Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-11-05 - Orange Coast PilotNB incumbents rebuff challenger~ ~~~~A.9!4~'·&1,. ............ -faetion ., ao9DT HYNDMAN ............... --"·,-- Incumbents DonaJd 1rau• and Evelyn Han tU«eiffully dcfc!Mkd cha lie~ frum wcll·publieized o_pponent1 to win re-e&eetion to the Newpon BCach Cny Council, ll«'Ord1na to early tlecuon tttumt J0tn1na them •~ntly will be cooncll newcomers Clarence .. Bu, .. Turner and PhilSanlOne, whowtllfill the acattdKa11ofl1d:w Hathttaod Bill At«. both who detidtd not.to ate~ rt<lecuop h Althouih Ntwport BeAch can4idates are drawn from 41strk ts, 1 ey art tleckd at lar.r. •• .. . . (P..._ Me JlfSWPOaT/A1) n Mesa V'ottng BJ PAUL UClllPIJEY ............... Co.ea Mm "*" appattntly re- jecjed the aincliclae111 of tlow arowda ldv()(ltes T~ and tt.at to City Hill two mtn Who CQJOYtd the bldtna or dtvrlopnJ Om11e Ambu~y. v.-hose family hau &ona h111ory 1n theclly, ~ppartd &O have outpolled 12 od~r cUdidatn aRer vowina dunna the campeaan to forn\lll the "fttr and propepnda" Spttld by the low·11owth aroup Mesa rt1on. . Wi&ll a1loul 1 1h1rd of lbt tNallOU coueted Tuaday niahtt .utbu~ "'-~"'-IM retlof"t• ..a . ..,....n1W .Ull vota. llUner .. p ~ Buff'a had s.nared I, 9t9 votet for lbe otha' open teal on the fhc IHI couatal Bu,._ a Ptannina comm1Nt0M1f0r two yarf, tn.iowd &he bect•na of ouflDi• .Mayar 'Norma Hnuos Ud fonnerMayor Ed Mcfatlaad Holdina onto .third paact: was Slndra Hanulton. ~hoalsotrhkized (...._Mell&aA/A7) WEDNFSDAY, NOVEMBERS, 1986 LOS ANGfl..ES (AP)-California over Republican challenger · . Ed votm ·re-elected Gov. George Deu· Zschau. · kme11an. and t fcatcd Chief Justice Whilt votors pve Dcukmejian the Rose Bird by landshde marJJn · -Opportunity to appoint a ~ con. Tuesday. while Democratic U.S Sen. scrvat1ve mijont) to the Cahfom1a Alan Cranston held a razor-trun lead -Supreme Court by oustm& Bird and at California Badham Scientists say a giant gl • d comet once struck the . 1 es rth • .revertlnglts __ _ _ _______ ......._ ;:lcfHMd./M to easy. Keeping the sizzle fn lunch and dinner menus la easy when you preserve fiesta food& for manana./D1 Nation Alaska leada tlie nation In teacher pay and spend- ing on education./ Al World Captured American Eugene Hasenfus tells the Nicaraguan People' a Tribunal that, If con- victed, he wm ask the court to have com- . -victory lb PAUL ARCIUPLEY °' .............. Rep. Robtrt Badham won a sixth term to lhe House of Representatives Tucsdaf fol10Yo>1ng pnmary and cen· eral eltttton races that wtrc incrras- 1n&Jy rancoro\ls as clcct1on <fa)' neared. With 30 l>ercent of the ballots · counted late Tuesday night. Badham was cn.iisina to c~sy 1ctoiy with 62 -ptrr~n4-M t~ \4tC-• ---::.---~--- He wd he wasn't "'omcd about challenger Bruce Swnntr. but rt· sentcd the tone of the Democrat's campa1an. "I really didn't have a ircat deal Qf concern that I wouldn't win." Badham said "The thing t~t has -pmton:t A"! ---:----+..e>01Ae=iwne..aoolUUJ1ULC~:wai11..::::~ Sports · nas11ncss of the campa11n" Sumner mounted his chalJtnJe after Wlnntn& a difficult wnte-1n campatgn against Art Hoffmann, a · d1sople of political mavcnck Lyndon LaRouche. • • r1es , ... 25 CE TS Fountain Valley-Edison matchup heads schedule of key high school foot- baU13ames Frlday./C1 INDEX umner. as chairman of the county Democratic Part). wa embarra scd to learn the only candidate to file for U.S. Rep. Robert Badham amllea at Westin (PleueeeeBADHAll/A9) South Cout Plua Hotel u he &Hdea to an _..,,...,..,._,, ............ eaey Ylctory o•er hl• Democratic challenaer, Bruce Sumner. Tuesday. J WA HlNGlO. CAP) -Demo- crats bro t the Rcpubl\ans' s111:-.)ear hold on .the · l'ate Tu£~y •nd ,iervcd noti« o President R~n Jblt cir midterm clccuon v1C1.0rY __ ._.;.J mC3nS his las\ twu )'can 10 office will 1Tqu1rc -thc art of JO"crnmcnt b)' comprom1~ ... Democrats p1ded up Republican seau 1n Maryland, F1onda, orth Carolina. Gcoraia and South Oak.ot.a and Mid the Dcmoerat1c teat in Colorado. Add1t1onall~. Democrats led GOP incumbent> 1n North Da- kota and Wa hmaton. and had moved into the lead m N~ada. where the Repubhean incumbent 1s retmna. ' As polls closed on the W~t (out natt Rcpubhcan uader Bob Dok ~tMtth<",......,·~ crat~ \\OU Id win controiof the ')cn.ite. " )Cl • It u qwc\t1on o w et er 11 will bt SJ or SS" Democrats. he s~ud. ··11 couldbe5 ... 5 orS'-47. We Ju t lo t a couple." said a dc,JCCted Dole. · Republican began the day trying to dd'cnd a ft111le 53:47 maJontf. When the votes came m, Ocmo- (Pl eue eee DEMOCRATS/ A9) Advice end Games--86 Bulletin Board A3 Buslnes. C6-7 Classified C8-10 Comics B7 Officials denY college district in finaricial bind Death notice C 10 Entertainment 85 Food 01-8 Mind & Body 8 1-3 Opinion a.. Poftee Log A3 Public Notfees CS, 10 Sports C1-5 Televlston 85 Weather A2 By ROBERT BARKER Of ... DllLl'tlt 11Jf' The Coast Community College Oistnct is not tn the C'-treme financial bind that's depicted in a report by the chairman of a st.a tr evaluatin1 team. local college official said Tuesday. In an inttnm report that followed an accreditation ,tudy of Golden We t College hl\t month, chairman Tom Clementuaid thcd1\tnct was in scriou financial cond111on and not many people knew about 1t. "It 1!1 of great concern to the v1s1ttn& team that so few people al Golden West arc aware of the scnow. financ&al condition of lhe district ." Clement wrote m the report. • .. Only a fe~ top adnumstnator\ and union kadcN> seem to full) undrr· stand thr imphcallon of the deficit 1pcnding pattern of the d1stnct which started approximately five )cars ago. "EJch year appro'1matd) l m1lhon 1s ,expended 1n e•ccss ot income. At the current ratt' of c\pcnditure. ttie di<otnrl will run totall) out of reserve ~11h1n one or two )ears unlcs\ thcr<' is ~me 'intenicntion to reduce e\pend1rurc~. increase income, or both .. ·( hancellor David Brownell ot the < oast Community 09'tncl that opcr· ates Orange CoaC>t College in Costa Mesa. Golden West Colkgc 1n Hunt· 1n ton Beach and Coa. t1tnc O't"· Jacobsens reunited with ' . ./ hugs, tears in Germany munll) Collr r based m Fountain Valle.>'. acknowlcd cd T uc~v that the d1s1rict hh gonl' through d1ffiC"Uh time and hai. had to dip into rc'lt'r\C., the last four )rar. ~cau\C ot \lt'epl) decltning enrollment and inadequate state tundtn But he claimed the d1\tr1Cl \.\.hi~ h no -01"cd Imm Rl ,000 full·t1mc.' \tudtnt 1n IQRI lo 51000 1n 1<186 ha\ taken !ltCr'" to 'hore \Ir the finam:iaJ dram on 1t' annual S95 m1llton budget The dhtnct. he 1~. expects to wind 4>P with a better endtni balance th1 )'car (about S2 m1llton) than 1t d1d la t )ear. Brownell, \!rho also clauncd that official ha"e made rc~tcd effort\. to keep all 1c .. c1 of the colltac community 1nformc..-d of.tli financial .. 1ate. said tht' d1stnct has not onl) l'iet'n -hit hard b. tit ticchn1ng enrollment. but l<oo b)' the dry ma up (Pl ....... COAST I A.2} Sellers guilty of rape, murder T£\'E MARBL f • LLBRS CONVIC'lltD IN MURDER-RAPE ••• fteaAl • .dlillncie ofpnolt. • Sel&cn. described as a .. dC<ltnt human bei"'· who dtd one terrible thina.. by l\is attomc)i. did not immediately react when the verdict wu ind but then ~med to break down as M hUllfd h1~ tearful w1rc. Mostly sunny days expeGt ed "I am completely shocked and • disappointed," teid derensc attorney Jenni ft( KclJer. who said she felt close to faintina when the verdict was read. Keller said she could find "no way in lotic or reason" for juron to convict Sellen offirst-dcgtte murdtt and rape. She had araued for sttond· dcaree murckr. Deputy District Attorney Rick r--..---lf cocaYinttJbrors that Sellen raped the' "WOman even tbouah the sexual assault occurrtd afterncr death, declined to comment on the jury's verdict. Likewj1e, the V\ctuu's mother. Maxine Andcnon, said She would . __. __ ._ wait until after the·penalty phase of ....-.....-.-,..:.-•be 1011 "I'd irate· to· JCOperd12e anytbina now," she said. bOdy and plattd n neatl)' on a bed. live y~ars because Oranac County The mother, a resident ofSah La.kc King told jurors. Shcntrs finacrpnnt experts _were City who apparently talked with her The defense a~ued that Sellers unable to match pnnts lifted from the daughter by telephone only minutes never intended to kill the woman and crime scene with Seller's prints. before she was killed., appeared near only went to the apartment on the Sellers.. who was interviewed by tears as she left the counroom. m1s1u1ded assumption that police at the time of the kilhn&. was Savannah Anderson. engaged to be Anderson was somehow romanti-not arrested until 1984 when an mamcd at the time of her death. was cally interested in him. Irvine pohce detective re<hecked bludgeoned 1n a bedroom of her "This was a raic kilhnafollo~cd by Seller's pnnts against those found 10 lrv1De apanment on May ls. 1979. a psychotic act of mtercou.rsc wtth a the apanment. Her body was discovered later that corpse," said Keller · after jurors At the time of· his arrest. Sclltn day by her fiancce and police. returned their guilty verdict. -lived in Brea with his wife and ycar- K.ing araued that Sellers broke into KeJler said .that Sellers.. who mar-old chtld and was employed as a tow the woman's apartment with the · ried a h11h school sweetheart from truck driver. hmm of l"llJ>il11 Ind murdenna the oniOa year after the-murocr ana KCTier said her client has no pnor 22-~r-old woman, who lived alone. fathered a child. wasd1SQncntcd from m m.inal record and was never ar- TM l'OS('Cutor ~id Se~rs -who lack of lcep and a diet of . rested dunng the five-year hiatus. · h-"--+---¥o<Oil(ed~ho-apar\mcAt ~plox as a~ · -" • · ... · security guard -killed Anderson. She accused the prosecutor of A psycholoa.ist employed by the returned several hours later to have wagin1 an emotional fight against her deferise team said Seller's wife-who sex with the" corpse and then went out clientand'claimcd that jurors were in sobbed while clutching her husband for breakfast with a friend tears at one point during the trial after in the courtroom -was stunned by Evidence presented durin& tha tnal being shown photographs of tbe the verdict. showed that before engaging in sex. victim The penalty phase could last up to Seller's washed the woman's battered The .lllUrdercasc went unsolved for two weeks. both attorneys airecd. em pa • 10 7't .. .. _..., 7f .. 47 44 41 .. n ., 71 ., I\ • ,. u , .. 11 " .. • 0, f . COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT ••• JACOBSENS.REUNITED WITH HUGS •• ~ Jl'romAl of tideland oil money dut to the plummeting pnces of oil. The d1stnct has received $2.8 million less than anticipated thLS year because of a fallofTtn qil roya1ties, he iaid Bul money expected to be. acncratcd from Propositroo SJ will pay for some sorely needed construc- tion and maintenance, Brownell sasd. The distnct also intends to cut much of the deficttby ~rurung costs at teleV.sion staiwn KOCE at the Gold- en-West Cone1e. Brownell said an- nual spendin1 has been slashed from $3.1 millio11 to less than $1 milhon. The distnct also 1s ta.kma steps to lease vacant land. consolidate oper- attons. cmbark onjosnt use programs, advertise from wtthin to. fill JOb vacancies and is u mg "creau vn y" in reassignments. Brownell s~ud. The comments on the d1stnct's ~ financial standings developed from a visit to Golden West College by an accrcd1dat1on team from the Western Associauon of Schools al)d Collqes. Clements, the team's cha1rman. ~the college has a "very s&onJ" telcblna stafhnd tbe school does tts basic function of instruction "very well;'' Golden West President Fred Gar- oa said members of the team v1sttcd 170-plus classes. 1nterv1ewed 250 students and failed to get a ncgauve comment about the quahlty of in- struction from a single student. 1 The report also clatmed that ad- m1nistrau ve upheavals over the last few years has resulted 1n a larae number of d1 gruntled people at Golden WesL • "A general perception of the ac- creditation team ts that people 1n all From Al release of other Americans missing in const1tuenC1es 1n this district have l.cbanon. been so lllVOl vcd wttfi survival m the last few years mat there has been tittle, "f hope to God !My'lJ be ~omina if any, planning done at any level -out soo~ and by God I'll be do~ board. distnct, or campus." there wit~ you. (reporters) loving . h them. too, he sa1d. Browtuna said t e '~"'!ult ,~ pert Six Americans -..,d 13 othtr wa traced to the adrmnas~ration of, ·fort1gners remain n.iuina in l.cba· fonner-Golden West ~dent L« -noii. Kidnappers have said they had Stevens who was reassi&ned 1n 1985 killed one of the Amencans. tbouah as vice chanccllo1 of business affairs 00 body was found. for the dtstnct. Jacobsen said Anderson and Steven~ who was appotnted prcsi-Sutherland "arc doing very well." dent in 1977, had received a "no Jacobsen, director of the American confidence" vote from faculty mem-University Hospital in Beirut, the be rs. -ORANGE ~ .... COAST ... ,r.1 MAtN OFFICE :no 1111•• a.,'' c.r .. Je ...... c• ai!t4.adllr-&• ISIO Co\la-G4 lllt1e c.apital of Lebanon, was kidnapped i~ Beirut on May 28:1985. tle told r~~w much be missed bascbalJ ,lhd University of California at Los Angeles football games. • " "What I'm actually tf)'ina to do is get a scat on the bench for the next UCLA game," he said. ..For a IUY who's looked at death for the last 18 months. these are the memones that kept me'°'"" .. .. I'm unemplo)ed., Im broke. I need a Job," Jacobsen said Jokingly. Hts son. Eric, said: "We're all happy because we're taltina these David Jaoobscn btlcelets ofTtoday." Relati\CS and-fnends o capfr~e­ Amencans have been wcanna bracelets wtth the hostage's name inscnbed on them. W-aite met tlle cbildrcn and their spouses at the Frankfurt airport. The children talked there about the other host.ages and lhetr fam.Jlics.. "We arc still with them as much as we ever ~ere. Jt's not over for us until it's over for them," Eric Jacobsen told reporters. D Dally PUot Dell very 11 OuerentMd Also contnbutin$ to the unsettled tunes. Browning said. was the "over- throw" or the old district board of trustees by the election of teacher- backed candtdates Nancy A. Pollard, Armando R. Ruiz and Conrad Nor- dquist 1n 1983. Cle•tecledl l<li·M71 ......,_ & edl!Ohli..1<12 4321 ,, Just call' 642-6086-CopJ'IQ'\1 19&3 O.a"9f0 Cont ~ Con-cient No ,_ ttorit& illu!J•alont lldieor1a' ,...!l .. or •o..n.N ,,..,,.., ,,...,, ,,..f t1e reprocM:ieG .,.,_. t1*41 '* What do you like about the Datly Prtot? What .;.-~:;::04::;-:=~=:=-=-==;-:::::~::::-7===-Wdon't ou like? Call the number above and_you.!..r-i....:~:..; ~ ~ OMI Al Cmta ....._ me5S11t be re.corded., transcn""l>e<f and de· ~": 1~~~'Cll-t>rca<r•SHtwwo00 bvercd to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answenna service may be used to record letters lo the editor on any toptc Contributors to our Letters column mu~1 include their name and telephone number for vcnficatton Tells us_what's on your mind. ---VOL ~NO.----t----....---------- Clrculetlon 'felephonM GAME 8/ W EEK 8 I DAY 4 ·THE GREATEST SK/SEASON STARTS RIGHT HERE ~,· 85 55 50 .81 I 7 13 37 38 f ~ . ' A YEAll ... At FLUENT ... I CHECK OUT OUR WUl•R 01 M. . YOU COUlO II mXTt · HERi ARI TODAY'S ••EIS • TWA .. - • ... Premier to support initiative backers A Ncwpon Bea b p<>hhtal actton Jl'OUP ha uran1~ a unique kickolT to a campa1an to permit expansion of Ncwpon Center b)' ho~ting a premier tontaht of the film "Tai-Pan:• • • • ·The film, ba~d on the bbok of the same name ·bY author James Clavctl. \l.ltll be tJown \tanin11t 7:15 p.m. at the F.dward\ Cinema in Newport enter. TickC'h arc S25 a person. Lagu .. a to preserve ope «urd1n1 10 Fran~ Brandt Oa\&S. rtprcscnt1n1ea,,1cv-t.ar.una 'ntcrpnW"i of,i ev-pon Brirh. told the C'1ty off1c11ls that thcov.ncn were 1n1tmted 1n dt'H•lop. • •na tht IOwtr portion oflhe land;adJl<'t'nt 10 Morn1n~1dc Lanc. He prowi.N ,ded•· ca1in1 the uppt'r portion to 1hc Cit) for open \pace. said I rank Ourin.1 thl nc&0tta11 s th~ cat} offered to bu' .SO acre of the land lorS6l5.000and l\kN the ()wn(r to dedantc the rem11nin1 70 .arn: , said Frank Tht aarcement was made late l hurWI) naaht bcfori-l.>a vt!> left . pac .. nt) v.ant Lbl: al( conwmaacd b) Otcdnber;· 1d frank ... '° lM land lftc>Uld be a'aalablc 10 1hr public b) mid· Orttmbrr"' • "h mcant1 that tt\C cit) •111 ha~t' 120 Km o( o~n ~ fore' r for S63S.OOO. There will bC' no de~clopmcnt bclwctn rch kada HNu and l'op of the orid," uid Fran\. • Colhton and Fit1pa1nrk arenPfC\td 10 1k thf toun<·al for a 1>0k' on 1~ oft'et' 11 the nc>.t Cit) Counnl mtt11n1 on Nov 18. :rhc movie premi.rr marl" the kickoff campai1n (or Citizens for a Better Newport, a aroup that I\ .....waini..p;maae of Mcasurc'4-.oo.a..'IX~lU:lC.c11..'llL-f.:.~===.:....--~---=-=----ballot No-. 2S. . on a.aght, then· freed ·in Caspers Park · Mta~ure A, ir affirmed, would penri1t The Irvine Co. to citpand its csn:ular hopping and bu!>tncss ctntcr 111;ith addnional • offict to~m .• rcs1dent1al tract!> and rest\mlnts Critics of the _S.300 mtl1ton expansion. pr91ca conten<J it w1U cau traffic problems despite The lr\11nc Co's pledge to bankroll about $40 malhon 1n -road 1mprovcntents. . • The oppo 111on to the cipans1on • 1s led b)' Gridlock .. a a.roup lhat gathered enou1h \lgnotures to put the development project up for a ~1tywide vote. David Pa)ne, a spokesman for-C1uzens for a Better Newport, said more than 4,000 people have been. inv1ted to the ~vie premiere. Mayor PbLI Maurer and architect Wilham Ficker, chairman of the &roup, arc expected to speak before the movie begins - Tac,ket~ may be puf'\:hased at the door. 1 • ·.. 8y PlllL IElDE&)t Al. 1 · Of~O-. .... .._ • • ... UmD return ··· Afcmakcoucarwa apturedatCaspcrs -. OraDd m.anhahl for Golden Weet Wilderness Park, taUCd wnha transmitter Collece•aftnt bomeco~ in 10 Ind released I pan of a study tnyerecf by yeua are Mark Loma.a. ·ronaei · the mauhna of a (>.:.)car-old Hun1ina1on New Tork Jeta d.efenaJ•e end Beach bo}. a statr Fi h and Game official wllo played OD the tint Rutler Utd Tuesday. team tn 1966-67: and Slllrley C.:a1pcrs. a 1 .. soo-acre county patk near Beb9•11oft. twO-time OIJ1Dplc San Juan C~ptStrano, ha been closed to •old meda.hrbner In rwtm.mJ.nc the public s1ntt the Oct. 19 attack. For wllol'uOWC'aluthomecommi -d=tpc:rttJ:j~:~~~ ~~~=:~P~:ti~i~ _ -L-.guna-c-.lean-up planned--~In 1967. Homeeoml~ · · -"OD-lf«n.15. -____ ......... The annual Fall Clean-Up Week tn Laguna ~ach will be held No'. l 7·21. . Dunn tha\ time, Laauna. Beach re51den1s may f-"LW.1i.a.Lol~1t1.-.!!!!~.....Jo1J.1n.!lw:.ii n ted ftems that norm all cannot be picked up w11h their rqular household trash. Items such as old rcfngerators, hot water tan ks, counches, chairs. carpets. stoves and an)' other large, bulky hou'IChotd 1tmes may be placed by the curb on the r~ular Lruh day dµr'ing th1$ week for pick up b) a special truck All loclung mcchan15ms should be removed from any t)'pe of rcfngerators. frec1ers. etc .• or doors removed, before they arc included m the pack-up . Clippings 'hould be bundled and \1ed. and be no looger than 4 feet an length and 18 an diameter. 'OddCou~· at Marlna H1gh The Manna High School pertorman& ans department will present Neil Simon's comedy .. The Odd Couple" at Lhc school'' 1Jt\lt Thea1ci; The play will be performed Nov. 13, 15 and 21 The female version will be presented N()v. '14. 20 and 22 C"uruun umc 1s 7 30 and adm141s1on ai S4 Household toilcs roundup Orange Count} residents can dt~pose of tOJtlC household products at a free toit1c round-up 1n Fullerton on "lo" I 5. lnstcod of 1hrov.1ng toit1c maten:rl in the trash or do"n the dram. residents can bnng 1t to the round-up site at StateCollc1e and Kimberly bct\\<een 9a.m and 3 pm Rain date 1s No' ll The following materials 1.1.-111 tk acct"pted for disposal: hou<;ehold cleaners. "'ood prcscrva11vcs. pamt and paml thinner. automobile and furniture pohsh. chemical dram cl~ enila1t"rs pesticides. 1.1.-~d k1llcrs. pool chem1cal~.-med1cauon. hobby supplies and photoaraphac chemicals. Gasoline and motor 011 "111 not be acccptc-d Local service stations ma)' be cont.acted for d1spo)3J mformat1on Products brought to the round-up must be an their original · contamc~ Tht) hould not be leaking. Gla\s containers should be protected from brealase Further mforma11on is a' aalablc b) c-0ntact1ng th~ county hanrdo~ l'Mieflal program at Wednesday, Nov. 5 ·' • 7.30 p.m. Irvine Community Services CommJ11loo. City Council Chambers 17200 Jam· borcc Blvd Thursday, Nov. 6 . • 7·30 p.m .. lrvlDe Planaln& Comml11lon. <J!1_ Coun 11 Chamoc~.i7200Tamoorce~ooo. • 6:30 p. m • LaJHa Beacll Board of Adj Ht· ment. Council Chambers. SOS Fore l venue. PoucE Loe -~ - . FlurryofmaileTs-bliJsted in MeSa r8ce By PAUL ARCWPLEY and TONY AA VEDRA Of .... Oeilr .... ai.et -Newly created "'ihctr· organaat1ons. an 1onu\ ofdc\clopcr mone) and deceptive . lJlllp.ugn h11:r.iturc In the linaJ da)S Of <. u .. 1a \k~\ <. 11~ ( ouncal clcc11ons ace being blJ'-'ll"ll h' \1' of I 1 candidates v}ang for t\\o oix·n w;il'I I hi.' lJOd1dJ1c .. al\o decried the d1~­ gu1wd 11lJCt'l1on of partisan politic., into a nm1pJll1~n dntton r hl' l hargn "'l.'f\' made tl~ Nick Banlcu < h.u fohn.,on ~fanc ~1aplc~. M1lce "lu1- ll'1 ( hm \tc"·I ~fa hncl Szkaradck and 811an T hc11ot "luncr ..aid \1onda\ ttfc s1' candidates ,01 IUj\'th1.r o\ 1..·r the ~cckend after l~,uming al.i1ml·c.J h' the flood of mailers 'lutlJl·nl) h111111g the lit)·, \Olcrs an the p .... 1 "ed. -pJr11rularl) lor candidates r.·tl'I Huna Jlld 01\11lc A.mburgc} \mburg1..·, hJ' wrH out three or four ma11ln an lhl· JlJ'' ''eek and Buffa at1east on\ \.ut1c1 ~•d iamng questions among lhl '" lJOd1dJll'\ JOOUI 1.1.-ho ... funthng the l''Jll'll\l'\C htl'rJluH· lorthc t\\OCa nd1da1cs lh•' labdcd "pm-dc,clopmcnt .. Buffa alw ha!. been helped in deceiving .voters b~ state Asscmbl)'man Gil Fttguson. Nutter s.:i1d Buffa was...cndor~d an mailers tWJ.Ce b)' the conscr-..a11\le assemblyman. even though Buffit is a Democrat. In a tabloid called the Cosl;l M~ Republican Elections Nev.'> that 's full of pan1~n pieces for state and federal candidates, 1he baclsade includes an endor.cment of Buffa an the-nonpanasan '-( at) Council ralc ··E,er)onc kno"' Gal Fcrgu!><>n ,., a hardcore RcR.ubhlan .. !'I.utter said "Yet here he 1s cloalong a !Xmouat a'> af he 1s a . Republican ·• In another mailer f-crgu~n 1.1.-ntes an open letter about ha\ lOnccrn on the cat~ clectaons -although he isn't• res1dent of the c1t) In It he endorses Buffa and .\mburgC). Nutter '><.lid The pair also lrl'ated ··shell" urgan11a· 11ons1hat uppon the1rcand1daues.1hc~11l cand1da1cs charged For mst:ince. :i group callcd ( 1t1zcns for a Bcucr C'osw Mesa. organa1cd for thc 1984 counCll elcc11ons. "as rc'iurrml'd an .\ugu\t b> new people u!.1ng 1hc name It ~nt out a letter that included n~ of AIDS, peace, self-esteem . and1-..1duals from vanous city &roups. Nutter ~id the letter 1mpl1cd the a.rouJ» those people came from also endoncd Amburgc) and-BulTa. ~t kast tv.o ~pie told Nuner their names v.C're mcluded on the letter wtthout the-ir pcrm1s ion ..\nother group the Costa Me~ Apan- ment Owners ( ommmtt. v.hach also suppo<ts Buffa and Amburgey uses the same bulk maahng permn number as ..\mburge) the m. charged -Th1$ so-<allcd mdependent commmce as actually Amburgt;'s · Nuner sn1d. ··eut hewa n't man enough 10 CO\.'er at up. ··we s1'\ members feel this 1s a deception and .as far as I'm conccmed 11 borders on fraud .. utter <;aad 1\mburgc-' said the protest smacked of sour grapes "They' re not go11~ 10 lov.cr mr to thc11 le' cl 1010 the guuer.' he said th as morning "They v.ouldn't be S3)1ng an)lhtna 1f1he\ v.erc the'Oncs endorsed·· On tht' SO<alled shell organaLataon~. "1n12mvr s:rnt-thcse grnops . mob1hztd thmischt! although he was un\urt ho~ large or c;mall tht') were ··11·si not sometfuna that On1lle put tOgtt 1*T fur Onii~.. ~ Utd- Buffa also dcftndcd bis ac110ns. but said he 1o1.as )'mpathatic Lo the motlvatioD.dlf • the bthcr candidates.. · , "I understand thal ~hen )OU gel down ro lhl" lasi moments. yo u giab for an~ina." Buffa said. ' • The slo1o1..gro1o1.th a.roup Mesa .\c11on t'in't without us Lra~s1ons. t1ther. sa1c:f the protcstmg candidate Joe Enck\On. supported b) the homc- <>wnt"rs· group, sent out a mailer bragaing hew.as proud lo~ Democrat. lns1dcJhe tralL ~ said he .supp()ncd' non-panisan· clecuons · • The m11hna permit the mailer was sent out on v.as Mcu .\ctaon·s. 'uuer said. - The sa~ cand1da1~ pui'toarthcr their O\\-n 01cr over lhc weekend and had It hand·<kh,ercd c;unday It warned -..otel"\ lo beware of "da'ihonc!tt dCC'CPll"e and m1sleadin1 l11cra1urc:· • utter s.aad the outcome of todafs clec11ons m1ih1 dctermtnc future action b> 1he-11' candtdat , 1nclud1ngorganwnga rt'l"aU clcctwn 1f Duft and .\mbu~) wlll.. .\mburgc) rcpJted ··"lo problem " ~ seti af J-i!Vi~= Yugoslavian court.upholds Artukov-ic 's-Oeath s~ntence AID 1.1.-orld peace and '1Clf-estccm will be 1he topics of a free symposium scheduled Fnda)' and Saturday atUC If\ me , No1ed psychologist Carl R Rogers will be featured spealer at the symposium. which is called "Toward a Healthier State." John Wh11cly. UCI professor of social ecology. and Assemblyman John Vasconcclio • ().Santa Clara. arc co- orpmzersof theconfcrencc. one an a series of to be held on campuses statewide. Fnday's three-part diScussion on AIDS Wllfl>cllef<f from 0 6 p m an ucrs Nelson Research Building audnonum Thomas Cesa no. professor of medicine. will speak about educattng the pubhc conctming AID Following Cesano's prescntauon. a panel of UCI medical eitpens wall discus-, current AIDS r~arch. In the third section. Horace Mitchell. UCI '1ccchanccllorofs1uden1 affairs. wall lead a panel d1scuss1on on pubhc pollC) choices concerning AID On Saturda>. P'-'~ holog1st Rogers will speak at 10 a.m an the Un1"ers1ty C"ent'cr Hemage room He wall discuss has recent tnino the w 1et l n1on and wall present his theol) for reducing tension between antagon1st1c group Although 1he UC I sessions are free. the university '" 1ssu1ng t1clcets to en urt scaung. Tickets for the turd.a} sc~s1ons can be resened b) calling 856-6281 or 856-5574. and uclets tor the ~IDS program By dae Asaocl•tecl Presa BELGRADE. 't ugosla\ 1a -The federal C oun upht'ld T ue'ida) a dC'ath sentence manded down-against con' 1cted war cnmrnal Andrus ..\nuko' 1c reJecu ng an extrnorchnary appeal by has lawyers. l anJug ne~s agenc) reported The laW}crs. who cited fa1hng health. can sull appeal for clemenq from Yugosla" 1a 'i. collccu' e pres1denq: The &1-td Artuko" 1c was extradited from the united States last Feb I:!. He had laved in Seal Beach since shonly after cntennrt the L nued ~tales in 1948 on a false passport. Yugoslavia says he was an tenor mm1s1er and secunl) chief of the az1 puppet state ofCroatta dunng World War II Zavcb D1stnct Coun sentenced ham to death after .\nukov1t was found guilt) on 1a) 14 ofwarenmes and mm~agAUlsl human at) He v..<a\ held responsible for 1mplement1ng pohc1es which killed "'00.000 Jews. Serbs and u)ps1cs 1n NaTI conccntrauon camps. UW)etS ZeJjk.o,QlujJ.c.andSJ!uJe Deun \atd m their appeal that .\nukovac."s health had gro ... n senlusl) ... orst since h1 tnal ended 1n Ma~ • .\nuko' 1c, held an a prison hospnal an Zagreb. wa repont'd 1ufft"nna from heart problems and near bhndncss Bank c~stOin~r refuSes to give moriey to two robbers door to hurglamc 1hc shop Thi.' intruder ~·:iu~ S200 damay and $10lc a telC\ 1s1on ~• v.onh $400 • • • 5omeo~ brolc a v.mdw101 to bur· glan1c o nurse·~ wh11e IQ 4 Voll .. )~agrn Rabbit convcnible. park('(! Monda~ on 1hc 11000 block of Warner ""cnuc The buralar cau~d SI ~ damage and \tole _ s1crco eQU'lpmcn1 1.1.onh SI :m from i\u10 ( cntcr L1n'r • • • .\ one·i.pcc\J :?0-1nch chrome mou num b1ocle ~•' \lolcn from lht fd~ard' ( tnQflll . . . .\ bro~n I q16 Ford Mu~1an1 v.u ~•olrn from BlucJ" • • • -' blue Huffy beach lrut\Cr '"''"°"'\en from IM -i '\00 blncl. of W 1lnu1 .\' cnuc ~ rcfn1erator • ;n:i \Omc an11quc lum11urc ....-ere stolen from a ron,1rudmn \tic on the I 7QOO block ol l o....-an. • • • · The trrro· wu 'tlolrn frvm 1 ford pad.up parked on thc 4200 hlud• of \andt>UIJ Wa" By PHIL SNEIOERMAN OfN~ ...... left Foun1:iin \ ;illl·~ pohtt ~nd a "um.1n pul u Iii." t'"'" on thl' "Ju~t \.1, 1'111" Jlhalu,u1>ln "hen hl' rdu\Cd lo . ha111I lllOlll'\ Ill .arnwd ICt'll-J c.: whbc1 ~ .tnd "mph "ulli.cd a"a~ Th~ bo~' \Wll' •11 •l':\ll'\.l ,hortl) :iflcr thl' aohhl·r~ .11tl·mri1. 'igt l .111 ~ C i1 l'\•uld "'"d tht· 1ncl- 1k111 11'1\ll. pl.in· ,11 .., '1 p m. on t laltll\\\.'\'ll \\ "''" J .!S H':H·old woman. "h<""' nam.: \\:t\ not di\-C 1rt\\\ old ,;iad th\· "om.in phnm:d do'>l'll uSl'd on automat.:d idler :u 1h,· pohcc w11h ,1 dc\( np11on ul lhl· tl'''"' \\\'II\ Fargo Bani. 011 Rrookhurs1 \11nute\ l:n.:r I\\\> ollkc" -,pou,·d \1ri:ct ond E:danal'r .\H·nue tv.o n.,,,., ~ro,~mg ~hk 'Ktuar,· Parli. r . Tht" 1.1.-oman wa<, confrootcd b\ 1hv ond ar~'tcd 1h.:m un \u,p1uhn of tccn-ngc1 ~.on,· of "hum dr,·w a p1 tnl :mempll'd rob°'"'r) • from h1<t 1.1.-a1'1tb3ml and dem.indcd .\ BH 1un 1.1.<l!> 1ali.l'll lf11m thl· mone). Cim1.1.old 1d 'iU pc<'t.,, Gn 1.1.-old ~1d The "om n ..aid \he hod nn mon<.''f The \ou1h~. \\ho both "1111 thl'' ror the )OUth and ~tt.;rd nw:i}. th~ '-"t'rC' 16. 1o1.~c pl ~~:d an Ora1\~C pohn~ \pokc\m'an \.11d I he \outh' c ounl\ Ju1,cn1I<.' Hall Thl·ar n;iml' 01..'ll 1..•a.,1 on I htnA;IC. . \\Crc \\llhhcld be\alJ~ ofthcat .ai;n Costa Me9a 1101 Pomona '~~ ~n. Mon'1ay. cards from a park1"a lo11t 1h~ Alph.1 &ra market, at 1%40 lklch 8hd. Pr,1111 tool l'rt uStd to dafnlF doorloch on • TO)O .. c~ tda at IM Huntington Beach Ora~ Cuun1y F 1rgrounds btt"-ffn 11 a.m. and l pm SundA) dunna the wttliend 1wap tfowe,cr. no entry wu made to the car. .... • • • • man lte\cd to be 1n ht\ 2°' or lashed the \trap ot a pu~ from the 'h ulJcr of a woman nc r JC Pcnnc\ 's.. '1111 t:ndinacr. fbc purw rontnmtd s~ • • • • • • ;\ rc\1den1 of 1hc 16000 block of Mt li1ch 1old Pohce thJt a man \wtndlcd him out of S 100 b> cla1m101 hc needed the mone) 10 bail ht ~•It out of Jail The m.ln ~ma brown 1979 C hcH\lltl ( hc\C1lt • • • While a rcs1dcn1 of 1he IM<Xl block of ~8rucc was dm1na at the: (iue~I Houw. I 380 \\-arncr \vc 4iunda), \Qme-onc pned a "''nd '-1.tn 10 burgbnu hu v.h11A: IQ 5 olkswa n Jetta. The loss included stcrt<> ~u1pmen1 "'\)rth S.l~IJ • • • \n air traffic controller whu h-.ci. on the I ~~JO hloc k of M) n 1c .... o00 reponed \unda) that someone. had entertd his (l~n sa and had ~tolcn • •·ale compWllOn model atrplaM 'Ole IO\ WI\ cm mated 11S1,$00. • • • c;a,nconc u~ a rod; IQ btNli. a ""'"dow 1n the hurJl.tl) unUa~ o( a home on tht 11100 bl k of (oral AIQC. The 1ntniJer \lt>le a $-iSO v1dta l'ttQrdcr and JC II'\ . . . .. A rt 11knt of the I hfOi: of M ~thcnon ~ Sunitay thll :somc:one had bu!Jl!ntcd Mt wtutc I ~ Volk J\ n~ lt\Ji.kr (11 vK'<f }l.11' JI laftd Shift t'fC'OC(IU1PffiC01 "llutd 1t SI. -• • • • • • • \ ~h1tc I Q8 I BM\\-,w, with blad. 1ntenor ~as stolen from ah' I f\100 blocl. ot ( onstrurnon < 1rclt Eas1 • • • The skm> from a To)OUI < chca perk((! on thc 17.WO blod lo Pullman Sirttt """ lolen . Jury selection under wayfor cbUd 's killer By tlae A•tot'iat~ Pr 1 • • • Newport Beach . :-0.carh $5001n ,ewe.In .. aHtolcn trnm a rn1dcnce on w 100 blocli. of 41\I \lrttl ••• four -.hccls,lrom • \nlh• en ~ctt \tolcn on lhe 1800 hlock of West Balboa Bou"" arJ The lo ~tame to aboul S900. · • • • .6, "•ndal 'IHhcJ tM 11~ <lf 1 car parked in \an \.t11uct lherr ....-as no ~umatt on the dam c. I killed ln shooting at doctor's office .· • .. ,· . . Comet may have flopped earth's magnetic field ..---c---.-....~ BERKELE\ ( P)-AJ!aotcomct Con~ucntl). the u~mna ol the •nd "a little 1 c aae·· ~n that·slammcd info Earth may have core-could hne ltd· to the collapse or While the Earth'K coolina. ocean triggered a compleit chain of evcn\S total ttvenal of the l'hqnetic field, \li&ter from the tquator moves in the that caused the Earth's maa'}ctlc ficl<J possibly for thousands of ye.,-s. . form of hurricanes· toward more to temporaril> reverse itsch 70();()()0 GcotosJSts detect past maaneuc northerly and southerly l~titudN and )CICS aao. scacnllsts say. . rt\cnals bystudymaold rock . V.:hen falls here in the form·ohnow.· The effect would ha'e caused a _rock forms. tts metallic pa1:u~les Water is l':.!dually rtdi tributed --------t-t-c('ftt'ftftllpe:9H9e¥1"S---ftad.-tltey-e~ ,.. t~lftttl~e' with t~ 11una-rom t e cqua 0 0 more pc e point south instead of north, two m~uc fiekl, crea~n& a finJC~· zones The rtdistnbuti't>n of man -Unive~ity ofCalifomia ph)sicim at pnnt for the ma1net1c field of the1! ahhouah very shaht compared to the the Ll~Tence Berkeley Laboratory e~. . . E,trth's overall Stze --is just enouJb have wnuen 1n a paper. The ~hanments md1~tc the latest to shahtly alter the Earth' rate ofapin. ·. • Anne and Brush Bradley of Costa Mesa hit the two.year mark m thelf marriage with on unexpected • dash of good fortune -they hecome the sixth week winners of the Doily Pilot & TWA Win.Go contest. "We won this duflng our anniversary week," said Brush Bradley. "I told my wife, 'Happy A I'" nn1versory. Anne laughed, "This was my present " That present Will be o dream trip v10 TWA, with destinations available worldw.de. The Brndleys were not immediately certom where they would vocation. But they said that they hod never hod the opportuniiy to travel overseas. They ore looking forward to that prospecf, now. Brush Bradley grew up near Columbus, Oh101 while Anne is from New York. The two met about three years ago when they were both working for McDonnell Douglas m St. lou1s. Sub!eq11e"tfr, ihey were both tronsiened to the McDonnell Douglas plant m Cypress, where computer graphics software is produced. · Ann: works in software ~evelopment, while Brush 1s in marketing. Brush said he travels extensively m his work, but he said those business trips leave little fime for leisure. The Brodleys hove been Doily Pilot subscribers for about a year, and they began ploying Wm-Go as soon as the contest was launched. 'I did weeks one through five, and he did week six," Anne said . Brush found the cord was a wmner. ' 11 didn't believe h1J1) when he told me," Anne said. "I mode him check 11 again." · She added, " I ploy almost anything, but I usually don't win much. Once when I was a kid back in New York, I won Q set of encyclopedias ma newspaper coloring contest. My dad thought that was great " Asked ii she and ~ush have vocation time lined up for their Win.Go trip, Anne replied, "If we don't, we'll hove to make some!" CALL OUR HOTLINE FOR .. INFORMATION, 714 642·4~33. ,, .. fllGHTS AVAQAllf flOM OIANGf COUN1Y10 IM ~ GOIDEN STATE ~IVES •I 'fhe 1eport by ~Rteherd-~tt;e rave(Jah~.100.000. ihe chanitna 1PirH~Hhe A. Muller end Donald f;. Moms .1s 1.9 mllhon an8 2 rruµion )ears aao. motion of metals ths>usands of milet ., 'schcdu~. to appear thtS w~k 1n Mul~cr and ~oms suuested the inside the planet -the metals that Geophy 1cal R~arch · Leners, a fol&<?w1naacenano:. • &eoerate· the earth's ma1J1etic field. Journal• published by the Amencan First. the metconte or comet h1t,s • • . • . •• Gcoph)$1cal Union. · ' ~the canh. dnv1n1 up m1lhons of tons. Muller lllld !fom said 1f thetr Muller al'ld Morris contend that a of dust. Abo, the impact 11nites fires theor)' 1s corTtCt, homans !1Uaht· comet, a teroid or giant meteor may that gush soot into the atmo pherc, unw1ttmaJy tngger a mas.net1c re- have slammed into Earth, ultimately w!Hch becomes so ctoaed that versal by altenng the Earth's climate upsettint the motion of metals within sunlight cannot penetrate the Eanh's by stanina a nu~lcar war that fill' the the planetary core thousands of miles surface. at mo phere with mm and soot, below the planet's surface. As a mutt, Earth's urfacc cools, causing a aJobaJ ccolul& down. Fiim:f•Ces charges for ~-Deporni.t ton-.:::_ bug, ro entpartslnfooii ·earingfe syt1teA11oc1atectPre11 _ former Nazi YUCAIPA-lnsect and rodent pans were found m ingredients used to ,-1 tt-rnatre-Mothe-r-Nat~ hcaJth.f-OOds promptina._criminal~~uar-A €'T"\ \;IS--- prosecufor who says "J look for buJ legs in pack.ages now." The compan.>:. e, ·U it Mother Nature's Goodies, and It e~ecuttvcs were charged with 11 ·,.. misdemeanor counts, includin1 food adulteration, insect and pest infestation LOS ANGELES (AP) -A de- and unsafe conditions for food production, Karen Bustos, a deputy district portation bcanng" ended Juesday for attorney for San Bernardino County, said Tuesday. The Yucaipa company's a retired aroccry store clerk accused of health food products ~ distnbutcd throughout Southern Cahfom1a. Bustos lytn' on his)' 1sa application about his said the products include Mexican sweetbreads and other pastries sold under service as a Nazi SS cohccntratioo the Villa V1ctona, Romero's and La Siesta labels, and fruit and pumpkm pies. camp auard dunn& World War II. quiches, tofu almond entrcc and olh~r vege~an and no--prtscrvativcs-addcd Bruno Blach, 66, of La Habra, did foods sold under the Mothet Nature s Goodies label. not take the witness stand in hts own Blood testlng reduces AIDS threat SAN FRANCISCO -The next five years look "pretty &rim" for developing AIDS vaccin~ but testing i~ expected to nnually ~ out the ,rhrcat of aetttn1 the deadly disease by Drood' transfusion. acco 1nJ rG Jn official· from the C~oters for Disease Control. Dr. James Allen. assistant director for medical science at CDC in Atlanta, told a workshop of the Ame~n Anociatimrof Blood Bank!'tha{ education-end-testina prOjl!'"m~ effectively stop~ the spread of AJDS l(ansfusion within 18 months of the first reported case. Several companies at the conference touted new and improved tests for doctors or home o\c, trying to cash in on the fast...,.owing $40 m1lhon AIDS diagnostic test market. Allen said A IDS cases tranm1tted t>y blood transfu ions accounted for 2 percent of all reported cases, with another I percent coming from blood-clouini agents. Currently, "no more than 10 to 20 units of blood per milhon" arc shpping through the system, be said. and ·.·after fi ve, six )'cars, it may be down to zero cases." Woman JJJan be Southside Slayer's victim defense, saying "I have nothma to deny. ... I'm never goina to be deported." A West German 1nvcst1ptJoo tn· d1catcd that Blach, as an SS corporal'" killed 36 inmates o fhe Wiener· Ncudorf conccntration camp because thty were too weak to evacuate befort lhe tamp was liberated by Amcncalt' troops in 1945. U.S. Immigration Judae James Vandello has until May 1 to decide 1f Blach should be deported. Blach satd if Vandel&o decides to depon him, an appeal could take'ycars 10 complete. Camp survivors allege 1n oral and written statements that Blach shot piisoncrs dunng the -12-day forced march to another concentration camp. On Monday. a survt'-Or of a NIZJ concentration camp identified Blach as the auard who gunned down an old man because he couJdn•t kccpupwtth a line ofpnsoners leaving the camp 10 1945. "I can't ever forget. The old chap looked at me when he died." said Alcxsy Bialas. 65. of Niagara Falls, "H4Pe-.._.._..maJt: Landls lacked ufety concern Can4'1a. Def cnsc attorney Ronald Parker attacked the testimony T..ucsday 1n tus final argument before Vandello. LOS ANQELES....: Police tried Tuesday to detcmunc if a woman found dead m a Watts alley was the 18th v1ct1m of the Southside Slayer, and fnends said the woman was a prostitute who ignored picas to stay off dark streets. Ari autopsy was planned Wednesday for Trina Bcatnce Chancy, 26. whose bod)'. was found Monday. said pohcc Cmdr. WiOiam Booth. Until police dcetde 1f the woman indeed was a victim of the Southside Slayer, the kllhna will be investigated jointly by detectives from the Southeast Division and from a city· county team probmg the scnal murders, police Commander WiHiam Booth said. • · LOS ANGELES-Dtrcctor John Land.JS and others 1n charae of filmina "Twthjlit Zone: The Movie" seemed to lack concern for the safety of people on ffie:set. a cameraman testified Tuesday in.l.andis' manslauahterlrial. "I had no sense whatever that the people runnin• the operation had any sense of carina. any sense of responsibility for anyone involved, whether it be actors. crew or bystanders.'' camera operator Michael Scott said "Ihu ctt~ 1s built around one witness, Mr. Bialas," said Parker. "But no other documentation about Mr. Bialas' statmcnt cxi ~ts." t-;::===:::============-r---...;_;.__ _______ --, Bialas did not idcnufy Blach in the ciiifoM TABLll PADS' courtroom. but hc-ptcked an ok1 V\M -=-=-=-+t----M~• ....... ~.._ SAVa.~.,...,.,, .. ,,. By lluytng ~ •4US ..... 'It.ff UPHOLSTERY lllC. ... , ..... c..t .... 1122-•11 .. cma m&-$41-UM put toacther by the prosccu\ion. "Yes. I am sure, sir," Bialas said under cross.e.um1nation later m the da¥· "I can sec him at that time in uniform." YW 'I LEADING MAKE UP -lllUEL WEITMllE -... FREE Seminar Ctlecuulng mak•up techniques and his new movie "llAITIRI OF THE UNIVERSE". • a2 RE8ERWNOW1 . 541-1424 . T8E LARGESt, M O ST BEAUTIFUL .JAGUAR DEALERSHIP IN ORANGE COUNTY IS NOW OPE N BAtJERJA ·the PROFESSIONAL Af:'PROACH .. ~ '· I 714/87'1 ·2002 2001 SOUTH MANCHESTE~ AVENUE ANAH IM.CA . .. Iranian official: ·More hostage relea u .s. enVQU held Watteexpectsme~efromcaptors tn ~":.:°~''":..;'&::.""th,~ 5 d --J " }} d 24 h ours, sa ys 2 Americans may go free t='1:t.!;,: :~~~~~~':'a;~ ·'.:l-,ys exp e e on a bakofty 10 Wk tonP<>Htn. U; ' . . . . WIESBADEN. Wcs1 Germany will be. ~ina· btck to Btarut. the HOtPiJal dam-lot Col Charles K. ~ (AP) -Anallcan Church envoy capual o Lcbinon, 10 nttoliatc lhe M&fret uid JIOOblcn was m ~ NICO IA, ~yDrus (AP) _ ·rtic · • Terry Waite said T1.1eMia> "reason-rclca~·o the Americans aod otba . health and Yw<>uld not need follo~·up · ati f J r_. Parr ·d R .-4-I ,..... ably strona uuest1ons" have emera· Wcstttl\ ho ta~. · mtdical catt. ruc,:-y oPrc~::; Rea:.i::e~~t~n epo~ & C 8uu8 edthatlwoAmcritallilAltllbethenut 8othAndirt001ndSutherlandart' • AbOul five boun afitt Jaco~n' e .. Al lht momeat h~1:still 1tM11tv~. You jui t can ·1 law a problfm tikr that. So. rm conllnuana." Sut he iddrnted the issue of 17 men tmfH'llOIWd 1ft Ku"u (9f &lit Occembfr 1983 bombinas of UM: U. and French embtM.a. lY.amac Jihld. or J"8mic: Holy War, rtptaledly h.11 demanded frttdom for us 17 ~om­ radts bc~rt 1t will ttl~\C Amcncan • ~osta~ in Lebanon . • nvoy to Tehran t t t . _ 17"1.-'-'I. d hostaies relca5Cd in Lebanon and be1n1 held by the Islamic Jihad apPU. ranct, Waite apo.lc of"a t11ht . . -Jra"ru.an rclatt~n?but 1~c:~~~.llleD~aa 111dhcexpecrechmessaaefiomlhcil" ~Atla009rfRldtupGf~ran 1hmmcr of hope for nev. lcacb0'.for 1rrnted, confined for Ovc days and beartatfac·L capton within 24 hours. · hute Moslem utremms. Waate other Western fio,taaes in addmon to lltmat. t'm llOt tt'1atn---+-.,... expelled. A He addrcned a news conference in emphasiud that he was waitina for a Anderson and uthetland~ But he The official Islamic Republic News · . -Wiesbaden near the U.S. Air Forc.e m~saac from lhe aroup 1d. "1 am cal'" ful about IJ\ ina Aaency quot~d speaker Hashemi BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -A Hotpttaf, where newly frwi Amen-_ lt was lslamu: Jihad that held hoPt." · ---"il:afStft)H tayins R:obert~~t?an~ w«kJ.x J\tWSJ?!PCT r~rtcd ru hosta David Jacob$cn was Jaco~n hostage for more than• 17 Waite said he was wai11n1 to hear they' rt (the 17) bt'•na treated well." Waite id "I htvtn"t S«n them, and I'd JUSt hke to know to my own satistac:tion they are bt1n1 treated proj>crt):" Mcfarlane, former Nattonal Sccunty 10 1u Tuesday edmon that Tra-n1_1'! und~oang mCC!iCi c.um1na 1on) . monihs. JjcobstJi. "-. a !Qttal from the same o le who sum· adviser, and four o(her Amen~ns leadu·Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini Waite, the emissary of the administrator fro.m Huntmaton moned ham 10 Beirut sl ~c-ei ju t arrived aboard. a plane carryina· recently suffered a ~vere heart attack ArchbashopofCanterbury, was asked Beach. Cahf.. ~•s • freed unday. btfort Jacobsen's rt'lease. W11te allO ~poke oft he fru)trations military cquiprncnl forlran .• , Jnd ha,s been requtrcd to take-a Iona if ,there hid bttn indicahons lhat Jac9bscn, ·Anderson. a native . of The nghcanenvoy. who began ~1s of h1 actcmpb to pin frttdom for R.afsanJarii s surpnsc statement, in • rest . . . As ociatcd . P~ss corr.espondent Lorain, Oh1Q, and Sutherland. of fort ~ end~von to free host.asrs·in Le WctlCfncn bdd capuvt 1n Lebanon. 1 spCcc;b markina the scvenlh an-· ~n'""aructe m .n.e pro-Synan Al Terry Anderson, 39, and educator e'olllns.Colo.,A~11n1dc-ar:iofajncul· non last )car. said hC sta'>ed in • ·overthepastmonthstherehave nivcrsary of the takeover of the U.S Sh1ru paper said that reports of Thomas Sutherland, SS. would be the tltre a& American University in Wiesbaden Wlth Jaco~n to lend him bctn uggcS't1on1 a number Of.times Embassy in Tehran, followed pub-secret contacts between the United next American hostaaes freed Beirut: were kidnapped separately in 1uppon, that somtthing wa 1oin1 lo move. I · hshed reports in the Maddie fast that Statesand Iran had fiaurcd ma power He replied "Tho~ have been Moslem west Beirut in 1985. Jacobsen director of the A~rk'an remember btina in Beirut in a room American hostaie David Jacobsen '""'"sml&&le between halll-hn,cn .. and slrong. Yes. 1 would say reasonably WaJte 1ad1cated he had expected Un1ven1t> Hospnal in Beirut tht totalfy alone for fo.e cays waitina for was freed Sunday as a result of moderates an the K.h0Me1n1 rc:JJme. strong ugaestions." other ho\tagcs to be-released with capttal ofl...ebanon;was kidnap~ 1n ~omethina to move," Wane '41d. He nesotiatlons betv.cen Iran apd the but because ofh1s ll!ness the pmtual "At the moment. the two people Jacobsen on undiy. Beirut on May 28. I 98S. ~1d no pr~ss came from th.at Umted States. leader could not tnlervcoe 1n lhe specifically tn my saahts arc Terry "To be hone t, l expected btttcr Waite was asked about ;a po$ 1blc anempt. Ra fsanjaru did not mcntt0n any dispute. . . Anderson and Thoma Sutherland," than what we aot," he said. • role by Syna 1n Jacob5cn'srclcasc and 111: menc.&n\ and 13 other -nqottat•en •nd the new ~)did It quoted an .unidentified lra!11'!n WaJle addtd. ··That is where our best • Jacobsen wept for JOY TucsdJty on whether Americans or Iranians were fomgners ttma1n m1~~ma in l:.cbe· not say t(hen the McFarlane vi it source aHay1~.....,ntnhn cantaccs Uc auhe moment.'' ~·~ h1s_grov.-n children aptn -· involved 1n the nego11a110M non. Islamic Jihad said it luUcd one of occurred. Buubc.Bcuu.L.ma&aZmc.Ab bed a.nd unable ro perform any duties He said he ex~ed to hear within sons Enc ind Paul and Cfa\iihter, .. , don•t want 10 commc-nt on the ..:the Amcr{ans. lJ • diplomat: Wil..- Shiru "ported that McFarlane went ~seof 1tre ~heart attack he 24hours1\"om htscintactswhcthcftte-Diane Duggan -and 5aUl he 1.onaed poht1caJ dynamics," ht replied. l1am BucRlcy. No bodywa~ fou . - to Tehran 1n September. recently suffered." Reagan, Mcfarlane and us. gov-Khome1n1, 86. penod1cally cmmeot offiCtals had no commenl on withdraws from public view for rest lhel'CpOn by the Iran.an newsagcncy and med1tal1on. On numerous oc-A~k"ed about the " rt that mih· cas1ons. in lbe past he w canceled h ·ultz .... tary equipment was 1nvo ve I:? ale tntments-fe.r-k>nJ.:pcAOds,-kad-House spokesman Larry Speake ing. lO.nlmon hc.w.as 111 or had dt.ed. reaffirmed a U.S. ban on weapons sales to that nation. "As Iona as Iran advocates lhc use of terrorism, the US. embargo will conuoue," Speakc told rePorten Acoord1ng to the IRNA report. Rafsa.ojana descnbed the Amencao mission to Tehran as a fullle attempt by Wash1n1ton to mend relations with the Islamic aovcmment of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The United Slates broke dtplomauc rc~uons with Iran m 1979 when the U.S. Embassy was SClzed and Amencans taken hostage. Rafsan1ani said Mcfarlane brou&ht 1 Btble •&ncdb.) Reaganand a cake that he descnbed as "a key to open lran-U.S. relations " Terry Waite, a special represcnta- uve of the Archbishop of Canterbury who has been closcty involved 1n efforts to win freedom for tht' hos~es held 1n Lebanon. was a ked about a possible Iranian and Synan role 1n Jacobsen's release. but he refused to comment Waite told a news conference in West Germany. however, that there .. ere "reatonabl) stron& suucsuon " that the nclt tv.o bostaaes to be released would be Assecialed Press chief Middle Easl correspondent Terry A. Anderson and educator Thomas Sutherland They arc held by the· extremist hnte Moslem group Islamic Jihad departs for talks which has tics to Iran. Watte s~ud he WASHINC,TON(AP)-Secretary expected a message-tus contacts in of State George P hultz headed for Beirut by Wednesday afternoon. Vienna on Tuesday w1lh a team of The lraman news agency s:ud that U.S. arms control spcc1ahsts to test in re ponsl to continued req uests for Soviet auitudcs on nuclear weapons Tehran's mediation lo secure the cut5' human nghts and terronsm release of the French and Amencan after the Iceland summ1L c~~~1~~~~s ~Jani listed tmn~ U.S. officials steered clear of pre- He said W)lshangton and Pam d1c11na how So\ 1et Foreign Mmastcr -must a,u.arantcc Jhe return of Iranian Eduard A. he"ardnadze v.ould assets seized after the rtvolullon. pondtoShwlt.<&' agenda...Buuhcy recoamze the nghts of Lcbanesc Shult1 was prepared to set up neg Moslems and free pohtical pnsoners uaung committees to tackle the ·in tsratl and other p3rts of the-world -dctatls of the latest U . proposals. RafsahJan 1 also said in hi speech which 1ncludt a 50 percent reduction that the pnme minister of Japan had in long-range nuclear missiles by sent a letter asking Iran to use' its 1991 mOutnce t<> sccure the rrleasc of The setting for the-Shult.z- American and Frtnch ho tages Shevardnadze talks Wednesday and The speaker said he had informed Thursday 1s a 35-nation rev1tw of the Tukyo that Iran would make efforts 197S Hclsmkugrcement. Its promise 1n that d1recuon if the Unned States 0TafrecreAchangeofpcoplcand1deas ships weapons purchased by the across the icy East-West d1v1de will gO\emmcnl of hah Mohammad serve as a backdrop for an expected Reza Pahla H. but not de)1vered. U .S appear 10 the Soviet) to 1mprovc- cond111ons in their counlry. On tc-rronsm. huhz 1s hoping for -r--:-----· . .; /, . /,. , On Novemt>er 20-23, estcliff Plaza rl wrapping up its remodeling with a pre-holiday celebration ... just for you! Watch your local newspapers for more information! . . . Hasenfus to ask court for mercy if convicted support 1n a moununa campaign "!JVI aga1nsl Syna. with which the So viets ~ ha.ve stron' military tics hultz 1 "===========================;::::===========::;:::==' accused S)rta. a.n. a spc«h Monda" t- nt&ht an Ph1ladelph1a of direct m~­"~vc-mcnt 1n a th~rted~mtohlow •~-~-~-~--~~~~-~~~~~--~---~-~~~-~~~~~~---~ up an lsraeh Jetliner' at a London airport last Apnl MANAG UA. N1caraaua (AP)-A captured Amcncan mercenary s~ud Tut$dayhev.ould a k the Nicaraguan JOvcmment to show compassion afhc was 'bOard a U.S.-made C'-123 cargo L Paul Bremer. The new head of the plane that was Oyang arms to countt r-terromm office at the tale Nicaraguan rebels when lhe pl.ant ·oepanment. is accompan)1ng 11------------------------------------------1 ""as shot d<J".n by Sandmasui troops ShulL1 Last week Bre mer met wtth an Southern Nlcanrgua_on-r-:-Oet-.-._s,_,,...-~o"'lfli..._1,cial<> in Bntam. in. Fmnec. v lunlionary court of terronsm and other cnmes apinstthc state Eugepc Hascnfus, 45, of Mannctte. Wis., made the tatemcnl whale being questioned by the proS«ullon and then his chief defense attome} in the afternoon session of the Sandma!.ta People's Tnbunal Near the end of the se!.s1on. Hasenfus' Nicaraguan attorney Ennque Sotelo Borgen asked the cargo handler: "If at the end of this tnal )OUMC to be found gu1hy and sentenced to pnson. would you ask the Nicaragua aovemment to be aenerous and show you compH ton so you could return to your home and to your wife and small children'" "Yes. I would," Hasenfus replied Hoenfus acknowled&ed that he He parachuted to safct) but the Wt t Gcrmanv. ta > an lhrcc-other crew member\. two their capitals Amcncan pilots and 8 Nicaraguan It 1s not clear how much anOuenct' radio operator. were killed '" the the Soviets ha ve on Pre 1dent Hafcz crash Assad·s go\ ernmcnl. or~ hethenhey "The obJCCtl\ e. of our flights into 1nttnd to use 11 Publicly, the Soviet!. Nicaragua was to resupply the FON have condemned acts of lerronsm (Nicaraguan Democratic Force) and and have sometimes been tar-Jets -the UNO (United Nicaraguan Op-Shuh1 will stop in Pans Fnday on position) teams of the Contras," he his wa> back to Washington to told the three-member court. The discu s the problem with ·rr1me rebels are referred to as Contras M1ntsttr Jacques Clurac and Foreign "Our.0bJ~Cl1veoftheaardchver; of Minister Jean-Bernard Ra1mond supplt~ to lhe Contras was to lcttp The Frt'nch and West Germans -are them resupplied so they could keep reluctant to go along wi th a JOlnt up their re astancc apinst lhe Sand-alhed strategy of pressure against 1n1sta aovernmcnt," Hascnfu said. Syna He faces a maximum scntenceof30 A disagreement over the U.S .. Lar )ears 1f convicted of terronsm. viol-Wars'" program disrupted progrc sat auni the maintenance of order and the Iceland summit on cutting back public se(Unt)'-, Qnd conspiracy. ~ superpower nuclear arsenals. Ctuldren of all ages, adults an<tgroups 95C deposit per ad\lertiaed package $1 sitting tee for each addltlOf\8! aubfecl in 11me ponra1t. Poeea our IMction. Nol vMd With arrt other on.r One adwt1ised paclcagO per aub- ;ect. or group poMd ~ Wednesday, NovembeP 5 thru Sunday, Novemoer 9 Dally 10 a.m.; -2 p.m. and 3 p.m. -7 R.m. ---Sunday. 10 a.m. -5 p.m~.:...!.===-===--~~~ Costa Meaa San Clemente Huntington Beach Westminster ... ~--c::m .,-1; ~E PORTR~IT PLAC .. ow, every an tan. stana on her own two feet. "Ouch, my feet hurt!" J.-1cl.. otl vnur "htlt. .... rnJ put up \Pur l td \\1•11· h('re 10 hrlp \\t'rt' tht.• Wumt•n ... thJlth :-.:t•t\\Pr~ .11 'l.inta Ana Ho<-p1t.il Mt"tlit.11 Ct'nlN. • And rtl'.ht nm' \\t' II g11.t· )t'u d ~RH· f 00 I l \AM \\h\ i fkc.1u'l' ttw ..,oom•r ,1 ftlOI pri1h ll'll'l '' dt'lt•<tt·J tht• lW,1('r at'' tt' lrl'Jt So ti \'1U I hdH' .a l1ttlt· ..,ort·nt '" "r .1 lt·ndt•r 'pot. umw "'' u., <. hann• .. Ml' \\:I' l Jn I 1. vou up in nn t1m1 '"nut ,, VOil d1ln I IJl..t• I tw ri~hl ''t'J" IH>W. y11111 little rrohlt•m n1uld n·.11lv knrl(~ \'<lll ott Vtllll 11'1 t Am,1 1in~ .i., 11 "t·t•m., .1 "1mplt• '"~'°" n h11 n.til c .rn bee 0m1• .1 n1ppltn>: cund it111n T he mo't common foot problem are: •Bunion• Women's Health a step ahead. etwork puts you ~ \1,r. t n It'll .art I tic n nl Tht') r~ ..... ~t'\l tt' d1 d1ltt•ri•nt lh1n~-. thJn mrm tikt'wt>arh1).th h('f'I ... .ind "Ul'I'' •1 t I h1 \\I 1bh1 "' pn•>:n.inc \ At \\,•1111 n ... t Ito.11th :\t'l\\ocJ. \\:I' 'J'lt•u.1l11l• 1n \~• •mt•n' lw.1lth r iHf' nt , ·if.., In t.11 I \ \'1•11wn .. I l1.ilt h :\1·tw11rl. 1 ... ,1 rt'v<'lu 1111n.11 \ l•lllu pt in h•'\' 1 h1•~p11.1l ... h,,uld tn•.1t .1 \\11111.111 !wt11 1 I h.in '•'II If 1 "' r h('en tr~.itt·d b1' 1111, \ \'t ~prt'' 1<ft'Ti)rn('lrdit•n..,1" r ht•.1h tn:ar1 1 n 11 , ... ,1;,d 1'"lluc-at1r'" tnr Wl'mC'n m Cl c;p n.1l h d1 '-t).!nl'd .uitl 1lt-.. 1r,1tnl h1• ... p11.1I ha .. ul unit \nd \1111 ,lonl rwt!d I<• b1 ,, pdllt'nl to take· ,1<h.int.1g1 •'I 1111r '' "ll c"-\\1• II refrr you I•• ,1n •'llht.10d10).' ph\ ''l i,in .and \H• 11 ).!1\t' \'tlU .111 ti 1 1n l11rm.1t1nn -.i' 1h.1t veo111 1n p.lrl1< 1p.11t '" "'·'"'"~ tlw ruJ I dt I ..... in ... h1r .t rl\l I l<.X.H I \t\~1 phv ... 1u.1n rt•lt:h.il 1•1 l1ttur1 rt'''n11 1 "" \.1llu .. a1 (714 1 c;iq !Nil .ind .... ~ t.1r !tu h r1r I\ nn . SANTA ANA llOIPITAL MIDICAl CINTll · 1901 'onh huf\ tl'\\ tn:ct ~.1nta nJ Ci\ 9nlo - ' .. ONngeC....OAllVPILOT/W~.~S. 19¥ • t AlasKa tops U.S. in school sp.en~ing ,. Big lottery winner commits suicide · WASt{INGTON (AP) -Alaska. the averaac teach was paid $29,132. peak: of2,21 l.OOO reponcd in 1980. $33.990. · \llMtt nearly everythina costs more, At the top of both rttina , Ala '' The aaency calculated that pubhc \ In averaac'pcr pupil spendin&o the Pl rr Ff ELD, Mau. (AP) -A man who won SI milhon in tht state lottct) aeven yca11 110 but ran into money problems killed leads the nation in education spend· averaged $8,349 in spend1na per hools •"crtacd nearly 18 student op five were Alaska; New York .• i both in teacher ~y and ~r pupil R_upil, and P:!lid iti teachers $41 480 per teacher combinina both etemen· JS, 710, New Jcney, S'S.S36: W)OM· himselfand his fi vt doas. wtice said Tuesday. ·~,, upenses. at»~ on avcr.aae. tary and secondary schools. ina. S.S,440; and Connecticut, $4,888. Teachers, meanwhile, face the low· Ulah spent onl) $2,297 ~r pupil,· · ln 1960, elemental")' schools aver-The District of Columbia pent ~rl C. Ttlontpson,-'"62;-and the dot1 were found dead Suncfay of carbon monoude po1sontl'!g sn Thom~n·s praae. aaid police LL · ·est 'salary . ~ale in South Dakota, the NEA figures showed, ahhouah it aacd 28.4 students peneacher, a ratio SS,020. while Utah ranks SOth in pendir'I& rantcclS 32nd in teacher pay at an that fell to 24.4 in 970 and 20., in At1hc other end of the sc4le,Join1na Gerald Ltt. . · . Medical Examinu 'Robctt Brown rulod the death a l\licide. per pupil. . · avera~ ofS22,34 l.. 1980. ForStt<>ndaryschools, the ratio South Dakota with the lowest teacher Nationally, t,he natlon·s 1ehool South DaKota a~el'qe'd SI 8,09S in in 1960 wa 2 l . 7 students per teacher. pay were Mmmippt. S 18.~3; Ar· . Thompson lef\ net note and investigators had no motive for his ' death. · . systcmsspentan averqe of$3,723 on pay forteachers, and ranked 39th m It fell to 19.9 in I 970and 17. t tn 1980. ~an·sas, $19,S38;Maane, S 19.S83: and each pupil in the 198S-86 schob1 ytat, .U\lcrall spcndina on pupil at $2.967 Followtn .Alaska, the five top New H~Q"psh1re, $20,263 But Joseph Delphia, a nci&hbur, said Thompson "'"debt-ridden _and alone when he died. ~ ,. and the typical teacher salary was per child. states for teacher salanes were New And (<lloWina Utah to make up th:t $25,313, accordina to information Nationally!!ht..NEArcport~therc York. $30.678; Michiaan. $30,16~, five ~ith ~he lo~st. a.ve~~ puptl compil~ by the N~t1onal Education were 2,495,000 sJbblie schoolteachers Rh~e Island, $29,470; and Cah· spend1n1 were Missm1pp1, S2:30S: A friend had moved out of the house a few wttks before and ·Thompson·, car 'had bttn repossessed, dtsp1te his SS0,000 yearly earnings from the l 979 state lottery, polie< and Delphia said. Assoc1at1on. In Cahfornta, an average worluna tn 1986, up hahtly from a forn11, $29, I 32. Idaho. S2.S09; Tennessee S2.S33, and of $3,608 was spent per student and year earlier and also surpas ina the The District of Columbi a Arica nu $2,642. ... WOMENS-FASHIONS -$29.99-564.99. t)r ~ soi sqx Career -.cp.1 r.uc-. m \.\\X)I blenj rlanncl bl.11cr:. ... 1ur1-. anJ hk,u-.c .. ·b ICI :'\01 m ~.irt.1 ~1,101.:.1 PIJl.C .i i Sl7.99. t)rr~ $.:19V-J 5 .. .., ..., J... .m~'l.'r,1 mfo~pull ,,,er •mc.i1cr., in·bn~hc... ('r p.t.,IL ., :::. .\1 l. t I lt1 S29.99 Ong s.:i:, CounterpJic... p.m1., or skirt ol polvc .. 1cr Orlona acn he in black cream. nk. ·blue or mu.,hroo:n. tr lb ::'\01 m . anta Monrca Pl.i~c: 7 . 524.99. {)rig -'8 IWR ~'ll'""" n\fJuwv p.mh nr pol\'c..,tcrfrJ~'l.m .,k1r1 in a,.-...meJ p.i.,1d shJde-. "11c., t'I !ti. Not m Sama !\fomca Place 7 $89.99. Ori~ SI iJ Cuccr dre.,..c-. bv Jane Smgl:r an ravon ch.1llt., prints wnh I.ice collar-. Marw "1\'lc:. in H4 l7 - ..$5.9.99. <. ln)i( SXO p,'\.,1llvc .-\111tWl1 .,puq pol)e-.1er drc.,~ w11h turtleneck. \''Id~ belt BIJck. 1adc 0r rm·al 111 ..i 14 'lO 574.99. Great buv Cahtorn1a:·C1rl r.1mn ..,h1rtdr'"" in blacklrcJ. 6 Ill '>ll ,,,.- S29.99·S69.99. 0rig. S~6. S104. OubY 4" 'arecr cla-. "" from Korct Choo::.ctrom 100% wool '>kiri'>. \Csts and polvcs1er blou5e-. .J 14. P S.M 74 538.99-5134.99. Ong S52-SIMO Club "i' .J" fall spt.>rtswear collec.uon trom la\'.oCllc dt•s1gncr!> .• -Include ].lekct~ -.k1rt~. pants. bfousc~ and <>wca1er 2 12: P S M ~ J 10/143 · ' $22.99-576.99. OnJI( SJr; S115. F:rll coordinate., from Kore! and Countrv Suhur.b.ins. Chcx).,c from blou'>C!) !)WC.lier-.. pant'>. sk1rn. and bl.ucr., 1n rich 1.1hr11: ... color., ft IX 160 " ... . . ... . 59-.99. <.ire lt bU\ \\'h1p ... 11.1ke l~ll in d.,~)rlL'l.l t • .ir l.llfi.,r., ~ ~ f r. GJ $69.99-5129.99 1..1ra~ ~108 s:ioo ChlX)~ lrllm a-. ... ortcd l.tnll'U" rn.1kcr k.uhcr h,,,,h '11177 525.99. l )n~ .\CJ .\1.m Anne Rll!>C!llclJ \'tnvl handba~., "1th 1.1ux "obr.i trim in ... h\lUIJer, SJl(hcl or dutctl .,, ... 1c., l.l 519.99. Reg $\0 (.alhktn ~lmc ... w1th '.:!~ buuun c.to ... e n~km lantn~ A..,.,1,rtcd "'1!.lr.., 10 r 57.50·526.25. Reg Stu Sh ~.we 2'> on .in regular price pms. lrom Stem fklloro. D.iupl.u e .ind more.. 1161 . ~ 523.99-559.99. Orig ~.W99 SIN.tN !>aw .rn cxtr.1 40% on ttlrcadv·n.-duccd handbags m -.h,,uldcr . .,Jtc11cl and tole .. 1vlc., Its . ~ 516.99 Great bw .\fund1 nap.i lcather N~.Hll/L'r .1>tcnJ·a \\ nh note pad. pen phone/ .tr<lrc""' ~(tJOn 'and Hs month calendar :\ ... ~1ned l.lll11r., 111• 519.99. (,rcit buv F~ux erocodttecakulatC'lf c.lutLh m b!Jck. \\;me. gray or brl"M'n. fill 539.99. Orig S5lf E::n:t.o leather casual flat \\'1th geometric heel Black. black pateRt, Jade. wheat. rub\: charco.11 Not m South Coast Plaza t6l 529.99. Ong $44 (,Iona \'andcrbtttupda1cd .. : ... ' . . $12.99·517.99. Drag $18 .S24 A~tcJ Jet.\'~ 519.99 t'4m .kperf. S35 S40 <.annon~ couon/ S\\1.',ltCr•\lOr ~ )i 2() 122f3t}1 ----====+IOti~tcr'2 ... ~-iJ''tllh11tt'C31dd~:iih•c:ctrluti ·11 pelf $4'1 $;(} S 13.50·516.50. Reg Sl8 S22. 1..£v1 -.s 501 .tnd ... 1ra1ght leg 1c.in-. m 100% conon a:...-.l"rted color., X 14 rcgul.u 8 14 ~hm. waist.., 27 \0 122 3Q Sl6.50·S27. Reg S22·S36 )oong Cla.,stcs .tl.r\ hl -.wearer-. tn .l'>sotted colors ll)r g1rb 7 14 ~ ~1 I. .ti SIS. ~ S.24 I~ cotton c.ordur\)\' p.inr... in : .h~irtcd l.Olor-; for girl~ 714 ·fi Sll.25·518. Rt.tg Sl i S:l4 Acrylic .,wearer~ for txw-. 4-7 A .. -.oneJ color~ •32~ $29.99. Queen. II pert S.5.5 SOO $39.99. l\1ng It per~ $6~ S70 $49.99. Standard 1...lSC!t. pr . It pert S45 S29.99. KinK ca~ ... P! II per I S <i<> $34.99. 130 - 539.99 JO\' Stle Ong, S80 Sl20 s~)rthcrn fcathc,. wh1tC-gOl)-.C cXl\\ n p1l1l"M.., m -,1,1nJard I queen or king .... ze:-. [xl\\·nproof coHon co1.·cr 87 579.99 '"' m -;ct. Orig. s21; C:omple!te • f1cldcrc 1 ~omf~mcr !>Cb Full "'t:t Ong S40ff $19.99. Queen Ong $.410 $99.99. kanK -.c.;t Ong. S4Q5 599.99. 541 S499. Reg S8:i<l B.trLJlnunger·s• ncwc:.,t 512.99. l )fig Sl8 Couonlpolvc:.t.er ts "ale cordu recliner. t.lanh.m.in In l\W\" Lc.uhc:r Plu.,"' rov p.1111-. in n.lVv. tJn or charcoal for bovs 4 7. 321 • or peach poh~~tcr/rayon 11141 SI0.50·522.50. Reg Sl4 $30 Save 2">% on 5299. Reg S600 The Chippc,1J,ilc wtng our entire .,clcl.l1on·of acn•ltc .,,\·cater!> tor g1rlc; ch.i1r CO\crcd an cream. blue or m.1uve raH'nl 4 tix 4V polve .. 1cr 104 "' · 511.25. RL'K SI:; P.t-.tcl l.Orduro\' pant:-. tor wrl<. -' 6x PmJ.. . .-iqu.i or hl.ic .l9 59.75·S18.75. Reg St3 S25 ave 2'>· on l)Ur cnure c.ollcc.uon of acrrlic swe.itcr., lt1r toddler ho\., and garb 2 4T ti3 Sl4.99. <.,rea1 buy o~hko ~ft·touch plu..,h he.ir ')7 S29.99. (,rLJl buv C.onon h.ikcr '>WC.lier m pe3t:h 1'tf*. m1 m bafla:Fld"="'u·inR.cr m~ S M L XL l}Q51 • 521.99. Creal b1.,1y \'elour crcwncck of cotton/ pol\'C!>ler m du!>!\' blue. mauve. tcaJ. red. roval. bl,1ck or wh11c S to.I L XL 1211 S899. Re~ SI 400 3 pc muon ..ct:th.m.il cmcred an n.uurJllmul11col1u .. tripe 1cx1ur1:J t.itmc f·ull -.1zc ... kcp '>Ol.i ~lso J\'atl.1blc l )n~ SI .600 Sl.099. 559 each Reg .. SI 20 SJ\C iO% l)f'l uur col lcct ion of .,leek hra .. s floor lamp., Imm Imperial •72• -Sl.099. nng Sl.liOO (..(lntcmpor.m lc.uhcr sof.i "nh ,11.ue arm -.t\ ling Al..o. ll}atchmK chair Ong s 1.200 S699. I :n S5.99. tin~ $8 ~11k.i..a lull lead cn....,c.il .. 1crn w.ue m goblet. wme or ch,1mpagnt tlut~ !:>elected pdllcrn .. .i.-..t1tablc ~t S99.99. t )rig 200 1818 .,tainlc"!'> .. tccl ll .. tt\l.'Jrc ..en ice for t" clvc A 60 piece .,cl' 181 mid heel pump 1n bl.tl.. k. white. roval. bern m S89. Ong I iO Ballv leather !)hp on-. with Sl99.99. l )r1~ $3"18 Magn.l111e IO pict:c ClX>k· \\.UC ... er. Pn~lt..,•non,11 qual11v for all cook-. Pur· ch.he the 10 pl. -.ct .1nd ;l matching S45 h.inging wav Je,uhcr '). ...... leatl'ff'IOI~ BM<:k or Of¥NO tlHtl'l-.el \)f~tfdj) . ----......--------~-------------....-.......... St\' C po< rlld• i!> ,vOO!> torVAtv Slt>~~ ------------------~ .. S39.99·S64.99. l 1rr~ SOO·S9b f.itlnrcd 11.mncl skirt and blazer fr,1m J top name Pl)1w .. 1er 'wo11l m .m .ur.w ol pl.11d ... colw., 6 In '.\:l'I m ~.1n1.1 .\Ion ll .l .J 529.99 l )ng ".JM l\,h-c .. 1cr crepe de chmc hl1lll'-t' w11h 11e tmm .1 ch,1tce n.1me \\'hnc rt·d 1 li.k nr c,,h,1lt. ti 1<1 :-.;l,t 111 S.rnt l \ l\ln11...1 .l S34.99 Re~ S::.O :\II rnll"':11w1tl p.mt rrom . \rm. n1...1-. hc.,t kno\\ n dc .. 1~ncr Bl.tl. k. ~r ,1\ , 1r. lld\ \ 4 l;f q.,, -~· S32 99. Reg \41-1 i\ritul pa1~1c,· .,h1n trom .1 \\ell knlw. n .\mcr1c.1n :-.:a1. ,. or '>Carlc1 c1'II•111 r.1rnn 17i 539.99. r.rc.11 blJ\ p,,lvc .. 1cr1cnt1nn \clour 111~ -.un in n,\,11. gr,1pc. 1.tdc.,,r turquni-.e \ ~1 I. 140 • 516.99 each. C.rear buy Pl>IVC.,ll.'r l.Ollllll lkL'lC .1u1vc ... cpar,ue-. Johnnie 1..ollar ll'P llr b.mJcJ hlltl1'm m 12 grcJt wlnr" ~ ~1 I. 1..io • FASHION ACCESSORtES S44.99. L)ng. S80 S<JO (a<.ual lc.uhu h,mdh.1g ... h\ CarpttbaR'> m bucku or tote st vie ... bl.1ck or \\hllC 11'\6 53. Re~ 54 I lanes L.:hr.1 "ihecr-.'-p.1111\'ht"'c Ill ba.,ic and 1a .. h1on colo~ all .,11c .. ·~ Sl4 99·518.99. On~ S22 S:lX An1m.1I pnnt ~,·,wn p.11.am,t-. or n1gh1sh1rt ol Wlllm/p"'"e"R'r P S .\H. 18.'• Sl7.99·Sl9.99. C..)r1g 523 S28 IOO% cotton nightgowns 1n blue or pink pnnr... . .i .. sgrtc<l styl PS·h.l ·LllJI RED BAG Sl399-S74.99. l..)n~ ~21 ~11.J E.,pr111al1 fa~h 11 n., and bprn <;p..m ll'P" .,wca1cr!t; pant:. . .,k1rt<. 111 s ~I I. Not m Palm Springs l;(}'l">-ll 529.99 <...re,u hU\' :-.:nrJ1l pattern' aavhdn\'lon ..,\\L ttu drl.~.,(!~ in blJLk \\ h11e. rcd/whnc. nw.lll \\hill' PL'.trlrc:c/whnL ~ \1 L 117 S2999 < .rc.ll huv lacqu.1rd wool blend llr .11. n Ill "'"" L.ltc:r Jrc.,.,c., S M L I J71 52999. c .rL.11 hur ~oltd nbbc<l .Krvltc t.111k .,\W.lll'r <lrl .,., Ill ptnk vcllow. aqu.i or white S.\11 117 S34 99 t .rc:.11 hll\ l'uflcd ,1urhc 1.Kquard H' ttu 1 . ,.lJdhl.11..k. rli\ .ll bldck or whac/l>l.1ek ~ ~1 I. li.l S24 99 < .rl·.11 hu\· 2r pulled ,1crvltc Jacqu.ud .~ 1r1 1 1~/hl.i\;k. ruvallblack or whnclblack S~IL Ii.I S44 99 ( .rc.11 bu\ \' back .. wearer drc!>., an f Uffl: J ld\'hC J•ll.ljUJrd Jade/black. royalllJfack o~ \\h11c/bl.1ck s ~I I. q;.,i1 KIDS SI 199·S37.99. Ong 18·$~ Garb' l.tll la~h1ans lrl'm ~~ur cnllectton bY a ""pmted" Co.1hforn1.l • tMnlt" Poh-e'ltcrlcotton tn ~nmsdnlnavv Sr1cs 2 6 .md 7 l.l Not in Palm 'pr1ngs 11rns1 519.99. Ong $27 Our cotton oxford cloth button d,Mn .,hart m whuc. blue or pmk Size., 1..i·1 t7 w11h '\2 )'I sleeve length Not m P.ilm Sprang. .. 120 2/520. Reg SICi each Roo~ter pure wool gabar· dine uc .. m f,111 colors :--:ot m P.dm Spring<; 1 ">q 2/515. Reg SI I c.\Ch Roo~tcr wool mohair knit ue-. in t.tll -.hadc-. Not m Palm C:,prmg., I 'Xl S99. Reg SI 50 Our 100% wool nJ\ \' docsk1 n hl.11cr 36 46 R 5 L 1Qr; • $44.99. Reg 567.50. 0ur d1stmc11ve wool flannel sl,1ck-. m 1rad111onal shades 30 42. 'JJQ1 Sl9.99. Our 100% cotton oxford cloth dress -.h1rt 111 white. blue or pink. 14'h 171h: 32 35 sleeve lengths 12()1 519.99-5199.99. Reg S~ S275 A hancbomc 1..olkLtt0n ol lamou designer pants. shirts. ... wc.ucrs knus and 1J,kets m p<.lpular colors. p,mcrn-. ''6 tp S32.99·559.99. Ong S4"> SQO J\\'R Club iog -.u11-. m ... 1urdv C(')t1on/pol¥\.~tcr \clour and triple ·knit a-:rvlic A ;;or1cd colhrs SM L·XL. 1118 HOME STORE 511.99 bath Ong 524. American designer col ton/tern lO\\eb in 8 ct.>lors l l;,nd Ung l~ S7.99. \\'a.,h Ong 55 ~ $3.99. 31 t • 57.99 '" m t )rig_ S24 famous n.imc 200 th re.id COltl)n ... hct.ts rull Ong S36. $14.99. Queen nn~ 548 $19.99. Kang Orig. S60 $24.99. Stand ard ca~c ... pr Ong 534. S1l.~ Kmg ca-.Cl>. pr l )rag 536 $15.99. 301 . ' J~ROBINSON'S • S99.99. Ong S200 100 p1cc.c Supreme -.1ainlc.,., -.1ccl tl.11\\.uc <.et indudcs all \'OU need 10 enter tatn Abbe\ Shell ,,r P.ins pattern Your bl.'nu-. ,., a matching .i picc:c htl ... tc"" ~t J2KJ S39.99. Ong S!SO 5120 Any size. goo<.t. tk"-' n pillow· h\.' ;"\.orthern £cat her• Clllll)n u.'l\c..:r . machine w,1sh ,rnd dr): 1871 S7.99·S24.99. It perfect S24·S60 Ralph Lau~n sheet., of 200 thr~c.l C\'ltlon m chamo,., woodlani'.1 ~rcen. smolcc or pueblo. Twin throogh lung -.17~ plu!\ pillow c.i:,c~ lrrcgul.irs 130 519.99-$44.99. If perfect $35 S70 Cannona 250 thread '!heel., of pam.i cotton m as'>Ol'tcd pat terns. Twin through king ~1zc plu~ pillow ca"c" Irregulars 301 S99.99. Reg S300 four piece Safari luggage <.cl by Da \'inci 1n ru&Kcd. hght. lcxtured \.Hl}1 Set includes tote. 'arry·on. 27• pull man and g.irmcnt b.ig m black. Not in M1 ion V1c10 and Palm Spring~ 1191 $19.99. Reg S42 Oc.s1sncr bath ~eel ol pure cotton 3~· x 72• m white. ecru. ~arlet. bur gund~~ dclph1111um. br1Kht navy or sungold IJh S2.99·Sl699. Re~ S4 S~I\ Vcr.1 Chri tm.1s ac cnt<; for the t.tblc mclUd placcm.u , napkm rmg~. c.ldd\' or ah & pepper ~ts Penguin. Snowman. Cat. Reindeer or ;an1a motif 1~)1 I tome tore items not .w~l.lblc m M1 1on V1eJ<l .• P.iJm Sprang'> or Sherm.in 0Jk Gallc.:na Furniture nnc m t I rton Plau. Kid not m • P.alm Spring J\\'Robm on~" \'ctcran!'i Day Sale end" f ucstfa)~ l"ovcmbcr I I. I lurr • m for best •lccuon . 'iQffiC qu.mutac Mc: lim11e(l .• lnJ all item 01rc ~l:i1ce1 to. prior .1lc No m.111 or phone orJcr~ pica •• ' . .... - • Vo ,Ne JreturneiltoFVC01lncll; Cook bolds edge· over McKalgbt ., . ~ BJ llOBb'I' BYNDMAN __ ... ...,,... .... Mayor 'Fred Vou " and James Neil wtre retumed to the City' oundl by•Fountain Valley "°ttl'1. b"' ~~ly el~tlon returns showed a close race (or the third avada~ council seat. Counc1rman 1Xo Nielsen, who det1dci1 not tO actk re~lection. ~ Cook i1 'pro.iaent 9f Neiahborhood Watch and ha~ been the top fund-raiser in this >ear'J Cny •. C ouffc1I race. . IOn, The l'C.'lattvely tame council rKi was sparked l>y ~ ·(~ firew~s from John Thom_l*>n, who tnlkd out Vou for special cntactJm, Thompton, an attorney. said the council .as _plaa&aed by croo)'ism and vowed to combat its spi'ead. El Goff!'Dor Sa~ Coatt .... ,.,.,...Nm... .,... . With about a third of the vote$ talhed late Tutlday;"burann <: ook'1tltd onl a ~i&ht ease ovtr•John McK.n1&ht for \he seat v.acated by · McKni&ht, ch11rman of the Founlli'n Valley Plannina Comm1111on, had won the endorsement ofNsctscn. Other candidates incluCJcd F111nk Nqn, Boo Hoxsie, Mary Ellis, Joyce Char and John ThomS>- The ~ilht otJ:ltr c&ndida&n took the pcn1Jion that the tity was 1n e~llent shape. The constant refrain from candidltnwnthat none-would pin pcnonaJly by be1na el«tfd to the ~ouncil. Tom BradleyD 51,852 .. om;.~1 1 __ G_._0c_ukm __ eJ_1&.;..n_R ___ 1...;5:_7_.36_9_ 1 w 1 m.m" ,c:e •••" "·-"' , . . Cam b~l-~~e~n~~' (te~tJ:y~. ~~t:i·~~:r:1~ ·Kenney 1·eading· in .. La·guila· ·. o:nEjl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- • . tJOn cover:qe Tuesday even1oa. ., · anchor Dan Rather pronounced die _By ROBERT HYNDMAN But city clerk Verna Rolhnacr said ballotina "the most s.Otcbed-on off· CM._..,,....... late Tuesday that his totals were not year election in history." Lida Campbtll-1..enney, a teacher Clfpetted to surpass Campbell-Len-lnde«!.controloftheScnatewuat Th M ·ddl "Ah 1 11 ney's. . . stake, as Mrt all U'tg, House seats and at urston 1 e o;J\, 00 • WI JOin Other.can.d1dates included R1.ck. ey 36 itatehoutet. With the ""'•thora of incumbents Dan Kenney and Bob Sia k .-Geritry on the Laauna Beach City t~r, a maintenance wor er. wnter races, there was no easy focal potnt.. . C'ounetl, accord1na-to early ~lcction Mause Meas and accountant Ctay-ln the the early· aoioa. Rather rctlims Tuesday_ • ton Vernon. sounded like a 5P0rucasttt U')'lnaio Laaun.a ~ voten.:also were_ keep t1'i faff trom h&mioa off'.the.sct Campbell-1..enney will replace asked to decide on the fate of the with the score 45.() in tbe founh Council\ltOman Bobbie Mink.in on unincorporatcdcommunityofTopof quarter. the five-member council. Minkin the World. Early returns showed lhat .. Hoo-boy. this Sc;we--race 1s dcc1~ed against runnana for another voterswanted to annex the area to the pickina up considerably .. he offered term. City mainly so .sewer lines could be at 8:45 p.m. when the network had With about 25 percent of the vote extend~ there. · . prQ,jectedtt~~::'n'; !:,kin& up • Kenney, Gentry • Th~ 1?n1eeded;-aty-ofrtetal thtte tea · · to-wi Campbell-unncywerctheclearwin-say, because the se_ptic systems now controloftheScnate. ners. servina the 10 homes have. over-ABC featured ~rbanc Peter Jen- . Don Black, wtio organized a write-flowed many \imes. Since £983,. 45 nin.gs pajrcd with veteran David. a.n campajan, will not have h1~ offictal sewer overflow related health viol-Brinkley, who offered his trademark tallies computed until later tti1s "-etk. at1ons have been recorded. clipped quips, such ~s bis mus1ns on ·GOP asseiilblymen tighten their g:rips on Orange Co•st By PAOL ARCHIP"LEY Ot .............. Rcpubbcan tatc assemblymen mamwned thett firm Jrip on the Ora.nae Coa .J Tuad&y. apparent!) winnma re-clecuon in the S8th, 69th and 10th d1stncts and taklna control of the open 72nd O.stnct 1n a U&ht race . 1rR1chard Longshore maintained his lead in the 72nd, the res\llts would mean Orange County Democrats haH been stnpoed of all representation in · Sacramento. Every state Senate and As~bly seat reprcscntina the county WQ.uld be held by fl Republican. Gil Ferguson, who succeeded uatc Sen. Manan Beracson in the sprawlina 10th d1stnct 1n 1984. rejected a low-key, under-financed bid to unseat him by Democrat Geoffrey Gray With l 6 percent of1he ballots counted Tuesday niaht. fcfJuSOn Cn.JO)ed a comfortable lead wnh 14 percent of the vote. The district includes all of NeWJ>Ort Beach and much of south Orange County. ~ A former Irvine Co vice president. Ferauson qu1,kly made a reputation for h1m~f 1n his first term when he IN-a mucb-pubhmzcd ban~ to oUit Assemblyman Tom H.iyden foT his anti-war ac- tivities dunng the V1elnam War. Gra), 38. a Newpon Beach attorney, became a token candidate for the Democrats when they decided not to waste money m a distnct where Republicans own a 2-1 registration advanta&C. olan Fnuelle handily won a fourth term in the 69tft-dtstnc~&nai.-De.mocr.a:t.Jack Baldwin. a_ . anfrom Irvine, taking 10 percent of the vote with 16 percent of the precincts counted 111 em ly . ttwrn,. t n fact. Fnzzelle of H untangton Beach, as well as Ferauson and other Republican candidates who · expected easy re-clcciion, spent""iii'Oie time outside their d1stncts camP1.1anina for other party hopefuls than they did at home ':I really didn•t have the conscience to spend a 101 of money on the campaiJn this year," Fnzulle said Tuesday night. The 69th dastnct includes paru of Hunun1ton Beach. fountain Valley, Costa Mesa and Irvine. Baldwin, a Democratic pany activist who has run •inst well-entrenched Republicans m the past, thouvit he had a shot at the esscmblyman be calJcd "the invisible ICJlslator. •• But Frizzellc said his constituents didn't a&ree with Baldwin's pohucs. "The only two t1mes we met face-to-face, he voiced his sup~n for Rose Bard and opposed the death penalty,· Fnuelle said. "l admire him for holding those convictions. btlt I don't think they represent the dastnct. And they certa1nly don't represent my views." . In the 58th d1stnct, Republican Dennis Brown was returned by the voters for a founh term aaainst little-known communitS' college instructor Pegay ~~.own tOQk a commaodan& lead immediately, arabbina 77 percent of the vote with 16 percent of the. Orange County precincts counted. The 58th dutnct covers most of Huntington Beach, Sunset Beach and Seal Beach in Ora.nae County, and tbe eastern portion of Lona Beach, Sianal Hill and Catalina Island in Los Anacles County. In a t1aht race 1n the central county's 72nd ~tritLwbach. was vacated by Assemblyman.Rt.chard Robinson in b1s bid to unseat Congressman Bob Do1h111. Oemoent 9HK~t was losina to Republican Richard Lonphorc in early return . With 16 perc.cnt of the bellots counted. Long- shore held 54 percent of the vote. HUNTINGTON RACE CLOSE.~~. From Al . ·.t Holdina a sh&ht edac for the third With four council .fl\Cmbers -Khnk, Henry Yee, Don Troy. Jim scat was We Bannister. an insurance ayor Rooen Mandie Jr., John Silva, Jay Stout and Tony Pas5an- 1Jency owner and avid supponer or Thomas. Don MacAlhster and Ruth nante. ci ty rcdc elopment plans. Bailey-,decadm.apin t rc~lectJon. In a separate race, incumbent City this years counetl race attracted 21 Attorney Gall Hutton easily won 1n But Bann1Ster was closely candidate~.. herraccapinstchallengerTedJohn-challenacd by both Grace Winchell In addiuon to those menuoned. son an Orange County Deputy and Rick Ro"'e Winchell is a college also-rans incl~ded George Hanna. Dastnct Attorney. counselor and ~r planruna com-Sherwood Balley, Dan Mahaffey, mm1oner and Rowe a 11-year city Nonna Vand~r Molen, John Valcn-r Although a c1iy audll was cnuca! of l'C.'Stdent, teachesccol0ayand United tino. Virait Lovelace, Tom Huuon.v9tersrcturnedhertotheJob States History at Golden West Col-L1venaood, LaVonne Lawler, Roben by a margan of nearly 2-to-1. accord- • .kac. , . Crawfis, Elame Craft. Timothy 1na to early returns. MESA .SLOW-GROWTH FACTION TRAILS ••• From Al slow arowth advpatcs dunna t~c campa1an for crcauna dissension in the city. ·· Joe Erickson, one of two candidates endorsed by Mesa ction, followed in founh p1a~. . Members of Mesa Action. which 1upponfd two winncn in the t 984 elections. had hoped to srab a council majonty thi year and stop the cit)'"'s h1an·nst, hiah-dcns1ty arowth. . I . AmbuflC)' and Buffa both came reveahna Buffa 1s a Democrat. under atllc:k 1n the final day for With about a third of the ba.llots spendina Larae amounts and running counted at midnight, candidates were what other candidate charaed were ranked as follows: Amburacy, 3,188: "~ecept1ve'' camp&l&n llctics. Buffa. 1,989: Hamilton. I, 199. Amburacy flooded voters dunn.g the final week with several ln11lers, while tracts for Buffa boasted the endorsement of Republican state Assemblyman Gil Ferguson w1thout Enckson. 1,626: Doua Yates. l ,32l: Bnan Theriot, 1,241 . Michael Nutter, I ,230; Bob Hanson. 8~ Chns tcel, 796, Char Johnson. 619, Mant Ma- ple , 609: Michael zkaradek. 475. Nicholas Bartlett. 192. the llhno1s 1ubematorial race be- tween Adlai Stevenson Ill and in-cumbent Jim Thompson the network had just called. Brinkley summed up · Stevenson's problem-plagued cam- pa1an -"His problems never ended. The}'..c_nded tonitht. He losL" NBC lost noth1na by sartm1at 10 p.m. EST-two hours later than CBS and I 5 minutes after ABC-offennJ a resn, eneraetic, chatty ap~ from co-anchon Tom Brokaw and John Chancellor. JlmBeam Bea111 , Roth locked in battle for 4th Dis.trict By G. JEANE'M'E AVENT o.llJ .... C.1141 ••• In the hotly contested 4th D1smct supervisorial race, Anaheim Mar.or Don Roth and Orange Mayor Jim Beam were locked in a fight to the finish early today Wnh 39 pucent of the vote counted in the early morning hours. Roth had 16,918 votes to Beam's I b.488 - a lead of 430 votes Ln a mud-shngtng campaign marked more b)' personal accusauons than a discussion of the issues, the two '11\aSors accused one another or telling the public hes· through the media and campaial\ literature. Both had taken a hard lane apmst cnme. but the} oppose a 1111 aero s from Anaheim Stadium currently favortd by the maJonty on the Board of Supervisors Ahhouah retmna upervisor Ralph B Clark intended to stay neutral in the acnmonious race, he issued a late endorsement of Roth, bccau he said, "I care too much about the 4th District. and-ebout the future ofOrang~Count). to si.nd on NEWPORT INCUMBENTS LE;A:DING:--•• -. ___ ,he.sidchn~~)' lo.Dl'r .. . Prom Al Clark.a formtrmayorof Anaheim. trauji won his third con ll\le But Hart bowed a 'itable mal"lln Reached at a «lebration at the l'C.'t1rCd aner 16 )ears on the Board. 1erm runn1n1 in 01 tnct I aptn l over Betk tn early rttums Tuesday 'We tan uth Cout Pla11 hotel · • James "Bun" Person, an attorney niaht. Tuesday niaht. Tumer said \he cam· In a ra« where the candidate\ and city PlanninaCommmioner"'ho "f feel very comfortable that I have paaan kept him buw. as heJuaJed his ra11td few eyebrow and hulc money ......... the top cam-11n , .... nder 1n thi I . ti l L. h af1ions fi1ht1na airport I UC as well toward campaianina. Recorder Ltt ...... - -won my re-c ~lion an1: the t at .. 8 h I .... r. d G w· year's race. • \/Cry stnoutl)t" Han sa.id. "The .. h1 dutae a a Plann1na Com· ranc ca 1 Y \K1eatc rea ry m- With abOut a third of the vote people are aivina me a rcil me Yae." mis ·oner. .. terbottom in a I 1ded vokd of counted late "Tuetday. traus had 3· "The numbcroncaacnd 1 ,,m the 119,026 to S6,335. to-2 ed~ on Pcnon. Han said she intend to conunuc 11rpon." he said. "That' the thing "At this po1nll have to oonft · I'd add~ sina traffic problem . in the that sat me into th1 " rather be ahead than behind but we IJ'C'I whale \teppina up her effon on · umcr al'° vov. d to pu h for knew it wa aoina to tie a <'lo cine," environmental issues. ..-hich ht Jaid l)HSQe of Measure A -Newport traus said. \Olen arc not al*a) aware of: • c enter C''Pln 1on -on th f'Jo"-25 Hart. also a two-term incumbent, In Distnct .-. Jae ie Heather did ballot handily defeated Allan Betk in the· not k another term. But the In O.stnct 6. carry tttum tho""cd Oistnct Thttt candidate he endorsed. Clartnce that 8111 ace• formtr sc1t will lthouah ~k ~1i not a b11 "Bus" Turner, will fill Mr ton the probabl ~tilted b Phil nsone. a campa11n pcnder, he sratibed 1ttcn· oounc1I. rrtircd ir Forte c tonel. hon by cbampiorunaoppios1taon to an Turner, h11rm1n of the city Plan• • n ne Ckftattd the challtnae of Irvine Co propc>ttl to expand New-n1na omma ion. appcarc4 to have Pat Michaels. Mi chael L•P.•n, Pon ~ntcr. Beek' effons have ltd to ddcattd challtf\ltr& Da\ id h n: Barbara 1 man and Harmon West· a o • 2.S ch tdt \ elm the-plan and Rooald \\ n1h1p I 8C'\l v.orth o1 Mi SlOft V1CJO ana 1tlhv1n ofNcwpon et. h \\.Crt both h11hl> rated an an Orange ounty Bat iaton poll of its mcmbc hip ... u.s :·Sea.te at pereat am.- Alan Cranston 0 76,0 6 P.d Zscnau R I 34,S60 Controller Gray Davis 0 77 ,338 W.CampbellR -· 122,911 - Attorney General John Van de C&mp 0 111,922 Bruce Gleason R 81,651 .,. - State Board of EqualU.tlon Ernest Dronenburg R 126,272 Marte Buckley D 58, I 32 ~ Con1tret1a -Sft1a.flL11.rtci . Robert Dom.it R · 18,2.46 Richard Rob1nson D I 5,226 .." Dlttrlct ff.5 pettal ~te4 Roben Badbam R 46, I 6 7 Brucc~umner 0 • 29,845 t!M District 11 percaC CHiiied Daniel Lungren R 18.1 l 3 · MichAet'Btackbum O 6,394 Supreme Court . Ju•tlce. H percnt coaled . Ro1e Bll'd Yes 46.305 No 162 640 Josepla Grodba 64,350 Yes No 127,542 Edward Puelll 139.314 Yes No 40.131 S&aaley MOu .. Yes 125,183 No 58.893 . Malcolm L•ca• Yes 142.853 No 36,468 Cnt Reynoso Yes 51,408 No . 138,192. Court of Appeal Yes No Daniel Kremer 139~297 33.902 Propo•1tlons SS -Sdlool Boad1 Yes 105,477 No 98.IS.'i 54 -Prl10D 80Dd1 Yes 129.464 No 16,258 5' -Drlakhll Waler Yes 153.238 No SJ.SOI ii -Collqe Boad1 Yes 101.821 No . 98.080 57 -Retirement Yes 145.606 No 51,545 U -Family Trao1fen Yes 153.345 No 46.940 st -Elecld DA Yes 161,990 No . 31 .910 It -Tu.tac Homu f cs . I S1,304 No 40,033 11 -Glllll·Salary Y6 82~85 No 119.462 ft -Jarvtr-Tax Yes 137,146 No 66.976 Yes ts-Eaallsla 16 .09 0 46.088 14 -AIDS Yes 70,501 No 141.264 . 15 -Toxlct Yes ... 133.055 No 80.111 State Auem bJy · HQ Dtttrlct Peay taus o 3.922 Ocinnis Brown R I 0.330 ·~ Dl•trkt ··~·c:Ma• ... Jad Bald•in 0 10,815 Roben Oalbvan 71,20' Newport BeaclJ 4 u perce.t ceale4 EJecl oee per illtrk1 Dllhict 1 • .Donald A. Strauss 6,236 James "Buzz'' Person 4,5S9 Dlltrlet I ~velyn R. Hart 6,S32 Allan Beck 4,411 D'-trkl-'--~""-Rooald W Winship 1,322 Oarcncc J Turner 4,954 David Shores 3, 99 l • Db'iiktt PatM1chaels 2,593 · Michael L lapin 2.239 Hannon WesJon 673 Betty Onmes Tc.man 855 Phil Sansone • 3,964 Yes No Cbrter Ainead.meac CCNSt.aMea 41 percat c..ai.4 Elect two M1cbut G. NUTter Bob Hanson Sandra L. Hanulton Peter Buffa Nicholas Banlcu Char Johnson Joe Enckson Mane N. Maplu Doua Yates Brian K. Thcnot M 1chacl W Szkaradck CbnsStccl Orville Amburgey S.2~ 4.038 . 1.401 1.031 2,030 2,382 221 189 1,133 683 l,'S23 J,4SS 561 899 3,164 Hunt111gton Beac st percat CMJltff• Elect foei George A. Hanna 1,361 Wet Bannister 5.250 Sherwood V. Bailey 1,731 John Erskine 6.294 Dan Mahaffey I. 921 Tom Ma ys 5,923 Normal Vander Mokn 3,453 John F. Valentino 1,205 V1ra>I Lovelace 564 Tom Livengood 4,05.4 LaVonnc Lawlor 691 Gra.cc H Winchell 4,726 Robert P. Crawfis 1,075 Elaine A. Craft l ,891 ' Timothy Klink 2,180 Rick Rowe 4,663 Henry Yee 4.435 Don Troy 2. S04 J1m..S1lva J.21 l Jay Stout 1,315 Tony Passannante I, 120 CUy AttorH)' · SO percent ~ultd Gail Hutton 9,438 Ted Johnson 4,937 LaJtUna '1eaclJ zf" percent cooled Elect Qree . • Dan Kenney 1,237 Roben Gentry 1, 140 Lida C'ampbell-Ltnncy 1.061 Don Black (Wnte In) Clayton Vernon • 419 Rickey Slater 214 M1111e M~ • 383 Yes 0 Cbrtcr Amett4meat Absoeee Vow OaJy l3 I F ountaln Valley· 41 percent conte4 Elect l'ff Fred Vo James 1 eat Frank Nevi Bob Hox 1e . Mat) Elh John M<'Knaatu Jo)tc bar Lau.rann Coo Joha Thompson . I 4,464 '·~' 1.lSl sos 2.319 2,637 811 2.64 9 olan f(inelk R 24.370 .. 1ttt1 0t1trk1 Irvine .Rallcla 41 ftttftl C'ta*I ..,. .ru-~ GeofTiTy Gray,0 12, 6 ,.,. ater .., ... ..,.~ct (itl FCIJuton R ~~.5 17 M ~· eem ... n.,. Ohtttc:t Albert Nan'er U ftH!.11 teimlff-~-...BtU)' H. OlsOn ·' IO.n1cl Gn t 0 9,S• 1 Petr wan Richard R l 1,246• Ray A. utr t - ....... -..... -...... _ ---"'E: ...... .. -- , , .. Aa Ot'Migeeo.t DAtLY PtLOT/Wedn9edey, ~ber 5. 19" ELlCTION '86 6 • Biid: ~I acc~pt it witll a coiiscienCe at pea:Ce'· . . ·· Chtef Jus tice concede~ early; J ustices ··ReynQso t Grodin trail b y Wilie ma rgins contr~l to con~r\ali"·cs fol the fir~t aid, "We think the voters a~ tcd up tre(\uent reversal'> of death entcnces. and the li~t woman ever Ul I time in three decades with the criminal 1ustice system. and .. 1 npprrciatc that '>Orne 'people Caltforn1a IO"emor's Cllban~t. was "The voters of California have they want a change, a,nd that 13' within our state arc tmJ>tltieru. impa· Brown's Agnculturt and ~rv1ces " .spoken, and I a~t thcrr \'~act." . rtfl~~w by ~bat )'OU ce this C".C· tientto sec e~ecution~ .. 6ird Ciitd, but ~cretal) in 1977 ~hen he named her ------~ ---Bird said an a con~ssion statement at nsng. . , , • • she added: "l don•t think an~body in to replace. rctmna. Chief JusuC( the coun's chamber~ in Los Angeles. • . OcukmeJi:tn s t~o appointees on tlli$ st~tc will sit•easy if, in fact. this Donald Wright. • ~ LOS ANOELEs (AP) -Chief Justice Rose 8ird, the first womao on the state Supreme Coun, and two 1 other Jerry Brown appointees Tues- The 'other two defeated Justices were Cruz Reynoso. th~couf1'S first Hispanic. and Joseph Grodin. Alf three had been targeted b) con- " ... I acttpt ;t' with a conscience at the current court. Malcolm lut'asa~d bccomd a court tllat in ures nothing peace." Edward Pane th. were retained \n but execution'> 10 appca e the ovcr- W1th 59 percent of the precincts ot:fi~ by comfortable margu~s along weening and insatiable appcutc of Cnuc11ed by farme1' for her '\\oork for Brown on farm labor and reporttns, Bird wa being rejected by with Stanle> Mosk. an apr;>;<>antee of ambitious pohtatians." • mor.t than 66~rccnt of the vote, former Gov. Edmund "Pat Brown. If · Sltd ·pesticide: issues. and ussailw as a hbcral with no prior Judic1aJ ex• pc"rirn~~Olf'\"Oter"COnfirmamm -so t 977 with a record-tow 51. 7 pc:rcent ma1orit y and has been the -..----daybecam~the firstjustices--Yete<I out of oflice in Califom1a's 50 years of judicial ret.tntton elections, buried by a conscrvat\ve. pro-death penalty landslide. F¥a""W! group ~ Reynoso by6Upcrcehlandvrodlnby n er conceS'sioll spct.-ch. ~rnr -th~re are to bt~"ecuuon G 57 percent. -. 'joked that she was tiking her defeat said, . •f. should be because th~ Their defeat allows Gov. eorge Debbie Goff. spokeswoman for ''like a man." She also ~poke about Constttut1on j\as been follo~ed ~d ~u~"!~~~~~~::°~~tui:.t:~~ri~h~ Cnme Victims for Court Reform. a the death penalty, the prime issue of the rule of law has been fol!owed. group oppo~ing the three justi~. opponents \t!ho attacked ~he court's . Bird. 50. a former public defender target of five unsuccc sful recall eamp:ugn since then. sweeps into 2nd ... .... ____ t~. ..--------t----- LOS ANGELES (AP)-California Gov. George Deukmejian. whose tough-on.crime image mirrored voter concern~ left Los Angeles Mayor Tum Bradley in lhe-du1st-+tliesEla\I. -1---------~-~- night. sweeping to a second term as leader of the nation's most populous state. With 26 percent of the vote counted, DcukmeJian hetd a steady lead of 64 percent to Bradley's 36 percent. By mid-evenin.g. the figures were Deukmejian 1.081. 769. Brad le> 604,266. ·DeukmeJian called hi~wide margin of victory "a mandate for us to hold steady on our course." .. We have built .a very sohd foundauon. and now we are tn a position to u ulrrcadf-forth~ stars." . the governor told his supponers. · At 10:20 p.m. BraCiJey emerged fr()fll his hotel suite and -told sup- poners: "The people of th as st.ate have '$j>Oken. I respect the will of the people. - "Ton ight the message 1s clear,.. . --------------------~~...-----~Y_otetS say;_~--· __ ____ to E_ngliSh~ Ilo to AI-DS measure LOS ANGELES (AP) .._ Voters supporters of Larouche .. ~Uw for overwheJmineJy approved a proposal 1dent1fic·at1on of A.IDS v1ct1ms and to-make En~sh-CaliforniiH ofTl{'.ial possjbJe Qul)ranune measures. It language whtle re~ecting an initiative would have barred them ffom educa- 1argctiog AlDS victims proposed by tion and restaurant employment. backers of political extremist Lyndon Vinuall)-all major candidates. th~ LaRouche. gay community and the California Also winning was Proposition 65. med1calestabJisbment opposed i~ --lLne-1l~'1.-.p" a.a.isa;11-..o.L-LIIC-...DaJillL-_ Also void n& oppositiQn o the mepsures. which would block com-AIDS initiative were Gov. corge pan1es from tainting drinking water IJCUl(mejian. his opportent, Los An· supplies with toxic chemicals and gel~ Mayor Tom Bndley and sena- order them .to post warnings to alen tonal candidates Sen. Alan Cranston. the publit' to dangerous contam1na-0-Calif.. and Republican R~p. Ed tion. Zschau. The toxics measure. backed by the laRouche supponer Khushro Democrats and mainly opposed b> Ghandi. who spearheaded the AIDS Repubhcans. was winnmg. wnh 64 iniuat1vc, refused to concede defeat, percent of .the voters favoring it in "but said. "People will demand that early returns. ,this be dealt with. When the president Volers also leaned toward approval · makes Al OS a national issue. then ofS 1.8 bi I hon in bonds to finance new this measure wall have won." prisons. schools and clean-water sys-Propositjon 63. whkh would terns. A measure authored by the late amend tbe state Const1tut1on to Howard Jan'• which ~-sa1d would r~l\1ze Eng.ltsh as -the stat~s -Of- close loopholes in his Proi>ositton 13 tic1al language. won wide suppon of t 978 was-being approved by 61 from voters.alarmed over an influx of percerit of the voters. non-English spcakin& 1mnuarant~ Voter overwhelminitY approved . "lfsclcnrlya1medat Hispanics and Proposition 63. the English language Asians. but tt doesn't help' people constituttonal amendment. and tum-· learn Enahsh." said 6tate Sen. An ed-down Proposition 64. the AIDS Torres. who opposed the measure, initiative, the two most hotl)' debated whi ch he s:ud should be fought in the ballot measures. •. courts. Bradley said ... We've lost an election. I want you to know the indomitable spirit of this old warrior will never say , . ~ die." -Gov. George Deukmejlan u.,. a. remote DcukmeJian. speaking at his head· control to change the channel' on hJ.a hotel quaners across town. said he had room aet in Loa Angelea Tue9day evening ·O~o and he and hla. wife. Gloria. watch early return• ghing him a •ubatantial lead over Mayor Tom Bradley. · With 17 pcr<'eftr or the vote The l OXJCS tn1Uat1ve. opposed by counted, the English language .Deukm~Jian. farmers and. industry. measure won 77 percent of the vote, would require that people be alcned with 23 per'ccnt opposing it. abou1 the presence of toxic and · But \ahfom1a c1t1zens.reJectcd the can·cer-causmg chemicals in drinking received a congratulatory telegram from Bradley. "He wtM!ed me well and he has said he wants to be helpful because we both share in our agreement to mat..e C~lifomia the best place 11 can be and I appreoate ttfat." the governor told a cheenog crowd. DculmleJ1an·s power at the polls was reflected in his achievement of a lon_gtime personal crusade to oust Chief Justice Rose Bird from the California Supreme Coun Two other JUStlces targeted by the governor for dismasal also lagged. ' Bradle). the popular four-term mayor of Los Angeles. had sought to become the s.tate's first black gov- ernor. ~ Others at Democratic headquaners were openl} pess1mislJc from the e\eoang's outset. •·1t was clear Dcukm~J1an would win." said former Gov. Edmund G. Brown Sr .. who JOtncd Sradley and other IJemocrats at the downtown Hilton Hotel. "Bradley ran a good campai~n but the issues weren't there," said Brown. "The odds were against him." It was an unprecedented rematch. the sec-ond gubernatorial ~ttlc in California history feauring the same two maJor candidates. In 1982. Brad· ley lost by less than" 94,000 votes. Later analysis showed that blacks and Latinos. voters which Bradley hoped Cranston holds slim lead over challenger Zschau By tbe Associated Prus C'ranston·s campaign spokesman. LOS ANGELES-A.lan Cranston. ~He came into the state. and he had a caught in the toughest elecuon battle candidate who failed to state the of his 18-year Senate career. held a reason for his cand1dac)' ... narrow lead Tuesda)' o"er challenger Cranston led Zschau in Santa Clara Ed Zschau. captunng dual support County -thl' home turf of both from heav1I) Democrauc San Fran-candidates -and in Los 1Angeles casco and vote-nch Los Angeles County. where a third ofCahfomia's counties. voters live He also led in Sacramen- Wrttr S~ percent of (altfoffl~ LO. Fresno... San F.rancLSC.O counties 24.000-plu s precincts reporting. but trailed dec1s1vely in the more Cranston led Zschau 49 percent to 48 rnnservative Ri verside and Orange· pe.rcent. or about 50.000 votes· out of cou nties. 3. S mil hon cast. Zschau had planned a victory party Two telev1s1on networks -AB( at the Marriott Hotel in Santa Clara. and CBS -prOJCCted C rano;ton the ·with several hundred supporters and victor based on ex.it polls. but NBC a ballroom decked with baJJoons and said the race was too close to call. a pap1er mache elephant. Both candidates targeted each other's legis1ative voting records. pouring millions of dollars into television ads that satw:atcd the airwaves dail} dunng the ·summer and fall. and both had national political figures cam·paigning in Cali· forma on their behalf -President Reagan for Zschau and Massachu- se.tts sen_ Edward Kennedy for Cranston. But -two ke y issues·· that loomed large as the Senate race heated up last year -Cranston's age and his unsuccessful 1984 run at the pres•· denq -played generally insignifi· canl roles in the campaign. A buoyant Cranston predicted Cranston, his staff and supporters The general election campaign \ 1ctory. declaring: 'T m looking for. prepared a similar victory party at the began in earnest only hou rs af\er the ward to being the ma1onty whip." Hyatt Hotel near the Los Angeles votes were counted in the June As Cranston's lead sohd1fied lnternauonal A1port. pnmary. when Cranston launched Zschau's staff said the congre,sman The $20 millton-plus California television advertising campaign that would issue a statement only when Senate campaign. the most expe nsive depicted Z..schau as a "Oip-flop" results were clear. • Senate ra~e in the nat10~. went dowh lawmaker in ke}""congressional votes, "Honest!), we dorft know wban to the w1~ Tuesday with Cranston such as am1s sales to Israel and aid to gomg on." said Ron Smim. Zschau's 1lnd Zscn§il .neck-and-feclc in the the Nicaraguan·Contras .. campaign manager. "We're not tyn ng polls · • to play any games. We JUSt don't About 8 percent of tho total vote Zschau. whose campaign stafflater know what's happening." F Tues<la> was expected to be absentee, ac,knowledged t~~t Cra!'ston had Zschau. whose ghttenng. multi-which trad111onally 1s largely Re-ca~ght them napping, switc~ed tele· milhon-dollar media advenis1ng publican and a clear benefit for vision pr~uctt<;>n compan1.es and campaign shot him from obscunty to Zschau. who had been named by ca~e·out Wl!h his own slash1~g ads, pohtical promanenee. was aided by President Reagan as a key GOP hope calling Cranston soft on terronsts. President Reagan. who campaigned of maintaining a Republican Senate Cranston. 72. who as Democratic on Zschau's behalf JUSt days before majonty whip is the second-most powerful the election. But that hope faded nationally Democrat in the upper house. bas had "Ronald Reagan docs not have Tuesda} as Democrats appeared to httlc difficulty in bis three races smcc coattails." said Oarry Sragow. gam control of the house. 1968. to tap. failed to vok in overwhelming numbers. Although the carrdidates' faces were familiar 1n-I 98o. the issues were different and the financial power of the candidates' had shifted dramati· cally. . Bradley. who outspent DeukmeJan rn 1982 by $500.000. could not compete for cash with the go"emor's prosperity irr 1986. AIDS initiative. by a 01aftin-0f-more waier. It \.\Ould give citizens standing than two to one. with {J7 percent to sue polluters. voting against it and 33 per~nt in Voters also w~to the polls to cast favor. ballots on 10 other propo 111ons, "We want every demagogue to including Proposition 61 backed b) know ... it stopped here tonight." ~id tax fighter Paul Gann. The initiattve. David Mixnei'. coordinator of the No which would hm1t top salaries paid by on 64 Campaign. He. hailed the gay the stqte to $80.000 for the govemo1> community's campaign to defeat the and S64.000 · for 'other key state tnit1auve, saying. "The message 1s ... employtts:-wa~mi°licfeated. with, 'Don't mess with us."' '62 percent of the electoratgc opposing The AIDS \nttiauvc. backed by 11. • • fl# '-51 , .... Sen. Alan Cranaton. D-Callf .• turn• ln hi• ballot Tue9day morn.Inc In Loe Anlela. • . _ McCarthybeats Curb; Davisleadsi~ controller race LOS ANGELES (AP) -Demo- cratic Lt. Gov. Leo McC'anhywon re· election Tucsda) alona wtth h1s • pany's.incumben t for attomey gen- eral, secrellry of tatt and trca urer, wh1Je Democrat Gray Davis h:eld hts lead 10 the controller battle McCanh>: pulled ahead of former Le. Gov Mike Cufb. 4 percent to 43 pereent, Wlth 31 pel"t'enl or lhe ~net suuew1dt re1>0nina m the mud·shn11n1 race for hcutenant aov- cmor. Aucmblyman Davis of hcrman Olkl cd&ed aht> d of ftat~ • n. Wilhun-< amvbcff, Hacienda Hei&hts, 51 perctnt to 4' percent. tn lhe·flatd.fouaht t>ittlc for controller. • The resultJ, which revc~d 1n1tial JOt lbe two GQP candtdfUt · m•IC ptciliciion of pre· • election polls. . "lam "cry plcasedt Van de Kamr Voters re-elected Democratic in· told supporters u a downtown hote cum bents for secretaf) of state. .., pledge to the people of Cahfom11• attorne)' &eneraJ and trt;asurer, as pre-that tM attorney aeneral will be elccuon-poll predicted. -~ -dedicated to -makina Eahfo~a a -Attorne) General John Van de .safer state .... a tate that delivers on m Kamp. wnh 6S percent of the votes.; promises .... dedicated to those who led GOP candidate Bruce Gica.son. a .cannot defend themselves." Panorama Cal) atto~y who had ~I J'hrcc sphnter: panics w~ich QUati· percent. tied candidates on statewide ballots -Secretarv of tatc March Fong -Libertarian. Peace and freedom F.u w11h 69 percent, pulled ahead of and American Independent -hoped Republican Orana County Super· the race for treasurer "'"ould as utc visor and fonner sstmblyman them the 2 percent vote tally the) 'Bruce cstllndc:j who had 26 percent. each need to t candidates on the -Treasur r e Unruh, run_nin 1988 ballot. • without Repubhcan OPPo 1taon, • Candidate for lieutenant 1overnor ~urcd 83 percent com~.rcd to 9 and controller fouah1 thtir way to rhe percent for his cl05CSt minor party general election with name calling oppo 1tton. Ray Cul rn of the and mud,stinarn~ hea<tin& the race~ Labenarian Partr. for the.u ually Jow·proG16 JCtondary constitutional offices. In the lieutenant governor race. MCCanhy. a 56-year.otd former As· scmbly speaker from San Franc1sco. accust<t Curbofmakin& ht fortune in HollywOod with .. scxpto1tauon" films such u "C'~clc Savgei" and · homoseitually-oncntcd records ~ucti as .. Silly va&es. · • Curt> •. a •'1 -yearoo0ld m1lhonnirc rccoro•na cxC(ullve who served as lieutenant iovcrnor under Dcmo- ttatic Go • Jrny Brown from 1979 to 198.l. re ponded with a $7 mtlHon lander and li~l su1t:.- ihe candid.at nu~d comli1ncil total of more than $4.3 mlllton. m tcarm. • MrGinhy had 1ncludina fr< )'cars as powerful peaker of the Assembly. Curb 1s a conscrvattve Hollywood record producer who only pe t p0ht1cal role was 111 licutenant.aov: emor. a po t he once dcscnbcd in an interview with a reporter as wonh- kss. The '\Urt>fl~ tctin-ment of tntum· bent controller, Democrat Ken Cory threw open the office, which was ~urc ivel~ pul".\ued b)' Divis of hcrman Oa1Cs :md C.amptiCU of ===Hacienda KeiJlits Polls sbo~ed Daw; ~wna a wide lead. okt lawyer aDd pohUQI ~.&. upset COftltf'Yal1ve. tednwn by fedctaJ coun1 ~ ~vidt blltkt wtlb a Wr &railed uw ~ toulll a d w. • • jtf three-ierm incumbent kepUbticari Kep.Job' Hiler. dlan«torled~Mlltn. • tl(6-petOeM,witll9l1•=--••"'-~ -, ~ Republacan1, as exP«ttd. · won two JnVloully And Democra11 pkbd up at laM one ..a"' Nonh a.1 ..,_.'CMI dtii••• a Pll'Vtllll.., D 1 111Mi& Dtmocratacopien1all1nPtnlltylvaniaandOtlaboma,a ·Carolina. ~ Duke UruwnU)' politK:a.I ldcftce wat1nl.ouitil-.whaea,....._, •• C1111 ,_._.. ..t clote race for a Dtmottatic open tat in Maf')land and a profnsor oUSled Rep William Co&ey Jr. in a race an nunery owner •..... d f_,. Welti me, a llllck o..o;. mustinpna eomett in ,Louitiena. AINI Fred Grand). wbic:b CObt)' bad..ma4e a rcl~t a~I for C'hntUU crat and former "°'*,.,, ..,, ... ,. • ••-b' former uar of TVs .. Tbe LOn Boat " picked up a former ·votts. aeptivc per~c:a:A-~ . . \\'.ASHIN~TON :-ihe Demo&ats QOnfidritly -Dtmocrauc Iowa disuict f~ the Reeublicans. In wntcm Nonh C'ar<»ina. Omaocrat Jama'Clatte In Ute. qt. wm· ••· D.C., proclauned . tbtar conunucd control of the House of By early Wednnday momina, Democra1' had won ltd naambettt Rep. Bdf Hendon S t-49 percent watb 92 ~ state Rep. Comu.cc Mcinlll ...... td 1 Re~ntataves T~y and sco~ pins ti\ tht pivotal IS I Mata ud were ~ ia anothtr '.S cli1tnct1. pe1"nt of tbt vote counled. . . fonncrty Derftqcratk teat, ddealias w·I& ......., ~ulh. where 1 Republican poftiical revi\lal born of th• Republicans claimed 111 dittricu and led 1n another 47. In lndaaaa. 33--)'car-old Drinocralic Rate Sth. James Bainum Jr. In rn;t;uua. ~·Cwt Wlldoa. a ~~~ t~a SlVfft im.-~--":"--.. ___ _.._· In South Carolina, Democraaac Mte Sm. Ehzabtth Jo~u pulled off a wt ft over s&ate Sen. Jame-1 Butd~r. who county offkial. led DeMoaat ~· to k r. 1 nnmn ~~S.C:., . :William btcka•Jlroaj CbD1111n Cu:u4:ft.enla.ti1tS in ~ for a rttaoture a 1ubUtbaa Pbalade?.-..: ... teat Mid...,. mocrats too •Ormer Y Repubhcan stats in Iowa's Work~n 1n a ~1ule-produana tt11tnct ~re OtmO'-prtv1ou•"' Rtpubbc:an open ~ nonhini I waa. IJimoc . .,.... VT troubled farm country, in southern Maine v1 .... hta ts had c a.t d _,.. I ~' h 11 h .... 1: • SoWh CarolJ_na, New York and lnd11n1, and o~stedOOP C'!'& ount~ on economic woes an t._ alluct to • n nort -ccnlra owa, w t'tt tn"' .arm economy wu ~epublic:a. ns ~Ito cap1ure61 formerly Democnuc ancu~bents an the M1111ss1ppi Delta, Indiana and North aave ~m tbe •· The open teat had been held ~ a a mlJor iMue, fonmr state Democratic chairman Dave ~•t an Oklahoma, whtte (onntt Tulia mayqir Jasaa c I Rqxibhcan.. . . Nqk ddeated Waterloo attorney John Mdniec for IN lnbofedtfeatedGU) Allison, a 39-)Ur-old law .Pi'ofeNor. ' arol~~hc only House district wbcre Prnidtnt Raia•. ~Dd Viflinta state de.._t.c Owen Pic:kttt; a iUt .vacanled by Republican C~r Evans. Mau~·· ,._new ~uon of K.enac:dyt alto 1oot 111 pl.I« in campeianed for • GO~ candidate, ~mocratic l{ep,. Dem~t..de&iedllepablicaastateSen. Joe Canada for r,ttarina DemOC"rttic Gov. JOKJ)h £. ~oan captured a tbi Coapaa. Joseph P. Kcnilldy II. &be IOft ofilain Sn. Frank McC'loskey ddt1ttd Republican cballt~ Rkh· ·a prevaousJz. OOP •t. ' fonnerl7 Republican Jtat, dcfnuna poh&ical ncwco~ Robert F. ·Ktnnedy. couttd io an easy . vlctOf)' ia the . ard Mdnt_m baa. much wide.rm• .......... ., .... r·v1n•• 11u.be _iuiniPP. Oeka. llep, Web() Fraaklin, t two-H. Rolhn Ives. . • • Botton, MJS$.., 1Cat of teti,rina Houte Speaker Thomas P. :..4.a ti 1 ··r ·'--"uw..~ CY" ~L..w.s C)P!!edJ!L[)t~• Mike &py, a Dcmomtulso appeared~~ ~e=r~~cw O'Neill Jr. • , ~--e c aime in their contest two years-o. Wtth 89 33-yea.iT.q{d black state om. 1.c1al 'Who uii"d'I. a Aron. I appb. r Yo~nrnate:~ iier 1;11.••t: ..... ~. ,.._..,_or~· Hou • o~'•:-perttnt of the vote counted an the seuthwcst Indiana tu the I 11 l ~.... v17111 -·" ~ ~·, " i':::'.: .. ~ .. "'r.-,,.....;.._.,.. distnct.. the incumbent held art I l ,000.votc cushion. tow te voters an ~taca Y po anzicu u1stnct to wan. picked up a previous y GOP sea\ by defeatina Suffolk Wniht. (). Tcus, ~tit won re-e ion to a l 7t tenn, f n another l ndiana d1stnct, Thomas Ward, a 37-year-Espy became t.ht tint k to ~at Mi~pPi in~ County lqislator Grqory J. Blass. • aod GOP leader Ro~icbel. R-nl., rtlained bas teal Conpns 11nc:e ReconstrUCt1on, 1n a d11tnet t'ltlc:e Also an New York, Rel>!lbtican Rep. Fred Eckert aloniw1th most other lcaderJhip fiawet . ~ BADHAM.;. F~Al the _ _primary ~ last spnna was ·Hoffmann. The former -Superior Court jud&e went through poht1cal trans- fonnations himself. He served in the st.ate Assembly wbile a Republican, but latµ became county chairm.an or the Democrats. He was appointed to -enai by ronncr:Gov. PirBMWD.. Dunn& the general election race he campaipcd bard io portray himself as a moderate who often agreed with the president and who )WOUid be independent 1n Congress. Badham easily won the pnmary apinst a spirited challenge by Nathan Rosenbefl, · The well-funded Newport Beach busanessman's politics were basically the same as the conaressman's, so ht made Badham the issue and focused on the consressman's frequent absences from -the-Hou~ end his worldwide travels. Rosenbera painted Badham as aloof, arroaant and lfnresponsive to bis constituents. Badham was stuna by Roscnbera's attacks. chargina the pohucal neophyte ran a ncptivc campaign. " .. Sumner picked up the theme and continued to hammer away al Badbarn The congressman tned to maintain his distance, characterizing Joeepb P. Kenned! ~celebrate. darhaC Sumner a a wcll-mcanana candidate dctory ,.,-ty Jn 8oeton 'l'ae9day ~t. but ignorant of the ways of Congress. Kennedy will replace rett.rtna Boue Speaker Tbomu P. O'Neill. He emphasized his experience and scnaonty, and enjoyed the endorse--. ments of the pl'C$ident and his : a· bli k ad;~::~:~:on.Badham ti :ed of epu cans ma e ~~ .. :r~ ~~1~~~~r:.~~~~J~ strong headway 1· n dunna a taping for KOCE-TV. . Tht five-term congressman said · Sumner was ··I} ing and knew It." and t t h ~ -~reatenCdt!>fiJe ala'A<SUltforslander s a e ouse ra,.es 1fSumnerd1dn't back off ~ The former ;ud&e dared tum. Bldb.am later said the maucr was in By die Associated Pttt1 opportunaues were available m con- tests in late·rcporting western states. his attorney's hands. ~ Celebrauna with other Republican winners and supporters at Westin uth-eoast Plazr Hotel, 86dhem said of has Democratic opponent. "I find n difficult to even talk about Mr. Sumner. "We used to live JO the same neiahborhood. He was rny prcdc· ccssor an the state Assembly. "J would never have attacked rum personally or attacked his fam ily," Badham said. - "l deeply regret· that chaUengcrs • that really don't have much JOing for them '44>0P. to that ktnd of th mg to get attention.' He defended has record in Congress and said hiT 1"P\... abroad were necessary to properly lib his job. "I have never missed a. critical vote," he said. "Let them talk. As Iona as I trunk I'm .doina the ri&ht thing and the voters do. then I'm happy and sats.sfi~." Jn other conarcssionil races. Re· publican Robert Doman was cd&ina Assemblyman Richard Robinson in his bid for a Sttond term in the 38th District. Wath 29 percent of the ballots counted, Dornan had aamered S4 percent of the vote. Republican . Danttl Lungren ~ easily outdistancing a Democratic challenge by Michael Blackbum in the 42nd Consress1onal Dastpct. With 29 percent of the county rctums counted, Lu~n had cap- tured 74 percent of the vote. crats had won 16 teats. Added to their lS holdo"er seats, &hat pve them at least a m~onty of SI . The)' were lcadm& in thrtt more races. so 1he1r total could rise ro S4 if the close rates fell their way Republicans claimed 12 wins and v.erc leadina in thrtt, which would make a total of 46, countinJ tht1rJI holdovers. Tht (Xmocrats needed a hifl of only fOur ~ts in their flvor to pin the ~ty p1ny1 fiaht 10 appoint committee chairmen and Kt the Senatc's leaistattve •nda. Their WfCll wett vi&!Mra.ble QOP frahmen who narrowly won office on ....... ~~~ lltefttth of Rt'~n·s landtidt e\cctton an 1980. Stn1te Democratic ~ader Roben C. Byrd of West Viflinaa, in line to bceomc maJonty leader. said he hid fint tho~t htt party would wan a 2-48 ~nty but u the returns ~~-=--1tcamc 1n. he conftdenny pmtictcd< 1'1 btlte\t it's aoina to be better than that . ~ The l>cmocrats arc all ~t to The Republican Party sbanercd the On a oaght that Repubhcans con~ Democrats' Iona-time gnp on state· ceded lhe were losina control of the ..houses Tu talcin Alabama for ate.. ~atonal victories the first Ume smce Reconstruction ga\le them a consotition pnze. - and movina th.~ GOP toward a pick.up Prc$ident Reapn 's spokesman of at least eight more executive Larry Speakes said t.he aubematoriaJ mansions. outcome "speaks weU for the per- In the process, the Republicansalso manent reahanment of the Re- rewrote the electoral h1s.tory book in publican Party." • Aorida. clectmg former Tampa "The sohd.SOuth lhat the Dcmo- Ma)or Bob Martinez. a Democrat-crats used to talk about ai n't so sohd tumed-Rcpublican. a.s the $late's flm -.nymOTe;" said GOP national .clwr- Hispanic chief executive. man Frank Fahrcnkopf. "As we bead TheyJOta measure of revenge. too, to the West, I thank we· have a good recla1m1ng Tex.as from the Demo--shot of maybe endm& up with a crats, as former GOP Gov. Bill majority of the govtmorships." Kay Orr. Clements beat incumbent Demo-With 19 gubernatorial vacancies. craucGov_Mar,k White, the man who IS of them created by retinng Dcmo- unscated Clements four years ago. c rats;-RcpubliCans s.a an opporrorn--C'nrmerncurall swepi toi-c--dcctt0n 1.n.NcbrasU. lonJJime Republican _tt for major _pins and a chanoe to Republican Gov. James Thomp- Pany act1v1st Kay Orr defeated a capture• m&Jority of aovemors-for son won another term m llhno1s, woman opponent to take the state the first ume smce 1969. Republtcan Edward Dt Prete won rc- away from the Democrats. • Democrats held 34 aovcmorshap election in Rhode Island, and John Altogether. Republican candidates and were defend ma 27 of them. The Sun\mu. chairman of the GOP go"· foraov~rnor won in eia,ht states and GOPwasdefendmgmne statchouses. cmors, won another term an Ne" were lcadina in three others now held WtSConsin·s Democratic incum-Hamp hare In Iowa, Republican by Democrats. Democrats won two bent. Gov. Anthony Earl, was tr:uhna Go'. Terry Branstad was rt-elected states now held by the GOP. Ten· narrowly behind GOP chaltenacr The GOP scored victories on nessce and Penns)'fvan1a. Tommy Thompson. ~mocrauc turfm Aonda. Alabama. If mat trend held up, at would Mo t other incumbent aovcmors Produce a net .. m of nine sc~ts, ust were havanaan easier time of it, with Maine. :rcus. Kansas. Nebraska. -South C'arolina and New Mc.Juco shy t>f the 10 th.e GOP n to Ne" Yorl ~mocrat .Mario Cuomo Republicans al led an the Dcmo- capturc a, majonty of the executive w1nnmg big. Incumbent Ocmocmt era tic-held state ofOkl ahoma. lcbho mansions. The Republ&cans have not James Blanchard m M1cbljlln. and Wisconsin. held lhe balance of power tn -Yht-Michael Dukak1s 1n Massachusetts. statehouses since 1969, and ~mo-Richard Celeste m Oh1Q, Joe Frank But Democrat\ \lo>re~ted both Tcn- crats had a 34-16 advantage going Harns in Georgia, Ball Clanton in ncssec and Pennsyh.ania, both slate into Tuesday's elections. rlcansas. Rudolph Pcrp1ch m "''th t~o-tcrm GOP ao,cmors rcllr· But for the Republicans, more Minnesota. and Wilham O'Neill m in11,. . work." Byrd said. "We ... don't want confrontation.".· Retinn.a Sen . Paul Luah. R· cv., whose scat wa leanina ~mocratk, said Republican control "was in jcoptrd)' all alona •• Rctanna House Speaker Thoma$ r. O'Neill Jr .. 0-Man .• said that with a Democratic Senate. "The &O\em· meru ill operate on the ~s1' that (Rcapn) is the leader of the na11on .• ,. Thm will be more concihat1on. It will be the ·an of &O\lemmcnt b) compromist. it has t\a~ned man)' limn an the pa t and it's not that bad .. In the SOutb. a tno o( GOP rmttmcn 1m11ton fetl dapi~ Rc-apn' rtpeated cfTortl 10 save them l~mocrat1e Go . Rob Graham dee fated Stn. Paula Hawkin in Flonda, DC.mocra11c Rtp. Wyche Fowler un· ~ttd Sen. Mack Mattan;ty 1n Gcor· 111. and Dcmucratic ltcp. Richard Shtl!!)' ~t n Jeremiah Denton out of ofTltt 1n labl In No~h Cltmh~. former D_cmo- Colorado'$ Senate ~at remams 1n AsMdlk4 rna Joseph P. Kennedy II casaly ,,,.on _clcction Tuesday to lhe M.assadtu-. Mrs... Townsend. a 3S·)'ear.Old law· • sens 8th Conpusional O.stnct teat )Cr, had fou&ht an uphill battlr once held by has uncle; President John apinst fir5t·term Republican Rep. F Kennedy, but his older sister, Helen Dcli~h Bentley in Maryland"s Kathleen Kennedy Townsend. lost overv.~inungl) ~~tic but con- hcr bid for a conarcssional seat 1n servauve Second Distnct 'MafYland. • Wath 28 ptJWnt of the vote taJlicd. At 34. the eldest son of Etbel and ~ Mrs. Townsend had f6,3S2. or 37 ' the late Sen percent, to Mrs. Bentley's 27,491, or Robert F. Ken-63 percent. · · nedy was ~. 3-After winninJ a ricrce, 11~ to-I pre~lec-Democratic pmna~ on Sept. 16. tton favontc Kenned~ set a speM.ina record for a o v e r , R e -Massachusetts coftjr'CSsional race publican Clark sankan& more than SI .S million int0 Abt 10 succeed is campaian. mclud.ina S2SO.OOO of--....,. U.S. House h.ilown funds. 1 • Speaker ) Thom as p . Mrs. Townsend manaacd the 1982 O'Neill Jr ,,,.ho re-dcctlon effort of her uncle, Sen. 1~ retmni~ancr Edward M . Kenned)', 0-~ Sbt 17 terms made door-to-door ~vaM&n& the "W'th 7 f 222 , • . hfeb)ood of her ca.mpaian. wcanf\I I 0 prct1bClS rq>ortlft&. sneakers and literally running ftom Kennedy had 2.41 7 votes, or 80 one house to the nc~t in whirlwind percent. to ~20, or 20 percent. for Abt, swines throuah oei&hborboods. . In Senate races, women gain one a a a ~ lose --another--.: By Ute Associated Preti WASHINGTON - Women gamed a U.S. senator and lost one Tuesday as Democrat Barbara 1kwsb-~ U\e >.actor Maryland, and GOP Sen Paula Hawkins failed to wan rc-elccuon in Aonda. · In Nebraska, Republican stat~ treasurer Kay Orr 'fl.'On the governor's race ap1nst former Lincoln Ma)or . Helen Boosahs., a CXmocrat. W1th 63 perttnt oflhc "ote counted, Orr had 51 percent to 49 percent for Boosalis. In another ht&h·profile race aovolv- ma a woman. Democratic.Lt. Gov. Hamett Woods of Mlssoon trailed former Gov. Chnstophcr Bond 47.5 percent to 52.5 percent with 75 -pel"CCl1t-Oftht-¥ote-counted Watb 58 prccent of the Aonda vote counted, Hawkms had 44 percent to 56 percent fOr Gov. Bob Graham. In Maryland. M1kulslu won ~ti "•ctol). gamenng 61 percent to 39 percent for GOP hopeful Landa Chavez.. wnh 83 percent of the vote an Cha,.cz. who durmg the batter campaign had called M1kulsk1 "anti· male" and a "San Franmco-t)le Democrat." said in conceding defeat Tuesday niaht that bcr opponent .. ran -a vcryaood an<hecy mart campaign. ··sar'bara M1kul ka 1s someone to be admired.. I want to "'i h her well m her new carect in a natcs talc senatoT." she added. M1lulsl1. cla1m1n1 victory and thanking her fam1I). said her .father was foo 111 to anend the celebratJon. .. But 'Dad. I know you're watch1na. and )Our da~ter is now a United States senator, • she said. bcamana. Ihc late. ~n Robert Kennedy:!__ dauahtcr. ~thlcen Kennedy ToWJlJ- end, lost her bid to oust incumbent Republican Helen -bentley an Maryland. An ebullient Townsend told her supporters, "I aucss It's better to learn a lesson at ~ beginna.ng of )Our political carter rattier than at tbr end." . • In Vermont with JS percent of the vote counted 1n the aovcmor•s race, G~ Madcle1-oe Kun10 led challengers Peter Smith and 1ndcpen· dent Bur!!i~ton Mayor Bcmard ndcts. 46.~~t. She needed more than SO -pmxnt ot-----.. vote to avoid Kod.ina the election to tho sia~~. 1n..Jha1 v • ....., __ .....,. however, the legislature would be expected to accede to the wi hes of the electorate. lo other races anvolvma women. <. onncct1 cut aubcmatorial candidite Juhe Bclqa. a Repu.bhc:an. lo~ her Iona-shot bid ap1nst incumbent Democrat Wilham O'Neill; Demo- crat Jill Long was defeated tfy Re- pubhcan Sen. Dan Quayle in lndta'na; and RepublLcan Judy Kochler l01t to incumbent Sen .. ~tan· Daxonl n II-• I no as • In all. ax-women soulbt five Senate scat and were amona-U9 women ~king conard ional or latewide offices. Qre"OeC!*t DAILY PlLOT11W~. Nov.mb«5, 1Me I J •. ' . , -,-----..... ·--·-:~. .: ,. .. . ,· . . H0URS: SHOfJl-HtJRSDAY AND FRIDAY 10-.TO 9, SATURDAY 10 TO 7J ~~~~·-~~-~~~U~N~~¥1 1T0 7,MOND~10TOUPECIA~HOURSVHEMN~~~~~-L~~~~ ,. - V.l.P. SPORTSWEAR "Save 30%: On. London Tailoring fall coor- dinates from The Villager. Jackets, skirts and pants in navy or silver wool flannel with · ....,. coordinating blouses and sweaters. , SeJeeted stores. 0 . 272. Orig. 56.00 to l70.00 ........ 31.99 to 118.99 EXPRESSIONS Save 33%: On acrylic knit dressing from Michael Carrie. V-neck sweater and slim skirt. S,M ,L. 0 . 40. Orig. 30.00 and 38.00 . . 19.99 ~ 24.• -Special pwchue: On Counterparts polyester crepe de chine blouse and Sahari linen-like trousers. Basic and fashion colors. D 443 .... 19.99 end 29.99 PLAZA SPORTSWEAR ~ Save 25%: On atl novelty popcorn yarn sweaters. Many styles in brights and . pastels. D. 149/450. · Reg . 28.00 to 44.00 . . ....... 21.00 to 33.00 PETITES Save 26%: On wool flannel winter coor- dinates for petites from Personal. Navy and red combinations. Petites 4 to 14, S-M-tJ D. ~-------.v.....--........ ng.,.....-t.v.,.--. ...,,...,to 94.00 . 29 ... to D .99 Special purchase: On wool flannel jackets, pants and skirts in grey or blue with coor- dinating blouses from Russ Petifes. Sizes 4 to 14, S-M-L 0 . 287 . . . .29.99 to 79.99 MORE WOMAN Smtcial purchase: On Ms. Russ wool coor- dinates in large sizes. Jackets, skirts, pants, blouses and sweaters in gray and royal blue combinations. Sizes 38 to 44. ·[:). 132 -. -.. -: .34.99 w ... FOCUS Save 25%: On all outerwear for juniors. Polar fleece, canvas, denim, sweater jackets and more. 0 . 76.- Reg . 40.00 to 85.00 . . . . . . . . . 30.00 to 13.75 COATS S.ve 25%: On 9ur entire stock of misses' • .. • wool and wool/acrylic coats. Includes reefer coats, pant collts and mare. ln solid tones, tweeds and herringbone patterns. Sizes 6 to 16. 0 . 25. Reg. 99.00 to 175.00 74.25 to 131.2& -. INTIMATE APPAREL . &eve 20%: On all Maiden form Sweet Nothings and Olga Smooth bras. 0 . 19/258. Reg. 11.00 to 16.50 . . . . . . ... l .IO to 13.20 Jeve 20%: Our entire stock of Maidenform : sleepwear including stretch lace end tricot gowns, coats and pajamas. P,S,M,L. 0 . 241288 . Reg. 20.99 to 41 .00 . 11.71 to 32.IO S.ve 20%: On our entire stock of Califomla Dynasty sleepwear. Find gow ns and steep shirts in liquid satin or jacquard. 0 . 288. Reg. 25.00 to 50.00 . . . . . . 20.00 to 40.00 &eve ~ 0-n all California Dynasty short and tong robes. 0 . 61 . Reg . 32.00 to 45.99 •.••.••... 21.• to a71 TUESDAY; NOVEMBER 111 , 9 T0.9* INTIMATE APPAREL • Save 20%: On all regular price camisoles and tap pants. Choose from Farr West, California · ·•• D'yna$ty, 'assis, M aidenform and more • .0. 63. Reg. 8.00 to 24:00 ......... 8.40 to 11.20 Save 20%: On·all ourVanity Fairand Evetyn. Pearson warm fleece robes. 0 . 51 . ' ~ Re,g. 28.oo t~ 60.00.....:. .. ~~22.40 to 41.oo Save 20%: On our entire collection of Lycra• panties. Choose from Henson. Maidenform and Warner's in pretty colors. 0 . 260. Reg. 4.25. to 8.50 .......... 3.AO to 1.10 FASHION ACCESSORIES Save 20%: On all Calvin Klein hosiery. She~rs, ultra-sheers, lextures and control- tops. o. 3. Reg . 3.00 to iw .. 2.40 to 14.40 Save 20%: On selected del9§ner checkb<>ok clutch~. checkbook covers_.1nd credit card cases. Black • .bone, taupe;~. burgundy and more. 0 . 142. Reg. 15.00 to 30.00 . . . . . · .... 12.00 to 24.00 Save 20%: On all regular-price scarves, neckwear. shawls and rainwear. Many styles · and colors. 0 . 41. · Reg. 7 .00 to 34.00 . . . . . . .. 5.90 to 27.20 Save 33%: On sterling silver rings by Cellini. . Some with crystal accents, 0 . 141. Reg. 18.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............ 12.00 SpecW pwchaM: On quilted floral ,boots from Oearform .. 0 . 138 ............ 12.• Spedal purchau: On pebble-grain leather ha~dbags from B.H. Smith. Blazer bagsancr -- shoulderbags. 0 . 422 .. '.: .... 24.99 end,. .. Special purcheM: On famous maker faux pearl and gold-tone jewelry. Necklaces, bracelets and earrings. 0. 20J fil .~ .. u ........ ·~ ••• 5.99 to 19.11 WO MEN'S SHOES Save 20%: On women's and men's active - shoes from Nike, Reebok and more. 0 . 1011284. Reg . 18.00 to 60.00 .. 14.40 to 41.00 MEN'S SPORTSWEAR Save 25%: On our entire stock of men's fabric and leather outerwear, Styles from Members Only by Europecraft, London Fog and· more. 0 . 217 . eg. 45.0010-18&.00' : .. :-:-... -.11 --11111 ................. - s.ve ~: On lambswool V-neck sweaters from our Neil Martin collection. lri"'a Wide .~ seecfion o sorias. 0. 171 . Reg . 35.00:.21~-------------­ S.ve 33%: On argyle sweaters in pure -Shetland wool. Cok>r combinations of gray, ivory, navy a.nd more. 0. 17l. Reg. 30.00 .......................... 11 .. YOUNG MEN Save 21%: On our entire stock of young men's outerwear. The latest looks in canvas,-~ 1 sh'\eting and alpine f eece. 0 . 189. t Reg. 30.00 to 100.00 ......... 22.IO to 71.00 ,.. Save 34%: On our bold, bright fisherman sweater from Modz: Crewneck solids of red, cream, green, cobalt and more. O. 5. Reg. 34.00 .......................... 22.44 Save 34%: On our Modz argyle sweaters. Crewneck styling with b.right diamond pat- terns. 0 . 5. Reg. 34.00 ... -:-....... -.. -.22.44 Spedel purdtM1: On patterned sweaters from Kennington. Acrylic or wool/ acrylic crewnecks. o .-5"":":".\ ................. 11• BOYS Save 30%: On our entire stock of outerwear for boys 4 to 7. ChoOs"e from :cotton - sheeting., Sherpa-lined corduroy and more. 0. 459. Reg. 13.00 to 37.00 .... l .10 to 2&.IO Save 30%: On all our Modz, R.R.F and Members Only outerwear in boys' sizes 8 to 20. 0 . 446. -- Reg. 24.99 to 55.00 .......... 1.7.41 to 31.50 WEST COAST KIDS Seve 30%: On our entire stock of outerwear for infants, toddlers and girls 4 to 14. 0 . 47/90/96/137/ZJ4/428. ~ 20%: On our entire stock of Jazz shoes. 0 . 8. ------n,eg-:-18.00-to 52.00--...•.... ';"71'2 ............ 40---------- Reg. 45.00 to 48.00 .......... 38.00 to 31.40 Save 20%: On Caressa's "Panthea" pump in black, bone or pink leather. D. 108. Reg. 73.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... &1.40 MEN'S FURNISHIN Save 25%: On solid dress shirts from famous French and American designers. 0 . 147. Reg. 27 .50 ... -...................... 20.13 Save 2'%: On full cut and fitted solid dress st)irts from Centura and Ax.iom. D. 218/431 : Reg. 13.90 to 16.90 , •..... ·., 10.43 to 12.• Save 42%: On our entire stock of fall fambs~ wool-ties. 0 . 122. Reg. 12.00 ........... I .• HOME ENTERTAINING 21% off: Gorham "~ng Edward" crystal tableware . .G.oblets,-hurricane lamps, _ sugar/creamer, bowts and more. 0 . 36. 70.01 off: Selected discontinued Mikasa 20 pc. dinnerware sets. No special orders. D. 408. Orig. 110.00 to 179.80 ............ ••- 42% off: Sango "M onte Carlo a·lack" 20 pc. · dinnerwar• set. O~ 11. Orig. 69.99 .... •• 50% off: "Chelsea Morn" 20 pc. dinnerware set from Noritake. 0 . 203. Orig. 200.00 . •.•- DOMESTICS _ Seve_25%.£ On_Q_u_r entire stock of designer hosiery. 0 . 281 . . 50% off: Complete daybed ensembles from ---... roscnr:-o-:-1 • · -~~-'---- Reg. 3. 75 to 8;.SO .. ., ........... 2.81 to 1.37 S.ve 25%: On Centura polyester/silk satin stripe and neat neckwear. 0 . 122 . Reg. 12.00 · .. . . . ........... 1.00 S.ve 2&%: On our entire selection of men'a gloves. 0. 105. Reg. 15.00 to 38.00 .......... 11.21 to 21.IO S.ve 30%: On Londontow ne rainwear w ith • removable plush lining 0 . 9. Reg. 145.00 to 200:-00 . . . 101.IO to 140.00 S.ve 30%: On famous American and French designer suits,. Two-piece styles. O. 61 . Reg. 285 00 to 33~ 00 .... 1•.M to 234.W.• .. •-" ..._,, c.t.Mt, "• c-.1.,,... c:.r., CM~ 0.. Mio ~ ,llN!ln V.a.r ~ Giil9r• ~ 1'111,. HUM~ hlcfl UfUM ...._ ~· J0M ~ het1>, ,._,. o--i.°""' lOI ,,.,,..... ' ...... ""'" ~It Monie• ,...,_,, 0.. '°"°' c... ""° n-.. OMJ r.,.,... !'lea llnd W• C:0..... . ... Reg. 200.00 to 300.00 ....... to 141•••• 20~00 to 70.00 off: 20()..thread count sheet ----- sets with everything in one package. 0 . 2. Orig. 30.00 to 100.00, tWin to king ... , .........•.... IM to 21M FURNITURE lpecilll puwd HI: 3 or 4.pc. renen Mtl ac- cented with a tropical print. 0. 38 •w••• 1IO.OO off: Vinyl wing chair and matching ot· toman. 0. 276. Reg. 449.00 ............ . 201.• off: "Palm Beach'' rattan ree\!11'9 chair by Barcalounger. 0. 210. · • Reg. 8'50.00 •.......••......... .....-•••• ... ,,... ........ ~ ' .... ""°' .. *.;\,...,_ "°"°" ..... lowltl c... ........ '*"' c:.univ,. ........ 'in"°"°"""' ..... c .......... " t/J ......... ' "· ..... _, .. ·Single Parents he~d · 25 %_ o{ A~eii~an fam lie .. . ~dren·ratsed by mom~ for . a sign.tftcant n umber of years the bureau said • • A m11ortanor 1s 1hat womc:n~rt h1vm1cti1ldrtn Jnd aen1na marned later'-or not matryi"a at au -and'tflat mama~ art more. likely to end in divorce, said D . Harriet P. McAdoo. a profcssorof~aal work at Ho"ard U nivcn1ty. By RANDOLPH E. SCHMI D , As a ~suit of the~ change. she "8id. "children art • 11 · 11 , ,._ .,_ bcm& ra1~ by thttr mothel'I fora 1gnifkant oumber of --.-,..;_....-...--~-.:·1----------..,~-~~-----7t11S oftlren h•cs WASHING'I 0 -·Mor ih n onC:founh of In addition; :she 11id in ·an 1ntcrv1cw. there art a Amencan families ~ith children -and more than 60 su~tantial numberofout-of-wedlock prt'&t\al\C1tumon1 percent of those that art black -were hcJded by a single both black and '4htte "'omen parent la t )W. the<:'. nsus Burt.Ju reported TUttday. A separa\C Census Bureau report on fertility last Jun ~·on~ •of the l\lOSl s1an1ftcant chan~ in famd)' 11id 20.2 percent of white t>1nh and'74.5 pi;rcent amona comPostt1on over the past I). yean has been the blacks w"e out of wedlock la\t )ear. a~ the suama "uMt"ntu1I .orowth in the num~r ofont•Ollttnt famtlies." surroundrn& unwed, mothrn lessens. · •• . ... \ Price of hospital ·room per day: $212 California is rated . . ' Both~red f!y .an inC~ease alllj'~ing .-in creases? We all gtt them. nobody want\ oftbc mt'J"UV tigtn. • • - them.and we.spend a bilbortdollars 1 2. If you can't ,top smokin& to '8\'C ~cartrying to act ridoftbcm. !hey arc )our ltfc )OU m1"1t stop to avoid the face ~rink.Jes. However. recent stud-JULIAN wnnkl s ·mol1n1 constricts the 1es with a synthetic vitamin A cream blood vcsStls arou.nd the eyes and st expensive s tate- for hospitalization -/. commonly used for acne may help WHITAKER mouth and ro~ the bod) of vitamin stem the udc. . · C necessary for collaitn production, ~.----...,.....Sk.in-Wlinkles, 1he u01\'Usal~~-iiiillllllmliiiiiimmm"tl~7;ofih1 H".m-v~k-OUt--""' d1cator of ••gcnina on" in life ·~ a tht' mokcn amona m) patients natural consequence of)ust that. The wsthout ha' 101 to ask. By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID . .......... .._ ..... WASHINGTON -Spcndina one day in a t) p1tal Amencan ho p1tal room cost $212 last )car." with Cahfom11 the most expcns'i vc state to be hospitalized .Ui. and Mi\ i ippi the least costly. Hospital room charics jumped nearly 70 percent over five )cars. on average, from·..-+~ cost of SI 27-a- day, according to statisttcs compiled by the Health Insurance Association of America. -Roomclta1g~l7partofthe - cost ofa trip to the hospital. • Add1na in doctors re~ . med1cation and other cha~ t'lliscd the average daily co t of a tay to S369 as of 1983, the mo t recent detailed stall ll available from the assoc11uon At that rate the ucra1c hospital stay wu e umated at S2. 7-89 by tM aroup The associauon'.s 1985 study of ho!.p1tal room charic found that \he average d.a1l y cost was $2 I in the Goldrn tatc That was up from a daily'ratc ofS 161 five ycan earhcr. Rounding out the five most costly state1 to be ho~p1tali4d were Ala kl. $27.t-a-day, MTChtpn. $270~ Penn· sylvania. S2S6 and Jllino1s, si47. At the other end of the sea.lo, a Miss1 1pp1 hospital room a ... eragcc! only S 114 per day. up from only $67: :-a-day m 1980. · The test of the tivr leut cx~n ivc state were Nonh Carolina. $139-a· (Pleue eee COST8/83) PAPARA ZZI . • ·-·· Speed reCovery by-the.book, kit . BTCJN1)'V TRANE CHRISTESON · School has ~tarted. So has sneezing. Your ch1kt 1s Stck. Even tho~h JOI.I do COJQY being w1th him Dr hcr1.1h1 much rogethcrne sis putting a strain on your relailonsnlp, to say nothm1 of your sanity~ You ha ... e heroic antcnt1ons of makma the\C days of total togctllcmess a memorable experience. but the walls seem to be cle»1 na m and your cabin fever is at an all lime high Your child should be . ~tang, but instead he's restless. • Your homemade ch1d:cn soup tastes great but 1t doesn't change the fact that you both feel hkc wet noodle . Theeltetrontc bab ... ~itteT is lookina more appcaltng~cry minute. but )OU know there mu t be someth1ngbet1er than telc ... 1Ston. ls there? Yes -and the J0101ion is as close ~s the nearest branch of the "lcwport Beach Public \..ibrary. Each location has a.project that is.so clcvcrllnd creative that it' almost enough to make you wash )Out child was sn1ffi in6'. Thr ('h1ldrcn's rv1ccs Divjsion of the ( orona dcl Mar. New~n <:enter. M.inQers-and Balboa branches all participate in tl'ie provam desiancd-solely forcb1ldrtn "under. the weather." No! onl) is it a pecial trot for.the vounistc~. buT 1rbenefit\ the parents by ~h1n1 lbem a much needed break and the rcas urancc that their children art involved iQ somethina cducauonal as well as en1o>ablc • This aptly named .. vet Well Soon Proaram ·took umc to cvol ... c. • AJlison ~ackso)1 the ch11dren· hbranan at the ewpon Center branch. read an article about a 1m1lar pr:ogram an orther:n California The project sounded so posiuve and e>.c1L1n1 that she tell 1t should be Pleue eee GET 83 Walter .->d Darlene Gerken and Elaa and Ray Wataon celebrated the men'• eel ectton .,.., .............. .....u for bu.manltarlan bonora preaented by the National Council of Cbrlatlan• anclJe••· ,. Trio of giver~ find awards are ec}u3.lly niQe to Feceive. NCCJ.cttesGerken, Redfield, Watson . at countY. c h a pter 's! 0th a nniversary 1_,. By VIDA DEAN O.-,fllla4...,.. .... . underp1nningsofthe tun arc made of -~rion of wrinkles 11 sullthc best l . void squant1n1-he in dcti· clast1n and collagen Collaaen form way to keep )our kin smooth. nitcl) conform\ to repeated muscle the tou1h fibers that hold the kin to Herc arc ~me ti~ • movements Crow·, fttt around the tht undcrlyma muscle and arc inter-I un ""or..h1pe" pay• a pnce . c)e' and furro\\-s between the ,eye • twined with springyelaslln fibers that Surely the most Slilltficant ac-brows are accelerated by squintma.. 11vc skin flexibility. As we age crlcratorofskin wrinkles 1sd1rect un When cit~ to prolonc harsh production of collaien '>iows and . hJht. Tht' ultra violet ra)'s that tan the sunlraht. sun &tassa or visors can cut· elastan loses its sprina. . s~m 1ncrc~ the br kdo~n of both down on th furrow One indirect test of skin aic ·~ to collaicn and ela tin .• One of the Keep 1 cheery coum~nee. A we pull the loose skin on the back of the 1ronit1 of modern hfe •'> that we 11ow aie. the t) pc of wnnklcs th.at develop rela~cd hud to see bow rapidly the old faster b) l~ina in the un tl)tnl to confonn to the most frcq~t facial kin sna~ back. The companson of look )Oun oitprts ion. A face etched wnh lauclt· 20\o 50-y~r~kt ~kio is dramau~ To-avord thnthrmnshoutctcitbrr. ier 1s moroattnCU\:C w~~ Much ofthccffortand mone) spent be hieldcd from direct" wnltght or with '4orry. . try1ns. to get nd of skin wrinkles 1s prott'Ctcd wtth louons coniaining tllt 4 Gc.t reaular rurtt$C. This an- wastcd fven wnh the encoura11ng h1ahcr concentrauon of PF hun studies on synthehc v11.am1n A, otccuon factor) that ~ak some~---eaec~U/UJ----1 W ~man's pface is debatable It was I ne'tl.·WOman bedtime story told b~ attomt;,-and feminist act1\i1st. rah Weddmgton to a ~!lout cro~d at l JC' Irvine ''Daddy. tell me apm about Mary who h d • huJc-lamb and arcw up to have the b1gg~t \hcep ranch in Tc'a'" 1 isn't fair for garbagt collectors to cam mort monc) than me: ·· .. The bos rtphcd, "So. be a prba collector.·· .. 4ia1d the ~crctary. ·vou couldn't PllY me ~nouJh.' ·• • Phylh Schlafl}. who helped dcfca1_:1••~~llllllllllll~•·•• the-Equal RlJhtrAmemtm ·n . TOO<f ~hl;>O)' QUlPi:>C¢ -w.dc.ome lO the frer enterpme S)~tem." The comparable·""'Orth I 1slattve clT6i1'1 TT abOut elimtnat1na ~,waJ st~ot)pina 1n tht' labor ma.ckct. at the oppo 1te podium. "Let me tell you a REAL story - not a fake one." Schlafly said in challcn1e. •• When I was in 17ollcge. there was no financial aid a vailable . I wor~ed my-way throu1h-iiYfinn1 machine iuns to.test ammunition." Then. 1n what seemed to be an Ebell's trick was a treatfOr 29funds Devil sh r{f esigned _ glamour and ghouls mixed eerily for show incredible leap of loa1c', she uSt'd hcr- ow..i:i pc~.nal heroin .10 JUSllf) her ant1-femm1 t pos111om . ft \Ira ~meho1.1. OK for her to tell .her: :own fak ~ton to uppon her sta!"d ~p1nst. "comparable. worth .. lc11slauon. "The secretary ~id to her bo~s. 'It Some JObs -particularly lhOtC which ha\C~ been trad1t1onally held by '<I.Omen -ha ... c remained low·pa)- rni WcJd1ngton. for one. wants lo fi" all that b) chan11n1 the law (Pleue eee AB9RT10Pf/8SJ° ' .,.., .... ,......, .... ._ Ebell Club prealde.ot LllUa.n-Oarrleon aa4 abow clLalrman lhannJ Pero adml!ed one of the apooky ceaterpleeee. ... • Hospital accre~iting methoc'.ls charrge Recommen aUons based on services, not new equipment ~1111 2,$00 othn health care fac1h1ies. h pual b1llt tor Ml percent ol thc nai1on·1 pet~nu The shift. "'h1ch will take effect over the nc\t few The ~•·Pn\latc romml$f.&On " made up of )car·s. reflttts a nat1oowidc trend dtmand1n1 more appointees' from orpn111uon5 such a the mencan emphasis on rnults 1n mtd1cal care. As a ~uh. doctoR Mcdieal Auoc11t1on and the American Hospetal AHOC&a· and hospitals wilt be htld more respc>ns1blc for tbe 'luaht) uon. NEW YORK (AP)-A panel will a«rtdit hospitals ofthC care. . Publu: and pm ate 1ud1e1 ha\e revealed I~ based on what they do and the care they provide rather The new pohc) also will create national and l<X:al ~anataons 1n mortahl)' and complicauon rates in similar than merely ~scd on whether they are equipped to tandards aaainst which individual hospuals can be hospatalt natlon~idc. The studies h.ow ~hat petaents ha\le pro\ ade h18'\~ualtty care. accordina 10 a report published matched. a i1n1ft<"anal) htahtt chan'c uf s'Yina m wmc fac1ht1cs tod Th<* standards ill ~-1 determined b) _.SUCh than in othtn ·- •)T.h J · ("' :. • > ' _ .... • f techniques as an analysn of how many patients nicovcrw "'' · 1 h • · . c 01nt om ma ion on Accm11ta11on o Hospalats from treatment without complicationuftd how man\.' did HOlp1tal1 and medical pro1es 1ona s ave cnt1c1/'Cd w1JI base Its recommendations on such thi~ 11 suraicaJ not. • . ~ the' ~tud1es. )lyina the rc$Catch docs not fake. different • 'mortalit}. complicauon rain and m asures of medical Dr. Dennis O'Utry, president of the accrcditina t)peS of patient, into account. outcome rather than on equipment nd manqtment. aaency, told the Times \hat the chanacs were .. con-Dr James Prt\IOSt. dam:tor ufthc aaency'• rcstarch The Ne~> York Times reported. troversial but inevitable." . and dc\lelopmcnt'departmeni. "id it was not cnouaht to -:nc.Chicqo.bucdcomm•n•oQ!.accttdjts moi:el.ban .,,.,..,~.-H4>tDt'te&t-..thet·.re not accredited usually-arc not--sltnpty a~ the quntt~'Ooes the-hosJ)itifha~- 0 percent of the nation's 6.000 aCllte,are hospitals as (h11blc for the federal Mcchcare proaram. Medic.arc pay capacity to provide hiah.quality care?" FAMILY S'i:ATS ••• From ii~ -pattnu ~omc >1nsJc, economic J>f'ObJems creases blood now lo the 1 skin tnd · ~set many woml'n and limit tn~ir options. shC said. imroves its ttHRI' quality and "Once couples separate and divorc:e, it is often more ap arancc. • . difficult_ to set remamed just because of the. economic Thouah most "skin elixirs" don't respons1b1hty of marry1n1 into a family," she said. work. Dr Alben K.lisman, head of the "That hits all classe • workint and middle·da Un1vcrs11y of Pennsylv•nia's •'1nl· families. Wtth the retrenchment offcderal p1ograms and' skin chn1c, has found that Ream-A rcstructunni of the labor rparket, 1t as more difficult for a (Ortho). a syntbetk vitamin A PRP- woman with children find a spouse with the facility to arataon, used to treat acne docs reduce support themm," she said. ttie dam1Je done by the sun. As Amona other Ondinas m the new Census Bureau reported in this month's issue of study: · -American Health, 16 m1ddle-qed •There arc 86.8 million households.in the United women were found to have healthier: Sl~s. up ~percent since 19.80. Thes& included 62~ sJcinan.r three months oftreatlftent- malhon fam1hes, up S.3 percent, and 24.1 mdlion non· with a .OS pcrceot rc11noic-acid Jody McKenney and Sae Caldwelfhoped for famdy hou~h.olds. up 13.S percent. cream. Fine wnnkles thinned out, the prtsa at Weetln South Coaat Plaa hotel . A family 1sdefined as ~wo or more people related by skan looked plumper, thicker, young- • ,birth, mamage or adoption. A household·fonsists of the er. and under the m1crosc0pe, WRINKLES ••• From Bl ~ } . ' pc<?ple occupyina uinJ)e housin4 unit, wb1ch can be one fibroblasts, the cells that produce ~------LT..::~SSE S. ... ~~ll------:1·1..,nd .. 1tt1\'1ra,d,.;..ual. unrelated people liVLna togethC1" or several co~qen. 10creascd in number and .:J.:J •• • . ---~ acnvny. Jl'romBl . •ihe number of mamed-cou~le fam1h~ has This med1ca11on 1s by prescription .. 1ncreued 2.S percent to S0.4 m1Uaon. and can cause 1rrit1t1on of the skin •Ave~e household size dropped from 2.76 persons 1nat1all~. It 1s not a cure-all and seems Fashion Island has come a long way smcc tts ~s of JU.SI tcnnisa_nd acttvcweaT. Fashions featured itzy lame, luxunou lcatheJS,JCwel-toned silks an die-for beaQed gowns. The show was fast paced and glamorous in 1980 to 2.69 last year. _ to work on the effects of sun damaac •The number of households maintained by people only. The m1tiaJ studies-do teem under age 2S has declined by 17 percent since J 980. The prom1s1na. but Dr. K.lisman and arcatest arowth was in househol<fs headed by people aacd others 10 the field state that avoidina · ... a real Halloween "treat." · The "tri cky" commattec members made sure each guest left with a treat-little bagof candy..SOmcofthe "ghouls" included Sae Bltlaell, S.eCaldwell, Bellen Kiuer,CarolynG1yer,JodyMclteuey,JadyStapp, Mary Rielly, Mary Ann Powers, Sandy Loapecker, S1teDeplerroandKatllle_tnFleldht&. JS to 44, up 2S pcrc:eoL Second was the 75-and-older age sun damaac is the best medicine for grou~ which increased 13.6 percent in household premature wnnkhna. . num •T7;c numbCr of persons lav1na alone has-c&.c-.1m~ed of J~'Na=B~.D~• :!:!: ' to ancrnse, althouah not as fast as an the 1970s when many TnatmHt JaiUtw&e la Rattattoa Paparazzi l1 edited li"y Dally Pilot Style ~ltor 'youna people were settina up housekeeping on their own. Beacla. Pleate 144Areel uy1':Httl., There were 20.6 million on~-person households in t to .... / ...._ • ._ 1985. up 12.6 perc:ent from..1980. By contrast, one-person or. cemmn 1 .. m e • .,,..,, VldaDttn. • householdsjumped 28.~ percent between 1970and 197S. r:~~~. P.9. Box lilt, C..ta Meta PACIACA COMMUNllY HOSPITAL ·coMMUNilY HEAL TH FORUM !This forum offers litdures. c&nics and seminars on variou heWthcatt Issues. This fall. these new programs w1D be oti to the pubic at no charge. PACIFICA'S INSTITUTE OF SPORTS MEDICINE November 20,. 1986 7:00 ... 9:00 PM SKIING SAFETY AND IN.llJRY PREVENTION Peter Reynolds, M .D. Orthopedic Surgeon .. . A discussion about equipment. proper con- ditioning and various types of common Injuries. P.clfk:a Towers t aaoo ~ St.. Hun!lngton Beech. CA 92648 Communlfy Room (2nd FloOr) -• , For~ 1nlomwtaon c.O r# Pacifica Comrruncy t.duc•toon CoordinM0t Community Hospital (714) 842-0611. Ext. 22 WE'RE READY FOR THE HOLIDAYS WITH NEW SHIPMENTS OF BEAUTIFUL LINGERIE THAT HAVE JUST . ARRIVED. COME-AND SEE THE BETTER THAN· EVER SELECTI ON' OF DISCONTINUED AND IR- REGULAR:_ bras, panties, slips and sleep- wear. ALL AT GREAT SAVINGS OFF THE LOW FACTORY ounET PRICES. 743-A BAKER STREET (OM block ltWI ot an.tol) COS'tA MESA, CA 12121 Phone: (714) 157-1214 HOURI: M-f 1W l:GO SAT. 10:00-5:00 Is OSTEOPOROSIS . . .. · In Your Future? -- ..., .......... ., .......... Hamanltarlan honoree Elaine Redfield, center • ...-con- ptalated 1" Dr. f!lorton C. Flerm&Jl and Vlr&lnJa Bender. 1 - THREE HONORED •.. From Bl · Rooaevelt(award wmnerm '81) who bnefl)' told about the form a· tion ofNCCJ. Sixteen former award winners were there including two ofthe three 1977-winners Ken fflckenbot-~m (with wife Rlloda) and Tom Riley. *"Dn .udrtcb was chamnan of the first dinner," recalled H1cken- bouom. (The followina year Aldrich was an awards recipient.} U1l1\.1 1'""''.11cnts at thccvcruna of dining and dancingwcrc.Leount • Sllue, Mary Joaea, Sopllle Godel, Rev.M1ar.JoluaSammoa(hegave oncofh1sgreat invocations). Geor1e Paley, Vlr&lnla Bender, Tom Nlellff, Stuley Pawlowak.I, Dr. DIDMI NiDb•r1, Harriett Wieder and Dr. Carl P:earhllan. Atsa,""t~ck1Uclrml, whose late husband was an award recipient in '79andwasoneofthe chapter founders. Smart Women, Smar Men Foolish Choices! 6 Meetings 7pm-9pm November 6, 13 & 20 December 4,. l l & l8 • There will be over 200,000 hip fractures this year alo'le·l· • 80% will be caused by osteoporosis • Unfortunately, as in all hip fractures 25% of these patients will die of a complic~tlon OlD WORLD ROMANCE AFLOAT Gourmet baskeu w/mampagne & r~s. IRVINE COAST CHARTERS 675-4704 NC>flSSIONAl. PLANNING Aboard Luxury Y.chu M services -arranged IRVlf\IE COAST CHARTERS 675·4704. • There is something we can do about It . -.... __ . ~--· -...-·-----_-,---- WOMAN AWARE DIAGNOSTIC CENTER--d4tdlcat4td to th• early dl1gno111 and evatuatlon of women'• hMlth conc•rn1- h11 added to '"-'' faclhty a high technology, photon denaltometry 1e1nner that meaaure1 bone JON 1n tM 1p1ne and htp1. The proc4tdure 11 1afe, paint ... and tughly accur•te It will detect 11 little u 1~ to 311. bon• ION • • 01teoporo.11 11 treatab,. when mlner11 cMtic1«1clel •re detected early H well aa 1topp1ng futur• bone lou when alrHdy pr ... nt. Evaluation 'from our o.teoporo-.1 c.,,t., will Include bone c.tcaum ...... ment and outhne your tt)dtvidu•llHd thef'epy. No Doctor R~fen81 ......,_. Our office 1tatt wlii Witt you tt bill ng your in1urance compeny. Cell Todey For An AppolnttMntl ,~~H-:f:t!:tlldiognostic center (714) 983-882.8 u IJ.6111111•~ •Woman Aware Llilllll• 11137 lroolchUrtf, 1110, 'ountaln Yilliy 1210I 714 647--6693· t:f'N""'· tit. " -ti· & e ... ,,.,., Res House sltt1n1. Shopplnc. Errands CATERING LIMOUSINE .. • • Inherif~d cb:roma ome defect1i~ ) . BJ PAUL RAE BlTR -....... ..., PHI.LAD LPHIA - A form of dylleiua that may affect one out of every 100 Ameru:an1 has been hnked to an 1nhtnted chromosome dtftct rcaearchtrs said Tuesday. ' ~on astudy of 16 fam11ie wtlh a h111ory of dyalcxia, scientists con- eluded that one out ol three 1nhm1ed casn of the reld1n1disorder11 linked to a dtfcct on chromnomc I :S, one of' thc23 pau·cd chromosomc$that carry humanienes. The findina, pubJW>c.d an cornunc· uon w11h the ahnAl mttt1n1 an Pbiladelptua of the American Sodcty of Human Gtnctit'I should allow better detection of •tTI1cted and1v1d· GET WELL.SOON ••• r .... a1 . du1 plicated 1n Oranac County. 'he approached the fnend~ of the L brary to sec 1f at was feasible. "The)' were terrine," remark Alliaon, "The arc a cat. -ha1dw0tki"11fOQJ' OtJ)t6p ~ Clon t now Whll WC WOU 0 0 W1 OUt' them ." . • Many thinas-wcckly Re1d1n1 Proarams and Children's films are two-:-simply c~uld not be done without the Friendsand their uppon. Helpma to bqin t_hc Get Well Soon PrOp'lm has been their late~t Pf'OJCCt. T~ re ult 11 one wonh sncczin& for. , . TheFn~ndspurchascdallthearafrnundtbCrtMsabl J>~'' t tohotd thtkiu.Theyllto 1upplie t e needco uftds for the hbrariPa,..nsr-.-• to J>':ln:!We or P/Oduce cvefy)htnt else. After buy1na the ~~rbacb. • M~nl~n Scott,· head of comtnunica'iaons. dcsiancd the colorful handouts. cards and slsn . · · Each kat eon.tams a thouahtful aet ~ card from the library. acuv1ty and col~nna paaes, and paper puzzles. There are t~o paae1' of poems about a sick bear to read and color. At least two carefully choiCr\ paperbacks will be_in~luded, but these are to be returned. Whtie the basic in~ients arc the same the finished product is customized deP.Cndiunl bn tt\t chJld's aac 'and sex The kits are des1a,ned for children from 3 to l O years old. t . Aaam, thank~ to the Friends' support and the librarians dedication, the kit 1s free. All tlley ask 1s that you return the pla\tic baSS and the paperback books. Each branch has 25 kit's available. _ · The prolfl,.Ql.JinoLbnly arowwa.Jt' &Qin&J>laccs as welt Marpret Poarch, coordaoat.or of t;hildren's services, bas already begun effort to make the kits av11lable an the.ped11trics wma of Hoa& Hospital uab, Jd Htrl>tn Lubs of lbC Un1ver· uy M1am1, one of the study't authors. "Int few )ea"-we could probably prt<t1ct at binfi wt\1cti child .-ill have d)'tlu1a." ~bs UJd ID an IDICn'ICW~ uth chaldrm could tMn ~ pvm spttial t~ln1na lO btlp tk m CO(JC wtth lht dhoidtr, an which lbe bniA teems unab~ to comedy proccu ~es 9flnters en. numbcri..Allhouatl dyslexics arc-of normal intellaecnce. they often fall behind in 1ehool or att m11diap0ted 11 leamina 1m~1red bt'cautc oflrouble rtadina; . The findina i~ also important beca~St of the liaht 1t 'hcds on the ~1~ the brain:'Lllbs said.' "It enables you to how that one ~ne " 1fTtct1na a specific brain function and lit development," he u1d (;HlCAGO (AP)-A new screen· in& test developed amonJ Alaskan E 1kimos can det«t hepat111s-causcd hver cancer up to two ~cars before it would otherwise be ev1dern. a phys- 1c1an and cancer researcher said Tuesday , The te~t could help virtu1tllY to - eradicate dtaths from hcpalltis- causcd hver cancer. ··•but to achieve i.h11, it'' a mauer o'-cost.and scttina pnorilles." said Dt. Brian McMahon, a physician with the Indian Health Service at Anchoraae. Alaska. McMahon sa1d the scrccnina pro- ce s was developed by his-agency and __ __._ __ the rullJon.al voters .loLDucax "h's a hare-brained scheme:· said Schlafly,· "a manipulation. which is unacceptable an a free SOC1ety." The two also dtsaarced on a few welcomes yoar respnset. U you wlsll a ~ply, please enclose a stamped, 1tlf·aHret1t4 envelope. Write to Lhada AJ1ut, Pll.D., C/O DaJJy P iiot, P.O. Box 15'0, Costa Mell tUU. Control and has proven 70 percent efTect1 ve lJ\ dia1nosmi,hepatit1s-in- duced hver cancer belore symptoms de velop -and lO ttme to cure the ducase SUfilcail). l.u'bl said he believn that moet d).atJUI II 1nhented, •hhouah re-searchers dO not know that for certain. Amont Ainerkant tJho wfllnd from d)'UcJua ere .Prnident WoC)d. row Wlb;oa qd V8"e Pmident Nelson Rod.ddlef, Dr. Alben ()allbutda. I ntU• rokJSist 11 ttt. Harvard Medical OOl who stadia ~ alreed that matt 4yalcll& at inherited .8'11 ht said n 11 wrona to 1.-ume &herd~ that tbetc IS,J $pecific ltDC that CA"9(1 dytltJCla. "It may be there is a ttnt tha11tu up chantts to make a brain vulner· atJI? 1nd·ttl tlo dy Ttiil un&r certain circumttanccs," he •id. Galaburda estimated that j percent to 10 pcr<"ent of the population, or hout l 0 million 10 20 million ~-. auflicr hm .UC cu haw little or • ldit.Y llnc1ly btalled dyllexaa. lallPllf. ~ 111unaw. 11y I.hit dyllew U _, .... Wtte .ane. lllOl!il -.. IVlkft u many 11 l S _ pc~at of d~ would M no more ibnonDIJ ~M.<WMMdaaid.:bu\lhole lbalt taftH IWriMn, Mo Mw .. naima&n anclude chaldren Cor Vf'hom uwally ..,._ &a..., abiliuea. the rnd1n&di•bihty 11Plftof1 larttr K.a"''lftlllh laid. probkm ofltamana d1.11biht1ts. ifht 1fttafc11b)'Lub1,1acolllbora~ Jamn K.avar\Qh of 1he toV?m· bOn widl ~Smith 8' * loYt~ ment'1 Na11onal lnstitute of~ Child 'Town NatiOUt lnainaw in <>.:aha, fkalth and Human Oe\lflapmcnt tll • eb. and 9rutt hnninf'Ol'-:of'ihe Bethesda. Md .• 111d that heredity University,~ of COkddo MediC'&I "Ju rely does"n't aceounl for all rcad•!'f . Center an ofnVff: s~ that one-(•ilure. but u doet account for somt. tb1rd of mherittd cases of d)'1Jn11 art · The institute funded Lubs' ~starclT. h"ked to 'ome defect on Kava"aah said that rcscarchtrs are chromosome l S. debinq wtJm~rl!Y\l~irtt"aetUltt hr ~hint ITC' _ __,_. a. disease. caused by ,tome brain pruumablj ltnUd to aenctic <kfccts abnormahty, or whtther tt imply i1 on other chromosomes. Lubl s.a1d, an Indicator of people who for many and the rcsearcherurc oow rchina ttasons. includ"'1 their upbrinpna. ror those defects . soc1at1on for the tudy of Liver more importantly. the medical com- DlKISCS. • momty -av;are:· The nJk o( contracting hepa\l s B which can hr passed throulh bloo4, tcmen or Yhva, 11 ircatest 1mon1 A 1an • SOuth Pacific 1sl1ndtTs and homose:uaals and 1ntra~mou1 drua The tesu were d11ected at the Heparnis 8 virt ually will di ppttr American lnd11n population . of when an inexpensive vaccine is Alaska, where McMahon said tbt-developed, probably within the dcc- mc1<kncc of hepat1tn 1s S percent to 7 ade, McMahon saad. users. McMahon said. • percent of the populace - and as r--------------~-~-------_.;.­much as 40 percent in wme EskJmo viUaaes. . Tests usina alpha-fetoprotein, a substance produced in the livers of fetuses, indicated tne presence 6t hver-cancer cells as much as two years before actual sym~toms of the dastase developed, he said. ln S1lt out of seven casts where the lest re~ulted 1n early detcction, the patients survived.. McMahon safd. Before the testina. he said. the cancer WIS fatal 97 percent of the llme. . Early Bird Di.....-:----~M--~ '7 .SO Featuring Prime Rtb o; Fresh Fish ..Complete dinner with choice of Soup or S.iWl Jnd Qejsert ffe discussed the findtnJS at a news conference after addrcssma the an- nual mecuna of the Amencan A~ other thin15 When 11 comes to the abortion 1-------------,.--------:--.::_:;.'=-:"~~~~~~~~~~~-=::-r::::::=-~~-:-~--~~~--~...L~~~~~~~~-:-~~~~!.....~~~~~-.:.~~~~-- • ISSUC, WeddtnJtOn IS pro-choice. she --·---------·- "It's a breakthrouah 1n that we've come up with a way ti;u:ktect cancer at a time when 1t can hr surpcally removed," the physician ~id "But we've aot to make the public -and behe't'eS that It 1s a woman 's n&ht to temunate a prqnancy • Schlaflr, s&)S &bat abortion 1s murder.~ Lafe t>eatn~ 111~ bqinning when 23 chromosomes of the male combine with 23 chromo~mes of the female." Then 1t ~s Weddin&t<.>n's tum amt she • ked rhttoncally, .. When docs life bc&in?" She admitted that she really didn't know. "Life, rather. 1s a conttnuous procc ," she sa1d. "r've seen sperm under the micro- scope ... they·re alive all n&ht What Lf ---PCQrle-dccidcd it wun't naht JUSt to sp1I them?"' (Except for the purpose of reproduction. of course.) .. Besides," she said, "People cel- ebrate birthda> not toncepuon da .. f: was qune a debate -and quite a scene. The audience of hundreds of women -~ and men applauded, booed. chcettd and fiJla.lly, pve the speakers a standana ovation. , SCblafly seems to suggest that feminism was noth1n1 more than a fad of the '70s. ff that v.crc true, then this even ma could never ha ve hap. pcned. Dr. Al&lll 11 a manure Ir famUy .. u1pl1t lD Corona de Mar. Siie COSTS ••• l"romB1 day: South Carohna. S 140. Arkansas. $14l and Tennessee. $142. The grpup found 13 states averaged h1aher costs than the nation as a wfiole while room rates were below the averaae 1n 36 states. . _: Victorian charm at a history making price., Uftlt eve ll. uo.oo ..... 1 .. , - -· IMlvde.!f. ... •11• ... Its ffn.lah 11 • ~-~ c.ti,.. O'fW lroe with ...... tri ... A .... cl...&ct s12999 ANKIN.G HAS-JUST GOTIE_N AWHOtE LOT EASIER. . American Interstate Bonk hos Installed brand new automatic teller machines so you con make deposits, find out your account balance and get cash 24 hours oday. But we dldrlt stop there. With our Instant Teller cord, you'll have access to 3,359 automatic teller machines throughout Col- lfomlo, Oregon, Washington, Nevada and Arizona. )bu con even AME ·1NJERSTATE K ,. use It at Safeway stores, Arco stations and American Express offices. Our customers have long appreciated our extended bank· Ing hours, friendly service and quick loan response. And now we ore o port of on& of the fin-est Instant teller networks In the coun- try. Maybe Ifs time you thought about switching to Am erican Interstate Bonk. · "\ . - Newpotf e.ach 500 "'-wporf c.nlW Drive fWNpor1 t.och, CA~ l'M/~ ,,.. porlcJng volkJollon Orange 675 So4Jfh Main SlrHt - e>range, CA -92664. 114/66W2f2 Houn 9.5 Moldiy throCJgh 1hc.ndaY. 9·6 Friday ~FDIC Colorado hospitals manaacd to be ~.-ctlyon the $212 national a"eraF t-----------------------------+-------------------- The assoc1111on's 1983 studies counted 6.888 ho~p1tals in the United States. with I .3S0,400 beds That was down from a peak of 7, 174 hospitals -. in 1974 C1hfom11. with the most people. aJso had the most ho p1tals, 581 with 110.300 beds an the state. New York, with only 338 hospitals counted. had more beds ava1l1ble, 122.200. Here 1s a state-by-state rundown of the averaae daily cost of a semi· private hospital room m I 98S and 1980. as compiled by the Health lnsurance Assoc1at1on of America. Stale .... 1110 C'aJ1fom1a 281 161 Alaska 274 189 M1ch1pn .270 ISi P ... t)luala HI lSt llhno1t 147 144 Nevada 241 I 2S Hawa11 BI 127 cm,.. Ut 111 Mu huStns 229 IS I 0 0 229 139 ash1n11on 229 I 2S ew Ym • U• 1'7 ta~att 2\4 IH Colorado 212 124 Vcrmon1 21 1 116 Mal.ff tH IU Connecuc1.11 20b 127 Rhode hland 205 138 . Montana 20'.l 113 l4aM tit HO New HamJ14h1rc IQ9 12S Anzona JQ) 106 New Mcmco I 92 11 S Ml .. tt0la • 111 ltl Maryland 187 119 M moura I 8S I 07 Indiana 184 107 ~ 114 , •• NcwJtnc) 183 146 flone!A 182 IOC> Iowa 179 107 l•t11<\1 171 ti When One Great Taste Isn't Enough ... I SHRIMP, EISH & CHICKEN s399 Only Long John Silver's has all three-shrimp, fish and chicken-on one plate! Or try our Shrimp & Fish or Fish & Chicken or our Seafood P.latter! Each dinner ~rved with thick-cut fryes arid slaw. For great tastes, variety and value. try Long John Silver's. Nonh O.\.ota 176 9.l • Utah 169 112 fiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiill:m;;i;= Wt ons1n 167 104 w,..... , .... Oklahoma 165 IOI V1f11n1a 164 1-01 Wcat V1f110&1 164 110 ....... lit .. ~uth DI ta 162 96 Tc'a' 159 91 Loult al\I ,. I $6 9 *9tb Ill IN 1.51 • 92 142 91 141 '" Ut I I 9 17 I Pt h1 • ... • .: KATHY WENT AW81D COLLEGE CAREFREE AND CAME HOME WITH I DEGBE, A BOYFRIEND, AND BULMA , BUUMIA isa p ~ss1ve illnt.~ characterized hy obses sions with food and vwe1¢n. compulsive OY~g and purgmg through the ll'IC~>f diuretJOi. laxan\es or \'Omitmg Bul.un1a ha.' reached ep1ckm1c proportions in the l'nitt'd ~~ 211% of fernale co~ie student.s ' partiapat.e m bullinic ~hm'1nrs· '1t the \ledictl Tn:-annent Center tor Eating Dts- o~ we am hrlp you to recmer by chan~g the Vwa) you think ~thout fcxxl and the way you think arout ) ou~lf · W • are part of a fttll :-A. rvi ) hospital and ,taffed by -profi i nab who cm provide you \\1th emotional ~p rt and medicJJ expertise \\ offer ooth an inpatient and outpatient pnw.un and are cown.'CI by most insuram.~ plait'\ Q FREE MO~'Tiill' CO\l\il"illl LEClt Call our l hour hothn now for a fl consultation or lecture reSt.'t'\'31.i n I.. . AleSsOn· i-~politi ca-1 addi·n · -Costa Mesa High School students learned a lessoh ·• in politics the other day. · T he ·entire Mustang student· body of 1,250 \\as among the 4,000-student contingent volunteered en massc to round out the crowd at the Republican rally headlined by President Ronald Reagar1 at the Pacific Amphitheatre. Monday's election rally was designed to capitalize on the president's ~pularity in Orange County and give GOP candidates like U.S: Senate hopeful Ed Zschau a boost. The biggest boost, of course, is the media coverage such events receive. School officials, recognizing the educational value of witnessing a slice of political history, appropriately approved the field trip. That decision met with the approval of poltt1cal orgaruzers. who recognize the value of playi ng to a loud and ttsponsive crowd. Without the imported student crowd of 4,000. the .9,000-pcrson rally . would have been even further dwarfed in the J 8~000 capacity arena. In fairness to the president's' populanty and to his _entourage, the raJJy was scheduled in the middle of C\ -working_ day. Not all those who would like were able to attend.' But those who did venture to the Costa Mesa · fairgrounds probably learned a thing or two. · The got a first-hand wok _at how poliucians - whether Republicans or Democrats -play a crowd. They should have learned that all 1s not exactl)' a~ the event director would have it appear. The students might have learned that spontaneous enthusiasm and unrestrained political fervor exists at these rallies, not so much in the bearts and minds of ~ommitted voters. but on the scriptwnters' pages. They might have concluded that the polt1cal consultants and the producers of such extravaganzas are the ones who determine the e01otion-packed outbursts of support we sec on the evening news. Had they been pnvy to the rehearsal. the students might have felt manipulated. They might have decided that the crowd's response is not as much determined by the wisdom of the words spoken as It i~ choreographed by the stage manager: Balloons on cue. Statue of Liberty on m> mark. Ready. Roll 'em. Let there be applau e Let there be songs. Ah yes. let there be a crowd. Surel)', there were many at Monday's rally and at others across the country whose attendance and enthusiasm was genuine. But just.as surely. there were many filling out the crowd and helping create the desired background and mood who would have rather been at the beach. Perhaps, we should all learn to regard political rallies with the same regard as that which goes tnlO the red, white and blue balloons. And we should also remember not to snicker in derision at reports from the Soviet Union pointing out that attendance at this particular Communist Part> rally or that Sov1~t m1htary parade was. in fact. mandatof)'. Opm1on\upmM!d an 1h1sspatc arc those of the Da1h Pilot Olhl·r , ll'", e:i.pres~d on 11)1~ pasc arc those of1hc1r author .. and ant)I'> Ri:atkr lClmmcnl · 1~ ln\lltd The 0:111) P1lol. P () Bm. I ~l>O < 0\13 Mc ..a •Pt.~t f'hunl· b4~·608b I ·' Should present bal anced report of all the issues To the £d11or: A~ prc'itdcnt of the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valle\< Board of RF- AL TORS. I wa~ presl·nt at the October 13 Cit ) C6un<:il meeting where redevelopment of the down- tov.n area wa~ pa~scd h) lht· C1t\ C ounc1I I am wrnmg to npre.,c; my e\lrl·me displeasure at the c.ovcragc ot this very important t~<:>uc 1n your October 14 cd1uon pccificall). I was 'er) d1sappo1n1ed 1n the SIOIJ' bl"cau~ I felt that far more altent1on and spat~ was 11vcn 10 those who oppo'ICd the measure than to those v.ho support~d 11 Tc t1mony v.;at; g1 .. cn b\. more than 40 1nd1v1dunls and .al lca'it hell of those spoke in fa-. or. }Cl the stol') quoted 10 ~pcakc~ -7 of whom, opposed 11 and only .3 who supported 11. I personally tc'ittfied at the heanng and presented the council with pelt·• tions and letters 'itancd by more than ~H untington Beach re'itdcnt\ who sopportcd the rcde"elopmcnt plan. There wa'i no mrnuon of that The pre iden1 of the llunt1ngton Beach Chamber of Commerce. Larr) Washa, also testi(icd in tx-'half of the Chamber. There wa\ no mention of that. There were two rcprtsc.ntatJ\'.cs <;>I .. COAST .., ~Ill the no grov.th group 'Huntington Beach Tomorrnv." quotl·d <)c,ernl rcprescntal 1 lit'<; oft he Jll 11-rcd1•\ l'lop ment group ··1t un11n[1.tnn lkad1 Togc1her'" al\o tt''il 1ftl·u r hc.•rl· v..i' no mention ol tha1 In add1t1on.1hae ''efl' m.in, u1hc.·r rc.•prcscntat1-.es of thl' hu\tlll''~ c.11m- munn> and oth c.·r H.'\llknt' ''ho <;poke tn la' or of t hl' prnJl'CI IA ho "c.·n· not mcnt1oni:d. I feel that ~ ou ha' c the.• rnpon.,1-' h1ht'v to pre1>ent a balanu~d rl·pon •>I the ,.,,ucl>. and I v.ould not h.1' t- wnttcn th ts letter had .,..c." rcn-:1' l'd "equal tame ·· but tn th•" tn\t.inu· I tccl1hat ~up)>orter\ of1hc rrdl"\l"l"r- mcnt v..erc gi .. cn le~' than lair co .. crage Certain I} }Our rcportt'I'.\ arc cn11tJed to their ov..n op1n11>n\ a\ tndt .. idual!. hut op1nion'I belong on the editorial page and \hould not he reflected rn th~ new\ rcpom v.;h1ch .. pt>rport 10 be; fallual. It >our riev..spapcr want\ to main· ta1n ''' ('red1h1ltt}' 1n the communtl}', l think 111 very important tor }Ou to correct thi \1tuat1on .ind rcpon lex al Issue in a more balanced manner." Ttiank )OU R.I . '"KIR .. KIRK! \ND iM>artl President Hun11n1ton Bcachtr ounta1n Valley Board ofR LT<R ,Inc. ""*' Wllllltef Puri T0ttt T .. 1 [C•IO. 0..1 .... ,_ Clrl' Ed•l<lf T _,,. Cla"611 - Newt Ed1or Ci ... INtf tli fdllOt T~' ... Clfcutat ti Olf tot ' t "'/ l camef romoneofthosetown and'41roteaoout lt, lwowahave ta n1ak up a new name for It -no on e would be.I/eve the real one. •• ADWSLL8 Colaw••• DAN WALTERS. -Reporter sports_ new 'tole . .. SACRAMENTO -Althou&h h may be asked 1ndin:ctJ) or e~en ubcon~1oush the political joumaJ· 1st's perpetual question revolve about ht) role. "What." the Journalist a ks himself, "am I tryangtoaccomplistrin covcnng this campaig.nr' And ult1m1tely, tbe answer 1s that · there arc t'-"O answers: the educator ancf the spam writer. • Hurray for lligginsvilIC,· Knob Noster and Peculiar As an educator. the joumahst 1s wntin' about candidates and their campaigns to help voters make in- formed choices -.profiles of the candidates-that upk>R l~ir personaJ back&rounds .and records. side-by· side compansons of the hvals views on the issues of the day, etc As a sports writer, however, the poltt1cal Journalist deals not wtth the records and the issucsofthoscsceluna votes. but with t~ campaigns them- ~lves -tclbng rftders and vtewers who's ahead (as measured b)' poll and otl'lerind1ators). what stra1e&JCS arc be1nl pursued and which tech- ~1'•tru:nd. \ "1an. told me he CnJO~cd refldtng articles I wnlc about m) hometo'-"n of H1&&.10S\ tile. M1s- '><lUn She think\ Lhc name ts funny. and thought I made 11 up. H1ggin!l .. 1llc J lunn) name'l No "a). It''> namc.d alter a Mr H1gg1ns who settled 1n the area over I 00 years ago But 1f 11-., funn ) names yo u"t:? aflcr Vt\.Wn then \11\souri a\ mo\l slates has 11~ '\hare We ha ve towns named Black JaC'k, Blue E)c. and T 1n I ov..n. There t!t aho a C ompcttt1on. a Sleeper ;ind a Succc\s, all w1th1n a 50-mtlc radws. The town ol' Mo0<h ts much farther away~:_ do" n on Jhe border of \11ssoun and Arkansa!. That could account for''' name If I came from om· ol tho~ 1owns and w role about It. I v.ould ha .. c to make up a ncv. name for ll -no one v.ould bd1cvc the re.ti one. When "-C pla)'cd bao;l.ctball and football 3(1.'Un!lt team'> 1n the to"'ns of Foose and Tallapoosa and Rosebud -I'm not making up these names, check the map of M1ssoun -I felt \Orr. for the checrlcader1>. No wav 1.ould 1hc' g1' e a c.hccr us.mg th~ name.• ol the. \Chool which alwaH includl·d the town name. without getti ng a laugh from the out-of-tov. n spec1a1ors. , There arc a couple or place!> lhat ha'e funn) name that could v..ork U\to a successful cheer -Faudcahng nnd fair Pia) But they wren·1 on our schedule so I .never had a chance to hc~r wha1 the cheerleaders wor~ out. Bob. with whom I wc01all1hrough school. rcwmei.J 10 Hauin ville after college and n s11n1 1n the ~n ice He fell in love al ftr..1 'iight with Nancy . an elcmcnt:ll) ..chool teacher who had mo"ed there during ht~ ab!>cnce On their first date. he took her to dinner in Warrcnshursjwhcn )OU art tr'v1ng to make an 1mprcss1on on w mconc 1n H1ggin\ .... 1llc. \OU talc them out of town for dinner -the cofTce shop won'1 do I\) '\anc~ was not a nati\.C~ Mts· 'iounan Dunng dinner. trying 10 orient hcr~lf, she asl.cd him the name .of the town nearest to War- rcno;,burg. 'Knob N~tcr."bc amv..cred w 1th a straight face. -.Janq went into spasmo;, of laugh- lC'r E-.ervo ne 1n the res taurant looked ~er \\'hen -.hr aot control of hcr\Clf. \he told Buh she c.ollec1ed odd name~oftowns. bu1 'ihc.hadn'1 heard th at one Rob d1dn'1,U\1nk Knob Noster was A n1qucs are. working and not worlung. NN f:.ventually. the Journalist winds up WE•·•·s performing both rotes. and somc:-LL nmcs W1th10 the same article If, .. ~ •••••••••••• .-hov..ever, there 1s a trend. in political • JOUmah~m. Jt 1s away from the former and to~rd the latt~r -a tendency most evident this year in California. an odd name. but he didn't hold It against Nancy because she did Knob · Noster got their first date ofT to a rous1n& success. They married ~me months later. moved to Cahfom1a and v..e touch ba~ occa\ionall y. To lhlS da~ when she ICtS peeved With him . al( Bob has to do 1s sidle up· to her and munncr "Knob Noster" and all as forgn en So }OU sec V1v1an. Htg&in'> .. tllc iu dull. st\,ltTy nanw; compared to ~me of tl!i ne1ghbor!o' tnoni kc~ l' .. c alwa)S been thanl.ful when JX'Ople ask me what pan of M1uour1 I come from. 1hat I can ~Y H1i· gms .. 11le Think how embamus1ng 1t would be to admn )OU came from one · of ~I.le other towns in the state such as Peculiar or Tightwad'' Or even v.or'iC -Cit ma>. Spnngs'' Columnl1t Aon Wrl/1 llvt,1 /JJ Lag1UJ• Nlgarl. In part, that's because t.ruuna poht1cal contests as sport mg event as s1mpl> more fun. But in the main, 1t reflects how the campaigns thcm- ~lves arc conducted and the pn- pnties of the candidates and the profes 1onal managers who elllst to "'" poht1c1ans as an earher gener- 1u1on of hucksters peddled soap tressing issues -statinf some ftrm policy about a matter o public concern -can be troublesome. A candidate who talks m those terms mu t c~pose h1m$Cl(to reporters and their skepttcal questioning. Ifs much less dangerous toshan the focus of the campatgn• to personal4t1cs personal a~saults upon one·s opponent. One might be accused of negauv1sm. but one ·~ immune to questions about one'£ own beliefs. or lack thereof L1m1t1ng downside fallout and max1mizin& upside polential, then . If you 're n~t a part of the solution, carry tlie ·b~nner leads to a strategy of min1m11ing senou discourse with the pubhc via the media. This syndrome ~ached 1u zenith, or nadir. this year when former Lt. Gov. Mike Curb. who hjU1l tendency to plant his (oot in his mouth durin.a ne~ conferences. dcaded to have virtually none of them. thus confin- ing ~mprugning to speeches in front " of sympathetic claques and s1mplisuc tclcv1s1on ads. 'i.\( RAMENTO-It was pc>tnted out to me ~ceJ'l\I) b) a fncnd back 1n Ph1lad\lph1a th.it I have: been 1n \acramci\10 fi .. c months and have not. in that time. wnttcn a single word about premenstrual '>) ndromc "People arc '>.l)tng >~u· .. c gone"° mellow out there. you \.C forgonen "hat's important ·· m) fnend said. and I fell the '>ling of the accusauon• tk:cau..c lite ..amc 1h1ng has ht-en bothcnng me. too. You '>CC O\Cr the )ea ~ I have developed an empath' with PMS \ufferers along with a propne.tary interest 1n the affi1ctt0n. It's a lot ltkc Jcrr)' l cw1s and muscurpr d)'strophy. He\ got .. Jerry'<; kids"' and I've got '"Pt•te\ killers." onlv I haven't been ahlc tn talk anyhod ~ into a telethon \l.'t · But I am gct\lng ahead of m>sclf. I lir\t became intcrc'itcd 1n PMS about nine da)5 after I go t married I came home from v..ork om· afternoon and tailed. "Ht honey what's for dinner''" into the house. This. of co me. v..a., before I knew that It 1s 1n-.cn\1the to asl \Our wife what'<; for dinner before )OU ask 1f she J'i ha PP> · in htf rela11ono;h1p<; w11h 1he pl•nct. I though1 tht "hone> .. p:in took care ol that Back then, of cour!>t. ever.th mg I knew about being mamec.l I'd picked up on "Oa1c and Haniet." On tht!> day. however, there wi'> no an,wtr. and so 1 \tood at \he end o( the hallwa) a"d uid It aj.ain : "Ha hone>· I'm home Whal'~ for din· ner?' .\nd~ I ~tood therc.wattlf\gtorhcr dre\~ to \tar the air as she humed the las1 fov.. steps to put one oftho!lt J)(rky h1tle lit~~' on the end of my no!le and IC'll me "meat loaf," I no1iccJ \-Om .. th1n1 trru'ra.an from lh dar._ end of the hall, and I new -call tt ln'ittnct -that our 1a~e wertn't OzZJc and t<amct anymotc:. "lov. v. htlc you lccp the funda- mental rule of PM 1n mind let me 1ell \OU about a woman named Charlotte King. Charlotte called me one da) 1a .. 1 v.eck and rold me that ~be knov. ~ v. hen carthqua keo; arc com mg. She know\ v..hcn. o;hc knowo; where, 'ihc kno"~ how strong. 1 he v.a~ o;he know\ i'i that her bod> 1 somehow 1n closer contact with the clements of the earth than yours or mine. and an d1srup11on anywhere m the planet's crust shows up in some corrcspondina place 1n her body. Chest pains. back rain , headache~. nausea. anx1Ct) AJ those symptoms mean something to Charlotte. and have C'nablcd her. she saiQ, to predict most of lhe earthquakes-maJor and minor -that have occurred all over the world 1n the last several )Cars She knew. for instance. al'IQu1 th e quake that htt Mexico C tty a day beforehand .\nyway. I 1alked to< harlone a few minute\. trying t0 be pohte. ancJ then I a ~her. in a polite wa), 1fshe had anything comma up nd he said that somettme in the neKt 24 hours. on eanhquakc betv..ccn 4.2 and S 2 on the Richter $Cale would be h11ung the Palm prinas area of Sou1hcm Cah- lom11. "My back." he said. "1 ju l ktlhng mt.' l\nd sure enough. 18 houri later. an carthquak.e mcuuring. 4.6' hi 5outhctn Californ10t, although it w~s fanhcr 111.e l than Palm pnngs. I wa "lmp1c d. and took her more \C'nou .ly when she called the next dny Purinl that convcrsauon C harloue mentioned a 1Cncral dis: comfort that had not settled in enough for h r to ~ ~ •1fic ahout v. ha\ It meant. For one thin >OU Harnct wuh a machete 1 v.cnt home thll n11ht. opened the door and topped cold -fcehna the pr ntc of tn un peakahlc evil. 1 hat. or there Wll\ 1 lov.-prc \Urt aour-."8Cnttr O\"tt the hvins room, .. Holy~· -." l .111d. ••tht ..-.ron w1t1.;h got Doroth)' red tiOe .. But I tPt m h d and folloWet! the rule. You rcmcmbet the rule? "T know,"' I 1CS, .. "'h. don'Jl&o u ptua""' nd I laved owth I nln utory1Sfairl) ~tra1&htforw1rd You wake up in th momin1 !Ind ~he' 1.9.!'inun the hv !1J room IaC'k. u don'J say n)th1n1 about bfi Ha t It 1 the fundamcnt 11 rule ot rM If )'OU get cautht in \h 1orn1, don't make any retrrtnet 10 the prtpal'lt10n Of food and )OU'rt • golna to lout uf therr altvc. .,. 'Tnnt me: I'm uuna htrt wnun th , r n'! I? """I. .. NEV .mentwn lhc pr.qma n TODAY IN HISTORY ------- Other candidates ha\c not so obviously l\<Otdcd press contacts. but the) certainly nave limited them, thus forcing the Caltfomaa pohtacal press to spend most of its ttme an the sports wnter mode, rather than the cduca.11onaJ one. When a canlpatgn consists largely oftaefteal deVlcc - food set-piece speeches and TV ads - So we sat down an hour later. mv rather than pchonal campa11nin1. daughter and I and the PMS victim, ai news conferences and debates, the the dinner table. There was some-Journalist is left with only so much thing in the middle of 11 that raw material:- resemblcd lasagna. except lasagna And, ~oo. jou~alists who covered bends. This went crack when I tried to this year sC3mpaignscame away with cut it. · • the sense thanhe ~nd1da1e' and ~heir ld1dn'tsay aword.IJusttook~me handlers were trying to make 1t a~ of whate~rit .was 1n the middle of the difficult as possible for the travehn& table and p111t 11 on my plate, and then media to keep in touch. I hppcd 11 under the table -!lhinf.)e Trad1uonally, the campaign or- by shingle -to my faithful old dog ganszations ha~e made arranacmcnts McGuire . , for transponat1on so that reporters Who wall cat an) thing for the ware services. TV stations and My daughter. who '" not 41tuptd. major nC'-"Spapcrs could accompany was doing the '3(Tle thing .. It ~undcd the candidates wherever they went like he was 'phntcnna bone under The news organizations paid - there, though. so I tncd to cover the through the nose. one might add. - not'IC with <s0mc pohtc convcrsat1on. for those services "l talked to a woman today that ean This )car, howe"cr. campaign predict earthquake\," I said. ~tatTs o;eemed reluctant to make 'iUCh My wife P'e me one of tho low· arranicments. or to do so only when beam look$ and said. "Ju t what 1s broad .media coverage of a c.n- THAT supposed to mean?" dadate!> ~ acttv1t1e wa~ deemed to be But before r could think of what· txneficaal. th twas uppo~d to mean. a piece of Most candidate~ wou~ f)f"t'kr to "'hatever "'e ~ere shppial McGuire meet rt.f!rtcr!> from local new paper\ caught in hi throat, and he made tha'I and T and radio \Ullons as they homble hacking not~ that began hke traveled, thus assunna themselves of a rtJUlar coush. but clearly and softball treatment, rather than deal unmistakably was, before tl ended, a with the me reporters day m and comment -)e -on the prep-day out, reporters who could dc1cct arat1on of food . an\ ~ubtlc eha~acs in the mcs$ll A'I I ~t thcrt, watching m)' wife that made 11 more d.Jfficult, for bit ter, I thought for a moment of uampl to chart how U. . natc poor Charlotte Kin and what th• candidate Ed Zschau WI!> dehvenn must bedoina to hcr. The nrugale had corutrvatt'vC bun-v.ords to au· rome to thi~: sHter g&tn\t '1iter. ditncc. in ulh~m Cahfomaa but nd that', •hy I t'et'fY •he banner wfteoina ha~ line in the north where for rMS h's ltkc the man ~1d, 1f polttie a~ lc!>s polaruc(f -not )Ou'rc not pan of the tu11on, you'" 1m~e. but mort d1fficu.tt. pan of the problem _,. e ef1 who souaht 11d tn tnivcl- Pttt ~~•~r .IJ • 1yHlf:tttd 1n th c.and1date often fbun<S col•JUlll r the~l"C1 dcahn1 w Jh ftti.ldtr1nt ' mpe11nii.f'f. for all o( thac..rcaM>n 1 lht r. • the m~1a cov .ra of ih~l986 -------------C11tfom1acam.J>'11niwa not tcmbly enha.hten1n1 Californians may ha~e bctn Vttll·anformcd on the deta1l1 of P.0}111 I aamina. l>Yt lound prcaou little n wh1 h to M)C lh6r voiln bOoth dec•~•on 0.. Jf'alfttt It I 1'1Hfbr.I tol•lfl&llt. ... ·1. • & Or•119 a-IMIA-V N.OTIWMI 11•mr • ...,_,,,, I. .. • 'Oetette's b Enry tht:ater son h1 u-•· Jctf)- cr. ""In uni*raldtd pla) by no one )Ou C\:C'f heard of trutt turnt out to ~ li&}\tl) Rn uonal. 1his ~awn is barely into its ~ond month, and we may alrt'a~.IJ.lvcJound lbat.llecpcr . .._,. ___ -r:a..-- It's •• rhc Octctle Bndat Ch,1b" It the Ncwport 1 heatc-r AmCen\er. and 1he reawn no ot}ler playhou~ ha'> d1~~·ered 1t prob bly can be traced . lO its urface synop 1s -eiabl si tCM charactt'r in her ~a t: the mem~n of from an lrish....RhodcJwd famil}_wb.ichscemtobe ''Y•n&tostc who.~ w~o me~t each Fnda)' night to play come off the dowd1e t. h 's an e1aht· bndgc • '° . t 934 and 1944. You . wa) ue, but there' no question about wpuldn tthink th:tt plot would have a "A·ho turns 1n •he most riveting "'hole lot of po 1b1htie$e11hcr. would performance. you? Mame Rou as the )ouniest ~1ster W~ll u onl)' proves the C?ld ac:b&t -and the one who's an the iravest Memben of ;'Tbe Octette Bride~ Club .. are·(atandhij; from left} llan:le ROM, Bnerly Vanuell, Nancy Oeerllni•. Jay D. Wli.c>n and (eeated) Jill Brede.en, Myrna Ryan. Shirley Prlce and Corinne Williama. about no.tJudgi~~ book b) 1t$co,er, <iangcT of 101na ofTthe deep end -beca~ ·0ctetlc appcan to ~ the s.1 mpl) superb. Granted. she ha) th~ surpnst ht\ of ttie IOCAI season - a how1e 1 role, but e"~" in her b k· c:omcdy-drama wh~ char:actC'f"S are gro und scenes we can feel the &Jue 1ndehbly etched (in moS't· instJu'lcC$). slowly coming lM'\Stuck wilh each and wh1ch ·p ck a gc."nui ne wallop at forced smile or nervous mannemm. its chtnu . It's the best' new play on a ·And her "Salome'# ~quence in the local stage in many mQOns. coslume p rty ~htch highlights the Director Joan McGill" has second act ,, priceless • fashioned somc"!>rilhant shadang.s of The other SC\.en ac1r~~s perform ' TV LISTINGS e Wtt..D, WllD WORlO OI AHIMAL8 r ID JOHN MCLAUGHUN'S OHE ON ONE " a.o. AT LAAGE NEWl YWE>CWIE HAVE OUN WU TRAVEl. fl THE TALK SHOW > 1n a neatly wo\·cn ensemble, with Corrinne Wilham\ notable· as the iron-handed elJcst smcr who still feel'S a compuls1or1 to dictate to her •ood. C'\'Co af the youngest 1s pu h1ng 40. Myrna Rya n reflects efTcct1vc ne rvous appre hension as the hQ"eu. while 'Nancy Gecrhngs is marvelous as the mo t uninh1b1tcd m~mbcr of ~MOVIE * • "The Return Of Thi L.Jvlng OMd" (19&5) Oki Outtgtr, Jtme1 Karen ~ -t'.30- .. YOUAOAIN? (!)MOVIE tt••• 'Diel M For Murdet" (19541 8 aJNOHTUNE I WU>, Wl.D WEST STAATAEJ< l ~YAAHS AT RON'S IN LAGUNA PAAl8E THE LOAD ( MOVIE ,. the clan. . P NEWS -"13l0=-~ Miiiand< Mee KtlY • (I .-.. 1-.r u &U•llrl!I WI AUN FOR THE MONEY· ~ t * ' Mlstr• Pamele" (1973) Julian Bllnet Dudley FOii« I ~" ~ ~ EHTUIPWIPfCtAI.. ~ II HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN G NOHT GAUfRY 8MOVIE (C MOVIE • • * 'Cocoon" ( 19851 Amedle, W ord 8m*Y Jaye Wilson give~ a touch1na portrayal of the second olde 1, and the only spinster of the bunch, who's an frubng health but presses on. Jill Bredesen gi ve\ Geerhn15 a good run Don a\ the most freewheeling. doubhng 1mprcss1vcl) on the p1ano and render· mg a TCmark.ably bawdy Red Riding Hood skat . L MCME ••• Deltll v.., Manhunt • (19'3) -1"0- "Wfd U ' ~ Anni Jerlfeys 8 EOUAUZ!A • P£AFECT STRANGeM I ~ E1.SEWHV'E 0 1100.000 PVRAMIO e HOm. Q -11:65- (~)MOVIE • ... ,, WJaoged Edge" (1985) Glenn CloM Jeff Bttdgel Rounding OU1 the aroup arc Bc\.Cr· I~ Vanast"k and ~h1rlc)' Pncc as. U t A Sddter'a S ory" 119&-'l HowWd E Aolrirls Jt , Adolph C... ~ 0FNITAIYl8LAHD MOVIE ID DllCOYER: THE WOALO OI * *'" Mf ~· f1974..0.---~THE 8C8ES -t2:CO- D &Sa<.EL I EBERT I THE MOVES .. ~ (J 000 COUPt..E IDNEWS aOPENMH> Srcneon, L .. CnlUI '1) RJOIT1VE • • D9COYElt THE WOALD OI (W MOVIE 8aEHCE ••• 'lt'reconc:Nble O!tl«tne:M" G EHTIIEPfEEUAS at PRAISE TH£ lOAO I 19841 Ryltl 0 Nell, S'*"Y Long ~~ -tt~ RMr ' (liM) Mel Gib-* ..... -. ( 1975) Roy Sc1*d-IOI\, Siuy Sc>ecelt tt Rob1t1 Sha1W P TWIUOHT ZONE ' MOVIE -10:06-** * "Greue" (1178) John TrlYOI-~MOYE ta OIMa Newton-John • • • Natlonll ~·· EIKOC*n L, MOVIE veuuon·· f 19851 ~ ChlM 6'¥· u •; Mane (1985) Scssy ~. ettyO'Angllo Jen Otnieb · -10: 15- P 000 COUPl.E (11) AEUGIOUS PAOORAMMIHO S' BAOT'HEMQ -10-.30- -8:30-fD AUN FOR THE MONEY AN 8 HEAD OI THE CU.SS O EHTEAPfflSE 8'ECW.. 0 I 1.000.000 CMAHCE OI A CJ!) JA0< HAYFOAO UF£T1ME ( P Nf NEWS MAGNUM. P.l (%>MOVIE ID WKRP If C1NC1NNA Tl t The Wamcx And Thi SotC*'_ .. '1) PET'EAOUNH 119M10MSt.rldlne u.eAi;,tw ( P HONEYMOONERS -11:00- ( S BIZAMEQ 8089 NlWS -t;OO--~ HIGHTlff ~CIJJI_ - -MOVIE • t Blondl.Hlet'• (\Wµotin l..eshl. Sella (~ EMEAGEHCY MOVIE * t ''Thi Hill Hl\'t E~ II" (1965) MldlMI Bttryman, Kem Blair -12:30-. II LATE HIGHT Wl1'H DAVID l.ETTEMtAN 8 lWlUOHT ZONE 8 TALES OF THE UHEXP£CTED OMOVIE t t t •.; Madi For Eac:h Olhlr ' I 1t71) iw,.. T eytor Jo9ec)tl Bolo- ~INN NEWS ., ...:>M: WOSSllLE ., TRUE CONFt.SSaoNS • AMEflCAN ST,ORY: em11•:1GST0'1177 OOtRTAJNMOO TONIGHT PRAISE THE LOAD Volunteer. JaAmertcanHeart V Association 1J MAOHUM, Pl 0 9CTV 111781 0 OIAtE A MEAKI • LATUHOW 8 DYNASTY CJ . .. e NIOtfTl.H -tU>-11 CIJ ~ . EDWARDS TOWN CEN'f ER MON-THURS AT -730- • 2 ON TH£ TOWN I CAAD 8HA.RK8 ~TA COUNTRY! gan 0 NEWS 9 8UTTf.AF\.JES e MOYIE 6!> IUSIHOS AEPOAT t t Pcny s 119811 Din MonaNn, THIS DAY Mn Hen1tt G> AN«1f 8HANKlE m ENTAEPAEHEURS m 8AAETT A m PRAISE TH£ LOAD 1PJ oNZZl. Y ADAMS &) NIGHT OAl.LEAY -t 1:30- lP) 8T AA TREK fJ A.DOEAL Y ($)MOVIE D TONIOKT t t i; 'MllllCrt In Rome" (1973) Rietlltd.IM1on Mlr'c.llo MutrOlln-,... -1:00-8 INHNEWS D f Al.ES OF THE UNEXPECTED MOYIE 7:00 + 9:30 I EYEON LA. HOU YWOOO SOUARES w·A·s·H t ••·~ "Vlctor I Victoria" (1982) 8 8DT OF SATUAOAY NIGHT • •.; Nlgtlt Of The LMng Oeld I 19e81 Jud th O'DN. Duane Jorlll 9) CAN YOU BE THINNER? e EOUCA TlONAl e a~AFOY 4'Ullt Andtewa Robtt1 Ptesron LIVE "A charming good time movie that's Impossible to resist .. • Them a new kind of adventure m the air. ...,. ......... \41#5 ·-·--_ ... _ _ ... . .,. . ...._. .... ·--, ........ , .. _ •. , .. , .... .._, ••14-....... -•lt fll ... -• GllA•M I -· --I . .._. .... N .. YM.seOT MAIUU&DfN.U) c1 1101 u 1n1 •1•0 ?110. 10 00 Ir ·-· ----•• PIGliY SUl Cf ct Na t~J .. • . ~I IPG·tJl«a .,. .. .,.... .... e ... - ••' 1>11 1 r.---• ·-- l\ nlllO ... lit-... ···-~ .._...c..... ~,~ "'~ MTmll• l&JICll "' ..... ... "'™""tlollt l'lc1tl¢ •&-,i .. ,.,,. m ''" LtNlllHYL1tylenltr 0~~ sou ......... ,,, SHOWS Al 11111 0 & I U A~(aJA f>•H ~lwt Tfle "'r 11111) A1 •••• 0 JO '"6THUSSN~ClllJ 7 :ao ""' A•out Latt Nit"' !lilt l 1U • JO TOPOUlt~J ... 1100. 10 10 -111 70M"' -"' ....... DOUT snuo PAUl NfW~OM QUIN THI COLOI Of MOHIY 1t1 11 M HI S;)I ... t•» DOUT ITnlO f<* UUIN TO, OUN 11191 ,,.,.,,.,...,ru., .. n wn.UNll """' CHllDUH Of A lUJll 000 (IJ " .. , >J • .IJI ••• , .... ~ 11J U& ,,., It ,. .. , "Dt '"' M.P lOVICeUT"I P•OM HYOHD Ill It M &.MI•' •UNNINO SCAalO Ill , ,. . ,. , .. ~ WCMTW.Ula IDl*Ai TOUGH GUYS 1"°1 11 iiua••-.s~• SHOH Cl•CUIT r,..111 tlOU'lltGff1T llt fHt OTHll llDI 1,..1i1 '. OIAOl y , ..... ,, ILUI vuvn J. CUWL.1,ACI I. TOP OUN t .. 2 . TIIKIC Otl T~IAT !!! ) ONCI lmtN LA MIRADA 71• 1'• 1•'9 l t "" •••II ~ •••• DOUY sttiJO PAUl -llllAH/tOM CIUllM THf COlOll Of MONIT ltl 11.M i.•JMIM 1 .... Of'tNI NOW »na ·n.u ._ rv MVOU .. MOMI" DOUT snuo WMCIOPt OOlOMIO JUM"N' JACK fl.ASH 1U J > U t • 141 IMS tlOI ........ , STMO IT'"M Uillt l!M •1lJ .... t1M '"" WILLIAM MUl'T CHILD•IN OF A LUSH OOOtai l )lO )00, lO .... ,.,. TOM UUUI TO, GUN 1l'Ot 1-00)UtM14t l•• HICK oa TIUAT Ill u,. ••••• MA.Nl4lJNTH r )1J ........ lo HABRA .U:;.. ·1 ' ... GATEWAY ltf\41 ,H '611 t "' \ •' Vt tr Vt• ~·T sn~PAUl MOOAH UOCOOtll OUNDH~Ul I O)U .... 14J .... OOUT •n•to ALllNS I'll . , .. ,. THI fl Y 111 "" ... 11• ~IY llWHO SOUL MAN t~Ul 1 lit),. •• ,,,, ••• f 1ANC 11 COl>PO\A t ,.GGY SUI GOT MAHllO , .... UJ I M &.tit M .... 1•n DOUT tnltO SKY IANOJTS ll'OI WI._ SJJ 7 MHJ NUl.,,...,. UOCOCMU OU.I 1,..111 OUNO ..Ot~U) AlllNS 11 nu flY lJ\iel}, them~• ronttnted nd lr&uabl) the d1111 t Of the IU tetl) 50rorit). Their1 arc ~h1dly beck· ground as 1anmct1ts and they re filled "plend1dl~. 1 he C-HUlto tncludti '"'' ofe-n a ncwspa~r phOtOf18pher pthcnna 1nform1t1on for a story on 1hc group (• n1c;c ~-ay to act thec~s»sation out of the way a'nd 1dintify each' characten Cole. who doubles bac~t•ae. gets some 1.ood comic mile~~ out of his bncf introductory Sttne. . Tt1ankfull)t the actual pla)1n1 'of bridge '' kept to a mtn1mum . anJ don't look for a comedy baitd on overblown arpaments o.,.er stralt'J). Pla)-wnght P.J. (Jarry (wh om ~e ... ,ume musl t>C 1 wom'lllr) h• mOf~ !mp<>nant fish to ft), and an her ''C~N~ A L!l8ER 000" IAI 5 ~5. I 00, 10 15 WILLIAM HIJRT "SOUL MAN" 1PG.1J) C THOMAS HOWELL g 00, I 00. 10 00 $2 00 TUES £ WEO "ALIENS" tRI 7 C5 "THE .fl Y" iAI 5 CS 10 IS S2 00 TUES & WEO •SCOrt McGINNIS• "SKY BANDITS" IPGI 700900 • S2 00 TUES & WEO "THE COt.OR ' . OF MONEY'' P NEWMANIT CRUISE 700. "930 "ftEOGY SUE C T~AI l'tOWJLL "SOUL MAN" IP0· 131 8 15. 9'30. 10 20 •.SCOTI McGfNHIS• "SKY IANOf'TI'• !POI 800.'I 00, t 50 •OEXTt'.fll GOfmOHe ''ROUND MIDMOHT" 100 t301AI ~....,....()F.. A LEIKR QOO•• (A)· WILLIAM HUA'T 130, I 50 TO-. CRUISE "TOP GUM" IPGI 530740 1'5 & 1 00 TIJts & WED "FROM IEYOND .. t'30fRI "n.tCK Ofl TREAT" !Al 35 10 15 $1 00 TUES I WE •AO& RIEMER S• "IT ANO IY ME'' (RI 'oo. too $100 TUES & WEO "THE Fl Y" (RI I 15 "ALIENS'' IA 5 co. 10 05 I 1 00 TIJES & WED GOT MAllfU£D .. !PG· 131 11---__;.-------t KATHLEEN TURNER .. AIWtN e 00 8 15 10 15 JACK fUIW' IA) I 00 3 15 5 307 ,5 t 50 "CHtlOREN OF $100 TUES a wm A LESSER GOD'' l~I "THE Fl Y" (RI 3 45 a 15 Wl~L:~ ~~RT "ALIEN9" I AI 1 10 s '° 10 00 R08 REINE'R S I 1 00 TUES ' WEO "STAND IY ME" !RI "CHILDREN OF a ,5, a 's 10 20 CLOSED rues. A LEISER GOD" (RI 12 10, 2 30. ',S, 7 00 11'30 C THOMAS HOWELL NO BAR{lAIN PRICE "SOUL MAN" (PG· 131 "P£0GY SUE 8 00. 1-00. 10 00 GOT MARRIED" (PG· 131 12 00 2 15 c 19'"• 1S-8 30 J=OUNTA IN VALLEY 839 1500 TOM CRUISE "TOP GUN" tPGI ' 730 ll CS S100 TUES I WEO •SCOTT McGINNIS• "SKY BANDrTS" 1PG1 830 8 30 10 05 SI 00 TUES 8 WEO UNIVERSTIY 85-l 8811 ~ •Jo+1N CLEES£• "CLOCKWISE" 1PG> 620 9JS 1000 WEO "JUMPIN JACK FLASH"tRI 100. I 15 $2 00 TUES & WEO "ALIENS" tRI s 25 1000 "THE Fl Y" lAI I 00 S2 00 TUES a WED ---....... 1CflOCODILE DUNDEE" IPG-131 615130101S NO BARGAIN PAI f .. BLUE V£L VET" tR1 115 I JO $2 00 TU£$ ' WEO "THE COlOR OF MONEY"tRI $ 15.1..30. 9 's 42 00 lUES & WEO 1020 $1 00 TUES t WEO "CROCODILE DUNDEE" IPG· 131 1 16 3 30. 5 C5 I 00 10 00 .,,e • • :iC _ • " : I HUNTINGTON TWIN 8.18 0388 •ACM AT.,.. I ~--._. "IWTHlESS PEOPt.F' fRll 30 "KARATE KIO II" 1P01 • 20 10 10 11 00 TUES ' WEO "TOUGH GUY.8" 4P.G1 BURT LANCAST£R e oo. a oo 10 oo $1 00 TUES & WED "THAT'S LIFE'' 1PG-131 JACK LEMMON 7 15•1 15 $2 00 TUES & WED ••NAME OF THEROSE"1R1 7 00 t'.lO SUI T\D & ID ••JUMPIN JACK FLA.SH" !A1 5 lQ 7 30 11 45 $2 00 TUES & WEO C THOMAS HOWELL "SOUL MAN" lPG· 1!1 815 830 1020 S2 ()() tUES ' WEO , PAUL HOGAN IS "CROCOOLE OUMOH" 8 00, I 00, 1000!PO·131 NO BAAGAIN PRICE r , r ~ f r., ;. :. rM ·--.:. :· , · . ... AU. llATI .. ,,... '1CMATI Ker (PO) I 00 "ft0t. TERGIJ8T II" . I 15, tOOO (PG-13) Hf~t1H< •P ''N'IJ ~ i , ~ ) l J ~ _ ....... ~QQYIUE T llAAMED" lfll'G. 131 • 00 8 15 10 15 '2 00 TUES I. WEJl> "JUWttf JACK FLA.ltt" (RI 5 30. 1.30 •• ,5 S2 00 TUES &"W!O ',1tff r.~A .'•~ '°'. 8«·. J~. ~ PAUi.. ...c>GAN 1$ CflOCODllE DUNDH' (PG-13) e 15. e 30 10 20 HO BARGAIN PAICE C THOMAS KOW!l.L "SOUL MAN" ciltM31 8-00 1 "00 10-00 S1 00 TUES & WEO TOM CRUISE "TOP.QUN" (PG) 11>0, t-1S $1 00 TU£S f. WED "TOUGH GUYS" !POI 7 45 •JOtMY OF 11Am GA*" S cs, t •5 (PG) '1 00 TIJES I WEO WESTBROOK :,10 .i.io~ .... ,._Tllll "' I A a all.WT "IOY WHO COULD Fl r a 00 101>0 (PGI "KARATE KIO U" IPGI 8 05 '1 ()() ruts WEO .. THURS "DODLY FlmtD" (R) 6•45, 10 10 .... ~ .... RIC ...... IC~OR .. TREAT" IR) 8 30 tT~O&TWUM" C THO~AS HOWELL "SOUL MAN" IPGl 7 30. i ,5 $2 00 TUES & WEO BURT LANCASTER "TOUGH GUY... !PG 8 00, 8 00. ,0 00 S2 00 TOES I WED ROB R£rNER S "STAND IY ME" IA> 8 30 8 30 100S S2 00 TUES I WEO ''PEGGY SUE OT MA.RRtED" tPG· 131 o 00 8 IS 10 tO S2 00 TUES & Wto •SCOn MciGllHS '"IKYWIDl'Tr • {PGl 700, too uarwum ,, P erforming really n.rM8y, N.vemlter t " · ARD!!S (March ll-Ap.ril 19): Panem as set. ass1anmc;nts arc m3de, you know where you stand in ron'ne-ction with money and love Cl\anJt'I occur in home; 'most of them will prove beneficial. Family me'™>er helps boo1>t a labor forfove-Both vulnerable. North dealt. NOaTH . business, career.\ ~ • TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Good lunar aspect. coin.cades with J wH watch1na a no talgic pr~raf11 . . ,. •Q•• ~ :}~ 8 CHOL£$ communication, spiritual values, medhat1~n. reali1ation that beanJ alone 1s c·au~ "Sentimental Journey' on net*"1Hs be\ns-lonely Mcmbcr~oppa~ue sex cares, will prove tt, morale pubhc tclev1s1on. and a faded female soan as result. . --was croonina 1trnnh? ca:nmir • ...1·~ ....----..s..----.,.-- GEM1N1(May21-J une 20): Focus on rcspon ib1hty, deadlines, intensified me au the M>.,·c you'"e aot." IDl£r love relath>nship. You-could r«eive Presumably, tM-lyFic wa directed _ ...... ___ ~_•_A. I :--"--------GotE• •J 101 ~QJ 82. ·<> e 1e5 z •X 109784 •a news concerning investment, partner-to a lover. but l kf)cw better. It was H ship, possible inheritance .. You'll ~lso really the audience she wanted and AlllS learn 01ore about tax, license require· needed love from -more love and .. ment~ s 01ore continually than any particular CANCER-Vunew:J)Jty-'22): What --YDN£Y lJldividual could ever give. had been a limitation is removed-stops Tbis is whit ma cs pcCfOrnrcrsl"lm; •re out, and rou'JI reacb wider audience. OM•DR · and k,eep. on running.. more than You'll be giving serious consjderat1on to "" fame, ·more than rnoncy, more even offer which could include partnership or · ihtt'n any amount of per'$0nal happi- travel. SpotlW\t also is on marital status. • ness they might find elsewhere. It is LEO (Jufy 23-Aug. 22): New aspects of employment spring to forefront. the msat1able need to be loved, as Creativity, romance. style. confidence are also featured. You'll receive good measured an decibels of applause. report concerning ba.sac issues, dependents. health. Another Leo figures Perfomnng in public for strangers prominently. , · 1s, for nearly all, a substitute for VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Don't skip details-if thorough you could be inadequate amounts of love they feel · ·"bi& winner." Emphas!s on emotional responses, ba~1c feelin~. e~ployl'."1ent they received in early life. This ts not an conn:ection-witb-ind1v1dualclose to-you. Senseorpurpose, direction will be to say that they may not have got restored. · . :. · -enoµ~h love.then; it)s to suggtst thal .UBl_U (Sept. 23-0ct.)~): You have ~ore "workmg n:~Qm: Yo\1 could . there as no such thingas .. enough" for enlarge den, office. home quaners. Long-distance communicauon relates to them. social invitation, pos$ible journey. Keep rtsolutions concerning diet, Nothing else explains what they are nutrition, work .sclledule. willing to endure to attain ic even a SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Many of your "best qualities'' surge to lifetime of failure, or relattve obscuri- forcfront. You enjoy livel) competition-.you'll nave plenty of that. and you ty, hoping for that one triumphant will come out on top. Some plans are subject to revision, much to your breakthrough that will assure them advantage. · • that they are truly beloved and truly SAGITTARIUS(Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Defend principles, analyze data, refuse wonwofit. ~o take peopje .. sit.uations for granted. Means ~s~ 9,Ue.stt~~s, give full rein to • Applause, to a dedicated per- tntellectual cunos1tr.. Member of opposite sex as flirting. • . former, means far more than admira- CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Ja~. 19): You l~am more at?out .condiltOM1 at tion for a specific talent; it is the mark ~oin;e1 you.become aware of ryghts, perm1ss1ons. Cycle high. JUdgm.ent and ofuhima)t approval and acceptance .. 1ntu1t1<?n will be on l.!lrget._Fam1ly member comes up with moncy-makmg 1dea. For this emotional chimera, they wilt Could involve weanng apparel. . . . . suffer indignities, rejections, d1sap-AQUARIUS(~an. 20-Feb .• 18): Define tenns. m51stu~clear instruct1on.s. pointments, heartbreak of every kind. · 1'fany answei:s are fou!ld beh~nd sceryes -"d~tie u~td-to-iook.-~ano-n lsruTiy as powerful a drive as tfie 1~1V~lves mystery, -mtngue. htdden resources. Pisces. Virgo pe_oplc._wall play. adcjiet's need for a fix -and'JUSt as" s1,nificant roles. • . necessarily repetitive. SOUTH No mountain climber, •'A''K8tl u orer~ 1s m r •. <:21'_~~=::;!====::±:==::::=:-::--=-==~rll~ltlf"-11.6.r;..-:~~~::..,,. indifTercnttd"the poss1 lity .(>f fa1lure ()A 10 ttlan the tpplt\~junkie. Th as 15 why. • Q"J of all people, they alone conie out of The bidding: "retirement:· or refuse to go into it. North Eut dtsp1te aJI the wealth and security a 1 • Pue person might desire. Just one more 1 NT Pue encore -and then one oiore -even after the voice 1s gone, the legs are 3 t Pue stiff, the comedic fines arc stale and ' c:::i Pue mechanical. 5 • Pu• There arc ·a· few exceptions, of 5 ·• Pue South •• 2 <:;:I ,0 ,. 5 () 6t Weet ..... Pu• . Pua Pue Pue Pue course, but they-'1lre the exceptional J•~ Pue exceptions that only point up the Opentl'lg lead: Four of• . . . West led a Jub and declarer ran quence f oll~ed. it to the Jae . Hls problem wa.s hit fourth hea . One way to handle that would be to duck a heart, draw two rounds ot tr:umpe ~ct then caah the ace-kln(J>f hearta. That would succeed ii. the heart.I were 3.3 or it the player with tour hearts held thrff trumps. But Jt could be fatal alnce it •xpoee& you general rule that enough 1s not enou~h, as Iona as there 1s "love" floating around out there that docs not belong lQ them. The 10th European Junior to a defensive ruff. Nature works in suana.~ ways her "-Onders to achieve. Without this fanatical drive, no doubt. we would not see and hear the glorious singers, the -eituberant dancers, th~ magnifi- cent actors who seem to burst every barrier of their craf\. People with ordinary nee_ds do not make ex- traordinary efforts. ihe others de· serve our applause, our admiration for their spunk -ana our sympathy fort cir cfeTus!on. . Slduy ·H•rrlf-l1 ~ 1yndlc•tH colUDlJJ1st. Champfonshlp, limited to players The Swedish declarer found a su- under 26-, was won by the Nether· perior line. He drew three rounds lands. Jl was a fitting reward for ll of trumps, ca.shed ·the ace of clubs country most active in promoting and ruf'ed a club back to hand . bridge for young players. · With East marked with nothing but PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Emphasis on pressure of deadline, challenge, · responsib1Jity, intensified relauonsb.ip. Powers of persuasion are-xeightcncd;---------------------------- The com~titora. might have red cards left, declarer11lmply-led _. been young in years and expert.-heart and, when West followed -:- ence, but they left no doubt.a about-with -a low card, he lNerted the their sklll. On this board from the eight. Eaat won a cheap heart trick, Sweden-Oreat • Britain match. but he wu end play~. No matter North•South bid well to reach a -Whlch.auit.lle..retumeiLJ!. would be * small slam tn spades.Jn the1r meth-tnt6-. tel\ihC"t" ~<! would presen--r- ods, South's reb{d of two heart& declarer with the extra trlck he wa.s forcing, and a cue-bidding~ needed to fulfiU his slam. sales ability 1s strong and you could emerge with sizable profit Capricorn plays role. ' lF NOVEMBER 6 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have unusual "oice. sense of drama, appreciate lJlxury, art. music and thelter. You are intense. passionate:- seldom do a~hinj .l'lalfwaX· can be self-indulgent You could h~ve :-ve~ght .problem and' sweet' tooth. ' Mcthbers of opposire sex firu1 yo.u antngu1ng. attractive, glamorous. Taurus. Libra, Seorp10 people pla'Y important roles in your life. What ai>"Pcars a setback will be transformed into solid gain toward cod of November. Money. love. advancement featured for you 10 December. Handi~apped ask equal treatment WOID .... ... -, -... -. Our collars getting whiter and whiter Most workers used lO ·~ blue collar. Now mQsl-53 percent-are white collar. Within 1 S years. the white collar are expected to go up to 90 percent. That's a lot of paper folk. WMI? It's going t<H>e even-her-Oer and harder to·find a good car:penter. tile setter, plumber. Skilled craftspeople will get the most mone)'. and ditchdiggers won't do badly. either. To be deadly. a snake has to have som.c_sort Qf equipment an us mouth . to inject its poison. So not cverysna4 is dan~erous. What people don't realize 1s that the saliva of almost all snakes ts andeed toxic To some degree. anyhow The older you get, the more you're inclined to buy wool. That's a Oat fact of marketmg. On your feet. Shet"pherders -clmck' -to the graying of America. Talk to a marijuana smoker and you'll ftmi lhat worthy may havcT little trouble remembering what you JUSt said. 11'1 the jargon. it's short-term memory loss. The longer arows the finger. the ·aster grows the nail. .Why newborn infants can 1aste sugar but not salt 1s 11 cunos1ty. isn't 1t'?A Q. Wh) d()(sn't a deep-diving seal get the bends? PEOPLE L.M. BOYD A. It collapses its lungs oo the ~Y dowp. So the pressure doesn't sud· denl) disburse more nitrogen than its body can handle. ~ Aar controllers worldwide give their instructions an English. Your frame of mind affects your body's immune system. That's long been known. But the lab researchers proved 1t again recently 1n tests on two groups of women -one categorized as "happily married." the other as "not happily married." When inoculated with bacteria. the bodies of the "happil> mamed" reacted in a much livelier manner to whip the germs than did those of the "not happily mamed." Says he~ the average U.S. famtl¥ spends $82 a year on dry cleaning. Drmtutnrver.rg~ tlrat. Lm of-people never dry clean anything. You see them down under t~e bndgc. Albert Einstein never did, either. L.M. Boyd I• • syndicated colamal•t. . DEAR ANNUNOERS: 1 would like to address this to your readers: DEAR MR. ANO MRS. JOHN Q. PUBLIC: I'm a 13-year-old boy who hit his bead diving through an innenube in a back yard pool. I'm a 26-year-old.houscwife who was slammed into broadside by a drunk driver. l'm a 36-y~ar.-old male who bad a motorcycle wreck at 18 inilrs per hour_ _ I'm a 52-ycar-old farmer who sat down in his backyard swing and the chain broke. . ~ We all h1rv~ one thing an common. W~ crushed our sJ)inaJ cords. We arc handicapped. We are io wheelchairs. When your children see us in public places and make a comment, don't yank them awa)'-fl'"thoYsh we were monsters. They arc cunous about what has happened to us. Let them ask us and we will tell them. • When we park in a handicapped parking place that seems spacious to you, please don't j)are at us and become angry. We need a &pace large enough to get out of our vehicles. Mr. Businessman, when we ask your security to ticket the vehicles, please don't become belligerent and say It drives away customers. We spend money, too. What I'm trying to explain 1s that we are you, only we had our accidents before you dad. We didn't think it could happen to us etther. but it patch of wet sand and a motorcycle going 18 miles .,an hour changed my life forever. I still love my wife and 7-year-otd n~s bcfor~. I want to beilble-to taJce- them out to eat, to movies and on vac~tiOnS.JUSt as YOU do. I don't i.et upset because you have 5,000 parking spaces at a shopping mall and I have only three. The physically disabled don't need your sympathy, and we don't need your resentment either. - AIN LAIDERS G .W.L. IN NORCROSS, GA. DEAR NORCltOSS: You've writ· te:n a letter tllat b llH to sbak~ a lot - of complacent people out of tbelr comfy, little cocoons. Thank you for reminding 11 once a1alD tbat tbe. difference betweo you and us ls a spilt second ofltad luck. We an ,eed to be brought face-to-face with that cbJlllng fact of Ufe and you did just tbat. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus· band as~ plastic surgeon. No. ht is not busy bobb•ng noses and mak 1 ni older women look youtfg. His specially is making thumbs out of fingers for people who have lost theirs in accidents. I've learned a great deal from him and would hkc to pass someth1n& on. Will you please tell your readm that if a loved one has an accident and plastic surgery is needed. they should call the surgeon in immediately and not watt until later to do the plastic work? Too many people think the victim should pull through first and then the plastic surgeon should be called 1n to repair the scars. Let your readers know it is 10 times more difficult. painful and expensive if they watt. Ideally, there should be one healing: one ttospitahtayand no need to correct an emergency job. -HIS WlFE IN..ij.QNOLUW.. - DEAR HON.: Tb.a.au for a leller that could 1ave a lot of pain, money and time. I bave never dealt wltb tbl1 topic in my column before and· am pleased to pass the word to my readers. H_~rtley clicks as news $how anc hor By the A11oclated Pre11 . NEW YORK -CBS· has unveiled half the team that will anchor its nrw morning show beginnrng an Jan\Jary. Marlette Hartley, an actres~ who has filled 1n for Jue Paaley as co-anchor of the NBC "Today" show. will be the co-ho t. A male co-anchor will be an- nounced later, the network said. The show. replacing the "CBS Mornina News" from 7:30a.m. to 9 a.m., will be produced by the CBS ente~nment d1v1sion Hartley has appeared in several feature and television movies. • including "Silence of the Heart" and "MADD: The Candy Light· ntr Story ... But her face may !)( most fam1har from the Polaroid teJevmon commett*ia1' she wa tn with actpr James Ganer. - 81.natra b a llet ·" 1 1 ----- .. Friedman. 74, for the "Order of the Sacred Treasure" for helpana witn Japan's economic policy. Sm, 66, former chairman of the Korea-Japan Cooperation Coun- cil, was selected for the "Order of .. the Rmng un .. for promot1na Japap-South Korea relation~. Charity ehuffte CH IC AGO-The producer of '"The Super Bowl Shuffie" record and videotape sa)s the lyncal promise b)' member~ of the Chicago Bears to "feed the needy" will be met. with' more than $330,000 aoina to charity. "l bchcve we have achieved our aoals," said Rfc~ud Meyer. pre 1dent of Red Label Record • "and -.e're pamcultr1t p4cased that we'"c t>ccn •blc 10 help make this conmbut1on to the C1ucafo commun1t)' and to need~ fam1l-1cs.·· Me)tr released (llurts frQm an aud11 of ~~\ o( rtcor<b' and v1d.cotapcs fcatunng 10 mcmbcri ot,lhc Chic:qo Beats.. who went on to wan 'the upcr Bowl tn Januan af\tr release of the re- cordm1s. The audit \tio'''1 thll ! of June 31>.J.!bOut 70~.000 ffi!Or<fs and 170,lMJ 'idtotapd had betn ~Id R 0 F A L L ·I I AMONO ' I I 1~ ; I l ) I C O K R y ' "I remember ttie good old daya s I [ J' I .., when you could. letch • IOda . ( • during a television commercial," ~=====::!:::::!.....::_ .aaKi the woman. "N'ow ~ can I TRAYE.W 1go -1hl-." .._,-1--1--,-8 -,--, --4 0 COIT!l)ll'tw the c"uckle Q\IOl•d . . • • _ 'bv l1ll•n9 1n the 'lllU•ng words _ _.___._....___..._...__, yo.. develop from step No 3 b•low ~ PP1NT NUM8£Pf[) ~ l[ lTlPS IN SOU.APES , J .. J • ti~AM8lf HUS I I I I J' THE I TQOAY-~s-_, CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACAOl8 1 Inferno man 8 Countef'pane 10 Large water bod lea 14" Bury 15 tndla et al 16 Cottage 17 Upstairs 18 -IP0'1• 20 Rev .. I*' 22 One of the Horn- 23 Burma native 2 .. Pipe fitting nstea 28 Light globe 29 Multitude 30 Soothing 35 Invite 38 Full..c:ale 37 King: Lat. 38 Important suit• • 1 Hard matter •3 Sentry'a command ,.,. Squander• ,.5 Aldlcule •8 Untrained 50'"0ne -·· 51 Aecycled .55 Oregon .,_ak 57 Mist Keaton 14 58 Cat~rel area 59 Additional 60 Smart Mt 81 lo,} no time: poet 62 Chilean coin 63 TOOi< out DOWN 1 Twoaome 2 A"dVWrnry 3 "Bahl" .. Doped • 5 Country · within another 6 Disused 7 Ski fMOrt 8 Deceived O R9tln 10 BMtlet 11 CMroded 12 Midst 13 Wiid time 19 Cultlvat .. 21 North of Nev. 2•Gu 25 The one over t~ PREVIOUS~ SOLVU> 26 Wit ... duct 27 Irritates 28 Bikini pa.rts 30 T1rlff 31 Feasted 32Pr ... 33 Peodht 3-' Lett .... 38 Anecdote 39 Leas ~batant11l 40 Plebe •1 A~lted •2 Ouctlht .... Ory •5 Olatrtct of lndll •6 Wed tlyty 47 E11cli. . .. a Flegrant · ,.9 Ctllgary Stampede, •·Q· 51 SUit 52 Crul.M 53 <lrstt.d. Mr. 5• Sign OYef' se WIN (to) 11 12 13 "You were thinner th~n. Daddy. But . your_tie was fatter. __ _ 0 Whet'1 the m1tter? Old you heir one of them groan?" · b~ Brad Anderson "I've heard of singing telegrams, but never howling greetings." PEANUTS · TM( ~NING-TIGE.R ~ARK THE WORLV'5 INJ'!>T EFFICIENT fATIHG MACHINE WrTH TM£ WORL~ MO~T VORACIOO'!> APP£11Tf, 5PIE' A MC.LPL£~ FEA451' ! TUllBLEWEEDS I WAN'f 10 Af'l?l..061tl: FM AU. ~e 1'1M~S l'VE. -m1ev-t> 6e1' vou 10 MA~R'(M~ .•• -~~~:.=: 11-S • -. • !o'1 ff~ ARE-FUSSY. >M.Wl\SON ! . 'Qt~E ABOUT1HEONLYFRl!ml 1 tM LEFT !• ~----------------------------' ~ 60! STOP! RUN! 6fTE! GOME SACK~" fEEDING, fRENZ<r. ' b~ Jim Davrs ... FUNKY WIKKERBEAN_ DOOKESBURY . . . M'~'100~ A ~ ~~ M~'TWOO? •• I f - J J by Tom Batiuk BUT WHAT HAPPeSED ! 1? by Garry Trudeau l t - • I I- . -. Widening Jamboree Road between Pacific Coast Highway Md San Joaquin Hills Roacj Ackhllonal road capacity )8000carsda1ly ••• NEW ROADS ~--+!Mm::.;m BOA O..J.MPRO \tEMEN-rs. -· EXISTl~OADS ' .. . ' r,. ·' ., ''· . • ' I ~-:H-er----;·in;-....-a~n -=-=K:-:---iln_m_e-;-1 .:....:.....,__----:----. __:..__:__ __ ... T raffle En11ineer and Newport Beach Resideni ,_ .. PACIFIC COAST HWY. More than $40 million in r.oad improvements completely funded by The Irvine Company and ready for construction with a "YES " vote on Measure A. l . As a specialist in community traffic plans and a Newport Beach resident, Herman KiJ!1II1el understands the traffic problems in our city. This map indicates the key road improvell}ents wh ich will occuc with a "Ye " YOteJID Measurc.A-atno cos to taXpayers. Hennan Kimmel bel ie~es these road improvements, paid for by The Irvine Company, will solve a great deal of our traffic problems. Just look at the map and you '11 start believing too. • HERMAN KIMMEL i currently President of H~rman Kimmel and Associates, Inc., Traffic Engineering Consultants in Newpc;>rt Beach. Mr. Kimmel has more than 30 years experience in transpo~tion.and .tt:a~c engi~eering. ~rior to starting his own business, .h~ mrked for the State of Cahfom1a D1v1s1on of H1ghways1ind the County of Orange, supery1smg all county traffic engineering pro_g_ram . \ 't ' 1 • .. •.. .J • --: .-~ t ·vote"Yes"on sire A .. ,for Traffi1: · Sallitions Now_ }. Jo . . • • :ii \ ,. :As u ·sual, there -~ ·ple~ty at.stake Friday EdlSQn-FV rivalry · ~ Fitghlights crllical weekmSunset ByROGERCARLSON~----~­ot•Dlllr,...._ · The I 9ttl Edison.Fountain Valley football game is on tap Friday niaht -tnd a u\ual. there's more than simple traditional rivalry riding on the outcome. Both arc 2-1 in the Sunset wgue · ch•!l'P1onship race with hope$ of overtaking Marina's 3-0 Vikin&S: Edison Ji f.ovoCt'd 10 cxiend its 13-4-1 M:ties advantage bu1h over the "lt's not Just the rivalry aspect. The past 17 years. Most of those games winner has a shot at the title. The loser were seen at Anaheim-5tad1um, but could be out of the pla¥offi ..... the rivalry was moved to Orange Edmm's personncJ Situation is at a Coast College this year. . high point. missing ju't two players For Dave While. in his maiden and bcin~ &roomed. Jor ~tial voyage as the Edison.,lupper, it" also playoffs action. ' a chance to make up for one of those Ti&ht end lack Srakacs and full · fou~_s. He was the quarterback back David Sherman remain side-· . . ------ ort""tl1Crl173 team wflich lost to lioed_with fojuiies. ~unJat-n YaUcy, -18-24;-at-the-saFM--The-8aron"--'...u"--'without-*Ae-- 6tte, Orange Coast College "namc"·playcrs, but White said that Fount.atn Valley Coa~h Mike doesn't deter ·from the fact his Milner IS 2-5 against EdiSQ(I, includ· Chargers must deal with items hkc as 1ng a 24-12 loss to Ediwn in 1985. ceater Doug Van Lare (6.2, 235) and "'Wc·rc sttll in the hunt," said 'sophomore quarterback David Hen· Milner. his team's . I 0-0 loss to · 1gan among others. Westminster rast week still fresh in "Percentage-wise Hcnaaan is pas - his mind. _ mg pretty well in the intermediate "Wc'rereload1ng. and hoJ)efullywe .range," said While ... And their de· can-focus all of our cfTons in the fensc pla~ec:r pretty well against rt Main1ng two weeks and come out· Westminster." oo-e pos1uve note. There's sttll a Tnrec obstacles for Hen11a_n & Co. chance for the championship and a loom in Edison's three down linemen · playoff berth. We've just got to take it -Bruce DuBois, Vince Legaspi and one week at a ttme." Rob Simon'Wn. .• 'We're •till bJ the huni. We're reloa.dlng, and ht;Jpelull;y· we-can locus all _ of our elf om ln the-!em&lnlng two weeks and come out on a JHMltlve note. There's stlll a "IL'.s kind.of fun playingiut.OCC.:' "A a threesome t~ arc as good as '-----=·....;.. ______ ..;.._ __________ ::.:..:;.....;.._:...,;.::..:1 $aid Whne. "The bottom line for us is anybody we've had, sa1 -wllile. " • nr ' t1 d · ·'th t·L ri ·J. --d .that they're. 2-1. and we're 2-1. "'The ydon'tstayblocked. Th~y'rcnot n e rt; e Wi .uem rut now, &a tr.e Prescason d~sn't m~an a thing. that bag. but.they're quack and have have to beat them and they IJave to beat 11.8 We're tied Wlth them nght now and big hearts." _ , • wenavctobcatthemandtl'leyhavcto . Mirnercalled &iison's trioofdOwn ••• lt S . not just the rfv4lry Upect. -The t?eat us. . . 11.~me~ .. moving balls of butcher winner has a shot at the tltle ..... e 1-· .. They had .a touih prescason ·1n knaves. ' • • ... ,,.., __ ,. =~~for th«; ch~mplonshlp a~d a pJa!oll term~ of schedule and. , IOJUrlCS. Continued Mainer; .. They're qu1c)... could be out of tb.e playoffs., They re well-coached and at s a great They compete on every play and are · MfJ<'e"'Mllner Fountain Valley he~d coach nvalQ. The k1d'i ~each other in the definitely three peoR!e who h~ve tqbe summer. and after.they graauatc a lot reclconed wi\h. In order for us to be. of them end up~ ni to Orange Coast successful. we ha,ve to block those or Golden West, so n's a bag game. (Pleue eee SUMSET /C4) -. . Uni seeks playoff clincher- Trojanscan wrap upSea View berth by beating Sailors By BARRY FAULKNER ...., .... e., ., ...... University H11b's football game with Newport Jfarbor Thursday at Newport ts a game crucial to both teams. '- .This week's pre·p games, odds · ' TJnanclay Unaver•ity at Newport Harbor · Newpon Harbor by 3 Costa Mesa vs. Trebuco Hills {at M1\'l1on V1e10) Costa Mesa by 4 San Clemente at Irvin<' Sao Clemente by I _ Btsbop Montgomery at Mater De1 Mater Det by I Friday . Edison vs. Fountain Valley (at Orange Coast College) &hson,by 7 Ocean View at HunlJngtoo Beach Jiuntmgtol\ Be.ach by I -,..--Dave Whtte Edt~on.head coach PCL i'ace·:coul<I . tighten~is week Four-way tie for --; _ top spot possible if Woodbridge wins By ROGER CARLSON OftMO..rJ .......... for J 234 yards on 200 camef -a 6 I avei!ge-, as well as l 1 touchdowns Jut11or quarterback Danny Lane has completed 70of119 for 919 yards and 5 TDs. .. I I The Trojans (2-1, 5·3) can clinch a playoff berth with a victory. They would also maintain an outside chance to tic for tbc Sea View League champiQnship, provided Tustin beats Saddleback Fnday and University follows with a victory over Tustin next week. Westminster vs. Marina (at Westminster) Marina by 3 Corona del Mar vs. Estancia (at Newport Harbor) CdM by 8 Laguna Halls vs. Wpodbridge (at Irvine} Woodbrid3c by 14 Orange al Laguna Beach , Orange by 3 W1tll the prQspect\ of four teams with 3-1 rcrords gomg into the final week of Pacific Coast League football pl31-: the focus 15 at Lagµna Beach fnda)' mght ~here the Artists play host to leaeue-lcad1ng Orange. Laguna HUia (0-3, 1-7) VI. Wood- brtd1e (2~1 . T-1): The 1-7 vs 7-1 speaks for itself. Woodbndac as a sohd favonte to dl pose of the . L Hawks. but Wamors Coach Gtnc · -~ .. NOJI said overconfidence 1s not a facfor he 1s concerned wilh. Saddfcback at TuslJn : 'Saddleback by 3 If. however, Newport Harbor (2-1, 3-4) defeats Uni, the Sailors would have the inside ttack for the third playoff spot. dependent on their final contest with Corona del Mar._ The game shapes up as a battle between a potent University runninf aamc and a .tlln&Y ,Newport def cnse. Trojan ballcarriers Craig BelJe. Day1d Liebke and to aJe scr degree, Gary Smarr. have been life featured elem~ts of Uni's wingcd-T-0fTensc. Bctlc, an All-CIF selection as a junior last year. is averaging 92.5 yards per game while C.1ebke. a fullbpck. is pounding -Out 96.3 per contest. Jp addjtion. Smarr, a rophomorc._ ha~ been__picking w> a larger share of the rushing load each aame. rushing for a season-high 55 yards last week. Smarr has run (or six touchdowns, but five have been Mark CunnlnJbam ca1led back by penalties. "I don't· think we'U come out more than a few-teams go-away-from throwing the ball," sa1d Una Coach d'what they do best. having shut out Mark Cunningham. "We·re not going three opponents this year, all on their to go away from our game plan unless home fields. . the~ make us.'" t:weck thc:.:Tars' drfi::osc lim- The Sailors' defcn5c hasmade-(Pleue eee UN1/C4) H-igh-scheol-crf.Jwds co'ntin Ue te-tlwin.dle Reasons vary for fiiCkoJfan s upport at ootballgames ----~- On thesurface, tllc "crowd'' of600 appeared pretty pathelic in numbers for a showdown of Pacific Coast Luaucfootball powers Woodbndac and Costa Mc$8 last Friday na&ht. All of some 225 showed up from Woodbridge-a team which is closing in on 8-1. ht.&hly ranked in the [ksrt-Mountain Conference, and a certain challenger to the CIF cham· pionship, as well as Costa.Mesa. You can talk about all ofJhc other th1np to do in South em California. That has been an excuse ever since tl)c crowds faded from the packed houses of the 'SOsand '60s, but there are other things to consider. · Forinstancc, how about c-0mpcting with tfallowecn night? Or better yet. whycompctewith Halloween night? Yougotopartieson Halloween night. not football games. lt seems that year-tn and year-oul thcc)'cleconunue to spanand lcssonslcamcdinonecrasimpl)' don't carryover to the nut cycle. And. it's notJUSt smaller schools ltkeCosta Mesa and Woodbndge. HowmanywcreatSaddleback·s Sea View Ltaguc howdown with Newport Harbor? · O~C-poloists win .orange Empire Playina n man do~n tor crucial Compoundina &he_problem late in stints in the fourth pcnod and the pmc wu that Enc Keller, the throua.hout the fir l overtime period. ParatM' kadinJ scorer. wn the man 1he Oran.ac Coa't College water polo e1ccted, Th~ P1ra1c~ hi<t turm.-d a 6-6 1ean\'s.defcn~came throuatno boo t half\1me scort into a 10.8 fourth· a I 3.11 ovc111mc victory apinst · pcnoo lead. But the Gaucho fouaht Saddlcback TucMtat to d1nch the back to tac the ~ore at IO. and •in It Orlnte Emptre Contcrcncc 'rown. & I .. Mike BunJC and Karl tcwart " "We we~ for«<! to play 1-0 scored 1011, m the first and ~ond overtimes Without him," Watson oven1mc pcnooi PRtivcly to said. "We Wl"fc forced 10 play very "veult the Pirate from a reaulation S)ttems oncntCd. Thcrt are ttm" l l ·ll Uc. . v.'hen you ('lft So on 1nd1\'tdull plly .. urt, thc1t names ~how up m the and Jlmn where )Ou nn be hurt h)' 1eorin1 column. but more import· that. We Wl"rt very aood aoout hc1"1 antly Wt SOt baJanccdl dll<'tpliotJ dtlClphned In the O~Crt1me play." e&aY from them," said Cn-anse < oa t The ~ond time Kellcr was f)Cnal- ~q1ch 06A Wat.an. ··~ner your lasl 11rd put Oran1~.Coast a man ~hort timeout 1 used up, you can'l call amund the l:.10 mart of the fourth them o'rr1ny more. Thme au>• were pcnod Mid S.ddlcblck mp6ndCd "'"> amport.ant 1n tcad1n1 the team •n wuh 11oal h Keith hon.-10 tie the th' water·· (Pl ....... 0CC/C2l Roc£1 r. CARLSON PREP SPORT S generous~ttmate was 2.500. Coronadel Mar and University ~urcd 1,300. Lagu.na Beach and Laguna Hills played bc(ort 300. Edison. one of the great attractions every year, played to I. WO in 1tsw1noverOcean V1t•w Would the numbCM had be-en up had they moved the games to Thu~ day. tbe night before Halloween? Marina and Huntingto n Beach drew 2,200. Fountam Valley and We'll· minster, two of the largest ~hools around with quahtyprograms. ·w 1.200 at Orange Coast College. "If we had W1lhe Gittens going against Kerwtn Bcll. l don't thank the crowd wou ld be there that was tbcr<' seven orc1ght )cars ago.·· said Fountain Valley football coach Mike Milner. · / "There are too man) other thing~ to do. A kid can save S 12 for a concert ticket instead of pa)1ng for three $4 football tickets. -· "EITorotsthc toptcam 1n Orange (Pleaee tee DWINDLll'fG /C3) . • .,.ton .... ., Jolan Mcl'tamara, YOted 11an-.J.:t'::: Y•r, attendil a preee confer•c Wltla bl• wtfe £Oen. Woodbndge. 2-1. 1s lhe favonte aga mst Laguna Hrll1. Costa Mesa. 2-I. 1s the tavonte against Trabuco Hills. Laguna Beach. 2-1. ma~ be the underdog. but wnh the home-field ·ad'-!1ntage. offers Woodbndge and Costa Mesa the hope of a four-way deadlock for n~'l:t week Here's how each ofth1c; week's PC L aamts shape,s up. • Orange (3-0, 5-31 at La1u.oa Beaeb (2-l, 7-1); Jntcnm Coach Llo)d Cotton said he c\peCt'I to be near full strength for the critical 'ihowdown ~•th tight cnd-defen'il\'C end ( hm Uicleerson (knee) and t"Omcrbadt <itcvc "lewb:, (1nehg1blc la~t week). probabl) read} to return. as wcll a!I place-kicker Ian V1d.e"Cpullcd mu\· cle). "On paper J'IJ admit that .at stacks up. as a br~thcr." $81d the Wood- bndge caoch. ''But UJ.&una Hills lost to-Costa Mesa,.13-9, and to uguna Beach. 16-10 A IJ.J h~ ve bad to do iS cmphasue those two ~ore , and mcnupn our score w1th Oranie (a 23-7 loss). That''l all our lcids really need 10 know "We know we have to wrn our last two pm<'s t.o be m cpntcnt1on for a tie I thmk C'osla Mdsa and Laguna Beach can be nght the~ (at,ainst Orange). <\nything can happen.· Woodbridge 1s eoming off a school record )i..po1nt production ap.uist Costa Mesa an a game which saw a llCtlr-100 pc~nt ~!Tort from all hand~. Laauna Hills was without starting quarterback Chns Leigber last w~elc and he 1s listed as tentative thtS week (separated shoulder). If he isn't read). the Hawks wtllgo with 5-8 ~nior Pal Buckle). "I ha"en't ~-en Orange. but I heard 1he} h.a\C a real ~ood fullback (Paul Maund)," .... 11d Cotton .. Their coach ~has smd a\ he goes they io But we ~on't have anything \pec1al 10 stop Co la Meta (%-1, 5 .• 3) v1. Trabwac0 him. Hilla C0-3, 3·5): The Mustang~ will be .. The good thmg" that the~ have to the big 9.lanner -the only question as come at us. Our kids haven 1 pla)'cd which school Trabuco Hills as on a that PoOrl) at home. They've played four-aame lo5an& streak. but has prett) well at home. even thouih wc shown J>Olent1al 1n a 24-2:? loo;<; to did lose to Costa Me<ta ( 49-18). Laguna Beach. as well as a whd lhrce "We e~peet Orange will tr) 10 run a quaners ~fore falling to Wood- lot of 1 at us." , bridge. 23-6. .r l.nguna Brach a~aitc; with the "They pla)ed well against Laguna skdgehammcr effect of 210-pound 8cach and \\IC'l'C e~pecting a nard tailback Jonathan Todd, who ha'i run (Pl.,...~ PCL/C4) . McNamara selected _.., flL Manager of Year BO. lON (\Pl -Thi' time. John 1cN.amttra 1o1.on ;i clo~ contc\t, F.j&htdll)\af\er hi\ f\(1-.1on Red So\ were cdacJ hy the Ne"' Yurk tets 1n • '"t .J . .,. 1.000 laree 230 entranta . Ytta1er fll• for free aceac, of ucceasful U.S. 1narathoners '~nous problem~ EN ENA DA. 8 c. Mexeco-A &eld NEW YORK -~ltle Marinm of2JOent ... ntnpnnkled with Hollywood catcher \t\e Y~. who played in four L :guna·earns wlfd-card :win ccltbritaa awaaaa Tbundai• dawn stan of Wotld ~ whale with the Loi Aaerin the SCORE 8-ja 1,000. DQdacn. has filed for free ,~·. the Thote erucred 1n the off-road event w1ll a~pt to Major Laauc Ptaycri AU0C1alt011-.nnounced Tua- drh c 11'c l,013·m1ln11·nadi1tance to La Pu ntartht day. • south end of thi1 rUllCd pcnin ula for the tint time Ye.r, 37, wuoncoha~ playni tod«larc f'orftte • an« the race ended there an 1982. • aacnc) Turiday, bril)lina to 4& the number of declared r.... AP ..,_tdtet rant to IH\e the stanana line will be moton:)clist fret aacnts. Artis ts t o meet Millikan next after beating Connelly. 12-6-NEW YORK -What' wrong wtth m Ganh wtttl~nd of Ph~niit on a Hu,qvama. lso filina on Tuesday ~re pitchen Mike laCou United States marathoners? Sweetland 11 tdmtd with fonner winner Oen Ashcran of the San Fraocatco Giants and Joe Beckwith of the The iblcnce 9f American runners. of Huntinaton Beach. They ace e<>n'1der'td $li&ht Dod&en, infic1dtr Davt Stapleton of the Bolton Red &om amona tM leadini finishers an * • • favontn to be the first to,rHCh la Pu earl) Frida)'. Sox. and outfieldtn Bally Sample of the Adan\l 8rayn: La&una Beach Hi&h idvanccd ta thefint round of tht Clf 3-Aairttplayoff'1Tuesdayafttra~n ~itha I 2·6wdd- card victol')I over Cp'\nelly on tht Atta•t• coufts. Sunday's New York Cit)' Marathon caused race • Lattr, karate movie tdol C'huck Norris of Lemon ~nd Rudy law of the Kansas C1ty Royals. director Fred Lebow to call it "a ~riou problem." Hciahu, Cali(, wtll $tart in a N1S$1n four-wh.etl-dn\lc Players 'Nith at lc11t sax ycan of ex~ct wha.e Lafun•. which hed for tee0nd pl~ w.ath ~ood­ brid&e 1n the Sea View Lequc. l~t a coin flap with ~ atNH'I aAd V.CC'C foiced jnto the Wild-card m11cb The Af'tttts~l-J.I o~~~~~&o pla~ M~­ champ1on Millikan in the first round on Thursday. "The lack of {~ood) performances' by American trut\ with his brother, aron. who as from Santa na. contracts ha\le opirid have until midn1aht. Nov. 11 to men and women is 1ncr'f'd1ble," Lebow said Monday. Also ~ttrt4 is television star LarryWalco~ of San nc . U n fili h Littt-W-- ---hr"ilnnrthP mC:O: and OWOMC!ll'S tthl!lb!:: o: WilJlCifu with DilcSCii.OnOfRa\ crside ~uatc ~or U)Jayct) New York Cat~ _Marathon. the best finish by an 1n a 14-year-okt Ford pickup. onamal team fails to saan him 1 Jan. 8. thaUeam as American-was 10th • Amona the favorites an the four-~heet vehicle inehaible to deal with the player untal May I, a month Amon1 the men, Pett Pfltzinger of Wellesley. divi51on Jre four-time \\!inner Mark McMallin of Bona ta into the 1987 season. Junior Mindy Leach ltd the way from the No. I sinJles pos1uon with a 6-2. 6.0. 6-l ~ttp So~om~n­ Juhe Brown al went 3 for 3 in No. 2 $Jn'1cs. i.kanaa t1e- btt1ker wan and winn1na the other t"-O set at 6-0. Mus., the t 984 U.S. Olympic Tnals marathon winner. in a Porsche dune bugy and Ivan tewan of Lakeside • finished 10th in 2 hours, 14 min:l\CS, 9 seconds. more in a factory To)ota • No aurgery for ~en' SaZ than three minutes behind the winQer, Gaanni Polj of • • • Italy, clocked tn 2:1-1:06. Amona the women, little-Tyler liVeD releaae by 49er8 LOS ANGEL!S -Second blseman Ill In doubles, juniors Wend)' usi and KJm Stephens won all their matches to help Lasuna advance. In the Sea View Ltaaue indi'-'idual finals at Lo known Sharlct Gilbert of Richmond, Calif .. finis.bed · · teveSaxofthe~sAnaelnDodaetiwon~ IQth 10 2:38:24, more than 10 nt!nut~ behal\d the • REDWOOD C'ITY -Joe Montana • be re<fUJrcd to unde~o s.urae . for bursitis wmntr. Gme Waitz of Norwa.y, clocked_in ~:28!06. • upccu to~ back an ht n franc•sco a -• ffthfheelrt~Nattonaf•~~r'111'2TI~-==;:::. ::;:;. ~.:--, Nonmte tff~1\lben0Sabaaffinutied1lftb' -4'Tcts' stamq hneup on Sunday, and he i nnounced Tuesday. • ' Cal>allero\. • Corona def Mar's out1h·5tt . $l1 bus ups.c~ teammate Danielle Scott .. the top sa:d. 6-3, 6-4, to advance to today's 2 o'clock finals at the Newport Bc.ach Tennis Club. in the Fukuoka Marathon in Japart in 2:09:i I has an thinks former teammate Wendell Tyler • Orthopedist Dr. William Waaner told Sax that the Amencan broken 2: 10:-1n me meami111e, ?Hore1aners will be carTyan& the football soon with another NFL iruury will be treated with physical therapy for six have done at a iota I of 44 umes, including Carlos Lopes team. months and then be re-evaluated, the Dodgers said. of Port up I, who sett he world best of2:07: 12 last year at Tyler. the veteran running back who rushed for Su was the second-leading hiller in the NL th.is Phebus will fact second-seeded Mario M uUally from Newport Harbor. Mullally reached the final round w1ttu 6-3. 6-0 dcc1s1on over No. 3 seed Robin Bain of CdM Rotterdam. andStevcJonesofWales, who ran 2:07:13, almost 3,000 yards an his three seasons as a San past season witb a .332 av~,_ the best by a Do<lacr also in 1985. at Chicago. Francisco starter, was rtlcascd on Tue5day in a mo"e regular since Tommy Davis hu .346 m 1962. Sax's II 0 In the doubles final. whach will foUow the sinales match today. Newport Harbor'~ Vanessa Bunnell and Leslie Ryan will face Estanc1a's Enn Hcndncks and Natalie Has11nis. the lcague:S defendm& champions. -----------------· _..., Bill Wal!h called "the most difficult task in rt.lY eight· hits were the most by a Dodacrsinc:eSteveGarvey's210 year tenure as head coach.•· in I 97S. • Quote of the day · Q•rrf I Dawkins, center for the New Jerscx Nets, talking about his recent marriage: "When I got married, l'm ure 50 girls jumped off the Empire State Building, another 50 off the World Trade Center and another 50 off the Chrysler Montana, the quarterback who is expected to come off the injured reserve list this week and start against St. Louis on Sunday, reacted to·lhe release of Tyler br sayina. "I was shocked,· and I'm sure everybody was.' Montana added. "He: as a fnend to everybody on the team. He was n exciting running back when he was here. and I'm sure he w111 be apin with sornconc else." Buildm1-" -Walsh said he, too. believed T)'ler could help another team with a "run-oriented attack. .. ~ -- Sailing mi.sta~e eRtdS · ~NewOZSeatlan~dy_tak fes~u• ~~~~~•he• ' 1t1im ; ~/~. pin by only 38 .seconds. She made up · d t f three seconds at the first leeward a Van age_ O .error mark.Shcwasstill in content1onunt1I to Win trials race she ·ren-snort or tnc sceona weitincr -----pin. rounuing 2: t 4 beh1nd New Zealand. From there on 1t was By ALMON LOCKABEY Dickson's race. Deir,......_.,._ New Zealand's win kept her an a Miss1ng1hdaytme m ayircht nice first ~tJ~ with New York Yacht can spoil your whole da)'. Club's America 11 with 26 points. That error at the second wtndward America 11 won her match against L--.:...-....::::::::~=:=:==..-J mark 1n Tuesday's race an t!Je Amen· Italy's Azzura by 1:30. • ., ca 's Cup challenger trials resulted ma The hot race oft he day was between 3 minute, 42 second-lo s for Newport England's Whne Crusader and Can· Beach's Rod Davis and Ea1lc against ada II wtth the Bntish edama the Chns Dickson's front-running New Canadians b y only .0295 seconds. Zealand m the third race of the Terry Neilsen, skipper of Canada November round robin: 11. was not~n.ain he had lost and s~ud The laylmc as the tack on which a > he would hke to sec a photoeraph of boat must be to .. lay" the mark the finish. J without another tack. EaaJc fell short tic said his bOwman thou&ht the)' of the mark and had to ta.kc an extra won. but the 28·)ear-old Olympic tack to properly round the mark while brollZe medal wanner from Toronto, New Zealand sailed blythcly down-said the race committee's dec1s1on as wind. The error cost Eagle over a finaJ . . minute and a half "That's sailboat racing." he said. Eagle got the stan by two seconds The victory kept White Crusader in Lakers turn back seattle,.110-96 Worthy's 26 points, Scott's third-quarter surge k_eys triumph From AP dbpatcbes EA TILE -Jam~ Worthy scored 26 points •nd Byron Scott added 23. including i 3--1n the thmt quarter. as the Los Anaeles Lakert defeated the Seattle SuperSomcs. 11().96. an an NBA pme Tuesday night. Scott hit a three-point goal early an the third quarter to break a 54-54 tie and then added 10 more points to lead the Lakers to an 86-74 lead after three penbds. Los Angeles had 7-2 and 8-2 spurt~ in the quarter. during which Worthy added 10 points. Marques Johnson scored 21 points and Cedric Maxwell added 12 for the Clippers. Dctlef Schrempf came off the bench to add 18 points and Al Wood scored 13 points for the Mavericks before 16,421 fans an Reunion Arena. The Mavencks peslered fh·e Clip- pers with a full-court press. forcing 12 turnovers as the) built a Sl-33 halftime lead. The cold-shooung Clappers started the game by h1tun1 only one of 1he1r first nine shots. Los Angeles was just as chilly at the outset of the second quarter. when it hat only four of the first 16 shots. · Dal1asled49-26 with 2:01 lcft in the firJt half. Schrempf was panicularly active, coming offtbe bench 10 score eight points in the second quarter. third place an the senes, three points behind the two leaders, New Zeal.and and Amenca n The top four scoring boats move into the semifinals starting Dec. 28. In a rundown of the d~'s results: New Zea.land beat e. 3:42; French K15s beat USA, seconds; Italia beat Heart of America, 50 S«onds~ St.an & · Stripes beat Chitllenge France, 4:5 1; White Cl")Juder beat Canada II, .0295 seconds; Amenca II beat Atzura. 1:30. Televialon, radio I , TELEVISION No events scheduled. RADIO No events S<'hcduled. I Bunnell and Ryan downed Estancia's Elaina Barch · and Stephanie Straw, 6-2. 6-0. while Hendricks and Hastings ousted lnarid Carlson -and Tani Abe of University. 6-2. 6-1. OCC stays iri first with 2-2 deadlock Bruins need help The Orwnae Coast College men's soccer team maintained its first-place tandmg in the Orange Empi~ Conference by holdina on for a 2-2 tic wt th host1l1"11enide to win Pac-1 0 title Tue9day afternoon. · The Pirates took a I .()lead 10 t.hetirstbalf on Richard P1lon'saoal and \lrent an front 2·1 in the second halfwhe~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Suddenly, the Pa-cafic-10 · Don Murphy scottd. Conference football race is easy to analyze. Even UCL.A-' However, the T1iers tted the game late ID the-match Coach Ten")' Donahue, reluctant to comment much and were stormina the ncl in the final moments when about it in recent weeks. is .willing to discuss what's goina goalkeeper John Footman made a num~roffine 51;vcs to on. pl'C$erve the deadlock. Footman ~as Credited with 11 "l think there's a team in front; Anzona State's in saves 1n the match. front," Donahue said with a smile. "I've fig~d that OCC roovcd _ _to 6.:9-2-J.l) __ cQnf~J.~~~ ,.pJay ... whaJc _ m'1ch out. Riversjde js 2-3-3. The Pirates will host Victor Valley .. There's no queition in m y mind that we're still Friday afternoon. - active and ahve in the race. The conference race is not In the South Coast Conference: over. Ithink that ourteam really ~lieves that it's not over Cerritos I, GolckD 1Vest 0: The Rustlers (l~ l m untjl it's over. conference play) dropped theitteeond trataJu dect51on u • "J f we set beat Saturday and Arirona State beats Ca Cemtos' Ramoa Haus taJhed with ~7:08 rcmainana. · • 1 it's over." · Goahe Tam Bontrager hnd s1.it saves for the Rustlers. AnzonaState is4-0-I in lcque play and 7-0-1 overall who host Mt. San Antonio Fnday night at 7:30. after wtuppan1 Washin&ton 34-21 lasl Saturday niaht. At In women's action: 4-1. VCLA i5 th~ only other Pac-10 team with less than Golda WHt 5, PaJomar t: ihe Rustlers tuned up for two losses in conference actJon. their showdown Fnday evening at 6 agamst lcque- ASU has two league pmcs remain.in& -the fifth. leadin1 Oranac Coast with the South Coast Conference ranked Sun Devils host Cal.afomia tbisSalUtday mght and U.utout of<host Palomar. travel to play arch-rival Arizona on Nov. 22. Shannon Augustine and Kclh Winkler put Golden A wan by ASU over Cal would eliminate everyone West (7-1-210 confettnce pla). 11-3-2 overall) ahead 2-0 but 12tb·ranked UCLA from chamP.ionship con1ent1on. at hatflune. Aucus.tine added two more aoals and laura It would be shocking if the Sun Dcvalt lose to the visittng Cox another to complete the sconng in the second baJf. Golden Bean. who have won only one game all season. In a collqe match: • • A win by ASU over Cal coupled with a UCLA lo to to.1 Beadi State f , UC lrvl.De I: The Anteaters took Stanford carlieT Saturday would give the Sun DeviJs the a 1-0 half\:imccdac but lht'49ers roared back in the~nd coitference crown and the Rose Bowl bid that goes with 11. half to claim the non-conference win 1n Lon.a Beach. Would Donahue be rooting for Cal? · Kim Cusimano gave UCI (8~9· I) the lead by sconna "I'm rootina for UCL.A this weekend," Donahue off a feed from Karin Grelsson. but that was.all the offense replied. ~ the Anteaters could 10anage. USC]iopes to inlprove weak ninning attack LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Southern Cal Trojans are 6-2. ranked 14th and contenders for a major bowl bid and, rather amazinJly, they've reached that point without bean& able to run the football very well. ••1 still want us to be a do minant runnina team, and I know we wilt be." •Trojan Coach Ted Tollner said Tu~ day. Asked if that mi&)lt not hap~n until 1987, Tollner replied, "R1&)lt now, I'd settle for us to be dominant nlnnina the ball in three games (ttmainina on the Trojans' sched· uJe)." • Southern Cal, with its Iona tra· dition of power-running teams led by Heisman·winnini tailbacks, rs averaginajust 3.2 yard$ per carry this fall aoina in lettina him handle the ball. There aretoina 10 be about 30 plays a pme when he's gomg to do some-- than& with the ball, which 1s about • n&ht s1nce )OU have to have a pla)er of his caJ1bcr handle the ball a lot. ''But \\e want to $Lill run 40 to 4S umes a pme.'' Tollner said ... We don't want it to &Ct loP\1dcd (1n pass- ru ih ratio). so we·vc got to act our runnangpme in order." Th T rOJan.s. who beat Ariz.on.a. 2().13, an a tough matchup in Tucson last Saturday, nave a bye this week. Then they face Cal at the Coh~um on Nov. ls. and close out against UCLA and Notre Dame. With a 4-2 Pac1fic-IO ttcord, the Trojans are virtulfllytliminared rrom the Rose Bowl race, but they will be in the running for a spot 1n another m~or bowl 1f they do well down the stretch. · Tom Chambers led the Somes with 21 points. and Dale Ellis added 19. LosAn&elescut the deficit to just 12 points midway through the third quarter before Aguirre aot hot w1th eaght pointsdunnaa I J-0 run chat put the Clappers away. Schrempfs basket at 5.44 gave Dallas a 99-67 lead and Di las Coach ,, .... ,. 1 Kareem Abdv.1-Jabbu of the Laken drlYee uoand Seattle'• Tom Cbambera d\ll"lnC f1nt qaarter of Tu.clay'• 1ame. The team has wori. tbouah. with aood defense and a new versatahty on offensive provided by quarterback Rodney Peete. .. The Lakers. behind Kun Ramb1s. who bad 17 rebounds for the game. controlled the third and fourth pcnods Michael Cooper added 14 for the takers. all in the fourth quarter. Dack Motta cleared his bench. S t L h - 0a11as ou\rebounded the ctappe~ unse _eague _onors polo players: "Peete is a dominant player ... and has cautnly been our offensi\le catalyst to thJS point," Totlner said. "But we're not aoina to say we can't run. "We've 1ont about as far as we're "I think we're an a goOd pos1t1on now," Tollner said. "Considerina where \\e are &oanf into the ninth game of the )Car. don'l 1hank we could feel much better about ouf$Clve~. ahhou&h we·d hke to be 1n a more solid posat1on an the con· fertnce race." 54-33. and outshot them SI percent to Dallu cru•he. CUppen 38 percent. James Donaldson had l l Andy Paructte and Wade trOWfl, tMrtne, St ; Men ce1n. w.ttm1M1w, 1r .. bo d r. D Ila . h I .. ~ II W t.. f h S t --Keft E""9111. WnlmiMter, ~ • Mndl Jones. TITLE re un s 1or a s. w 1 e rn uwe oma~A o t e unset ~iue water wn11NM••· Sr . Gr" LullNll, EOttion, Jr~~ QCC WINS DALLAS -Rolando Blackman led the 01ppers m rebounds with polo champion Manna V1k1ngs were ceun., t90e11e1. 1Edft0n, St; Todd ~ • • • and Mark A&u1rre cached scored 20 seven. 'llOted tcasuc co-Pla)ers of the Year, · =:i•i Vdev. Sr .• l rlH klKc•. Huin11nt1on From C 1 points and 1hc defense-minded Dal· Los Angeles did outshoot Dallas at and Edison Coach Don Mahaffey wu · · MCCHIO TIAM r.me at 11 with 2:33 rcmainina. &r&bbcd the rcJectcd ball by Coheo, las Mavericks rolled to a 118-86 the free throw line. 80 percent to 6S voted Coach of th.,e Year on ballots Mll1e Mcea.M, tMrlN , St.; crelt Olll9n0edl ..... .... I h. h t Ora Keller made a dcfien"'""" /:!;oul 1·n th victory over the error-prone Los percent. the Oippe~· only positive cast by the lcaaue's coaches. 1~1. Merine, Sr · Anctv Mtf'ttrldR, M9r1t1e. unae llMol UK~ * ac pu nae ~· ... 11 A nae let Clippers. . staustic. • Other all-league selections include: :;.~,;:.:,~·,,:'G'.:=.' e~;:,1151 ~·= Coast ahead l I· 1 O. hole to stop a sure follow-in attempt · The Mavericks put the heat on the ~ Tb¢.fictorypve Dalla a 2-0 home ,.ST Tl..... TlletnM, IEdltOl'I, Sr . seott "'""'· r-.on. St.. Saddleblck tdhrea~.~tned aaain01nathde with two seconds lei\ scaled the Cl' d r. ' I r. . 23 t S'".... r.or the fi-t ta·m· ,·, .. "... lhe .... 3tell ~ , ... tit), Fountell' v....,. Jr.. wanana secon s, ""' aoalie VI r"CJulacion (IC. It abo WI$ Keller's io~~i~~~~rs~iei~in~s1~v~c~y~,·~·o~re~1~~~~u~m~·~~l-~~~·i~-~~~~~a~~~n~·i~.~~~~~·~·-~~~i~~A~~~.1r~~i~iui~~~i·~~ri=~~itj~iw~=~ii~i.Mi~~·~ai:~!v~C~~i~i~~~~,i~~v~~i·i1ri.i4i~~Li~~·~· ~a~tN~M~fi~ ::~l~~~th~~·~~ WilAT A WAY TO IOI~ ~ W in one gome of ·WIN-GO ond get two free 1icl~1s to Europe ••• Aiso ... the West Indies .•• or some other exci ting place.· Check T odoy' s Numbers on Page A2 ilJ Piii 1 r TWA .. FIND OUT HOW GOOD WE REALL V ARE. \ . In all, Cohen was credikd with J..S The victory pui Orwnae Coast at Nves. 13-0 in conference play and 23~ "We usually ajve the aoalic ptttt) overall whale Saddlebaek felt to 10.J aood ddente," Watt<>n said. "but an scc:ond place. Tbe victory Jeft every time \here was a breakdown. "Ora~ Coast unbeattn in two )ean (Ce>Mn) came throuah •• o~ oonfcrenc:e_play>ner _101n1 12-0 to Wben the Rofldrunncr win the Pacific Coast Conference in ..----------------, 1985, and wa tht 27th conS«Utive home "111ttorv. If\. another comm1.iD1t) cotlese pmt: . Cl.we. W11t ti, Pa••-CC I: Scott tanen and Bnln Coups tcomS five and four plt resptet&\·e· I} to perk the RwJtlas to a South Coast onfcrcncc ' victory 11 Palldena. Ian Buchanan, Bnan Brothcnon and Am Van DY~ each ICkJed thrtt IOll Gokkn Wtit triilCd &o a t-3 half\ me laid •nd uted thm toalies 1n the pmc. l ll·l 1n con~ pme L.thc Rullltts remain titd 1th LOnt acach for firM plkc. lllS II ·. • McCall~m ctjmbining tWo.wor Ralcter back also staying busy as ensign In Navy . .. • DWINDLING HIGH SCHOOL CROWDS ••. From Cl . . Robinson answers County and'ls not drawang. Numbers are down an termsofk1ds&OlnJOut for football:" .. One of the keys to the dem1s.c of the populanty, I believe, 1s the SO<alled conference ~•up which came into being an 1977, when theCIFdoubled the playoffs by sphtuna the 4.A, 3-A. 2-A and I ·A into eight conferences. They put five leaaues an each conference, with three bcnhs tocach lcaaue and a wild card entt) compns- ing 16-t~m playoff~ brackets • Taking an even heavier battenng wastheCIFTop IOpolls. Top 10 from a conference consistina of some 30 schools? W1than four weeics, sponswntersarcscratchang their heads trying to find a No. 8 or 9 · selection Many newspapers simply ignore what was once some vel) antrresnng food for thoudll Ncwpon Harbor 1s in the Central Conference Edison 1s 1n the Big Five Conference Woodbndgc 1s an the Desen Mountain Conference Irvine 1s in the Sou them Conference. It means Newport Hatbor1s in one • portion ofa 2-A sccuon. Ed~on 1s in a pan of a 4.A section. Woodbndge 1S' m one half ofa I ·A scctiQn and lrvane 1sinone.p1ecc ofa 3-A~ction-l thank. h 's watered-downed and very con- fusmg to the fan Fronkl), give me a CIF4.Achamp1on You can ha\.e lhe Northwestern Conference lllle. as ~ell as the Smythe Conference crown "The) ten a lot to be d.es1rcd when lhcyd1d that," ~td Mtlner " owada)s.11 is not as ruued a tnp to the finals ·· · Ten }CU'S agQ. you "ere given a ~mmagedate to get o ut the kink\. then you played 2 or 4 non-league .. games, depending on whether you had an eight or six-team league, then 1t wasa five-game haul to the finals Afterdroppin& the playoffs to four games, they decided they could make some more money by playing instead of scrimmaging the fi rst wcelC, so another meaningless non-lca$ue ganf~ was added, erasing the ume- honored scrimmaic that so many in 1stcd was vital to the season. / So now we stlll have a 14-gamc • season for the finalists, but with fi vc non-league games and four playofl' games. And if anyone 1s making. mone) because of the added non- lcque game, he or she belongs to a very small club · It would seem to be 1 backward s1tuauon. Howman)' non-league games can )OU J>la> without falling asleep'> The soluuon \\-OU Id seem rather s1mple-dropapract1ccgameand doubleth~onferencesback to4.A. 3- A. 2-A and I-A classdicat1ons, leav- 1n-g alfij) two or four-game notr-league season. seven or fi vc league games and five games to the top 1n the pla)ofTs. TIUUTprobably loo simple. how- ever. to ever be considered At_Milncrreadtly.admtt~. "Weao through five pracuce game and add t\\O weeks for faTI camp. That's SC\ en weeksw1thabsolutelynothingat stake. Wflafs the pomt'l'' Not much 1f~u·re hardly pa)ang the rent with cro"ds of 1.200 Non-league pm es seldom draw - note\len Bann111gand£d1son. Foract the Ser\.,te and Mater Dc1 non-leaaue games wath Edison and Fountain Valle), those arcn"t the norm "Someofthemdon'tbnngan)· bod)," said Mainer. ·'When we play • Lon& Beach Poly at Orange Coast College, they bnng virtually no one.·· * * * Just as distressing 1s the waterpolo satuauon this year. . Coronadel Marwillbc10 theClF4. Aiinals. You can put your money on r that.Costa Mesa will be in the 2-A finals That'sanother ure bet. And. I su~.-ihcy'll havcplenty of support. But they could have so much more from the fansaod med1a, 1ftheClF did not demand the semifinals be pla)ed on Fnda). conflicting with the final Fn6a) night of the regular football season. I fthat'<> 001 bad enoueti. the)' wall a f uU "eek so they can do atagaui. putt an& their sho~sc at Belmont Plaza up against the first round of the CIF football playoffs on Fnday night. What that shows 1s an unbeJaevable lack of insight, thought or planning by CJ t:. And. 11's not that they're un- aware of the con01ct Advised of the situation. the basic reacuon was no reaction by Cl F adm1n1strat1 ve aide Bill Clark. * ... * New1>Qn Harbor lii&ll'J.Satlon have the nght idea in terms of scheduling. Their basketball fun- dra1serforthe athlellcdepartment 1s · Friday night. the night a1terThurs- da> 'spme with Univers1t):. The 7 30game finds a number of tele1.1s1on pcrsonall'\1esgoangagamst a facult) group... -- Among the celebnt1cs a~ O_>nas- ty'sTed McGinley. Hotel's Michael Spouod. formercycleschamp1on Bruce Penhall and former NBA star George Yardley Shaw Pea.la.all ·pas gaJP.e ·critics ... He's not bothered · as Rams still win field to Lansford's winnan& field &oal. Once aga1n, the gct-no.-respect Rams had somehow found a way to win. in traditional styl€" an~n.t~~fr=d :;ext~~~a~r~ -. Francisco in-the NFC WcSl;and also NEW ORLEANS (AP) -So )OU now share the d1st1nct1on of ha" in& think tht Rams can't pass'> the' sccond-beSt record an the NFL. Also. Bobby Nettlesofthe t. Louis Card1nalsorpnwu1on, former Cleveland Browns' quarterback Paul McDonald and Bnan Theriot. a former UCLA track and field runner whose most recent endeavors have beenembro1lcd in runnan& fora seat on 1heCosta Mesa CttyCounc1I "So what?'' says John Robinson. 7·2 ·~tr.we can beat the Super Bowl Robinson •dmattcd the absence of McGinley. whose background also includes "Happy Days" and ~Love Boat." comes from the Iona hne bf watcq>olo talent at Harbor. as well a<, Yardle~. NcttlesandThenot from the Sailors athleuccamp. champs m Cbacaao. where they're so Ch1caao quarte~k Jim McMahon, tough, I don't care what an)'ooe says who's nunio& a sore n&ht.shouldcr, about us bean& a one-dimensional may h~,·e hun the Bears. team and all that stuff." the Rams "Bui we uill dtd a .to1 of good coach said. things " he said "Don't fo~t. (Eric) "I say, 'So what?'·· Otcke~son gamed over 100 yards Amon& the faculJy team, will be wrestlingcoa~h Bnck Bailey. b~J..et­ ball-s0ftball coach Tim.Parse!, soccer . coach Roger let&hton and volleyball coach Dan Glenn The team that can't pass passed a apanst the best run defense l've seen s1gn1ficant test Monday ru&ht in since I came into the NFL. .. Chteago.10pp1ng. thc Bean. 2().17. on Mike Lansford's 50-yard field goal m Dickerson packed up 11 T )'ard$ on .the final seconds 29came andaddcd46yard on three Unlll the last minute. Rams quar-pasas rcccot1ons. tcrbaclf Steve 911 had completed a '.Ahhoug}) Robinson wouldn't say grand total of three of his 22 pa !ie~ much aoout his plans at quarteroid; Tr:ick coach EricTwcit will handle the faculty and Bucko haw. football assistant and ch1eflctter-wnter, will handle the celebs. But with 47 seconds lcfl, the Jame forth1sSunda),it'sC(_xpcctcd thathe1J ued I 7-17 and the Rams on their 35-stan Otis again, with rook.le Jim ·yard line •. 01ls completed three more Everett possibly makmJ a bnef NFL passes to 'mafC'h the ~ams d~wn the • debut. •. OCEAN DYNAMICS _.._._.. -·----- I WEEK ONLY! Aluminum 80 Tanks w/K Valve Regular 200 00 _ 9911 Parkway Aluminum 100 w/K Valve Regular 26000 __ 179.88 Aluminum 50 w/K Vatve Regular 199.95 __ 129.88 Pro Sub 2788 ~~~~ ~rnph1te Fans Seatec o·Manta BC 16 9 Bl Medium And Large j., I ' Pro Sub l?9'' ~.o,ncept .v. BC i ~~ 7mm FJ Wetsuits Silver Streak -· Regular 325 00 __ 269.88 Sitvtr Streak with Hood Regular 375 ()() ___ 299.88 Speed Stripe Regular 266 00 ___ 209.88 SpHCI Strtpt with Hood Regular 295 00 239.88 Body Glove 3·2 Pro ,. II Full Surf Suit ' ... Sherwood Magnum BB ~."~ z.ard ~~gulat or I. 9 Ocean Dynamic 2988 ~~era ~~·~Tights LossTER IEAloN SPECIALS! ~ SALE Reg SAU Consncll Sf 2 Regul.Uor 3000_17t.18 UK 1200 Lights ____ 55 00_ 44 •• US Div rs 3 Gauge .Console w/T1mer __ 250 00_1 ... 18 lkehte Mini C Lights 24 95 _ 11.a ODI Weight Belt 6 95_ l.18 Own c Hy Ute _~--28 00_ 1tM Famous Maker\\" Shorty Suits 89 95_ 51.18 Divers Almanat_______ n 95_ 11.• US Divers Pac1l1ca M.lsk£ 32 00_ 22.M All Dive W3tclla 2K to ... Off us Divers Compro Fins (Blue Only) 5200__. 3UI Blut Red & Green Chemial Lit J 80_ Ut ri SOOi'keltng B.lgs 11 95 t.'8 Green Bug Big t 1 95-_ t.• Oacor Aero 9501Rcgutat0f 210'00 17'.18 All WenOlr;a Knit M Off Assorted Surf & Dive Suits ft to 50'4 Off Assorted Di't1 T ·Sh1rt5 ____ v,1 10 1 ~ 95_ i.• =~·--Plu• •,,.ctaH:ul•'-Ckiaeour. Oft Olona, HoOda, •••lia; "°9:,r;, .,_,,k•I~, 8C'a A MfHe l Let Us Book Yor Next Dive Vacation! .La Canada 20 Foothtll Blvd (8 18)1 27t7 HunUngton ... ch 18242 Bf\ld f71 41848·0988 A/J ()Oo(l Thtu Tuesday, No¥erllber 1 i wt ()Ua, Md &z OD.Some Na. . . . a. ... COMC DAILY PIL01'./ w~ay. Nowmber 5, 1Ne UNSET RIVALRIES .•• . .._Cl lbree down peopJt." • Eailcm's blckfteld has bccomt a VWIJ6• n. Lion• three·pron"..rt att.IC'k smce the an~r· ltU-Wnrmlnaltf JI, ~,1,.. o . f 6".V G ,..,._W•••mlntltt It, ~,IN 0 '10ft 0 JOphomorr ta1lback IJS 19'r W•ttmlntltf 34 Mtli,.. 6 -' Mttanda and the mo,cment of 1...-w"1rnlit••., "·Ma''"'• 1• Kaltaph Cart~r from ta1lbtck to 1K,..,.Wtt1miMt., l.t M.rln. " f'ulltiick "he1t qu~rtcrback Mike l::'.:~:i~:::-K =w,,:: · N,~ Htnderwn hncs 11'1e Chargers up u1. m~wttim111t•tt n . Mar1111 12 NUIONAL. CONl'HINCI the 1. lj7l-Wnltt'll'lllft 30, MtrlN 0 • WMt f'72-Wt1lm11111tt )A, MtrtM • w L. T ht.,,, ,. ne 1 ... I .. 411 114. "' ·•11 111 ,,, Meranda was ho\p1 tali1ed Monday 1'7>-wttrmin"., 2•. M!l,IM 1 ••rn• 1 1 0 Ind T.ursda..: la.,L wrek tOt test 1t7•-wtt•m•ntltf 7, ...... ,.,.. 1 AUent11 s 3 1 1 1'1S-WetlQI ntl., 1), Marll\e t Se F t S J l b«aosc of ap~ttnt Ou and tomac:h , l976-We1thllll•ttt JS Meflf\t 1 N•~ o;:_~~o 4 5 • 0 • "4 17S 1'0 cramps but was.read{ for H\JTinngtQn ' lf~!!:~~-!::; :: =;::: r c-... · &ach on F'riday. He s expected to be , lt7t-Mt;ln• .,·1• w"imin,1..-1 C,,•ceoo. ' t .. · m 20> 111 read) for Fountain Valley"' v.dl, 1tt0-Mtrln•J_7.~Wt•lrnlt>\lll'o•• ~~::~0•• : : : m 1~ .:r, "l beheve Ed1o;on ha\ added 4 new tftl r111• •• 1m•111" TtrrP• ,,., 2 1 o m'4l61 f'6 r1t11 11 ttrnlMIW 21 .. 1 t 0 111 HI ,., dimension," ~td M1lner, aUudt!'.I& 10 ·1m -1,,. 1~ we.1m1n"., t CrMn " •ut , Miranda. "The) ha\l' two Qu-aJ1ty •~r 42 w.-1m•11•'" '' NVOl•n" 1 t o ne 1M t?• backs who are very vel'\ tile nd., l"~•n• 1· w..im•nttw i. Wt\N~tOll 1 2 o 111 212 1u . Wet1rnffi.1« -wi.t. 15--1-l Ot s 6 l O '67 2.0 l5I they have a quarterback \\hO mal.:cs P"ll•delptue , • o >» ll l 17t lhifns happen, 1 compctttor and a ~1. Lou•• , 1 o m 116 toe tou kid. He gets thitl& done lime,.. id' O'Hara. "'Maybe we can AMlltteAH coN,.lllNCI •· n order fQr us to be su<.~'~ful ~"' 1 ,.., 2jo 1 .. defen-;i vcly we ha' e ·to conuun the start " n,cw sen es." ~==~ cov ' 3 ~ M 1 m tts quarterback. l f he.ha) a field day Octan Vlew (0·.S, t_ • .l)-&LJluo ~ 1. • o 55' 11• :1" run1'1na the fQPtball~ or scrambling· Jnston 8tacb (O·S1 t~I): ll's J:lome-~~1g~"0 s {' 0 5S6 m J: on tt1e pass, wc'rr toi rt~t:o~losc the ·cotn1~ for thi! Otlen.. ('elebrat1ng 60 . • c~11 o 111 119 g.ame. h' a~ imple as th4L" .)cars since their-first champ1onsh1p c1nc1t111111 • • 3 o '"tot ·~:; . Kickoff is at 'l:30. but 11's not'thr srason under Harry "Cap" Sheue. ~~.~=~ 6 3 ~ ~~ ::; 195 onl) game in town. ln fact. it is / .\nd. tt'\ a chance for someone to Mout1on ~ : o 111 m '°' probably the most s1gnifkant night o( escape the cellar. NY Jell Etat 0 .., 1., 171 the }ear for the Sun'>et League. "This ts a game that is going to New eno••nd ! j o ,., 1u 131 Herc's a look at the other two make th~1r season. or our seasoll," M1em1 • s o ..., ,,. 2.a ~;.._----=--pmw. -~ "'11d HunttnQton Beach Coach G eo rge =l>01ii ~ ~ g ~ 1: ru Pascoe." And the team that makes the suno.v•s Getnt1 Westminster ( t -1, C·3· l ) vs. Marilla (3·0, 3.S): 'Tm JU'it hoping to stay on the field with them:· said Marin~ Coach Chns Ramse). "Tbey'rc.awfull) stout. The} pla)eda tough preseason and obviously there wr rc some rensons for them being prcse.~son No 1. to be considered that h1dt . llamsey said Westminster ha., the edge in emotion too. "They have the revenge factor (seven straight losscs'"to Manna). the league championship. you name at ... said Ramsc). "all the mt>uvauonal edge. "lfwe were playing every week like we dtd aga1n!>t Edison, or Servatc. maybe I'd feel a little d1fferentl}. We rt still not sure which 1s the real Manna team." Marina's two best cffons came a&alDSl Scrvite and three weeks later against Edison a.ame That was tv.o \\'teks ago. Wemnmncr Cooch Jtm O'Hara who ma} be w11hou1 startmg quar· terback ~1ke Austtn becau-.c of a sPrainc~ ankle, is wary of Maniift -speed. --- "Manna·., front people use the run· around technique... said O'Ha~ "The) cannot compete physically on~n-one. but they'll do 1t to lJle1r advantage. The~ 're a well-coached football team Tnr offensive hne gets off the ball extremely fast. as they do defens1,.el} " Wh11C' Manna cn)O}'S a drama11~ edge in qu1cknes!\1 it's no larger an advantage than Westm1ns<er's <oi1e and strength "I guess what that mcan'i 1s we·re big slow and dumh." ~•d O'Hara •am1 chcln: --smatt; ~-and m- telhgcnt.ust make sure to mequon that I'm saying thatjok1ngl)." Manna's qu1cknds was Vet) eva· dent against Huntington Beach last week "John 1m'> looked \c~ good against Huntrngton Beach and Rick Vanderriet runs vc~ well Like Ed1osn. the) ha\ic three pcoplr there 1n the backfi cfd (1nclud1ng fullbat•k can Magula1. O'Hara doesn t ajlret> with Ram~~·., asscs,ment of mot1vat1bn. "We re pla) 1ng for po<;s1bl)" a piece of. the champ1onsh1p. that's ouF mot1va11on. The) ·re look1ong at the poss1b1ht) of an outnght cham- p1onc;hip." said O'Hara . The Vikings' c;e\Cn-game winning streak against We'itm1n'>ter wa\ preceded hy a 16-vear drought which produced one tie aRd l 5 losses for fewest mt!ilakcs is going to win. Items •• pffw 0t1ten1 <Crienne1 2 •' 10 e.m I "The" do some th1no.. offensively ••l•n -1 0••1a1 <01•nnt1 • •• • om' I -SI l.OYll ., Stn Fre11et1<0 . that negnte our strength. They throw Ntw V'6rk Jet• 11 A111n11 the ball. and 1f)OU.dJ>.that, you can be !:~~!:! :: g:;i,:;-com~Ullve with anybody. cn1c.too 11 Tem111 ll•v • 1 {'l not suggesting any com-c1nc1nne11 et Mous•on Panson. but tt's similar to the the N•w Engt•nct 11 1nc11eneP04l• P1ll1t>uro11 et auHeio tloh~> Bowl game a few ye.ars ego St•ttle •• Kensu c11v when BYU beat M1ch1gan. No way wu111no1on •• Grttn eev ·could BYU match up . ..but they thrtw New York G~~:~=llh1• the ball (a'nd won). M11rn1 •• cievelend <C11tnnt1 7 •' 6 Pm I "It's the passing game that we ha ve NFL IMden 10 stop They run well. but we have to 1T11rtM1t111 MlnlttY'• o.m.1 stn~the pass." . NATIONAL co .. , ...... c. • Ouertef'tledll • can Vu~w Coach Guy Carrono ,.A l"C Yft TO tnt iiBtd his team's challenge is in deahng Kremer. M•nne,01a 110 1s2 2J30 20 7 h h d th f th Q w111111 oauu JS3 •s llS7 U s wit t e size an streng O e K•"'P s.n Frenc•tco tt7 111 1s..1 11 e Oilers. · 15,.,.,.r Oe'la• 161 102 131' • • .. We're ttyt~ to find some clunks Sc11roecier wu11'"01on m 1.U tl70 10 7 in their armor. said Carrozzo ... , was •u~J, vcn A\19 1.G To on their campus. and I'm convinced 01<1•.,""· """' m 1141 s.o 42 1 they ~her have &mall buildings or :i:;';\~::r~' ~~ ~ :~ ~ ~ the bt8$est linemen I've rver seen. stoger1. wu1111111•on 199 m 40 o u J'm tryin& to convince <?Ur gu)shto Pav•on c11.c100 AK.rv: 7ll •.1 " 5 sta) lov. and--kecp moving so t e} P'C vn Ave t.G ro won't get crushed. Cler~ was11inoton 50 '63 ,7_3 5S ~ "W • a h g t ftke rven. We•1m oe11es •• S63 11 s 69 1 l' re apprO C tn I ' / lllet S.n FranclKO 4S t7' IU 6' 9 game. to ellecute ~ell anq take care ol MOnK • ..vas/\tnoton 4S 112 1s..1 " l the ball. JtJ~t get-OOr dt!~n 11'e..chcck$ L.of!Gll.~IMQ Bey •I 511 IB )6 ) and--<:ovcrages rn and take care of . AMttteAN. CON,.E1t•NCS ourselves. Ou•r1WWC:~ ,.c vn TO ._,, .. J'm not taking anything 3Wa). 0'8rltn Jell 74S 162 2190 17 6 from teams we've played. hut tn 1he Eeson. New E~11••"<1 ~ ns 1612 10 1 I EIWtv 0-~ IAJ ll lS IJ 4 last five weeks we ost to some pretty Ko"' cievt1en<1 110 167 t93S 10 • good people. and at umes we didn't Merino,M•ern 121 1" 25" 21 1s do anrthing 10 help the ~1tuat10n Au"'r'~a Yft AV9 L.G TO Penalues and turnovers and come w.,_.. St•"'-176 11s o 31 • back to haunt 1.1s ·• &rOOk• C111CJnn111 120 "' u ss • ~ht le both teams ha vc a btg Winder· Denver 11~ 57 53: ~: !l ~ . tqctor. Jell ... 1ncentJve. -gelling int<> the win Rozlef. Hc>u••on. 149 "' 3.3 1e j column -there 1s also rhe coaching llece!Wh.-c Ycls Ave LG to 1ncent1ve roon,Jtll SI ao1 l)t 62 1 Carrono and Pascoe v..crc Stlllh °"""911-. it.!Otn SJ "' 11.7 JS • ~d .. cla.,~mates at fountain Valle" MO'oen, New Eno1an<1 .u 112. te.o 44 7 " • r .Ancte,,on, Sen Ole9o Al )f'T 9 S 19 ' ~en-tar; School. ai. well as Foun· ----1o1.1u..1Acs.a11aool~-.o_m 12.l » l tatn Valle} High Each wa-, the other'' ~FL odds best man al hi'i wl·ddlng. · s1,1HoAY Add1tionallv. Carro7.7o·s ass1S· Aams 2 ' ovtf' 'New Ot-1t11ns · ·Oellu 2-, over ltelo•n tants Howard Isom and Kurt t11u111ngron 9 Pver 'Gteen 8ev Clemen\ wcre Pasc~·s ass1stanf$ ·eutt1110 1., o...-.r l"fm1>0rol'I Untll th.~ }Car Also. Ocean Vrew New Yor• Je!S J 1 over •A11an11 , Ch•CIOO 14 over •TemP• hv US\14'tant Jeff ( h1lcott IS an ell.-01ler, Ne>N Eno•end 13 ~ ov., 'lndlan1POh\ and Huntington Beach ass1stan1 Roy C1ncmne11 •over 'Hou•ton Brummett. a former head coach for ~~=,~·~v_, 10~~,·~~~:, the Oilers. has ass1c;ted at Ocean ,.., .. York G .. nrs l ..., 0<1er •P11i1adt1on11 View · , ~•n FrafltlKO fO ov-.r St L-outs ·o.nvtr 15 ovtr Sen oi-oo ( arrouo'\ a'i'iCssmenl on· all of MONO~Y this "Ever) game IS a h1g game" 'Ctevt11~ 3 over Miami r t.h r1fi ·-oeno1t1 nome IHm A<, 1or e nO'>C·to-no'>C co ronla· """' Nerrett'• A-ltece & 5-" ..... .(t,<>n v.11h ht'> longtime friend. Pa.~1x· NFL LOGS ..aid it's not nece'>!Mlnl }' his idea ol Rams (7·2) happ)' times 14 ·s, Louis .. I don't know how much }OU like 16 Sen Frenc.v.o fi 74 1nc1;1neP011s playing your ncnds." ~aid Pascoe 10 PlllJt<ltlpll•• "You warn to Wtn a football game. l& T1m1>1 8ev and beat a friend. beattng 7vcryth1ng " 411•n1• 1• Oetr011 he represents He (Carro1 o) run'> a i. Allan•• 10 13 7 l • 20 26 10 7 17 great program and I'd It~ lo think we 20 Cntceoo can swatlg at an\ run the same kind of program." ~~: ~:"'e~1~;s \ifanna. "\1omrntum UNIS~EKSPLAYOFFS ...... Nov 13-Ntw 0r1 .. ns Nov »-•• New Yori\ Jth Ote 7-0allH Ote U-MJ1m1 • OK 19-al S.n Frtncl~O J 1' Dttv« • weat1111t•on t New Vorll. G ~h ll k !I Ot00 '' Ken .. • Cllv 14 W.1111 lO M~ml tt H®>•on 10 ()ej\ff( Nov t-111 OeP111 Nov 1.-Cll•elall<I NO\' 20-tl S.11 0•'90 Nov >0-l'flllldtlOfl\t o.c ..... , *"" Otc l._Ke1111t Cltv Dec. .21-llld en1P01t1 • . . ' Cdfnmunltv «lle9e lo9S ooL.o•N wnr 11.01 ~ l• &ekenfleld " Ofenge COISI 77. Vtnlure · lO . Patecltllt CC 71 L.onQ 8HCll CC 45 ComPIOll 37 Ml. Sin AnlOlllO Nov t-•• Fvllerlon Nov IS-C...ril<n Nov 21-EI C.m1no • 111 llOmt gemts 11 Or'enge Cou l OltANGl COAST n-n 4 Got<len Wt61 . 27 RencllO S.nlleoo u S.Odlftltell 22 c:;roumont 14 lthlMtldt CC 2.4 San D*IO MIMI '11 Soull1wtsltrn No• t-S.n 01ego cc Nov •1s-e1 P11omtr Nov n-<:1trus .. .. ,. 77 10 31 lt 34 .. . NHL CAMfl'Ul.I. COH,.1t1NCa Ectmonton Winn NII '''""' Klnel Vencouvtr Toronto : SI l.ovt• Detroit MlllnttOll ClllQ90 SmvtM OM-"'11 Wl.T"5 t • . I 17 ' s 1 ll s 7 0 10 l t I 7 , . , . "'""' Otvllltft G, GA ,, ... 41 45 Al 50 •7 '° ,. •1 • 2 3 IS 3' ll 4 3 l II 3A )I l s 1 11 l l ll 4 61 ,.,., 1 ·a2 •. .,"° W'Al.H COHFWlllNCI Plllledelohla PilllbvrOfl NV 11~ "•"ldl OM.-10 , 0 20 • 3 7 " ' • 1 lJ u 24 " .. ., 3' HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS SH Yi9w l.HeM- • NewJttteY --WunlnotOll. • ' 6 0 l'l 1 l 1 11 4S . S3 47 SI 1.Htut C>Yerel NYRIJ'llllrr tr, "' Adsn• OM'1lll StddleOICk Tu1lfn UntvtrJllV flltWP61'1 H•rbo!' Coro111 Otf Mer Estenc•• WI. T l 0 0 3 0 0 2 I 0 I 1 0 0 .., 0 Q l 0 llwrtdlV's G-(7:)0) UnlV.,lllY ., Newoorl Htrt>Of W L.T I O O 7 1 0 s 3 0 • r-v , 6 0 0 • 0 , r1dl V' t Gemtt 11:,JO l E s••nc•• "' C0t0nt oe1 Mir <•t New wt HtrbOf) S.ddTC" el Tu"'". S"unset LMf'le LMtut W LT Marin• 3 0 0 EdlM)ll t I 0 FPuntA1n Ve'ftv 7 l 0 -w.nrnllilttr l 1 o H11n111191on 8tKI\ O -J 0 Octen View O l _o "rldllY'• Gtmtt Ollt> ~ .. WI. T 3 s 0 • 2 0 , ' 0 , '1 , , ' 0 , ' 0 EdlJOI\ VI Foun11rn VllltV I•• ~ ~°'" COl!e9tl , Wnttn1~!.r "' Merlna <•• Wntmlmtlf'I OUen View et MuntlngtOft &tKtl jliacHk CMsf LHM. :.. LH9U9 -OV9rlfll W I. T ·w I. T Ot-enoe l O O S l O Coale Me" 1 1 0 S l 4 LeOUf\e Buch 2 1 0 7 I 0 Woodbf'ldOt 2 1 0 1 I 0 1..toune Miiis o 3 O I 1 0 Trebu<o Miits O 3 o 3 S 0 ~Y'I G...,. (7:)0) Coste Me" vi Tte~ MlllJ 111 Ml"ion VletO) 'rldeY'I Gem11 l7:l0) L.ouna M1H• v1.. Woodbrl<lot let trvlnt) 0.-•not ti LAOllN Suell SOCl1tl CMlf LMtUe ...... w I. f EIToro l 0 0 Minion VltlO l 0 0 CePl•treno v111ev 2 1 o O•"'t Miiia I 2 0 trvJne O l O Sin Clemente 0 3 0 TllllndaY'I Gatnf 17:30) Sin Ctemtn1e 11 Irvine · 'r!OeV'I G-(7:l0l C10l1treno Velln .. MIHlon Vlelo Et Toro •• Oene Hiiia 0¥wel .WI. T I 0 ·O s ) 0 s 3 0 l s 0 l 7 0 ) s b Ovtc>ec Montr .. 1 Httlford I MIOll &u11•10 ' • 4 • l 3 16 SI '4 IS ., 0 4 l l 11 l S • 41 s ' 1 > 7 2 11 .a 42 • JI •1 Tu.MllV'I ScMts W1Mloet 6 0ue0t< 3 PlltlaoelPl'l1e 7, .New Jenev 1 Vencouvtr 1, Pillsbllrtll 2 • New VortUtlflnd•n 1, Weslllnet011 I 't .......... Gemtt ~ton ti lutflllO New Vork t111nc1en el MerlfOfd Ntw Yorlt ••nows et o.trolt Vtncovvtr i t w-.111ne1on SI l.ou1' •I T0tonto Mlnne$011 ti Cn1Ct9o c.io.rv 111 Eoll\Clfrton TiwrU9Y'• Gemet Monlr .. I el Klnel Plllltde!Plll• ., New JtrMV T O"OlllO •• Mlnne.0111 -~·s SOC.C•A ~all9e SOUTH COAST CON'C*• c:.mtea 1, 0.-.. • Golden Wt\I toetle "" ... IOlll,...., 6 ottANGI IW.a CONPlltlNCa Or ... C..t i. •Nini* cc 2 Orencie C:0.11 KO'~ ~ 1, MU'llflv Gotll• Mvts Footmen ll (ef'IWIWftlfV c""9 SOUTH COAST CON,.ltlNCa ~ ¥Wftt s. ,......, 0 Golden Wnl KOflno. AUQUtllne ), Cox I, Winkler l Ooelle tnn. Krtl>t 6 -= From Cl 1ted an e>.plos1-.c Saddlcback oOensc to JUM one TD (on an 80-yard run) 1md "3' fictd Jt>ahmrtt-6 lcm-:~ Tlr was on an intcrccpuon return "They run the ball well," said Sailors' Coach JefT Brinkley. "They have Belle and Ltebke and they do some good 1h1ng"i. We alway-, tr) to adjust our defense to the team we're fac ing and, we'll make some ad1ust· menis this week." . Their offen!>e 1s not a\ etku1 ve a~ wme of our opponent\' have been butthey can mctvc thc--batl1'nd get 1 into end Tone .• "'Their ktd'i will be real comfortable playmg us. The) arc down nght now but lhey can win the la\t two and still have a respectable. record. We need a win" P-!!ep-footbal-tlo·g-· • (. deMtt$ ... ..,. lllfM) "Th1s13mc mc~n111fwe win. we go to the playoff , and 1fwc lose \.\.ecould be out of n." s~ud C unningham "We obv1ou\I) can't lo~ any more " said ~nnklc>. "We arc going to put It on the ltne and sec how badly we want to go to the playoffs. This will be a &.OOd tC$t of our character .. "We've got to play a "iOhd game and hmll our tumo,crs." continued Brinkley. "I think the two team,· makeup 1s-s1m1lar ph~s1cally " .. Going in both ream~ arc evenly. matched." ~aid ( unningham. "It' going to be d~c1ded h> wht<'h team makd the le;m mistake-. " V1cw League Saddleback {3·0, 8·0} at Tustin C3·0, 7·1 )~ The .~oadrunnc~ meet 1hc1r most challengin& league te~t in th•'> baule of Sea View unhcatens The winner WllJ likely take the league crown w11h c nly one pmc remaining. It figures to come down to tum· overs. which the Tillers have avoided for the most.part, while Saddleback has lhnved on oppo·nents' m1scue1J. "This 1s it "said Saddiehack Coach Jetl) Witte. "This game 1s for the cha mp1onsh 1 p. "l be_}' have a Jood 6cftn\C and their offense ts soltd They arc n very !i.Ound football team I'm hopeful that our ability to create turnovers will t·onunrie, but Tustin is not the type of team which make~ a Jot of m1!ltakc,. "I think)nc key 10 th<' pmr will be which team makes the leut mi ... takes" SEA VIEW LEAGU& SOUTH COAST LSAGUIE S\INSIT LIAGUS CO..ONA OU MAit (M J lltV1NE' (1·~ IOttON !6·21 ) Munli119lon 9 .. cll 0 20 Un•Vtflllv 3A 21 51 Anll'IOllV (Maul) 0 l Sen Clemente 7 O Wt1Jmln•ter 31 DS f l Modena 0 0 (ApiaftlllO V11tev 31 7 Tustin 10 14 Servile 1 IS WOO<lbrtd9t ?4 0 ~ec;W 41 34 ~ltr Del 17 30 Cosre Mtst 1t 21 Vlllt Perk t• 7 S.nlt Moftlu t i 7 S.ddlebl<k • n O Mlulon Viele>' .O 7 MllrlM• 17 13 Tu••ln' 14 l oene HIM•• 23 17 Wt1tmlns1er• I> 14 Unlv1n1tv• ?O IS El Toro• S. at OCeen View• 0 N7-!stenci.• (II Npl Merbor) N.-Stn CMlfMntt• N7-tt Fovnttln Ve11ty• (111 OCC) Nl.i-a1 Nt ... OOl'I Merbor' I NI,_., C•Pftlrtl'IO V1•1ev· Nl>-MunllnolOll 9tK11• (Ill ()(;() ~STAN(IA (0·11 CAl'ISTltANO VALl.IY CS·al ,OUNTAIM VAl.L&Y l2•4) 4 CW111 Mffl 2' 2' Footnl" 2' 14 Mater Oii 2' J3 l.1ou111 Hiils " 2' Cenvon 14 12 El TOfo JI 2' l.oi Am•oo• Al Jl Corona Otl Mir O 0 Mlnlol> VleiO 11 ~ C1Pftlr-Vttltv J4 l • E"ancle O 10 &vvltt 14 0 WOO<IOl'i40t 26 7 Seddlebeell .. 6 L.one ... ell Poly 20 20 Ut11Ytft•IV' '3 lS Dent Miiis'-16 U -Ocltl\ V1fW-! -1' 0 N•w-• H ... bof" 47 IS Et TOfo• 17 17 HUlllmtlon IMell' 7 • Tualin' lS t 2 S.n C1tfMn11• 1)• O Wtitmi111t.,• 10 N7-11 C<1M· l•I Npl MerbOr) N7-I Min ion v1e1q• N7-Ed1M>n. (•I OCCI Nt.-Stddlebllek. (ti OCC) Nl.,_,,.,,... Nl-f-M•rlnll' (Ill Wtslmlnsltr) NlW,.OH HAllltolt (4-41 DANA MIL.LS !Ml HUffnNOTOft HACH <HI • Sent• AM 1' J4 L.HUlll )iM'• 1 O COl'Of\e Otl MM > 20 0c .. n V1t<11 O 17 Trat>uco MUI• 14 U llittoo Monl90fl'lt'V It 4 Munlintlon Bkcll 0 ' 1.ttunt a..c11 14 0 ...,_wt ~rbor • 21 Co•tt ,...... 0 27 Fu~•on 4J ' Lont lllCl'I W1'10n 1 0 El Ttf'O n 6 Unl•ttallv 16 t Miilet' Del 20 17 Tu•11n• 2t 16 '-P1Wtt\O \lt11ev• U 0 W"lmlMttr• 21 •1 Es•111C·•· o 2) 1rv1nt• ) 7 Foun1tJn ven.y• 17 O Stddiebee-• l7 1 M•u on v t .o• 14 1 Mtrlne• 17 N6-Unl,,1r1;11• N1-ll Toro• N7-«Hn view• Nl4-Coront del Mllf• N1-.1 s.n Cltll'Nfttl' Nl)-el EetM>n' (111 0C'1 UNWlltSIT'f !Ml IL. TO.O 11 .. l MAllllNA !Ml i. ,,..,,.,. 20 20 w1111t111n, "• It o !•-•nie 0 P11remo..in1 14 ) l l'ounlt1n Valley 12 f S«vlle t WOOdbrl~ 10 11 Weslmlll1ltf 0 f. flootfltl , lS LtOYflt H I . 1) 11 El ""'*"• U 211.1 Qulnt1 l6 Dene H • 6 l1 N•wlllOfl Ht'bor 0 10 MUUir..,.. •> lhlt 'IC•e• 10 .. St 11 C~tt• 77 17 l tfilOl'I• 1 s.oo .o.c•• JS 17 Cao1weno V•llev" lS 3J OC11n vi.w• 20 Coron• Ott Mtf• lA S6 1rv•M• 1J 17 M""t'NIOll ~· N ., NtwOOl'I HerOQf N7 .• , Dtfl• Hmt• N1-W1tllT\lMltt• (el Wl'll) Nl-T1n•111• (t i 1rv !'It) Nl I Mi"'°" Vleic>" ,..,~., ,II\ Vellev' ... W"'9 17 n · 17 . 27 ,, 7 1 7 ..;;;;.,~;;;.:S~OOUHCK , ... , MISVOlll VtUO CS·J) oc•u NW CJ·tl • n11 Ant '¥'1!ltV ' o s.11 o'"° MMM K~ U 1111 •111 '" • ll t-lt11 0 HewMfi ~trlef t• l.1 M•Of• • u 'Oll'llll!tl Vtlitv • s... ,.. v~ 41 Ir~ 0 0 ~·Alie 12 ,, l'8iA a c..mtr-Vtlltv 1 A1 UeUfle_ .. Wl 11 kf!te Ant 11 CO"IN'I dtl Mar• 1 40 trvine•. 14 'tuM•ltt v.-· U \Mlwra•tv, 1 II It Cltmefl•t• 7 Mlfltle• '1 N~I Hll':IW~ t f4 011\t H • 0 ldl'Mlrl" N1 I T11lllll0 Nt-<ellls'rt ne \'e~v· N1-et 111M!1"'9"1ft ee.ctl' Nt.-11· st• • 1a 1 OCC> , Nit-Ct r-· .,,......._.tm!Mt_.. ce1 "" TVITI" IMJ IA .. CUM1"11 l.l•JI .. .,....HM (4•1•0 l• i<.Na tH.-Vfl l I 14 ~ldel 14 lf~le ·1 L.O• A -rot 7 7 torllflll Oii If# ~ ) Jt lr'Y111t 10 tr.1M 1 7 I.~ H • t 11 Tore 21 '001 ., 1) ltell(_flt A!Mll!bt t 6 Crewl n Nttt TOf•eiU 1 0 I. ....... IMctl 1' '1 ftDOtNI 2t "-"'"'' Ht ft!Ot• II 11 11 7.,o• llt tt ~ INecfl' I' (Ot'OM ffl Mar• ll t Ml'4Jotl vt.flo• t lJ (dlMI\• ts l!s•lllCI•" ' tJ c.e11rreno VeMV" .., 1t '°"'"e111 .,...,. N1-4Udte&llO:• '"'9!f" H1 tMflM• (Wft~j NI ., u11 .... .u,,• le! If.. Nl..-0. H • NI I OCft!t VJtW• 1 "" Y- ,. 0 ,, D 0 • 17 • PACl~tc COAST UAtM#a COITA MaSA (S·fr 1• l!itencle 2S Sentleoo )S lt11nch0 Alemlle>t 7 NewllOl'I .. erbor 2t COfont c1t1 Mer 1) Leount HIM•. 4f l.HUllll lff<:ri• le Wooclbf1dol• ' 0 • 21 JO ' ,. 3' N...-.1 Tr.outo Miii\• l•t MV) Nl>-tt Ofenot' (ti II Modtfte) 1.AOUNA Ill.ACM CM) 21 El SeoUl\00 21 L.e Serna II Oent H'"I 16 Vellev Cllfl,llen 14 Sen Ci.mtnle 24 TreCM.Ko Hiil&.') It Coile Me11• 1• l.IOUM .. 1111' N7-<)renoe· r Nl ..... WOOOOfklot• WOOONIOGI CMl S4 Sen Ci...mtntt 1 Lt Quinta 10 Unlvenllv • 1A Corene Ott Mar 2' l••ttld• 1 Oftnet• 23 TrHueo Hiiis' Jt Co•tt Mew• N7-u.tuM Min.• <•• 1rvlnel Mlt-tt L.ae11111 .. 11<"' LAGUNA HH.U CM) 7 Deni Hlll6 14 l!t11nc1e • sen ClltMllt• 13 u111.,enay 41 Mltt!O!I Vlelo t Cott• MeM• ear ..... • lO I.MUii• 1Mc11· H1 1 w..-1e1ee· <•• 1r111NI NI,..... Trlltlll<o ""'. (el MVJ ...... (f.Jl 7 " ' 14 0 t2 49 10 ,. ' • 1' •o 2l • " ,. 13 7 is 0 1) )I 16 .. ltnflele ' o Norco 1' 1' 1(..... 21 20 VIile ~ll 11" 1) CaflVOl'I • 27 n 'Nu•rkNt" 1 )1 La1UM Hiii• 'I 2i Trlhet H... t N1-et Ll9\llll IM(ll• Nl~IO MIM0 Ill II ~) ftMUCIO •&U fJ•U It .. c.-Cftr!Mleft 1• °"" Hiil .. •Ml .. ,.,. WOttd ,,~ • ._, .. 1 , ....... 2ta...le9Cll• ,..-• W11•r1M" • °'.,.... ...-..Cott• .... flf "'") Hl)-11 \.MYN Miit• !al MVI ' -· 17 ' ,,. • •• n " i -. . Mliv ....... l-4ll, Cll:IJ U'l ... 16'--~-' CU ..... lll (t6) -Mexwell 2•S t •I 12. Cffe 4· 10 4·7 12. &.nlemln 3·t H '· Drew >-11 o-o '· M Jot\11~ M 4 M 21, Woodson )·7 2·2 t, Nll'!lpblus 4•7 0-0 I, wnflt M H 1, GO'OOll :H H 7, Polee I·• 0-0 2, Ktmolen 0-1 M 1, I JotwllOfl 0.-0 1·1'" I T"Oltlf' lt•tl 24 lO 8' DALLAS (lit) -Aiw•rrt 7•" •·t 20. Perkins 4·1 l·l t. ao.t0son •·7 )•3 11, ~.,.., 2·4 2·2 6, 9ltdlmen 9•11 2·2 70, TorP'tv '2 4 2•6 4, Oe11l1 7·6 2•2 7, WOOd 6·12 0-2 1>, Sdwemof l ·t 1-1 It, B ti> 1'3 M .J, WtMIMIOll 1-2 0-0 2, JKkJOll 0-1 l·• ) TOI.._ 4'•19 23·lS 111. ~"" °"""" CllPPel'S " 17 27 ,.._ " o.ne-i n ,. >0 11-111 Ttvtt·POlnt ooe1.-01\'ll. Wood. Sclltemof FOl.lled OVl-NOM ll!t«IOUnd-Cli_,I 4' IMe11wtt n. Delle• '5 (Oontldton 111 At· •fstt.-<llPHl't 21 (Mllawell 51, Otllt• lO iHer"' 1l Toi.I loUl..-Cliooer"i 30. Oe-U. TteMIC••s-Mtxw.11, Mar-D .... CMCll Mollt, Otllll llfeolll dtftflM Alltnde~1',411 WAT•R ~LO Gen1RulttV ~ OltANG• 1,...1 C.ON,lltlNC• °"""' ''"' 1i. s.-...ar n ~k I S I 4 0 C>-11 Of•noe c ... , 2 • > t 1 t-ll Oren11t CoHI KOl'lntt. Sllwtrt S, l unoe l. ICtlltr 2. CllrllltnMn t, L.ullllt"'-n I Gotlit """ CONln 15 SOUTH COAST GOH'HINC.I ca.. w ... ti, .......... cc • Goldtn West I 4 S 1-21 Pe"Otne CC I 2 J l-t OOIOtn Wtsl KOflnt L.•rMI! 5, OOilolll• '-IU('l\e~ l , trolhltlotl 3, VM OVl\t l , S•orv ,, ludm.n 1. Gotlie ,.,, .. Slltl!Olro t, ll°"111'°" s . Armatrone ). T ... O at.ea. OM m11e PwM I U.000 -Tllr•~~~utt Cle•""f\9 Drla":~,IOO· ., ..... 1 ~-tMnel II• 2 ltelfl Sflefler (Va!4lfl1.-.1 11' ,,.... ((Wt ... , ,,, ' I .. liXTH aAC9, I PutM tlUOO TlltM YM!' _,. •~ 11t1 orke tlt- 1 '°°'"" tsm-1 u• 2 ltMWrt SOlr I ICMdlttt l tit J Llt'lm.wav'*"'ll IOrl ... 1 '" t VICIGr'I l.N tHetlllllldtll II• I Al\'IOl'Oll\ tPinc.ay) i1' 6 Le C.iole IOll1<ar" I H• I i rMmld IP90rotal II• I Gral\ ltrlN U•.-.. >I 11' t A ltltlll ION (VM111\lflel Ii. 10 "'"''-"' CS•Dflltl ' 11' ~S <I ·~> 'IN'•• to ne11e uncenlfft9CI d •lld '~, ..... !Mt.\ •• '°"° !Ille'!' ....... A ._ .... , N>IA fl 11 ltiiM bnl r19'lt 9'f IM N<t. Med llM'f,.... NI._ .. , or« N'I, Ll9MT• • HIWA.,NOLM8 Ct ·21 ci.ulc ,.,, .. tor COINM t\11\\ Plft llftl at HoCIVwCIOf P.,k LOHC~T ANTIOUA llGHTH ••c• OM mitt -.. OS,000 eckled Atf1tmtd H..w!leep Oreci. Ill MndlCeP for '"'" veer Old• HST l at P•IN(J 1081"1' I (tfh •.al PlttCI PLAY A •IOHT IOCA '''"'!tee.ti x-cttnolH -81111« lcK•ff ... ------------ Hollywc,od Park open 37-day meetirigtOday INOLEWOOD fAP)-A fttld of 11 haded by Cbeal)lka~ Ind Ckar Choice ts c.nte~ to run tn toda)'"1 S 7S,000.ad&d Afficmcd Haftdtatp, the feature race on opcnina da) of HoU)wood Park)J'all ltolldl) Meet· 1n1 of Champ1of(s Cheapskate •111 be ridden by Gary Stevenund 1 aw11ne'd luah we11ht of 120 pounds (or the one.mtle ra<e fqr )-~car-olds. Clear ho1« will M •ridden by Patrick Vale01ucla an<f 1 1uJ1ncd 119 pound C~apsk.ate hH earncd·mo~ than S42~.000 in his career and hu finished in the monty 1n 11 of his 13 tarts this )ea1. ChCar>$lt.atc captured the 1. raul Detby at n~ Downs n M111nnou an June ud de»-hated for KCond pit« wtth SoulMm Halo behind W11e unn in the Supn Ocrb) at Lou1 ana DDTtm n Stp- tcmbct. Clear Choice <A Qn the Swap1 Stakes on clos•QI day Of: HoH~ Park•• pnn1-s1.1mm~r mttt1n1 and WI third in 1he Discovery._Handicap 11 Aqueduct 1n h1 most recentaart. The 37-day, four·hohday_-M«11n1 of ChamS"on' finishes on Chmtma1 E11c with rac1n1 cvt'fy Wednesday throu&h Sunday. In addJtJon. thnc will be a penal prosn m n a I utsday, wh1 h 1 Veteran's Day. Los. Al results ... ' ... . .. . . . . .. . TUUOAY'S •uuLn <•• .. s.~ ..... ...,,.,_ .. meeMtl l'•ST •ACa. ~Til'lb Trihi ~ llelCllDell 00 hO 7• M•H N•lutt l (hie ll.¥1<tvl • • 20 4 20 K 8' Most Cat (f. Owareh) t 00 T•l'M 20.52 AIM ,_ T ... Plot fl\oCll-, M Mt• .. Milrl NI kl, Ang .. Wr I, €1Yt l"lt!'t. Oii LAI lt...-1, Ambrot-"9 $cretctltd Oatldv M/Uv MM111 SJ •XACTA 110·11 Pa d &iOO WOOO\IOCJI A ..... FO' ···~·Sett .. U llCACTA IS-•l petd llt..0 ' MXTH llACI. MO v¥d& A Zllf• lltovnecunt I 0..Cllt'IJ ,. 40 • 20 no Cll~M IW ... d l ._!-~ 2 20 1 lO MM'tiOOO Lifl'll" !G•Meerl 110 r11N 1llO • AIM '"' C...Wat•4111 S«illi A .... , .W.. $1 v Ceuntv 11 l>CACTA CS·'! H•d •1309 SIVlllfTH aACa, UC> vtrdl I °"'' YOlJ ,,,... (MolQle!O S to iOI t-40 • OOIWIO <•~1 I 1-0I 1 *' <t <tO 7 eo , 20 S.ft .. (;OOf !D~•tenl >to G Los ~Jamitos ra_cing entries HCOHO •ACll. 3SO 'l'trOI C<JJmlG 1omt> ID•dtrlck~I Ybont-VefflOm IFiOl*'MI ' Sn4 Atl .on ( Btl<Mlt l) Tlmt 1127 Uf 210 Tomtt 2111 l 00 Ii.Itel fl'l: Oltl Swelt, S~ Merri, A lUftl HoPt Too -•· Al~ ren ;ett T 811, M«>tv P•tv., Jov In Tiie Woodo 4 J•I So FHI, Pe•M•M Lott S<rttcl'!ad Jt ¥\ a." -11 IXACTA 17 )) Mod SlUO llGHTN ltACI UO v.,dt · S2 IXACTA 11·61 Nof Jl2 40 T"•D ltACI. lSO 'ardl Forttlfe Vefle101r1 CO•ttl EttHM M«rid« CT•u-•I 140 lAO 110 TONIGHT'S INTltlU (17tfl .. U·~ Wlt"W Mne ""ff'INI ,..,.., ~ 109 ,..., ltACI. 350 verOt ""M 12,400 1· .,..,. • ..., I 4t Ci.•mino orlCt '4.000 I li'rottmo.e I hf di I Hooli.,.,.. ..... CFrtv) J ""' l>lttflt IEcJwarcttl • Motel MMrles• CGonHltll S A.-Orbit (Ciartial 6 ShM1t Or•r• CLa<kevl 7 Soley ~ tFlllMoel I eo.111 l a•r<Cr9"WI t ll'l'lct!Ht Natt,,. IM lellfll IO ._, Pelllt (Flol'tll llCOMO •ACI. 480 varn PwM n .100 2· .,_....,. CLlornil!9 -'<• M.OOI 1 Son*la Tlla! Tll"'t IVt~I J SKrwf AllrMCll (MY!ftl 3 lltdiv OM (Hartl 4 T .... Ye.t 1..tler Cit-I S Tenta lool tCatdottl • Krtl«VC'*'Otf (UckWI 7 EtN>r9>dOC CPllll>MI • l11trean. (OiotrOC:llMI') Coach can tie Michigan win mark with victory Saturday ANN ARBOR. Mich. (A.Pl -Bo Schcmbcchlcr 1s chastnJ a kttnd reluctant!)'. and he '>ho4)d catch 11 on Saturday · F1cld1na H Yo'>t the most famous coach 1n Micbip.n football h1"itOf) and one of the giants of tbe pme, compiled a r«ord of I 6S-2Q-10 from 1901 m 1926 at Ann rbor. Schembcchler. \1nce tak1n1 the M1ch1pnJob 1n 1969. is 164-38-4. That mcaos a victory at Purdue on Saturday w11J enable Schembechler to ue .. HufT) Up .. Yo~fs record. and a mumph agafnst M1nnc<;ota the followlna week will make htm the w1nn1ngest football coach tn the school"s history "I'm not a record-chaser ... Schcmbcctiler said. '"ll I n't so O'\UCh what r vc done. We've won a lot of games. but it's .a testament to a great coaching staff and great playen ·• Schcmbechler sccm'i awe<f by the compamon '"Yost, tagg. Pop Warner·· he said, hng.cnng on each name. "Those were the real pioneers. - Schembechler ha'i 'itud1ed the leaend he 1s abQ.ut to overtake. lllc~an '•Bo Schembechler la nearlna the ecboof record for m09t llf etlme rictorfa. '"l"ve got a couple book<> Re wrote:· Schembcchlcr said '"He was a vcf) bn&ht gu) T 1m~ were simpler then He'd show up a couple da>' before pracuce coach the team. then go ba ck 10 West V1~1na •• -WilkJJl!I injured -i Hawks'· in Atla n ta star forced- .to leave game early after h urting ankle From AP dl1p11tdtes ATLANTA -Rand> Wmman's 28 points and Ke vin W11l if 23 enabled tht Atlanta Ha wks to over· come a fint..quaner 1ruury to 5tar forward Dominique Wilktns and defeat Milwaukee. 107-98. fucsda> . nilht. ., Wilkins. 'he NBA 0 \ sconn& cham- pion la t )'C<tr. left with · an ankle 1rvury late in the first quaner after sconna one point. He had sc01cd more than 30 points in, each of the Hawks' lint two same of the tcason The Hawks ta.id Wilkin will be cumined today after swellina in the ankteaoesdown. H1 utatu wa li,.ed as "day-to-day." '" • because of10Jufles. the Nuagetsiot 18 potnts from Kumusstn. Han.d1k. making hi s first start 10 nearly two years, had 16 of his points tn the fi"t half New York"s Bill CanwnJht did not play because of a spnuned ankle uffered 1n a game Monda> n1Jht Denver never trailed, but wa, ahead JU t 76-74 1n the middle of the third period ~hen JU mu sen, who had a carcer-hiJh 11 rcbound'- outscortd the Kn1cks 8-2 in a two. mihute pan to open an 84-76 lead that lhe v1 itors ntver threatened the rt t of the way. Rookie Kenny Wal~er led the Kn1cks wuh 18 PQ•nt~. 12 in the lu1 quaner. after p1ck{na up four fouh in the aame's opcnina five minutes Patnck Ew1n1 had 16 points and Pat ( umminp 13 for the Kn1cks. • Recket1 lit, IUa11 14: In am•· mcnto, Akecm Ola.iuwon ored 26 poiots and Jim Pctcncn arab~d IS rebounds as flou ton defeated ra· men to. Ce• ViJ!oll {Mota.I) UO HO ) .S.v Nall~• IWtrdl 4 P1110t Trv ICtNMrl s Siii Slloan ( l•ldl 1 J ' P~c1flc £•-I IO~ICllMlll tn 1n 122 110 Go Ovick M<llev CFIOf.,l SurD<rMI S•tr.-i fF19Utrotl HO no :: . TrtCU~•uOc ICl'ttotrl HO 1'1t . Timi 2176 , JJO Atw r~ S<t.I rrt•¥ ~. Iv-TtUlv T1mt 11 1' ttGKTH •ACI. t70 .,.,di PVfM M.400 l Y .. f Oldt &. UC> Clt•m.no PflQ SI 000 I $1'\tw"" Sutt (8afd) U2 Attci ,..., WOCMhtoO Jot Atw•ed Sltrl, Fallheottd ltov, hf CM .. Oulcll K l>D· Wa•dl Cvtt C•hcll, Stleclla ,,_.. Hwmoi. n IXA<;TA cs-•1 M;ct .. '° ., DAILY Tlt•L.a IS.,_St NtO "'140 ..... TH llt ACI, HI .,.,fh 1 cn.rw VIC1orv tG ... c1e1 110 l IW Colfax Larll tMe'81'1 1n krt•"'" Cl\aM °"' J119, ,Cl>CIY\ ~ U"1e w 'mer, Le T-ort Ft<t O.•t f'Vt119MI J"' u.tl•loot f~I M It Fll't (0.,l<•Mfll 4 CH COJ It.,. (C);Oef'lcllMfl) 111 U IXACTA «II N•O •ttl60 s Timtto c;.1eone ((trOOH) 1n ' •a•M "four Ouktl (Garcia! tn l'QUtt'TH llAQ. lsO ¥atd\ Pt..C-IE Cett:ta ".>"'"' 1110 11 >0 :llO ,.. A.Ml''" Vt Lou Eew 1..-e, ~ fl'te 1 Nothinot Fr• IPtur.ne) 11' NINTH •ACe. 350 Vtrft PllfM U.IOI > E ttellO Co IWttdl Ca Me W~•t-tr'I IG·lll Time 1tl2 ) t0 2 t0 ~ ltOCMI O«Ul'I'! Sa.nl, Gollll• T...-.tlOY 2 IO w ,.,., 'f<lt'1"91« .,..,. o•ch Cit mono prlet· M.000 I Five Ool MwrtlMfl! IWerdl 1 Golla G•I Gont llfoohl 1n 1n 177 ,,, AltO flll\; U •tlv ~. Me¥M s.,c., Awaome To T,.,. MH Doctor 0-.erdt' "' Ste Ottet Oo. $•e1teit\ lltOCll.t! S<rt!~ c..,1 N • .,.. .. ~· T-• i2 llCACTA I 0-tl 9eld t l7 60 S2 ~I( MlC U S·S-7-S-101 Da•d SS71 >0 let 20 "''"""" t~kei\_Jflve l'IOrWlt, Pttd. Slt20 10 374 , A CM:' ScllG IGwc••I • 1\1\efflde .. ILew•sl ""™ ••c•. 'lSO ""°' IN Mtrl M«ry (If oell S) W0"""'9 l>CktlS lro...-l'IOr""T. ~ IO IO J.O 2«1 • t i ~ ,., ... t lO-l·<t·~S-j-7.+lOI .... S If~ ~r!Ot COk*'iellfffll ' Penucllt IG•~Clel H• 11t ,,, 0-l~ l~l<tM'ft) Ella1ve W1v• (Mllchelll u• 2 ,. , eo 10 '""" "' "n nrtlrk•" ~ ...,.'"" uo oa;o nue 10 JO """"""° toelrth c....-•-• 1 $t•nl .. , Jr IVt\IVMI Tlmt 1e23 To•a etrrv-.ool S71.44 II e Pttf\ltd Dnart IFteuwoal t Doctor Jtcl IP et1tonl 122 tn A\o ttn. EIJ.iu Lii o~. >•• o Mava PleH•"· a-1 a .. utv, Da\«t llttwerd All~ftet 3.0ll M.Jt..et ,.,.ndle S5'' Ml eriifjou . .. I haveo ncofhiscontracts HegotSl,OOO plushcgot to ea t at the lra1nina table No TV show, no shoe deal no cn<1orscmet\t' •• ~ Yost's baste football ph1lowphy wu not unlike Schcmbcchler"s .. , saw a little .of his film:· Schemb«hler said. -He formulated lhe ba 1c stratcg) He stressed defense. A lot of people don1t ~al12c that. His J>(J1nt·a-minutc tcams.,,.allfie _ n'fl' talked about was defense. Even when he got beat. 11 wa\ )..() •• • · Yost"s fir!lt five team v.erc the .. Po1nt·l' tile'" teams J>!Obably the ~t.known T~ r~-tcams,. Crom 1901 -1905. played S6 pm~ without a def¢at. inctud1 n.g 29 consecu11ve v1ctones. and scored l.821 points to the opponentr 42 Yost remained as coach for 23 cpnscaJt1ve seasons retinn1 temporanly 1n 1924. but returned for the I 92S • and 1926 seasons Yo l's fi"t four teams and fast four teams all wer:c Bia Ten champions HIS mo<si l&!lltnl lepcy. however, 1'1 the stadium which the Wolvennes play m today MKh1gan Stadium was completed, under h15 supcrv1s1on. m 1927 at a cost in excc'>s of$9SO,OOO. '"He was an engineer by trade," Schcmbecbler said '"He was apparently an absolute 1en1us. bu1ld1ng tha1 plant ltke he d1d He mu">t have been a hcllu"a guy" After amvma 1n Ann Arbor. Schembcchler~ wife. 'vt1llte became fnends with Yost's widow '"When I first came here. J v.ent up to his house. Schcml:>C'chlcr said ··1 went up there ~veral times. JUSt 10 look at the memorabilta and Yost an1facts .. >\hhough Ckhemb«hlcr never knew Yost, e'ccpt HocKEY throuih book~ and v1 ttS to the hou~. he was clo~ to another football legend -Paul "Bear·· Bryant of Alabama · Bryant used to p1ctt Sc~mbcchk-r to help coach postscason all -starpme and to wort summercfurrcs; It wa~ dunna the tame thl' Bear was ci<mnt m on 300 victonc and 1t was cnout.h to c.:onvmcc <;chemb«hler he d9(~n't want that k.tnd orramc ··rm not ~u~ whether Bear pursumg that aoal v.as really .. onh n • ~hembtchlcr ~1d .. He v.as an old man. He didn't ~-ant to coach an)morr Yet. he coached • another )UT •. C\ en aft.tr tir '"' 1he OOlh, bca.usr lie had 47 J)C'ople tied ll• him Their JO~ould be t~J.opordy if hcqu1 t. " -. ··He fi n1 bed wnh a med1oett scascm quit. and a year later he wa' dead.- ·The S7·)'rar-old \chembcchkr had b)pass c;urgcry after suffenng a he an att.ack on 1hr t"\.C of 1he t 970 R0t.t Bowlaa~. "There ·~ no <.hann· that rm so1n4 to Win 300." he said 'Thafs an 11txolutt' 1mposs1bll11y ' hembcchkr who <;1aned at M11m1 ol Ohio. 1 204-55· 7 overall <;:uurda)'~ \ 1ctory over llhno1~ was h1~ 10'1th m the 'itad1um 'i ost hu1h '"Yeah. I'm having fun ·· \chrmbcchlrr <;aid '"Ru1 )OU have to ·u11dernnru1 that last couple of )t.an. we ha\Cn't lo'it many g.imes •· \it1c-h1gan, a lier a 6-6 ~son in 1984. rebounded with a I 0-1 ·I '>t'a<>on m 1 "K5 fin1sh1n~ No 2 tn the final poll after a F1c\ta Bowl ~11.:ton o'er Nebraska The WoJ\ennesll"C K-<ho farthts ~sc>n and ranked Ne ~ 1h1s v.cek. ,,... Jets fly· to victory 'b~hind Kyte 's goal Nordiq~es suffer first home setback to Winnipeg, 6-3 lrm1cu\ took a pa'is from Dan ~ rawtry, fought off a check from dl'lcnseman Dave Richter and pump- ed 1h~ 'hot mto the upper nght corner to take tht league lead 1n goal Dtno ('tlcarcllt of M1nne..ota " liCCond with 16 l tm1eu' ha<> at lea<>I one point 1n eal h of P1mbur'9.h's 13 pmC\ lsla1'dtn 7. Ca~itals l: In nion-· dak. N 'i • Pat t..Fontaint and M1k("'- B<M~ ~orcd tv.o &nal~ apiece, lead· mi the l'llan~k~ pa\t '1ntgl1n1 \\ 1,h1n11on l 1 r ontaine· .. fi"'11oal ol the niJht. on pc>"cr pla). tngcrtd a 1hrt'c·1ott lif\I l'\'t10J for lhc f'ilandcl"\ and W ~rv. York etntrr c-appcd a tw{)-goal t,(.'('ond period ~1th h1 .. ..C\lcnlh gQal of,. the \('8t,On Bo\\~ "<:Orcd 1n 1hc: ~<'ond penoo and linl"heJ :-.:r~ \ ork'' ~ortna 1n the third ~1th one of thl'('~ hlandcr · powt"r·pl;iy i<)ll' Willis' hook shot pvt the fi awk the lead for aood at 7.3-7 1 with 2:44 left in the third quarter ttc add d 10 founh.quartcr points as the H wk~ putted 10 a 97-86 lead with 4.49 lcfL The Rocket pla)cd without Ralph • mpson. who has an inJurcd lcO ankle. • Housion never tra1ltd 1n the: con· Jamee Edward8 of Phoenlz (left) foal• Portland forward Jerome Keney dartn& flnt period of NBA conteet Tuad.ay. Conquerors win wild-card match Glenn Riven had 17 poinn and Jon Koncak added 12 for tlanta. Chff Levi ns ton 1ddcd 10 PQ1n1 1x 1n thl-fuunb quarter. and a game· htah J 7 rebound for the Hav.k ' ,Sidney Mon rteflid the Buck with 21 pQ1na foll 'lrfd hy Cra11 HOd • I J. Jack 1km1 Ottd 11 and Rte\} P,m:c 10 for M1hr..auk tc t and led by a many a 16 point 1n · Two lrct throw' by Dwayne Wash· the founh quarter, • 1n11on v.1th 13 ~ond1 rcma1n1na M1tchcH W111ur omt four con· pve cw JcN'y a 101-100 lead, but ~ut1vc \SI kct~ 1n the final thftt ~lone·, bl ket c mpt tcd thc.xor· m10utc' of the third pcnod to derail a -1n 1o s M41onc ~o~ 32 poinh cramcnto • rally and Jl\'C the and JelT 1alonc 26 for the Bullet ockctn 74i60 advant• 1n into Pa r tU. 7kn Ill: In ln- thc final quarter. W n lin1 J d1an It \.John yon ~d a ta· wllh 21w1nts rttr·h ah4'~~ 10 ud1n1all I I of Ball t11n .. • ts ltl: Jn l;andovcr, h11 team PQ1nt 1n the second Md , Jeff' Malone's l()ofoot falta y o~cn1mc. a the Pa en defeated Jumper with four nd rcm111'lu11 ,' rru tJ\1'11 • - .pve Wuhin ton a \t tor) O\Cr Ne I on l d 1hc lirM fhc point of Jcr ·• • tb fit1alpeflodto11vell\d1ana,v.h1ih The Net;;, ~ho gC1\ .20 po1n from 'n ~J nn c1 h1 pml' Jo~ina Slf'("ak •Bo k W1lhams, ralh d from a ..0.l 1 inst 1 I'\, I ta • I I~ I d with dcfi II f\t-r one quanct. then (i II 0 aen betund 96-87 With 4 24 left 1n the lall 111 , n lh: In ( h1 ~o. ITI \tic I Jur\litt, held .· • ., • Oe•• C01111 DAILY PlLOT/ W~. ~-&, 1918 { U l C UP s ~ DowNs I NYSE UPS & DOWNS --= ~-""--=----= ----------...c~ --~-~ -/ ...... / ...... / ...... / ...... .. I , ,,, ,,, ..--,..,.. 50%0Ff ........ ~ ........ c;--7 ,,, ,,, ,,, "' HOME EQUITY LOAN FEE ~ L-...... -- ~ ~ r-~ . , I Brmg rh1s coupon mat umc ofloan applicanon,and you could save from $125 to $3.125~ I Or 1f you apply by phone.', ask the Loan Officer for redemption instructions. I I 1'..1mc.· ___ __.::;_ _________________ _ I Add re-.~ I I Branch I 1 IBIS OFFER GOOD ONLY WITH nns.couroN. 1 I R"r' >du.r , ,, pht•r " ·r r ot rh1 n•urun 11<"11 ~1ltd l.oen applicalKJn mu~ ht-~t1\·td hv I I Dlo..cmhn I~. IQ"(> •nJ ln•n funJrJ 1:1\ J.1nu~I"\ Xl l'ltf71'rPla co luaNonowntr-ottu~ rne• I ,it'Nt,•'lt•I-. \iav no1 ~ u~ "'''"'Jun.:ti.'ln ... 11hothtr Banko( Amnica H..>mt Equuy l.tioanolftf'< L--------------------~~ Gemng a Home Equt<y Loan at Bank of America is less ra.xmg than ever before. And Wlth rax changes JU~t around the.corner. now tS the nme to apply Bnng thi coupon m. and you could save &om $12 5 m $3.125. Add to this ou r urpru mgly low ratt"'l- and the fact chat you can apply by phone and get FIXED RATE VARIABLE RATE 10.503 8.753 ,, . .,., .. ,Ra,., • "'' ll 10.733 8.90% . \ nn answer in just one bu incss day -and you 've got mor~ than enough reason to come to Bank of America. Apply by phone at.J·800·1HE·B-OF-A, or apply m person. You've got nothing co lose. and plenty to save. IJ) Bankof America W! WiU1t the . ' it . J ... NEW YORK I AP) Nov. 4 AcJva11eed '1 ()e(lined ynctianged otatit,s~s Nl!W h ghs ls Ntw lows AMEX LEADER S Stock prices advart~ce EW YORK (a.P)-tocks rtto~ f'tom an yarl) \CIOO k and finished mos1l y h1&htr in awH trading TuCi(b)'. • _ Pm:c\ opcncd w11.b tcrcd-losscs .and ap~arcd the mar~ct·s recent adv.ancc would bt haltl'(j But prices 1umcd m1lcd and then moved ahe<id during the clo 1ng how T r:ldcrs s.iad stock and bond prtCCS irutiaUy c-amc und-.:r pl"C"~!lurc be-cause or rumo~ that the fir~t p;in of the Trcasur) 's S29 billion quartm) ~ d pt~m. • · Pr•" NEW YORK tAPI No" ~ Pr..,,,; u~ Ao,,anc9d Todam cs._,,, Oec•·l'ff Jjj . Unct1a"9t'd '31 To•al1uun 2i7 N1!Wtltgtl5 New lows 15 ,. I NYSE LEAOlRS N~W YORI( I A.Pl -S.les, • 0 m Oflct and 1>et ~"·~ of the 10 ~· tclj1re Ameroc11n Sroctt E •Chll"OS •UYfl 1r1cti ng n1 1ionat1v a l more and ,,., cllange of the ~S most aCl•¥1! Ntw VOl"k SIO(X ~ '""""' tract ng na 11onallv a l mor• 11\an SI Nam. tnan Sl Nam. BAT Ind AmTrEllt or Wicktt HISbf'O S Amdahl HomeGro Tr•asAorCo ~orlmarTel n cnoBav p en1rstSa11 GoLD QuoTES l_ - - - , METALS QuoTES Pl'l •a Ett c Ci()Od}'Hr US>X Coro AlldSlrs s Gen Motors HanM>n n G~lll!t AmEIPw Am Morors HuttonEF Ame< T~T Be,,er vs IBM CPC lnH Nat~• I Dow JoNES A ~£RAGfS NEW YORK CAP) -Flnel Oow•JOM\ averages for Nov • jtoc1111 °"" !1 Lew 0... m-lnO 118418 1 1173U 1m -, 8rrn J)'ai· ~m, •[$3' IS UI 10 1 111• 10 0° '5 sr~ u 51 ll u sio Indus lf, n~ J • U11 . ' •s's~" kii.m ·NASDAQ SuM~~R~ thz. G·9 from anglon:i qu1t4 ~tbly µ,rz. • parnz.ct. pcl<4t.. e ~\C U\ ¢vuy 11'\0n9 ...,ordrobz. eort., n,,in T1lprillc.nt ell· cot.t.cn shcil} with hghL-Mt1.9ht, tortl2n llni1"9, vqntAzd beck, • '1Kn1u.ad cutlS Ord bOU.om. thrt ~£C?PU-lm Wtnobn:okir <r:V<U" ' CALL 842-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE If CAWNQ FROM SOUTH ORANGE 540-1220 .. ...,., .. SAIL INTO $AVINGS 4 .lines,. sg \ "0 7 days ... ' .v ll'fl>a .. ,..,,, OHlY Ho "911 tl•I•, eo.-;c .. Automil0¥e IMllrtl Ott HIMp W.111..0 0 You can now ~II the D•lly Piiot Cl•••lfled Dept. on i•turd•y morning.from l:OO'to 11:30 •.m. ~o P.l•c• your Bu'nd•J •rid Monday 9da • o...i •.• .......... .:-"'. ............ c......,_-C....•-c--o.. ....... •'-· .. ,_......, ._....... ..... ...__...--.. ......... '-..... '-... '-........ ""'",......· _.,.... .................. '-~······ .__c..,._. CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5878 .... 1. ..... tllO llM ,, .. >•• tltO MISC. llNTALI tJOt t1'0t ''°' • 1111 • >m APAITMIN1S >n• 1m 1740 71•1 ,, ... .1" -······ '91AllCIAI. ._,., .. .....ON; ...... ....._w_ ---..0;, ........ .._..,,._ _,, ..... _,~ _....,_,,o,., PUBLICATION DEADLINE Monday ........... Sat. 11:30 AM Tu.day~ ......... Mon. 5:30 PM Wedneaday ..... Tuee. 5:30 PM Thur9day .......... Wed. 5:30 PM Fr1day ............ Thurt. 5:30 PM Saturday ............ Fr1. 5:30 PM Sundtly ............ Sat. 11:30 AM CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS T~Setvloe Monday-Fttaey 8 00 AM~.30 PM S.turdey 8:00 AM-I 1 :30 AM ~Count• Mondey-Frldey • 8:00 AM-5 00 PM 142.5171 ......... wa••Y ._.., ..... ......, . GAllAGI IAUI 61ot tla. t lOI ftAlllPNTA ..... IOATS . ••11 ti>• .,,. tl:M ~...,. .... ""'1 .... ~r;-_.;....-;,_..;.,...~.._- -VICI .... Cl .. Y . ·10 . .... tUI •I,. ••n .. ., ., .. ••• •111 Miit. ,_,,.,,. '->11¥11-__.,....,,_. AUTOMOTIV~ -i--. -~'"-" .--w--·-o.-... '~ v-_....,o.m ~ ,.._.._.... "-~ -.-- CHECK YOUA AD THE FIRST DAY The Ody PllOt atrt"99 for efftciency and accufacy. Howeo.w, ~ erron do OCCUt • .,...._ 11'1an wMn your ad II read beck and check your .ad d.ity. Aapof1 erron lmmedMnety to '42~78. The Deity Piiot accepta no Kabillty tor WI'/ error In an ~t f« wt*=h It may be re.poneibte except tor the cost of the epace actuelly occup6ad by the trror. Credit<*' only be allOW9d fOflhe mt lnJef11on. • IOIO IOI• ··~· tOIO fOll t010 ... '°" 9040 '°"' '°'° tlOO noo ~ · bal Ettltt Fer Silt Colli Mtu 102 na Cost1 Jllt11 2124 le.,.rt ltac~ 2119 Soatll Co11 t Mttrt C..t1 •en Ultlc.tti •en 2124 Cost1 Mt11 _ 2624 HHt. Buell 2'40 HtaJt1/Cta•t1 ..SR' 1 '"Bl close 410 haiasula 2107 ORAMA TIC Hst 3br Be1ul1ful custom hOme -2116 tBdrm ullls pa $525 mo aU llA•a GO(F COURSE VIEW lf1lla Wimer 18drm, 1B1 schootslsh(>pptng Won I 2 & 38drm winter & Yrly 2 ba Jog to bch Newer 38r " Oen 3Ba lols o1 JBA 2Ba Condo pool CMl>Of l, lnOry lac Go lo-~g spol~S$ 21>dr S600 unlurn 'OrPt1 crp~. ctatraJ 1002 I.st'• $127 500 Cora Agt Penmsula Aentets avt. 2 sty. X Int area $1250 high cethngs overloo•nng spa,1 r;uuo !'C balcony cation Sorry no pell ANRTIE•TS Reterenc:ea req d relrig d w carpart pool. •HUI YIEW lltlE * 548-6897 or 5"6-2313 v 1na Rentals 675-4912 646 1035 722·8477 pool $2500 Ag1 642-2 t34 :~~o~~ secunt; :383 w Bay 760 8083 P1:~dr~e;==tl0n room S40 69~6 ~ ~~fs5!/~~~;~~ 1211 Custom Hee 1 story 'Sil llfllHtt CllSl·OIT Corou 4tl Mu 2122 EtSIOE houH. nice quiet llC CllYOI COHO! 1BR IBA house wllront 1 Bdrm SS25 HUT ltCaTIO• Down • bau & • oce1n BROKERS WELCOME 3Br 2Ba. No pets rel s Lr"' 3 bdrm 2', ba w/r.AAJ. l uxu1y 281 2Ba Condo yard Close to be.ch &· 1 Bdrm $650 $695 u501mo 1BR lBA •II htHI lt1cll 2'41 , SPACIOUS 3BR 3BA frpl $99"tmo s 1300 ~ " . """" h $700/ I •" -views38r3B•• r1m&Loaded wt upgrades ,, .... ,. spa1enn1sandsecg11e. AIC WIO pool tennb. $Ops mout1111es S30 WW1lson bllnslnd.tyrm.nrbe•c:ti 28r 198 garege oceen spa Best •rea Nothing .1t1ese d1am111c 2 story 2' car gar 7 17 Ja9m1ne S48 0181 or 49$·8744 High c;e11tngs skYl!J1hlS saunn $975/mo Dys included 646-7739 :.omplet~y remodeled & ihops view nr beh ee.m c.ls hk• ll' Model home cond homes start al S 158 900 Availa17b1 1:, 7 1 60 111 881S.,15oo Exec Mesa Ve<de hm l g lormaJ din rm 4 wet bar . 638·040S t:"ves 73 t 7528 2eR IBA $700/mo $300 units Uke new CIQ.se to 741 w 18th St & ti•dwd firs No Lagune at SS60.000 (Incl land) Only 7 tell• Agt 548· 1329 ' · ~ 3Br 2ea frplc covered S l69Stmo Patnck/Sue A 1 ts dl'p gastwtr pd la buses shops & beach • rSl MGMT 642· 1603 $995i mo yrly 494.3044 HASTINGS & CO H It 1A,.O Charming 3Br 2Ba 3 hses palto 0 /W, 2 car garage agl 631-12661760-8702 JH •ta Lanne Apts 1838 Ptacen-TSL MGMT 640-55&0 Anytime• Ht. ICll -to CdM bch Lg FR & w / 0 p n, w / o 1 n c I ILUJFS lllCa 118 See mgr 548-2S62 642 1603 or· 722 90 12 MOYE 111 llOW , ::>CEAN VIEW1 Walk to ·-..... --... ·-Wlll31LISTllCll ~~~~g fs~~oo2 ~a~~I $l450tmo 979 7111 lBR2BA isry S12501mo lsl1n• 2606 •EASTSIDE2BR 1BA 'IUHllOWfur•,•·s•k ;~:e~ml~c;~~~s 1:~7;:· ~~:i~hd~:~r:i~~ut11~~~~ JBr conOo w/2 car •1• 12-3 Sun 12-S 216 LUXURV3br2b• Euts10e Avail lmmed No pets 18'R Ouplea. eeluf 3ar lndry rm Single or '4eal profess1on11 Busl· 1800 Pomona eluded $800 499 4124 COLDWC!LL BANl(eRO !ached garo,ge Only T h • .._ Old c 963 """"3 IO " 1 t o M 1-548 5056 .$115.900 Bkr 963•8377 Jasmine SI 759 9070 own ome r-r yrs all N~ ·c:uc:. SUPEA LG PVT PAT mdtr•eu CP e pre ness a.., • fSL MGMT 842-1603 SUNSET 0vef The Ocean Very deluH S 1150/mo SOTUEIY'S trpt· ~am ceiling $885 $650tmo 241·8282 agt u t •-L 1"~9 CORgNA DEL MAR Ville Rentals A 963 2160 968 t720 :LEAN l.,ge 18drm. new "lewer 1Br S57S 28r Stu010 ..$o Coast Hwy "twf!' -It•-Sbr~ba 2 Cir g•r 675-4912 IMTHHTIOHLlllULn OI • •HHIAIUJUPTS• carpels drapes spot· w lr19 S77S POOi 1ac Stove 1efr.g p•rk1ng no _._ ... ._ -.. Ill CUYOI CHHI $1650tmd, 556-8970 Pr ovate Stnglt v.1pa110 tBr & 2Br lr.g range less references req'd Clow to beh Avi tmme<S pets S67Stmo 499-2690 lrg 3 bdrm 2''> ba w/pool days 760-0895 eves MAKE YOUR MOVE Blutts 3Br or 2 • Oen. W3I~ 10 beach $600/mo 1aund1y pOOI c:arpOft ~o S475 546-6936 eves 867 w t9th St 645-1740 2659 TISTII Sll0,000 spa tennis ano sec gate lu• 2· sto1y S room tay.out 2 Ba Frptc 2 car ger s 6 o o sec u,. 1 y pets 5595 & S695 El,STSllf lll•M Newrrt leac~ Nestle<! In the hills H.gh ..celtngs skylights College ltke appeal 2br hs I 'y1d crackhn l1ptc $700 patto. comm pool S 1350 Owne11Bkr 675·9058 n I W 19th St 5'8-0492 n "lewport Heights uea 1BR wllar119 *k i patll- w mountein g 1101111 torm•I din rm & wet bar w/gar updated ktl $775 rent E ·S"'e or yr lse No pets 6-40-8606 -1ove q 1etrig trplc utilS 2Bd•m I 8alh pr1v•te mg space Cat ok. views th1s48Restateof&. "s169Sfmo Patnc:ll/Sue 539-~t9 lAgttee •Ut·lttl • Eastt>Wll t¥<Mm sn.rp & hlboa feaiu26•017a ~a~~,'18a~,s~izabas: l1at0~575tmo 646-0985 ~·~~ r:::~6f0;~ SC5951m~~: 6 s:;o 060 sec 5 ltrs sectus1on ag\631·1266760-8702 Hl.klORllCWYi1• Redone ond 1eady 4br clean 4BR2' BAdblgar Co1nOp Wuhert Dryer casa1111.•• red•IC·~ ...... elegance Pool uuna P 3 8<1 Frplc "'Gourmet 1ncld1den2baoltAdams lrp tg patio Sl600tmo '* * * * * * * 5700CAT OK 722_8011 •.}4E-"IEWPOAT VILLAGE and wine storage c~::c:~lt :;~ ;:~~1811~; Kitchen $2300 497-4213 $860 1111 539 619 t lse Susan 633 5907 S500 tBR Apt uhl pd WE'RE T BEST• APARTMENTS •• * * 21R l ~IA* * 544~1010 Ho99 3b0. 2ba $159 000 Modern 3Br 2Ba lrpte A.gt Ice EXCLUSIVE HARBOR 410 Harding BalbOa •2Br 2Ba Ni SC Pita SA F~~N~S~~~~~~~!1l PRES~~k' ~TION 3a1~ near Ho-cl No Agent 645-3683 Manny balconies & skylights "lice 18dim e•tra large RIDGE 3bd 2 bl 'lg 1 Adull no pet~ 547 1155 ~;,P~;~:IC PC:,~ :~ •Fr~ utilities 5 Bloclll 10 pets SH5 67S-64 11 CAPE COO'tONOO DUPLEX largeuntts 38r Avail Dec: $l300/mo yard stove & relng loll ,wtwet bar pOOlt 3BR 2BA DUPLEX Frplc: $i"S01'.IOPETS72280it •Spaoousl1vong South CoaslPlaza WOOdsy selllng close to 28• frplcs balcony 5 969-4229 Eves washer hkup 1 car gar-tennis.~ gate lrplc 2 dbl gar yrly furtMh or *~•kitchen •CIO~ 10 oc Airpo<t ,.~ C age pell olt. $595. decks.. S2.3-50Imo.. lsA.. >Anfurn1sh $ J300Jmo *BAY TIMBERS• •.Blt·tn ovens & range1 •7 MllWIM to a..cro ~ ..,....1er omm Obi garag~s $365.000 NEW3BR3',,BA TWNHSE S48 1498 997-9309 Agl Call MF 851·1 t84 Kim 67S 1771 or 760 J75S ::>uif't tBr frplc pool •P•t1os pool, ape, ltnn11 Tn-lovel OPEN SUNOAV 1-5 o/Vet bar 2 frplc:s dbl gar •Night Lighted Sand 2BR. 2 SBA w/v1ulted 718 IRIS 640-6213 No pets $2000/mo PHTRIDCE COYE Na· •tOR VIEW llOll Bachelor Unit 8 house. to patoo gsar No pets 3997 •Coveted Garaget V-0lleyball & Tennis Cris ceilings Ind 2 Y1eW decks Agent 673 5354 2b 2bl lrpl Id f "' ne n F U I N t & W Bay I $635 6S0-635 * POQI & BB0'1 •Pool Jacun l BBQ Subm11 on lse opt fO•ECLOSl•E Fl"E• · r w "• w :a~ Cod near astiion water n urn ewcrp · •Plush landscaping p n n " n carpel $950 240·39 t I Island 2BR den 2' .ea pa1111 Avl now• Yrly * LG 1BR newly re· •Covered ark1ng $226 000 631-1400 In Newport Httghls Ocean Co1t1 Mesa 2124 SHARP • CLE•N 2BOrm. condo pool tennis S4 50'mo 675 9229 c.lt'C..or.lled quiet pool no * Xlnl loeehon across •Cable TV Available VtlLA BALBOA CONOO view S250 000 Call •MONflCELLO TWNHSE o ,.. $ 7001 7 .. 9 14•6 pets $552 up 1994 lrom park •Rec Room with Fireplace Super clean wt2 m1tr su11 7S9 4830 GREAT WEST· JBR 28A. dbl enc Qar. stove, t car enclosed 1 mo " • .. HW IUILDlllli MOntoVla 548 .0336 •Sorry no pets and Billiards es lrplc & hied kitchen-ERN REAL ESTATE W· d hkup No pets 5930 garage $750/mo NO N THE-t'IEIGH.IS Charm-lbd 5650 no pets :365 W WILSON •Saun.s Guarded gate complex 979•1739 own/ant pell Call 548-1377 ing newly remooeled 3Br 102 E Bay Apt 6 •Mesa Ven:le 28r 1B11 IC2· 11l1 t BR f'URNt UNFURN I oot & $lo 000 [ T T • h 2 • upper new dee Of. dish-c N ....... t F & Bake w P sp& Cl J Sharp g cleen 28drm. ouse. ca1 garage orner ..... wy r down end quahhed buyer ! •PEllTRIHE COYE• stove 1 car enclosed $1,550 646-7241 Iv msg OCEANFRONT 2Br 2Ba. WHher locked gar• EASTSIDE 2bdrm unit Sorry No pets' can takeov9' e•uattng J • e11cellent locauon 28r g 1 , 1 g e N 0 Pe 11 LARGE prime 3br 2b1 reduced to S 1 tOOl mo S67S No pels 640-249S modern kitchen gareg1t (714)557 007S IOan $ 149.000 673.6900 ----2Ba Wshr/Oryr micro. sn5tmo 546.9950 winter S 1300/mo yJarly •Mes.I Verde d lu.c 2Br laundry p1111atl!' balcon11. llw,T .cll •• ir. 000 lrplc vaulted ce1l111gs 2 upp.-r duple• un11 ' blk Agt 75? 22?8 2Ba dshwshr gas kit $710/mo 240 3923 ~ICE WtSIOE 2 bedroom. - \.'\llHIHC"l 1141'11 .... ''" RE• E'>l41E r ... 1111.. S Cl C .a Jo bch frpl beam ce1hng, 2 batl'I, garage, gas plld Cute 1 bdrm conoo near car oar wtopnr Over •rtr 011 Ol•t !tie balcony wtsmall v•-STEPS TO BEACH t and l~ked oaraga. lndry rm EASTS•DE 2 BEDROOM S785 Cell Marc 17141 wer.tchtt Plaza Per feel streams & falls POOi & · 2BR BA lg patio 2 cir ot ocean $ l350tmo yrty 2 BR yearly ren 1 als S'750 No pets 640-?495 COTT AGE 650-3507 111, yOV""' couple ,..111ng 5Pd Great view $995 Avl gar $900/mO 786·3324 ?vlv.llnd 494-7728 wkdys Carpo1 I . no Pits •PfllT•IOC( COYE• 1 1 I 1 $750 .... .,. I 113 No -ts •u9 2••7 67 .. 32 t8 73 t 54•6 n 8 to s ove rp c :::HARP • CLEAN 280rm Slltfle<I Wl'ly pey.1ent'> ,...... ~ ~ .... rNnu pay mOfe 2·storv ,sk lot Judy 833-3650 .,. or .. 6;46-0988 ~ " "'O 00 2 3 , 2 $700 ., Eacellent loce11on 18r c1pts drps dshwshr • P&llW91C KEAi All UY Y1EW --------v N b1 t '>l>I pool bdrm ba l11ds sat NEWPORT SHORES 2t>O o/VATERFRONT yrty S 1600 2Ba Wshr Oryr. micro. aststde Duplex 3Br 28•. encloted garlg!t no pets Traditional 1>1ke to bch $965 '"" 53~ 6 t9 t Agt ,.. ?ba 2 car oar lease , yr mo 2BR parking pvt hplc vaulled cl!'lhngs 2 garao• washer/Oryer S670imo 64!>-SS77 Only $265.000' Includes pool spa, double MCUrity and best of 111 thui. bedrooms 2 bllhS 1wo last & cleaning Reis req roaatliD $1100 mo All new upper beach ntamkr p1et d, car 0a1 ¥</opnr Over l'lkup Vatd garOener Realty SS7-7 t62 alt 6 wkdays V•llt umt sundeck 557-4373 tels 675 3063 •trf'dmS & tanr. Pool & s975,mo 831•3646 • spa Grea1 voew S995 Avl 631-7370 CHIO X'lttt lff Nr aui-1 HGT~ Area Condo C.rtll ••I •11 2622 11 ·3 NO pet'I s,9 ?44 7 oaiconies & 11un<1ry room OCEHFROIT 4H 31l .,.,,,h v.asher/Ory•r ot re-zoned R 2 $569 ooo main C•ll to see the ~st 640 1'60~305 5,5 9586 of tl'le Vt!f Nlllft. ROGER BROWN 759-9100 ~------. . .... SAVE ON HIGH LABOR costs and buno II your- Acrup 1125 1 8 Acres' ?ast grOWlng Pem1• Apartments? Just S49 500• Terms• John Denver Really 657 ·5118 Elie& 244-400 I : A 170 self No down payments R I Ouahty pre-cut materials _e_a•.•-•------ Step by step Instructions ~Hit St Co ados [ Call 101 details or •tttnd I - -~-Oz tree Miles Home"I Sem1n 1er1 _s. 1a~ C•n 11141 s2 1 1434 -.-W-P-f-.-.. -.-Tt-lll_l_H_S_E_ Ti• of ll•t lllt FUll Y FURN & BEAUT so of bay fron11oe 144 BAYFRONT 6BR and depth Probate Bob fabulous $'4500/mo Ceuston (7141851 7720 Or WEST NWPT 3BR 2BA. 673·0354 Steps to IX:h $1050/mo OCNFRNT beaut 48R lully laJHI furn home $2500tmo Pnlasal1 1007 IWPT·YRLY HllTaLS S925 38d 1',B• gar 3Br 3S. tri-level 2 car 644 7589 Iv msg school market & frwy encl gar catport no 1111, HUT FOi U•. Costa Mesa Twnhm 3BR frpl ltke new comm pool ~fOSS ~ Pilfk S 1000 Wate•hon1 Homes Inc 131· 1•00 L<><*•no l<>t • •nend? Find t11tersotcm1e~111ct:iss1t1ee1 St 150/mo • 9eC dep incl pet~ $1300tmo lstllast grnd1 No pets 848-3479 $300 dep 650·2529 AVAILABLE NOW• 5850 ·mo 640 4255 Haat. ltacll 2140 ;)II Jamboree 3br yrty 2ba ~-'!!"'"-!'"'""-~--g1r gourmet kttch s102 •OCEAN lllEW• From upper dacit fltew 18r 1 Ba spa F ng r angfl 111 ullls tncl S1175tmo 423 B99onia 646 21 11 lBr 1Ba clean v.cant 539-6191 Agt fee Enclosed garage K1d1 ok Close to beach H001mo 962-447-1 •OCEAN VIEW• IBR tBA Ouplex upstairs ' block t o beech lBR 2BA. 2 encl pkng. bile $850/mo 673·9013 Wetlchll 48drm. 2')Ba, newly remodeled & franch doors. lg Inca Y" 3Br 28a •YI 11120 S 1100 $2200/mo 63 1 -2966 mo ' New paint. crpt, k1lchen & floors Grdnr & waler pd 846-85 tS '-LL NEW crpt floor paint 1ns1de & oul 3Br w/lam rm, lrplc lg ya1d. dbl gar $97Stmo Kida & pets ~ 863 069 7 or 863· 1600 BEAUT new tBr Condo. galed rettrement comm PlllO lndry hk up. avail •mrned $575 no-851S L11aa1 leacll 2141 LIVE I• a CASTLE to ocn. 'lrJy S 1350 S700 . 28R I BA EXEC OCEAl\IFRONT sec Ullls paid No kitchen condo 38r 2BA. Vrty S 1700 Must See• ref rig micro opuo~al ClHERY RHTIL 708 Avoc1do 675 52 ~ J R lllT llC. SPECTICIUlll OCEH I lll·CIOI tr 111·1113 tiY VIEWS Sleps to ocean Cute Cozy YOl IHHYf m Bachelors & , BO rm "ATEO VILLAGE COM localed tn unique 1pt * SllHP I ClW * 18• stove I car encl gar SS20 No pets 546-9950 • TOWllOISLnPI * 2B1 1' Ba garage patio 3033 C Coolidge $715/mo 432-7767 55SO • • Month Free Rent So Coast Plaza orea 1Br, ail lenced pool. carport No pets 546-8791 IHTHTI• 2Br I ' .ea 1wnhs Eslde loc Pool gar lndry rrn S74S 2310 Sont• An1 fSl MGMT &42-1603 £ SIDE 2bd lti. ril 1271 w dry1 hllu.p rangf', gar. adults n/pets H95 • $695 WC 751-6190 D 548·5169 eves _ SIOE C M ? !Ir, ger $695 t Br cottage house $635 2233 Orange Av "lev.ly dec:o1a1e 637·«1594 E'sill1 f11r1 lu..11ltw •or NEAT. n-amkr prot. business male 5419-5056 fOP AREA quiet no pets \4ESA PINES tBr !Ba :1rpor1 enCI patto 'Jr balc:Ol'IY S6 10 up POOL 1pa bbq S49·2<t4 7 Jnlurn1Shed 2Br 1Be wtw crpt bOtn r•nge, oven dlw Ger paoo S725 Otc 9~7 2~5 Res 759-5•84 Haat. lt1ell 2840 SEAWllD VILUCE 2 Bedroom 2 S.th 2 c:ar garl19t! Sletn 10 beach $' 100 ·m o P"roperty Hous.e W -3850 •LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT )Br 2Bil "" d lrplc <f>vt oeJCll tennis pet Ok S 1800 mo yrly 675 7687 )Bdrm. 2Ba. ,., bile 10 beac:tt Oeearr"""'· new crpt s •vall now-i S 1100tmo. 67S-4912 l !!t 2Ba. garage. sunoecle . tireptace 1 block to beacn S 1360tmo yrly CALL &44·6800 '.>uPle• aC)l furntShed Wtn· ter rental $700tmo 122 25th St Newl)Oft BNch 12131697 1505 =ASTBlUFF Townnoute Apt 3Br 2Ba 2 Cir gar No pets S 1025/mo y1 IM 6-44-1010 ()I 760-7037 Alte• 'ipm 0t WknCSs !.IBlutt pnme 11ea 2br 2 ba nu ren dee, encl gar wlloprus no pets St 050 • sec dep 47.5-0008 ~ ~3$ ~•rge B.cl'lel<>t unit 1 block 10 beach Ex11eme ly clean Avail I 115 S49~/mo yrly 549-4239 \4alure adutl 2Br 1 ·~a. 4- Plew 2 s1ory, garage, $800/mo 111 • sec Nr <Hoag Hosp Ev/Wlendt. All, Agl 835-3558 'lewl)Ofl HelQhta 28drm IBa garage laundry pOOI Wale< & gas paid $700 & $725 650--8213 HWPI T MARl•a &PTS E1e9an1 wi1ertron1 1911 281 28a & 2Br 2Ba · den Miero dlw, lrple, ~rege, PM t>Cn ~teS0-$2595 boat slip avail SOfry. no pe11 760-0919 ,a••LHS -u PT o/VEST NWPT 3BR hm lrpt -r" • • dbl gar S t350/mo Fllllf HIE. DOVER SHORES 48R rNrde ocean viev.1 ~t1te llvong on· acre ot g1r- MUNITY 2·38drm 2' •Bl c.omptex wlcharm1ng II· 1600· 1800 sq II ol mospherc lnOry rm, lg PURE LUXURY G11ege sunOeck, prvl garage SPA in mastef suites available A RARE FINO! Dining room. woo<! burn-$600 $850/mo No pets 1ng f11ej)lace m1erov.1ve 675 0447 WMY HT CALL 30fgeous oc:Nnlront 2& IH·l 111 2Ba • Oen Stove, crp11. 4 Bdrm 3 81. 3 cir g1reg1t r1m1ly "°!"8 S2250 mo I House From Ocun PENINSULA 2BR furn PL.AVA RE 673 .. 1900 SltPl IO ouan $900fmo -. C 1022 COSTA IHA THIE ortal ••I Mu JBR trplc I.tie new comm 30x 11i r2 lot Older 2br pool s10001mo w!ba a bec"91of ¥r/bft, Wllerlront Homes Inc 43& Carnatrort. S210 000 la 1·1400 499-2101 ........ ,_ ._... 011 NtWPOfl 2br 2ba kid• 1At .... pegp19",cleMlf_, 0 1' eaay d•P $575 l*pyO\iwrltaanad th•twtN 539 6191 Agt tee ~~ l' StU y.., p,.,,,.,1 Cal CluttfW, "642 -5671 for information & surprisingly low cost. 512--Make 1 c:h•lcl 1 quilt wnn callOO baby 1nlm•I• ~ to eectl block Dtrec11on1 pattern PiecM, deta for 52ll7e· quirt Each pattern S3 2S ptua 75c l)OStaQe handling Y ... lil .. llJI ..... ,....,.., s~ ,.... ..... ,..1 .,, ......... ....,; .. ,1117Mll ..... ..... _ ......... .... • Ocns p()Ol ' ~· CIOM to bHCh 2Br, 281 S 166 H mo 1nc:1 u1111 494-4653 or 494-GOH •••r•• h1eat 211t NewPQtt ShOres gotgeous 3Br 2B•. all •~1hea. ocean view, new crpt Upper Duplex S1250 v 1111 Rentals 67S·4912 2131H"MIS NO F{E TO TENANT 29 St 2/1 S950 tip. nice Ctubhou 212 S92S 2 gar 30 SI 312 St 150 2 ger tp VILU RHTALS lll·'912 o~n prov1te patio ~ liry 28R :!BA ~plex ELEGANT LIVING only untt wl lrplc:. shr git ·wlO t5 minutes 10 Fast11on hkvp So or nwy. tsl•nd. IS m•nutes 10 So s 1195/mo Agt 673-~5" Co • Plaza 1us1 east ot Newl)Off BlvO & south Of NEWLY DEC 1p1c1ou1 San Oi~o lreeway 2473 3BA 2BA. trpl. gar, Cleek, Orenge Ave 631·S439 grdnr. wel11 10 ~ 'h & By DQPI Ollfy shopt $ 1450 759.3092 In Clt•Htt 2175 Ctst1 Mtaa 2124 N San Ctern Every1t11no turn Avl now• S87S/mo No prepOld 1a11 (818)5750111 1 BDRM $495 APARTMENTS • MINUTES FROM THE BEACH • 1 & 2 BEDROOM FLOOR Pt.ANS • MICROWAVE & REFRIGERATOR • UNDERGROUND PARKING • CLUBHOUSE & FITNESS ROOM •POOL& SPA • PRIME LOCATIONS STlll AVAILABLE Open OOITV from 9om 106 pm .. SE'wl.I Vllutl!E Orps No pets Yrly rent.al w $1450/mo Call 675-0447 15555 Huntington Village Sfl01A11$ &PU-If L•ne from Sen Chego ..,,.. •-FtHWly notlh OI e .. ch 1 mile lrom beach to McFaddttn v.es1 6n 642·2357 Mcradd n Steps 10 t>Ncti 28' 18& ~ •• ,.ri~ec1~·ae1=.~,o=,=ft-kt-1i.-yrly S8251mo rrptc new ovv ii comm•n<1ulotot er"'' Dsnwshr, W/O ;JltMl•Of\ (213)718• 1041 ' . ..,., ..... ~ ZMt Mak th Move to the w. Park wport QNE MONTH FREE RENT • · Mak l.M ..art mtve &t Put Newptn, Nt..-Ptrt Bu~'• Jrtllltr l•••l'J M4ra1 . Ftra1At4 ud ufa~ 11 t, ' a bdroem 1partmnta ... lewMMttt oety mJa11t1 lrotn NtwJOrt Cattr •841 JPalllta hlaW frtca UH to Slltt. • Jambortt && SU J08411a H11l1 RM4 (714) 6'M·l90CJ .PARK NEWPORT. # .. . I . . lady w/c. to Cite fOf .. derty lady Hou,. & salary nego11able 644-4417 •hat 5pm Woman on Soc;&u Secut1ty thal • wanll lo -"' my hOIM wielditfly tiaMll· cappe~ woman. lite l\sekpg RAii• 962-1711 •Hical?Dtital Sl OS New• uN1T BUILOlNG 2 PorutoRs . 111 087 W 19th St C M SIOfeS Of Oles 600-3000 9 30am-6 30pm M·F ~ Sq Ft Agt 541.5032 cep1ion1st1back olc & Piileblaid• up heJpful, Sil I Ill LIME llWNIT OUTll dei>end1t>1e, gooo ~ 1026 W P.eltic: Coast Hwy GARDEN VIEW OFFICE etill Call Ric:fl 14.,_.403 NewPo<l 8 .. ch Rettig TV 10 •13 unturn $400/mo lllT&l IYllUllT S 135 •wk 'Vf. no depostt C.Jf Garry Rue Mt· f412 Pteasam ~~ ~ Vnatlta ltJtah NR o c AltPo<f area. nyg1en1s1 for 1.2 oeys I* 2122 atrtum olhce 225 sq It wk Plene can 640· t t 22 --·-----""--iant 1. ulll, IOI• of parlc. 91G 8EAR CABIN large, ng mo-mo ok 452-9368 Front/Bec:tl, busy Chris· pOOI table, colOr '"· 2 llatT Ped oteJOrange 4-S ltplct 5*p1 14 .,, .. ES, ... SH... dys. eall benefits Eaper 714 5-45--6916 E 17th St CM Remodeled. prel'O but will train S pvl. • tbl al e. paoo The some Laur .. 639-9545 leatah •• ... .. Doyle Co/Rich 122·1602 PIT eou, .. Clefk 2·7ptn -----~-!'!'!2R7P!'l4,. Off~ ..ith ad)IC*lt MC· Matute dependable I*· : • NWPT 8CH OCNFRNT retM'ial 1t11iornn upstus son GOOd driving tec:Ofd Working n11mkr fem olloU i>uild•no CdM IC>-6'0-0140 wanted 10 stw 38' apt tah<¥1 S600fmo · -"•• CJ • ·'/Ol'"""t=·--.•400 $450 Ind uflll G31·A752 uflhttel C.11 ~tween tnc.. act ~ •ITIPITIUll* • ~11,e clean! N B 4bd "9e $325 mo MS-9969 9am to Spm 7'60..fial ._...... ... Tll m --Time tor a Changel Full -n•" _. "~ · c:tw'ge boold1eeper. ·men Fuft MrV<e otflCI' -2 yrs ••S* V•y light Newpott Center &40-5470 tY1)1t'g Call fOf info (7141 2 bdrms 111111 S275 a Unique targe bayfront Ap-67S-01SO, Belly, M·f .J-5 ~ MC LO IUlldedl-ptOll 2.400 sq 1t · 1000 ~t Beach M2·2614 °' SAM65A · 141 fl outCSOOT deck. lCCHIT• GUil Salboe Island • Clean 11· 12500 mo l7 t 4~32-0653 Data Entry entry level Pc)t. tree 28R ti>t MI F 25 •. Ctaaercial PrtJtttJ mon 10-Key 111.p heloful non-smllr, ''" wt 1 I*· znl Win train Circle K Cor· son $385/mo 675-7243 PQ<ahon (7 t4)6A2-7702 a.tt>oe ISiand ntsmllr lhr 38t 281 apt. '' gtrage, S.00 U1tls & ,.,, last ~ "dep A111\I nowl 673-1378 eorona del l.411 o;:;e; In I ·hi• time opportunity MacArlhur and CoHt Hwy fH simple re1111 & othee Prime adver1t11ng ' :AsM F_,,,llo shr aunny and Identity loe1uon 3bf 2be w/IOd.Ck w/O, o· .. nert user bulldlng 11or1ge sp S433/mo Incl okay A• tenant• mo to uttl & cable 780 5412 mo now Can eloM ptiOf ,._ Tn' .. ~. s110 ~ to tst ot year Onve by -• 1n -2333 ~ Coast Hwy ?rof F, n-smk. Poot• ten· Please DO NOT conteci n1s 720-1770 Jonn mag t~a1111 Cah Gus Char· :M 6 mo old TwnhM M/F r0tl(714)M5·5363totee pr~y Out ot stat MA AGER 23•. n-smk ''" 3~ o~tre.itor w1P IOOk 11 2' bl Jae. wl dry S500 1 11 ollers $875.000 uttls •ncld 722-0702 c rtesy to f>rOlc•• FOf CORONA 0£.L: MAR l1nanc1al det1•ll call cOl-1;;;;;iiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~:-_s,;=A:::;d;f.~ Ei.g1nt, Great h6f'ne IO< lect (808) 171-IOOO. man Avell•b~~;~~ l14a1tri1l Z111 c aoo aq " light mfg & of· etn 2~-..35 lht belut 38' 2 ftee wtparktng Loading Wy NB twnhse Xlnt 10C area Alr~t location ~I~ ~7= rec...,':: 54~:~ or 790~ _ ire MALE ahr <>e.an front I a ct• t Pt•• tr t f home rn Newpo't a-.acl'I 2lH ssoo •uhl1t1et n2:.c>38A l'X. 11T Tl Fii JO Yll Of 642"4806 NWPT BEACH DUPLEX Nine Male nlsmkr stir OWC w/20% dovm Both OrangetrM Condo W/O, units 2BR !BA wllr~ tenn11 pool saun•. WALK TO BEACH & BAY S375tmo Dan 65 I· 1957 Call now Bill ot Donne l ag Bch ocn Vlellt 3BFUBA Webster 631• 1268 hm • Oen M/F 30-40. smkr ok A11t 1mmed S4SO • •.; uh 497-3980 LOOt<ING for outgoing male 10 -'1r stylish 2 "°'>' la1l1n1 I Fiaaacial l'IOuH S312.SO AYlll now' 631-65"1 aft 5 1•1.-... --,.-.. -,---- "AIF 25 • Badl Bly Conde> o,,.rtuity 2ttl Pl·!IC·ten AVAIL NOW • -. Lile ll'Mr olil $375 , S 150 ::OUNTRY BOY NEEDS des> N~n 645-5123 HELP' 4 year Old RV Center mutl e11p1nd' i.AIF to 11\r 3bf CondO nr Prosp«tu1 avatl M.-e O C C furn , tav11dry fae yout lotig 111m SSS WOfl( $3$0/tno • uttl Avall m the great north...at now 751·7757 (2l>e)892-0N7 ~ 8 C1oM to beach Shat• 18r 281. trple. pOOl.1ac. 2 Aaat .. c .. tatl uir 9at ptrtlll tum $550 •aat .. ctlltlfl fin 'nO AVAii. Now 548-$890 " •SPIRITuAL 1 PSYCHIC l'fO IOl>ICCO Ptof .,,, 3Br READINGS Palm end • cl9". 2•.;Ba Tustin card tead1n91 ev11table condo w/ 1 SA251tno uflll Natt0n••lr renowned PIY· p.i<t 669 9420 chic, 1oc: 1 & he d 19 yra OCEAN FRONT P.rl'I 2bd. Sat1sfacuon Ouar1nttee1' 2ba. gor Orf!ll 1po1r 4~2·7291 ot 493·2054 1-495 • MCUrlly Avt Now! t7S·•st0 Garr I.Mt I Fta .. ...... Lac ... Home. n•lll'lllr S425. 49-i., 154 f(lfl)ADS ARE FREE Cit. $2.40 per day Tl'tel s All you PIY fOf 3 hNS 30 oay m1n•m\Jm 1n the -SERVICE -DIRECTORY CAll TODAY•! All Fiii LOIS YOl.lt SflfYICe Directory Representative ••2-4321td.310 Beauty • Wanted Pro- ted&Onats only Stylllt & Ma.nic:urrtt ~ing pos.. 111on m protessoonll htgt\· ly mottvated 1110n Flat mOlllhl'f l ... 171 61-47 CASHIERS • FIT Gta..,._ yard. 12prn.e1m 10< Sef. Y1Ce Station ALSO GIS '511t1on Anendants M~t nave Od allltU<Se & dnlt• to earn 96~9512 F V CISllEI WAITll ,. T wlc dll'fl', c:lll Blrbara l0t appt 540-3280 ClllTU .. L PIT Ot FIT. BEACH CLEANERS 2 t t2ll Beac.h SIYO, Hunt- ington Be8't>. Corntf of OPENINGS NOW AVAii.ABLE CAI lllTES HIRE 1hrough cl.Jssified . SMtta Cent, t.ae1u Hiiis, llMI Huntington leach CWtllfl City IS Ill l'llllOn I lafOlll rttJilef cl lltlnd name VidtO 1udl0 w n maiior eippiiancas Due 10 I tttmtltlOou$. lllcflUI Ill l>uSlnUS we cur ntly flM 100 POSITIONS AVAILABLE • 'ReQullf & Seasonal fuillime & Pan Trmt I I • . CIO Of1ft19C..QM:YPILOTIWldr11111W ...... 6,11M j HAVE A NEED? ... , ,OIC~t11 • Alll>I 'IUVROU r lhth .. 1 Q\.elil11 .... ,, " c;., ... c .. ITll UH #OrtM I ""' U\ f {••O I tt .. 11 N"""'c"' Buch f::2YOUUS # . I . IN U.S.A. lAllCtSl INVlHTOJI ON JH( WlSI 'cOASI OOY lllOO(L l COlOlt .. CAU.TODAY I ,1 )I TH' I 1tJ"'' 1 t· . J' /1 .• t ~ . I ~ j ~ • ~ .. " , ~ I ' ~ . ' ' .. . . j / 1 l i 842 2000 I ~BUICK DEALER·r 1.AAGfST SELECT'ION of, ••• rnodeC. low,,..... Ctdillaa In Of_,.,.' CcM.anl'/' S.. UI tocltlyf 540 -9100 1600 Har bot 8Jvd COSTAMf.SA ---- WI llf 11.&. IAlll USEDCARSt TRUCK5 COME IN OR CALL F'OR Fiii UftllUI. HHO DOR I ROBINS o.t..ILLO •ttllllt'I IU' ~, PLYMOUTH '72. HOG fOAD 11Aifl\• •ii It .1 '1111 BEACH BLVD oeo. $50·4101 HUNTINGTON BEACH ---l1 ,. !," ,,.,., " . J, 11< _._._l_· ... ~~l_a 14~1-·1_1_1_1 __ ~~------~--t~J~~~~. gt .. ,, tow mllet S2300 080. M0-22~ °' 6'S-5601 Tht• bu~ le con· cluci.d~MtnOMdl* °'*''"' BUfchel fh&a ... ,.,,...,..,_..., .. llled- .,, ... ,,,. County Ctetll ot Or· r.J: County on October 21. Faaa. Publ"'*' Orange Colet Oaoly PllOl NoWmbet 5 .11, 19,26 198& W4<15 _,,, .......... ........ ,, --+-INTO SAVINGS The DillJ 1'111t hos o ~w woy t~ tum your Hidden T ntm\l,.S into CASH with o S?.00 Clouified Ad. ,. $9 OO wlth • prepaym~nt 4 Lines_;..7 Days--$9.00' Nectt.,....lftcepywceM.-.t ieft. Pri1101 pon1t\· only. No Con1merclal, Real btote, Automotive, Booting °' Employm nt Ads. Th r• 11 no pnce lim1t 10 what you con 0011ert1se. U you need 10 seA '(OUf couch, high chOir or ony unused merchond1se-coll the Doily Pilot Clouified staff or use tht coupon btlow. • Moll to1 OC:iily Pilot, 330 W. 90y St., Cos10 Mieso, Ca 92626 ~ . 642-5678 _________ ...,_ ____ _._ ........ ~~ NAM~--~--------~-=--=---------~ PHONE-_.. ...... _1 -I AOC>lf!i·------~----~~~---------------- CID _____ .,.~-...... ...... ---LIP ___ _ • .. CARNESABROSA ---(Beef or Pon u40DJoa) 1 ~ poudl cuter cat beef c~ack rout-or porll 1~ollldtt r'81& .1 ~ qaan1 water S ollloa1, peeled and 1Uced 3clovet1arUc, ml.Deed i tabletpoou Extra Spicy 1e.uoalag blend Boneandcotoffall fatand&r1stlcfrom meat. Cut meat into 1-mch chunks. Refrigerate until ready to process. Place bonesand water in ltAJZOON PIMIENTA VERDE ~--~· (Cen ... Peppen l q•art1 nt fresll eera hweet l'ff ,.,,en, deued ud claopped i sweet srea peppen, cleaaed ud c~.,,ed lc•p~1,.e•..ioa i tabletpooU Lew PepPer·N~ Gar Uc 1ea1on- ta1 blnd h Combine-all inarcdieots and cover with water; bring to a boil Pack mixture into clean hot jars, leavina I-inch head space. Pour cooking liquid over.veaetables, lcavma 1-mch head space. Add boibn& water if more hqu1d is needed. Remove air bubbles. Adjust caps. Process in prcuurc canner according to manufacturer's directions. Yield; 6 pllltsor 3 quarts. Serve as vqetable, 1n soups. casseroles. SALSA DE TOMATOES Y CHll.IES (Toma tees ud c.t1J Peppen) I quits peeled, dlopped tomatoes 4 CWP.! c~opped MJoas i lar1e pea cM.UI, cleued, seeded and Ql"ed . 4 teupoou Lemon and Herb 1ea1onln1 blead • • In large pan, combine aJl ingredients and cook over low heat unuJ thickened (about I V2 hours)~ Stir mixture frequently to prevent stickina. Brina toa boil. Pour into clean, hot · jars, leaving 1h-inch head space. · Add 11'2 teaspoons distilled vinegar or lemon juice tohalfprnts\ I tablespoon to pints. Remove air bubbles. AdJust caps. Process in pressure canner according to manufacturer's di~onnt I 0 pounds press- . (Pla.e see FIESTA/08) r Ther e -may be mQte-than o~e way to Cook Cia:tJ ... .. but crab cakes seem to be this country's favorite B7EJ.AJNECORN 1111111C:bll'J ............ Back before crabmeat cost $18 a pound, no one gave much thought to turning the precious meat of. a then-undepicted crab population into fried patties. The best ones were served With tanar sauce and some brew, and usually could be found any place you'd find seafarers or seafood lovers. Nothma fancy, . except, some would say, the crab meat. Today, crab cake have fancy the haven't used yet. 'Humble in origin but s1z.zhng in price, the cakes seem more at home alongside a fruity Chardonnay and a small vase containing a sinJle, budd1na rose. Modem chefs, all too happy to oblige a clamorin& for crab, have Cornish .hens plum delicious If you've shied away from Rock Comish hens because you didn't know exactly wliit they were or how to best prepare them, wc·ve aot the answers. With today's popularity of poultry tt's urprisina that these tender httle hens arc so often overlooked. Corrusb hens were developed from an old English brcCd of small domestic fowl. These youna. petite bltds, about one and a quarter pounds each, arc JUICY and tender. And. they're c pcc1ally aood routed and aJazcd. Although Comi h hens taste much like chicken, Utty'rc not very flavorful on their own. Thttcforc, the bome « nomi LI 1t the Kik- koman Kitchen recommend bru h1na both the 'kin and the cavities libctaUy with sauce before and dunna cookina. All_you nttd for these· hvcly Plum-Glued Hens i plum jam, naturally brcWrd soy sauce, orat:'&C juice. llrl• and n1se. Crushed antK • usuaU)· relcpfecl to wcrt pa ti) rec I I prt>vidcs I p~t the little cakes on thc;ir 1.fUSty regionaJ Amencan menu~ and charged us accordinaly. · From Mid-Atlanuc beginnings dabng to the early 1800s, crab cakes were made with the lump meat of Maryland blue crabs. Today, they're being made across the c.ountry with wbalever crab avails _ i~lf .... and they're enjoying a certain celebrity on both coasts. Find them with little troubfe tn San Francisco at Fog Ctty Diner, served with a bitey, sherry-ca~enne mayonnaise: at Stars, where 1f the kitchen can't &et fresh Dunaencs , blue crab from the East is flown in instead. At Campton Place. where they're gussied up Wlth bitter curly lfCCnS tossed with duck drippinss and duck cracklings and a p1cy tomato remoulade. Samantha's, a San Francisco restaurant ma.km& one of the bigcsi runuu:rab.Q l between 800 and 1.000 a month. So common are the cakes in New York City that they've become a point of reference, as in "salmon ·crab cakes:· which ·do not have crab. · park of hvcly flavor' fhat edd to the diatinctive and plcasina wie of the sauce. • Bastina not only cnvtloPCS the hens with outstandina navo!,, but also produces a beauufully nch. btOnz.e &laze. This ls an c~ntl ea y :cntrec • After all, except for people who claim to be allergic to it, who doesn't lilce crab meat? "tt•s unbelievable they pay the prices they do," said John Turn- acliff o~ Sacramento. "It's like developing a .iaste fOr·caV.ar. Onec~avc-lt, people will do anything to get it." The getting of crab is going to get better by this month. The tra- ditional season for Pacific Dunge- ness crab, the prevailing crab of the that'i idc.al for the no~1ce a well a the aourmct. PLUM-GLAZED HEN • 4 ' r~ ., ,,... 1tect c.n1n .... , ...... 11 ,..... us, *•-'tu tnaea tep~-J·• ' West Coast, bc&Jns the second Tuesday 1n November. Depending on how the season sha~ up, the opener can float to an earher or later date. Th~r. N<>v. l J 11.target.edAS the day crabs will begm to be harvested in hmited~tal1u-ea of California. By Dec. I, the rest of the coast should have open season, Tumachff ~ys. Prices should drop from $4.50 a pou11.d for whole crabs to $2. 75 to ~ n, aataratly brewed ">' M9ee 1 &Ml•••• or Jake I cl .. a prlk, ,res ... ....... MIHHM.C:fUW Remove nd dintd gtblet and (Pl M COR!'fl H/07) ' $3.50 a pound, and from as haah a $18.99 a pound for fre h bulk meat to about S 12 to tl 3 ·a pound. But any pnce decrease is offset by an outlook for disappointing crab landmgs. Tumacliff pomts to over- fishing and the possibihty of pol- luted waters ·in some areas. lf it looks like there will be a shormge; be satd. "the season wtll' be cut back. It will stan later and end earlier:·~1t usually runs through June. Those with bouts of indulcence- gratificatton Wlll find a way lo have their crab cakes and cat them, too . On the West Coast, they'll be made from the spiky, s~ccl, tender meat of the Dungeness crab for which the season peaks in Novem- ber and December The most expensive form of crab meat is precooked meat extracted from the shell. But..1he.&ho1 • at lel!M «> anyone with a fe tish for frc hncs • is the "Cancer magi iter" -.alive and w 0 c-:- Bc<:au lw ~- handled mtensivety. unpacked im- mediately, and kept in tanks, it exists roclusively in selected lo- cations, includmg some stores that cater to the gourmet. and some I A ian markets. The next op:uon u Whole, precooked frozen t>unaenes.s. avail-. able all year Since il's ready to eat, have your fish rctatler crack 1t for you, or <!o it yourself (set instruc- tions). · · Cocktail crab claws have ta¥d on some meaning as bar Jood, the perfect, appetii~r that comes Wlta somethmg you can grab-the claw. Crabs are de·<la~cd from one side at a ume. Then they're returned to the water. where the rema1nJn&claw becomes larger. and the missma one irows back. The same procedure tS followed for crab legs. In addition to Dungeoes.s crab, the West Coast also grows A.Iuka snow crab, a sweet. dcltcate, snowy white meat, and the fonrudable At.ska king crab, witb its beefy. jo1cy meat etched along one side with red. . If it's real crabmcat you want. beware of nearly convincing im- posters. Anytime you sec crab salld __ .... semn1 for less than $ a pound. "YOU'rc probebly-buymg sunmi. a fish product made from an anetent Japanese method for prcssin& ocean white fish into Iona cigar (Plea.e eee CAKU/03) Raisin 'yout]] fitness new goal of 'Cosby kid' • ' . Tradauonal ~~cu1 ind not ~yknownhett, but 1t ma) harboca attnd of the near futurt since at fitull cn.m. u to what mllkrs food the popWirau 1nerourante. lihtrcare the httle surprises in Plfttt!&ation and iaste that touch a ne c:Mrd0fapprecia1ion. and there are ·-.. daat blvencvu surfaced bcfort" iaeommt~ial kitc:hc-ns. J• f1F1 Cue A1tbethiid L'Ell.pttSSrestaurant isopeninain LosAn&cles. which lcatureuupert>Basquccui inc. weaskedpastrychefPamclCompa to lharc a recipr. . AlthO~ this recipe is a httlc Iona. tt 1s not reall) rompJicateJ. Compu sugests usina thi\ tortt for hohda) entertain in& or &ift ai~ ing. L'EXPRESSCARAMELWALNUT TORTE : l ~ ~ fl!119"1 flMr l Mi ••• , ... sru•l•te4 .. ,.r buttCredandtlOuredspnna-tOrmcakemoad.PrtM~Wlthfl.,..so that at adheres tow sides ofthC' pan. Refri8'fate JO minutes. Roll a 9.anch circle with tM remainina doup, placi 11 on a P'itce of "u. paf)trorplasticwrapand refri,eraae. ln,wa .. r Caramel .. Snfl ........... ...., . I :::=.~::=:=u . . .. • Combine ......,.,nca water iri a heavy saucepan over low heat until tiapri1dill0lved.Slirri111can11an&1y. turn he9111p1nd brinatoa boil until the sy(Up racbcs • lithl c:aratncl (pale IOidn)color-abOut' l 0 to l S minutn. Remove from heat and saircouwady tor I .S minuteS while addins thC'ctama linleata tame. Stir in tAe wnuts. Pour caramel fillina while warm inao the lined pan. Brush over-hanaina pasuy with water. Cover caramel walnut fill ina with the 9-lnch pastryarcle.Cuuslit in thccentctofpaatry aad bake in a pre-heated 3SO. dcartt oven for 30 to JS minutes or untiJIOtden in color Gently release f'rOm pan and invert onto a cake rack. Allow to cool font least 2 hours. ............. •. ~e.,..ate41H1Uer , . ~teGlue .. ... . ................ ~ .. ~ . • •21.4 • mu' : •' • ' • . • ' • • I • ----=~Cf'M8 • • , • ' ' a e ncm1xcrbeauogc1 er sa t supra maoutterinsmiJr-Meltc oco te1naoouT>litioilei'overlo\WfiCat. Stir an whipping l •picca.Addegand milk and beat fora few seconds more.Add tlourallat cream and beat in thcblendriorfoodprocnsoruntil thick and shiny. once and mix only until it is barcl) incorporated (small bitsofbuner ~ should 1til be visible). · Tum the tone over on a servina plate. Pour chocolate glaze onto the I Transferl/,ofthcdough toa lightly floured pastry board. Press into a centero~thetoneand sprcad~ven~yover:top. Chill until the chocolate is round shape and roll out into al 2·inchdrcJe. Place dough ma 9' 2-mch firm. Usingapastry bag,garrush with whippedcrearn.Scrves8 .• RAISIN' FITNESS •• ,. FromDl _ Anewwaytotrifle with chocolate treat· . ._/ Winners will receive an all-cx~nse-paid trip to Wuhington, D.C., to attend a spCcial council awards ceremony, accompanied by a parent and the student's pbysicaJ education teacher. • - ... Adm1n1stered through each school's physical educa- tion department, .. The Great Raisin Fitness Challenge" I was desianed to motivate students lo increase their physical activity, cat more nutritiously and give serious attention to the need to keep fit. Parents and students who want more information about .. The Great Raisin Fitness Challenge" should There's no stopping chocolate fans \Nben lbcy stan dreaming up ways to use lheir favorite flavor, such as this chocoholic version of classic English trifle. · CHOCOLATE TRIFLE ~ cap .. 1ar combine suaar and cornstarch. Stir in milk and chocolaic. Cook and stir until thickened and bubbly. Cook and stir 2 minutes more. Graduall~ stir about J cup of hot mixture into cg yolks. Return all to saucepan. Cook and stir 2 minutes more. Remove from Tasfy ta pas ·tops for quick ~nacks contact their school's physical education instructor. Tempestt Schools need in• more mformauon on it can write to: Great Raisin Fitness Challensc, President's Counctl on Physical Fitness and Sports. Washing· ! tabletP,OMt coruta.r9 ! "" mllll • ton. D.C. 20001.· " . . ! squrn (! ouces) .. 1weetned dloeolaR, c1aep,e~ z beatn eu J•lb .. TEMPES'ITS RAISIN ENERGIZER MIX ! tablespoon IHltter er m&l'JU• lae ~ tea1poofi1 vuilla 3 Cllpt Diel cake C9bes Z.ca~ralm1 ! cap •ulted sllelled peants S tablapoou caflee liqlleu cap1 WklPllD& cream. whipped ¥1 ct1p dry na1ae4 ••flower or 1llelledJ>..umpkln seeds, _____ _ Cllp~~ .. t - 1 n large bowl oombine all ingredients; toss. Store m airtight corttAioec. In " ~~vv mf"'liinm ~~llN>l":itn • "IF YOU WANNA WIN, YOU &oTTA ·PlAY WIN-80!" \ Clleclt · Tolly '1 Nu1111Jl11 on P1g1 Aa. _Daily Pilat & TW~ FINO OUT HOW GOOD WE REALLY ARE. ' . LAX/ Orange County Connections Via Golden State Airlines WIN-GO Hotline: (714)642-4333 llT• 2.a<tl Alfmond W t •2 ' (Btl TDWtr ,tm ·HOttll It El Toro floe6) 82530 C71•t 137· ~2 Ml.eTll KAC1t 1906t lttch 8N• .9~ (Ht•I tollltMll .Mtrkll It G11l1tld1 Piion• (n4) 848 8'75 " Perfect for Company Gitting! The great gift idea that gives a tasteful performance Whatever the occasion This year let Honey8aked brand hams represent your company. we've been entertaining taste buds all over the country for more than 30 years. With HoneyBaked brand hams c and G1ft Certificates you can dance through that gift fist 1n style • Baked for over 30 hou • HoMYGlued • s,Mr8f Sliced (for Mey elk:lng) • PartyTniys • Netk>nwtde Shi~ Gift~ (Md11med Mfionwldet I Honey•kect bfend "-"' 19 •¥ellabfe only lhn>"9h Honey .. kect etcHM. Honey8alfed brand ,,.,,.,. •A GINt Ent9'1alne~ and• h•>O'act to follow. lAMMIA Srcamott Pll11 2•21 W Wllinl• Btvd 80831 (1 ~· w of Buell 8'¥d ) Pllont 1213) 694 211• ~ 1'19 H TISM (llKat•>B7 l'hpne (114) 197 9980 .. heat. Stir in · butter and vanilla. Tapas bars are cropping up Cover surface with clear plastic everywhere, as this Spanjsh food wrap; chill without stining. finds tts.-way into the U.S. market To auemble, t>lace J cup of the Tapasori&1natcdmSpamasasnack cake cubes in the bottom of a 2-served at bars and cafes. ·quart glass bowl'. Sprinkle with I The word ta.pas literally means tablespoon of the liqueur. Spread 1/J "top:' It earned this title from the of the cooked mixture over cake custom of laying a piece of bread mixture. Spread with If, of whipped ovq beer or wine &)asses to prevent cream. ReP.Qt layers twice..-~ icsfrom--gettina •n... • with whippCd cream. · Ideal for entertaining or as a cozy 'Re'friaerate for24 hours-before -~a-ck tor two. Qmtk -n Ea"SY servin&: Makes 6.servings. Empanadas are Amencanized ver- l. """" M I' . \. ).: •• , •YPQ -de 1c1qus maple flavored oatmeal fortified with vitamins and iron. Or enjoy Wheatena•s toasted wheat ta te and pt~ fiber than lhe leadina hot caeal1. Han A COlJPON TO TRY 081 ~ ...................... ltWilldM_,... .. illiillllt .......................... ........... ~·---ln~--E! r.-.~_.,.... .............. i:. ro ... mt.• •t -.......................... ,,,,,.., .... u -~ CMlt ..... '*" ,, ~· .,._ ... _____________________ ,_ .... • s1ons of Spanish tapas: Four delec- table filling vanauons -Cheesy Apple Cinnamon, Ptua, Apncot· Walnut and Ham & Swiss -arc blanketed m flaky pastry rounds. An added feature of these mini pastnes 1s that they can be prepartd · ahead oft1meJ frozen a11d tha\\'.cd as needed. QU~ ~EASYnfPl\N.IDB l packa1e (15 011Dce1) refrtger- afei pie ru1 1 r • Ci1 -; crusts % Quick 'a Easy Filllllg1• 1 eu. sllgblly beaten 1 teatpoon water Preheat oven to 400 dcgrccs. On lrghtly floul'ed surface, unfold p>e crusts With a 3-inch round cookie cutter.cut pie crusts into 24 circle re·rolhng excess douih as nctdcd. Evenl)' divtde LQuick 'n Ea y Filling on center of 12 circles. Lagh.d) Q'lOJsten ~-OLdouah wuh wateT and fold 1n half; seal edges with a fork. P1eTcc lO~ with fork. then brush with egg beaten wilb water. -· Evenly d1v1de S"econd Quick 'n Easy F1lhng on center of remain ins circles: continue as above. Place · pastnes o n ung"'1scd baking sheet and bale J 2 minutes or until golden brown. Serve warm. Makes 24 empanada . ·~lck 'a · Easy Fllllilg1 - Choose any two: . Clleny Apple Clnnaiuon: Com-, bme l/J cup finely chopped apple, 2 tablespoons shredded cheddar cheese, I tablespoon brown supr. 1/a teaspoon ground cmr1:amoo and. 1f desired. l tablespoon raisins. Use 'lz tablespoon fillmg on each pastry circle. pnnkle pastry top . tf desired, with sugar. Pl11a: Combine 114 cup chopped tomato, 1/4 cup shredded mozzarella cheese. '• teaspoon bas1 I leaves, dash garlic powder and dash pepper. Use-~12 tablespoon filling on each pastry circle Spnnkle pastry tops, if de ired. w1ch paprika. Aprlcot·Walna&: Combine 'IJ cup apricot preserves, 2 tablcsp00ns finely chopped walnuts and' dash ground cinnamon. Use I tea poon lillina on each pastry circle. prinkle pa try top , if desired. with additional cinnamon. Ham & Swl11: Combine 1/4 cup thinly liccd. chopped cooked ham with 1;, cup thinly sliced, chopped w1ss cheese. Lightly brush pastry with prepared· mustard. Use 'iz tablespoon filling on each pa try circle. Spnnklc pastry tops. if de ired, wtth ~prika. Freezl•1/tllawl•1 ~lrectloDS: Tightly wrap beked ~mpanadas in wu paper or-plastic wrap: then " heav)'..duty aluminum foil~ freeze. To serve. unY<r1p and place frozen pastnes on baking sheet. Bake at 400 degrees 8 minutes or until heated through. Almond products Japan has intrOduccd more than • 100 new almond items thi! year. Some of the new almond prod· ucu arc almond ~ptidc, a defattcd • atmond-hnltfi • tant almond cocoa: assorted almond rice craC'ken: an ice candr bar; a ch1lltd almond frun J>1U&: a h~cred almond and hocstrina potato nack; mokcd almond cookie • and an lmond ana diiro fish snad:. .>. • CAKES ••• PromDl lbapes that approximate the looks of·tbe.meat of crab legs. Owe 1t a 1--bold IU'tpe otrea aye, an e 'untrained eye, you~ve sot crab leis; but a watel)', chewy texture sjvcs it away as a simulation. • For all the eqjoyment to be found in the body and soul of a crab, for the scant 398 calorics in an entire pound, for the hefty 789 milliarams of phosphorous and 498 nullisrams of potaSSium, not tQ mention an inetedible9,380unitsofVitantinA, there's' sot to be some son of catch. . Call 1t the catch of the day - actually, two catches: 3,850 milli- srams of naturally occurrina so- dium, and ,t58 milli~s of c otesterol.lfyouaivideapoundor crabmeat into four iemngs, the sodium and cholesterol would rqister, perperson,just underwbat is recommended for an entire day. Those numbers, however, don't seem to discouraae crab lovers. If they did. there would be more crab to JO around Herc's what needs crack.ma: The proper way to cook and~ open a crab, and what can be done with the meat besides make trab cakes. To cook bve crab: Handle .with Iona tonas. Ho1d ihe crab away from your body. Drop into a larae cauldron with rapidly boilina water, seasoned if desired, with bay cues. peppercorn , t"nd but· chilies. Cover, return-to a boil, and boil 3 to 4 mil)utes, until crab turns -on. t orange. - o break apart: . •Remove the back. Hold the base of the crab with one band. Place your thumb under the shell at the m1dpotnt. and pull the back off. •Discard the VlSCCra. When the back is off, you 'U see the viscera and a;ills. Viscera is also known as crab butler, which is edible but ap.- prcciatcd by few, sometimes mixed with melted butter to make a dip. Tbe plls and shell arc the only inedible pans of a crab. •Wash the center of the crab to remove any rcinainina viscera. Also, clean out the back shell. •With the crab upside down. hit the Jcp with a mallet and form a thin ridge in each. Make sure the lea stays attached to the body. The crab as now cleaned, and can be served hot or cold. •To serve cold, replac~ the back, ·· and serve the re-formed crab on lettuce leaves with'COCktail sauce or an hcrbed mayonnaise. The back then becomes a discard "plate" for smaller shells. •To store in-shell crab: Wrap well. Freeze up to I 0 months. Once thawed. it ,nay be refrigerated for one day. •To thaw: Place ID the refriaer- ator for 8 to 10 hours, or overrught. To thaw in a microwave, cover crab with wax paper and use defrost setting. or 30 percent power, for 20 minutes. Tum and microwave 20 minutes more. let stand 20 minutes. Without mentioruna specific recipes, whole, pfC'o<X>Oked crabs may be served hot by brief stearn- ina, sauteina. or simrnerina. •To steam: Place a steam basket in a larae pot. Fill with boilina water to a depth of ¥. inch. Place crab legs and body sections in the basket. Reduee heat and steam, covered, about S minutes, or until crab is thoroughly heated through. •To saute: Heat a few table- spoons of butter in a sk.allet. Add extracted crab meat. and saute only 3 to S minutes. •Tp simmer: Add crab meat last. Add serving-sized pieces of crab meat to soups or stews dunng final S minutes of cook.mg. Cook's rules: . •One '"1olc 2-to 3-pound Dunaeness crab yields about J 0 ounces, or about 2 cups, of crab meat. • Allow about 2 to 3 ounces crab meat per persofl. •One cup ofloosely patked crab meat weiahs S to 6 ounces. DUNGENESS CRAB CA~ 1 lar1e reel bell pepper 1 meft•mHloa 1 rtb celery 1 t tabln~tll b•tter 11ar1eeu,1>eaa.• 1 ~ to t ctaps .. rt fre1ll wllole- •lleat bread cnmbt -1....-1r1111:n.ttd DU1meu .. crabmut 1 tea.,... frail Uayme, or ~ •.... .,.. .. Pe• ulMI cay .... ,.,,er ':._, I &ab .... 11•1 ma1...iee I ....... I ••• ,.,...., ----,..---"'" ncly mince the bell pepper, oruon, and celery. H.eat ~ butter in a wide. hcani skillet. A<ld the vctetabl and let sweat over low beat. urrina now .and then unttl imdcr, about 20 nunuta. Remove with a toned spoon to a (Pl ....... CllAa/04), ue On Ille West CC*& &he aban- dallce of f'retl9 fish and lbellllh H one of tbil felioa'~ 111tronomic lu1uriel. Cram ofSeaJ'OOd litQue takes fulled~-of this boua1y. o«mos a ftavorftll combination of mussels, clams. and chunks of Eacifk white fish In every ladle. A simp&t,-10-make variation of this .1rad1 tional bisque naru. wnb cho~ onions and . tomatoes aauteed in ·oil. Clam juice: dryed thyme, and vermouth, are sim- mered .with the vqttables. The 'clams. mussels -m their colorful shells, and the white fish are then -added and simmeruf;ust '°"' ,....... to cook du'oalh· ru..i.ly, •bolt nulk ii added to the uute, 11viftJ me bisque n1 dwK,.. tmsuc full-tM.>cSied ieuure and nch color. ... ,..., " ....... .,.. ... ~ .......... .. ........... ' Ladle pipina hot Cttam of Sta- food 81,que into latte soup plates and accompany with warm prhc bread or corn tius and herbtd , .,. 1 dllmt h v.,.... ................ e.-..... 1·18didlml ""', ·~ Ct119 ..ull ....... ,..,.,,. ..... butter. • . CREAM OF SEAFOOD SlSQUE , ........ llced . • f i.matoet ~led, aeedf'd, aad Hopped ltMletJOOUOlJ ' 1 1 l-ouce cu dam Jaice Saute onions and 1omatoe1 an otl. ·.Add c:lam Juice, bey leaf1 thyme, and vermouth; immer j minutes Add mussels, claft11 and white fish; cover and simmer l 0 minutes. Uncover; &ad rema1n1ns •nirc· · dient1. Heat throuah. but do not .. bOil. Ma.kn 6 servinp. "Double Coupon ..... , _., ........ ____ ..... _, __ .....,_ __ .. -~"-=.c......:''!'9~----.. = ·----:..r.:::-'----==--=-------..- RaJpb10ld l'ashioned IceCream Any------- ScbUHng· LtliiiOM...-~~adumtt 2Ne=:Qoabl9 COOOM PwC-... Coupoa 11o.,._, aw No••....., la..,.. USDA lmp.-Gold•D Premium . London Broil USDA lmp.-Golden Premium · Sirloin Tip Alaskan Salmon . 24 oz.-Ralphs Super.Bread .. ·~m You Pay Only • Imperial Margarine . S~ice Ally PackOQe ff ::0. LIAMO.. ... .UO..Coupoa,_~ CClllllM ........... .., • ..._ ........ u. .... • 2 ltr. bt1. .• 99 .45 ·.45 W'btt.osWMcd 49 Sen• .20 • ~:apkq 59 S<rYe .16 • Ralphs Frozen CUt Com-16 oz. :::csv~59 S<n•.26 , . .'~ ~· Welcome Gemco Shoppers We Want To Be Your Supermarket! .._,0-.-..... ........ .. _ ................. _ ........ ·--.-c....oie __ ....,...._ ....................... ..... e.o1r ....... .__...., ... °"" ............. --...,.., .. ._... ..... ,._._.. .......... .., ____ ...... ~ ..... ·- • ...__ .. ,..__,__... .... ___ ,_ ..... _ _... ................... I_,,,_ --M-Milii'!_~•-Mmll-,.._ .... ......... ,,.."ii.. _ _,__ ....... ' .......... -.,....,..._ Royal Astoria Crystal The Covington Ed1t1on StonewarL· Prlces·effectlve November 6th~ November 12, 1986 . ' • .. I' • c • .. .. , . If you c•il 't fiilf;l a C~upon· club, st8rt your own " r . . . Dear Jue -I hl!vc tr d to coupons/ l'io, how do. l 10 bout roupons one; sold, will not tx' ~ ... Herc's a r tund form townie foe:: write for: A $3 rtfund EXTRA· locale a coupo~ club 1n this arta. finding a rcpl coupon club'? -os the) "er~ meant to be used -to $1 refund. R VE Perm $I . TRENGTH EXCEDRIN $3 Re- but thcrt docsn t seem to be one. Helen Harper. Moo~. La. pur~hasc the couponed produ1,;t'i Refund Offer, P.O. 80x 2C)(>JU; fund Offer, P.O. Box 14536, Bait!· A ~ew months ago, a. lad) Dear Hrlea -)es, )OU could It a Pit. that )OU ha\e not been J £ Jefferson Cit~. MO 6SI02. Send a morc.MD21268. Th1soffcrupircs adHn1std a cou,1>0n club an the have purcha~ the coupons. able to pnd a C<?upon club. in )Our UI self-addressed tamped envelope. Dec 31. 1986, but ~uc ts for the classified ad section of the .n~w • Manufacturers are not e.nthus1ast1c srca. \\ ~) don t )OU tJll ~ club f This offer expires Dec. 31. 1986, but form mu t be rece ived by Nov. 17, paper and invited people tOJOtn I aboutany.onc~lhngtheircoupons. )'Ou~elf. • . • UWR reque ts for the form must ·be 1986. · was enthus1a.suc ~nd gave her q cal~~ but there is no law 10 pre' cnt Jt. . Just put . up n notice on the ; •. re<:eived by Nd'. 30, 1'986. Whi~e waiting fortne form. save . It turned our that she was only lfaper onch.JthccoupoMfrom bulletin board at the supermurket Wh1lewnittngfortheformsavea the universal product code carton mterc ted in selli"J coupons at I 0 a newspaper. the coupons become or public hbral'). and YOL! hould proof of purchue fro!" any Rave flap of eat her Extra~Strength fa. cents each. I thought about bu)tn& his or her per onal property soon receive calls from otncrs who the others to pic:l out tho e they can Perm (the bottom Uni' ersal Prod-cednn Tablets or Capsules (40s or coffee and det~rgent coupons from The per on can then 11ve the arc caier to JOJO. . • • , • u e. And peoplc'are bound to ha ve a uct Code panel), along wit~·a dated lar&er). al~ng with the ca h·rtaJS~er • her, but I '"asn t sure 1t wa legal. w coupons awa)'. trade them with a Meeting are easy. since 1t good time. because a\a coupon club cash-register receipt with the receipt with the purchase pnce I didn't. friend or e'en sell them, so long as sunpte forevcl')one to pa s around m.eetang everyone ·JOCS home a pOrchase price circled. circle4. · Could • J have bouaht the there 1s no rea on to belie\ c that the their unwanted coupons and allow "inner. Here'.s..:inother refund form to Here 1s this week's list of refund ·····~Ll ff···.·~:·y-T~ ~'~) LO'.''.' Price Lccidcr. Cciebr;ttli-19 The Be~ir H lit HJ Of Our St~conc1 f-1tty Yeci1 s (~a·~:~ ~·····-~-----------------------------------------.. VETERANS DAY TUES . NOV t1. STORE ~OURS -------------, OPEN: 8:00 am till 7:00 ~m • Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Sliced Bacon-:"o: o ,_s1 .39 Macaroni & Cheese MQl!T~51.19 Brisket =? u.51.39 Steak Umm ~* e~51.79 Smoked Ham . -s::· ... ~·.,.. ll51.49 Chi cken Nuggets ""-o.n \1()1 52.69 Top Sl'rlo1·n Steak ,, 52 29 Pie Shells :·A<:AA:·. ••01 ... 51-.09 °"" 18 • COZ'f MITC"' N T-Bone Steak ~,~r O" •• 52.29 Cake ~:ATr ,.o,·52.25 Cu remaster Ham =~~s .• 53.69 Croissants:::::·"0 m .o, 52. 75 Roasting Chicken !>~;::'4NIS •• 51 .09 Apple ~Juice ~ f-;:-' .• °' 99e Rainbow Trout CU-1l0 •. ll 51 .89 . P1nea 1101 51.09 Compare these Low Prices .., . Vegetable Cocktail SJ.OS 66-0Z Orange Juice ~-:O!Ulo .. 4,~1.29 -DANNON Yogurt ::~:. . . . .. ()l '1 .45 Kraft ·Singles ~:M. 10151.59 Graham Crackers ~'l'.\··~ ... °' 51.59 Cookies ~~ ··o: 51.69 GREEN_ GlANT WHOLE- Niblets ~ - Cor11 REGULAR OR NO SALT Garden Fresh Produce CaobagelN' .rA~ A(fNNEAD6 Cranberriesou·,,~·· Onionsu.-Ml. Si¥HT~ Carlo Rossi ~AA•rTOV.'IE Ronrico Rum ::~(Ofl Finlandia Vodka O'Darby~ Meister Brau (~ ,,,.~·r•" 59.99 110.-. sg.sg P90'4 ~e99 ,,.,oz s2.99 Soup Mix:lLI Grape Ju i ce ~~.fq~ Koolers :c:;~~. Chip's tv~~--fVI' aTY\r 110151 .09 15¢ oer1· Or Sl1'ce 1.1r CIWCll.\~tto s1 59 Po~v -,cOI • f'= -~•fff'1l• ttJOl a v oClka 0001 s1 .49 R·. . Cola :~ .. ,::!'~~OifllNU .,,<>ls 1.~9 919 88 ,.. 75e Seven Up ~~"" ""l• 51 .09 ·I :·• Dressing u Mt: 51 .59 Cinnamon:::m ,t02s1 .69 Spagnetti Sauce.=PwS •<R'2.39 Fruit Wheats :::.. "":Oii .• ~ 51. 79 Facial Tissue ='i:.~, Zee NaRkins ~~ .. Huggies::..t •• • .. :•i -.-----:., --~--~-~--------,,...-, ---,..,-~--r~---,------------) -:····~~··. ~ ~~'·.: ~·J(1 (1,lf'11 ··, 1\Jo Girr1n11ck~ c_v(~ry!J()dy 'vViri'l vv1P1 ... --,11tlt·1 ',,I); l ti.". Lu·:.· f 11\, ~ •• j J ~ ·····--------~----------------------------------.... . r offers. Start looking for the required refund forms, wtii~h )'OU can Obtain i-mc-supC"nnartrer. m·lfe'WSpaptr and magazine advertisements and from trading with friends. . Mcanwh1IC' start-collecllng tho needed proofs of purchase. as d • tailed below. RememUcr. same offers are not a' ailable in all areas of the country. These offers· require refund forms: BIC Bits Refund Offer. Receive up to a $2 refund. Send Che required refund form and the packages f rol')l the following quahty Bic ~roducts: any B1c Writing Jnstruwent Multi- Paclc.. Bic Roller Sin~e Pack: B1c - haver or BiC" Lighter spend SS and get $2 back or spend 3 and get $I back), aloni with the dated cash-re~1stcr receipt(s) with the purchase pnce(6) circled. Expires Dec. 3 1, 1986. --- DR . CHOLL'S Pro Comfon Spons Cu h1 ons $1 Refund Offer. Send the required refund form and tlte Dr. Scholl's Pro Comfon logo from the front of the Dr. Scholl's Pro Comfon Spons Cushions In- . soles package. alon$ with the dated cash-register receipt with the purchase pnce circled, Expires Dec. 31 , 1986. ERASER MATE 2 $I Refund Offer. Send. the required refund form and. the proof-of-purchase pomon from one three-pack of an ,Eraser Mate 2 paclcage. Exp1TeS Dec. I, 1986. 4-W A Y $ r' Refund Offer. Send the rcQU.trcd refund..-form and the co mplete outer ctrton from 4-Way \ Nasal pray (any size or form). a.long with the cash-regi ster receipt with the purchase price etrcled. fap1res Dec. 31. l986. · L'EGG Refu nd Offer. Receive $5 cash. plus $2 1n: coupons. Send the required refund form and the round-bottom disk from 10 pack- ages of any combination of Sheer Energy. Sheer Elegance or Acti vc- Support -clearly showtng the· Universal Product Code and brand name. Expires Nov. 30. 1986. CRAB ... F tomDS mixing bclwl and let cool ..Mix m the Cf' and I 'h cups of the crumbs. Mix m crabmcat, salt, tbyme, and cayenne. Stir in mayonnaise and parsley. Chill mixture at least I ho.1r, or overnight Form patties, sqUecrina out ex- cds moisture between the palms of your hands. If mixture is too thin, add rcmaming bread crumbs. Fry caJces m small amount of hot coolanao1l over medium-high heat for 4 minutes per side, or until browned. Serve immediately with tartar sauce. Makes 6 servings. DUNGEN~ CRAB AND CORN BISQUE 2 table1pooa1 b9tter 1 medl•m oaJOll)l:Dely ml.Deed Ker11el1 from 2 ears con , or 1 ~ caps frozen :. tablespoon Ooar 2 capt c .. cken bro ... 1 bay leaf 1 pond freslt Daageaen cnb n>eat (tee aote) Wblte pepper. to taste 2 cups balf-and-balf 2 euyolkt F retlt 1r1ted natme1 2 tea1pooa1 11terry. or to taste Frffla cltopPed parsley lo a medium saucepan, melt the butter over medium-igh beat Add the onion and com, and saute 1 S minutes. Sprinkle in the flour,and cook and tir for 2 minutes. Gradually stir in the chicken broth. Add bay leaf.and bring to a boil. Cook and stir for 5 minutes. Add the crab mcatand pepper. Keep at a simmer for 3 minutes. · Meanwhile, beat tb'e cg yolks with the half-and-halt Whisk into .. soup, off the heat. Return to low heat for a minute or two. Add outmca and sherry, and spriok.Je • with parsley. Remove bay leaf. Serve immediately. Makes 4 to 6 servings. Calcium's early role Dietary calcium may not pla> as if nificant role in the prcvcnllon .o ostcopofO i Is first thouaht, accor<Jina t~ studic Uiat arc ~n· nin& to how that the rate of lo an bone ma does not vary amona women whose caJc1um con ump- tion varic arcady. te t reported 1n Research New indicates thit compared to calcium uppltmfnts. only e troacn supP&f. cnts lowed bone ma l s· • nificantl)'. 'The aucb apPlics only to adul not ch1ktren, and the rtttarchcn .said that calcium intake in child· • hood and ldolescence till seem to dewemunc pak bone ma adulthood. . , ,. Toda.y' Neighborhood · Drugs tore . PRINT SALE 2 SETSOf. ] COLOR PRJNTS FOR THE PRICE OF EJr1l'lg I\ roll of HO 126 (JISC 3~mm KOd.acolor ru1• oc othtN• C·41 process him tor ~velopmg a.nd Pl"'llihg at 0vr .,_.~'>'ditv low • p11ce_ nd v.eJl o•v• \l<Xl i" e11tr• t,ol, c;olo1 pr•nt ror 11~' Oller EM 11 8 86 ONE DAY SERVICE NOT AVAILA8l£ 01 THIS OFFER Perma Soft •Shampoo or . Conditioner, 8 ounce •Hair Sprav. 7 ounce •Mousse 5 5 oonce All Types VOURCHOICE ~139 · Our Regular 2 49-2 99 Nivea •Lollon ~ 8 ounce All T tPes , •Sk.n 011 8 dU'hce --. ..... CVS Cont~I Top ----cvs Regu ar Pantyhose Pantyhose Reinforceo Toe· Assorted Sh~des & Sizes , Reinforced Panty & Toe Assorted Shades & Sizes . . CVS Elegant-, GVS.......--- Ultra Sheer Sheer Support Pantyhose 1 Pantyhose Assorted Shades & Sizes Cotton Panel Assorted Shades & Sizes I •• 1 ~-'P"' -. .· 1 > I · 1·' ~· .. . I -CVS All Slleer I Pantyhose Cotton Panel Sandalfoo~ Assorted Shades & S•zes I P~RS/IM9 FOR ,~ p~s /189 . FOR P~S 189 p~s/139 .-+-tm-.--l....llC.W'-'-----=~_;;__--+---!,,~ur Regular 1 39 ea p~s/139 ·· FOR · Ou• Regular 1 39 .e• I Our Regular 1 89 ea VOUR CHOICE 169 •Coast Deodorant S'bap Regular or ... Sun Spray Scent S-ounce Bar Bath Size ··Tone Skin Care Bar 3 5 ounce YOUR CHOICE Trident Sugarless Gum 18 Strcks Assorted Flavors Christmas Votive Candle Red Green or White ~R1100 2 95 Value Sorry l'fo ~·~~k• Scott .-----"?\ Baby fresh Wipes Scented or Unscented 80 count 219 Our Regular 2 89 TOdat Contraceptive Sponge 3 Plus 1 Free f • I e. v.s ·COSTA MESA . • ' The Courtyara • Hiift50r Blvd I Int r ec11on Of Harbor h & Newport Boul vard p armacy 122-11so ' . •Queen Sin_ V1.58 •Outsize ....... , .. 211• •Uttra Ultra Sneer 211.99 Our Regular 2 99 ea • stoctmgs 2 pairs CVS Sheer Stockings Reinforced Toe Assorted Shades 2 Palfs Per Pack p~s/169 FOR Our Regular 1 69 ea ('. di S~p ~':".'..,..:-..... ("""" 'uPtW• "''"'*"' t 'P-t ••want 1 ................. --..... "'°""" '"-.. • BenyHn COugh Syrup . YOUR CHOICE 4 ounce. All Tyoes -• Neo-Synephrine Nasal Spray or Nose Drops 1ee-0 5 ounce All Types •Sudafed. Tablets 24 count 12 Hour capsules, 10 count or Our Reg 2 7~3 73 Cough Syrup. 4 ounce Static Guard ;..Spray Eliminates Static Cling 6 ounce · 19;9 pur Regular 2 89 Glade Ught Air Freshener \ Gontte or Hint of Powder 7 ounce Aero al 88¢·: Out R9gular 1 29 HUNTINGTON BEACH loohmann 5 Point Plaza M ln St At Bench.Blvd For rfy All Pharmacv M7 25 ., Hershey's candy • •Golden Almond •Golden Sohta1res •Golden Ill •Marabou Mint Crisp •Marabou Roll 2 65 Ol -3 2 OZ 77c!o1~e Our Regular 1 09 ea 4 Planters cashew Halves Salted 1 t 5 ounce Can ~9 Our Regular ~ 59 FOUNTAIN VALLEY Lucl\y Shopping CCnt r Corn r 01 Srookhur t St & Eilts A 06 2 : CVS -Knee Highs Comfort Top . Assorted Shades Reinforced Toe or Sandalfool , 1 Pair Pack P~s/79~ Our Regular 79' ea •Comfort Top•Oueen S•ze • or Color F 1ashH 1 Patr P;Jcl< • V• CVS I Knee Highs 1 Reinforced Toe ~or Sandatloot Assorted Shades 3 P4" Pack I p~/179. I . "'3 Pa1rP,ack V1• Our Regular 1 79 ea I •Ou .. ,. S.ze Comton Top~ .... I Creamy, RICh Formula .... . 'Super-Rich. 'Love-Pat' Mascara • REVLON 0 Super-Rich -custom Eyes Mascara Eye Shadow .A$10ttad Ty~ & Shades Assorted Shades 249 129 Our Regular • 35 Our Regular 2 10 CVS Ptpe Tobacco Assorted Blends f.i9 Our Reg~lar 4 69 Schie- Plus P.lattnum made a 5 count Pis/88 l AGUNA HILLS Laguna Hiiia Mall Et Toro Road · \ MISSION VIEJO 328 M1ss1on V1 10 M 1J Moistutllltlg Pressed Powder ..._. •Love-ht Pressed Powder • •Touch & Glow L1qu1d Makeup Assorted Shades- 31!E Our Reg 5 95-6 SO ,, I •• I I I 11111------------------------ I . ' •• Ola .. COMe DAILY PILOT I Wed ...... NcMmtiir 5, 19M Stuffed TomatOes .quiCk, f!J.llnl llOllRISS FAMILY STIAK HUGHES • INCH I 69 VALUE TRIMMED BHF Cl<;lO L& • . Classics combine conventencel Items. produce deltciously re ue with quick, haht entrtts for two Blake want5' to return to the delectable foods -like stuffed tomatoc -that made Amenca great. f"1e update the cla sic b)' With ohttlettmeandsomuchto comb1n1ngconven1cnce item with do, more workmg couples arc fresh produce for healthful, happ~ opting for CJ.SY, on-the-go meal . dinma. But equally imponant are concerns One contemporary ve~1on of over calories and health -not to thts alJ·time favonte is Lamb and mention great fa te. Rice Stuffed Tomatoes. For this How to please your palates, meal-m-one, Blake has combined wa1stlin~s and schedules? Chef inarcd1ents reminiscent of the Mid· Blake ~mcrson Swihart, a nutn-. east -lamb, tomatoes, cumin, uorust and Culinary Institute of cinnamon and rice -yet fam1har Amenca araduate. "bas come to the to us all. fA8Ml• IOllN SLICID llACON I l 8 PKG 9 REG. OR THICK IA. I • 7 .. •IO DI HO .. ISllSALSA l-L8 HOT OR MILD IA. 1.19 You will cs~iany enJOY this guilt-free dinner because 1t IS por- tion<ontrolltd -taeh entree is only a larae a a tomato and 430 calonc~. which include\ the meat, \'egetable and 1i e Or. for another Oavorf ul vari- ation on the tradition I stuffed tom110, try Ono tuffed Tomatoes. Orzo is a forrh of 1)8sta, haped much like a gram of nee. Combined with other Jtahan-'&tylc ingredients such as basil( moi 2arclla and pumcsan cheese, this stuffed tomato variation is another easy· to-make entrcc. "Either wa -Lamb and Rice •OlllLISS CHUCK snAK Hughes Point Cul Boke. Broil Or Fry • ' . • 2 69 Anno Monos Hot Or SW..t CORNED BEEF BR'6KET ....... ~. . t.a · 1.39 ...... PAClflC SNAPPI• FR.LITS .... ·····-·········· .. te • ITAUAN SAUSAGE ........... . LB 2.i9 I·~ ........ ,~ OLO•I A-I SPAOHITTI 16-0 Z PKG KUINIX TISSUI IOY LIQUID f ..... OllANOl IUIG A9 175-COUNT 85 FAClAl OR 100-0 .BOUTIQUE • _ 22-0 Z DISH 99 DETERGENT INCL. 3S' OFF LABEL • · HALF GAL CHILLED CARTON 1.19 Sue Pock Reg Or Sourdough THOMAS' ENGLISti MUFFJNS .••. ., . • 99 Smgle Rolls HI-ORI TOWELS ......... 65 Fresh Scent Incl. S' Off Lobel .GALLON LIQUID CLOROX ......... 1.09 N ice N l ight 6-0z. Aasort.d NON FAT YOGURT ................. .. .SS TEXAS GRAPEFRUIT .,. .RUBY, NEW CROP Oceon Spray 17 Oz ,Pkg FRESH CRANBERRIES LB A9 btro Choice 6·0z Pk9 MARIANI APRICOTS •·Inch Pot OAM.M........,..:.u.a.&.l!o..:1.89 AFRICAN VIOLETS .......... , ................. ff SLIM-LIM£ AUNT llMIMA'S WAl'PLIS auOGll OOURMll 10.0~ 1A9 ontrtn lOOUNCE ASSORTED A9 i>.ppendge Forms ChMM CROISSANT PIZZAS 16-0unce Con ( ......... , Fl ) I -SAP•O•O 12-01. 'KO. fltlSH ICHlllAN RAMIN ..ac>OlH .29 A9 I 3.S-OUNC&. ASSORTED Shirok1ku 0 28·0z Aatort.d .................. I.ff SEASONED SEAWEED •• Shiraktku Kotokur1ko 12 Oz Box TREE TOP APPLE JUICE ........ ., .... 2.29 I.ff '" POTATO STARCH . ··············· ..... ,_.,. ~~--( u•••• ..., •••••• ) OPEN VOERANS DAY NIS. NOV. 6 "' -· ,l - -750ML i;.::n.:::.i Mtdot1 750 Ml MELON LIQUEUR .. .. . ' ' .. •••••••••a•'•/---L'l .. S COKIAOL IOlt ~ANIYllO•I ~~~~: PRiii· IN 2-PR PACK l y lOreol PREFERENCE HAIR COLOR 11 Oz Aasort.d ....................... " ................... . '·'' NOXEMA SHAVE CREAM l ,. • tuffcd Tomatoes or Ono tuffcd Tomatoes -these cntrea ·~ tht liaht and hnhhful answer to d1n1na in the hectic '80s. LAMB AND RICE STUFFED TOMATOE i lar1e tomatoes "'~ ,,..... ..... 111 --------·~ cap ca.opped oatoa ~ teatpooa lfOUd ~llJDID ~ ttatpGOD silt ~ 1eas~a pepper ·-tea1pooa ctaumoa 1 • ~ Cllp paCUltd pre-cooked rice '"cap water 1 tablespoon cllopped parsley Cut tops off tomatoes and scoop out seed$ and pulp, reserving pulp. Sautc lamb .and onion m skillet' over medium heat 5 minutes or until meat 1s ~browned. Stir in S(a.59nings and cook I minu~ Ion.cc. Remove from heat 'and star·· .. m nee, water, parsley and reserved • tomato pulp. Fttmly pack-mixtu.rc _ mto tomatoes. Place in baking 0.sh, cover and bakeat 3-25dcgrees for30 minutes. Uncover and bake S minutes longer. Makes 2 servings, OJtiOSTUFFEDTOMATOES % medium tomatoes . Ya cup chicken brotb Ya ·teaspoon instant, minced onion 14 cup ono 14 teatpooD batll Datb of garlic powder 3 tablespoons dlced p.;Ft·sklm monarella clleese 1 tablespoon crated parm~ cbene 1 teaspoonJ>atter Aar1arine~ 3 tablespoons water• •Or omit b•tter aad water; bake ID a greased bak1D1 dlab . Slice top$ offtomatocs: scoop out pulp, leaving a sh.ell. Reserve 'IJ cup • pulp. Simmer broth, qnion and orz.o m saucepan, stimn~ OC· cast<>na)ly., until liquid..is absorbed- Add basil,. garhc pcwd!r and re· served pulp, mixing well. Divide mozzarella cheese among tomato hells; tnen fill with orzo mixture. Place tomatoes in baking dish: sprinkle with parmcsan cheese and.dot with butter. Po.tr water around tomatoes, cover and bake at :)-50 degrees for l 0 mmutcs: then un&>ver and bake IS minutes longer. Makes 2 servings. · Nt>te: Recipe may be doubled using !11 cup each mQzzareUa cheese and ~ater. Pumpkin cooks can compete Adult and junior cooks ~n show off their culinary talents whi le helpina the Muscular Dystrophy Associatie . The Great Pumpkin C.:ook-off at the Anaheim Hilton and Towers Saturday, Nov. 16 will test their creative use of pumpkih, with awards planned for dessert and non-dessert for adults and dessert only for Juniors. Entry fees go to MD . For entry rules and awards infor- mation, contact the Anaheim Hilton and Towers pubhc relations department at 740-4268. • • • "Chocolate Daze" is the theme of a cooking class to be taught by chef Madeleine DeGroote at 11 a.m. Monday at the Sherman Library ~cl-Mar.-- Rcgjstration fee is $25, and preregistration is required. For 1nforniation~U the.prdcn -0ffice at 673-2261. • • • At Coast Cooking School, Laguna Beach, Ricki Older will teach a class on turkeyside'dishent 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Monday ($20); Chodolate Gifts will be the topic of Leigh Sauser of Azhmcrc Chocolatiere at 10:30 a.m. Nov. 12 ($ 18); and Helene Leichter Saxby will demonstrate foods for a h1Jh tea at 10:30a.m~ Nov. lS(S 18). F9r reservations, call 499·2574. • • • Rusttc Italian DLSrn:s by Viana La Place will be presented at 6:30p.m. Friday ($30) at Plret's, South Coast Plaza, a~d Roy Plngo will demon· strate Fresh Ideas with Fish and Vegetables at 10:30 a.m. Saturday ($25). For information. call $56.6461. • • • Annemarie Crump will teach Hoh~> Breads and Coffeecakes a\ to a.m. Nov. 12 at My Favorite Thinas Cooking School, 14370 Culver Drive, Irvine. Fee is $30. For information, call 552-0221. • • • At Ma Cuisine, Fashion..Jsland, Renee Carisio will teach a dass on Truffles at 10:30 a.m. Nov. 12 (US), and Sharon Kraus will dem- on1tra~ a Holiday Dinner.at 10:30_ a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Nov. 13 ($<40). For tnfonnation, c411159-6818. • • • Hobday Buffets is the tOl>ic of a Ta t1n1 Spoon claa.to °' 1>tt9t1t\Cd at 10 am. and 6_:30 p,m. Nov~ LI at 16382 Ardsley Circle, Hunti!'atOn Bekh. Cost as $30. For 1nfor-matioa~ Call Cathy Thomas •t 840-2351. _.. BUY through cfusified ble your plea ure with microwave entr'ees for tWo I ..J • o l ~·tounde/ina for microwave • . • recapn that att easy-to-fix entrttt • ~hr an net, broth, *'· ltmon To reheat, place in sauce_pan (or an , for two? If IO, Chd' Blake Enwnon JU ace Ind ~r. Cover and cook nonmttal bUifta dash for macro- Swihart has c:ttattd 50~ lip at .HIGH for S ma.nutn. Let stand S wave) with 2 tablespoons waltt. healthf"I aa&feel for ~ thet tak~ man~tes. Aufl' .wath fork. Makes 2 Cover. Simmer on top ohtove 8 to minimal effon with areat rewards se~,':t: , · . &-0 Mtftttlel, ltftlly ttirftftl ~ in ta1te. . . . C:ombane all •narcdl~nts casaonall~ For miaowave, Cook at One of.Swihan'J ~ipes is Rice u~pt ryce.1n skiU~t. Brina to a full MEOIUM'for 9 minutes, or unul Stuffed Aounder ... Ifs a dream for hoal. Stir an fice. Cover; temove thorouahly heated, tumiflf dish coupleswholovetocat inareaut le from h~at. Let sUnd S minutes. one-quaner tum after S minutes. but don't like to work at cook int" Auf'f with for~ Makes 2 cu~ or 2 Stir aently before scrvina. • says this ettahvc yet practical scrv1n~. . . Nese: Recipe may be doubled or ~teoftheCulinary Institute of If desired, frttu s1f\lle pe>rtaon . halved, usin& skillet dir~ions. ~~::·its ·convenient start with Vons Unllmlua•- frozen fish fillets and Minute nc:e to •--"iiiii--~~~ its microwave fi n11h, lb is dish take! .:i less than hilf an hour to reach tnc dinn~r: table. · ~ith. an underaraduatc dqree .. in m1crob1oloey and ataduate work'. in nutrition -all before his chcrs trainina -Swihart remains con- scious of caloric and nutrition values of the recipes he develops. Has recipe for Rice StuO"cd Flounder em~lcs ha belief that food can look and .taste &ood and still bcaood for you And at just 290 calones per scrvins. who would araue? · L TtHs sav<m' entfce. ~n faet, is a canvas of feathcry-bght touches: an . accent of fueshly aratcd aingcr and scallion, a hint of carrot an,d a touch of cream to smooth out and bind' the fluffy nee filina. While a little Sall is used in the filling to enhance all the flavors, Swihart recommends seasoning the fish with thejWce of any fresh cnrus -lime, lemon or grapefru1t Fish that's bttq salted. he points out, can lose precious JU aces dunng cooking.. ·or Boneless The flounder fo1ds around the filhna for a speedy. microwave- ready en tree. Garnish this dish with an aspara&us spearlor an elegant finiShcd touch · Rump Roasts Select U.S.D.A. Choice Beef 'A'' _Thin Trimmed, Umit 6 Lbs. R•lar Price lb.21" Or, try Seafood and Rice - another miCrt>waveable entrce. Both malce cookan& for two a snap. RICE STUFFED FLOUNDER "np 1rated carrot \S np pacb1ed pre-cooked rice •.~ cwp aieavy cream 1 tablespoon cbopped 1calH01J1 1 teaspooa Alt • ~aspooa_ flDdy cllopped rresai amcer . .. Dao of pepper i Oo•.ader fltlet1 (4 onces eactl) t tea1rons butter or margarine Combine carrot, rice, cream. scallJons. wt, pngcr aTid pepper. Spread nee mixture evenly over fillets. Fold fillets in half and place in and1v1dual casseroles. Dot with butter and bake at 325 degrees for 20 n\jnutes or until fi sh is easil¥ fla.ked with a fork . Makes 2 scr- vmgs. . Microwave Directions: Prepare 1t•ffiD& ud staff flouoder u dJrected, placlDg flooder la mJcrowave-Jile baklDI dllb. Omi& btltter. Cover ud cook at HIGH i to t \S miaates. Rotate dJsb. Cook i to ' t \\ mlaaies IOD&e.r. Let stand covered S ailD1tes. SEAFOOD AND RICE 1 ciap cliopped imitation crab mea& or cabed cooked cllicken l taltle1pooa buster or maraar- lne 1 tablespoon onion flakes ~ teaspoo11 1ar1Jc powder ~. cap pacu1ed pre-cooked rlce ~ cup cllic.ken brotb ..... ''J np tbwed ireea peas 1 teaspoon lemon juJce CORNISH .•. J'romDl necks from hens. Rrnse hens under . cold runnin& water, drain well and s-t dry. Place, breast ide up, on rack in shallow foil-lined baking pan. Combane plum jam, soy sauce, oranaeJuice, prlic and anise seed ; brush cavities and skins of hens thorouahly with mixture. Cover hens loosely with foal and bake in 37S-dcaree oven l hour; brush oe<:aStonally with soy sauce' miuure. Remove foil and bake 30 minutes lonaer, or unt1l hens are tender, brushing occasionall~ witti rem~nina soy sauce mixture. Makes 4 scrvinas. Nete: If hens brown too quickly durina last 5 to · 10 minutes of cookina time, cover looscl~ with foil. Fiber vs. dieting An aous dictcrl con umina cx- ettsavc amount~offiberin cffons to lose wctaht may find that they lo more nutrients than pounds. ac- cordina to 1 un1vcn1ty study. C>verwtlfh.t eduhs who con· sumeCI a hi(h-ftber Oil and wheat bnn bar daily lost only one pound more than those on low-fibtr dttts an a I 2·Wftk chnacal study a1 < Davi Otni~I uumon Center. whach pcc11lizc in ~•&ht l<m. -::-~ Fairchlkl 49 Tangerln # f"tMollhi5-wl Lb~ Limit 6 Pounda C&C Cola ~°'°""' 21..S 81 Um112 PlfC........, ~-...-.54 • MEAT Fresh L.ten Ground Beef . ~ t39 Diie,... t:. ... .m ,. ... Alet Minnon Steak 498 ..,..... · u;;t\ O\Gi:it"'"" • n.. lJllM'N ~ Eve Of The Round Roast 229 ~ O'IDAC>wift.._,.. T i.. Boneless Familv Steaks 169 ~U.SOAO-..., '{ "-'' • lb Milk Fed Veal Cutlets 598 r ......... o.-.. u Farmer .1bbn Ham Slices 229 hN!-r...-t';;·· lb • Wil90i\ Sbd Bacon t89 ,,.,,,. ~ ::-~ County Une' 109 _l.nnnhorn OleeK . ~le;=-~~ 12 <Ma,... -Llrnlt 2 PRODUCE r • Precious Ricotta ~ .12~C-4. "''~ Kraft American Sinales .. o-,..,._u~.._..,. 119 169 ~~Jurk~ Breast . . 26~ ~~s ~Country Crock 17' Continental '*'nurt 49 ~~.~~ . Birds Eye Cool Whip 99 Q T.. • ·~'-~~ 99 ... ~ _l)OC... .... Pecan •a ... a.-1!!' Twirls YoMLt .... ~21'WC~· ~·~Muffins .99 ~Hawaiian Sweet Bread 139 ~~Cleanser 3j100 Fresh Start Detergent 299 ~) e...lh':Wii7' I ~ & ~ W&ne Cooler 229 Coors Beer-12 Pack 479 12 ..... NmDden Mountain Olablis ~ ----uu... ~-- Prices (;uod .'liovcmbt:rS-11. l98S . -.! New cookbook slmplifie~ • • traditional ltalla r.eclp~s.- . . ,, \ . . ltahan dashrs have been delight· alla Contadtna) -the chicken I ina Americans for man)' }Cars. BuL.. breasb arc simmered in vrae1ablc Italian dishes prepared at' home sauce made with a can of ready-to. ... often take quite .a bit of\ime and serve minestrone soup, canned work. amchoke hearts and a .splash of A new coolcbOok. "'A Taste of wine vmepr. Serve the maxtutt on Italy" shows that rtcedn't be true. It pasta.and ~op with some chnppcd offers an appeah\"& collection of fresh parsley. , · Italia~ reeipes usibg simple short-Another recipe from the book. cuts -all tested in the kitchens of Chicken with Lentils and Chick Progrcsso Foods. Peas(PoUocon LcnticchaeeCcci) 1s In t~c folloWing recipe from the simply chicken nutritiously sauced book -Country Chicken (Pollo with canned lenttl soup and-chic ~as. . '· . . 1. Just saute ch1cr.en attei tn o ave oil, add the soup with some white wine and simmer until tender . Drain a 19-ounce can of chick peas and heat with the"Chicktn un\il hot. Lovely with akafysala'ttand Italian brt'ad. . To purchase the cookbook. send $3.95 1n check or money orqcr to Prog.resso Cookbook ()frer, P.O. Box 7970C. Westbury. N.Y .• ti . l'Jlow 5lx to eight weeks for delivery. COUNTRY CHIC~EN (Pollo alla Contadlu) 2 wbole ~ckea breasts, boned, · sld.Ued and llalved -~t:-... we)pOoa• ·. ll•Uan·•tyJe bread cnimb1 • ; • -~ 2 tablespoo11 oJlve oil :-cutl t 011Dcesh-eriy•to-1e"-__,., minestrone aoap 2 table1pon1 wine viae1ar ~ teaspoon 1t11ar 1 can (U -ounces) arttcboke beart1 • ~ cap chopped fresla panley Nn Deaier ales • limit Righ1s Resm1cd Irvine-Ranch Fa11t1ers Market is your holiday Sale Items Al'ailable al Orange CtJunty l*ocations Only Uihtly coat chicken on both sides with bread crumbs. In-a large skillet heat olive oil until hot. Add ~ chicken. Saute until l2rown on both sides. C'i>mbine minestrone soup, wine vi negar and sugar. Pour over chick.en. · MEAT USDA Choice Beef Filet Mignon By the piece. 2.J lbs. avg. weight. 6!J!t lb. USDA Choice Beef Kabobs · Marinated or regular 399 with v~etahles. lb. . Fresh Roasting Chicken }49 5 to 7 lbs. l'ach. lb. Boneless Pork 299 Loin Roast lb. Order Your .. Irvine Ranch Farmers Market Fresh Turkeys Nowt "The :Satur;il One"' · no hormones. no preservatives. Pica.~ order car1y for Tha~vmll. 1984 Estilte William Baccala Sauvignoo Blanc A perfect match for virtually any fish or seafood you might choose from our spectacular fish department. 699 750 ml. reg ltOO Or,111111' C"111111r11 ''""'f f. ff•'11t 1/uliird und C mru l/,•\,1 Order now for the holi!agsl " I ~ foods ...,, -headquarters. - ·Fresh Ocean pray- Cranberries-· carden Fresh ~ufg:~~vs~1~~=!ra~!~h. m7uffins9. quick Cauliflower lb. Freeze now for the holia~ys. The Sophisticated Cabbage ... · bag. e Far·m Fresh · Texas .Ruby B1'occ0li lb. • 4 9 .59 Grapefruit . ea. • 49 ~ ''.• ~ · For the holidays, we have a large selection of nuts and candies available· in our bulk department. ·~ (Items may be pre-packaged in som~ stores.) BAKERY Fresh Pippin Apple Pie Fresh apples with a touch of sugar. cinnamon and butter. topped with a flaky p~lry crust. 529 . reg 5.95 ea. ea. • . ,. Gia9t - Plueberry Muffins Our own incredibly BIG and mouth- watcringly delicious muffins are naked fresh daily. Nn p~escrvatives .no .a~d1uvc~! 399 reg. 4 .... 9 pkg. of 4 G·ROCER Y exi~an Light on-Alcoholic Malt Six 12-oz. cans 9-4 9 reg: 3.99 \ '1 L-&: A Prune Juice Qt. btl. reg. 1.49 Evian .• 9!) Natural Spring W9t9 from the Alps. 1.5 ltr. reg. 1.39 e ~ CHEESE Jarlsberg Cheese Special&/ ·Jarlsberg Cheese Ball Covered in slivered 359 !moods. 12-<Jz. reg. 4.69 ea. ea. Jarlsberg Cold-Pak · - Cheese Spread A delic1ous choice for par· ~and snacks. 8 oz. cup. }99 reg. 2.59 ca. ea. ~Now in 'Yorba 'Linda! 18633 Yorba Linda Blvd. 779-5777 Simmer. covered, until chicken as cooked and tender, about J 0- minutes. Drain anichokes; cut in halves. Add to skillet. Increase the ' heat and baste atichokes with pan ~juices until artichokes arc hot. Sprinkle with chopped parsley and serve over freshly cooked spU}letti, if desired. Yield; 4 por- tioA s. CHICKEN WITH LENT~ AND CHICK PEAS (Pollo con LentJcclale e Ceci) 3. table1pooa1 oUve oU 2 ~ poaDd.s cbicken parts 2 can ( lt ounces ea cit) ready-t ... ~i·----serve entll soap-- - SEAFOOD -Fresh Silver# Salmon ,. Whole or half. 3 99. lb. Boneless .Shark Steaks Excelle11t for BBQ 499 or broiling. lb. ' Fresh Yellowtail Fillets 499 lb. Live Maine Mussels Black only. --~ lb. }99· DELI Salad· Sampler Plate Gounnet-to-go! Choose any J of our gourmet salads salads and we'll in- clude a fresh roll and butter. Great for l_unch. din~cr. A 95 parties or anytime. ea!. ~ foster. Fanns Lo-Salt Turkey Breast A gourmet deh turkey bre~t with very 'little salt. Perfect for duh sanJwichcs. 559 reg. 6.59 th. ,. lb. Boar's )iead Brand The cc1t•1ar. of< uld mis. Short-Cut Boiled Ham Brookl~n·s ~·amoul\! The finc.'iH'>oil- ed n~r~\ monc>' r..in huy' 529 r~g. 6.2J Jh. lh. ~ cup dry vermoatlt or wb.Jte wine - •14 teaapoongroHd black pepper 1 cu (lt ~maces) chick peas In a large skillet heat olive oil. until hot. Add ch.icken. ·Sautc until brown on all sides. Drain off fat. Stir in-1cntil soup. ..wine.and bJack pepper. Bring to a boil.--· Reduce-• heat and simmer, oov- ered, uhiil chicken is coolc:Cd and tender, about 45 minutes, stining often and adding a small amount of water, if needed. Drain cbick peas; stir into skillet Heat until hot. Serve sprini.led -with parsley, if desired. Yield: 4 portfons. FIESTA ... FromDl ure. Yield: 6 pints or 12 ha:lf pints. Note: Recipe. not advjsable for processing in quans. CHILI CON QUESO 1 cap (4--ou.oces) low-sodium Cheddar cbeese 1 plat T<Jmatoes and Clalll Pep-pers . Add cheese to Tomatoes & Chill Peppers mix ture; heat and stir until cheese melts. Serve with Tortilla chips. CHIU CON CARNE . (Chill) • 5 poHdt gro11Dd beef 1 quart cbopped onion 2 caps cbopped 1r.eea peppers ...._...... 5 cloves garlic, minced 2 quarts peeled, chopped tomatoes l (20·ou.nce) can tomato sa1ce ~ cup (!.5·ounce) jar E.xtra Spicy seasoning blend 1 "l cups water Saute beef, onions, green peppers and garlic until all pink is gone from beef; drain. Add remaining inaredjents. Bring mixture to a boil and si mmer 5 minutes. Pack into clean hot jars,lleaving t-inch head space. Remove air bubbles. Adjust caps . Process in pressure canner ac- cording tq manufacturer's· direc- tions at 1 SI pounds pressure. Yield: 12 pints or 6 quart~. Scr'7i,ng suggestion: Add 2 ( 16- ouncc) cans red kidney beans (drained) to l..quan cbih. Heat. Top each serving with sour cream topping, chopped onion or cheese. May also be used in casserotei or filling for tacos. SOP a>E CHILES (Soatllwtst QUI S..p) I plat Beef or-Pork mhnare l ~t Cora ... P.,,.n mix._...__... ~ pJat Tomaaoe. U4 CMW Peppen mlztare I c•pltre" Heat all ingredients toacther. Makca 6 I-cup servinp. 1 SOUR CREAM TOPPING ~~ ... rttMm ~ tea.,..._ E1traS,Jq ....... ta;W-.. Blend IQICther ~ur• CTC.am and sca10nin1 blend. Serve o"·cr Bur· ntos or Tacos. • Bincumben rebU.ff chal~engers 11J ll08DT 11YNOMAN ............... •· Incumbents OonaJd Strauss and Evelyn Han sU«intf\dly de~ndcd chal~nees from •11-~bliazed opponent1 to wm rc-cle<'taon ... Ne .. pon Btach eityCouncil, aund1111 to tar1yetmlon · Jojruna aMm apparently will be councal M~omcn Cllttn« "Bus" Turner and Phil Sansone. who wtll fill me vacated teat& of Jadtte . HeatMr and Bitl ~. both who decacjed not to seek ~-cltt'tion. • Altho1o1ah N~ Beach canctidatcS ari drawn from d1~nrict , · they are elected at larac. • . ' (P ........ NSWPOaT/A7) :growth f~ctton in Mesa voting Br P.AUL AaClllPLEY With aboUt a dlird cl lht balloc1 ......_,...... • counted TUlldly ~ A~ Cosia Mt11 vo\c'n appucntly tt• ••ta1tl~1herest0iftae ,l«led the candidaciea Of slow &rOWth ' J*k,~., 11 U U V Viotft, id•OC'llH TUNSay HO sent to 'City ·-~, .... <Hall two mtn who el\joyed \he 1,989v*'1 ouhc Olber qpcn ant oa back1nJ of dt\iCloptfJ .i>ie ftve-llal councal ' Orville Ambuf1tY.' wtK>sc family Bu&.aplanqcompai~lar hasa lon1hi.-ory an thecn).apPclttd two Ytan.M enJOyed tM u~ .. ~(~6J" to ha"e outpolled 12 othercandidatn outaoana, avor Norma ..... ,..,..,."'"' after vow1na dunna the campai&n to former Mayor Ed McFarland, forettaH lhe Near and propapnda" Holdina onto third Pl~e .was spread b~ the slow-vowth aroup Sandra Hamilton, who allO cnllcai.ed Mcsa Act1on. , , (Pl ........... A/A7) WEDNESDAY, OVEMBER ~' 1986 25 CE TS Cranston holds thin lead over Zschap; Rose Bird ousted from court in landsilde LOS ANGELES (AP)-Cahfornja voters re-elected Gov. Gwrse Deu- kme;ian and defeated Chief Justice Rose Bird by landshde margins Tuesday, whale Democratic U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston held a razor-than lead -Scientists say a giant· comet once struck the earth, reversing Its magnetic field.I A4 Food · Keeping the SIZZie In lunch and dinner menus· Is easy when )'OU preaerve fiesta foods for manana./0 1 Nation Alaska leadS the nation in teacher pay and spend- ing on education./ Al Wor ld Captured American Eugene Hasenfus tells t he Nicaraguan People's Tribunal that, If con- victed, hewlll ask the · court to have com- p~slon./ A5 Spo~a Fountain Valley-Edison matchup heads schedullJ of key high school foot- ball games Frlday./C1 ~ INDEX over Republican · challenger · Ed Zschau. While voters gave DeukmeJian the opPQrtunity to appp1nt a new con~ scrvat1ve majonty to the California Supreme Court by ousting Bird and at Bad ham glldes to easy • ,_yictory By PAUL AJ\CHIPLEY Of .. 0-.,........ .... · Rep. Robert Badham "-On a sixth term to the House of Representatives Tuesday following pnmary aoo en.. eral election races that were incre.as- ioaJy rancorous as election day • neared. With 30 perctnt of the ballots counted latt Tuesday night. Badham was cruising to easy victory .. with b2 percent of the vote. · He said he wasn"l womed about challenger Bruce Sumner, but re- sented the tone of the Democrat's Cl mpaign:. ··1 really didn't have a great deal of concern. that I v.ouldn't win.'' Badh~m said. "The thing that bas bothered me about this campaign -! and unfortunately 1t is increasing with intensity and frequency -1s the nastiness of the campaign."" Sumner mounted his challen$e after winning a difficult wnte-in cam~ign against Art HofTmann. a d1sople of pohucal ma"enclc Lyndon uRouche. Sumner. as chainnan of the county Democrauc Party, wa embarra sed to learn the only candidate to file for (Pleue eee BADHAll/ A9) least one pther appointee of former • Gov. Jerry Brow~ the Repubhcan governor 111 continue to be sur- rounded b) Democral5 m the Capitol as Democrats retained at least four of the other five statewide offitts and apin ~on majorities in the st.ate Sen1ue and Assembly. Zschau led 1n early returns whtdl were · heanl) wei&hted by tra- d_itionally conservative absentee ballots. but Cranst,On pulled narrowly ahead before midnight, The judicial totals "'ere 924,948 to confirm Bird for another 12 years and votes to O\ertum death penalty conv1cuonsalso trailed by substanttal margins: Justice Cniz Reynoso was defeated by a 3-2 ma,rgin, and Justice For complete election wrap-up, ... A7,8,9 J.867,984 to remo"c htt from office. Two other Supreme £oCm justices who had been t.argete<i alona with Bird by conservatnes because of their Joseph (Jrodin trailed by 57 percent tO 43 percent with more than one: thtrd of the vote tallied. J~t1ces Stanley Mosk, Malcolm U.S. Rep. Robert Badia.in amllee at Weetln South Cout Plaza Hotel u he &Udee t~ an 099r,... .... ., ............ eaay victory over hi• De~ratlc cliillenger, Bruce Sumner, Tue8day. Lucas and Edward Panelli . were reconfirmed with more than '70 percent of the vote. ·. Democratic Lt. Gov. f :eo McCarth~ defeated ReJ)ublican· M1~e Curbbyuurpri in&Jycomfortablc 10 percent margin, and Democrat Gray Davis led Republican William Campbell for 6t.ate controller: Attorney General John Van ck (Pleueeee f1fJD/A9) Demos seize Senate Cont rol ~ WAHINGTON (AP) -Demo- crats broke the Republicans· suc-)ear hold on the Senate :fund.a)' and ~T\'ed no\Jce on President Rcapn that the1r mldtmn election vi~ means his last tM> )cars in office Will require "'the an of government by compromise •• Democrais picked up Repubhcan scats an Maryland. Aonda, North Carolina, Georgia a.nd South Dakota and l\eld the ,[)emocrat1c scat in Colorado. Add1t1onally. Democrats led GOP incumbents in North Da- kota and Washingt<>n. and had moved into the leadtn ~vada. where the Repubhcan incumbent is retiring. As polls closed on lhe West CoasL Senate Repubhcao Leader Bob Dole of Kansas conceded that the Demo- crats would win control of the Senate. "Oh )tah, 1t'saque uon of whether ll will be 53 or 55"' Democrats he said "ltcould~55-4Sor53-4'7 WeJu t lo t a couple .. said a dejected Dole Repubhcans bcpn the day trying to defend a fragile SJ.-47 tnaJonty. When the votes came m. fi>cmo- .. (Pleue eee DEllOCRA TS/ A9) Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics B6 A3 C6-7 C8-10 B7 C10 BS 01-8 B1-3 B4 Officials €leny-eellege €listrict in financial bind Death notices Entertainment Food Mind & Body Opinion Police Log Public No Ices Sports Television Weather A3 CS, 10 C1-5 BS A2 -:J By ROBERT BARKER Of"'90e!IJ .......... The Coast Communit) College D1stnct is not in the extreme financial bind that's depicted an a report by the chairman of a state evaluaung team. local college officials said Tuesda) In an intenm repon that followed an accred1tat1on stud) of Golden West Collcie last month chairman Tom Clements said the d1stnct was in senous financial condition and not many people knew about 1t. "It 1sof great concern to the visiting team that so few people at Golden West are aware of the serious financial condition of the district." Clcm~nt<J wrote an the report "Only a few top administrator and union leaders seem to full}. under- stand the 1mphration of the deficit pending pattern of the d1stnct wtnch started approximate!) five )cars ago. "Each ~car approx1rna1el) $2 .. Jacobsens reunited' With hugs, tears in Ge'rmany WIESBADEN. We t Germany told reporte~ ·· • )'OU're going to (AP) -David Jacobsen ~ept for JOY Releted •torte• on AS. ha\~ to wa1tofffor two '.Ca~. But rm Tuesday on scema h1' ctiildren aaain goina to do 1t (run for tongrc s). h's and said ht-lonacd for the day other old tither to freedom wtth a sona. going to happen, it's what'~ 111 my Amman held m ~banon also arc On Tuesda> evening. Wa1tc told 3 de t1n)." · free. Houn later. Ar:iJhcan Church news conference in W1esba<ttn he Hc \poke to reporters from a flag· envoy Terry Waite offertd hope that . e~~lS to hear within 24 hour\ from draped ho\pllal b:ilcon~. v.hcrc he may be soon. h1 contacts whether he will be appeu~d wuh hi' son Enc and Paul Jacobstn's three grown children returning to Beirut to negotiate the and his daughter. 01anc Dugan. arri\·ed in~ frankfur;.on. Tues-f'C'lcast of more Wr trm h tB&t They spcnt•bout.1'4-MunJ.~~- day momi"I to .JCC tbc1r lather. He Waite, the cMoy of rchbish® of the h p1tal before emerging to meet was re~ated by his hntc Moslem Cantrrbury Rot)Crt Runc1t-,said there 1oum:ahm Jaco~n hu N h1 <"h1l- ludnappcn an lkarut on Sundl) after* arc ''reasonabl)' trona uge tions" drtn. who then played a reconttd more than 17months'ofcapt1v1t' and that the nc't nfo hostatrs to be ~naa ut his homcccim1n1-··When now11undc~1n1mtd1t."lltcsuitthe released wall ht '"'o 'mcnC'ln al50 '_t}lc Word ome ... ~rittcn and",una lJ. . Air For e Hospital in held 1nce 19 ..._ s1CX1attd Ptt ~ r£i, the two n . • Winbedtn . chief Middle East l r pondtnt -\\uh tcaD in his e)"t'$, Jiacobstn Hotptial (hrtttor 01. Charles • Ten') • ndcnon and tdUC'ator 1d Tucsda wa "a da> o1 JO) "•th Mafftt told a MYr'I coafc~ncc later Thoml uthcrland · m~ kid .. Tuctda JacOblcn was"' IO(xt health Jamblcn. a f\o~ITal ltd.m n1!.tr1tor 'I ~'ant to thank: God form) ~uh, and wuk1 n t need follow-up mt'd1· and a natl\e of t1unt1n1ton Beac'h. for their w1 om and their JUd&· al c•~. hf,: ~1d he had bttn think1na mtnt.'' mllhon as expended m excess of income. At the current rate of expenditure. the district will run totally out of reserves w1th1n one or two TS' unless there 1s some intervention to reduce oxpend1turcs. 1ncrea income, or both.· Chancellor Da"1d Brownell of the Coast Community D1stnct that oper- ate Orange Coast College in Cos1.a Mesa. Golden We t College in Hunt- ingtof1 Beach and Coastline Com- murut) College based m fountain Valle~. acknowledged Tuesday that the dastnct has gone throu&h difficult limes and ha~ had to dip into rescn;e~ the l.a~t four }Ca~ bccali-.,e of ~tcepl) dechrung.cnrollmcnl and anadcquatr stardtinmna. But tte claimed thl' d1stnct, v.h1ch nose-dived from 1.000 full-lime students 1n 19 I to 51 .000 an 1986. has taken strp to horc up the financial drain on u annual S95 The famah had n emotional abOut runnina forthc U.S onare ' ButJIC! n re ted rhcr ta miday rtun• n 11 1hc h0$Pttal and .. lJnfonuna1el) m) t1m11'lg" H~ry. mmts thu M no .. hoped fi r th ~ l"reetd American la09taCe O.Yld JacObeea llaqe llale eon, Bric. the chi~., komtd their ~>year-. "(f'f bad The cl«tion '' todl),".hc (..._. ... JAC088&"9/A.2) dartD1 tlaelr rnnlon la Wl•INaclen, W Germany. \' • m1lhon budget. The d1stnct. he said. CApccts to wind up with a better cndmg balance thJ.s ·)car (about S2 m1lhon) than ll did last }Car Brownell. ~ho aJso claimed that officials ha"e made repeated efTons to keep all !~vets of the colft-gt communlt) informed of its financtal tale, sa.1d the di Lrict has not ~>nl}, been hu hard b' the declining enrollment. but also b) the drying up (Pl~ eee COAST I A2) I Sellers gUilty of rape, murder B TEVE MARBLE , ., LLB CONVICTEDINllURDER-RAPE ••• ,...Al dllMeolparolc. SelllDn. detcnbed u a "decent ~ bcina _who did one temblc '9UI" by hia attorney. did not la\media~I) mlC't whtn tht verdict twu rod but thtn 1ttmed to bttak ---clown as he hiw:d hn tearful wife . .. , am completely ~ocked and ditlppoin\ed," •id dtfeftte attorney Jennifer Keller. who ~d'lhe felt close \o faiquna w~n tht verdict was .react. Ktlkt aaid aht could find "ho way in loaic or reason" for Juron· to convict Sellen of fint-de&rtt murder and rape. She had arguc<ffor second· delrtt murder. Deputy District Attorney Ric~ Kina. who was able toconvincejuron that Sellen raped the woman even thouah the ~ual assault occumd · after 1'er death, dccltned to comment Oil the jury's verdict. Likewise. the . victim's mother, MUine _AndmOn, said the would Laamie Selle;... Jeft. loob dlatra=t after ajuJ ftacla ber Wilt ~ntal after the penally phase or bubuid Robert Ll-d Sellen ty. • • 1be tnal to·commtnt. • . • • . -. -1 ~ • • • • Mo~tly sunny days expe_cted "rd hate to jeopardize anythi.na -• ., · : • · · • . " · •. • ~_..,..,.-..,-..-" .sbe . . --·-bOdund maccd:ll r1eaUY;o11 a bed. i,·,~cao bttaux 0ranat Cou.nl)'_ The mother, a resident of Salt Lake Kins told Jurors.. Shenffs finaerpnnt experts were City who appartntly talked wllb her The defense '!lued that Sellers unable to match prints lifted from the da•ttt by telephone only minutes never mtended to IC1l1 the ~oman and c::nme scene w1th SclJer's prints. before abe wu killed, appeared near only went to the apartment on the Sellers. who was interviewed by tears u she left t~ courtroom. mis,auided assumption • that police at the time of the killing. was Savannah AndersQn, cnpaed to~ Anderson l"'as somehow romantl· not arrested until 1984 when an married at the time of her death, was cal)y interested in him. Irv ine police dctecti~ re-checked bludaeone.d .in a bedroom of her "This was a rage kilhni f9llowed by Seller's prints apinst tllose found in lrvme apanmept on May ts. 1979. a psyf:hot1c1act of intercourse with a the «partment. .. Her body was d1scQvcred later that corpse,'' said Keller after Jurors At the time of his arrest, Sellers day by her fiant'ft artd pahce. returned thefr auilty verdict. Ii ved trt Brea with his wife-and year- kina araued that Sellers broke into Keller saJd that Sellers, who mar-old child and was employed as a tow the woman's apenment with the ned a high school swecthean from truck dnver. intent of rapina and murderinJ the Ohio ~ year· aftet the murder and Keller said her client has no prior 22-year-old woman, who lived alone. fathe~acbild, was disoriented from criminal record and was never ar- The prosecutor said Sellers -who lack of sleep and a diet of rested dunna the fivc-)ear b.iatus. worked at the apartment complex as a amphetamines. "He doeso 'tdeserve this." she said. security auard -killed Anderson, She accused the prosecutor of A pS)'Chologist employed by the returned several hours later to have wagmg an emouon&I fiaht apmst her defense team said Seller's wife-who sex with the corpse and then went out client and claimed that Jurors 'Wtre 10 sobbed while clutchinJ her husband for breakfast With a fncnd. tears at one point dunng Ute trial after in the courtroom -was stunned by Evidence presented dunna the trial being shown photognti>hs of the the verdict. showed that before ena.aaina in sex, v1ct1m. The penalty phase could last up to Seller's washed the woman's battered The murder case went unsolved for two.weeks, both attorneys qfced. COAST COMMUNI'nY COLLEGE DISTRICT ••• From Al -. . constituencies in this district' ttave been so involved with survival in the last few years that there has been little, if a'!}', ~!an~ing done at ~)' level :- or tideland 011 money due to the finanoal standings developed from a ,plummeuna prices ofoil. visit to Golden West College by an The distnct has received $2.8 accrcdidation team from the Western m1ij1on less than anuc1pated ~s year Association'of Schopls and Colleges. --~ ota falloffin oil royalties. he tcmcntsJ the team's chalrman, said. But money expected. to bC said tbc college bas a ~·very stronJ .. generated from Proposition S6 will teaching staff and the school does its pay for some sorely needed cons.tnJC.. .basic (unc .. On of instruction "very boar<I. d1stnct, or campus.l . Brownina said the tumult In pan was traced to the adminrstrauon of former· Golden West President ~Lee Stevens who was reassigned in I 98S as vice chancellor of business affairs t1on and mamtcnance, Brownell said. well v · The distnct also intends to cut Golden West President Fred Gar- much of the dcficn by prunina co tsat -cia said memben of the team v1s1ted telcv1ston station K-OCE at the Gold· I ?~plus classes, mtervicwed 2SO co West College. Brownell said an-students and fatted to get a negative nual spend1n1 ha been slashed from . comment about the qllllilty of 1n· $3.1 mtlhon to less than S 1 mtlhon. struct1on from a aglc student The d1stnct also 1s takma steps to The report 'also ·ci.imed that a'1~ •·• lease vacant land. consolidate opcr-ministrattv~ upheavals over the last attons, embark on1omt use programs. few )cars has resulted m a large advertise from W1th1n to fill JOb number of disgruntled people at vacancies and ts using "creauvny" in Golden West reass1anments, Brownell said .. A aEileral perccptton of the ac- The comments on the d1stnct's ettdttataon team 1s that people m all for the district. . Stevens. who was·appointed presi- dent m 1977. had received a "no confidence" 'Vote from faculty mem- bers Also contnbutlnJ to the unsettled times, Browning said, was tbe "over- throw" of \he old district board of trustees by the election of.u:achcr-backed cand1dates Nancy A. Pollard, Armando R. Rull and Conrad Nor-dqUls~ in 1983. GAME 8 / WEEK 8 /DAY 4 ' 85 55 ·so 81 7 ·13 37 -.. . . . . l ~ -JACOBSENS REUNITED WITH HUGS •.. From Al release._ of other Americans miss1na m Lebanon. "I hope to God they'll be comina out soon and t>y God I'll be down 'th-ere 'th -yOtJ (~pone~ lovt a ttl~mi too," he said. Six Americans and 13 other foreianers remain missing in Leba- non. K.i'-1nappers have said they had killed one of the Americans, though no body was found. _ Jacobsen said Andcnon and Sutherland "are do•na very well." Jacobsen. dfrector of the Amencan Un1vers1ty Hospital 1n Beirut, the ORANGE ....... .. COAST ..... r•• MAIN OFFICE 3JO ...._. e., '' Coll• ..... c.t MM aoore IQ• 1.56() C<IM• "'9M CA ~2616 capiull of Lebanon, was kidnapped m Beirut on May 28, I 98S. He told reporters how much he missed baseball and Uruvirslty of -Califol"!l1a at LOs Angeles football games. "What rm actually tryina to do as· act a scat on the t)ench for the next UCLA game," he said. "For a auy who's looked at death for the last 18 months, these are the rncmoricuhat kept me 'oina." .. rm unemployed, I m broke, I need a job," Jacobsen said JOk1naJy. His soo, Eric, said: "We're all happy because we're talung these David J1cobsen bracelets ofTtoda)'." Relative' and fnends of caiitivc -Ameriean have tJeev-~mTJ bracelets with the hostage's name inscribed on them . Watte met the children and their spouses at the Frankfu~ airpon. The children talked t.Here about the other hostages and their families. "Weare still with them a.s~ u we ever were. It's not oveT for us until 1t'sover'forthem," EncJacobsen told reporters D:!t~ o...tect-... 2 ~7· .._ & ......... 2 '31• .,.-CoP-,•'11'\I l!lll ()°"'lye~ ~ c.on.c-1 !'lo MO#\ ~-............ --n-ett• O< --,,..., ....... , IMf be tlQ<-.c.ecl " l'IOIA fCl«tei pet Justcall 642-6086 la Guarenteed ·1.1~w ""' .. nos ,... '°"-,_,.. l>T ?130pm c;.-7p"' eftO'(OIJICOl>'f • be ~ .. cqpyt.gN- VOL 71,NO.• What do' you hke about th_c Dady Pilot? What don't you like? CaJI the number above and your message will be recorded, transcribed and de· livered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answcrina service may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Cootribu1ors to our Letters column must mclude their name and telephone number for vcnfication. Tells us what's on your mIDd. mE .· GREATESl SKI SEASON STARTS RIGHT HERE ........ . S.•...O.r ~ r II '°"' C).) l'IOI ,..__ 1 ... C«'"( 0,, 1 • "' c.i .,........ 10 A "' ...., rW' C°"1' ""' be--ed Clrculetlon Te,!!phone• Moal Urau~ eo..nt1 .._ ea...m l~lj~ ........ :,, .. ....., .,...,~ ~,_.,,__Cl. 7N°'JJ.lllU ) ) f • -