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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-12-05 - Orange Coast Pilot, Embattled banking regulator· resigns BUSINESS/ A 7 ... THE ORANGE COAST , WORLD/A4 .. . Students given sobering lesson COAST /A3 25CENTS TUESDAY" DECEMBER 5 .. 1989 Ocean front_ development under fire By ROBERT BARKER Of -DM!y .._ St"" Revised plans for three new res- taurants and accompanying shops and stores to be constructed on the ocean side of Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach came under heavy fire when unveiled officially for the fu-st time Monday night. A ••• of polnsettl•s Planning Commissio ner Geri O r- tega said she was "mad as hell" about the development plans, claim- ing they would destroy the "pristine view" of the coastline. "I call on the residents all t>ver the state to go against this project, .. she said. "We don't want a dense. 80 000-squarc-foot commercial de- velopment. We don't need a mall on Stl_.enta S.IMlr• KasqMld ~ llruc• Jorun plllftt ...._. Mlvn _... • p1411hor• of po..,..HI• • ~ ... COMt the beach." Also coming before the City Council for the first time Monday was a proposal to incorporate a modern version of the Golden Bear nighclub in the Plcrside Pavilion entertainment complex at Main Street and Pacific Coast Highway. The old Golden Bear, first a res- taurant when constructed in 1929 and later a nightclub where nsmg musicial stars performed, was de- molished in I 986 to make room for redevel6pmcnt and because 11 fai led to meet earthquake standards. Consultant Richard Harlow said plans call for a 3.000-square-foot nightclub that will seat up to 400 people to be operated b} Pepper's restaurant. "an upst} le . fa mil~" res- Cotl .... The spectacular 1pU1'9n are sale J to S1JO p.111. n...-., and PrklaJ at the coll ... Hortlcultwe Center. • Saving baby's life was a real high 'Crying ... was the best sound you could hope for ' 9y pt AUL ARCHIP'UY Md lltlS YOKOI Of -Dail!Y ,_ SU« Two days after savina a toddler's life, Bill G raham was still riding an emotional high. The Ncwpon Beach polioe officer had been the fint to respond to a 911 call Saturda~m James Land- is, whose son Je had fallen into the backyard swimmina pool and stopped breathina. When On.ham arrived. Landis. 39, was sivina his 18-month--01d son moutb·to-moutb rautcitation. For the 2S-year-old officer, a simi- lar incident from the past came rushing back. Theo an MP at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, G raham was the first to arrive at a military housing unit wheR a baby had reportedly suff'oc::a tcd. The youna Marine perfonned CPR on that baby for 1 S minutes, without success. He learned later that the mother had rolled over on the infant in her sleep. The child had been dead for an hour before he arrived.. Saturday, when he walked into the CO\llC,IOIC\ 1111,C \l'I Landis' back yard and saw James Landis frantically ~ing to revive his son. the similarities were fnght- cning. · "The baby was about the same size an. d age. and he had that same ashen look. that same look of death," Graham said. "I thought, 'Ob no. Here I go again.· .. • But Graham took over, was able to open the infant's airway. and had the child breathina in seconds. "When be started cryina. it was the best sound you could hope for," Graham said. Doclon kept Jeffrey, Diana and James Landis' onl} child. under ot>- scrvauon for two nights at Hoag Memonal Hospital. But by Monday. JefTre) was bad. to his rambunctious toddler self, running around and hollenng to get his parents' attentio n "He's absolutely fine:· said Diana, 37, in a phone interview punctuated by Jeffrey's yelhn& in the baclqround. Diana said she and her husband weren't sure 1f Jeffrey slipped and fell into the pool accidentally or 1 f he went in out of curiosity. "Wt're around the pool w1th him a lot. but he is a cauuous child ... she said. taurant. - Harlow said architect\ v.111 work m parts of Lhe facade of the Old Golden Bear that was presc~ed and stored m a cuy warehouse If approved. the Golden Bear would be located 1n 1hc four-stol) entertainment comple' acro~s lht> street from P1ers1de Village In unveiling plans fo r P1ers1dl' Village, which m~ludes three new restaurant~ plus retention of Max· well's restaurant. develo per Jonathon Chodos said backen arc trying to make the project "ccon- om1caJI) viable and as moff'ensivc as possible.·· Chodos said the entire project. planned to be built on the oart of (Please Sff PLAN/Alt Mesa ce>un.cil cuts bar's hours, orders additional parking By 808 VAN EYKEN Of the OM!y -Staff Costa Mesa Cit) Council mem- bers Monday slapped a ~t of ught (I _rcstricttons on noise and dancing at Hogue Banmchael's bar on . ev.port Boulevard./measures the saloon·s owner said -would put him out of busmcss. Another Newpon Boule,ard bar Harry and Henf) 's Goat Hill Ta'- cm. got off more eas1l~ The l:Ounc1I removed a restnc11on on the Ul\ - em's hours of operauon that had been imposed b~ the Planning (om- m1ss1on last month Acting in response to neighbors' complamts of noise. trash and rowdiness. the council voted to cut off dancing at 11 p.m. at Hogue Ba.rmichael's and to require the owner to obtain the use of 50 ad- ditional parking spaces a1 an ofT-s11e location. "We'll~ out of business with that just as we would wtth no dancing a1 all." said Hogue Barm1chael's owner. Jules Boryczev.sk1 "It'll kill us. And where arc we going to find 50 parking spaces.'' The council's 3· I dec1S1on. with Mayor Peter Buffa absent and C oun- cilman at Clasgow 'ot1ng no. came after a two-~our pubhc hcanns at which several neighbors voiced complaints about the popular week- end entertainment spot. "I've ~n living here a couple of years." Church Street resident Dave McC'o)' said. "Every weekend I wake up and find the. yard h uercd with trash. The other ntght I found all my neighbors mail boxes piled 10 my yard .. Another n~1ghbor menuoned more scnous problems. "The~·' e been parking cars 1n my lot for I 0 'can... saJd Peter Wadsworth. a ne1ghbonng busmess owner ... In the past two v.-eclcs alone. I've had several acts of vandalism. r ve had cars broken into and win- dows smashed. I've had human def- ccauon on m) premises." The neighbors' comments were coun1cred by a large number of patrons. some of whom were local residents. and bar e mployees. Hogue Barmichacl's defenders said Boryczcwsk:i and the bar's man- agement were doing a good job of pohcmg the area and keeping ~ lem s to a minimum. "I own the maintenance company that cleans up inside and out. .. said CJirl os Rus1z. a resident of Diamond Bar 'T ve heard people talk about trash on the streets, but we piclc up all the paper 10 the vicinity, wbct.ber n's fast food wrappers or whatever. (Please see COUNCIL/ Alt Laguna land use hearing tonight .. Residents say theY' re not part of OEI problem~ and a ban on commercial use of CF'Ca. "People want air quality, but they only t.vor solutions that don't re-s,um penonat ucrifica, .. Kau •Kl ~ don't n:alia bow nuacb eech individual is a pan of the pn>ble:m ... But even while l'CIDC)Odeftu op. DOlld telUicUoM -their ....... " pneat cooceded the Air Qwility =y1aent Piia -wi1la 'O' I' n M-........... due ia Ge '"°' -d ..... a pmid efl'bct oa dM _.., olllt. .... -.. WY/All .,s wlthdra f;om I . Insurance job aids Ban nlster ,,... ..,, ... wh NpOftl Hu.nti.ap>o Beach Councilman W• Buuillter became the ooly R.e-- pubtican in the l"ICle for It.ate in-ewance commiuiooer on Monday wbn lDIUJ'aOCe O>mmiMioner Rox- ani Gillespie announced abe would not be runni~ The office will become an elected t::.' for the first time next Novem- Oilletoie. an apPOintee of Gov. 0eorte l>eukmejaan, was the best known Republican campaiping for tbe ·office. But she was also the most coriuoversial fiaure in either party in tbe race because of her h.igb-profiJe role in implementina Proposition 103, including several abrupt ~ of policy in granting or deoyana insurance companies' ex- . empcions from the initiative•s rate COUNCIL From Al I'm out there every morning and I sec that the area gets policed." One handicapped patron 'said Hogue Barmichael's 1s the only sports bar in the area that is fully equipped to serve wheelchair-bound customers. "I can't even use the bathroom at other bars in the area." Doug O'Keefe said. "At Hogue·s. they've gone beyond what's required in adapting their facilities to the dis- abled." Despite the spirited-defense, which included signatures from 50 residents of the neighborhood sur- rounding Hogue Bannichael's. a ma- jority of council members remained LAGUNA From Al zones within the city and modifies -at least shghtly -every element within Laguna's general plan. Where possible, existing land-use and zoning regulations for Laguna Beach arc being extended to South Laguna. But for the most part, the proposed zoning and land-use dcsig- nauons are being carried over intact from the South Laguna Specific Plan, which has servca as the area's planning document since 1983. "The underlying objective in this project is to mee&c the conte'1ts of that SpeClfic plan into eust1ftg city documents, m particular. our gen- SURVEY From Al As with past surveys, a majority named traffic as the county's biggest problem, cited by 40 percent of the residents. Jn fact, satisfaction with the frtt- way system has declined 25 percent since 1982. About 60 percent of commuters said traffic on their routes to work had worsened, com- pared with 39 percent in 1982. Nevertheless, the one-person-~­ car commuter remains vutuaUy un- cbanaed durinR that period. ••As with air pollution, they see traffic CODJCltiOn as a problem that needs solvma, but they don't want to chan&e their personal habits to fix it,.. Aaldassare said. Notina that voters rejected two local ules tax measures durina the decade aimed at fundina transpor- tation improvements, be said, "The bigest problem in the 1980s bas fCDU'lted no chlnaes in CWTent be- havior and no consensus about fu- ture solutions ... Growth was cited as the second most s>raaioa problem, named by 17 percent of the respondents. Accordina to .S9 percent, local srowth reauJations are not strict rollbKk requiremcnL Her announcement catapulted 8uuliller, an independent in1uraoce -.mt. into the Umelipt in the Ro-pur:eaermary. ' at a COUAciJ JDCCti.oa Mooctty, Bannister termed Rouni's witbdrinl u a shot in the ann for his candidacy. •• "We've been movina ahead, and this will ju.st add to our momen- tum, .. be said. Bannister also said that be teeS no other Republican rivals on the horizon and that he now bas hopes of obtainina in eodorsemeot from Detlkinejian, who be said bad been withboldina bis endorsement from Ro uni. Democrats either formally in the race or Ooatina political tnal balloons about runnina include Con- convinced there was a problem that required drastic measures. "We realize the restrictions are severe, but we hope they will prove something that you can Jive with," Councilwoman Mary Hornbuckle said. Additional restrictions imposed by the council included a complete prohibition Ofl noise, a requirement that the bar's windows remain closed at all times and a limitation on the number of people permitted to wait outside the bar to no more than 20. Hogue Barmichaers attorney. Robert 8 . Adams.. said the saloon's owners would probably file an ap- peal to the council's action in Su- perior Court. "I think they've gone beyond their prerogatives with some of these re- eral plan and our zoning ordinance," said Kyle Buttcrwick. communil~ services di rector. So far. it is the pro~scd changes in restrictions for residential areas. such as how high a home can be or bow much of the lot. 11~ cover, that have generated ttwgr~Jcst de- bate. • While current city standards re- strict heights to 30 feet above ground, the proposed plan limits building heights to 25 feet on Oat lots and up to 30 feet on sloping lots. This aspecrof the plan is considered a "flexible ordman~" open to modi- fication in special instances. More significantly. the council will also consider chang.ang the gen- eral plan to allow inclusion of a enough, CC2.mparcd with 52 percent last year and 40 percent m 1982 Drug abuse was named by 54 percent as the most scnous social problem in Orange County, followed by health care (14 percent). phght of the homeless ( 12 percent) and child care (7 percent). while 13 percent named. other issues. As in the past, Orange Countians fall behind other Americans in gi v- ing time and money to charitable causes. The" averaae amount p ven to charity is 0.6 percent of the median household income. Republicans, college-educated residents, those with children at home and those who donate money arc more likely to volunteer their time. Still. only tbrtt in 10 county residents do so on a regular basis. Baldassare and Katz said pan of the reason may be the relative "new- ness·· of Orange County com- munities. "We're a relatively young com- munity. and we're still in the process of find.in& out who we att," Baldassare said. In addition. people involved with their churches and synagogues tend to aive more of their money and of themselves, but Orange Countians , . way Collis, a mmibeT o( the State loud of EQualiution~ telcviJion com11M1Dtator "Dill Press; and Walter Zellnwm, eieaitive d&naor of Cali- ~mia Common Cautc. Gillespie made the surpri1e aa- nouncement that she was abandon· lna her S-month-<>ld e:g;ratory ~­itical~m · in o .. to ttrve the . of California unen- cum by the distractioos of pol~ itical fund-raisin& and a divisive political campaian." Sbe added in a written statement announana her decision that she has '"also decided not to seek employ- ment in the-insurance industiy when my term in office expires nnc N~ vember," but she did not say what other plans she ntay have. The 47-ycar-<>ld Gillespie, who bad been an attorney for Industrial strictions." Adams said. "With the noise restriction, for example, you can't just say to a business that opens onto a sidewalk that you can have zero noise emanating from the establishment. What you do is estab- lish and allowable level) of sound. and enforce it." The Goat Hill Tavern has also been the subject of com plaints. At a heanng Nov. 13 on the Goat Hill Tavern's operating permit, planning commissioners voted to reduce the tavern's operating hours and to require other crowd control and security measures. But Councilman On Ambu~cy called for a review of the Planning Commission's action. saying the re- duced hours might defeat the de- sired purpo~. A neighboring bar, the Helm, is fairly complicated method for calcu- latina building height. In additioD. lhc plan revises regu- lations on the extent to which a lot can be developed. Although the city•s Design Review Board often approves much smaller structures. current city regulations allow de- veloptnent of up to 50 perc.ent of a lot. The plan calls for maximum lot coverage of between 35 and 44 per- cent Another hotly debated issue deals with zoning and rent moratoriums fONr1obil~-h&me-paRs.-:r o preserve affordable housing. the commission is recommending that mobile home parks -at least one of which is tarJCted for redevelopment -be zoned for mobile home u~ only. on the average arc less involved with reliaious institutions than other Americans., he said. ~It's a shame Wlth all the affluence here that they're not willing to share some of that.·· Katz said. And, surprisingly, affluence no loqcr seems to provide the buffer from problems that middle class residents face. ••Having a big income bad always been insurance apiost the county's problems," Katz said. "Those eam- 1na .SS0,000 or more were always more confident ... "But for th~first time. it looks as if money no ronger buys happiness with Orange County," Baldassare said. Correction , . A bcadlia:ie in Saturday's Daily Pilot, "Police arrest 16 abortion protesten," was incorrect. The demonstrators at the Burl- inpme offices of the BWTOuahs W:~come ~orp. were protcstina the ~na~cy of the company's anti- The Dally Pilot regrets the error. A new ltn lfl'll"I ....... leach with frah Ind ..tlirwl , ...... ,.... ......... ... ~-a aquarium part of Pierside proposal Indemnity, a San FrancitoeH>ued iDJUn.DOC company, before her ap- pointment as commissioner. bas been under constant attack for ber implemention of Proposition 103. permitted to stay open until 2 a.m. The Helm shares a perking lot with the Goat Hill and security guards hired by the Goat Hill's owner, Robert Ziemer. police the parking lot. To force the Goat Hill to close at 1 a.m .. as required by the Planning Commission. would leave the park- ina lot with no security guards dur- inJ the Helm~s final hour of oper- auon. Council members voted 3-1. with Sandy Genis opposed. to restore the Goat Hill's regular closing time of 2 a.m. Two =:.-Moaday were ooneide.i;a IO build die SoutJ>.. lud'1 ..,..._. marine 8qUarium, wbicll propoaeaCI bope would draw more tbaD one million visilOrl a.o· aually to tbc renovated downtown area CJ( Huntiaaton Beach. Wildlife Associates Inc. of Pawdna, in conjunction with Ro~ en Clwtel l.eucr It Co. of BeveTly Hilla, ae proposina a Sil million to SU millioa Ocean Wildlife Center that would anchor the renovation of new boidl, restaurants, shops and a pier plannec\for the downtown area. Two years lfO, the Cousteau So- ciety ~ a l 2S,()()()..squarc- foot aquarium. riv alina the Monterey Bay aquarium and now- defunct Marineland on the Palos Verdes peninsula. but thole plans proved too large and costly. The Ocean Wildlife Center. at one-third the size of the proposed Cousteau Society aquarium and half the cost, would house seven of the most popular marine species: sharks. dolphtns, river otters, penguins. sea lions. sea turtles and giant octo- puses. But it would forego many exotic exhibits· that company of- ficials contend would not be as attractive to visitors. If the company's proposal gains support from business and com- munity leaders, formal plans will be submitted to the city of Huntington PLAN ''°"'At beech that's now covered by an uphalt ~na . lot. is between 70,000 and 90,000 square feet, about the 11me me as tbc previous Pierside ViU.C plan that was scuttled for being too bia to pay off economietllY. Q\odos ~d. thou&h, the curTCnt plans are bulked up by a la,.e pier plaza. another plaza. a surf museum, a possible aquarium. boardwalk viewpoints and other amenities. Q\odos claimed the development would actuaUy improve vistas of the ooean and beach. He· said com- mercial and specialty stores arc needed "because a restaurant row would be too sterile for pedestrians." Critics claimed the project, from the pier to Lake Street. is obJec- tionable because it's just as big as ever. Resident Larry Geisse argued that the restaurants will create ·•a vinual circus" at the beach. "Why do we have to look like Newport Bcach._>'at. it will be required that we dnvt" Merccdesci. and Jaguars. "Why can't we be bold and protect our beaches?'' Beach early next year. said David McDougal. a partner in Wildlife Associates. Amburgey said keeping the 1"('8· ular closinJ time would permit the other rcstnctions 10 take effect. The Goat Hill Tavern's con- ditional use pennit will be up for review apin in three months. Two injured in 1-car crash Also, to reduce the cbaJ}ce that low- income mobile home residents will be forced from their homes for econ- omic reasons. the commiuion is asking for a halt to rent increases for six months while rent stabilization measures arc considered. Some residents have contested the new plan. Among them arc the owncn of up to a dozen pieces of property in South Laguna that would be rezoned for less building densiti . While tonight may be the last public bcarina on.. the. plan. 1be. coun- cil is not expected to take final action until Oec. 12, according to Butterwick. The new regulations arc intended to take effect on that date, he said. Pessimism about the county"s fu. turc increased in one y~r from 38 to 47 percent, while only 28 percent believed the county will become a better place to live, compared to 35 percent last year. Consequently, more people are thinkina about moving o ut of the county. Overall, the survey showed resi- dents still think Orange County is a pretty good place to live. It's just not as aood as at used to be. from ltllff _,.. wtre reports • Two people were injured. one leriously, in a ~ven car pileup early Monday that forced the closure of three southbound lanes of the Santa Ana Freeway in Irvine. The~ shortly before 10: l S a.m. jUll north of the free.. way's interchange with the San Diego Freeway. BABY From At "We're JUSt real pleased wlth the outcome," Diana said. The l..andises arc discussina either covering or fiUing the pool "We don't want to overreact," Diana said. but the family bas re- alized the fence they installed around the pool isn't enough protec- tion. • The landises have not been able to talk to Graham since the accident because of the officer's days off. but the family hopes to visit him at work Wednesday, Diana said. "We want to go over and sec him with Jefmy and thank him," Diana said. "He•s the one that made the difference. He got there so quickJ y. "We were thanking all the doctors at Hoq. and they weTC saying. 'Thank the ofTICler.' I can•t'WaJt to meet him ... For Graham, the near-traledy Oranic County Fire Department spohswaman Kathleen Ota said the more seriously injured victim was taken to Mission Hospital R~onal Medical Center in Mission Viejo. The other victim suffered minor Utjuries. However, details remained skelchy Monday evenina because the investigating officer was still trying to obtain information. came at a fortuitous time. "I'm still in the proces of going through a divorce." he said. "ft ha~ been a real dram. "So this came at a perfect ume It reaUy uplifted my sp1nts." And 1t relnlorcc<l G raham·s hfc· lona ambition to become a pohct officer. "h 's something I've always want· ed to do," be said.. He earned his associate degree by age 19, but v.as too young to JOin a police forcc. So be joined tbe Manne Corps to p in a little "maturing." he said. He was a Newport &ach reservist for one year and bas been on the force two yea.rs. The occasional downside of pohc<' work is insi&nificant when an op- portunity like Saturday·s· comes alona.. "Even the downers you become ac:c:ustomed to,·· Graham said "When somethina like this happens. it makes up for anything they can do to you.·· Jusl ca /1642-6086 ORANGE bi ....... COAST IJ r•• D•llyPHot Delivery Is Gu•r•nteed What do you hlte about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your message will be recorded. transcribed and de- livered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-bo ur answcrina service may be used to record letten to the editor on an~ topic. Contributon to our Lettcn column must include their name and telephone number for verification. Tell us what's on your mind. YOL.12,NO.• MAIN Offf'ICIE J lfl " l..t'f \t ( 1\IA "'°V ( /# f ~..-;~.,." "l" I • \Hl tou.-\Aru " "'·'·' Ct..tut,1 .wt\ 111•' \~""a.,,,~"<..,.,, .. ,, '-·~ .,.,.., \c-cwh ,. •I • • / "'''' " """ \p. .If\ 1\4 / 4 1 tn ~~ .. , .. J1 • \40 ''· t '"" '-'~· ,,.,. \'«'1 (OOy• qnt -'4\.1 f'tr\llr\ \ti ol P.\ j\fl •• "'In\ f"if).f t I 9"\.-Cfr· ')f .,,.,.,, ,,....,.,.,,,.., ,,,. .. ,. -...y t.14" 'f''"' •1;,. • • '"' '"' \0--( • ~· .... ~· ,.. f t 1()~14~( ·~· \.r<ona U •H PO\t-'9"' p...41 •r cou..t ._. .. v c .. ,,,,.,.. rJ"\ I •• Ml(lt \1Jn'Cf Pl*""" by c ~H ~' \\ J\ Of>t POi,r .,,,,.,.,,,.., "*''.,.,, Oy ""¥ f \I ""'CJnl,,,... ,,,.,,. Of~ ( OflU (J~ 'I r .h,,"ll \ PtlOf"'""'"'d by -"\1f,v?\\ O'""Q' co.-" Pl.Jot \"'"'9 co A,,,...... ,,.O·~ .. 11.1 .,., •\ t'VO'l\hrd \f"Vf'" ""'Of~\ ~ ......,,,., 1"4-' portl p_.. ~'""'41 P""" '' "' UO W IAy \t (o•t• "'~"' If ,,,, ,,,.. ~~ ... ~ ~,. tioAiJ-l·:r" • ... ... """ • 10 ""' •""2 ,,,,..,,. ~ ~ .... °"' .,....."'"'~ Out u tOf""llPr \*'~"' r l r"llf"' \ opr'f'\ ''Df" e-• '" to \ p'" Wf""•O..)'\ I A\\•\f r -.; w ·th ,ow' c ,, " •l•t-', ,.,....,, Clrculatlon Telephones MANUFACTURED a FINIStEI;) .. ORANGE COUNTY Heirwood is in its 37th year of manufacturing and finishing the finest shutter products available anywhere, right here in Orange County. Unlike many of our competitors, who sefl shutters made in foreign lands, ours are home grown! When you need Information regarding shutters, please call us. OUr represent~tive wUI b8 happy to give you a carefully measured in-· home estimate at no charge. We are sure you wlll be pleaaad with cu fine product. '8!fM prbt. You should aliO be plll•ad k~ you wll rKllve. proClJCt rMde and tlnlltMid In ClltGmia ~ Cllfomla craftllw-.. .. - DAILY PILOTIT~. December 6, - ' Ill I I I I I' HO\ H U Dinosaur a rty at NB museum Students get soberl~g demonstration . The Museum of Natural History and.&denc:e lD Newport Beach hosts Its fourth annuaJ Dinosaur ~risunu party from 10 Lm. to nooo Saturday. Cbild~n -aes S 10 I 0 years are invited to join the celebration. ActJVities include a short talk and demon- Sltllion.on dinosaurs followed by a crafts prosram and dino pinata party. A dino raffle and treau arc planned for all who attend. Parenu and grand- pattnts are encourqed to attend to assist the children in decorating the muscum•s holiday tree. Admission is S2 tor museum memben and S3 for nonmembers. The museum is at 2627 Vista <lei Oro. Newport Beach For more information call at 640-7120. ( ScoUts g~t holiday spirit . Fountain Valley G ari Scouts are setting the holiday scene at the Fountain Valley Library. Junior Troop No. 835 has set up a Chnstmas tree an the library lobby. local troops may add handmade decoratio ns thro ugh Christmas. The public and troop~ are encouraged to filJ the empty space under the tree with donations of canned goods, bab) food. formula and disposable diapers to help suppon "Ha~ llands" sponsored by Holy Family Church in Fountain Valley. For mo re information call Janice Travis at 963-6349. Brunch to aid Mak~-A -\11/sh --8y JANIT ZJMMl•MAN Of .... ~ ..... IUft A .,.ay Maz,da, with iu passcnaer seat amaJhed under the dashboard and itt , hood creased 1n accordian·like pleatt., .... , the subject of a serious leuon at Huntinaton Beach"High School on Mon·, day. It wasn't reading. or wntina or arithmeuc, however. It was an eumPG of real life. The car. with a toppled blue Ho nda motorcycle embedded in its hood, was hauled to the campus quad to make a point. Motben ~inst Drunk Driving. aJona with Huntinaton Beach police and the student body, recruted a crash to show teen-agers just how dangerous drinking and driving can be. , Three students, wnh blood and bruises painted on the1I faces. realist1cally portrayed the dnvers and victims. A police car and motorcycle. fire engJne and ambulance roared onto campus. with sirens going. to 1nvcst1gate the collision. The dnvcr ol the car was handcuffed and caned off to an imaginary )ail after she failed a scncs o f field sobnet) tests that were explained by an office r using a bullhorn. The re-enac1ment had the desarc.-d ef- fect -students bulled with their views on the well-pub I ici1ed subJCCI. "I don't thank you can tell kids no t to drink; they're not going to listen. Bui telling them not to dnnk and dn-.c. I think that has more of an effect.'' -.aid 17- ycar-old Kosten Dicke). who acted as the dnver of the car. • • \ o...,..._.,......~-"-... Newpon Landing restaurant wall be hosting a special chantv champagne brunch to benefit the Orange ( ount> Chapter o f the Make-A-Wish Foundation from 10 a .m 10 3 p.m. Saturday. Dickey. who doec;n't drank alco hol. said she became more aware ol the problem after thl· daughter of her mother's fnend was ~1lkd in an akohol- related accident Stude nts, pollce officers •nd fi refighters re-enact • traf'fk ua1h ln volvlng a drunken driver. All proc<.'t"d\ generated wait be donated to Make-A-Wash \\hat·h grants washes for severely 111 ch1ld ren. A t.1~-<.le<luct1ble donation of $20 per person as requested . Hunch will include fresh fruit. cabemet sorbet. eggs lkned1ct. potatoes en croute an(j., dessert. Magician ~Ott Tokar wall entertain and local merchants \\ 111 ha\\.' a fundra1sang raffit. Fo r required rc<;<:rvauons or more infor- mation call 675-237' Church Christmas p arty The staged accident was 1he kick-off of a nauo nal campa1~n urgrng d n,ers to tie a .red nbbon on U~car car in a pledge to stay a sober dn \er. said ')heIT) Metcalfe. president of MADI)', Orangt' < ount} chapter The group has targeted 'oungstt'rs bc- cauS<' of the pov.er the) \'ield "i th tht"1 r parents. she ~ad "If }OU do n't l·hange the a11 11udes of the adults a\ "ell a<. th~· r hlldrrn. then you've lost ground:· Metcallt' c;a1d The message apparl·nth ha\ gollt'n through 10 a 101 of pcopk In I ~tlX. drunken dn \ 1ng fa taht1e!> 1n Orange Count)' v.ere do v. n h> I~ ~ pc.:rlt·n1 ac- rnrdmg to M .\DO ~ In the first s11t month\ o l 1h1\ \l'J r. J people 1n Orange l ount> 1-H'rt· k1 lkd an alcohol-related accident<. In I 9NX. I '4 people died in drunkcn-dm mg an ·1dcnt\ in the co unt\. . T he a1111ude a mong man\ 'tu1.knt' on campus 1\ that the\ rnn·1 ket'P fnends from dnnk1ng. hut the\ lJn 'top them from drinking and dn\ 1ng .\nd dramat1l mc~gcs lake the o m· ddl\ l'rl'd ~ond~\ are all tht: more l'l1Cl'tl\ t' thn \aid "Th1<, ma} help the \nungn k1d'I ·· o;a1d M ache lie Lo' mg. a 4'1.'mm · 1 ht' nlda kid s ha'e alread' madt· up 1h1:1r mind<.. the) al read~ knu" thl' r unscquenl l.,, hot ma)he lor tht' nin1 h grader' 11 might make a d1ffert'nn· ·· Kenneth .\thcnon said h1.• alh 1~·' 11'1'> The Women of Sout'll Coast Community Church sponsor their annual Chnstmas event Saturday a t the Irvine Mam o n Hotel. Brunch wall be served from 8 .i~ a m. and lunch wall be served from 12 . .is p rn The e\Cnt \\Ill feature thl' 160-mcmbcr <\1usa Pacific lJ n1' t'r\11~ Orchesta and ('hoar perfomung a wtde selection of Chno;t mas music. as well as. Chnst1an o;pc:akn and lrumonst ~a~ G I) nn People~. More than I NOi i "om en are c1tpcctcd to attend T acket\ art· S20 and ma~ be purchased at the churl·h ofliu: I lll mort• inform ati on call at 8 54-7600. ext )ll, Rohrabacher claims Nicaragua's action risks U.S. intervention Count ry Ch ristmas In Irvin~ Also an I r'lnt· Saturda) "111 he the Countr) Chnstmas (ckhra11un at O ld To"n In-me from noon to 5 p m. , .\ttrac11on' 1ndud1.· lrn· farnal~ photos with Santa Clau'i fro m I to ~ p.m .. n des 1n a horsc- drawn haywason a nd rntl·namment by carolers. A holiday colonng contl'St will be open to children 10 ye.ars and )Oungcr. \\Ith cntr) forms available from Old f own merchants. Completed pictures should be turned an to an) of the merchants by noon Dec. 16 . .\ pr11e drawing for a selection of stuffed tedd) bcars wall bc held at I p.m. that day. Fo r more 1nforma11on about the celebrataon or contests. call 557-5100. Snow party In Costa M~sa Whtie Irvine celebrates with panies. Costa Mesa will celebrate with snow at the annual Holiday Snowhall special event from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m . Saturday. A 55-to n htll of sno w for slt'ddtng. snow fun- zone play area and wrnterland picture area will be open at Estancia Park/Baleanc Commun11y Center. 1975 Balean c Dn\C. Other actJ vitaes 10- clude hayndes. pony n des. face painting. bounce house. hohda) entertainment and m ore. The event as open to children 12 years and yo un1er. k!tmmal donauons. which wilJ go to the Red Cro .. are a'iked for some events. From Dally Piiot wire services WASHlf'.(JTO'\, -fhc Sand101.,1a government nskcd greater l S an ter- vcnuo n an N 1c.aragua .\\ h<'n 11 refused to allo\\ a congre~s1onal delcgauon into that countr) last v.ec~end to obscn <' cam- paigning before 1hc Fehrua~ elecuons. according to an O rangt' Cou nt) con- gressman who was among tho\(.' lum t"d away. .. I hey slammed the door 1n our face. but 1f they maintain th1o; pohc} they are going to find out lhey slammed the d oor on their own fingers'' said Rep . Dana Rohrabachcr. R-Scal Beach. Rohrabacher, three other congress men and State Depanmcnt officials were scheduled to v1s1t El Sah ador and Nicaragua. but we re denied '1sas b\ the Nicaraguan go,ernment and v.etc· dis- suaded fro m v1s11ang El ah ador b«auS<' of fighung there. The gro up an stead '1<11ted Honduras and Panama v.here 11 met \\tlh .S. m1htar; office rs and o ppos1t1on leaders in Panama and '1s11cd a Nicaraguan guemllas camp an Uon<h.tra\ The U .S goHrnment 1s bacl 1ng the Nicaraguan resistance. known as the the Contras. and wo uld hk;e to Set' Pan- amanian '>trong m • .tn \IJnud 'onl·ga O\enhro"n. Rohrabal hcr 1'> J '>lmng lon- gress1onal \uppon a o f the l ontra" While he ~1d he did not want to cn11c1ze the adm1n1s11a11 on tor its hand- ling of a recent coup attempt in Panama. he urged the president not to tear using force 10 oust Noriega. "I JUSt thin k !'lon ega 1~ \1111 an po"er because the American go\emmC'nt has 'no t come to the real11a11on that 11 has Ul react and react forceful!\." he .-.aid "We may have to suppon th0'4.' using force .. <\ccordang to m p) o f a lc11er from 1ht.· Nicaraguan Foreign Man1~1cr D'Escolo Brockmann, the group wa\ turned a"a' because Rep. G V "Sonn'" Montgom - ery. D-M1ss . as a memtll:r of Pre' Hush"· election obser-.er group "Nicaragua cannot permit am l \ Presadenttal Comm1ss1on 10 rnmc here and masquerade as innocent and 1m- pan1al o bsen ers." the lc11er rt•ad an pclrt "From the point of \IC" ol C'red1b1nt\ among our people ha' 1ng heen ap- pointed to Mr Bush·., Pre\1den11al < om- miss1on as the kiss of death ·· But Rohrabacher "arned that l t>e p1ng prcs1dent1a l ob<;en er\ out "ould ta mt the elections "It 1s absoluteh 1mpcf':ltl\ <' toward The Nicaraguan gover""'•nt re- fused to allow Rep. Dana Rohrabac.her and other con- 9reUlften Into th• countiy. creating an atmosphere of neces~~ for a free election ·· he said "Othel'WIS<'. there's an atmosphere o f m11m1dauon and ho pelessness that the o pposnon faces that's 1mposs1ble to O\ercome Tho')C peo ple feel hle the' are cut off do\\ n there from e"~one It's hle h'ang your hfe v.1th somebod) ·s boot in )OU fa e " For more informauon call 645-4985. ' (' .\ l .t :'\ D ·\ H Resident injured in hOuse fire Tue day, Dec. 5 1y IRIS YOKOI Of -D.ity Not ,,..., • 6 p.m . La1ua Beacll Ctty CoacU. council chambers. 550 Forest Ave. A Costa Mesa man. roused from has sleep by a fire thal started near his water heater. was blasted wi th names and heat when he opened the door to his garage early Monday momina. • 6:30 p.m. lrvtae CUy Coadl, council chambers, I Ctvic Center Plaza. • 7 p.m . Newport Bead! Pub, Beaclln u4 Recreall• Comml•loa. council chambers, 3300 Newpon Blvd. John Carlson, 30. was treated at Col- l• Hospital for smoke inbaJatioo and minor burns on has beck and face. • 8 p.m. F ... tal8 Valley City Ceud1. council chambers. 10200 Slater Ave. Wedne day, Dec. 6 No mectinp scheduled The fire started about 3:20 a.m. and ca~ an estimated SS0,000 dama&e to the praae and ~1tcben. Carlson shares the house in the 300 block of Monte Villa Avenue with hu arandmother. Aloite POI IC I I .Of, sbore EJemencary School shortly before 4:45 p.m. Sunday. ' . . . A bllct beach CNiter bicycle WU ltOlln ftom • bike nlCk in fron( or tbe Tbrifty Jr. store. 4600 Barran<:a Pkwy. SuW.y. the theft ... re- poned at i :37 iua. 6 •• Someone brote uno \be om- puw Ptoduct Cenaer, 16912 Von ltarmaa AW. Sudly and Mo6t I com,,.-~ter. Tbe "'-It.._ was tepOJ1ld It 9:47 LBI. / ••• Police Mftlted Amanck • v. PIUlipl, n. • • f 'cm ot ~ ---ol~drllll%J.., • ll:'f9 '! ... West. The firc woke Carlson. but at first he didn't know what 11 was when he went to invcstigat,e. said has mother. France' The fi re "as confined ma1nl> to the garage. hut the kllchen su'itaancd some smo ke d amage. Wood said. he est1- Q"1ated the fi rt' ca uS<'d SH .000 an damage to the structure and another S25.000 to the co ntents Carlson. · "He opene'CI the door and C' <'I) th ang cam e flyma at ham:· she said. Cartson quickly wnhdrcw, and West dialed 911. Three fire enames and one truck rushed to the one·story houte. Fire-fiabtcn bad the fire un<kr control 1n about 20 miputn, said Susan Wood. Cotta Mesa Fire Oepartmcot spokeswoman. Th<' blaze apparent!) was caused b <;0me combusllble matenal near the water heater. Wood said Fran~ Carlson said the famil) fe lt lucky the)' e-scapcd \\1thout more senous 11tjuncs and grateful for fi re department's quick response. ~rt•s evCf) person·s ntghtmare." she Mid. "The Fire Dcpanmen\ wa p-cat." a l'C8"lC otli«r. hhoulh find)' di 1111 Lt, Fmt R.alpb Batley ~­ ly told Police be was unemplo~ 8e WU~ It dty jail OD f500 bail. • • • A camera and all its acoeseoria were takeft tom a bou:I room at tbe ·Marrion Hottl. 900 Newport Cater Dr. • • • A pli.r ol -.biie ud cliamoM ............... , ..... epmn. -la ... llOO lllcd ol Piil Naapan lftlf • Yiclill 1111 .., ..,. ............. •• A IUOO ba = _. a UDO. vca....... ·•• n••· .. .... .I07 .... ""' fnends to \la~ <,ober \\hale ~atching fn ends get drunl then imagine them behind the wheel 11·~ enough to stop them an 1hear tracb . he said . Huntington Beach pohce O ffi cer Bnan Da-.1dson said such reahsu c demon- strations have more of an impact ttian a lecture "E\e~·bod\ need'> a tune-up to Stt and realize v.hat can happc.:n." he said. "If not. ma\be "e'll let a fnend drive when th<') <;houldn'1 ·· State GO.P out of poll guar_d lawsuit, ly H0\11 ARD FINE ~ -Mo..ec!t An O range Count) federal Judac Mon- day dismissed the st.ate Republican Party from a lawsuit stemming from the ~ una of guards at several Sant.a An.a polling places 10 the November 1988 election. In a summat) JudgmenL U.S. District Judge J Spence r Letts ruled there was not enouah e\ 1de ncc to keep the-state GOP as a pan ) an the suit. But the Judge did st"t a January tnal date in the su1L which also names As.- sembl) man Cun Pnngle. R-Oarden Grove. and the Oransr County Re- publican Part) as defendants. Earher thas year. a hall-dozen H1spantc voters filed suit ••OSI the state and count) GOP organizations. Pnn&le. Or- anar County Clerk Don Tanney and a sccunty auaro finn for postJna auards who allqedly mterfercd with the' vot1na process at polling booths tn Pnnak's dtstnct. The platnufTs charged that the auards d1scnmmated apjnst H1span1cs likely to vote for Democratic candidate$. Tanne) settled out of court rettnlly. aarec•na to pay $20.000. while the Saddlcback Secunty Co. reached a S60.000 settlement earhcr this fall. "We should never tave been sued an the fU"St plac;c," said John MudleT, an attorney for the state GOP. .. We fed the d1 ovcry has JOOC on for over a year, and the plaintiffs have had an opportunity to bnna forth cvadcnot and have f11led utterly to do so tba1 we should ~ let o ut. and the Judie ..,eed Wlth us." Mueller S&Jd. Attorneys for the other parucs to the lawsuit could not ~ reached for com- 01ent. M ONftg9 COMI QM. V Pk.OT/ Tu11 .... DI 11 •blr I ... Increased .fighting traps for~lgn rs In parts of Manlla_ MANILA. ~ppines (AP) -" ~~aa intensified toda).' between ad loyal forces in the Mabti ft•oc;.t district. \¥here about 2,000 fbnianen. ,inchadina more than 200 Americ:ans, have been trapped in bo1ds foe four days. Eff'oru to evacuate foreianen held by the rebell appeared to have stalled early today. . A 60mm mortar round slammcld .... into a squatter settlement near the '""'-· Makati Medical Center about 6 a.m. (l p.m. PST M°t!::l. Ten~ ~taken to tbe w, includina a ~Id Prl wbo died. TWo bombs ellploded in the capi- tal late Monday, wounctinc two people. It wu unclear if \hey ~ mated to tbe coup attempt, which bepn Friday and bas killed at least 71 ~ and wounded more than 500. At least biree people wett killed in Makad on Monday and ls. i.nclud- .. one American. were wounded by llUpet fire and shells. Troops loyal to the 1ovemment of .President d>razon Aquino, becked by three armored personnel ca.rrien, bepa movina undec cover of fire to1IWatd the botd district where the foreiplWs are. A statement telephoned to news orpnizations from a rebel SJ".Okes- man, Capt. Albert r en. w.d the in1uraent1 would releaae tbc ~ to dispel suapicioos they were beine bdd boauee. ' Tbe ltatemcnt aaid the foreipen would be &ec to leave the botell at 10 a.m. Tuesday and would be 1Qen to Manila's airport aboard shuttle buees. Yen Mid the move did apt in- ditate the rebels were about to end their bid to oust Aquino. .. Tbat'1 the farthest thina that we Bush: ~orbachev cOmml~t~d to change . WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-• --~------------------­ dent Bush, briefina bis Cabinet =:\t>&i..°lf ;~~e!u::~~ Elsewhere in Eastern Europe: "very much in control" in the Soviet Union and committed to peaceful ctwiae as lwd-line communist gov- ernments are swept from po~er. While refusing to proclaim \he Cold War over, Bush said Gorbachev's acceptance of dramatic reforms in Eastern Europe "absolutely mandates new thinking" by the West. Bush returned to the White House on Monday night aft.er two days of summit talks in Malta and a stop in Brussels to t>rief NATO leaders. He was greeted by his wife. Barbara, who sot a kiss, and dog, Millie, who aot a pat. Bush, in a concession to possible jct la& from trans-Atlantic travel, pushed back his schedule one hour today, receiving his daily in- telligence briefing in the Oval Office at 9 a.m. instead of 8 a.m. But Bush's optimistic remarks about Gorbachev contrasted with comments by Vice President Dan ln o\her East Bloc developments Monday: MOSQ)W -Warsaw Pact leaders met Monday amid rapid, bewilderin& political change in Eastern Europe and uncertainty about \he 34-year-old military alliance's role and unity. At Monday~s session, the ~viet Union and Pact members Bulgaria, Huopry, East Germany and Poland con- de mned \heir own action in iovadina ~boslovak:ia in 1968 to crush a reform movement. The Soviet news qcncy Tass aitp said the Kremlin and Prague will ~n talks on possible reduction ofSovtet troops still bued in Czechoslovakia. Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev indicated at the mcetina that \he Warsaw Pact and its Western opponent. the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, will someday become political ra\her than military. alliances. CZECBOSLOV AIIA -More than I 50,000 demonstrators filled Wenceslas ~uarc. rejecting the new Communist-dominated government and demind1nf free elections. The opposition called for a second general s~ on Dec. I if there iF ".'0 new go~«7rnmeot by Sunday. Tho~nds of tounsts from Czechoslovakia freely VlStted the West for the first llme in decades after the government lifted most travel restrictions. EAST GERMANY -East Germans outraged by the corruption of cx- leaders tried to storm secret police offices to make sure the evidence was protected.-Prosecutors blocked access by the ousted officials to the evidence. Premier Hans Modrow emeraed as the leading political figure one day after the Communist Pany leadership resigned. He led a three-member delegation to the Warsaw Pact summit in Moscow. Quayle in an interview published l today in The Washington Post. Bush was in bi&h spirits Monday he assured the allies the United Quayle, who has been more skep-after giving NA TO leaders an States wouJd maintain "significant tical in bis public comments on the assessment of the summit. Asked at mili~ forces in Europe as long as Soviet Union than other adminis-a news conference why he risked our alhes desire our P.rcsence." tration officials, said there WI$ no riding on a Navy launch through 6-At the same time, Bush said he reason to believe Soviet foreign pol-foot waves after talks with would "lc.ick our bureaucracy" and icy has changed. Gorbachev, Bush jokinaly said: urge other Western countries to "You're still dC4'1ing with a "You know these charismatic, complete work on a treaty between totalitarian JOvcrnment" that wants macho, visionary guys. They'll do NA TO and the Warsaw Pact to to ••create instability" around the anything." reduce troops. tanks. artillery and by nellt year. Bush told NATO leaders he hoped a multinational summit could be convened in Europe ocllt summer to sian such an accord. He said be wants that tJUty "in the bank" before seeking deeper re· ductions. Negotiators . working on the accord in the Austrian capital are making brisk -progress but severaJ issues arc unresolved, most signifi- cantly a dispute over the kind of Soviet airplanes to be scrapped. Gorbachev's grip on power has been questioned in li&ht of the dra- matic ueheaval in his . once-solid communist empire and the fai lure of his reform programs to ease short- ages of food and olher goods. Asked 1f Gorbachev acted like a man in jeopardy, Bush said: "He seemed very much in control. You could tell the way he interacted with his own top people there. And be felt very confident in discussing without notes a wide array of subjects with me." Searching for a way to describe the . K)cmlin leader's attitude, B~sh said \&Aat "subdued is the WTong word, but I would say determined and unemotional about it." Other · members of Bush's del- egation remarked that Gorbachev seemed low key in com~risoo with his demeanor at summits with for- mer President Reagan. Bush said he hoped the West could take steps to ease Soviet econ- omic woes. ial;;o~.:h:,.~:·:d·~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOn~~ iaii;m;o;re;;se;";· o;u;s;n;o;te;;B;u;sh;;w;·~d other COl'\veotional forces in Europe __________ .... ________________________ __ • Im Pierce.Brothers Im NORIUWES illd cBIE1blEs - Shuttle's sonic booms stir earthquake worrjes SAN FRANClSCO (AP) -Sonic booms set off by a space shuttle created ground motion that showed earthquakes may shake Los Angeles lkylcrapers more violently than once \bought. scientists said Mon- da.Y.. 'Engineers say we don't need to worry about iti but I'm not so sure," said geophts1cs professor Hiroo Kanamon o the California 11\stitutc of Technology in Pasadena. "It's time to really think about this prob- lem more carefully and more seriously.' The study by severaJ Caltech and U.S. Geological StlrVey scientists was outlinccl by K.anamori during the American Gcoph sical Union's fall meeting. The researchers determined Col- umbia's characteristic twin sonic booms simultaneously thumped 400 high-rise buildings in downtown Los Angeles and lbe nearby Wilshire district as the shuttle swept north- east over the city at 2,600 mph before landing at Edwards Air Force Base at 6:37 a.m. last Aug. 13. !he scientists analyzed the seis- m!c waves, and found the soft, 1.25- mile-decp sediments beneath Los Angeles amplify the effects of slow s~yina "l<?og-pcriod" quake wav~ WJth a penod -or time between . wave crests - of 2 to 3 seconds Short-period waves cause sharP jolts. Let the season begin ... Roger's Gardens' Christmas Fantasy 7 Acre Oasis 25 Themed Trees Evening Starlit Walle Living Gifts&: Living Trees A NEWPORT BEACH San Joaqui n Hills Road (at McArthur) Mon.-Frl. 9-9• Sun. 9-6 could~ .. be laid. .. We~ our lives to Ibis caute. We wiU ..aid the liDe to tbe lat ~ of our blood ... Pwwident IUlh cllled Aquino on arrivina beck in Wllhi.Gaton &om tbe Malta ~ summit and foUowina a ~twith NA TO allies in Belaium to expre11 concern for tbe lives of ."1lericans in the Mabti hotels. White Home apokelman Martin Fitzwater quoiect Bush u tellina Aqllillo: ., '1 undentand some Americ:aDA are in &be bolela.... Can we _. cboee DOODie out? rm vay wecerned aboUt their lives and their llfecy.' .. ""She aaured him they were doina c.verytbina potlible to protect American Uvea,.. Frtzwa&er laid. "Tben tbe preaidellt ended &be con- venation by _ 11yina. 'J appreciate y0ur concern for the civiliaftl. We're proud of you for ltaDdioa "P wi\h pat c:ourqe. We want to 1ee you iucceed..' •• f \ I . I I-0 H ' I \ II H 11·: I ' lly The Aaodirled f'NSI Senator's corruption trlal begins SACRAMENTO -A mum state Sen. Joseph Montoya Weill on trial Monday on federal corruption charges that could result in a 22.0-year prison sentence and more than $3 million in fines. Montoya, cna1rm.ao of the Senate's Business and Professions Committee. refused to answer reporten' questions as he entered the courthouse accompanied by his wife. Pilar, and two of his daughters. The 50-year-old El Monte Democrat. who. bad ·flea~ innoccn~. is facing a dozen felony counts that accuse him o bnbery elltortton, racketeering and money laundering. Attorneys and the judge said they hoped to select a jury today. Judge to withhold McMartin verdicts LOS ANGELES -The judge in the McMartin preschool molestation trial agreed Monday to withhold the announcement of partial verdicts returned by deliberating jurors until the panel returns from a two-week Christmas vacation. Superior Court Judge William Pounders aJso en- couraged jurors to consider eliminating the vacation. Three jurors told the judge they were worried about friends. neighbors and co-workers pressuring them about their verdicts if some were an· nounccd before they left for the two-week rettss on Dec. 15. The j urors are considering 65 separate charges agajnst Raymond Buckey. 31 , and his mother. Peggy McMartin Buckey. 63. '\ .\ 1'10'\ .\I. HK I t :1-·s Probe of ex-HUD .chief considered WASHINGTON -Attorney GeneraJ Dick Thornburgh di1clo!ed Monday that he had ordered a preliminary inquiry to determine whether a special prosecutor should mvcstigate alleged criminal wrona,doin& by former Housing Secretary Samuel R. Pierce Jr. Justice Department spokes- man David Runke!t said a letter to Congress delivered earlier in the day informed lawmakers of the action. Thornburgh ordered the inquiry in response to a request by 19 House Democrats that he appoint a special prosecutor, formally known as an independent counsel, to investigate allegations of criminal wrongdoina by Pierce when he ran the scandal-plagued Department of Rousing and Urban Development. IRS looking at Nancy Re!gan's gowns · WASHINGTON -Former first lady Nancy Reagan's taste in desi&ner gowns, which once broughl her cnttc1sm for their expense. has now brou&ht her the curiosity of IRS agents wanting to know if she owes back taxes lor their use. The Internal Revenue Service began its inquiry earlier this year, The Wasllington Post reported. Nancy Reagan bas acknowledged borrowinJ the designer gowns dunng her years an the White House. but former President Reagan did not hst them as loans on his government financial disclosure statements ~r declare their value on the couple's income tax returns. The JOwns could be considered as interest-free loans and therefore as tauble mcomc. Organs recipient Improving PITTSBURGH -One day after a woman became the world's first recipient of a transplanted heart. liver and kidn'ey, doctors talked Monday about the chances of weaning her from a respirator and how soon she could go home. Cindy Martin. 26, who had already had a previous hean transplant, was in critical condition -normal after transplant sursery - in Presbyterian-University Hospital's intensive care unit Monday. "Ho~fuUy she will go home in three or four weclcs," said Dr. John Arm••· who performed Sunday's heart transplant. "Ri&ht now her organ funcllon looks encouraging. She's awake and writing us notes." Ozone hole closed for this year WASHINGTON -The annual Antarctic ozone bole has closed for this year. the NationaJ Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported Monday. The hole, actually a region of depleted ozone levels 10 the Sl!'tosphere over t~e South Pole that appears every year in the Antarctic wmter and ~ty spnng. approached record levels in October, scientists said. ()_:tone 10 the upper atmosphere helps ~o the Earth from c1an&erous ultraviolet radiation from the sun. Scientists have been concerned that the bole over Antarctica could endaoser marine life in \hat rqjon and if the depletion spreads, cause increased s~n cancer and other health pr0blems. Navy blocks protesters, launches mlssHe CAPE CANA VER.Al... Fla,. -. The ~avy outmutcled Greenpeace anti- nuclear protesters Monday, cnpphna their veuels and towi1>1 them out of an ~ where th_ey tried unsuccessfUlly to halt the test launch of a Trident 2 m~ssilc. The .h•&h seas drama took place in the Atlantic SO miles off the Aonda coast JUSt before the nuclear-powered submarine Tennessee un· leashed the $26.S million missile on a test that put the Trident 2 prosram beck on track after two ellplosivc failures in the first three undenea launches. Tbe Navy said its ships had to "shoulder" aside a larae lbip canyina protelterl, and c:aptu" and tow away two hiah·speed rafts called Zodiacs from tbe la~, ~· Sreenpeace USA peace activists said the Navy rammed their ship, aimed fire hoses down its smoke ltacb to stop ill Cllliaea and that Na~ diven had sliced the fuel lines and punctured the poat.ooftl Oft the ZodUICI Vice Adm. Roter a.con said hOleS were u.led and that Navy ..Uon la rafts cut tbe ft.id linea on one of the l.odiaQ after the ocher broke down ill beavy --. Thftie Navy belicopcen made life even more mite:rablc for = = ;::m ~.l.odiacs by hovcrlq ovabad. matiJ11 alrady -11fhh is a terrible ounee. .. said ~ 8&boutb. neaative direC'lor of 0.191 •I lll•llllCl:ll 1JSA. iD a •temnL 11lil ia 1.D matridled eet o/ ~ ..... a PllDlfW '.Pl'C*ll in iD*1Wi.oaml .......... ,._,_ =• ljolrelwoma b dae pl'ote9'cn. lllld Oreenpeace .... ca11t flrilll lf:pl ............ Navy • -· .. I ···- -•i t • { Orenge eo.t DAILY PILOT/T.-dey, D1cM1ber 5,.. M • • '· k What FiVe Nei~ ·Built In Your Bae II INTRODUCING IRVINE MEDICAL CENTER - The hospital brought to life by the p,;eople oflrvine. If you get the ~ , feeling~ people behind >/ \. ~~ e Irvine Medical Center , , '· ~ '! ~ ~ .. ~ .... 7 .. ~ ,._ ~ .J.. Yl know exactly what ~ 'J"·•·_.,,...0>"<1 you want, you 're right. Because it's 0wr11«<•llf". 11 ltoJfal cjlMM ~ tMltmJ the hospital that io iMrtltmlwltlic•w•mu began as a q,ream of people like you, in neighborhoods like yours. It All Started Around A Neighbor's Cotf ee Table. Irvine Medical Center can trace its roots to a single evening ten years ago. On that night, a handful of people shared a pot of coffee and their conc~t the quality ofhealth care in Irvine. They agreed to do whatever was neces- sary to put a hospital in Irvine's future-and to have a say in the type c1 care such a facility wooJd provide. so 00 that night, PeqJlc ban Irvine Qmumnity Hos- ptal was b<.n.1!1 the summer c:L 1983, PICH spcar- bc;dcd a massi\!C ~dmeto ~a CJertifiCiR c:LNccd b a batpl~a vitll~t11Puril mtbeemlPDf gathered over 20,000 votes to support- nearly 30°/o oflrvine's total population . That same year, The Irvine Com- pany donated 15 acres ofland on Sand Omyon Avenue for use as a hospital site. The future looked brighter. And healthier. Building The Best From The Ground Up. Once ground was broken on the Sand Canyon site in late 1986, I~ Medical Center finally became less a dream and more a reality. Opening in early 1990, Irvine Medical Center Medical Mall, housing outpatient diagnostic services; spacious lobby, art gallery and con- temporary restaurant. Taking Care oflrvine Before Our Doors Are Open. Even though oor Grand Opening won't take place until early 1990, we 're already making a healthy dif- ference in Irvine lives with these Irvine Medical Center serv- ices and programs: ~Assessment and Reactivation (PAR) Kt-14tfrvrr tlit f rrst WytMY m Cen--a c~• --L- 1rt 01t lmrw ltorpi"'1 ·"""' UTr~K vn~ paedic diagnostic and outpatimt ttratment .focility ... PregtUGym-our ~and po$1- natal fitness progrmn ... BodyCues-a ~1 htJJJth outmJch education program ... Educatiooal Resc.uce Centcr---0pm~pub& SOUtU far cutmfl in.fonnahon on health and mtdica1 topics ... Speakers Bureau-~ and hospital team mtmbas art awilablt to addrtss groups°" lwltJt. rdattd subjects ... Physician Ri:irral. Irvine Medical Untcr. Coad on us to be a heakhy pan c:L }Q1f life. C111857.o:6500 tt . dcuils oo all our QllRm pograms and oilier scrvia5 ·' as they bcoorne naiJ!blr Windy, slightly warmer afternoons expected ~ "'*"''< Clly AIMlltl ......,,. .. Mlougot ~ ....... di ..... loilelf' ~ ·--"". ......,..Vt Cwtllou ,..,., '° lf \JI 11 '" u JJ " S1 JO 17 0 '° JO ... " 0 ll 11 11 14 u. •1 47 JO °' I) 0) IS 04 '1 )t so )J )7 JO ORANGE OOAST TIDES TUHOllY O.Cl-11 I. -· Extended forecast ,.,....., ................ COASfAl MICAS -Mostly (WM ll"n llNnd.1y -''ld.ay With QU11Y c..,,.on winos fnd"'O ''ldilfY Co.anal IOw -.Os -109 -~ l tld.ay "'9"t -~ ... ClllfY mot"'"V """'"'>' ctu tono .ano c~• s.ttu1o.ty -"rrnocvo '""'*'felf'. s c Cl\atloiuon.wva ChMIO<te.N C c~ ~~ 47 JO so " S7 40 MEOHT ·It • • ' 0 J:1le 4.1 Ill 8:l2e 2.7 Lo 1:41p 4 .0 Ml 8:4Sp 0.7 Lo .... .,, .. WEDNESDAY }:52• 4.6 "' lO:Ole 2.0 Lo J:2lp ).6 Ml 9 :36p LO Lo THURSDAY 4:29e 5.0 Ml 11 :1le 1.2 Lo 4:539 J.5 lh 10:27p 1.l lo HIQht "' !ht 60t lll>d JO. low• "' IM "*' :JOI """ 40t ltCMIWT'Alllf AftAS -MOICl'y O..at -· Thutws.ty and f •od""f I>•'<°"' lf'O p.w1ly doudy -(~I WtUld.ay local 9'J'fy W...Ol CO .lO '""'1 ""OUO" lht PttlOd •MO<t "'91" •n 11¥ 40t 10 m.d SOI. LOW\ 1n Ow uppf't ll"fflt 10 towrt JOt OCUllT AftAS -Mollly t lrM 1tw• rnurw1.ay .,.., l•..UO, ~com-no Pllltly CIOudy otnd C~t \"IUfn.ty l1>1.oj q.my -10 )() ,.,.,,. 1n.ouqtt '"" ~uOd Norr~'" Orun rnot'' ,,.. rrw SO. 10 "*" 60s l°""' on lh~ 10s ICI m'(J JOt \outt>trn orsrn "'9"' "' lhr Ul>Pf'' 60I 10 ""° 10. low• •n '"" "PP"' lQ\ 10 -· '°' U.S. temps H"Q'll M"CI Ov,.,,._Qt11 IOW\ It) \ 0 m PST cinc1nn.t11 Cltv--.c! C OIOt .000 Spg1 C-SC ,.,,._,, G.a c.--..1.0r>io ConcOfd.N H Corpui Crv•st• 0MLH F1 Woun 0 -vton O.oytOf\O 8uc n ~·· !Nt MO-nt\ OH10<c Ouluth fl l'UO Elluns E~ Ev,,.•v~ F.MtbMllll '"'00 "~""" '~"' fOft \mrth F0tc W.lf"" Goodl.ancl AOtWnt ,, .. ,., II )I Gt-Jun<IOC>" /VI.Jone-on AIOM'ly.1"4., All><IQUOl QUP ~­_.., MchOt. Allw¥llr II> .. Gt-•apoo• 11 ()4 Gtt.M ,..,,. H 1\ Gitt" lhy Ill 14 Gtt~O N ( "8 1• H.am111ut9 ) I }b HanfOfd ., 16 ~ 4) 14 41 11 111 " "' lb SJ 11 so 1S J1 l'I I b Ob 111 ., 1 I IO ,, 10 \• H t.1 ) I \I .lO W) I} 11 11 bl 11 JO " 61> Sb so "' ,. 01 4() l • S8 11 l\ 10 l>S 10 )8 10 l>8 )) •8 18 ,. 18 SI SO )1 " •• 18 JI 18 2l O'I S7 )• HOM 'I'll I·\ \ 0 ·11-.U 1y Ron C..f Repon Syndkate Opponent Daniel Inouye. D· Hawaii, said of the 8-2: "We have WASHINGTON -Here's how an investment in peace here. and I area lawmakers were recorded on would hope that for at least another major roll call votes in the closing year ... we keep this investment 1n days of the 1989 session of Congress. place ... , Sc~ators voting )CS wanted to The Senate tcmunate the Stealth bomber pro- Stealtls bomber ~';:·Cranston, D · Yes By a vote of 29 for and 68 against, Pete Wilson, R . No the Senate refused to stnp the fiscal 1990 defense appropriauons bill (HR 3072) of$2.3 b1lhon earmarked ror production of add111onal 8-2 .. Stealth" bombers. The amendment was offered as the Senate sent the new Pentagon budget to President Bush for his sip.aturc. Its purpose was to tcnnan- at.c the 8-2 program after the 1n1ual production run of 13 or so planes 1s completed The Air Force wants to acquire 132 8-h as its ncxt-gencra,t1on strategic bomber, at a cost now estimated at $530 million each. Ameri"dment sponsor Alan Cranston. D-Calif., said that 1n view of unfunded domestic needs and unoertainties over the Stealth's per- formance and mission 11 1s time to terminate .. the most expensive weapons system ever bought by mankind." The House Deficit reduction By a vote of 272 for and 128 apinst, the House approved a defi· cn reduction bill that puts the fiscal 1990 federal budget in comphance with Gramm-Rudman hnuts on an- nuaJ indebtedness The Senate then approved the measure by voice vote, and President Bush signed 11 into law. The ··reconClhauon'· bill (HR 3299) would reduce red ink for the year that began Oct. I by at least S 14.6 billion. lowering the deficit to the $110 b1lhon level required by the Gramm-Rudman law. Legislated spending cuts would account for about $6.6 b1lhon of the reduction and new taJtcs abou 1 S2. 9 b1lhon. Forced across.the-board cuts. in effeCt untll February under "sc· OUR RA1E IS SO SMALL IT'S questration" provisions. would re- duce rthe year's deficit by $4.6 billion, and lower Treasury borrow- ing costs resulting from the bill would save $629 m1lhon. Along with cutting the deficit and enacting new taxes in spec1ahLcd areas of the economy. the bill makes a host of policy changes. For exam- ple, it reforms the way physicians arc reimbursed under Medicare. prohibiting them from charging un- reasonable fees that ultimately arc paid by taxpayers. The measure confronts the deficit more squarelY. than any of the an- nual reconc1hat1on hills passed previously this decade. Still. 11 leaves entitlement programs v1rtuall> un- touched. resorts to accounting gim- micks such as moving the S 1.8 b1lhon Postal Service deficit and $420 millio n in Farm Credit System bailout costs "ofT budget, .. and once again pushes the most difficult fiscal and poht1cal decisions on taming the deficit into the next year. Supporter Leon· Panetta. D-Calif .. said "a yes vote provides for real deficit reducuon...... ' Opponent Salvio Conte. R-Mass., said the bill lacks .. any s1gn1ficant effort to address the root cause of' the deficit'' entitlement pro- arams. HDnoMu ..... Of' ....__.,NA. =. ....,,., >--a1 C-Clly ~ i..e Ctwrtn ~ ~T lJnle lloU ~ WllOoQ Macon ~ ~d ~,.,, " •s ,, Jl so lO 0 II S4I 10 u 11 .. )6 '5 JI 4S 11 S4I JS 1• .. .. ,, 44 17 .. 27 61 1' •• II 67 JI S4 24 .0 ,. IS °' SI 1l SI JJ JS " 6S 17 1.l 45 .. J6 SJ 11 1J l7 JS ll 1l 4J '1 14 71 l• lJ 10 Jl " •• JJ lJ I l H 60 MoOlle MonlOOflW'Y • N.,,..,_ -Oti.111'1 54 J) 40 11 .. 0 40 11 n JS SI ll so 17 S4 )2 Calif. temps 11 17 68 40 "' 0 /8 )8 -Y~City ---NorlOlll. V • NOntl ,,_te ~City On-. OrlM100 ,.~.,, l'f()rla ~ "'-"'• l'OttlMwJ.Ott ,.,~. ""--.. ..,. •olPld Cny •...o •1<hln0nd ·-· •<><N11e1.N Y •oclrl0td St Lou11 StTl"ICNNt \11 s.ir .... o,. WI! i...t City S.M1W Slvt'Vrpott S.OU• Ct1y s;o.,. , ... South kno ~ 11 14 1' IS )8 14 •7 l) ., l7 .. JI s• JS H " SI JI J1 18 74 4 7 (>I .. 1l 11 10 11 411 10 S• H 60 l• )1 11 41 10 16 °" •l 10 &O 11 88 u 6 1 Sii •• 11 S1 \4 64 16 S& H so )) JS 10 so J8 Members voting yes supported the reconciliation bill. Robert Doman. R-38 · No William Dannemeyer. R-39 · No Christopher Cox. R-40 · No Dana Rohrabacher. R-42 · No Ron Packard, R-43 • No Nevada wUderneH By a vote of 126 for and 283 against, the House rejected an amendment to reduce by 40 percent the pToposed Nevada wilderness area. Congress later sent to President Bush a bill (S 974) designating 733,000 unspoiled acres in the state as federal wilderness to be protected by law against logging, mining and oth~r degrading commercial and rec- rcauonaJ uses. · All of the land 1s owned b> the National Forest Service. This amendment sought 10 reduce the Nevada wilderness area from 733,000 to the 41 2.000 acres rec- ommended by Agnculturc Secretary Clayton Yuetter. who oversees the forest service. If Bush signs the bill, Nevada will become the 50th state to have U.S. wilderness areas under terms of the 1964 Wilderness Act. Amendm ent supporter Don Young. R-Alaska, said the bill was advocated by env1ronmentahsts and others ••that think they have the HOllleleu • .., .• ··~·-·oN pfl ....... Llllw.._ ............ New· ,.,. •••di AnlMel ...... . ..• , ............ ...,. ...................... ... I: .... ~ ......... ... ~ .............. _ ... , .... ................... ,, .. ... ....... c....• .... Smog report "" I) 71 19 lb lll ,. •6 "" .. f> I •• 6t )9 tot 4J PO •& 10 IJ 10 18 Ill J\ ,. )f> m S4 ~II 4 1 1>• lb \4 fl 11 •8 1>4 UI 74 hl Sii 1• Surf /Sun/Moon llZS aMUl 3·• ,.,, ... good • 8 good ... good ... gOOd 3 . ,.., 3 4111ff I u• ,,,.. ""' .... , too.ty ... f> ., • .,~ "" .ti 4 4) p m I ""' W~,.,, ot " 47 • "' """' "" ... • • ) p .... In. Aw Ov•1y M"""9f'"""" O•"'"I _, .... "" -ty l"'OU9'""'' .... ~ moon """' IO<Uy M I I ~·· ~ W'U M t 1 S• p"' ' '""' \Aj-f"~! o.ty .i 11 1• p "' ..,,., "" r....,n..,,. 11 ••• w-tn • "'*"-ilAnOMd '""" • ol 1J<n I~ lol>ti~ MHS -I>() ln lnl.#'O 1(1).a m "' God-given right to tell people that live on the fand how they should live." Opponent Peter Kostmayer, D· Pa., said .. this so-called draconian measure adds six-tenths of one per- cent of the stale of Nevada 10 wilder- ness. I th1hk that 1'> 'cry. vel) modest." ~mbcrs voting )CS wanted IO reduce Nevada wilderness areas b) 40 percent. Doman · Ye'> Dannemeyer · Y <.'s Cox· No Ro hrabachcr · Yes Packard · Y cs Ola I-a-porn By a vote o f 98 for and 306 agaJnst, the House refused to re- move 'd1al-a-pom· language from the fiscal 1990 appropna11o ns bill for the depanments of Labor. Health and Human <;crv1ces. and Education (HR 3566) This preserved Senate language to outlaw or curb !>erv1ce<, that prov1dl' sexually explicit telephone commen- tary to callers. A 1989 Suprrmc Court decision struck do..., n an e\1st- ing 'dial-a-porn' la..., as an infringe- ment on free speech. The new language was s1gnl'd into law by President Bush ao; part of HR 3566. I'\ 'l'Ht: SER\'l('t: Anny s,t. Richard W. Post, son of Alice Post of Fountain Valley. has arrived for duty 1n South Korea w11h the 8th Field Artillery. • • • Air National Guard Airman Dua ft. Uvermore, son of Sandra Livermore of M1ss1on Viejo and · David Livermore of Costa Mesa. bas lf'lduated from the U.S. Air Force command and control spccaal- ist course at Kttsler Air Force Base. Miss. • • • Marine Staff S11. Jeffrey A. Mco.uel, a graduate of Irvine Hiah School, has recently completed the Staff Non-Commissioned Officer (SNCO) Leadership Cou~. • • • Navy Petty Officer tDd Clan Jef· freJ A. Aerwoo4, son of Jack and Mary Sherwood of Huntington Beach, recently reported for duty at Naval Education and Training Sup- pon Center, Pacific, San Diego. • • • Alnau Mart A. Hyatt. son of Stephen Ambrose of Huntington 8eacb bas araduated from the u .s . Air Force aircraft maintenance COUJ"le at Sheppard Air Force Base. Texas . • • • Members voting to remo~ language from the bill object procedural grounds. They dis 1ked the way the Senate had load~~up HR 3566 at the end of the 1, .,gq session with prov1s1ons not gerfna'ne to the bill. They also objected to d1srqardmg House rules and all~­ mg an appropnat1o ns bill to be used as the vehicle for substantivr changes 1n the law But lawmakers on the other side of the issue said the House should seize the opf)Onun1t) al hand 10 move aga1nc;t dial-a-porn services Membcrc; 'oung )CS wanted to remove dial-a-porn language from the pending appropnallons bill. CALIFOR"11A Voting }'es: Bosco. Fazio. Pelosi. Dcllums. Star~ Edwards. Lantos. Tom C"a I. Mincta. Panetta. Rcilenson. · man. Rmbal. Berman. llwm Martinez.· D)mall). .\nde1~· Torre'>. George Bro wn. Voling no: Herger. Matsui. B°"cr George Miller. Shumwa). Condit. Pashayan. "-Richard Lehihan . Lagomarnno. W1l11am Thomas. Gallegl). Moorhead. Dreier. km uw1s, Mc( andlcss. Dornan · blo DanncmeH·r . No " Cox · No- Rohrabacher · No Packard · No . • :J Marine Gnaery S«t. Mat~ If. Lara, son of Barbara Ko'1:'. of Laguna Beach. recently deplo~ lo Manne C9rps Air Station, 1wa:an1. Japan while serving with Mart« 1'\11 Weather Attack Squadro~J32 , Manne Corps Air Station. Clterry Point, N.C • • • Navy Petty Officer Jrtl Cla11 Cory VlDeHt, son of Gary and Terr) Vincent of Huntington Beach ~­ ccntly reported foT duty at Naval Technical Training Center Corry Station. Pensacola, Fll. • • • Manne ht Lt. J• F. Re,.W1, son of retired Air Force Co Jad Mrs. Jon Reynolds of Hun~· n Beach. was graduated fro e Basic School located at the ne Corps Combat Dcvelo ment • mand, Quanuco. Va. :ferno 4 s prepared. as a newly-oomm_i~ ofliCCf', for anianmcnt to t~t Manne Force. i~,: . . . "'' Sec.4 Lt. AadMay P. Sq~ of Anaelo Scplla of Hun n Beach, has been awarded th · nautical rating of n.aviptor fojow- in1 Jllduation from U.S. Air.,~ naV1ptor training at M~~~ 1r force Bue. 1, - L regulator r I s, says he was· scapegoat Ir OAVW SKIDMOn , ............. WASHINGTON -M. Danny Wall. under ftre for his bandlina of .Ut may become the costliest sav- lQp a.nd loan failure in history, reiigned Monday as the aovem- meat'1 chief S&L reaulator. Jn his letltf of resignation to Prtlideftt Bush, Wall complained be ..., being made "a sca~t" for the problems of the entire indu.stry and denounced a "steady stream of one·~ infonnation" from con- sre-ooal bearings concemtng the co!laPfe of Lincoln Sav1np and Loan Anociation of Irvine. Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, D- Teus, chairman of the House Bank-ina Committee, has blamed Wall for allowina Lincolr\ to remain open until last April even thouah govern- ment e:ummen had ~mmended in May 1987 that 1t be closed. The bailout of the institution is expected to cost tupayen up to $2.S billion. In tum, Wall cnticized Gonzalez on 1Monday, uyina he "resorted to corruption of the truth" in trying to force the regulator out. Wall's departure brought cx- prcstions of relief from Consress and the Bu.sh administration. Gonzaln said in a statement. "I know this wu a difficult decialon, but I commend him for taJdna the action so that the air may be cleared a.nd we may move forward in deaJ- ina with the savinp and loan eris.I._ .. He made no mention of Wall's accusations. Another committee member, Rep. Charles Scburner, O.N.Y .. said Wall "delerves to go" but added that be "should not be held as the scepqoat for the thrift mess." Wall's mentor, Sen. Jake Garn, R- Ut.ah, who brought him to. Wuh inJ- ton in 1975 as his chief a.ide. said Wall was "a man of unquestionably solid character and intqrity" but was "a convenient target for the critics who souaht a scapegoat for the serious problems in the thrift tndustry." Treasury Secretary Nicholas F. Brad~. whose depanment oversees ·Walls Office of Thrift Supervision. commended the regulator's decision to step down as .. public spirited." He added, "We arc ~nning the search for a new OTS director and a.re committed to a smooth tran- sition and the uninterrupted con- tinuation of the agency's 1mponant work." · Accordini to an industry source. three caod1datcs favored by the Treasury Department ~ Richard F. Syron, Dl'Clident of the Federal lle-eerve llank of 'Bolion; William H. Roelle. who ii in charp of SAL mcue deals at the Rnolution Trusa Corp.; and William Taylor. a 1mior ~tory oftjcial at the Federal llelerve Board now lef'Vina u a.n ldviteT to the administration board that ovenoes the RTC. Wall let no firm date for bis departure, sayina be would stay OD for a transition period. He said be wu looking forward to a job out of JC?vemment but had no specific pos.- 1tion in mind. For nearly two months, Wall bas been the cbtcf tarFt ~f bearinp by Gonz.aiez's panel. At fint, only Gonzalez called for his resipiation, but in recent weeks the committee chainnan was joined by Senate Ma- jority Leader Georsc Mitchell, 0. Maine, private sroups and several major newspapen .. Neither Brady nor President Bush defended Wall in public and, accord- ing to aovemment sources. White Houle Counsel C. Boyden Gray was pusbina for his ouster. WaU, how- ever declared to a packed news con(erence, "This has been com- pleiely at my initiative." Wall said he had offered to leave office last January, but the adminis- tration. which at that time was draft- ~ pro~ Scfcl bailout lqi~ lat.Jon. wanted ham to serve out his term through June 30, 199 1. The invcstiption by the House Bank.ina Committee has also starred up trouble for five senators who intervened with regulators on Lln- coln 's behalf before Wall took office Jul7 I, 1987. · As I testified under oath. neither political influence nor Lmcoln's Charles Keatina affected my de- cision on Lincoln,'' Wall said 1n his resianation letter. "Nor for that mat- ter have I ever made dec1S1ons for political reasons dunna my tenure as chairman and director." Market continues last week's advance NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market rose Monday, but Its ad- vance failed to pack the punch of Friday's impressive rally. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials advanced S.98 points to 2. 753.63, its ninth-highest clo~ ever. Advancing issues edged out dc- clinina ones by about 8 to 7 an nationwide trading of stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange. with 81 0 issues up, 708 down and 469 unchan&ed. Volume on the floor of Lhe 811 Board totaled 150.36 million stares.. down from 199.20 million m Fn - day's session. Analysts said the market was buoyed mainly by takeover spccu- la!ron involving several stocks and strength in technology issues. In- vestors' hopes for lower tntercst rates, which had catapulted Wall Street higher last Fnday and hf\ed the Dow Jones average 41 .38 points, appeared less solid on Monday. "A lot of focus is on the Federal Reserve," wd Huah Johnso n, senior vice oresident ol First Albany '\ l SJ: ('0,.POSITt: 'l 'H ·\ '\S .\("flO"S Corp. 1n Albany, N.Y. The market will have to sec Fri- day's scheduled government report on unemployment an November before regaining confidence that the Fed will case credit by nudgjna interest rates lower. he said . Wall Street also seemed a blt disappointed with the results of the U.S.-Sov1et summit this past week- end, analysts said. Hopes for the summit had helped spark Friday's rally. The market shrugged off Mon- day's repon by the Commerce De- partment that orders to U.S. fac- tories for manufactured goods fell 0.2 pet"Cent in October to their low- est level since July. "The market is an even-keel af- fair,'' said Larry Wachtel. an anal~t at Prudential-Bache Secunttcs Inc. "Nothina posiuve nor ncpuvc." The factory orders repon was the latest indicator showma the econ- omy slowina as the year draws to an end. The manufacturing sector has been particularly weak. prompung concern of possible layoffs and a rise in the unemployment rate. Traders also were unperturbed by news that M. Danny Wall. under fire for bis handlina of the costliest sav1np and loan failure m history, mianed as the aovemment's chief Scfcl rcsulator. Amona acuvely traded issues on the NYSE, USX jumped 21/• to 37 amid continued spcculataon that in- vestor Carl Icahn 1s preparing a takeover proposal as part of his efl'on to force a major restructunng of the steel and energy compeny. IBM rose 2Yt to 991/•, Chevron was up 'h at 101.la and Mattel advanced l 'h to 18¥ •. United Airlines' pa.rent UAL suraed SI/• to 179''• followina news that inv~tment aroup Condor Pan- nen has raued its stake 1n UAL to 11.8 pet"Cent and 1s holdina talks with the company and its major union&. The airline's pilots and top manaaen have-been tryina lo buy the compeny for several months. Euon was down 11. at 48 V. and Windmere lost 'h at 8'h. Nationwide, consolidated volume m NYSE-lilted issues, includina tndet in those stocks on rqional excbaqes and in the ovcr-the- counter market, totaled 182. 96 million shares. · As measured by W1lsh1re As--~J:•4 sociates' index of more than S,-000 actively traded stocks. the market pined $6.03 billion. or 0.18 percent, lD value. Factory -or9ers dr.op rJlirrors U.S . economy WASHINGTON (AP) -Orden to U.S. factories dropped 0.2 pcroent in October, the ICCOnd sttataht monthly decUne, the aovernmeot laid Monday in its latest repon on tbe ll\lllishness pippins the mdus.- trial teetor of\ lbe economy. .. It really corresponds with wha1 'I happening in the econo my," wl! O.vld Berson, chief economist WJth the Federal NatJona.1 Monaa&e M- IOciation. The Commcree Dcpanment sa.1d orden for both durable and non- durable manufactured aoods fell to a seasonally ad1usted S233 9 billion foUowina a revised 1 pefCCnt decline in September. September on&>nally was reponed to be unchanged fol- lowing a 2.8 percent increase an Auaust · The level of orders was the lowest since S2l0.4 b1lhon were wnttcn last July. Durable goods -.. b1g-uckt't .. items that a.re expected to last more than three years -fell I 3 per~nt to S 123.6 b1lhon. Smee the) often arc financed through loans. they have born the brunt of high interest rates rcsulu ng from Federal Reserve etToru to slow the economy and con1'io mfl.ation. .. In manufactunng, the durable P.&1'.\ IS really hurung bad!). pnmar- ily because autos arc domg so poorly "H .\·1· '\ls•: DID HEW YOltlC (AP> Oec.. ~ , 1~ "l St: I .•:.\ Dt:KS DOit 10'~ '\ER,GE.~ 'IJ:T .\ l .S PR l<·•:s NIW ~ C~ -Spa4 ~......,or.­"=-· 7•50 per l*"'CI. NV C-_. ........ "'°" 0..-.• , 20IO. _,nd, us dsall:-• ..!:':,;.., (1136 --"°"""· "" c-- "-"··-·~ -·13-·~ ---ftt . a..111s ..... --.-..-. per 111 1 .._. • ao......,, a ...,_ ,...., --. .-i ._ · MSOI per ''°" as. NV C-IClGI -"" "'°" __, -t211$~00 -7t .. - -y°"" ...... • 15.25 004$30 00 lr!>r OS. N Y ._..,..., ....... M03 70 lll Y ~--...,,. ....... now," Benon aid. .. The noo- durable portion o( the ec:ooorny it not doina terribly becaUJC coosum~ tioo spendina on nop-durabks n::ally is pretty strona." Non-durable orders we:tt up I. I percent to SI 10.3 billion. led by p1n1 an foods, chemicals and tobecco products. Automobtle \ales have fallen stead.il y since car makers bepn the new model year m October by drop- ping mccnuvcs and posting hiabc1' sucker pnces. But despite the de- cbne m auto sales, transportation ordcn roSiC I. 7 percent becauar of increases tn orders for commcraal aircnft and defense slupbuLlding. ExcludJna transportation, how- ever, orders would have fallen O.S percent Without the dcfeMC cat- egory. orders would have been up 0.3 percent. Orders tn the vol.auk defense categol) declined 12.1 per- cent m October Shi pments of manufactured •oods fell 0.6 percent to $232.2 billion. while inventories rose 0.3 percent to S37 l.9 b1lhon. If inventones increase without a corrcspondmg gam 10 new ordcn. 1t could signal production cutbacks in the future as factones attempt to iet nd of &oods on shelves and back.lots. Machine industries led the decbne ID durable &oodS orders. GOl.D PRl('ES Great News O If I P' \'fl UO M \' Great 9-moodl bigb yield CD Ow 9-moolh ~t Plus CD offers a high gullWllCICd ii lfCl'CSt rale. And a kJw minlloom opening tel.need $2~ Sl.<XX> if ~·e S> or oklef. Unlill llDI a>s. this oae 1111 YG1 di noiey dw ... illtsm.~to ---· «~opaq A.....alleld· • ncan GIC3l American Bank. SSB bdoop to the a.a. Amel ic:ln family that tm 1()4 )al'S d safe growth behind it. And it~ in.utd by the f'DIC .. A high'*· low mininun 9-1Tollh CD ml pa&~ vice fJiwn ~ wh> CIR. With ..... I I .... ~ it 111)' w<Jllda OW9' one million J*4* die•• Clim Ameriml ... <.. I Teen -age sex is more disappointing than fun ' I H ' 'ti \ h. • H "- ~ diappointiQ&. to I tried apin with Mike. then Neal. *8 Geor1e. I doe'\ bow what I was k>oti .. f'Or. bot--~ it 'Was 1 didn't find it. I tot a lot of foolish **t from =rines ud soaps and movies. lite wasn't like that. If I ~ talk to the youna, prts wbo rad your oolumn, I would 1dl them· that 'eeNllC sex docsn 't solve problems. it autcs more. It doesn't make a girt fttl loved. it makes her feel cheap. rd let them know lhat it doesn't make a air1 "'more ofa woman." 1t can make her les1 of one. If I could talk to pa.rents.. rd urge tbem 'to cmpbasitt sclf «SJ>CCt and hiab standards. They <>-.ht to leach tbeitdl= and sons that romaa· tic love be bucd on respect ud c:wiJI& and that it develops one day -al -• time. Ml)'9e tbele soun,d like old.- fa•ioMcl idea$. but rm not ~ • dried-up old prune. rm 24 have been ~ it. How many women have wntlell 10 say they wislllod they'd saved themselves for their busbuds? Well. you can edd me to lbc list. I realize this letter is too loQI. All!'t but it's the voice of expa acie and at comes ~t from lbc bcart.. I hooe you will print it. - CUMBERLAND, ,MD. DBAll C.: 1' ...... ! Ne WQ. I 'CS. w:llllte ,... Cl •• -... Tacky 1awn ·sculpture: 'It's so bad it's good' 9y llOllERT M. ANDltEWS 2 •Pt.a- ARLINGTON. Va. -It 1sn"t any noisy, late-mght parties at bachelo'r John Sbumate's home that have his neiabbors wh1spenng. Ifs what he keeps in has front yard. Ute the lifc..sitt Bv1s ~) bust with pu.f1>k pompadour, bolted atop a tall pedestal guarded b) a grinning. rcd-bcankd gnome holding a s\gn rcadina "Long Lnc the Kang." Or that p1as11c palm trtt fes- tooned with blinking blue hghts that decorated Shumate's front porch last Cbristm.a.s. opposne a plasuc Santa Claus wh~ fat bell~ was il- luminated W\l_h a flastung light bulb. Passosbv ~ att transit~~ by I.be ooncttte Venus de Milo and ~ Oarmngo, the plasttc madonna na the concrete rabbit. squirrel and penguin. And the little concrete toddler. sbyl¥ clutching a tedd~ be.ar and suck.in& on its fingers whale 1ts diapers fall down. If!> one of Sb\lll\ate"-s favorites.. .. It's the most homf)1n.g thing rve ~ seen.," ~ says with a chuckle. .. 1t•s just awful." Slnamate, a 42-ycar-old U'C'h1tect and avid collector of lawn orna- ments.. delights in adorning the yard of his modest bunplo~ in \bis Wasbinaton suburb ,.,"'Ith th~ son of truly wtclcss schloclt that makes urban sophisticates wtncc. .. I saw th1s stuff ~n I was a kld po•in& up m the Ph11.addpbua suburbs.."' he said. "It was humorous to me e\TD then. What's intcresung about the SOs •'ll the 1unk> stuff - the cars.. the lawn sculptures. the furnitwe. Ifs so blld it ·s aood." Sbu.matc bad only a lcw ptnk Oaminaos when he bought tus Ar- lincton house thrtt years ago. ~r­ ~ it was the house. with ns onainal pink ahmuoum sidina from the 1950s. that inspin!d Shumate to I . tt. HO\ D beain collC'C'ting in earnest. His favonte haunt is Harper's Lawn Ornaments. a two-acre mecca for kitsch hunters in rural Hamson- burg.. Va. It was there that he found his S32 Eh;s bust among the tons of concrete birdbaths.. Jesus figures.. antlered stags and naked ladies. .. Things were relau,·cl) quiet around ~ until I put up Eh 1s.. .. Shumate said. "It became a land· mark oVfftllgbt. At first m) neigh- bors didn't lrnov.' what to think. but the} finally figured out m~ sen~ of humor and no~ the' enjO\ It. Shumate is a C'ad11lac freal. too. He's owned six of them. The latesL part'ed in his dn~ewa~. 1s a monstrous 1915 model Ace-twood. Original avocado grttn pamt. wide white sidewalls.. license plates that mad "Gross xs·· (for Gross f\ccss) and a "Caution: I Brake" For Eh 1s"' bumper st1cktr. "I consider that to he ont of my lawn sculptures..·· he says. Down in his basement. humat<' kttps the trash} stuff hr hasn't de- cided where to d1spb) in the proper mock-serious st' le. including a con- crete cherub with a large fish dra()t"d over its shoulder and ··~our genC'nc babe v.1th a bunch of gra~·· sprayed with gilt paint. On a shelf arc air-brushed wall sqwrrcls.. a pink coffee mug ~1th pelJcan-shapcd handle. a blue plastic shart that Shumate ontt hung from ~ rcar-,;cw muyor of his old pov..· dC'r-bluc Cadd). "This is ~hat yuppies put in th<'ir kitchen Y."lndov. as a JO l e." he said disdainful I\. ··The,. ha' e no real commitment to la~-n ornaments. If everyoM thinks ifs a jOke. It d~n·t count.. Ifs not really fun.·· NEW YORK -If \OU cast a jealous e)~ at the fashionably flt. take bean. A hefty ...,.._ B....._ was praised in the weck"s People ma,a- zinc. but not euctly for his joCJln& suit. and Job Candy got maxed rcvicv.-s for knitwear. A panel of five fashion con- noisseurs gave their opinions in the mapzine's annual review of ctl- ebnty attire. Candy's outfit ~'&S compared to "a dad's swcat<'r, ·· by one reviewer. But another said. ··0ne more chin- up and he'd look a lot better." The word on Brando: "It doesn't matter what he ~"Cars. even if it is a par:a- chute." Fir1t lad\ Bart.an Bull WOO praise for her faux pearls., and one panelist gushed over Jadde Oaauls as "the hippest woman ever ... Praises also went to Pri8cesa Dlue -··she's got the legs for iC -and Aqela Laubery -"10 out of 10." The review of st) le-makers and brukers dubbed actress Seu Y..,.. "the scariest woman in fashion,' and panned Roaeaue Barr's "Mr. T look.'" Actress llim Basiqer's penchant · for Stt-through evening wear is blasted: "Is that a tattoo or is it her hngcne?'' NEW YORK -Comedian B ... y Raclett watched seagulls so much that he learned to look hke one. "I was a method seagull.·· Hackett said "I climbed up on the window and jumped."" The character of Scuttle the sea- gull in Disne) ·s ne'-' film 'The Little Mermaid.. was modeled afier the comedian. Hackett studied the birds at Mahbu beach near Los Angeles after he signed to provide the voice of the charactc. He told People magazine in this Wttk"s issue that he l<'amed seagulls are ·•terrorists.·· "They"ll pull and tear and cat anything,·· he said. l'hc friendly SC&j(Ull in the movie .... tM ............ retMI It wtll N an.die. ftMb fw wri ..... Y• .. ...,. .... dlu ,_.11 ner- bew. • •• DEAR ANN )-ANDERS: Mom pew up din poor. She is com- fortably fixed now and there is no ...... •r oeecS ror her to be fnlpt. but she •~and ICrimpe on evcrythi111- . Sbe ma bet • bias tluee or rout times. keeps IOiled PIRC!: towels for '"wipipa up the floor: washes and reutea paper cups ana plates as well a1 plastic spoons and forks. We bouaht her a dishwasher for Mot'her's Day. but she never u1e1 it. She loads it when we come for dinner, but as soon u we leave she unloads it and washes the dishes in the sink. (Hates to use electricity.) It's the same story with the wash- er-dryer. She prefers to wash by band, insi5ting~ that the machine doesn't JCt things clean enough. We've given her money for va- cations, but she puts it in the bank -w•••,,_• John ShUMate •nd ht1 atvts sculpture. was changed after animator David Stephan saw a series of photographs of Hackett making faces like a sea· gull's. Scrapping the skinny gull he orig- inally drew. Stephan added a few pounds, endowed the bird with crossed, cloS<"-set eyes. and gave it Hackett's tendency of talking out of the side of his mouth. Matrimonial honesty not on path to weddirig bliss A IC8900cd female editor~ a youna man on her staff to ask amnr:rou:s women on what oc- casiom they miabt tic to lbcir matri- eoaial mates. Ne\U, said far~ JOU-.:r wives than okkr. The editor Slid. Go beck and ask ~ )'OU~ wna if tbcy ~t a lot wilb theiT busbllnds. He did.. They do. -smokina kills... said Brooft Slaidcls, ""and if you ·re killed. l'OU ·~ lall a vay important part of your ... A polar bear is aftaid of a walrus. lecalm a wcilbty wa1nas can laR a ... under. lo~ than a bear ~ If lbc JJ'.Ola!" br.ar were naner. bc'd afraid of tilkf' whales. too. Tbey've beet\ known \0 catch daoee been. 1'lme aoee.. -YMCA .. is also the *' 1uillice fOr Wiueau1cca. Nev. Seetdc Instead ot Sealth. Nome 1n- Slc:ad of None. Rolla instead of R.alci&b-Australia instead of Aus- trialia.. rm out of space. You finish tbc list.. Kleenex was mvcoted in 1924 solely to wipe off makeup. Took it six yeu:s lo catch on as a common- cold kerchic( It's not illcpJ in Michigan for a l\tlC D\lllician to conjure up hard liquor drinks out of bis hat.. But 1f he does so. be bas to have a liquor ticmse.. ln the Old West, .. to Puos a man" meant to sbool him and heave bim into the river to hide the body. So reports an ex,])Cl't on co-wbov talk. Aa unp.emcditakld cnme. dcarty. Dow1I &rOUDd Pecos. you never bow wt.ell \be river wiJI n1e moulb to bide • body. If the tilthn waits <Mlt on the lmUly, ae IQ te1t 1COre o1 the c1u1c1 *°Pl -.i levee points. So rt WU reponed by Sea. Daniel P. Moyruhan. Look. St. Peter's Church m The Vatican ain't no cathedral. it's a basilica. Repon 1s forei.gners have bought land in every state except Rhode Island. Q. Who invented Liedcrkranz cheese? A. A 23-~car-old delicatessen clerk named Emde Fre.,.. In Monroe. N.Y. Has boss sang regularly in a New Yorlc City choral society called the Liedcrlcranz.. Fellow singers tasted the cheese and approved, so the boss named 1t in their honor. Nothing in the record suggests Frey got a ruse. In 1892. this. Same year Italy raised the m1n1mum mamagc qc for girls to 12. ~m now told the French .. piu'" means "'it stinks" and by pronounc- 1n1 1t well enough. we art our e'<- pression "P.U." Year. but 1700. 1800 and 1900 were . not. Wh) not? A. Ever) time the centur} changes. we skip a Leap Year unless the number of the )Car is divisible by 400. The year 2000 will be the first Leap Year tum-of-the-century in 400 years. About 45 percent of all medical prescriptions arc for substances that have no effect whatsoever on the people who take them. Such is the quoted claim in a scientific journal of a pharmacoloaist named Dr. Sis- scla Bock. In our Love and War man's file. Item No. 94480. entitled ··variation on a Theme " reads: "A girl in the car is worth five in the phone book." A newborn camel also is called a foal. When that thing known later is .. democracy". was invented -in Athens id SOS B.C. -it was called .. equality under the law." Few motqUitos survive around llio Claro. Bruit. About l0.000 pur- ple manim winter lhaMboub, that's why. Methodist founder John We<>lc'. who lived to be 88. ne'er ate a·n evening meal. In 1800. a good clock cost about 80 percent of a man·s annual salar;'. A quaner of the people in Boston now live on land that was oncC' under water. They didn't dike 1t out the way the Dutch did. They filled. Takes 12 to 36 hours for a baby penguin to break out of its shell. To1.1~ job. By the time it hits daylight. ifs exhausted. What, you didn't know Kansas City, Mo .• and Kansas City. Kans., are on the same side of the M issouri River'? Only know of one buildina with 68,000 miles,.l)f telephone lines in it -the Pcntaaon . What you and I know u the common house mouse wun't arou.ad tbete pans befoft C.olumbQI showed up. Got here later on lbil'I from Asia. and nc~ aocs anywhere. The 6ul straw was lut week wben I pve Mom rny old ounaina to donate to her churc~ Today she showed up in a smock she had made out of the curtains. I said nothina. but it really upset me. . . What can we do to act th11 won- derful woman to stop being so miaerly and enjoy life? She really deserves it. -BAL T~ORE PROGENY DEAR BALTIMOR E: You ..daer, ,..r deu, cu't MUeYe Get • b ...... er ,..r. Bela& fnpl .. ....... y~mMr~ 11aaa ... wUJ •••r e11up. ne ..... 9Ctully eajoys pt.etia1 ,_ae.,soletwtte. llOHO'( 01'1 Tiie.ciay. Dec. ~ ARJES (March 21-April 19): If you insist on debating details, op- portunity for major advanec~ent will vanish . Gain overall view. Leave mmor points for another time. Focus 011 hospitals. instit~ tions, possible tour of museum. TAURUS (Apnl 20..May 20): Almost everything desired can now be fulfilled. Fresh start indicated. romance in picture. successful utilization of charm. persuasiveness. Spotlight on real estate. secunt). education of famil v member. GEMINI (May 2i-June 20): Intui- tion is on target. Spotlight on caf'C('r. business. major a~lis ment. U nonhodox procedur suc- cessful. Family disput<' cd to finances should not deter you. Aquarian 1s represented. CANCER (June 21 -Jul) 22): Favorable lunar aspect coincides with vision. potential. possible par- ticipation in publishing venture. Cycle highlights versatility, humor. intellectual curiosity. Sagittarius plays sir.nificant role. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Many gave odds that you could not break n.llis and still reach goal. TlfoS<' persdlf were losers Current c~cle highhghls rebuilding program. added strength Agent will indicate monc) coming. VIRGO (Aug. 13-Sept. 2:!): Flurry of act1 v1t> centers around agree- ment. contract. partner or mate . Wntten communicatio n means major change has been finahud. Young person becomes all~. hel ps you with the "monog. ·· LIBRA ( ept. 23-0 ct. 22): Domestic area commands atten1100. Someone dose 10 you compla1n.s of "aches and pains." Be d1plomat1c, sympathetic. Job must be done. )OU cannot be tied down. Be aware of sugar intake. Taurus in volved. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): What had been .. in place" 1s re- m oved. Emphasis on physical at· traction. creativity, intensified love relationship. Whisper of sweet nothings should not be taken too seriously. Protect self in clinches. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Deal relating to durable goods. auto- m obile. propeny c.in be c. onsum- mated. Older person tnvolvc::d, poss- ibly employer or parc~Rela­ tionship will ~uire more umc, money, responsibility. Dedicatio n. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What seemed lost will be recovered.. Aries indivi<\ual says. ··1 found it and I'm so happy I also found you!"' Emphasis on universal appeal, dis.- tanoc. possible journey. Brother or sister is involved. AQUAlllUS (Jan. 2~Feb. Ii): New approach results in profit. Let 10 of losing proposition. You ~id your duty, now pass baton. Focus op personal Possessions. colJcctions, in- come potential. ieo. another AQuarian in picture. "5CES (Feb. 19-March 20): Moon in your sign accents initiative, judamcnt. timing. You'll look area~ visor returns. Some will commen~ "You positively exude sex appeal' Stress personality. public appear- ance. say, "I will" D' DEC. i JS YOUR BIRTHDAY ... you have writer's sianaturc, do plenty of traveling. are capable of puttina feelinp in words. You are dynamic, rest.less. enjoy Oinina. Gemini. Virao, s.ittarius persona olay important rofcs in your life. = dispute th.it month will bt prOlcla could le8d to defeat .... JOU to lbc rilht line or play n. only suit where Eut c:u ;.aij --k-.~-:~ .. tbl cwnPliln to keep Eut 0 illd. Time Is a lbaple "Y to a( o..,•• mat .. ·W• GI klill OI '-"'· c:roa t -kl9i o1...-.. lliM ................ ,,....* • ..,. ..... -... _., Tllll'• - rd '9'11•,••·••a a~ --.................. . ..... ,.. ........... . ••~r,. •,..Ill n no1111 ----- I UI IOHI \I •tH . ,, 1 II I > 1ll ,., Police agencies run smack into · drug problem 11 Tb . na1 . '" .. e news was S:Cnsano on its face. but leas than ,If surpru1na upon ~~ny. fllegaJ drug use is ham~ local a law enforcement m its effons to recruit new oflicen. . A check with the county Sheriffs Department and area police_ de~ents found a high incidence of put ~ use was di~ualifyina_as many as half of those applying for jobs. Police ~enCles have al~ays had hiah drop.out rates amona apphcants. The requucments are strict and caRen r-in law enforcement arc not for everyone. It is not as glamorous as televised cops and robbers. Still, the trend. which first made headlines in Los An&eles, was disturbing. Law enforcement officers are the mmt line ~n the war on drugs. How thin would that line beco~~ wath as many as 50 percent of job applicants adm1ttmg past drug use? Could drug abusers slip through the scrcenmg? Can enough qualified poliec officers and sheriffs deputies be found? . A closer look rcv~ls mo~t local police agencies arc not havtqg problems keepang their ranks full. despite the drug drop-outs. And the intensive background investigations cond~cted on police rec~its'. including polygraph tests, dras~call~ . reduc~ the hkehhood: of anyone with a prcd1sposmon to illegal drugs making the force. The thin blue hne won't be broken by drugs. With that said. however. the report was unsettlillJ-The fact remains that drug.use in our society is so pervasive no segment remains unscathed. Our sports heroes arc felled by illegal drug use, our children's lives threatened. Community leaders arc tainted and, yes. our future law officers arc haunted by their past. . We. s.hould not truly be su!'Priscd. The phrase drug ep1dem1c 1s not hollow. The warnings of experts arc not idle threats. Reports Of-drug use among middle class pro- fessionals. in middle schools and in the Midwest arc not the exceptions, sensationalized for their oddity. They arc the norm. In some way. vinually e eryone has been touched by drug abuse. their lives threatened by illegal substances. Our future generations. our law officers-to-be arc no different for they arc products of the same society that has spawned the epidemic. That is the truly disturbing revelation of the entire matter. TOD.\l I' HISTOHl Today 1s Tucsda~ rkccmber S. the 339th day of 1989. There are 26 days left 1n lhe year Today's h1ghhgh1 in history On December S. 19Jl Proh1b1t1on came to an end as Utah became the 36th state to raufy the :! I st .\mcndmcnt lo the Constituuon. thereby repealing the 18th l\mcndment. On this date: In 1776. the first ~holas11c fratem1t} in Amenca. Phi Beta l<Appa, was organucd at the C'ollcgt: of Wilham and Mary m Williamsburg. Va. In 1782. the first president who was a native citizen of the United tatcs. Manin Van Buren. was born 1n Kinderhook. N.Y. In 1791 , composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozan died in Vienna. Austna. at the age of 35 In I 831. former President John Quine} Adams took his seat as a member of the U.S. Hou~ of Reprt'sentataves. In 1848, President James Polk tnggcrcd the Gold Rush of '49 by confirming that gol~ had been discovered m California. In 1901 , movie produt·er Walt Disney was .born in Chicago. In 1977, Egypt broke d1plomat1C' relations with Syria. Libya, AJ$cria. Iraq and South Yemen 1n the wake of criticism that followed President Anwar Sadat's peace ovenures to Israel. In 1978, the Amencan space probe Pioneer Venus l. orbitina Venus. began bemung back its first information and picture of the planet to ~entists in Mountain View. C'al1f. In 1985. on Wall trc~t. the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose above the 1,500..point level for the first ttme. then fell back to end the day at 1.482.91 . Ten years ago. Feminist Soma Johnson was formally excommunicated by the Mormon Church b«ausc of her outspoken suppon for the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to lhe Consutuuon. . Five yurs ago: Iran's official news agency quoted the h1Jacken of a Kuwaiu jetliner parked at Tehran airport as saying th.CY would blow up the plane unless Kuwait released 14 1mpnsoned exmm1sts. One year ago: A federal grand JUry 10 Nonh Carolina. indicted PTL founder Jim Bakker and former aide Richard Dortch on fraud and conspiracy charaes. (Bailer was convict~ of all counts: Dortch pleaded gwlty to four counts and cooperated with prosecutors in exchange for a lighter sentence.) . . Today's Birthda>s: Senator Strom ~urmond. R-S.C.: 1s ~7: S.•naer Little R ichard is 57. Author Joan Dtd1on 1s SS . Author Calvin Tnlhn 1s S4. ~ctrcss Morpn Bnuany 1s 38. -OR-AN-GE_C_OA-S T_lll_ily Pillt W .-C'O•f'f' IM f'OMI. ROi;t:\IAR\ .Hl Rt.:HMA' -Pl BLISllER TO\t T-\11 Editor Dff\ H :\U\ \unC'1att f.dllnr WM (I \ "' , .. ,.. t::d11or ~Tt:\ E \I Httl •. Chy Editor ROGER 81.00\1 f'l'•htrn Editor ROGER CA Rl.-.0\ Sporb [dllor ·.TOM ll'DD Om1lat'-Dlrfftor TEAi Pl'PO Clttul1do• Markl'Un1 \tH&lt'' eoahAN~ H ... Df.ti"WJ M•IMllt'' CHALO GOOO c ..... w ~itt Ma .. ftt JA '' REICIU:~BERG R .. tail alft \taaa,l'r CHERI FlU:E.\IA \ Clu•ifh-d Managtt Jl 0\ OE1T"<. Ll'pl .\dvl"rliain~ \tanagn BECKY S. RENDEil N ""ow-.. MARVCAATEa ~ !'eniMalf• 8f& Tueedey, Deoember 6, .. - lllllH' E~d U.S. aid to El ~alvador(' To the Editor. Tbe most di1turt>ina news in the media reprding the f'CC)Cnt t.naic eveotl in El Salvador ~ not the events memselvcs but the reaction ~~ 1111 ,.,\l lCf~ .... of our lawmakers in Wasbinaton to tbete oc::curences. Already we an: hearing from the 81.1sb administration that it is .. un- clear" who is responsible for the ·• tonure and murder of' six Jesuits from Spain, their cook and her tccn-aae daughter, shades of 1980 when that most compassionate Alexander Raia opined that the four American nuns wbo were raped and killed by the same animals might themselves have been at fault l'or running a roadblock. What scant and fragmented infor- mation we have been able to glean from the Daily Pilot and other local papers seems to suggest that the atrocity reprding the Jesuits 1s somehow ued in w11h the FMLN rebel insurrection and that these : priests were merly in volved in some crossfire in a general civil upnsing. Funher, one would assume. relying on the news services repons. that the whole bloodshed was m fact started .· . • • • • by the rebels for no discemablc legitimate reason. The accurate facts are that on Oct. 31 , 1mmed1atel)' after the Costa Rican Latm-AmenC'an summit where the Sandinista government was condemned. a powerful bomb devastated the headquarters of the nauonal union in San Salvador. vir- tually the only oppos1t1on brave enough to openly cn11c1ze the ruling government of President Chnsuani. Thirty men. women and thildren were killed or hombl\ v.ounded 1n that unpro,oked aitad. S1mul- taneousl}. another homb that same da> nppcd the offices of the Com- . mince of lhe Disappeared and .\s- sassinated in El Sahador "ounding six. None of this "a" reponed 1n an) local press. The c'cnts 1n Ens} (1er· man) at the 11mt· apparent!~ 0' er· shado""ed e\'eryth1ng else in the v.orld When the rebels angnl~ re· sponded v. 1th an all-out T ct of· fens1ve. one v..ould v.ondcr Just v.hat their gne' ances v.ere Our ov. n Rep Chnstopher Cox recent!~ wrote an antcle v.ondenng v.h~ President Or- lega of 1'1caragua had the audac11~ to defend himself against auack The potnl of 1h1s leuer 1s to point out that SI 4 m1lhon pc:r da}' of our tax dollars goes to prop up the rollen. corrupt and genocidal go'- ememnt of El ahador's ARENA part) I plead v.11h m) elected rcp- rescnta11..,es to do lhe nght thing for a change and 1mmed1atel) cease all m1htaf') aid at once . .\s a taxpayer. I want the blood off m) hands. KARE:" "Ac KE!'. "'A·J lJERGENS Costa Mesa SOS won't abandon OC's needy To the Editor· In response lo ~our cd1tonal of No\' :!8. Share Our Selves is .grateful for the Pilot's continued concern for our organization and particularly for lhose we serve. There are a few points made lhat I would hke to comment on. however. You arc correct that we cenatnl) arc reluc- tant to move, for we continue to believe thal Rea Center 1s the perfect location for our IAork. 'W e art realists. however. and have received the message loud and clear thal the Cit) Council wtll not rcscmd ltS decision to ev1C't SOS on Jan 15. With this understanding. on .\ug. !7 our Board appointed two of its members as liaisons to the ctty staff. Smee tjlat time. they ha'e v.orked coopcra11vel> t~ther m an attempt to find a suitable new location. fordable rent . ..a!C1~ faC'to~. acceptance from neighbor/tenants as "foot dragging ... the) arc mistaken. We ha'e responded v.1th1n :!4 hours to e''Cf) loca tion pre~ntcd to us Our board walked through the Sill' on PlaC'enlla .\' enue the first Saturda) morning (the) "Ork dunng the week) after 1l v.as suggested to us as a poss1bht) and presented our appraisal on Monda~ morning lo the C'1t~ l 'nfonunall·h that loca11on "as qu1ckl~ rented to other. You suggest th<H-"bad blood threatens 10 boil" and thal a Januan '>ho"dov.n means lhe "poor homeless people ma) be further v1c- t1m1zcd " Sureh . 1f .O~ 1s forced to lca'e Rea Center. our chent<.. v.111 s.uffer .\s. for bad blood bo1hng. 0 ·has had "arm rela11ons "1th the cit) of Costa Me~ and tht' C'nmmunt1~ at large for almost :!O )Car"' \\ e are not a d" 1s1' e orgamza· .JJon. but dunng our long h1sto11 ha,·c brought SOS close than move. 1 thought b) taking,a sUfbd we might effecuvel) focus widespread ahet!Cion on lhe fact that the NIMBY (not in my back )ard ) s'ndromc 1:, dcsiro\lng 'alued social ser- vices ail o'er the count!'). and I had hoped that 1n the long run a greater good might evolve 10 some wa) for those v.e serve and cart' about. Cooler heads on our board prevailed and con- vinced me we d1dn'l ha'e the lull.u~ to stand on pnnc1ple v.hen such a needed sen ice was in Jeopard). ince our .\ugust meeting. we have been unanimous in our resoh e lo cooperate in finding a suitable nev. location. but that we would not go lhrouith the trauma. expense. and trcmendou~ v.ork oT rebuilding onl~ to have to mo'e again m a ~hon ume Januan IS ~ looming darkl~ on the honzon. We want to assure all thal no matter what hap~ns. Share Our Sch es will not abandon the effort to build a more JUSt society in Oral\IC Count) - one that gives everyone a chance to obwn enough food. deccn1 houstnJ. access to medical care. and a chance to hve a d1.grufied life. The fa c1 that no suitable locatton has been found as yet 1s not the ~suh of"etther side tr)1ng to demonstrate their resolve" (presumably SOS to stay and the city to move us). nor an) lack of wtll nor cooperation. The city staff has worked dihgentl) to calT) out the council's dictates and at the same time meet SOS' requirements. If some council mem- bers sec our need for adequate parking. af- together thousands of' oluntccrs a nd supporters from all walks of ltft \\ e ha' e v.elcomed all v. ho arc suffenng or in need no mailer -...ho they are or where the~ C'ome from We "ould never consc1ousl) ctioo<;c." an) thing thal v.ould cause our 1mpo' en shed brothers and sisters to su~r more. When l \41d 1n Jul) that I would rather set JEAN FORBATH Director Share Our Selves This reader snubs columnist 's table talk To the Editor: I was drawn to Linda .\lgazt's column on snubbing in much the same manner as one's tongue 1s drawn to the sore tooth. 1 found 1t extrcmch difficult to behcvc lhat a newspa~r. an) news- paper. would devote 18 column inches to such dnvel. Ms. Alpz1 starts her dialogue wt th an example of "snubber')" by de- scribing the poor schnook who 1s put at the "wron1" i.able at a chant) event. Doesn't she know that b) lhe very nature of the event. that 1s. a charity event. there are no "wrong" tables~ Anyone who pays S 150 for a dinner that probably cost a buck- fif\y to produce is domg so in order to help someone less fonunate. > Isn't he? I mean. who in his nght mind would pay that k.ind of money JUSt to be seen seated at the ··n&hf' table? Or, worse yet. take a chance at beina seated at the ··wron1" table? After alJ. somebody has to sit there. Ms. 'J\lgaz1 then goes on to de- scnbe people v.nh "attitudes ... about people not IO their "group•• r\.e always been faintl} amused b~ these folks. An)onc who aspires to b«'ome part of a "group" and behe' cs 1hat membership tn that group v.111 mal e them supcnor to others 1n some wa> 1s in deep trouble This "groupie" generall~ 1s run- ning on empt) v.11h rc-gard lo <ielf esteem. and netXts constant re- assurance that he or she 1<; not so bad after all. The fiC't1t1ous \upen- onty afforded b} membership m this group. acts to suppl) this re· assurance. That 1s. unul someone 1n the group scats her at the "wrong" table. The fallaC'~ of group supcnonty comes to the fore -...hen \OU C'Ons1der that the group 1s ~upc:nor onl) to those who are dyine lo get in. The rest of the world thinks the) ·ve got too much free time. Ironically enouJh. the onl) one v.ho arc pan of the group. hut v.ho don't need the group. are those who arc rttagnrzed as the king and queen of the hill. The} 're general!\ quite amused b) the ....,hole thing. I got a real bell~ laugh out of Ms. <\lgazt's example of the "fello\I, who takes 11 upon himself to always invtte some third ~rson when the purpose of your meet mg was to have a tetc-a-tete... She figures he de- serves to be snubbed Poss1bh. but let's eumine his mot1vat1on Could 11 be that he bnngs the third person 1n pure self defense') Or. perhaps he finds the first person somev. hat less than sumulaung7 I think it's too )ate to soub lhe fnend she descnbes as the one "who stands you up -who doesn't keep appointments." '\fter all. the fncnd has been doing the snubbmg by not showing up. The whole concept of "snubbing" is stuo1d. and 1s Quite usily de• featcd. Buy dinners at the chant) event. then don't go Not Of\h can't they put you m the "wrong" scat; but you're snubbing the whole crowd b) not showtni up Don't strugle and grovel l9 be- come part of a group. Stan your own damn group. and watch others grovel. If you don't shov. for ~vc:a.I appointments wtth someone and they persist m fa1hng to take tbe hint. keep going. Maybe. wtth any luck at all he or she will finally snub )'OU. Fmall). a snub can onl) hurt you 1fyou le-t It. I beheve it was Groucho Marx who summed the whole thing up beautifully when he said "I wouldn't belona to a club that ~ld have someone hke me as a mem- ber." BILL HARVEY Hununaton Beech Huntington horns in on holiday tradition I • .. AIO DAILY PILOT/ T.,..._, o.o.nMr I, .. Soloists ate stars In L.A. Chamber .Show 8y ION STOf'f'IL ~NltC:.Uo •• ...,.,. Soprano Alicia Pun:ell made a brilliant and auspicious local , debut Friday evenina as soloist in the oonocrt of the Loa Aqelcs Chamber Ordiestra at the Orange County Perfonnina Arts Center. It ia rare to bear the tow vocal command which Pun:ell exhibited in works of Bach and Vivaldi. Pusaacs which would tu I.be courqe of an average singer were tossed oft with precision and style, evoking from· the near-capacity audience a warm and enthusiastic rc1ponse. Purcell's voice is not large. One docs not expect to hear her in 19th Ce~tu opera, but the oratorio and Lieder repertoire will benefit y from the Chicago-based soprano's talents. The warm quality o her voice and her impeccable pitch arc seldom en- countered ..00 will be Iona remembered. · The' other .. star" of the program, sponsored by the Orange County Philharmonic Society, was Patricia Mabee. the orchestra's barpsicbordisL She dazzled the audience with a thrilling performance of the first-movement cadenza in the Fifth Brandenburg Concerto of Bach, and provided exemplary continuo support throu&hout the evening. The Bach cadenza always takes audiences by surprise because the two remaining ~ists, a violinist and a flutist. arc more visible. In this case the sense of surprise evolved into wonderment and delight. One hopes to hear more from Ms. Mabee in future solo opportunities. Violinists Ralph Morrison and Rene Mandel. trumpeter Mario Guarneri and flutist David Shostac provided note-perfect solo performances in various segments of the program. As fint-chair members of the L.A. Chamber Orchestra they arc a credit to the organization and deserve full rec0$1lition as exceptional musicians. In performance of the Chnstmas Concerti of Corelli and Manfredini an attempt was made to imitate the churning of viol- dominated Baroque string ensembles. The effort was misguided. At least one listener wished he had brought along some Dramamine. Artificial "authcnticiW. was thankfully abandoned in the per- formance of a work for strings by the Salzburg court composer Heinrich von Biber ( 1644-1 704 ). The works of this composer arc performed with some frequency in Europe. and their programmatic content includes depictions of the decades of the rosary. In this case, "Peasants' Journey to Church" was the subject and the musical material was melodically rich. More Biber. please! Nicholas McGegan conducted briskly. '90\'IE l~ISTl~GS Newport Beach ._ .. -f'-• 1 fl'(;-1)1 12 JO 2 4S ~IS. 7)()94S aA&.90A C--70'/ f 8JllOo4 81110 1>7\ !HO Trw. "-• 7 9 IS llOWMOI NCWPOrr CoN•MA IOO N~wpo!I C~u• Ouw 644-0760 I .............. ll'GI S 7 JO 10 1 ....... ...,...,.,1 9 10 J lledl .. -,_. 1 !PGI S •\ 8 I~)() IDWMOI di.ANO a•-fnn.on 11.Wnd Nrw ~ Cetllfn«>tlnt' I ........... ,T ...... fl'G-llj 11 I 4 I> 8 10 21"9 ... fl'CrlJJ 11 45 I )S J JO S l() 1 )() • JO J.Alt 0..-.. le He..,.,. !GI I/ JO I )0 • JO 6J0.8JO.IOIS 4TIMU...M..-IGI 12 1 •S 11\ ~ tS I 8,4S. 10 20 S CrlloMI - _ _. !PC. I Jt I I •S I 4S. 4. t. IS, 8 4S. 10 JO 6 DM fl'Gl 12, 2 lO. 5, 7 JO 10 7 OWi I M V-(P<i·Di II •S I 4S • 6 1S.8J0.10 ~ UDO 0--Newport lllvo at lllPWl>O'I V1Mq '73-tllSO ._... ...... •OOllA..S. ·-Saedo~ "--~ ,_~ tio.ia> -~,. ~-...... ~ ·u.~ ---.._,_,......, !locolt1.-..... Q IOIO !in • ~ •• 1'1*> IMll*A ""'°' ~ .... ~IJbo 1-So#C-.._ __ ltl-«UI #11 11 ~ • -·llllON llAQI • IAllUNA ...... ~ ~!JI oa.c.. M147l0 ~=11aMGi S1a MNMOUAS l'Gt 12:15-2:45-S:t0-7:50-10.25 MllMJGI 12:45-2:50-4:55-'7;()5.9:20 ~ TitllATite l'K>S f C'OdU H1Q,.,way 61)·1>1!>0 H.-,, V 1 9 •S Cotta Mesa IDWA•DI CINIMA ceNTI• NOi H a lbOI 11\fO /M~u Vtr~ Cr ritt1 '17' •I" I ~ WOM>•1 T-.... IP<i I ll r l l • 6 8 10 l TIM Uftle M-fCil I l I •S I JS 5 15 I 84S 1 11_1.......,.... ll'C.f I/ /IO S I !O 10 4--0-.. Ge Te-·" IGI 11 JO J JO •.JO b JO. 8 lO llDWAltOS CINIMA HMDQ• 81¥<1 /'IO.om\ 'lvt S•t.·HOl aMlll .. tft•'-•liPC.111 4S I IS\ H 8 IS 10 JO HJUt90• TWIN CINIMAI """llo• Blvcl /F W~wn S1•tt1 6ll-JSOI I " ... _ NIPto 1•1 s lO fl 10 lO 2 TIM ... f PGt s 1 'I MIUA Cll,.IMA Ntwporl 8tvo l'lcn \t M 6 SO/\ ~V-fPC. lllS 45 II 1015 • ----.. A UNIVERSAL PICTURE ...... ""'° •OUNQI •llANOOll ._,,_ ..... ~~ I -~ ::.c-. lellCllllllllO OIMGf to.c.ca , ...... ---· •WU..... m.oo· oJ01'1f •-c...... • ..-oil llM:ll •IAlftAAllA--Jll·~ 1-IAID I-...... •IUleO ..-.t-"rx*1t4~JO oQ:!l!OO !)W.Wllfl • PAU ENr10 IN in-!!!!!llr Coastline ntom' 8Y TOM TmJS Oill!)r ..... c ........... Mounti~ a non-musical version of one of the hottest properties in the theater today is one of tboee projects that probably seemed like a pieny &ood idea at the time. But the bloodless, ploddina "Phantom of the Opera" now on display at Coastline Community CoUeec is hardly even a lcisaina oouain to the more illustrious musi- cal now pacKing them in at the Ahmanson. The straight adaptation of the French classic by Gene Traylor simply doesn't work, and director Robert Michael Coprad's tcehnical embellishments arc, at best. distractinf: Traylor has · •de-Frcnchified'" the work to &ive American actors a respite from the task of mastering accents. setting the play in New York City. He also changed the singing star's lover from Raoul to Andrew, although several other characters' names reflect their orig- inal heritage. Conrad has added some inventive technical touches, given the limited facilities of the collcec's Newport Beach Center. But the mclusion of a backup chorus of hissing "Ph,n- tomettes" who assist the villain in his plots -whether called for in the script or added for this production -1s a piece of stylistic nonsense that merely turns the story into a charade. Conrad assi$ns the title role to the best actor at his disposal -himS('lf, under the nom de plume of Conrad Michaels -and turns in a bravura performance as the fiendish mu- sician who dwells under the opera house and orchestrates the career of his beloved singer. While often ven- tUrillJ d&J1gerously close to melo- TOWN awTS• CltleMAS Souttl Co.ut Plat11 751 -4184 I TIM ~· ... ,.,,. ... 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The Phantom of the Opera" is in little danger of being conf\lsed with its uptown namesake, but ifs an ambitious undertaking nevertheless. Performances continue Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. throu&h Dec. 16 at the Newport Beach Center, 310' Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar, with reservations taken at 75 1-9740. • • • CALLBOARD -Auditions for a children's theater production of Rodgers and Hammerstein's "The Sound of Music" will be held next Monday and Tuesday at 7 p.m. at ·the Depot Playhouse, 3 11 S. Euclid St.. La Habra .... director Marie SW fer will be casting youngsters from age 5 through high school and all roles are opcn .... ciw'(213) 694-1079 for details. Lynn Barnes •nd Conr•d Mlc~el1 In .. lttYntom of the Op•r••• •t Coanlln• Communltj Coll•e.•· Golden West College has an- nounced TCadings for the K.aufman- Hart comedy ··The Man Who Came to Dinner ...... director Cha rles Mitchell will hold tryouts Dec. 19 at 7 p.m. in the Actor's Pla yb<>;it Theater and is seeking a cast of IS men and nine women of all adult agcs .... call 895-81 34 for more infor- drama. Conrad/Michaels effecti vely wrings the pathetic obsession from the role and his demonic faughter shakes the stage. ally sing) as Chnstine, the rising star mesmerized by the Phantom. Doug Duquette gives a solid account of her fiance, but is limned by the straight dimensions of the role. Comely Lynn Barnes hits the nght notes (even though she docsn·t actu-Beyond the three leads. the level mation. • Foxx sees red over ,.RS seizure LAS VEGAS (AP) -Comedian Redd Foxx says he has bttn "whiteltstcd .. and blames racism for his current problems with the Internal Revenue Service. apply to him, because "nobody black hurt me ... "There have got to be some whites in town that owe taxes, .. Foxx said ... Why don't they go to their houses and tear 1t_ up and throw stuff all around the floor'? Because the)' got big attorneys and le.now that before they go, who·s representing you." Foxx's home was raided a week ago by IRS agents who took cars. furniture. clothing and some of his Jewelry. Thcseizwn were made to pay $755,166.21 in bade taxes for the years 1983. 1984 and 1980, the IRS said. The agency said Foxx had ignored four notices sent to him to make paylllent. Fou, the star of the 1970s TV series .. Sanford and Son," filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection YI 1983. citing S 1.6 million owed the IRS from taxes prior to 1983 and more than $800.000 owed other credtton. Foxx said he has been "wttttelisted. whiteballed ... The black comic sajd the term blackballed doesn't Foxx. who lives here, is currently appearing at the Hacienda Hotel on the Las Vegas Strip. TV l .ISTl~GS 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 fl WbMI of Jaopentyf 0 RHCUt 911 (R) (In Stereo) O MooM-·~ "O¥ef flt T~987 Drama) ~$11f Newt Pit Sljll FOltune 0 SUllOne ROC>erl LOClOll Blakely (In 80} O D ~ Hltd Cqiy ~ Tne W1tnes~ (In In the ltlat ol the Night (In Midnlgtlt Caler Blo<>a Rad Newt Tonitflt IMw TnnlnM Stereo! ::i Sieteol o llln Stereo) o Inn Slereol a Clllltts "' ICl'llral o NBA 8a .. 1tblll Los Angetes Cl!Pl)&rS at Los Angeles l.akt!fS (LNe) Newt. CMtn o "'°'*' • ABC Newt 0 Eye on LA. Wtlo'a the Wondtf R0teannt (In COldl (In ttli1ytOflll4hl . 'New Newt Nigtltlnt 0 Bou? 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As our needs arose Mixina the lineup arou~d became years aao. became an assistant to and kids sot injured, we started almost a daily ritual for Laird then-bead coach Barry Wallace, moving people around. Haye1 and Mauricio Oaure, the took over the program in the "I suspect people will take us twojugem.auts of Orange Coast middle of the decade and then seriously now. Laird's just an C.oUeae men's soccer. hook:cd up with Hayes three years outst.andina motivator, he knov.s ago. all the ins' and outs' of the Hayes, OCCs head coach, and ClaW'C, the assistant who has ex- perienced more cycles than a wash- ana machine, would move players around, change starting positions and ... finally, lead the Pirates to the state community college cham- pionship. "Laird and I, we're so brilliant.'' Claurejoked, "we finally did it, but it took us the whole season to figure out a starting lineup." Claure, who played at OCC 12 Kt:EPl:\G COU'.'\T .. A lot can happen· over 112 moons, here we go again, Leonard vs . Duran Winning the state title. though, 1s academics. He knoWHJI the good something new. teachers and knowseouhsehng "I'm kind of in a daze," Claure techniques. That's our goal. to get said. referring to the Pirates' 3-2 kids into four-year schools and we victory over Fresno City College have a good track record w1th that ·· last Saturday. the state cham-And an even better track record pionshjp game at El Camino Col-appears to be on the horizon. State lcge. "It's just starting to hit me. It's championships tend to do that. But been a long time coming and long this one didn't come easy. overdue. Many of the changes this year "We set up some schemes this weren't necessarily by design. For year and the kids understood. We example Andy Strouse. the Orange mad_e a couple of adjustments dur-Empire Conference Player of the . . Sea Kings seeking another 'CIF title •r Wnk with everybody rh•t's in the (Division VT) playoffs thjs year, it's a food a bal.tnce u I've i«n. I tbink °"" rhro&llh four, (tbe Sea View Leafue) is ioiq to JO out and compete "ieaJ bMd. •• -Jetr Brinkley N.-wpon Harbor football coach Year "ho scored 21 goals this season. 1nclodmg t"o in the 111k game. missed the two ~uthern California Regional pla)offgames after having surgcr) on his wnst Strouse received an O K lrom a doctor to pla) w11h a soft cast 1n the t"o state playoff contests .. In my mind. this was ours for the taking," stud Strouse ... We pla)· (Please see M~N/BJ) They'll remember No. 100 for more than century mark All-lime victor. :>.o 100 t·ouldn t have come at a ~Iler 11me With no cho1u· but to pull together as a unit 0 ' en:ome adverslt} and shut out their oppo- nent. Barbara Bond's "omerf'I SO<.· cer team at Orange< oast ( olk1w hit the centun mJrl.. la!>t aturJ.i, in a chmatH.. ~a')on-end ing thnllt·r defeating C o<.umnes R1' rr. I-fl tor th<' first official commun1t) rnlkgc state championship. South Coast Conlerence PlaH·r 111 the Year Michelle Forgctll'. a sopho_mpre stnker who scored 19 aoals for the Lad~cs th.as season. was sufTenng frorrf tonstllitas while halfback Renee Cano was declared 1nehgibleJust before OCC took the field What t1mtng. .. The v.hole year was a struggle for extraneous reasons:· scud Bond, whose team fin1~cd 1 l -4-4. .. Michelle "as sick and that rcall} didn't help u!> but "e'd struggled all !.eaM>n V.e had peopl<' with mono and JUSt~ad ups and do"ns all \Car · · \o the "'hole ~ason came down to the linal gam<' and ap1n \.\e had some contro' ers1es Michelle was ')td. and "e had a pla}er int'hgible. and that reall} '>ho"ed the depth of our i.eam \.\ e JUSI kind of rotated pla}cl"'J around and that proved to help \H 1n the t'nd."' fPlease s.ee \llOMEN/Bll Bt\SKETBt\LL Palmer's knee 'injury not serious I Iron M ke. 11 learnln ns . Losing has i ts -its way of showing some of the shortcomings nay loll. Diab cbecbd baaowa pt and found DOtb.1111-antJna. So be ==-abwi=--~=11 • I MINNEAPOLIS-Lolint teema to ha~ taught Mike Ditka what a bean'\Uack could noc That football, like Ufe baa limits. Cautbt in the throes of a losin& tcUOD for the fmt time since his fint ICUOO at tbe Chicaao helm seven .,. years aao. stripped of many oftbe fi'icftd.I and more than a few of the players who made the Bean his Bean, Ditka finally took a cold, hard look around him and absolved everybody ofblame except Mike .. I don't think anybody WU bothered by h, but ft'u J>n>blem that will never come up apin. Tb.it team we1electeduac:oachi~ff, and if it's not wionina. I can't blame the team. l've aot to blame me... i fixture in tbe ptoCetS. lbe NFL'• last aJlll'Y man. rgina up·aod down the nation's sidellncs on a ufa.ri to atamp out mediocrityt enricbiQ& bJmself beyond hi.I wiloest dreams and linina the pockets of almost anyQne who wu aJona for the ride. Ditb. / Or so it appeared Sunday. .. Reprdless of wha~ple want to say about me or ao • ng el~. this is my' football team. his is the team I picked and the team I want playing form~. I have no questions in my mind about these auys right now. Ufc.hu been u alm0tt•perpetuaJ pt check for Mike Ditka, and not bavina to relfl)n anyone else for most of the tests, t)e aJways passed. He eteaped a life in the stttl mills near his boyhood home in Aljquippa. Pa., by playina footbaJI with an ex- traordinary fire bumina in his belly. It only got bright~on lheday 1n 1982 when George Halas, crusty old Papa Bear himself. plucked Dito from the anonymous ranks of assis-- tant coaches and challen&ed him to lightJhat fire under a moribund Chicaao franchise. Uttle more than a year aao. a heart attack stopped Ditk:a in bis tracks. Uttle more than a week later, he thtew off the covers of his hospital bed and roshed back onto the hi&b wire that is coaching one of the most visible teams in what is arguably the most scrutinized sport. It was, in every way, vintqe Di'ka, the man wt\o wouJd push fri&ht- eningly at his own limits so th.it those who played for him would. in turn. be tempted ro test theirs. And for a while, even though the Bears had thinned out considerably. es- pecially on the defensive side of the ball, it worked. .. Losina,'' he contmucd. "the coach has to take the tieat for, and that's life. I have no qualms about these guys even though I got on thefT\ pretty hard last week. That was total- ly out ofline. I was wrong. I think that went by the wayside. There. Duk.a was paired with Bill Tobin, the shrewdest football ex- ecutive ever to work the college draft, and the rest was history -one Super Bowl. three appearances in the NFC championship game, five NFC Cen- tral titles. Ditka became a television This team. though. ran out of tal- ent before it ran out of guts. The problem -until Sunday anyway - was that everybody in the NFL . Sl'OIC I' HICI \h. Everett becoming toast of Rams camp · with new confidence From The Assodated Press The 49crs have Joe Montana. but the Rams have a budding "legend" of their * own. Down by 10 points with four mmutes remAJnmg Sunday 1n Dallas, 11 was Jim Everett to the rescue for the Rams. . Leadtng a dramatic comeback for the second straight week, Evert'tt threw a pair of touchdown passes to give the Rams a 35-31 victory over the Cowboys. "He's a leader and he taJces control of the offense," wide receiver Ron Brown said of E-veretL "It comes from him." "Jim came in the huddJe and said there was a lot of time. don't panic," added wide receiver Aaron Cox, who bad 103 yards and two touchdown' on fi ve . receptions against the Cowboys. "It's j ust a great feeling. It aJI goes back to Jim Everett. He's always telling us to keep fighting." "He seems to have infected this team," Coach John Robinson said Monda} of the youn~ quarterback. referring to a can-do spirit. "The stones are already bqinnina ... "Jim could go 1n the huddle and say. ·Aba-ba-ba- yah,"' Robinson said. mimicking a person groping for words. "and they'd come out of there saying. 'That man has nerves of steel.' He's becoming legendary." Robinson was laughing and exaggerating, but Ever- ett has. in fact. shown an increasing maturity under pressure. ~ The come-from-behind win over the Cowboys marked the fifth tame th1s season that Everett has brought the Rams fr<Sm behind 10 the final quarter. including rallying them from a 17-3 deficit in the final minutes to a 20-17 victory over New Orleans two games qo. Elsewhere: •In El Segundo. the Los Angeles Raiders are coming off an emotional victory over AFC West rival Denver and Coach Art Shell acknowledged Monday the possibility of a letdown in their next game. So while congratulating his playen on th~ir 16-J 3 overtime victory over the Broncos a day earlier, Shell cautioned them against overlooking the .Phoenix Cardinals. who visit the Los Angeles Coliseum next Sunday in the Raiders' final home game of the season. "We're not that sood where we can say we'll take it easy," Shell said. "There's too much at stake, and we need the wins." The Raiden are one of three AFC teams with 7--6 records and hopiog for a wt Id-card spot in the playoffs. Three wins wouJd parantee that. while anything less i; would leave them at the mercy of others. 8 Pervis Ellison. this year's No. I draft pick of the Sacramento Kings, will sit out the next three weeks to allow a 10re ri&ht foot to heal. •Romanian 1YULDUt Nadia Comaneci, who fled ha Communist homeland for freedom in the West, arrived here Monday niabt and said she would be tettlin& in South Aorida. Jn the NBA: •Sparked by its defense, the Portland Trail Blazen p~ away in the second half to defeat the Orlando Magic 121-9S. 8 NASHVILLE -The Oeveland Indians reached ~ment with San Oteao to trade Joe Carts to the Pldtes, provided that a new contract can be worked out for the slugina outfielder. • The Indians would receive you~ catcher Sandy Alomar Jr. and a pack:aae of other playcn from the Pldm lf the conditional deal can be completed. 01011 01 1111 It\\ --onkiati• wu not the difl:sence in lbe pmc. Tbe ditrcrence io the pmc wu t.blt they lat u.a, .. Alabuna footbe.U COICb Bill Curry fo(. &owioa the Tide•s 3().20 lou to Aubum Slturday. r .................. .., ....................... __. I' THE 81.E.\l'Ht:Rs ._, ___ _ .. __ "Sounds like two, possibly three linebackers blitzing ... you'd better toss that sucker." Kansas pours It on, 103-48 LAWRENCE. Kan. -Terry Brown ~ scored 21 points and K.an~s started the • second half with a 32-4 run Monday night T as the No. 2 Jawhawks routed Division II ---- Tennessee-Martm 103-48. Mark Randall scored 19 points and had 14 re- bounds for Kansas (7-0). Rick Calloway had 12 points and Kevm Pn tchard I 0. The Jayhawks cap1taltzed on numerous turnovers by Tennessee-Martin (3-3). which had nearly twic.e as many fouls. Elsewhere in college basketball Monday: •In Columbta, Mo .. freshman Travis Ford made three 3-poi,nters as Missouri closed the first half with a 33-9 run and the fourth-ranked Tigers beat Creighton 86-79. Seahf wks rally, 1 7-t6 SEATTLE -With one play, John L Williams turned a miserable night into ~ something special. "-="' Until Dave Krieg and Williams com- bined on Seattle's longest play of the sea90n, a SI-yard touchdown pass with S:38 remaining Monday niaht.. the Sea.hawks fullback couldn't get out of his own way, much leas away from Bufr.lo's tackJers. But his bi& play lifted the Seahawks past the sputtering Buffalo Bills 17-16. "We finally made some plays," Siahawks coach Cluck K.oox said . • · 11 I I\ l'IO,.fC \UIO ftL.mYmOll Noon -llOCMIO: PttCA NsttoMI FlMI& from LM Veeat (t .. ), ESPN. 4 D.tn. -COLLaH aASIC.ST'aALL: Seton Hall--w. W9ke For•t from Gf'Mftlboro, N.C., ESPH. s p.m. -cou.a•• aA1K•TaALL: Mw1Mll et w .. 1 Vlrtlni. Creoe11t1 et 10 p.m.), SoortiCNnnel S p.m. -PRO aASKtrraALL: Denvw et Chlc:99o, TNT. 6 p.m. -COLL••• laAIKaTaALL: SI. Jotln'I YI. North CerollM Stete from ~llboro, N.C., ESPH. 7:30 p.m. -PRO aAIKSTaAU: CllDPen et Uken, CMnnet-t. 7:JI p.m. -COUJIH llAIKaTaALL: T......-Chett.,_.. •• ,..... .. , Prime Tld&et. 9 P.lft. -IOCCmb Evwton et W,mb•don In E'*""' L.-.ue metdl (,_.), IMrtlCMnnet. 10 •.m.. -AUTO aAClflls Formule Atlentk Rouncl I from s.me o .. >, ~ Tldt ... llAIMO 7:30 D.tft. -NO ~ a.... et L.Mwl, KLAC (510). KltTH (ftl). .-med IO Dow It but 0.tb. eYeft thouah a quick alance alona the side- line tbould have told l;lim as much. Wilber Manball, the brilliant, youna lineb9cker, became a free 1Fftt aad left two years qo for better doUan in WubinatoJl. The Unet.cket on the other flank, Otis Wilton, blew out bis knee wt aeuon, and didn't last throub train- inae&mp. And Ditb himse!Fbad areased lhe skids for qua.rterbKk Jim McMahon's depanu~ to San Dieao at the end of the preseason. The offensive line is sbowina wear and tear commensurate with its age, and when All-Pro tackJe Dan Hampton went down after a 4-0 start for his I 0th (and possibly final) knee operation, the talents of the grizzled veterans that remained-Mike Sin&Jetary, Steve McMich.ael Dave Duerson -had dimirushed to the point where they could no longer cover up for the mistakes of their youthful sidekicks. Like any team in transition, this didn't happen all at once. But after 'I .\JOH l ,E:\Gl'ES tbat couu..=:1 two oftbe lut nine _pmes. bittina a DeW low after . IMt SWlday'a loll to the Washinswn Jtodelriu by bwnWatina bis C01Cbes. '""'*'~ bia players aocf ftnally doiQa tbe lUldiinbbk, coocedjna. Somebow, lhough, sometimedur· int tbe put week, somebody aot ~to Mike Ditb. It was not the fint tune-Ditka't cardioloaill uys bis otr-tbe.field habit.a are the stuff of American Heart Association com- mercials -but it may have been just in time to extend his life as a coach. .. He said some thinas to the team before the game, different things than be usually does .... He went out of his way to make everybody feel aood. as thou&h he wanted us to know how he felt about us," linebacker Ron Rivera said. "He told us he had confidence, tl\at be appreciated the effort we've given, very positive stuff. "It sounded like he'd realized some things about this team and about himself. He realized, maybe. that the veteran team that bad been tbroueb a lot toeetber-winnina. loeina. m0td y winnina -now bad a lot of youqer pys on it and that they needecla different kind of atten- tion. "Why didn't it happe1\ sooner11 don't know," Rivera said. "¥aybe becaute be loves the pme so much. be loves the Bear orpnization so much, that be didn't want to re- copize limitations." Al her husband met reporters 10 the lockerroom, Diana Ditka sat quietly on a chair in the aJoon:iy gray Metrodome concourse, glanana at her watch and fretting. • She conceded it had been a trying week, but added that she hadn't no- ticed an)' great change in Mike. •·About the only thing Mike hasn't tried to tum this thing around is playina himself." she said. ··And be- lieve me, he would ifhe thought it could help." Baseball's annual stopover gets under way with wheeler-dealers By JIM DONAGHY ,., ---\II- NASHVILLE, Tenn. -Comm1ss1oner Fay Vin- c.ent, often evoking the memory of Ban Giamatti, outlined bis ideas for labor negotiatons. expansipn and player relations Monday in the commissioner's annual winter meetings speech. Vincent took over as commissioner when Giamatti died in September. He had been deputy commissioner for six months. "I often think of what I have had to enjoy and what Bart has not." Vincent said. "He didn't get to his World Series. and he would have loved it. He didn't get to make this state-of-the-game address. and I delight in thinking of what he might have said." Just weds after beinJ named commissioner, Vin- cent was faced with a maJOr crisis when an earthquake hit the Bay area on Oct. 17 prior to Game 3 of the World Senes at Candlestick Park. Vincent decided to delay the Series until the area was ready and was prai~ by government officials for his compassion. "It was a season of high mountains and low vaJleys," Vincent said. · The game's lowest point was the ongoing investiga- tion into allegations that Cincinnati manager Pete Rose bet on baseball. The issue dominated Giamatti's short tenure as comm1ss1oner l\nd led to Rose's banishment from basebaJI a week before Giamatti's death. "Bart's most remembered statement is 'Nobody is biger than the game,"' Vincent said. "I will follow that. "We mu1t ~lize that on and off the field, baseball is a game of roles." Baseball's most pressing issue is labor negotiations. The Basic Agreement with the players association expires on Dec. 31. The key issues are salary arbitration. potential changes in free agency and revenue sharing. "Labor negotiations must not become a morality problem. at least not in baseball," Vincent said. "This 1s a financial issue in which two sides must allocate a scarce res0urcc. Nobody wants a work stoppage. Being an optimist, I dop't believe there will be one." Vincent also called for a structure within basebaJI which permits a smalJ franchise to compete with the larger markets. A proposed revenue sharing plan would be used for this pufl)Ose. Montreal owner Charles Bronfman, whose club lost pitchers Mark Langston, Bryn Smith and Pucual Perez Strawberry gives his Mets' club a deadline NASHV{LLE. Tenn. -New York Mets right fielder Darryl StrawbeIT)• has given the club a Feb. I deadline to reach a settlement on a new contract. Strawberry wants a little more than S 12 million dollars over four years, accordin4 to his aaent. Eric Goldschmidt. Strawberry who is in the option year of his contract. made S 1.4 million ,last season and will make S 1.8 million in 1990. On a number of oc- casions, he has threatened to leave the ~ets after the 1990 Str.wbeny season ~n he 1s eligible for free agency. "The Mets know what we want... Gold- schmidt said. "Now, it's time for them to get back to us." The Mets said they expected to contact Straw- berry in a week to I 0 days. Last season. Strawberry hit only 225 With 29 homers and 77 RBis. to free agency. said his team cannot compete with the biger TV markets. "We need a better and stable set of labor relations so baseball can as an industry prosper and meet the demands of the next century." Vincent said. "Our labor relations in this industry must improve to the point where an atmosphere of trust. of reason and fairness exists among tho~ at the table." Vincent said his plans for the game include an improved drug program. expansion. fairness in hiring. and marketina of baseball in Europe. "Within 90 days of a labor a.,-cement. the National Lca,ue will announce a definttc timetable for the addition of two \C4ms to the National League," he said. "I would like to put in place an agreement with the union which would govern our drug program," Vincent added. Currently. the players union and baseball do not have a mutual agreement. "But first, we have to know more about the extent of the problem and we need to do some additional research. Yanks, Pirates start off with Slaught trade NASHVILLE, Tenn. -The New York Yankees dealt catcher Don Slaupt to the Pitt:t:f1 Pirates Monday for ri&ht-ban Jeff Rob- inson and WilUe Smith in the first trade of the winter meetinas. Slaupt, 31, hit . 2S I with five home Nns and 38 RBis in 11 7 games for the Yankees last season. He started his career with Kansas City in 1982 and was traded to Tcus o the 1985 season. The dealt Slauabt to the Yankees on v. 2, 1987. for pitcher Brad NASHVILLE (AP) -NOtel from tM ............ ,,... ..... ~ .. y. Arns berg. Slauaht's best season came for the Ranaen in 1986 when he had 13 homers and 46 RBis. Robinson, 28, was used as a starter and reliever last season and had a 7·13 record with~ earned run averqc. Jo 1988, R son was I 1-5 and aP.peared in 7S mes. Smith, 22, compi ed a 7-S record while pitching for Salem and HIJ'- risburg in the Pittsburah orpni.z.a- tion. ''One of our scouts saJd he's like a young Lee Smith," Yankees vice president Georgoe Bradley said. The Yankees plan to use Robinson in a relief role. He appeared in SO games last season and started 19. Bradley said Bob Geren will do \M bulk of the catching for New York next season. Slaupt will share the Pirates' catching duties with Mike Lavalliere. "We hate to lose a pitcher of Jeff Robinson's ability, but we needed to improve our catcbi:na, .. Piratct p- enl manqer Larry Douahty said. ~ COllll DAILY N.OT/T.__, Dec a t a I. -- . . -., ' ' . Laird H•r•• fr...., and his Or•,... Coast Coll-stat• dlalwplondllp soccer ae-. WOMEN ''°"' ., Sophomore center/halfback KJm Dunon (Mission Viejo), voted the team MVP by her OCC peers. scored the game's only goal 8:28 into the second half after a sltirmish in front of the net. The real hero, thouah. was freshman soatie Julie Williams. who had Sill saves. Five came in the first half. and two of those were "great saves that kept us in the game," according to Bond. In an unofficial state title game la.st year, the Lady Pirates lost to Fresno City. 2-1 , in overtime. at Chabot College in Hayward. They didn't quite know how to take it because losing was not something they were accustomed to. With constant tumult this year and a few losses under their belt. the Lady Pirates knew what losing was about. Call it mo re mental balance as OCC entered the state title game at El Camino College. "The struqlc really pa ad off for o ur team." said Bond, whose teams have won four consecutive South Coast Conference champ1onsh1ps and five an the past Sill seasons. "I know 1t'~an age-old lesson and fonllnatcly 1t was loud and c~ar. It was j ust one of those ttting.s. If you kcc{> worlting hard and keep believ- ing in yourself, it'll end up paying off. Even 24 hours before the state playoffs we had illnesses and in- eligibilities. "We played well enough to win and that's all that counted. Last year on the bus after we'd won the conference and we were going to Chabot. we hadn't lost a game yet and~ didn't believe it when we lost This year, by the time we made it (to the final). nothing was going to stand in our way." Nothing did. Especially when 11 came to Williams, who registered her fourth shutout of the year. "(Williams) was the MVP of the (state championship) "me." Bond added. "They didn't 11ve an MVP award in the women's game like they did in the men's game. but I think she was our MVP." Dutton, meanwhile, agreed that the attitude of the team took a different angle toward winning the state flag. "That's what we needed, a change ofattitude," said Dutton. "Our winning (the title) had a lot to do with attitude -overall team at- titude. As the season went on. we became closer as a team. Like (on Saturday), 1t symbolized so much. that as a team we could pla> together and overcome all the dif- ficulties wtth a good attitude. "We knew all we had to d o (apjnst Cosumnes Ri ver) was get one goal in and we knew we'd have it. We were dominating most of the game and we were attacking most of the time, and 1t was Just a matter of time before we put one in." 0range Coast bla$ted I 7 shots on goal. keeping the pressure on the Lady Chiefs. who took only nine. Pan ofOCC's defensive prowess came from Erinn Kanney. a freshman sweeper who praised Bond and played an instrumental role all season. "She is the most po\iuve coach I've ever played for," Kanney said o f Bond, OCCs only coach in eight ycan. "She's always up and she never gets do wn on us. She JUSI wants you to do the best you can. Her and Coach Mo (assistant Monique Brass) have put this pro- gram together really well. They're a good combination of coaches. .. We had a team meeting the da) before (Saturday) and Coach Bond put the season in prospecuve. We could finally create our own deslln} a nd she got us thinking on the same point. I think that made a dif- ference. "Our team had a lot of different attitudes and characters. but ""C came together when we had to. With Michelle not feeling well. 11 JUSI showed how much depth we had. She's obviously one of our strongest weapons on offense and 11 JUSI showed that our team was strong the whole season. "Coming into the finals, It was hard to take. the fact that M1chelk was sack." OCC's Ro bin Karnes and Bnt- tany Leonard scored goals which were called back against Cosumnes River. sandwtched t'n between Dut- ton's goal which counted. Fullback Juhe C linkenbeard (Edison). who plays in front of Kanney, and fullback Chm Jones (Estancia) took maJor steps toward maturity from last year 10 this ~ season, according to Bond, and both played important roles. MEN From 111 ed reall) ""ell in the second hall '.\e wanted 11and11 sho""ed ·· OCC goallm:per Ken Langwonh). the M P o t the siatr champ1onsh1p game. mas~ed pan ot the conference ..eason occau~ ot a wnst IOJU r). but nothing lOuld get by him in the pla~off\ "He didn't allow a goal in 1.•11hrr (state pla)ofl) game." ~1d Ha~1.·~ "We won 1-0 against -'.mt:ncan Ri ver and we pulled hrm out 1n tht" champ1onsh1p game aga1n\1 h t:\no Caty wben we had a '\.()lead ~\· brought him back an ""1th I fl manutes left. lead1ng l-:! and hr preserved the wan "We made a fe .,., other '>UO\t1tu- tt0ns so evel)one rould pla) in J state champ1onsh1p gamt: hut .,..r put (lang.,.,,onh) bad. 1n1 ~·1.au'>t· we'd pla}ed 100 hard th1~ \1.•:ir to kt this one slip through .. Sophomore Paul Oldham I \1Jta De1). a first team all-1.unkn:nce forward, scored the othi:r 0( C ~ual\ against Fresno to gl\ e the Pira t1.'' a 3-0 lead. All three 1.<:orts 1.·am1.· in the ~cond hall bctore the KJm' closed the ldP b~ n1.·tting t\\ 11.t" against reser'>c goal11.· Bill Kll'1n Langwonh} stopped fi\t' r n·,no sh91s while t 'ccllent dct1.·n" H" d - forts were turne<;I m h) 1ns1dt" tull- backs Rich Peth1gal (uHap1a1n1 and Shaun Jarrard ()( C fin"h1.·d the season 18--i-2 "I always thought "'c had a chance because we had a darn good team." said Hayes. "'But to 1h1nl . o..,._,...._.,,_...._., Mater Der1 Chuctc Gray f41 reltountfa In tr.me• Cllarffe Andrea CJJI 1creen1 off competition. Mo,....cha won, 8J-J7. Monarchs fomp past Oilers, 82-.3 7 1y 11110 McCLATOfY o..,,,_c.. ......... Mater Dei Hiah'• Monarchs were out to show everyone and anyone Monday niaht that they are indeed worthy of a top rankina ln any Or-anae county hi&h school basketball poll. Tbe Mopan:hs dominated every al))Cet of a loplidcd 82-37 abellack:ina of the Hunti."l'OO Beach Olien and e*ned tbe rilbt to facce Lona Beach Jonlu ln the finaJa of the Colta Mesa-Newport Harbor Tio-OfT Tournament toniabt (8:30) at Costa Mesa Hilb. When push came to lhove early ln tbe pine. Ma1er Dei made all the ,.._, mova. Muscapba Abdi•t buket .arty in t.be ftnl quarter pve I.be ouen their fint and only a-s ~ ud from Lbere dae MOMl'Cbl t , up tbdr level ol play and IU lftY tom die ...... and .. ~ slower Olien. 1lwy 1'Cllt on ali ru to end the quarw act Mwr loobd beet. ne oo.n ooWda"l ba8dle • • ..... ..-.. ..... Del•• •.• , JNIOlldltmd ............. .. ... cww Oil .... ~ .. CI09lt =--ti-------' -~-diaqulioa. _._.., ... , .......... ... ...... ..., .......... 'h 9W11Y. . .._ ....... ...,.. ....... , -~'t-lf::ltti = . ~ .. ~·.~a m .. ... didn't seem to improve. .. They're a very good and deep ball club and can come at you with so many weapons. h 's bard to f11urc where to ~n to try to s1op them. We didn't y our pme, but that's all a part o pl.a yina sc:arul. "You can't play confident if you're ICaRd. We bad a few players re1pood in eenain areas and r was pleued with them. but for 90 pen:cnt of us it wun 't a aood effon. •• Tbe Monarchs ~ indeed very deep. They can play .,eiaht playen in a dole pme and 11ill have capeble playen to•1ubltitute oft'the bencb. In . dUa pme they UIOd 15 p&ayen and 11 of tbem scored. Fo(W&l'd Chartic AA· dra· led tbe Moaarchs' onllaUlht with 1 S points followed by Dera Slooe'• _ ! •,. and David Boyte and Du O·Neal added I 0 apeice. Four more Md Ive or'more poillta. n. Oilen oa me Olber hand .... KIOl'.ille oPPOftmtitiel ~ Cflley Md tlleia emd never ICOnld more dllu 12 paiett m ·• q--. o..nt Scou ....... -.... oely ............... .-aa.AIMI. .... .-.21,... .... 0.. =.:..:::i.-.: ..:~= ·::-~ ~·t= ~.= Tu mlom ~~ ~1112n =-Gl-=-r \pillr ...... WI .... = ..... . Artists capture title The o.-y Not One can't say lquna Beach Hiah's victory wasn't earned. but thCTC was tome charity involved. The Artists his 33 of 38 free throws Monday naaht. tndudana 13 of 13 in the fourth quaner, to soundly .defeat host Oranee Lutheran an the cbam~~p pme of its own tournament. The · fundraiten were junior point auard Josh Borella (1().10). senior fOrward Dain Blanton (9-9) and tenior auard John Trevino (8-10). The trio ICOtCd 29, 21 and 20 poinu rc.spectavely u Borella wu named the tournament's Most Valuable Ptayer Blanton a1IO rebounded well. Tbe Ani1t.1, J.(), never trailed after the fint quart.er, al\bouab Oruee Lutheran. l·I, stayod within~ Lacuna led 2().18 at the fint *»Pt 41-38 at halftime and S7·S4 after throe quarten. · Dlrml Cole, ()ranee Lutbctan'16-.b»t·S cater, led all 1COrers with 30 pointa. you're going to"" an a state cham- p1onsh1p .. too man)' ,thanfS have 10 fall into place Lile tnJunes -1f )'Ou're going 10 ha\e them. the't ha'e to come at the nght ume Ot cour~ \OU can ne,t'r haH· an &nJUT') ai the nght time but tht>re are better ume'i than o thers ·· Ha)es 1s looking forward 10 ha' ang Pat Callaghan !( oruna del Mar). Marco Vazqut.'7 (fatanc1a) and Paul Bums (New·pon Harbor) back for next season. A.II played kc\ roles for the Pirate'> th!\ fall "'There was something about this team this 'car." said ( laure .. 1 felt all along that ""e had a t hance to do "'ell. We',e had better teams here. but that's not the nature of soccer. Somcumes better teams don't win. People arc finalJ> going 10 pa} Oran1e C oas1 some respecl "Most people we pla)ed thought Orange Coast v.as a M1ckc~ Mou~ operation. and ma> be now tb1s will sho"' some interest I think the) 'II stan noticing us ·· Since O\C-s inception an 1977. the soccer program has compiled a 149-69-39 record. including fi ve conference tJtks in the 80s. Walla~ won South Coast Conference cham- p1onsh1ps rn 1980. '81 and '82 while Hayes" teams wo n the Orange Em- pire Conference crown last year and this season. HIGH S('HOOI. GIRl.S BASKETBALL Monarchs will try to build around McDonald . By ST AN GRANCH 0""9)1,._Cotr•__.,... One of tht: most 'uu.·csstul girls basketball team\ 1n the 1980s has been that of the Ma ter Dc1 Monarchs. The Monarchs ha-.e cap- tured se' en straight .\ngelus League titles going I fl;O last :-ear Howe'> er w11h onl) thrt.>e returning pJa,ers clouds of uncertaan1t) ha'e crept O\er Mater Dc1 High Scbool "'This team is 'en hard to pre- dict." said Mater De1. Coach Brenda Yecke "We had an unimpressive summer. and I realh th1nl "'e .ire o n a t""<>->ear plan. In the Jut two ~ea~ we have ~duated I ~ pla)e~ so 1.1.e lack varsll) expenence .. Heading the hst of returning pla)- crs 1s \1elass1a M c Donald McDonald. a fhc--foot-Stven JUnaor forward. was second team all-league • i)KlOO ~ca~ the Monarchs offens1' eh "Melissia 1s a great athlete ... 'ede said ... he St't se' eral le~guc records an track.. She 1s uStd to handling pressure on a and1\ldual le'cl and I thank she .,.,.,11 be able to handle 1t at the t~ lc\el. "She had a stress fracture over the summer. which 1s o ne reason the team dad so poorly She as the stabltz- IDI force of the team. but we will need some other people to score if we arc to do well ... Joining McDonald an the starung hne up are Shell& Manio (5-3 j unior guard), Joan Maurer (5-6 j unior suard) and Zsuzs1 Burkhalter (5-1 l 1un1or center). Thrtt players arc ")mg for the final startrng spot 1ocludtng Dawn Jawronsk1 (5-10 sophomore center), Rose lnbnuano !5-8 JUnaor forward) and Cehstc Rivera ( ~-6 Junior guard) . ··v.e have onl\ two ~ruors on the team and the~ ·don't figure to sec much action so ""C are rcaJI~ young." Ycckc said "I hesitate to ~t any goals for this team It seems hkc an odd )car for the league ~•th a lot of teams rebuilding. "1 would lake to finish m the top lhrcc and go to the pla)offs. To do that we ha\e to be '<'I) aggressive on defense '.\e need to score off the fast break bccauSt v.e don't have much offenSt Al~ our guards must be able to handle pressure at the varsity level. and that remains to be seen. •'This will be an 1otettSung year. So far 11 has been a fun challenge. - Artists involved in long-range program, building for future The Datty Piiot Coming off a 2-8 'ear an the Pacific Coast uague and onl) ha" mg three returning pla)Cr<>. th1rd-)ear Laguna Beach .\nms gi rls basketball Coach Greg Marshall kno"" s that he faC'cs a touah task this season "lo C\'~ aspcct this 1s a rebuilding year for us."' Marshall ~·d "\\e are real young and 'Cl) anexpencnced. We lost our ~st pla)er and ha\C onl> two returning starters "I have no t ..et an) goals for this team All I ""3nt to do 1s ti)' to develop some true basketbaJI players this year, and get read) for next year. I want us to 1mpro\C ""•th each game We can't rel) on o ne person hkc we dld m the past. so ~e need everyone to 1m~rove and pla~ up to their potenual." Returning to the starting hne up for the -\ntsts this vear are S-foot-4 sophomore guard Nikki Klenten and S-8 JUOtor center Laune Rush. Heather Marlo""' (a S-7 senior foward) also returns and thesr thtte are cxpccted 10 carT) the offensive burden for Lagu na Beach Sue Gunderson ( S-7 senior 1uard) and.. Cole Stephe ns (5-7 freshman fo~I round out the starting hneup Othe~ ""ho arc expected to see a lot of acuon arc Genesse Swanout (5-6 senior &uardfforward) and Simo n Olavcna ( 5-7 scmor guard). "Simon 1s a transfer student from Brant,·· ManhaU said. ··she actually started the first game for us bccautt Nikki 1s rccovenng from a strained knee. Simon maybe o ne of the most talented pla}ers on the team. but she lacks c1penencc and the lanauaee be.mer has been a problem too. "The key for us 1s we need to cut down on our turnovers. We don't handle the ball too well and in today's pmc teams don·t sit beck io zones any more. 1t is full-<:<>un prcn- ure. "We have a &ood defcnsr and when we act the ball up court our offense can be effective. We lack a true auard to bnna up the ball. ao we are wortcin« hard o n that. "Ounna the preteUOn I am Pill to let everyone play. l want them all to ac1 e1pc:ncnoc. and by kapr I will tctl&c on 11.1 o r xven players and 1e1t how well we can do. l think we will be competiuve." Westminster has four returning starters, but it's still a long road I ns Losing has its its way of showing some of the shortcomings ===..~:-="" =::!=-~=tt MINN£APOUS-Louateema to have taqht Mike Oilka wfiat a bcart auack could ooc Tbat football. lite we bas limits. ""Ca~tin the throes of a lollna ~the fint time since his tint llCUOD &1 the Chicaao helm seven ~ fltO, stripped of many of the tneDd.t and more than a few of the ... doa"t t.binlr an~ wu bothered by it. Mal ft't a Prc>blcm tbal wilJDCVU'COIDCUPlllia. Tbitteam we~ as a COllCbina.aa«. and if it's not wiJuWla, I can 'l blame the team. rve Sot to blame me ... Ufe bu been an almost..petpetual pt check for Mike Ditb, and not bavifta to rdy OD anyone dte for most of the leltS, he always OUtcd. He eaped a life in the sieer mills near his boyhood borne in Aliquippa. fixture in tk procm. the NFL 'a last uarY mu. ntaina up and down the utioo'• tidcliDCI on a afari to swnp out mediocrity. eeridililt bimtelf beyond bia wildest dreamt ud lini111 the podc.etJ of almost anyone who wu aloal for the ride. players who made the Bean bis · lean, Ditk.a finally took a cold, bard look around him and absolved evaybody of blame exoept Mi.kc Ditb. Pa. · na football witb an a- Little men than a year ll01 a heart attack stOpped Diib in bis tncb. UuJe mOft than a week later, he ~off the co~ofhis hospital bed and rushed onto the hiab wire that iscoacbina one of the most visible teams in what is arauably the most 1CtUtinizcd sport. Or so it appeanid Sunday. fitt bumi in his belly. o y got ghtcr on~ day in 1982 when George Halu. crusty okl Papa Bear himself, plucked D11b from the anonymous ranks of assis- tant coaches and challenged him to light that fire under a moribund Chicaao franchise. .. Reprdless of what people want to say about me or anything else, this is ~ fOQlbaU team. This is the team I picked and the team I want playing for me. I have no questions in my mind about thcscgup right now. ''Latina. .. he conttnued. "the • ~b bas to take the beat for, and tbafs life. I have no qualms about these guys even tboup I got on them pretty ha.rd last week. That was total- ly out ofline. I was wrong. I think that went by the wayside. There, Oitka was paired with 8111 Tobin. the shrewdest football ex- ecutive cvcT to work the college draft. and the rest was history -one Super- Bowl. three appearances 10 the NFC championship game, five NFC Cen- tral titles. Oilb became a television It was, in every way, vini.te Ditka.. the man wtlo would push tii&ht- cnin&Jy at his own limits so that those wbo played for him would, in turn, be tempted to teSt theirs. And for a while, even though the Bears bad thinned out oonsidcrably. ~ pccia.lly on the defensive side of the ball, it worked. This team, though, ran o ut of tal- ent before it ran out of guts .. The problem -until Sunday anyway - was that everybody in the NFL Everett becoming toast of Rams . camp with new confidence The 49ers have Joe Montana. but the Rams have a budding ~legend" of their * own. Down by 10 points with four minutes rcmaimng Sunday in OaUas. it was Jim Everett to the rescue for the Rams. Leading a dramauc comeback for the second stra.ipu week, Everett threw a pair of touchdown puses to 11ve the Rams a 3S.3 I victory ovCT the Cowboys. "He's a l~cr and he takes cootroJ of the offense." wide receiver Ron Brown said of Everett. "It comes from him." .. Jim came in the huddle and said there was a lot of time. don't pantc.'' added wide receiver Aaron Cox. who had 103 yards and two touchdowns on five receptions against th<' Cowboys. "h's just a great feeling. It all goes back to Jim Everett. He's always tellina us to keep fi&h ting." "He seems to have infected this team," Coach Jahn Robinson said Monday of lhe yOUOJ quartCTback. rcfenina to a can-do spirit. "The stones arc already bcainnina ... • . ''Jim couJd go ID the huddle and say. 'A~..ba-ba- yah."' Robinson aid. mimicking a person sropina for words, "and they'd come out of there saytng. 'That man bas nerves of steel.' He's becoming legendary." R'Ot>1bson was lau&f'iing ~tng. but E-vcr- ctt has. 10 fact. shown an increasing matunl)' under ~ The comc-from-behtnd wm oveT the Cowboys ed f\h ttme this season that Everett has bro ms from behind in the final quartCT. incl g them from a 17-3 deficit in the finaJ minutes to a 20-1 7 victon over New Orleans two pmcs qo. Elsewhere: • In El Segundo, the Los Angeles Raiders arc comina off an emotional victory over AFC West rivaJ Denver and Coach Art Shell acknowledged Monday the potlibility of a letdown in their next game. So while congratulatin' his playcn on their' 16-13 overtime victory o vCT the roncos a day earliCT. SbcU cautioned them apinst overlooking the Phocnia Cardinals. who visit the Los AnseAcs Colisewn next Sunday in the Raiders' 6naJ home pme of the season. .. We're not that good where ~ can say we'll take it easy," Sbcll said "There's too much at stake. and we need the wins. .. The Raiders arc one of th~ AFC t.eU'IS with 7-6 records and bopina for a wild~ spot io the playo1f.s.. Three wim would guarantee that. while anything lea would leave them at the mercy of otben. •Pervis Ellison, this year's No. I draft pick of the Sacn.mcoto Kinp. 'Mil sit out the next thnlc 'MlCb t.o allow a sore riaht foot to bcal. •Romanian a.ymnut Nadia Comaneci. who Ocd her c.ommunist homeland for freedom in the West, urived bcft Monday nipt and said she wduJd be leUli.DI in South Aorida. In the NBA: • stwkrd by its defcn1e, the Portland Trai~lucn pulled away in the second half to defeat the Orlando Miiiie 121 -9S. •NASHVILLE -The Cleveland Indians rcacbcd ~ment with San Dies<> to trade Joe Carter to the Pldra. provided thatrt new contract can be worked out for t.be 11=· na ou.tl'addcr. ~ I · s would receive younc catcher Sandy Aloaw Jr. and a peckar of other players from t.be Padres if \be conditional deal cu be com--. 0 f o II O I I 111 U \ l "Olk:ial ' WU not dlic 11iflelrNOC iD dlic ...-. Tbe :Z.coce iG dlic pmc -tbat tbey blM us. .. Alahema foobJJ coecb Bill Oury fo(. 1owiJ11 tbe Tide't 30-20 loll to A.._ s.tmday. r ............................. __ ...... ._. ...... .., ... ~ • I'\ 'lH t: Bt•:.\(. H •:Rs ·-~---­ .. __ "Sounds like two, possibly three linebackers blltzlng ... you'd better toss that sucker." Kansas pours ft on, 103-48 LAWRENCE. Kan. -Terry Brown ~ scored 21 po~nts and Kansas staned the • second balfwj(h a ~ NA MQndzy .night r ast fie No. 2 Jawhawks routed Division II ---- Tennessee-Manto lOl-48. Mark Randall sco~ 19 points and had 14 re- bounds for Kansas (7-0). Rick Calloway had 12 points and Kevin Pntchard I 0. The Jayh~wks capitahzed on numerous tumoven by Tennessee-Manin (3-3). which had nearly twice as many fouls. Elsewhere tn college baskctbaJl Monda)': 8 In Columbia. Mo .. freshman Travis Ford made three 3-potnters as Missouri closed the first half with a 33-9 run and the founh-nnlced Tigers beat Creighton 86-79. Sea hawks rally, 1 7 -16 SEATTLE -With one play. Jobo L ---- Williams turned a misenble night into e somcthin& special. Untif Dave Krieg and Williams com----- bincd on Seattle's longest play of the scason. a SI-yard to~wn pass with S:38 rcmaioina Monday ni&bt. the Sc:ahawb fuUbeck couldn't set out of hi.s own way, much lea S:l.. from Buffalo's tackJen. But bis bia play lifted the wb put the sputtcriQ& Buffalo &ills 17-16. ..We finally made some plays... Seahawb coacb Chuck IC.Ao• Wd. ~· 1111\1'10,-IC \UIU seemed to know it Ml Dttb. ewo tbouab a qWdt t1&nce alon& the ai<k- liae alaouJd bave COkl him as much. Wilber Manball, t.be brilliant. youq lineblcker, became 1 free -.ent ud left c-o yean aao for better doUan in Wabina10n. The lineblcker on the other flank. Otis Wilton, blew out bis knee las• tcUOD,and didn't last tbrouab train-int camp. ADd Ditb him tell' bad ..a.d the sk:.idl for quartert.ck Jim J.tcMahon 's departure 10 San Dieao at the end of the preteUOn. The offensive line is ibowina wear and tearc:ommeoauratewith i&aqe, and when All-Pro tackle Dan Hampton went down after a 4--0 'Stan for his I Otb (and possibly final) knee operation, the talents of the arinlcd vetaans tbat rcmamed -Mike Sinalct.ary, Steve McMichael, Dave Duerson -had diminished to the point where they could no longer cover up for the mistakes of their youthful sidekicks. Like any team in transitJon. this didn't happen all at once. But after 'ti \JOH 1.1:.\Gl.ES ..... coatUmed all bUt two of the lat Dine JUDH. bittina a new low aAer. IMt Suday•a ao.a to the Wubinat.oo Redlllri• l!Y bwnWatina hi• COKhel. momu. bit Dlayen and finally doiQa tbc withlnkab&c, conocdina. Somehow, lhouah, aomctbne dur· iDI tbe pell week. somebody got ~ 10 Mike Oit.lca. 1t wu not the first tame-Dilka'1 c:anliolotist says bis off-the-field babi&a are the stuff of American Heart Allociation com-mctcials-but it may have been lust in time to extend his Ufe as a coach. .. He said some tbinp to the team before thepme, diffCTCnt thinas than be usually does .... He went out of his way to mate everybody feel aood. as thouah tic wanted us to know how he fcJtabout us." linebackerRon Rivera said. "He told us he had confidenc.e, that be appreciated the effort we've given, very positive stuff. "It sounded like he'd realized some things about this team and about himself. He realized, maybe, .. that the vctaan team that bad been tbrouP a lot t0tethcr-winnina. lolia&. moaty winniftl-now had a lot of'yollnpr pp on 1t and that they needed a different kinde f ltlCD· don. • .. Why didn't it happen sooncr7 J don't know," Rivera said. "Maybe becau1e be loves the pme so much, be loves the Bear orpnization IO much. th&I he didn't want to rc- oosni.ze limitations. .. As her husband met rcportcn an the lockeuoom, Diana Oillca Mt quietly on a chair in the &)oomy gray Mctrodome concourse, &).ancina at her watch and fretting.. She conceded it had been a trying week. but added that she hadn't no- ticed any p-eat changc in Mike. ''About the only thing Mike hasn't tried to tum this thing around is playina himself ... she said ... And be- lieve me, he would ifhe thought it could help.'' Baseball's annual stopover gets under way with wheeler-d,ealers By Jl-.oc>HAGHY ,., ............. NASHVILLE, Tenn. -Commissioner Fay Vin- cen~ often evoking lhe memory of Bart Giamatti, outhncd bis ideas for labor ncgotiatons, expansion and player relations Monday in the commissioneT's annual winter meetings speech. • Vincent took over as commissioner when Giamatti died in September. He had been deputy commissioner for six months. "I often think of what I have had to enjoy and what Bart has not." Vincent said. "He d idn't getto his World Scnes, and he would have loved it. He didn't get to make this state-of-the-game address. and I delight in thinking of what he might have said." Just weeks after bcinJ named commissioner, Vin- cent was faced with a maJor cns1s when an earthquake hit the Bay area o n Oct. 17 pnor to Game 3 of the World Scncs at Candlestick Park. Vincent decided to delay the Series until the area was ready and was praised by government officials for bis compassion. "It was a season of high. mount.ams and low valleys.," Vincent said. The game's lowest point was the ongoing investip· tion into aJlcpttons that Ctncinnati manqn Pete Rose bet on baseball. The issue dominated G 1amatti's sbon tenure as commisslQncr and to 'Rose-5in1shmenr from bucball a week be ore 1amatt1 ca . "Bart's most rcmembe~ statement is 'Nobody 1s bigcr than the game,"' Vincent said ... , will follow that. ··we must reahzc that on and-off the field. baseball is a prne of rules. - Baseball's most pressing issue is labor negotiations. The Basic Agreement with the players associatton expires on Dec. 31 . The key issues arc salary arbitration. potentJaJ changcs in free agency and revenue sharing. "Labor negotiations must not become a morality problem, at least not in baseball," Vincent said. "This 1s a financial issue in which two sides must allocate a scarce resource. Nobody wants a work stoppqc. Being an opcltnist, I don't believe there will be one." Vincent aJso called for a structure within baseball which permits a small franchise to compete with the lar&cr maTkets. A proposed revenue sharing plan would be used for this purpose. Montreat owner Charles Bronfman. whose club lost pitchers Mark Ltngstoo, Bryn Smith aod PucuaJ Perez Strawberry gives his Mets' club a deadline\ NASHVILLE. Tenn. -New York Mets right fieldeT Darryl Strawberry has pvcn the club a Feb. 1 1 deadline to reach a settlement on a new contract. Strawberry wants a little more than S 12 million dollars over four years, acc.ording to bis agent, Eric Goldschmidt. Strawberry. who is in the option year of his contract, made S 1.4 million last season and will make S 1.8 million in 1990. On a number of oc- casions,. he has threatened to leave lhc Mets after the 1990 season when he is eligible for free agency. "The Mets know what we want." Gold- schmidt said. "Now, it's time for them to get t.ck to us." The Mets said they expected to cont.act Straw· berry ID a week to 10 days. Last season, Strawberry hit only .225 with 29 homers and 77 RBis. to free agency. said his team cannot compete with the btger TV · mar~ "We need a better and stable set of labor relations so bucbalJ can as an industry prosper and meet th<' , demands of the next century," Vincent said. . "Ou~ labor rclatJons in this industry must improve to the potnt where an atmosphere of trust. of reason and faimess e.1usts among those at the table ... Vincent said his plans for the game include an improved drug program, expansion. fairness in hiring. and marketina of basebaJI in Europe. "Within 90 days of a labor avcemcnt, the National Lea$ue will announce a definite timetable for the addttion of two team) to the National Lcaauc," be said. "I would hke to put in plac.e an acrccment with the union which would govern our drug program, .. Vincent added . Currently. the players union and baseball do not have a mutual agreement. "But first. we have to know more about the extent of the problem and we need to do some additional raearch. Yanks, Pirates start off with Slaught trade NASHVILLE. Tenn. -The-New York Yankees dcaJt catcher Don Slauabt to the Pittsburgh Pirates Monday for ri&ht-bandcrs Jeff Rob- inson and WiOie Smith in the fint trade of the winteT meetings. Slaupt, 31 , hit .25 I with five home runs and 38 RBis in I 17 pmes for the Yankees last ~n. He started his ca.rccr with Kansas City in 1982 and was traded to Texas to the 198S season. The dealt Slauabt to the Yankees- OG • 2. 1917, for pilcber Brad Arnsbcrg. Slau&bt's best season came for the Ranaen in 1986 when he had 13 bomcn and 46 RBis. Robinson, 28. was used u a Staner and Rlievcr last season and bad a 7-13 m:ord with a 4.S8 earned run averqe. In 1988, Robinson was 11 -S and appeared in 75 pmcs. Smith. 22, compiled a 7-S record while pitchina for Salem and Har- ~abura in the Pittsbuflh orpniza- uon. "One of our scouts said he's like a youna Lee Smith," Yankees vice president George Bradley said. The Yankees plan to use Robi.nson in a relief role. He appeared in SO pmes last tea.son and started 19. Bradley said Bob Geren will do the buJk of the catching for New York next season. Slaucht will share the Pirates' catcbina duties with Mile<' Lavalliere. "We hate to lose a pitchCT of Jeff Robinson's ability, but we needed to improve our catcbiq." Pirates een- enl J1lUllCr Lany Do&ilhty said. I . . -.. . . . Ullrd Hay•• fr'9fttJ and his Oranee Coast College stat• dlalwplonshlp soccer 1e-. WOMEN l'rom Bt Sophomore center/halfback Kim Dutton (Mission Viejo). voted the team MVP by her OCC peers, scored the game's only goal 8:28 into the second haJf after a slurm1sh in front of the net. The real hero. thou&h, was freshman Joa1ie Julie Williams. who had six saves. five came in the fint half. and two of tttosc were "great saves that kept us in the game, .. according to Bond. In an unofficial state title game last year, the Lady Pirates lost to Fresno City, 2-1 , in overtime. at Chabot College in Hayward. They didn't quite know how to take it because losing was not something they were accustomed to. With constant tumult this year and a few losstS under their belt. the Lady Pirates knew what losing was about. Call it more mental balance as OCC entered the state tnle game at El Camino College. "The struggle really paid ofT for ..our team." said Bond , whose teams have won four consccuu ve South Coast Con ference champ1onsh1ps and five in the past six seasons. "I know 1t's an age-old lesson and fortunately it was loud and clear. It was Just one of1hose things. If you kcc~ wo rking hard and keep behev- ing in yourself, it'll end up paying ofT. Even 24 hours before the state playoffs we had illnesses and in- eligibilities. "We played well enough to win and that's all that counted. Last year on the bus alter we'd won the conference and we were going to Chabot, we badn 't lost a pme yet and we didn't believe it when we lost. This year, by the time we ·made it (to the finaJ), nothing was going to st.and in our way." Nothing did. Espcoally when 1t came to Williams. who registered her fourth shutout of the year. "(Williams) was the MVP of the (state championship) same, .. Bond added. "They didn't gJVe an MVP award in the women's game like they did in the men's game. but I think she was our MVP." Dutton. meanwhile, agreed that the attitude of the team took a diffCTent angle toward winning the state flag. "That's what we needed, a change of attitude:· said Dutton. "Our winning (the utJe) had a lot to do with attitude -overall team at- titude. As the season went o n. wc became closer as a team. Like (on Saturday), 11 symbolized so much. that as a team we could play together and overcome all the dif- ficulties with a good attitude. "We knew all we had to do (against Cosumncs River) warget one goal in and we knew we'd·havc it. We-were dominating most of the game atfd we were attacking most of the time, a·nd it was just a mailer of time before we pu1 one in." Orange Coast blasted 17 sho ts on goal, keeping the pressure on the Lady Chiefs. who took only nine. Par1 ofOCC"s defensive prowess came from Erinn Kanney. a fresbman sweeper who praised II Bond and played an instrumental role all season. "She is the most po\iuvc coach I've ever played for," Kanney said of Bond, OCCs only coach in eight yean. "She's always up and she never gets down on us. She JUSt Wints you to do the best you can. Her a nd Coach Mo (assistant Monique Brass) have put this pro- gram together really well. They're a good combination of coaches. "We had a team meeting the day before (Saturday) and Coach Bond put the season in prospective: We could finally create our own destin}' and she got us thinking on the same point. I think that milde a dif- ference. "Our team had a lot of different attitudes and characters. but we came lOJCthcr when we had to. With Michelle not fcchng well. 11 JUSl showed how much depth we had. She's obviously o ne of our strongest weapons on offense and 11 JUSt showed that our team was strong the whole season. "Coming into the finals. ll was hard to. take. the fact that M1chclk was sick." OCC's Robin Karnes and Bnt- tany Leonard scored goals which were called back against Cosumn~ River, sandwiched in between Dut- ton's goal which counted. Fullback Julie Clinkenbeard (Edison). who plays in front of Kanney, and fullback Chns Jones (Estancia) took maJor steps toward maturity from last year to this season, according to Bond. and both played important roles. MEN From 81 cd really v.ell 1n the S«ond half' We wanted 11 and 11 sho~ed " OCC goalkeeper Ken Langwonh> the MVP of the '>tale champ1onsh1p game. m1s-.cd part of the conference season becauM: of a wnst lnJUry. but nothing could get by him 1n the playom. "He didn't allow a~oal in l'llher (state playofl) game.' !><ltd Ha}C\ "We won 1-0 against Amencan River and we pulled hi m out in 1ht· champ1onsh1p game aga1n\t h e\no C1l y when we had a J.Q lead Wl· brought him back 1n with 111 minutes left. leading 3-2. and hl' preserved the win -we made a fc~ Other 'iUh\lllU· t1ons so ever;one could pla) in J statt champ1omh1p game hut "l' put (Langwonh~ halk 1nJ hel·au"K· we'd pla}cd too hard tht'i \l'ar to k·t this one shp through .. Sophomore Paul Oldham 1"1Jll'r Dc1), a first team all<onkrt:nce forward, scored the other ()( C go.ii against Fre~no to g1'e the P1rall·\ a 3-0 lead. All three ..core\ «amc in the second halfbcforc the R.am'\ closed the gap h~ nct11ng l"lll' against reserve goalil' Hill K ll·1 n Langwonh) stopsxd fi,c-F-rt:<>no shots while e'<cellent dcfl·n"\l' d · forts were turned 1n h\ 1n<>1dt· full· backs Rich Peth1gal (uH'aptain I and Shaun Jarrard 0( C fint.,hl'd the season 18-4-2 "I always thought we had a chance because we had a dam good team," said Haye<; "But to think -................ ~--..-.--· M•er Dera Chuck Gr•y f41 re1ao...-1n tr.nlc • al.rtl. Andr•• 1111 screens off competllton. Mowell• won, aJ-17. Monarchs romp past Oilers, 82-3 7 8y RID Mc:Cl.ATOfY Olll}I,... Gw•• .. -· Maler Oei Hilb'• Monarchs were out to show everyone and anyone Monday niaht that lbcfy are iftdecd won.by of a ~ ruk:ina in any Or- ~ COWlty hiah ICbool basketball Tbe Monarchs dominated every ofaloplided8~371hcllackina n Hunti_np>D 8eecb <>Um aoc1 eU"Ded the npt JO face Lona Bach Jorda lD &be ftAalt of the Com · Mna-Newpon Harbor Ti&>-0« Tournament t.ooilb1 (8:30) at Col1a "'W-HillL Wbal Pulh came to lbove early in tbe pane.. Maw ~ made Ill the rilbt mcwa Mutapba Abdi'• bMket elia1y 18 &be fin& quarw 11ve tbe Oillrl tMAr Int ud only IMd at '"-ud frolll dlln tbe MOMl'dul tamed ~ 1IP dleir le¥el of play and ,.. away •ll hin ........ and~ ~ lloWer Oillft. 1bey 1'Cal OD ai • ,. to ... lbe qu.w ...... " kdled tlM*; ,,. 08lr'I ooulda'\ Mlldll .... -pum n....., DIA f ' ' • ........ ~ ... ---Wo..-• ..... "' .... ~ r~*'---IMt•Hill • -i-..al 6a t nil rm .... _. ... ww. ...... .... ., .......... 11.--. ..... -~ ....... ... -~:~-= f.)!i;it"" Artists capture title The o.-y Not One can't say lquoa Beach Hi&h's victory wasn't earned. but there was IOIDC charity involved. Tbe Artists bis 33 o( 38 he throws Monday nl&ht. 1ncludtna 13 of l 3 in the fourth qua.net. to toundly defeat host Oral\lt Lutheran 1n the cbampionabip pme of its own tournament. The leldin& fundraiten were junior point pwd Josh Borella (10.10). IC'ftior forward Dain Blanton (9-9) and leIUor pard John Trevino (8-10). The trio ICOf'ed 29. 21 and 20 points respectively u loftlla wa named the tournament's Ma.t Valu.blc Player. Blanto n Uo rebouftdld well. Tbe Anisu. J.O. never trailed after the flnt q~. aJlbouah Orallll Lutberaa. l--1, stayed within~ l..apna led 20-18 at the flm -... 41 -31 at balftirn. and S7-S4 after three quanm. • . D1rma Cole, <>ranee Lutbcran's 6--foot-S c:cnter, led all ICOrel"I witb 30 ...... you're somg 10 -.-.in a State cham- p1onsh1p . . too many th1nss have to fall into place Like inJunes -1f you're going to ha\C them. the) ha'e to come at the: nght umc Of course \Ou can never have an 1nJu~ ai the nght time. but there are bt'ttcr limes than others " Hayes I\ looking forward to ha' ing Pat Callaghan (Corona dcl ~far), Marco Vazquez (Estancia) and Paul Bums (Ncwpon Harbor) back for next season. All played Ice ) roles for the Pirates this fall "There was something about this team this year," said ( laure "I felt all along that we had a chance to do well. We've had bt'tter t-.;i.ms here. but that's not the nature of soccer . Sometimes better teams don't win. People arc fil'l.all~ gomg to pay Orange Coast some respect. "Most people we played thought Orange Coa!.t was a M1ckc) Mou~ operauon. and ma) be now this will shov. some interest I think the) ·11 st.an noucmg us " Since QC C\ incep1100 1n 1977. the soccer program has compiled a I 4'J-69-39 record. including fi ve conference titles in the 80s. Wallace won South Coast Conference cham- p1onsh1ps in 1980. '81 and '82 whdc Hayes' teams won the Orange Em- pire Conference crown last year and this season. HIGH S('HOOI, GIRl,S BASIKETB.\l.I, MonarchS will try to build around McDonald By ST AN GRANCH o.-y....,.,....,~_... One of tht: mo'>t \Ul'l CS'iful girls basketball teams an 1hr 1980s has been that of the Mater Dc1 Monarchs. n1c Monarchs have cap- tured SC\.Cn stra1gh1 .\ngclu~ League titles going I ft-0 last ~ear Howe' er v. llh on!) three returning pla\ers clouds of uncena1nit) have crept over Mater Dc1 H igh School "This team 1s "et) hard to pre· diet." !>aid Mater Dc1 Coach Brenda Yccke. "We had an un1mpress1vc summer. and I rcalh think v.e arc on a two-year plan In ihc last two }'ears we have graduated I~ pla}'ers. so v.c lack varslt) expcnencc: .. Heading the hst of returning pla}· ers 1s \tcli!>S1a M c Donald McDonald. a fi, e-foot-sevcn Junior forward. was S«"ond team all-league last jear and •~ l'.JI~ ~~ lhc.. Monarchs 01Tcns1\ cl\ "Mcltss1a t!. a greai athlete.'' 'I ecke said. "She set sc' era I league: record5 in track. ~he 1s used to handling prcssu~ on a 1ndl\ 1dual le' cl. and I think she -.-.111 bc able to handle ll at the team IC\ cl "She had a stre!>s fracture over the summer, which 1s one reason the team did so poorl). She 1s the stabb2- 1Dg force of the team. but we will need some other people to score 1fwe arc to do well .. .. Joining Mc Donald 111 the starun& hne up arc Shella Man10 (5-3 Junior guard). Joan Maurer (5-6 junior Juard) and Zsuzs1 Burkhalter (5-11 Junior center). Three ..,players arc vymg for the final starting spot including Dawn Jawronsb ( 5-10 sophomore center), Ro~ lnbra1ano (5-8 Junior forward) and Cehstc Rivera ( 5-6 Junior guard). "We have only two semors on the tum and the> ·don't figure to sec much action so v.e arc really young. .. Yecke said. "I hesitate to set any goals for this team It seems h~e an odd }'Car for the league with a lot of teams rebuilding. "I would hke lO finish m the top l.b.n:c_Afld..&Q_to_ tbc la o To do that we ha\ c to be very aggressive on -Ocfensc We need to score o ff the fast break because we don't have much offense Also our guards must be able to handle pressure at the varsity level. and that remains to be secns "This will be an intcresung y So far it has been a fun challenge ... Artists involved in long-range program, building for future The Dally Piiot Coming off a 2-lS }ear 1n the Pacific Coast League and onl) ha' mg thrcc returning pla}ers. lh1rd·)ear Laguna Beach '\rt1sts gJrls basketball Coach Greg Marshall knov.s that he faces a tough task this season "ln cvef) aspect this 1s a rebuilding year for us." Marshall said. "\\c arc reaJ young and \Cr) ancxpcnenced. We lost our best pla~er and have o nl} two rcturn1Dg naner. "I have not '>Ct an~ goals for this team. All I want to do 1s ti) to develop some true basketball players this year, and get read} for next year. I want us to 1mpr0\e v.11h each game. We can't rel} on one pcrwn hkc we did in the pa'>t. so we need everyone to 1m{>rovc and pla} up to their pot.enual." Returning to the staning hne up for the A.rt1sts this \ear arc .5-foot-4 sophomore guard Nikki Klentcn and .5-8 JUOIOr center Laune Rush. Heather Marlow (a 5-7 senior foward) also returns and thctt three arc expected to c.a1T) the offensive burden for Laguna Beach Sue Gunderson ( 5-7 senior 1uard) and Cole Stephens ( .5· 7 freshman forward I round out lbc start.mg hncup Othcl'\ who arc expected to .sec a lot of aruo n arc ~ncue Swartout (5-6 senior guard/forward) and Sunoo Ollvena. (5-7 senior guard). "Simon tS a transfer swdcnt from Brazil" Manhall said ... She actually started the tint ~c for us because Nikki 1s recovcnng from a strained lcooe. Simon maybe ooc of the most talented players on the team, but she lacks ex pencnc:c and the l&Jlll.Ulle bamcr has been a problem too. "The key for us 1s we need to cut down on our turnovers. We don't handJe the ball too weU and in today's game teams don't sit back in zones any mo~. 11 u fulJ-coun prcs.- ure. "We have a aood dcfctl9C and when we set the ball up court our offense c.an be effective. We Lack a true auard lo brina up the ball, ao we att workioa bard on thaL ··0unna the ~ J am 1'111111 to let everyone play. I want t.bem aD ' to tel expencnoe. and by 1eaaue I will 1ettk on su or seven playen and tee how well~ can do. I think ~will be compct1t1vc ·• - Westminster has four returning starters, but it's still a long road I .wawwwwta OW""9 -.a ••ra ca •• ....__ W L ,_ -n > .. 1) • _,.. tJ..IQ)~ ' 1 Mt s St.151~ • It ... 1~ •n .au 1 ............ n • m ' s ..., 1~ '5.60 H'• ' 7 .5'J J~ 11 •>'-' • 12 .no 7~ > 12 JOO • IASTPM COW&a•NC• ....._.,...... W L Pct. .. 10 ' J.H • ' .$71 1 t 7 S6.)l • 10 ,..w l 4 II 141 S\.'a • 1• .m 1 c..'11 DfWI'* '. ' ."2 10 ' ."25 \It • 6.AOO 1 t 6 AGO l 1 • M7 l 7 • .Al7 )\It ' • .AOO ' .......... lmt"e Porneno 121 OrtenOo tS T......-.o-~•1 ~7:11-. ~ al ,._ Ycwtl, •:JO o.m a.ton al CNirlotl9, 4!30 o.m. Portland a l Miami, .. ..JO o.m. Utall at ClaWlllnd, ~ o.m. o.n..,., •• ciuc..eo. S».m. New JerMV at MJMnola, s o.m Golden Stale al Oel!At, S:lO o.m. Houston at s.ame, 7 o.m. Mltwauk" al Seuamento, 7:30 P m C:.•••.....,., C-... rw 0....w..tT--.. "'"' ·--, ........ ) 6-<vprau ~ Glenclell ....,.I~ "'-Cerrito• ,..,.., ._. (TllwMlily) 6-s.tl Oll!oo Mew YL AntelOCle Va .. y t--<Jfnn "'-Golden Wnt COM.MUNfTY COLLaG• WOMaN ~Welt~C.-...efhS.....•S4 (~T__.,..f'.,..I 0..-..W... ...,..., .......... ft ft pf Ip Slrdlla 7 0 2 II Dame S 0 I 11 Arrnalr-1 o 3 2 9uonl 1 o o 2 JOMIOll l 4 1 tO IJNlnclO 2 0 1 • Smltfl 1002 Louil t022 J.O&on 6 I 1 20 Thomoton 6 2 0 14 Gonclrlnoer 2 0 3 4 0.vll l 2 S I Hamnton > l 1 1 TITavtor I 1 0 3 ~ 1 0 I 2 TaTavtor 4 0 I I TOfall 23 13 IS 6l Totals 23 S II 54 Malftlme· Goldtfl West. 19-11 Thrw-oolnt -" GOiden Wnt -Slrdlla '· s-.oiu -Oeme 1 HIGH SCHOOt. 90YS L8ft9 a.di JerdM st, s. •• •• 1m S4 I~ HMMr.C•la MMe~-) La JeNIM Sa ... 11 rC* Brvanl c...,.._no Hamilton ...,,,, Kine Scott Smltfl ltlOrOUClft Tot.it .. ft pf Ip ......... S 3 ' 13 Neuven 3 1 1 7 2 l l 6 Torl"f I 0 I 2 1 I 0 l Mc:Farla,_ S 0 4 12 s 0 I " ,,,._. s 2 l ,, 2 2 I 6 G.-rt ' 6 2 14 0 1 1 I lt .. I,,_ I 0 0 2 4 03 1~1 2 1 25 • 2 ' " 23 11 It Sf Totall 21 10 IS ~ Sc99 " QINrlar'I l..One 9eedl Jofo.11 tt IS I 17-Sf h fttlllt* 17 10 10 17-S. Tllrw-PO!nt ooe•i· JonSan-Harrl• 1, ltOlboroulfl 1. s.ci llU'lll Cll-McF lll'land 2. ft ST 1. SVnaM (JI) I. KMIM07> 3.0.. ... 0M\(S) 4. -.our• ( 1) S..UNLV 6.0UM 7.lllnof• l.Mk:Neen t.LSU 10. Al'QMai (2) 11.Loul•flll 12. OklehOma 13. UCLA 1C.I~ 15. St. John'• 16. Memoflli SI. 17. N«th C.rollna 11. Georgia Tedi lt. N. Carolina SI. 20.AfllON 21.AteOeme 22. Pfttsbureh 23. T emo6t 2C. 0Neon St. 2 Flor ~PllPW ..... 1.515 1 H 1Ml 4 H tAS 3 ..... t,325 s )-1 1,2165 • H 1.246 1 H 1,1'9 I 3-1 1,CllO 10 2-1 1,051 t 3-0 1.031 11 J-1 -13 2-0 m 11 3-0 761 15 3-0 617 14 4-1 "'20 3-0 460 22 4-2 '9 12 2-0 "'21 •• , 421 25 1-2 "11 2 •·O 215 - 2·1 211 11 2-1 275 16 3-0 203 -1·0 1IO 24 M9t1r Del 12. H ......... .., a.di J7 (.......,. ...,...c.ea Mew TIP-affl H11 ._..,a.di Miiiar 1>91 ....... .. ..... "' ~ Jahr Luca• ADdl Morton McAlllndl Tavtor ..,..,, VladlOI LAll•theft 1 I 3 l Bovie , • 2 2 10 S 1 2 ll Grav 2 I I S 3 0 2 7 Andrn 6 3 I IS 4 1 2 t M/tav-'ftY 0 0 1 0 I l 0 S O'Nell 3 2 • 10 0030 Quinn 202 • I 0 l 2 St-6 2 l 14 O O I O Karlcll l 1 l 1 0020 "'--2 1 06 o o o o hllMtero• l o o 6 Ivey l 0 0 2 Sufi 00 1 0 Nolan 0 0 0 0 Met< lnGllY 0 0 0 0 O°TOOle I 0 0 3 Total• IS 6 II 31 Tot••• ll 12 11 11 Seer-a ...., Qva"'9n Hunt1ne1on 8Mch n 12 • S-37 Mater Del n 2S 11 17--41 Thrae·oolnt _,, H&-Lucu . MO-O'Nell 121. Ma-. O'TOOle lrVtM S4. T~ H .. 4t 1Ce11'1 Mfu . ....._, TIP-Ofll T__,_.,I lntM TrallUca H .. ........ .. ....... 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Co11 OCle Sortino &Mn Ono Patmer-1 Yorke Soarlll Halctl Kelm SMC>Mro ,,.,,en Totait ........ 0 0 I 0 ' 0 I , s 0 1 13 3 0 1 6 ' 0 1 • 0 0 ' 0 4 0 I I ' •• 6 2 0 , ' ' 0 0 2 ' 0 0 , ' 0 I , .. ft llJf • Statnle 1 4 2 I Kool 0 2 0 2 Hen\allCMI 0 2 0 2 HIOMll 2 I 0 S Ebert 1 O I 2 Ratll"UUaft 1 0 l 2 Wellllnclt 2 0 2 • RutM41 0 1 0 1 23 4 14 S3 Tol11l I 10 10 26 Sar-. .,., ~""" Marina 14 IS ll 11-il Fool,,111 6 I 6 6-26 ThrM·oolnl QO<tll Marin-Sortino 3 T actlnlcall None. H.,,... .... BMdl U, SllYMM 41 ( W 11 • rnt191 TeurwMflt) Sav-H"""""911 ... di ...... "' ....... .. 8o•leY 9 1 1 )0 Wolff 1 0 I 2 Fraoetlck 6 1 4 13 Davis • • l 12 ~nandel I I 0 l ACCKla l 0 0 2 Rn• o l ) l Lovin 0 0 1 0 Aliff 00 10 ~ 303 6 Endow l 2 O ' jatv l 0 l 6 C .. tro 0 0 0 0 AmllrOM 4 0 l I now 2004 Wa•ar l l 2 7 Totall 11 1 10 • l Torell 21 S 16 47 k8" .,., °"""" S.vanna Hunllnelon BHcn Thr .. ·oolnt llCMlll None. Tecflnlcal\: N-.. ll 9 IS 6--41 17 • 17 l+--47 DEEP SE\ ~ DAV.Y'S LOCK&a ( ........ 9-dll -l boats, 72 aneten It bonito, 20I COd, C2 catoco 11eu, 21 madlerat, 21 ~. 37 ~ owcn, ' wtlltt ""'· ' "'-""' N&WPOttT LANO.NG -1 ooat. 7 ..,...,., 10 Mfld on&, 1 oonlto, l teUIOln, 47 c.allco INKI, I ..,. oercl\ ~" U M. NW lOIJl\l 10 .... SI $2, SI _..-.. COi .. C~r5r~ -·-SI 11, i -FA-41"' U ()ll-IJO. A-$1 '7 W l(.,,tuc,¥ 62, 8uU• ff 'Of) -'Voo II. Furman n -_,_,.. T.oi 11' -..... SE 16 --•it'o SI IOI O.Wer• SI '° $eft 0... SI Sl Te._. Tec11 !O "Oo'llf•-•r". -Sou,..•¥ "'•"le ,,_ &$, Te••• Coa 11 ....... -..... -.. T ...... II C.I F""!Oe 411 ..._,,..SI It r.._,_ SI 1• A-.--SI• N C C.._,IOllo 11 O.•-It E•""·NH ,...,_ ....... ., Ma, .... ,.., 65 FOU·--It Alllr .... t M For...,,.11.-..,,.c-.. S.-.. St • \Mfne P-"'t IO We.,.,..... SI SS --" S1 -..n ---~1)6 ,....., EM• C•ro•.,. .. Frwwoll _.,.. .. ~-,.,. fl ""'-... ., ...,,,, ... .,~ .. --I! -• SS. _.. .. S• !O •-•lO:ST_._..., .. ,._.... TefW' .. A~f"Of' •l 1Clft'\.IC•¥ tO'J M.u1111oo Sr 91 IOUTMWllST -··-75 W --·ICO '1 ~SI .. la-SJ CIF From St ~r. because we almosl dido 't make 1t1" said CdM fullback-inside linebacker Jcrrott Willard. who started at defensive end 10 the title pme a year ago. La Quinta.. the No. l team from the Garden Grove League. emerged stron& at the finish of lhe league teaSOD and h.it the playoffs with a three-pme winning streak and a 6-4 overan mark, equal to CdM until a non-league forfeit win put the Sea Kinas at 7-3. Aztecs Coach Roger Takahashi tbouaht he bad a &ood team at the beainninJ of the season, but it didn't really bit stride until quarterback R.icbatd Weaver ca.me into form to start their current su-pme winnina streak. In the playoffs. the victims have been: un~ten Valencia. the~ LSU 116 L-16 L-·-10< ,_,.., St 11 I~ II llMJ 11 Oil League champions. Newpor t Harbor. the third-place team from the Sea View League; and la Mirada. the third-place team from the Suburban League which ousted second-seeded Estancia from the playoffs. It's bttn that kind of tournament "There's no doubt in my m ind .. that the field was balanced. Ta.kahashi said. "People always ex- pect fonn to take place. I don't think people expected 1hcse two teams. Tbcrc were no patsies in the first round. Ev~one had a dogfight to get through. • La Quinta's Trent Juhan was a two-year rctuminJ staner at quar- terback this spnng. but Weaver matured into the role dunog sum- mer pusiog leque. Julian moved to b.a.lft.ck and has been an extremely productive runner and receiver. while Weavu has thrown for over 2,000 yards. -C•o .. fl .. ,._..., n ~·"-"' v ..... w-so . "We reall y became close to a lot of the guys on the team," Juliati said. "He relates better with the receivers than I did . He's more calm and keeps his head bener. He's a lot more consistent." Weaver injured his shoulder run- ning the ball dunng the second week of the sc~son against Orange and had to wear "shock pads" for live weeks. "It put me out of groove." Weaver said. "I wasn't playing with con- fidence anymore. I had to wear shock pads underneath. I wasn't throwing the same. l wore them fi ve weeks, and we went 2-3. Since I took them Off, WC haven't lost. I've &Ot the confidence back since." After losing to Bolsa Grande the seventh week. it was more than the removal of Weaver's pads that made the difference. The Aztecs ~ 2-2 in lea.sue with three· games to play and were on the spot. .. After we lost to Bolsa. we had Ml.JC ll>TICE NI.JC ll)TIC( Ml.IC ll>TICE PICft'TIOUSW .. umnA~ The tolcM4ng S*1IO"' .,. ACTIT'IOU8Mll••H U..SJAW The folowlng pereona - ... • ...... CC&lll',_• a.Pr'Mdlc:o -. --~ A ..... car..a.v ~ ... ,. 0-.. T.,... .. y o.tr.le ..,, ........ ... W LT 11 2 • ' . . ' 7 0 3 lt 0 Cll*'llt I I 0 • s 0 • 1 0 s I 0 • t 0 ... ' • 0 ' • 0 1 ' 0 s • I ' tt • N.PPPA M63MHI ---M1211156 .DI• JD AlS 8' 297 A1S J'2 21' ,461 ,,., .. .mtHDS -221 ,,. M2 171 220 MJmm .DI -251 .mm211 .,, lM 111 An•H• Cl 91 I u Hou.ton c~ ClndMell Pfttlbureh 8uffe6o Mleml lndlen8POl1• NewEnetend N.Y.Jets ~ ... W L T 10 a o 7 • 0 • ' 1 5 I 0 i ' 0 ~ I 5 0 7 s 1 1 ' 0 • 7 0 .... I s 1 6 ' 7 s • 4 9 0 0 0 0 0 11 ·C11nd'led division !Ille ~If'• lc:er'a S..nle 17, lluftalO 16 ....... o-. Pfloenlx a t ......_ I 11.m Atlanta at Minnesota, 10 •.m. Dela•., F'tlll~. 10 ...... Detroit al CNceeo. 10 a.m ..615 311 310 .sn m ,,. .m JOS 225 .462 1'3,,. ICaMet City at ~ Sav. 10 a rn Hew OrtMM al Buffalo. 10 a rn Pllltllurtf\ at New York Jell, 10 a rn Sen Olaeo at Watlllneton. 10 • m S.111• •• Cincinnati, 10 •.m T.,..,.. kv 1t Houlton. 10 •"' Cleveland al l~lt. I 11.m New Yon Glentt a l o.n.,,.,. l Pm N-Enolanct al Miami. S o.m MIMm'I'• 0-San Franchc:o at .-. 6 o.m 1. ColorMlo (SS) -~ ......... 11-0-0 1,4'2 1 2. Mleml, Fie. (4) 3. Mldlloan ( 1) '-Notre O.me S. Florlde St. "Nebresk• 7.AleberN I. Tenne$SM t. Auburn 10. Arit.eni.s 11. lllnof• 12. USC 10-Hl 1~ • 10-1·0 1,37• 3 11-1-0 1,323 5 9-2·0 1.265 ' 10-1-0 1, 191 7 10-1-0 1.090 2 10·1·0 '·°'' • 9-2-0 1,02• " 10-1-0 913 9 9-2-0 9ll 10 1-2-1 '31 12 9·2-0 741 13 9-2-(1 611 14 Rustlers capture tourney H\,htlH\1 1 Tan, CdM lock horns Wednesday h 's not even the Sea View Leaaue le:UOD yet. but N~ Harbor and Dk:t Stricklin'• Goldeo West Col-Corona del Mar bilJu' boy• are .. women'• bulcetball team ims eoited to do battle on the l()()CCf proved to I().() 00 S~y by win, field. ~ tbe Collcp of the Scauow Both teams won theit qu.a.rterfinal Tournament aa tourney 'MVP.,.... ,P'Atcbel al the lrvi.De Tournament Oaudctwe JICboft ICOl'Od 20 point.I 011 Monday scttint up a acmifinal ud pabbed 11 rebounds in leadina matc:bup on'Wednetday at 3 p.m. at tbe Rust.lento a 6J,S. victory over fferilale Park. Newport dominated the bOlt Giants. San Clemente for a ~ win, while Bill Si.rcbia bad 18 points and CdM battled to a 0-0 tie with San- Micki Hamilton and Shawna tiqo before winnina in a shootout. Armstrona were selected aJl,tour, 4-2. · name!'t as GWC handed Sequoias For Newport, Alex Opoulos scored (9-1 ! its fint loss of the season. . two aoals and assisted on another to Stacee Johnson added 10 .points lead the Sailors, who improved to and pulled down a team-high 12 }.(). After oing up 4--0 on Santa Ana rebounds for the Lady ~ustlcn.. ~ho Valley in tf:e first 2S minutes of their entered ~e game averagi~ 93 points fint round game on Saturday. the a .-inc. It ~ clC?sc u~lll ~bo~t five Sajlors took a 4--0 lead in 23'h minutes to go, said Stnckhn. Then minutes Monday. San Clemente fell wt snuck ahead by a few. It was a t 2 1 hard-fought defensive battle." 0 • · Golden West led. 29-28. at haJf-"We're playrng reall y well nght time. but pulled away in the second now," said Coach Mark Payne. half. "We've got five seniors, two of them On the high school level Monday: starters. mostly juniors and four • Melisa Sortino, a ~nior point freshman playing. Ifs a very young guard. led Marina to a S3-26 non-tCIJm. They just work real hard. Ieaaue victory at Foothill, cannjng 3 They're just clickrng right now." ofS from 3-point ranie en route to 13 Opoulos assisted Dave Pattison points. as well as picking off seven for the first goal, Tnstian uyva as- steals and dishinJ off five assists to sisted Opoulos on the second. Joey help the Vilungs improve to 2-0. Perez booted 10 a deflection of his •Costa Mcsa·s Oliv1a DiCamtlle own 1nttlal luck wb1ch bounced off scored IS points and Thui Nguyen the official and Opoulos sco~ un- hit a trio ofthrtt-pointers en route to assisted to make it 4-0. 12 points. but Orange outlasted the In Cd M'~ victory. the two teams Mustangs in overumc at the Irvine battled to a scoreless tie through World News Tournament. Orange is regulation as Sea Kings goalie Chris 1-1, while Costa Mesa fell to 0-1. Connelly stopped 18 sho1s. In the "We did some good things. but we shootout, Connelly hm1ted Santiago did some bad things too." said Costa to just two goals:' while Chm Smith. Mesa Coach Jim Weeks. "We fouled Jusun Pierce, Tanner Rupp and out our two top scorers. They've got Alfredo Sandoval connected to a 6-foot center. and we couldn't stop provide the victo~ for CdM. her inside." DiCamillc hit one of two free throws to tJc the pme at 51 wnh five seconds remaining 10 the fourth quarter, and the Mustangs took a SS-S3 lead 10 overtime before the Panthers rallied for the victory. •Huntington Beach moved into Wedne5day's 5 o'clock consolation finals of the Irvine Tournanent at University following a 47-41 victory over Savanna. sparked by the 12 ponts of Jana Davis and six. rebound apiece from Clare Walker and Amber Ambrose. Sftl'9'91'\G In high school girls matche~: • Tustin's Courtney Augustine scored the game·s only goal to lead the Tillers past C-0rona dcl Mar and into the Irvine Tournament semi- finals against Dana Hill at 3 p.m. Wednesday. El Toro meets Troy 1n the other semifinal. At the South Torrance Tour- nament. Edison collected a 2-0 vic- tory via Lynne Th1cl's two gaols over Bishop. then dropped a 3-2 '"erd1ct to RoyaJ despite the sconng of Jennifer Lachman and Anne Thiel 13. Houaton 1C. Clemson 1 S. Virginie 16. TexeiA&M 10-2-0 657 1~ U.1. 0... OUbUJ11 1t•1 1·3·0 S70 16 Cat~ ..... > 1:49.61 >. ~ Tave.novldl, SoY.., Ul\lon, l;.5109 17. we11 Vlrolnla 11. Penn St. 1·2· 1 ffO 17 Mmll 7·3·1 466 11 100 l1ec1Utrcit!-l, W91Y Zabalolnov. Sovie! lt. Brl(INm Youno 10·2·0 371 1t Union, $7.ll 2, O.n VH ICll, 8oca Ralon, Fi., ~:~ro·s,. , 1·3-0 330 20 eav, S7.l5 l, Kevin ul~. Canada, l~-0 291 21:-11-~11&:00 ;.,t~l: 91n Pl-. !Camell. 22. MkttlQan St . 2l. Hewell 7-4-(1 271 22 p t -2-0 2<11 23 lelltWI, UNL.V. H.02. 2, Jim Harvev. ~. 2C. Pfttibufgh 25. Texa• Tech N...J •• JerWY We,,., SS.06 l , AnlhOnY Mou.a. 7·3·1 Ito 2• New~, SSA t-3·0 13' 25 100 ""'~1. Anclen ~I. SW9detl. our baclcs against the wall. and it made us better," Weaver said. Julian.said. "When we first started in spnn.g. we were all looking for- ward to the season. We all knew this would be the year. Then we lost three m a row. won two and dropped another. We looked at one another and said, ·Why are we doing this. why arc we doing that.· We knew we could do better. "It took a little soul searching. Since then. we've turned on the juice." Wide receiver Wes Kollar said. "When we won l~ue our freshman year, we always sa10 .this would be the year." La Quint.a went to a title game once before behind the all-purpose pme of Bart Rccktenwald. losing to Sea View League foe Saddleback in J98S. Last year was Corona dcl Mar's first title pme experience and ~ hit.Al 2, Trov Oalbn. "'-'!•. P'TloMlclan, 1 sulted in av1ctory over Valencia. It was a playoff bracket which evolved pretty much according to fonn. with three of the top four ~ds advancing to the semifinals and No. I a nd 3 playina for the top spot. Corona dcl Mar returns with sev- eral of the same players. although 11 is a much different team -not nearly as deep but still \'Cry talented. A year ago, the Sea Kings went 12-0-2. This year. they lost a non- le.quc pmc which later turned to a forfeit win and thrtt of fi ve l~uc pmes in the competitive Sea View Lequc battle, including a 24-7 thumpina by Tustin. That's when Holland said he had bis doubts about what he had SAid at the season's start. but it was also may have strvcd as a tumiDf poioL "I was real d1sappo1ntcd," Holland sa1d. "We didn't come to play. Warren (Johnson) wasn't in the pme, and we didn't play with any intensity." The diffcreocc in 400 IM-1, Jan Bldrman, Swtdan, Univ of Nel>ratkl. 4~'-4.0. 2, Oar-ell WU1'*1ofd, Ft MY9f'I, Fla , Swim Fiorica 4:11 01 3, Al .. ~meto, Boca Raton, Fla . Mlu lon Bev. •:ll 1' ·-100 llaCJltll'"'*-'· Janie W991taH, MIUlon Hiit, Kan • Kal\let Cltv 91aaert, 1113 90 2, a.ttv Mltc:Nll, Marietta . ONo. L°"""°'"n, 1~ 22 3. L.IM Ouooe. VlrOlnla 8MC,,, Va Old OomWon A-Ile CluCI I-OS IS attitude after that was-. ..knowing you don·t JUSt go on the field and win." The Sea Kings lost again 1n the fin.al regular season game when a .strong Newpon Harbor team rallied to win 8-7 on an cx1ra point tnck play After the Newpon Harbor game, we aot a second chance:· Willard said. "Now we don't want to mess this UJ?." Wlule 1l won't be the dccidina factor -Takahashi said his team has shown no signs of tightness m the playoffs. Holland said the cham- pionship game experientt factor can help the Sea Kings. "It has to help a little bit. knowing that you can do lt once." Holland said. "There's something m ystic about doing n . You ml&ht say marbe ll isn't meant to be. but if you pul it off. you know that this school can win a football championship." rta.IC ll>TICE NI.JC fl)TlCE NI.JC ll)T1C£ Nl.IC fl)TICE Pta.IC NOTICE Or .. ~OAILYPl.OTIT._..,,O.C1, .. a ... _ .... f!M..;;;;;;;;;s;-..-•-•.-a-.__ ... ___.,._•=.;;1e..-•~•-a;;;.... ____ ,.....,._c __ e...,1,..a.___1 ___ ,.=1e-• ..... •.-...i_..1 ... ......;1_1;;;;;;;;,;;;c..-• ... n....,a....__ 1 _ _...,._•;;;;:u;;;.1C_.,_na:=--__ ,..;;;• .. c-..-• .. m..-.._.1 ___ ,..;;;;.;;;.;1C;;..;•~t1Cl.----....c mm MLE !pl'D ~ ..... ~.. AGl.a ..... ANOIO°' ..,__ ._... w,..... ••..-cl,_ ...... _.. .. .,_ Ml-~ ar.....,.. • ~ CircM, CoMsHt A¥ocad]~10J. ~!~ .... ~ ::'~~~·~::if. WW i& -.....ClU .. AMOOI MApt, .... .-OW.on:,.,...,.. _, .. ..._ !Me .. -_.., .. ~Pf..._'" eectlclfl 1HO OI Mw. ......_ t2Nt Colla ........ ._...,_, ttw -., .. ,_, - --INT~ OffQ ()Ir THI "-~ llDSIDI ... ....,... • .. ._....,,.... ot ,.._ N~PrOOMtCode Thie 1>vt1nw .. GOn• prtipeny~-The~~·· lllec.G1#1Nlof'e~ YOU AM It DIPMA.T ~ ()Ir ft9 c , •• ..... .,... .. _..., .......... .._..Oft. No\ .... A,..._ fora..-Nodce tlUcMd by 8" ...... Id.., '2 IM OO U 6 CVAAEH-dolr1I ~ • YOVI ••II ••...., .. ~A 080 CJlr r-..T COUNTY, '<>f' THI -~Clwl olOr· ~.M .. WMlof...,_ I.I,,_ lofm II ........ from 0. Tiie re9tetra1'1 COlft· CV (12 521 SE.1ZED FM>M MICAOMIMf. 2.aot W ~OU~~~.... • OATID 0111t1• """™ ~ Of ~Atrrv ~ on No .,..., .. _,.., Mio Mid ~ ..... A. flmme court Cller'll menoed to 11--..ct ...., f!IHIDENCE ANO ISO .._. A-. Sant• Ma YOU TM<e A~ TO WAU.IONO..ALOHGTHI n . 1... -wfty .. be ... TNe ........... Ned Chen. ,..,_ Walter•.,_ unci. tfle IC:UtlOue SEJZ£D F'AOM PERSON Of' c.. t27CM ::~~~. " • pA()TlCT YOUfll P~. 80UNOAllllH llTWHN ,._. ......, -"'t .. County a.ti of Or-'9t!tloner ~ ,_ ot IWlfftlll DONALD CHAALES AEED) S1enley Wong 240t W ..--· EAlY. fT MAY II SOU> AT SAID LOT t1 ANO 8Atp PWtllhed OtM99 COMt The OllTNCT ,_ ef'99 County on No~ lilAM I . ~""°"T, ... _, .00... on Oc:1Cl«)er 1 I, ... MIHd put~nl 10 H1111 A.__ Swlte AM. :: =•~.:::..: A PUIUC IM.£. IF YOU PAACfl A ~ Pt1ot Oeceffttler 5, 12, 1M r1gf1 10 ref8C1 etf'1 01 .. 22. ,... ~ llCMOA .... UW A 1Nt Hellltll and g-.ry Code See-c.Hf 9'27CM .. NE.ED AH EXPlANA"'°" PAACEL f · AN UN· 1t. 26. 1... b6dt 01 10 .._ el"I Ir· ....n 90CICtUI, Al*-.y .., 8o00ti111<....im.n.1 lion 11471111411 Dy the True t><.1Mnet• le con· IOf Soec:Ni NotiC:e 0( IN OF ~ NATUM OflJ '"' DIVIDED t2 PElllOENT T-12' ,..., ... OI .......... ~ Ot-. COMt , .......... tit .. Qr... Thie Materfteftl .... med PoMolt OllC*1 ducted ti)' WI IOdlvlduel Ing or"" !fwenlory end .. PROCEEDING AOAINIT INTtAESl AS TENANT IN In f/lt'J b6dt Otln O. llilddlftg. Deify PllOt o.c.mDer 5, 12, ""~ ~ '1r., '--9 Alto "'4111 the County C1ertt o1 Ot· eo.t1• ..._. Trie regl1trari1 com· prelUI al_...__.. ot °"'!• YOU, YOU SHOULD CON-COMMON IN ANO TO LOTS .. _..,. -Put-wt to ttie ~ 19. H . 1.. ...... CA W1'14111 ange County on Nowmt>er men ~ ~ to 1ranuc:t l>IMI f/lt'J ~\Ion °' aCIOOUl'lt • TACT ALAWY£R. 165 ANO tee Of' TRACT ,.._ ..,,-. ofhctlofl 1173of1hel.abor T·tl7 an I . WI.,...., 22. 1tet .,.:,_~~~ = ~,,... unoe< Ille flem~ e>t<Mded in Melian 1.250-' A~-0~:!:t:,.:e~~c0: ~A~~·';:P~1~~ ~,.=:, .. ~.~":sf~r~C:: NlJC *>TICE =--~ ~== Put111at1ec1 °'~ ~'=;1:~8°~ ~=:J ~:;-:-t>o~W: :ov= ~!:':=:. TITLE INSUAANCE COM-PAGES 48. 49 ANO &O Of' The~ peteotle we lained from the Dlt9c10f of '21• ~ ~ ... n, Otllty P110t December 5 12, and ~ Coo. Yoo ere 24 tH9 = ~.....,.. ft'Of" "- PANY M duly llPC)Olnted MISCELLANEOUS MAPS doi ~Ill: IN Oepwll'Nnt of lnduW!el tf11t Loe ~ CA .-& 19 ~ 1989 eb'/ tlfled lhat the Olt-Stanley Wong ii T~ under end ~ IN THE OFFICE Of' THE c".foss PULSE IMAGIHO ~the oener• ~ NOTIC8 tw Put>Uetlecl Otange Cout T -1111 ::. A:,ney ot O.ange Tin• •t•lemertl was ltled p~~= Mar Wal\4"'9. toO..SofTnmr9COtdeclCOUNTY RECOAOE.A OF7S46~#104Stanto11'tneniteofper~1 Nhf .. TO o.tlyPtlotNoYemt>er28,2t. County" .. lnll••••dWt11'11he County Clerlto10t· UOtrT 10104111 M lnltl'UINnt No SAJD COUNTY Caltf, tOeeo ' ' and the ,.,_.. ~ mUTlll ffTl&TA!! Oecenlt>et 5, 1989 n...""'7 rtaJC M)TlC( Pfoceedil!Q9 10 torten lhe e.nge County on NQ¥emt>er a!~~:u t.IWl9 a, 88-508924, 11'1 BOC*IAMI, EXCEPT FROM A POR-Ellen McNay A~. ratefofl'loltday ~ _. ~ _ • """' ~lt>ed proe>eny 28 1989 -. ,_ Pagel\rMGt8. of Otftc:lial ,. TION Of' SAID LOT 1ee All 7545 l<atelle • 104 StMton W0tti In the~ In ~ WALTWM.... U1l7I pYFtwnl to~" and Sale-Or F= =· :;~~ • cordS. Macuted by· DANIEL Oil, GAS PETROLEUM Ce11f tOeeo ' ' WI work le to be pertOrmad CMAM.18 MAM PtaJC M)TIC( ITATDmllfT tw ty Coo. SectlOn t 1•!8 • PublttlleO afl09 t U. A.- A MARl£8t<I.' AHO ~ AHD OTHER MINERAL OR Thie t>uelneu It con· l'of W11 crtfl Of ~ of WM.QM AaAllCKJllllNT OP You lfe instructed ll\et ,1 O..ty P11018~1>e< 5 12. A ......... •:--..;;:,,_ DACE 8 . MARTESIO ••H Y DA 0 C AR B 0 N ductedby:1nindMdull WOtlc• Meded to_...,.. C-..._A1..,_ FlCTITK>U9.,_U UUtwl'ICTYnOUe youo.#etocont•tthetor· t9 26 t9 1rv110t(a).lntfleofllceof1he SUBSTANCES IN ANO The regletrant com-tneconttect Theaer.-... Toallneln.C>erleflQar-. ~ITAru.WT llU .... 11...-tenure ol tri11 prope11y 1 122 r:'~~'::-U::: Co<.inty Recorder of OR-UNOE.A Of' WHICH MAY BE menc:.d to lraneec1 ~ on me •• the DISTRICT Olftce Ctedllotl, contingent creel.. The fC>llowtng peflOnl .,. Tl'Mt roOOWlft9 penone ~'to Hqjth and~,. UTZ ~.ow ANGE County. St8te ol Cell· PRODUCED FROM SAID ,_ undef the flc11t'°"' toc.ateel et 1370 Adame A-. tora. end pereont who may OOtng ~ .. NI.,. et>andoned the UM of ty Code Section 11•84 5 ----------1 tTI_., ~ .. ,._: tornia. WIU SEU AT PUB-LAND, TOGETHER WITH bu--. ,_ or ~ Oletrtct Purc:hMing. eo.ta o~ ti. lnt-teel In WESTERN STAR CHAR· Iha F1c1111011e Bu•lneu you mull tile• .-itoeO Claim f'\&.IC NOTIC[ 12100 ...,..CA IODS LIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST THE RIGHT TO USE THAT Hied above on·~ ....... CA copm ~be the .. OI_, ... ort>otl'I of TER & TOURS 777 0om .. N•m• TOKIAMERICA •t•t•nQ yOIJr •l'lt8'Mt 1n IN l°t ... ~=-Otanoe eoe.i BIDDER FOR CASH (pey-PORTION ONLY OF SAID 21.1989 ot>telnedon~ ACOflY CH AA LES M il TON ngoOr •I( ~POflBeecll TECHNOLOGIES INC . Pf°'*'Y Vou musl hte thlt 61797 28 29 able al time of Nie In lewf\il LAND WHICH UNDERLIES EJ1ern MeNay Andreoui of theM rat• lhell be poet. WAL TEAS ua CHARLES Cellf 92660 I 8 8 41 2 U e c Ar t l'I u 1 ciaim "' tne Super00< Coun NOTICE Of' ~= ~o;:- moMI'/ of the United Slit•) A PLANE PARALLEL TO Thie etal-11 ..,.. ftled eel et Ille 191> ei1e MARI< WALTERS Donald R TownlOn 777 Boulevard Sulle 200 IMne ol 1ne Counly Of Ote.1'1Q9 N'TTT10M TO .,.~ at THE CHAPMAN AVENUE AND 500 FEET BELOW THE wttl'I the County Cler1t of Of. II ~~"'91\detoryupon A PETITION ri.. C>e8'1 l\led Domingo Or •I( Newpor1 Cahf 92715 W>fhtn IM'lf 1301 <Sayt ol the A~TP HTATl I ENTRANCE TO THE CIVIC PRESENT SURFACE OF 8"09 County on ~ the CONTRACTOR lo wtlom t>y Char1el Mllfk Wal1er1 1n Beect1 Caltl 926e0 The F1Ch1t01J1 8ut1ne.1 llrtt pyt>11catoon ot th<t No-Of' CftAM.al .._TC* CENT EA BUILDING. 300 SAID LANO FOA THE 28. 1989 the contract II awatOed. and the Supenor Cou~.,i>I C.· Tt111 bu11ne11 11 con. Name referred 10.al>OV'e wu llQ! unless )'OIJ receive WAL TIRI ._ P\.llJC N0TlC£ EAST CHAPMAN AVENUE. PURPOSE OF PROS-,.-upon any ~t>contractor lonwa, Cour)ty ot ~ dueled by t n •ndM<lual fll«S m OrenQe County on 11e1ua1 nof1C41 (~ ute CHAMil M. WAl TUll ORANGE. CA 00000 e.ll PECTING FOR, DEVELOP. Publlthed Otenge COMt undef IUCh CONTRACTOR. THE 'PETITION requests The regtt1ran1 c9m · Sec>temt>er 27' 1985 FILE ContrOI Numt>et ~1.03 I I c-No.. A11001t FtemtOt.lt au..-u ngl'lt tttle and inlerMt con-ING ANO/OR EXTRACTING Da~y PllOI Oec:emt>er 5, 12, to QfY ~ .... thin Ille t9'd the ~t 1 Will deleel rnen<:4!1C1 lo 1ren~1 OUlf· NO F2877.0 Y0u musi ser.,. an enoorMCI To t ll ,,.,,. Denel!Cler-1 NA.ME STATEMENT <!eyed to and I\()'# hefd t>y It SAID OIL GAS. PET. 19 26, 1989 ~rat• to 1111 wont.-. Augutt 28 1980 .,. lld· ness uncle< ll>e l1Cf1t1ou1 Tot11 (Us' Inc 18662 CoP) of the Cllllm on the Ots· Cr&<lllor' con11ngen1 tr9<1• Tfle IC>llow•no persons •r• unelet Mid OeeCl ol 1'rull In ROLEUM ANO OTHER MIN-T • 120 ~ t>y lhetn In the ex· milted 10 problle The wt.II ti buSlness name or n....-Mac:A'111Ur Blv<I Suite 200 tr-ct AllOH'141'f ot Orange I tors and i>e<sons #f\O ma~ oo.ng t>us.neu as tile propeny Slluateel In Mid E R A l A N 0 ecullon of the contract a\lellable IOf examonauon In ltstea t l>Ove on October 31 lrvtne Catd 9271 S IC01Jnly tAttn Tl'IOmH J olherwtM tit 1nteteetec1 •n J v C RE 11.4 ODE L NG County and Stele delcrlbed H Y D R 0 C A R B 0 N Dl-tC NO'""r No l>ldder m.,. wOl'IClrew tNI Ille ke()t by tl'le court 19119 H111 bull,_. was c.on· Borris Oeovly OlllrlC1 Al· the ''"" or es1a1e or DOlh of 16761 Wtterway 11unt as SU8ST ANCES FROM SAID I"~ t~ .,,y bid IOf e perlOd of forty-A HEARING on tile peli· Oonel<I R TOWl'llOl'I dUC:l9<1 bye corporahon iome.,1 al 700 Civic CAntet C 11 A A L ES M IL T 0 N .ngt<>" Be4ch Callt 92649 PARCEL A LOT 90 OF BY MEANS OF WELLS hve 146) days alt« the date lion will t>e held on o.c.m. Th1t stelement wae Ille<! This 1tatemen1 wu Ille<! Onve Weal S.,,te Ana CA I WALTERS illlt CHARLES Jamu V Collura Jr TRACT NO 3433, AS PER DRILLED INTO SAID 11111 Mt IO< the ~Ing of bide bef 14, 1989. 11 I •S ?M th with the County Ciefk of Or· wilh lhe County Clet-ol Or-92701 within tenllOl<leysof 1 M NALTERS 16491 We1~rw1y Hunl MAP RECORDED IN BOOK SUBSURFACE OF SAID NOTICI tw A peymenl bond and • Dept No 3 located et 700 enge County on Noverrot>et t nge County on Novernoer 1ne toting ol the c1e1m on the A PETITION na~ Df!ef' hl&OI •n910,.. Beacll C.t1I 9~9 178, PAGES 48, 49 ANO SO l AN 0 FR 0 M SITES PCTIT'ION TO peffOfmance t>ond lhall ti. Clvle Centet Drive West, 2 I 19~9 16, 1989 Sup e" or Court C 1 v ot Dt C"t rles Mark WeUf!fs 1n l t11s ou•iness 11 con O F M ISCELLANEOUS LOCATED ON OTHER AOlllNl8TEll'llTATE required prk>f to e11:eeutlon SenteAna,CA92701 Ft.m41 Pubhshed Orangt! Coas1 Otvts•on tM Superior Court or Call· oucte<Jby anondrvldual MAPS. IN THE OFFICE OF LANO IT BEING EXPRESS· Of' CH._.I MllTC>tf ol tl'le contractand lt'teH be IF YOU OBJECT to ll'le Publls/\eo Orange CoeSI Daily ?llot November 28 De-The tailure to 1ttTl4llv Ille 1orn1a Counly ol O.enoe T '1e reg1s1rant com · THE COUNTV RECORDER LY UNDERSTOOD ANO WALTIAI ella In Ille lorm Mt lorth In tl'lfl grenung"ot the petition. you Oaoly Piiot December 5. 12 cembef ~ 12 19 1919 ano secure a ver•loed claim THE PETITION r9Queats menc.ecl 10 1r1111~ t>uel· OF SAID COUNTY AGREED THAT EDISON SE· CHAM.II MAM contract documenta ll'IOIJIO appear al the l'leaflng 19 26 1989 T · 111 staring an 1n1erest 1n IN! !he <lececlel'll ' WIL l <le19<1 ness under the flc11UOUI \-?ARCEL B A NON-EX· CUR1T1ES COMPANY. ITS WAL.TERI ?ur-nllo Section 4590 and atete your objeellons or T ·I 1S PfOperty '" lhe S<.1per1or Augull 28 1980 oe &Cl· ous1ness name or names ·tLUSIVE EASEMENT FOR SUCCESSORS ANO AS· C.. No.. A11001t o1 the Government Code of nie wrllten objectlOna wlll'I P\&.JC NOTICE CO\Jrt will result on lhe prop.1 m1ttet1 10 prob••• Tl'le wtll 15 >ISlllCI •t>ov• on NOvemt>er INGRESS TO AND EGRES IGNS SHALL HAVE NO To all l'lelrt, t>eoeflclatlee. Ille Stlle of CellfOfnla, lhe ll'lecourt before tlle heating Ml.IC NOTICE erty t>etng oec.la•eo 0, 0,. 1 ••a•l•t>le lor e~•m•"41toon 1n 17 1989 FROM SAID PAACEL A IGHT TO ENTER U?ON creditors, oonhngent Credi-contract wl ll conta in VOi.ir appearance may be In K-52M4 Clete<l lorteo1 to Ille Stare OI lhe Ille ke()I by 1"41 COufl James v Collw• Jr THROUGH LOTS 185 AND THE SURFACE OF SAID tors, •nd pefSOlll wtlo may provision• permlltlng the person or by your enorney FtCTnlOUI .u..... NOTICE OF SEIZURE Cahlorn1a and <l•51rlbut9<1 A tiEARtNG on Ille pell-This statemenl *SS 1.-0 166 OF TRACT NO 3433. LAND OR TO USE SAID otl'lerwtse be lnlllf•led In euccenful b id der to YOU MAY EXAMINE the NAME tTATE•NT PURSUANT TO HEAL TH P<Jr~tnt 10 the pro111~s 01 toon will be "41<1 on 0ecem w•ll'I ll'le County Clerk 01 Or· AS PER MAP RECORDED LANO OR ANY PORTION the Wiii or estate, or botl'I, ol tub•Utute eecun11es for 8"'f Ille kept by the court If you Tiie lotlowmg PeflOnl tre ANO SAJ'ETV CODE SEC· Hea1111 ano S•lel'y COde Sec be< 1• 1989 11 I •5 PM .,, ange Coun1y on Novernbet IN BOOK 178. PAGES •8. 49 THEREOF TO SAID DEPTH CH A R l ES MI l T 0 N monlet Wlthl'leld by the Dis-are 1 penon 1nlflf'M1eel 1n doong bUs•nesa es TION 11• 71 11•88 ANO tion 11•89 ""''"OIJI lutl l"le< Oepl No 3 1oca1eo at 700 28 1989 ,. N 0 5 0 0 F MI s . OF 500 FEET USE ANY WALTERS •ka CHARLES lrtet to enture pertonnence ttoe Miiie. you may Ille Wt11'1 cus TOMIZEO v OCA· NOTICE OF INTEND ED r>OllC8 or """"O C••< Cent.. Drive Wesl CELLANEOUS MAPS IN PURPOSE WHATSOEVER, MARK WALTERS und4"' lhe contract lhe ooun t formal Req..-1 TIONAL SERVICES 595 FORFEITURE PURSUANT Put>i•She<I Orange Coatl Stnlt Ana CA 92701 THE OFFICE O F THE RESERVED IN THE DEED A PETITION t1u ~ fllec:t Oo•=i, ..... rd, IJ lor Speclal Notloe of lhe hi-Marquette C11cle Coste TO HEALTH ANO SAFEn' 08'1) Pilot No\tilmoer 28 ()&. F YOU OBJECT 10 Ille ,...,., ?ubhsneo Orange Coest 0811~ PtlOI December !> 12 19 26 1989 COUNTY RECORDER OF FROM EDISON SECURI· t>y Cl'letlM Merit Well«I In 9ettJ DtrectOf of 1ng ol an .,...entory and ap-Mesa Calif 92626 CODE SECTION 11•84 • '*"oer 5 12 1989 grtnw.g ot the petition )'OU SAID COUNTV TIES C 0 M P ANY RE· lhe Suc>er10< Court ol Cell· l"Wcl\aelftt pre1saJ or es11te asets or of Bog<1en l(ulm1n1k1 595 On Oc1ot>et 10 1999 et r 104 snou1<1 aooear at 11\e '-t•ng PARCEL c AN EX· CORDED OCTOBER 17. lornle. eoun:r ol Orange Put>lllheel Orange Cow ~---------..,_ ________ _ CLUSIVE EASEMENT TO 1958 IN BOOI( U 50 PAGE THE PETI ION ~· Oa1ly Pllol QeQembet 5 12. P\aJC M)TIC( P\8JC M)TIC( . P\8JC M)TIC( Ml.JC M>TICE I P\8.IC NOTICC Pllll.IC P«>TlCC PLACE AND MAINTAIN •2 t OFFICIAL RECORDS Ille <lecedent'1 Will dated 1989 . UTILITY LINES ACROSS ALSO EXCE?1' A POR· Apol8, 1981.ti.lldm11teel to T12• PUBLIC NOTICE OF THE •NNU•L COST LOTS t65 AND 168 OF TION OF LOTS 165 ANO probele The ... " II eva1table " " TRACT NO :µ33 AS PER 166 ONE·HALF OF All for examination tn Ille hie•-------OF W •STEW •TEA COLLECTION, TAE •TMENT AND DISPOSAL SERVICE MAP RECORDED IN BOOK MINERALS OIL. AS ANO kepi by the court ' P\llUC NOTICE " " " 178 ?AGES 48 49 ANO 50 OTHER HYDROCARBON A HEARING on the peu-i-__;_;;;.;;..;;.;.;.....;.;~;;._-FOR USERS WITHIN COUNTY SANITATION DISTRICT NO. 5 OF ORANGE COUNTY O F M ISCE LL ANEOUS SUBSTANCES SAVED OR hon WIN .,.~ on Deoem· FU MO: ~1 MAPS IN THE OfflCE OF SOLO FROM SAID LAND l>er 1•. 1989 II 1 45 PM In "I ,._LH THE COUNTY RECORDER UPON THE CONDITIONS. Dept No 3 IOCated at 700 NOTICI Of' OF SAID COUNTY TO HOWEVER THAT THE CIVIC Cent« Drive Wnt. TtltUITEE'•tAU ?ROVIDE WATER. ELEC.. GR,. NT 0 A OR SU C . Santi Ana. CA 9270 t YOU ARE IN OE FAULT TRICITY GAS TELEPHONE CESSORS IN INTEREST OF IF YOU OBJECT lo the UNDER A DEED OF TRUST. o\NO SEWERAGE SERVICE OWNERSHIP SHALL HAVE granting Of ttoe petition, you DATED O<:IOber 21 , 1988, FOR SINGLE·FAMIL V RES•· NO RIGHT OF ENTRY UPON 11\ould appear •t the l'IMrlng UNLESS YOU TAl(E AC· OENTIAL USE TO SAID THE SURFACE OF THE •nd state yOIJr objeCllonl or TION TO PROTECT YOUR PARCEL A SAID EASE· LANO ANO SHALL NOT hie written Obj90hon1 with ?RO?ERTV IT MAY BE MENT TO SE ALONG THE 0 R I L l F 0 R s u c H 11141 court belOfe the '-t1no SOLO A T PUBLIC SALE IF SHORTEST ANO MOST SUBSTANCES WITHIN THE YO\.lr 9'>0N'ance may be In YOU NEED AN EXPLA· CONVENIENT ROUTE BE· UP?ER 500 FEET OF SAID PMSOO Of by your tltorney NATION OF THE NATURE TWEEN THE SAID PARCEL LANO AS RESERVED IN YOt> MAY EXAMINE tl<e OF THE PROCEEDING A ANO THE NEAREST PUB· THE DEED FROM LENA VI· Ille kept by Ille court If you A GAINST YOU YOU LIC UTILITY EASEMENT OLETTE A WIDOW. RE-ere a petson •nl«Mled 1n SHOULD CONTACT A LAW· SHOWN ON A MAP OF CORDED SEPTEMBER 23, the estate you may Ille with VER SAID TRACT 1955 IN BOQI( 3220. PAGE ttoe court • tormel A9QUett Sl.,,·Sl'lew Corpore1oon. a PARCEL 0 A NON·EX 317 OFFICIAL RECORDS tor Special Mota of Ille ..... C•lllornt• corporation .. CLUSIVE EASEMENT OVER The street t0<1reu and Ing ot an 1n...en1ory and ae>-duly appointed Tr u11ee LOT 9 t OF TRACT NO 011"1ef common o.signatton. praisal 01 eet•t• ueta or ol under tl'le tollow1ng d• 3433 AS PEfl MAP RE· ti any of tile real PfoPertY any pellUOO or account u tcrlbed Deed ol Trust WILL CORi>ED IN BOOt< 175 detCt1b•<I tbove II prO'tlded In NCllOQ. t250 pf SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION . c>urPOr'ted 10 ti. 364 .SEV· l"9 Caltlornla Probate Code TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER ... \111\0llfl .. ILLE LN cos TA MESA CA A Request lor Special Nolie. FOR CASH or u "1 lorth 11'1 9 2 6 2 7 BENE FI c I AR y form IS ••ellable trom lhe Sec.hon 292•h Of the CMI T R A N S A M E R I C A court Cletk Code '" rioht title t nd BRICltNER FINANCIAL SERVICES Criertes Meri. Welters mtetest conveyed 10 ano Juan Ila H. Brick.Der. 7t•·832·1600 Pet•t-now roeld uooer MIO Oeed of ~---..oAd-.-.0.-Uuat~l..,-IWJ!~~~T Trust 1n~~operty l"lefe<n-h&nl A A-ptlt !, ifft d1sclt1m1 any ltat>tllty '°'any Eeq... MOttOAlii;-~a altllf d99c11bed in Oldaboma. died incorrectness ol Ille .. , .. t IOCKIUt. AllOfn•r fer TRUS TOR Oev•d s December 3, lHt. ll<l<lrest Ind Oll"lef common , .. ,ttonen. ., •. QrMMI Pnelp1 Jr . BENEFICIARY Sa.nlved by two son s, OeslgNtoon 11 any lllOwn Aft., Zll'ld Fir., Loe ~ CvP. INC ReeorOed Oc1o· lle'eln ...... CA ICI0174W ber 24 1953 u ln1tr No Thomas Brickner and Sa.o uMI will be made. b\11 JfU'F 1. WltTEMIA.N. 88·5• ia.6 ot Offte1el Re- David Brickner; sis· .. ,thOUI covenant or .. .,. Eeq... ANTIN. llllAGA ..... COfdl 1n 11'141 office ot Ille Re- ter, Mat tit Kinney renty exprus Of 1mplled, re-tTIM. LITT a Ofl:llOW. corder ol Orange County d gtr<llng tllte, poSMUIOn. Of 12100 ...... 9'Yd.,lttl fl., SAID Deed 01 Trusl 0.. and s I X I r a n • encumbrlncet 10 D•Y tl'le Loe A,,...... CA IOOilS acr1t>ea tNI lotlowlng prop- c blldren. One grand· rem1tnino Pf•nCIP•• sum 01 Published Otenge Coast erty Triet portion or Lot 43 d au g b t er, Kt e J y 1,,. nol41CS) MWteel by salO Delly Piiot Novembef 28, 29, 01 Tract No 673. Couniy of Brickner. and flvt Dee<! or Trutt. with 1nterett December 5. 1989 Orange. State ot Ca1ttorn1e. thereon u provided In Mid TW008 as per map recorded 1n grandsons, Jason, note(•I.· eovences, 11 any, eoo«20.Pao-t17 and18,ol T o m , W a r r e n , undet the terms 01 said 0ee0 Nl.IC NOTICE Mlsceflaneout Maos in tile Micheal and Matthew 01 Tru11 rees charQee end otfoc. of tile COi.iniy Re-a.oentes or th. Trust .. end MOncl TO corder or said County, de-B r I c k D t r . M r I . 01 lruttl cr"led t>y Mid c;ONTMCTOlla toerlbed u toiiows Per<* t Bricuer was a 43 DHd 01 Trull 10, the CAU.JNO '°" M>I u per map recorded in year re1lde11t of New-amount rH1onet>ty H U· ScN>ol ObtriCI COAST BOOk 72 Pao-5 •nd 8 of port Beacb. IDltr· m•tecl to be 54,485 59. COMMUNITY COLLEGE Pllfoel Mec>t In the office of Tl'le t>enellelary undef Mid DISTRICT the C01Jnty ReeOfdet of"'° ment, Pacific View o..o 01 Trutt l'leretofor• ••· Bid oue111ne 10 30 Couniy Memorial Park. ecuteel end de!Nereel 10 ll'le o'clodt • m of Ille 19th day MAY BE ALSO l(NOWN underSigned • written Dee-ol o.c.mtier. 1989 AS 4 12 Ht:n' Coron• del TOVATT 1eret1on ol o.tautt and De-Place ot Bid R~pl Mat CA Ill• •trMI ad-BERT A L TOVA TT, mand tor Sele, and • .rttan eo..1 Community College drea or common deei9-pa.ssed away Deot.-em· Notice ot 0.1..n and flee· District. Putchalfng 0eper1. t\atton II ettown •t>ow. no ._r l. 1989 SW'VI·--' UontoSea llleundelligoed ment. 1370 AdlllM Ave werranty IS given II to 111 ~ vnJ c:auted Mid NollOe ot De-Costa u..a, CA 12fl2e comp1e1-. Of correct- by sons. Antho n y and leult and Election lo Sell to PROJECT I DENT I Ft-.,. .. , S d T tt 9 ti. rec:orOed 1n the county CATION NAME Bid •1493, Tl'lebeneflCier;unoerMld y ney ova . ..... the reel Pfoe-lY .. RECARPETING VARIOUS Deecl ol Trust by reuon of grandc h 1 Id r('n, 12 loealeel CAMPUS BUILDINGS. brMCl'I of defaultln the obit- great grandchildren Oet• 11/20189 GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE gallons aecured tMtet>y. a.n d I great gN"at ~A TTTU Bid Document• Are On l'leretoforeexeouted and de- g randc h i Id Mrs INIURANCI COMPANY, File: Cout Community Col-·~ti~ I~~~ ' Al TMJl'f'D. lt1 avtC lege Dlltl'IC1. Putd\allng De-wr .,, Tovatt was a long CIMTlll' DlllVI WllT, panmenl, 1370 Adamt A"'9 . lault end Demend for Sale. ume member of the lue'TI "'-IMTA MA, CO.ta M .... CA t282CS. and written notice of btMCh F trst Chr1s l1 a n CA~.1~~ Tretler Fecltlly. 171 41~~~~to :".:: ., .... 9UNCll.Y, Al-432·57&0 .,......,__ o Church of Hunt· atltANT llCMTMY NOTICE 1$ HEREBY Pf<>P«1Y to Nlltfy Mid ot>4t- i.ngton Beach. Life Pul>ll9hed Otano-CoMt GIVEN that the at>ov• getlons. end tllerMlter the Member o f the M · Delly Piiot NoYemt>er 28. De-named~ Olttrlct of Or· =~':'eec~..:c!r;:: sistance League of cember 5· 12· 1let "'09 County, Cellfornla, act· tlon 10 be reoorOed A .. ,, .... T 103 Ing Dy and ttvougti na Qov. -.-Hunting lon Beach, emtng&owd ....,..,,....,,... 7, I H9 H tnatr. No Lile Member o f the terred to .. "OtSTRter·. wt11 8~ 1eee2. of Offtclal Re-- U •-•-J Soc t 50 "8.JC M)TIC( reeetve up to. but not tee. cords In the office of the Re--~""nca '" y • than the ~•tated time. ccwder of Orange County year member o f the FteTYTIOUe .,.... -*' 1>6d• for the _d of Seid.-wt11 be~ but P.E.O. and Put Mem· NMm ITA~ acontr8Cttortlleab0"'9P">-Wlltlout ~' or ww· ._ f w Hun•1 ...... ,.,. The tOllOwlng peraone are JeCt ranty. ~or lmphd,,... ucro ..... ~. CIOiftQ ~-.: e6cs. "*'be,..... 1n e-dlftO tttte. pcnurlon, ot 8Nch Llbrary Board. ClfEST VIEW REALTY, the place ldentlf'ed abc>Ye, encumi-r-. to pey the Memorlel aervlcea 1n ~ A ..... Sult• and _.... be °'**' and reinainlng pr~ eum of will be held Friday. 1014. N9wPOr1 Beec:fl. Cellf putllldy ,_, lltOud .. the ..... ot>llget~ r"° wtt~ "-----'----8 1989 at 12"3 abov••t•led time and Mid Deed "" "*· ~""""'"'' • N0<man J Suker. 14 .,._.. tn1ere1t •• 1atd riot• 2:30 P.M. at W Flnt OdY9MY Court. ~ E8Ctl bidder -.. be • pro\ltded, ...,_,If erry. Christian Church. Beidl. Clalt. t2M3 11cenHd con1ractor undefthewme ..... ~oheld°::: 1207 Main SL Hunt-Tl\11 bu..,,._ I• con-punuent to 1t1e ...,_of Truet. ·C'o...-•1 duc19d Dy en lndMclual encl Pfofm'cw1e Code end ...,.,_of the T end inltOn Beech. r .,,~ Y Tiie reot11ran1 oom· be ~ tn .,.. tollowlr'9 of IN TNttt crMted by Mid requests in lieu of "*"*' 10 trlr!Met ~ c• :rcdooa: O..S of Tnm ~ .. _. (lowttl donation be ,,... under the ~ C-15 be '*' Gfl o.o.mMr 12. ~ NIM Of MIMI • A ~ proj!Kt ..,_ 1Mt. 11.00 AM at the sent to the Ft rat llMd alboW on· No•••l4Mr epct60n ,o;;~ wMcUed CltM'tk> '""om. entranoa Christ.I.an Church of 21. 1... tot T~. D«il Mier 12. of I~ ~MIOn, HWlllncton Beach. Nomw1 J. Suk• 1 ... • 1 p.m. ~ ..._ 1eoo £. 11t11 aw. . .,.._ the Chilc:lttn't Wlnc Thia •••••ient .. Ned at W.••• <*1oe °' 103, Santa AN. Cellomla w1tt1 IN~ a"1l of Or-0...... W.-0-... (1t 11 9270 t of the Hun~n .,.. County on No:Mlber Md'...., A-> ......... The aotal _,.,. of N Beach Library, or tt. tttt ,....,.nocio•1e1ten• =.....,_Of the..,... 'j(MAr tavcri• charity~ ~ ~ "= -~ ..... lllUl1 GOnb'ii\ 9'1yto == =-"': lntenMD\ wiU be ori· Deity.,._. o.oemNr 9, ti. end • ,.1110 •• 90 .,_ .,,..,_., 1e1ie C1fW9t8. end vate ln Paaf~ View .... ,. ...... .. ,.:.. HltMATIO ooet• ..... lihmof'lal Park, New-T·111 ...... ......, 11111 ........ ~encl..._...,• of Biid\. Padfk: on .. '°"" ......... _. t lie date llef eO f. la "",. '9JC.. .. ...... ... i•lll. 8 IM.0.!-Tlt.Jt,N .._ 11 . -...... ,.,=···........ ... ~-. ......, Mt-HOJIR ... lti!!!•.• ......,. • ~ ~-...... eor,., ... 11 ......... lft ~--~ MldT,....., ... l.tla -............................... .... ... -. ... !PW'""-.::..n... ~~~ .. •:::ll , c 1 ,A tl701, C'14) 1111..... ............... • . ........ ..... • rra 1a 11 --_,_ ........ ,,... .............. .... ....._ ___ ___ a\.lr• ............ ..... ·•=:r m:.__ioioiii __ .......,_ .... • u...... ~ ...... ----~ In accordance with the prov1s1ons of Section 204(b)(5) of .the Clean Water Ac1 of 1977 (Public Law 95-217), County Sanitation District No. 5 of Orange County 1s required to notify an users of tts sewerage system of the rate end po~lon of the ad valorem taxes paid by its users which are attributable to wastewater treatment services. This Dtatrlct. the jurisdictional boundaries or which are presented on tl'le accompanying map, receives a portion of the one-percent ( 1•1.J basic tax levy collected annually from property ownefs by the Orange County Tax Collector. This notice 1s being published 1n con1unct1on with the mamng of the Joint Consolidated Tax Bill by the Tax Collector to enable users to determine the share of their basic property tax levy which Is used to pay for wastewat.er treatment services provided by this District. This Drstnct annually receives approximately 3.21•/o of the 1°/e basic tax levy collected from the property owne<s In the District The revenues generated for the Olstr,ct from the basic tax levy are not sufficient to pay for all the ongoing ope(ations, maintenance and replacement/rehab1lltatlon costs associated wtth collecting. treating and disposing of the wastewater generated from the properties within the District. Accordingly, all res1de('ltial and small non-residential users in the District must also pay a supplemental user fee, which tor cost savings 1s coflected for the District by the Tax Cofleclor with the annual property taxes The annual supplemental user fees in County Sanitation 01strict No 5 are presented in the following table Sl1'9le-Femlly AeskMncff Multl-FMnlly Aeeldencee Sm.,I Commerdal/tnduetriel/ Govemmen\8' UMn $.45 oo S27 00 per unit $32 001 1.000 SQ It of bu11d1~ The following example \dent1f1es the combined areount a homeowner will pay f~r the D1stnct ~'services in_ 1989·J"llC.__1f_ne..._r_s_ne _____ ,,... UWITS"OTTOme With an aS'SeSS80 value ofSr00.000- Revenue Sourc. Property Tax Supplemental User Fee a..11 tor P•JnMnt Am04'nt 3 21•1. x w. basic tax levy x $100.000 = Annual fee for slngle-famtly residence Total annual amount paid to District No . 5 in 1989-90 for wastewater services Annu.I Amount Peld to Olatrlct No. 5 \ $32 10 .. Large industrial and commerclal users of the sewerage system pay their proportionate share of the cost of wastewater collection. treatment and disposal services based upon the actual vofume of wastewater they discharge and the amounts of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and suspended solids (SS) In thetr discharge. The following schedule 1dent1fles the rates now 1n etfect for these large users tn fiscal year 1989-90· 800 SS ' ($/million gallons) ($11.000 pounds) ($/ 1.000 pounds) $155.29 $124.69 $160 78 ~ Revenues collected from these large users Me also used to pay for the ong04ng operations. maintenance and reptaoe- ment/rehabihtation costs of the District's sewerage system These industrial users pay tees ranging from several hundred to more than $14,000 per year for transport. treatment and disposal of ttwMr wastewater through our raclllues If you would like addlt1onal Information on the charges you are paying for wastewater collectlon, treatment and dtaposal services. please call the District's staff at (714) 962-241 1. extension 5 The District's administrative offices are open trom 7·30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m .. Monday through Thursday, and 7:30 a.m . to 4·30 p.m. on Fridays COSTA MESA •• t999 IRVINE I 2-5678 540-1220 496 6800 n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t~-~·i•i~D&&i:]•~~!~~&~,~L5C:J2~1EN ~ 21U~~21~~L ~~L u~~· ~ CLASSIFIED INDEX M2·5678 • ,_ •Clwt. quiet &. IOllCiol .. In ttw cotony, ~38R. OLDE COM _ 3 bO upp9I' WESTFIELD APTS EXEC 28A a 38A. WIO .oetUilVFOUAN>* ~ Tim DAILY M.OT CLAA~lfO Of"FtCl HOUfll '~~ MOto-Frl 1 30.Mt·S '°P"' Sat I OOem-l, 30MI .__c-.. .... , • 00-·5 OOpm OIAOL .. I ~l(••-0--, ·-~---· ....... _... ·-....... _ , __ DI •CM.._ • ... ... ...,., ...... ·~ , .... ...., .... '"""'' , ...... ~·,:::: . . .' ~ ~ .... £:) . Ii . u : . , '·•. . ·~ . ... ' " \ . . .... ,_ OoMrl "'9W OPEN 12_5 38R 28A, 2 car ~·· 28A, 2 cw ger, , MW 11575 8uutlfully M81nt.in.d hkup, h'plo, micro, P9flo. •GATE) COMMUNm'* • 1111 1~ 210 Liiie #210 enclpallo,atorag.S1125 crpt, lg enc v-r • woe ll.UFFS . lmlNIC. Oelor .. •SEVERAl.1.0CATIOHS From 11195. No pets. ....... nm.1--.a C .. CK YOUll AD TitS l'IMT DAY '""...,. ... ~ .... -.............. .... ... .,., ......................... ,., .. ... ,, ......,....,.....,._...., ..... .. ........................... .._.. ..... . ................. ..,...,. , ....... ..... ""-..,. ....... .., ............ ... .._.. .. .....-.w....-11 •-..•,..... ·--..... --.... -....... .................... ., . ., ,,..,, .. ................. ..,~ ...... -.... _, ..__. ... _. ·-W ... , M ......., ...................... ,.,....,.... ........_ ........ (.......,...,I~' .. -_,, .......... _. ....-. -._. .... ............. .....,._ ......... _.. ' .• , ..,.. . . -• . : ... -.... ..... .,_ ... . •. ~I 13e9,8oo. Agent, watt.; NO PESTS e.40-2496 pool, ••nnl• &. play-SBA vtew 11895 2Bdrm 1•1oe. •no The 0 ..... ~?2 2BR ~· w/2 Cit ................. . t13--4MS SBA 28A twnhM, frethly ground. 11,286/mo CdM·8chfrntoondo1bd, 28drm2Be STIIO ---Y•lll II centrelAIC,Wlltbet,..,.. •1to 4ledil'OOIWll ==-.,.,=±-:=,...-~:-I painted Dbf gw wait! 10 957·2187 den 119" 398 W. Wiiton 831·5593 --•••22 ptace, mlcfo • ...,_ & *~ WEST NEW • At· O Cc . Av a II' n 0 w PENIN. 38A hm, p11tlo & ---------LrO I. qutee 1 & ~. '*"-dryet M!up9. Golf ccutM *aoM to~ tr~IYe ~ $10SOimo 241-oeo8 Agt: f::::::: U::::i 2152 epe S11t5 1 Bedroom 1865 Ing !ant, dl w. cebte hlcup view Allmaintlnc:t Sony, *~lllt-CALL T~YI with 3 bdrm•. 2 ••ha & ~ ~ JASMINE PARK • guatd 301 A¥0Cado 642-HSO 9ncigar. Beectlwood/l.t)t. No.,.. .. M4...o509 YIW IEITILI "'* MCh unit, 1 twock 10 """lllllTS Cozy new tiome. 3 BR; 2\.i gated 3 bd 12100 -------324 Victoria. 548-3708 best oc:eet1 bw:tlee. lMge •BR 2 etory 2 cw BA, frplc, dlw, p11tlo, NEWPORT ISLAND AREA 1 Bedroom M55 LMge eunny & epec1o1a 1 n 11Ml12 IW ........ 15,000 gatige. s>ittlO ~th-to-fenced yard, garege Chntfront 3BR. doelc. 241 W. Wiiton 831-0MO BR ~/den & eun dectc •Wtmll • monthll .... .'auso. wtopener. grdnr Incl. $3!500 NEWLY DECORATED w/d hllup. oak cabinet•: •llllT-lftl TEPS tobMCl'l.tMWJtu1pt "-~~~~H~ 214 Palmer St. Unit A $l,350/mo. 249·2242 .... ,. ........... EASTSIOE 28 Rwlc:atport, W1<Y unique $790/mo. *M'nl•f ... * Swlkltchenette. $550/mo REAL TORS Agent 875-~75 IULfm 1.... HP unit. Weter pd. e.42-6858 EXCLUSIVE BEACH yrtt Ind utll. 11~ ~St. PrudentlalCallt. Alty Newporllt.:h 2169 836-<t1209·5PM LO 2 BR 2 BA w/w frptc. COMMUNfTY NofHmC*•.116-7337 I f\.m Tl H•I Wlvtew ~!'L!2,1 28R 2566 ;:::;~~~;:.95 =t0 g~~~& s~:O e:~A Vlir'1a~~ ~-= ..... IPT UY NW .. fl! 1N• WllU NW 28A, frplc, upgrad•s. 29R w/ ., new decor 1st last sec 6'2-0433 pt.c;e, gar9gt1 & en)Oy OUf 18' 1Be nr NPT CHTRIJW Mountain ••ttlng aur-Enjoy bruthleklng View & End Unit. Comm pool & bltlns ?n<Xs yd w/pauo' _: _ · · prv1 beadl S taoo AH $795. No pee-. &40-1314 rounded by streams & sunset,. from thla 3BR spa. S 1350/mo. Betty Wtr pd. 636-4 l20 ~5PM Modem 2 BR, wfglau malnten.noe Incl. VERSAILLES BACHELOR. fallslGeragewle>prw,wl d 28A t>Muty wlfeatur• Parker 982·1143 or 667 Vtctorla'I' s735 waltedllv rm ,beemcell-*leat ... ldra* Futiyl'Urn ,,.,ml bctt i-:::=::::===I hkup, woodburnlng lrpk:. too numbefous to men-5-40-7355 Torelli Rtty ·· · tngs. lge patio. $700. On SORRY.-*' PETS $850 mo Agt 14&-8724 or I• mlct'o tat + dep. lion. tmmed occpy poss--· --THE SEVILLE E 16th St See Mgr. at •u 11· •• _11 · lil»oa 1stancf 2106 tBR Conetoe '850 Ible. Children & pets ok WESTCLIFF 2BR 2BA 28R 1'ABA w/gar, bttin1, 437 Princeton Of, C.M _. _. ~93 1.--.;;;.;;.;,._...,_ ......... _ 401 BRIGHTON SPRINGS Short or long te<m tease. Condo. dfw. w/d, frptc, fenced yard w/patlo. ---tBR •.; BLK BCl'4 Frlg/stv. WESTCLiFF 2BR 2BA Beeutlfut 2BR 18A. gat-(Avaltable Now) $2250/mo. Call carport, pool. 1900/mo. ~ 120 9-SPM .U .... nun gar 1 P8fSOO $700/mo Condo. d/w, wld. lrplc. age, new crpt, lrplc. 408 BRIGHTON SPRINGS .. llllSJ 955:..8385 or 240·829l 2619 Sen1e Ana 'l'.. $745 3BR, 1'MtA, garage, frptc. yrly 118'~ 36th St carport, pool $900/mo wthrldryr, beam oeitngs. (A118ll•ble 115) 1•• ... 1 ... IOOO YUILi IEITILS new paint 85-4-7592 646-3623n23-4018 955-6385 or 240-6281 $1125/mo yr1y. 673-5349 28R Trl-lvt Condos $1050 &-11' 1BR. carpet. drapes, lg --- - --------•29 BRYSON SPRINGS OCEANFRONTS fenced patio, cioae to Newport Across the street 3 BLOCKS TO BEACH-Wll11Uff 211 ..... Immaculate 5 BR. 3 BA, (Avellebte Now) ~ M.A..V 2. 3 & 'Bedroom• 1hop1S590/mo. See, 382 2BR. lrpk:. garage $795 18R. all utts pd, gar. tndry Built-Ins. no p et a steps to waterl Fresh pnt, 2170 Blsca ne Sprln s KU'rF.llS\. ../ 6 Units to ChooM From Victoria "13. 650-724• No pela. 1665 Irvine Ave rm, yard. hrdwd nrs. Pet $780/mo. 548-7533 new crpt. trplc. gar. Best '(A'4,lllabre 12115) g \J\"'1 ....,. -Yj' 10.·" ·11 Priced lrom S 1250-12200 • 1BR & 2BR. · 1Ba. up-•2. Cell 720-9422 ok $835. Ken 650-1111 ---- 1 st. on the rsl. 121 Topaz. No P ts CALL v tm '' • ,.._ ~. \. 1_ 1 OLUIU . -----wESTCLtFF Large tBR $1,850. 213-696-3897 e S49-2447 e a REALTQRg,. Nr bch 3BR 2BA $1500 I stairs. gar .. tndry, cable, .. ~ . SPAllllS 211211 Apt. new carpets, pool Stps to sand 29R S 1100 DIW. no pets $600-$675 1 BR & 2BR or 2 BR New decor. frptc, PoOI. no adults. No pets Avt now Balboa COLLEGE PARK. la.rge 3 2BR 2'hBA. LUX TWNHM. HU nm IULTll 845-6682 Qf 540-5446 wlpatlo All wl pV1 ga.r-pets. $995/mo. 640-1911 $750/mo. 673-6640 Peninsula 2107 BR. 2 BA, trptc, approx. Model perfect, flp, gar, tl• --•2BR DUPLEX. Quiet & , ages. dshwshr, cable II -~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ t,700 sq 11. $1,175/mo. pool/spa/tennis. $1500 .---good area. Large yard ready. pool. spa, BBQ, *21111111 * SlnClfmentt 2676 OCNFRT 2BR 18A, garage 2285 Fordham 642-5597 771_32391213-4?4-3963 sngt garage $750 ' tndry lacllttles Good loc Frig. dllhwuher, stove .... ..., .... _____ _ small yard, quiet. cute. HT&Ol•t--E ~ 539-A Bernard 760--0168 177 E. 22nd St 631-7376 1nct No pets S..S-4855 Near ~ Hospltel, $1200/mo. Great aree 28R 2BA. ~ ca~:rage. *llf flll!* •BAY TIMBERS* North East CM 38R 2BA, * 1•• ..... -i:~· 1v'!ii .. ,,~~s74;~c::· Vrty No Petst 675-7•20 fenced yard, huge living Beautiful 28' 2Ba. ~ blll to Balboa 1BR, lrptc, cable, pool. paho. dbte garage. ca· Fng, dishwasher. stove 558-7659 2 22 area, t1replace, 100• bay. 2 car ger .. w/d hll· l1'lnd 2606 palt0, g.ar. No pets. 399 thedTat ce~. dl w met No pets 54~55 Corona dd MM 1 S 1150/mo Vacant. Don ~~ic~ ~~:;'5~~~ngs. & cozv 1BR, awllence In· W Bay St S665. 650-635~ ..!..1000 mo 7 138 *•West Newport 1 Misc. Rentals 2BR 1Ba. trptc, Piii beech, Pf•N 642-9797 423 E Bay eluded, carpeting, taun-*USTSllE* PHI&• T......... House to beach 2BR =======;;;; gardener. ger. wl d hkup TSL MGMT 642•1603 dry racttltlel No pets. yrty 3BR lBA Co1tege W/D Newport Heights speeluos 2BA yrty Furnlunlurn Rooms 2706 ~f~;~r::~· 1~st:~·· *RENTALS AVAILABLE S775l mo. &73-9293 hkup. Has carport~ IOI 2 & quiet. lrelhly painted St0251mo 642•3850 EXCLUSIVE BALBOA .. ---~--.. ------1 cm, OLUI 111 cars No pets $875/mo beautifully lndscpd Pool. ILOCI Tl ..... IUCI PENINSULA Prtv .. ~ _.,... --• -. ••• * *•FEE OU.RIO* 5 7 · -6 · carports & tndry lac Ptnlnsula 1007 *---·-••---• Marti Agt642-7706 Neartheweter 1675/mo Avt 1111 · 22 294 18drml011nglAduttS675 Sl&Olff trance. no cooking Of _ _. _____ .._.1Room to rent In 48R hoUse s...•-_._ Call alter 5pm, 774-3055 CLISE Tl ILLJ 28drm townnome $875 V smolung S350-675-339_t DES PERA TEI Must Sell $550 963-727 t 1 BA, lrptc. Piii yard. sngt Brand new 38R 2BA Dplx, Incl f I di I 1 t t I 38R 2BA upper unit gar ...,.. ________ $237 500 V I b 2BR gar 132 Cectt Pt $745 1 blk to oclllbay. Patio, VEARL V 2BR 1BA 2 ca1 28R 1BA laundry oom orma n ng, o a o ' • MILE to Hoag or beed\ Houses/Condos . u o Day 3BR2BADuptex Frplc. mo Curt ti 631-1266 sundeck $1500 yrly 28R parking. prlv 8'1i. avail I I bu & lho r W ti 1200• sll TRW req'd age D/W, WfD hk up. Empt Male Xlnt CM•• -2BA condo bte gar. gar. newly decorated c ose o s ps. I SOfry No pets S 11951"10 Pvt t cook/smoke deQ< 771-3719 602 Avocado. 51375 Incl ---2BA. patio. prkng $1100 12117. $950 mo. 225 'II accept OC Housing 268 E l&th St 2l0 Lugonla efl '·no General 1002 ou&water 760-9020 WTSllETIWll•E 673-90291869-2571 Msg Ruby 673-0377 S725mo. CALLC rtll631-t266 TSl MGMT 642-1603 $400/mo. * 64&-1035 02 3BR l '~B A twnhme -~ -2257 Maple u ~ lllffS-PllTllE Costa Mesa 1 4 411 Hazel Dr 3Br 28a. :~~~r~:,·.g~1~gy~rp~:i~¥ ~~u~~B~~~~A~~ beh BalboaP«*tsuta 2607 TSLMGMT 64~1603 PUISIMYIEW&PTS *~B~~F~~2:~~~~~~ Holets/Motels 2718 • PlllfHTllllfffl 1S~'=~O*Un ~:7~::.n·:~~T~pa~~~·n~-Elden Ave St050tmo Home S1500mo. Studio 1 lge BR. 1BA, carport *llOILICITIOIJ 2:a~o~:A2 1~1;·~~~~,~~ pootl2carportstcom wtd UllUIUll ~==~~ JBR 2BA. 2 tip, bltln vac ~~75~mo Catt ~~·1_!31 Curt 11631-1266 S500mo. 631-6825 ;~efs~m~~ Vr~e Av~:·,~~ 28R l'l'IBA townhouse. 5950 No Pets 631•6107 St050 No pets 722-8011 MTN Ill ~OVE tght I to this sys.2carattchgar.many lllllllEW31112~ E'SIDE lg 2BR 1BA up-IAYRllTPEITilllSE 1611WBalboa675-255E laundry room, patio, all Pvt yards 38R 28AS900 •Eastbtull clean WktyS175-Up Heat pool I r d n I Ith u pgrades' $259,500 All amenities Avatt Imm stairs. vaulted oeltlngs, Spacious 3Br, $2250/mo built-ms $795/mo. 2BR 1BA SeoO Spacloos' townhouse 28R l 'i BA. steps to bch. cable. kite. ' rfr~~ ~~•c:n pa~~· o:er· Prins only. 642-3850 Bkr S 1875 mo 675-2626 new carpel, paint blinds. Pacific lnrt RE. 721-1380 2 BR, 1 BA. carport, step! 2078 Thurin lg kit enc carporti lrptc, pool, patio. carpon maid S1C 985 N Coast • lookl"" trees and green-single garage $825/mo -to the beach $975/mo TSL MGMT 642-1603 675-0936 642 8319 $899 NO PETS 722-6011 H_, l'"" Buch 494_5294 ... IEW &CIEi .. ES DUPLEX 215 Oahtta. 675·8•27 BAY ISLAND Fabulous Vrty Aval! now t8 ti W -• · .. , ..... - '. ery near community pool , .. SA1f Hrdwd firs, new ttte. llarbor view & pv1 beach Balboa 675-2558 011n LOCITIOI TINS IS TIE PUCIU * s HAR p I BR. new SU Liii mm Beautllully upgraded wUh ocean view. moments to lllS/HTS H s5p8ac•,ou,s g,roundhsed& dock 702 E OCEANFRONT 12&0 OFF 2llO •••u 1-c2abrlpeks'optta~:n'·dencau gaa1trnageow Wkly f8f'ltats now •v81t ~ French doors. veulled IY Nil.Ill sand No pets 972-2079 Spacious Mesa Verde r. rp c. urnos F v -•~ .... . • $147 00 wit & up ~74 -celllng, new Berber 3 BR. 2'1t BA. pnme East-___ 38R 28A lam rm 51450 $3500/mo. Agt 548-0100 Wlnte< urn 28R 2BA Ea.ststde 2BR Twnhse Top aree. park-ttke setting $700/mo 760-8862 · ... carpet. hardwood floors, d local M d HARBOR VIEW HILLS 6 · 2 3 9 wl d d /w, encl o•r Av Apts Frpk:. dlw. gerage, Beaulllutty melntalned -Nwpt Blvd. CM 646-7445 • skylights 'emodeled ~~x~ 1811 1 1°unres an~,0~ 3BR 2'1.BA. tamtty rm. 3 ~4~_80434 •2 4 or Bayridge 2BR . 2BA No~ S975mo 673-0782 yard/patio. tndry rm. IBR Apt w/garage or s;~~S~BCH l~~at~ ---- kitchen. mirrors. tex· S3lO 000 car gar highly upgraded• Condo. lrptc. pool. spa. 915 w Balboa:rB 2Bt $850 carport Vaulted c:ethng. meet c ng ' Roommates Wanted "turized walls and much OPEN SUN 1.5 $3000/mo Open Sun NEWPORT TERRACE 3 att gar. sec gate no pets IBA rt available Dec 2617 ORANGE AVE balcony. tireptace, pool l1reptace, elec O"' door · 2724 • :'°more• Great location 320 E 2 tst St 11·3 1217 Keel A.gt BR 2'> BA T~nhse, gar-S 1.425tmo 8S.-2841 t. sl2Zi mo ulll Inc TSl MGMT 642-1603 spa. BBQ Also 18R Apt ~e2~;~~ Of Sici i.~:o~ o -near Corona def Mar Or call fOf appointment, 759-6389 age. avail I/ 1 No pets, IEACI llPLU 673-3358 Mr Jim S525 • Dep Mobile home. down wtpoolside patio BALBOA Cute Oeel\ apt --: schOOls. tennis. parks 548.7001 k•ds ok S1 tOO 645·92t9 J $680 up tst • Secunty $650 t BR CLOSE TO to Share wtnon smell• and Eestblull Shopping ..l&Sllllf ~IHI Small Bachelor Apt New-LM~'.';;~.~~~t.;~~ b~:~ YICU'T-ff Fifi ~~:.·~~!ur:,.~~~53 No pets. 549-2447 OCEAN Stove, 1elrtger· $385/mo Frplc. DIW. • Cente< This is 8 true Ne~ Btld'I 1069 2BR. lam rm. hbry. htghty port He1gtlls $495/rno the best bch• S 1350/mo tBR 1BA ''> blk to bch1 1991 Newpof1 Blvd WESTBAV APTS ator ref~ences reQIJlred garage 675-3818 r~t>eauty' $418.000 ~ upgr~ed. spa. Vl8W U I I 665 I y...._ I . k 5735 $500 17 141 723-0414 BALBOA tSI-n~-:;;::. , .. a a t-Vacant 1 10 4 year i.iase t• s inc 1 rvme Ave yrly Callr833-3650 (Judy) .. , w pr g I WE T AV •PTS Beau11tutty Ma1n1amed """"''"-• ~.LIJnl_ ---. ~ 11<'A ~ "' -::-toe~t"WiC11ttt1111mlli1t+~~~~~~~~ , Sparkling ocean view 2Br 0 els ,." .. oomo-Oays Eves/Wk,nds 673-6478 $200 OFF MOVE-IN! s &Pl wtparktng S500/mo. ( 11 .l ~ 11 I I KJ N~ 28a lull condo. ltahan _760-8850 Eves 494-3367 Twnhm 38R, 28A, trptc. CHARMING Cape Cod These attractive Apts tea-~=~ ~ lg tn good areas of Perun-5250 deposit 673•2355 re t \) W\,' marble tush gray ~ber LARGE 38r 28a duple" oat10. enc garage, n' So House. 2Br 18a • J block VEARL V 3BR, 2BA Steps ture pool. spa. prhtate 28d 1, 8 5780 suta & some w/parktng ___ _ _ - llti2J Ill ,1 TOii'• carpet fireplace Frptc deck w/d garage Coast Plaza. $1.350/mo to ocean & bay 5-car to beach $875 921 ''> E patios or decks. garage 3 r~ 6 •; 6 6-68 From $500/mo CM 381 twnhse, SC P1aa ~1the~: LIMllAll 1211.111 MPLETEL v remodeled Catttornta bungalow duplex New roof. Ille, carpet. kitchens Live 1n ... one or rent out both One • bf the last ol 111 lllnd 144-IOll •---------: CllTlll llllE - ' •TITUM \ovEL v evstom riome on I huge IOt Solat heated ~.fruit trMS. R.v ec-oeu 3 bedroom home r .. tur" eecurlty tyatem. wet• purifier. wet ber, djmng room, lemlly room and t.lr conditioning. Celt .1or an appointment 1369,900 1 ... 1100 ~~I·.~:! 1-.l KJ NS :. I!!! ( U\ m\l\" ' liiilJ ftl ~I TOft!-1' liii ... PltmT' jfe'll glV9 you the down In •xc:hg tor a share of own-..,-ehlp. You m&ke the ':t"1hly pymt• & .. .,.,. •pprec. You rec•lve 100% la>e beneltt•. ~ have clMn credit Ag1 23~4335 Oyt, Ev, Wkndt 6S0-4oo9 g, 724-1964 513 Marguerite$ l&50mo 213-598·6428 pa1kmg Mooring avail Balboa Blvd ALSO 1&2 or carport 1n a beautifully 1 1 1 th 1 4 18 C&llflY IEIT&l.S, a area Overtook a PoOI _ _ Adults * 759•1834 $1250/mo * 650-3649 BRapts &75-5088 landscaped setting B hel 5590 •MTtll-4lll Tennis. w/d. get MIF *Fffl-PlD* Dana Point 2126 -Sorry.nopets ac or _ $400/mo·ut•t 540-2012 2 Duplexes on 2 contlgloos Price Reduced tg t800 sit USTlllFF W/YIEW Corona def Mar 2622 t Bedroom $655 1 Bedr~m S660 BEAUT 3Br 28a. open Fem et star hm No 1 .... tots Close 10 bay g 3BR 3 Full baths. 2 pvt •BR. 2BA. den. new 5BR 38A. xtnt cond• 2Bdrm t' •Ba $750 2Bdrm 1 ·Ba S795 beam cell, frpk: wl d. Shr pr 11 1 p --.. beach Ouie1 locatlon A patios. 2 car garage, w/d carpet. w/d. Inge, lenoect $2700/mo • $2700 sec. 28R '''°'BA $~50 + $500 625 Cent8f St 642-142• 2250 Vanguard 540-9626 gar Btk to beacll $1300 ~~ rbffc ':;; bch Ill BA. rare fmd 5740 ooo hkups S 1650 759-9194 yd, !amity area Sl275_ No pets. CALL Barbara Deposit Ask about our ~---· ---Mrs Fo11 deys 997-6211 rJ' 497 ~ lllLWllTr i.ira1 .,. . 492-3051 or 496-4262 Sanr~ret, Agl. 644-0t95 ·spec1an au ••a•a ans. , Bedr~m $675 eves 760~0583 . yar S, p~ entr • ULnuu..t " Costa Mesa . tteleo B Dowd, Rltr 900 Sea Lane 64•-2611 2BR· lBA, OIW, beeutllul 28drm 1 .ea $825 R 2Br. M prof. Mstr lll-4HO 7114 Hunt. BHch 2140 u6o ISLE ~lmm&c 3aR 2BR 1BA. gar. tndry. utts pool area. large rec room ~~~r~ f~~ St 548.~:g~ CUl .. 111 Br/Ba. gar. tndry Pvt. For Sale by Owner. Lowest 121 0 lllAIW&f HB S l750 •BA 3BA 2'.',BA. very pV1, 70' tot pd No Pets S 1000 mo & laundry room. close lo t btk to bay or beach! Eastslde Costa Mesa priced Vitia Balboa. Lg 1 Older· 1 BR total return 2 t · j 19 1 11 1 Nr bch & tennjs $2400 614 ·e· Margueflte Open shops & buses $675/mo $665/mo yrty 675-1746 $447 50 • uttt . Jett, BR. S tH,000: 2 BR. new stove. ~elrig. vacant d~~~ 'R° car 8~ar ':Sn; Ag1. Kathleen 642-3661 Sat-Sun 1·4 5"48·2525 530 W. Wilson Dana Point 2626 Newpo'ft Heights 2BR 694-4432/w 54~·76 1~1" $206,000 Call Ken, S625 756-8558 corid. gard Incl 846-0809 Ull _.uf .. Piii •S250 OFF 1ST MOt• TSL 9laT SPACIOUS & QUIET lBR IBA. ftptc. patio, enci Shr 48R 2BA & pvt decti 631-6052 --___ -s lou 28 2B 1 pie garage quiet nghbrhd' wlocean ,,_ 1n Npt 8ch ------•3BR 2•.;eA twnhse on Lg spacious sngl femlly 2 Homes 2BR IBA & pee s r a. r . 722-9012 or 642-1603 APT w/deck. garage. Ing 642-44JO or 675-1746 W D D/W $5001 1fW PE•. llft.ll Bluffs nr tx:h• Dbl gar. hm. 5BR 3BA. 2 trptcs, Waterfront 2BR 2e'A. deck. encl gar S 1200. Sorry No Pets $675 mo Reis 675-1849 / 4 ·et~ 642.~ Only I ten. each unit 3 Bit lrptc. lncd yd Spa S1250 trml dining & lam rm, 3 S800 to $1800 673-6030 _ *646-2087* •2Br 1•,..ea. twnhouse Of 493-076t ..... T .. m 211 960.2 28 8t{ - 28A.prlme100blockto-Smallpet?646-6541• cargar S1600546·6560 IEWNITCIES 3BR 2BA. l/p, dlw, dbte style, dl w, encl gar. Pool. redecoreted No WALK TO BCHl l)AY call~ Steps to beach •3BR townhoUte. Newpt NICE lBr lBa condo pool T gar. new carpet/paint. fenced yllfd, trplc. Avail pets $775tmo 642-7653 Share 2BR NB home Won I last tong! Prlncl-Hgla lrptc patlO very • • 3 BR, 2'..\ BA. ooean YteW. sun decil, vaulted o.c 15 $805 640-7904 Hunt. Btld'I 2640 Wast'«/Oryer. f1fep4eCe patsonty t2127thSI .. nl<le .322 .0gte St•C :··~~roc:',r~,j 0 12 Goodwlll Court oeillng1Cet1875-71t3 · · lBRlBA = depes NEWPORTPtERAREA Mate OfFem•S525mo N 8 Agent 675-84 75 59951mo 647•7540 arner wer 1 ve 642-3490 BACHELOR APT. Kiie, ·car 1· r · Veerly ·~ 8ltt to beech! • ''t uttt 673-6381 P11.1dent1et Call!. Rlty Dec S6501mo 959-980• CUTE OLDER 1BDRM pool, yd, Incl util. furn gar. d/w, CO! laundry 2BR, gatage, no pets Av1 --*OS'119l* READY for move In~ ...,....lltnlll211 Ab<>Yegerage.S775/mo $550/mo Avl t2115 $875 mo 2116 Hess nowS&50tmo 673--6640 NEWPORTBluttsar-.ttv New1)0<1 Helgtlts. 3 BR, 2 1BR 18A Incl retri..... ,_... 1Ba house EZ waik to Mo-mo r8'1tal $1500/mo 432 Avocado Linde. 633-7511or675-1234 84&-6451 or 536-3764 - -28' apt, pool. get. yerd BA, hdwcl floors. ocn vu · "'' ·-' Avt 1217 642-3850 Bllr 673-3005 -----NEWPORT SHORES 3BR Non-,,,..r Greet .,._i et end 01 street, l ,600 st. prtvete Ml251mo Cell dwntwn/bch New paint. _ · ___ __ _ ___ Eutslde 1 BR. w/nfl'W CHARMING 1BR 1 block 2BA hofne yrty 51700 S350l mo * 631-8586 PrlncipaJsonly 850•771 SCOTTl548-2794 carpets. etc, 2-<:ar gar. NwptCrestCondotg3BR GREATBAVVIEWI floors. no pets. 4 plex to ocean ~carpel, PROPERTY HOUSE -- •EASTSIOE HOUSE• $950/mo. Agt 53&-8874 2'At8A. dbl ger. spa, 2BR 1BA. f/p. gar, d/w. unit '575/mo ._ depo91t new lloonng Small pet Rl TRS 642•3850 NON-SMOKING room· SIAR, .UPLU 3BR 28A. Fireplace, gar· VERY trg 381 2811 twnhse pool/tennis. walk to bdl S1200mo Call Kelly or 722-9855 ,..Y9 meuage ~$6351~ 675-6606 . ------mate needed to sher• 3 ege. all new Inside. {)sltet wlfam rm, din rm, trptc. $1650/mo lse. 544-3049 ~~~-:gs F~..:~ EASTSIDE 28R tBA LARGE 28R upstairs apt ~ Jll 211 ~'~• Costac ~~ Remodeled owner'• unit 8(9&. S1 t90 • &40-2426 lndry rm, d/W, patio. Nr PROF DECOR PNTHSE •A (upetan) • Wfgarage. Cfoae to 9Vflry· Newly decor. Din rm, w/EVERYTHING tor only days-979-7026 28R 2BA, wllg brick •EASTSIDE O e & elem achoo!. quiet neigh-Two lBR Versa.Illes .,., ml 1 h Ing I Ave II now bak:Ony & gar Lndry lac. $2200/mo. e.42-3350 Bkr · __ patio .+ • very to 1BR Monte Vtst; ;0~g~BA borhd $1000/mo $1500 bch. POOi tennis ;ec rm Lml 211 + tfe 1750/mo. Agt 631-7370 1750. ~t-2285 anr Spm ._ &TD--PRIVATE comm w/~ Rental unit, 1398,000 g•· No Pets Good credit aec dep 213-592·2214 S 1250 mO & S 10oo mo' 1 btodl to beach Lar,.. ----• •-W beach, spa. lrplc, wld, Ml -.nm.ULYAA .. --· · ..-E'SIDE2Br1'Mte,1100tq 2BR2BA.frptc,dec:Jt+t.c. 1 kite garage non-.rNtr •-req. $750/Mo. 556-7597 Agt 846-8724/&42-0493 = .. ~~:'::'ti n. Encl gat. patio. bultt· L!Qun! Btldt 2648 S1250/mo yrly. 760-7t53 MIF. 55001,M. 631-ssti .,..... •E'SIDE 38R 1\.i8 A, d/w, lrvlnt 2 I 44 1191 ti.., tmM. 8i3-4147 . Ins. S79Sl fTI<! &75-4630. COMMANDING VIEW of i.....:....;..:...;;..;.___;_~---~-~~_;.;.;.;;.;....;;;.;;...;....;;;.;;.;= WITD,_,. w/d hk-up, 2 car g•. Beeutllul 28R detached Brend new, 3BR. 2BA 642•9795 or '22-6510 coast Wall·wall gins . ...OW/-trptc, o•rdner. patio. home, lrptc, lg llltchen. 2 $1,500/mo & $1,400/mo, Costa~ 2624 l'lmlfllll&L Beach •cross tlreet. 38R 28A "townhome-S 1,075/mo No P•lll car garage. comm pool, month-to-month rental. 2BR 2BA quiet, ftp, d/ Luxurious Large llv rm. ttyle" + •large 19R Apt 2379 Orange AY9, apt,._ ~rll Hr tchOolt. lhoPt. unfurnished. 121. 121~ •BIO 2BR. qutee Eee1eide pool caii ~ w. Gourmet kttch Pvt dedt. wftluge kitchen. 1984 2,. 650-4965 before 8pm erltege Parll. Qrndr 27th St. loc, BBQ & laundry rm. · · 1Bdrm SHS No pela crul.., boat 11 ~lonal. $995/mo 551-2776 3BR. 2BA S 1, 1001mo & Garege & cable avt. S745. mAT ~Tiii Low Deposit 494-2265 000 -2.IU -S 1.2001mo furnished. 6 NO pets. 831·M27 B ... ...., $e3S, E'alde-19th & Orange. ORANGETREE 18Rcondo month lease 12115199 to C e· 1 r 1 ... upettt, "" petlO. Studio, ocean view, bt11 to .111111 IL n Mutr ••• w/frpl, belcony. AIC. refrlg, w/d. lennlt. 6115190. 119. 110'..\ 27th -:: .. 7;uft kit~ .,: r,~~· 2roc:e. ~ $300~ ~· pdNoS6175 mo Fenced petlO & getege. pool. L• S700 + eec. Avt St. Agent 875-8475. C ' .. • · • ,..--. "" .._. ut to lll-llll $1390/mo • 642·"27 Dec t no oett 760--8768 Pru<Senti&t Celt! Atty loaeOW 10 evieryttllng .. vt Incl. No peta. S500 aec. move In . 07-4581, • · N I • M2·7334. MS-5853. t45 E. 19th St. 4 1 NlJC NOTICl NlJC NOna NI.JC NOTICl l __ ... ____ ec ___ NO_m ___ .__" __ .;..;.IC...._NO.._.Tl .... ICE~- YOU AM IN DEl'AUlT No MM332tl, W\U SELL Hotlce.111118,449.80 ,... .-in lllwll.ll ~ ol h PV8UC AUCTION TO Dated November 18. MOTICa Of' SA.La ,._ Bd't. 500 N. ... 8lltd &,Qt sit. pnde ()( OWMrstllp. Nr Hoeg s 1,595,000 721-8508 ****** 3'5 a/f-Arts. crafts. otc. storage? Gd E-alde C M 1oc Scottt SU-2794 ~EJ $2.44 per day That's ALL you pay fOf ' lineS. 30 day mlnif!'IUm In the SERVICE DIRECTORY For more tnfonndOn CALL TOOAV" ISIFll LllS VCNf s.vk:le Olrec1or, ,_._1tative 142-4121 ht.111 All YOUR co\t:NCAriiRETine~I~==== NEEDS Quality WOftl 11 reas prices. Free est. 751-8535 ~ ···-.• lftl21i 1111 , OWn9f au records 5 Y' extef\Cled warrenty New tires t>rallM •SK m1ln E lec:;l hC E very1 l'ltng Sun 1 R oo f Pr e m i u m Grt F V loc $1 500· M~t OC>C>tv' New lolftj!.,. Chlrtft1 Sound Tape Leather $2Mtmo • S4S·9''7 agency needs Man~ 2 RUNAWAY FOR WEEK Seal' Wl"ule ••11'1 Red Restaurants yrs Sa~e & egency •«i> ENO Chart• State-Of int~()< s, 7 500 Ol:>O Call req d ~oora1e& moen-,9 6'78 -mmnc Pltfll 11¥9 erio helpful Ca :µ Gtea1oei. Plilg OM! ult-Time Part-Time. T00°'760-050S Wltl'lst<ipc>ef 67>.7l00 BMW 79 320t ·-'-"" l ..... , •1" ,...,. ~........., !!!""'-" ... ~-( .. , .. ..:..cl A'l'I 'OI tit M!<(tdr\ lllM'o ' Por,.;te mft&Rtll•t. GOOOt~CS NeedS minOf wen. SIDO obO ~73 --meg.. ( Ford 1•1111.1m Llmi'9d Edition 'MRU fa l&I 304 V ..& with CMWdl twe, -- oellent condftlon, --r.ck & plnlOn SMllring. PIB, tilt. Qr\Me, k~ entry eiect rlc wln- dowslloc:U. nWr()f'I. ~ tenna. -ts. r-~ oefrost Dolby Super 90Und 1191'90, leaU. ~ noltter y new tlrea. bflkes ~-moo. vie many extrM EJICl6- 1en1 mwtt~ recoro MU$1 1M & dn~ \0 9P- ~te Reg!st• 8u-"9f'S ~ Bar & Preo-Cootl Apply CA..../"-A. /S tt91f1C 1ft 59.200 or SS.IOO ~· """"'s tor• ~ , ano t .......,---=------,mi I conortion lo-m11eege o only ........ ma.nt~ r«:.Ords ' month IM.lll mm soeed S5300 OBO CAll d.,-1 all ya~ 25 & SS a"*I S 12 SO P9' &«-2021 -~ 1 -. Sail preferred 752-2881 --1ghly v!Slt>te de9lgnef An1!f,1!s 6010 --FDU11 U1 m 1• llL ..,.. ::-:ns ;::!!,,!o .=Too SS P91d tor Potter;' 1411 Mft UYJlllJ E11~t eondrtlOn. t\lly Call E~ Melling hf9hly motivated Catalina. Bauer. Kay 2500 sit 2BR & °:' :::" loaded 18 000 mites, --1111 ..._ ~ 640--0125 Flf'Ch 30 1 & 40$ dish-uoper untvrn up 11 702-.388--0Ma ..,.,. China decorative Dock~ avall S 1850'mo HONDA 82 ACCORD llTIA. .... ll hgurlneS 673-6223 yrty 752-288 1 675-8335 2 DOOR HATCHBACK OUMW!V9S wanted FIT, I NEED DOCK OR SIDE A1C AM/FM Stereo PIT. nlghls & weeece!\dS Afeln!s 6011 TIE FOR 2' BOAT Wiii 98K m;. Vf/f'y gooo cond 1n the ShoWroom oHlol -trade tor ,ewelry Call $2200 080 S43-5838 Mutt be dependable & •AefnOerator Kenmo<e. Lido Jewelry S4~9'36 - tleJ!lb6e p..._ appy at wttrte slOe-by-slde S200 t NISSAN SENTAA 1985, WICl<ES FURNITURE * M 1crow ev e S6 0 MfK Tr-•"-e11r1 low mU• 2-4oor. 3200 Hart>of Bl c M * Fr1 9 1da1re washer • -~---· 1 $4 695 OBO 673·'221 $1SO All hke new 14 PORSCHE 944 TURBO .... FIT 494-8301 U"r"f!rallm 00 1986 Bleck with ~ =••••J.1•=-xperlence r equired 1973 AIRSTREAM 31-Ft. leethef AU OOllON 281< Pteaeapptyal F~ 6014 1n oarl\at3S1W BayS1 miles M int S21 700 - WICKES FURNITURE BEAUTIFUL XMAS GIFT .:8 Cos1a Mesa S5000 Da ys95S·3'00 Ev .. 71',000 mle&. 1 ~. 3200~ 81 C M ROUiette Game tab'e ()( 71'-650-02S4 673-717' af'leri>,1'500 4'18-1901 avaitable In Costa Mesa :1 Hu= on Fountain Valley NO (OU.ECllNG 1'0 SOLICITING t lnt n., A Wttli Mull ht~ Jrpnldlbtt ' .. lllld pmd ol ~ ... 142-4111 llahan Inlaid wood ~ used S59S 662·2636 l&Tm Wll 111111 u anress & t~ newir uMd s 195 •8'0-8733• TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE IUISWHH• Mattrns t>en. trame oew $235 840-8733 o.ning table ~ t1n1Sh '6 diamet ... two 18 eatens!Ons S 150 Cuti 6'0-'1'3 DIA Tab'e •8· opens to 68 2 arm chatrs $100 Matching Ct11n1 Cab 42' c76 $100. 640-<BSBS QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS & B O )(, OUIL TEO • BRANO NEW! S 155 CALL • 840-4133 • SACRIACE '5000 "' ,.., be•g• leather SOF" wlqueen l'lio.-.-oed & rec1tner S 1200/mo 561-4242 Of S4&-1707 SOf: A & 10ve Met. beige ftofal. pr ~ ,..,.,. c:Nlrs Gleen unworn $395 talc• al TS~ 7531 S<>V'™WEST BAR .ml 2 padded tier S1QCM "" .. velue $2500 UC $ 1000 It ......... '* couctl. tea blUa. ,..... '2000 MC 11000. ~ toveeMt ..... $ 1250 MC S100 bOtt\ still In cartons 67!MIMI ACROSS '". en..,. "'00 6 Merass ,, Snip .... ,,..,,..,_ Cll) IS H.,Ofln 16 Fort>oc! 17 APl)end 18 Combtn411ton 20 Total 22 Pvcctnl ~ 23 Vef\tdft 25 s,,...1n9 28 \Jf giancy 29 Mar~ lO Wlll'ted l2 o..ta110f\ )4N~ 39S~ '2 COUQh Oroo 430-. 4.$ Enncll .. Aaalncffa 4t Fvry so S.-• S4 ... Ol e.1 -TW~O_E_l __ Ec=-=o-=~,::;E,::;D-..:IC:I 1 2 3 BEDS.llle,..,m=-ar llNt "-9d...-d U&5 14 Md\ Stl DOI 6 -T lltCtl eo.-C1 68 $1000 69 C)ncry 10 AOOle pans Tl H..o COY9I DOWN t bclllmallO" 2 Hennlul .l WeallM 4 0.--. 5 FUD 6 Endure 7 ~ t AW9911'• 9 S.-orm 10 W0tatnQ 11 T .... l)edly t 2 Comedy type 13 Tremple 19 Styea 21 PrOflOUl"I 23 Smallwm 2' "-tent 26 "ocal 27 Htgflr~ City 30 'WfCWIQ 3 1 Siunn.d 33 Fldd9er-cr ._, .,,_,. 35 HM •i 36 p__, J7 OMNrtnl P-.ef* ,....,.~ SJ~-. SS~ 57 ---..... ......... •1TI1W U\.Odll..,.._ .. ea' .-: .. ..... ... by BH Keane "Barty's a good watchdog, Mommy. Look how he can watch TV." by Bract Anderson "Ignore him. He just likes to disagree . . . ~ANCY with met" · ilLO Alm JANIS ~ W4AT WlJU> 'OJ ul<i tat amer~~~ COON I &It CUL TUIUt by Maratta & Matatta .. J I• DENNIS THE llltNACE by Hank Ketcham ·\:, u [ '. '' l I ' ''' I ' by Jerry Scott L ~ ' L...=~~--===:J ... ~' ---.· ~~ by Jimmy Johnson WHA1 JC'.l~DOF~ DORK 00£.~ SME. f.AKE. lli,fOR? . by Tom K. Ryan WMV 001 RUSH DOWN MSE EVERV MORNIN6 TEN MINUTES AMEAP OF TIME so I wo~·r MISS TME SCMOOL eos ? - GARFIELD NOTICE ANYfMtNU PtFf£RENT .__?-""~A~&OUT~'.._:'ME,GARflELP? MMMMM? FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE w1~Au.o;::us EATING lJP A~ iUl5 OAT (3fq\N .. FUNKY WINKERBEAN DOOIUSBURY by Garry Trudeau by Chartea M. 8dMllZ by Jim Davis by Lynn Johnston ~t-&010~~-~PA~ ~NOT"~WtlH ACR1r-11NA-~l by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batluk /