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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-12-11 - Orange Coast Pilot" Communist Laughter His stories Pany no reigns at always teach longer ru,es Way Off children Czechs Broadway a lesson WORLD/A4 T HEATER/AS COA ST/A3 THE ORANGE COAS T 25CENTS l\t ONDAY,.DECEMBER 11, 1989 King-sized Christmas display '11Mre01 llttl• ctNince that die ....... s.nu perclletl on top of Ille ·~e.con .. , home of llldl8nl •ftd ~ ....• ,... wlll be 840.•~lng tltrougtll any chllltn.,. this Chrlabze., ave. Stlll .. ltle towering SL Nktr: does ltl jolt .. an .,.e·C.tdllnil good·lty• to the h elfhbomood from which ttte •"91•• wlfl be moving. Eve ry ye•r, the Engles, who •re Big C.nyon-bound, go •II out t o decor.ie .,..... Newpon Beach home. Thia ye•r,.Jh•y hired •" W M .. k of S.nu AIM to cre•t e t he klng·•I••~ S.nu: and h ta glftl ffw dtelr rooftop. · Residents want NB addres~, not Gosta Mesa By IRIS YOKOI Ofttw~-\ .. ~ For 1,•ears, rc-s1dents of a small count' ·island nes1\ed betv.~n 1hc southCm up of c·os ia ~ft•sa and tht· Dover Shores coi-n mun1t\ 1n Ne.,..- pon &ach ha\t' con,1dirt•d lht·n1- sclves cn11ens uf thL' ~a.:h 1ov.n The~ rl"cc1vc mad abou1 SL·1,~•pon &-ach's parks and Tt'CTl'31100 pro- grams, cable It'll"' 1s1on bruadca~t~ or 1he '.\le14·pon Beach C'tt~ Council meetings and emergenc~ <,c.-r, 1~'t' from ~e"'PO" Bt·ach pol1•c and fir(' But J U51 n:ccn1h . rl·s1drn1~ 1n lhl' half-mile ]ong arl'a k·amt•d tht•ir nC"1ghborhood 15 actual!~ mOrl' ( o~ta Mesa than n LS se ..... pon Beach So the-. ha\i.' ix·1 111onl·d !ht· ruun!\·, LOCaJ .\genl~~ Formation (om- m1ss1on 10 trJnsfer tth·1r nl'1gh- borhood from t -osta \1t•sa'\ sphere of influence 10 s c .... pon Bt·ach's ThC' comm 1~s1on Jt."nrt·d thC" rl'· quC"st la st ""t."ek . ordering 1ha1 the neighborhood n:main 11c:d 10 Costa :\'C's.a. Sul!. commissionen. 1nd1catt"d the issue ma~ br d1s1:u~~d again ne:\t yt'a r. aft('r a JOin1 f'o~ta '.\,c.·s.a- ~c...,,·pon Reach stud~ 1' conduc1cd of all tht• small un1nCL'rror.11ed pocktlS be\,,.,('Cn the 1""ll 1.'1\IC' ThC' neighborhood that tnt"d 11.1 break free of <--osta '.\tc~ 1~ l01:ated cast . of Ne .... ·pon Boulc,ar~I and borderC'd b\ Santa l!'ab1:l .\' rnuc. The1ford ":·a}. Santa ·\na ~\C"nue and Tustin . .\venue. Th(' lanJ has btt'n under Cos1a ,\1 t•.sa's JUnsdit-. tion for C"1gh1 yC"ars. according 10 Jim C o!angt.-lo l'\t'C'u\I' t' d1rKtor of 1hr coun\\ 's lormation comm1s!r>1on Th~re are mor~· than l 50 parcels in thC" neighborhood. Colangelo s.a1d ~bout 15 ~ears. ago. Costa \t('sa and '.'ie .... ·pon Beach )\ruci.. a gentll'- man\ agreement to use Irvin(' and Tustin a'enues ls tht" d1\1d1ng hnC" for unincorporated land Tht" '"'O c1 11es agrt'cd land ""'t'Sl of the hnC" "'·ould be in ('os1a ~1esa·s temtof) wh.Llt the land 10 the east would br in :"'C"""l)Or1 Beach's But John Buchanan. ~ho bough1 his Donnie Road propen~ thrtt months ago. said he and his neigh- bors had no idea the\ ........ n: in Cost.a ~esa·s sphere of 1nfluencC". a tenn that mean~ thl' an;a is. on<' da~ ex.pC"Cted to bt" annc.·,ed b~ the c11 ~ Buchanan said he "stumbled on10·· the fact JUSt afte-r he boug.h1 his propen~. "'t'lllC" re'1l'""1ng maps ~·h1le Costa '.\1c~ ~as updating its gC"nC'ral plan In S.o\'embcr. Buchanan "''rote a lener to 1ht fonnauon comm1ss1on as.king that his neighborhood be sh1fled to --: ....... ·pon's sphere of in- fluence. He collected signatures from about ~ percent of 1he area's -,_es1denl!a and some 100 suppon1ve reside nts attended the formation comm1ss1on's heanng on Wednes- da~. according to Buchanan. · "h .... ·as a fa1rl' unued effon." Buchanan said. · Buchanan said residents 1n his comm un n~ ha vt had Newpon /P~~se Stt CITY/ A21 city wrestles with re.creational-vehi-cl-es parking rules ly HOLLY J, WAGNER Of ""' c..,. -SC..., An ad hoc committee in Fountain Valley is attempting to draw up regulalions for parking recrca1ional vehicles in residential areas. A controversial nuisantt abate- ment ordinance passed last year set some restrictions on parking rtt· reational vehicles within the city, but Assistant City Manager Ray Kromer tcnntd \he ordinance too '"incomplete" to deal "'llh the RV issue. Under the nuisance ordinance. RV owners may park their vehic;ln in rear and side yards and o n pa\•ed surfaces such as driveways in fron1 yards so long as there is no overhang onto public righ1s--0f-way. The City Council later appointC'd the commilltt 10 make recommen- dations for a specific ordinance on RVs. The committee held its first CO\ ER STORl 1'0RKl"\l> _Qe_c_emhe-L i.s_busy_,.. sad season for icounty coroners 8y EMILY ADAMS Of ... 0..,. .... "-" .. ~me ruj.hlS,"tlic-ph-one never rinp. But in Occcmbcr lhat is ~most never true. For deputies in ~ Sheriff-Coroner's office, the last :Wtontb of the year is always the ~c . ~~On Nov. 2S, just six calls came j,10 the office all day. By Doc. J, ~ties were runninc to keep up ~th a awellina caseload. On I.hat day. at 7:ll a.m., an 8().. ,ar-old woman died. app..-cntJy of natural c:auses. A deputy wu d.ita P1tcbed to the scene. Sixteen minll\a tater. a 21-year-old man au th>m a freeway ov~ and ~ deputy left the ofll<e. At I:)() Lm .. I )().)ft.f..okfi woma. .. dl9d of utunl cautea. At 9:56. *re WU an ~tJy accidellial *'"tb ofaa S-_..,id boy. At I l:JO a.m., I tuicide WU reponed. the numbers jump in Dcctmbcr due to increased alcohol use and traffic. he~lated:;-ormaytie-11s l he- holiday blues. This year has been busier than most for Ellinabuf'lh and his col· lc&ues. Already, homicides arc at an alf time hith in lhe county: So far this year, there have beer> about 147 reporu:d killinp. last year, the homicide record Slood II 129. Homicides arc lenahty procedures for the deputy coroner who mLUI eudWly record all evidence at Ute -. iadodi• dewls that would mate mOlt people's atomach tum. For iolCIU. lf time of cklltb ii _..., 11)' lami must be oall!IOd -tbobody;the•oftbe- ---• ... tlaM of deotb. .......,..... 911m1w'1 Aoved --. ""'....,... -.. llnponant .... .,-. . ......,...... ..... meeting 1n No\cmbrr. Kro mer chairs the comm11tt'l.'.' 0 1 eight communny members and l""'O city staff members. The committtt is comprised of Kromer. four ITC'· rcauon vehicle ownef'5. four non- owncrs and city planner Don Con- trama.n as an ad,·1scr. ."i.fter one meeting. Kron1er said. the comm11tec rcachl'd an agreement that the main 1ssut needed 10 be addressed was safety. Some rts1dcnts have argued 1hat c.ampr-rs and motorhome!> parked 1n rcs1den11al areas o!len obscure 1he v1s1on of dn\'ers a nd pcdestnans. creaung a traffic safct~ hazard. Yet RV owners sa y many of 1hem choSt to bu) homes in Foun1a1n Valley prtt1Stl) br-cauS(' the nun1 - mum lot silt. uni!! about a month ag,o. was 7.200 squan: feet. a d imension 1ha1 gives owners plcnt~ of room to park their recreational vch1CIC'S on 1hr1 r property "l\'s rtall' a \Cf\ emo11onal issue:· Kroni.rr said · .. RV o"'ners have a large 1n\'estment 1n tht'1r RVs and homrowners ha\C a largl' 1n- \'CStment in their homes and thl· safety of their neighborhoods .. He said the comm111ec 1!> hoping to stnke a balance bi,~t .,.,•ct•n thi: 1 .... 0 \'iewpo1nts and w1\l consider local sentiment and ordinan("('s 1n other cities durin& its dehbcrauons. • If rts1dents have 1he1r RVs ltg1s- lated off the strt"t'ts and out of their \'ards. the' "'111 be forced to Sttk !.patts in it\' s1oraac yards. Rates al storage yards 1n tht area range from SJO to S90 pc-r month dcpr-nding o n the lo! and tht' s1zt ol the RV. Onl~ one lot 1s 1n Fountain Valley In add111 on ..... -a111ng lis1s have up to JO name'.i on lhem al some lots. ~ fPWase see PARKING/ All Toddler who -fell-down cliff-- Improving ly LESLIE EARNEST Of-~-sc..., A toddler who ~uffercd massive head inJunts ""'hen he fell 23 feet from a rhfT 1n Lquna Beach last month is continuing 10 improve. a 5P0knwoman from Mission H 05p\- \l.I Rea:tonal Medical Ctnler said Sunday. Braden Little. 19 months. now opens his eyes and seems ·•prrtl): akn.." said Marauent~ Nelson. He is now listed in fair condition, she: said. .. He's doina much brtler, He's been breathina on his own for a long time. .. Tbc chikl was irtjumd Nov. 12 when bis mother, Jayne Barbara UttJe. wu briefly jfistracted as lbc played with her ton in lbc 1-.* )Wd of \hdr homt in \he 100 block of l'l!orl SU'«t. 1-na -police Sat. RAymoad Latdie oaMI_ Althouall a fionc. rltn1 the yard, at ooe leCtion of the ~ _. • .-. the -ii CJDly • 17 -~ Latdie :!~.::' .. ~';,'! Md.ii __ _ ,be UL c.uoa Elli-. tuperrilllls {llputy CA>n>Dw, ""' ... -... =:-• -every Doc. I llr ,...,. He~1 llill blllled . ...,.. ·1••-··· No-days ---,_ .• .._ .. ....... -e/aiNw•NMll Wf NII ICl'a.; ... ....,. I ....... .. .. '" ··--•1AJ1 ... .................. •••lllSI C1r1ft•C P a s•llll1ll-•'l ... ill_._..., ...... ., ........ a1h• 11111 -ii llill ;,, the ...... podloaia ...... -ult. ...... ..... GOOD MORNING C~ .............................. A10 Cr.la 114 ......................... r ... ••••2011t ...................... .. " & ... , ....................... "' Pt.lllllt Naitlce1... ... .. .... ..... ••• .. .. lilOfta... ..... . .. .. .... .... .... .... ... 11-4 "' ""' ............................. ""' WIJ .. -............................ M IWWt ...-.s.. ....................... ~ A1 .... & lody ....................... AS ~ .............................. At ~ ................................. A7 ..... .. E .. 15 " a: • ~ ~ , c 1 .,. e • LU L • It 0 ii • • II W1 • .. li -., • . , t1 1 • c lk 8l c c • I T ( ;\ l " l , ( • ( I • • ' ' A ' I 1 • • ' • ' /I " " • upport expected for Laguna bus system funding ....... ~ -.. ~ .... """ Tbe 0ruaie C-0unty TraMPOr· caaioo Commisaioo naff as npectcd to recommend today that of'DciaJ1 ~ve fundtn1 for a year's Opetat· ... upmin for tht belcquercd UiluAa Beach bu• l)'llml. At the same time, staff will uk the oommiMJon to deny. at least for the time ~ tbe City's reque1t to be mmbuneCf for more than S300.000 in ttPlaccmcnt vduclc:s. 10cludm& the COit of a new tram for u~ d unn& Holld•y expres.-.. 11..., 8owera acts .. con· ductor on the P ••hlon ,.._.. aapr .. 1, Wiiiett wlndt ttv ..... s.m.•1 VIII .. • •nd around di• f18nt Ovt..,..1 tr•• 8t die Newport Cent.,. .... 11. lll• train waa bultt by 8ower1· f•ttter, Ted. tbt IWllDVI' fcsnvaJ ICUOft. The ruommmdauon comn on the b«b of month• of ·•pttulatJOn about whether lbe county's onJy city-run bu1 1y1\em will survive in the wake of increased COJtl and decreased ndcl"\h1p. The 19·ycar-old tranllt sy"cm 11 fueled by approxunatcly SS00,00 in federal and nate-funds. which city officials uy they do not intend to relinquish While admittin& the t.ran.11t •>•tcm has room for 1m. provcment, cu y officials ma1ntam dla1 I apna raicknti, pan.icu,larty youths and the eldttly, rely hQvaJy on lhe trams th.at rqularly roam the hilly nci&hborhood1. However, in May, co unty-hired a~iton r~ommended the com· million con11dcr replacina Laauna·\ 1ystem with county bu~ and Dial· A-Ride. TeM1ons peaked last month when the comm1ss1 on voted to h1~ a COD$Ultanl to deva~ performance 1tandards for county trans11 oper- aton The •tandardl-are to be culled from the auditor's rccommen- dauons. t 1.aatt 1n che month, ho~''tr, aty oft"aca.a.11 and county staff bcld what Ont paltlC.lpant dcecnbcd IS a COOJ>- erat1 vc meet1na dunna which tbc two entities bepn to work toward common 1oal1 "We're all worluna t<>sether and it wat a very po1111ve mcctina." Deb- bie Chnsincr, a 'mem~ of · 1he Transportatio n Comm1uin staff, 11id after the ~ssion "I'm not say- ina anybody 1s comm1ted to any course of actio n. but we're 101ng to Extremely high tides expected in area 8y LESLIE EARNEST Of ttw o..,. ~-".., Rising 11des are cxpcltcd to pound the Orangi: ( oa\t for the next ftw days with the h1ghe\t predicted for Tu~ay morning at 7 57 when of· ficaab \3y ud~ ~111 reach 7 2 fi-ct The r.ondtuon. which OCCU(T!i about once a year. 1\ unu\ual 1n tha1 CITY from At Beach 11p r.odc\ for more than 20 years and arc ...:net.I h) Newpon Beach fac1llt1c\ th;it an: clo!>er to them than tho)( m ( O!ila Mc~. Buchanan •.cud The residents lan tune into t abk broadcast\ of the: N<"wpon &al h Caty Council mce11n&!i but canncJt pick up the< O\UI Mc11a City Council broadcasts, Buchanan said Add111onally pmpeny value-. are hasher in Newpon Beach than 1n Costa M~. rc$1dents have araued Buchanan ~•d the land use 1n h1't neighborhood of large, 'lingJe family homes as a!M> more comp;.uble to the Dover Shores area than to the de'n,e, mull1·famdy residence charactcnsllc of \urroundang Cosui Mesa But Make Robin\on, ( ost.a Mesa''> pnnc1pal city planner. said the Irvine-Tustin d1v1dmg hne I'> prnc- ucal and l<>gJcal Vanous cit)' ~r­ v1oe1. including poh~ patrols and nrect~ r.wceping. arc more eli1ly ad· ministered with \uch a uniform r.1ty boundary, Robinson said. "If we're amprovana the street, you c.an ao 1he entire street," be said Betide,, the agrecmen1 be1wccn the two c1t1es was made long ago. he added Ncwpon Beach ( '1ty Manager Roben Wynn said ha\ c1ty. too, wishes lo honor the gcntl(man't. aareement and would only be interc:ncd an annuin1 tfutt area 1f Cost.a Meu was aarecable. udes ho,cnng at 7.fcct do not nor· mally pcr'tl\I for -.cH:ral da)'> at a time, an < >rangt· < ount> < om· 01 unicatwn\ \J><>kt ... ma n ..a 1d While no \totm v.arning\ ar.lom· pany 1he predict1"n' of h1gh~de'>. offic1al'> arc ur~ing rna'>till r 1de~lt to keep an eye on th<" w ('r forcc..ul!> for the ncxl few da)\ An unexpected \torm could combint· with the h1'11 tide~ to create hazard- ous cond1t1on!t . ..aid kfl') Steifer. with the National Weather Scr v1<..c . "If we had something like that, these tide' could pose a real threat lo coast.al propen)," he \aid "We sug· gest you \ta)' 1nfomH·d in uuc weather cond111CJO'i t han1,<t· Al the lime being, 11 doc\n·t l1H1k like Lhev will." Clear and v.1nd) '>k)'> arO(p(CdlC· ted for the coa~tal area\ 1'lU>ugh Tuesday with lows 1n the upper 2~ and highs 1n the 60s to low 7()1. On Sunda). llde\ peaked at 6 8 feet at 6:10 a m I hey were e.kpccted to reach 7 I feet at 7: 13 this mom· 1ng. By Wednesday. offi cials say the tade~ wall begin 10 d1mm1sh. 6 held in drive-by shooting in HB ly LE SLIE EARNEST Of -o..,. ~ .... h aft At least two )Outh\ were inJured and s1• other., were taken into custody a'> a re\ult of a dnvc-b)' shooting near Old World < enter 1n Huntington &ach on ';aturday n1&ht. pohtc ..ay ihe -sax \U'IJ>C<. l'>, all '>anta Ana resident'>. ""ere apprehended on the San Diego Frecwa) near the Euclid Avenue offramp in Fountain Valley. according to H untington Beach pohcc Lt. (,ary Dav1\. A uwcd..gO shotgun and expended \hdl l<t\lng' were thro wn ou1 the v.rnd11'4 \horth before the -arre\t I rd' I'> "><ml .. The lnJUrlC\ ul the \llllfll\ J11 not appear to he ll ft·.thrl'<tlt·n m~ .. Davis said Two uftht• v1l1Hll\ wen· tll·atcl.l at a local ho\p1tal Da' 1'> ..aid he did not know if the 1hird '1l llm v.a' h11 by the \hotgun bla\t Police did nut d1'K:I O'>(: 1hc rC\I· denccs of the v1l1tm'> or v.hcthn the shootings wcrt· gang relatt•d "l 'm s ure the~·u be louk1ni into leisure World resident dies in fire ly TM Detty Pftot A 66-ycar-<ild woman wa~ d1~ covered dead m her Le1\ure World apanmcnt Sunday the apparent vic- tim of • smoking accident. Orange County Shcnff s official~ say Preliminary repon '-indicate tha1 the unidentified Laguna Half\ woman died of smoke inhalatio n from a smoldenng couch. Lt. W il- ham Franc11 wd. An autopsy will be performed 11.llla> "It ap~ar\ that \he fell a'>leep la\I n1Jht wuh a lit u prr ttt· .. I ranu' said Sunday While the cout h where 1he v1ct1m la y wa\ wa\ burned rn the fire, there was little damage to the rest of the apanment. he -..ud No one else wu in the apanmrnt The woman\ bod) wa' d1!>- covercd next to the coul h hanci~ said. Suspect held in break-in at private school 9y The 0 91)' PNot that," Ciruy '><Ard fhc 1nu<.kn111Hurrt·d JI ll"t7 pm ~aturd;n '4hl·n 1'1411 on-dut~ patrol oflilCf\ hl'.irl.I '"" \hotgun blast'> near I lunt1n1<1011 1llagl· I .anc and C cntt'r l>nvr I wo vch1t le' were \CCn kaving lhl· area Officer-. followed one ol thl· 'e· hide\, a 19~4 < amar11 '>(>Uthhound onto the San D1qen hee'4a) v.hc rt· they were JOin<"d h> other lfunt ington ~ach offill'r\ ( rr<t~ \:lid The weapon wu., recovered h> poli ce. PARKING From A l "They don'1 move vef) fa,t. e ither." ~aid one 'ltoragt··lol propnetor Kromer ..a id th<.· u1mm1ttct.' r '· peels to hav(' a rt•<:ommcndat1on for the Planning ( omml\\IOn -a prt'I· ude to any ord1nanu.-that might come before the rnuncil -1n ahou1 three month'> Before an) propo..al Kromer said, the committee will probabl) have a co uple of well advcrt1!1ed meetings with the community on the subject. Meanwhile, the comm1tt<'c ha'I yet to determine a regular meeuna schedule and the dale of the next mectma has no t yet been set. Ctt1zcns an= welcome to attend the mectinas and air their concerns. lit down and ""1)(k et out and ttt ~ ~ can ecb1cve other com· moo around.·· Jn 1p1tc of the d1fTettncn, the commi eon suff had always tn· tended to recommend approval of the Clty'1 19894 90 fiiC&I year budatt for operatm& c.tpentet, Christner said. The amount recommended for approv•I 1~ $237,063. However. sull hanarna an the bal- ance as U 08,41 I that the City ha• submltled for reimbursement for re- CORONER ''°'""' u ys. Su1Cldes also take a long tame out of the offic~. Almo\t everyone close to the '-Uletde needs to be inter- viewed. Often. Elhngburgh has to break the new!I to lo.,.ed ones. It~ pan ol the JOb, but its o ne ,pan Elhngburgh has never gotten used 'to. Ellln~burgh, 40. ha'I an cas) smile. he's q111ck with a story and pracuccd at making people feel comfortable. Still, Elhngburgh l'i the last pef"IOn someone would want to sec coming up his walk. "The worst pan of the JOb 1s going to a fatal traffic accident -one that's nCAr the v1ct1m's home. Af\er seeing the body, looking at the 1.0 .. the pen.anal papers. )OU have to go around the block and tell som eone that the person who was an ho ur late at the store isn't coming home," Elhngbur&h said . Mo~l or the time. he'll try to find a neighbor who know\ the family and bnng that pe™>n along. A lam- ahar fa~ hel~. he ..a)'i Every once in a while, he'll ha'e two or three of thoM: not1fica11ons an a single night. On tho<oe night~. ht> goc'-home "feeling hkc ever) thing has been dr.uned out of me " El11ngburg.h al~ trains nev. r('- tru1t\ and dunng tho~ ~ss1on\ he gives pointers to new deputies on how t<> break painful nrws, but there 1s no ea'-y formula, he ..ays. In orie 1nude11 t. '14 h1ch Ell- ingburgh de'>(·nbcs as the ~dd~t story he knows. Shenffi. deputies had found a man deceased in bu van. He had been 11.,ted as massing for the past two or three days. Ellangburgh went tu the scene and, af\cr collecting what evidence he could, left for the addrc\~ on the man's dnve r's licen'><' As he approached thl· hou~. he could hear a woman t·ry1ng softly inside He knocked on th(' door. When a )Oung woman opened the door and \aw Hhnghurgh with her hu'iband''> ID on hi\ clapboard, her face hnp.htenrd tor a moment They'd found her hu,band "i\nd then I hJd hr ll'll her v.t''d found him but hl' v.,l\ dl·ad \he \laned l n mg ag;u n harder i\ nd then a huh> '.>l:t rtcd u) 1ng I lOuldn '1 th111k ol v. ha1 to ...:1) 111 lomfon hl't '.>O I told hn. ·The h:ih), lw reall> net.'d'> )OU no" · \he \l'enwtl a httlc b<'tter alter 1hat ·· I llrnithurgh ..aid The deput~ torum·(, lontall\ wath the puhl11. iltt.'n 'tr alwa)S ter· ri bk \o met1111 n 1nq 're 11nt strange Once a man t·alled thc coroner\ office and a\kN.f I lllnghurgh what wa'i th(' ht'\l '4a) 111 llllllmtl 'u1ude He wointl·d an eOel t1H' method. hut he al\O wa11tcd to bl· 'ure nohody would be hlanwd he \a1tl The man ..aid he'd alread> talked 10 h1' minl'.tcr. hi\ dooor. a P'>)- ch1atns1 and a wunsc:lor He wa~ t ired of them I k JU'>I wanted to commit <1u1c1dc nuw. and he wanted Ellingburgh to tell t11m how "I talked to ham for a whale. told him he really should talk to some- o ne cl~ I told him there were people out there who could help. but he d1d 't want to listen. O f course, I couldn't tell him how to kill himself," Elhngburgh stud. None nf this 1s what l:.ll1ngburgh 1magrned he'd he doing wtlh has days when he was a forestry student at Cal Stale Los Angclci. The part- time JOb he took at 11 mortuary was placement veludes. A poruon or that amount would ao to rwnbune the city for a reccnv ly P"'chaKd tram to take lbt place of the San f rancitco-ttytc trolley that wu OnQt a fiuure in town but which has now bttn retired. However, as part of rettnt d1s- cuHions, the comm11s1on has q,reed that the city's festival serviot 1bould be contruted to a prjvate operator. Reimbursement for the fm1val vt- h1ck 11 attn as bein& 1n conflict with th.at soal. officials say dnving a car. not working with bodies . But when 1t came ttmc to pack up b1' paycheck. the boss made him 10 into the embalming room to get It Dunng his first brush with death. Ellingburgh admits, he wu "weak· kneed and shalung." He became accustomed to the work. Eventually, he came to ell.JOY 1t and trained to be a mortician That's what he was doing nearly ~ decade ago when. fascinated wtth the 1nvesupt1ve work of deputy coronen, he asked a deputy how one could move to the shentrs o ffice. Besides the odd hours "murders don't usually happen dur- ina 8 to S on the weekdays" -and scenes of gnef he's constantly ex · posed to, there's a couple things which bother EJhngburib about h1i. JOb. Two, to be euct. Two women. both dead youllg. still unidentified. They arc the onl) outstanding cases Elhngburgh has, the only unidentified bodies, At odd moments, the details of thest ca~ stall come back to ham. Jane Doc 874092 was JUSt 17 or 18 when she died. She was blond and. after extensive reconstruc11on, ap- peared quite pretty. Her skeletal remains were fou nd near Gypsum Canyon 1n Augu'it 1987 The case, tul nded to Ellingburgh. made newspaper hcadhnes at the tame. lipec1ahsts were called an who cleaned the bones and discovered what appeared to be knife marks on the nbs. Using a new technique , the skull was meas ured and studied and cla)' was used to r«onstruct the young woman's face. The model was made smilina to show a ch1p~d front tooth. Sull she wu not 1denuficd. her loller never found Another woman. th1r. one an her m1d-20s. should have been easier. She was found .almo~t immediately after she apparently Jumped from a cliff in Dana Po int. But she c.amed no 1den11ficat1on. At the top. of the bluff, she'd left a purse with' a map, a matchbook and a ~nbbled phone number <\he had no money. W11h thc..c dues. flhngburgh traced her path from lht> evening before her fatal leap She gone to a local hott'I and asked the mgh1 desk clerk 1f there were an) hill)\ building., around Then ~he'd called a cab from a phone booth It wa~ the cab com ran> ·s phon<" number 'lhe'd left The matlhbook came from the hotel. l he <:ab dnv~r remembered her. he'd told her thl· bluff area wa.; as far a~ '>he could get o n the money '>he harl The.-pune. with a woman's name 1ns1de had been stolen an Laguna Beach eight )Cars earlier All clue\ led to the same dead end ''Every 11me I go sailing. I '>CC that cliff an Dana Point I alway5 point 11 o ut to m) wife. I say. 'Sec that's where they found her R1&ht there near that alluvial fan,' and she alwa)'$ says. 'I know. C'ullen, you always show m(' that spot.' But every time. I say 11 again." Ell- ingburgh said. In December. in the coroncr'5. office. there isn't much tame to thank about cases Io na past. But on a reoent day, Elhngbuflh sat with two files spread in front of him. looking over photoanphs and old notes. Maybe there was an angle un- discovered. The telephone rang 1mpat1ently an the backaround. The formation comm1ss1on aarccd "ii'• eJ1111tcd th IS way for years," C'olanaelo u1d. The cumm1u1o n also feh there wa. no ml ev1denct" the area Ii served better by Newpon Beach faciht1cs. accordina to Col- an,elo . A 27-ycar-old man was ap- prehended after he was discovered inside a Costa Meu pnvate school Sunday nl&ht. police aay. in at Mardan Center of Educational Therapy at 69~ W. l9lh Street ju.st ffter 9 p.m. when a c1tian reported hca~na the l>Ound of &Jass breaking. lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill Wynck said. Six officcn. a police doa and a Tbe unarmed man, who 1dent1fied bimJelf 11 James Scott Zahler but whom police "Y refuted to &ive a ~ of ~. wu arrctted on ausokton of bwaJary, acc:ordina to ~ 5cL Loren Wyrick. Ofllcen ~ aJened to the break- bcHcopter mponded to the call and diac:overcd a front window of of the 1ehool had been 5mubed, police Sat. Jim Watson said. The lone 1u1pect wa1 d iac:overcd m1ide the buildina, where 1ehool offices bad been ran- aacked, Watson ta1d. C \I llOIC,I\ 10111 IC\ No one pi~ks all six winning numbers numbcn and the bonus number to will s 211 ,w 9 apiece. The mt.cu were told m tbc dlin of: San Oteao. 1.a P\aeate, Aaoura Hill1, Sonoma uCI Ridunond. Tbe winni"J num ben, picked Sat· _.Y njpt rot the C&lifornia Lot-wy•a twico-week.ly "Lotto 6-49" = 23, 37, 21. 46, 39, II and the ..... -.... ==-.......... rt rtiu oo '* "'°"'' ,.,. ,... ...... ( ........ IO•M _,._,_,_ .......... Owl '"' .... """'' , _ " ~ ....... Ill., •• ~ .. "'".. ""' Wll!I 104if (lltlil•r• " ,.... YOU 'LL ALWAYS FIND Q f rvm lht' Expcctt d Stylt of Polo/Ralph l..aurt n All wool. IH ll lwd f•ttric, 44"tlt~ ~ntC'tl Hit '"'·00 All COllOR, ...... ,,. .... d1nlll·,l•l4 •ltln. "'·00 100 ....... , • ._~ pn•• '"'· 111.,0 ) ~ rr1 ~ ::r: ~ z C) ; . ~ s s s .. II I I I f I I'\ HO\ HU ac supervisor to discuss air quality . qt.nae Co unty Supervisor k a rriett Weider will d1r.cuu lhe county's air quality '". a luncheon meeuna of Town HaJI o f Califo rnia al noon ~~=."the Red Lion Inn, 30SO Bristol St., . A member oft.he County Board ofSupcrvoors SJDOC 1978, Weader 1~ also a member o f the South ~t Au Q uality Manaaement District and the California Air Rciourc.cs Board. In those capacit1« s~ bu fou&ht to require offsho re oil np to meet au. quality standards, supported the AQMD regu- lauons requ1nng major employers to adopt traffic tt:ductJon plans and st.ipportcd the biannual ve- hicle inspection a nd m aintenance program to reduce cm1ss1ons. Prcpa1d advance reservataons arc required to attend the luncheon ( ost 1s S 18 for Town Hall members and $25 for guests. For rescrvauo ns or m ore informataon call 759-6618 o r (213) 628-814 1. Ubrarlan r~tlr~m~nt party . Mesa Verde Library wall host a retire ment party fo r branch ma nager Mary Anne Zook from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m . Wed nesday. The handbell choir from Red Hall Lutheran Church will perform at 7 p.m. 'The library 1s at 2969 Mesa Verde Drive East c~uM~. · .An sal~ at Gold~n W~st Coll~g~ Golden West College will host 1ts holiday an sale from 10 am to 3 pm and 6 to 9 p.m Wednesday at the campus. 15744 Golden West St .. HunUnJtonBcach Patntin~. ceramics. sculptures and o ther an works by faculty and students wall be on sale in the Fine Ans Patio Ponaonc; of the ..ak proceeds wall benefit the G WC Fine Ans Galler). The Gothard St reet parking lot pro\ ides eas) access to the Fine An~ Patao. For more infor- matio n call at 895-8358. Gard~n club luncheon The South ( oast Gard en Club wall have ats Pointscrna luncheon at 11 :30 am Wednesday at El Adobe restaurant, 18191 Cam ino Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano The Sa n Clemente H igh School Madng.als. under the direction of Julie Barron a nd accom· panicd by p1an1st JoAn n Williams, wall e ntertain. Fashwn coordinator Shirley Ann Foushee will m oderate a fashion show of clothing from four different shops. Door pnzes will be awarded. Proceeds from the luncheon wall go to the N1auel Boun1tal Pre\Crve Do nation as S 15. For rt'!i<:rvauons or more 1nformat1on call 496-0244 Kappa Kappa Gamma party The Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae Assoc1a- t1on o f Southern Orange ( ounl) 1s holding 11s annual holiday luncheon at 10 30 am Thurs<ia) 1n Corona dcl Mar A general meeting and gift exchange will take place All member'i are welcoml' to attend For reservations or more information l'all Barbara Tappan at 759-9332 or Janet Lynn at 722-1364. lnt~rlor d~slgn school op~n hous~ Cahfomaa College of lnten or Design wall have an open house from I to 6 p.m. Fnday. Th~ school o ffers a beginning inten or design pravam for those who wo uld like to decorate their own ho mes, as well as a state-approved c~n1ficatc pravam for those who want to make a career of mtenor des18Jl. Tours wall be offered and student work wall be Oil display. Instructo r Joan Messenger will speak Oil "Color Trends for the 90s." T hose interested may also part1c1pate in a gtf\ exchange. Holiday refreshments w11l be served The school 1s also collecta ng gif\s for Orange- wood Home for Battered Children. Those who wish arc asked to bn ng a new. unwrapped. dressy o utfit for a child I 5 months to 8 ycan or donate to the La Casa fund. For more infonnataon call the school at 540-1210. T he school 1s a t 2915 Redhill Ave .. 8-201. Costa Mesa. (. \ I, J: '\ D ·\ H Monda r, Dec. 1 l • 6:30 p.m . Cet&a Mesa Pl••••1 Com-ma.ea.., council chambers. 77 Fair Drive. • 6:30 p.m . C..&a Mesa CUy Ceacil, special hearing on city's revised G eneral Plan, fifth floor , conference room , Civic Center, 77 Fair Dnve. • 7:30 p.m . Newport Beadl City CoacU, council chambers, 3300 Newpon Blvd. Tuesday, Dec. 12 • 6:30 p.m. lnlH Ctty Coudl. council chambers, I Civic Center Plaza. • 6 p.m. La.-. Beeell City c..ucrr. c.ouncil chambers, SOS F"orcst Ave. • 7:30 p.m. La.-. Buell Ualfld SdMel D11trtct ._,.. •f Eiecatao., district offioc. 5SO Blumonl St DAILY PILOT /Monday. Oiei I 11Der 11. .. Aa '1 \ k I' f ~ I 111 f~ H \ D l Story teller always leaves a message ly DllOttAH A . SAKAMOTO The fourth-g nade class was tran,fonncd when Charles Feinbt:ra walked an. The way students' faces bnghtened as they clapped their hands, v1s1tors would think Santa Clau-. )USt came into the classroom at Wh1tt1er ~hool an Costa Mesa. He could be Santa, minus the beard. T his gentle man filled the chaldrens' day with stones. 1maginat1on and dreams. "Ha. Mr F-c1nberg," about 30 children chanted The\ were all \males So was Feinberg · "How 1s the most wonderful class in the world th1\ morning·r he asked "I'm not here for 30\thang el\e but fun ~ you ready for (un'' O K get )Our laugh m uscles read''" It's 9: 15 a m and the children "C:re all gig k s u f-e1 nberg prepared to dell\cr a message on truth ~k didn't prl·ach. hut read a \to~ .. I he flnnl 1pal'<, "'ew Clothe!>" The pupal\ pa'11upa11: in the stor) tell· ing b~ r~peat1ng ddlil ult "ord s. answering 4ue\t1on\ and lrea11ng <;(·enc~ from the book a<.cord1ng to h~1nberg's 1nstrucuon\. The SIJ-)t'ar-olJ n·11rcd hhtory profe'isor from < olumh1a l ' n1 ver'>ll Y throws ham<;tlf 1010 thl· '''")·acting out the character ~r Hund~ h~ 1ump1ng up and do""· \1mllua11ng ronfu!>1on and fnatratwn and l'' cntualh JO~ and pnde as he honor'> a \oung \tullcnt "ho told the truth The children laughl·<l at thl' lunn~ pan., and pan1upatl'd a\ I l'tntx·rF a\kl'd lhl'm QUC'>llOn\ dunng thl' \tell"\ E'en their teal hl·r \Cl t .11 hl·r lll''>k and lastent.'d attcn11,eh to thl' 1.1k Charles felnberg, 80. reads to 4th grade pupll1 at Whittler School In Costa Meu. "You \l:C \hl· onh kn1:"' the: truth Don't ~ou a~rct· that thl· truth 1\ thl· onf\ thing 10 tell'" hl· J\kl·d thl' grnup fhl'~ all agreed A'> l-c1nhcrl\ kit 1tw mom hl' g..t'l' hug'> and !>hook ham!\ \1Jn' pupil' g;cH· him a "high fi,l ... J OJ laughed a\ hl' 1wned them 1n their \l}k ot farl·v.cll lie v.1\hcJ them goodh~l' and km·" thl·m O\ nallll' He prom1\l:d to rl·turn .ind g;tH' t"o educational mJga11ne' 111 thc ll',1lhn 111 give IO thl· ho~ .ind girl "ho ll\ll'nctl thl' most a11cnt1,eh and lould an"'•"l'r 4u1'\· taom about thl' '>ton Fe1nhcrg. a 'l'"' rort Bl'Jl h re<,1,knt tx."giln lorn1ng 111 \\. h1tltl'r 'xhnol lfl )ear\ ago at thl· u1g1ng 111 h" v.1k J '-l·v.pon- Me..a l ntlicd \l hool l>l\trtll nur~ He on~analh tx·~n v.orl..1ng v.nh the gifted thlldrl·n hut lx·l.inw rnnn:rnl'd ahout thl' otht•r \IUdl'lll\ .,.,ho ""l'ft•n't ren:1' mg h1'> \l'n 1u·' "I "'Cnl Ill lhl' rmnup.tl JnJ "-IHJ 'I want to got IJ" 111, 1.1" .inJ gl·t 10 I.no" the \ludl'nl\ I "Jilt 111 rl·.1d 111 thl'm · .. he said F-einhcrg Pil l..' ht' ''"n'' lJn-fulh l k ..aad he "••nl' h" \lunn 111 tl'Jl h lhl' chlldrl'O J \Ion thJI "111 l.t\I thnr l'nl1fl' h\t''> .. A II nn \l11rll'\ h.1' l' u nq Ul'\llltn.thl\ a me~..ag~. hut 1hn rill add up t1l ttil· samt' thing. hJ\l' faith 1n ~our'"-·11 and bche\C 10 \OUf\l'lf .. hl· \.llll Feanhcrg \:.ml hc 'J'>l'nlh houf\ p1l king and choosing thl· hool.. le> rtad for that da' ·"1t tall'\ .i 1111 of t1ml· I go to tht· hhraf) .rnd horro1.1o the hool.. 1f "'l' ha' l' 11 here That v.a' I t an 1l'll thl' kllh the' can rind the bo~1k 1n thl'll lahran Or I bu) a lµt of hool..\. v.h1ch I g1\C a"'a' I bu\ about I 1)()(1 h<K.llt..) a \Car .. he .-.aid "I 'tr: II> 3111'lt.'al to d11lcrcnl r>t:11pk for book\ I'll he glad lo dl'dn thrnl up and gne thcm to m~ da\\l'\ .. F-c1nlx·rg '>l rc...,ed tht• 1mpon.tntl' ol book\ l,.i\I ~l'llf hc tt,.l\l' ·'"'"' t,()O llH · uonanl·' "P1tl.. up ,1 hook II "ill t:tl..l· '"u 11u1 on a magK l df"JX't , tal l· \11u to J1fkrrn1 part\ ot tht· 1.1oorld 11 t.ikc\ '"u pl3ll., · ··1 here " a pnde in ha' ang a hool.. I ha'e kid' "'ho u>me to me eH''; da~ '\1r f c1ntx·rg. Lan I ha\e a hook'' I 3\lt.. them 1.1oh\ dnd thc' \.J\ thn dun't ha'e bool~ 1( I lan "-" 1h.11 "·I' tht·ir tir\I p<l\'>(."SW>n and I ~q· II 111 lhl'm tht>n that 1<. tx:au11ful · H<.' "3' pl.inn1nF 111 rl'.HI "I ht· I rnJJO H11r..e" t•> .rnothl'I dJ" thJI J.i, "I am gornti. 10 rl«t1I thfl'C 'tc•flt'\ Jhc1u1 tht• {Jfl'Ck'> anJ lhl'll tUltUrl' Ito thl kid\ hr ..aid "I "ant thcm 111 k.1rn Jhc1u1 charauer ( hildrcn ,11\o dra" ptl lurn Jht1ut the stone\ h·antx·rg real!\ to tht'm I ft• lhl"n collcll'l tht·m all and v.ntt'\ lOmml'Ot'i on them before ht· rl·turn\ thl•m lht• tullo"' · 1ng meeting "look at thl' "'n11ng nn 1h1\ one loul.. at the color 'ov. '>he ,., d ha pp' per'>on " ht' 'Mild The dra"' 1 ngs tkp1t tl'd J ''"r. ht reJd on &ra' 11a11on f ' er. thing 1n the dra"' ings '-A.Cf<' fh 1ng an tht· Jtr l-e1nhcr~ 1n·.1h them hkc:' pnl'ek\\ "'Ork\ 111 an He "'nte'> per.,onal lOmme-nt' 11n t"3lh of them ") ou do linl· "urk 'n ur km·r ang 1., hcau11tul and \our Jn ,, u1lortul Keep up thl' good v.oirk. ht· "roll' on onl' paper "I don't ha\t' In do 1h1~ thl\ I\ not nl\ JOb I do lhl\ 10 rt'dth Jmund ham lo It'll him that I lare .thout "h.11 hr don" he said "\1~ whok ~Jtnt ,, 111 t'ntnura&l'" Ft'inberg \II'> 1n h1' dt•\k 1n d 4u1ett·r pan of the hhrar. and pull' 11ut d file from his dc-.k It " tilled "'llh ktter. ol thank\ and IO\l' Imm pa,1 \ludenl\ One 'itudent "'rote to th.in!.. him lur the gift ul htt'raturt' and ..aid he kn11"' 11 1.1.a\ \1r Feinberg "h11 &3'l' him th.u gill '.\.1an' tc:-achef\ haq· \C."nt 1hank-\11u notes 10 F-c:-1nt>t:rg lur thc ~c:-at 1nllul·nt'c he ha~ hdd on tht· dJ'~' PMenl\ Jl\41 behc'e ht· ,, the:' fl'3\nn thl'lr 'ipan1\h speaking l h1Jdcrn learncJ tu real! and "'ntc f:.ng h\h tn 11nl' \edl fe1nhcrg and h1\ 1.1o1k lkkn ha\l· a hall on tht• \\ h11t1er 1.:c1mpu\ ded1latl·d 10 them. Feinberg Hall hou\(.'' lomputcr-. that teach 1hc pupil ano1ha u\t·lul 'ilt..lll ICl aad them in their future "This hall belong\ to tht· kad\ ol \\hat· tier ~hool. 11·~ all 1he1r' .. he "11d Typical '88 UCI graduate earns S24,000 annually, survey shows DEBORAH A. SAKAMOTO 0..,, -(Off•-- Thc typical I 9tUS l '< I graduate I'> "or~­ mg full time:. camcng a ~earl) "31ar: nl $24,100 and cmplo)C'd 1n bu\iness or industry, according to a un1,er;1t) SUrvC} The ( are<."r Planning and Plan·mc:nl Cen ter mailed out :!.(>29 career \urHH to UCI graduates an December 1988 ·and received 1.091 replies. for a 52 percent retum rate. Nearly 66 percent of th<." r<.'spondcnts said they were: employed full time. whale 13 pcrct'nt reponcd attending gradual<.' school onl y. Almost 18 percent were employed pan tame 11nd clt1'1(' to 4 per- cent were unemploy<."d Tht' 'iurvey 1s designed to help in devasma career planning programs for students, said Gladys De Necochea, the center's as51sta nt d irector Four years ago. 48 percent of the 19115 ataduates s.a1d they were t'mplO}ed full time wtule 24 pcrttnt were in K hool o nly. Thirteen percent reponed working and attend ing classes and 3 percent wcrt' unemployed Since 1985. salan es have been 1ncrcas- ina steadily, w11h the tcch n1cal. enganccr- ina and computer science araduates re- ponang the h1ghe'>I int:ome' h1r e~am­ pk. an I Ql(.5 a lomputl'r \.t:1enn· gradual<' was makinj S:!~ 8Ci \ Thi., ..alar. 1n- crcaS('d to S30.4<JO en I "KM Comm un1lat111n\ and an' ~radualC''> ""Cnt from S l6 llf)(J 1n l"X'i Ill s _11'i001n 1988 TyPC's nl cmplo' rnt·n1 '.trtl'U t:un\1dn· ab" from .,ear to \l'3r In I "Kl( \() percent rePt'ncd h<.·1ng m a 1clhn1ral \ aned from 5" PC'ru·nt en I "I\(, l1l fl~ perc("nl in 11.iKK Computer scaeme cng1n«"nntt and .in' graduatc\ continue .t\ lht· k a't hkC'h to pu~ut' tunha stud' In 19 . 4 'i perrent nl ttradu,11e' "11d tht'\ "'<.'re 1n \(.h1K1I rather lull nr f'Jn 11mc. De Nooxht•a Ytd \\ h1k mo't graduate 'ltudC'nl\ haH reponed o'er the past tour 't'.tr\ 1 hat Sine~ 1985, technical, ~ngln~~rlng and comput~r scl~nc~ graduat~s have r~ported th~ hlg~st ln- com~s. pos1t1o n. an 198 . 11 "ll' ~:' rx-rccnt In 1988. 11 percent '31d the)' '-A.ere in man- agement. whale o nl) 7 percent reponC'd that level in 1985 Commun1ca11on' Jnd ans ha\t' held stead) at about 4 rx-rcrnt the past four _)'cars..._ while health profes411onal'I have increased from 4 perct'nt in I 985 to 8 percent 1n 1988 8 1ological sc1<."nccs graduat<."s ronttnuC' to compnK the largest pcrct'nt of lf1ldU· a tes pursu1 na advanced degrtts In the past four )Ca~. this rcprcKntauon has tht') weft' \Ct'kcng a master\ dcgre"C. th<' percentage 1!> dropping. from '7 rx-rrrnt an 1985 to 32 percent an I Q88 ThoK seeking a la" degree ha\C in· crcakd shghtl). from ., pl"rl'Cnt an IQ~ Ci to I 0 perttnt an IQ ll Tho~ pur'iutng a medical profes~1onal d<.'&f'Ct" hl\.' t' Ouc· tuated consaderabh . from 14 pcrccnt 1n 1985 to 22 pcl"C't'nt an I 988 Another sune) wtll be mailed this month to 1989 graduat~. u't June. UCI awarded 2,883 bachelor's, master's, doc- toral and medical dqJ"t'n. f t'inberg ~ de\l ·~ lro°"de·d "•th \OUths v.ho rnme tu hug him or ~halt..c ha<. hand ~tan ' -.tudenl\ drop ti ... to ..a' a quick hello Ft'anht-rg '' oh' 111u\I ~ the hool's father tigure He lardulf\ h't<"n~ to each student and o lTers hook~ and ad' ace ··People a'>k me "'h~ I don·1 go back to tt'al.'h1ng lOllcgl' \\ h' don't I go dM'" here V. t'll th!\ I'> "ht'rt' the gro1o1.1h rnins th1 <. 1~ 11 nght here .. he said. htnbcrg \aid he '" rnncemt'd about the other S(hool'> "'ho don't ha'c someone lake him to <.pt.·nd 11me "'1th the pupils and rC'ad to them and 1s constanll' appealing. tu t>thc:r older adults to h~lp a't their ltX.al ":hool<, "\1' namt' l'i not "'nttt'n up here -. tort, er I "ould ltke C'\er. school to h.a'c one ta 'oluntc.-cri I t'Ct·I· lon<.'I\ b«ausc the uthcr I.ad' are nut being t.ak~ care of." he· <.aad ·1 ha' t' ~l'n u'<d 1n \pc'Ctal cla~ for <>pet.aal t 3'>C.''\ a' a re"ard for students:·'hc ..aid laughing "I am nut u~d to Ix-mg a re...,ard " "I'm XI• rm hcr.e ht-c-au!l.C I grc~ I grt'" to he a hum.in being here .. be said "(iet out here ( ome to an' school whert \Ou h't' TC'achl·r\ and p·noc1pals nttd \OU Help share the capac•t) -.h.Jch \Ou',e been 10 V. hethcr \OU kno1o1. com- puten or SCIC'OCT' Or ) OU ma~ kno1o1. a lot about the st.a~. bnng that y,,orld into childhood" Hilntington to hike fees for developers The Huntington &ach Cat~ Counol has agreed to raise de' eloper fees on ne~ homt"S for parlt acqua~uon and develop- ment The counol'~ aC'laon last "eek ra1fC1 the fee to S' 1211 per singk famah home and S:! 164 for a multiple fam1l). untt. f hc rurren1 I~ that v.ef'(: t'Stabhshcd 10 198:! call for a S2.JQ5 fee for a n~­ famtl) ho me and S I 16:' for muluple famal) unit In other business. the: l'OunC1l agreed to ,pend S55.000 to bu' an 18-passenaa van that will provide frc-c passenac-r tcr· v1~ to the pier Cit) '\dmmastrator Paul Cook said the Cit) C'ventuall · may buy two or three add1t1onal tram for shutlk scrv1~ at the ne" hotels and alona the beach The council also appro,cd kttpina Walnut A.'enue 10 the downtown ~ bctWttn Main and 6th strttU 60 ftt't wtde instead of wtdening 1t to 80 fttL The dcc1s1on was a '1ctory for propttt)' owners alo n.1 Walnut U'Ct't wbo UJd their prosxrt) could havt been shced up by \he street w1den1na. A quest for the tru .breakfast of champions No food fi&hts between the kids Of' Shann• the same 1c:kals 1n brcak- primal sc:rcams from Mom. Is It fist food IS one or the baste tenets of potlible com flakes grnerate a a food maniqc. kinder. and grntlcr America? You t°s not 1urpn1ina pctfKt1oniat don't att that Ir.and of serenity from ooupks VIVlt.lte to a breakfast food the auaar-ctattd d onu1,..nd-<l0fftt called Just Rtaht. Not OK or Almo1t ....._ lliabt. Ot\ i'he other hand this · Who hasn't heard or that famous wouktn't appeal to the frt"e·•h«lina cenal that is uffte1ently mament· Beby Boomert who prefer a Fort)'· illl to mate ledate punts let hkc Phat otftal they can kttp 1n a di ... lkidl •in? The only daftlC' in con· aect brown wrapper 1n then cup- ...... \00 many of that .,..., board • ._ aa thl"OWl!'I out 1 b1p on ,_,. And then thttt arc the notWtsa .a11ti llefd. Whtie I'~ tried *ii tNIPt who ~ fOr I Wte of U Y- --iu small ~ ....,.. .. to th .. wtth Old Fuhioeed an IL Hftl ...... with dipity. i1 Pfod9clld .. tlbout ()kt fuhioeed Oai .... CIQWCllll ..ult. I reoovaed •a• wMdl lllllt beeft redMco'atd fbf IM ti _, lail ,cMith to buy I pair OI · -;c-'b--time? JilM. ~ ~~ rc1 bt ..._ ll .- ............ oiti.lk ............ -~ .. I ~II 0 .::.:-.:.:: l::i.~=-Hiii "r 'r'; 1£•t1 ............ ..... • ..._... • A ....... II I • .......... • . I J . ' M Or..-COMl DAILY PtlOT/ Mondlly. Oloember 11, 1111 Non-Communists lead Czechoslovakia PRAOUE. Cacbollovalda (AP) -A tovenunent controlled by non-Commwlisu took power Sunday for lbe ftnt time in 4 l years. and teM of ~-ncb of people jammed tbe nal:ioa •1 ttft!ell to celebrate the hi,.. &Orie victories of their peaceful rev- olutioG. I President Gustav Husak, the na- tion's last old-tuard Communist leedcr, rniancd after swearina in the new tovemment. which includn two men who were penccutcd u ditlideilts until ju1t two weeks lfO. In a key compromise, the lntenor Mi.niltry, which runs the nation's bated~ and uniformed police, will be run by a leadina dissident. tbe new Communist premier and a Coai.munist Party member pr0p0sed by the opposition. The new 21-member government contains 10 Communists, two of whom enjoy oppositilon support, 1even noo-pany members and two members each from the small Soc:i.alist and People's ~es. which recently broke ties with the Com- mwlists. More than I 00.000 people crammed Prague's Wenceslas Square 10 hear opposition leader Vaclav Havel, 53, and other dissi- dents who battled jail and harass- ment for 13 years catalogue the successes of their fight for democ- racy. Dalal Lama ~ccepts Nobel Peace Prize OSLO, Norway (AP) -The Dalai Lama accepted the Nobel Peace Prize on Sunday and said that de- spite Chjnese rebuffs. he rcm&Jned committed to non-violence in scclc- in& an end to China's 40-year oc- cus-tion of his Himalayan home- land. TibcL ''I accept the pnze with profound ptitudc on behalf of the oppressed everywhere and for all those who stnaale for freedom and work for world peace,'' he sajd at a ceremony attended by_ King Olav V and gov- ernment officials. At a white-tic ceremony m Stock- holm, Sweden. Kmg Cati XVI Gustaf awarded gold Nobel med- allions to nine laureates who won the priz-es for literature. chemistry. physics, medicine and economic sci· enoes. Six were Amencans. Spanish writer Camilo Jose Ccla received the prize for literature. Americans J. Michael Bishop and Harold E. Varmus won the Nobel Prize for medicine: Americans Nor-man F. Ramsey and Hans G. Dcbmelt and Wolfgang Paul of West Germ.any for physics.; Americans Sidney AJtman and Thomas R. Cech for chemistry. and Trnn Haavelmo of Norway for econ- omics. The ()aJaj lama wd Cluna's ~ Elsewhere in Eastern Europe 9y The ~ ftreu Other najor developments Sunday in Eastern Europe included: , &AST GERMANY -New Communist Party chief Greaor Gyii said he wanu a clear separation of s-rtY µd J.Ovemment functions. while a statc- run labor union demands the riaht to strike. The four World War II Allies -Franc:ie. Britain, the U nited States and the Soviet Union -say they will meet~ to discuss the role of Berlin in East-West affairs. a Alli.A -More than S0,000 people rallied in Softa in the biaest pro«mocracy demonstration since the Communisu consolidated power 43 yean aao. Speakers urged the Communists 10 speed up the pace of reforms and some demanded an end to their constitutionally 1uarantecd monopoly on power. SOVIET UNION -President Mikhail S. Gorbachev warned the Communist Pany leadership that their colleques' fall from power in Eastern Europe oroves ther must quickly solve Soviet domestic problems or face similar r.excesses. • • Estonians and Latvians voted in local elections expected Jo result in defeat for huge numbers of Communist officials. In Moscow, S,000 marched in below-zero temperatures in suppon of reformist parliamentarians and were left alone by police. But a smaller group of1everal hundred Democratic Union supponen wu forcibly hustled off Pushkin Square after about 20 minutes, after s~ken ripped up photo- srapbs of Gorbachtv and Soviet founder Vladamir Lenin. WASHINGTON -Secretary ofState James A. Baker 111 said any effort to rush the reunification of East and West Germany would risk instability and violence. Speaking on the ABC-TV program "This Weck with David Brinkley" before leaving for urgent talks with allied leaden on the rapid changes sweeping the Communist East. Baker also predicted an increasin& emphasis on the political aspect of the NATO alliance as its miHtary miaht becomes less important in the new atmosphere. But he said there is no danger that U.S. forces will pull out entirely. 11te D .... lMlla wlltl .... 'JYrv*.. a...n-n of the Nobel C01111Wlttee, tollowlng the ,.••• ,., ... preaenuttlon. jection of his 1987 peace plan /was forcing him to rethtnk his approach and that he might withdraw his proposal. But. he added: "Our struggle must remain non-violent and frtt of hatred.'' The Dala1 Lama. born Ten.zm Gyastso. was chosen at age 5 as the l"Clncamation of Tibet's god-king. making him religious and political bead of the isolated mountain na- uon. He Oed mto exilt in India after a failed upnsing in 1959. .The Dala1 Lama. 54. has called for Tibetln autonomy over domestic mattel'3, with China retaining con- trol over m1litaf) and d1plomat1c affairs. Be11ing has rejected the for- mula. In what was S«n as a protest. China's ambassador to Norway. L1 Baocheng. left the ceremony as the Dalai Lama amved. U.S. officials' meeting with Chinese leader draws criticism BEUlNG (AP) -Senior leader Del)I Xiaopina o n Sunday told U.S. National Security Advaser Brent Scowcroft that their two nations must overcome strained relations beca'4te .. we share common desires and sbarc common needs." Dena's commenu came at the end of an unannounced o~y visit by Scowcroft., the most senior Amen- can ot6c:ial to visit China SJ nee its military crackdown on the pro- demoa1cy movement in June. Scowcroft., accompanied by Depu- Sec:retary of State Lawrence viliL • later flew to Tokyo and apilnete officials o n the Neitber side announced specific meuwa to improve relations but oae U.S. oflicial said, "I think very HI \1111 H good sroundworlc was laid." In Wuhinaton. Secretary of State James A. Baker 111 defended Presi- dent Bush's decision 10 send the delqation six months after China ~ its crackdown. Speakin& on ABC-TV's "This Week with David Brinkley" pro-sram. Baker sa.id , "The president ... deplores the trqcdy of Tiananmcn Square. But he's of the view that we shollkln't run the risk of oompound-ina that trqedy by ttylnJ to isolate China from the intemauonaJ com- munity." Fi&btina criticism that the move was a jveaway to thc-OUnese gov· emment without any improvement in human ri&hts. Baker insisted Odna still will be asked to make cbaQees before relations can return 10 the way they were before Bc1jmg in June crushed student protests in and around Tiananmcn Square. Sen. Oaibome Pell. D-R.I .. chair- man of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. was among the con- ~ional critics of the trip. He said. 'Al the very time that freedom is sweepina through Eastern Europe. we should be sure. the U nited States stands for freedom and democracy in Asja as well." Chinese dissidents in the United States also criticized the Bush ad- ministration Sunday. "We arc seeing 1h_c fag t~\ tbcrc...iu split between Consress and the Bush adminis- tration on the issue." Yan Jiaqi. chairman of the Front for a Demo- cratic China. said through an inter- preter. Tbc embattled Communjsu have sranlcd stunni"' conceuiona. in- cludina the openana ol' borden. the prJ>mite of free elections and the elimination of their monopoly on power. Czechoslovakia's Parliament meeu Tuesday to pick Huuk's suc- oeuor, and both Havel and Alex- ander Dubcek. 68, the popular leader of the crushed 1968 reform movement. have said they would accept the post if nominated. "We haven't won yet." Havel told the cheerina CTowd in a nationally televised speech. "But it is a arcat success. Jivina us great hope. This is a success for all of us. both our nations. Without this spontaneous awakening. this success would cwt have been achieved." "This ~c.eful revolution was ... against v1olence. din, mafias, privi- leaes. persecutions," Havel said. "Let us preserve its purity, peace- fulness, love and merry. fnendly flai .. r. "The years-long. deadly silence of a humiliated people has been drowt1ed out by a multi-.voiced popular choir,'' he said. Referring to the police crackdown on students Nov. 17 that energized the nation's pro-democracy move- ment. he said: ... After an anificial halt. history began moving with breathtaking speed. Panel says abortion data was censored WASHINGTON (AP) -A con- ircssional panel charged Sunday that the federal government has fai l- ed 10 report evidence of the relative safety of abonions for women. A repon released by a House committee also claimed the federal Centers for Disease Control has censored research on abortio n. and uJ)ed the Department of Health and Human Services to assure public health research is not affected by poHticaJ judgments It also recommended mcrea.scd federal suppon for contraceptive re- search to help decrease the 1.5 million abortions obtained by American women every year. "This report provides 1mponant evidence of the relative safety of abortion for women. since more than 90 percent of abortions per- formed in the U.S. arc much safer than pregnancy and childbirth. and even the most dangerous types of legal abortions arc equal 1n risk to carrying a pregnancy to term:· said Rep. Ted Weiss. D-N.Y. Has statement was tncludcd with the rcpon b)' the Ho use G overn- ment Operauons Committee. based on an investigation by its subcom- mittee on human resources and in- tergovernmental relations. which Weiss chairs. The panel conducted an investiga- tion into the efforts by the Reagan administration 10 have its surgeon general, C. Everett Koop, prepare a report on the health cff ccts of abortion on women. After conduct- ing meetings and research. Koop in January wrote to Rcapn stating there was insufficient information on which to base a repon. A draft of Koop's unreleased re- port was made public by the sub- committee in March. It concluded that valid scientific studies have documented that modem abortion is a mcdkally safe proocdure and doe5 not increase a woman's subsequent risk of inf'Crtility, millC:&rl"iaae or premature births. It concluded that the frequency of long-term psycho-l<>f.c:al dfccts is UDCCr1ain. however. n reJeasina its final report, t.be panel included material from tran- scripts of 27 confidential meetinp Koop held with anti-abortion and abortion·ri&hU advocates. (\I II OH'I \ HUii i' Boat breaks up off San Diego SAN DIEOO -One perlOD WU killed and two OCben were listed u miuina when their l S-foot fishin& boat broke up tomewba'e outlide San Dieto Hamor. the Cout Guard said Sunday. Tbc small ~t, with three people aboard, left the harbor on a fisbin& t17P Saturday, said Cout Guard Chief Wamnt Officer Oen Dcwell. . · Pieces of the boat were spotted ftoatin& in the war.er off ~ant Loma early Sunday by a vessel passina t.hrouah the area, Dewell aaid. A Cout Guard rescuccrew found the body of an unidentified adult male alona the Point Loma shoreline about three hours later. AIDS protesten at Catholic churches toS ANGELES -Protesters Sunday tarseted four Southland Catholic churches u ~ of nationwide rallies apin11 the c~"!f'Cb'• stand on AIDS education. Ball Ca~biAnco. a member of AIDS Coabuon to Unleash Power (ACTUP) L.A. said that Los Angeles Archbishop Roser ~ahooy hu s~ the Catholic Church toward a rigjd stand on cducauon abo.ut acqu1~ immune deficiency sr,ndrome. "The only way 10 stop (AIDS) 11 educauon and more education. • be said. . .. About 75 people protested at each off~r churches: St. Francis of Aws1 in Silv~. Lalce, Our Lady Queen of Anaels m downtown ~ An&elcs. The Good Shepherd in Beverly HiJJs and Blessed Sacrament tn Hollywood, Capobianco wd. No arrests were made. '\ ·\'1'10'\ \I. RHIJ:t ·s Liver recipient ~as more surgery CHICAGO -The young recipient of the nation's tint Hvina~o.nor Hver transplant successfully underwent surgery Sunday for the second ''!'le in two days 10 stop bleeding on the surface of her new orpn, hospital officials said. Twcn1y-1wo-month-old AJy~ Smith w~ taken to sursery at .10 a.'!'· Sunday after an operation the night before failed 10 stop the bleedang. said Mary Fctsch. a spokeswoman for the University of Chicago Hospitals. 1:"he bleeding was controlled and Alyssa was out of surgery at 2 p.m., accordmg \o Dr. Christoph Broclsch. who headed the team that performed the transplant and subsequent operations. Hunting bison flear Yellowstone allowed HELENA Mont. -Bison that blunder over the li ne from Yellowstone National Park 'are fair game for hunters again this winter. but park offi cials expect the harvest 10 be smaller tb~n the 500 take~ last season. Just h~w many of the big. furry. dumb beasts will. wand« outside the pai:k boundancs to graze depends on how severe the wmter 1s 'V!d bow pinched the food supply withm the park. officials say. Hunters aren't ~llowed 10 shoot bufTaJo in the park. Dr. Don Davis. a Texas i\&M University specialist in the highly infectious bactenal disease. said the slaughter of wandenna b1wn is necessary to prevent the spread of brucellosis among Montana cattle herds. He said previous claims ~park officials that the bison bug could not be transm itted to cattle ha~oven false. Woman gives away th".lusands In cash C HICAGO -Christmas came early at a motel bar near Midway Aa~n when a well-dressed wortlan walked in. wished everyone a happy bohday and started passing out SI 00. S 50 and S20 bills to patrons. Judy Kelly. of Boston. said she was dnving across the country competing against 40 or 50 other ~ople m a national "treasure hunt" that required her to give money awa). according to a truck dnver at the bar who asked to remain anonymous. But the gentroslly seemed suspicious to tavern owners. who c.alled police. Officers questioned the woman and took her 10 a local mental health center for an evaluation but did not arrest her. police said. Bush: Christmas '89 to be remembered WASHINGTON -President Bush says new openings for democncy and peace aro und the world make this Christmas "a moment to be ~membered." "For 40 years the world has known only a gnm and joylcu peace, hard and cold." the president said Sunday. "But now, evcrywbeTC, you sec signs of a warmer. more hopeful peace. hke a candle which flaclcers tn the djstance. II beckons. encourages. ca.sis a bright glow in the world's darkest comers." Bush spoke o n stage at the end of the taping of an NBC televi1fon special, "Christmas in Washington." that will air Dec. 18. MOHl .D HHIJ:J'S Campaign march tums Into riot MASATEPE, Nicaragua -A campaign march by hundreds of opposition supponcrs turned mto a n ot Sunday. Police sa.id al least one penon was k.illed and witnesses said 20 people were injured. Two vehicles we~ burned. and a private home and the local headquaners of the rulina Sandinista Front were sacked. The fighting broke out during a rally by the National Opposition Union, or UNO, when a v oup of about 20 Sandinista loyalists and opposition followers exchanged insults and then blows in this town of I S,000 peo ple about 30 miles south of Managua. Thousands moum slaln women MONTREAL -Thousands of anevina men and women filed by a row of white coffins Sunday. payillJ respecu to the 14 women killed by a 1unman shoutina "I bate fcmimsts" durina Canada's wont mass murder. The ftower.<fraped coffins of eight of the victims ;:.eJlaocd in the University of Montreal's ball of honor. and moumen by quietly in sin&le Jilc.. "It's a shame that such a thing could bal>pen in thjs world," said Yvon Lechanc.e, a phone company manager. He said he and bis family, includin& two univenity students, were there u "part of the human family." A funeral service for nine o f the victims will be held this momina at the Notre Dame cathedral. The other families scheduled private ceremonies. __ S_a_nta Ana winds to bring sunny sky today Tiit A((ll Wta\1" , • 'O<t<lH •0t "(iOI'\ MO">,,~ C' •mt•• I I 10,,j.,,J • • • ••• ~-_..... ..... ~ .. .. .... II .. ,, llilonf""Y u 40 ~ 64 .II Newport k«" Ml so ~ &4 u Ol'lt•lo u 4 1 , ........ 71 44 ,_ .. 4 1 ......... •J lt ---61 41 ....._.C"1 .. 44 ....,.... .. ... Saa-.. J1 llllw '° ,. S.,.. ........ IO H J1 w.a... 1J 40 t::=.. .. 41 H .. "'' """" 61 .. S...J91t H 4 1 S..111111111 61 " ..... ,.,.. .. to s-a...._ .. " ..... c_ •• M '-'~~ 11 JI ,.. .... • PO .. ........ u n ....... " n -v-, J1 --.. .. = •• )4 • .. ID ....... ~ u JJ U.S. ae.pa .................... ,, ... "' -·=i~ .. " q • II '· = II .. • II • " ,, .. .. .__ 74 4) llMlllO u 11 ...... on.VI lS 01 CMlllOu I) -IJ c-... 16 " CIWlintOft.l C l4 )6 C~WV'a 41 )0 C~.N C 40 14 c~ ... J4 (,.,.._ 1) IJ C'*'fO JS 11 c~ JJ H ~ u 1J c.-... ~ J1 n c.......s 47 JJ , ....... 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" ··--· :.t: II Si: .. JJ ---:rr· .. .. i .. u :.-~ --, ., " ... ,_ ....... ....... ., c. n " ==' ... ., .. •• •• F .. • I .. ~ a u .. ·.· s Unusual ocedure r stores man's skull · ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP)· -Twp l>IM&ic suraeons worked a miracle for I youna man from Bolivia who bad a quarter of his brain and part of hit lkuU blown away by a bullet five yean qo. "I can't believe it, it's incrediWe." Pacho Penaloza, 21 , said through interpreter Jose Trejo. Penaloza, who flew home a week qo, said he's eager to return to school. la 1984, in his hometown of La Paz, Bolivia, Penaloza and a friend were lookina at the friend's father's pis10l when it fired. The buUet ealel'ed just above Penaloza's left ~ and emerged from the back· of bi• bead. He survived surgery, but his pr~­ nosis was pim. doctors told his mother, Elvira Rosales. Paralysis of his ri&ht side was expected, and she said sbe was told he wouldn't speak apin. He was in a coma for two months. 8-lt when he ·awoke, his efTons to speak, regain his strength and write with his left hand astonished his family and doctors. The major prob- lem, which his doctors were in- capable of treating. was that his brain was extremely vulnerable, cov- ered on the left side by only a thin layer of scar tissue. When his mother heard that Ana Trejo, was vi\1ting from St. Paul and working on an adoption prO)CCt for the Children's Home Society of Minnesota, Ms. Rosales crashed a luncheon and asked her to find help for her son. Two years after the shooting. everything was arranged except the paperwork to get Penaloza out of the Pl..elc ..,..._,.. In St. P•ul, Mlnnetota wOftled • ...,_,. In rellulldl.'"'tl the llrull of PKtlo Pen.lou, 21, of ~u. who IUfferH extensive ......... to his he.ct In • , ... 9un Kddent. country, said Mrs. Trejo's husband, Jose. It was three more years before Penaloza would reach the United States. United Hqspital, where Trejo was a board member, had agreed to provide hospitalization. Joseph Skow and Frank Pilney were to perform the delicate reconstructive operation. with a neurosurgeon on standby. Finally, in July, Penaloza arrived in St. Paul. Skow and Pitney said Monday that the first step was to stretch Pacho's scalp so the) would have a flap -0f skin to cover the bone graft with which they intended to covrr his brain. Using a device more familiar 1n breast rcconstrucuon surgery, they installed an inflatablr plastic pouch called a tissue expander at the base of his skull. At weekly intervals over several months. they tnJCCted the balloon with fluid. each time stretching the scalp a little funher. When the scalp was ready. the surgeons removed a plate of bone from the right side of his head and split it longitudinally. "It's like a sandwich." said Skow. "The skull contains a layer of blood vessels between two hard shells of bone. We put the outer shell right back where we got It and grafted the other onto the other side." They also borrowed a secti on of his bottom-most right nb to fill out the skull. The final step was to stretch the expanded scalp over the bone graft to his left ear. "Once all his hair grows back the defect will be hardly noticeable:· Skow said. Neurologically, Penaloza's de- velopment continues to be promis- ing, although his nght fist remains clenched and he has a slight limp. Initially there were concerns about his shon .term memof). but those problems seem to be fading. and his speech is lucid. The changing fa Ce, and gender, of the U.S. medical profession The medical profession 1s chang- ina radically. and is soon to be dominated by women and m~onty men. Ever since 1929, and up until the mid-'70s, the medical profession was vinually an all whatc men's club. There was no significant incrcaK in women applicants to medical schools from 1929 until the early 19105. at which time women made up less than I 0 percent. However, since then there has been a steep decline an white men entering medical school, and an equally steep mcrusc in women. In 1960-75, rouJhly 34.000 men ap- plied to medical schools annually, but last year less than 17.000 ap- plied, a drop of nearly SO percent. Women applicants increased from about 4,000 to 12,000 thus keeping the tot.al number of applicants about the same. The classes m medical school arc rar.tiy approaching Kxual parity wttb women making up more than 40 percent of the student body. lo addition, the fall-off in male applicants has been primarily amona whites. There has been • 13J.- pen:ent increase in Asian Americans apptyina to medical school. The reasons for this shift arc probably economic. The incessant · crin from the public to "do some-thiaa" about both the risin& cost of m6dk:al care, and the disparity of medical care delivery to those with and without insurance are stimu- lath!& action from the ~vernment. --lbe mediciT profesiion 1s no view- ed u the economic bonanza it has If the root cause of these demo- graphic changes 1s financial. then the profession ma) have an enurel) dif- ferent "fed" 1n the next 15 \ears. Currentl> the re has been an ex- plosion 1n the use of technolog}. pnmanl) in the surg.1cal spec1aht1es. If the financial crunch begins to ~educe the use of technolog~. ph~ s- 1c1ans \A.Ill be spending mo re ume counseling and g1nng advice on in order to maintain a high quality lifestyle changes. Some sa} that of students enJcring medical schools. women are better able 10 do this you need at least 3 applicants for than men. every two available positions in the Jn shon. the demographic change schools. Without the large increase may usher m a "kinder and gentler" in women applicants. the profession profession an the next several dec- today would be in scnous trouble. adcs. If the fears of ".socialized medi-J•llaa WllUtker, M.D, autbor of cine" are scaring men away from the "Ret1enl111 He•rt Dl1eue," "Re- profcssion. that fear may be un-venbl1 Dl•bete1" <W•rner Boot1J, Justified. In Canada. the socialized ud "Reven1JJ1 He.Jib Rl1b" <P•t· medical system seems to be working um), I• director of tie Wlit»ter relatively well. In recent surveys the ffellJJeu I111fltute la Ne•port Canadian citizenship is very happy Be•cll. with their system and their death .-------------~ rates. infant mortality rates. and RUFFELL'$ bospiw monahty rates arc com- rhl':~~u~~~~t superior to those in UPHOLSTERY INC. In addition. the profession 1s still -. '•...., CMrs lllrt! in high demand as the apphcauons JIU -aa., CISTI mu&-541-115' from both meo and women have 1-----------------i been steadily increasing. (This may reflect different cultural attitudes towards medical care in Canada and the United States.) These changes of course would be applauded by feminists who can ri&htly say now that barriers to women's participation in the medi- cal profession have not only soften- ed; but tflvr-bet"n Totally JWepr away. ' J Orenge C0Nt DAILY PILOT/Mondey, ~ 11, 1911 Holiday anxiety: What to get for t~at special somebody? It wu just thr week after Thanks1ivin1 and vmons of suprplums -and Chn stmas shop- pina -danced through minds everywhere. Even those who arc most procra.stinauon-pronc staned thinki~ about what to get whom for the holidays. Some people arc easy to buy for. Tcen-aaers. for example. usually have a more than ample wtsh hst and most little kids also know exact- ly what they hope Sanui will bnng. Choosing gifts fo r others ma) be more of a problem. Because presents may be seen as reflccllH~ of how much you value a relat1onsh1p. choosing a g1f\ fo r your spouse or lover may be a loaded act1v1 ty. Just how perc~pt1ve and scns1uve arc you to his or her needs? What would he or she like to receive from you? How imaginative can you be? How much should you spend" Will the amount be consistent with what your partner will spend'> Will you be embarrassed. or does that really matter? If women think the}' worry about what to choose for their men. men seem to have an even bigger prob- lem. They can be downnght fright- ened about having their gifo re- jected, and WOrT) about feeling re- jected themselves as a result. Too many men wait for the last moment. spend too much money and bu) "anything." But a woman can help her man with his gift-bu)mg anxiety. Forget about him magicall> "knowing" JUSt what will please )'Ou G1\e the gu}' a break. The men l'\e known all sa~ ho" much they appreciate a few direct hints. Then the> feel free to "sur- pnsc" their woman wi th one of her own su1 uible choices. When I askrd one fello~ named Mike what he was planning to get his wife for Chmtmas. he smiled with o bvious relic:f. "No problem this }Car." he said. "She put a leather Jacket on hold an a store and told me ahout 1t. What a doll. I love her fo r making 1t so easy for me. I e~·en bought the matching skin as a surpnsc:" For those men whose "1 ves and girlfncnds are not as cooperative. let me help. What does }Our lad} hope you will buy for her'> Jewell). Becau\C for all but the most earth> of "om.:n. Je"elf') feels like a gif\ of lo'e Most would agree that there 1s no bcuer substitute - they love wearing the tangible s}'m - bols of affection that their husbands and lovers gJ\c them Beyond JC\l<CllJ. \!<Omen (hlce men) want to be remembered with gifts that show apprcc1at1on for a vanety of their attributes. A book reflecting her interest. pe™>nah1cd stationery in her fa, onte color. a piece of sports equipment for an activity )OU share together (make sure It s an act1v1ty she likes and it's equipment of her choice ) Chances are she·li alw lo' e uckets to a favonte concen Or to a shO\\ you know she'd cnJO). an"ork (1 f you know her taste), a small amount of her favonte candy, tapes or CD's by her fa vorite group, a gift cen1ticate (wtth the promise to ac- company her o n the shopping tnp) or some creative evidence of an upcoming romantic getawa). Cauuon· Don't buy clothes unless you're absolute!} sure about her size and that she's craz) about her own bod). Even 1f you'll neH·r understand why she wants \!<hat she "'ants ~ o u can enJO) hrr excitement Dr. AlfHi I• • marrlA1e ud f•mny ,.er•plll la Coroo• del Mar. Site welcomu yomr re•poa•e. II yo11 wl1t ter to reply, plu•e eodose • •Utmped, 1ell-•ddre.,ed eavelo~. Wrlt~ to Liad• Altui Pb.D.. c o Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1510. Coit.a Me ... Ull6. Shop 'ti/ you drop a few pounds, that is> lly a ls.AN l'llU> Dllljo ..... C.•illpO-· LYON EYE INSTITUTE MEDICAL GROL'P · 'A~ain. Dr. Lyon . '11) Jm ceresr than/....\ for w ur excel/em sen·1ce ·' . unwl" 11ed paT1en1 le11er •J! ,', P• HT 760-3003 • Comprehen.,1\C Quaht~ E)e Care • La.-.er D1ahctK & Glau\."nm.t Ther.:ip) l401 Avocado. Suite 402 (off MacArthur Blvd ) n1-1144 • Small-lnn!'>llln Catarac t Implant' • Co,met1c Eyelid Tucb • Contac t Leru. Problem' 1 2617 E. Chapman Suite 108 • FREE Rad1aJ-K or Cataract ... creen (off 55 Freeway) with th1 \ ad on, M.ll, Ph.D., Board Certilled Oi tha1 ~ been in the past, due to the incrca~ .---------------t ma role the •ovemment will be i,.;;:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~+------'-'----------------------------------- playina in medical economics. This I eat/i"'elHll!L., teems to friabten ofT many of the 7· -r'' l'J :=:1.!!'r!~t. d~s nd\ seem to e/ae/llet, tbe rapid infl~ of women into n'-~1.1111~ rnedica1 1ehools has certainly done ~,.. ,- tk profeuion • service. If •t were Find out who can teach you t upon wbi&e men who made up the lion's share of through classified. or the last SO years, there WMld not have been enouah appli- cm• in 1988 for all the positions 642-5678 a-'hble in medical ICbool. Mott educators 1eknowledee that l>ay A1tcr1tion GiYe A_Little Christmas"' __ Gift Collection for Needy Children T o make Christmas brighter for hundreds of kids who would have no gifts to open Christmas morning, the Daily Pilot and Independent newspapers are conducting a special gift rollection for needy children. And, to shaft! the joy that comes from giving, we invite you to join our gift collection. Bring any new toy, clothes or other suitable ltems for kids ages 2-17l0 the Daily Pilot lobby between now and S pm Thursday December 20 and put them under our Give A Uttle Christmas tree. There'• no need to wrap your gifts. Santa'a el-ws wW tab~ ol that and Shue Our Selva, A c.o.ta Mea hued charitable orpniz.atioft. will dlltrtbute than. In othill' w&dl, thlJ'1l &Ive our s1ft9 Of krfe ID.,...... wlM> *1ly nl8d -aftit appa'll• Ihm\! j . l'J ... ol th Pl Ull n< m hi • .. • ti • • a. Cl . " w &l ~ I\ f< e- .p • • c b d a II ~ 1 • .. t • t ( ( I I ~ l ~ ' • f J • •• ( t DAILY PILOT/ Mondey, Oeoernber 11, 1989 FN'f EKl:AINM t :N'I, 1111 \II IC Porter and Previn new releases • 1n Way Off Broadway serves up a delicious show-biz comedy ly \lllWAM GLACKIN ~-s.M<• ... Herc arc reviews of two new albums: "Cole Porter: Anytllm1 Goes" Kim Cris well, Cris Groenendaal, Frederica von Stade and Jade Gilford with John McG/inn and the London Symphony Orchestra: EMI. In the world of U.S. musicals. this is historic: The first recording ever m_ad~ of "Any~hing Goes" in the original 1934 version,· plus three songs eliminated dunn~ rehearsals. . Like _the sima!a~ly authentic recording of"Sbow Boat" released by EMI earlier th~s year, n_ as the work of John McGlinn. a young conductor and scholar with a passion for the American musical. Like the earlier recording. it is a first-class production, accompanied by a small book that reproduces the complete lyrics. including the long original encore and reprise for "You're the Top":. some dialc>Jue; historical notes (What was a Brewster body'! Who was Bishop Manmng?); an account of how the orchestrations were restored; and pictures of the original playbill and cast, including Ethel Merman. William Gaxton and Victor Moore. To realize the importance of the restoration. you have to remember wh~t they've been doing to .. Anything Goes" since. The 1962 Broadway revival of the show. repeated by countless regional companies. added songs from o ther shows and rearranged and altered not only the book. but some of the lyrics. The 1987 revival made funher changes. including a new book. _The pcrfor~ances are fine. One of McGlinn's best inspirations was casting Jack Galford as the Rev. Mr. Moon (Moonface Manin. the hopelessly ~~uddled ~ublic Enemy No. 13). Gilf~rd is n?t o nly in the gentle. lovable tradauon of Vactor Moore. but he can sang. which makes "Be Like the Bluebird·' even funnier. Frederica von Stade as. of course. a great singer wnh a beautiful voice. but she also has a sure feel in$ for pop style that some other operatic singers can't match. Kim Criswell isn't Merman (who could be?) but she's got Merman's brash approach. and her nice soprano takes on the same kind of brass when she lets 1t out in "Blow. Gabnel. Blow.'' ''After Hours" AndrC' Prr\ in. piano. wllh Ra.\ Brown and Joe Pass: Te/arc. As a pianist. Andre Prcvan made an astonishing 60 or so 1azz and pop records in the 1950s. whale he was conducting and composing an Hollywood studios. Then. as everybod> knows. he went on to the top level of symphony conducting. This 1s a welcome return. and he couldn·1 have had better company. A rolhckang "There'll Ne, er Be Anothl.'r You" gets thl.' session off to a fine. relaxed stan. "I Onl~ Ha'e Eyes for You," a1 a slow tempo. has touches of one of Prevan's idols. Art Tatum. and so docs an extravagant improvisation on "All the Things You Arc." Throughout. a prime source of sumulation for the listener 1s the wa\ Prevan makes a new tune out of the old one, s~ ncopated and some" here behind the beat. a knockout example as "Limehouse Blues." T'' LISTl~GS 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 ly BONNIE FEVERGEON Oell)r l'904 '°" ............ Hearty laughter signals the success of Way Off Broadway's cunent offering of Nick Hall's hilarious comedy, "Eat Your Hca~ut." Si istic staging places the ccntra focus of the production on five versatile players who. under the direction of Dave Judy, put the accent on fun in this facacal account of a waiter and would-be actor plying his trade in a varied assonment of New York restaurants on his way to fame and fonune. Tony Reyerditto. founder and artistic dirtc1or of Way Off Broadwa)'.. takes a turn under the lights as Charlie. the spmted young man whose vision of thc- a trical s uccess keeps him motiva1ed through hours of menial servitude as a waiter. Clad alternately in tuxedo and striped apron and moving easily from narration to panicipation, Reverditto provides a person- able character easily admired for his rare blend of ambition and compassion. Serving in multiple roles as men. women, girls and bo}s arc Dave Moms. Carole Cooney, Vicky Dawson and Ron McCaw. All demonstrate versatility in their ponrayals of Charlie's patrons 1n vaned settings rang- ing from casual coffee shop to formal dining place Morris performs to a h) ~tcn­ cal pitch an Act l's third scene. enacting an ex trcmel} hung!) customer who is unable to get the attention of has scrvrr. l·nd- ang the scene atop a tablr as 10:30 11:00 11 :30 • WtlMI of Jeoplntyt 0 M.,orOld iln FMIOUs Murplly °"'P19 INewlllrt 11n J Doctor. JNewt Pat s,.111 For11N C Stereo!::: T.ddv Z 8town Women 1Stereo1:.; Doctor D E~ Hard C°'1 [fil lln ~ Flllllly Mo1111: •~\?"Lady 111 a Comer'' 11989 O!ama) Loretta Newt Best ol TOfliaht Slereol :J 11 ereoJ a Youno Lindsav Frost Bnan Keith Prem>ere 1ln Stereo1 ~J C.rson IRJ • ~~ Out of TIM1 MoN· u• "Sweet Dfeams" p98S Bo09rap11yJ Jessoea Hews Clleers ::; Brothers ~ World Lanae Ed Hams Ann W~#Qtln • Nfl FCICICNI San Francisco 49ers at Los Angele$ Rams Mondly Htgh1 Live M•cGyver Two Tomes News Nighlhne ,,. Contd Trooble fin Stereo1:.:: , .:. PM MHlzlne Ent. Tonight ~O.cl Tedd¥ Z Mufp!ty e. OtalQn. w. NewNrt I Doctor News Pal S..- IJ Love l~te &Alle News (lJ'ftl I Inside Edition Newl (L••e1 C¥ol Burnett TV's GrntHI ~1. I Bamey Miiier love COMIC1lon and Fnends I Connte11on mn Nfl Foollal: •9ers at Rams Coot d I~ Rpt. CU1'1911t AflH MK<irvef On Steieo1:; News NIQhtltnt :; ID M'A'S'H Currant Afl11r 21 J~ Straet AW 0 l Alien Nation Little Lost jNews Comedy Act.m-12 RI fin tereoJ o Lamb IRI (In Sttreol ::::' E1nreH --_.___ -Cotby Show • Cour1 M<Me· ••"? "Tiit ~er. Tht MotlOll Plciln" 11986 I"-•• • AIWl'llO H•U '•1n Stefeol o IFantasvl Hunh Rlonev Vanessa Shlrp Patrtoa Bar1.er I • MacHtilJ L.iw.r Cool d ~ "'-YhollM A Ra15'f\ 1n the Sun 0 l Pled9e ha-MMing of Manlund In ine I RMi1nmnci JP an I ol 71 • wtlMI of IMidt Edition IW' (In ~ Family MoVll: ••11 "Lady in a Corntf" 11989 O.ama1 Lorena News 8"tof FOfUllO S1ereo1 :J In teteol:: Youna LindSav rrosl Boan 1<81th Plemoe1e tin S1e1~ I Canon 1R1 • Pr1iM "" Lord Pr1iM lfle lord In Toudl JKk Van IOwtgttt Thompson Rtgll\lld Imm Chirry • MacNlillltlnf Newtflout Al CreaturH Gtul and T-an: The °"'9f Ch!N (In lawrwnce Wiiii Show Bu1ine11 Rpt. BnlclsNw on; Sm.al S1e1eo11Part 4 of 41:::: Cnnstmas Reunoon The FllllllY • PerTy lillaoft The Gase OI the Moctl-EJten Mlllk 8e'f9lty ...... ..... Mary Tyler Mooft Didi Van I Ma Bob Ntwtla,, jGreen Acres Hta,, ol the NatJon Paid Program AU ~ Shottslol ila EvtniNi at IN ltnpO'I Slow llolt From Sinbaya c.nturr. Budaoest Shortstorit1 MIC Movie: "lldletot'' Cont d Movie: u \>i "The Lrte of RieyM (19'9) Willlam Beno• 1Ceont7 IM<Me: ••• "e.ctlllor Mottle(' 119391 BRAVO It It Eaay to le YOUllQ? McMe: •we\? "Come and SNM (1986 O!ama) Alexei Kravchenllo NR South Batik Show (RI DIS Mo'lll Contd Mer"'8ld I Fla T'" (In Stereo) Mo.ii~ et•"1 ''The Nutty ProfellOI"' (1963) Jtm L8WIS OuillHMitl Wobeoont EPN AcMMn: Grut Events [Soortl I"" -Nf1.. Grett NFl NFl'• GtHtell Moments Sportslooll ·-SpomC~lef FAii 110 Clllb 8aWMn ......,, McMe: ••"7 ''The SNdow !Udln" (1982} Tom Selleck 700 Club GALA Doe Vldle McMe: "El Secrwto de .. Sollrona" Sari Garcia 24 Horn Mcme: "l i.m a.II.tot" Lueha Moreno. JullO ~ma HIO Mo'lll Cont'd ... 1111'1 Mt That Mo¥ie: •u "ful Moon in lllue Water" 0 McMI: u• "Comina to~" (1988) Edd18 Murphy R LR ~.i.-~F0tlh Mo¥ie: •••• "It'• a Wonclertul life" (19'6 Fantasy) James Stewan Donni Reed MAX ..... w ....... Coned Movie: u '-c..I 5117" (1988) R Q Mo<M: u lli .. .....,.. (1988) Phtl Collins R MoVll: .. ,, .. ~ -·-, " *" In. a.mt IL.ooMwT1.11e1 le •i.ctlld llllilWEd GrMft Acm Car S4 Sit. Niallt ISCTV [Lauall-ln (My 3 Sons ..... lollinill. FICll\1 NIQflt at the Foruin (L!Ye) lltl Hodlew. Los Anaale!I KtnQs 11 Montrall Ca/laooens ICU , ..... Cont'd Spclftl ... ·--Foo4bll' Cllifornia Bowl Bd Stall vs Fresno Suite lrom r: rHnO iR) WriteflTV IHOW ...... Contd Rtlnoc:erol MrMe: ••• ........ 11987) MQev RowU (In Slereol R McMt: ••'1 "Alien Natioft" 11988) R Q a. 5'landlllla TIS lllooAe: •••• "PllDll" i 1970) Coot d ....... -bploret (R) !Movie: ue ''for Wllom IN Bel Toll" TllC li1owtr. .............. Cont'd McM9: ••Yz "Anollef WOllllftM (19118) 'PG Mo¥ie: ••Yz ''Cocoon: Tiit Altum" (1988) 0on Ameche O "OlceMrl" TNT fllowie: wDinMr • Eiaflf' 11989. Comedv) wen 8acal ~ ... ~ ....... (19'5 Sospeose) Cllarles-BlWN .. Tll W1° USA ~ Vici On Slereo) ........... ,,_ T1111 Wl'MlliRa ..._ Ya (In Stereo) WON ..... 0 USA l'Oriilt.t ~o ........... GunHo llloM: ••Yz "T1ne O'Clodl ltiall" 11987 ~J USA T 01111111t WWOR ..... Tul MMloHll Twllallt ZON Joe Fndl .. Plid Proarllm MU WfltX ..... USA TmliaM °'"'9 0 ....... ........... CatlOft I USA T Cll'oliaH ....... "Tiit Rftim" -Complete TV H1tln9 1 In Sund•y1 TV Upd•t e Tony Revedltto •nd C.rol• Cooney In W•y Off •road-1 w•y1 p roduction of ··••t Your H••rt Out.'• lights fade and uproarious laugh- ter slowly subsides. The highlight for Coone) and McCaw comes in the opening moments of Act II, in which the incessant babbling of an elderly lady inspires a temfic dasplav of mime from the distn:ssed coun- t')'. boy at an adJ01nin$ table. going through the motions of various forms of murder and suicide which se<c>m to offer has only escape from the seemangl) endless dron1n$S of ha~ counter- pan. Meanwhile. obll\ aous to her offense. Coone~ 's character rambles on wtth her animated monologue. Both kl·cp thl· au- dience in <,llchl.'s Vicky Oa"son ult1matcl) Sl'f· ves as the ob1ec1 of Charlie'<; affections an her ponrayal of an attractive and perk>-though shghtl} shy. typist an the process of escaping a mismatched be- trothal. Because the production 1s dedicated 10 the )oungstcrs of the Children'!i Homc Society of California. 11 pro' adc!> an op- portun1t} to sharr with thosl' who are less fonunate Dona- tions of canned food wall be sent to tht• SOl'ICt\ and will be rl.'- warded with SI off the purc:hasc pnce of a ticket. Performances arc <><:hedulcd for 8 p.m. on Dt.'r. IS. 16. 29. and 30: and Jan. 5. 6, 12 and I '\. (Note the theater as dark Del-. 11 and 23). For ticket!> and anfor- mauon. call 547-8997. 'War of Wo(lds' shows world at war with self By ANDEE BECK McCl•tchy N•w' S#Nk~ Ha'e ~ou heard" fhen."" a \'ar on. ··war of the WorlJ, ... till' <.\nd1- cated sene~ that''i in thl' m1d<,t of 1ts ampro,ed o;econd 'l':t\on. 1<. mal..ang quiet noase that ·"c'd bc "'I'>(.' to listen to. The time 1c; "almo~t tomorrn" .. The place 1-; Earth. such as 11 I'> In the H.G Welle; slof') ("hll'h Orson W<"lles brought tu life alto~ethcr too '1\'idl~ for the radio audience of 1938). Eanh 1s under attack b} outer-space monster\ The telev1s1on show ha!\ chang<c>d the aliens' point of ongana11on from Mars to the distant Monhra1. Their m1ss1on rrmains 1hc same: to seek and destrO} until this planet 1s - theirs. But, this war of the world~ 1~n't JUSt some third-rate ~1ence fiction. It's a darkl} e\ocat1v<' futunst1c drama whose future as a minute and a half from now. A second wave of aliens has de- scended upon an Earth that's npc for the plucking. Our econom). our environment. our hope and faith are rapidly deteriorating. II would seem that all the Monhrens have to do 1s exploit our v.-eaknesses as tools for our own destruction. Since the first week of OC'tober. the Monhrens have used rock music to subliminally tum the lost youth into an army of assassins. They've secretly turned a devout minister into a seeming miracle worker whose real work as blinding people to the sinister truth. They've made gun" and drugs w1dl·I~ :t(Yl.\\lhk to hastcn our dem1'4.' l\nd mn~t fnghtcn1ng or all. the~·,<' eAplo1tl'd our paranoia b~ cloning themc,c1¥e!> into human hod- 1es. Now "C don't lno" "horn to trust The t'Ol'm' \\Ould '>Ct'm Ill tx· more than Just among us. The enem~ as us. Then· 1~ ho"t''er. a handful ol heroes waging war lor all the nghl reasons: Dr Black"ood (Jared Martin). m1crob1olog1s1 Suzanne McC'ullough (Lynda Mason Green) and her promising 13-)ear-old daughter. Debi (Rachd Blanchard) . Driven underground when the aliens destro)ed their headquarters. these members of the so-called Blackwood Pro1ect sangle-handedl~ neutrahu the aliens' 'anou~. nefarious deeds while the rest of Eanh's population 1s embroiled an greed. rage and ram- pant annah1lat1on. A voice. rem1n1scen1 of Orson Welles' in his radio play. begs the question dunng the opening credits. "What as this world coming to')" It's a question that's sure to swim through the vtewer's head as each week "War of the Worlds" explores its gnm v1s1on of a world that's al war with at_sc!f. It's not a pretty picture. but 11 1s a remarkable series that boasts some of the best writing. acting. d1rcct1on. musical sconng and productio n values that you'll find on television as we prepare to venture anto the 1990s and beyond. MOVIE LISTl~GS Newport Beach '"llll'l"-\\11\1I.Ill\<.1111111 \10\U ,I'-\II \BO! I" 9A&..oA C1Na-70'1 I ll.olboA lllvO l> I\ H 10 T.-W.e l•IS IDWMIOS ~ CINHIA )()() N""'PO'I C rnc Pr Ouvr 644-0160 I ..... •=ae fl'<;I S 1 JO 10 ,........ lllJ •JO, •JO )lleclr .. -,_.I tl'GI s •s 8 H IOJO IDW"'90S IMANO CJNCM.A FA<htan l\IM'cl N..w '°" c-.. 640-1118 I .............. , ~ ff'O I 'I 11 ,. 4 II W-IO l "'9 W• .. -._.. ,., 11 4S 1 4 JO 1 ' JO J M ........ H...,_ ICil 11 J n 1 IS TIM ... lf'<'JI ta s 10 • 4"'9 ....... M-.W ICil 11I 4S) IS SIS 1 11 o . 1010 S ......... ll'O Ill 11 1 4 I> 8 10 6 ... ll'GI 11 1 JO s 1 JO 10 1 OW I r Y-ll'Cr I J) I I 0 I 4S •. • IS. 11 JO. 10 40 ueo CIMIMA N.wpon 11ve1 ,.. ~ v-.oe •1HHO ...... -..._. 1 ll'G I JI 11 JO 1 45 SIS 7J0 •4S f'Oln' T'HllA'1111 )'C)S f Co•tt Mi(jhw..y 61 ) ... 160 ...,..v1.••s ... ~ C"'9MA ~ 1101 H.,IHI, ""'°IMna Vtfdl C__., t,.<41•1 1 ......... ,...._l"G-IJI U . l . 4 .•.•• 10 i n. ..... ___,.IOI'' i o . 1 n . s "· 1. ••• ...... PSI "°' IJ, uo. s no. 10 4.All ._'iii 99 .....,_IOI• 4', 10.IS fte ... ,a, r 10. • to. • JO Seasonal , reading for l youngsters 1y .JUDY GREEN ~-·~ I Each year at this time I bring out· our treasured Christmas books and put them in their holiday home io the livin1 room. From there o ur children read them or·find someone to read to them. Af\er the New Year. the books all go away to freshen up for next yeu. In sorting through 1he many new seasonal books published this year to celebrate the fun and meaning of Christmas. plus those for Hant-ikkah and Kwanzaa (the African cel- ebration of life). I found several gems to add to our treasure. •Two holiday favorite! for r,oungsters ages 4 to 8' are 'Christmas on Exeter Street" by Diane Hendry (Knopf. $1 2.9S) and ''Keeping a C hristmas Secret" by Phyllis R. Naylor (Atheneum, $13.95). In "Exeter treet:· Ben and J ane's house begins to fill on Christmas Eve with relatives. Then a blizzard. car trouble. and party noises bring an assonment of others to the "lovely old house wit h bi& fnendly windows." Af\er everyone settles down for a long winter's nap, Mrs. Mistletoe leaves a note o n the front door telling Santa there arc 18 children inside. including Lily-Lou 1n the kttchcn sink. John Lawrencc·s amusingly detailed pictures invite counting and J i!>Covery. especially the cut.away for the 4-story house plus the atllc w11h people sleeping in every open space -bathtub. win- dow sails. mantels and lotchen shelve!>. In "~cret," little Michael. under relentless teasing from Dad, lets slip what Dad's getting for Christmas. 81g brother and sister don't need to rub an the disappointment Michael feels in himself However. later he rescues has self-estl'em and a family outing with a cll.'ver move. This stor) with ats expressive artwork is espccaall> appealing to a you.ngcr · sibling. • Two gems for sopiewhat older children. ag<c>s 5 to 9, are "A Gift from Saini Francis, The F'lrst Creche" by Joanna Cble (Morrow, S 13.95) and "Uncle Vova's T~·e" by Patncaa Polacco (Phalom<c>I. S l~.95). In "Gan ... Cole tells the stor) of a boy nam<'d Francis born 800 years ago to a wealthy family an the town of Ass1s1 . how he left has family to teach that happan<'ss does not co~ from money and why he created the first nativity scene and a few oU»er celebrallons of Christ's binh tut ate now trad1t1on Wath Michele Lcmaeux's color-rich. somewhat pnmitavc paintings that are reflec- 11ve of art of that penod. Cole's clear text is a fresh approach to the Chnstmas stor). "Uncle Vova's Tree" wall tug at sentimental hearts. Polacco draws from her Russian rools for her tale of a Russian grandfather celebratang the holiday wnh his loving family and the forest animals. and how he insists on remembenng to decorate his outdoor tree with food for the animals. The children's enthusiasm for the Russian foods and ceT- emonies as 1nfec11ous. but their love for their grandfather cames the story. • A welcome holiday novel of values and the meaning of Kwanzaa as Mildred Pins Walter's "Have A Happy ... " (Lothrop. Lee & Shepard. $1 0.95, ages 8 to 12). Christopher Noel Dodd wall be 11 on Christmas Day. but he antici- pates a bleak giving season since h,is father is out of work. The famity•s l~ve suppon s Chris during the touth umcs. J ..... -~ 1 !Kil • 's • JO. l(t40 UA ~COAST l"LAIA IS61 W ~' ~ s..o-on• I ...... .,_.., T" ....... il'Ci I Ji t l SS. 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'o . .., .... l"IQf711.tQ •• r ... tde Valley i"UllOHl\1 \C High school l., _students target unfounded fears Some Fountain Valley residents arc up in arms, they are f~ul and they're angry. '"Not in my backyard" is their rallying cry, propen y values arc their concern. Wl;lat is it that h~s galvanized the neighborhood around Fountain Valley High ,School? Have uncaring officials proposed locating a nuclear reactor on the campus? Is there a plan afoot to use the comer of Bushard Street and Slater Avenue as _a toxic Waste dump? Have bureaucrats thought- lessly considered building a prison on the si 1e? Of what arc tthe rcsidcntsLafraid? 1 Kids. ·-, !he ho~cowncrs are afraid of kids. The scourge ~ns1sts of high sc~ool students. The plague is made up of teen-agers. The residents sec 14-, 15-, 16-. 17-and 18-ycar- ·olds -no~ as t~e next generation. not as young people, not as fresh minds 111" need of an education -but as a threat. . They see the students of Wintersburg Continuation ,H igh School as losers. troublemakers. criminals and drug abusers. 1 They are wrong. of course. It is a mistake made out of 1 ignorance. The residents don"t know the students who attend Wintersburs. They know only that a continuation i~ial! ~hool is different from the traditional-teaming 1nsutu uon o n the comer, and they fear the difference. One school district official called the residents" perceptions ""imagery." He was being kind. Residents have not been so kind to the Huntington Beach Union High School District's plan to move Winter· ;sburg to the Fountain Valley campus so the present 14-acre .site at Golden West Street and Warner Avenue in Hunt· ,1ington Beach can be leased to help !he district make ends .. meet. Leasing thf' site wo uld bnng in an estimated SI million a year for 40 years and help improve every studenl's educatio n in the district. but Fountain Valley residents will hear none of 1t. All they hear are unfounded warnings their proP:CrtY values will tumble bcca us.c. of the students dov.•n the Street. They should stop yelling so they. can listen to school officials because what they will hear will surely c hange their minds. They will learn a continuation school isn't a high school Jail. 1t ts not place for dangerous rowdies. Quite simply. it is an alternative for studcnls who have had diffic ulty in a routine high sc hool. For some students. routine is '"1hat they can"t abide. They get lost 1n 1he shuffle of a regular classroom se tting. They yearn for indi vidual ~ttenti on, to progress at their own pace. Yes. some of the s1ude nts are troubled and some have been in trouble. Discipline, absenteeism or drugs may have tripped up the stude nts in the past. but Wintersburg is a last chance and the kids knoy,· it. It i~ a final resort for a hi&h school education: they must make 11 or get out. Most make it. There is no where else to go. Op1n1ons expressed 1n 1n1s space a1e tnose ol tile Dally Piiot Otl'le• 'riewl e•Pfessed on 1n1s page are those ol !heir autl'lors and ar11s1s Readers" comments are 1nv1led and may be sent to The Da11y Pilot. P 0 •1.Bo• 1S60, Costa Mesa 92626 0 I lll :IC \ Ol('l :S Consider caregivers ' woes .. _ Sun1c c·a1 iforn1a lcg1 sla1ors got a harro"'ing gli n1pSt.· ... al tht· challcngl· t'at·1ng 1hnst· y,·ho pro ' idc long-lerm care 10 i11 lir111. t•I J l'rl' relali\t'S ... L11tlt· a1it•n 11un has hecn given 10 the plight o f ,£art·g1' rr!i '' hu look. after s1ek a nd d isablt•d older famil) n1cn1 l:k:rs. These arc the-so--callcd ··sand"''ich generation," people y,·ho find thernSt.·lvt'S sand wiched lxt .... ·een rcsponsbilitu.•s for career. r hddrt·n. n1arriagL" a nd care for elderly rcla1i ves. Sonll' tellin g tstin1o ny on caring for relati ves suffering fronl .-\\1hctnH.·r·s disease a nd other infirmities v.•as de- li,L"rtd 10 thl' ·\ssL"n1bl) lonlm1ttec on Aging and Lo ng 'T t·rm Care ... .\sS('mbl ~n1an Lloyd G . c·o nncll y ofSacran1ent o, chair- J n1an of the conln11ttcc. said he wi ll explo re leg1sla1ion thal ,;,t.ou_ld help carc~1' 1ng state employees in mcctin_g suc h .. J an11\) obhgalLo ns. The asscnlblyn1an also pro mised 10 txplorc "'·ays in which the state L·an wo rk with private cn1plo~ crs H> prun1ott· such progr.lnls. Thi!!. 1s an area where government can appropriately \\'Or~ v.•11h thl· pr1,atc sector. To do nothing 1n this cnl ica l matter \\'Ould 1n the long run be c:c.tre mcly costl y to Tiie Haaford Seatlael -OR-AN-GE-CU-A5-T D_l_ily Pilat HllSEMAR't Cll l"HC:lt~IA' -1•t Rl.l~llF.H -- • • ' ' " • ,. t• T(),\t TAIT F.dl1t1r OON rENl.E'" Aw.ori11tr t:dllor 1·0~1 CL1\Nli\" Nl"w1 f:.t11"r s·rr.vt: .\I AHHtt: 0 1y Ed.llor R<lCF.R BLOO~t fC'•htrn Editor ROGER CAR I.SON Sport• Editor TO!ll BUDD Orn&.tJo. lNrTC'IM ,..,,,. TER I PUPO Orr.ulalloa M•r•f'tl•C M•n•IC'.f "' ·•• 808 rRAl'IK " . • Home Deli•arr M•••1r.r CHALONGOOD c ... 1••er !Mr•ke M•n•aer PllA.llOO SHAH c-.- RHOl'<PA 'lllEEP 0.1a ,.,__.., M•Mfl!' llOl'(l'<A JACClleON C...Oll- cw.a1 w m ... ,, ....... JA~' Rf~l(:ll f;'\'Hl::H(. Hr111il ~•I•·~ ll101"•,.;rr t:ltt:HI t"HEl::.\IA' (:111.-ifif'd M•n"I"' Jl"IJT fl•:TTINf; l.'!"1t•I Atl\'l"rll.!11a \111111,.r PATR lt:IA .A . GA.Rl,t; S~i•I Sffllon• Editn,. 8f.C'](. \' S. lft;NOt:RSC.lN A.rt Olrtll"IM MA.RY CARTER Ad Senifft Mahfer ALI SA. TADLOCK Pra .. i•IM Offtdor HENllY KNIGHT Pta .. 11 ... M•••I r lJ5.A T ANNf.l' p,..p,.. S.,.-v ..... ;ATIUCk TOOi. p,..p,_,.,,_....,. 900n~ .............. llU.CllA-,, 7 ••. ,., • CHNl>N Monday, Oeeembtr 11, 1M9 • ltlll~ "JUST IN CASE ..• -DID IMELDA MARCOS LE/WE BE!llND ANY RUNNING SHOES?! .. -" LETTERS Today it: Monday. DK:. 11. the )4S1h day of 1989. The~ are 20 days left 1n the year. Today's h1ghhdn 1n history: On Dec. I l. J9J6, Britain's K.ina Edward VII I abc;hcatcd 1n o("dcr to marry Amcncan divorcee Wallis Warfield Simpson. In a radio ad· drcs~. Edward said he "would have found it 1mpm$1ble'' to caJT)' out his dutJc!i J\ king ··~'lthout the hclP. and suppon of the ~on1an I JovC". • On th1~ datr-. Jn 17 19. the first r~{·orded sighting of the Aurora Bor~alfs took place in New England. In 1792. Franct"s King Louis X VI went on tnal. accu~ of 1rcason. (Conv1c11:d and condemned. Louis was ~nl 10 ihc gu111011ne 1h1: follow· 1ng Januan ! ln 187~. ·_,_menca's firs! black gov- ernor took office as P1nc knt')' Ben- ion lltev.an P1nt:hba(-k became ac1- 1nl! go\ernor or I uu1s1anu In 111:;!{, puller in Buenos Aires th .... ·aned an aurmpt o n the life-of Pres1den1--ell·c1 Herht·ri Hoo\ er. Jn 1941 (1 erm<in~ and Italy de- clared ";ir on the l 1nued S1a 1es In l94ti . lht L n11cd Nations Jn1 er· nal1onal ( hildrr-n"s Em ergency Fund. L':'\.lf"EF. "''as r-stabhshed. -By T•~ As1ocia1e4 Pn1• Add infestation to board ineptitude To 1hr-Editor: Ho ly cockro aches. Ratman. they're at Ll again. Y..'hat's nl'Xt'! The jokers of the Ocean Vic"'-' School Board have done 11 so nun1erousl) now 1ha1 "'-'t· art• acl·usHunC"d 10 it Yes. this proud hod} of burl'au- cratic clowns has n1anagl'd to hit thl· headlines more o ftl'n !han 7'><1 Z..a\ mamagr-s and. I might add. "1th 1ht· same laughable fl'Suh' Shan1t· sham(", no"' lht') ha'c n1ana1_1.l·d 1l1 overlook 1nfL·s1a11un tn s1>n1L' 11f1hei1 d1stnct school;,. Prev1ou!>I\. all the .i\tl'nllun centered arUunJ the Ouard ·~ inahil1· 1y to allocate r'inanl'l:jl nt·l·d\ "hl·n paren1het1call) "l" knu \.\ lhl') '1l· g•1t tht' bucks hut fo rgut \.\ht·rl· !hl·~ put tht'm. Bui RO\.\ "t' k·;1rn tl'.l~:hi.'r> ha1 e bug\ frl·qut·n11ng thL'lr lu.,.,l'I cxtrcn11! 1l'S caus1 ng l"\ l'll grcJll'r d "' comfon to !hL· nun1hcr •Hll' \trl'\\- rclatt'd OCl"u p;uiun 111 lhl' "ork fort!"- While s.choul board n1L·mher' po n- tificate lht:tr boring d1a1nht.· ;ind how-h~lp-1S· JUSt-:iruunJ-1hc · cor- ner no n~·nst.'. thl'st'" v.ondcrful. pro- fess1o nall ) ded1ca1ed . cun11n11ted pcoplc n1ust suffer e1 en !he mo~l humiliating <>lap in the fal·c uf then1 all. and chat 1s lhl· ,J:ip 111 poor and unh)g1en1c l\Ork-cn 11ronnH'nt \Jtu- at1 ons. I-lo"'· could 1he' •• ~nt111ul· In 1n\ul1 anamorph1call ) ihl• c.1n1munll) 1n ~·h1ch thC) purportL·d!~ \Jer\e "Ith d1gn1t) and JU\llll' f\1r all and 1hen overlook cockro:u·he.,' .\.nd . of cuur'>l· thl' l'tar of the d1stnl't. ,\lunte ,\I t \lurr:11 1hL· dran of coc krOalhl~m . rnakc,· .1 lliUnlt·r ·~1atrmt·n1 of dl'n1al th.11 1h1• d1,tn,-1 doesn't hail" .1 h.irrnll·~., ha,·1t·n;1l 1n<.('{'t prohk·n1 ;1nJ that It 1\ po~\11">1~ an 1solatL'd 1n.1,\t•n1 lh1' '' 1n- s1d1ous :ind luJ1•n1u' Is ht•. 1n al\ c1fh1' 1nfln1h' 1•1,J\\111 calling thl' 1l0al·her~ h.1ro.>"1 I he .:-on- ducl of the tledgl1ng nc-ean \'1e.,., !><.'hool board ;ind 1 1~ all-:iround p.::r· formanct• go to 'hu" \IJU that "'-l. the 1 u ter~ \ho uld takL' .i ( ln<.c:r lop~ at olir">t'llt·, \O that nl"\! ttnlt" "e ~·on't be '!) \c.'11 ;1,\un·d h\ the!M.' lo"·cr t·che\un pohlH 1 an~ ;1n.J their beaming fomp!at·cnt.:1\'"' no" 1ha1 the-~ ha1e n~n hi 1he ,1f!\l"l'' (•t thL·ir mt"an1ngl;,-s~ l'3rl·er\ Tht•} ha•c pru\cn tc1 thr IJ\- pa}t'rs t11ne .ind t1n1r .1g.11n that 1he} generalt' 1nrt"\s;1n1 nd1l"ule nut onl\ frun1 v.11h1n their o"n ran~!>. hut from people ltkt• m)'>c:l1 "'-hO reall) ha\e no J.\ 111 11.nnd 1<>h11 '>l'ldon1 1n1oht' tht·n1,t·he' '-'llh puhhl m:11 - lt'r' flr 1s\ut"\ ,1nJ "hu tuuld nPI a'o1d 1h1s inl·ptnl·'>!> l-....•1::Ju'>t· '"'t"f"\ tlml" he pl\keJ up lf\l' P!lut tht'fl' "a'> al"'.t\\ \t>n1eth1ng .1N°•ut tht• Ocean \ !t'"' \.\.hunt bv,1rd dnd 1l' t•p1~o<l1t :ind Jcnh1~(1g.1r n11,rnana~r - n1en1 of ont" of thl' most-pnzcd commodotit·."> 1n fu tunst1c 1nvr-s1- men1s "''("could rnak.t• o ur childrr-n It's 'till tht· ~n1r-old s1ory, a fig.hi for Jo, e and gto~. a case of d o or die as 11mt' 80C."S b~ and 1ntt"r~s1 builds and } 1t·lding of rgos art' less 1m po11· an\ than hiring quahfit"d r ustod1ans "ho can't •1suall\ dc:hneatt" the dif- ference bo:t"t"en · coc~roaches and Boeing .,.l,., Onct• 1hat occurs, 1hcn tht' credih1h1~ of 1he Ocean View school board might have regained a modicum ,,! tht• st41ndards then con- temporane!i tn 01hcr d1s1ncts ha ve attain~ Plr-a~t· 11ad\ Pilot. l·ontinul' 1h~Sc!" articles 1)n thC Ckean \'1e"" !"!Chool hoard. I understand boisterou.') laughter 1~ g1iod fur }OUr fac1al mus- cle~ DIC I'\ < .\.~·1 PRELL Corona dt·I 1'1ar What's a 1 4-letter word for someone who 7 • • • • • To thl' Ed1tur· Each Frida' mnrnin~ I .:1\\;111 Jl'h\l"~ ufth~· (Jail) P1lo1 \t) 1.unu"t' hur''' "11h ant1t qiat1on as I rt•ach fur ttlt· \)a1t•h..,,1\... \l"1"t1t1n 10 learn ho.,., the ··E,t·~hl:Ki) ·~ .\ t nuc"" pt:ople h;i\l' t"'- conated the la tL'\I 1hl·~ anlc)l\)111'. the "Ork\ ( arl·full~. I pun.hrJ 1n the "'ord. ("-R-l "-( -l-\-f.-R-H--\-1 -1-S-r \\"lld "llh an\lt'I\. I '-'alrht•d as the n1ach1ne ahsorbt.·d the \~ord an'ct ,10 .... 1~ began to "'nth~ on thl· 1ahlc l->ch1rl' ml' Fron1 llS s.:an1 s. sm oke esi.:aped and at·ros\ thl' dial lapped cll'ctron1r fla!>hcs that "'-ou[J r1•at the mo!>I pc nt·traung li ghtning . .\" r ran for co,·er, 11 fi1llcd our and gradually rneltl'd into a plast1f hl."ap "'-Ith on!) a fa1n1 blea1"1 ng ot' II\ hl·a11J1ke \·h1p. that once "as tht' ner't" cell o r"a wondrou<> ~)~f't"Tth.-.lt had been beair-n b) the challt•ngl· to define a "cruc1verbal1~c · and "'-'Ould "nrk no more. serret ()ur lll\.·al hhranan "'a' \\Umped. along ~·11h m~ Funk &. \\agnall!> ...:ot 10 dr-spair. for final!~ the ~iernam -\\ebster <.enter 1n Spnng- lield. ~ias!. unlo..·~cd the: m\s1r-n . ~O'-" 1 conCl'dt' 1ha1 nH}<;\ uf !ht· l·lul\vy,Ql)(i set can "'"l\h\\:JnJ the re\ Lt'""" (If a Sllldl·nt, a C P4. and even a ~tag(· J trl'Ch){ Hui a ..::ruc1,t•rbahsf.' Come no"·· that ha' gvt 1t1 Ile iUul pla ~' ~1os1 assuredl\, "hute\l'r a l"rlll'l\l'rh;1l1s t l!i. a mer<' mo,·1e p°rod ucrr ca n he nu ma1ch "Defi ne that profe<><>10n .. I \<11d. and off I went to nl ) ne" ell·c1ron1 c "ord finder d1(·- 1ionan : the kind "1th thou~ands of v.o rds filled With l0hl' la tl'S1 dt'finLllOns. Srx'll1ngs. S}nOn)'nlS. Should I share 11"' I think noi. for m} quest has changed me "'ho am I to depnvr-our locaht~ o f th1!. fe-ch ng of tnumph. the conqut"St of '"''O)man O\r-r v.·ord" Beller rhat your readers go through rhc process themselves and then bombard you .... 11h the results of their retcarch, so thal the rest of 1hr-world may revel in the knowledge uf the true mr-an1ng of a cruc1 \ erbalist Reah1ing the ta \k N.-fnrl' mt'. out ~·amc m) trust} l'ollcgc J1cuuna11. but ll) no a,:111. fo1 11 100 lac~ed the knu""\edgl· n1'l"t'~.-.a~ 111 rt1t'al the B<'IRBI ~11CHA ELS Epic °'ntagon1st Costa Mesa This is n o c a fan teccer To the Editor: I am appallt·d anll ~h oc ked 1ha1 you wo uld pnnt su•h a lcllt'r '-"rL!lt•n hy Rohen (iairdncr ("'El Toro Manne Ba.st is a public nui~nre."' Dec. I). You used 1hc boldrst pnnt I've ever seen 1n !hl' Pilot, :t1mt'l')l seeming as though }Our pasx·r t·on- eurred .,.,,,h Gairdner"~ cnt1cal rC'- mark.s. Beach blanket bingo threatened by Huntington council's actions How unpa1nol 1l" ~ou art• 1u l'n- couragc peopl e to ~ntc l·n11c1 1111g the U.S. Mannes "'-'ho ha1c protected us so "'ell. I hopt' )nu low lots of subscnpt1ons. I ""'ll nl·1er buy thr-Pllot,.aga1n. MAR'' \-\.\.RRISC)N Costa Mesa T o the Ed11l1r h sure v.a~ grt•at h' rt•ad th.11 \lr Curtis Fossun1. ~cn1or stall ··uun'>t·l al Sacramento. and <>late 00ir1al' .1rr ·working to S3'l' lhl• t-f un11ngt on Beach beaches from thl· hand' or some de,cloPt-·r~ "'hn "a nt t•J der\ the c·a11fornia c·o ns11tut111n J1."di- cat1on Of the beal"hl'S for the puhht use for then O\\ n hc:nt"iil and prnfit wnh the help ot some members of the ('it ) Council of Hun11ngttln Beach. I "oulJ li ~l' to \l."t' lht• ~ta1c ~tart an 1n1es11gat 1on of all the 3l"t111t1rs of the l lun!1ngton lk•H·h •'HUn~d "'-htch includes the Office of the C"1 11 .\.Uornc1 and tht• ReJc,e-lupment .\gene): for 1mprnpt·r 3C'IL' It} ikstdes the beach.~s. l"onJemn1ng pcoplt'."s home!! inc 1hl· do..,.ntov.n areas. t~ing to 11oreck ( entral Park "'"l\h an unnfi-dcd ! 8-hole g.oll cours.c dc"elopment on land that was obtained "1t h publ1\· funds for a pubhc parlc: and 5«'/hng 0tT a park 10 a dC'' elopc-r warran1 probr-s. J 4.~1ES A . R l lSH 1-l ununglon Reach ODO T o the Ed1tor: Just a thought on the Huntington Beach C11\ Counc11"s ··nC'""\11 and im - proved"' P1ers1dr-\'dlage· "When-"s the beach""' DIANA BOOM Huntingto n Beach Mobile home owners need protection By MAY \I/A.LE llRO\ll/N Thal star pine has no"' reacht•d .'0 t \,()(X) pcr~nl). Evef)body clsc"s fttt 1n height. rcn1 went up proport1ona1el ~. In August of 1989, P..1r. Richard In 1976, lhc ihrer-dC''t"lopcrs who We found out mob11f home 01i1.·n-H~I purchastd Trcasurc Island buih tho-high-.nse-.Surf and-Sand~ el"$ are.-a'-•-gru1 disad11aiHAgf'-OOm· otiil~fil. silua~ on t~ Hotel 1n Laguna Beach had decided pared to rqular home 01i1.'ncrs be-- ocean side of the Coast Highw~y ~n the location of Treasure Island \\'as cau~ as Ion~ as their homes s11 on Laaui:ia . Bcac_h. Hall .h<?ughl it in the perfect site for a 11meshare hotel. lots 1n mob1lr-home parks, rents &_Stoetatton with a subsidiary o~"";ler-Their plans sho~·cd a hotel complex have 10 be paid every nlonth, The nil l ynch, ~ubbard fo r S40 millio n. , that looked cnonno us and h1d Mus. part owner can .-.ise tM rents at 1ny Thra: m1lhon dollars ~crc then Al th.at time. the locallon o f our lime. The res1dcn1s have nc> ri,hts 1ddcd to the purchase pncc to pay park made us pan of Orange Coun· and n o rt"C011r1t. off the former developers. 1y. for the next fi ve ~'cars. we (ought When a park owner decides IO Wben the owners of J""n:asurc the On.nae County supcrvison and convr-n the propcnv, mo bile homes l~land had announced their intc:n-the developers for the survival ofthr-become unr.cllahle. Thu, means loss tK>n to tel.I the park •. we. the home unspoilfd beauty of Treasure Island. of home: as wt:ll as loss or ~ny ownen. tned to buy it. We form~ ilt bluffs. tra:s. beaches. roves and investment made on proptrty 1m· T IROOA (Treasure l~la,nd Rcu-the: continued existence or out provcmcnts. ~nee ~n A~tiOn) •nd homes A number or senion on fiJ;cd hired Conhncntal AUocillel. a com-· · r.--.. •-· , •• which sptdal' · bt:I · Al k:ast thrtt out of five 0 '11fla<' 1noomes wctt '"'uov 10 ~ve '"' ~ home ownerslttt :hue":h: County supervison came into every part. Severa.I ,or th,<>*. who o~ park Ibey live in We offered 10 buy meetin1 rud)' 10 vote for lhat un· money oc their wn1t1 and rould.n I OW' put for $4() million, wblch wu •tty timesha!" to replace the tx· It~ eodod up hl'l(I!& !O wait lw&)'. the lmOWlt the owners !old '*' they ~Ill SOO resMSents. The¥ battly los1na a mucb u S~OOO- would ICOtpL Our offer wu not hnened to us. and only relurunlly New pcoptc have moved Into the ,.._. _ ii was never even .,.. panted very minor concnsions. In part and most of them. fOt ~M time ~· delplir, wt took our fish• to the beina. WM •bte to atrord ,the renll. We woukl ha"c: p.td the COUl1I -and toll every eue. Some arc ~enda:t wath m~ eddiliwl Sl rnUlioa. bat we wen .. , Ume wortcd for ua. E~ wt.th than ooe femdy tbanrw oWatnh1p -·-... -ud -_ ...... plant oad permi1'. ... o(. -le home. told ny ow oftw .. •~ OQMINdioa money .-... Md ._. wm me raidetttt o< Tw ~::.-~ --IO oa •-41!'>ppco"'11, -"" ~ llload bod llloir a...•...--tlcrts1 1 ...... mlw OMJ 1 'w * ai..s of 1t.1a.-..tLwe_.lalil _. .............., &-.................... ~w. .. _ .... would .... ,. 21vsJ. •llrl.HU •ell'I nm •• n •oo=--•AJ C I •loo. 1., ..,., '9 a W .._ l?Qli ........... ,_ nt ... ,li•'-. lat 11 7 - c• •r... Jiit • • r• &. • ZBIEll _.~J:' • , ... 2 "~~-='==--'!!!P'(Ji--• ~Ill ... -it iiiin1 -iili-,,, ,:w::w.,; ~ .. .., mo bile homes."" Hall said, bul lhe "when" and .. for ho"'' much"' "''aS nevc:r dis.cussed. Hall I-Oki senior c1 1tlcns "nol 10 - worry·· because their rt'nts would not ao up, but tw failed 10 mention 1ha1 1hi~ onl.~s#lhcd to people wbo could Quahf)\\.fOr f«tcral relier from 1he Dcpan01en1 of Hous1na and Urban Development. Each deliahtful promise Mr. Rieb ... ard Hall makes. upon examination. turns oul to be empfy. A year aao1 Treasure laland be- came pan o lhc city of 1 .... Beach. The P\annina COmmdlioe ol Lquna Beacb has volOd '° aone Treasure Island a ptrmaant mobile home port -• viaory -- Treuu.re b1al'WJ bu ._. Im •· 1..._ R>r m°" -50~• JS yean ill ~· -poruy" wailer .. -lOMd II (T , .... io.i~-i C4w:r:;~¥ +'-ii .. t' w or'--n ---,.. ...... -?. " •• -• " I AlO Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT/ Monday. December 11, 1MI by Bii Keane COUKTSR CULTUR& by Maratta & Maratta PEANUTS "You behave back there or we're turning this car around right now!" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson f r I j I ' e DENKIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ... ·•· • . . GARFIELD WHAT PO YOO WANNA DO TO DAY, eoY~? .. ,,_. ·: . . . . . . . . ''TME PATHS OF 6LOR'( LEAD SOT TO TME 6RAVE 11 by Jim Davis FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnst,en "He has to sleep with us. His dog house ts stuffed with Christmas presents!" NANCY ARLO AND JANIS TUllBLEWEEDS ~' •UH .. MAOOARE.T. l NEED TO B£ GOOD UNTIL ,. (l{RIST'MAS. ~ AeOUT 6IVI~ ME mE LE5$0N$? W 1 COPIE..D T~ ;ruFF INblDE a: if.\£ C<>JER WT l Q\ANEJED A ~ W°'206 L£;TT~~~ by Jerry Scott WT * ;rorTE:D lµE. ~'2.AVD 'f.I~ 1 WWOE.D IT lt-1 , W !M t,,IUGX. ~llH TµE.. F Al..ON6 ¥JI\~~ O\ti6RIN' by Jimmy Johnson IMY~··SOT~ IT Dtt..IV~R'? O 0 ~ , I ; by Kev1n Fagan by Pat Brady SHOE JUDGE PARKER ~."'W" ...... J ~E N A BBEY ASKS S AM WHAT H E THINKS A60UT H ER 1 B UILDIN G A IE NNIS COMPLEX AT SPENC ER F A RMS, H E TELLS H E R W ITH A S M IL E I FUNKY WINKERBEAN -1HE ANNOfA'fED 'A HUNDRED BOf11..£5 OF BEER ON i'HE WAU...' - DOONESBURY - by Jeff MacNelly AN gxPtANATi~-0!= n.4E: N~L Wll ... DCARD Pt.A'<~F ~LL>T$ by Harold Le Doux DO"' T M ISTAKE M Y APPA RENT LOOK ~-OF 6EV"lllL0ERME NTA S A NY,-H IN G t MORE THAN THAI , MS SPENCe Fv YOU AS KED FOR AN O PINION WITH · • { gvT GIVIN G ME ONE ? E TAIL OF'" WHAT I .,.....L1111 , PReSUME I S A euS1N E SS VENTUR E' by Tom Batluk 1HI!:> BOOK IS IN"fl::NDED AS AN IN-DE.PfH H£REAF1ER iO BE REFERRED "fO AS I AH B080i'CA.l ' . EAAMINA1iON OF CL.AUD€ J 6ARL..OW'5 MA51'ERPfEC.E, ' 'A HUNDRED BO'frl..E.5 Of 6E.ER ~ 1HE WA~' ... by Garry Trudeau ··-·-.....,, el ... Men IO CtODe Can~t ._.,...._..__~ I ? '-....... ·-....... -· "° -"'Y ..... -----.... the C.tllby. blA • I M u G , s y I nolal!Otll'9dl0 --_' I I I I' I . . FO LTY 7 I I I' I r CH UTH I I r I I 0.., -,,,.... .,. a.-,..,._ Corona del M•r quairterback Todd Kehrll (l•ftl avoids th• rush of J11-pound defensive llnern•n Sunny G.gau. How big? As big as a second child Holland rates back-to-back as 50-50 deal By ROGER CARLSON OI' U-. Oally -\tsfl' Champ1onsh1ps on the (.IF lt'\l'I a~n't exactl y a dime a do1t•n. and when they're back -to-back. a\ is th e ca~ for Dave Holland his his Corona del Mar Sea Kings. 1he obvious ques- tion from many is "~l o"' tng ""'as thi s one?'' 11 might sound a tough question - Holland's Sea Kings "'l'nt I :?-0-:? a year ago as they don11natcd !)1v1sion VI foo1ball teams. that 's prctt~ tough to improve upon. But this year's edition. "'h1 ch "'as beaten in its first s1an aga1n s1 Hunt- ington Beach (latc:r to changl."d to a forfeit win) and lost thrt'e times in league play, &a"c a Cinderella per- formance in the p\ayon\ that just about defies the odds. Thrtt straight shu1out vic1or1es in the playoffs. including a :?7-0 rout of top-rated Sunny i-lills. then a :!l-10 vic1ory over La Quinta for the crown. "It was a big win." said Holland. who has spent a 101 of thi s past week.end doing what he's b«-n un- able to do for a long time -watching , •.•. some tcle\·1s1on and doing as cln~· to no1h1ng as po's1blc "Bui both of 1hcn1 \lhl· t\.\1) 1nlt· VICIOn t'S). 1hry'n-hath the same I kno"" the seniors fl'h thi~ .... :1, l'\Cn more spc.·c1al . hut 1r'i hkl· ha\'1ng l"'O k.1ds. The) 'rl' dtfli.~rl·nt. But ~ou lo\l' them both. The tir.,1 onl' ...,·as \ l'r' special. Thi!> Onl··~ 'ipcci;1I. 10 0 \\'{· "·ere a don11n:111ng tl·an1 last ~l·ar This year "'r ~trugglcd for a Ion~ 11n1l' but "'e l'ndcd up gct11ng Lt !thl' l1llc l Both arc 1mportan1 ln thl' \l'hool and progran1." Over a cour'>(" of IS ~i.·ars Holland ha s had hi 'i sharl' of up~ and do"·n. and among thl· up ...... as a n1cn1nrabll' 12-7 v1clol) O\Cr Edison. snapping the Charger<; ~0-grtml' .... 1n1ng slrl'ak 1n 19 71. and a 15-1.J \1t·lor\ O\er ri val Ncwpon Harhor 1n '85 . · "Last year's Pacifica gan1c ""'as un- bchevable." recalled Holland of thl' 14--7 verdict. "It gut us 1n10 lhl' finals. the first-ever for a Nl'wpon-!l.tc:sa d1s1ric1 tram." That momrnl ha s nn..., trans- cended into hack·to-back cro...,n!>. "Baclc.·lo-back. 1ha1·s somt'1h1ng,'' underplayed Holland. "T""o beach teams." Holland is 4u1ck to D<)1n 1 out 1ha1 the key to it all starts "''tth pla~en.. but he ha!> also had an {'dgc 1n tl·rn1s of coachu1g "'llh thl' assistan\'l' of Larry Br: an the past 1...,0 seasons. It has bcrn Br.an "''ho has hci.·n lh\• archnec1 of C'ofona·~ le thal passing game, and it's ht· ... n lhl' flll'iS1ng gamr ...,.hich ha'i catapulll·d an alwa}S- tough defens1\l' nut into '\Ome1h1ng that JUSI "-Ouldn'1 rrack do...,,n the stretch. "This \tafT i' \{'r: n1uch l1kl· thl' one I had in thl' earl1 '70s." said Holland. ··eut Ur.an h~ls bcl'n ablt• to makt' lhl' quar1c:rliat·k Jll.'rform_" . .\ y{'ar ago 11 "as a con\'l'ned dcfens1'e back. T} Pncc. "ho sho .... ·- ed .\11-C.IF laurels 111 th~: \l\ll' game. Last Friday night 11 "·as Todd Kehrh. a sophomore "'ho had nl'\er com- pleted a pass for 1h c \ars1t~ conung in, who d1spla}t·d c;1pab1\it1es of an .\Jl-CIF quanerback. .. From 1he first game to the last game Kchrh maiu red. ··said Holland. .. I said that about T) Pn cc last year and I'll say 1t again. I ]{'ft 1hat up to Larry Bryan. Offens1 \·el ~ Larry Bryan was a big pan of this and I (Please see CdM /821 Dawe Holland Rams, 49ers in showcase tonight San Francis co home free, but playoffs on fine for Rams the Rams bccausc of bruised ribs. He first suffered 1he injury Nov. 1q against Grce-n Bay, then ~injured the ly KEN PETERS ___ ...,...w There's a special quality to big- pmc, big-play quancrbacks, those rare athletes who almosl magically. mythically find ways to win. The San Francisco 49ers have the= •On TV, Channel 7 •t 6 NFL's acknowledged master of the art, veteran Joe Montana. '"If Bill (W4lsh) were still coaching. they would have Montana near death ~na into this pme," Robinson __ 11ill • ..1milinA._··v .. ~:nJ«__11im (}dontafta}. Those kind of guys play In this kind of pme. •• Walsh reti.rcd as the 49cn coach after the Super Bowl in January. with uaistant Ocorsc Seifert tak.ina over. Goin& into his second ,.me jap.in111hc Rams 11 San Francitc0'1 beld c:o.c:h, Seifen wu worried labout some 1reu ofhiJ 1eam'1 play. The Rams (M) need to win to Illy ahve in the d1v1sio n ra« . .\nd even 1f -the 49ers-cvt'nluall y win the 111le. the Rams need a victory lo s1rengthcn 11s chance at a ...,.ild-card playoff bcnh. The quanerbacks figure to be the focal points or the nauonally 1ek- v1~d matchup. "Montana se1s a different level for them," said Rams Coach John Rob- inson. a longtime admirer of the San Francisco quarlerback. "Steve Young allowi them 10 continue on that level, bul Montana sets it." And the Rams' Evercn. who. like Montana. has developed a knack for leading dramatic comebacks. seems 1o_bt_takina_biucam to a diffettrll level. "He :s«ms to have infCC'tcd !his team," Robinson said. referring to Evere1t 's confid ence and enthusiasm. "The stories about him alrc1dy arc stanina." Montana leads the NFl. in passina wi1ha lofty 11 6.l rating. farahead of the second-place ratin& of 94.0 by Buffalo's Jim Kelly, the AFC leader. Ironicall y. Montana's rating 1s ribs last Sunday at A1lanu, lca,·1ng onl y No. 2-on h1s-o:wn ~ceam. Young, the game late1n the finthalf. who doesn't quahfy 1n 1hc quar-Even when Montana's LnJunes terba.clc. ra1ings race becausc he hasn't h.ave sidelined him this year. Young played enough. has a rating of 143. 7. has come on and looked like a left- E v e re I t , handed version of the San Francisco meanwhile. is starter. with the 49crs win ning rc- s econ d to gardlC1sofwh1ch quanerback was in Montana in lhe the pme. NFC, with a Robinson. however, had no doubt rating of90.6. which quarterback the Rams would Despite nag-gina injuries see ionight. much of the The Rams have a youn1er player season. Mon-they pcrttive to be devclopina into tana has com-that kind of a quanerbaclc.. Jim Ever· pfiled a re· ett. markabtc-rr-:·' The two. coTnCldenti.lly m'lktni perttnt of his passes (23 1.for-323) 1-2 in the NFC passing ratings lhis for lJ.95 7 yards., with 22 touchdowns sceason, 10 head-t<rhcad tonight and nve interceptions. when the Rams en1enain the 49cn at Everett, who hasn'1 miuced any Anaheim Stadium. playina time, is 257-for-432 (59.5 The pme is a big one. . . pm.::ent) for 3,617 yards, with 24 The 49crs (11 -2) can d 1nch th,c1r touchdowns and 15 interceptions. &fourth consecutive NFC West hlk There had been some question with i win, and earn the home rtekl wttttber Montana woukl play apinst advantqc throu&hout the playoffs. Raiders can play it tough in kickbafl .. ,, doesn't marter bow you win. ,._ I -Ila l.oooanl." • Rowie r.:: LA llaKlen MONDAY, DECEMBER 11 . 1989 lllloll .... 11001 H\,h.I I H\11 ••• ,--;o.." ...... 'tOCl 1 .. .... ,, ....... ~ l<)_.0 ... .... 1c.n.. ir;.1 ~M-., !l ....... ---,.,_. ""-" ''====== -- ·-J.:·"i1 --· 1.0 ... °"' :1 -- ([_, lr:..a.IO~lj P"' I t•-· ---•te ... '"' ' -- - '_, I Ill , .. °"' l l (C..-•1 _ OA .>7' ·r -· . ,. ..... o ••. JO . ,,,,, ,. .... l~. ~ -rJ, )' • r ~~·· ''Ht.., I'\'- f I ,.,..,\l ,----j[ 1 <(IP"' Do< .!'/ !~--~ j ................ ( ,, _,, /•:!O F•. 0..-1't jf--------~ I ""',,_. _ .. ,., i..-1 Los Alamitos, Ed~ granted top see · for 5th Coast Classic By ROGER CA.Rt.SON Ot-~-k"" The fifth annual Coast Christmas Classic. a 16-team high school basketball 1n v1ta- tional at Estancia High , was unveiled "1th 11s pa1nngs Sunday morning and two rc - CC'nt tournament champions -Los .4.lam11os and Edison. were accorded honors as the No. I and 2 Sttds. Los Alamitos, bolstered by 6-foot-11 Rotx-n ConhsK. who has alrcad~ comm111t'd 10 Anzona Slatr . has swept 10 a 4-0 record and .,.,·on the Trabuco Hills Tournament cham pionship Saturda~ night. Conhsk, the tourne~ ·~ MVP, scored 2J points 1n an 82-67 VICIOT)' O\'er El Dorado. the same unit which opened the season ...,,th a non-league 68-65 win over Edison. the \atler' onl) ~1back 1n four stans.. Edison since \j,·ent on to record thrtt s1ra1gh1 \'ictones at tt'te Sa.nu Maria lnv1tat1onal. including a 56-55 lltle win over Sunset League rival Manna. The balance of seeds 1n \l.ha1 1s con~dered a very ll&ht and balanced field. includes N o. 3 Long Beach Jordan and No. 4 M ission VieJO. Jordan was 1mpress1'e in shu111ng Saddleback off at the Costa Mcsa-Newpon Harbor Tip-off Tournament. and Mission Viejo has already sho .... ·n 1u polenuaJ. na1hng a Cherokee Parts-less Marina quintet 54-45 eaij.Y. and e~tend1ng Y>s Ala~itos ilJ the Tr&;buw Hill• I Ouri'ia1n£rif se1ti1fini ls bcrorc fallin& by • onC"-po1nt mal"IJD. Among the ma1or first-round matchups arc Tustin and Huntin&1on Beach, Loog Beach Jordan and Glendale Hoover. LA Banrtin& and Irvine and V1su and the host Estancia Eqjes. Tus11n is 4-0 "'1th a 1ournamen1 crown in its hand, and Huntinaton Beach counters with a 1-:? punch of 6-6 Ste-phen Lucas and Savanna tranfer ~fustapha .i\bd1. Hoover boasts Rn1or sconng sensauon Jot'tn HHJm1n and Jordan, which has annually produced lls sha~ of standout team pcrfonnances in this tournament. and has already shown a good blend of talen1 in disposin1 of Saddleback_ Banning of Los Angeles 1s a neWC'omer. as is Vista from San Diqo County, and each comes 1n with crcden1ials which Jive anticipation of runnina teams taking their sho1s at the <kfcndi111 champions (Irvine) and tournament host Estancia. __ y ear _jJor lhe_toumamcnt appcan_lO bc_onc_whicb.Js u:yina_to~ rebuild after last year's situation when an unprecedcnled pullout of one of thee mosl recognized teams in Southern California (Sanll Cara) pvc the 1oumey. if nothina else. a black eye. .. TofC lures top cp dntets; lrvlne, La Quinta start .. I Switzer answers charges With some matter-of-fact statements _,,.,_ "'9 AJIHIMld Plw OKLAHOMA CITY -Former Olcla· --- boma coech Barry Switzer says be gave ~ Jamelle Holkway a piaskin briefcase as a ~ =tion praent., and that be ••probably" t Holieway a beer sometime durina the Qutr· tetb9ck'1 yean with the Sooners. Switzer said Saturday be had received the briefcase u a sift, and that be had &iven away other-"frcebies'• auch u shirts to athletes and non ... thletes durina bis 16 years u the Sooners' bead coach. ··There's no tellina bow many aolf bags rve given away to friends," be told The Daily Oklahoman in Sunday's editions. -Jamelle is not the only "kid rve ever &iven a &bin or a sweater to. Kids that didn't have a shirt, J said •Here, take this one: But I also gave them to kids who were not athletes." Switzer was rcspondina to a story in Friday's Los AnaeJes Times in which Holieway said Switzer bad bouabt him drinks and given him a leather sports bag. Switzer said Holieway had seen the breifcasc and said be would like to have it. Switzer said he had promised it to him if he would get his degree, and said that while Hotieway is a corTCspondcnce course shon of p-aduation, he gave the briefcase to him when he left Magic puts Lakers away ORLANOO, Aa. ·-The Orlando ~ Maaic fell behind by 12 points at halftime • and spent the next 18 minutes "treading ' water" Sunday night. When the expansion ---- team finally made its move, there was nothing the Los Angeles Lakers could do to stop a flood of points. "It just crecped up on all of us," Reggie Theus said after the expansion Magic ralliod from a 14-point founb..quarter deficit to win I 08-t 03 over Ole Lakers. winners of five NBA titles in the 1980s. "That's why you stay in the game until the buzzer sounds." Theus added. "We stayed within striking distance and when the opportunity came we took advan- tage of it." Sam Vincent scored 11 fourth- quartcr points and keyed a game- ending 23-4 run that enabled Or· lando to stop a four-game losing streak. "It looked like we were tread· Theui ine water for so long," Magic coach Matt Guokas said. "Our defense just got better and better. We gambled a little bit with some double teaming and created some things for ourselves." The victory was the fifth for the first-year Magic (3-11) against a playoff team from last season and gave Orlando the N BA record for the best start by an expansion team after 19 games. The Lakers. who led 99-85-with 6:28 to go a nd managed just two baskets the rest of the way, lost for the second straight night Washington beat Los Angeles 103-101 Saturday in tfie first game of an eight-game, 12- dAy road trip. "We had 42 minutes of very good basketball. and then we j ust totally collapsed.·· Lakers coach Pat Riley said. "It's totally unlike us to do this. This was one of the worst collapses I have ever seen," he added. "You've got to team to close out games in this league. You have to have a killer tnstinct." Elsewhere in the NBA Sunday: •Jack Sikma scored 16 of his season-high 30 points in the fourth quarter and Mike Dunleavy and Frank Komc1 each added nine in the period as the Milwaukee Bucb defeated the Portland Trail Blazers 107-104, snapping a four-game losing streak. t~ I O I I O I I 111 U \ \ Cincinnati Beapls Coach Sam Wydle, ad· dressing bis Benpls' fans while admonisbina them for throwina snowballs on to the field Sunday in a pmc apinst visiting Seattle: "You don't live in Oevelaod -you live in Cincinnati." Kings crush Quebec, 8-4 QUEBEC -Luc Robitaille found the ~ defensively shaky Quebec Nordiqucs j ust the trick after a heartbreaking overtJmc • • defeat. "It was a big game for us followina the overtime loss apinst Edmonton on Friday," said Robitaille, who scored twice and added three assists to lead the Los Anaeles Kinas to an 8-4 victory over Quebec Sunday. ••it was one of those fun games where evcrythina ps well for you," said Robitaille. wbote pis pve him 23 this season and a tie for the league lead with Brett Hull of the St. Louis Blues. '"Thia was a game we were cx~tcd to win because we're much higher in the standmgs but that always makes it harder to win." Elsewhere in the NHL Sunday: •Seldom-used Al Secord bad two pis and Jac- ques Oouticr extended his home winnina streak to ei&ht 11 the Cbicqo Black.hawks defeated the Vancouver Canucks 7-l. • Power-play goals by Dale Hawcrchuck and Pat ~uik &napped a second-period tie and &ed the Wmni1Je1Jeu to a 4-1 victory over the CaJpry Flames. • IUck V aive bad a aoaI and an usUt, lead.ins Buffalo to a 4-3 victory over the Waab.inaton Capitals at lbe S&bres equaled a club m:ord with their 12th ltnilbl victo!r at home. • Okka Sinisalo broke a tie midwa_y throulbt the secoDd period and Philadelphia killed oft" all eiabt New Yott powa-plays u the Ayers beat the Raqm 4-~ OU earuer tbit year. An athlete ls prohibited from rcmviQ& a sift after completion of bis eliaibility if it ia in recopition of bis athletic aocompliabment1, but NCAA ruJa provide only that be could no tonser ~nicipete ill athletica. Holieway had used up his eli&ibility. David Bent. director ol' enforcement for the NCAA, tw said . the NCAA ii primarily inJeraied iD incidents that occur after a ICbool bu boen pUced oa probation. The Soonen were bit with a three-year probation on Dec. 19. In reference to Holieway'a claim that Switzer bouaht bim drinks, the former CQ{ch &aid. "I ~y bouabt him a beer, not a mixed drink. sometime in a restaurant in the off-teaSOn ... "I'm sure that happened. I've done that for other kids in my years at Okla.boma, after a bowl pme wu over, never during the tcaSOn and just in a ~ settina. I've bought a beer for chccrlcadcn before, Ju&t trying to be a gentleman." Holieway told the Times he was able to use gas stations, laundries and restaurants owned by Oklahoma supporters without J)4yina. But be said he wouldn't &i~e specifics because he did not ~t to put the 1ehool 1n a position to receive the "death penalty;• under which a program can be suspended for one or two ycan. l'\THEBtJ.\( Ht:Hs ~k!! Bob searches for a receiver, secure In the knowledge that his deodorant's lnvlslble shield protects for up to 12 full hours. Dawson at odds with Ryan DALLAS - A Dallas television sports- caster says that Philadelphia Eagles coach * Buddy Ryan challenged him to fight twice. then left abruptly when the tnvitat1on was accepted. Ted Dawson. sports anchor for KDFW-TV, told the Dallas Times Herald that he and Ryan had a confrontation at the Eagles' practice on Thursday, then later bad another one at a Philadelphia television station. Dawson, a Southern California sportscaster for scveraJ years. was in Phjladelphia in preparation for the Eagles-Cowboys game Sunday. Elsewhere in sports on Sunday: • Loyola Marymount senior center Hank Gathers, who collapsed in the second half of Saturday rupt's ~e against UC Santa Barbara. will remain hospital- ized through tonight or Tuesday morning. •Jack Fouts. who took over as Cornell's head football coach in April when Maxie Bauahan quit amid rc.~>ns be was romantically involved with an assistant's wife, bas resigned. •Simon Robert Nuli, a 26-ycar-<>ld police officer from Tanzania. overcame slrOft$ winds in winning the Honolulu Marathon, just missmg the course record, finishing in 2 hours, 11 minutes, 47 seconds, four seconds off of the course record. •Skiing star Albeno Tomba entered a Bolopa hospital after breaking his collarbone in a aiant slalom race at Val d 'lscrc. France. •Gary Payton scored 39 points and No. 24.0regon State held Tennessee to only four points in ovenimc to give the Beavers a 96-90 non-conference basketball victory. · • Unlmown Ernesto Beatriz of Mexico City, whose friends took up a collection to pay his bus fare here, won $5,000 with an unexpected victory in the San Dicao International Marathon. clocked m 2:16.12. 11II\1'10'\-H \UIO ft&.aYlllCMI 10 a.m. -COLLSH f'OOTU&.Lt NCAA OlvtslOn II ~~ from Fllnnce, AIL-.1-*IOftYlll Stale YI. W.1llll9ol Coleet (telle), ESPN. ' "-"'· -NO .-OOTaALL: SM Frandtco at Rams, OwlM4 7. 'P.m. -90XIMG: Celvln Grow YI. Adei'n Gerda, lufl6or-"9tltwelttlt1, from Peudena, Texas, 5Porh· Chennel. 7 P.m. -90XINO: Juan Jose Elfreda n. Jesus Satud, iuNor-feethef wel9ht1, from the Forum, Pr1me Ticket. l:JO P.tn. -COLLaH l'OOT9AU.: CMlfOrnle 90.t ... Stete YI. Fresno State from Fresno (tePe), ~ . ,. .. P.m. -MOCKaY: Kines at Montreel (del9V9d), Prime Tldtet. RADIO 'p.m. -NO P'OOTaALL: s.n Francllco at Rama, KMPC (7l0). 'P.m. -HOCKIY: K"'91 at Montreet (dllev9d), KLAC (510). .......................... D•v• Hol,.nd gets •noltl•r vlct~ ride Oft .,....ould•n of "'9 Coron• d•I M• S•• ......_ CdM From81 have to give him a lot of credit." Bryan coached the quarterback and called the offensive plays. What the Sea, Kinas• passmg game did was simply complete the pack· age. You really couldn't gang up on Brian Lucas and the run game. or on Kerbli and the passing game, as La Quinta and its defensive stunting was to find out. Sooner or later the Aztecs would get burned -ala a 49- yard touchdown strike to Weston Johnson on a blitz, or a 94-yard touchdown run by Lucas. on a blitz. It was but 7-3 in Corona del Mar's favor at halftime and Holland knew anything could happen. He admits he was concerned. "Offensively we knew they were going to continue to do the same things with the tnck stuff,'' said Holland. "They had been been suc- cessful with it and we felt they would throw to their backs. and they d id. "If they were going to score we j ust wanted them to take some ume doing it." Holland has already weathered one storm when he saw his top run- ner, Lucas, go down with what ap- peared to be a serious khee injury early in the fi rst quarter. "I thought he was down for good:· said Holland. "I guess he got hit on the knee and it was bruised some. He missed two senes and had the knee iced, and we were reall} hurting then. I was thinking we ha'e to play really good defense and be able to throw the ball." l ucas returned. howe' er. and early an the third quarter he broke the long o ne for 94 yards. COAST From 11 s&nta Clara was granted the No. I seed off its reputation and veteran Coach Lou Cv1janovich and his Sainis went on to record a first- round victory over Cypress. But Cvijano\"ich wasn't happy with the officiating even with the victory. and so staled. The next night his highly-regarded quintet went up against what was then considered an "average" Edison team (the Chargers were 5-7 at the time) and Jon Borchert's team shocked Cvijanovich and the Saints, 39-38. outscoring Santa Clara 17-3 in the final period, capped by a last· 1eeond shot that bounced on the rim and fell through. Cvij~ovicb cried foul. blamed the officiating, and against all rules, p\11.led his team from the tour- nament, leaving Laguna Hills and Huntinaton Beach no one to play in the following rounds. • Santa Clara was forced to forfeit its next two pmes (against Laguna Hills and Huntington Beach) and eventually would wind up as the state champion iR Division JV. the only blemishes on the record for the cntue lt.UOD comina' from the three IOllCI at this tournament -27-3. Cv\ianovicb and bis Saints were pJaced •on probation by the ClF Southern Section and arc not cliaible to compete in any tournaments this lealOO. The tournament, however, ac- cord.ins to tournament director Tim O'Brien, Estancia 's coach, wu placed on a year's probation bccaUllC of the &ct the officials bad n.01 been Uiiined l))t-me aulhOnzed CIF of· 6cial (Speledy Castillo), rather by Llluna ae.c&•1 Darrdf McK.ibban. Mc:K.ibbao, who bad made the auianmenu for the t.oUnWnent for tbe Int four yean. ii DO loaiDr' with tbe IOUl"Dlmeat. nor are die PaT)' brocben, An and Chuck. who bad ofiaiaalJy conceived tbe tour-...... , ADodlier setbKk for the tour-·rr•i daia )W' ii that it ii a uue 1 s... tounWDeDt witlt the 16th = ...... up of axNMllry £8'aDda ••-~tbeao.ofan ............. _,. ,.. .................. ~ ., ...... .,. ....... dtmto ... INI re• 1111·-.. fDllOnd bJ ......... Die. 21 ill .. : .... ......... ,.~ ... -... _ .... __ --• Dia. 29 -..,,. .... •Die.• ~ ... J .. ri·-== iii ..... 91• "They were blitzing and they had no one left." explamed Holland. "One of the Johnsons (Warren or Weston) just shielded him off with a block and it was like we had three auys runnina downfield. Jeff Jackson made a grut block and Brian found the crease and did a great job.·· Corona del Mar took its share of punishment early, but 1t began to even out as the game progressed. "That's usually the way we've been," said Holland of Corona's business-like approach. as opposed to goin& in at a fever pitch. "I just don't know any other way," he said. At halftime he told his team simp- ly two things -"We need to score and we need to hold them in the early part of the third q uarter." No one was eetttng che\\ed out - in fact, only twice did Holland reall} get burned up wi th his Sea King during the ~ason: during first-half play of games against .University and Pacifica, when he felt his team wasn't putting forth the effort. Estancia laid a 16-3 defeat on Cor- ona and Tusun applied a 24· 7 lesson. but Holland had no admonishment for either. "Agatnst Tustin it wasn't like we were scrcwtng up, they were just beating our butts,'' reasoned Holland. "But agatnst Un1vers1t} a nd Pa- cifica. we were getting penalties we didn't need." Corona del Mar had all the 1tt>ms you need for a champion -defense. the quarterback. tailback. a bruising fullback and linebackers supreme. And, 1t has that extra ingredient - the Johnson twtns. who were two- man wreck.mg crews on both sides of the ball as widcouts and corners. worn well. Wancn was No. I tn 1986 and lost three straight. and has never re· turned. Edgewood was No. I tn 1987. iust got past Costa Mesa tn the first round, then lost three straight. a nd has never returned. Last year it was Santa C'lara, and the Satnts don't ever figure to return. 0 PREPS From Bl ulina difficulties in the 32-team con- cept and will be working with a 24- team field. The top eiJht scc4s arc Edison. San Bernardino, Marina, Saddle- back, Compton, Millikan. Irvine and Woodbridge. The La Quinta Invitation includes Estancia and Huntington Beach. both which arc involved in first- round activity tonight. 0 erw.w.,..Newsa.111c T.-....,etlnlMHtlll Sen len\erdlno bye ~ Verdel n l>aramouflt 7~1 Wlltoft VL lntlne Cenyon wines bve T ...... et OWttt C-... .,.,,.,.. Merine bye 1~ ... -Hiib "''-C~-09I Mar 6'-<>r.,._ l.uttlerllfl ¥L LB Mllllkan lledlelldsbve T.-.....etwna-. Edltoft bye 6'--Sentl AM n. Gerrt . 7'.Jt-..,._ ...,_ on, Woodtwld9e ........ trYe T...._et\Wu11..,_H6111 COl'llltfOft IM 7...U•ll•llltv""' ,_.,,,. .......... !$; n. S.VllMI KMIMY 111¥9 • T•_,Mlllt II Oil toll a •"!_~=..--· T...a., ~ l..cfl ....., VL Servi .. "'-· ......,.."°"'* n. "'1Allr ,......,., "9-C ... lfW v...., YI. MllrtM v..., TtflWll, 7-1 Ml 1 w ... n. Lao¥ole -r.-., ~ Alemllot n. ""°' illf .... T.-..~ .......... n.OC..V... T-., ......_, C..-. n. Wllldleller T__., t:al Ola '1Ca .__. n. Meter Otl we fs"lltew._......._ CCI I ...... ~ c.w. ~ ...., n. 0...-... .......,., ___ Oii .... l:lt-C•ll•rw ..,...,..MINltl v...., ...., ...... ••L...-.... CCllll•= .,._, 1-CliJllltW ~MwWWW ~ ww.r ""L.1•1 llf~..._, --~-·' ......... 0....1 .... ,,.. Oii ..... ftu.,,. ===.., ....... ~ ..................... . ~=• a-111lf lllerft.&.A iiHS··:t ... u ~ .......... ..... •=r:"lm:~-- "They made bia scores and they kept big scores away from us." said Holla nd. "You win games by bia plays and keeping them away from the big plays. They were just game- breakcrs, even last year." Holland saw Friday's game-break- :r when Marc Perlmutter intercepted in the fourth quarter to stave off a La Quinta threat after the latter had pulled to within 21-10. "They had the m omentum and we were kind of floundering." said Holland. "I've seen it happen for us and to us before. Your kids stan tightening up and I was concerned. But then Perlmutter got the inter- ception.·· So it's two straight in the title game with convincing verdicts against outstandtng compet1t1on. "La Quinta was hurting early too,'' said Holland ... but as the season progressed they were as good as an}- one. I don't think anyone who had beaten La Quinta would have want· ed to olav them aa.ain." Next year? Kchrh returns for his junior season after getting 14 games under his belt. and both guards (Gar- rick Fr-0st and G,eorgc Apkarian) re- turn. Defensive!) Holland has nine returning starters. ··our sophomores were only 1-9. but 1he freshmen were 8-2 and we ma~ go wllh a freshman.Junior varsi- ty and varsit>.'' said Holland. ··.\lot of those freshmen are going to be moved up to the vars1t}. A lot more than we'"e e1,cr had." Corona·s non-league schedule will include H untington Beach. Manna. Trabuco Hills. Estancia and Costa Mesa. then the Sea View League. includtng new entry Woodbridge. BOAT l'\G Soviets rriay still continue FREMANTLE. Australia (AP) - A New Zealand radio station un- veiled plans Sunday to enable the Soviet yacht Fasizi to continue in the Whitbread Round-the-World ocean race. The Soviet crew had considered pullina out of the race after running out of money and Skip Novak. the yacht's Amencan sk.ipper, had been desperately seeking .sponsorship since the yacht sailed into Fremantle on Nov. 26, at the end of the second leg of the race. He and Fasizi project manager Vladislav Murnikov were invited to A ucltland by Barry Everard. owner of a local radio station. "What we have done is fonn an organizing committee that will coor- dinate fund ra.isina in Auckland. and already the response bas been ter- rific," Everard said. "We have ajven them an assurance that they will have enough money, so basically we have underwritten their costs for the next two le:p, from Frcmantlc to AucJcland and then on to Punte del Este in Uruauay." There have been offen of bOusina while in AucJcland. fresh food for the lea of the race from AucJcland to hnte dd Este and help with main- tainance work on the yacht. New Zealand baa two yachts in the 33,000.nautical mile race. The yacht St.ei~ bu won both~ aaifed eo far, from Southampt0n. to Pu.nte del &tc, ud then on to Fremantle. The ot.bet New Znland COU)' fisher A Pa)'kd .. ia fourth amona 23 bo9ta. V ikings rule the roost In NFC Central, Bears offlclally join the ranks of NFL has-beens 8y The Auodat~·.-,.u Vik.inp' league-leadin& defenK took over. T?e Minnesota Vikings moved within one victory of ~ear flrst NFC Central Dwisaon title since 1980 by bcatma Atlanta 4J.17 Sunday, and the Chicago Bean moved over. ~left U , Packen S: Steve DcBcrg pas~d for two touchdowns, and the Chiefs kept al ive their playoff hopes at 7-6-1. The Chiefs seared 14 points in the final minute of the first half for a 21-3 lead. then. shut the Packers out in the sefond half. Keith Millard and Tim Newton returned third- quarter fumble~ -~th fo rced by Chris Doleman - for to uchdown in Minnesota's victory. The Vikings arc 9-S, ooe game ahead ofGr~n Bay (8-6). which lost 21-3 at home to ~nsas City. .. "~e control our own destiny," Doleman said. Kansas City sacked Packers quarterback Don Ma- jkowski fo ur times, intercepted him once and held Green Bay to four second-half first downs: The victory was the Chiefs' third straight. Grun Bay (8-6) had won three in a row. · Tha t s all we want." The IJ:cars, meanwhalr. lost to Detroit in Chicago, 2?-~ ~. endaog their spunenng attempt at a sixth straight ~1v1s1on lltle and ehmina ung them from pla)'off conten-llon at 6-8. Lloa1 Z7, Bears 17: Rookie Barry Sanden ran for 120 yards and two touchdowns for the Lions (5-9). who won their third straight game and matched their longest winning streak since winning the first four games of the 1978 season. Chic.ago lost four m a ro"' for the first time since 198 1 and lost to the Lions fo r the first time in 11 meetings. . "h's. not the end of the world." Bears coach Mike Ditk.a sa1.d. ·· ... It's definitely my fault. I think we can put a pcnod af\er that and quote marks and make a lot of you peo ple happ).'. Herc's how at we nt Sunda> in the NFL: Ea&lH ZO, Cowboys 10: Randall Cunningham passed for 170 yards and a touchdown. keepinJ the Eagles tied at 10-4 atop the NFC East wnh the Giants. NF'L Commissioner Paul Tagliabue was at the game because of allegataons the last time the~ two teams met that Eagles coach Budd) R)an had olTt'red a bount) for roughing up Cowbo)., pla) l'r\ Viii~&• 43, Falcons 17: Should the Vi k.rngs and Packers tte fo r thr lead. Minnesota holds the edge with a better div1s1on rl'Cord The Vikings L·d ::!0-IO at halft ime. but C'hns Miller threw a 17-yard l D pass 10 Shawn Colli ns 10 pull the Falco ns (3-11 ) within a field $Oal in the third quaner Wade Wilson wai. the n intercepted, and Atlanta moved to a fi rst down at m 40 before Doleman and the The re were fi ve anfrar11on!. for unnccessar) rough- ness in the game. played t\.\O days after Tagliabue d1sm iss<!d the Cowboys· protest. The Eagle'! kd 17-3 at halftime. Dallas 1s 1-13. Raiders stay in the hunt, 1 6-1 4 By JOHN NADEL Al' St>ort• 11/rltf'( I-yard line. He score<l two pla~~ later. ··Marcus 1s one of the best to ever play this game." LOS ANGELES -All \\CCk long. the Los .\ngeles Raiders said the) werc going to :n 01d a letdown against the Phoenix Cardinals Then the} ra me out and laid an egg. Raiders coach An Shell said ... , felt confident with him in there under theSt' condition~ Then."s nobody better in the game at going O\ er the top.'' The Raiders were coming off an emotional 16-13 ovenime '1ctOf) 0' rr the Oc"' er Broncos before a crowd of 87.560 at the Lo\ -\ngdes Coliseum. Onl> 41.785 watched the gaml· against the Cardinals. However. the Ra11krs rl•mamed sohdlv entrenched in the playoff race when Marcus Allen scored on a 1- yard d ive w11h 40 Sl'COnds remaining Sunda) to give the Raiders a hard-fought 16-14 '1ctor) over the underdog Card inals. The Cardinal' h.ad tah·n a 14-9 lead on a 2-yard touchdo"'n pass from Gar) Hogcboom to Ja) Novacek Wlth 5: 10 rcma1n1ng. capping a 90-)ard. 15-pla)' dnve. Bu t Vance Mueller returned the ensuing kickoff 49 yards and the Raiders mo' ed 46 ) ards an 13 plays to score the wmnang touchdown. .. We mo,ed the ball "ell but"'" couldn't score. for whatever reason." \hell '>31ll "We JUSt ""eren't on toda\.. But all m all. it's a "'1n no mailer what.·· Allen was at a lo.-,., "hen asked about 1he subpar performance b~ the Raider\ .. It's difficult 10 C\Pla1n l"m Ir) ing 10 find an answer:· he said ... The \1gn1fitancl· of the game should be an 1ncen11,c." On a personal k'el. .\lkn ..aid he .. JUSt wanted to Allen. playing his first game !>ince suffering a knee injury on Oct. 9. kept the drive alive with a 3-yard di ve on a fo unh-and-2 play. pulling the ball at the Phoenix contribute.'' ' Loi. Angeles. which has won three straight games. 1s 8-6 with two games remaining. FOOTBALi, 0 N'L NetleMI C• .. •ic. v -S.n Frnci co Items New Orleans Allent1 Mlnnewta GrMnBav Chlceoo Detroit T1moe Bev Wett W L T 11 2 0 9 ' 0 7 7 0 3 11 0 Centre! 9 s I 6 6 I s 9 s 9 East 0 0 0 0 0 ftct. PF PA """ 365 216 .69'2 337 280 .500 31S 275 21 4 225 375 6'3 305 231 S71 302 311 ,,29 330 311 .357 24 333 .JS7 291 3S5 Ptllledefphla N.Y . Glenta Westline ton Ptloenl• Delle• 10 ' 0 .71• 291 230 10 ' 0 .71' 299 235 I 6 0 .571 326 271 S 9 0 .3S7 2U 309 1 13 0 .071 19• 351 Amenan C•lfel we Wett W L T W L T •-Denver ........ KenseiCltv S..ltle 10 ' 0 I 6 0 7 ' l 6 • 0 Sen DleGO ' 10 0 Houston Cl9W4end Clnc:fnnell Plttlbur9'1 Centrel 9 s 7 6 7 7 7 7 •.. , &uff•lo • 6 Mleml • 6 lndlanePOll• 7 7 New Enolend 5 9 N.Y. Jets ' 10 •-dMMll~ .... Y·dMMll• .......... 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 S.....'t'•SC-.......... ,.._,. 1• Mlnnesoll '3. Alle.nle 17 ~ .. '°· Oelle• 10 Oetro11 ?J. Ch~ 17 Pct. ftF PA ftct. ftF P'A .714 309 207 .571 211 240 .536 271 242 .429 211 211 .216 227 261 .643 331 327 .536 217 2t7 .500 322 249 .500 206 294 .571 3'2 296 .571 294 310 .500 250 247 .JS7 267 339 216 239 336 KenMt Cltv 21, Gr_, 8ev 3 New Or1MM 22, 8 ""9IO It Pfthllur911 13, New York Je" 0 Watlllneton 2', San Di.oo 11 Saeltle 2•. ClnclMall 17 Houtton 20, Ta~ 81 v 17 1~1, n. c1a,,...nc1 11 1011 New Yont Ga.nit 1', Otn....r 7 M*n1 ll, New Entlland 10 T ...... t O..... San FrancllCO al ltMM. (CM nn411 1 •• 61 ~.,. . ._ Dalla• el New York Glenlt, t-lO • m. o.,,.,,... al Pfloenlx. I o.m. ....... .,.. o.i- New Yori< Jel• al It-, I o m ltaNln a• S..llla, S o.m ~-.. v a• Cl\luoo, 10 • m "4Malon 11 Cl11e1Mell, 10 a.m Mleml at lndleNCIOll•. 10 1 m M!Nwlote al Cleveleftd. 10 1 m New lllllMd •I Ptt1Mlur91\. 10 • m Sen Oleeo al Kanu1 Cltv, 10 1.m T.,,.. .. ., at o.tro11. 10 a.m. W~ at Allaflll, 1 p_m. .,.,_ el Sell Fr~. 1 o.m __.,,Dec. II "'1r.d1iJllM et New OriiMM (C1'eMll 7 el 61 b*nl6.C.....14 sc...w.._,. • 1 • ,_,, •• J ,_,. • BASKETBALL ~~ N&A WESTEltN CONFEltENCE l"eclflc: OM\Mft w L l"ct. Lehn I• ~ Porneno ·~ 6 S..1111 II 1 Phoenix 1 I ~ 6 II S.cre,,.,..,10 6 11 GOiden Stele • I• MldwHI 01\'lwon Sen Antonio 12 ~ Utell 12 s o.<'lver I) 6 Hov"on ' 10 0•11•• • 9 MlnnftOle s ll C"-rlOlle l IS EASTERN CON,.ERENCE A h flll< OIVISlen 717 7U "I ~1 3S3 3S3 m 106 106 ~ .,. •11 ,,. 167 New Vorll. Pl\ll•Oltotll• &ollon We\l\lno1on New Jeruv Ml•ml W L l"ct. 12 1 632 10 I S56 11 9 S50 9 II •50 s 13 218 s 16 23& 1no1ena Allenle O.lroll ClllceGO Mllwe\ill" 0r1enoo Cleveleno Central OMUolft II S 611 11 6 667 12 7 632 II 1 611 • 10 '" I II 0 1 1 11 38'1 SIMdeV'• sc- Orlanoo lot. L.Mten 103 Mllwe\illft 107, Porlleno llM T.....,., CO-Clevelen<l el Utell, •30 om TuesdilV'l Gemn L.elren el CMrlOlle, S om ~ •• Poftteno. 7 JO om Sen A.nlonlO et Atlante •.30 o m MlnnHOte al lnclle~. •JO Pm Ptll~ e1 N-Jerll• S om DaMet et CllluOO, UO om Ortenoo 11 Mllweull.ft, S JO om PT!oenla el H0taton. S.30 om O.troll el Olftver. 6.JO P m GOiden Sl•I• el Sacramento. 1 JO om Milek 1oa. Lalren 103 GB 2 1 s 1 1 9 , • 1 , '1 oa 1 1 I , J , . , • 1 . , s L.AKEltS -Green 2·9 •-I 11, Wonllv 11•11 f-11 31, fl\omPlOO S·IO 2-• 12. Scoll 7-IS 3·3 17. Jol\nM>n l·161·9 1'. COOl)lr 1·7 0-0 1. Olv1c •·7 •·4 12, Drew 1·1 O·O 4. auca,,.11 H 0-0 0 Tolell JS-et 31·Jf 103 Otl&.ANOO -ltevnold1 7·1' 0·0 I•, Clli.d91 ll>-116·10 26, Acrn 2·S 1·2 S, Theu• 4·13 l·t 20, Vincent 1•15 S·S 21, Anderton •-12 2·• 10, Gl'Mft 0-l 0-0 0, Sllllet 0· 1 0-0 0, Smllll •·6 0-0 I. Turner 0-0 0-0 0, Antlev l·I 2·2 • Total• .,.90 2•·32 lot Sc-. bY Oue"9n L.Men 27 • • 11-1a OftMea 27 16 • is-1• >-Point eoels-t.°' A11oetet l·f IGr~ 1-2. 0r-0-1, John'°" O-l. c-O-ll. 0r1enoo 0-1 (Vlnc.nt>. Fouled out-None. lt~o. Antelft 4' (Ofvac 13), OrlenOO 45 (C~llaOte 12). AHISll-LOI Anoetn II (JoMIOll I), Orlanoo 26 (Vlftelnl 10) Total fouls~OI AAoe4es n. 0'1endo V. Tectwo~OI Aneeln AleNI d9tenM. LOI Anottas coacll ltlltv. A-lS.017 HO( h.1-.\ ·~ NHL CAMP8&LL CON,.ERENCE Smvtlle OM1len w L T '"" GF GA EOmOt>lon IS 10 s JS 121 10. Klnel IS 11 2 32 13? 110 Ce101rv 11 " • 31 130 111 WIMIOlll u IJ J ll 97 10S Vel'l(OllVe< 10 16 ' 2' 102 111 N llN'I• OIVl\lon Cnlcego 17 11 1 3' 117 10S MCnl'llOll 16 u I ll 108 IOI SI Louil IJ II s )I 103 93 Toronto u 17 0 n 1n 1•2 O•lrOtl 9 16 ~ n 19 llS WALES CONFERENCE l"etrlc• OIVlsleft w L T '"" GF GA NY Aenoe'i IS 11 s lS 106 " !"tllleOllOllle IS 11 ~ llS 101 w1111lno1on 12 u 28 103 104 Ptllll>llroll 12 lS 26 113 121 NIW JtrHV II IS 1S 110 120 NY ltlen<Mr\ 9 18 n 99 llS AdAml OMsleft &vffelO 19 • •2 110 93 Monlrlll 11 11 3? 113 9S aoston 16 10 JS 100 81 Heriford IS IS Jl 104 102 OulOec 6 11 16 99 1'6 SundAV'l S<ere• Klrla I, Quebec • WIMIOlll •. Celoerv 1 &vflllO •. WHM\Glon ) Pl\lleo.toflle '· New York A•noer\ 2 Cllluoo 1. \lenco...•er I TWtflt'a Gemes SI Louil el Toronto, •JO om LO. Anoelel 11 Monlr•et •JS om Ceioerv et Eomonton, 6.lS om T'uew.V'•G.emft ao"°" •• PtlllburGll. 4.lS 0 m New Jen 1v el New Yori< ,, .. _,, VlllCOU\lef' II Mlnneiol•. ~ 0 m ,..,.., ...... •JS om ) l-• I 2-4 1 QueOec, 0.8IOll 4 (GUii\), 10 •2. 2 Lot A""'"· 1toollai11t 22 <Nlctloh, &ennlng), 1S-o6. 1 Lo• Anoelft. aennlno 2 1Aoollel1te, Gre1111.¥>. 17'46 loo> '"-ltv-Salllc. Que llnltn.fena). 16·26 s.c.... ..... • LO• Anoelel. &ennlno l (Grellll.vl. l .• I. s. l ot Anoetn. T•VIC>r s (Ductle\M. Waller•> .• 11, • ()velle(, Sakic 16 (Lewton). 'IS. 7. LO• An~\, T-111 lS IKHPlr. Ovc.~ne). 13:37 P-lllet~OM T'lllnl ~ I. Lot AllCll!ls. ltoollellle 23 (Nier.oils. Gretzllv), UO. t Quebec, D1810ls S (Sall ie), 16:21, 10. Lo• Anoel9'. T1v~ 6 lltOl>Clellle, Nlchollll 11.24, II Quetlec. Goulel 1 (Finn, SIHlny) 11:57, 12 Los AnoelH. NICl\olt\ 21 (ltoC>llellla, Grallll.v), It Sf Penettv-MCSorlrt. L.A (llOOltlft9). I ..JI. Stlota on eoe.....-t..o. Anoei.. 7·9·11-27 Que-* 7·11·1)-lt Poww·Olev Ooe»ortunlllft-LO\ Anoetlt l of 1.~0of l Goellt• LO$ A""'". Hruaev. 12·9-2 Ill SllOtl·l' M\lft) Quetlec, Tvenuu. S-12· I 117· It) A-IS .... 1t~¥1Hewell.U--Wav,,. a.-Y, OM McC-1 ft,,,, ~ I IH\\,\f !'''"'' Giull H. Bre.coe '1: Dave Mcwn tiptoed 57 yards tbrou&b the snow with a. screen pass, and th~ Giants defense made a 14-0 halfhme lead stand up over Denver, which already has clinched the AFC West with a I 0-4 record. Mcaaett's run came m idway through the second quarter and gave New York a 14-0 lead. Earlier, Onis Anderson scored from 3 yards o ut on New York's first possession . New York's defense then beat back every Bronco!> thrust but o ne. which ended with a 32-)ard TD pass from John Elway to Michael Young.. Saiat1 ZZ, Bills lt: John Fo urcade made his first NFL start. aside from stnke games. and threw two touchdown passes for New O rleans (7. 7). which was eliminated from playoff conte ntion b) Ph1adelph1a's victory. Fourcade replaced the benched Bobb~ Heben and threw for 302 yards. helpin~ 1he Saints snap a two-µme losing streak. Buffalo (8-6) has lost t\\O an a ro"' an llS battle to sta) atop the AFC East Steelers 13, Jets 0: Pattsburgh·s defense. led b~ linebacker Greg Lloyd. got ns fi m hutout since Sept. 22, 1985 against Houston. Tim Work) Sl'ored on a 35- yard run on the opening dn' e. then the Steelers turned to defense. Lloyd intercepted a pass a nd had one sack. Oiiers %0, Buccaneers 17: Warren Moon threw two touchdown passes, and Houston·s dcfcn!>e batted down two punts. intercepted a pass and rccon·red a fu mble Houston 1s 9-5 and on top of the AFC Central. ""h1le Tampa Ba) fell to 5-9. The kc) ddensavc pla) came with I: 18 to pla) when safety Buba McDowell rernvcred a fumble b) Tampa Bay·!I James Wilder at the Houston 21 . Seallawkl %4, Bengals 17: Da'c Kneg lobbed a 1- yard touchdown pass 10 Cun Warner w11h 3: 51 to pla~ for the winning touchdown. dropping Cmcannau to 7-7 and 1wo games backox Houston Kneg·s second touchdown pass followed a disputed call. Seanle (6-8) appeared 10 ~ stopped "'hen Warner failed on third-and-goal from the I . But the pla) was blown dead for illegal motion. gl\ mg Sea11le another chance. even though the referee later decided there "as no motion on the pla) . Ste' e Largent entered the record book w11h 1 OOth career touchdown reception. breaking the mark of Hall- of-Famer Don H utson. Largent. 35. earlier had extended his rernrd to 1.,5 consecutive game~ \\1th a ret~ep11on . Redskins U , Chargers Zl: Mark R~ p1en th re" t"'O touchdown passes. and Chap Lo hmiller k1d.ed four field goals as the Redskins ( -6) gave Joe Gibbs his IOOth victory as a head coach. The winning score came on a foun.h-and-3 pla) when Ryp1en lofted a 33-yard to uchdown pass to G ary - ~-» ,. > ,. • -> ••• -~ --- Hold Ing -~ Raid en· Marcus A llen ulls o ver tit• goal llne for winning touchdo wn Sunday. (lark \.I.1th 7 21 k it. g1\1ng \\J,h1ngton a 23-21 lead 0' er San Dal·gu ( 4-I! 'I Colts %3, 8 rowni1 17: \1 tkl· Pnur returned a pass 1ntercep11on St< ) .ird' lu1 .i wu1. hdown 10 g1 "C In- daanapolls the \ 1ctnr. ll\ l'I C le' eland Browns. whose kicker Matt Bahr m1'\t·d l\\O lhan1.·e~ to win the game. lnd1anapoli\ (' ·" l gu1 11110 11\ en1 me after Keith l a)lor"s 77.,ard anter1.ep11on return set up the t)ang touchdo\\n "1th I '" rl·m.11ning 1n regulauon. Bahr. 1.1. l\o obt1 nw • .-.ed J potenual game-\\ inning kid. of 39 \ard.., \\Ith 2~ '>nond<:. k it in rcgulauon. hie"' his \uddt·n-<leath npronun1t\ lrom 35 ~ards wtth 6:05 to go an o\ en1me ( k'dand (~-t>-l 1 h•-.1 '" third s1ra1gh1 game. 1s \\tnless an tour and 0-2-1 1n venime Oolpblns 31. Patriots 10: 'ammae mnh scored on a three ')hon ru n~ dnd Dan \fanno passed for 300 yards as M1am1 mo\ed into J 1ir-.1-pbce 11e 1.1.11h Buffalo - although the Bills hol<l thl· t1cbrl'Jl.t'r ad' anatge -in the -\H £.s<)t But ~taam1 al<to m(l'\e<l mtu a frontrunner's pos- 1t1on m the ra1.c tor thl· -\H ·., '"'o ""lld<ard benhs. That mean' 11 thl· l>olphin<, \\an their final games at lnd1anapoll~ ..ind ..ti hmnl· aga1n'>I "'-ansas Cit). they"re guaranteed of mal.1ng the pla~otls. M1am1 . ranl.ed th1r<l-\\ON 1n the !'<FL 1n rushing defense. hm1ted John tcphem to 20 }ards an 10 c.a mes. New Eng.land fell tO 5-11 as M1am1 completed Its first .!lweep O\ er the Patnots ~ance 1984 8ASkET9ALL Hllllt lcMll ....... , __ ... ,,_.. ... _........,,, Cl,. S·AA I L8 P04• I~· 11 1 St MoniU D·•l. l 1.vnwooo l•-10 4 L•kewooo 1'3·71 S MtMllletl c2S·7 6 Se,. ~ ... •o•no ~-1 1 ltlOlenM 20-7 I ~dr (17·l). • S.m1 v...., '1 ·• 10 Ett..,e~ IS·• Cl,. S·A I Metw Del CJS·ll; 2 1.ovoi. 121·)1 l CaP•••••NI v11,.. 2S·• ' L°' A-.m11°' 12· U S MO<e->o Va"«.. 1'·7 • Senta aero.re IS·lO 1 E Toro 11l·lll L Mw1ll9 ( 16-IS); f Oceell View ( 1'-fl; 10 Oem-1l·ll1 Cl,. 4-AA 1. &._ (IS·ll ), 2 Oom~1 12•-SI, l ""'°" Amel I 17-101 • J w Norlll 121·11. s Camerino 11•·11 • A1v..-•10e Polv (21·7) 7 GleflOOr• Jl-ll I Muir (10· 131 9 Comoton C 14· 111 10 Celllorn1e c 16·1) Cl,. •·A I Ar te•l• 121·11 2 Ge-1\e CI0-11> 3 u Mlreoe PO·l•l. • ltJo Mew C11·SI. S CrHC»nle Velilv I 16·f l 6 8er\low ,2.J-•> 1 Kenneov I 16-tl I El ~ C?0-6l 9 8urr0U9h• avroen• 111-11 10 Fuller•°" 17·7' Cll' >·AA I MorntnOl•Ge C 2S-4) 2 Wvlle 111·111 l Footnlh I IS· IOI 4 ltolllr>G Hiil• C24·S). s Cancan"•• 1ll·101 6 Trebueo Hiii• t?S·7l. 7 Pomona 1l•·I01 I 8•ee·0Un<U 111-1) 9 El Oor100 1:to-s1 10 west..-n 111-•l Cl,. J·A I Notre O.me ~men o.11• (11·1). 2 l..e CeMde (li-l). 3 SI &..-MrO (1'3·6) ._ C- ... M9r t•·l1l1 S St Peui 120-<lJ. 6 PIClflce ( 1•~1. 1 San LUil OC>IMIO I 11·1) I AencNI Alem•'°' 11· ll 9 Hervero ll· IOI. 10 Vucxe Vallev lt·7 0 1" 2-AA I Sen•• Ciera 17·1> 2 Vertlum o.i ll1·11), l ihMu'° 121·6' • Ce~el U•-Sl ~ S...te Meroente 9· 161 ' w"'"• Cl'lr·st .. n 123-71 7 T~o1 17-61 I Pl\n X 6-161 9 Chemlnede If· ll 10 Tw..,•vn,,... Pelml 9-131 Cll" l·A KlntP" Miii• KrUlll•lnJ•ld tloldl Quebec's Joe ~ lleftl • lte turn1 eround the net of the Klftel ....... ~ ..-~ action Sun~. IOnp _.,.,a~ I Not-. Dame ltlwrl>Oe 112· lll 2 Serre 110-121 l Ore,. L..,t"9<at1 l24·SI '-Crour-lll·ltl S Wfttern Clr~lian (1S·12> 6 v ... ., C~hlla11 (16-fl, 1 SI ~-Santa Merla 112·12) I El 5-sftOO llS-111 t MoiaV9 (9· 11) 10 SI 8-ventvre llS-'1 ----- GOI J .:) F• lS-lt SMerlOl'I LMll'Nn Hutton <>Pen, L..e Jolla. Feo n -2s Nll.-n L°' ... _.., e>o.n PecHlc PellleClel M.lrcl\ 1 ·• Oor•I Rvoer Ooen Miami W..rel\ I· 11 Hone!• CIHlle:, Corel SOf'lno•. Fie W..rC'fl IS-11 Pie•.,., C"-molon•h•o Ponte veore Fie M.lrC1l 21·2S Nfllle lnvllehon.t OrleACIO Fie MarC1l 2t-Allf'N I ,_._, ln•V"ence ,.....,, <>o.n. n. WOOOleno• Tuu Aor• S·I Meatet'l AUOUlle Ge •orl S-t C>eocKll Gveren"-ClauK: Hat ''"°""•·Miu Aor1 12· lS "'11(1 Het'f1eoe Clanlc Hiiton HMCI lllall4, s c Aort lt·Z2 KM.Ill G•Hl9" Gr-•tioro 0oen G"""'°°"°, N C.. ~ 26-'9 USFa.G Cleulc ,.._ Or'IMn• '49V H GTE '""'" HelMWI Ciani< Ir""'° Tian ,,,,.., 10-ll Memorial Ouol•n Oftoo May 11-10 Soulll_,....,, 8el COIOf\<el Fort WOf'llll. Teo& Mev 24·17 ... Soulll Atlenll Clan~ Meriel ta.~ "' '49Y )1·~ l K-ONtl PolOmlK Mel Jl,#lt 1·11 t.ftttl WMHlnl ONn 0.. arootr., • Hllllt ScMlt Gl'1s , __ .... _... ... _ ...... , Ctf' S·AA 1 Mornlnotloe Ill· 1'', t Clllrio 127· ll. l. Pel<'l'IOele O•· 11 ). • L11nwooe1 111·71, S. Reoten~h (17 7) •• LMO &MCI\ F>olv (IJ·71. 1 Channel !llano• 110-1), I AOOie Va.lie¥ !lH I; •. Don LUIO (11·71. 10 Anletooe Vactev '16-tl Cll" S·A 1 ..... 111-4), 2 H.n (24·l l. l Senl• 8ertiere 121·•> 4 Onlerlo (2'·21, S.. 0-"""' 114·4)1 6 W9'1 Co•IM 119-J) J Et Toro (11·10). I l"aMGenl I 16· 1> t Cenvon 5orl"9'l (19-71. 10 ArrollO ~anoe {11·71 Cit' 4-AA l Gellr I lt-11 2 ~" 12•·Sl. l J W Nortt1 m -•1 • Como!Ot> (IJ-7), s. Wu• ... (Jl4~ • V•leftCIA <71 ·101. 1 Wntlalle llt .. ). I Mluloft vi.;o (23·S> ' c ... von·4nellelm 12'·•>. lO Loera 111 • 12) Cll" ••• I I.a HeOre I lt•7), 2 SI Jo"9llfl 121-71. l P9lm o.--t 12l·l) .... Gell9llle (l•·fl. s. I.a Quinta (ft·•>. 6 l isl'IM Mon~ 11 .... ). 1 Ka .... ()4-1). I-Loi A"-Ci.·2), t An.ale 111·7). 10 CYWnS (11_,l CW J·AA I lf'M-()dftOe IJl·J). 2 P8llDs Venl9 (24·4), ) AIMCMaro (20-6). 4. Lotnooc (~"'9); l A~ llH I. 6 ·~ (14 .. l, 1 s.-llt·t>. I. ........ (194)1 t Tt._ Hiia (14"">, 10.. G-.. OH i ~ . 't1\H\llf41'. :}at .. .. bi • " a I " w .. II "' _ .. .. " T .. d ~ 1, f< .. p • - c ii d • • v 1 • • I • t ' ' I I _J • I I f • • I . I .I ' I r r I l 1 • I I j I '· ...... .. Oi&•O..DAILYPILOT/Monclllr,OM1m• 11 ... Softball signups Colw Mtu Unit: Ltaaue softball, fot air1s 9-15 Yt&fl of qc, will hola •icrt11P1 Jan, 20 and Jan. 27 al Costa Mna Hi&h School from 9 Lm,·aoon. Tht leql.IC is for Costa Mesa ttUdcn11 only. For more information, pho~ Janit Quezada. Jat11e vice president. al 546-7894. Seniors softball A Stniors (55 and older) slow pitch soRball leq11e is \ookina for playcn to compete in 1hc H11ptin1~on Beach lc.quc bcsinnina the fint S11nday 1n January, 1989. For more information, phone Bob at 840-6370 evCni~ from 5-11 p.m. sec baseball clinic Southern California College will host 1 baseball chnic from Dec. 27 10 Dr«-. 30 on 1hc school camp11s field , 55 Fair Dri ve. Cos1a ...... The cost is SIOO each wnh S25 orT for each additional family member. Times each day w1J1 be from 9 a:m.-1 p.m. with the SoCal College staff, fcatunng head coach Charlie Philhps. conduc1ing th«" clinics. Items to be covered include infield dr.Hs. outfield drills, conc:cpts of hutinglbun1ing. pitchina mechanics, pitchina drills, cu1ch1ng techniqll«'/drills and bascrunnin&/lcads, etc. For more infonnation, call 858-0463 after 6 p.m. or 556-3610 (e~t 279). FV Youth Baseball Fountain Valley Youth Bucball will hold its final 1tan·up for 1990 on January 6 from noon to S p.m. •1 the founta;n Valier Rccrc111ion Cnltt •I Brook.hurt\ St. Ind Hell Ave. Tbc ~ue is for qes S-16' and the-re arc no • rnidentiaf boundry fimits. For inronnation, call Carol Ritter at 962-60&4. Basketball league Applications art now being acceptt'd for lhe Founlain Valley Communi1y Servi~' Division Winl«'r S·M•n Basketball ~a1ur. · TC#lm rosters and f«s are being accepted on a tin1-comC', firs1-scrvtd basi' ,11 the Fountain Vall«")' Recreation Cen ter, 16400"'Brookhuri1. through Dr«-. I ~ at 4 p,m, Fees arc S2.50 per. tram. and mus1 be sub. mined in 1he form of a money onkr or cashier's ehttlr. made payable to 1he City of Fountain Vallc-y. Addi1ionall!. otlic1als arc 10 be paid,.ni&htl y at a ra1r of 16 pC"r team. The lequc will be divided into "D" {Tues-day), "C'' (Sunday/Monday) and "B" (Thurs- day) divisions. All pmn arc to be-pla)'rd al the Fountain Vallrr Rttrea1ion CC"nter. Classi- fication games wil ht-gin Jan. 8. I 990. LC'ague pla)' will stan Jan. 15 and run for 10 weeks. Ros ten. arc limitc<l 10 12 pla)'C'n.. all 18 years of age or older . For more infonna1ion, phone the Fountain Valle-)' Rttrca1ion Center at 839-861 l bc:lwttn 8 a.m. 1nd 5 p.m. 20-year-old dominating rodeo lly TI M DAHLBERG "" Soon. .......... LAS VEGAS -T y Murray. a ~0- year-old who captured rook ie of the year honors his first season. capprd his sophomore year Sunday bv ...,·in- ning the coveted all-around title as the nation's top cowboy at the Na- tional Finals Rodeo. Murray didn"1 plare 1n Sunday's competition. but managed to stay on his horses in both the bareback and saddle bronc e\1en1s to win enough 642-5678 CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678 overall money ro boost his season earnings to S 134.806 and make him the year.Jong champio n. Five of the seven defending cha m- pions also won 1heir respective events as 1he $2.3 million even\ ended 1he rodeo scaln after I 0 go- arounds. "I'm numb." sa.1 Murray. of Odessa. Texas. ··r,·c dream«"d about this ever since I c.an remember. It's lhe greatest f«ling in the world." Murray. who entered !he lucrative FROM "°"TH C*A.MGt: CO . FftOll IOUTH 0..AMGI' CO. ........ .. 1117 THE DAtl. 't 11'1..0T C:lASS.,1£0 Ofra ••OUA.<; ,_,..,.. ,,..,,..,-,,7 ~5~ s..• e oo. .... 1 ' 30,,., ..__...,~ w.J I 00-·$ aop... CHECK YOUR AO THE FIRIT DAY .. n •t .___, .-. . . ,~ ..... !.!..t! rodeo trailing roper Clay O'Brien Cooper for 1h.e all-around title. won S58~30 iu the NFR lo overtake Cooper and wi n the title. Cooprr, of Gilbert. Ariz., earned S34,390 in the rodeo to finish. second overall a1S117.489. He was followed closely by Murray's uncle, Butch Myers. a steer wrestler and calf roper who finished lhe year at SJ 16 .390. Murray clinched the overall ti1lc by sconng a 78 on hi s la st bareback ride. ,..,...,,I • • " " M .. .. • • .. _ 0 ....... -Ollfldl 0 t1 Sun!tV H.. 0 11 U1 Qi,llftr9 lO llTANQA {It-I, S•ll JI CO.la Mell 0 )t i........,. H1" J ,. Lei Ami-0 «I L..-.-a..ct. 0 21 Ot•-0 tt c-Oii Ml!r" 3 i. u111--.rtv• o 2' NlwCIOl't H"110r'" 10 17 Twlltl• 12 10 Sldi111~1ci.• 0 c .. 12 La Mlf'.0. 15 N•~T NA•llOlt (f·Z. )·fl >o L18001. &Mc;h 26 ()cMn \IJIW ' Hwlllnll<I" 9Mch 10 La Hll:lr• 17 LDnO a.en Wiiton 1• un1v.,-•1tv• 1 T .... 1111• 10 E1r...c .. • 11~· I • " !tort.Ill 0 , ' " " " " ' JI GllM (Oil 20 14 LI Quinta 2l SADDL••ACIC. t•·4, 2-J) 1 Dcun \119W 1, 0 S.n" Afll 71 12 El lt•flCIMI o 1 S..r1 :n It Sin!• An. Vall•v O 1• Tu•lln" I I• cor-Oii Mtr" n :II un1....,1uv· 1l 17 NlwPOl"1 Harbor" 11 o E111nc11• o TUSTIN 11·S, l·l l 11 FOOll'llM 6 71 ,,,..t ... o.i 'l'O 10 lrvlM a 15 El toro « ' ~n Vlolw JS 1~· 1( 10 N1we>0r! H1r00r• 1 1• Cor0<11 1191 M1r• 1 12 E111nc11t• 11 1• UnlYl'jllv" 10 co• ] I NOl'w11k 71 o S.Unnv Mllh 21 UNIVERSITY 12-1, •·SI J lrvJ,.. 19 ' Ml•-'oll \li.io !o6 11 WOOdb<'!d99 l U Footlllll• 1 ) 0 1 1111 1"11111 1• 21 N ... _., M••O<H'' 2• 0 E"1nc11• 16 u S.OOlll>ltk • n 1 cor-d•l ,...,. 2s 10 Tu1t1n• 1• .... . ..... ti •I ..,,!.....,,, MJ 1t c.e.1 w Vtlllw ~ °"'*. "' __ ... ............ 1 HwAll¥IM1 h9c:fl• • ,....,..y...,. II AMtN" '4 Oc9lfl VlitW" J1 w.tmlrll•· .. .. "-' q ··--:.~·~·· JS FOt1IW1t .. " M .. " (ton.II) I " • " 0 " .. .. flOUWT .. YALL•Y Cf-t, 1·1) 0 MllW Otl tforlelU 1 1• II Toro 21 1 M1M1on Yielo >4 0 I I Modllll !lcN1wlll 1 0 ........ 9Mcfl Polv ., 14 ~ vi.w• 11 1.S Edfton• 21 JI Watmlr'lltw• 14 21 Mlrlnl" II 0 HlJ'I. 9-dl" (OOUOll tort.ii) I <•• ' "°"'""' 51 MUMTlfllGTIHll ••ACM (1-11, 1·J) O COtol\.I CNI /Mr (!Orf9111 1 0 Pklfka (lcN1wlll 1 0 MIW-1 HtlftlQr (lorillll 1 0 Lono 9Mql WI!'°" (forf9111 I 14 ,...,., 0.1 lt o Edi.on• 11~111 1 o Mtrln&• 11ort1Ul I 7 OU.n vi.ow• 21 O Wntmlr111.,· ('°'1'9111 I 0 Fin, V11tn• (dOIJIN torf•lr) 1 MARltolA ()-7, 1·4) n LOI Allmllot 0 COl"on.t doll Mir 9 Foollll~ 11 Lak ... OOCI ' Ml8lkln 1 wnrmlntll'" l Huntlnglon 9HC1i' I E<ll.oll" 11 Foun111n \l•Mlv' 7 O.:..n \Ii.ow• OCIAN VllW (J-4, 4-11 .. .__. 1• N1woor1 Harbor 20 S.nra AN Vakv 1 w.11 ... n JS Tu1lln 17 Fovn•aln \lali.v• 41 w n rmlnllt<'" )I Hunllnv•on 8"cto• 10 EdlM>n" U ,,,_.rln1• " • " , • • (forflltl 0 " " " ' " • • • " " ' ,. ' " WESTMINSTER IJ-&. l ·l) 11 LI Quln11 7 MIUl1<1n 21 E._1n11 11 Clolllrano V1U•v 1 \11ltncl• t Marina• 11 Oo:'H n vi.w• U Foun111n ~11i.v• I Huru11111oro 8Hc~· D EdilOll' " " n " " ' " " !forl•lll D " -·-, .... .., ··-·--,, ... o.r... • ,~ ': 5 ii .,, ....... II C....•MM ',,.,.. .... , ~Ha· :f : .. " " n " ·-11 LIMN._,.,.. M W11A -· " (forlell) 0 LAllUlllA HILLS Ct-6. >-Jl " " .. " " " " .. 17 S....11-14 7 l!itancl9 21 1 Sen c ...... ,. 10 IJ Cor-CN1 ,,,_., •l 13 ArMWa 7 2t WoodbrlclM" 0 41 COll• M9u" 1 J Trtl:luCO Hllll" •I 1 0r .... • 21 27 La1un.1 9..et!" 12 c .. 11 Yuc.aloa IJ 7 Aoour1 14 OltANGE tl0·>-1, 1-11 io Chino o 1l L1 Quln11 6 ' 1(111111 • 15 Vlllo Pll"lo. 0 0 IE1t•ncl1 11 1 L•ouna &He+>' • 21 WOOdtlr!Oo<I' l 35 COit• N\9u' 20 21 L"""9 HIU1" I 1 Tr1buco M1t11• 20 c .. %1 A11K.OWO 6 15 S.nt1 v,..1 1• JS A_.1 n J Tr•DUco 111111 \J Tll:A•uco MILLS (l>·I, S·ll '° s.n11 '"'-'"'"• u 1 P..,. Hiit\ 1• 11 Loner a..cn w 11'°" o JJ Simi \111ir.. IJ 24 YIU. Parlo. O )5 C°'I• Mnlo" • "' u.eun. 9ffch• [( •I L~ Mlh' J » Woodbrldg9' XI 20 Or-· 7 c .. :U Hotrl O•rne (lltlv.,~) U JS C1brlllo o .. s.n11 C1.1r1 21 l) 0<•11119 1 .. .. .. " ""' •'-TOAO (12-1, 4·11 " El Dor.00 17 "-1•111 \/...., tt TOffW P'lnel U Tinlin It Al'! ....... \/• ..... ,, lrvll'9" 41 0.-Hiii" 11 Mluloll V191o" J4 s.n c .......... 21 c.l•tr•no v....-.i· .,,. ., ._ 11 \II .. P•rll 21 M11-'oll \lllio to P•ramounl ...... tl·1, 1·41 " un1....,,11y ) VI .. P•rti; 0 Tuttln It WQDdOl'lcloti 11 f'oott1• 12 El Toro• It S.n Cllm9nl1" O C.P41tr1no V•lllv" • Ml»lon \lllio" O O.n. Mlh" _ ... (la->. 1·21 .U LI JOl'Oefl S6 Ucll....,l ltv :M Fountain \l..,.v :io Sin!• Alll 2• C•n'fl)n, C1nvon C 6 0.fll HIM1• 14 C•l>l11r1no \11ll9v" 14 E1 Toro• ll 1rv1 ... • ll s.n c...,,..,, •• c .. lJ Scnurr "-· 14 El TOl"O IOI) SAN CL•MllNT 11·7, l·Jl If WOOdbr._,. 10 s.n oi.vo """"''°" 10 L...-Mlll1 11 M1vt1lr 21 L...-8ffel'I 4 CN>h.rrano \1 •119v' 4 lrvlfl9' 1 DINI Hlll1° 7 El TOl"o• o MJ111on vi.1o· . ""'°'" ... _ "..,. From North Orange County From South Orange County TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZL .. C<-57 App.trlllon .. --St 'f'Mm eo n-t• .,. .. .,.._._,, 02 Voln .,_, ..... DO- I AtJic.tl i.11.e 2 Uhcc:w•••""'" ,._.,Doon '°"""" $ ... ,., l "--.ao '~ I "D T IM ...... .. """"" 11 ...... llHny :~==-,. Cotton tllbric 21 FNll 14 Ao*wl: ..... ,. __ at ...... M» .,_ 21 Alllout: pref, 21001 Slll'ft ......... .. _ = =""' 311"*'1 ... 31 Mothertloocl ---40 Lale.-. ... ''"~Get -" 43 Not '"°'9 trlM .. ,_ 41'#0ttt I ........ ., ..... __ - " l2 • • u 11 • ,. • ' ti 21 12 (oO J6 0 7 ' 7 0 ' 41 ' l• 0 •l t " " 2J 0 12 21 .. 7 n • 14 (OI) 14 ,, ) 17 10 13 21 l7 1 12 ll 13 0 ' 1 0 try 12 0 77 21 6 0 6 6 71 2• 70 1 ,. 0 31 14 9 34 ll 1220 &800 --2007 -B. 2Br ,.. Dec !II ·1nc:I Jim DI to bcht .SISSOO , .5-3090 .• -6478. •·Steps 121'A E. 30 1&2 i068. !D '1 $2.44 per day That'a ALL you pay tor 4 llMa, 30 day minimum In tl'le SERVICE DIEC TORY F« mofe lntormatlon CALL TOOAYll lllFllLllS YfNf 9«Wle OltectOtY Aept.-ntattw Ml-4111 llt.111 ------ ' ~'I • ' ' ' I' ... .. c. No )Ob too small, ,... ... ., ••• 11 St Uc,. 573707 Res -Comm SeN•no an your electric.I Medi (714) 631-3238 JoMPfl A Greco • I . • 'I ' I DUMP RUNS • JUNK Furni ture. trash, tree t>ranc:hes. appliances Call Mike 7dys646-1391 Int.I t. pat Ing. cuatom te11turlno. quality wo<k Problems-No Prob- lems! •326864 554-7831 --eo·s PLASTERING All types, Int /EJlt Patc:l"t-T ex1u,._R .. tucco Lath Free •t 963-3418 ... dlbtlln ca.a M-. lncenuve bonus to all 1nd1- v1duals t11red' You re loott1n9 tor money OPS l"tas tl"te solution to your casn '1ow problem& we are 1n need of Quahtted 1ndtV1duals to work guard gated commun1t1es apartment comple:rt>s and ottt8f interesting 10- c:attons Are you prepared tor 1ot> sat1slact1on e1<cellent wages and an 1ncent1ve bonus tor ltte season tl"tat dents your pocke1 t>OOlo.? OPS c&n help Call today tor an tmmecltate inter- view DYllllC PIOTECTIOI SERVICES 'n:;'•";;s;•~·~u;--;;;;l~;;;;,..~s;•~n~u;;;;~l~;;:,..;=;s~!!!!!l;,:::;::;l~;,;!WUC~~·;llCl~';;;;;;di~:ii~~--~;;:;;;;;;~;;;i--!!lllll!!!!L. NONDA 'llAOCOfllD i. Tiiie ~ ti COfl· Anati.im A~ ,t28, leicl .... ..Wlflllfttlllll.llUI WMATM CAf.ATIOMS. ""-""-a•j!§ Ml MYMU4_.f§l !I JCIOO""ATCt41ACK d\1d9dby.91~ eo.1 ......... c.w.uu1 wltNIUl ~or ... 1MIO ......... SI., foun· fti~tl. •• ~ _., ..... " llMwp. AJC. ""'''M s-...o. Tri• r•oi•1'•"t com· OtfXllM 11.19 ~. 19'5 f-"'Y· ..... or ""Pied,.. tti6n v~. CeM. t2:10I TM fOIO!Mr'I ..... .,.. ,_.. "'-...._.. _....,. L MAXl!.Y MK fN V.., CtQOO oonc1 """"* IO n.wt °'*" At1an.lm A~~ 1128, ~dlnl title, pot ''PP'oo Of N=lllOl'I L.ewlt. doitle~-~Or...-009lt ............ fA, -.._,,. tuo0"bao ~$831 •,.... undW 1"9 ~t6GU9tot11Meu.c.Mf.02621 incumbt...._10_...,"'9 15llO SI., F~ fXClUSIVe:lY YOU"I . D91b'Pilott'fo....,llWIO,lf, SC! cwnca. M4 ,.,._ 8111111.. Ka. .. J~ ' ~ NtM 0-'*'* Thi• ~ It con-~*9tllM tilW'ed by 1til\ Vllle)t, t2:10t 11302 W1t .. ~ LIM, 0.-•olMr 4, t t. t• flWlll Wey. GoMi MIU. 7 TOYOTA •tt, r.cwt tng, titted llboY9 on:~-<IUCltd_SW;l'll.do.nctand .... Mid o.td, ~ U... Th&t butiMM II oon, Hw11tltlgt0tl 9"dl, c.itt. ...... Cllil. '2621 ,,_ tltet/IMfllifY, tun. 17, 1911 Tht'"" fe9l1t,an1 com• Wiider. "lwllh lnter .. l II ~ Oy; tin~ tlt4t l\tlll Plerret1d, 2SS1 ...._.112 Oot1'0ll l!M1on mencec:1 to trltlllCI IMl6· pnMcted ""'""'· Mid m. The-re9111t1n1 ioom· Tony1 ~ ~. ..aJC .,ncl Nllte:ttelSt ........... CIM. up, ln'IOO-This SUll""*"I ... 1119d neM ~ the Mctjt!ous ""'*° P!'ll\c.lpll of lh9 tlOMI ~ 10 lrwwect ~ 19312 W•t'j~~ l•ne, 82170 q Pg 9045 1"'Qlam 1• -.ithtMCounty<>tc'ltotOt-· but1t1es1 MINI 01 ,._ NWt9d by Mid OMO ...ittl n.u ~ tM flctlt!OY9 ~llnQtori • -ACnnoue• I 1• Sv•'I Pl.,ret10. 2331' tl!.CH tlllild' .... -~ .. ~ Cownly on NOw•W 1111.o aw..on· ~t-blir lnler .. 11'*'10n U~ bwtlnftt "-OI --t26Ae NAllllTAW ~St .. ~Calt. ~ 20' -~ .... £££11 wtte ~~'1*"° 2t, 1ffll 2.1"8 ir!uklNOle litted•boveOtl NIA Thtl ~ II con, T,..~P"IWl9 .. 92'1'0 --.· con•tri.c:tH lrl J--•-J'*--"!"'".. ·-. '.""l.. ••.ooo m~ ,..._ Oeborlh f4.M1 Rllwtd WllftNICONVrtANC· Nll'ICY DicltlOl'I L...i. d1,1etec1 b'I:"' ~ dotl'O ~ .-:: TMI ~ It con· .... -...,_, ._ ...... PubUlhed 0.-ang.9 Coast Thit 1111~1 WU flttd lltOCOMJ .... -.-Thu ... .__I -flied , .... r•gl11ranl com· AEAD'l'-MADE PAOO· <luC-.:tby:~llld .... ptywOOd wtw111 ......-c .,...,_ tll-3414 ' "4.000. 2·<4321 •iii. OaUy Pilot o.c.mber -4, 11, Wllh '"' Cowntt Clerk of Or· aw .. LOI AMGn.11, CA llrlllh tMCOunty Clerll. ol °'' tNne.ci to lrll'IUC1 ~ UCTS, 20172 &pl110rltt, Th• •et•••t•nt COll'I• CIM!Md COl•'Oll•t lrOn MS Of 170..1790 ''"" 18. :J5, 1M9 arige County on ~.mber • ...,.(tu,..._.,, a1>ge Couro1y °"~tier,_, l.llMMr lf'le flctltlou• HuntlnglOll BMCf'I, Cellf. IMrlOtO to 11...att bl.lit-~. IMtiCIC & wNf9. .,~ h0uf'91 M·s.80 -4, 1989 .,..... ............. fm 2t, 19'9 bu"'-l\llnW 01 ,_ f2Mf MM under the lctll\ovl 12" 1*' ftOof, I ped11tek SPEQAL LAHDAU. VOlKSWAGEN RABBIT 1-----,-,..,-,----·I •.utWI TAC•....,. , ..... P1ted 1bolfe oro. Novemt>M lengdon C. P.-rll, 20972 ~ name or ,..,_ ll'I plM: & aqua. ""°'o-IOK. Mril. t.o.did.' o n 11&4, ucellent con-PtB.IC NOTtC£ PobHlh9d Or•rioa CCHIJt •r: CAAOl.I ,....._, PublitHCI o..~ Cout 1,. '"' Sptndritt,HurotiftQllOl'le..ctl. llsted new. on'. <>eioMr 'II. Cl'llPfW avail on~-MI00080.634-.2042 dll6on,,11.tnrool,-'tlllell-0.l!'f'Piloto.c.mber It, ti, ASlllTAMTllCMTMl:Y Ol~y PilOI Decetrlbe< -4, 11, Tonya Mon~ C•NI 912646 1$19 UNO twice. '20,ooo·new. I . • I I flCTITtOUI 9'18M•• 25, 1989. Jal'!Ul l') 1, t990 PuOlllMd Or ... Cout 18, 25. 1ff9 Thia ... ,_,, -hied CMrlM e Ung<>. 240t "'.., ~r.nd "'' tar 15000/obo, 19' or, lue nter or. MAMI ITA~ M·stS 01~yP110l November 27. O.· M~Sl!i ""'h the County C....., ol Of. Ohlitwwi. long 8Nc:fl. c.llf Tl"9 ... '-'t -lilld 113-0309 lllllC:WWW 909() AMIFM CllMllt w ith Tlll loltoWtngperaohtare cemt>9f4. 11. tHO ange Cownl'I on Ni>vemt>9f 90115 wrilhltleCountyQ9ftlOl'Or· Amp. a .100. Mw11 1e11. doong bull,_ u: •u1>i•c ~i"'r M572 .. 1111,IC ....,""t 21. 1999 T"4t t1w11.,.,, 11 con· 11'19' C-ty on o.c-ntMir l.wQoaul. Cornple19 Mt of °'°"""""*'' 8eil9d ¥9-Ted 146-9216 FOX 6 ASSOCIATES. r.__. """ SW. ..-.__ ""'1~ ,...,. OuetlO t>y· a~ pan-~. 1,919 Louis vumon luggaige. '*'-1rom $t00. Cor· .. • 33!15 v11 lido. S•• 360. FICTITIOUS _,...11 Plll.IC NOTICE Pl.i~lhed Or~ Coalt ,_.sh!~ ,.._, &ultcw. ~ b-cl. .... CfteY)11. POf~ ~I Be.ch. C•IH 92663 NA• ITAJl•NT F~~A~.. 0..ly Piiot oec:..nblr ... 11. Tri• ,,;111r1nt corn· Pubkthed Ot-angt Coelt ~. etc. fk>uohl and other canftect.ted ..._, 1800 •notnelp11n1 B•tlal• J Fo>.. 3336 Via The lollOwi~ perSOf'lll ,,, ftCTIOOUI ~· T 111. ~5. 19111 ~ to tr1na.e1 blal· Diiiy P*>1~blr11. Ill, ov.MU.ll'S-$290 prope1U... Few .... _ red , 11150 OBO. Lido G. NewpOrt Beaeh, •-"""""slnltHU" N.\111.ITAftWNT h9 IOl!owttlgPltlOMWI M-511 f!eQ undet 1ri. hcllllow• 25. 19119,Janwary 1, 1990 ..,,........... ~· ...... 4 c ·•~ ......... "" do11~ bu11t1eu u : ...,.._ M 596 MUST SELll .__ t-aoo-ue-2562 a ........-.. 14 •Ill. 92"""' NATIONAL EOVCATION Tiii tOllowifog f*IOllll ... AL BACIO, 1157<15 Beach·l-----------1 buSI .... ,. name ()< 2 •" -p/MI SlO ~ -·-·-.... OS*l~ VW ,77 SUPER BEETLE. Thl1 bus111ess 11 con-RESOURCE COUNCIL. doongbullf'lftll 11· B~d . Hunlll'Olon 8each,l---'rtlll.C:::::IC:..:;N0::.:11C£='--lltll!O 1bo.-. Ol'I Oecembll'I---------.., -·· ,,.,..... I duel.Ob)' •nlnOovtdUll 3001 Redfl.il A.-. Bio; 5, SPLASH MARINE. 2t2\\ CIM 92f.ollll 1, 1989 ..nw */504 ""'fnOt)', IO · NEW: P tlnl, am/Im Th• regl1t•a111 com · ou~e l08, O.Ot l30. Costa E 8ay. Balboa, C1hl. 926451 f iink LeoMi 2146 5p1o, 'tcTITIOUI ...,._.. IL Clav Par•~• rtaJC NOTICE lonll, prOClllOt In· ~II, englM. elee· menced to lranHCI b4.4Si· MQa. Clall !921126 MiCl'IMf Ol!iget, 212'/o E naker St All.ti.Im Cllll NAME tTATIWNT Thfs sta1_,I lfil'U flledll--~~="-'==~-- cludrld. Uoel_,1 con· ,....... ~ 9100 lrlCll, ignition. Good neu undef the llcU!low1 Vtekte E1+'9 o.etzel, 2336 B•y. Bmlbo&. Calif ll26el 92502 ' · . The follootlnq petlOl'll .,. wllh the Counly C..,k of Ot· Tin.a ON:IEtt MO. dltlon. 13.0001080. Call lW... dNn lnllf'IOf. 1>u1lnass riam111 01 names Cornell [}f Colla Mell, This bu1lnet1 Is con· An~o p.,1., 2 146 Sain· OOltlQ bullflMI •• ¥9' County on Noftmblf ...,._ TM.ll'RI. 148-Ma.4 W.O.. ..A:. llW SIL£ ex Ir• I S 17 00 ob o . listed abOwe oo November c1i.r 92626 Oucllllil by· 1n Individual tllker SI , An .. helm. Ci!ll LA NCO, 603 E 81tb0a 9 19119 IALI MO. I-IOI?$ JI( --4117-41110 lw Msg lt1 EYMi. 17, 1989 '"'' bus/hes• 11 con· Tr111 •egl11r1nr com· 97502 Blvd . Newl)Otl a.act> Cahl f.Q1102 "*· "'11 lfl09 ROUND trip Dlit• tlc«el, Our enttN ~orr h.. Barb•r• J Fo• Oucllll(I by iln ond•wlClul! mancl!lil 10 1•anwt busl· This bUlit1e ts I• con-92661. Puoltttled 0rlf"9lll Co.II 1111 , •• at1y U.S. ~rel~ bien dfMtielly f9duold Y.W. HI 1111 Tnos .iate<"lllnl w11 Ille<! rrie ,111g.,tranl com-nfls under rhe hcl!tlout dueled Dy co·part,...s Stu•rl A Cogan at1d Oa11v P1101 Novembel' 20, 21. llSOTtCE M tlnatlon, 1land·by. must lot eatra •vlnga1 • SpMd. Air Conditlorl!ng, W11h the Cou111y Clerk or Ot· menc&d ro rran1ic1 boll· bu11ne11 name O• names The •egitl ranr com· Sha1on A Cogan as Deeembet -4, 11, !Nll TM.lllt:E'I •A.LE UM b'l 12121. Beet ofter. ....... Stereo C e11et 11 , 1"9fl C0un1'Y on NoYemoe< neSs unoer rM roctllfout l1s1eo abowi on December meo'ICed to t•intael bu5l· 11u!l1~01 Hltl Cogan Fam-M-567 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT 8J3..6231' 1540 J*'1borM Road =~°(~~ci:~t 21 18119 FQl2'2 ~:i~"'::Ow~•:• N°;'A namet1 I ,~~: ... Ouoger =~ne~d~.~he ottie~!!~e! ·:~ll~•utl C111eo August 2<1, Plll.IC NOTICE g~~~ ~~J~~U~~~ -:::::::':;0::;:".iT:;"--'1 --..;'~··~·~-~"~~·~·~·~o~h'_ __ I MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Publ~sheCJ O<ange Coa11 V•cO.oe Otetlef Thlfi 1tal&r'nklt wu Ille<! 1151eCJ aoow 00 til0"'9fflbet P1ut and N111111111 Su1•l---'-"'""'-'"""""---l YOU l AKf; ACTtON TO Jtw*Y/Fun/Art * --· 1n1 Beac h B l wO . H 8 . 011111)' P~OI December 4. 11 . TTl•$ lllllllme<ll was filed Wflh lhe County Cle•k OI Or-20 1989 L1ngooe. :1033 E ocean NOTtCE Of PROTECT YOUR PROP· 60l§ -18, 25, 1989 wo!n 1he County Cler~ ot Of. llll'glll Cownty on Dlllcembef Frink leone Blvd NewPO<t Beach, Ca111 l'U9ltC IALE ERTY, IT MAY BE SOlO AT • .,._,,,,,.. ______ ,5-S~. AfC, Stereo 847-1555 M·Sll2 ,-.. c-. .• 1, o-"'~--'"--· <I 1989 926'I Accoo.;nt Numbe< A PUBLIC SALE If YOU ,...____ " ..,.,, • " ....,...., .. .,..., · 1Tl1s slarernent was roled D T-•PIAGET men & lad... ..__tte, Svnroot, Cut-• 1989 FUl15' Th•t buSill955 15 con-20308<1111·2 NEE AN EXPLANA ,...,... _ · wolri tTll Coun1~ Clefk QI Of. 5 o< T"E NATURE O• T"E *'tchea, 18Kmeahti.nd. tom Whells. Like New! WIUPAffllTITUI Pl.a.IC NOTICE fUll1SJ Pul'Jf11l'led O•ange Cotti anOf! Coun!y on Nowmbet ouc1e<1 Dv a gene.11 p~rl· NOTICE I HEREBY '-'' " ,.. •Plitlnum tidies dll\nel' $9595 ( t 5M4132) BILL PuDhsl'led Orang.e CoaSl Oa1ty P<IOt Oecembef 11, Ill, 20. 1989 roertoop GIVEN PURSUAN T TO PROCEEDINGS AGAINST ring, 4 dlltTIOflds. lotll MAX.EV TOYOTA 18881 "8 llAllf FICTITIOUS 9U&1NE811 0111!~ Pilot OKemDl!lf 1 r. 111, 25 191!9, January 1, 1990 F.QllS1 The registrant com -SEC"JJON 9 -!>0' OF THE YOU. 't'OU SHOULD COH· 1.81<. 811ch B l\td., H.B . Blind new BMW 3251 NAMfSTAfEMfNT 1,_,_'_'_"_·_'_•_'_"_"~'-'-·-'~'~'°~~l---;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;:;M:-·5"_•_; Published Orange Coatl menoe<l 10 l•ilnsac:I bu5l· UNIFQRJ,j COMMERCIAL TACT A LAWYER eMlnk cotot:Y. i-...th llohl &47--1555 Trie !Olklw1ngper$011Silre M-Sll7 Oa<ty P•k>I Oecembc!f -4, II, ness undtl< 1ne l•Cl•hOUs CODE, II.NO S ECTION On 12/21 1119 at 10.00 '-~ • 1 -'-~C:.:"-------1 Con""'"lble, while with dol~ business as 1 __ _!'~1,!SC!!Q!!f!l.__J-;:;:;PIBl.;;;~IC~N()::::"::C:E;;;--: 18 2s. 1989 bu5'ness name 0< names 18037 5 01" THE CAll· AM WESTERN MUTUAL :0ttS::. 1;;~~127 ~.··~c~s~~er~ ~,!,'.,:: ... pl~~~ 11~9 A~.,~~D~:.'. ~~;,~; CPIBl.DAN 1.c."°. ,.',',CE,.. FICTITIOUl IUMMES5 ________ M_-_,_,_6 ; l•s~.r~ •• ~".·,·.·.~~ N,:.'f.&~'~ .. ~~:r~:c6D~A~T1:!i ~~~ ~~'!.~::T?i~,::.t~~ BLUE FOX JACKET. worn Castette. Wire Wheel cwttom wheels. car BNch. Cahl 92660 NAMt: STATtMENT P'llSLIC NOTICE ., ..,.,...,,, .... .,_, tale> ot 1rie moblle hOm8 al'Cl P'K-nt 10 OeeCl OI only onoe, medium .ize. CoV«tl. Supe' Sh•rpl phone, fully loaded lnht•iors l'lv Jo Ann, 1119 J0~noc:=~-~:.· Ttie follQWin; PlfSOOI ire wotri tl\e County Cle<\ ol Of . lclenl•loeD 11s 1968 Skyllne 2• ~~j,~~Ss R•~ o n ()-lg}nlllbf $6119, Mii lot LI k • New 1 S 1 a9 5 . COrnpany lranslef'. must Es1111t1e ln , Newp0r1 Beacl'I, Clomg bu$jMSt as FJCTITlOUI •USINESS •"91! Counf'p' on Novernbet ~ 5 6 1Vt o b • I e Home. 8 ' no. S2S0 .•• 17l-207I Mil\ Anume 11851 al Call! 92660 NO. 5700. t IG Hl WAVES . 196 1 NAME STATEMENT 9 1989 SC91;>\)()( & U LAIVI 1!5SO, 115-0990668oolt PIQlllO!Ot· jtPHE54S) Bill MAXEY 5575/mo. Th•s buson11155 ,5 con-MOP"nn35-4 SwanDf Cosre rvtesa Call! Thelollowin.gper&O<\'!llfl! fQ7207 'e<;l•tle<ea 10 Oon1ld E f1c;11IRec0<d1•nlMofloceot 87WI--TOYOTA, t8881 Beach •••1tll d>JCll<tby a<1 ondow1aua1 YOU ARE IN DEfAULI 92626 ao.,>g ouslnessis Pun!+snl!O 0•1nge COas1 Jamff CorevC James, by 1lltl Aeca<def Ol Orange Blvd. H.B. 8474555 __. Thill 1egotl• anl com-UNDER A DEED OF TRUST rvt•lchell Ollv•d Sorenllf1, NEWPORT C Q A ST Dllol~ Pilot No...,mb@f 20 21 IT!o! undersogne<I on Qecem. County, Cal!IOINI. 1.u1cule<I t111L ... 11N 1 ·~~~~~~~~~~.13~~~~~~~~~1 1 menced lo lr11nsac;1 but•· DATED Augusr 9 , 1 9114 UN· 1961 Swan Of , Co1t11 1Vtesa. PROPERT IES. ;>()(I Newpor! Qec,,,mt>e< ~ 11 1989 be< 21 191!9 11 .. M 18SS D)' JAMfS W ALLEN. WILL * f.W. m 11M 1W1$S unde• !he !1c\1!10Us LESS YOU TAKE ACTION C1•ol 92626 Cenh~• Orll<i! ~ lO<I, Ne...-porl M ·56!i W l(a1ena Ave Or1111ge Of. SELL AT PUBLIC AVCTK)N FURS: Hlgt! IUhlon lull 5-Speed, Stll'eo Cauette. Auto$ Domeak: 93CXJ bosoness name or names TO PROTECT YOUR PROP-Trios busuiess ,5 con· Be8C'1. CllM 92660 1-----------i a nge County Cahlorn11, TO T>!E HIGHEST BIDDER Lyn• & White Fox Cott by Swnroot, Custom Wheels. listed aoo.-e on NovemDe• (RT'I'. IT MA'r BE SOLO AT du(tell by an •noowodual '-'•·~ C!lrClelucco 4 5'5 PllSLIC NOTICE SUCH SALE IS BEING FOR CASH (Payabll 111 ..... M. JaequoM, worn twice. Shar p l $6595. BILL ....... 20 1989 A PUBllC S ALE IF 't'OU rrie registra nt com· C;ol)•~lo lf"race C0<on•ae1l ---'-"'"-''-""-''-"~--I MAOE by •e1150fl OI '"Iii"' Ol5111ltl1<1lawfulmOl"ltl'j'Ol llle Leopard 11011, bla ck MAXEY TOYOTA, 18881 A Jo Ann Wonrenburg NEED AN EKPLANAT ION menced to Hlln'4Ct bvsi· Ma• C.ah! 9.,325 FICTITIOUS 9USINESS teieo 0""""' S dltl...,,1 II 01 Unotecl S!l!Hl It At Ille ,mink trim,n'llllctll~ mYft. Be1Ch B lvd ., H.B . stomlllC 6 c!\eerlng. This s1a1ernen1 w1s hleQ OF THE NAT URE. OF lHE nest under the lott•l•ous Tnis bu5oness os con· NAME STATEMENT Augiis! I~ 19119, undoer tl'lll Chaoman II._,.,. en1rlne9 collar. c ulls , belt & l.&1'-8555 1200. Need leclO•t· wotri lhe County Cler~ ol Ot-PROCEEDING AGol'INS T busoness name 0t names du(leQ D) an •nd•.,du&I TtM! lotl0wtfl9 Pef'$OllS ••e c~tam M•nut!K:lured Home to ,,.. c;..,oe Cet'>le. 9vtlCllflQ. tl'IOVldWt. Full 1en9th type buyer. 11091 Coun1y on No...ern~ YOU VOU SHOULO CON· 11s1eo above on Oecemt>e• T'1t "'g•sti,n! tOm · domg bu5iOltt •~ Reld•I lns11111imen1 COntracr 300 East cnapma.1 11.,......., d#k brown mtnk coat by 4 MERCEDES CHROME fl nlll&ll 2t 1989 TACT A LAWYER Nolle• DI ;> 1989 ~ed 10 t•ansacT buS•· CO .. STLINE EMPLO't'-and St'C-uflly Agreemenl Ou1nge, CA 92667 an ngTll, LudWig. Ulll Ann rubefry WHEELS Mlh MICHELIN Real nice. 88,000 miles F'3Ul1 Trw11 .. ·1 Siii' Uotcnl!'ll Oa~"' S0tente" fl<l'S' ur>CIP• the •iclltoous MENT $41 S!ur9eon Cosll d1ueo August 12 1988. 0.-!lite and rni.-esl con....yed tufl wl'foa colar & curfs. TIRES. 4 montl'IS new $4500. P ... ti11sned O•ufl9e Coast Under o.9d Tri1s sraremenl was Meo bus.ness namt or nalT'ff Meu. csior 92626 t""een •IQ•Stered ownB•S •1 lo .&no"°"' t>el(J by >t unae< u 10. Black, grey & white $600. 644-0412 ..... O~Mll.,llml I..,... 01101y P1101 Dec<!!mbe• 4 11 . ot T'1111 w•lh lhol County C1er\ or Or · 1os1ea atiov .. on No~emDer D;;i .. n Wtulcomti ~-4 1 <t<'WIC" 11fH'l 1ne unde<.-gnecl sa"' Oeeo ol Trust "' lhe diamond ~n abbll:liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 18 ;>S 1989 Not•ce •s tiereoygiven1ri1u angt> COunl)o on Decltmbeo 21 19119 s iurgeo" CostaMeSll c-.111 us Secu•ed Pany 1nd ptOQert~ 511,..19<1 "' U.O coal. Poatum tinedr mus~J Mlo-llJltrlM-H1l M-~83 WESTERN CONVE't'ANC· 4 1'!169 Ma•• Caroe•ucc• 9?ti:?6 put5uill"t 10 !rte "gnt ot tile County C!1hl0tru•. Oete•tl'J, O ,__ 1-----------1 ING CORP a C1hlo<n•I fU(l1"6 11111 statement WIS l•le<l Jelhlll) l"i)lllrMlll $<1 1 Stu<· unoeosionea unoeo-!he S.. .ng !he l1nd 11\e<~ Loi 17.n ,1,fr "Bari cotol. ll'Nllli '11,.H&IJ.T PUBLICNOTIC[ Co•P<l•IU•on 85 trustee or PuDl•sned O•<tnge Coast ... ,1htt>e Counl)Cle<kol O•· ~ Costa r..le-5a Cah• c"''''Y 11.g•ee,.,enl Secnon BIOck T3S ol Co<on• Oe! " : boe fut1 Zone" WHITE New Empl AJIO'I 40R, XlNT. Ab90iulely lm· 1ucc1115so< tiustee , O• Oa1I~ P1101 December 1 ! 18 d'IQe Cou,,!y on Dflcemtwr 926;>6 9-SO• or ltll Un1Fo.-m Com· M4r '" 11>1! Coty ol Ne.,.por! by Ruth Hinds. Orlg!neJ Alms N-Tires New m1cul11e. LOIS ol e~tres FICTITIOUS BUSINESS 'uD51•1u1e01rus!eepursuant 25 1989 Janua<) t 1990 • tQ89 TTl11 ous•ne ,5 ,, co"· me1(•i1\ Code And S«t•on Be/teh Count) GI Ofan.g., 11170 w.tercolOr. Serious Paint'. AM/FM ~belle Mutl -· NAME STATfMENl to 1ne Oet!<I OI Tru~1 ll•· '-'·593 fUlllM ouc!lld Dy co oarlners 11103i S 01 lhe Cahl0<1"a S1a1eol C1l1lo<.,.._ Uthown lnqulrila onlyt RaCllo With Equalizer UU •-••JI The IOllOW<rlfl pe.sons ''" ecuted bV ROBERT 0 Puol•sne<I O•lllf>94' c 0851 T!ie •f'Q•Sl•anl ' com -Heaitn and Salely C-O<le Ol"I a map rt.reol reco<Ot!d 106 . 6 13 . 3 1 1 6 or Loi• ol New Ptrts VERY --d0tng tius.ness as MOUDY AN UNMARRIED PUBllC NOTICE Oa •1 P1tot December 11 111 'l"llln-Oed lo tra•15aC• Du5'· 11.1 •n~ """ belore tl'll •n DOO~ 3 P"il'f!S 41 and -42 714-6"°""0295 LY MSg CLEANI £,.cefleni Con· UI '11 .._, R PROJECTS DEVELOP· IVIAN l'IECOROEO AUGUST ;o!, 1969 Janua•y l 1990 ,,11155 ..,11011 '"" tocu1,ous ~~ •eQ<51e<fl<I °""'-0< OI mlSC.ellenoeout ""'PS , .. dlllon, S3000 080 Ctll • _.,_.. rvtE NT CO (POCI 111;>9 14 , 1984 In B()f)lo. Page Inst FICTITIOUS BUSINESS M-S92 buS1t1<:!$S n.amr 0< •iar->t!s 1111) O!he• s&cure<I 011111v ma~ ta<ds ol .0.1nge Counly UllES +6ll·4705* Good ConChton. LOADED Wasl(lol1 Qi Su•te300 New· ~84·335996 of Olht1al Re· Nit.ME STATEMENT I -~~-------· i.51.-d RDOve on N A <l'<leo;om •1.;ud (ollatl!l'!ll under C11o1oon11 MUST SELL p 1 Beacn Cahl 92660 CO•dS on !l'le oll1ce o! !!'le-The !ollOwong persons are Jelhey 1~$011 S.-Cloon 9·5'06 o! lhe Un1!0<m TM 11•111'11 llO<lr1u and . S2.&00 OBO 534-20<!2 d N Brown ;> 12 S Count~ Rec;orde• ol OR-00,,.9 bu,one$s $S Pl8LIC NOTICE I '1•i; i;!alt>rn,,.,,1 NdS lole<l CO<"!n>e<C"t l COCle •od Sec· Olfl<e• CCll"mon ~nahon .WI... CHEVY .85 CELEBRITY-IW•bari' Cah! ANGE Count~ C.i•lorrna CO TTONF1 ELDS ? 1~ "''" uie Counh cie-~ at O• •8037 !I ol 11'M! C1h· •I ano ol·ttie •lllal P<'<>oerlY '89 LEGEND_& and pursu8n! 10 !he No11ct Fo•tSl ..,,.e Laguna Be.t<:h NOTICE INVITING tcuma >-1ea•lh 11nd S•!et~ <lf'SC ••bed ati o ve '' ftl"&IEllEllT '901NTEGRA <l cyllndM.alC,clcp/b. l,1>~' ·-~"'" (on-ot ~ra..,u and f1ecl!on to Cai.I 926$l SfAlEO~OPOS lllS ;"~8~°""" °"' NO•e<"Tlb<O< Coce o1 re.,de••ng P<>•P<l'led'to be 7111«1Av· 1;11-S S £ No PTODlemt S2500 Sell 1ne<eunCJer r~oroed M•""" A·-·-"'''....,, NOTIC E IS HE REB'I' $10 •90 ;o "' lull·'lment ol .,.ue, "-POft Beecfl CA IV£1 Al I 722·7537 Y an ond•••duai J 1 1? \9119 tn B • P•g ·~ ""''M& ... ., GIVfNtn11t O-J Seg'et'Sll0'11 FU1225 1 •• • 1_ 0 __ 1 1 II.I n , , The re9 1s1ran1 com uv oc:o t' Co CDhto,.1<a 319 Mfuone & So"~ .,..,11 •<"Ce•vf.I S<'!llle<I Putll•!>ht"\) O•a~ CO<ISI •nsl;o lmfl!"ll o..,.1gat1Qn1 !ie-'"" ..,n .,.s.,..,~ 1us11oe ' Eitcellenl Selectlon -_,. 1111 encea Jo 11ansac• tiu5l· Ins!=-89·37!11118 or sl•d 01-"'"" BllDO.i ·lsUtr•a Cahl b•as up ro !fie "°"' 01 4 0.-.,1, p,101 NovemDe• 20 1T . Cu•«! bl tl'lol coi111..-a1 as Cl<M:laom' Mly 11aoott1y lo< any Appr1lsed 11 $3875 -·• -ftllt • l"lflS unde< tne toctotious l•c•al Aec0<d$ ""'I Sell on 9~662 O(IOC~ pm on 1...,. ,11'1 d ay Q«e,.·oer • 11 l989 wei• as -0-"'P•\lffle<ll 01 1no;:o.,ec1"9$s 01 1"" str111el Round llonl apJ)i"Oll. 2f3 -an1n 0ood'"lranaporti11'0rl Car bUSlrl@SS ff8me Of '13mfl5 0ec0 ,/~rnbe< 18 11989 111 1 :JO T'11S Ou5oness 15 c;on OI J<tnU!IP> \Qg() !Ot modi· 1.(.561 e •pe<i ,f'S re1Minatily I"'· oldd•llS 81>1' Olfle< CO<t'lmon of 1 c.rat. PRICE RE· -Need• m:rn:or wo<k $800 l•Stecl aoove on Now&mDe• at on !'1f' ODOy 10 trie a.,c;ted o1 ,. co<p0tat1t111 1-----------cu•rea ny rt111! uoa..$09.....,,'" CllS<Q"''''°" ,1 flnv shown Ot>O 650-<!073 IYf! mtg ,S, \9119 bu•\d1119 601 South lll'WIS f hll! •llg•S lflfl! com . focaroon °1 111111" 51gnal ft'l<i-• '"g rio!Oo ng ind t>eoem DUCED TO S 1.800 1001 Quall SI. Np! Bch R N O Street O•ange CA a1 pyOhC -~~ao ,0 ,, .,,,,., •··•· 109etne• worn "" the lllP· MLIC NOTIC( "•-•.or•ng 10< cOli•l-.i IOt SalCI 141e,...11 De"'"°" bl.It 080111 llJ 2112 -·I '"na•ll rown r ! in I II .. ~........ o ~ uw pu•tll'\111"1 wo•• on connec·l ---'-="-''-""-''-"~--1 """ -646-7<196 • Th •S slatemenl w8$ hied auc •On 0 e ri.gnes O• . '1!lSS '1111;1(" !l'>e ,,,l•l•OUS FICTITIOUS •USINIESS tt•S005'l•on .• n ar•""91114it IO< ..... 1nou1 conW1<1an1 ()< war· &4 2 -43 21 e.t 262 ~~~:.:::,,:;:;.;:::._~~I And Cl'>ecli OU• bac;~ <10 Wllll !!le Coonly Cler~ ot Ot· Cle• Tor (asri •oa~•Dle 111! lhe Ou~mess name o• names !•on lhe•""'111 "'5 llt'tcnoed E:ME T the $ale and fOf reasonable ,.,..,.._ f.1•1)<8'$SO< omQt>ett •e-;~~~~;~~~~~1 _•~C~U~AA~~IN8T~E~G~R~A~~·:•B8:·1 wholeaa1e IO I Good •nge C0unty ori Q«embe• l•me ot sale in 111w!u1 money 11s1ee1 a110..-e on Nowe"1ber '" (•l1•D'1 "' (f•oryiew Hit.Ml STit.T N allo•"'Y s tees •nCI lo• ga•CJ•ng l<lle DOtM!511on o< warn1nty 1t1H In ertect. lroul>la-ITee cart Call tor 4 1989 or 1r>e un.tl'<l Stales\ 811 1 1969 Ro~d a1 5outn Co,.sr Of•ve 1 lrM> lollow•"Q l)el'!I0<15 a•t •easonOle ll•PfJf'l-Such lt!IC.,.,..D••noes. 10 P•Y 1,,_ Best offll'. S40·2314 Clelalli. ,,439165 .,gn! 11ue. aria •n1erest con, Tony Harvir P•esiJer!I Prooosals muM be M•b· d0 0'"9 tiusi;-e-",5 115 11 0 ienoe• ,,.. rne 1011111 fUm ot •em•m•ng P<•r>e>01J sum ol -I -•~9 •'t"t·t'(I lo anO now '1CICI Dy •I 1 .. ,, ,,,10_0_1 ••• 1,,,.,, rnotled on Int> Olank looms 1 "' N S •8 490 70 ma1 tie macte to IN! no1-.1) stocur&d ..., SAKI ..-~ '11.1"" BMW 1979 320!, 4-tpeed. •-N'0 Pu0h5'1llO Oran~ Co11st 0 0 ,.., 1.. " ... " ""u s~ts 1 th•ougn 3 piep1tr...:I \llSOR'I' CONSUl TING J -• Excellenl condition. low l---C-:.::..:.:.o•.:.__ Dilol~ Polo! Decl!lmber 11 , 11! un er Sill• on .. e w•ll'l lhe Counly Cle<• ot O•· ind Tur noshed to• !hill R<t"a l•W•"t' C1l•I 927'5 G•ff1'1 T•ee Acceo13f'ICI ill Deed ol T•ust ""''" .nter.SI **flllm** ml""' ....... ,malnleriancere--•fllf 25 1989 January 1 1990 tllOPt'•1 S•!uated on 51Ud a"ll"' County 0 ,, NP~f'mbfl1 Oo:I Bl O ) t...,.a<1dress 511t0t!'1lboWI lhe<eon 4SP<OW1de<iln Hl(J -· ··.. ~ --M-591 C0un1y anQ State and Cle-9 1989 pu•r>Os.4! ~"II .. n•ch ma1 tlf' ""'5 c· •m7an !! nol reGf'en\eet $.i!itd Mii r>Oll!SI ~0W~flC95 11 ..,.,. -cord1. One orlg lnal 'll•FlllYUIU l-----------ISC1<0fldar.•o11ows f.Q7'2ll ont;,oneo l rom CJ R.at1;o 10v1roe ,.1,t 9i' 1~ .... ~1 DI maae 001 w<tN>ut uf'\Oeflllller"1•oltheDe«I PICK VOUR CHRISTMAS ,.,.,.ale 0*1191". $4500. D111>11c ~11cE E'"•Oll A Sege<st•om & Sons ., 3315 Tf\1S Ou•lne.ss ,. t.On· ' 1 ~ ---Cute. air cond. pOwer r ~ ,..., ~ ••. ::,,_. ,, ••. ,,., '' -••· Publl'l'le<I Orange Co1s1 Fa.,~MW< Road. Cotli!I M6t.6. dl.K:IOO by-,.,. !fl(!Mdual COYl'n•nt o< w..-rarify ••· 0 ruu -11'9' _.., Aktt!, p~~mo. ~~~-64_•_-_20_2_•---I steer'.;1. po-r Dralles FICTITtOUS aUSINE6S "';~-;,,u"117e<1 ;1he St~j; ot g:~~:: ~~~=920, 27 91626 ori one (71 <1 ) l tif, '"g'"''~n f com ~~ ~~ r::! ·:~'::~s~!~,~== 9el0lt, a.uet Hound, B=.3~ ~: ... 5. ~~t·N~ (20 lA7 95).S699S. NAllE STit.TEMENT Cahlo.-nla County ol Qt. M·!lti;> 5•6·01 10 irom 600am to menced !O Uiln•ac;I OU~-"°""°"'~ aoprovat o< 9n· Deed Ol Tr ust IO·•ll Bolton T""*. Chlhua· JOHNSON & SON Ttie lollowo~ Pef'$0'1S are •nge 11nd is Clete"b<e<:I as 5 00 Pm IVton<lay through ~s und11< !l>e' hc1H•ou1 CU<nD•aO"•ces io Pl)' lo< the $82.281169 flu•, Cocker Spinlel. conOl!lon. Must Sea. 2726 H1ttl0f Blvd. C M ooinn Ous1<1111Ss ., follows f fld lly At M•<I otfice. l>od, bt.Sl<ltl'n ""'"" Of n.,,.,., el0tet11Cl r9fT!&""""-PfltlC>· The oer...tlOary und9' Mid Golden Rein.--. K..,_ 111.500 obo. 673-4399 540-5630 Ai:CHORS AWAY PON· A CONDOMINIUM CON· Pt.ellC NOTICE l)efs mllY also obtaon CO()lf!t l•stea above on Novernt>9f pat sum 11oe1e~~-un0et OeeCJol Tnnt •e1ol'or.u, nond. Maltese. Mln . 'c~·~D<~Ltu.~c;'-·'ioo~~·~·~V~l~L~L~E'~iiT;:;;:;:;;;;:;;:;~;;I TOON BOAT ~ENTAtS. 600 SISHNG OF THE fOLLOWs FICTITIOUS BUSINESS o t ,'"", •'•,ns lln,~ SOK•I•· 1 :~~.~. G•m••" 11'!.e ''•nulactu•ed Hon>e Alt-ecu1.a •nd !Hiii-..:! 10 1tte .,_._ " E. Ba1 Streel, Newport !NG c a.' ns or "' con· ....,...,, " 111111ns1a11mentC011tr.ct9fld undel"'9""f!d • ... ~ O.C· -•nll.ll.11", Norwegl•t1 350 V8 . beige/tin PARCEL 1 u N O NAME STATEMENT • templa11!4 omptOV-1t5 lhos •l•te......,I 0.1111 l<llO l!lkhound, Paplllon. 111lhet . A b eauty! Beacn,Cal1I 92661 nn ° 1 · The followlng pet50llS!l•I All P,oposalsoobtd65"all w•~htrteCc:>unty Cler~OIO.· S«:u"l~Agt__,I 1ar.tlon ot Oetal.llt and De-~ing._ Pom«anilUl •OT J••'> Rlcl'lllllCI Grl!fl•oglf ;>()(1111 loc.1teCI on LOI 1 OI T111CI No O bu · Jnqu.t-1ega1dlng tM matld lo! S... Ind I ~t.n . Rat · ' • ._, • Bw~1rCJ, Hunhnoton Beach, 11094, as lftown on • rvtap Ol"{I ~111 be •(Comp•n•ed by • •nge Count~ on llioYemtier ~lel'lCIColtai.tl>l lo MIOICI Note. ot Oet....rl and El<IC-Pug, 1 Tern.. Sctllp-1----,-.,-----'---C.111 92646 . recorded In Book 3 16, CLASS!CA l GL ASS c1snier s Of C9tt1ti«! chee~. II 1989 may De OH'ICIO 10 8-T) llontoS.. The~ pWt.e, Toy PoodlM, Wire ~ lff lfl 1 Tl'l!I business os con· P191!11 31 arid 3;> ol IVlll· ET CHING, 8 15 W 11111'1 SI . pay1b1e 10 Ille Olelef ol CJ f~1 Hl!lft al 9600 Center Ave , cflUSed said f>«>Uc;,. OI' 0... ...., Fo• Tenier & Yor11.ht UC911ent concflllorl, ft.lll)o d ucltO by •n l<10•wiClulll cenaneous Vaps, <eoo<Os 01 Cos1a MKB. C1HI 92627 S ege•' 1 r o m & Sons. Pub!•~r.ed Orwige Cont S 1 e 1 fi 0 . R • n c 11 0 llUll ""° flllcil0<1 10 Sell 10 Al pupp1111 gumrar1leed lo•ded, 18,000 mlle1. Tha registrant com· Or•nge COUflly. C•l•la<noa, DebO•llh L Ca•ler, 2502 11mounU"fl 10 ten oercenl Oa.•I~ P1101 Nov9!"10f!or XI. '11 Cuci monga, CA P'lOnl no tie rtlCOf'CJed ~ 1,.,. count)' Pt"fl.ANO PAVILION 702-3U-0968 l'l'\lnald to !rlnHCI busl· and as sttowt1 on !l'le [)e(;ll•· England .,5 Hunt1ngto11 (10'ol ol the bid. OI Dy • Dece<nbt"< 4 11, 1989 1·800-365-0089 wM!<e the real prO(>ltty II OPEN 7 DAYS "'9S5 unoer the l1Cllhou• 1t1on snO Condominium Beith. Calo! bond on M>Cl •mount llln<I M-560 OMEN TIW:E: ACCEP· IOealea 1431'<1a..ctlatvd.\4omi.S -.m1111 DUiiness n1me Ot namn Plari raco•deCI Ap•ll 13. This bU$>llt'$• ($ COtl· P•yabl• to SllCI c J TANOI!. INC .. "···· DATE. 11/20189 405 fw'}, nut lo TvQet. Auto. A/C, Ster~ CISMI· llifeO above Ol'I Deciinbei 1973 as lnt!rumen1 No ducl&d Dy •n ind•v•Clual SeQeftl•om & Sons. ,ignea Pl.a.IC NQflC( l llld9!""'1191' WIS TERN MUTUAL * Ml-1111 * 1e. Law MU.. Uk• .....i 1. 1999 13388 •n Boo6' 1064• Pag1 lhe regosuinr com-0r the biOOer a110 • co.-por· PublltheQ Qiar.ge cont COlllPORATIOM, It•• 17905. {024333) Bill Rkh'10 Grl!flioger 4fi2 01 Otllclal, Reco.-d1 ol meroceo to llan..ct bul•· 111111 surety Said ChKk Shalt FICTITK>US M111MESS O.ol)' PtlOI Der::emtlll' 11. WEIT COAST HIOtfWAY, •• ...... MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 fh1s st1temen1 was llllO 0.angt! Coun!y. (The "COl'I· ,..,. und.,-the llctlUout be !0tlllllled °' ta>d bOfl<I N ... STit.Tt•NT 19119 IUITI MO, •IWPORT •-B B B with tl'llCounl~Cle<"k ol Or-Clom lntum Pl1n··1. and bu5'0lllSS name 0< namH tnall beeome oay1ble in fl'llllollowlng per.on1ai1 MSN •ACH. CA ...:s, ('1'4) BUNNU. 0 ....,,old, &4•7~5tt55 1" d ' H · · lt1'Qlll COUf\ty on Oeoembe' amenClme...ts thlf•lO re-hSllll(l llt>ove on l91l2 case the bldd• dll)O$l•1ng doong busmest as Ml-4-. A9 wdlo T,_..., ;io~ .. :;-:;-~-~-~~~·~·~·~5'0~~ .. 11~=;iiiiiii'iiiliiil-4, 19tl9 corded •n Book 11552, Page Deborah l Carle< lhl tame dots nol w!thln TH( EO FAC PART"'IER· P\aJC NQTIC[ .,._~ «...-, T,....... MM'll•n•-FQtMl' !116 1nd on 800k 11552. Th•5 5titetntlf1T Wll tiM<I ren (101 d!l)'I 1tter .wrtt1en SMIP l53SE1ttCC1.1sl Hwy .l---"-"'""'-'"""""---I ,.,._ ....... "-w Re b U I I I -. n Publ!sl'leO 0!1nge Coal P8Q1 !121!, DOlh ol Officlal wlth lhe Coun!yClerk o!Or· no1oc11110C10$0,$1!;ln lhecon· Co.-o"adel M111.Catot gJt25 NO-_f(:0$3l$2.__ __ .. l"utlWled Ot-eoge CoNt -r-• Oltily Piiot DecemDll< 1 t. ll'I, Re<:orC11 1"9" Countv on NOV'embe< lracl Glot1• 8 Okuda, ll07 Gw-TICE OF PE1T1lON Ot111y Pilot Novwntier 21'. Oe-6059 glneltr1n1m111k>nfrur, 1~:::::::::::::::::::::,j 25. 1989_ J8fll.llt\' l. 1g;go PARCEL 2 An uodl""O«I 21. l9119 Ttie conuactor W1H be •e-oenoa CorOt110el rvter. Call! TO ADMIPISTER cetrobef •. 11 . 1989 ,.,.,,,.,...,, _____ newConnellylnlll'lor,1001· M-S&4 1118 ,,.,.,.,,,,.. lol 1 of fde2St qu11ecl 10 lu•nlth w11h lhoe92f>2S ESTATEOF VAMAHA~model much etM to 11111 SICri-TrictNo 809•.••~on Pubt•thed 0.1roge Coas1 C011tr1ct • la!1ritut Plf' Tl\11 bu•1ne1• 11 ton· : CLP"300, • MW, *'th flee 11 111400 otlo. 8 Map recorCllCI in Book D•tly Piiot oe.:-nbet •. 11, lorm•nce bond 111 111e ducted by' a11 ln<llY!Oull SALOME F. DAVIS,,,l ·---------- IOYnd boit. Ptild 14500. (758NIXJ o.ys 852·1426 ACmeoue ..,..... f't&IC NOTICE 316. ,,.e&3 1 ane1 3201 Mis· 18 25. 1939 1moun1 ot One ~ Th• reg11111n1 com· AKA SALOME FEL1. ... Jor •--. &73-0309 E ,..._ ITAnmlfT M 58fi p """" ft.au.. _....... vealS54-2312 flCTITIOUO""-•• oenaneous MllPS.reco.-dsol · ""cen1 1i. ....... 1 01 the 49' mence<I 10 trantae1 bull· ..,....._. Thelollowlnnpanon111re ..., .,., ,-,-~ -'I ~••rNOAl47'71 OOll'IQ bulH'r<li: u : .,.. •TATl•NT Oranoa Coun1y, Ca~lornla, gr I -"' .... """· """ Uf10ll' !he ~ltlloul -GOE • STAW Of" """L -..--....... IJ:>IJJ MBZ '85 Flf"ltSHING TOUC H, 31!57 The lollowmg perSON .,. at>own and dal'lnecl 11 COm· Pl.llUC NOTICE Md a llt>Ot •rid' maleri.i bu..,-. n-or n-To .. ,.._ ••• • DIRRYl1' GI" ~ ._.... .... ,........ 3000 Twrt>O. EJ1cell1nt 9"cn. su11111 520. NewpO<-t doing but!,_.., mon Ar .. 0<1 the 1txwe ,... PIYl'nlf11 bond In the""'°""'' 1111.0 •boYI O<'I. J 1nua,.,. 1, belie~ and PMW'llll u. OP ..cnnoue YAA8fTY2e'' oond.IUT'lrool,loWmllel 8e1Ctt,Ci lil 82660 LI N COL N W OOD· ,.,,ecf lo Oec:i1••tlon and Ft~~A~.JI ~:~ ~unarad P..-Oll'll 1891 who '"7 °'*"'99 be .,._ ....... ·~..:;:---.... 123.0000B0.530-"M5 Roy$milh,100$Serr1ri-WORl(ING, 2145 Legun•COl'IOomino>.omRESE.R"IN...,,G T E RE Ttif!l ............... -aoN .. ~t~1t!.he ... 'f'.,:"'''' GTIO<llB.OllOO. 11 ...... w In.... ,,.. lO!tO'trlnO ~ --" "-""· Oo. Or1nge, CllH 92665 Cyfl Rd . LllglM'll Beach. • H • ~~-~.,.,..... • o COtl• hll Sllt_,I WU filed ....... Cir ~. Of: "'"atlaNklnld !hot -o1 · • ltt 1112 MERCEDES ·n 450SlC Thia bul!t1ess 11 COfl· C•lll 112651 FROM eiu:IUtiw .._19 CIOlng boll-u tr1clo• will at10 tutnltt; wtll'l 1.,. Cownly CllO• al Qr. SALOME F. DAVIS. lh• flcUlloul Butlnt1ss tit( Orig. mlel. Suorool, Cluetedby:anlrtdtll!Clu•t O!lv•d Lincoln 21,5 ove< the ''Rfltrlcted Com-SUCHOCKI W IP ING certlfical" ot lfleuran~ !IOge Coullly on No_.rtb« SALOME FELL DAVIS N.,..._, LINCOlN ANNISH cer ptlOnl, 116.000 080. Tl'le reg!sliint c m· L C Rd · L mon A1ea·· (q llie nrne .,. RAGS. 3211 That!• S I , e w1denc1t1g 1H lt1!11.ft1nce SI t989 A PETITION ,_ been WOODWORKI NG 2145 l23-0701 agut\11 yn ' lgUf\I 1110Wn I nd cteftflld In $81c1 Lagoni Beech, Call! ll21SS1 covera;e II reQulfed by 11'11 FG1tla llitd bY JNl l C'I" Rd ', --.. IJ.,_.,.,.,,,;;;.,;;,.,_,.,,..-lmer'ICIO lo lren..ct :1h.C:lll.9265tl Oecl•r•1ion arid Con-Susan Suchocllt, 3211 COOl•.cl Publtlhed Ortnga COUt FUNDERBURG In 119 r:::;::Clllt 926$·; ._-- MERCEDES '71 450 SEL ,_. und9r the lk:!ltlovl ~ .._ ""~!.~._,COfl· Clomintum Plan n ameNtecll Thall• SI., Ll(IUna BaKh, A" p!'OOoSllt shall be II.lb· Oa1ry Piiot ~bl!lf 20, 77, ~ Court of The j;"oct1uous &--. Ughl blul all 0t1g Credit ~ """"' or namel uct..., "' an~ ........... ._. 10< lhe ""' ltflO ~PoMI Call! 82651 m1t1ed lo C.J . S-oao"•trCWfl & Deotmber 4. 11 , 1'89 Caliklrrna. ~ of no Pl'°'*"1 41c#2503t) Wiied lbo¥tr Ol'I November Tn1 regltl•anl com· 111 IOfth in Mid Oec1at10on this bu1lne11 11 con· Sons 11 lhe MktfeU fllhoOMl M-564 ORANGE. N..,....•efetrWIO•bOVl-c.AN~tz1·&4M 20. 19H menceo to tran..ct bull· IW'ldCon<lominivmP11n OUc;leCJby •nlndioridutl t>etownotltl•llWolhotday THE ... .!E-rrr.oN ~.In g~9~1~ Roy Smith ""' under Ille llclltiOU1 PAACEl 3. The r1;111r1n1 com · •nd "°"' 9')Killecl Nrtlln. ,...,_.. •-J~ 18£1•mfl Thlt sllt-11 wu Iliad bu!llf'lftl name 0.-IWTIN E1;ci\.lll,,.. _,, ap-menceCl to 1rantae1 bu.is Attbldsll'lalr"""'1va11Cllo< FUNOE.ABUAG be ~39'lci:. WlllO".W::cet•llMlnw ::;_1~.,"'!,C~ "•=~NIA pUrtenan1 to Ille llfl!I de-,_. ll!'lde< tl'le flclltloul eGcalln<lardarsah•ooen--RCTmOUI..,..... flSl90tttsd • perw\81 2145'11tagl>..!._~~~: .-. & out! Drl¥erl b'f • 21 1989 Thll 11ai.rnem wn Tiied tcrlber:I aoowe. lo.-UM anCJ b<.l1lnest n•me o-"'"-.,. ...,. ITAra.wf NtW= ... ,. ID laownt. 8Mcl\. Callif t2tSt ~ ~ lad)' , ,.._ with 1he Co.tnl'I Clark of Or-occupwy of the Ant,ict.O M11-:a lbo¥1 Oii ~ NI pr~ tt\1111 ba r.on-Thi fOllowlr;g ~IN adrt iW lf'9 ..... GI This bUlifW wM COl'\-w,...._ fMNI illtOM Publfthecl Q;o'. Co.II ange Coutlty on 0.0. obmt CO!ftll'IOfl l\f .. s "-anCJ l' I t lt<tered a mVnlclplt pubic °o:! ~ M.' 11"9 .......... Ouc~ by Wt ~ ~4.000,Celcui1 ~SP~C.0.:':! '· 1t, 4, ISiet ~-:=;:ct 1: C:1ar!=-:: ~t:·t~~ r"9d =~!ti:no:==::mc: SA~E~r=,~~~:: -=, .. g:~-: wtttt"':.~C:ot~ • • PuDll9t'led Or C-. ~ Plan u -wllh !hot Coutlly Ciafk ol Or· prOYttlonl ol S.:tlotl 1710 n'lifltt• c.,;, 92613 WU. ... ....._ I ~ -.. Col.roly o.c. ..,_ POMCHf: .... TURllO M-5&4 Dally Pl60I' o.carn": 11 ,. atloctled for ••CkltiYe ...-a1"91 County Oii NowmMt to 1790 ~Of IM catl· o.wi erei9 .......... 1)411 be .. I .. ~ • 4, ,... on• 1 ... .._. wtth l'9Y __ .,. ...,...,._ 25, tsat.Jenuary 1. 1t9o . tt'{thl OWl'llf ollha Untt des 21. 19atl -~nlal• ....... .,_-... TWI..,.. w..i,,,,.,..-. Cllll'. lllit ..... !ft! -*la •.,. t ' 1"° Or-. COMt ...,_ All opt1oM.. 2tK .--""'1 iw. .....-0 aolbad 1tKwt. Being: P1tlo pr..,. rite IC8llo 92"3 .. ri' M tDf Dlif'I ,....,. O.C. beo 11 ti. ,... .... ·._mt. t11,100. M•llWl.,..n ~.J'· 9S;::P~0fO: iind ~~~"':!,.~ ~1.;',.C:~~": ~ bt;':n~eofto.:;'".;!~._ • .,. n . , .. _,,_.,y1, ~ 7 =~::-s..oo. lvn ~,_,. P\llJC ll)TIC( PA~EL 4: ~•ckllM 11. 25. 19et on ,... II me Ofllot °' the T"• 'reo11tr•n1 COM· A MEAIWMa -• .. M ..... -.. Pl'90N.... 1usme11I• for '""'· In-M-611 City Qerk 8tld 8'11<1 for1-lt IO tr...at ~ ........ - .... ~~ 11C11'IOUl-N gr-arid IQNM, UM 8tld P9Ntlle9P111etlbedltler.in ~ tN ~ •• ,. • ~---THf (;HAllMjJtj GN>l.IP, ......... w ento~ment M tM ~ IOf~IClwlthh name Of """* ,. ,, ...... o.e. , ~ ,.. MSI Plnftfooti, Cotta The IOllowfrtt Ptl'tonl ate .,.. lhowr\ 1rte1 °"""*' In coM. M>ow. M · NIA .... • lOD • CMI--:=;:-~, ~~.1312 :'.,:V-Met,.,.,~ rte~a9: ''"~:9 .:.;,=.-=:,.Mii.._: ~~.,... ._ ;?~ S4SI ~ ..... Cotti Armada Ortwe, Hurlangton "'-"· nte~...,_.,.c-..... CA-(7111f lfleCourlt)'Qisrll.olOr, ----·-. oen. ~:;--~-' ••it EXCl!,.TINO THl!Pl l· dOinl~I&: ....,_.9'! ..... -.-l"ltl~Ofl tlD:aata --~-.....,., -• -FROM thoM portions ol 1'111 llAQ4 ANA ~1 t!lld 0..,.. C-t . 1M ii' • e;;:r-.-r.=•-:0"'. =.-c::-.-~M =:r.":.:'C::: =.r:.•a;, .... c..=""'04., ... ,_. .•. ·,,........... ~"= P. ...... .......,. ....... T"".,.,..... .. Con• lnOf\,.,. In ---. l!NlaY.C.1!20 2• ---·u ....... " ~ -........ OcmkMt ~ 1ly. II' Id.,_. -A ' .... • ' ..... '*"" '"' r90111reft1 COM· '"°" tnCI CoflOOflllliNM ........... c.... ..... ~ 4. 11. -,..., Clllf. tta.7 ...,. .. --.on: tl1'I "'3ftCltld to W.-bull-n.. ... .,..... d 1M TNI INW'"9 .. con-• .......,.,__.._. .. , ,.. ""°"' -.....,.=......,_°'......................... .... ...... n. -fllld ....... ._... ot ,_... ............... TM ,...,, ... , eH1--!?!!:!! ~ .. ~°""°'°'' ........... ...,. ..., .......... ,_... ............. ... rill., .. ,., l¢ ~ ............. -1•1• ................. .. ,_ ....... a-~flfCJr. ....... •• • ••• ...... ....... --P ESbl O.. CW o...,e.tr r ... ~ .. ._ _.._.9"!.N~e•t• --· 11 ::'I: --~-.... •iF, " -. . ...... v.c .•• ""' JS::;::l~-;;,ii:..~-':! ;--1 __ ~ • r :.:\ ::z • - --Tl MS1'3