starting signal caller. went down with a fractured throwing hand in the sea~on opener against Santa Ana. season as a JUnior.) - HOUSTON (AP) -Houston Mana,er Hal Lanier realizes very well that 1t will be sircngth-against- strcngth when the Astros meet 1he New York Mets in the National League playoffs. He is rehabilitating the inJury and apparently on his wa)' to recovery bct'ausc Bnnkley confirmed Monday night that BreJtfus could be available to play Thursday against El Toro 1f needed. The injury to Breijfus lefl the gate wide open for Junior Kirk Summers, Brinkley's No. 2 quanerback in earl} September. to step in and become an overnight hero "I was a lot more confident in this game than I wa~ in the first game," ummers said. "BeingJu\l a junior and going out there ... I was nervous. "But now I feel real comfortable. And 1t helps when you hcfve great receivers like Mark Craig. Joe Maxw~ and Steve Kalatschan. Bui most of the credit goes to the line. because without them I wouldn't be anything.'' In hi'> third stan of the season. Summers completed 11 of 17 pa\!>C'i for 11 0 yards and two touchdowns including no interceptions. He got the Tars on the board in the second quancr last week w11h a 16-yard sconng pass to Joe Maxwell and ga ve the a1lors a 21--0 lead in the fourth quaner w1 1h a 5-yard touchdown toss to Mark ( ra1g. Summers earned the D01I) Pilot's Player of the Wee k honor for his efTon against the Mustangs, a game 1n wh1 rh he showed no weaknes~s. ··They won their d1v1s1on so early because of their pitching,.. Lanier said. "That's their strength. They have so many people who can shut If ummerscontinues to lead the a1lor!> 1n the manner he did lasl week. he should ha"e a lod on the. startJng quarterback JOb. nght? "I think the game against Ocean View may ha'e been a hule h1l belier," said Summers. who (Pleue .ee T AR8/C3) ::~~~~~frh.~~~~~~~o:,a~Wni~~;~; Cd:·.··, ··•esa an"-e up,· ,.,..a•s at ET with an earned run average of 3.15. 1r.& ~ .tr.&·~ LI .I, ~ .& 1 second in the Nauonal League. be- hind the Mets' 3.11 . The Astrosy had one stretch. beginning on Sept. 23. during which they won six of eight games. all by shutouts. The best-of-seven playoff senes begins Wednesday night in the Astrodome, with 1985 NL Cy Young Award winner Dw1ghl Gooden of Sea Kings hold 15-5 series edgeoverCM; Sailctrs have big task By ROGER ~ARLSON OtlMDellfll'lotltlff NL pla{::'!!';~~ale Corona del Mar High-~ ca Kings WedlleMlv have a reputation lo protect. Pffw York Mtt' al Houston. s 2S om The Sea Kings have a 15-5 scnc!t Tllundlv New York Me" at Houston, s·20 om edge over Costa Mesa H 1gh in Sltvr•v football and have won the last six. Houston II New York Mtll, 9 10 am But Mesa is determined to pu• Suftdly Hou•ron ar New York Mth. s 20 Pm. some holes in that reputation in a Mlndlv, 0<1. 11 • 1rad1t1onal nvalry between the two Houston ., N-v°'"" Me"· 12:05 om 111 NewPort-Mesa schools. nt<'euary) Wtclnetdllv,Oct. u Newpon Harbor. meanwhile, finds New York Met' 11 Houilon, 12-os om 111 itself in deep waters aga1 n'it El Toro, TllurMlv. 0c1." Nu. 2 in the Daily Pilot's Orange New YOf'k Me" 11 Houston. s 20 om 111 County rankings. MCenarv> Here's a look at this week's games AM o•""' 10 be 1a1ev1~ bv ABC !Channa• 11 involving Sea View League. Pacific Coast Lca$ue and South Coast League enincs from the Orange C'oasl area: New York facing Mike Scott. who led the NL wit h 306 strikeouts and pitched a no-hitter against San Fran- cisco on Sept. 25 when the Astros clinched the NL West. Seott was 18-1 0. while Gooden was 17-6 forthe Mets, who clinched the NL East on Sept. 17. Lanier. first-year manager for the Astros. he has a great deal of respect for his Mets counterpart. Davey Johnson. And he rcalm~s the Mets have more weapons than just pitch- ing. Corona del Mar ( 1-3) vs. Costa Mesa (3-l ): "Co'ita Mesa 1s 3-1 and they're playing vel) well," said CdM Coach Dave Holland. who hat been involved in 12 of those dec1s1on (10-2). "They have a good running back (Tyler Riddell) and their quar- terback (Mike Crowe) doesn't do anything to hurt them. (Mike) Szypersk1 1s a good defensi' c ballplayer and a good north and south runner at fullback. "They do some thing'i offensi vely. out of several different 'iCts. which can bend and tretch a defense.·· This week's prep games, odds Thursday El foro b\ 7 v. oodbridge b> · 1 ~ Un1versit> by l Wc~tminsler by 3 Ne'' pon Harbor vs. El Toro (at Mi ssion VicJO) Woodbndgc vs. Estancia (at Newpon Harbor) Dana Hills vs. Uni versity (at lnine) Foothill at Westminster Friday Costa Mc:'ia 's. Corona del Mar (al Newpon l Laguna Bellh at San Clemente Villa Park al Irvine CdM b} 3 Laguna Beach b) 7 Irvine b> 4 Mater De1 by 6 Edison by 4 Santa Ana by 8 Millikan b) 3 Poly by 9 Saddleback by 6 Huntington Beach vs. Mater Dc1 {at OCC I Santa Monica vs. Edison (at Huntington Beach ) Santa Ana V$. ~n View (at Westminster) Manna at Millikan Fountain Valley vs. LB Poly (at Veterans 'tad1um ) Saddlcback at Capistrano Valley ... Holland said he doesn't see any e'tra mot1 vat1on fo r the rej uvenated "1 us1angs 1n trying to show up an old 'ka Vic.,., Lea$ue foe. "Playing Cor- ona del Mar 1s mot1 vat1on enough. We have m alnes with all lhc district schools. I don't think they have been put doy, n b) going to the Pacific Coast League. which 1s a lot more balanced than some people fch before the <.~a'ion. ··our turnovers are troublesome nghl now and we've gol 10 ">top I hem 1f ""e're going to be a good football team .. rm not a!> concerned as I normally would be w11h three !tnught losses, because this team knows where 1t 1s going. We knew we had a lot to accomplish 1n the prcscason," "Corona del Mar is a lot belier than 1tHccord." said Baldwin. "Take awa y the touchdown plays from their C'apo Valley film and ask 'who won·r and you'd probabl) sa) Corona del ~1ar. "Against Woodbridge an inter- ception and fumble produced Wood- bridge touchdowns. Other than that Corona won the game. "Offensively they don't do what we can do. bul the)°'c very s1m1lar in terms of defense lo Newport, solid and big. 'Corona dcl Mar t'i always big for our kids Asa coach, ll''i not a b1gdcal, but for these kids. the> 'd rather beat Corona del Mar than anybody. It's our big m al \\l e ha .. c Estancia and Ncwpon Harhor. but< ·orona del Mar i our h1g nval. .. Newport Harbor (3·1 I vs. El Toro (4-0): Newport has racked up three wins in ce an opening loss. but will be hard-prc~sed to continue the 'itrcak against the Chargers and standout 1uruoc quarterback Bret Johnson . as well as alforacofOffier talent. "El Toro '' a bun sa"':· ">aid Newpon Ha rbor Coach JcfT Bnnl...tc~ ··The) arc a solid team \II Ith a good offen sive and dcfrnl>IH' line, a good quancrback and fine rece1 .. er!.. "I think this 1s their year to put evel)'thing together "It's going to be a heck of a challenge for our athlete".>. e!>pcc1all) our secondary. Costa Mesa ha'i suc- cess throwing the ba ll early on us and El Toro can really make the big phi > .. We aren't planning, anything special. We hope to JUSt sharpen up everything and get tuned up for league. i\ t!!ood performance against El Toro will definitely gi ve us some momentum going into league We hope to be solid mcntalh. be in position and do thin~ ngh1 Then we'll let whatc\cr happen,s ph>'>•C.all}" hap~n ·· Woodbrlda~ 14·01 vs. Estancia (0-4) at N~wport Harbor: Thert''' a mismatch here. 1n terms of r{'{·ords and c\pericnce _"The)·, e hcen struggling.·· ~'\l\I Woodbridge Coach Ciene "loJr ··Estanci a 1s a really} oung 1eam.'' Noj1\ pnmal) concern I\ 1..l'eping his unbeaten Wamor" mcntalh read) "T.hat'l> the oh' IOU\ P'~chtl­ logical problem an> coach would tall about, but I think after last "'eek. overconfidence or complaccny .,,..on't happen Bill'°· "We're just going 10 go .11\rr lht.•m 100 percent and sec what haooens · (Pleaee eee PREP /C2) "Davey's done a great JOb. and I think the difference this yeu with the Mets is that they're not just one pitcher," said Lanier. who was a coach for the pennant-wmning t. Louis Cardinals last year. "They've had Kevi n Mitchell. Tim Teufel and Len Dykstra all for the whole season. They can ao to their bench. They have better bllance and a ~tronger bench. Rams have-that flair-when game on line .. You throw a lcf\-hander at them. From AP dl1patclies and they come back with Mitchell. The Rams, while unable to pul togethe1 a ' You throw a right-hander, and they reall y dominant game th1t. season, have cena1nly oome at you with Dykstra, Wally shown a nair for the dramatic. Backman and Howard Johnson." "We aot three of our four wins on the last play The Meu' manaaer, on the other of the game," Rams Coach John Robinson s:ud hand, recoan1zcs Lan1er's game t>lan. Monuay at h1 weekJy meeting with rcpartcrs refined as a coach under Cardinals "When we play. you aotta stay until the end ... Manaacr Whitey Herzog. On offense. Ttic Rams. whose c.arher victonc~ of 16-10 the Astros' philosophy is to attack. be over St. Louis and l 6.13 over an FrnnC1sco tt1.rcs ive take the extra b3sc weren't a ured until the l'lme's final play. did 1t ~You k~ow pretty mueh what the apin unday. Thi time. Enc 01cke"°n capped a other ,uy's style of manaaina is." 207-yard ru hing pcrforma.ncc Wllh a 42-)'ard Johmon said. "so you tend to touchdown run 2: 16 into o"ert1me to &Jve' the anticipate what kind of move5 he's • heavily favored Rams a 26-20 victory over Tampa aoina to ma.kc. Bay. "Anytime a team plays up Co 1t~ Robinson ~q1d he wa d1sappo1ntcd 1n 11 potcnuat, vou'vc done a aood JOb as a numbrr of Jrea with the Rams' play. but ddcd. man&Ff :' .. Our club has the ablluy to come throu&h 1n arand !>t)'le when the pmc IS on the hnc " He also said that he was confident that 1hc Rams eventually will have thoM'.' dayl> when they'll play dominant football top to bottom. "We haven't had a game where we 've played y,.ell 1n all phase , but we will," he said ··And the other guys ttavcn't been ma.long a lot of mistake • "You ha"c those strca1's where the other guy throw the ball to you, or the ball bounce out of their hands and into yours. We haven't really had any of those yet." The Rams, 4-1 and tied wnh Atlanta and San Franc• o for the NF West lead. tra"cl to GC<lrg1a to pla) the Falcon on • unday Robinson said that quarterback Steve 88tlkowski. who suffered a knee sprain 1n the Rams' 34-20 lo ' at Philadelphia nine day a o. 1 expected to be able to playqa1n this former team. the F'alcoM \ tcvc Dils, gcltlnJ. his firs1 s1an 1nce ht wa., with the MinneMlta V1k1ngs back 1n I Q83, ftlltd 1n for 8artkowsk1 again t 1he BuccanecN Dils thrt.,,.., forjust 118yards,completing I 1 of22.but hecamc: throuah in the overtime. going 2-of-2 for 14 yanh as the Rams required onl)' four pla to end tht.• game ''I'd have no rcscrva\lons about ian1np. l<'"e (Oil ) apin," Robinwn '81d. "1n the ovcrt1ml". part1cularly, he was cfl'cctive 1hrow1ni the ball ·• Robinson satd that. wh1lc trc will keep both Oils and Bankowski ready to go e3ch week. he 4lt1ll plln tO bnng rookie qunncrba k Jim vtrttt alonf. slowly 'We'll kccpma cramm1na J1m vc~tt to the paint where he can heir out. Ruhin\on ~•d "I know pcop~e alrtady arc \3\m&. 'V. I\) ,1on't the> put Jim Everett in the game+ I think lhal \l.tluld he a homhle mt\take now. I • A m erica 's C up The quest Eagle loses 2nd straight in cup trial From staff and wire reports FREM.\NTI E. <\u,lralla '\menca II and ~tars & 'tnpco;, the two lop L ~ l'Ontendcr. for the nght 10 ha111e <\u•.traha for the .\mcnca•., ( up JlO'lcd 1mpress1vc v1ctones toda) in tht· 1h1rd da) of lhc first round-roh1n of the l'hallenger chminauon 'iefles But the Newpon HMhor Yacht C lub'' 11-meter Eagle lo t •ti sttond 'ltra1ght m c. 10 ~t.arc. & tnpes. following a <;qucakcr Monda)' lO ao with 1h overwhelm ma w1n 1n the first race of the Amen~·~ Cup lhnllen et tnals unday Fd'\gle' lo 10 1he French yacht French Km o n Monda wa b) 27 ~ondct o"cr a t'ionened courx m h&hl. &b1fty wmd'i. The wtn unda)' wa-. b) nine minut and 26 ond~ C\p1nst another French contender. ('hallen.ge Franl"t in bn k IS-t 8 knot -.-.inds Iron• lly. both ttnch yachtll an: bcina ~kippered by brot~n. Mart Pa~ot on h Uen Fran« and 't ves Pl.\jot on Frtnch K1 • a fa ter boat with mort ~wcnen cd kipper and t rc-w John Kohu• and mtn.4.'a II dom1 - lPleue tee SAGL&/CS) ca Osw .. COMI DAILY P'tlOT/ T• llG'I¥, Ocloblr 7. ,_ A o~gnlght for Largent, Seahawks S£ATTl£ (AP) -Dave Kriea tbrcwblluet..,...........,..... t.oaa• l l-leCIDDd spma in die lbild quaner" u !amle .. 1lft Diceo 1);1 M°°!:J:on 1 ~rec:eiv· Ult · 1 for the SQhawb' Steve ~ and the ~· C1wtic JoiMr. After I frulltalint .wt, l..arltat caup1117-yardetfrom ~eatfyin tbe leCOnd quar1er for bu I 21tb couecutive aamc witb 1 cau:b.. He aleo moved huo fourth pl8Ce on I.be all-limo receiviQa rll'dlee Usl ud cau,ht a I S.yard &ouc:hdown Pia. the 1eeond of k.ries's three. Joiner moved_jJUt Don Maynard to become the Nfl.'1 all•time rcceiv-lna Yi!date leader on a 20-yard pus &Om Daft Fouts in the third quarter. He~ with four rectptJons (or 39 yards and now bas 11 .ISS. It wa1 also a banner nicbt for ScattJc'1 Norm JohnJon. who kideed four field pis, iodudiDJ a S4-yardtt tbat lied hil own team reCord, and for Cun W&meT, who ran for 142 yards io 28 carnet. Krica, wbote other soorina p&11n were a 46-yarder to Byroo Franklin and 1 two-yarder to Eric lane, wai 21 ofJS for 284 yards. But the ni&ht was most satisfyin1 for La,..ent, who spent the ni&ht hstenina to cries of "Steve, Steve, Steve'' from the K.inadome crowd of 63,287. Seattle'• 8~e Lariat la doable-teamed by San Dt.eao'• W•JD• Dam (left) and Jeff Dale, bat.he came ap wttb the pue and takee ball to aldelhae after a record 128tb etral&'ht fame with a cat.ch. --------------College pla1en of the week Nothing's official, but Rose may h~ve · played last game From,,,, cUapatcbee CINCINNATI -Aug. 17, 1986: A a pinch-hit strikeout ap1nst San Diego's Goose Gossqe. - That's how Pete Rose's last at·bal will be described if the Cincinnati Reds' 4S-ycar-old player- manaacr decides to end his playing career prior to the 1987 season. Rose, basebltll's all-time rut leader, said there's a chan~ he will be a pinch-hitter next season, the last year ofhi1 playina oontract with the Reds. But his prolonged absence from the lineup at the end of this season and his assessment of next year's roster indicate he may have played his last game. Rose was asked after a se~n~nding loss to the Padres Sunday whether there was a chance he won't play again. "There's a good c ha nce. If there are 24 guys, including the left-handed and right-handed pinch-hitters who arc going to be ROM better than me, there is," he said. However. Rose then.JX>intcd out that the Reds' l>cst pinch-hitter this season. K.aJ Daniels, will be an outfielder next season, leaving an opening for a pinch- h1tter. As he has most of the season, Rose 1s avoiding a head-on d1scuss1o n about his r.tans. ··we'll sec what happens, ' he said. Rose ended 1he.scason the way he started It, sining on the bench. ' A bad case offlu la1e in spnng training forced Rose onto the disabled list for Opening Day. He had trouble getting into form when activated, and didn't play after the pinch-h1tt1ngappcarancc Aug. 17. His last start was Aug. 16, when he went 0-for-4 for the second consecutive game. His last hit was a ~ven1h-inning single off San Francisco's Greg Minton when he went~ for-4 on Aug. 14. He had o ne shining moment this year -a five-hit game Aug. 11 agamst the Giants. But he finished the season Sunday with a .219 average -52 hits in 237 at- bats. Quote of the day "I JUSt tell the truth. I'm not smart enough to say one thing and two days later remember what I said. I try to tell It like It 1s. Maybe it's' not always nabt. ~ut I try to be fair." -Philadelphia Eagles Coach B~dr Ryu'• explanatio n for his of'ten controversta comments. __,PREP FOOTBALL ... From Cl Linebacker Scott Stephen and quar-m terback Jeff Van Raaphorst of Arizona •II t State were named Monday as Pacific-10 Conference players of the week for their roles tn the Sun Devils' 16-9 victory Saturday at UCLA. Stephco, a senior from Los Angeles, was credited ' with 11t.ackJC1,10 unassisted, induding three for losses and two quarterback sacks for 22 yards in losses. Van Raaphorst, a semor from El Cajon. completed 16 of 19 passes for 187 yards and the game's only touchdown. His 84.2 percent comp]etion rate estab- lished a school rc<:0rd. In Pacific Coast Athletic Association c1rcles. San Jose State quarterback Mjke Pera an<S Utah State defensive tackle Jim Pauciello have been selected players of the week. Pera, a 6-2, 215-pound junior from Denver, was honored as the offensive player of the week for the second time this season. Pauciello, a 6-3, 253-pound senior from Trumbull, Conn .. was named the t1efen~i ve player of the week USC's Linda Sharp gets poet LOS ANGELES-Linda Sharp, head m women's basketball coach at Southern Cal. has been named coach of the U.S. women's team at the 1987 World University Games in Za&rcb, Yugoslavia. 11 was announced Monday. · Sharp, entering her 10th season at Southern Cal, has a 215-67 record and guided 1he Women ofTro> to two national championships and four Final Four 8J2pearences in the last six years. In 1983, she was named women·~ collegiate coach of the year after leading her team to its first natJonal cham_p1onship. • Team selection for the World Univers1fy Games, scheduled for July 8-19. will take place next April. Kings get 12-year vet Bourne tos ANGELES -Head Coach Pat ~ Quinn of the Los Angeles Kmgs said "we ' just became a better hockey club" with Monday's acquisition of Bob Bou me in the • NHL waiver draft. The 32-year-old left wing. a 12-year veteran left unprotected by the New York (slanders, scored 20 goals in four of the last six seasons. In his best pro season. 1980.81. he scored 35 goals and 4 assists in 78 games. Bourne was the first of seven players selected in the waiver draft. He was taken by the l(jngs after the Detroit Red Wings. who had the firsi overall choice. passed. "There is no question he was the player we wanted," said l(jngs general manager Rogie Vachon. "We definitely needed his size (6-foot-3. 200 pounds) ... He's a ireat penalty killer and a versatile foward." Bourne is expected to arrive 1n Los Angeles in time for the Kings' 20th-season opener Thursday night, against the St. Louis Blues. With the six-week loss of wing Phil Sykes due to wrist sur:sery, Bourne "will make an immediate contribution to this club," Vachon said. "We're at our lowest point right now," said Estancia Coach John Liebcnaood. "I talked to Gene Sun- day and he said he knows how we feel after he went I ·8 his first year. heading into league, but a loss isn't going to destroy us." "We will ma ke some adjustments on the offensive line because they arc needed. We have a hard week of practice. "I don't set their no-huddle offense as much ofa problem, because we call from the sidehnes on defense. We'll also work on it all week in practice. They can only do so much with it and they stiU are work.in1 out some kinks. I .. Woodbrid&c has beaten some &ood teams in l.a Quinta, Universi~y. Corona del Mar 1.nd Irvine. I predict they will win the Pacific Coast Leuue. "We have no injuries and we as coaches wUI do our very best to act the playen back up. I hope wc can rqroup." o ... Hiiis (1·1) v1. UaJvertlt}' (S.I) at lrvlH: The Trojans of Un.ivenity arc up aaainst a physical o~ncnt in the Dolphins. althouah it s one weakened by the loss of senfor nanoer Victor Vurpillat, who broke his lea qainst Lquna Beac h. ••1 tee Jason Burden ran for two or three touchdowns apin1t Fullenon," II.id Univenj'X Coach Mark Cun- nin&ham. "so it 1 not aJI bad for Dana Hilf1. 1"hey posses a rc.tJ 1ood pusina pme alona with the run and are pretty bllanccd with 1 26-20 ration Nn and pus ll'I the (t.m IWO pmn. .. This a really a phy1ical team and we want to match up pbyNcally. We Mnt to come off tbe Odd feclina we bit Ju1t a1 hard 11 they dJd. ·'lt'U be i boost for us to win.. ' La1ana Beaeb (4-0) at Saa Clemente (3·1): This is a series that goes beyond 1964 to the '40s with San Juan Capistrano, but it's day one for interim coach Lloyd Cotton and his 1986 Laguna squad. "Some of the coaches and players saw them qainst Woodbridge;· said Cotton. "From what they tell me, San Clemente doesn't offer much in the way of speed, but the linemen have some size. "The strength of our defense is agajnst th~run so it'll be intercstint to sec if they come at us. I don't thmk anyone can make a Uvina runnina apinst us. "Basically it's only us that have stopped us so far. We've 1ot 1,500 pounds of offen1ive linemen and it'll be Jonathan Todd riaht, Jonathan Todd left and Jonathan Todd up the middle. No surprises." Todd a 6-0, 210-pound tailback, has rushed for 808 yards on 111 carries in rouraame1-a 7.3 avera1e pin per carry. VUJa Park (l~I) 1& fnlH (1-4): The Vaqueros will bew1itin1 with j ust one thouaht in mind -to make amends for a tumover-pla&ued 41-0 1011 to Saddleblck last week. "Villa Park is 1 aood ball club,·· said Irvine Coach Terry Henipn. "8u1 it's ~bat we do that concerns ua. When we execute we can compete. "We oted 1 win. The kids Med it. aod the stall' Medi it It's our last pmeaeon pme and everybody likct to IO inM> ~with 1 V1C10ry. That wouJd be bdpful." ......... (f .. ) It c.,lltnM Vala.,: " po ha 10 many ~ial Dlllr ........... _, ....... Doq Rauch, C4ll tanele with Coeta Iii-Friday. formatio ns," noted Saddleback Coach Jerry Witte. ••They usuaJly have four or five receivers with no runnin1 backs behind the quar- terback (Todd Marinovicb} and we're aoin1 to have to play a contain defense. "We can't let 12.yard gains ao for 80' yards. We have to make them drive." Marinovich, the celebrated junior transfer from Mater Del, is on the threshold of breakina the all-time pusin& yardqe mark for Oran.-= County with still tw~tbirds of a aeason left, u well u his senior year. He i183 yards short oftbe record of ~1264, a tw~year compilation by Newpon Harbor'• Shane Foley, and projects to IO me I 0,000 yardt before he'1 lbrou,.,,. "I don t think~ have seen anyone with our 1 , •• continued W1tteofhi1 third-ranked cam. They have very aood tlneb9cken and have 1l.ze up front We're aoint to have to throw the bill. We have to sprad it out." , BOSTON -Pitcher Roger acmens ~f the Boston Red Sox, w.ho led the major 1 IQgucs with 24 victories this year, was named Monday the 12th winner of the Joe Crorun Award for "distinauished ach-tevmcnt." . rn making the announcement on the eve of Clemens' start against the Angels in the Al:Cham· pionship Series' opener, league president Bobby Brown noted that the big right-hander 1s the first winner of the award since 1983. After undergoing shoulder surgery on Aug. 30. 1985. Clemens came back to post a 24-4 record . winning his first 14 decisions. He set a maJor league record of20 strilceouts"here against &attic-on April 29. Injuries cutting at Cowboys ~ IRVING Tex.as -Dallas defensive back Victor ScOtt underwent SUrJC ry on Monday to repair a dislocated right wrist suffered in Sunday's 29-14 NFL loss to [il Denver. ,r ./ The Cowboys, in their worst cond ition llOf the season as they prepare for their biggest game against the NFC Eastern Division·leading Washington Redskins. also arc concerned about All-Pro defensive tackle Randy White, quarterback Danny White and running back Tony Dorsett. Strong safety Bill Bates also 1s bothered by a sprained anlcJc that caused his departure in the fourth penod and coulci llamper his effectiveness on Sunday. Randy White 1s being treated for a pulled hamstnng suffered 1n th~first quartet of the game as he slipped on the grass of Mile High Stadium. He was questionable for Sunday's game at noon in Texas Stadium against the 5-0 Redsk~ns. Italian denies blood-d~plng NEW YORK -Italy's Orlando m Pizzolato, two-time New York City Mara- thon champion, denied persistent rumors Monday ttlat Italian long--Oistance runners were enhancing their performances with 1he help of blood-<lop1 ng. The rumors surfaced and spread after the recent European Championships, in which the Italians won six of the nine medals in the men's 5,000 and 10,000 meters and the marathon. including a 1-2-3 finish in the 10,000 by Stefano Mei, Alberto Cova and Salvatore Antibo. "I'm sure they (Italians) don't use it (blood- doping)," Pizzolato said at a news conference. Television, radio TELEVISION 5 p.m. -BASEBALL PLAYOFFS: Angels al Boston, Channel 7. RADIO 5 p.m. -BASEBALL PLAYOFFS: Angels at Boston, KMPC (710). Dodg~rs' fall from grace was right from start LOS ANGELES (AP) -That preseason mishap in April haunted the Los Angeles Dodgers to the bitter end of a disappointing 1986 season.. . . . As if to put an exclamation point on their year-long woes. the final reminder of what a stumblin1 slide took from the Dodiers on that April afternoon in Florida was served up dunna the season's final week. The team that was a strong choice to successfully defend its National Lcaaue Western Division title lost sluqer Pedro Guerrero to a knee injury in their final exhibition pme in Florida on April 3. It was a blow from which the Dodaen never recovered. After seven ineffective weeks trying to rebound from the injury, Guerrero hit three home runs on three consecutive days as September wound to a close. And as if to show that his heroics miaht not have mattered, the Dodaers lost all three pmes. Los Anaeles, riddled by ihiurics ever since Guerrero went down, finished with a 7~-89 record and a distant fifth 'in the division,23 pmes behind the ficst·placc Houston Astros. En route, the Dodgers committed 181 errors. "It's a been a very lonJ. frustratin1 year aod in that rep rd, you're happy to ICC 1t end," catcher Mike Scioscia of the Dodaen said." As far as our finish , it's a tou&b thina to 1wallow for the winter, aeeina bow tem'bly we pcrformc:<L Beina at the bottom of our division for most of tbe year is a touah ~ins to relate to:• One year aao. the Dodacn finished atop the Nt Wcat with 1 9S-67 record. They were defeated JO the Leque ChempionshJp Series in su pmes by the SL Louis Card1nal1. Without Guerrero, and without sluuina outfielder Mike Marshall for nearly •II of the season half of the teaaon, the Oodeen wound up olayina in 66 one-NJ\ pme1. They were 21-38 mark in tboee contests. ··we wouldn't have playtd 66 one-ruo blll&amet if Ptte (Ptdro Guerrero) wa1n't hun or if Man6aU wu (Pleue ... DOOOSU/C4) ~, · ~hschool football stars of the week UAJll WOOUISY C--delllar Tbc S-10, d7().pound junior WJbeck. rushed (or 120 -yards, includ.in& & 4?·Yard to~bclow~J on nine carnet hc10lDI CdM outpioed WoodbridtC 241 -231. •~~~~~~~~~~ MtK1t RJTCBm Cmta.... . . The 6-0, 1 7~· und senior wide receiver cau t 7 pAStet for 97 yards, inclu 1n1 a 13-yard aconna catch in a 21·7 loss to Newport Harbor. ·~~~~~~~~~- LUY TON UTA1'CIA . The S-7 I 4S-pound outs1de lincbacker-~1ver, bad eight \ICkJes, includin1 one sack. A 1enior he aJso knocked down ~~against Capo Valley. * 81'&\'Jt KALA T8C~ Newport Barbor The 6-0, 210-pound senior tjght end-linebacker, had four solo tackJes, three assists and one interception in a 21·7 win. He aJso bad 2 catches for 26,yards. JONATllA1' TODD LapnaBeach Avenai111 7.3 yatds on 111 carries so far. be rushed for.12! yards on 3 7 runs and scored 2 iDs, as well as spearheading the defense at m iddJc linebacker. ·~~~~~~~~~~ KALEAPB CARTER ltdlaon The 6-0, 200-pound junior tailback ran for 177 yards on 28 carries, scoring two TDs, both coming in the first quarter when he rushed for 112 yards. •~~~~~~~~~~- RAY LUCKEY Poantaln Valley Averaging 4.2 yards per carry, he scored on a 19-yard run and graded out 85 percent by the coaching staff in the Barons' 14-10 loss to Servite High. ·~~~~~~~~~~ BEN LeFRANCOIS 11.arlna The Vikings' prace-kicker and ·wide receiver, he had 10 recep- tions for 11 0 yards, scoring on a 4- yard pass play, as well executing blocking assignments. ·~~~~~~~~~~ KIKEMOSHAM Bantl ... ton Beach A 5-IU. 170-pound junior outside linebacker he was in- volved in three sacks, recorded a safety and blocked a punt in the Oile!'J' 9-7 win over LB Wilson. ·~~~~~~~~~~ LARRY STUPPY 'Ocean View The 6-3, 21 O.pound senior offensive and defensive tackle blocked extremely well against one of St. Paul's 1ougher dc- fensi ve linemen in a 17-12 loss. •~~~~~~~~~ DAVID WEBB '1ntne Despite a one-sided loss due largely to turnovers, the Va- queros' middle guard stood out with six lead tackles and two assisted stops against Saddleback. • • JEPF BAILEY Unl•eralty A 6-3. 170-pound junior quar- terback, he completed 6 of 8 for 110 yards and a touchdown, with a second strai&ht no-interception effort in a 35-f 3 victory .• •~~~~~~~~~~ PAUL RODRIGUEZ W oodbrtqe A 170-pound senior cor- nerback, he intercepted two Cor- ona del Mar passes and was a ~onsistent ~iner on punt returns ID a 24-15 win for the Warriors. •~~~~~~~~~ •~~~~~~~~~- TODD WBA VltR W•tmlnater A three-year 1t1rter at llneba_cktr, he had 7 first hits and 8 1ul11ed tacklet for the Lion1 u wcU u playina. a stron1 aame at Uabt end on offenac. DA VJD DtJDKAK .. dcUebeoll A 16S.pound_Jun.ior, he ran the ope"ina kkkorrbeck as yards for I M>~Wft and ICOf9CI Oft I I· yard run, ln addition 10 a fwnblc tte0very in a •1-0 win. ,. Donahue utshope 1 nhistoey His Bruins have een late bloomers nthewayto wl LOS ANGELES (AP) UCLA Coach Terry Donahue expressed the lhope Monday that ha Bruins can ,rebound frQJn a noo-winninaeffon in 1thcir Padfic-10 Conference opener tbe same way they have in the last four years. He also said that he hasn't con- templated a cl\an&c at q~nerb&ck, but didn't rule out such a move in the future. "Obviously, our football team is in la difficult position and we arc going to face one of the best ieams in the country right now • this Saturday,·• Donahue said at his weekly luncheon meeting with reponers. "We lost o ur conference opener, but we've been In this situation before." The Bruins dropped a 16-9 dcc1s1on to l 5th-ranked Arizona State last weekend in their first Pac-I 0 acuon of the year. UCLA, which entered the game rankeq l Sth nationally, has a 2-2 overall record and has dropl)ed out of the Top Twenty for the lirst time this season. The Bruins arc 0-3-2 in their last five league openers, but previously -~y' e bounded back, winning the • Pac-10 championship three times in -the last four ~a~ and when they didn't wtn the crown, they were 9-3 overall and beat Miami, Fla .. 1n the Fiesta Bowl. "I feel about the same as in other y.eaa.".Qonahuc m<L .. rm hoprng this team will fight as hard with tts back to the wall as the other teams did. We'll just have to play the games and find out." The Drums return to action against unbeaten. 11th-ranked Anzona at the Rose Bowl this Saturday. The W1ldcats, 1-0 in league play and 4-0 overall, haven't played since beating Colorado 24-11 on SCpt. 27. Senior quanerback Matt te' ens completed only I 0 of has 25 passes for 93 yards and was JUSt 2-of-12 for 12 yards in the second half. "I thought there were times in the game where Matt played extremely well and times in the game where he didn't do so well." Donahue said ... , wouldn't say lhat°s unique to Matt tevens. I think that was true with the whole team. stanmg v.1th me. ··we pla)cd hard ... we Just came up a little shon ." Donahue was asked 1f he has considered making a changt' at quar- terback. "I was dreading coming here toda). I really was," Donahue began. ac- knowledging t_hat he c~cted to be asked such a questton. "I want 10 gi\C Man SteH·ns C' CT)' opponunit} possible to be a success- ful quanerback at UCLA." Donahue s~ud .. He's been o ne of the most lo)aJ. hard-work1ng athletes l'\C e'er had here " TARS ••• From Cl completed 15 o f 24 passes 1or 173 yards dunng his in1ual stan last month against the Sea hawks ... But this o ne seemed 10 mean a lmlc more." So what .,..,11 happen v.hen BreJtfu 1s full" recovered and read~ 10 come back?. "We'll sec what's happening at that time.'' Bnnklc}' said. "We'll 'ice how Kirk's pla)mg and how Vince 1s recovering." Bnnkley actually has three quar· tcrbacks he can depend on -1un1or Chns Hall (6-3. 180-pounds) would be the third in mind. But 11 appears as 1f ummcrs 1s doing a respectable JOb at makmg his bid to become the regular passer for the next two years He's close to finishing lus campaign movement. .. I'd like to continue playing," said Summers. who has stancd at quar- terback on the freshman and sophomore teams, respectively. the past two years. 'Tm having a blast nght now. This 1s fun ... there's nothing like 11." Fo r the season. Summers has rompleted J7 of 71 pa!>~~ for 357 yards and three touchdowns. The Sailors art al o 3-0 with him as thei r starter.lie ha been mtercept«l thrct.• times. Ho wever. BrcJtfus will soon bf ready. .. He should be back soon." Bnnklc> said. "He's staning to throw the ball right no w. It's ju st a day-to- day thing. "But we'll look at him 1n pracucc and see how 11's going. Riaht now. Ktrk'sourquanerback and Vince 1sat a rehab1lnat1o n •Hate. So we don't hllve to make the (staning quar- terback) dtc1s1on nght now." Not now. but 1(. ummcrsconunue~ to impress and the Tars continue to sail. the race may end automaticall y. .. We'll JUSt have to wait and cc." Bnnkley said. "We're real fonunate W'!'vc 84>1 thrc~LLYS. that can play the pos1t1on. And f'm confident 1n all three quarterbacks.. "They all thr« pl it ume dunng the ~ummer and 1l was all prett> c"cn Then we ao t into our (full) gear and we gave the JOb to Vince. In thl' fir1t pme (against Sunta na) we endt'd up usinJ all three quancrbacks." The Sailors face h1~ly-rcgardcd El Toro Thurlday and 1f Summers ha'I anythina to do 'with tl. it could tum into quite a banlc. "We're up for this aame. we definitely want thLS win bad." um· merua1d of the upcoming 'lhowdown be1wt%n the Sailors and (I Toro. ranked No. 2 in the Dail) Ptlot's To I 0 Or10 e ounty football poll "This I 'Nhat''I fun . to l.n()(k on a rated te•m.'' ·um m e" ad1.kd MPL NATIOMA&. COMttlalNCI .... WLTP'd. ..,. ,.. AllMta 4 I • -.,. ,. LA. •enu 4 I • -102 .. San F' r enc;ltco 4 1 •• •• IM 70 Nri~ 1 4 D 100 74 101, c:..'111 c11ic. .. o 5 0 0 1000 , .. '° MlnllMOte 3 2 D ·* '°' '° Detroit 2 > 0 ,.00 IS 102 Tall'IH 8ev 1 4 0 .100 81 m Gretn .. Y 0 5 0 -~ '° IS6 .... Wealllnoton s 0 0 I 000 114 67 NY Glanll • I 0 800 •s 70 Dalla• 3 2 0 600 142 108 PTIJIMMlotlle 2 , 0 400 II 107 SI Loult 0 j 0 000 .. 110 AMa"ICAN CONflll"INCI West Denv91' $ 0 0 1000 141 17 5"111• • I 0 IOO Ill 7• KenH\OIY 3 2 0 600 IOS " LA ltaldefa 2 , 0 400 92 92 Son Oleoo 1 4 0 200 10. 121 CM!frol Clnclrinetl 3 7 0 600 121 142 Crtveleno l 2 0 600 Ill 13' HOU110f1 I • 0 200 n " Pl1t1bof'oll 1 • 0 200 63 12S IEHI NY Jell 4 I 0 900 l2S 109 New E ngtanc > 2 0 600 131 II 811Halo 1 4 0 200 10. lot Mlemt I 4 0 200 176 176 llldlo1111POlls 0 s 0 000 41 141 l'MM9v'• Sc.we s..1111 l3, Son Oleoo 7 SU!ldeV'• Gamet aom1 01 Alto1110 ICl\onnt! 1 •• 10 am I Seattle 11 lltaldln 811ffol0 01 Mtornl Ctilceoo at Mou"on oeiroll 11 GrHn 8ov Kin.-, Cllv er C1ev11ono New Orlun• et lndl1nee>oll1 ~ew Yori. Je11 el New EMleno S Lo.JI• et h moo 8ov Wunlngton el Ooll4u PnllecMIC>hlo ol Now V°"" Glont• Ml11neaoto ., Son FrollCIKO ~ver 01 SaP 01- Mencia¥. Oct. ll Plllll)u(Oh ot Clrw:tnnetl C ..... Tep 20 The Too Twentv 1tom1 Ill ,,,. AUOCIOllCI Pren t 01119e looti>ell POii, wit" flr\l•plou votu In oerentlleus. 1916 rKOfO, 1ote1 oofnh bOHd °" 20· 1t· 11· l7· T6· 1H4· 13· I,· l 1 l 0.J.l:'f·6· · 1110 ron-ln11 In le\I wHW.'1 ooll Recoro P" Pv• I Mloml, Fie !SS> S·O·O I, 1SS I lAtebOme (2) S·O·O I.OU 7 lNel>fl\lle 4 0·0 911 ) 4.Ml(11101n 4 0· 0 9S9 • S Penn St11e I II 4·0·0 937 S 6 Oltlellom• J-1-0 • 867 6 1 Auourn •·O·O an 7 l.AfltaMli 4·0·0 726 I 9 So C1flforn1a 4·0·0 1'19 9 10 lowo 4 0-0 614 fl 11.Arl:mi'w •·.O·jt ~ -to 12 WHl\•n<;1ton J· I 0 504 12 13 lloVIOf' 4· l·O 43 13 14 Tun A&M 3· 1·0 393 14 1S Arlrono SI l·O· I 392 16 16 uu 2 l 0. 268 II 11 N Cero11na St 3·0· 1 1J3 20 11 Stontoro 4·0·0 111 19 Mlulnl1>1>I SI 4 I 0 "' 20.c11m10" 3 1 O 17 Olr!tr\ rec.e1v1no volH Nor 111 CoroHna 68, Georol1 49, M1cn1oon s1111 '6. lndlane 40, UCl.A 2'. Ml1m1 ot Ol\lo 21. Merv•end lS Frelno Stile 9. Air FOf'ce a. FIOrlde Sltll a. \/1r111nl1 Teen 1 <>i·o S1ote S Coio<aoo S101e , Novv I p,11 I Soull>trn Metnoo1t1 I Hlth sdtOOI renlllneS CIF BIG FIVE CONFERENCE l"H. sme.I, IN-ltKtrd Pn. I ll"noo Am•t, Anoe11a 4 ·O 139 2. EdlMI\. S\lftMt 4·0 IV l 1.011011, Oel Rtv •·O 103 4 Crl\OI, Del Riv •·O 91 S ~rv1t1, AflOllU\ 3· I 91 6 SI JoM Bot.to, Del Rev 4 ·O 64 1 Fontena, Cllru1 &ell J· I Sot I Mllllun,-Moot'e-l·O ,Ji 9 Lono 8Ac.h Po1v. Moor• I· 2 l• 10 EIHnl'IOwer, Cllru1 Bl!ll 3· l 18 Otl'Hlr\ RuDlOOux IC1tn.1\ Beu) 3 I. Sen Goroon10 ICllru\ Bell>. I I t, SI Btrnerd (AlliJllUS), l · I CIF CENTRAi. CONFEIUENCE I. s.-....cti, Seo View •·O 100 1 T•ov. Freewov •·O 7S 3. S<.llllv Hilb.. FtM'fJ/AY 4·0 11 4 80'H Grenoo, Geroen Gre>vt •·O 63 S Wtsllf'n. Oro~ l 1 61 6 Tu111n, Seo V1-3 I 60 1 V•••ncfo, Or•~ 2 1·1 SI .. New-1 Hal't)lf, Seo View l · I ll 9 I.• Hetira, FrHwav 1· I 18 10 Fulterlon. Freewov 3· l 1 l Otnlf'r Norw11lt1 (~uburoanl, •·O; La Quinto tGaroen Grovel~ 2·2. Ctl' OESEltT·M()()HTAIH CONl'EaENCE I SI JO\et>ll. LO\ Pedrf\ 4·0 119 2. WNdbrldel, l"1dfk Cent 4·0 103 3 Horverel, Sol\le Fe J· I 93 • Bloomlnoloo. Sun1..i,1 •·O 17 S, l.llUN ... di, l"ociflc COHI 4·0 5' 6 I.a Slerro. Sun•l•t 3· I SS 7 A••~oero. Lo• Pod•"' 2 1 I 49 L CM'11 Mew, l"odfk CoHI 3· l 31 9 -Sell· Jefl 5on11 Fe •·O 30 10 Pno Rol>le\ Lo\ Pae1re1 l I 20 Otner• Noire Dame Riv Sunlu•I I J· 1. Ttme<:ule llalffv !Sun1L1\t1. • 0. Sente Paule tFronlltrl l·l Agoura IFronlltr l 2·2 Sanl• Claro 1Fron11er). 2· 1 CIF SOUTHERN CONFERENCE I Et Toro. Sov•ll Cont • • 0 120 2 l.vnwooo Sen Gat>r<tl Vallev 3 1 al J Hawthorne Octon • ·O 81 • E\oeranza Empire 3·0· I 11 s I.DI AlemllO\, Em1>·•• •·O 10 6 Son11 Ana Cenru•'f l I 61 1 CePO Vat ev Sou111 Cout 3· 1 58 a Foo1r1111 Ce111urv l I S6 t Loora Em1>1rt 3·0· I <16 10 Sen•o MOn•ce. Ocean t I 9 Other\ P11r1moun1 Ser-Gel>f1el Vollevl. 3 1 Cul\ftr Citv IOcfl111l 4·0 Hklh school 'cMdUM THURSDAY 17:30) (Non·ll•euel Ntwe>orl Hert>or ,., El Toro let M1n 1on Vlelo) WOOObrldoe V\ E 1t11ncla I 11 Newoon Haroorl Dane Hiii' v\ UniveflllV lal Irvine> Foo1"H1 11 Weitmln11er I.• Qulnte vl Servile I e1 Gohr> Wu 1ern al Fullerton R1rrcno A1om11os V\ Moonot1a !el Gll>ver Stod1uml E,,,.,We I.Meua Kot.i1a v' Pocflico let 8o•H Gr1noe1 FlltlOAY (7:)0, unlen lflter'#IH Mttd) (Nen·lfftiUe) Founl•1n Velltv v• l.ong 8t1c1> Polv to• Veter•n' St1dluml Merine 1t Mllli~on Mo1tr Del "' Hunlln111on Bue" lat Or1noe Coa" CofleOtl Santa Monlc1 v• Eol1on (ti Hunllnoton BHCll) Senta Ana ,., Octon View lat Wtalmln1ter) Co"• MHI v\ Corono ott Mar Cat N1woor1 Horbor) Seooi.t>eell et Co1>lltrano Vollev L111uno 8eecll 11 !Min Cl.,,...nlt Vlllo Parll. at Irvine Weit Torrance a• Tu1lln Trabu(o Hmt et Mir oles It Cl om I C.11von n Oren111 Cet E• ~•> Minion ViOIO .. , Legune Hill\ (II Mln POn Vlllo) 8ettllowtr "' l.Ol Amloo• <•• Gera.n Grovel N09alll v1 S.nte Ano Valley (ot !Minta Ano &owl) r l • H•l>r• 11 Haclenoe H1lon1, Wll\on S.nllaoo v•. SOnor• 111 L• Hetlr•l 8r1e·Olllld• in SuMv HIM\ let Buena Pork 1 !Mlvenne vt. Troy (al Fulflrlonl Vatencla at SOlsa Gre11do IEmtlh L.Mtue E\oeran11 v\ CVI>'"' tel WHlern) ttennedV "' El Dorado Cal Velenclel 1.01 A1emltos vi Loere car GIOver Steo•urn> SAT\MOA\' Movie r ot Gordin c;ro ... •-Stork "' Anel>e1m let Glover Stod<urnl 0... ... """"' OAYIY'S LOCKIR ,........,, ... dll -• 00.11, .. .,.,, JU OOll!t• ... cell(O beU ll .. "° l>IH •S KUllM ns DIM Dlf'Cll SS ••rid dell• • wllllt ll M!, 400 mt ektftl Nl~T LANO.NO 7 DOoh 11 onoltr\ Sl l>Ofl.IO, 41 .. l'ICI IMU J9 cetlco be•• 7 helll1ut, l \Culelon, 7 t'Oellf1an DANA WHA•fl -l to.It. n •nv ~ 111 llMIU, 2'° llOftot•, 7• roc~I"" 3~ rnac~.-tt. ~ tl'IM0\""41 l KulOlfl ------ .................. SUMMY MtU.I IMVITATIOllAL ( .. , ........ , C... .. NW1S.~1 K~ 0 1 D t-1 '°'Olli Otl IMr ' ' J .,_IS CclM teormo Harmo11 l , MorMA J. o.olM J, 0\11\0aa 2. Vlnla 1, Tllor/\Ot.Oll 1. Klafltl 1 CdM ooetle ..... , Wttt1tt (SJ Cw-... ~ 11. ~(SOI t Untvonllv ISO> o l l ~ t Corona cMI Mer • J ' .,_17 COM Korl/IO H••O 5, Oedfno '· Mornn 2, FOiey 2. Klarln 2, Hofmol'I 1, VlfllO I, Tl\ornotoll I ' COM ooel ........ , WtOI*' (JI Tvttlill 12. CtreM ... Mar 'V • COf'ono Otl Mer JV 0 1 ) I-' Tustin J 1 > 1-11 CdM tCOflng atonktnllOrn 2, Seelhorat l, cnerlo I. Jacobltn 1. Hocnadel 1 COM ooelle Yvet ltheldft 16) Hlttl ldlNt ,..,..,_ · Ctfl 4·A 1. c.r-llleil Mars 2. ~_. ...,_.,, 1 av.no Pe rk, 4. SUM'I' Hiii&; S. Sonoro; '· Tultln, 1. Martnai a. Uf11Wnifv1 ' VIiia P•rk; , 10 Fullerton Cl,. >·A 1 Son Cietnenle, 2 El DorodO, l. El Toro, 4. lllv•o•oe PolY> 5 Haelence Mel91111 WMaon, 6 I.OS All()\, 1 Indio; • Muir, • Loa AlamltOI, 10 Do\ Putt>IO\ Clfl 2·A I. Coit11 "'"91 2 El SeiMIOO. l Son l.ui• 001100. • L• Serna, S Mlraleall, 6 C.llrlllO, 1 Don Luoo. I El lle11eno, t So11la Yner, 10 Soult> PHoelene CrM1 cMtrv rrilr'iis HIGH SCHOO\. llOYS C" 4·A I PalOt Vtr<let. 1 Tl'IOUMnd 0.kl, 3 Buena, • Rio MIMI, s. c.r-.. Mar/ .. Oona Hill•, 1 Villo Perll. I Mlu lon Vltlo 9 Soutll Torro11G1, • 10 Tu\lln Cl~ >·A 1 Arrovo. 1 Lo Hebfe. 3. Hort, 4. Uotond, S 8uene Perli. 6 Alemenv, 7. Monltl>eflo, I llubldou•. 9. Htmll, 10 ltolOfnl•d C" 2·A 1 Walnut, 2 Va1encJ1, 3 Covina, • LomPOC. S AOOUre, 6. Gesla MtMl1 7 Lo11uno Mill\; L Latuno Bffc:ll1 9 Chino. 10 Trel>U<o Hiiis HIGH SCHOOL Gtllll.S CIF 4·A l Poto' Vlf'OI\ 1 Tllouu ncs 0.11,, l N~ ~ Wff""~W.w,,..., HartMl1 6 Canvon. 7 8utN L OGeen vi.w; 9 Deno t1ills, 10 RIVlf'•IOI POiy CIF l·A I Arrovo Gra!WM ? l.oml>OC, 3 I.a Hot>ro, 4 El Rancno S H1c1tnda He1ot11, Wll\011, 6 Seugu,, 7 Sctlvrr 8 Mon1e11e11o, 9 Corona. 10 Norco CIF 1·A l Mt11>1rle 7 Welnul, l Morro Bev. 4. LatiUno 8Hct11 S Mounteln View 6 Soul,, Hiii\. 1 AIHC.IOtrO, • I.• Quinto, 9 NOf'Ol\ott, 10 Cn1no • >'-· Voh~ HIGH SCHOOi. CIRl.S 5·• I Mira CO\IO 1 Hueneme, J. WOOdbrid9e ••• NtWPOrt H1r1>0f'; s. l.atuf\O llHdl; .. cor-.. Mer; 1. Metw Oii; • 81tnoo Mofl•oomerv 9 Ool Pue!llOl 0 SI JO\tl>tl ••• I Torrance 1 Lono 8HCll w ion l. Met1nio; • Merlborouvn. S Marvmount 6. lnllne; 1 C•l>i•tre no Vahev L EOhan; 9 Notre Oeme Acaelem'I' 10 Arcao111 Hltfl smoof r•Mlnvs CIF 4·A Clltl.S I Mir11t11t. 7 Po101 Vero". J. cor-del Mer; 4. Edbet11 S Senta Barbera. 6 Beverlv H1111. 7 Rolling Miii\, I. NewPOrt HartMll'; 9 Wttllelit. 10 Sou•n Torrence. ctl' l · A GIAl.S , I Sen Morlrio, 1 Tnousono o.-'· l A11oure, 4. Metw o.l1 S All\ambra, 6 we,tlokt , 1 ·c1oremon1 a Diamond Bar 9 Heme! 10. WMdlll'ld91. Cll' 1·A GIRLS 1 (ham1naoe. 2 Indio, 3 LO<J11vllle, • Va1enc1a S La o.i1n1e 6 San Lu•\ Obitoo. 7 Lo\ Am·oo1 8 Kt1>oel 9 San Bernardino. 10 Geroen Grove Mondllv's tranMictlons 8ASE8ALL AmOf'ICOll L••ou• BAI. TIMORE ORIOLES-Naml<I Col R1Pktn Sr manager NEW YORI<. YAN1<.EES-E1ttrd\td 01>110"' on 1ne co111rect\ ot Oave It g,,.111 1>llcner and Mlltt fHte< outf•..Olf tor 1987 Netionel LH-MONT RE '-L EXPOS-Announced tllor ltoo Manu n. BobOv W•nklH l.orrv 81ornor1n ond Ken M1ct1a, coacne' will rtturn nea1 Ytor Announced 1ne1 1tic11. R1n1c11 enel Jca Kerrloan. coect1t1 nevt not betn Hked 10 return but i..ve been o!lertd e>o1111011• w11111n Ille club'\ mlllor · 1eeoue orgenlrotlon PIT"fSBURGM PIRATES-Named Bernoro J Mullin 11n1or vice 1>rH101n1 for 11\.1\lnen oe· ve<opmenl BASKETBAl.1. Hollonal 8Hlr1ft)el Auoda'*'t DALL AS MAVEltl(l($-W1lv1<1 Kim C:oo~10 ou~ro FOOT8Al.1. "'•'** l'ootbal l.H9Ue NE w VOil ~ JE TS-Aorffd to 1erml will\ Richard TO<lll auarterl>Ock ST 1.tOUIS CAROINALS-Sloneo !fie Swanson wldt re<:elvtr HOCKEY Ntllonal HKlrlY l.Htlllt BUFFAl.0 SABRES-Stltctecl C•or-Gllle1, left wing from "'' New York l\len<Ml°5 end Witt Pelemtn• riolll wln<;1, trom '"' New Yori< Renoers In ll'lt w1l11er drall HARTFORD WHALERS-SelKltO Goro Snerven r g"' wino trorn ''"' Eelmonton Ot,.r, In ll'lt WOIVt< (jrtlt LOS ANGEi.ES KINGS-Seltcleo BOtl 8ournt efl w·~9 from Ille Ntw YDfll ltlel\CIOf'$ ono Mo• Dev" i.!t wl119, frorn 11\e 8uff110 Sebfll .n '"' welver °'elt ST 1.0UIS 81.UES-Seltcted Pel t1uone' r10111 wino from tl\1 8u!lal0 Sobf .. t11 Ille w1tvtr orett WASHING TON CAPIT Al.S-S.lecteo JOl'ln a1um dtfen .. men lrorn Ille 8os1on 8rutl'l1 In .... w•lvtr csrell CO~LllCa FLOlttOA s"" TE-Announced ll'lol E'd Ctork, llMOecUr ri11 Min ullllled from scnooi MAltOUETT£-AllllOUl'ICeel Ille retirement .. Ha"" RA'lmond\ ellllelk: OlrKlor, lftec11ve Allt 11, 1917 SALES • SERVICE • lEASfNG --•-oc °"""""""lA ......... ..._ L.1111.._ ... , ........... I,_ ...... °"""'-" 2 Ml :.-..::-1ir/I ::I· 108~0 r 1ruton1 Bl Nor"'''~ 213,868 3233 71 4. 636 b71~ - OrMQe CoeM DAILY PLOT/Tt.111dllr, 0•1•1 1, • Prep footb811 ~og _ ,-r SIA Yt•W LIAGUI SOUTH COAST LIACMll 9'llllaT LIMW ~AC..c COAIT L&AeUm C~otlLMAll(M) .,, ... , .... , •DllCHf ( ... ) COITA mM U-1) > HY!lllfteton hedl • 20 U!ll....,.,,y M 21 SI ,MIMftv (.MMll) 0 Na .. ..a • ,..,.~ 1 • Wft""lf!llW » Hll ~ D ,,...,. .... • 0 C#l1tr-Ve ..... )I 1 Tutlln 1.0 M WV"-1 JS..-..-..... • Kw.Mllr._. 1A ISU•1~ .. M ,,,.._ o.I 17 , ..._.,,..,., 21 010-<otta Mew ial H9I HllfOOf) Olt-V .. ~_,.. OIO-S4lftle ~ (et Ht11 9-Cfll O»-CM-_. Miii (el OCCI 01 ..... l hUllMCI,. lat SA lowt) 011~vi.io· 0"'-f Meftna• (WW!'rWW) O~ .... llll OCCI cn .... T\latlfl• (el OCCI OU-.10-Hlla· OD-Weltm1n1tw• c .. OC~l o:J ..... t "'---...... 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(et MV) 01.-.1 Htw-1 Horbo<' 01.-.1 El Toro• l•I MVJ 02 ..... 1 ~lllltlOft 9Md1• ~··Meu· 0)1.-Tu1t1n• (al Not Hortior) 031-s&ll '*'*'lo' O»-el WftlmlMter• (et OCCI Ol.._..~H-0 (atMV) N7-f CdM° Cat Hot Hertior) H1-.1 Ml.-IOll Vteio• H1-£dlMlft• lal OCCI "'1-<>rellM' NI~· (01 OCC> H 1.-.rvlftt• Hl~r1na• <et Wfllmlnilerl Hl.....W~ NaWPOaT HA"IOR {J.1) DANA HILL.I ll•ll MUNTIMOTON ••ACM (t·tJ WOOC*UOGI < ... > 'Santa AAA ,, 3A L.aoune H1111 1 0 Corona dtl MAI , M San Ci..em.nte " 10 ~n View 0 11 TrebUco Hiiis It 3' 8l1l'IOll MDMOOf'IWY It 1 I.a Quinta ' • HU'lll11oton &Men 0 • La~ •••di I• 0 Newoort Herbot • 10 UlllVer'sltv • 21 Co1ta Mete 0 71 FU!llrlon ., t Lono leect\ Wlhon 1 2A CorON Oii MM IS 0.-1 El Toro 101 MV/ Of-et U11lv9l'alty (al 1.-vi,.,.I Olo-Melet o.I (al OCCI Of-el latancW Cal NH) 011-1 Tu"1n· 017-tt Co1>hrrorio vonev• 011-1 Wetlmln11.-• 011-1 Orenea• 01+-E1lo11Clt' 02....,.lrvlne• Ol......,oun111n v111av• 01+-T r alluco Hilla• (et ifvlN.I 031-.t Saddi.t>6ck • !SA 8owt11 031-Ml .. lol\ 111e10• O~I Marine• CaJ w.ttmlMlert OJI-I COtle Mew' (al QCC) NrUl\lvtr111v• N7-EI TOIO' N7-<>cun view• N7-L.aoune Hlllt· (al lfvlMI Nl.....CorON Otl Mer• N 1....,1 Son Clemente• N 1r-.1 EdflOl'I• (el OCCI Nl ....... 1 LffUne ~· UNIVllUITY (2·21 U TO.O (4·01 MAalNA (D·4l LA.uMA ... LU C,l•JI J4 lrVIM 20 20 Wnltet\all, Pa " 0 Elll9f'an1e 17 1 Delle Hlllt M O P1r1moun1 14 31 FOUft!Olll Vetlev 11 • S«vllt 2t 14 Elland• ,, I WOOdOrldOt 10 21 WHtm1nt11f' 0 1 Fooll\IQ 17 6 Sen Clt<'Nntt T 15 l..a11uno Mill\ 13 37 El .MoOene 14 21 I.a Qu1nte 27 13 U'lfvenlty u Ot-Otno Hill\ (ot Irvine) ot-N-POrl Heroor (II MV) 010-.1 Mllllllan Ol~Mlon V1eto (el MV) 011-11 Et1oncl1' let Nor HerDOrl 011-et Son Ctemenlt' Ol~dilOll' (at w"tmlntltl') 017-1 Colle IMM0 {at OCCI 02r-.1 SoelcSteOKll 111 SA 80..,11 024-CoPO V.....,, let NW) 01 ...... 1 0c:: .. n v-· cwmJ 02s-<>r•1'"" Cat MV, l:JOl 031-COf'ono ~ Mer• Col INlntJ 030-trvlM' lat MV) 030-+0n 8ee<"1' (al wn1mlntl« J 03~ 9Md'l0 (al Mvl N ...... 1 NtWPOrl Horbor N7-t Dene Hlh ' N7-W.atmlnttlf'' (al Wml H7-t WOOClbt'lcl.-0 (al lfVlnt) Nl4-Tua11n• (01 1rv1M) Nl'-1 Min ion VlelO' Hl'-1 ,:1n Vollev' Cal Wm) Nlr-.t Treoueo Hlll° Cat MV ) SAOOLEUCK (4·01 MISSION Vfl.Jb Cl·ll OCllAN VllW ll·J) OtlANOll '2·21 41 Sento Ane Valltv 6 0 Sen OleQD ~~\e 3 29 KIMtd'I' 14 .,. kntleoo • 2S Sonlo Ana 6 ll Hert u O N-POrl Harbor 20 0 NOf'CO 16 24 1.o Habre • 14 Fountol11 Vollev 0 2' l>ento Ano venev ' It Kalllla 13 Al lrvl111 0 0 Sonte .t.ne 19 12 51. Peul 17 20 VIiie Perk 17 . 011>-11 C11>1\lral\o Valley 01~1 La11uno Hlllt I•• fo/iV) OIC>-Sente Anl Ill Wutmlntllf'l 011>-CallVDfl (al El Modena) 014--Corona oel Mar• ISA 8owll 011-1 lrvl111• 011-1 Founttl11 Veuev• (el H81 017-Woodbrldtt" (at El Modena) 02:3--tJnlvenHv• !SA 8owll on-Sen Cl1men1e• 024-Marine• (01 W11lmi11,twl 02!1-11 !.....-Hllll0 (al MV, 1:30) 031-NtwPOrl Herbor' IS.A &owl) OJl-1 01111 HIH1• 031-Eol\Oft' ta• Hin a .. cn) CXk>-..,rabuCO Hiiis• (et El Mol N7-el Tu\llrl' N7-<:aoh.rrorio Velllv· N7-et Hunlfngton 81ecn• N7-t~hecll· Nl,_.1 EllAllCI•' 1aJ QC.U Hle-£1 TOIO' Hl6':-WA~lec~Ma-) Nl>-< .. te Mele0 ~~-MoMnol TUSTIN ll·ll SAN CLIE~NTE ll·ll WISTMINSTl:a ( 1·2· I) TilAIUCO HILU (Ml 16 KeNa IHawolil 0 14 WOOdb!'ICIOt 34 14 Volencil 14 IS So cam Clvlltlaft 0 3 Lo' A11m110\ 1 1 COf'ono CIC\! Mar ) l2 lrviM 0 1• Dene Hllll 17 10 lrlllnt 1 7 Looun• Mitts 6 0 El TOf'o 21 ._. lltlm a' lflt Wono ' ?I Foot"llt • 13 Roncl'IO Alemito\ 0 'Cretot 23 l7 8Ul'rOU9M, •!4oeu111 27 Oll>-We11 Torrence OIC>-1.aouno 8•.cn ot-FootMI 010-.t Mlr .... te, l 1>m. 017-NIWPOfJ tto.r oor. 011-EI Toro• 017-Hunll119tC1<1 eoecn• 017--Laeune leecll• Cot MVI 014-tl CdM' (al OCC I 02>-at Minion V1110• 02>-at EdllOll' 111 OCC) 02 ...... 1 WOOCIOrld9e. (•1 lrvlne) Oll-el ES1enc10• (el Npt Harbor ) 031-• C11>l1treno Va1tev• O»-Foun1oln VeUer Cat OCC> 030--el Orenoe• lot El Modena) N7-Saclellebe0' N6'-ll lrvtne• N7-11 Merine• (Wetrmlnlle<l Nt-<osta Maw' lat MVI NIA-al Unlver111v• tel Irvine) Nl4--0ane Hlll1' N l+-11 Oco n View• (et H8) Nl:>-111 Laou1111 HIU•' (II MV) EAGLE •.• From Cl nated En&l_and's White Crusader. ._--------------==:::--t--:s~1p:-:pc:-='."".l by Haro rd CU<lmore. to Last we~k 's plays ----40 yards or more for prep I~otball •91-David Lu~bkc (Unf· 'ers11~). TD run. •85-Da1.1d Dudman (Saddlcback). kickoff return for TO •52-John ~Im!> (Manna). run. • 51-Ja1. Contrera!> (Mater Dc1). intcrc'eption return, •47-·can Woolse) ((or- -0na del Mar). TD run. •43-Ed Milum I \lt.'wport Har-bor). run. Sean Wooleey Last week's rHIWag leaders I J onathan Todd (Laguna Ekach). 37-228: 2. KaJcaph Caner (£d1)on). 28-177. 3 Jo hn S1m'i (Manna). 26-136; 4 Da"d L1eble (Un1 vers1t} ). 11 -132: 5. John Woolc,e) (Corona del Mar). 9-120. 6 Mike Steinke (Irvine). 15-103: 7 Kun S1Uba (Ocean View). 11 -95; 8 Ed Milum (Newport Harbor). 11 -92; 9. ( ra1g Belle (Un1 Wr'$1l) ). 12-91 Last week's passing leaders I Mike C'unius (Matcr Dc1). 18-36-0. 218 yards. 2 TDs. 2. Mike Crowe (Costa Mesa). I S-32-4. 195 )ard'i, I T D. 3 Rick Vandemct (Manna). 17-15·2. 178 \ards. I TD. Enc Brou~er (\\ oodbndge). 11 -20-2. 144 yard'>. 2 TDs:·s. Mike Henderson (Edison). 7-13·1. 112 yards I TO-6 Kirk <;ummcr!> (Ncwpon Harhor). 11-17-0. 110 ~ardc, 1 TDs 7 JdT Baile) ll n1' cr!>1t) ). 6-8-0. 110 'ards. I TD Last week 's receiving leaders I Ben Lcfranco1'> (Manna). 10-110. :!. Mike R1tch1c I( o'ita Mc'>JI. 7-97: l Da' 1d Townsend CWoodbndge). 7-92: 4 Jim o·Bnen I Milll'r Dl•tl. 6·51. 5 JefT Jone., <I n 1ne1. 6-20 Last week's leading scorers I ( ra1g Belle It' OJ\ crs1 1~ ). 14 points 2 (lie) Kalcaph C aner I l:..d1!1on). M1~c Henderson (Edison). Pat Lcbono t Mater Dc1). Kun Szuba (0ct.'an V1ev. ). Jonathan Todd (Laguna Beach). D:n 1d Dudman !Saddkhad 1 12 pointHach. Camacho getting reckless NE~ YORK t .\Pl -Hecto r "Macho" ( amacho. the World Ro >.· mg C ounl'1I hght\\e1gh1 champion. wa'i issued ti'c summonses Monda) tor dn\ mg hie, 19 6 red Ferran sport<i car un\afch :ind "'11hout a ltcen..e poltce ~1d The ~4->car·olJ <.. amacho "'as speeding and wca\ 1ng 1n and out lanes ·at 4 45 p.m on First A1.cnue ~tween 1N th a nd 102nd streets, "'hen he "'3' pulled over b~ poltce • said gt. Rn) rnond O'Donnell. a police spoket;man. The undefeated fighter v.as 1\<iucd summonses for reckless drn 1ng. op- erating an unregistered 'ch1dl'. o pcr· aung an uninsured 'chi le, dn,ing "'11hou1 a hccnc.e. and un\3tc lanl' changing. O'Donnell '>aid ".\t first we thought "'l' hJd J warrant out lor him We tn\C\llgated funhcr and determined II v.1a\ no t h im." he added. On Co)cpt 26 in M1am1. Camacho retained his title with a unnnimou!o I 2-round decision o'er C ornchu~ Bo1a-Edv.ards take home an easy victory. Stars & Stripes. skippered by Dennis Conner, ro lled over the Newpon Harbor Yacht Club's Eagle, sailed by Olym- pic gold medalist Rod Davis. .. We're not concerned with the loss to French Kiss as the h&ht 10-12 knot winds were not exactly to Eagle's 1 liking." said Rod Davis, Eagle's skipper 1n a phone caJl to the Eagle hcadquancrs m Newpon Beach. Eagle o fficials are keeping a run- ning score on the challenger tnals at the Mariner Mile Shipyard. 2507 W. Coast H ighway, contrary to earlier repons that the board 1s displayed at Newpon Harbor Yacht Club. . Eagle go t the Stan over French K.JSs by two ~nds. and inCTCased the lead to 23 seconds at the first weather mark on the 17-mtle course. The course was shoncnt'd from the no r· maJ 24-milcs because of the h&ht weather French Kiss moved ahead of Eagle on the d o wnwmd run. led by 11 seconds at the leeward mark and nt>ver relinquished the lead. The French boat led by 22 seconds at the second weather mark. 16 seconds at the Jibe mark, 26 seconds at the leeward mark. and 27 seconds at the finish Whtte C rusader's defeat was its first 1n three races. while Amenca II. which had an ofT-day Monday, scored 11s second w1n. tars & Stnpes scored llS third win. while Eagle lost for the second time in three races. The 01her undefeated hopefuls, Nev. Zealand and Frenc h Kiss. kept their records intact. Chns Q.icbon.. ___ _: · the 14-year-old sk1_pperofNew Zea· land. outdueled USA ·s 12-meter vet- eran Tom Blackallcr at the starting hne. and was nt>ver m trouble after that Sea Kings rip two polo foes Corona del Mar High's top-rated Sea Kings. with All-ClF' returnee Enc VtnJe back for the first ume smce the summer because of a tom bac k muscle. s"'cpt past Kennedy and San Otego\.., ni1.cnt} with caseMonjlay in the fi~t tv.o rounds of the 31-team ~unn' Hill., In' national, set at four SltC"> The a Kings. paced by three goals ap1ecc trnm 8111 Hannon. C hns Morgan and Chns Oeding. dumped Kenned' I'\-I. then dunked the Sao D11~go :ontmgcnt 17-2 with Keith Head pa' mg the way with five goals at Tustin High ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- 1 WINNERS ALREADY!! ''YEAH ••• PACK YOUR BASS. YOU COULD BE NEXT!'' Check Today's Numbers on Page A2. And Name Your Destination! TWA & THE DAILY PILOT -See How Good We Really Arel Daily Pilat ,,TWA FIND OUT HOW GOOD WE RE ALLY ARE LAXIO(jANGE COUNTY CONNECnONS VIA GOLDEN STATE AIRLINES WIN-GO Hotline: (714) 642-4333 C4 Or9nge eo..t DAILY PILOT/ Tueeday,' Oc1obet 7, 1988 "' Oak 'f.Fee racing handica.p WIDMHOAY'S INTIUH .................... __ , I f'W..alllolft. • ,.,T aaa. 1 "" "*" Pur.-· ,13,000. ' -Didi ' i.-ClelmlN Ofi(t l 10,000 I PeVWt °'"'" l~Oll) llt ? Vk!Olt A..-1 llleck) (1) all! l~~wi.($~) 116 ' I..,.. (Or .... ) 116 5 ltld O\i.ry CIC.MAii) 116 6 Oii Oecl CV"9n1uelal C11 11' 1 ~lnelv ... I CCe1te110A) llt • .._. TMMt ownelldt1l 116 f ... I l.Ndtr CGllbtrl) 11' 10 t•• Smolle CHewtev) llt 11 lellftced 9ucleaUOooc:¥ -'" 12 eomo.v 1er1eno.r (0...l!Ouueve l 116 vtleeLI ASRT (3•1) Won lm9renlvtlv el PoMolle end bltw out I~ • Oct '· herd lo ci.ny ~ Dllllne; l'LL SMOK• C•·I) llun• '""'"el 1111• ovel Wld wlll be exlfe IOUOh wllll Hewlrt rlOlllO IOOey; OH DAD Ct ·l) Erratic rlll'M' nol ovennetc:Mcl wll11 tlleM. 900d loundellon of Clrlh Mflce Otl Mer LONGSHOT· LANOSEEll HCOMO ••c•. ' turlon9s Purse llUOO Malden•. 1 .,..,, old. breel Ill CA Cllllmll!O price w.ooo-n•,ooo I P~o IPlncavl 2 Furtv CSlbtllel 3 Unl....,181 Men (81Kkl • Al'fltllc EndtaYOf (Kaenel) S Lyrlcel Table (Or1eoa> (II 6 Tulere GOid (Slevens) 1 TMll'I l lllrnev (Hernenoeo I With Clllu (Pelton) t S.Crtl Score 10.let>ouuevel 111 117 117 A 111 117 111 111 1l1 .a 112 111 $5 m.illion guaranteed NEW YORK (AP)-A prize ofS5 million has been guaranLl!ed to Lhc winner of thoroughbred racing's Ken- tucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes in 1987 under a bonus system announced Monday by Triple Crown Productions. Included was a SI million bonus to ~car.old who~mpe1es i~all 1hree Triple Crown races and accumulates the most points by finishing first. second or third in the thre¢ races. Seen as the major beneficiary of the move was Baltimore's Pimlico Race Coursc.--homc oHhe..Prea.kness. which recen1ly lost twd Derby winners. Gato Del Sol in 1982 and Spend a Buck in 1985, when their owners decided 10 skip the second leg of the Triple Crown series. 10 Pomme Fleet (tonllllll 111 """' ,,.. notlllnt IO Dl'OV•, 1"""'"9d •no 1 \ f'Mlil• A Podo.ettul C Dotnlntuell 12 No OOYble DNI (PeclrOlt) 117 wort.Int wtll, tove1 1111• dowMlll turf courw, 111 MewlMA~UMYIT C .. 2J HllNY re• .......... ll ~Of .,OllM (~•> (1) 117 1• Siio Ftln CMeae> m 111 IS~ Welti COfttte) C2l 111 16 J.l ll.'• OreMi co.w.u.wvel m 111 llJA..uco CMI LUMM Ill llW'~t U118M 10 do lletl, ,..,. a-10 ~ end •• " belltt IOdeY, 18atlT ICOlll (t •l) Of-. .... lrom •trallflt melden Net, ~ :9t • a.o I In "'8t'o IMNOft, MiaMDa .. I CM' lltOMZll Ct·l) 01~ MIMCI Ill toOCI Nit •• Oct • fllllU\1119 oul Ille flvt eltlltM In l!OU. ellO ...- ..-i dr•~ln LC*GSHOn LY•ICA1..-.T~ TtttaO llACa . ' 112 fUrtones. PIKM: SU,000. 3 veat Qld$ & uP. ci.1rn1119 Pl'IC•: SSO,OOO•MS,000. I llarbea (lllllck) • 109 1 Amtn01"8ftlrOllltr (Shoemaktf) 116 3 lllvets Fec:IOf' (OrleQal 116 4 Kl119 Of Callfotllla (Valtfl1uale) 116 s cou,.Jne EHie tMlral 111 ' Qulo Ster CP'eelo'ote) 116 1 lnfanlrvmen (Piftcey) 118 I P&lrlot Gto .... (OelehOuuevt ) l 16 f ()flceo CtCMntl) 114 10 TteldY Na•ur•llv (SltY-) 116 ~ ST Alt ( 10-11 Abunelence ol IPffd In 1111$ llekl, netdeCI lest et Pomona and '' Pl'lmeel for uDMtl today, COUltMNG EAGLI 14·11 Has come 10 hand Ol lalt l>Hlln9 all competition on wev uP IM llldeltf, win nMCI too effOft, KING OF CALlf'ORNIA 19·2> AIWav\ runs well 111 lhls oval a nd cen fire tr .. h, too conditioner SPOls them were lhev can win. t..ONGSHSOT· AMANOTHERBllOTHER. W-.cl llllv "",_....., --ol ... IM'""" tor return, <-' lie leMrect, IALLADllY C7·21 Very QUl(ll '"° ~ lo lleY• CIMr ..... Ml'l'f, m1al be IMMCI. LOHGSHOT OUlt SW£ET SHAM IUlTM aACL 6 l\il'loftin PvtM \2'.000 Aaowtl!C*. ...... ' "*'-'· , YMl't • ' .. I Si9n Off ( 5*119) 1 It 2 Strldlllt E "y (Sllotfneker) 11S > VMCI Dencer ISOlh) 11' 6 TOMMY lllM (MeHI US S Chetmlne SuMn CMcHarvuel 11' hieofty ""' (Meetf'rofl) 113 1 Tammy Lu (OtlallOuuav•) Ill • Sym«lollcaHv (Sltvtn•l 113 9 Scretn Door llllack) •111 10 s.111a·~ Joi (Plncev) 111 11 Oandv lieMen tPe«otel 113 CNAAMNO SUSAN l•-11 Hone and rider re1.l!'liltd IO< Come«>eck, llletlly r"8rded !Illy lies been lrou«lie Pl'-. no -••Ion " 10 abllilY; V1Vt0 DANCI • ()-11 Verv QUldl and Is elWeys IOUllll. will be •trono contt!ldef •IWI wOUld no• IUl'Pl'IM wllll wl.n, IALCOHY PASS (2• 11 8obOled at lllt "•", recov9'td to 1uit rnlu wlllle Pl'OOeblv be\I, cen make a~. LONGSHOT SYMllOLICALL Y SIVENTH aACE. I mile Pune: '27,000 Allowence. 3 YH r Oki\. 1 Lord Allison COllverH) 2 Frtre Jall\IH CMe11) 3 Tommy The Hewk Ullackl 4 OarileUI (McCarronJ • s Cu• a v GIH• COtt1houn1Y11) m 116 116 FOURTH aACI. l 1/16 mllu Pur111: $22,000. ' Time For Sakerlo CV11tn1ual1I x111 l?O 116 116 116 116 116 Mlfeltfl. meldtn lllllei & mere,, 3 veer1 old & uo 1 Tahoe Tan90 ISleven1I I Aoval Alvdar IPlnc.ayl 117 9 Sobrt La Par CShoemekerl 1 GOidie Hawn (McC.arron) 117 9 Grecian WMdltf IHawlevl J AsPlrele (Solis) 117 10 Ae Enler (Plncavl 121 4 Beoonla (lllaca) 11112 AIM ...... s Regel HOiion (l(eenel) 117 11 MldwHI Kln9 (Del1h0uueve) (I) 116 6 Kerallno IStloemahrl 111 12 A1191t Arc (Plncevl (1) 116 7 Oonlukrls (Oelel'ICKllHvtl 117 TYWIE f'OR SAKARTO C•·ll L0$1 Yaloeble I unc-ed (VetenTualal 117 9rovnd lhrOU9hOul wnilt red119 wide, cen beet 9 SwHIMU (Hefnendt1) 117 tlli' lleld wflll pal'-'11 hendll"9, CUT ay GLASS 10 Quffn Joen (Hawlty) 121 16·11 81g effort IH I, nr$1 'lert 'Ince bel119 11 Sevenell M.oot1 lMeia) 117 gelded, IOok for stro119 effort IOCS.v, TOMMY DONTASKa1s (3·11 Overceme rouol'I '""to THE HAWK ll·ll Is ntelom bel bUt elwavs rl9h1 ltnl'"' llllrd In 9000 heel, Dltw out in "'8rP ""''•· lhtrt, could be Perl ol nlct txecla wltll lillle rider llOICllng t>ot ller>d; UNCONOUI RIO C2· II ra cing luc:k LONGSHSOT: TAHOE TANGO. "• Second efler selling •JI Ille pact es odds on EIGHTH RACE. 6.S furlo119\ on rurt. Purse· favorllt, hes benefit of race 11 lllls dlslenn, s•S.000 Autumn Oen H1nolc1p !2nd Olvlslonl Wlcllv one lo beel, a lGAL NOTION 19·21 A HendlceP tor fillies & meres ot ell eges. Grou Winner of 1111, Hiiies hHI came t>.ck 10 win PurH SS2.S7S. ht, '31.?7S; 2nd, '9,000, 3rd, lmpreulvely next "art, ca1>ablt with beSI S6.7SO. 4111, '3.37S, Slh, $1, 19S LONGSHOT ROYAL AL YOAA I Loucoum ISoll'I 117 FlfTH RAC.I,, " tur10ngs ll'\.Jur.t....£uot.;. 2 8tusl'llfl9 All over IMcHargue) I IS US,000 Autumn OIY\ Hanc!«•P Chi Olv ) A J Weter Crv,lel' !Toro> 119 HendicaP for fiNles & mart\ ol aN •1>11s Gron • Re9al Ttes IVeroara ) I IS PlffH \S2.S25. hi, '32.27S. 2r>d. tt,000. 3rd. S lle"900I' llubv 10.le nounavel llS S6,7SO, 41h, '3,37S, Siii s 1.12s 6 Chtrrv Ma1\0ft CPeelrozal 112 I our SwNt snam 1~101 113 1 He< llovenv IM<:C1rron1 119 2 Gou !-(Bletk) 110 I Shvwi1111 !Pincevl 110 3 Tu Ooc19e (McCerron> ,.,... 119 9 EIOclueck !St!Oemekerl 116 c 8e1t11drv (V11len1uelal 116 10 l(raemtf' C81ackl 113 5 Ou111erid1119lv CSlevenll l?O 11 ComPe rat>llltv CVatenruetal II? 6 lalde <Hawlevl 114 SHVWING (2·1) Hes laced lhe l>fft this veer 7 Solva (0rl4!9al 118 and with some success, worked 1:12.l Ocl 2 e Llchl <Bezel 1 IS under strong l>OICI, di,lenct ldtel; HER ROY· 9 Alwevs A Hll IPtdrozal 110 Al.TY !3·1) Loves lllls oownhlll turf course , 10 Artwer1evl119lunvet (Snoemekerl 117 figure\ close 10 top cllOlce. slrOOG foe; ltEGAL II Sc>eclaculer Jolie (Plncevl 117 TIES !6· 11 Nol quite In this cten bul wllri'9 trip OUTSTANOINGL y (3-1) Aptly named H '"'' coukl earn • wre LONGSHOT: LOUCOUM. TEllY TullEll _.,... llACI. 1 II .. ,,._ PvtM 11'.000 ,,.... ' """"'>.,_,Old' ~ C1e1m111t or ice a)t, ... ,. •• I llert IOOI t HertWICltd 116 2 Good Stvlt (l(_.e) 111 3 Neut'llle'• 0"1 (Plflcev > Ill • Don A To. (Sftollrneller) 116 S lt~tellon Mhs CV ... 1Ulie) j.lt 6 Fr~ Star ICt•l"*ll "llt • 7 ""'' S<OtW ~ ...... , 114 I L.• hftrenei. lllonlllel 116 9 a.11'1 Leelv IOrteoel 116 10 l.adv Hele.lie (Cl1nerosl a 107 11 SWffl Winkle (lleckl Jl 109 GOOO STYLE <•·1) SOffd 10 o•lll cornme nCI over 11111 fltld, faced allOwence ComPenv l<l''.i dl'091 10 clelml119 leYtl; •ll"VTATION IWJJ (3·11 Lovn 11111 oval end will receive tofld ~·. "'" "-'d •• lllis level •nd run• w .. !Of 11111 rider, ,.I NCH ST A.It 16• I) GOOCI 1'9fllner sPl'illllne a l Pomone, Pl'tftn dl11anc• and wlM Dt deGenl price lodaY LONGSHOT llAllE lOOl. a EST a IT VISIBLE ASSET I hi llact l NICE ltL.AY OUIP STAil llrd ltacel Los Al entries L•MIWI .... " TODAY'S a .. Talll (4llMI ........... ...,_. _...., ""' ..... 1lJI ,.ST aAC& OM l'l\lle NCe PurM' 12,000 WtnnJng GIOw, Oto ,lflO, NlckY 0 llrevo, ... ., OleM. Yn I (ell(ell, Jllwel Solrjl LUCkY ou.en. AndVS ll*'1. SWlll\O S.1rr1 Al10 tlltlt*-Tllenkt k l, $Htd Busl• SICONO a.ca. OM mile trot Pur\ot sl,900' Cllllmine price 5'.0C»-110,000. Frencls Ctouollllfly, ICllt Rules, HI~ Cllio J K Sclmolll, Noble ltllOllll, TM600w, a·Weltu•, Ll&at Pride, C1111tlve Ahq elltlt>Mt-Hol Chlo. a Storm T COIJfns TM•o ltACI. Ont mile 1>9Ct PurH· 11,JOO Cl<llmlne pri~•· lS,000. Pfoes llalldl1, Gol<*l Palcll, So llowov, Suiltd To A Tff. Andvs Mey, Wvnna•Nendlna, Chelltrl119, Tahlllan Wind, LI,. llocn.tla Al10 tllgl..--C~eel, Sc•PYle irou.tTH •ACE. One mile trol Purse '3,000 GHC>te Junior, llonnt:' Cororet Comet, Kens Ooll, Saturday Oen, SMWI TombOv. C1llf0tnla Jack, Ciiio Of Jada, Liiiie HouM AIM> e419ibll--OY~ lloO '9FTH •ACE. One mile~<• Purse Sl,100 Cllllmlng l>f'l<t· '7.SOO Hav To S-0, HeatNll, Stormin Norme, ' ,..01 'Y t •.,.;••~ If\ 11 1t_,nott CMfrott LU''9~ Oarrf!I, An<IYI Dofftf, EmNror HUlllW. "''° eMgl~ool Jeo llltTH •ACa. OM mile N(8 Pvr .. alMO. Skl-• Solrlt. FlllmKfnt, Slllooers Tveoon, h\I Of Arflle, CaNtornlll Arlttl. S.brllle ... w•rd, Pew Flttfl, Va\NM. MB EaoreM HVINTM aACI. OM ml~ NCt ~M'. u 100 Cl<llmlne DrlCt • 10 000 l tnftllOtl. Miu Vltl\OYtf, [)(14 t.b-1, C Im SOClal Cree• In Aclion. Vlncenn. kY ,.,_, IC•ltl llrevo, !!Jalldor•' Glrl Al10 e11ollllt-OoOtlr-e vrdles Pet. llGHTH ltACI. OM mJle oec• Plf"M aUOO Clalmlno cwlcit 17,500. l(llltYS Peltf, Jim 5't1Werll. Bootl9 ltu.•, LlnQ'en Gus. ltlcll h 1111,1, ScNlindl•lltCi, Cell· tornla Matlc, Frnn T11tn1. llarv J1ne. AISO tllolbi.-Lord Levltv NINTH ••Cl. OM mile oece PVl'M Sl,)(IO C 1a1mlng orlc• lS.000 toomer Hill, CaDltln Lord, EOl'l'IQl\I Froat. ~lal Peltf, OO<Tllni<, Slre/9111 Elon'. Hklll Counlel Ven Tuelot1 Mlli. Burnbfo. AIM> tllglt>te-Natllel\ Perri, l.~ Sflle TENTH RACI. One mite HC!I. Pul'M f l,900. Clalmll!O Pf'ICt S7,SOO Level BNuly ur1u Skio-. Pooelet'. Pref· erenual Time Caolierano 8Mctl, Steroid Slalllon. lleftal>it B890ad Tlllef, H.ilO Cllerttr DODGERS' DOW.NF ALL BEGAN EARLY. • • FromC2 available.'' said Dodgers' pitcher Orel Hcrsh1scr '"In· stead of it being a one-run game. we might ha vt' bl't·n three or four runs up with those gu ys in the lineup.'" Aside from Gut'rrcro's absence. 1hc Dodgers also had to struggle for extended periods of time without Marshall. 1hird base man Bill Madlock and shortstop Marrano Duncan. all regulars. As lale as early August there was a glimmer of hope "that 1he Dodgers could retain their d1v1s1on title. The} rattled off eight win.tin.a row and nine of I 010improve 10 54-53. That left them ~hin 5th games of the div1sron- leading Astros. Unfortunately.just as the Dodgers muck out on the road to the top. the road struck back. The} promptl} lost 1hree s1ra1ght rn Cincinnati en rou1e 10 losing lhe ofs1x on 1he road. The Dodgers would go on to post a 27-54 mark as 1he v1s1lln$ team. suffering more road losses than an} Dodger team since 1905. By Aug. 21 . the Dodgers had lost I 0 of 14 10 drop to 58-63 and 11 games behind the Astro). falling forewr fro m 1he di vision race. There were two bright spots 1n the Dodgen'...season of disappointment -the ever-reli able Fernando Valenzuela and second basem~n Steve Sax. Valenzuela surpassed the 20-wrn mark for lhe first tr me in his career. finishing with a 21 -1 I record. He also set a personal personal be t for strikeouts "'1th 242. the NL's second he-st total behind Hou'lton's Mike 'Oii. who fin1shl'd with 306. • ··1t "'a' m' besl scawn. hl:cauM' 11 was the first ume I ~on 20:· \'akntudJ ~rd al\er hrl> final start. ..He lost a 101 of tough game):· • 1osc1a said. '"And 1f he had an) suppon he could haH' ma} be won 15 or 16 game~:· a>.. "'ho had to figure a' one of 1hc lca)I llkel)' cand1da1es to contend for the leagul''s batling crown, battled Montr{'ars l 1m R:11ncs and San Diego's Ton} Gwynn to the final da~. He fin1 shc:d ~rnnd al .332. JUSt two points behind Raines. "'What can Isa\. It wasa thrrll to be m the race.'' Sax l>ard. '"G1"e Raines· thl· crl·drt. He's a good guy and an outstandin$ hitter. I didn't l'ome rn expecting to have a year hkc this. I'm ha pp\ for thc wa} it went for me, but 1t doesn't mean as much brt-auM" of1hc way 1hc club went." The pla)'er who mo)t c~cmplrfied the frustrat1Qns of 1986 was pitcher Bob Welch. \\hO finr hed with a17-13 record. He ga .. e up three runs or less rn 14 of 15 outings dunng one stretch. In 19 of hrs H stans this season. the Dodgers scored three ru ns or le s. "Bobby Welch-had an ou1si.anding year." Hershiser said. "We JUSt didn't support hrm . When a guy pitches well and gets S\Jl>port, he can wen 20 ga mes. When a guy p11ches well and doesn'I gel support, he can l'nd up 7.1 t You can onl} pitch as good a'l your 1eam." Needless to say. thal wa~n·t \Cr) good 1n 1986. ~~.J ~~1 ~~1 ~~1 ~~--~--~-~-,-~-~--~-~-~-~-~~-~-~-~-m----~--~-m-~~--~-~-~-~-- NOTICE OF JOJNT PUBLIC HEARING BY THE CITY COUNCIL Aeency and the City Council on uly 10, 1114 !I'd Deee!nber 11, 1915, rempectlvely. Of THE CITY Or COSTA MESA AN D TITT COSTA MES~ '"'9 Plnal mt and the SEIKI wm be considered by the Aaency and City at (hj time of REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY, Cl':Y OP COSTA MESA, the public hearfnr on the Acreement. 1'1e Pinal BIR and the SEIRI are available for CALIFORNIA ON THE PROPOSED SALE BY THE AGEN CY OF lmpectfon and copying at the place and time 1peclfled above with the other documents CERTAIN PROPERTJES WITHIN THE COSTA MESA lilted below. DOWNTOWN REOEVELOP:\1ENT PROJECT AREA TO MOLA DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION FOR THE DEVELOPMENT 1. A copy of the Acreement between the COila Mesa Redevelopment Agency, OF A MIXED USE HOTEL, COMMERCIAL RETAIL AN D City of Costa Mesa, C&Ufornla and Mola Development Corporation. RENTAL HOUSING DEVELOPMENT AND ON THE PROPOSED DISPOSITION ANO DEVELOPMENT AGREEMENT PERTAINING THERETO I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Costa Mesa (the 1 1 ~ "City") and the Costa Mesa Rede.velopment Agency, City of Costa Mesa, California (the "Agency") will hold a joint public hearing on October 14, 1986 at the hour of 6 : 30 I p.m ., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, in the City Council Chambers, 1 Cit y Hall, 77 Pair Drive, Costa Mesa, CalifornJa 92626 pursuant to the California Community Redevelopment Law (Health and Safety Code Sections 33000 et. seq.) for the purpose of conslderi"i the approval of a proposed Disposition and Development Agreement, (the "Agreement"), with Mola Development Corporation (the "Developer") Which prov des ror the sale of tfie Sile o t e ve oper or the development and operation of a mixed UH development which includes a hotel, commercial retail and 2. 3. A aim mary Report which describes and ipecif ies: •• b. It The coet of the Acreement to the Acency • The'9tlmated value of the lnterat to be conveyed, determined at the hich•t UHS permitted under the Redevelopment Plan for the Colta M ... Downtown Redevelopment Project. 1be Pinal P.nvironmental Impact Report for 19.5 acres in the Costa Mesa Downtown Redevelopment Area and the Pinal a.pp1emental P.nvlronmental Impact Report for the Colta Mesa Downtown Redevelopment Project, pertalnlnc to the ll1ere commercial retail lite, toeether with the original Pinal Environmental Impact Report for the Costa Mesa Downtown Redevelopment Project. office space and rentia1 housing. · DATED: _9_-..... ,((t_-$_(, __ _ The Redevelopment Plan for the Costa Mesa Down~own Redevelopment Project provides for 1he-development in the Project area of a mixed use project including a hotel, commercial retail and office space, and rental housing. A total of fifty~ight thousand (5 8,000) square feet of commercial retail and office space and a 150 room hotel and 150 rental housing units is proposed to be constructed by the ™veloper on the Site along with the necessary parki~ and landscaping. The location of the Site with.in the Costa Mesa Downtown Redevelopment Project, is shown on the map accompanying this Notice. The purpose of the public hearing is to consider: t. The prop<>Sed sale of the Site in the Costa Mesa Downtown Redevelopment Project, by the Agency to the Developer for the development and operation of a mixed \.Be project including a hotel, commercial retail and office 1P4ce and rental housing development with the necessary parking and landscaping. 2. The proposed document providing for such sale ls the proposed Disposition and Development Agreement. 3. All evidence and testimony for and against the approval of the Agreement and the proposed sale of the Site to Mt>la Development Corporation. At the above stated day, hour and_place any and all persons havlnl any objections to the Acreement or the proposed sale of the Site or to the recularfty of any of the prior proceedlnpt;may appear before the Agency and the City Council and 1how cause why the Agreement or the proposed sale of the Site should not be approved. At any time not later than the hour af oresald set for hearlnc, any person objecting to the proposed sale of the Site, or the Acreement, may file In writing with the City Clerk a 1tatement of hi• or her objections thereto. Any persons or orsanlzatlona deslrlnc to be heard at the heartnc wW be afforded an opportunity to be heard. At the aforet&Jd hour the City Council and the Acency 1hall proceed to hear and pall upon all written and oral objectlona. The f ollowlnc documents are available for public impectJon and copytnc durlnc r.,war office hourt (8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday thrOUfh Prlday) at the office of the City Clerk and Secretary of the Acency, City Hall, TT Palr Drive, Colta Mesa, California 12828. - Al the A19ncy .-..ponalble for OUTYfnl out the Redevelopment Plan for the Colta M-Downtown Redevelopment Ptiojeot, th• eo.ta M.. Redevelopment Apncy, City of Colta M .. , C&JJfomll and the City eow.cn of Colta M .. have prevlOUlly prepered and the Clty and the Apncy ctertltled the Pinal lnvlronmental lmpect R9POl1 for the Costa M-Downtown Redevelopment Plan on Dffember 17, llT 3. Amonr the impl4tmentatlon aeUvltlel whoM environmental Impacts are .. •••d In the Pinal llR t. the development propo1ed to be aooornplllhed under the Al!"Mment. In ..-.-.otlon with ltl eonaideratlon of the Acr'Mment the Apncty hu further oondueted • tdtlal ltudl• to detw•IM II Mrtala propo1ed dlwtloprn•ta, IMludlnr the propa11d dewelopment under' thll AsrMment, would ha" eMtlonal llsnlfloyt .n..u cm tM •Ylronment not oo¥ered In the Plnll llR eertw.d for the Colta 11- DDWliton lidiYelop"'ent Pro~ ... -...it of tlM Initial ltudl•, two IUPSll•mtnta to tM-!lnal..JJJt (the •llKI"> hffe been prepuied Ind eertlfted by the t , ' " Publish: 120/1 8-27 ) I J J ] .., I o I a:: < > September 30, 1986 October 7, 1188 1 _l_J LJ ....::.::::====::....:=' I~ '.J c l t·1,iishcc~ n r :i nqri Co<t~. D:i 1ly 1lot.i ~: . .,1 :.M hP.r 1 1", ')ct "' 1·r-; l 'lS6 I•, I _...._ --~ --J • SITE MAP Mota Development • Ot•• ca.. DM.Y N.0Jnu11•1t· 0111•1J?., ---.-..-,. --------- IAll1rno CALL 842-5178 4 11nes, •g oo· 7 days... • . ....,_ ... Ollll.Y ............. OC•t ..... -. .. • • • ........ ._...._ c.. ._ aw._. 1111 • .-..... 11• c..... w .. am 11111 &'1 •/mii .._ alt iiii Cd14 lftOM eftof.._ ... 1& Almo1t oc.Mnfront SIK • 11: + Q , Fum ::Ii 'J'lllt• pekl Studio -PRIDE ~ ~"IPtl becft ~ kh appi. 2bl 2 ter lrptc ecau1Pt M&O + tit I MC. utlll Pd. kitchen ~ bath, pet,0. Aw4 I. ' .., E'lide CM, 3bd, 2~ba. E·Z move 53 .. 1191 kltch 11260 531-t1t1 °'*" S.l/Sun 1·5. 424 nowl ... 25/mo. Mio pett DElUXI WATl#AOHT "*-eel •"9rt ........ frptc, dbl~· 1111,500 Agt I• Agt fM PolntetU.. * ... Ht e.40.5341 Of,ICI SPACE. ct..-& ,_., • ...._ •• ASS,..,.,.,. 10 ...... 1.9'\I 1,000 ...,.. h I '"" 11 &ft ~. C.-~ -•tlO '173--3113 ._.. ' ' Hefe'• va6ue 2br 2bl up. Beilboe bMd\ "°'*· 38A •llJTI MU• Call~ ....... -~ -Ot ~ dated kltefl not ,., to 18A, trptc 1 "°'* to 2 + Study, .-pt to beh, LlllLY-.U.,_ wl150n.t53M1111 ocu n 1900/mo. oat. pluah crpt S900 Fee Cdii. 1000-attnewcwp. •~1111 I --IU Agt... 17Me30 -oent tlLmT llMlll IPMtmll 28A MA. UOC* Id,~ ~.a.::~ kzLwtlK •ti 38r.28e+Oenwf..,.ttW'U .... 2 BAYRIOOE CClr'dO 2bf, heutlfUldw\lergeOer· w/dl'lk~~=·1 0t873-C12t" iPW MOM Ai;K flfeplecie '° Mna rm. >Ont -..... ---...... ._ 2ba. gated. eM ammen. 1\!,l lmltumllll,,,,., I den Apta, petloe. dee*•. TSL MGMT .. a. teo3 8c:tlOOI to College ...... cond.Muat.-1l15t,$00 .___,....,. w/d,gw,rett.11250/mo. rm un · 1 bllC to spa.Sorry No~e. ....... Reuon1bl• r at••· Ownr/Agt 973.~ 38r, ~le AetUrbllhlng ' 5-40.-7551"'781-8180 bch. 1750/mo. 675-4174 2Bdrm 281ih 1790 , ....... Ampte p1t9, utlla p-'d. "3·'4162 Mn, H._.. T .................. ~o0o~'t9-~;t= Beyrldge Condo. HO Avail~ 1 . Sml fufn "' 398W.Wlt9oo 831·"'3 m it8 2155ECetHwyl75-tl001=-_...,----..;..;;.-- 2 · gated comm 2Br 28-. unlurri bach un•t. Mlcto, Dau L...1-I -... new hofne9 • 38A 3'h8A 2bf 2'hb• dbl oat bUllt frplc air p(,oi I ao~ Mo, gar w/d Utllt pd ,... C M. roor.i for • ,..,.ct· •t·2 1 2s1 Elden. can rent ini.trpl,empet,aa·501~ s1.001mci .... 7eo-1275 S53°51m0 ca11.84o-o507 +cjlS§EtdiiXCA; ..,.. c:Metlan WOtttlnO Small epece C-..re>1 150·ii'iiiiliiiiir~"P!~--tor 1400/moMCfl.Want + 546-eo71 d __ ----2bd, 1ba w1ga1 S750 714 Mima6e,nonllnlcr/dflnker IQ hi AYll lrlwMd . ...., ""1 OI to trade tor lend In NB or 6:~-&eaa eYena....a •ra. Beeutltul cuatom home Open airy 2~R 2BA duc>le• 73g.191~ pfflMga8. 5'*~107 c:rpl I '*"'· SUS/mo. youn Mon·W•d~P:rl CM tor 5-10 unlta. .... 3Br + Oen, 3Ba, I011 of unit w/lrplc • stir git • 4117-1328-£~ C• dye. t-5, 175-2311 8ein-1pm Meu V•de Rlclh f1oc:lt 845-0tM 2 M•lr Bdnna, 28A CoMo high oetllng1 overloOlllng w/d hkup So of hwy Will excNnge low ":ot :. EXECUTIVE SUITES AIN A9fe. M2-75'3 • t .... l t near So. Cont Plue, poot S2$00 Agt 842-2134 $11115/mo Agt 873-5354 W[•U •ac~ general = ..... gated MC. W/D hkup, 111··--Step• to bMCh:-Slnnle 11.\lr 1L. t~wraa •. 2 ~80-2"0 larnlty. FURN GARDEN OfFICES HIL••tLlll .. IL.11-w-pool. Agt. 973-l&e<> -·--· rooms, Bachelo .. r·1 . prk •naoea, *""lleul775. Receptloniat. W/P, Copier PIT. Mutt driw. 854-t2.e5 ,, _.._, Oetlgner perfect lro 3 ..,. ..,.... ..... b/ "liiiil _&_More 751-1308 955-3900 Bob LG Dupte11, 1tepe to land, •E .. talde aharp 28drm, bdrm 2,~ ba a/e /pool 18drma & 28drma 1v111 111/1111/sec: 824-1557 or _ •• •BR upper, 28A lowr, sun-1Ba hOuae. Gatage, fnecl ape : tannii S ;7951mo New erpts & floon, lndry tenant 494-11673 --U~IOiiU~ • .-m;.~----F~i;.:=-~~E;. LO\llngf, -"-...,---0.-n-penon---,-0 ~i \~rLH ~~~ f.c~p c~ap.~;~7;1~ Patrlc:k/agl 0 831-1261 ~i: .. ri=.s~~:;:r SUNSET Ov« The~ ll'fll. Rcet 100.400 el. atart at :;eN;r ~~mo ton.: R.E. 759-5080, 837.J 175 sec Must atand credit .. Ulfll MM ~ __ 1 ~:~!r~. ~~t Hwy• n0 Wkly rental.. I 14$ I S275t mo Avall now N/amkr Aefa l~U · ~ 770-S629 tel 38r &-... ..--Up/WltJy. Color' TV. rree Costa Mesa.1179-1272 H Ullll--Home on rway, + $1150 Br $750 Bolh pets S675tmo. 4te. 90 coffee. heet=-....,.. maid LG d ... ,-o .. ,__ In ,.__.. Aeepon91b6e, Iovino per· .. , fem ,. 2 FP. 3 car oat. 11 ...,.,,.. .,. ,,....,. ..,.,.. IOfl to eat f 2 okl .. lmott ~ .cre on water· sngt slry ffeah paint new w rptc. garage 760-8515 lt!f!!! luc •t aerllk:e & at to oc:Mn. Mesa S250/mo amall In· • or 1M' ~=i ~~~ 100~~· meatiBllll crp1g: $3600 , .. _ Avi'oec. -2Bdrm TownhouH 2 Kltefl'• av1 985 N. Cout dus1ri'a1 ec>aee ~. rr:.::nt~~ $6,aoO,oOo. Appol:~t Agl 722-6988/840 ... 818 Cettl .HI 2'Z4 Bath, 'Jarage, cut•aac: Hwy. ~ag 8ci'I '1_94--S~ ldjoinlng ofc. 842-M20. CM hOIM. 1 cHd OK. with PATRICK TENORE TIWlll•I EASTBLUFF 3br 2ba . $725/mo. Nr Hoag. Refa llU yr 9ITll. NEW 4 UNIT BUILDING 84~ ~wtu.-831· 12M or 780-l702 ..... ter.... S 1650/mo lat & last+ MC 1 & 2BR APT. QUIET 752· 7884 &-5 Wkdyl Wkly rent• now avaM 887 W 19th SI .. C.M. _ __...._ I Frplc. vaulted celllngt, dbl avalleble ,1•1 1eaae only COMPLEX Poot,nopet1, 1147.00 wtt & up 2274 Stores or Ofc1 800-3000 -'" gar. poot, apa. No pets. (714)650-8088 IV "*S '495 & 1695 $600 MC ···--· Nwpt Blvd. CM 848-7 .. 5 Sq Ft Agt 5-41-5032 "'w""Al ..... .,-~~--=--fl)Ol'ft---1Bdrm $810 · 646-36'8 ~•_....r tal fof --' hoWe 966 w .• 18th St. 845-2739 Fantutle Condo on the NON-SMOKERS ONLY. SUI•~ Tm DHITMmTI :"ortt N.:p;;-~ ----====-weler wlfabuloUs view. ••Ill TllSI* Stunning lBr 1B• + 3026 W Padflc Cou1 u...u • Full Mrlllce OfftCe 1-1.1u .,.__ 7an......,. • Ulfll-••U fllll* Pool S17951mo. Decor· 1Br 1Ba, garage S550 enormous ten -sundecill N~ Beach.~·;v Newport Center 640-5'*70 _ •••• , ,_,., ...,.."'9¥ OellgMr perlec:t, lrg 3 3br, 2ba, c:onvr den, pool ator lurnlahed. 673.08116 2Br 2Ba, fireplace $625 Lovely envi ronment. $135+wtt egl, no depoll1 Waterffont 0 -..... .,...... THIMn ... bdrm 2'h ba..-Jc w/poot serv, gerdnr, ammen. ..i. 3Br 2Ba. yard $750 Pool. No pets. 1 peraon ~--------,,..,. ...,.._.... ... 1 .t tennla .• 1 • 71151 mo $1500 (213)432·2601 Nearly new beoutiful 3Br, OTHERS AVAILABLE Fee S750 Lse 840-0349 Yualita ltalala wl1h lantutJc view .. llllll , ..... ...... • 2B• home w/lrplc In TILlll.ll •. 1...... J1 S.COO/mo perking lnct. ,. ......... ~ • ..,_._. •• - -PiUiCll'7igtl3T-l2M flNWl.ux-condOnrl>Cfl. NewPon Helg-rilSTl050 ,.. ..-Ula""* -6•6 4oo:iT~ "'.;M::..F~ry .. ;-- WM~~ • • • t • ~ ... >-;..-: ........ ll • .:S ••. : ~~· -.... ~,, ~ . ~ Y.v • ,· CONDO Very Private! 3Br 2'h81. F/P. dbl gar, per mo 722-~77 •NEWL y DECORATED• Eatra clean 1. bath. good BIG BEAR cXfiiN large. ---·•u•• - Immaculate! Nr Hoeg ec>•. sml pet <>ti. Sl 195. Newpor1 laland charming 2Br, new crpt, fncd yrd, a.rea. lull ki1ch 1525. F.. pool table, cotor 111. 2 wK••-r ·-..--• P~/ .. -• •-tall fll e.11 Hosp 3bd, 2ba. $159.000 646' 1844 or 842-9866 · waterfront. Av1 nowl New wtr pd 636-4 1~ t-Spm Tl.I.WIT 111-1111 frpiCS. Sleeps 14 Nnty decorated. full Mr· l!M:;;•;';•';:•;tr;•:tne=..,.:l~l:•: .. .. .., .,,t 84"' ........ .. 3B S 2566 Or•nna ·A $650 714 Sots-fi te vice 1Ut1e Ai>c>fo• 400 9Q . .......... _ .... ____ -. J"'~ ... anny •PDTIW ""* erpt. r 1'hBa 1300 -·r . ft •t 11/lq " Greet lo-XwXAb wiAAINd FiMD IHtn/CniM LtlH ....... ....., oalllft AIU Excellent locat1on. 2Br Vtlll Rental• 675--4912 •PDTlllll °'"* 201o~!'i~Hdrm. WANTED: Big Beat cabin cation Secretary aeMce Seetls interior a.igner. liaerar JM lal'Mr Yltw..... Allo1d1ble price 11 28a. W/D hkup, frple, Ocntrnt hm SBR + separ-E•cellent location 2Br JBa w/lrg balcony. Utils Oecembef 24th lhru the avail Clll 850-3381 Minimum 3 ~· pro-01111111111 $1811 ,000. lnves1or vauttedceltlng1,2cargar ale guest qtrs. lg tot. 2Ba, W/D hkup, lrplo, incl N pell STOO/nio 2811'1. FamUy went• to.~·~ • 1 .. 11onal e11~rlence: *llYFlllT• · owned & mull setl this wlopnr 0119f streams & Good pkng Close to vaulledcelllngs.2cargar 756-18~8or833·3363 · have• Whit• Christmas. ~••trftl Pr""" creelivl~~mtsldlls • First unte cmtrl ng 111 -yiran-::c&Jr 7511·"93 1111 Pool & spa. Great ...,HYC-Avt -now-YYty. wlt>pnT over sTreams & ~834 evee & wknda ---l'lll must. ..,..,..__I Premium Eod Unll twnt>m ftaiaH lll'I GREAT WESTERN REAL ~~~~a!i!!~ 1~1 17 S3000 675-4630 agt falls Poot & spa Great •YDlllLLll• I ta ti ls tt lhu 29r house w/irg tot :'!!!.hie~~ te>!S.. ~ In "The eov." Elegant & ESTATE 011 Jamboree/E-Btufl view $1 l6G-Avatl lO/H 28r-28e IMO 2124 MtNUl't Realty & liilletl· ~Ana CA 927<>4-· ec>aclousw/2suiles,lorm 1llPlO •IUllA* S10253bdrmflatappeal· Nopets 549·2 .. 7 722•7388 ments. Ofc: 842·1334 or .,....,--'"--·----- dine, view deck & 3bd, 2ba, upper unit In [ y ' Obi gatl Fenced yd• LM 1ng 2ba gar 539-6191 S550. ·~Month Free Rent •VfM"sallleS Bach Unit • BACKBAY AREA. Huge Eves 851·9819 RE Br~er/AllOde1e to "weters edge" patio tristlne cond. VACANTI r-'l f! J. 548-1939, 548-n29 Agt lee So Coast Plaza area. 1Br, Great loc! Sec bldg, PoOI. house, l0tm din, grand work PIT with family Just redUCled to S5115,000 Ready to go! PLUS 2bd. -• ..& 11r fenced pool ~rport spa. Nr bch 16SO ofc piano, lrplc, tnOl'e. S375+ SAU IT .... 0.2 owned m«. 1Qeoe c:om- lor prompt Ule. 1bd down. Grut rental AVAIL IMMEDIATELY Spectecular Back Bay No pets M&-a791 752_8011 Ev 548.0A2S + Utll 241-9331 2 B~I On Lot. $229,500 P¥'f· 673-7480. Hastings & Co 840·5560 1,91 Lseland $252 500 • • G e n o a C o v e • ' view 3Br 2'1tBa, frplc, 2 B boa 1982 Charle St. C.M anm• llVISTllS Older well m11n1alned 4 Bdrm home wi1h separ· ate ap1r1men1 on TWO overslZ4ld R· 1 IOU Located on the Balboa Peninsula Point just a short stroll 10 bay and ocean t>eacl'les Pr!Ged lo settle estate et 1us1 ASSOCIATED REALTY •MllTltl,. Condo/End Untt. 38A, terraces. $1900/mo • ATTRACTIVE tight, airy 3BA 2BA. 1 BLOCK TO 81 la.M/Fshr3Br 2B• 645-45390<642·7910 Wical/ .. tal SI -673-3663 ct'::~~! ~..:.~~"ff( 2' tBA. 2 story wi1h lrplc. ullls 673-29•4 3br 2ba. Xlnt E/side toe BEACH OtshwUher, Re-~ri:· °::~11:i.~~.~ , .... ....:-• -.. • ... BTIL ... ....,,,,.... -.... dshwshr. W/D hkups. dbl Walk 10 weves.S500~lta\ frplc. I car gar . no pets, lrigerator. $1150/mo. Oct I S, yrly 873--1376 ..... •• C.naa .. 1 .. r 1122 Commun1tyPo01. laundry gerage wtelect. GOO. btlls pd very ciean crpts $900• dep 548-1709 650-1618 i3oo SF ,;cm In. llmTllT m&TI 1-...-lecilitles end-patio_ _ p.rvt patiO $989 • $l l89 thru-out 539-1>191 Agl BRIGHTON SPRINGS 3Bff 2BA newer duplex CdM Ocean view. SBA Side & out, can redo ln1er Flell·tlmt po91tlon avail tn ....-•-~ dep 863-0697 or tee Condo 2Br l 'hBa trl-tevel. upper untt Close to°"'. 38A. lor tingle~ or tosutt. 875W 15th St. NB, pr()Qfesalve high teen. llPlD Traditional 863•1500 Agt, No Fee. " micro, 2 car garage Gar. lrplc. Avl now Yrty. couple 1745/mo. Scott 213-433-0tM1 high touc:t'I ott~. Salary •Bdrm & 1Bdrm It price Realty BRIGHTON, SPRINGS ~~~~:ayF~pv~c.hogma~. :~.All wlopnr, W/D hkup Over $1350 67S.4830 ag1 760.0212/D 780..()920/E ~J>~3~'r! !'Mail rOec too tow for publication condo 2Br 1 .\Ba 1,. level " streams & la11s Pool. spa ---CM DUPLEX m11r bdrm. •T&-• .nrv ..-. ...- For details call DARRELL 631·7370 · ' now S l600/mo. yrly $995 No pets 549-2447 UCI l&Y llU ~vt ba. for ,...,.,..n ••/F _.::: --11.. •-•-PASH PROPERTIES micro. 2 car garage 675-<4630 iig$11 20 02 B St B -..... -"' -••--•• _,_, 720 _ 9 .. 22 w/opnr 1 WID hkup. Over ' _ CW H Ill 1 lrch 1 drm, kg lncld $375 + MCUrity 6 6 0 0 1 q It t 11 M11ure & motivated pet· st,eams & rans Pool. spa 3BA 2BA-Wlbay VI.I S 1300 lBa wllrg belcony Utns 722.0374 aft 5 ...... A .. .__..,. _10·"~ 1Y son w11Mng to gtOW. Front Ct1tl •na 1124 VERSAILLES CONDO $995 No pell 549·2 .. 7 3BA 2BA upper w/2 car WE'RE THE BEST• incl No pets $600/mo. -...,,.,,,...,_, -_.. ano baCk olflc:e, eny 808 1 Bd -I --encl prkng, yrly s 1350 I & 2 BEDROOMS 756' 1821 or 833-3363 l'SM PH 5Pf8Y bootht 70C gross o·K insurance col'8c· •I/Siil if..... s110,J;,' a/!~ IU CONDO 3~. 1 ~ba. dbl WINTEA·28A ocnlrnt & FURNISHINGS AVAIL 2t:>d, lba, lndry lac. uu1 taM-tlons ll·ray llcenae (714)673 4400 3Br2Ba,xtralglam rm.lg 213975-0234 Col'~t encig•.Xlntloc 11100 JBAduplex.avallnowt •Freeutttities •lll'fMUIT tnel'd Av1tmm 842-7390 I• I• 631-14""' """ mo 548-04-U-eves. •Sp-1ous IM'nn En1oy Ille luxury olthls ew --"'v laundry rm. 1tor area. ••La'Jt lt•H 213·542·3S8f-D Ca.Rf RllT&l •H•.;: kilch.,;·" cluS1veguard gated c~: FEMALE to share 3Br 28a LVN PI T W.-ends 730 $495,000 cul-de-sac. •IJev acoetS. • • R MIT Ill -,,-hOU I C t M /2 --" • •Bit-In ovens & rannas munlty m a spacious se n 01 a esa • am-3 30 pm . .,._.._t·-• $229,500. Open HM 12·5 Fer •-le 1100 DARLING 2BA HOUSE! •-,;... th ••001 I i F1----l-J '-"""'' --lll·••A• If Ill •11• •Patios 1Bdrm .. .,,t AmenltlH o er women, ~ mo. al 8ftl ._.. & Board Care tacfflli• 412 ~~bi~~ay 945-4539 NEW MOBILE HOME bch g~~·u:"~~~·Jas:~r;~ :~ ---. • •Covered Garages met trptts. wet bars. AIC, 548-3977 af1 5 wkdays laalaHI Very pleesant Apply at BY OWNER EISIDE area, up graded, tow 1982·M-549-:MS4 Yrly hm style abode rite •Poot & BBO's micros. W/O hkupa & 2 Hunt 8ch M/F to share .taaa'liH ........ _393 HotPilal Rd . N.B. DUPLEX 2Br 1Ba. ea h.. down, asaumeble loan. -·-· near ocean $750 won't •Plush landscaping car garages S 1395 furn 2er condo, pref non ~ ""--..:-l/AU:--.... -own _yard &_9ar Owners $39.500.(714)661-2004 E·stde house $525 cozy last539.&191A tree •Xlnt locatlon across Sofry nopets644-0509 smtuS335 841·5343Mk siFTHEWEALTH i~""""°'taK~a...,., .. ....,.-..... _,~~- umt larger has encl patio --crptd decor ctlffd line AEnts ltom pMk comp1eiery lufnfSIJ•O tor Jutte.or Jen LTHE LOIIEB.X....CMZE ~lions now ~ S 179.500 (2131598-4057 Acrllfl 1125 must see 539-6191 la •Sorry, no pets Bachelor apt, greal toe & -INTRODUCING FOR THE accepted tor Pllf1· time ----Agt ,.. 365 w WILSON v~ $825/mo 759 "1•2 Lg room & own beth, near FIRST TIME IN CA oHICe ...,...tlOl'I • T-ng • . _..,,...__,.,_ * ... ftlll * --J1)1a• 411!-•v-""' '" UC I nd ahQ9Plno f: ,....._ ,,.. Kida pets no problem 3br --1•2-1111 Leave message · · • ' em A new product tha1riua7 10-KeynJQUfrwd NO Eves 3BR 2BA Extra large yerd 11 • &oall FM• Y prel'd $425/mo Call yr track record In most or Sundays. Deya only. I COLDWell BANl(eR~ unmn· ........ Quellty home In pres- t1g1ou1 gate-guarded area Immaculate 5 BR with FA and den Master aulle with fireplace '"·IMO Elegance! 38drml Nuevol Neerty 1 acrel S 115,0001 John Denver Really 657-5118 Eves 943-2234 •H209 LlllllUMll Featurl~ private entrance to spacK>US que.ner1 for spec:lat lrienda or rel•· llVff This 3 bdfm, 3 bath home 11 quality rebuilt wi1h WOOd, ~ ~ tlan glass. 1 thlpa gati.y kltcher't wtth oommerclal equipment & Sub·Zero retrlgeretor. Now S650.000. . • l . ! I . ~ .... ' ( '\ ) RUUIMlmY ULY• IUTIYIU *'&UIT* Plcturnque 15 acrea. and home on l'llH I~ with 350• view of Sent• Ynez Valt.y Only 5 mllea from SOivang. '425,000 Paul 8urtnes1 (805) 688-1990 ndsso,,.;e work $142 oo0 ' l2IO _.. 2ba 2 ger lrplc: spa $995 2BA lBA. YALY, UNFUAN. CHARMING 2Br 1BI, encl EASTBLUFF Townhouse Holly 557-1050 lottery stalff Our prod· 25 Hra/Wk Apply at Kirk Prins only. Agt 6•&-3627 ,...... 539-6l9l Agl lee NO GAR, $850/mo, gar. frpl, $775: also 3Br Ap1 38r 2'-'tBa 2 car get. NB HOUSE w/gourmet ktl uct works independently, Jewe6ers. 2300 Hlfbof ----II I ··-· llAOI - -834·0959 2Ba $875 187 ••onte No n..t s 10251 I B s 8 Co 4 UNITS Jtln'1 cond. lg ..... ~~llslc:M with DIVJTIYI -"' .. -s. mo yr M In • conven location. but hand-In-hand w/stata lvd, te 1 • sta MeN bl I t I ~ 2 mstr B 2Ba /d ,_.,.NU Decor In & out 3bt Vesta.CM 646-1282 644-1010 or 760-7037 Prof, stra'ght, n-smkr 1011-.v Mlttlonsoltott-.v Nophone callSPleaM suma e m eres ony ...-ingvleWtcanvons. r, .w ... .,.... 2b $1600 2b '2 .. , 5 Wk-... ' -·1 ~, toan owe Agent Pat .. -......... d ht 'l"'h 2 car gar, p()Ol, epL $995 a. · ' ba CHEERY 2BD DUPLEX "ter pm°' '"'1 S500 +aec 54&-2427 tteketuold Est'd nat'I co W ORD PROCESSOR Cobb 675-2013 ~=:sit: Im~~: _1se_Nr SC Plza 662-1700 !_!!n~e~6~~rl frpl. wld. FULLY FURN FuDenlly lubrn 2~~'." .~ + NB. proleulonlll to share ~1~0:~ ~~ strong Eng ••Us. e1erlc:ai will be costly, but could Massive •bdrm hse lnclds 1-•1 L ,-• -l 1 or 2 Pers .. n-smkr · ay v....... ..,.. ... up 3bd hOuH. 1 blk to beach ' assl for Busy s .... Exec tUll F•n ......,.cf dream hld•away. den ""d gar kids nat I •II 1a1a1a I ReL S65Q...64.6-23.23 garage* 1800 Sq Fl. .w/balcony. S3llO mo. utlls Xlnt Tax Shelter. Paulve FIT or PIT CM 646-5565 New alngle lamily homes In 1""' ' ,..... -07 Micro. d/w, lndry tikup, Of Active ln¥e&tment · Costa Mesa wlprlvete The price reflects S895 539-6191 Agt lee -Lalanne Apts. 2Br 1Ba. lrplc PM beach & pool incivded 642·2654 Protected., ... av1 Tum - -... --1-'l""l-PO __ _ tncd yrds. Tiie roofs. oak outstanding value Don't ONE Bedroom house In t Bdrm Apt. on sand. S700/mo S300 dep GH $3000/mo • Sub-leaae PARK NWPT TOWNHSE, Key Operation. Full ~ac:· Developer In Cos1a Meu b , & 1 miss this one! Call 1 S pr'me location. -Inter & water pd. Chlld ok. 1 ....., 1 tory support & training ca .nets much more B b .. 1 760 1900 rear. enced yard! Ingle • -for 6 mos. Boat dock poo . spe. ten. ,_, c ose. need• Accountant. 2·3 Call today Agt 548-1329 ar ara. ,..g • only! n-pe1s '450 Alt 4 rental, lulty furn w/gar. 1838 Placentia See Mgr avail Call 760.09111 Back Bey vu. Avail Min investment $6.4.500 years eJtC> In account• llll-.. --'l-Cllll_-111' __ -Lucer--ne_.,.,V,....al,,..t.y-::::3-:-7':"'.""'_ec:_r_es-. weelldeys 548-094.4 avall lmmed 835-5'*45 Large t>ac:helor wllarge lido Baytront 3Br 2Ba. IMMED Jan 720· 1457 ~-~~~-~6 ,~t ~~'? payable Conatructlon Only 1 left 2 8drm. 2 •• S. power & septiC tank In. SMOKIN' DEALS 2BD. 1BA HOUSE YRL Y patio, lighted cerport wld. lrplc Prvt t>each, Prof male 22 shr 2Br 281 _Sereout lnqulrff Only! :.;t!~ ~.~ townhome. tlreplaQe. at· zoned for moblte homes or 3bdrm homey spot 2ba Ger age $850 ... utils 2 blka 859 W 19th St ~20/mo 1 en n1s Avail 1 111. CM apt, pool, lndry, e1c l 1 751 .,:;;:; • iar k1d1 n---ty r...,.,one to beach Avail lm"'8d. $1850/mo yrly. 675·7"•7 S4001mo + ·~ utlla .+ ... ., Tt I.Na 4 or appt --==._,.,,.-=-=,---- tached 2 car Jarage. house s•s.ooo 84&-8347 ..,_ ""' •n 11 llW --c=-101a11y upgrld Cell --725 or . No pets 835-5445 $575/mo 1BR 1BA. w/d ltdO bayfronl 3BR upper, $225 MC 557-3804 Signeture Loans. Up to B 0 0 K KEE p e R Fu II DevldCooper631-1266 •111·11i1• 2br. 2be. frpl. $850/mo hk I d d ~,.,.1 newpalnt ne crpt lrplc ROOMMATE WANTED S10,000Free0etails.O. charge, FIT. ~puter ltatab Sprawling 4br 3ba inclds avail 10·15. 1st.last . up.19';f4t0~0~';" oc gar Sandy~ch.S1500: Balboa Peninsula near verslfittd 7311 Belenve exper nelpful, n/smkr. ~t•'"f¢•••" den big country kit I/yd • $300. Iv meuage TSL MGMT 642•1603 Avl now yrly675-4630 agt bch, gar. yrly, S340tmo .:: 1016 Houston TX n036 V~=~on Resorts lnt'I _ _ gar 11000 539-6191 544-7549 Owner/Agent ___________ .:._ Call 631.0471 WIDOW h*-••oNEY tor -680l Linda 21,z A t I NEWPORT VILLAGE NEWPORT MARINAAPTS .,. '"' ~---..:.----Hll -~ 11t2BDAM 1BA Encloaed APARTMENTS *Elegant bayfront. 1800 Roommate wanted To lhr TOs $10Kl up, no credit T,,. t>IQQell ~In E/SIOE 3Br, 1-atory IWPl-WMIDWll Ftaalaia landscapedyard.glfage. Costa Mesa IQ 11 .2Br +Oen.mlcro. 2BA2BAnewC.M Apt ..-no penelty Call towniun .Olndaalfled Condo wl lrpl. lg LR I l'Ull Y 'URN I BEAUT YaJJlf 2134 S8501mo yearly IMM PRESTIGE LOCATION d/w. lrplC. pm bch, encl w/ pool. Jee . ltundry fee Denison Assoc 673 7311 ;:.T:::!ry=''=a=nd=-~---..- WM R • 1t .\ . •• • prlv patio, 2 car att 11ar OCEANFRONT 3BR unit _ 536--6617 after 5pm 5 Blocks to gar $2595 boat slip avail $350/mo 5'*8-6064 Aa b S141,500 851.0255/D s15sotmo Cheap but clean S375 ren· South Coast Ptaza Sorry. no peta 780-0ll19 ---••Uctllft OCEANFRONT 4BR family 181 •bod• bills pd 811 •a.rt Ill"'* •CloM to oc Airport Roommale wented New· hataanatab fiii FllEOllSlll-Flm And It's In a prime area. Cati for details S 119,000 759·4830 GREAT WEST· EAN RE.Al ESTATE ~. FHRl.11111 1114,000 Lota of value here' Spli1 lellel, frplc. 2 car attached gerage 759-4830 GREAT WESTERN REAL ESTATE (§!l!j, home $2500/mo appls hurry 539-6191 Studio, steps 10 sand. Utlls • 7 Minutes to Beach ~;:~~~~t;:r ~~~c,.! ~~,!~:i11:1~~ ;:,a •SPtRtTUAL 1 PSYCHIC BAVFAONT 8BR and Agt fee Incl Only 1395 Hurry! •Night Lighted Send C I 5 6 6 6 READINGS P I labuloos. $4500/mo l•al. •ac~ 2140 TILIHIT lli-1111 Volleyball & Tennis Cr11 $~;;~n.)lr~y ~~~~11;1•w. _a 1 afl pm 4 • 947 card readings a!a';;ab:'d IWPT-nLT RUT&LS TOP Floor Balboa office/ •Pool. Jacuzzi. BBO ltat1b Waat .. 272' Nauona11y renowned P•Y· WEST NWPT 2BR. trplc. IUIPUT... studio. view Apt .. w/t>eaut. •Covered Parking SPECf ACULAR OCEAN· Wanted upsc1fe 38R. chlC. tocal & lte'd 19 yrs nu paint & crpt $1125/mo Gated. near bch, excl 2br. oak nrs. hlQh ceilings •Ceble TV Available FRONT VIEW 38r, 2ba, 2 quiet. pv1 hm in NB or Sa1tslectt0n Guarante6d' WEST NWPT, 1 blk to bch, 2ba lrpl, d/w, w/d hOok· $650/mo. 756-9162 •Rec Room W11h Flreplece gar. turn, wlnt8f $1300 COM for Nov 1 OClCUPI"· 492-7296 or 493-205' 3BA lrpl s1200i mo up. encl gar. 2 bales. ten· __ and Btlhards 2004 W Ooeanf,-ont cy on yrty IN 720 11669 - WEST NWPT 3BA hm. lrpl. nls ct & spa. no pets 4Bc 481 Duplex Apt, un-•Saunas (7 141640-.4784 . GEM DELIVERY SERVICE dbl gar 11350/mo s 1 o o o • s 7 o o sec turn. 6 mo lse or mthty 111 1 BA FUANIUNFUAN Studenls! Late 2 & 38drms Ct•atrcial -Grocery's & other needs DOVER SHORES 4BR 963-0963 M ay 1 Gar S2200 Corner Nwpt Fwy & Baker winter relltals Call Villa LE. S.lt Ital c~~~~~~.7 :..-rr;::-- lamlly home $2250/mo t --l -2144 2 13 •9 4 3 • 8 4 3 4 0 ' Sorry. No ~ts• Rentals 675-4912 ' OISTA ... .. UYl81 213·943-2860 (71 4)557-0075 Unlurn 1 BR 1BA duplex, ......... r.... -zt2S SBA. lrplc, llke new, comm HAil l•llEllATIU AVAILABLE NOW No lee Nice 2Br 2Ba. O/W. blllns. crpt. pkng Walk to ocean _______ 1_7_1 ... t FOUND 2 M 1an/blk St>ep pool. $1000/mo 2txl. 1'~b•. ale carport 1Br tBa 'ltblk to beach lndry lac lncd patto No & bay 43,d St S650lmo. TOP noor Gt>oa 0L 1 F Seal Pt Slam . M Brin- Waterfront Homes. Inc $950 720-0876 $600/mo ~ sec . yrly pets Non-smkr S650 yearly. 499-48411 studtO view Apt . wlbeeut dal Pil Bult F Lhesa 111· 1• TURTLE ROCK 3Br. 2Ba 673-4798 O< 673-6478 760-1418 or 642-7528 oak firs high cetkngs Cocker m111 M blkl wflt OVER 1000 RENTALS . Condo Fireplace. garage ......... EASTSIDE SHARP & vl~!":'~B:,=t= $650/mo '156-9162 HuSl\y, F Calico dom SH SpeciaJiZing l.n all ere... & carport S 1395/mo. 1bd $65(1. Bach S525. no CLEAN 2Br, wld hookup vtew Avail now 1625 3 OFFICES FOR LEASE 63I·1030 prices & sizes. Tell us _ 640·5324 peta. 102 E Bay ,t,pt e 1 car anct gCJr , NO pets 644-7211 agt Reis TRW In Huntington Beach at what U need! Fee ., -11-·-·-'Ill* 750/mo 5•6·9950 Newlend & Hamll1on fnl IU\ •os Tlttfl.Wefltt SAN M ICHEL 50' of bey frontage, 144' TOWNHOME 2br, 21.ibl. depth Probete. Bob bMul 1 yr old. & 128,llOO Ceu•lln (714)851·7720 or by OWT'l\r, prlncic>al• only TELERENT 875 8860 _,. YIKW -~ SHAAPI CLEAN 28r Wlnter-3Br 2'1·B• Oplx on $595/mo 1169-4787 uunu" • 28drm, den. 2Ba. fireplace Eaal Balboa Bachelor & the sand nr 45tl'I St. ---£ ..... --s 1300/mo Judy. Agl w/ocun-bay views i1·:~:·~'D htu:· p:t~o,. Furnished ... , upgfeda. tM 111111. n . ARE FRE Pniaaala 2117 _ 631-1266 Newty decorated 1525 6901~ 54s.9950 almost new 12500/mo. t817 wesla1tt yrty Ind utlls to 1 n/llNcg 544-2484 M·F 9·5 Nwpt Bch 541·5032 agt Cal.• 2, 3 I 48r Wlntet I Yrty. Llpu ltac~ 2141 Adult 873•6372 TOP AREA ~ul411t. no pets ---- P-1n-ut1 A-tall .... -··ESA PINE 1Br 1"-li~--===·=IC=L== ... =~====·:-::;:!---!~ •.<1•-1111 Ht-Opem.Oft( ...... e v;;~ A-;,t ... e~912 .... muLI .. , OCEANFRONT 28r 2h. Carport. encl patio ... ~ • ... ... --9nO ....,.. edd 7 ---..,.--~--=-..---Beeut w t>m 3BR 3BA lmmac cond .. I 1150/mo Or baleony $650 up FOUND Blad! & Wl'llle 9e11C9 to thla daiaelc 1<n1t Oceenfronl Winier Rentel Wilk to pvt bch 7511· 1552 wtnt91', t 1225-S 1350/mo POOL ec>a. bbq 549-2447 Puppy, llCty Wiiheim & •WNW UM ~ ..,_ 2 stry hm. Prime toe, 38r - -yrly. Agl 752·2218 Garlleld, HB 5-4Ml72 or gerlng yam tr1 one C010f 2Ba. 2 car gar. Fully turn. •• -~ 2111 Unlum""iltied2Br 1e.. w/w Make the Move to the 548-9091 Onc:tlona. Sine ~·28. WIO. lt.o peta 835-$445 __ ~ crpt. bltln rallQ8. OV«l. --Shot .. gorgeoua 1 & 2 I". wntf onto/ nr Gel d/w Gar. palto $725 Ofc: FOUND Dog. golden Eldl pattern a.a pll.la .,111rn1 ..... 3Br 281. an am«llt.... Pier 813"'389/81~921 1157-2565 Res 759-5'*84 New Park Newport cocker mix, M, vac: 75c ~hendltng 1111 ocean vtew. new CfPI Qreenvllle & Sunnow.t. t'IY ,.....,. ... •r::::::::::---2"8"A•~a;;-ullii\ili\li\).., Upper Duple• $1400 le.ta... 145-'014 .... .. ";;;-,;;;;· Pertt'& ~ -= VI"• Rent8'1 l75-411 t2 11=111fll Mab tile ... rt ... e ... Pan N...,_,, -FOUNO HUSKY ...... ... ~ pelnt ln9'de a out. I 1250, 2BR 2BA f\Hn moblle t>m, W y Newpert ..._.., ,,_1er 1uuy ........ VJc: &roo11t1ur11/AdM'nl 1n t:' .:.: 213,..71-2166 utll1 pd Poot Exit toe. ... 4 .. ~911• Firi...W ... _,.,...... l, I, 1 1 H.8_ 963~7446 "'11m Mii -- 873-035'* 842-0894 10-2PM Let U1 .... Y• lU Wntr 9115 to 8115.1900 All ..... 111'1 REWARD 1200. Oteetty ~..,,_.. .... S II ti p rf I iiiiiiiiiil~~~,.iiiji~I 985·9114 or-948.8820 .._ • l»f41'M111 .,.,.._ ..... ......._.'" _,, Mlaeedl Sm M lite bm ------- t '.. ,.,. r 2& 1C ""';:pt; I;:;;: 2BA cot'* w Npt. 1 ,_ miHtn ,,... N..,.rt C.&er aM ,....._ Poodte mill. bm ._, "'91 on °'9COUllrT A-11 "•-4 till• to bch .... to to bch prllf\9 S78Slmo I , _ _. r trlmed, t>fn c:o1111 •ll*Ot COUPOM1 ~ IH .,_ ._...WW, eftopt. no t•'· Pref yriy. ~111 paid rats. •-· ,.. •* •• •1.... vic ~ 81¥d tMont• m °"' St C'9ften Cl8a· "*''"'411'00173--7335 842•7003 Of .. 2.-.1 Jambtrtt at Sea J-.m Rllb 9'eM viat•. CM L.o.t 9t2t kJQ u .. ttwn tor great Al 5671 " HA. tpee:tecular 84M 112 Of 842 82tt k . boaQ _.. ._.l • • ~ vtew, ffl*, 2 I* •NPT CREST CONDO• ('TM) 644-19()6 I.OST 8ledl C.t, long t\9if, ; ~::-" lOOO = for IL..:formation ... patlO. 511 .....,d ~ONT AOW VIEWI ·A~RK female. 11111• whl on c..-.. ~ .... 1 I I 1 1535/mo 790.e312 38A 21-\BA, I 1560/mo. 11~t1. loveble N0t1tl '° AHder Miiii 62 1o & I I I 8-yfront. -,,_.. Kathy. Agt. S.5-2235 Cotta Mete 545·7033 ~ Blvd ~ WOOO- I surpr s ng y 2~2eA.t11noor 0oc• •REN1ALSAVAILA8 e NEWPOR l~T014temat-Pood141. eo0e NY 113n I t ~ l(nmedlat• OC· NO FCE CHARQi.D T Mt t ow cos . eupanc:y. $2750/mo. )'Mt 1-.4 BA $900-$8000 PIM ~i ... tt:l' on"1~01~ lAUll WllBa ~~~~~~~~...l-~~~~-~--1.:= ..... ~84073•7d'ft ~1-Man1.~Ao!1~.l4~2~-1~1~83~Jl~"'~~·~·=•;•;;SF;;;;~~;;;;;~~~~;;J~!!!!!~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~--.\.L:::.::~!.36-4~~tt-4~~~~c:.:~~~;A::•~~1~~·~ a ' ce Or.nge eou. DAIL v PILOT I Tueedey, October 7. 19M Cl!lnll... .. T•WMl/TI• a.,..._..... lwsal HJI ..... IUI ..... II• ._llt••• GlftL. llftlDAY l'honea, ... ffll ft.IWll ... •ljert .... Ill.MIT ... .. MIMOl"I w /mlrrora, i:i::'*/numb«lwlttWI ......... Lf ............. P/T nw ·o·~ Alfpott FIT i,1gt11CMo1 gtedUate illll•fl , n1011~~=~fWi/ltl'j•mnwm~;t-' Gt9gOf .,._.,._ 1131 0 u .._ knows lhal lta Houn fle•lblt 152·9155. with good driving record ,..,. ,.__ 1 _.. ~-.... I MOO 1 · fttecentia. C M r.o.-10M ~· ..::..~..... .............. ..... _ A",.... In __..n 10 Mr One Of VJll\Ot -·1r 1 fwml &41-.a13 Cell lob '41-47.. .. __ ...... ----· ,.._ ,...,, ,......... prem111e pertormmg If'· _,....__..,....... ..... , ooly be u ~Ml u our fllm l'uent" at Robert Bt4n. ~I briattulm-JOHN WAYNE f AMl'-Y s .... IU9PO'f, phonee, II peopte. That• wft)' n 're1 w1 .. ~1 ,.._,!',°'st' N&p1"!_aoch mediate openlnQ '°'ex-TENNIS Clue "*"c •· '",;i;i;m~/-typlno & data entry H~ looking fOf tht cr•m o Elp'd wortllno w/cok>re, ..., """' ..,. peri.nced New Aocount1 1 ti Ip SI so . Al L. Ill + Medlcttl lmmed GPM-the crop to optn ovr MW· mfftutemenfl & g: .()penlnge ~ Aveileble .Aepr ... nllllvt at our .....a 147 -!l=H!!l~l=•!I,...,_.!!~ I ~\:1~~'.1EV:~~n :ir:~.:'~'r:: ~1Jmi~F:r CAI ROUTES ~.:01.fr:!~~~: ~l~lllu=k~~ 11,M., ....... taurant In F'ounlaln Valley g-a• m.-..-fMn extra cut\ fOt de-dent blflklng el(pertenc. nei. rm i.t rug', ted lo ml, hatdtY UMdt Mull '1111 LEGAL SECRETARY PIT and la Patma ---·-llve<y ol Tne HUNT· preferred Excellent ben· $l500 2 rttan ategere Miit $150 e73·2M2 ll xtn't lront office aklllt, •Une Cooke Accepuno appllcatlona INGTON BEACH/ ,OUN• eflta and competitive w tdr~wer • UOO/pr 1-.::.. Mll word prOCffll~ htlprut. The Or•• Coat DaMy •FOOd Server• 3333 W Coasl H:l. Npl. TAIN VALLEY INDEPEN· eompen1111on pack~ e.45-7088 alt=-II diDll ..... TOP SSS PAID :;:;;;~; ~::,, ltE=t~~ ~ ~ •.Hi:!'=• Beacl\. :=9 -· =~· N'!"~":le<J~I~ n! ?~~. ~,·::~~~~~t•r SMALL Bird ftlQht cage ••LU I Wllll Isa• For Pampered Aetall Ad"9Mlalng 0.-• Dlltlwtlheta eottcltlng Mu1t naw de-_...... 2'1t4 ·xe· S7S. 12 Can•ry .. Merc.cles Ben11 Sec'y/,._., Top elelllt, l>artment A mlnlumum ot BecauM we are open Exp'd ter 1 Placentia Ave, penda.ble ea.r, 1ruc1t Of EOE M/FIV/H brHdlng c1ge1 tneludlng ALL 11110 •ttlln Ull relt, for bu1y l= 2 )'Mt• mec;jla Nlea ••· everydty fron 8:30 am to CM 842•9a37 a11tlon wagon and In-__ --"-cups, perchea & ne111 I -• Top Mercedet Prleel Paid Hill•~ office. 930-~ II preferred. Wt 2:00l>m. y.our WOl'k day II lllHOTH 1ur1nce. .UIYlll ITATlll s 100 for all. e4e..a 132 ....... CAlL PET EA or RA y IFFIOI IELP ~::;~ aalary ptua In· :;: ~0:;:7~ "!T1~: In proc.u receiving In.-OAU HI· 1• &mUllT frtt t• f H U ~~:~1~A~~°a~~gN 1 11111If1...m lmmed. opening. N"d Plea11sendre1umeto: grfft environment1 ~om· ~gee~~~ ~r·~~:g:~: A•kforJoAnne F~~:r::''e1'~•s L~o"~~ FREE aduR tem9' cat. 71•1Hl·41H ~1a\ llW111 I f .... 11101111 energellc:peraonforgen. pi.te traJfllng, pata va• equlpm..-'11.SPCexpvery PAITTlllllLP. • Hwy L~unaSeh' ,. spayed, out •Id• cat.10 w'tec ...... • ' 2t3or '114e37·2333 omc:e dutlet, typing tic Illa Ir=• Otatt c1tlon1, meal compenH-helpful, good beneflll 1&-20 houfllweek. morn. • -.. gd hm, e50-094e "/ J~~31·, .. ""•~!!l!!!!!!''ll!!!!"' c req'd. Npl Bctt Cannery I P111f tlon, and axcellenl op. M & Sii-Aafltl toJ 11 TOVOT A '80 CELI A. VIiiage toe. DATELINE 330 W BAY ST po11unltl .. IOf advance-Call for appt. utual eve Apply In person rn-"" FREE KITTENS TO GD HM 5spd, amlfm c:att. allver TOURS.Sandrae75-7e20 COST'"M" .. SA.CAtme ment Look Into the Lt Metal Stamping 27os Brtst011<l06 C.M. FI T or PI T, M -F. 2 blk M 1 blk M w/Wtlt ALLH.lllP•l•H llW'Hl21• gray. very good cond ,.. .. Peep dlf1ert11eel Vl1H u1 (7 14)848·8900 Rent• Flictl Video. 7 30·4PM. no exper nee. paw1. 1 'gr1yl1h mil( F, 1 Burgundy metalllc, black $3750 499-46A9 PUT TIMI nPIST Attn Dtepley Adv. II 18633 Brootlhurat " llHIWIOf lllPIOTll PLUMBER for Mrv and $4.50/hr. pleaM apply In 3yr blk Mom cat Call .,. ....... Interior, s spd, sunroof. Law Oft!Qe. Newport Bc;h. Manager Elll• (Callen• Corner repr, OMV drlllef$ rec & person Boot11 Ofl Ta1>1 Kelly between 4·7PM For24mo.onapp'dcredit amllmtcass loaded low Speed accuracy euen· Shops>lngC1r)lnFountaln ... 4ttlP/Tt.r Ile, Apply In person: 729FaradCM.548-5525 9e9•5428 HllHWIUCI miles St8K 497S713 llal. Hours 1·5. No ltlort· Valley Of call P J L. r..w..tial ,,.,.rtJ Campbell Plumbing WANTED WEOOIN-G -Co-Ot•• Coa1t after 6pm hand req'd 852-0444 A est aur a n t Co r P . 1 Ii O..te •sa .,,.. 1855 Laguna Ca,nyon Ad. ordinator need• some Free to f<>t<' ~~old Jeep/Aenaull HONDA 83 Civic 4 dOO• .,. __ 1 --.::-Affl0Wft .. asltlhl1 7141752-6157 f 1_ --'A.JI LagBon,494-2744 walHHI background Aeemlr/bLaacb ••iw' Grdeenat 2524Harbor Costa Me .. r spd 33K mt ,.ereo .. ._aan ptrton, n-per· Earn 35 50% Call Debbie -lltr .... _ -r -~ L I I I "" ~ IAf 102• " · sonallly tor making • ' Gt l S§'t0 (!ff) 221 ••01 PrT EVES & WKENOS, ove Y env ronmen wl klds Call 960·~44 1 • • • cau, atr. xlnl In & OUI Ille phone calla In office Real•_ <7 '41432-8837 atra · • -v,; Several OC loc Apply In Good pay w/lrlnge ben· • blue, SS395 722-850 1 estate & computer'"'* ... , S&UI, F/T r /T *llllYEllS* JfWfLRf cull person l884 N'EWPOAT efils 494•9550 •••• ••••rl•ls I030 Tr1cb • 9035 HONDA Accord 81 4 dr helpf\ll Pay baled on' Experience Help Wanted. Major Aeprographlc1 Ser· Wiii train 1harp lndlvlduat BLVD, CM, alter 5PM WELHIS •FOR SALE• FORD ·78 1 Ton PIU Kint autolatrllo m1, new cass. qu1hflc1t1on1. Full or part We will lratn Weekends vkle & Supply Co . seek-Some olflce work & aaln, PIT Fem. to help OeslQn MacGregor Yec;hls 220 Concrete Caps !brick) cond orig ownr auto pertecl. 1 owner de· lime 722·9550 ' & evenings 842-2606 Ing d1111ers 40 hr wk. day· all around help S4·S4.50 Business with T ·Shfrt 1631 Placentla.C M 8x2x 16/in xlnt cond All p/s, ~Ir, cau. c;ulM, 2 cf'ased pp 24 1-9331 PIT RECEPTIONIST Ume hrs, & Co benahl s M·F 9.5 Full benefit• Ahlneatone setting1 & or f1Arl 540· 19~ __ tanks, CB. till 11eerlng, Mature peraon with front l&llWUI SAUi Must have current OMV Call J ene or Jan misc. Jobs. 642-5727 DOUBLE GARAGE DOOR camper pkg S4900 • 01t1ce appearance to Full or Part time counter when applying CaM Mr 892-6866 or 894-1856 ,. /T SALES llllL . Ntrcllia•ist W/all hardware In xlnt Overhead camper, sleeps answer phones. and light sales In an "old time" Seay 540-4174 or apply cond. S250 Oller' 4, st ove. ere $400 typing Pacific View hardware store. See at 234 Fisher Ave. CM IAIE IP UTllT CASHIER EXPERIENCE A ArtliUCtl 6011 CALL 642-9666 646-7240 Doug Murphy Memorial Park and Steve, Wright Hardware, .----MUST. FlexibJe houri. I llf 1-WtOll Mortuary Nwpt Bch. 126 Aoch .. ter, CM ASSEMBLERS Experienced PIT demon· K 6~2 9~05 rr" -----:-'·---Apply 1·00 am only! 11ratlng local department aren .. • .. LES 117-11•• 644·2700 ask tor Pat IAIAlllt/S&Lll MacGregor Yachts 1631 stores 1 800·833-8800 .. , /T RIOEPTllllST For Lani Shoe Dept. Placentia, C.M. tlALITT oemaL ........ ., /lrnr For busy COM hair salon tn Fashion Island. AUTO DETAILING MOTllH'S IARIET I PIOllCTlll llPT. $650 Must sell laatll need Exper needed. e75-S531 Full time. 640-7810 Mature adull, F/T for IUTCllH F i:~o-4'}.'M, p'4:50/h~ -~o ~hi 548-1659 ~ --_,.... OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS! moblle detaillng co. No Looking tqr a sharp, ltlOf PTllllST S9 Biiiion Mega Industry exp nee EOE 964· 1025 energeltc fast paced lndl· exper nee. Apply In ~· FRIGIDAIRE Auto Washer, Aetall Art chain 11ore wants you In our pet fool -. ---v1dua1 lor our produce son Books on Tape, 729 Kenmore Gas Dryer. opening new oll1ce In business Call for appl • IUm &IYlllR dept Produce exp nee. Farad CM. 548-5525 White & heaviy duty, Huntington Beach TyPI 556-7546 or 546-2838 PIT, mature & respon· Full & Pa1t-11me Please RETIREE for roofing eatl-$350 for both G42·5602 50wpm, good phone slble Sales ablllty Wiii apply at 225 E 17th mates, comm. Needs WHIRL POOL electric manner. plee1ant person RETAIL IALflll&I train 271 E 171h St. CM ·Street Costa Mesa good personallty w/tra.ln. stove. white. lk new Some sales helpful. but Ae1a11 beckground req'd Call 646-ll026 btwn 10·5 110TOll ROUTE -Also need exp'd roofer 29'~"W 25"0 . $200 nor req'd Hard worker Must have refs & full·time BEAUTY SALON "' 548-6213 Color TV $25 722·9824 Honda generator 5.000 Aaltl •• rtt4 tlOO wait. approx 100 hours. i=miliiii::iiiiilllliliii=i Liquid cooled.. on wheels. JIM CLICK $1400 obo 650-6662 AUDI/RENAULT OfUct hraitart JEEP I ai •••t I047 •.• 0 .. one ystem. complete r • w/maln box Sliver Reed Electronlc Typewriter, besl offer 491-6564 IRVINE AUTO CENTER 714-951-3144 800-428., 7 485 llZ'l1 HOI Wnilel btk low mt. 1ttnt care. fully equlpad. sunroof. 3 yr warranty avail, service records S12,ttl •221329 Jl•SUIOH llNRTI 1001 Quall SI . N B 833·9300 MBZ '70 280Sl. 4spd, botn tops, chrome whl~. stereo 11lnt S 18,600 Denver (3031761-4442 -Ill 'lt 2401 A/C, PIW, CIC, XLNT CONO $7800 548-3807 self-motivated, depen· pos111on No nights or . ---1014 dable For app1 c111 Sundays Company t>en-~::an;.;:,~e~~or,~~ A;~gg~~ sli~x>'~~~o~~~-Sales/Cashiers .. r .. a .. ra_,i_t•.1.• _____ _ l7 l4)894•3~80 erus paid vacation. In-CALL 675-5531 mg 3.4 hours a day Immediate opening for I llT'nlllTlltE f ............ 11 qwe 11 Kirk Jewe1era. XEROX 1020 Desk-Top Copier Like new, takes any paper Paid $1800 asking $600 obo 675-7243 Ptts I hi•als 6049 ·'"u_l_O_lt_flfT_A_lllml_.....,,,,,.!r.=====;, 0~~LING~~Kc HJ Lt1sl11 140·.SOO :=:: II llKr•••"' 2300 Hart>or Blvd, Ste Ulfl1LMllllHR Mondaythru Frtdayalter-sales people a nd US tll·l1U Irvine AJ3 Agency needs 18 Costa Mesa No noon Saturday and Sun· cashiers Home improve· ---1 year. S300 650-~6-5 o_r _852-0222 BMW 9. 15 % ... , ntsmoker wt 1 year of col PUT· TIME WHU day morn 1 n g Ca I I ment center experlenc'ed 2 lo dresMrl sso., King lege minimum Pnon; phone calls please _ Pennysaver paging area Is 642-4333 ask for Kirk a PLUS eapeclalty in the sz hdbd $25 End table answering & light WOfd SALES PERSON for fine easy to learn Houra are 0 Ct Ill areas or hardware. nur· S 17 Antq couch $35 & FREE""''" lltttll, APA Fl~NCING PUR<,C.tlf On Approved Credll AL OI IH·H11 b11l111. 60 Month/30•/.0own c.ttLVROl l T processing Call Kalle al 1ewe1ery store exp'd M()f{ 10 30am to approx "~f,' sery, plumbing & elec· orher misc 650-8247 (7 14)863-9100 preferred Colla Mesa 7pm Tues 10am 10 ap· D111y Plltt 1r1cal . Plea~ gt'f'Y In B.E A u T 1 F u l o A K --area 548·.3403 1>fOX e-30p Retlr s ~w 8~ person Mon· r DRESSER double mlr· SEOllEHllY TELE-SALES-#-welcome Apply 1660 Costa Mesa CA 92626 l·P IOIE CE•TH ror, 9 dra~r. ~ln't cond. S•-a11-.-~-'S :_--rmtled TTrrre Ortlf' Htth"" Qv•ll•y -,.~, ... 1 .. & c;., ..... Gen contractor loc In N B Professional position 5 Placentia. Costa Mesa 11 58 clesstlled rule-ot· 1271 lritttl $400673·1619 nr 0 C airport seeks de-cl .. nAnA person w/clerlcal yrs exp Leadership 11 . CAstllER 1humb We lell rea ers w .. 11 Otsfa Itta "WRINKLED" Some AestrlCllons Apply '750-$2500 642-4968 .. JfH&l#f #OfOll wur ,...,. ~ · mus I Comm11s1on only, I hey need 10 know 10 t>uy E 0 E •• F 60 wpm, some acctg. S 1000 Wkly 720_8467 Mothers Market & Kitchen what lh need . . ..,.. phone exp to asstst Pro1 _ _ 1s now hiring a cashier to HORnAllY P /T Admtn. Nl smk ofc FI T Cl L /I. work 3·5 days per week. 8·5 M-F. Sal commen ••• nt1uaat1 Must be able 10 work wtexp Call Karl 852·8202 5520 weekends Pis apply at Openings Now Available HS PHSH 225c~s~1~e~~eet A M M-F, 20 hralwk Shorthand lnilne CALL 261·1616 Tecbical/Tra•es 5505 Needed evening hour.s Call 673-0910 COHTH PHS ... r I T weelidays S5 50 hout Exper req'd Lag Bc;h Duke s Burgers 499-24 14 IELIYHY rEllSOI For florist Must have good drtv1n9 record Broadway Flower Shop, 2750 Harbo• B·2 Costa Mesa CAR ROUTES Earn Extra Ca•h Brand new Ratph LaUTen Masica l11traatii1 -•...u Bedding. kg bd. Allison IOSS ...... panern Gd discount. --........ ~.....,!"!"'--I Cash on1y1 650-4129 ELECTRIC YllH King size Bdrm set. 2 night Xylophone. Beel offer stands & dresser $400. 631 -8439 Aelrlg $70, WI D $200 Pi'lnOI 1t. 0rf&al 759-0862 or 720-1509 • 1059 Moving Sale Sofa, chair, coffee table 2 11ngle HAMMOND Organ. small. bed s 557-4919 or Ahy1hm II, perfec1 cond 549-0300. ext 498 walnut $795 760-6050. 559-8157 1540 Jamboree, N 8. 640-6444 44~ I c OHi 11 ... 11 N ... port 8of h 673-0900 Sf PAIATE EHIPUI ~. =.=P:E:UG:E:O:T:•=:J DELIVERY DEPARTMENT * MASTERA Tl * McLAREN'S BMW : s~'-l.: =~~r~~:. ~ SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN ' JS Zll THANK YOU r:~~ IN U.S.A. AHO TRYING HARDCR TO BC = l ·SALES • 8! .. VtCE •PARTS •LEASING .AkC.ISI Wll NlOli• ~N IH[ W(S I 'COA .. t £VEJIY MOOCL ' COlC» CALL TODAY S()LJTH (.01.JIJT v IH/lltlff11Hf11 .;~ HI,,,. "H'' ,,, Hf fl.I (71-ll 842-2000 Does bac:k· to-tehooi mean more ume on your handt during the day? Maybe 1 p11rH tme tot>'s lhe ans- CARPllTHS APPHITICE IL FOANAIO HIYH Allen Beck Florist. 2809 Nwpt Blvd NB 675-1353 For Delivery Of Thi• Paper NEW Model Home Coun· try bdrm set-dresser 2 nile stands, headboard for dbl or queen $175 474-044010 642-1788/E KIMBAL Paradise duel lo.eyboard organ 6 yrs old dark wood. $850 786·4229 M·F 11119, S·S ltll 6 626 S Euchd St Fullerton CA 714·680 6300 213-691-6701 • 752-0900 • ! G91 lool! 1r19 on ctustfle<I Small last growing cons1 co needs career minded yng man wl bas1e wOOd· working knowledge 548-6449 CHPHTHS Carpenlers/Pfeceworkera needed al 3002 South Harbor Blvd 1n Santa Ana at comer ol Segerstrom lSSTMH Cate/Bakery Seetung -11 organized aggressive 1nd1v1dual wl ab11t1y to worlo. under pressure Previous exper nee t>en· ellts, advanee ~40-<C279 Marcia WUTH/WAITIESS With car for lunch service. Mon-Fn. 8 30-1pm $40 $60 dally Accepting •P· DlllYHS WHTH Immediate employment Trat11c contractors 1s cur· rently htrmg PIT Van Drivers to drive tn the 0 C area Apply at 13770 Firestone Bl, Santa Fee Springs (213) 921 ·0442 -1. EXERCISER lnstruclor HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT ElP'I EUCTIUCIAI p1tca1tons 2-4pm 2121 And Electrlclan·s Helper Shannon, Santa Ana S 15 pet hour teacnlng our classes 1n your City Wiii train 61 9 461-9247 Deliver 1 day a week. No collecting. no soliciting . Must have dependable car, truck or station wagon and insurance Amburgey's Electr~ 979-0747 FDIAU llAIE 97!f-~3 1, or 645"·8623 OYE• lllfL• __ WAITRISS/llUll~·~ ~-" ,. EXPEWO Concrete and ~lpt.A. Graveyard Shifts No exper nee, receive Masonry man Interested available The Grinder complimentar y hatr, 1n starttng own business Restaurant, H OO w. make-up. and photogra· under large landscape Coast Hwy, NB. Contact phy, promotional ser- CALL 842-1444 Co (714) 855-3791 Mgr 9am-7pm 642-8881 vices. Call Lenny's Photo Studio/Salon 675·0823 Ask for JoAnne Craney • • • I .. • • : : : I : A•••rtisl11 lltts 1 Ctrratrz Electrical Laa••ca•i•t Jhusi a1 StrYict ---==---·:~O~oo=r=s-~A::e:p:a1;r.~A7:11:e,;::a:;;t1o::n:s~ rAHISM EUCTlllC 'Liwacaa.e Companion/Aides tor Uve $2 40 Pe da I Cabtnels-Panel·LockS·elC Ouahty work lree est DIG IT LANDSCAPE ANO tn care & ltte hskpg lor . r y 35 yrs exp Jerry 642-0567 =425513 968-7401 CONST We dig II all• Reas lhe elderly (714)833-2009 Thats ALL you pay for SUN VALLEY Const AESIOICOMM U INO 26 prices he/Ins 646-7070 Painti11 ----- 3 lines. 3?n d:;{,, minimum I do 11 all' Home Improve. yrs Do my own work. Lie OAJENTAL GARDENER FINE PAINTING Ety Rich· SERVICE DIRECTORY CALL TODAY!! All FOii LOIS Your S.rv1C• 01rec:1ory Representa11ve 142-4321 .... 310 14 yrs refs 642-7390 "278041 Al 646·8 f26 Full gardening service ard Sinor 16 yrs ol happy Plus Smell Remodel and ELECTRICIAN Free estimates 530·0l85 ,. customers. Ltc 280644 Additions Walls Doors ltc r 233108 Smell/large Gardening-Cleanups. Tree Thank-You• 963·4114 142-1170. I CARE, IH jObs & repairs 548-5203 removals· Trtm-Naw lawns A A A PAINTING lntlExt Cu It · ELECTRICIAN Oual wOl'k & Maint Allredo 54 l -3833 LOWEST possible price ~ Free est S20 nr Tree/Trtm1C1e11nup compf 10 Step Service 662·3235 CARPET LAYER Sells 1'487892 Greg 979-6278 rrdeninj Reas prices MATOIAN PAINTING ~~~:ts1~:i~11:i~~~esa~~ NEW'& REPAIR No 1ob 42-287 Chuck 548-6530 Ouellty A Specialty T 5 8 5785 too small Top quality DUSTY'S Landscape/lawn L1c•288597 631-9295 Repairs tm, 4 • Reas FREE e,t 631·2345 M11n Serv Wkly1monthl GLASGOW PAINTING Ct•Ht/Ctacrttt H1nllym1a 1 time Fr~ f'St 241 ·1G40 Int/Ext 30 yrs exper . Driveways. patios pains ••HANDYMAN •* Sl UMP BUSTERS Slump ref's 642-5214 ere No job too small Large or small 1 do 11 elll root remove end con· •.•,;ri•t Reas Mickey. 536-0553 Pat 53 t-5579 or Ive msg crete cracking portable 1""11'1-w~-~P"'!'!'!'IP'!!'li~"'"'r- Actalticll C1Ui111 WEEKS CONCRETE unit. backyds Ok 536-4444 F THING INTERIORS •GEN HOME REPAIRS HARGING/STAIPPING AEBLOWN OR JSX1NTEO SERVICES • Saw cutting· Painl Drywall Carpenrry Gardening Full Service VISA-MC 673· l5 l 2 Alao 1n1/Ex1 Painting remove concrele·asphall· etc Gary 545.5277 PTL Mow. edge ciean ups L•c•288597 631-9295 dirl ~487559 631-2610 -966-27 t61Eves lv m59 Pl11ltr/ltf1ir FENCES-GATES Tree lrtm - - Queen sz bed brand new. still pkg d warranly tn· elude<t Patd S635 musl sen $325 obo 846·38 t6 REFRIGERATOR Ken· more 2 1 cu It wt1ce UMAllA PIAIO Ct11tlt Fre nch prove1;1c1a1 wl bench $2200 496-6783 • • TV, SterH, Eltelttnics iOIO maker beige color. like --1-E·.-1Tl-C•O•L•Ol-TY-- new S200 Washer SEars Kenmore heavy duly, llke 25" with remore control new S50 d1n1ng rm set 5225 496·6783 modern style leble. 4 Tr1ns~rtitioa cha11s $200, Electric, _ dryer S25, Sole (6 mos Power &II 7012 oldJ s1 so. addlUonat ..111, Lii •n~s ~ t It ems make oller ,. " 1~ ,,., 494-7803. 515 Through '72. 6·71's, 7kw. OWC, St Laguna Beach-lrades poss Must sell" I ' Try S69K Bl(r 960-7467 SOFA. lamps, sofa bed. S 'I --10 antique oak desk & II ltatl 14 center pedestal tbl 'II llAH CIRISTIAIS wlleaves 548-9654 BUY NOW ANO SAVE Solid birch roll top desk 960· 7467 BKA $350 Sohd birch srereo cabinet S300 Window Sptt4/Ski loat1 A/C S225. Micro $150. 7016 498-1774 or 49 2-0710 WANTED Need donation Twt 1H .In HIS ol king size bed or frig lor (5 50) S 1800 ea obo needy tarnny Please call 979-7820 or S36·2130 650•643 1 Sli,1/Dtcks/Ster11e MitctllHHH 1015 7022 AMERICAN lndlan ltema SLIPS AVAILABLE wanted rugs, baskets. Sizes 25 and 30 also ortenlal rugs Call 642-4644 213 691· 1637 9·5pm, Mon-Fri lHU PUYOFF TIX Oet an angle on lhe camera All Days $30-$80 w/optlon equipment you've atways on W C S 645-3022 wanted. Read clualfled. MOTOR ROUTE Available In lrvlne area. $700 a month. No collecting. 3.4 hours a day. Monday thru Friday after-• noon. Sat & Sun. morning. Call 642-4333 ext. 209 and ask for Jim. ORANGE COAST llllyPttat 330 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa, CA AMTEX TEXTURING Cllil• Cut Dump runs c M IN B Landtcape/Garden Ser-lltYWALL Wall & Celling Te11turlng Baby Nur!At w/ 14 yrs tllP area Jim Whyte G42· noe vice Compl monthly m11n1 Complele Mrvlcftl FREE llllJl!!!!ll•~-mf!llllll!!lllll!fll~!!!!!l .. !'ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l'!~ 648-7203 Bob 521·9957 taking eppllc lor daycare R Ii x'"! ·els Steve 5•6 9147 estimates! 675-3060 1••••• ••••••••••••• •••~1· ... , ----ia .. 111 Starting 11/3 536-7607 LT HAULING • MOVING Mattarf_ Int t Ext Patch Pl .. terlng. •. C i\tU:EH Ol'PORl'U JTY • ParlJng Area R;>alra & CARING. exp'd Nanny·I, Garage & Yard Clnups BRtCKWbAK Smell 1obs Custom Texturing Quality • AetYrtacl~ • Aooflng & hskpers, ltve·tnstor out Jon 6'45·8192 Newport Cos11 Mesa Work Problems-No Prob-:. MANAGER •. W.t-prdo l"'t• '"" 1-4 199 trom $75 week 647-2415 -Irvine Ref's 675-3 175 ' rems! •328864 554-7831 •• " ""' HAULING e CLEAN-UPS ealtigeaplty, etaei11et, etc99i11g \ Find out who can teach you throu~h classified. FU SUCCESSFUL ClllZIN How much will your son or daught•r know about business when applying for their first full-time job? Plenty, if he or she hos ever been o riewspaper ca rrier. Through route experience he or she is alr9<?dy o . lo p ahead of their clossmatea. While they all master ideas, the boy or girl with o riewspaper route is able to put them to practical use. &Ysiriess? Carrien learn the basic learn the bosic pririciples from the first day of sfortiOQ to deliver riewspopen. They buy at w+.olesdle, sell at retail, make collections, keep their own books, and deal with people f o<e to face. Carriers quickly find out that "profit" ond ''loss" ore mo,. thon tutbook terms. The benefits of manag ing a newipoper route ore on equation for o future svcceufvl citizen. A great number of today'' prominent men and women Jtarted their public careers a• newspaper corrier1. And they all vouch that o newspaper route gives a boy or glr1 a head start on the future. A...-lemcn •MY HOME DAYCAA~ 7 Days Lowell ,.,.. LOW COST Block-brick Pl•••l•1 • •! •MOBll.EXUTO bEfXlle ~~~Fc~~:;'e~':.~;:~es Call Barry, 631 -4748 ~~~;~~t~~:v~~~;';~6k~~ 1-2•4•11•,•1~,~.~l!"'!H~."!'1~1~11~ : 1d\pfpllcation& ar r oow .b~in8 au• :. 11 p at Spectal monthly ratn, Rt11tlir ltHtJ •All ptumblng a neaung\t • crptt or manefJtment po&rltont. • DI J II ' nandwuh.Mark259-131 1 Clt11i11Stnict Fit1t11 Bi~t·~~;,~.~~1~~:~~111• DAAINS c1MrlromS1S. : I ndividua l• must Lt 111'U-: hat lemm --Housecleanlflg•Wlndowa hJt 19tritit• Olllll pallot lrM e11 538-4833 F1ucet·Dl1po11l·Replpe1 • motlvatf'd, o r «anlttd. flt"lbll' and • CIRCULATION DEPT. Boys ond girls 10 years ond older who moy be interested 1n route w orlc should contoct •he Doily Pilot C:trculot1on deportmenr at 642-4333. INTERIOR DECORATING t~!~~··~,~~a:~~·-~~: g:i~, HI energy,chol tett FREE , 641·0007 "P.S "722·906e : ~oal o~lf'nttd. Ap1)llrantA n1111t r njo :• 330 WEST IAY ST. P.O . BOX 1.560 Vachtt·epecl•llzlnglncon--conaullttlon G73-932' Mt'l111 IMfill e workln• with }'t)utl111• COSTA M ESA, CA LIF. 92626 lour .. __.ding curtalni FAtENOLV TIGERSI Why -L -.&-..--_.--• e ,-----------------, Sea,;"°'~p(,,t 754-6218 1pendyoun1kJal>t•t1rM HwKlp••I •A·11"111* REPAlR SPECtAL.tST Aver • Rrllablt vthirlt. valid lic•to~r • -•--1-~ c:te•n ng?FrMest1m1tes. I Llncart CLEAN a EXPERT c:all 185 Fr• Ml l lc'd • and inaurancr a mo1t. •. II Yea. my Mn/dcwght9r would like II luhaa• ~ reaon&ble ~ 1-3606 ci8 LAWN SERViCf 0119r15 years e11per11nce 30 Y" llCP Walt. 770-2725 • • f . Do'ty plot •WANTED TYPINO tNB PEASONALIZED SECl.H MOW =-EOOETWICEMO Lie T·118428 730•1353 I HbNt tny bid by 80%. • Wt nfrtr«""<'l'llt'nl rompont bf'n•: '"ormation on a 1 l route I CLERICAL WORK IN MV Many yeer1 exp Ref'• All S20-S25 541-5722 .. ABC MOVING.. ~nytt w0t11 gu•t : dil lnr ludlng: Paid var ationa and • I .. 110M! REAS 140-7413 tpm e.thl50·1772CM ISHIKAWALANOSC"PE Quick 4 Careful T13804G Fr .... I 722-7537 e I I e HIS/HER NAME 1-------I e_c •• ...., 1.............. CIM-"'I & Mtlnt*1llnct LO RATES 552·0410 ho idayt, mt"dtt"a anrl dtralul in · e ... ... u .. n ... ,. Til •. auranct. bonu pro.ram, H lan •nd e I PXfRlCk'9eX611\JftRi-I h!WA~ <7141eso-41'7 ITdYlllOILUll t e ..rnil,..~t allountf. • ·----------1 FINISHING Str1p.1t11n tocXL CORTWXcf6R.15 -UHi ITIMITI .,.. ... E)(p(Af ciJWilC Tlllno • • ...,_rtf nitn OuahtyWOJk, tr• ••P Aefl ~ Topped/remove Cleanup Orange Co OrlQlnal Otstlf'ICtl.,., AnordltN e ppl i n ptuon Tutt. lhru e • I f~ "' s .. n1192·7702 Construcllon. 1~·32.23 nu lawnl eprntttt '751 -347$ Stvd.,.t Movera Tnwred Kllcllent, batPls.. 722·117e3 ·.Thu,._ 2:00·6:00 p.m •• ---------ZIP-I Lie T 124·43f ~ 1·1.427 I I~ K CT RE! SEAVIC NEWW.,et\OuM Storage Wl...., Cl...Ut : llllU llllT PlllJlllll OI,.: PHON ... E __ __._..o;.;;;_......_,JGs:I pet'!~~ ntry ~ a Top Trim Removal Ouet 119i:' -• • _ -~·Aemocfl·AddttlOf'lll' 8Y Notmtn The Doorman Serv LICl lM ,,.. •t CareM Coun~ s~~;~e.:~:::::..:rng • 330 w. Bay St. • I OoOf ... _c~ ~ Oe1C a Fir 157 ~ tff.tH3 °' S3e..eeff •v hr '°' ~. '4Weet Ltd ce11 (714) e.4e-Heo I Costa M818, CA 92626 : PARENT•S-I :c,~~w"'!-1ADh<fA~r~ ~ =-·~:.:::~. WlnWta'°41'110tMWltll 1~~ .. ~=:o EOE • .__.:~~:u~ ... --_~_-_--_~_-_-_-_-_-J •• 1hu ,-;;z...:o .~ Bonded 5Aa·5555 J:;y!.,"::~:i'fs~' •= c.M. wlndowl 114-5u4 _ • •••••• ••• •••• • ••••••··~::·u~~=~~~=~~~~~~~==ii:======::! , • I I • • • f ..,.,.,. . • ••ow -l?llr"" ••11 •• • ... °"""•••u•• -,-:.,--~. •!:"" -·-----.._ r , .... %.M!fltl9'1i•I .....,.c:...,. ... c O::.f:U---·· ,..~ .. .,o.e.-7.M.tt.-... ~ .. -•-•" · .. ......,..,...._ ..... '"LllTATI o .. ··--·-·-..... 5 ,., w -... ., •• , rH "*"' ................. oe. ,. , Imo.._ C.. • ,._. CIAT8>ATa1 SUI c;.lo"=~=~=: ftil~Qli!iMilJiiili ......, .. ''". =,,, ........ Dllr •. PWUClllll ,.,..0....,,...,,,, ~'.:1.:.'&.:.~.,~ ..._ ___ ., .. ,.·I' ""';;1.:in1;i :\:'............. • ......... ,_., 0...1,M, t, --..... -.-. • ..... -. .. ., Tiii N ,.,_llUI• --..::..•...,:: = =:. '= T1l1 "=''•''IP ,., •·,.. , .• 'I'!' 'n":..1= "'.=._ ='"~: =, .. ,,, '0... ,_,.,. .. ...,.. torci........... Tiie ....... ..,_.. _..... .. ,_ lHI UIM MNI -'01tllllNTIO•)! .. l*I • .. 111111. "-'•1111 No 4 tMCm ftmJC '9111 ... ---. • ..,., "9JC ~al( "B!lJ~ .o..._. C.. TO .. Tiii ... IWilfll. y Lam .................. ON>l,,_!Jp~CAUU -COtlttruet!N, ttl1 I ... 0.,,_0....1. *' lfTUATmD •THI lfATI &.OCIC O· TMIN I Md .. tcw • ....... Of vn -OI fMMI ..... • ...._ ...,.. , ...... CA K.. T411 CW ~m&t.. COUMTV y MOii .......... Al _....... kAINI WILLW. flMNK llA'lll• ._, . "::.noa'a~I NIH 1••1 Ill CW °"" ... I . CUT't CW 1AtO NOMNIMTl-Y .... .,. Mid • It _. '-Mid 8 ........ Ill lllt H~-A LMY PAM· Tw 0e1,_ ..... 1'91 Tiie ........ ,._. ... lf•T ff PmJC llJta NtWr°"1' llMlN. MO• LM, A DllTANClll CW :::=:::.:-.= :=..':::;.~ -:wtiiOW =-~IW. ........ CA--. .._ .. ,.._ tt' r: .=:::..!:=-~ Dl,ICftlllD~rou.t>wt· l:r..:'f.-':r = C8I 111b1 In the ...e Of r: "°"' .._. .._.. TO II II JIM TNe ..,._ le .... =· =:' ~ A~ HAI« 'AINIOlil. ttf _. ..:.:'. L~~ 'ia 1• ti MO WH•1a :, .. 0::-.-:';.t=~,,.,•0 ....... w..... ,~a::,..•..:::. du&::~i.·~~·u 11 a101 • ._.. • ~-:;;_.._AN. ........... ,. • a.oicK't1 'cwTH1 _::,=:..~.:' lflla 1tli Md f'Ul '-ot Oo-IT IS HIW't ~ OI..._. Md oenMll.... Ttllt ••imeilt -... .._~ :· ·~.!:. J0a0t 0. T,_ 110t ...,_. On 'Odotw 21, tlM .. ~4011,T:A~ :/. ...... ~==-...: '1M*· ttll. "'* ._ ... tNat .. pettontll1•1 IJflfl ~Md ....... -. ..,._Colnya.tlOfOf· --we .. ~• AN A¥ef1Ue ;ttl AMM!m. 11:00 a,111, ,.,... "'1Mtka111 IOOK ... ..... ...... Man .. 11Nt1t, 1ne., , .... ._.,,....,.,....,.....,..._ .. -..._ .. ,.. .. ,,,~County..,.., .. ..,~·= 19 Cellfof,.._tneM ·!~Mee ee:"•· •" °" :.C..U~ ,.,....,.. ._, phone (111) 24•-IOIO. MfOf• !hie oowt"' Depert. "'lie .. MdlOI ...... of: n . ,.. ~ OCHI• Tiiie ~ .. oon-.,._._ OOtpor -MAN .-iON>t °" °"" .......... -- AQent '°'Owner. ment Ho. 3 • 100 CMo DILINDA LADY ,AM· ,_ ~ i an~ duCtM by. M lndlvld Ill TruatH, or luce1 .... , "NGi COUNTY CALI .-out ___. or ..,. '""•••••n ~ Or8fll8 C08lt Center Dri¥9 W., lante rtNIU.A rlAllllftlld ~ 0.... Tllli 491oenton O.T,,_; -TtultM or lul»tlltutM flOMA • • reney,..,_., ......... ~ DellY "*" Octot. 7. 14. ::;-..ca11torn1e.1 ..... 2~~ •• .." t!!"~~ .... ~ ~=ti:-' ..,..,.. ao, wltflfle~~of"::. nim •1t1ment .. Med !."C'~-= ,.wm.i; to .... 11rnmto11 •.,. 1..a ... • ..... o-., ...,.. -· ....... -7, "·it, ,... ,..___ ....... wi.tl ... County OWk °'Or· .,., ~ .... to .....,, .. T412 ........ and then and ..... perlcw Court of 0r-. T.c» r'°8.ee"' on_..,,.. .,.. ~ty Oft.., .......... o-. .... L .... ca.-THAT l'OlltflON 0, ........ .....,_ .. en ... lltlowcauee,lf...,_~. ~r-..11U191M1Joan 4•1 23 1... !Omit ll'llltltd .P8'11•= aOCKDOITH«Ml.90A ftOl8 Ot,,.....,,.., w 1--------lllftly Mid~ tor CNnat lftott M llPllOI,_. tt pet• ,_ ' ,_, and ~ Mliy I, TMCT. Al IHOWH ON A _...., ~ ot T wit: PmlJC ll)TIC( Of 1WN Mould not M _,., r.-...... to .. ~ m1ICl PWlillled Otanot COM4 PublilNd Or 11 C.... e I I" II tr 11 "'•"I N 0 MA, ftlOONl8> .. 9()09( --=·.: .... Mted. mlflleMrtM ..... oftMde-~Hot0ot<*t'7, 14.21, OtlkyP#otOc10:,,~ 14 21 -.1.111. q1 Ollolel .... •. lllAGI 11 O' UIS· towtne ........ ~ •· l'tclmOUI ...... IT 18 F\H\THll' .,...., oecllnt. '9CTmOUelllll•M 21. ,... 21 1NI ' ' ' corde of Or8fll8 County, c:tu.AH10U1 MAN, M· ... ...,_. • ._ MAM! ITAW thee.~ qi tNt Otfet to The "91tlon '"ueet• llMm ITATW T417 . T4aG CIM01"'8..,., ~ fo COlltOa 0, OftANGI =: .................. 11. I .. TM IOllOwtrtg peraona •• cw M pe t:M tled 111 ~lly to ldmll....., fie TM '°'°'*II......,. .,. .,.. OW1alft ...._qi Otfall COUNTY,~. DI.-of tNI ~ or .... "' 1 Pll.... OoltlO tMiMll -w.t.fl ~ ....... I IA I~ •• , of ...... under .,.. ~ dotl'I ........ -Com-..UC•TU ·-W" --....,,., ,..... ... 4, ICWO Al ,OlLOWI: I 11,t7t '7 . Aune. new tit• (nwonment• s.Mcee,.. .. ~.,,,...... dent MmWlleltadofl ol fa. ~~lnc..821 ... _ -·~ , .......... ,,,,..~ No COUl....aNG AT THI MUSTSEU..1842·7278 StrMmWOOcl Alie , !MM, In INI county ....... '8*Act CencM.NllwpOttlMott.CA ••m ... naoe •. ol Oflclill ... MOeT!AITPLY~ _tl/Off!Cll.,.!!._ , CA t:l115 a wee11 TOf f«# con-A 11eet1nQ on 1M ~ t2llO l'tcTmOUe MWM • _,. COtde Of ... Ooutlty, .. 0, 1410 ILOCK D; ..._WI - l/W 7J, CAMPER WEST-0.¥ta ~ Aronne, *':!r:ri: to tM wlll ti. llel'ir °" OCTOMft C....., fllrOQtMWnlfto. teAm ITA~ ...,,._OP under~ llU"9UMf to Mid TH f NC I I 0 UT H. YOU AM IN DUAUlT FALIA Xlnt Cond Mutt MIM811bove ofaal4t 2t 1MI .. 141 , ...... Inc llllnoleootpoi.-on.311 TN~l*IOflltre OtUOUIT'IOll• DeedofTNttMl•llUlllci WQTl. .. LY ALOHO T .. ONDl"AOUO°'T....-r. .. • . u a 0 0 0 8 0 Thia bull,_. 1• con-*'SEP H 1 . o.Pt. No. a ei 70/J CMo lo • NorttMellt Hwy, fttl. ~ tt: Ston. "Mmall• euctlon IOt Cttf\, lawful IOUTHIAITIM. y l.M °' ~~my~ T~K~~~ 87S.'3520f831·1571 Cluc1edbyan~ """ T. ""'·· It., c.nter Dri¥9 w.e ....... AidQe,l\.IOOM Dr lnwetort, 2091 ... Publllc llOtioe ...... moneyofttle~ .... INC>"-~ D AHO Ill TOPAOT--v""------..,..,,.,.,...~=-=--=. :=--0.vld Oemien AfonM .t ,._. hperw Ana. CA 12702 TrM. ~ Je con-&AM. co.ta ..._, Cal oMn 1N1 ~ hltouNan of AIMtlCI, I CMfllet'a I 0 U T H W E 8 T E ,_ L Y _,' ""'" ... ._...... VW RA881T n Tlllt •tlltmenl WM lllad 'If YOU oe.j(cT to ft1e duc:ttd l»y: e OOfpcnltofl t2t2t and Oartl*t ¥ l(otllUM. clleclll payat>i. to .. Id l'fK>l.OHGATIOH TO AH.._ fATY, IT MAY 11 IOl.D AT Deluxe. elmOtt cherry! 1 wltll IN County Cleflt of Or· Otantlno of tM petition ~ Jim V ........... ,,...._,, Mllege Corporation p~ tt.fetofor• dolflo 11U1111M1 T"*-9. drewn on a .._ or T!ASECTION WITH A LINE A PUeUC SALE. If YOU OW'* catl $1850 Obo.-~County on s.ptember llloutd .itller-_.., at IM Tllll .. ....,_, ... Nitd lion Fund, 2091 S. ~ uno« tM ftctlUow firm M1lonalt>enlil,lttNOt..,_ LYING SOUTHWfST!M.Y HEED AN EXPUHATIOH ~~2•42 2t, 19M 11Mftne and ee.t• Y04ltl 00-with tN County Clettl of Or· Lane, Coat a M•ta. CA """-and M;tie of Tic TNM, •al etedlt union. 0t e ..... OF. PARAU..£L TO ANO ~c[~f f.~~A8:I~ a Ill ,.,_ lonaorl!Mwrlttenot>jeo-W118 ~ty on~-, Calltomla COfPQf· It •F II City ING., City of or tederll MYlnOa and loan DISTANT H 00 FEET Y""' YOU 8..,.. .. ,. """""· 118 Publitlled Orange COMt 11ona with tM cowrt tMlfofe 2t. 1tM Ion Ot*'09, Couftty of Of1ft9e, WOdtelon ~WI tHa MlAIUlltED AT ,_IG+iT ""'' ......... ~ __. • YI ?illy Ptlol Septamw 30. tM llWlnf. YCNI IPPW· ,... L.8wrenounclC1toteMlll· ,, ... Of Celffomle. did on ........... ,..,., er\lrence ANOLfS F"OM THE TA.cflT~~-2• •Cll ..... I 1:1( OGto'* 7. 14, 21. INe llU mey M lr'I perlOn or 11y PubtllNd Or8fll8 COMt • 183.5 Wlnowefd, ~ Ule 30t11 day of auy, 1Ne, to '"9 A1Mr1cen TlUe in.-NORTH!ASTEAL Y LINf Of lMe • I r T404 yourattor119y Delly Piiot ~emb« 30, 8"cll.CAt2MO bymutualconetnt,dlleoM, IUtlW'Ce~loeatedlt SAIO BLOCK O; THENCE "YOU A"f A C,_£DITOA Oejotler 7, 14, 21, 1Me ·· Tll11 bulllneta la con• INllld PM1'*• and..,. 114 Ealt Flftfl Strwt, In IN N0flJTHW£8UALY ALOHO .::.. -=-. '':,.!· = QDO©~ "8.IC NOTICE or a conflnger;t creditor ot T4'02 eel by: joint Yentut• mlnll• thW re&ltlonl .. city ot Santa Ana. Callfomla. SAIO PARALLEL UNI. A Ille o.cuud, ~ mutt Ille M.,. o. Alce, StOM patlnet• theNin. •• , tll•t t'Oflt, tltle and DIST ANCt °' 135.00 FEEf, .... ~· gw> -;: '1CTITIOUI IU ... 11 81-.,. 111nTirr 'fCMH c111m with 1M c0\lt1 or N1JC ll)TIC( 8roolll lnvntor•: Melaca Said bullMM lr'l IM Mur• lnt•Mt ~ to .,.. now MORE OA L£88, TO AN IN• n...11u PllOt .. ..:::. 30 1 NAMSITA,.....,,. ,._ nu1iw; pt...,,t It to IN perlOfllll POtl llon Panllon Fund, wtllbe~tlyt<e¥ottl Midbyltun«Mrllldo.dot TERSECTIOH WITH THE ~7 ..._ • .. T1141 lollowtng l*IOt'll .,. repreMntlllYe eoooltlltd tly ~nnoue ..,_.. Menu.I G. Ric.. Tru1t.. Zeltounlwi, .tlO ... pey and Tt\llt In .... pr~ ... ~ s 0 u TH w E 8 T f AL y October 7• 14• ,... TJll # doing bullneu aa: TM '1CTI1'10U9 ....... 11141 court Willlln ic)ur iTIOfttM MAim ITAT_., • Tllll 1t1t9'Mnl W11 flied dllCllet~ ~ ...,... ... and t ied In Mid County and PROLONGATION OF THE S.11\My Orouci. 3857 81fCfl T ~ftm#T lfOl'll tM date of llt9l II-TM followlftg f*90M .,. .,._.,. 1111\TM"r •-.,. --•-ir 1111\-.,._.,. lllftJ-.. .,. .,. lllftTV"r Str .. 1 11572 Newport 8MCf\ 1141 . ........_",. l*IOnl •• auanc. Of lener• tt pto\ltded dOlfll bUelnell M : ,..... .--nu 1 ~ ...-""' ~ ...-""' ~ ...-nu ~ ..._ nu1iw; 92MO ' doing bulllleel •: Tl)e ,.._ In Section 700 ol U•• CorPt. Inc., 2727 Shannon ~=======:l.:===:::::::::::::::::=.l::========L========:.1.:=======:.. s!~,:_~11 ~M!-2 ;,';:,.~· . .::::_ ~::_ ~~ = ~-~041~4• ,.,,,. AN. PU9L1C NOTICE Of 11tm ANNUAL COIT BUICK DEALER CAt212t ' · CAl2714 not •1lPlf• prior to tour Aellef Corp9., Inc., Calif. OF WAllWWATIR TMATMENT SERVICE FOR UHRI ~~:, ::inne.:..,.:,.,con-21~~·~..:":.~·;:; =tlll ~ic. ":!:!.~Of ttle ~~·~~h '=' WITHIN COUNTY SAMIT A TION DllTRICT NO. 5 OF ORANGE COUNTY R K S.11\My ~ CIC>latrano, CA 92975 vo*71 MAY EXAM!fff 1Ple Tiii• bvalneta II con- Tl'lll 1tet4lt'Mnt wu flied Ronllld 8enjemln UnMy. Ille kept tly ttle cowrt. 11 ~ ducted by: • c.cwpotltion willl 11~ County C6ettl of Or· 1717-A &edford &AM. New-.,. I person ......,_ed In Mary Jo ANettll. Sec· tno-C0unty on ~ternber port-.8..ct\, CA 82ttO IN ..... you mey ..,. I retety 23 19M Patric.II LNM Unlllly, upon ttle ••ecutOt or~ Tiiie -...ment ... Ned ' ,,_,.. 1717-A Bedford !AM. New-lltrator, or upon the ... 1 wttt; tM County Ctar1t of Or· Publillled Orange COMt pof'I BMcti, CA t2MO 10f"9y fOf IM •11«:u10f Of .,.. County on September D111y PHot s.pternw 30. Tiii• bu•ln ... •• con-ldmtnlttratot. and llM wltfl 21. tNe Octooet 7 t4, 21, 19M :::: by: 8 09f*ll 1*1· IM court W11'I proof of 18'·1 flll19t2 T 405 Pat'"" J~ w..a~-Ylca. • wrltt~ requeat 1t•· 1 ~ Oranoa COMt ., ..,_ Ing 11111 you dellr• epeclal Delly Piiot Sep1emt1er 30, Tllll 1t11-1 WM ftled nottce ot 1M 1ff1no of en lno-IOetober 7, 14, 21, INe ~ty_Cf«~Of Or-YS110ty and JIC)Q(lillment of l T 400 ~ County on SeptMllt>er •tall MMtl or of the peel-:___;;=;._.;;;;:;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;..:.:..:, FINNEY 11 . 19M t1on1oraccount•111en11oned rtaJC ll)TIC( James (Jake) Finney, ,., .... 1nSect1ont2001nc11200.so1 __ ...._ ....... _..... __ _ age 39 died October Publl~ :,~ bef ~ the Cellfornll Prot>ete Code. K •114 2, 1986 Jake, a resi-~.Oc~ober7~9M • ._-::.:.,~.:.*::· ~~A=• dent of Balboa, was T3IO 'ertt•., w..t, ..... 1tti, TN following pertona .,. the beloved husband Of..,.., CA -~ butlnel8 ae: QUIET 21 " l11t1>0r ~ 979-ZSOO of Vicki, and loving o:~b~:!:'~:r. i~~ ~~'R~~~~21 ~:·~:_~~t~ . C.M father o f J ason, Bran-P\8JC NOT1C£ 1988 Santa Ana. CA 92703 In .ccordance wtth the s>tO'<IWona of Sectton 204 (b) (5) of the c-.n Water Ac1 of 1en (Public: Law 95-217), County 8-nhetlon Olatr1ct No. S of Orenge County le required to notify .. ~ of lta ....,IOI 1Y9tem of the r•t• end portion of the ed valorem tue1 paid by ht UMr'I whk:tl are •ttrlbutabte to w•••t• t,..t:ment MMcel. Thia Dlltrlct, the jurtedlctlonel ~ of wNc:tl are p.111n1ed on the eccompenytng mep, recelvM •portion of the OM-Percent (1%) bMlo tu Wly COiiected ennue1y from !property OWMr'I by the Orange County Tax Colactot. Thie notice ii being publlahed In contunctJOn with the m.-ng of the Joint ConlOlldated fax 8* by the Tax Colactor to enable UMr'I to determtne the lhlt9 of theW bMlc P'OC*1Y we levy~ It UMd to pey fOf waetewater. trMtment ~ ptcMded by tNe Oiltrtct, T~ Otttrlct annu.,ty ~ IPPfOxlmatety 2.80% of the 1% bale tax levy cotlected from the P'oC*tY ~ In the 011tr1ct. the rewnuea generated for the Dtltrk:t from the buk: tex levy are not IUfflcient to pay for all the ongoing operatlone, mM1tenat\09 end replecernent/reheblttatk>n coeta ••oclattid wtth coAectlng, treating end diapol6ng of the wut.-ter generated from the propertle9 wttNn the Diltr1ct. Accordingly, all relldentlaJ and am.al non-reeldentlal ueer1 In the Dlltf'lct muet UC> pay a aupplementlil ueer fee, whk:h fot cost aavfngl I• cottected tot the Oiltrlet by the Tax Coffectot wtth the annual ptoper1y tu.. The aupplemental UMr f ... In County Sanitation Dlltrlet No. 5 •• lhown In the fotlowlng tebte, and •• bUed upon the 8'u o1 the water meter tnateMed on your ptoperty: BUICK REGAL '80, Um-don, and Justin. Jake ,tCTITM>Ua IU-11 TW421 George L. and Etllel M lted. V-6. fully equip, was lhe aon of NAMI ITATOmNT Young, 3510 E. Longrldge Ccw.aected • ..., ....., ltM 1mmec, 1/c, tllt, cruise, f'tlllC NOTICE Drlw. Or~. CA 921a7 ' .I $4000 650-0946 M 1 Id r ed and J · TN fOllowlnQ peraons "' Tlll1 bu1l~H 11 con-s r. f OinO 1>u11nesa u · CON-..... TWTVW.1 --11 1" or'-· purgeo!' 1nney 0 ULlANTS' NETWORK. .. ...... _ --ductedby. llulblndlnclWll• -CU 'IO ltYIHt w h 1 tt 1 er. a la 0 1820 Plt1l Newport Drlw. NAMI ITATnmNT George L Young H't" $28.40 $52.50 105.00 210.00 420.00 840.00 :>ark blu•. IHI"-' Int, survived by 3 sisters,· uil• 30I. Newport 8Mcll, TM IOllowlng l*IOt'll are Tllll 1tatemen1 was tiled 2 .. $6000 obo 850-2896 dOff'll buetneu •· Nevada -"tll Ille County Clef'll of Or-3 .. Carleen Topham: A 926e0 Bob'• ProOolf. 2101 H11bor ange County on Septemw NABERS CADILLAC Lynda M1t.chelJ. and ~~ e7:~Gt:: &MS . 11E10, Coat• Mele. 23. 1Ne 4" M.1ry Lou Donlin. Buena Pll'k, CA tOl~I • CA 92121 ,_. G" M('morlal Servl·ces Lidia R. Card. F""'.ny Ketllfyn l P~eraen. 7171 PublitNO Orange ~1 8 .. ....,.... Soutll""'1nd Cr , H\lntlnfton D111tyPtlo1 Octo«>er7 14,21, will be held October Menor 123e Erilllne Green, Bcti, CA 92841 21. 1986 1,880.00 LARGEST SELECTION ol l11e mocs.l. low mlleage Cad1ttee1 In Orange County• S.. us lodtyl 540-9100 2600 Herbor Blvd COSTA MESA ~ ' Buena Pllk, CA 90621 T.. b I I 9. t 00 P M &l Chnsl Tiits butfnMI 11 con· .... u• Mii I con· dUClld by an IMMdual 1---------Church By The Sea. ducted t>r • ~ pan. 1<1111ryn Pat•Mn PllllJC NOTICE HOO W Balboa Blvd , nerlhtp R Car Tlll1 •111eman1 wu llled -------- Newport Beach. ~m::'.iim.ntd -filed with,..,. County C6ettl Of Or· It •tat ange County on Septernt>et '1CTITIOUI MWU GLOVER wt111111t County ci.11 ot Or-11 t91e NAm STAT'IMDT EARL FRANKLIN ~~County on Augutl 22' '11Mn TN following '*90flS ate T415 VlrtuaJty all lingt.-famlty ree6dencel l'lave wat• meten of l Inch or leell. end pay $28.40 ennualty. Mutti- famlty unftt/apartmentt ennu8ltV pay S 15.85 per unit. The tOllowlng exempae ldentlftee the oomt>Wled amounf a nom.owner wlll ~tot the o.ttrtc1'1 MMcel In 1986-87 If he/lhe owna •home wtth an u11111d vatu. of $100,00 and,, .. • 1 ·water meter: WI llY All UIEI USEOCARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR Publltlled Orange Coett dOlnQ bulll'IMI ea; LOmmtd GLOVER , 74 years. fl17al D111y Piiot S.Otem• 11. St ~•rformanc•. 1011 ,....,..,. lource ' passed a way October Pu~tltled Orange Coal 23. 30. Octotier 7. 1Ne Brio.<> Or., Suitt tot, Coat• AftftUlll Amount l'eld to Dlabtut No. I 5. 1986 in Freonla, ~;''&f~ ~~";'= 21· T3M Mna. 92127 Texas Preceded in · ' ' Su9" Lombard St 1n ..... tment1 Property tax rta.JC NOTICE lid. Inc. (Calllornll eorpor-FIHUPUIUL 2.80% x 1% belie tax levy )( s 100.000 - S28.00 0.LILLO OIOllLn 18211 BEACH BLVD. death by htS beloved lllon). 10111r1oao0r .. Su11e wire. Dorothy, in '1CTITIOUl.,...ll 1ot,Coe11Meae,CA92827 Supp&ementaJ UMf' 1985 Mr Glover was 11t-1C 1111\TaM NAm ITARmwT Thi• bu11nn1 la con· fee Annual fee for 1" water meter $28.40 HUNTINGTON BEACH 14l·IOll;141-SIS1 •CHEVY ·n Mont• Catto Spon Cpe. run1 & loolll xlnl Mull Mii 11111 wtcndl S 1450 Or Best Ollefl 636-7763 or 549·4002 CHEVY Celebrity 64. sll· ver 4dr. etc, v-11, AM/FM, cruise control, $4500 760-0322 hmlor '12 lt.,.n.r 7 1 .<fOO oflglnal mllH . IOOk• Ilk• M'tll Excellent condition S 1250 obo 639-3111 '14 CllT.YllTA WAI Auto. elr. 1t11<eo, cats. r/reck. 7 peuenQel' Vin •800609 J'·"' bo M h 14 1912 ,.~ "" ~ Tiie lollowlng f*IOM 111 dueled by-a corporation m arc · doing bulll'IMI ••: COS-Lomb11d St Inv lid, Inc . In Ch1hcothe. T e xas. (CITA~':':c&AL.) MOHOUSE, 410 W. Coeet Wlfflam TaylOr He lived tn the New -NOTICE TO DEFENDANT. Highway. Suite 323, ~-Tiiie 1111am.n1 wll filed port Beach a~a for (Avllo • ,t.cu-*'Ol JAMES port BMctl, CA 92113 with tile County Clefk ol Or· over 40 years. He was EUGENE SEVERANCE. dbl Jean LM Reich. 14441 ~ County on Septemb« 'red k d · SEVERANCE CONSTAUC-Janel Way. San Diego, CA 24, 191& a rel• true river, TION SURETY COMPANY 92129 ,_ associated with the OF THE PACIFIC, and DOES T1111 bu1tn111 11 con-Publlen.d Or~ Coast lumber industry, he 1-v. lr>Clull~ dueled by an lndlvldua,I Delly PllOI Ociooet 7, t.4, 21. YOU ARE 8EINO Sue> JNl'I L "-ich 21, 191& T411 was a member of th~ BY PLAINTIFF (A Ud .. .... Tiii• 1111emen1 ..... flied Woodsman Of The oemandando) CONCORD with IN County C6ettl of Or· 1--------- Wo rld, a nd served his MECHANICAL, INC. ~~ty on S..,tember rtll.JC ll)TIC( country faithfully in Yew ...,,. • CAUMDAJt · nwr. k llttl lhe US Army m :A!!:.,~-::'~ Pul>llllled Orange eo.t '1CTmOUl-U W W 1 ( He 1 s "'9Wtfttefl ,.._.... at Dally PllOI Septembet 23. NAm ITATDmWT survived by his sister ""-oewt. 30· Octot>et 7· 14· 1981T314 d:::~~~~ :'.~ Mrs J ewell Peeler of ,.: ...._ • ::::-.,: .. ANACON. 515 N. Tuttln Av· Muleshoe. T exas. and =••-::..'r: rta.IC NOTICE anue. Sult• 1eo. Santa Ana. 4 nieces. Graveside 111 ,....., ..... ._,.. It ,_ Callforni. 12705 ces will be held went tile CMft .. ..., ywr ~nnoue IU ... 11 Oarryt w. We«>b, 7347 E. serv1 OMe N.u. ITATl9NT Seddlellorn Wfr(. Orange, Thursday, October 9, " row de _. .. ywr T .... foll6wlng per10n1 •• CA 921et 10:00 A .M. at River-rHp•w.., ....._ ,_..., doing bu9lneN M : AKborne Tlli9 butln"' la eon- side Na tional Cem -1oM 1tie oaae, Md ywr c-1. 3024A Break•• ducted by: M lndlvlduel et.ery. R1vers1de, CA. •...-;; ":::'.:' .C ~~5 Corona del Mar. CA ~~.~:Zi!:~ waa n1ee1 Pie r ce Broa. Bell :::.., .,_.,,.,. "-.._ John Anttiony Qulnlan, wttll IN County Cl«k Of Or· Broadway Mortuary, court. 3024A Bralkett Dr1119, Cor-ange County on Septemw D 642 91 "'0 T1*t .. ....., ..... ,._ one 0.. M11, CA 92125 28, 19M 1rectors. • " _. ... ., _. Ttll1 bualn•H 11 con-. 'a1107 ........ ......, .. _, ...... STIMSON to ca1 ., ....,_, ""'' ducted by an lndlYlduel Pubtllhecl Orange CoMt liiiii;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;:;;;;1iiii~BESS l E F STIMSON ew':Ji!.!;' de Mt Mewt1 Jolln Antllony Oulnllf'I .L _ Deily Piiot 0c10• 7. 14, 21, • · • _, ,_,,..., ... _. Thl1 1111411'Mnt w11 IMeCJ 28. 19M rC"s1dent oC Newport ... ...., ... _,,...., Wltll 11141 County Ci.rt! 01 Or· T41' Beach. passed away a ..... .w .... (lllM M ange County on Sec>•ern• -------- October 5. 1986. Born tN ,._.. Meet). 11· 19ee ,_,. rt&IC NOTICE I:X>ttmber 18, 1889 m ~..:.::.:. 4;: Publlllled Or~ Coeat "•tn M <'adv1lle. Penn She ::r:" _.. ..._ .. ,._. Dally Piiot Septamt>et 30, ~TITIOUe .,... .. IS survived by grand-di,. OtAI CA&.UIOAMOe OclOW 7, 14· 21. 1* NA• IT4TDmWT ""6.jM!llWI sons Willard S Voit ,.,. ,, ..... ,., ""' T407 ~"-'ollowln9 peraona are -• . . nd' ,..... .. .ctttl I -doing butlMM u: THE _M_E_RC_U_A_Y-.-78-M""O_N_A-=-Rc~H:-:I Robert D Voit a ...,.............. rta.IC NOTIC£ JEWISH DEVELOPMENT Orig owner low ml Rwhard A Voit, and UN oer1e e WM........ COMPANY. 11331 ltvlne tmlfm ale Sl 750080. great grandsons. 1111hntce,. re.....,. '1CTITIOUl.,...ll Boutevard, Sult• c . Tualln. . . . R ...... rutUCll 14 -II ' .... NAm ITATIW Callfornl• 92t80 (7141 873-7094 R1C'hard and o uo:rl MOfttl •......,. .._.... TN loffOwlng ~· .,, O.UtlCll En••PflMI. inc .. Voll Funeral services ._111,11, ••11 IH f•r· e1o1ng ~ u. 1 DO, Callfornl• corpor111on. 1940 You don't know whet ~·re will be held Thurs· "'a II••••• I• I• I•• l TOI 3e5 Santa lube!, N Acacia. FUiierton, C:... mleelng II llawn'traed d Octobe g 1986 ••11111•11 •_.....,. Newpon8c:t't.CA92t80 torn11tm1 ay. r • .. • ..... Mfte ....-. .. Marllyn BHn J•fl1r1. Tll!t bullMta la con----------1 10.00 A M . at PllClflC ..... ..,.,. ~by· a corl>Qfatlon _......;.rtll...;;.;;..;;;IC;.;...;NO ..... T_ICE ___ 1 View MemoriaJ Park, II_.."°,,.......• Thia bu11n .. 1 11 con-Oeutacll lnterpr!Me. lnQ., Newport Beach CA. n11 ute • ....... ,_. d\icted by en lndMdull Lucy DeuteGll, Prelldent n ' ,.,. .. -. J.. ....... M11llyn 8Mr't ,,.,,_, T'* atee.m.nt ... llMO In llf'u of owers, ....., .. .....,.., • .._. TN• •tat411'Mnl wee llltd w1111 t,,. County Cltrtt Of Or· family ~u"l c:on· r etraa •••H •• .. wttll tM County Clerlll of Or· anoe County on Sep*""' tributlon• mey be ,,.,..... • ..... ..,. ""9 County on _..,,,* 23, 1tte made U> the Willard ";:C:::':91:~= 24, IMe ,_ Publlttled Orange": D. Volt, Radiology ......._ ~ .-...., Publltned Orange COM1 Dtlty Piiot Octow"7. 14, 21. Department.. at Hoaa ...,_ .... • .. ....-oe11v Piiot Septeml* 30, H , •tee Memorial Ho.pit.Al In tilfft1dl.._.• ............. Octol* 7, 14. 21. 1tee T422 ,.._w_ ee.ch p 1 .... •., 1111111,.,,.... T403 --------''"' -·. . ....., ............ ,...,________ NIJC ll)TIC( clflc Vlew Mortuary • .,...... • 1111111•11 • •, rtalC ll)TIC( __ ...._...._....__....__ Olr«ton. 044-2700 r,:. ~=-~ r.cnnouo ... u ~m.:.::.. .. '•c•te vww •MC)lllAL l'ARK cemetery • Mortutry Cl'leptl • Crema1ory 3500 PecifiC v,._, Or1vt ~Newport Bffch ~ .. 2700 ....... ). Mm ITAt'llmff MAim OTA~ C... .... C11111 TM following pertone an TM ~......,. .,.. TMn....ertd...._Of dOlf'IG~ .. ·£ecrowe doing 1111•1"••• ••: tN court II' (fl llOllltlt• 1 (IC , lnO , 2111 ! CoeM CHlftUH. UU IHr dlt9cclOn de le GOt1'e -~ Vic-HtQtwrf/y, ¢orON Del Mer, ltrMt, ~ 104, Cot4t torvmt MuNctpet Court. CA 92t25 MeM. C8'1fotnle NtM 14455 CMc Ortl9, Vic· '"" H "-d. 3130 .... Donne Meron, uq .... t~. CA t2312. Yt9W Aft , CofOl'll Dtl Mer. hconct ltt91t, LOftt IMdl, Tl'•• ,,.,,,., ...... .,., Cellf t2'25 c....,.. toOOi t~ """"*of,,..,. ,.,.,,... Ayan, 3700 8. Carmen " ...... -............. tiff• ettomey. 0r ,...,_, ,.... 0t •Kho,..,,.. AM. For9 Avenue, •t. lAlluM wtctlOut M 9"0JMY, le (It CA t2'104 taiecfl. CA ttte 1 norntir. leclreoclcwlytl,.,_ Tlilt bu•lneta It con· ~ L Feteer. NO mero d• , ... ,°". d•I C9UCttd., a _...,tltft lfMll• ltrM4, L .. .,.,. ~ ,_ ........ , ... o ,_ H. "8td, l'Ne leecft, CA-..e1 CMI ~ «we l'IO Thia .....,,,.,,, .. flltd Tl'll• ~ i. OOft• tlt nc. Oo••Cl_o. ••)· wlttl the ~tt Cltr1l of Or· d\olC'1" by ..... ,.,_ .. pen. ITMN J "°"' 1ua 1 .,. County on ... ..,,.,., ,,.,. Mein .... ........ CA "· 1tll9 Donne Meton 92341 (91t) 24'· .,,. 1 "'"" ,... ... ..,,.,, ....... T otaJ annual emount paid to Dtttrlct No. 5 In 1986-87 for wutewater tervlc:ee $54$.40 Large lndu1trlaJ end commerclel UMf'I of the aewerage ty9tem pay their ptoportk>nl1e snare of the coat of wutewater collection, trMtment and dlapoeal MtVtcea bMed upon the ectuat 'IOfume of wutewater they dltcharge and the amount• of btocherNcel oxygen demand (800) and IUapended tollda (SS) In their di.charge. TM fotlowlng IChedule ldentlftee the rat• now In effect for theM latge u.ra In flecaJ.vear 1986--87: flow 900 .. (S/mllllon gallont) S189.45 · ($/1,000 pou~) $75.41 (S/1,000 pound•) $74.80 Rewnueo collected from theM large uaers are allO UMd to pay for the ongoing operatlonl, maintenance end repiacement/rehebUltatlon C09t1 of the Olstrtct'• ....,age ty9tem. ThMe tncfultr181 uteri pay leet ranging from MYeral hundred to more than SM,000 per year for traMPOrt. trMtment and dlapoeal of their wastewater through our f1Cflltle9. If you would Ilk• addl110na1 Information on the charge. you are paytng for wutewater coUectlon, treatment end dltpoMJ MMcee, p-.. call the Dtttrlct'• atan et (714) 982·2411, Extenlk>n 5. The District'• admlnlatrettve offtoee.,.. open from 7:30 a.m . to 5:30 p .m •• Monday through Thurlday. and 7:30 a .m. to 4:30 p.m. on Frtd1y1. T-999 IRVINE COUNTY SAN ITA T ION DISTRICT NO. DATt (f:.ctla) FH '° ~ Or*'Oe eo.t wttll the ~ty Cltrtt of Of• __;:__~~4.-------~--------------~----------------..-------------------...... ~ Orlif'9e COMe CWLV ptLOT/ T..._, October 7, 1tee ..... .... .. Oftlol ., ... Counlr ... ~flie-t l&aftl IP .,., Of tlld Coufttv, The ,-ICtltloua lkllineel CLMIA.... vou Mm IN Df,AUl.T Neme~toebOveWM TOU8 11 • ~A DllD OJ TNJIT !Med on ~ 2t, t ... In ,.,_OP=· iOW Oo\TIO tllllllO UNLUI IN County Of 0r.,... Orte-TO 4111 ltm' YOU TAQ ACTION TO 1n111 Flit No 1"311731 ll'TAft llO, At-1 PROTICT YOU9' P"°P• OeutlOh EnwprlMI, tnc .. To II helra. .,.,,..._ ... , IATY. IT MAY M IOLD AT 1940 N Acacle, Fullerton, ctedl!Olt 1M contlfttent A PUklC IAll W YOU CA 82'31. Caltfot,.._ COl'pc>f• credltcn end S*90N -., Ntto AN EXP\AHA TIOH ltlon ml 11eoCtl.W1M.,.,..._, OF THI NATUM OF THI Thil ~ wee con- in lhl w11 end/or _..,. ot PROCHOfNG AGAINST ducted by a COfl)Ofltton C L A R A M A .. I I YOU, YOU StiOUlO CON-Thia 1tatement w .. Hied TOLLEFSAUD TACT A LAWVIR. with the County Cler1il ol Or· A petlllon hu ~ Hied $ 14 31th Stteet, Newport enge Co~mlY on Septtmber by Merllyn Claire Hen· ~(K • CA,_ ....... __ 23. 11&8 dr!Ctteon 11'1 the Superior I 1 Iv• --Ot OtullOh Enterl)l'INI, Inc: .. Court oc Orange C®nty ,.. comtnon ~•Uon of Lucy OeutlCtl, Preelden. 1 11n11 1t111 MerilY" Clelr• PfCIPtnY ta ~ ~. no Publl9hed Orenee Cout Crlclieon be "'°°"1tecl1werrenty II Olwn II lo Ma OallyPllo10clober"7. 14,21, aa petaonal repreeent•lf..,.,~ .. ,.. or eottect· 28. 1168 10 admlnt.ter tht M1•1• of ne11) Ttle beneflcl11y T•23 tlMt decedlnt 1uncw Mid Deed of Trull, by •--------- The petition requHt• reuon ot a breecti or defauft rtB.tC NOTICE 1uthottty to admln ster the In lhe ob61getlon• aecurect 1·---------tllllt under the lndec>en· thereby, heretofore ... It •1'1 dftlt Admtnlstr111on ol Es-ecutect and dellwrect to 1he ACTITIOU8 .,... .. 11tes ~ undertlgned a wrilten ~ NAllm ITA,.....,,. A neanng on the petltlOn tatation ot Defeutt enct 0.-The foltowlng persons .,. wlll be held on OCTOBER mend lor Sate, Md Mitten doing t>ullneu as: COUN· 15 1986 11 t ·45 P.-M. In nolloe of breectl and of elec· TBY FLORIST & Gl"S, oePI No 3 11 700 Civic tlon to CIUM lhe undet· 1081 E. Mein SI .. Tullln, CA Cenllf Drive Wnl. Santi llgned 10 Mii eeld property 92880 Anl, CA 92702 IO ••ll•fy lllcl ~Ilona. Mic.heel R. Hetrflfa, t505 IF YOU OBJECT to the land lh« .. ft• the under· E. Raitt St • Santi Ana. CA granting of lhe petition, you llgned ceUllCI eeld notice of 92704 lllOUICI 14lher appeat at the breech Ind ot electlon lo be JMnell• M Herrera 1505 b-recorded Jvne 11, t9M M s R..... s s A • CA nearing aod 11111 your o inst No 88-244451 of Of "'" t • ant• na. jtcllons or Ille wr(,len oblec· 1 r · • 92704 , lions with the court t>elore I lielal Records In the omc. of This bll1ln111 le con· tne hea11ng. Your appear· tne Recorder of ~range ducted by. huaband and wife 1oce may be 1n person ot by 1C~:.:J'· le 11 be made ..... Mlchael R Herrera. your attorney N WI • ""' .ie.oette M Herrera YOU MAY EXAMINE tne wllhoul c:oven.nl or Wit'• Tiiie llatement was filed file kepi by the court II you ranty expreu or lmplled, r• with lhe Covnly Clt<t. of Or· II& e person 1n1ertsled In garding Utle possenlon, or ange County on Seplem* n.eu Publl•hed Oranoe Coul 01llyP11ol0cto*7.14,21. the esta1e you ni1y serve ancumbranc... to pey the 25, 1988 upon the executor or idmlo-remlfnl"il prlnclpal sum of 111,110r 0, up0n the 11• the note(a) MCured by 11ld iorney 'tor lhe executor ot deed ol Trust with lnternt admtn1s1rel0t tnd l1le with ,as In 111d notl provided, ad· 28. 1988 1111! court wilh proof of Hf· v1nces ti Illy. under the T419 v~ a wrnten request Slat· terms of said Deed of l~t. •----------•no lhat you desire Sl)9Cl1I fees. charges, and eJ\,,.,.._ montlC MnT.ICE notice of the fihng of an In· of Ille Trustee and ol the 1---'"-~--""----en1ory end sppralsern.nt of ousts creeled by said OMc::t v 1-of Trust estate ssseta or of the pet Seid sale will be held on· lions or accounis menuoned In Section 1200 ano 1200 S of Tuesday October 14, 1988, 1he C1llforn11 Problle Code II 1 30 P m In lhe lot>by lo AOJ 8. WoolMJ, Altorner the building localed at 801 to Pttlllofttf 20ft I an South Lewis St,_I. Orangt, r • __ ... ...... Cet1fornta 92668 ~uln Hiii• A...... ..... Al 1ne lime ol the lnlllll port .. ach, CA l2ttO , __ Pubhsned Oreooe coesi publlceuon of this not ..... Dally Pilot October 7 8 12. the total amounl ot lhe un- 1986 peid b1l1nce of the obi!· TWS427 gallon secured by Ille above described deed of trusl and --D-llDL-IC_NO_Tl_C_E __ esttmaled costs. exoen .... __ r_1.N ______ 1 nd 1dvancts l e NOTICE OF S418.959 55 TRUSTEE'S IALE " II possible lhat a1 the La.n No. JEFFREY lime or sate lhe opening bid T.S. No. 151535 may be less lh81'1 the 10111 UNf'T COOE I indebledlWISS due T 0 SERVICE COMPAN'I' II ev11llble, the expec1ed ooen1ng bid m1y bt ob-as duly 1ppomttd Trustee ll•ned by celling the IOllow· ul'IOer 1he following de-ing lelephOne number• on K rlbed 4Md ol llull WliL Ille day before lhe sale (714) SELL "T PUBLIC AUCTION 85-4837or121:ie21-•88S TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER I Dalad Sep~ba1 18. FOR CA"SH ANOIOR !RC 1986 CASHIERS OR CERTIFIED T D H .. VICE COM· CHECKS SPECIFIEO IN ' ' T I CIVIL CODE SECTION PANY, H utd n19tM, J Lori Carpenter, AHltlanl 2924h (payable 11 the mne of lec:rttary, I01 South Lewie sete '" 11w1u1 money ol tne It. Or•nee CA..., (714) United St11tas) ell rlQhl, title 3IM700 ' aod 1n1eres1 conveyed to TAC 13M2 end now held by II under Published Orenge Coast u1d Deed ol Trull in the 0111y P1101 September 23 property hereinaller de· o Octo~ 7 1986 seril>ed TRUSTOR JOHN M JEF· T381 FERY. ELAINE B JEFFERY i---P-UB_ll_C_NO_Tl_C_E __ BENEFICIARY WARD 1-----------PEARCE, CALLIE PEARCE K au• Recorded January 9, 1981 STATEMENT OF IS Instr No 7722 In Book 13907 page 201 ol Oll1e1a1 ABANOONMENT OF Records In Ille otflee of the USE Of FICTITIOUS Recordef of Cringe County BUSINESS NA,ME seld deed of trust de-The following paraona sent>M lhe following f,ave abandoned the use 01 lot 8 Block 537 of Cenat he F1c1111ous Buatness Section' IS per Map Re-ame THE JEWISH DE· corded 1n Book 4 Page 98 of ELOPMENT COMPANY Miscellaneous Meo• in lhe 1940 N Acacia. Fulle<ton. K 21121 ITATl•NTOF A8ANDOl .. NT Of' Ull Of' '1CTITIOU9 84.1 ... alNAME The following person• have abandoned the UM ol the Flctltloua Bu1lneu Name BAMBINI, 3333 Brlstot Street. Costa MeN, CA. The Flc1ltlou1 Busineu Name referred to above wu filed on July 21 1986 In the County of Orange, Original File No F31470S Sidney F1n1rof. 3084 Neslat, Laguna Beech, CA 92651 Claire Slmchowltz. 13 N Stonlnglon, S Laguna, CA 92652 Th11 bu11ness was oon· dUCltd by co-partners This 11tetement was flled with the County Clerk of Or· ange Coun1y on October t , 1980 Sidrwty Fanarol Claire S1mcnow1tz Publlllled Orange Coasl Daily Pilot Oclot>er 7 14. 21. 28 1986 H24 POOLIC NOTICE • 43143 NOTICE Of PUBLIC I ALE OF PERSONAL ""'OH:ATY "f7t7t s Notice is hereby given th11 pursueol to Sec1lons 21701 -217 15 01 1ne C•h· lornie Bus1oess and Pro- fessions Code Section 2328 of tne Celllorn11 Commercial Coc:se, Seclton 535 01 tne California Penal Code and tne provisions of lhe C•ll· torn1a Auction Licensing Act. the unde<tlgned wilt sell Ml.IC NOTIC( MUC f!!!C! MUC NOYD MUC !!Ta MUC !!!!Cl .. pubic .... ~ OOfflf .... natlOfl fOlowing ~ Thie .__,. ... .... TllW b1611Mel .. coft: 12. 1... FOl'ttJM, BRANCH NO t, °'*· ... -.... blddint on tfle 22nd IMY ot "DeA (tfle flctlllOul "llNI', 1tl IN County Qlttl of Or• duct.cl~ In lndMOull ,,_,. U 111 LAKl CENTE" IWt ...... Ip. ACM1 • '°' Qe1C>Mt. , .... II ~ 00 pr~ ~. no flt,. Ooul'lty on...,......, Rica Kll*O ~ Orengt COMt OAt-4. l'fl! l El TOAO ..... tftpd, ..... ....,, 3 o'dodl PM, on ... ,.,.,.,... UllOul -..... be UMd 11 tNe TtW .. ~ -....., o.ilr Nol s.t.mo. 30, CALIFORNIA 12'30 ON Of\ blcl ""'°· cm --... .._.,. Mid prOl*1y "-unleM ..... II • Q.ltttnl • "*" .tth the County Cler\ of Of· Octobet 'T. f4.'2t, tN8 Anl!R OCTOllR 2•. ,... 0.-,...,.. ......... Nttl ltorM, end whlGtl .,. ,.tratlOn with the Orenge P\lbltshecl Orange COMt -.i County on Septembef T391 C•I Clelm• may be tiled 10 bid • tfle ..... PurdW IOCat~ at Pvblic 8torllQI. ~y Aecor6tf, In CaM Of Dally Pllol ~~ ti, t~, llMI Wilh lht ~tnown 9be)Ye. """'bemedll~OMll- 2065 Plel*\111 Avenue, In eorpot1llon1, lnctudt the 23, 30. Oct04* 7, tNI ~1 P\RJC.ll)TIC( (I) The lelt Otle for fttlrlO Md peld fOt M .. .,,. of the City of Cotta MeN. namee Of the Pretldenl. T3el "'blitlhed Orenee CoMt c111m1 i. October 23. 1... putclwlM AN ~ County ot OrMOt. 1\141 Of Sec<tllf'Y. TrlMUf9t. ~I--------Dtlly Piiot ~~ 30. 1 mtl (QI TNt 1111k Ttanefer le goodl •• loed M II IM CelifOfnla. the goodl, cNt· Mll'lioet ... -11> NOTICE 0c1~ 1. 1•. 21. 1tet 111ennoue .,.... aub)let to s.ction •toe Of muet be~ llt fie.,,. llel or J*IOl\ll prC)C)Wty • The City Councll o1 the 1-__.;'"..;;.;.~-."'------T3t3 NAiii ITAT'llmff Ille Comm«dll COde. of ........ _,_ IO prior acrlbed below. In the mat· City ot Coeta ~ flMtVll 'tcTITIOUI _,..... ---------The I~ pettOnl we A.D.L., IMC.. lllr: JIM Cll'l(lllllltlOfl In the -=.: ter• of: the right to reject eny or 111 NAllm ITATeMINT flta.IC NOTICE do&no t>utlMu .. : 11 w.e. KAHMAZ.ADIH MID llA.I Mlt*'-' .,.....,, Pat hrd. Sp. E 140 • Bel, bids The loH~ng per.one 1te s.McM: 2) Acddent Ae-.IAHAMCMRl1 C~AT& and obllgaled perty, ~ trf bfd, 2 IC)llr, tennll rctct DATED; Oclobef 3, t98e doing t>uslneu u · ClnCO 9C •11 oovery S.Yloel 2t31 Del· Of'Ptclltl l ttlll 7th and t4lfl deY Owner r~ the rltht Publi.hed Orange Cout Company t7232 Courtney '1CTIT10U9 .,_.. mter, S..11Art&,CA92705 Publlshed Ofange Co.It tot>«, ltM P\lbllO ltor191 10 bid at the .... P\lfchaMI Diiiy Pilot Oc~ 7. 19" Ln Hun•rnaton 8Metl Clllf NAiii ITArnmwr Chartu Adcock tt Dally Pilot Oct~ 7, 1"6 ManlCllf'M"(. Inc., Teie-mutt bemldewtttlceehonly T408 92$.49 • Thelollew4ngpw10Mare Elderglen,lnllne,CAl2714 T4CMI phone (811) 144·1010, and oeild tor II the Um• of • Jonn Wllllam Crown, dOlnO butlnelt .. Fifth Av· Thi• t>u8'nu• la eon· Agent fOt Owl~-CO.I purchHe. All purch&Md Ptlll.lC M>TICE 17232 Courtney 1.1' • Hunt· enue Limoual!'I s.,v~. dueled by an ll\dMCIClll • fltBJC NOTICE D .. ~~ .... _, 0c"'""'t-"-..... 7 ,. good• are IOkl M II and 1 ton &each, Calif. 92849 2 tO t North Hellotrope Drive, Charles Adcock '"1"' """" • • m111t be remo~ It lhe Ume FICTITIOUI 9U'*'ll i;emeta Frances Crown. S1nt1 An1, CA 92708 Thi• 1t1lement w11 filed 8 411.tO 198 T 413 011111. Sale subject to prk>f um STATeMINT 17232 counney, Huntington Zapara. lno., Calttorni. with lh• County Cletk of Or· NOT1CI Of' canc9Nallon In the event of The loHowlng per1or11 lfe Beach. Calll 92649 cptpofltlon. 3220 Via vi. .nge County on September "'9Ltc IALI OF Mlllemenl bet'MMft ~ doing t>ullneu •• Patio Thll t>ualnaH 11 oon· tu. Alpine, CA 9200t 10. 18MI ""IONM. ~"" and obllo*ted. party Detect Building 12. 2182 Dupont. ducted by huabtnd 1nd wtlt Tl\ls bu1ln111 11 con-L n1tn1 • 22101 • thla 7111 end t41h dey ol Oc· IMne. CA 92715 JOhn W Crown dUctld by a corporation Publlthed Orange CoMI Nollca 11 lleteby ~ lhlt tobtr, t986 Public Storage ForMI G. Smllh Jr .. RoN ThlS lllltmenl WI.I hied Zapwa, lno .. Jetry Zapata, Dally Pllol September 30, pursuanl 10 Seellonl 1988 of Minagemtnt. Inc.. T .... Mlf'Y Smith, 1001 Grenvllle wlth the Counly Cle<k of Or· Chairman October 7, t4, 21. 1818 lhe Civil Code, State ol Cell- phone (~-~) 2'4·8080. Of.. NIWl)Or't Betch. CA ange county on September Thia 1tatemen1 wu tiled T398 turnla, SaGll<>n 2328 bl lhe Agenl for vwner. 92680 11 1986 wlttt lhe County Cle<k ol Or· ---------Calllornle Commerclal Publlthed Orange Cout Thia bualnen 11 con· · ,,,.,. 10119 Covn1y on Septtrnbtr P\lll.IC NOTICE Code, Section 535 of the Oalty Piiot October 7, 14. ducted by husband and wife PubhSl'led Or.nge Coul 12, 1986 ---------Catllornl1 Penal Code Incl 1988 T 411 Fort1t G Smlth, Jr 01tly Pilot Sepltmber 18. flt-IC 1101t Ille provlsloo• pl 1"41 Call- Thb 1111emeo1 w11 llled 23, 30 Oclot>tr 7, 1986 PublltM<t Orange Coul FtcTITIOUa .,._,, fornla Auction licensing ---------with the County Clerk of Or· T38t Dilly Pilot $eplember 30. NA• ITATIMINT Act, tne unc:lflfllgned will tell flta.IC M>TICE ange County on September Octol>el' 7. 14, 2 t . t188 The tollowlng persons .,, 11 public sale by competitive --------~ 1 t, 1986 PUBLIC NOTICE T395 doing bu1lne11 as: P1yte11 bidding Of1 the nnd dly of NOT1CI'. F31M70 r--------------------Shoe Sourc:. k1892. 13]21 October, 1986. al t2·30 INVfT*G IM>I Pubhshed Orange Co11t IC 27101 P\&.IC NOTICE N-port Ave , Tustin, CA o'clOCll PM. located II Pub· IM> fTIM Dally Pllol September 16, FICTITIOUI IUl lHEll 92680 lie S1orage, 2099 Ptecentla NO. 1a 23. 30 Octo* 1 1986 NAME ITATIMENT K 2I01t Volume Shoe Corpor· Aveoue, In Ille City of Costa NOTICE IS HEREBY T362 Tne lollow1ng persons are ~Tmout ~U lllO<l. 323t E 6th St , Mesa. Counly of Orange, GIVEN Iha I 111 led I----------d0<ng buslne11 81 VIC· NAMI ITAn•NT' Topel\a. Kenaat 6660t, Mia· Stale of Calllornla, lhe ptoposats will be received by P\lll.IC NOTICE TOR 'S LIGHTING t608 W The following pert0n1 art aourl corporation abandoned goods. chaltles Ille City of Cotti MHI •01----------Chapman. 011nge. C A doing bu1lne11 H . 8111 Tills business 11 con-or personal property de· wil The City Cduncll, P.O. FICTITIOUI IUllNHI 92668 Stroud Muonry. 2020 ducted by; a corporellon Krll>ed below 'In the mat- Box t200, Cotta MeN. Ci ff.. NAME ITATEMENT Pompey COfp . a Calf· Poinse111a, Sanla An1, CA Volume Shoe Corpor· ters of lo1n11 92628·t200, on Of The following persons ire rornta corp0<a11on 1608 W 92708 ahon, w v ROhin, Jr , Al· Andy Uphoff. Sp B 012 • befortlhehour OI t1 00 Im dOlng t>uslness as Krest Chapman Orange. CA 8111 Slroud, 2020 PolnM1· list Treasurer Oryr Inge loot ba 2 ChlH, on Friday, October 3t. l986 Electronics. 1930 Swen. 92668 II• Santi Ana. CA 92708 Tn11 1111emant was flled drt bke, 7 bJtS mite II 8'1111 t>e the respe>Mlbillty Cott Men 92626 This bus1neh 11 con-This buslntH la con-with Ille County Clt<k or Or· Landlord reaervta lhe of the bidder lo de!lver hts Keith Gtrm1ne. 1930 dVC:led by a corpor111on ducted by· an 1ncl1vldual ange County on September rlghl to bid 11 tile sale FtCTTTIOUI MllMN NAMI ITA,.....,. Tiie foltowing persont art doing bullneaa aa: Skol Ch1rter1, 190 Newpott Cenllr Or •280. Newport Beach CA 92$80 Tor 8 Eckert. 2105 QelClfllO, NeWPort Beech. CA 92660 E.llhef' Troyano. 8500 W. Charlston • 2 re.. LH Vegas, NV 89t02 Th•• bu1lneS1 la con- ducted by 1 general part· oetslllP TOf 8 E~ert Th!I .... .,,,.,.. WIS tllecl yv1th lhe County Clerlt ot Or· ange County on Septembef 11, 1988 n1M11 Publlthed Orenge Cout 011ly Piiot Sec>tember 18, 23. 30. OclObet 7, t988 T359 bid lo the City Clef'k • Offioe Swan. Costa Mesas. CA Pompey COf P . ten V. Biii Stroud t4, 1986 . Purc11ases muSI be m1de by the proper 1nnouoc:.d 92626 Weske. Presiden1 Thia aritement wu llled F3t1Mt with cash onlr and paid tor 1---------- tlme Bids will be publlcly Tllll buelnesa 11 con· This s1111ement wes filed with the County Clttll ol Or· Publish.CS Otange Coast 11 the tim. o purctiue. Att 1 ___ Pllll. __ IC_NO_TICE __ _ OP&ntd and read aloud II dvcted by· 1n lndtvidu1l w111i...tne County Clerk of Or· ange County on s.s>tember Dally Pilot September 30. purchesed good• are sold as 11·00 Im. or u IOOn lllet• Keith Germane 1nge County on Seotembet t8, t986 Octo"9f 7 t4, 2 t, 1986 Is and rnusl be removed 11 alter as ptacllcable on Fri-Tnis slltement wu ltled 8. 1986 f3tm7 T399 the ume ol purchase Sale day, October3t. t986, In the wllh ine Coumy Clerk of Or· F311111 Publi.ned Orangt Coast subjeet to prlOr eaftQlltallon CouncU Chamber•, City Hall, ange County on Sepiember Publlslled Orange Coast Daily Piiot September 30, 1----------In 1ne event of Mllltfntnt 77 Fair Oflve. Cotti MHe, 11 1986 Daily P1101 Sep1amt>er 23. October 7. 14, 21 . t988 P\lll.IC NOTICE between Landlord ind obll· C1fllornta, for the furnishing · FatMl1 30, Oc101>er 7, 1•. 1986 T396 galed party Oaled 1hl1 71h FICTITI009 ltU ... 11 NA• ITATl•NT The following petaont .,. doing bullnffl 11 A & M EnterprlMt, 31.1 t Second Ave •I. Coroo1 det Mlf 92625 of IBM COMPUTER UP· Publlahed Orange Cout T383 IC 21112 end 141h day of October. GRADE Dally Piiot September 18. NOTICI TO 1986 Pubhc Stotage M1n-Cecil H Moore. 1244 E Addillonal "" ot the 23 30 Octot>et 7 1986 P\&.IC NOTICE Nil.IC NOTICE CMDfl°"I agemenl. Inc . Telephone ~~2 Long Beach. CA 1pec:1•1ca11ons may t>e ob-· ' · TJ63 (Otvteton I (818) 2"4·8080 Ag\nt tor W H D • _ ... ~ 18,.5 talned at Ille Office ol tne IC 27937 K 2I017 of the lllndlO!d_ 1 lam ,..,..,..eon, ' Purc11es1ng Agent al 77 Fair ---------FICTITIOUI IUl lNEll FtcTITIOU9 84.1 ... 11 ComrMrclM Code) PubllSlled Orange Cout "Crtnsh1w. lotAngifet. CA Ortvt . Costa Mesa, Call· __ l'tlll. __ IC_NO_T_IC_E__ HAME STATEMENT NAMe STATaMIENT (al A Bulk Transfer 11 Deily P11o1 Oc1ober 7, 14. ~19 1 l0rnla Bids should t>e re-FICTITIOUI ltUllNEll The followlng persons 1,. The following per.ans are about 10 be made 1986 his tw1lneH I con- turned to the attention of the NAMI ITATtMENT doing but1ntu .,. Thi doing business .,. WARM· (b) The names and busl-T 410 dueled by a general P•r1· Olly Clerk, within 111<1 time 1 Frenkfurler Factory. 352 ING1'0N • SEMLER PART· ness eddresNS ot 11\e Trans· nershlp llmlt, In a eealed envelope The ollowlng persons ere South Main Streel Orange. NERS, a California general terOf art EODIE FARIS ANO CAlcll H Moore ldenlilledontheoultldewllh doing business es· Soulll par1ner.tltp, 3090 Pullman LILY FARIS. 1910 W PUBLIC NOTICE Tiiis 111temanl wu Ned the B1C1 Item Numbet and the Coast Regional Merketlng C~~~~ ... 13141 Yockey Street. Coste M.... Call· BALBOA BLVD . NEWPORT ----------w11n lhe County Cter11 ol Or· Openlng011t HOt Eul Edln~r El2 St . ~3tO, Garden GrOllt, lorn1a92628 BEACH CALIFORNIA 1431.U angaCountyO<lSc19tembtr Eacll bid shell ~ty Santi Anl, CA 92 05 -CA 92644 W 1 rm Ing Io o . 0 x n a rd 92660 NOTICE Of' 11 1986 eaetl 1nd every Item u .sel Steven Allen Norlhcote Nani Hee. Lee. 13141 Town Center, a )Olnt ven-The names and busmen POaUC I ALf' Of FJtMn for Ill In the s,._.lfieatlons. 5 8 2 7 E 8 st Br 0 0 k ture.· 3090 Pullman Street. addresses of the Transferee PE"IONAL "'~"TY Pubflaned Orange Coall ..,.... Lakewood c • 90713 Yockey SI , •310; Garden .,,~ 8 AnyandalleKoeptlon1101he · "' Gr.OYLC~j2644 Cosla Mesa. C1hlornta ere AO L INC , A Cell· "0010tl Dally Pllol ~•ember t . ~must t>t '10 · Thit buslneas 1~ con-Ttus buaineu 15 con· 92629 --lom1e C<l'po<etion;-P-0-8ox Notice Is her1by11"'9"tll c~ 30 Ociober~;---ttee ty staled In Ille btd, Ind fall· dueled by •n lndlVldull dueled by hutblnd and wife Semler Oxnard Pattners, 4J86. Or1ngt Calllornl1 pursu1nt 10 Sections T385 ure to set forth any Item In Steve Nonhcole Kt Jae Lee 1 C1hlorn11 hmilec:t partner-92613 21701-21715 of Ille Cali- the specillcauons Shall be Tllit Stlletnenl wu hied Tllis slelemenl was filed ahlp clo Jacques War-Alf otner buSlness names r0fn11 BuSlness and Pro· grounds for rejeciton ol Ille with the County Clerk 01 Or· w•lh the County Cle<k of Or· lllauer. 4028 EHi Broad· and addresses used by Int ltsslOns Code, Section 2328 Nil.IC NOTICE bid Inge Couoly on September S w1fr. L"""' Beacll. CA 90803 Translerot wtlh1n thrtt yNrl Of the Cahlornta Commercial ---------l" t986 ange County on eptember -... Each bid shall se1 lor1h tne c , 23. 1986 Ills business la con· lest pasl 110 l1r es known to Code. Sec1ton 535 or the FICTITIOUI llU ... 11 lull names and residences ol ,,, .. ,. ,320552 dueled by: a general P8rl· lhe Transferee are: None Calllornla Penal Code end NAM! ITAff•NT all persons and parties Publllllt<I Orange Coast c n•rsh1p (c) The loeallon end ,,..,,, lhe provision a of 1ht The follow!"" -1or11 we Dall Pllol September 16 Publlsned Orange oast ~ .-·· ........... lmetested In lhe proposal 11 .,3 3Y0 Ocio ..... r 7 1986 · Daily p1101 September 30, Warm 1 n g I on· 0 x n a rd er at descriplion of lhe PIOP· C1hlonrla AucllOn LICenSlng do4ng butlneu II L 'egglo lhe bid 1s by a corpor1hon. " • ""' · Oclobe< 7 1, 21 1986 Town Center. a JOlnl vtn· er1y 10 be tran•lerrld are Ac1. Ille undera.gned wlll sell Oellgns, I t9 Coral Ave . lllle tne names ol the OI· T358 T394 1Uf8 By The Robe<l p FURNITURE, FIXTURES II pub11C sale by c.ompe1111ve BalbOl Island. CA 92682 hcers wno c1n sign 1n Werm.ngton Co I Cl ll· EQUIPMENT MACHINERY b1dd1ng Ol'I the 22nd d1y of L. u r,. KI m I egg I 0 egreemen1 on t>ellelf of the PUBLIC NOTICE tornla corpor-ellon. By Rob· LEASEHOLD IMPROVE· OClober. 1988. II 2·00 Schubert 119 Coral Ave . corporation end whether ---------f>OOLIC NOTICE 8ft P Werming1on. Presl· MENTS. STOCK tN TAAOE. o'clock PM, on the premises Betbo1 laland. CA 92882 more than one oll1cer must FICTITIOUS IUSINE18 ---------dent GOODWILL AND BUSI· wnere said property has Thil bualneu 11 con· Sign II lhe bid IS by a per1· NAME STATEMENT K 27te2 Seml8f Oan1rd Pertners. NESS NAME OF THAT CEA· been stored, and which ate ducted by an lndMdual nershlp or a )Olnl venture. Tiie lo1tow1ng persons ere FICTITIOU8 IUl lNEll 1 Cal1lorn1a llmlled par1ner· T AIN YOGURT SHOP BUSI· loclled 11 Publlc Storage. Laurie K LegoiO Schubert 11818 Ille names Ind Id· doing business IS S1n11 NAME STATEMENT shlP By Semler Oxnerd N Es s K N 0 w N As 2065 Plecenua Avenue. In This lllltrnellt WU bled dres!l4!s of all general part· Ana Envelope & Printing Tiie IOllowing persons are Group Inc a C1lll0<n1a cor· GOURMET YOGURT 19t0 lhe C11y of Coste Mesa. with the County Cieri! ol Or· ners Incl 104n1 ven1ur1<1 It Co 3207 W Warner Ave doing business 11 The pora11on Rooatd H Semler W BALBOA BLVO . NEW· Counly of Orange Sllle of ange Counly on Se9tember lhe bidder IS a sole Sanle Ane CA 92704 Bobby Singer MethOd, 1992 llS vice Prestdent, By· PORT BEACH CALIFORNIA C1flfornta. 1ne goods. Ch81· 11. 19&6 ptoprietorshlp or another Burbank L11nographers Bateanc. Co5t8 Mesa CA MiChael L Donner. II• Sec· 92660 11es or pefsonat properly de- entity lhat does business (Calllornia corporation) 92626 re11ry (d) The place. 1od dale oo scribed t:Jetow to lhe mat· F31M12 Published Orange Coast Daily Pilot September 18, 23. 30 Octot>et 7. 1988 under a fielihous n1me. the Tll1s business Is con· Richard M. Kapko, 1992 Th11 1111emen1 wu filed or elter which. the Bulk lers of bid Shall be In the r11t name dueled by e corporation Balearic. Coste Mesa CA wllh 1he County Clerk of Or· Transfer 1s 10 be consum· Ger110 PtaM!owskt, Sp. o ol the bidder with 1 detlg· Dale W Hall, Secy/TrtH 1 ~2626 angt County on S.Olember mated art THE ESCROW 103. Misc um. Clths-.antlque 0 at Corona del Mor 0 at Huntington Beach Saturday's College Games, Oct. 11 0 Arizona D use 0 Col State Fullerton 0 Pittsburgh 0 Georgia 0 at UCLA 0 at Washington Stat• 0 at long Beoch State 0 at Notre Dome 0 at LSU Sunday's Pro Games; Oct. 12 0 Roms• 0 Seattle 0 Buffalo 0 Chicago• 0 D.nV9r• 0 Detroit 0 Kon'°' City 0 Minnesota 0 at Atlanta 0 at Raiders• 0 at Miami• 0 at Houston 0 at Son Diego 0 at Gr..,. aay• 0 at Cleveland* 0 ~ Son Francisco• • 0 at Indianapolis• GAME RULES G•,..,.s 1111 wlll be DUOllShed uch Tuesci.v ~k• vOtK olclts on .,_. enlrv *""· cvt OUI, men or O.llver 10 Tiie D•llV Pllol, DO Wnt a.v SI Cosl• MeMi, C• ,,,,, • Entri., mu~ be 0011merke<1 no l•ler tll•n S PM ThurSO.v, orec11e1rn11 Ille ~uno.v 11am. LAI• enlrlet wlM no1 be counled If more INn -wlnne<, • tit· orffltt< wt• be oetermlneo Winners ... be llUClhheO ~ followl119 Tueidev Wlrvws mev olclt uo O<ll H •I Tr,e 011tv Pllol office Fr!Otv AF'TER ? OOf' M fo4lowln11 lnnounc.mttll ~ llstled In lh4 PI Ptf. I enlrv ---· Duoflullon of enlrv form nol acceotR!t Emotovtt' and ram11i.1 of Ortnot Co.11 Publlslllng Co nol tlfgl'* Mu•• be II Ot OYtr to enter con1e11 {On Your fn,..~) A nlNT10 N1 Winner's Circt. The Doily Pilot 330 Wttt &cry St. Costo Mesa, CA 92626 T387 LAST WEEK'S WINNERS: 0 N.w Otteons 0 N.w York J.n 0 Philadelphia 0 St. Louis 0 at New Englond• l First Plac~ Kurt Brittain 17-0 S.COnd Place Mary Woodward 17-0 Third Piece Ken S~ton 17-0 0 at ~ Yortt Gionh • 0 at T ompo &cry• •••••Eie Breaker•••••• Wmhington ot OoftOs • -------~ ------ • Spom EditorCrolg SMlf'• ~h of tire W_. .. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1986 25CENTS OUR WINNER ON A41 TODAY'S NUMBERS ON A2 -C~asb--wido~w ·asks l ·lmillion .. .l Claims Newport officer speeding during Thursday's fatal crash on Balboa Blvd. arrested on suspicion of felony drunk- en drivina and vehicular ~ slaQbter. T6.rasber, a former tralr1e safety officer wbo was on routine petrol at the time of the accident. was seriously inju~ in the I 2:2S a.m. collision oo Balboa Boulevard. cw~ ~use of the onaoina in-vesupuon. The claim was filed by Irvine attomer Ted Wentwonh on behalf o( Finney s wife, Vick:ie, and their tbnc tcen-aae sons. Finney, a Batboa resident, was i commercial developer who was apparently celebratina h.is first bif business deal at the time of the accident. By STEVE MARBLE Of .. Dlllr ........ The widow of a man k:illed when his car was rammed by an oncoming police car filed an S 11 million claim Monday against the city of Newport Beach, alleajng the offtcer was speed- ing. The claim alleges that Officer Joe Newport Harbor's Kirk · Summers Is the Dally Piiot's prep football Play- er of1heWeek:/C1 Angels cashed In on Year of the Rookie (Wally Joy- ner)./C1 Calif orrila Lenders gear up for surge In home equity loans be- cause of new tax law .I AS FAA recommends charges against the Or- ange County pilot of a am".11 plane who was In the.area of the Cerritos .... 1A ,..1.,. "•~""'" I A A INDEX Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Death notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public notices Sports Television Weather 87 A3 81-5 CS-7 88 C7 86 AS AS A3 C7, 8, 4 C1-4 86 A2 Thruberwasdrivingatexcessiveand reckless speeds without emergency lights or a siren when his patrol car struck the 1986 Buick in which Jake Finney was a passenger. Finney, 39, was killed in last Thursday's acc;ident and the driver of the car, Kent Hindes, was critically injured. Hindes subsequently was Judge censors.. ballot claims Newport Center foes say thrust of ballot argument stil!_intact By STEVE MARBLE OfhDellr ......... Ncwpor1 Beach city leaders~ ed panial victors Monday in-a Superior Court tight over a ballot argument written by a sl6w-growth group opposed to a $300 million expansion plan for Newport Center. But the most controversial claim in the argument -that the expansion wall worsen traffic conditions in the beach city - survived the legal challenge because It is worded as an opinion. not a fact. Following a bnel heanng. j uage Hannon Scoville ordered the Orange County Registrar of Voters to strike two statements and a third referrencc from the 250-word statement penned by members of a group called Grid- lock . Both sides declared victory after the hearing. "The thrust of our argument re- mains intact/' said Allan Beek. leader of the opposition group. "It's still a good argument." Mayor Phil Maurer. who favors the development project and was named as a plaintiff in the lawsuit, said he is only disappointed that Scoville did not delete all portions of the argu- ment that were challenged. The wreck i1 beina investigated by the California Highway Patrol and results of the investigation are not expected for ~veral wceafs, said Newport Beach Traffic lnvestiptor Bill Mcinnis. Police declined to comment on the Wentworth estimated the police" man was traveling at speeds reaching 6S mph when his car struck the Buick, which was in the process of making a U-turn. The attorney descri bed the "These were false, misleading statements," said Maurer. Dellr,....,....._,_.._. Gridlock is an activist group op-Palntind the town red posed to the Irvi ne Co.'s plan to a expand Newport Center with office John SallT&D of Lake Forat puta the c herry o n top of a towers, restaurants and four res1den-Tutee Freese u he palnta the eatery'• roof on Brlatol Street (Pleue .ee JUDGE/ A2) ln Coeta llaa thla weekend. officer's drivina as .. arossly nqJi. aent." "The amount of damqe an this acadent is so substanuaJ that the officer bad to be aoina at least 6S mph," said Wentworth, wbo 9 id he Wlll have ex~ perform an indepen- dent investaption of the crash. The attorney said the sobriety of bis client and Hindes has no bcariog on the officer's alleaed actions. ' In initiaJ reports, police indicated that Hindes pulled abruptly into the path or the oncoming patrol car. Police have not indicated how fast either car was tnvelin&. • Thrasher wu trapped inside tus squad car and a police officer wbo responded to investipte tbe acctdent bad to smash a window of the peuol car to free btm. One of Hindes' relatives Ytd the two men probably were rctumana from a latedannerand ma~e been celebratina their fint b-s io the commercial development business. ' · Michello Brinkman, who identified herself as Hindes' niece, sugested her uncle was makfo& a U-tum to stop at (Pleue tee WIDOW I A2) Mes.a Council commits to ' senior center· I Forms group to plan f acHity~ city may buy back Mardan School and choose •lS board of directors. Additionally, co uncil members or- dered their staff to examine -me possibility ofbuyang back the Mardan School property, including the build- ings that previously housed Costa Mesa City Hall. By TONY SA.A VEDRA The property at 19th Street and °' .. ci.., .... ...,. Pomona A venue was sold to the non- The Costa Mesa City Council profit organization in 1979. Mardan commilfcd itselr Monday to provide officials are now c-0nsidering moving a recreational center for senior the school to Irvine. cilizeM;-potentraity on -ih"e site now-The council's actions lollowed the occupied by the Mardan School for advice of an $18,000 report com- the educationally handicapped. missioned by the city in April to In a series of unanimous votes. assess the needs of Costa Mesa's council members avcect to spend ci ty elderly. · money on the senior center project The three-month study, by Bette L. and create a non-profit corporation to Davis and Associates. concluded that plan and manage the new complex. seniors needed a place of their own The council further asked its senior instead of sharing the city's limited citizens committee to set the guide-recreational facilities with the general lines for the would-be corporation (Pleue .ee KESA/ A4) Soviet sub sinks in west Atlantic WASHINGTON (AP) -A nu- clear-powered. nuclear-armed Soviet submarine, apparently doomed from the moment 1t ex~nenccd a fire and explosion last Fnday morning, sank and was abandoned by us crew early Monday in the western Atlantic Ocean. The SoV.et news agency Tass said no lives were lost when the so-called Yankee-class submarine went down around 4 a.m. EDT, and the Pentagon said it bad no reason to doubt that statement. The vessel sank in waters 18.000 feet deep about 1.060 nautical miles to the cast of Cape Hatteras. N.C.. or roughly 600 miTei east of the island of Bei:muda. A Soviet merchant ship, which earher had been artempting to tow the vessel. collected survivors and remained in the area on Monday, the Pentagon said Two ranking U.S. m1htary officers said th e si nking posed nq threat to the envi.ronment, even though the sut>- manne wa~ powered by two nuclear reactors and earned up to 16 nuclear. tipped, SS-N-6 balhsuc missiles. The warheads atop one of tho~ missile could very well have been blown into the sea and sank when the submanne expcnenced a fire and (Pleue eee SUB/ A4) Nicaraguans claim American adviser captured CB.lifornia lotto gam.e to start up next week f MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) - The Defense Ministry said Monday night that a man who survived the downing of a Contra rebel supply plane in southern Nicaragua 1dent- 1fied himself as a U.S. military adviser in El Salvador. and the three dead crewmen as Amencans. The ministry said in a statement that the survivor of the Sunday afternoon incident had identified himself as Eugene Hafenfuf, 35, and (Pleueeee U .S./A4) SACRAMENTO (AP) -State officials Monday confirmed an Oct. 14 stanup date for overdue computer lotto. expected to open a new lottery era marked by spasms of gambling statewide over the largest jackpots in U.S. history. Lotto "will be one of the most 1mponant games that the California lottery will ever offer." Director Mark Michalko said at a Capitol news conference. Betting on the new game will stan statewide at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday. Oct. 14. dunng, promotional ceremonies in 19 ci ties, M ichalko said. The first weekly drawing will be at 7:58 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 18, closing a hve half-hour TV show in Los Angeles, dcscnbed by lottery official Susan Clark as a "star-studded spec- tacular." The kickoff date for-lotto. long- awaited by gambling enthusiasts and heavily promoted by th~ lottery, had been kept a closely guarded secret by state officials. An official with the company that will operate the system, GTECH Corp., disclosed the date in an interview Friday. Broken water main rips hole in street on Laguna hillside By ROBERT HYNDMAN OflMDellr .......... A residential street 1n Laguna Beach wi ll be closed for at least two weeks while workers repair a 20-foot hole npped open by a broker water main. · Work crews were to inspect the damage Monday along the 11 00 block of Summit Drive and map out plans to repair the road. said Terry Brandt, the city's director of municipal ser- vices. "We're hopeful we can get things repaired within two weeks. but it may take as long as three. We won 't know unttl we get a better look at the damage." Brandt said this morning. In the meantime. traffic in both directions will be bloc ked. The main burst at about 11 p.m. Saturday, flood ing the street and the causing the road to sink about I 0 feet Once the hillside collapsed, much of the now spilled down the canyon .• No one was inJurcd and no homes were damaged. but a police officer reported a close caJI when he re- sponded to the scene j ust in time to sec th.e cliff cpllapse next to his parked patrol car. I The new game is designed to gradually become the mainstay of the state operation, as it has an other sta tes. Lotto 1s expected to bnng in about $800 million the first year. Machalko said. Sales of sc ratch-off tickets have sagged by two-thirds since they began a year ago. The decline was expected as player interest wa ned. but was less severe than in other lottenes. Despite decreasing sales, the lottery celebrated ias first year Oct. 3 as the third largest such operation in the world. Of$2.06 billion in revenue. the Theodore Frank required 34 percent share of about $800 million -together with admin- 1stra11ve savings of about $75 million -will go to edu cation. said M1chalko Meanwhile, the S 15.2 m1ll1on1ack- pot awarded to Eve pcncer in the scratch-off ucket games' "Big pan" was the biggest U.S. lone~ pme during the penod, M1chalko ~•d Combined sales of lotto and con- tinuing scratch-off games arc ex- pected to gradually make the loller) the largest 1n the world "-Ith annual sales ofS 2.5·b1lhon to SJ billion The stan of lotto was origjnall> forecast for September, but was delayed b} extensive testing of the complex S)'~tem of nearl} 5.000 tenmnlsstatew1de. which will be used to log bets into t""an computers in Wh1t11er and Sacramento. It's the largest system of 11s type an the world. M1chalko said tate officials have described the delay as exercising proper caution but representatives of GTECH . tht• Rhode lc;land firm that won a $1 ~I million contract to set up the (Pleaeeeee LOTTO/A4) New death hear~g for Frank delayed By tbe Associated Press \ A Judge accepted a defense request Monday to delay the start of a nc~ penalty tnal for Theodore Frank. whoSt death sentence for the 1978 torture-murder of a 2-)ear-old girl was overturned last )ear Defense attorney Willard W1kscll told Orange County • upcnor ( oun Judge John -J. Ryan hr needed more time to stu dy the prosecution's wnt- ten response'> H> numerous pretnal motions. The gra\-h:ured. tx-arded Frank 51. clad 1n a mustard-colored Jail 1umpsu1t. ans"ered "Yes" several tames as the Judge asked whether he understood that his nght to a spttd)' proceeding was being waived. R)an rescheduled the heanng for Oct. 13. also agreeing to W1kselrs request that Frank be allowed to wear (PleaHeee DEATH/Al) 'Engl~sh-Only' proposition.getting short shift LISA MAHONEY Opponents failing to muster campaign. see impact on ~ervices for immigrants Oranae County --Yotcrs may be suri>ri5Cd' to sec Proposition 63 when they 10 to the poll Nov 4. The proposed constitutional amendment. which would proclaim EnaJ1 h the 0Qic11J lanaua£c of C'ah- fomia, has been laratlY overlooked amid the furorovcrmort high-profile propos.it1ons deahna with govern- ' mcnt salaries, toxic rqulations and lhe identification of individuals in- fected wtth 1 virus that causes acquired immUl'\C deficiency syn- drome. Thoulh opposed by Oov. Ocora~ Deukmcj1an. tale 1ehools uper- tntendeht Bill Ho1n11nd Los Anecln Mayor Tom Bradley. only two Or- J anae County politicians, scnaton Paul Carpenter, 33rd District, and William Campbell, 3 ht District, have spoken qainst the proposition which would require the state Uais- laturc to ~rvc and enhtncc the role or tnaJilh and permit any resident orbusinc:nownerin thutate to file suit over laws they believe diminish or ianore Enafilh u the common laftluaee of CaGfomiL None have spOken in 1ts favor. And, thoush dmounc:icd as divilivt by lht Onnee County Human Rela- t1ons Comm1ss1on. the propo 1t1on was dcnly 11nored by the Board of upcrvisors when its members voted to oppose three other ballot mca urcs lut week. For the record, the measure as favored by Thomas Riley and op- posed by Harriett Wieder. Bruce Nestande saad he is und«acfed and supcrvison Ralph C'lark and Roecr Stanton refused to return telephone anquines on the subJCCt Nmnde, wl1o ua tcd vote~ opposina the Gann lnauauve. the LaRouchc AID lnit1a11ve and the Toiucs lnit1a11vc-propo 1uon 61 . 64 and 6S -said he did not hring up the English only amendment because. unlike the others. ll has no ddl'cct on county government. Fo cus ON THE Nrws Propo 1tion 63 opponent say P' ~­ a.ae ofthc amendment cou ld result m the ehm1nat1on of county-huro b1I-orpnized oppo 1taon 1n Orana~ inaual social wort<cn.. health pcrwn--County, le than a month bcfo~ the nel and others. Creneral Election. Wedged as at ., between lhttc The Onngc County Coaht1on loudly debated propo lltons. Prop-gamst Propo\1tion 63 include the o!utaon 6 l hl1 only rcccntly attracted (Pleue ... SftOLlall/ A2) ' ' OrMQeCoMt DAIL.V PILOT/ Tue.day, Ootober 7, 1Me ENGLISH ONLY MEASURE OVERLOOKED .•. ham Al Amnan C1v1l Libcrtic' lJmon. tl't LeaaueofWomcn Vote~. the Le-aaue of United U&11n American Cit"en . Lot Amaao1 of Oranac County, the Latino Women's Network and the Otan,e County Human Kcla11on<1 Commttl1on It has no budact to ~peak of and orpnt1er Let Podolak of Orange said sht hopes to raise enouah money for an mformat1onal Oyer. Thouah a few 'pro' and 'no' brochures, bumpor tuckers and s11ns from state-level campaign group are sure to find their way into Oronfe County: the onl~ scheduled activ1 y on Proposition 63 u an Oct. 14 debate 'P<>Mored by the Human Relations Commi sion 11 7 p.m. at the Corbin Center in Sant.a Ana. The lack of intrrc~t surroundma Propo itaon 63 suits 1ti. supponcr\ just fine. Buoyed by the case of collecuna the 600.000 signatures required to place the measure on the bal101 (the actual number of s1gna-turcs' topped I million) and by a.Sept. 13 Los Angeles Ti'l"e poll indicating 70 percent of voters support 11. there's no reason to launch an expensive promotional campatgn here or anywhere else 1n the state, said alifom1a English Cam- pa ian Chairman tank) Diamond. In the unlikely event those oppos1 1ng the propos1t1on muster enough' money to grab 'otcr a11cn11on ( ali- fomia English has the resources of w. parent, U.S. Enghsh, 10 wage 1h own media campaign. he \aid. Those on oppo .. ing ~ides of thl' propos1 t1on have d1fTcrl'nt ideas 8\ to why it has generateJ \o little <:On· trovcrs). Diamond "lay~ n's because mos1 votcri.. 1ncludin& tho~ who come from non-l;nalt h peak1na back- arounds. aarec that the EnJh h fanauaac is bccomina diluted by bihnaual balJoti.. b11tn~ual education and other ~cll-meanina but m1s- au1ded 10\Crnmcnt CfTOn lO 3 ISt non-Engh'ih pcakina C'ahfom1an~ and that someth1na \hould be done about 1t. But David Hamlin, Southern Cali- fornia Campa1•n coordinator for Cahforni•ns United Against 63. $8YS voters simply havo11°t lookcd beyond the proposition's title to sec how racist and discriminatory it 11. Sance on the urface, u seems only to reinfo~ a fact -that EnaJ1sh 1s the primary taniuaic JO Cahfomia - It's not surpns1n1 that "everybod) tends to uppon Propos111on 63 on fi~t blush," Hamlin said. What they don't realm: 1s that thl' amendment. could bring an end to bilingual cmeraency telephone opc-r- ators. roc1al workers. coun intoT· prC'tcr\ and non-En,hsh 1n\truc.:11onal brochu res on subJect!r like 'ichool enrollment and childtl'n \ 'acu- na11ons. S4id Randall Wick. pn:\1dent of the Orange ( ount)' C hapter of the AO\Cne'an Cl\ 11 L1bcr11es l ln1on of Southern Cali fornia. .. An) 1nd1,1dual or group that doc!in't like what the government " doing can file a lawsull and cause the government to !>pend a lot of mone} defending its actions." he .. a1J Though the wording ol the prop- os1t1on only give!) general d1rcc11o ns to the Legislature 10 pre~rve and enhance the role off nali~h. Diamond says the PAii.tit of the propos1uon would not.end cmeraency services - only bahnaual blJlot where not required by federal law. It would al.a permit chaf\ae 1n billnaual tduc111on proaram • he said. Sugtsttoni that ll could do more are tht re uh ofa "campaian ofdccc1l, of dirty tri ks, of 'Kare tac11c and of fear." he said. Otamond said he worked with former tate Sen. S.J. Hayakawa on the EnJhsh only amendment because he believes the Enalish languaac is "under very serious threat. "There 1 a pouibahty of a second official lanauagc 1n this state. I sec thai. as a terrible, temble danacr." Diamond says that bilingual a • 1 t nee 10 non-Enahsh speaking 1m- m1arants d()(S them a disservice by ehmina11na the need to learn English. His opponents point to a I 98S Rand \orp. survey on Hispanic houM'hold~ that shows that over 95 pcrcen~ of first-generation Mexican- Amcricans arc. proficient JO Engl ir;h. and only SO percent of second genera11on Hispanics even learn Spanish C'rillc'> al'to say the proposed amendment docs nothing to help recent 1mm1grants learn English, thuu~h there 1s a c'Jing need for more Engh sh as a Sccon Languaac classes . ··what arc we going to do." a'\ked Orange ounty'~ Podolak. whose grandparents were Russian immi- grants who spoke only Yiddish when they arnved in the United States. "Say you can't speak to us until you learn English?" DEATH HEARING FOR FRANK DELAYED ••• · From Al c1v1han cloth!:' a.t.Juturl loun JP· pea ranees. Frank. who had a h1\tor} nf child moles1a11on. wa., {OO\ 1t.ted for thl· March 14. I 971<. abdulllOn, nwle'lta· uon. tonure and 'itrungulat1on ol Amy Sue Se1t1. "ho\C bod) "a'> found two day!> later 1n the fopang11 Can)on area of Lm .\nti\Cle'> < ounl) he was 1aken from her aunt"1i hou-.c 1n amanllo. 50 milt"'> nonhwt"?I of Los Angele<> · Ouwdc coil.CL 'W ~ '),rnJ hl'. agreed Frank must remained Lun- fined. He added hl' "Ill pre..ent reasons at the pc-nail) pha\t.' retnal why Frank shou!d be kl·pt all'e "My pos1t1on 1s that he -.houldn t be released from pn.,on. hut hl' shouldn't be ell.<.'t.utcd ·· W1k\dl \a1J .. l·th1nk 1f he \I.a'.:> kt ou t ot }ail he would probahl~ mok'>t again When a">ked tf I rank "-J' rl·-morscful. .. , eah he n·al111.·., thJt he' hurt not onl} his '1c11m\ hut thl· famil) of v1cllm'> 'r cah hl' \'>orr) ·· Ventur} ( ount) lkpul\ l>1'ttmt Attorney Thoma'> J Hut1.hins ha' u1d he w1ll tr) IO present 10 Wllnl'\\C\ who will !>how hank\ hl\tur~ ul d11ld ., molesulllon. I he trial "-J'> mo\ cd to Orange County bccau'c of puhlic1t} 1n Ventura Count~ W1kscll said l1l' \I.Ill pn·..cnt ahout 1:1 half-do1,•n w1tnl''>\t'\ I le wouldn't de..cribc the nature ofthl'lr tc\t1mony but \<ltd ii could 1ndudl' p!.y<.holos•· u1I 1rst1mony regarding Frank'\ life prctcd1ng his att'> of mole5.ta t1on I rank \l.as!lcnlentctl totleath 1n the ga.. chamber. but the ( allforn1a ~upreme . _( ourt tJ\ er1urned the '>l'Ah.'An'. lai.1 )Car on ground~ tha r ran I>.·., \lo<riting'> about mole\llOng 1. h1ldren "'erl' ~11cJ illegal~ from ht., home and u'>Cd aga1n'>t him The high lllUrt. hU\l.l'\.er Uf)hcld r rank"\ rnn· VIC:tlOll Hutc-htns doc .. n'1 bcl1evl' the "'rit· 1n~' arc ncc.:c\\ary 1n the ne"' ncnah) pha'>C ··\\\· tnkr\ ll."\:d a number of the iurur-. that paniupateJ 111 thJI lir\I mal Jnd l'ath o t them rnent111nl'd that thl "riling'> d1dn·1 pla> J \l'f) 1mnunant part JI all ··ht· ..aid ··I he) "ere rcall) loolo.1nga1 thl· nature cit till' murtlcr and 1h1.· t1irturl· ol 1h1\ hllll' girl· - llUtlhlll\ \,I\\ till· flrD\ClUllllO GAME 4 I WEE K 4 I DAY 3 seek' the death penalty based on the fact~ of the murder and a history of child molestation by Frank, formally branded a mentally disordered sex offender. who was released from Atascadero State Hospital about two months before the Seitz killing. WIDOW ••. From Al a store 10 purt.hasc a pac k of cigarette\ "'Herc·., a gu y who was 39 year\ old and mo\I of those years had been spent prcpann* for thi s moment, for his big break. • said Wentworth of F1nMy. "And suddenly. his life's sn uffed out:· T hrasher. a seven-year veteran of 1he Police force. ~uc;tained head and fat ial 101uricc; Police said he ~a' released from the hospital Monda) H1ndr\. who suffered head and chest •nJUrll''>. remained at Fountain Valk\ Rl'g1onal ho'>p11al Monda> 1n stabli: cond1t1on 84 55 43 24 30 ' ~ A VEAH ... Al FlUEMT HERE . ( CHECK OUT OUR LATEST WINNERS OM A4. YOU COULD IE 11xn NERI ARE TODAY 'S NUMBERS. • Ru ('S ano '°'O.v ·o ntn, .... gott e ore 0,.. vCu' r. C" •' cord ,., J our HOHi ~E 642 4333 9 5 /, F o~ fof WIN GO informo11or 1111J Plllt & TWA .. I 17 ' Mostly fair skies this afternoon I.ow CllOud• dutlnl Ille nlaftt Ind _.,morning hcMn wttl clNt to..,.. Ngh CllOudlnl9I M CMMI •Ill f81r tk!M owr tM Orange Cout, IM NettoMI W .. ther a.Mee Mid. HIQhe tochly wtM rangt from 17 to 72 at the be9eNI and from 74 to 71 intend I.owe toniOftt..., 'M09 from 55to12 Southern CW!for"'-rnountelne wttl be partty cbldy with lsol•ted thower• and thund«lhowtrt during the •ttttnoon IOd .v.nlng hourt Hight will bt In tM eo., lowt from 32 to 45. O...rtt wtll be partly cloudy with llolet"' thundet1tocm1 during the attttnoon enct·~. Upper deMrt hight wlff ranee ffom 80 to 86. loWer deler't hight from 81 to 95. Lowa Witt r.,. ftom IM 401 to eoa. , Southwee, to weet wind• 10 to 11 knota wtM b'Qw through tM In~ coutal wattt•, ~ • w.aterty aweM of 2 to 4 feet. Breaker• wllt reach 5 to 7 feet on tome w.at-faclng beachft. U.S. Tempe 12 47 12 t2 .. 16 .. ,. ~1 Surf Forecut Tldea u 22 • 1 0 I 34 21 u 02 IUll ,._ Ioele, M I &2 a m and Mii Ml2tpm ~ tlMe 100., M 1121 am encl -. .. t IOprn JUDGE CENSORS BALLOT ARGUMENT ••• From Al 11al 1rac1 . Through a swiature cam· pa11n. the group forced city officials to put the development before vote rs ·ma specnrl election Nov. 25. 1 The challenged ballot argument, to be mailed 10 all rcg1<1tcred voter in the city. stated that traffic condition" throughout the entire cit y will wor~n 1f the proJecl stands. City leaders cnallenged that ~tate· mtnl, but Scovill e ru led 11 was "an op1n1on" and not subject 10 a test ol truth. Scovi lle did not~> whether he bche\C the \lntcmcnt to he true or fal..c In anotha pon1on ofthl' argument undlock Slated that traffic 1n locona del Mar "111 worsen despite a multi· million d<>Uar b) pa\s the Irvine Co. ha~ promised 10 burtt amund1 1Tc 'iea~1de rnmmunll)'. C 11) leadcri. did not challenge the \ta1emcn1 but did challenge a referen- ce 11 made to envi ronmental docu- ments prepared fnr the expansion proJell. Scoville <>idl'd with the Cit) and ordered the refl'rcncc dcl~ ··So we lo!>t the reference Thal OK .. ~1d Beck ·\ statrmcnt c.oneern1 ng the amount ul open 1.pac.e at Newpon Center was also ordered cut from the argument. Scoville ruled that Gnd- lock's claim 1ha1 the expansion plan -would RSUlt ll'I a toss ofopcn space wa\ false. The Judge al!.o deleted a final !>latcment. which claimed that the S40 million in road improvement promised by the Ir vine Co. consisted ofland value and not actual construc- 11on costs Beck. however. admitted the state- ment was incorrect before the city tiled its suit. He dcscnbed 11 as a ··s1up1d m1nakc'" on has pan. BofA conslders merglng wlth Flrst Interstate ~AN FRAN\ISCO (AP) Beleaguered BankAmerica Corp .. the r;ia11on'1. second-largest hankin_gcom· pany. said Monday 1t was considering a $2.77 billion mcrget proJ>Osal from the small er First Interstate Bancorp. Announcement of the potential merger came al the end of BankAmerica d1m.:ton' mon1hl> meeting and after the stock market closed for the day. Under the tcrmi. of the proposal. cac.h share of BankAmerica common 'ltock would be exchanged for .22 ofa share of rir'it lnter\tate common ~~~~~E Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE 1 IQ.,,,.., !Mir ' ( .Jlle ,...,,_. (.A ,,.. I'! l•t" fl • •!>60 1_.,.10 IA<-lo• I.I' 'llf>llJ 'itock and one cihare of preferred stock w11h an estimated value of S6 per share b)' Fir\I ln 1ers1a1e·s 1nv~!tlment banker. Goldman Sachs & Co. BankAmerica stock closed up 8711, cents toS I 2.2S a share Monday o n the Ne"' York Stock Exchange. F1ri.1 Interstate fell 371'1 tents10 $54.75. Based on current market pnces. the BankAmerica shares would be ex- changed for First Interstate valued at approximately $924 million and preferred stock worth S 1.85 billion. John Keane, a BankAmerica vice president, declined to comment on the value of the merger. He said the bank-company ha'i asked for funher 1nformauon from First Interstate before at takes a pos1t1on on the offer. Part1c1pat1ng 1n the board mcctina with BankAmerica were its financial and legal advisers. Salomon Bros. Inc. and Wachtell, Lipton. Rosen &. Katz, the San Francasco-basc:d com- pany said in a statement. Anhur J. Montgomery. a spokes- man for First Interstate. was not al has office. according to a woman answering the telephone. Deity ptlot Dellfttr 11 Guerenteed -y Ftldey n you 00 c1e ... 1eoe~ 6<12 5878 --& ..io10r .. 1 M2 •32t Justcall 642-6086 -,.... 'fOUI .,.. oY ~ 30 p '" cal blllof• 7 p '" "'° 'fOUI C.Ol>y .... be -....1<1 r,.,,.,f ,, 1 1111 (/o&•'9f' (<Al! Pt11J1 """Q G.omP11ny N, ri•IN\. \lf,.,,,.'I i'llU\H1tr.ont .,,_tfJntl rTtllfet Of edYtttl'M '""''" ~ .. ,. 1 "'•Y be •eptodutlKl .. ntiout lj>f'l.131 pei m~ '1• c.i1..c;11.gr t ow~ !J<tr.<>'·0 ~'H• POllAll" rA<:l el r_,..,,. M... C.a olOfl•I IUPS 10 80()1 6"0.C.11p1oon by._.,,..., '!I~'> Pl" pe1IO(I oY,, .~ S7 r)() "'"'"'hl\I ""' ,. • J"' t •,1 I» "f Pll()f "''" *' t<.ll 11 tomi......i ,,,. 119., r ,,... ~ ""~ lly ,,,. o. .. yo c.,,.,, Pv~""'ll c, ..... , .• ,, " .... ~,..,,,, .,. C>UO'<V..0 ,,._, llY<>;;;t ,,.,., A "'O"' '19<>"9' .01«• "s>Ubll""9c! S.l"'Oer- !11"'.l 5ut'°4y\ I, .. p<o<<~l C>U'*""'Q P'!l'>I "et ))C) Wft• Rat f,, ...... p" Bo• 1S6/l Gott•"'""' C.• '"'" 91626 VOL. 71, NO. 280 .. What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your message will be recorded, transcribed and de- livered to the appropriate editor. Sa!U<Oey al\Cl ISutl<Mr II rou oo noi ·-.. your ~ by 1 1 m cal belOre 10 I l'I 4tl1CI yOUI COPy d be-9d The same 24-hour answering service may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letten column must include their name and telephone number for verification. Clrculetlon Tele~ Tells us what's on your mind. • Fall Tweeds A fresh in terpreta ti on of updated co/orations and patterns distinguish our superb selection of tweed sport coats. Pictured is a classic grey herringbone interwoven with subtle shades of green and la vendar . We invite yoo to view our collection. Gentlemen's Oothang Inspired by Tradition •