HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-09-13 - Orange Coast Pilot-SINESS
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13~ 1988 25 CENTS
~lcoliol problem i~. suspect's past ,
4 •
San Otego school r e portedly expelled ~~d~~:~:~~d~~~~~~~~\t~J~~~~
eenaccused in-Balbo--a traffic fatalny--j~~!..:k~r-nelas made brhisfamii~
BJ JONATHAN VOLZKE Sept. I incident and
Blanca Ornelas said her son was a
good student and that she had ne'er
remains an seen him drank. he said he lo"ed
·oe ... ...,,.._.... Orange County Jail in lieu of milk. · "' ·
. Descnbcd by his family as a good $250,000 bail. -
student and a model son, the teen-"To m y knowledge. there's ap-
•r accused of running down and parently something to the sto~ that
lullina a Balboa woman while he was there was some problem in San.
in a drunken st~por apparently was Qicgo," Beverly Hills atto~ne_) Ralph
-expelled from high school, possibly -Bencangey said. Monday. ..But I
for a drug or alcohol problem . hrs don't have dir~t knowledge of any
attorney said Monday. details."
Danny David Ornelas is charged Ben_canaey'sstatement as well as an
with second-degree murder in the anonymous report that the 19-year-
Mechanical faJlure Is
blamed for the crash of a
Navy F-14 fighter jet at an
alrfteld In El Cajon on
Monday.JM
Baalneu
Son of Carl's Jr. ham-
burger cha.In founder to
repay S 10,500 as part of a
federal Insider trading
1Ult against hlm./85
1'atl~ii -
Faumg ~der hit T
Greyhound bus in New
Mexico, killing five
people./ Al
Biltemtnment
Noat•lgla has its day,
both on stage and In
. concert./ Al
.. We've neve r known ham 10
drink." she said.
Ornelas is charged w 1th murderi ng
Debbie Ann Killelea. 37. on Sept. I as
she walked her two sons through an
allcy-bchrnd Oceetn Bou ~ard. -•
The Hunungton Park man alleged-
ly raced a friend's turbo-charged
Nissan through the alle~ and veered
(Pleue see ALCOHOL/A2)
Tragedyspurs trafflC FOposals
BJ PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' -Dllllr !"'et ....
Speed "humps." v.arn1ng lights. increased patrols
and cul-de-sacs are among the safet~ propo'><!I!> being
studied for Newpon Beach streets and alle)'> an thC' Y.akC'
of the tragic death of a Balboa Peninsula Y.oman
The City Council and se' eral resadcots discussed
options ~dunnfi-.a ~\ianda):. Sllld} ..se.ssron armed at
preventing future 1nodents lake the Sept. I death of
Debbie Ann Killelea.
She was stru.clc b) an alle$1.t'd drunken dn' er \.\h1le she
walked with her two sons through ao alley behind her
Ocean A venue home ·
Danny Ornelas. 19. of Huntington Park has been
charged "'1th second-degree murder and remains Jailed in
·1teu ofS~S0.000 bail
Counetlwoman Ruthel~-n Plummer satd the ctty's
streets have ~en overwhelmed b} '1s1tors
\Vrth streets becomtng a giant parking lot. ··alleys
na' e become escape hatches ... Plummer said. "They were
never designed to handk that traffic
. (-Pleue eee TRAGEDY I A2)
Surf hits
IO feet
at Coast
beaches
Storm churns up
20-f oot breakers
at N~wport Wedge
BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN .................
The biggest and best surf of
summer, and perhaps of the pas{ vear.
is breaking against Oran~e Coast
beaches this week., keeping lifeguards
alert and prompung surfers to miss
work.
Although dozens of rescues were
made among those who braved the
powerful surf. lifeguards said the size
of the waves was intimidating enough
to keep a lot of peol:}le on shore.
The big waves arrived Saturday
niaht and built to a high Monday with
steady I (}.foot sets. Although the surf
is nearly that size today. 1t is expected
tQdiminisb Slightly through the week.
-, Tb'c huge surf was created by a
Souta. Pacific slotm that. moxed
steadily toward California. hitung
b.t apinst south-aod southwest~
facina beaches. A.t the Wedge m
Balboa. a legendary bod~surfing
break, waves peaked Monda' at 15 to ->20-fert. .
Inda A body •arfer drop. down the ~·ere of a 10-(oot-plaa waYe at the \VecSce.
"This 1s the south swell we've been
waiting all summer for.·· said Chns
Borg. a nieteorologist for Surf Line. a
Huntington Beach-based telephone
surf rcpon SCf".jce. ''The. Sou them
(Pleue eee SURP' / A2J
Birth• . . . Bulletin Board
Bu81neas
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EntertaJnment
()pinion
People
,.
A7
A3
85-7
88-10
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AS
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Brother says murder suspect confessed
Police Log
Public Notices
Sport•
WMther
· A9
. A3
810
B1--4--
A2
By BOB VAN EYKEN °' ...............
A man with a history of alcohol and dru& problems testified Monday that
his brother confessed to him that he
drove to Costa Mesa in 1983 and
fatally shot Jeffrey Molloy Pa'rker. the
man he believed was 'responsible for
killing his fiancee.
Richard Dale Wilson, 47,. is ac-
cused In the shooting death of Parker.
who. at the time of his death. was
suspected of having killed Wilson's
airlfriend after a night of drugs and
sex in Beverly Hill"S several months
earlier.
Okel Wilson repeated earlier tcs11-
mony in whkh he said Wilson told
him he wanted to avenge the death of
his &irlfriend. San Francisc;o socialite
Joan McShane MillS> •
Wilson's defense attome\S. hov-
ever. drew on ev1dl'.'ncc i hat the
brother, Okel Wilson. ~as lln al-
coholic and had been suITenng bla k-
outsand memory lapses at the time of
the aJl~ed confession.
Under quesuoning by Deput~ Dis-
trict Attome~ DougJas Woodsmall
Okel Wilson said his brother boastt'd
ofhavmg committed the murdl·r
E~~con IJ_Uts ~n .end to his~l9Sing $treak
' . . -~---~-~----~~·'--~----------' . Afterspen~ingyea~s behind bars, Mesa
man gets·off' drugs, turns his ltf e around
BJ JONATHAN VOLZltE ...............
Newspapers are filltd with stories
about loeen like Steven Cantell.
A ctn. UICI' ar<>wi"I up 1n Costa
Mela in ihe early 1970s, he stoic what
be could to IUPPC>rtbis habit -from
biljob. bily or st,_.rs. •
And be 10t cauaht, omc.and time llltin.
On one O<X!Uion, a dotcatcher IPOlled bim_jaywalkina and called for
a police oftic:er, who, upon arrival.
widea1ally ran Cantell over with his
motoreyde. Cantell wasn't bu.rt when
kDocbd into tbe shrubl. But the
-matijMN in his pocket jarred lose,
and Cu1eU was arrested.
Anocher time, police pulled over
dae car be wu ia. ud in a panic. he lbo¥ld a vial boldinsthrec marijuana r,m1c1own tbe front of bis pants. tboulht he"d made it. until an oftlclr Mook his pants. The vial
tulllbled down Cantcll's lea. hit the ~wmmt. and bounced onto the
.... foot.
Mile livina in the Arcbn. a
OOlnpln of nan-down a~nts
-Oftllooti"I the Newpon 8cacb
Hll "ftoftl. Cuitell and I buddy
apartment to son throU&h the goods
.while bis partner journeyed to Santa
Ana to set up a buy. One of the first
attempted sales cauaht authorities'
attentJon, and Cantell wu in trouble
apin.
Cantell was weU known by local law
enforcement officials and tbast irt the ·
'county jail. With five felony convic-
tions, ht spent most of bis 20s behind
ban. He was never on the streets for
more than u months.
So it was a bomecomina of sons
late IMt week when Cantell. now 39,
returned to the Costa Mesa Police
DeDutment and to the OraDIC Coun-
ty Sail. But this time, his hands were not
sb8c:tled; bis arms wc:re not held by police oftk:en. . nm time, Cantell entered • he
mu; under bis arm he carried a fWI
and unconditional pardon ~ b)•
Oov.~ian. And the Mdrupandcn~a"' behind him. huajobwith the San
francilCO Sllerifl"s [)epantMnt as a
dnll-ebute eouatelor. .. rvc leemed bei111 ffte is a pmi·
..... Cantell laid. "'l apprmate the
~ jail, priton. all of that. It took
wblt 1t took to Ft me straiPteMCI
OUL ..
.. He sa1d he wanted to do some-
thing to that punk Jeffre} Parker.'" the
defendant's brother said.
Wilson said bis brother. a well-to-
do San Franc:1Sco accountant. uked
to borrow a pickup truck so that·be
could drive to Southern California an
(Pleue eee BROTllER /A2)
Training
program
may·cut
welfare
By BOB VAN EYKEN
Ot .... o.lly .........
A. plan designed to save taxpayers'
mone' b} steering welfare recipients
10 sct(.suffic1enC) was unveiled Mon-
da~ b~ the county Social Services
A.gency.
Knov.'Tl asOAIN. Greatef "enues
for Independence. the protrarr\ 1s
intended to get . heads of welfare
rcc1prtnt households into remed1al.
education and job-training programs
tailored for Orange County's h1gh
technology JOb market
"In our type of cconom} with low
uMmploymenl. there arc a lot of jobs
out there aoina beaina. .. said Bob
Gnffith, deputy director of the Social
Services A&cOC)'. "The hard part is
that many of these JObs !'CQ.Uirc skills
that you don't aequitt in JUSt a few
months." ·
Modeled af\er a successful~
in Massadlutetts, GAIN 11 a 537i
millton 1ia~ propvn, but acti 4
of the state's S8 t'C>uoties bas been ~ with . tailon"t it to local
"Th11 it the first tmout aw:': Cahi>mia to edchea tile
pc>pulatioft, trad1ti0Mlly tM .......
popglation '° tellder' .... ~ ..
•Kt I.any l..ciuMD. dinKtof ol ...
-------~:;;._....,._ -""'-----L·-----~,1 [ft_ ..._.,aa, __ ,.. ....................................................... ~...,~-r
""*' lato llveral pcbts. They made • wida 1'18' radao equipment alMt
...._ .-. Cutell -~ in ~
1
Ol ... COllll DAILY Pel.OT/ Tueectay, September 13, 1988 ...
OBDY SPURS TRAFFIC PROPOSALS ••• ..... Al . ' . Wftlt...,. aft I aymptom o( a
..... lumir problem. To reduce the ..-d ia tie alleys is just a fina 11ep in
an overall Dian. I'm t_ust sorry a real ~bad &o occur.
lion. said Killelea was amona those ...
who had Iona fouaht for safety Mercuryup, Out surfs down
Cit~• have been lookinc at me bility of placi~ speed .. hump1" in tome anu of the city.
but hive found miud multi in other
communities where they are used.
While narrow ·~ "bumps" arc
commonly round an parking lots, the
bro9der apeed ''humps" alt less
jani~ ao.drivm and less damaging
to vebidea. "t the same time, motor-
ists are able to drive faster over the
hump&. rcducin1 their effectiveness.
City traffic eRJineer Rich Ed-
monston said the city of Brea was the
first in the state to install speed
bump&. but the city atiomey there is
concerned about liabilityc
Pasadena bas the largest program
in the state, but puts the speed bumps
only on low-volume strttts.
.. Most cities that have used them
found they did reduce speed," Ed·
monston uid. But drivers who don't
like the bumps move to other streets~
creatina new problems elsewhere, he
said. .
The humps create othcrproblcms,
too, includmg increased noise from
laf'F" vehicles, street sweeping and
drainaae difficulties, and damage to
vehicle alignment and suspension
systems.
Council members suggested the
city study other options, such as
in1tallina blinldna warning lights.
time-lapse cameras and "8ott's
dots,•• reflective markers used on
freeways to separate lanes.
Councilman Phil Sansone won-
dered if the.re were any law against
em:tina "Not a Thru Street" signs on
alleys that were not really dead ends.
Residents said they were open to
sugestions, as long as something was
done.
Dayna Pettit, president of the
Balboa Point Homeowners Associa-
measures on the penmsula .
"This will be a tribute to Debbie
Killelea more than anything else,"
she said.
Pettit sussted the city investipte
tumina alleys into cul..<fe-saC"S lo
prevent their use as thoroughfares.
Gayle l(jna, a neighbqr of the
Killelea family, said the accident
oc:cgrred behind her home.
"I'm S1ill in shock," King said.
••Debbie and I spent the summer
worryin1 about our children."
She said everyone on the alley
sianed a petition to make it a one-way
street.
Monday evening at the regularly
scheduled City Council meeting,
Balboa resident Bill Wren uraed t.be
city to reconsider its u~ or traffic
studies that arc based on mid-winter,
weekday volumes of traffic rather
than hi&h-volume weekend and sum-
mer traffic.
Da7DA Pettit
GaJleK!nc
"According to our traffic stud1e ,
Debbie was murdered by a car that
didn't exist," Wrenjaid.
"It wa n aCC1d~nt -about 10
happen. We sugcsted solutions, but
nothing was done. Now it has become.
an emotional issue."
K.Jllelea's death prompted rcsi·
dents from other parts of the city to
attend the study session as well.
urging the council to take measures in
their neighborhoods.
Diane Edmunds-On, a 'Newport
Shores resident, said speeding ~as a
problem in her neighborhood and
asked the city to consider placing
speed humps there.
A Shore Oiffs resident said the lack
of sidewalks in her neighborhood
increased dangers to pedestrians
there.
The city's Traffic Affairs Commit-
tee was tentatively slated to take up
the issue today.
T......,.,,_ .. nee .....,_ and cloUd9 wll deClf •11
acroe1 loulMrn Celfornle Wedneedey, but the big .,,..._.
1Mt i11lghted IUfters wlll ai.o f9de, the National W.ttw
.... '°'**'today.
n. ._,......, ....... ..,., .................... ,.
A kM ~ eystem OY9I' NeYada la expected to weaken
end heed not1heeet, tending temperetur• up llightty end ..,_1n9 up the cloud cover that ha blanketed the., .. the put
few~. But wavee epewned by• Southern Hemltpher• 1torm
thet hed tWhed up to eight fMC on eouth·faclng bWhel at• .,_expected to dlmlnllh Wednndey.
Alona the OrenQe Cout ttwe will be late night through mid·
morning low oloUd1 end local fog mainly near the cout.
OtherWIM fair through Wedneeday with .unny end a ltttle ..mer deya. 8Mch lows tonight In the mld ·50t to mld-eo..
Hlghl Wedneeday In the upper 60s to mid-70.. Valley lows
tonight In the mid-SO. to low 609. Highs Wednesday In the
mld-809 10 low 909.
....... 11 70 "~ U.S. Temps --~ " 74 C.Jlf. Tem1>9. ,_YlwtlCfly 78 IO .. Le OlldmNoN City .. lie 74 ~ ... M 0-.. n 52 ----· 52 .. 0..... 13 n :.,::r 24 '*"-endWIO al 5 p"'
Alllll4.t es 71 ll't9 U11S'ilo& 76 83 12 51
Alllf1llc Cl!y 14 $1 ..._.. .. 73 llnU 82 52 .....,_. II .. :::'.!,'.._ &3 .. ,_ .. 51 ...... ....,.. IO 68 11 54 Loe.-.,... 15 IO ... 111 43 "°"*'Cl.Ore. .. S3 ~ .. 51
~ 11 80 ::::rClty 15 IS ~-..... 74 ..
:,.on.SC 13 70 57 39 ... ..._ 12 12
90 10 ,_.... M 40 :::·.-:.Olly 92 IO
~"c 8t 68 ~ 82 15 19 55 g::,, 15 51 .. LOIAe 91 70 .__,_ " 55
13 70 a.1..a11e Ctty 83 41 .__ 15 51
~ n .. ... Mlonlo " 94 74 len'*IO 73 es
eoium-.ONo 11 68 ...... eo 57 len ,,endlco 75 &I
~Worth .. 14 ....,_ 74 45 ....... IO 57 Oeyton 78 ge ~ 17 .. len LMll Obllpo 12 60
o.n-fl 43 T......SIP\rabQ 92 75 ........ ' " !le
0..-13 53 T°'*'• 94 6e Hllfl, low tor 24 rioure tlfClln9 •• :f "'
Oetrol1 13 80 T_, 92 ..
----83 Dululll 115 31 T'*9 IHI 117 ---I 81 54
llPeeci ff 83 w....,..on.o.c 111 ge ...... ge 31
Erle eo 117 Wldllt• llO 511 8lltlOP 73 51
,~. 511 45 ~ .. 12 ,..,_n 68 32 • 117 12 ...,.,....,... __ -ta.-57 Cl.twei' Clly 4 15 11 "°"°"*' ff 71 SmoaReport ...._.., .. 49
Houelon Ill 78 ......... 14 Ill
~.....,.,. 17 .. L.A. Alrpot1 72 II
JeP.eon,Mtee 91 10 ~ ..... 68 83
.... _.... ff 71 ....._ ~ lndea (pel~ o-50 OfMrlo 71 61
~ 52 44 1~:: ... ~.:-100 ~ 101-llMI Uft• ~ eo 55
K-Cily M 57 200-2tt .-y unl'leelttlful, 300 .._.... 111 58 ................... Aral ........ u.vee-eo 55 ........ ~· Mtelned pel 8-ld .. ..... ..,.,. n H Llnle Aoc:ll 91 87 .._. ..... ~ .......... 13 54 L.,..._ 14 73 .......... .. IO ~ 90 72 .... ..... IO MllcAntlUr 8l¥d 33-50 TIMeV~ .. 33 ........ 8MCll 15 112 ....._t1fP tic• V~--· 33-58 Ton-73 51 .......... 13 55 i..ei-..... ~J •. 0 ......, 10 13 ......... ,,....,. 18 •2 Loe ........ Airport., ___ -2$-42 Y_....V., .,. 158
Bztended == ...... :::::&.:-' .. ... ~._. dey.
............ --Higrla •to71811ie .............. -...., IOI IR...,._ lo.-. 52IO16
Barf Report
LOCA,_
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TOOAY '-'cllow 5:10P"'-11 ._,,._ 1 t-'OI p.m.. 4 5
....... y """ ... 4;51&.ll'I 15
~l::r ... 11:13Lfl'I,. 53 5·41pm 11 ........... 11:48p ....... u
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.
EX-CON TURNS HIS LIFE AROUND •••
From Al ALCOHOL PROBLEM IN SUSPECT'S PAST •.•
l"rolllAl
into J(jllelea, drasgjng her body more
than SO feet before the woman fell
onto the asphalt, Newport Beac~
Police said.
She died on an operating table
hours later. Ornelas fled when the car
tumbled in the alley. but was later
arrested, authorities said. .
Police spokesman Officer Bob
Oakley said Ornelas· blood-akobol
level was .18. nearly twice the level at
which a motorist is presumed too
drunk to drive.
Blanca Ornelas said her son did· not
intentionally hit Killelea. She de·
scribed her son as a good boy 'Aho'd
never had any problems with drugs or
alcohol.
But Bencangcy said Ornelas. was
expelled from an unidentified high
school in San Diego. PQssibly for a
dr~g or alcohol problem.
San Diego area school officials said
they could not release records about
former students and would not con·
firm the reports.
His fam ily. speaking outside 1he
Orange County Jail last \\Cek. de·
scribed Ornelas as a good student who
attended Pius X. a Catholic high
~hool in Downey.
.
Officials there. however. said Or-
nelas volunui.[ily withdrew from the
hi&h school in 1987 after one )'ear of classes. They refused to discuss why
he withdrew," but said he did not
receive a diploma there.
Family members declined to dis-
cuss the reports. although Ornelas'
younger sister said the problem in San
Diego was circumstantial.
"Nobody ever saw him with
drugs." she said.
Newport Beach Police and Dcput)
District Attorney R ick King. who 1s
prosecuting Ornelas. said the~ "ere
unaware of an~ previous problems.
Cantell said it was prison ·and the
realization that he was reaching the
end of his rope that led him iO clean
up.
"I always had a habit of telling on
myself when I got caught so people
would feel sorry for me and I'd get a
H&ht scn\ence,'' Cantell said of his
many misadventures· in and out of
prison. "I knew my next stop was San
Quentin, and I didn't want to end up
there. Reality there is either figllt or
die, and sometimes you still die ...
..,. After a couple of false starts in a
Narcotics Anonymous program, the
sessions finally began to take hold. ;·1 started to take a different look.
and I didn't want to go back to prison
anymore. I was getting too old,"
job."
When Cantell began working for
the department in 1982, he was paid
with money from a stale grant. When
the grant ran out and his position was
eliminated, Cantell kept working.
"I bad found w mething mean-
ingful to me, and there was no way I
was going to let the government kick
me out of my job." Cantell said.
In 1986, a permanent position
iesting for drugs ~nd .Junning a jail
furlough proJram opened up and
Cantell was hired. ~
Durin9 this time. Caniell worked to
clear his record. Under state law, an
ex-felon who works in the communi-
ty forthrec years without an arrest can
apply to the state Supreme Court for a
ccnificate of rehabilitation.
morally than legally {or him. Cantell
siid.
"It is important for me to show my
mother (and family) this." he said.
"After all I put them through, this is
important."
Cantell said be plans. to use-the
pardon in an attempt to become a full
sworn member of the San Francisco
Sheriffs DcJ)!lrtment. He said he's
tQo old for stlect patrol, but wants t.o
work in the corrections or transpor-
tation divisions.
Ex-felons arc usually prohibited
from getting permits to carry firearms
and don't become peace officers, but
Cantell said he's counting on the
pardon to sec him through.
SURF HITS 10 FEET AT COAST BEACHES ••.
Cantell said. "I saw people that had
been where I was and the' were
aenina their hves cleaned up.';
Narcotics Anonymou·s works like
the other help programs -former
drua use.rs gather and share their
experiences. strengtti and support.
Cantell got th.e certificate. but he
wanted more.
Officials at Police Officers Stan-
dard Training, which sets law en-
forcement standards for the state. sa)
they've never heard of an ex-felon
switching sides._ but Cantell thinks he
can do it. ·rr-Al
Hemisphere has not been kmd to us
this year, but this one is near ideal. the
biaestand bcstsu.rf we've ha<L"
lfora said the surf has arrived with
Iona intervals-the distance between
wave peaks - a sure.sign of big surf.
In addition, water temperatures have
been comfQrtable and winds -have
'"becn liaht. contributing to the ideal
1urfin1 conditions.
Bora predicts the surf will begin to
dissipate today, losing about one foot
in heiaht per day through the end of
the week. . •. •
"The thing ebout south swells is
they build slowly and go away
slowly," be said. "It will be great
surflna right through Friday:·
In Newport Beach. lifeguards re-
ported only a handful of rescues, but
said the number are bjgh considering
the relatively small crowd on the
beach. /
"When J say. l2or 14 rescues. tbat
miaht not sound like a lot, but It is
w.hen you consider there's only 50
people in -~~.>.water." said Gordon
Reed. a Newport Beach marine safety fficer~ "It's dangerous fot sometme
not accustomed to the ocean and the
waves. These waves come in straigh\.
. pack a lot.of punch al)d break really
hard."
Reed said it w.as only the cool
weatherand the smaJI crowds created
by the arrival of the school tha1 kept
r'C$CUCS down.
"I guarantee that if we had had this
kind of surf over Labor Da). we
would have made 1,000 rescues."
In Huntington Beach, where the
surf measured 6 tO 8 feet near the
damaged city pier, experienced surf-
ers were Joined in the wateT b} wme
inexperienced visitors. on !lo<>&ic
boards, said lifeguard supervisor
Mike Gifford. •
"It seemed like for every Boogje
boarder that we nt into the water.
the~ was a reseue-we!d make,"
Gifford uid. "These waves are big.
Some people come all the way down
to the beach and figure they can·t
wimp out, so they go in the water
when they shouldn't. It's something
about battling Mother Nature or
whatever." •
Huntington Beach lifeguards have
been keeping a cloS'.e eye on the
surfers. advising those that appear
inexperienced to exercise extra cau-
tion or reconsider entering the "ater
altogether.
"When I got out of priWTMtre-
time, there was somebody from NA
waiting to mec1 me ... he said. "That
was new to me. I'd always had
positive influences in my life, like m y
parents-or priesT, but nOb<>dy who
understood me.
• He applied for. and received this
month, a full and urrcondiuonal
pardon from the governor.
While the document does not·seal
hinecord. irgoes-in his-file and can
work in his fa vor, Bu t it docs more
.. It sounds far-fetched. but I got
pardoned, and that was once far-
fctched:--cantell sai<1. "Most ex-
felons never gel this far."
BROTHER TESTIFIES •• , .. --
Jl'romAl "When you're first out is a real
vulnerable time. You feel like you order to kill Parker. detoxification and recovery program
deserve to get loaded. get a woman. ·He said he refused to lend him the two days after his brother allegedly
act crazy because you've been down truck"becausc I didn't want him to go confessed to him. · ·
so Iona. but'that just sets you up for to LA. In my opinion, he was hurt and He said he had suffered blackouts
another fa ll." angry and I know that when people for at least 16 years prior to 1983 artd
Narcotics Anonymous took . archurtandangrytheysometimesdo that the inci(lents had become more
Cantell to San Francisco because things the)'.~wouldn•t otherwise do." frequent and severe as his drinking
OranJC County did not have nightl) Okel Wilson said his-brother left his increased in the early 1980s. •
meeunas. he said. Once there. he Modesto borne in anger. Okel Wilson insisted, however.
continued to get his life back ori track. He later testified that Wilson told that his memory lapses mainly coo-
Cantell said he was pumping him on Aug. 8, 1983, that he had aone cemcd dates and times. He said he
psoline in a Bay Arca station when a to Costa Mesa, hidden in the bushes remembered most events that oc-
former county sheriff pulled in. outside Parker's mother's house, shot curred, even during his periods of
Cantell told him of his recovel'). and Parker once, and then-approached heavy drinking. "'
JOB-TRAINING PROGRAM UNVEILED ••• the sheriff suggested he apply as a him and shot h im again in the temple. He testified, and medical recil-ds
counselor at the San Francisco "I lauabed at him." Okel Wilson confirm, that he entered alcoboljc PromAl • ' ------Strerift's Department cO\Jnty parole said. "hFtought he was k1ddin1. I told recovery proarams three times in Ill
division. · him I didn't think he was capable of eiaht-month period from 1983 IO So(,ial Services AJency.
Diane Edwards, director of adult
and employment programs for the
aacncy, said there are a number of
ways in which this program dilTers
from previous. less well-funded ef-
forts.
"GAIN is oot geared toward tbe
quick fi x. where sorneone is placed 10
a low-payina job, is not able to
support her family and has to go back
to welfare." sh,e said. ''This is de·
sianed to break the cycle of dependen-
cy. -.
The program wtll pump about $5.'J
million into Orange County. In·
eluded in the packaae is funding for
child cart'. end for such incidental
costs as transportation to and from
job interviews, uniforms al'ld other
necessities for cmploymenL
"In the past, we didn't ha ve money
for child care or for transportation,
which made .i• difficult for programs
to be effective," she said.
A,ency officials have 1dentafied 35
job ca&caoria that they believe are
realistic pis for proaram pan1ci-
pant1. Only occupations in which the
w.,es are hiah enouah to su~rt a
family have been chosen. said Bob
Griffith, the qency's deputy director.
OAANGE ........
COAST --· rmi
--OPl'ICI
......... C-.-..CA
"These incl ude clencal jobs. trades
such as ca(J>Cnfer. electrician or
plumber. various technology-rela1ed
fields such as equipment repair.
certain medical tcchn1c1an positions
or even cooks." he said.
Griffith said the agency c 11matcs
thai.a job must pay at least $7 an ho ur
in order fo r it to be wonhwh1lc for a
program panic1pant.
Gri(lith said there are abou1 17.000
families in Orange County now-
rcceiving Aid to Fam1hes 'ti.Ith De-
pen'dent Children. or Af'DC.
He said about 5.400 heads of
households are expected to part1c1·
pate.
All recipients whose children are 6
years or older will be required to
participate 1n the jot>-tra1nina pro-
gram. Those with )'Ounger children
may also participate.
Participants are gi ven aptitude
tcstsand other screening 1odeterm1ne
what their needs and interests are.
The typical ~rtic1pant will require
some remedial secondary education
in addition to job training in order to
become employable in Oianae Coun-
ty's job market, Griffith said.
State and federal officials hope the
result of the Gt\JN proaram will be a
---t.r '911. eo.1• .._ CA 1an ~ -ttt•M71 ~ & .0.IOtlM ..... , .
c....llN ttU ----..... ,.,_ .. , .... -.. ........,., .. ,,.,...mer 11e ·•~
---Mllf IL 1Gf~9'1-
'
reduction in the number of people He $Ot a ve~ close looking over. such a thing. But he said. yes he did. early 1984. He said he bas not had a
who need AFOC, Griffith said. He b t h t · k · h d He 1·ns1'st.-.4 that he did." · drink since complefion of tbe thi(d said the prnoram includes a scientifi· u e ao a JO wor mg wit rug \;U -.-offenders in the county jail. Upon cross examination by de· tri:atment. cally administered study that will "My big pitch was that I was ~n ex· fense attorney Joel Baruch. Wil10n He .said his relationship with the
compare those who participate in the offender. that I could do the job,'' admitttd that he had a severe prob-defendant had been cordial until tie prog0~:mcow~tt~ot:e~sesia~h~pcd?c~0~·f the Cantell said. "It was so perfect for me. lem with alcohQI and drugs in 1983. iold Costa Mesa Police investigatots ~udy is that wme~~~o~ewill _1_h_a_d~th_e_be~s_t _q_u_a_li_fi1c_a_t_io_n_s_~_o~rth_e~~H_e~sa_i_d~h_e~en_t_e_re_d~a_n~a-~_o_h_o_lie~_a_~~u_t _th_e_~-~~~co~n-~~~-o_n_.~~
have to be barred from participating
in order to forrn a conl(ol group for
comparison. he said.
"But al lhis time. Oianl!LCounty ·
not a control group county owe mar, ·
not have to deal with {hat problem. '
he said.
The GA IN program was
authorized by state legislation in
1985. but counties were g1 \'Cn until
this month to put their programs
t<>aether. Edwards said Orange Coun-
ty had benefited from the long
P.lanning period.
· "It wat a very complicated pro-
aram to draw up and we dehberatel)
took the maximum:· she said. "We're
in a position to benefit from mistakes
made in other counties where they got
staned earlier."
The prosram is funded only unul
June JO. the end-0f the current· fiscal
year. Funding to continue the pro-
aram will be appropriated at the
aiscretion of the state Legislature.
.. E .. ...... " ... ,... ................. ............ , ... ............. ......
............ I ,. ......... ... ..,.,,_ .. .....
-~ ......... -........
•
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A perfect complement to
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Alao available in walnut.
black and cordovan.
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561 Newpon Center Di'.
(714) 6404310
•
)
. -
Women's seminar
slated Saturday
at.Westin in Mesa
The Dolphins division of the Ncwpon Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce will sponsor their first Wo~~n·s Opponunity Workshop Saturday al the
Westan South Coast, Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa.
. The P!"Olrlm is designed for businesswomen
interested an upward or redirected career moves as
well as ent~prencurs. The seminar will open at 7:30
a.m. and wdl run through 2 p.m.
The conference is priced at $4S, including
lunch. Reservations are being taken by the chamber
It 6"44-821 1.
Papenrark IJeJp altered
Paperwork assistance, provided by volunteers
&om the American Association of University
Women. wit! be a~ailable f ri~y from 2 to 4 p.m . at Gtat Amencan Fmt Savtng.s an Laguna Hills.
Covered will be Medicare, health insurance,
bank and brokers' statements, telephone bills and
otberpaperwork problems. Call Jeanette Larnbenat
951-7260 for funher information.
AlDS forum at co11e6e
SaddJcback College's Community Services Depa~me!"'t will present a forum on "Coping W ith
Al~ Fnday from 1 to 10 p.m . in the Doyle G.
McKinney Theater on the Mission Viejo campus.
. . Sad~lebaclc health pr<?fessbr Margaret PTen-
d1 v11lc will moderat the session lVld a donation ofS2
will ba asked at the door. Cart Joyce Hanna at
'82-4650 for additional information.
Women'• aealon at OCC
A seminar for women focusing on goals.
directions and skills, will be offered Friday from 1 to
9:30 {).m. in Room lOS of the OC'C Counseling and
Admissions Boilding.
Jeanne Nelson, co-director of the Newport
Harbor Counseling Center, will cqnduct the work-
shop. The fee is $20 and registraoon may be
obtained by calling 432-S880.
Retired Marines gather
A free bnefing for all retired Mannes will be
prcscnteQ Saturday at 8 a.m. at the Station
Auditorium on the El Toro Manne Base.
Health and medical sen ices. volunteer op-
ponunites and spacc..ava1lablc travel will be a mong
the topics discussed. Lunch will be served for a SS
fee, and reservations will be taken at 6Sl-4SOI or
651 -277L
Computer dJJ8 offered ~
"What to Look for an Purchasing a Micro-
computer" is the title ofa workshop to be presented
Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon in Room I 02 of
Oranae Coast College's Science Lecture Hall.
· Moses Armijo. a Newport Beach business
consu.ltant. will conduct the seminar. The fee is $25.
and tickets may be purchased by phone at 432-5880. •
L 1VV to meet 1n Newport
The League of Women Voters of the Orange
Coast will hold its annual kickoff ineeting Saturday
from I :30 to 3 p.m . at the Ne~ pon Center branch of
the Newport Beach L1brat). 856 Sao Clemente
Drive. ·· •Dr. Carl Schwartz. Fullerton College political
science profc$SOr. ~ 111 speak on .. Emerging Issues
• Between "'Ufe UmmrSr.n~ n"d MexiC'o."' Catt
548-978~ for additional information.
Tue.day, Sept. 13
• 6:30 p.m. l rvlac Chy CoucU, council
chambers, 17200Jamboree Road.
• 7:30 p.ln. lrvlae Sdeol BMnl special
meedq, district office. SOSO Barranca Parkway.
• 1:30 p.m. Newport-Mesa Vilified Sdool
Dl9trtet, Harper Communi.iy Center. 425 E. J 8lb
Street, Cost.a Mesa.
• 7:30 p.m. Hutiasto.a Buell UaJoa Hip
Sdleel D11trict, distnct education board room.
10251 Yorktown Ave.
1Vednaday, Sept. 14
• 9:30 a.m. Oraqc Ceuty Beari •f S.,Cr-
ft8en, board hcarina room. Hall of Administration.
10 Civic Center Plaza. Santa AnC ~
• 7'p.m. Lapaa Beadl ~ Coll1Jlll11ioa,
council chambers, 50S Forest Ave.
Oranoe Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, &.ptember 13, 1M8 ..
NB comminity center plans 0K'd·
I J PAUL ARCHJPLEY • ~city will acqwrc a l)'mnasaum and °'._...,,....... related cqwpmeot and several dassrooms
from Newport Cbnsuan Ht&)\ School. The
Ncwpon Beach officials look steps school has relocated. •
Monday to create a West Ncwpon Com-• A 16-unn apartment complex. ancludina
munity Center that will pro' 1dc rec· seven dnianated as affordable housan&
reational activities, counseling and othcT units, wilt be built on the remainder of the
servicn to local 1'esidents. school site.
The City Council unanamousl} ap-The 8-year-old symnas1um. ~here SC\·
proved plans to spend $290 000 an city eral spons activiu~ already arc under
money and borrow another S 1.2 million way, would be the onl)'. facility of its kind
from the Department of Housing and undcrcity control. Whalec.ity proa.ramsarc
Urban Development to buy pan of a also held in school ayms, they arc subject
fonner private school at 883 W. 15th St. to school district scheduling chaoaes.
Transit officials
talk of merging
county agenejes
By BOB VAN EYKEN °' .. .,.., ..........
Orange County transponauon com-
missioners fired up a Juggernaut Monda)
that some other transponation officials
say could roll over t~cir tnteresLS.
Commissioners have been talking for
months about the idea ofconsohdating the
county's" various transponation agencies
into a single body. • •
The consohdauon should also mcludc
some transpon.auon-relatc.d functions
now eurciscd b} city goycrnmcnts. a
special committee formed by the Orange
County Transpon.auon Commission con-
cluded.
Monday the commission 'oted unani-
mously to begin d1scuss1ons with other
transponataon &$enc1cs and ~1th c1t1es.
with the antenuon of prepanog state
leaislation., that ~ould permit consolida-
tion.
One of the goals 1s the '4-rillng of
leaislation that \.\<Ould permit consolida-
tion of two major agcn1ccs. the com-
mission and the Orange Count) Transit
District. which runs the count) 's bus
system.
The commission also 'oted 10 began
working with the city of Laguna Beach on
the idea of merging the city's shuttle bus
system with the transit distnct.
Commissioners who have been in-
volved in consolidation d1scuss1ons so far
speak highly of the proposal. ,
"Government usually gro"s b' splitting
and d1v1d1ng and expandtng like an
amoeba:' said Roger Stanton. a com-
missioner who was part oft he thr~-person
consolidation study co mmittee. '&This is
an attempt to grow by consolidating and
eliminating the duplication of effort that
often accompanies growth 1n govern-
ment."
Stanton. who also 1s a count) super-
visor. said Later that it might not be a bad
thin$ if some staff posiuons were
.eliminated in consolidauon. '
.. That might be seen as a pos1t1ve
development. ifn means that fewcr.,eoplc
are doing the same work. or maybe even a
little better." he said.
One commissioner. Dick Edgar. said be
was womcd that consohdauon might be
railroaded through against the wishes of
the count) ·s Cit} offietals. "I am not against having a dialogue. but
I am against having a dialogue ~Ith ahc
caveat that consolidation is a foregone
conclusion." said Edgar. a C1t} Council
member in Tustin.
Early reactions to the consolidation 1de&
from other transpon.at1on officials ha' c
ranged from cautious to hostile.
Ken Frank. Laguna Beach cHy-manager.
said the city had not been consulted about
the idea of merging Laguna Beach Transit
with the count) transit d1stnct.
''Nobody has even called us." he said.
Frank ~iso eitpressed contempt for the
idea of <:ombining t~ transit d1stnct w11h
Councilwoman Ru1hel)n Plummer said
a community center that could ~rvc
rnidcnts ID West Ne~ pon v.as long
overdue.
''I've been a broken record w ll') ing to
aiet a piece of.ground for some small pal'k
somewhere until we-can get our fancy
park," Plummer said.
The council also appro,ed Plummer's
request that the name of the center be
chanacd from the Nonh""esi Ne"pon
Communal)' Center.
Some residents pleaded" 1th \.he council
to consider building a pla}ground on the
Rater Stanton
the Transportauen Ci>mm1~!11on
"l don't thmk It makes an\ !>ense at all
he said ... The comm1ss1on· 1s a funding
agency. whereas the d1s1nct 1'> an o perator
I don't Stt the wisdom in combining the
funding agenc) v.11h the agem·~ ~h 1 h
spends It."
Transit dlstnct 01lii:1als ha' e begun
their own stud.. of the consolidauon
proposal. and · distm:t po~cs"'oman
Claudia Keith said she behe,ed ll "a' too
early to be discussing legislauon "hen
officlals are no,t ~'~.n sure -Yet "hat the
advantages of consolidation might he
Comm1S1oners said the\ "uuld hke to
have state legislation perm1mng the con·
sohdation of the transit d1str...-1 and t he
transportation commission read~ for tn·
troduct1on by no later than Januaf'\ I <NO.
Police hold three Coast men
i~ drug-related kidnapplng
By JONATHAN VOLZKE
15t .. INlf ,_ ....
Three Orange Coast men accuSt"d of an
apparently drug-related kidnapping. that
authorities say in' olH·d as much as $2
million "worth of cocaine "ere released on
their own recognizance Mpnday. court
officials said.
Don Kermit. 40. of Irvine: Alben Potel.
49, of Fountain· Valle). and Grisha
Moradian. SO .. of Irvine were released on
the promise to appear at their prehminarv
hearing. when a municipal c-ourtjudge "iii
determine whether there ts enough
-evidence for them to suind trtal on
kidnapping charges.
-Potel was held on S.:!00.000 b3il. Kermit
on S l()(f.000 bail and Moradian on
$50,000 follo""1ng their arrc ts late last
week· at the Cafe Casino restaurant in
Costa Mesa. S$t. Tom Bo' land said.
-Boylana said f"otel h.1red Ki:rmn. a
private investigator. to track do"'n some
a~she lost. a-nd Kermit kidnapped a 40-
year-old Fountain Valley man at gunpoint
bccauSt" he thought tt\e man had the goods.
.. We believe the merchandise to be I 7
kilos of cocaine, with a street value of S:!
million:· Boyland said. ··But "c don't
have-any cocaine."
Police said the victim was released less
than an hour after he "as kidnapped in
Fountain VaUey. alleged!) after ht' con·
vi need Kermit' he didn't kno" Jn\lhin@
about the merchandise
The man contacted Costa ~1csa ~'llu."
and then agreed to meet" uh Kermit at the
South C-oast area restaurant. B°' land Qtd
The ~rgeant said detC<'ll\l'S \.\Jtchcd tht•
meeting. ,
"After we gathered enough C\ 1Jcnn• ~e
arrested Kcrmu:· Bo\ land said "Pl"il'l
a nd Moradian were arrt'Sted .... hen \\('
found them acttng as looJ.outs ··
Boyland said a handgun "3" found 1n
Kennit's car. but the am·~ts "ere \.\1tht,ut
incident.
site. but counc1lmcmbers sald the com-
munal} ccntCT would serve all age iroups,
includina many scmor citizens who cur-
rently use the Oasis Senior Cmzens Center
an Corona dcl Mar.
Because lhc center will be largcl) funded
by the federal government. It will be open
to resident~/rom outside the city.
That prompted Councilman Phil
Sansone to suggest the cll} seek some land
ofcooperauve agreement wnh Costa Mesa
officials that would enable Newpon Beach
seniors to use the Costa Mesa public golf
courses at rates enJOH~d b) locaJ residents.
Laguna
panel
oppose~
park plan
By LANCE IGNON
Ofho.llfl"llotlt.11
A. 14-foot·widc bike trail. a commercial
center and a Qark should not be ~ of a
5.000-acre hunk of u_ndcveloped propen)
~paraung Laguna Beach from Laguna
Niguel. the Laguna Beach O pen Space
Commission recommended Monda).
In an effon to keep the enormous Aliso
and Wood Can~on Regional Park as
natural as possible. the commissio n rec-
ommended the count) erase three maJor
clements from the park plan. S8ld Assis-
tant Cit~ Manager Rob Clark.
The recommendations will be for-
warded to the Cll) Council.~ h1ch v.111 pass
on lls suggcsuons to count~ supen 1sors.
Supcf'\isors have the final sa~
The comm1ss1on decried the countv 's
plan to open up a section of the park near
the intcrstttJoo of El Toro and Laguna
Can)on roads for commercial develop-
ment becau~ the locauon 1s part of the
Cll) ·s greenbelt The grttnbelt is a stretch
of undeveloped propert), mcluding the
regional parlc. that nngs the city.
The comm1ss1on recommended the
county elimmate a 14-foot-wide hilang
and biCJChng trail proposed to run through
the Ahso Creek ·Golf Course at the
southern end of the park. A 12-foot-higb
fence scparaung the tra1J from golfCTS
might affect animal m1grauon. the com-
mission S8ld. and the bikers and hikers
might interfc~ with golfers.
At the same ume. the commission
praised O range Count~ uperY1sor
Thomas Rile). v.hose d1stnct includes the
park. for helping eliminate a plan to install
a tram SCf''ICC in the park.
Rile) has also rc~1,ed accolades for
lcadma ncgouauons wtth the MISSion
VJeJO C6 that led to the dcvelo~T
donaung I .io acres to the park in
C\Changc for de' elopment nghts to the
"hso VICJO planned communll) .\t the
same ume. others ha'e cnuc1zed super-
' 1sors. including Rile~. for allowing A.l1so
V1CJO to double ID size dunng the last I 0
years . -The comm1ss1on also suggested the
count) scuttle plans to build 3 1rad1t1onal
park next to the ci t) ·s Moulton Mcado"s
Park
The Ah so and"-' oods C an)ons Regional
Park. along wtth two nc1ghbonng parks.
""Ill form a 14.000-acre greenbelt
stretching from ~ewpon &-ach to Laguna
Niguel. one of the Jarg~l natural coastal
areas remaining on the Southern Cah-
fomia coast
San Diego man admits ~el ping rig contests
LOS ANGELES t .\P) -.\ Na~
civilian employee who pleaded guilty to
helpin1 ri1 Taco Bell and lpba Beta
promotional contests has agreed to testify
apinst executives of the marketing firm
that created the ~mes.
James Frcdenck Ltt. SO. of San Diego
pleaded guilty Monda) to one' count of
mail fraud stemming from his acceptance
of prizes in Aloha Beta's ··cahfomia
Drcamin' .. and· Taco Bell's ··Wheels.
Reels and Meals" contests.
He ttttived at lust $26.500 as p:in of
the scheme. that divcned an e umated
$68,000 from consumers to peo ple ~
socialed With C&K Markeung of :--Jew
Jersey. Neither Taco Bell nor .\lpha Beta was
. implicated in anv wrongdo ing and both
cooperated with · the 1n' es11gat1on. said
Assistant U .S. Attome' Dan d K!ltz
Ltt faces up to fi,e )Cars in pn n .md .t
$250.000 fine: "'hen he 1s sentenced m l \
District Coun i n Los .\ngek Jan :! '
He said he "'as handed ~"Inning 11, kt't~
for the games b~ a rclau'e of a(.\"-
ellecuuvc he met dunng scuba-di' n~ classes. He admitted he fa lse!) claimed ,,,
have \.\OD $28.500 in the contest a~ par. ,,1
an attempt to conC't'al the fact that thl
monc) had ~n d1,ent'd to C .t~ cCltTers
4. grand Ju~ returned a I kount federal
fraud indictment last month against Lee
and four others The~ arc: C&K Martceting
President J ohn Edwar<:I Curtin 111. 37: his
brother. Kim John \unin. 3S. Kevin
Joseph Kissane .~5 a compan} 'ic-e
president. and l"ar dealer Jero me .
S:iratta. Sb. of Pon ~ u PC\:k. ".J
The othe~ face tnal 'l" I
Swiiidler Senienceil, Wilf
·repay victi.ms $650,000
lmpon Bod' and Rebuilding in the
1600 block of Pomona A. venue. The
sound systems ~ert valued at $600
P'oantain Valle y
Thieves pned open a door at
Wend' 's restaurant. I ~Q 40
Brookhurst St.. in the earl\ hours
Monda) and stoic S6.4S I from a safe
Je"'rtry fu)m a d~r 1n L.hl' : M •
block of Spark.man Lane · ... . ..
A. resident \,\ho said she hl Jrd tli.
sound of breaking etas "'.h'" 'he
arrl\ed hQme 10 the JbO<X1 ~h~I. ,,,
Charfc)' 11lc Circle said '><'ni.•11nl'
stole a $500 videocassette rc~·,,r,kr • • • i\n employee reponed that ~nml'
eS<apca thro ugh a back fence. • • • .\ man rt'ponedh h;trrassing cus-1ome~ and asking ior a nde outside
an .\lpha Beta c;u permartct was
amsted a1'er pohC't' saw him unnate
on a pu..,hc \lrt'et
Newport Beach
.\ doorman and a customer sought
batter"\ charges against each other
afttr a rnntrontataon in a par~ang lot
at \1astrC11ann1·s ~nquet Facilit_ at
'~.U \\ (oaM Hw~ The woman was
~a1ttn@ for 'alcts to bnng htr car
v.-htn the' doorman from Promises
niahtcluti ordered' her to give him a
glass of champagne she held. She
refused and she claimed he threw her
10 tht ground and held her down.
• BJ TM .bledatff Press
A c;onvic:ted swindler has been
tm1CnCled to six yean an prison and
will make partial restitution to 308
victi"'Sr at least one of whom lost his
Im llVIJllS on ~ boiler-room ttle-
marketint scam. ·
Jerold Nabridlc. SS. of Irvine
ref\ated to comment Monday after beinl tentenced by U.S. District Judie Aliomwie Stoller, who pvt
him until Oct. 3 to beain tervin1 hts
pftlOft term.
He bu been free on S 7 5.000 bail ; llMIY becaUIC he offered in April to IQ $6'°'000 in rntitution. He bad
• IMlld 1 muimum of 20 yean in
• priloa and a SSI0,000 fine. •
'• •8 11a• Mee ~ to rcpon early
• MCl1dll1 ..... "'°'°""had SlnK'k .. iibwed I deer U• tM 811 Bmd ' .. al= Canyon Roed. The ilUtnd was found aJona the
IOOObloct. • • • A Wbite and brown tuh Tna,
valued .. SlOO. WU ~ Jto\tn
MolldaJ from 1 home on C"aaalina ~ • • •
The restitution plan calls for the
S6SO,OOO to be divided among 308
victims in what Oranae County Chief
Assistant District Attomc) Michael
Capizzi said could be the laraest
lump.sum restitution payment ever
made in Ol'JftJt <;o~n~.
Nabridle ~ au11ty to scam-
ties and mail fraud June 29 in .S.
Dillric1 Coun. He admitted stealin&
S770,000 from four out-of-st.ate m-
veston who paid him money for
worthless oil. ps and mineral stocks.
But Allistant u.s. Anomer Nancy
Wieben Stock said federa postal
inYlltipaon de1emlined that he ac-
tually bilked JOI people out of about
Sl.I million. Under 1erms of~ apttmmt. the IOur investors Nabridee admitted
selling the worthless stocks to .... 111
recejvc about 50 cents for each dollar
they invested from the $650.000
Nabridae 1s payina. The other 30-i
people will m:c1vc about 3Q cents. on
the dollar. officials said.
Nabridf! reponedly amassed near-
ly SI nnltion in prnonal "cal th throuah the opnauon of his tcl<"-
markelln1 venture 1n lrvme called
Midwest Mineral Propcrt1~Jnc.
The four victims Nabndge ad-
mitted deftaudina were Roben E.
McDowell of Beaver. Pa .• who lost h 1s
life sav\np of S245. 750; John. 8.
Bernford of Pb~nUJ •·bo tnV"csted
$430, I 00 in nonexutent llhno11 oil
wells. lftd an elderly Idaho couple.
Max and Virpnia Marotz. who lost
196.200.
• • • Someone rcponedl) broke into a
car parked at .\lbt'rtson· , I I 0
Brookhurst t.. and stole a purse
containmgS30 cuh. checks and other,.
contents. • • • <\ 33-.. ear-old Santa .\na man was
amsted. Monda~ on rusp1c1on of
dn·nna ""hale under the 1nflu(nce
after aJlelcdly becoming tn'ohed an
an 1ruul')<aus1og traffic arodent at
Lilac Wa) and Mt. Ja kson trcct. • • • Two young women ""ere arrested
Monday on susp1c1on of le"d con-
duct in the area of Harbor Boulevard
and Lilac Way.
a.n...,._._cb
Th1evn cnttttd a locked re.u door
an the 17000 block. of ttl n Cu'Cle
and stole two diamond ned.lattS
vaJ~ at S 1.400 and an t-t ntle
wonhS400. • • • An unatltnded he&'') trud. re-
ponedl) rolled out ol a dnv~-a ud
iu.t 1 vu in lk YlC'lJUt) of later
AYCtaWMCi lcacb lou\tYard • • • ....... lbanered I 'hdll'I wtft-
.. to I lllillr:t a.I st<* I pd\.
wra vtir••• ...S clotbn'I tn • l400 blocl ol _...., On • • • l•tnadm ,... apca '..lidr •1ndow _. 9'ole S50 ~ Ud s:?.~ tn
one stoic a book. full "' '"'''~ cert1fiaatcs at the ~rco stal11'n '"'
Warner A'c • • • Several people reponcd hC'.mn~
five or si.it gunshots an the 'ic1ni t' llf
Graham St~t and later ..\' cnul·
They said the) could also hear P'-''Pk
yellana an~ a car le~' 1ng honl\ allC'r
the s~ots at 1:0 I p m
lntDe
An irate resident rcponl·d .tn
unknown suspttt "as smoking man·
juana &n the patio ne't to hl'r
driveway on the 17000 blod l,f
Chestnut. The resident '-lld the JX)I
'11\0kana was a conunual pro bkm
No ~ts ""-ere made • • • A beby opossum-.. .. s C'3ptured in a
fi~ an a home on tht' :noo block
of Sausahto "Cn\K" It ~u tran~
poned 'o animal SCfV1tt "he~ 1t
• • • A. 44<ahber Magnum revolver
valued at S ()()and a 32-calibeucm i-
automauc handgun valued at $500 ~-tre stolen from a home on the 1400
block ofWesl Ocean Front. ••• A ~rman student st.ayina 1n
Fountain Valley reponed the thef\ of
his wallet, including his pa pon and
cash. and a 35mm Ricoh camen
while he was sw1mmmg ofrlbc beich
tt •2nd trcet. Total lou was C'lli-
mated at $62
Gang killings d own In LA
at)'Wide •
1'lledea I •die lellllll flla tlllllli~ llw aafuuc Dt ..,.
fOlice llid ~ ia I ±t .................... [. ., .•.
• I l
·Wildfire
destroys
dozens of.
buildings
UKE WILDWOOD (AP) -An
oat-ofircontrol mountain blaze leveled ICOres of lavish homes and
m'Oed in on hundreds of rural
clwellinp in the rugcd Sierra Ne-
~-~ the evacuation of at ._ 1.000 people and threatening an
internationally known high-tech
COID_jmly. -nil is the classic forest-urban
interface. This is the fire of the 1990a,~ Ed Waaoner of the state
Department of Forestry, the opcr-
atiou dinictor of the 2, 788-member
flreftptina force told an early mom -
'• briefina of more than 50 field we;;~ly have as extreme a condition u anywhere in California a.Lm .,, ... or anywhere in the U.S. today," Member of U.S. Fore.t Sernce loob o•er all that'• left of a
WllllODCJ' said. "We thought we had home and C&£ near Gr&M Valley.
itdOWn :yesterday, and then we los.l.Ua.
homes.' cause of the hmited access on a
But Wagoner praised lirefi&hters narrow road. f'or holding the losses 10 that level. "If the fire gets into the town. then a them "we probably had ex-WC have tO reassess whether we
4,000 'to S,000 homes. yd we should be in there," Iverson said,
14 that we know of." noting all residents have al!'C3d} ~n rare officials stressed. however, evacuated. ••(f -.e have shin~ winds,
that many of those homes are still in we're not going to sit around m there.
extreme danger, cspcc1ally Rough The safety of crews comes firs1:·
and Ready, a community of about lvCt'SOD added that a post-dawyi '°° residents located in the heavily assessment of the fire revealed that 11 wooded bottom of a steep canyon-on bad spread from the Lake Wildwood
the cdlC of the fire about seven miles area -the focus of most damage -.t of Grass Valley. Sunday and Monday, both southwest
Fire planruna chief Steve Iverson across Highway 20 and north across
saidsavinaRoughandReadywasone the Yuba River. Each of those new
of the top priority of crews today. but areas amounted to "several thousand
he cautioned that it was a part1cularl) acres," but had relatively few struc-
dan,erous area for firefighters be-tures.
At l~st 149 structures, including
92 h omes, were d estroyed .
authorities said. Some of the homes
were valued at SI million. One three-
story country mansion. surrounded
by a wooden deck, was razed in
minuaes.
A preliminary estimate put the
losses at more than S9 million 10
structures alone, according to the
U.S. Forest Service, but that figure
was expected to climb far higher.
The warm, dry winds that drove
the fire across 40 square miles of
timber-and brush-covered terrain
continued through the fljght, as sleep-
starved fircfi&htcrs sU1Jggled to hold
their own against the 70-foot-high
flames.
Mechanical failure cited
in El Cajon crash of F-14
EL CAJON (AP) -Mechanical
failure forced two Navy pilots to
abandoD an F-14 raahter jet over a
suburban airfield, spark.int a fiery
crash in which six were injured,
officials said.
Five people, includina the two
crewmen, remained hospitalized this
morning, authorities said. Two were
in critical condition.
The F-14 crashed upside down
shortly afteT 10 a.m. Monday into
hanprs at Gillespie Field and ex-
ploded. The blaze destroyed a hangar
and an attached extension, but spared
a nearby restaurant. At least six cars
and three or four planes parked on the
around were burned.
. No estimate of damage was re-
leased.
Authorities said the two crewman
tried to guide the S35 million F-14,
the fi&hteT jct glaroori7ed in the
movie "Top Gun," 10 the runway at
Oillaoie Field before bailing out. The
suburt.n airfield is on the northem edee of El~ IS miles eaSl of
downtown San Dieao.
Capt. Gary Huahcs, commanding
officer of NAS Miramar, said they
were pateful there weren't more
i!IJuries, "perticularly when you're
this close to El Cajon. It's 11 very
ulated area.•• ~jet pessed within a mile of an
eJementary school. . :
"I thouaht they were j~t doing
tricks. And then we saw the para-
chutes." said Washington Moscuso, a
sixth-trader at Ballantyne Elemen-
tary School. '
Vice Adm. John Fetterman, com-
mander of Naval Air Forces Pacific
Fleet, said the fliers began expcri~nc
ina hydraulics failure while returning
to Miramar NavaJ Air Station in San Dieao from a training mission.
The hydraulic system controls the
~uling allows Big Brothers
_to screen out ho111osexuals
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A judge
has ruled Big Brothers of Greater Los
Anacles may exclude homosexuals
and bisexuals as companions to
fatherless children enrolled in the
non-profit organization.
The gro-up was delighted and
relieved by the. ruling, Richard S.
KJinc, a director of Big Brother • said
Monday.
"Relieved because the judge has
ruled that we may contmue very
careful and selective screening of
potential Big Brothers candidates:·
KJine said ... It's not our purpose to
expose a young boy to alternate
lifestyles while he's struggling with his
OWn identity.
"We arc an the Position of matching
some very impressionable young
boys, seven-, eight-year-olds. with
one of the most 1mPortant and
influential people in·their lives. And
we take that role very sc~·
Superior Court Judge John
Zebrowski on Friday d ismissed a
discrimination lawsuit brought in
December 1985 by the American
Civif Liberties Union of Southern
C.lifomia.
pta1w•1 flaps and other stabilifln&
equipment essential to landina and
takeoff. The aircraft flipped over after the
two men ejected, witnesses said.
Witnesses said the top of the
inverted aircraft hit the top of the
Skydance Helicopters hanaar then
llammed into the ground and slid
into a row of han.prs, which were
e"lulfed in flames.
It was like a bomb JOing off," said
Mel C.in, owner of Slcydance Heli-
copters, who was inside his hanaar
with several employees.
The jet did not carry any ordnance,
officials said.
Both fliers struck Power lines,
caulina outqes to about 5,000 El
c..ion residents. Lt. Cmdr.· Jim Barnett, the pilot,
was in aood condition at Mercy
Hospital with bruises and fractures, a
hospital SPolceswoman said.
llUl faUa to break mark
for.,e In Catalina ntm
AVALON (AP) - A 71 -ycar-qld
athlete who has held records as tlle
oldest man to swim the English
Channel and circle Manhattan failed
today in his attempt to cross the chilly
Pacific waters between Santa
C.talina Island and the Los Angeles
coast
Ashby Hafl).Cr said he was forced to
stop when he bcaan to JCt nauseated
and an old shoulder inJ ury bcaan to ~ache aboUL.5:45 a m He..bad com-
pleted about half of the 19.1-mile
crossina that he began just before I t
p.m. Monday night.
"I feel fine physicially," Harper
said in a ship-to-shore telephone
interview.
sWife -
DAMASCUS. Syria {AP) -Freed West GeTman
hostage Rudolf Cordes was reunited with his wife
Marlene today after she flew from Bonn with senior
government officials to take him home.
Cordes' captors said his release was linked to e.
ubanese Shiite on trial in West Germany for the 1985
hijacking of the TWA jet and the shooting death of U.S.
Navy diver Robert Stethcm.
"She fell into his arms and they kissed each other for a long time," an official who w11ncssed the reunion told
The Associated Press.
Cordes, 55, was released late Monday jn Beirut by
pro-Iranian Shiite Mosle m extremists who kidnapped
him in January 1987. He was driven to Damascus by Brig.
Ali Hammoud. Syria's military intelligence chief in
Beirut. ..
Cordes was the last Weo;t German hostage in
Lc.banq.n. _
In a note issued in Beirut, they said ifMohammed Ali
Hamadi's release cannot be gain~d legally. "then we shall
be obliged to again resort to violence."
Officials said Cordes was in good health.
After the airport reunion. the former hostage, his wife
and West German State Minister for Chancery Affairs
Wolfaang Schacublc were scheduled to go to the Forci~
Ministry where Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa will
formally hand Cordes over to West German ambassador
Georae Hermann Schlingenspicpcn.
•BACK TO•
Gilbert hits 130 mph,
.slams Cayman Islands
BARGAINS
GIORQI() ..,...
MEN'S SHOES
$1999 .
( ) f'." " ' \
..
KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) -rooftops, disrupted communications
Hurricane Gilbert, packing winds of and Poured up to I 0 inches o f rain on
up to I 30 mph, hit the Cayman the island.
lslands today aft~r devastating Ja-The National Weather Scrvic~ and
maica with. fierce rains, flash fl<><><;is radio operators said they received
and mudshdes, weather and radio repons of heavy damage in Kingston
fCPorts said. . . , the capital of 750,000, on tbC
-A ham ope~toc.rn.Ncw Yqrk Ci~y IOUtheast coast and Montego Bay on
who was. m~nnon_ng amat~ur. ra~10 the northwest. Twenty-foot waves ~~mun1cat1ons in Jamaica said, pounded the northern resort of Ocho
K.inpto!' is devastated, Mo.nt~o Rios and tourists were evacuated ~~.hat hard and Ocho Rios ts from bcachside hotels.
"According to them, telephones~re At 6 -a.m . PDT, the Weather
down and electricity is down," said Service sajd Gilbert was centered
-.the-Operator, Norm Chwat. an officer near latitude 19 north, lonaitude 81.5
with the American Red Cross Radio west, or about 20 miles south of
Oub. He said there was an uncon-Grand C.yman. It was movina west
firmed report a tourist hotel on at about IS mph. The hurricane
Jamaica's popular north coast bad center said Gilben's maximum sus-
bcen wrecked by the hurricane. taincd winds climbed to J 30 mph and
There were no official reports of the storm was expected to grow
casualties. But an unconfirmed fCPort stroqcr u it moved westward o~r
said 30 people were killed in .hlmaica. open water toward Mexico's Yucatan
where the storm Monday tore off Peninsula.
F-llllit .enj(ineer-testlftee
ill tital ofTW A hijacker · . .
FRANKFURT, West Germany
(AP) -The Oiaht enaineer of TWA
jet hijacked in 1985 testified today ~t Mohammed Ali Hamadi "joy-
fully pointed.. to the blood of a
murdered U.S. hostqe and indicated
his death wu a pat victory for the
bi~· a.... ca~. een· . z• • ..... t ~neer !)amtn 1m-
mennann IUd the hijackers beat him
and ~-.en after the Athens to Romefliatwaueiz:edJunc 14. 1985.
He llidbe wu kicked and pistol-wbiDDld. .
.. , Would be bit on the aide of the
he9d wjtb the pn butt. When I would
bend fbrward the blows would ao
down my bid." Ham8di. a Lebanese Shiite
..,oslem, iC on trial on chaf'8CS of ajr
PlrKY and murder.
Zimmermann, of Cascade, Idaho,
said Hamadi proudly pointed to
Stethem's blood on the jet's fusclqe
u he and Hamadi walked around the
plane when it landed in AJajers.
0'Wben we went around the fron~ the nc. of the airplane, Mr. Hamadi
joyfully pointed to the blood nmnina
down the door.And with the pistol he
pointed -he indicated -he WU very proud o( this 'fl" and or him bavi~ c:auted this, Zimmermann leltiftid.
.. He let1Md to be clemonstratina
that he wu ca&J¥1c of beina a wonhy
IOldier of the came for some rn-ol-ution." l.immamaml lddal.
·No Time for Lunch?
Try Marcello's Lunch Buffet
All You Can Eat 1411 ........ ..,,.,~ ..... -·ra:---...., • -.... •!11111 SllCll tUl9if c-. •a , wa .,....-.
-• Olidlll c:.-.. ............ SllCll '9Y·~•S-.•!lllltS..
•
~Etilfcs
office
impugns
Meese
W ASHINOTON (AP) -A lawyer
for E.dwin Meese Ill says the fo rmer
attorney aeneral's reputation has
been impuancd unfairly by a Govern·
ment Ethics Office memorandum on M~ tba~ <!cclares that "simply
avo1dina cnmanal conduct as not the
merit of public service."
Ethics oflicc director Frank N~ker said Monday that Meese
failed to meet federal ethics require-
ments by han&ing onto S 14.000 in
telephone stoclc and b} assisting
lonatime friend E. Robert Wallach.
Nebeker's based his memo o n the
resulu of a criminal tn\est1gat1on
completed this summer by indepen-
dent counsel James Mc Ka y.
Althouah McKay declined to pros-
ecute Meese, he co ncluded that
Meese probably broke federal co n-
flict-of-tntercst laws twice b) hand-
lin& matters afTecung the tele-
communications industry at the time
he held ,the phone stock.
Meese declared he had been vindi-
cated because he had not been
prosecuted. ,
But Nebeker said: "A major
purpose of this memorandum is to
remind and inform that simply
avoidinJ criminal conduct ts not the
mark of public strv1ce."
The critique was sent to ethics
officers in the federal government.
James Rocap, a lawyer for Meese. ~-sa~1 ~to a slitement: "We are 0.s.-
maycd" by Nebeker's memo. that
Mcese's "mt~ty and reputation
have been unfatrl) impugned."
Rocap said Nebeker "apparent!)'
read the McKay report," but not the
rebuttal to it filed by Mecsc'-s laW)ers.
In it, they said Meese's behavior had
met the bi&hest ethtcaJ standards.
Rocap also said Nebeker had
rejected a request to meet with
M~ attomc:°"'·._'"T"" __ _
A letter last Wednesday rom
Nebe~tc:J Meese·s lawyers said the
findinp would be based on ··un-
disputed facts" and that the request
for a meeting-was therefore bein~
denied.
Nebeker said Meese also may ha vc
violated a presidential execuu ve
order on ethics.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, September 13, 1988 AS
I·
Workers get day off
to a Wait t5e Rapture
-Five killed and ~4 injUred
as boulder shears off bus
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP)-A pubhshang company closed us offices
in the behef that malhons of the faithful wall be called to heaven today
in. a. prelude to . the Second Coming. Most religious scholars and
ministers doubt 1t.
All such forecasts 1n the past have been wrong. noted Malcolm
Tolbert, professor of New Testament 1nterpretat1on at Southeastern
Theoloaical Seminary an Wake Forest.
Nonetheless. a woman who answered the tel~pnone at lhe World
Bible"Society in Nashv ille. Tenn .. Monday said the office wasclosedlo
&ive employees tjme to be with their fam1hes. The company published
the book by E.dgar C. Whisenant that contains the prediction "88
Reasons The Rapture Will Ek In 1988." '
"ffanyonc is left here. they'll be here Wednesda) morning," said a
woman named Lorraine, who rcfu$Cd to give her last name.
"The odds of anybod) being nght are cenainl)' greater than the
odds of winrung the recent Flonda lotter;." Tolbert siad Monday.
He noted that such predictions ha\e been.made countless umes in
the past 2.000 years. "Nobod) 's been nght ··
EMBUOO. N.M. (AP) -.\ large
boulder tumbled onto a road"a) a fter
a duuwkntorm and sheared off the
front ofa Greyho und bus. k1llt ng live
people and inJunn& 14. authorities
said.
"I felt an impact ... a bag co ncussion
and (what sounded Mee) a loud
e"plosion, kind of deafening. .. said
Sean It. Jones. one of tYoO passengers
whocteapcd 1nJury. "All ofa !.udden.
I felt debris coming-at us . .\ bnght
liaht flashed. like sparks and electrici-
ty in the front end of the bu<i."
'The bus, bound from Dcn..,,er to
Albuquerque with 20 passengct and
a driver aboard;-wa strud. on '~
Me"1co Hiaflway 68 late "tonda~
said spokesv.oman Lup1a Camon.
The accident occurred in a-moun·
tainous area about-SO miles north of
Santa Fe, where the haghwa) parallels
the Rao Embudo near the point where
that river meets theG1Q Grande.
The dnver and fou~ passtngers died~ and 14 passcn ers "'ere 10Jured .
Camon wd. F our of the tnJured
passengers ~e~e admmed to hosp•·
taJs; their tnJuncs v.erc not dc!>C'n bed
as ltfc-threatenmg.
Satwant Khalsa. deput~ state medi-
cal 1nvesttpto r. sa.td all fi,c of the
dead were adults . .\Jthough po~lll\ e
1denttfica.uon rematns incomplete. he
said ooc v1c11m "as from India and
anothCf" "as from Japan H o~p1tal
offiCtals said six of the inJured "ere
children under 10 )cllrs old.
A lalJC rock tumbled from the
mountain as the bus approached. said
State Police Office~ Harold W ot. It
was raanin& at the time.
"ft sheared the front end of the bus
off." Zuni said. describing the
boulder as "about as big as the front
end ofa car."
Witnesses said the impact of the
boulder pushed the bus into some
other rocks, keeping at from falltng
into t.he water 40 feet below. The
driver apparcnt.Jy was killed instant-
ly
The area had been hit by a powerful
thunderstorm just a fc" hours before
the arodent.. and st.ate Police O fficer
T.R. Rodella said the ram ma) have
triggered the fall of rocks.
GOvernm·ent urges testing of horn es for radon
WASHINGTON (APJ - The
problem of residential radon con-
amination appears to be more "1de-
spread than pr,evi~sly belie' cd a.Ad
serious enough to warrant tesung for
the deadly gas in every home na-
tionwide. the head of the En-
vironmental Protection Agenc) said
today.
New surveys show pamcularl~
high levels of the invisible. odorless
gas 1n Manncsota, Nonh Dakota and
Pennsylvania. The a ... erage home 1n
those states contains radon abo\ e the
EPA'sgu1dehnes. accord mg to figures
released Monday at a joint ne"!t
conference of EPA and the Public
Health Service.
Discussing the findinis on the
ABC-TV's "Good Morning Ameri-
ca," EPA Administrator Lee M.
Thomas said the agenc) had belicYed
rado n was a maJor problem tor
several years. but "v. hat this infor-
mation shows us 1s that 111s a problem
in many sates. more state'i> than "l'
had thought. In add1 uon. the es11-
mates (of concentrat1ons1 arc a l1nle
higher than we had thought ..
EPA has csumatcd radon-caused
lung cancers could be kalhng ~o ooo
people out of the natton's annual toll
of 130.000 lun1 cancer deaths
And though EP ~ ha'i>I"' t lhang.cd 11\
estimate that I 0 percent ot '>Orne 11
malhon homes have radon ah<" l' thr
guadehnes. the ne" suPc~s in '<\l'O
sat~ and on Indian land~ 1n l"'O
more showed more than ~CJ pcn:cnt lll
all ho mes abo\e the guideline'>
Combined "1th the re~ult\ nf 111
states surveyed last ~car that mcam
one home an four of the I ~ million in
the two sun e} s "'as ab<n e th.:
agcnc) ·s guadchnc of 4 p1cocunes per
later. satd Rich G uimond. head of
EPA"s rad1auon office.
.. We thank we've documented the
problem enough to recommend that
every home be tested ... Thomas said.
"Even tf we are off b) (a factor of
10). the problem 1s severe enough so
that we oulht to do something about
1t." said \lemon Houk. assistant
surico n general .
na equate care provided
for ~erlously mentallY-ill
·ll-DAY l<INDE11GART-e
KlllD•llGAllT•N THllU 8TH QllAD•
-WASHINGTON (AP) -lnade-Vermont and Connecticut are the •t1•TUISPllTAT9I... ENROLL NOW quate care for the serious!) mental!) best at prov1d1ng scrv1CC'S. • NSSal
ill is "the major failure of .\mcncan Lowest-rated in the sul"e} ""ere • IU•IETWY91
medicine and social sen ices." two Ha" all, Arizona, the District of • -11. Eml. SP£Ull (MTI PlllCS}. Fill Semester
health organizations said today. Co lumbia. Delaware, Wyoming. Df??IZD
··This failure is panicularl~ stnk1nL..Jdaho and Mississ,!)i ~i":---..,,.-~.+9---~• IUmjll ITU SM. CMU.._
since WC no Wlfl'lrlmosrorrhe~ .. n general. hOSP.ltal care or the sr• ITS I UI TO If 31... ----&---1.a.:n__._
people can be succcssfull) treated and senously mentally all in sate.men al " - .: '11111 ""6' • ~"
rehabilitated," said the two ad' ocacy hospitals as somewhat worse than 1t
groups, adding that the maJor re-was two years ago while outpatieM
sponsibility lies with the states. scr'Wccs are· modestly better." thc-
Expanding on a ranktng svstcm groups reported. ··Rehabiliation ser-
first used in 1986. a new suf\'C) b) th1: vices and housing for the seriously
groups concluded that Rhode tsland. mentally ill remain on the best of days
Wisconsin, New Hamp hare. Maine. seriously deficient." 168i5 Brookhtnt St., FOllltain Valey
, .
Dukakisstresses
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Bush touts economy
By TM Associated Pre11
Democrat Michael Dukakis said
today the United States should en-
courqc better Soviet relations, but
still deal firmly with any Soviet
deception or aggression. Republican
Oeorae Bush, emphasizing economic
themes, said Americans are better off
than when· President Reagan took
office.
Dukakis w d of U.S.-Sovie t rela-
tions, "We in America shoulcLstand
ready to respond to progress Wlth
· prosress. But we must be ready to
· meet stubbornness with determina-
tion, deception with the truth and
· aaression with. the full P,Owe~ or a .
· suona and united democratic al-
liance."
His comments, continuing a week· l~empbasison foreign and milttary
poltey, came one day af\er he pied~
supportfortheStcaJth bomber. which
he said. was be&un during a Demo-
cratic admirustration and would be
completed during his own.
Bush, renewing his attack on
Ouk.akis as too liberal for the presi-
dency, said today in a speech to the
Executives' Oub in Chicago that the
Democratsupportsa big-government
philosophy that will leave ··Amenca --· .....W..Ckled to tbe-mi1takcs of the past."
In bis remarksz Bush embrac~
Rapn principles oflcss government
but afso•praiscd the idea of "econ-
omic empowerment." a phrase of\e n
uted by JCS9C Jackson. a Democrat ~ly considered more liberal
than Dukakis. Bush said that an addition to has
atandsapinst new~ and in favor
of a ""ftuiblc freeze" on government
spend.in&. "the third pnnciple ts
economic empowerment. The IU'eftllh ofour economy comes from
• tbe people, not from the 1ovemmcnt.
&om the creativity and initiative of
lbe iDdividuil, not from official
dinlctives.. five-year plans and so-
. called industrial policies."
Dukakis. in a 1pecc:h to the Ch1cqo
Council on Fore.,a Relations today,
laid, .. Yes, it would be naive to take
• Cloviet le9der M ilthail) Gorbachev at ·his word, but it would be daf\ICl'OUS to
..,.hilwonlttoee11wswend and
•••
untested in . the court or public
opinion around the .world."
He praised Reagan for the progress
his administration has made on
nuclear arms· control but said too
of\en the arms-rcduc-tion pro posals
came from the Soviet l.Jnion. And he
questioned whettrer Bush o r has
running mate. Indiana Sen. Dan
Quayle, bad the judgment and e'<·
perience to negotiate with the Soviets.
"Gcoric Bush has been around
Washington a long time but if he
couldn't stand up to llie ayatollah or
say no to Noriega. how w~ll he
measure up to Gorbachev? .. Oukakis
aslt-_cv.__---
Mcanwhile, fi ve members of
Bush'.s Coalition of American Na-
tionalities resigned Mo nday amid
cha.r'Jes of ties to anti-Semitic or-
pnizations. They said in a statement
they were leaving ··because we have
been attacked unfairly by George
Bush's politkaJ opponents:·
The resignations come on the heels
of Frc\icric V. Malek's decision to
leave his Republican National Com-
mittee post after a published rcpon
said he bad compiled a list m 1971 of
Jews at the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Bush had appointed Malek to the
RNCjob.
The two presidential candidates
were deadlocked in the latest public
opinion poll. A Cable News Network·
USA Today survey of I ,'260 cen.a1n
voters. conducted last v.eel. by the
Gordon Black Corp.1· found 48 ~r
cent favored the Republican ticket
while 46 percent preferred the ~mo
cratic slate.
The marain of error of 3 ~rccntage
=~u makes tbc race a virtual dead
A seeond poll: conducted Sept. 8-10
by the Roper Orpnization. gave
Duk.ak.is the lead. 49 percent to 43
percent Once apin. the S perttnt
marlin of error in ctther direction
meant the lead was unccrt.am .
Stcppina up his offensive on-Mon-
day. Dukakis issued an unusuaJ
promjsc to support the Stealth
bomber - a pled&e that appeartd to
IO beyond the cand1da1e·s prev1ou~
statements that be supported con-
tinued mearch on tbc project.
( OFFERS.
Current
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dum~ " it h(lUl not K'<' Tht• rat<> will llt' ad.I us t ed tf t hf> balanc .-
d ro1 ~ ht•lo" 10 ,000
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NSAVI
, #
·.
'Tis ORen season
for trapping of
voters' attention
,.... It may feel like fall for some. or still seem like sum mer. fn
reality, it is neither. It is the time of the candidate, the
campaign season.
The hazx days following Labor Day bring with them an
.. overnight chill and warm afternoons. But for incumbents and
would-be politicians alike, the situation is growing pro-
grcssiYely hotter.
Between now and the first weekend in Novernber when
things will erupt in a full bojl, look for aU manner of political
phenomena. not all of tltem of a natural son.
There will be o utlandish charges met by equally wild
countercharges. Mud wiJI fl}, whispen will be passed and
rumors planted.
It is the time.of the plastic smile, the firm handshake and
the last-minute mailer. Candidate coffees are sandwic~
around rubber chicken fund-raisers.
There's a politicia n in every parade.
EndQIKille.Iill multiply at an even mo.re ~ng rate
than campaign signs.
Lt is at once the ilJy season and a serious time of year.
George' Bush will forget what day it is. Other candidates T,. ·a1· nte· d well water-more will forget why it is the) are running.
We will, of course, unintentionaJJy contribute to this
madness. Such isa pitfall in being the messenger. The message
of a decision best left by editors to read.en fulftlling t heir role
Tueeday, September 13, 1tl8 Al
Lf r 't f·
Laguna
scliools
policy
doubted
To the Editor:
1 The LaJuna Beach School District
is becomm1 the city's most active
developer. They have closed the Aliso
·School and sold oft'the land,..Now the
school children of Soutlr La&una arc
bused to El Moro every day. The
district bas entered into an aareement
to sell its sub-division on Alta Lquna ~
Boulevard. It devised a tentative tract
map for 36 new houses, and used its
influence to obtain Planning Com-
mission and City Council approval.
It has determined that these lands
arc excess and not required so the
district can obtain the money to
remodel the high school It is uraent
that the high school be repaired and
be made safe for our students,
however, i$ a$7,000,0Cl0...rcmodding
required? Is it wise to sell off these
public lands to acquire a swimming
pool and an ampithea1re?.
isn'talwayswonhyofthe~riceofdelivery.euttbatislhek ...... in,__d --t.-prevalen~~-_ ljepoded_· _
as voters. ._.,__--+---Howcvcr,wc-withd~~ny-clam'OI · -
In most cities, the bulk of the
athletic facilities are provided by the
schools. It is not from the kindness of
their heans that the public is ~
mitted to use the athletic facilities
after school hours; it is required by
state law. Those -who arc concerned
about the lack of athletic fatilitics in
Laauna Beach should question the
decisions that have been made by the for your attention. WASHINGTON -Pesticides
On our Opinio n page, we will share our views on who are have percolated through the ground ~ and they were focusing on problem
t~e best candidates. It is neither a responsibility to be taken and into well waterin at least 34 states ~Q~
lightly, nor a recommendation to be accepted blindly. None of -significantly more contamination JACI
us is without bias. than was previously reponed b) the
After meetin~ with those candidates who seek our federal government. a ..
endorsement, weagh in~ the issues and surveying the . About· 90 pe~nt of rural Ameri-MIUSll
campaigns, the Daily Pilot will recommeod how you m ight cans &et t.heir drinking water from the
areas. Nevenheless. the data in·
dicates groundwater contamination
is more widespread than previously
thought.
Among other things PIRG re-
poned:
• Of the 73 pesticides, at least 25
can cau~ cancer, 18 can eausc birth
defects and 14 can cause genetic
dama_ge .
~hoot district. .
It is certainly inappr6priate for the
school district to sell ofT so much of
their land for development. and then
complain to the council about the
lack of playing fields for the young-
sters of Lquna Beach. k ball cround. An estimated 13 million , mar your ot. • wells serve I I 7 million ~ople na-and JOSEPH SPlAR One cannot have it both ways. if
remodeling the high school as of
paramount im~rtance, it necessi-
tates selling off the land, and the
consequence is having fewer athletic
facilities. ·
lt is not solely d1itorial ego. that prompts us to re rai.~ _ t1onwid . ----. - -not 6c completed until t 990.
.-..-------from endorsing candidates who don't seek our blessang. It JS The Environmental Protection -J While tli'e EPA ·s written data may • caJifornia. with _3 I difTerent
pesticides found in tested wells. Jed
the other states.
likely there are candidates seeking office on the Orange Coast Agency gathered test data from be conservative. the· rcpon from
who would view our endorsement as not only unwelcome but 45,000 wells and found that 5,500 of PIRG may lean a little too far 1n the
perhaps a recipe for cenain defeat. · them were tainted with harmful levels other direction. Some of the test
There may be exceptions. Mr. Bush and Mr. Dukalcis of at lea.st one pesticide. Another information is not hold ing up to
• Aldicarb. a chemical that can
cause vomiting, stomach pain and
blurred vision, was found in concen-
trations as high as 200 pans per
billion in Wisconsin and 5 75 pans per
billion on Long Island. N.Y.
GENE FELDER
Laauna Beach may_ not drop by the Dail)' Pilot's offices r.et we may offer our S.SOO wells had traces of 73 difTerent scientific scrutiny by the EPA. ac-
assessment on that race. And ·we wtlL..do our best to pcstjcides in amounts that would not cording to agenC} scienti st. Patrick
d d h t': • f · · d be harmful. Holden. Even talc.mg that rnto con-un erstan t e coniysmg arra 0 state proposltlons an The EPA had that information last sideration. Holden said the fi nal Brower needs
to rethink make some sense of ir all. February, but it issued a \\Tllten figures. to be released Oct. l. will
Still we will -try to suck with who m and.what we know repon saying only 19 pesticides had exceed the 19 pesticides in 24 states
NEXT MAJORITY LEADER -
As lonJ as Michael Dukak1s was far
ahead in the polls. Democratic sena-
tors weren't too concerned about
pickin& a strong Senate maJOrity
leader to succeed Robert Byrd of
West Virginia. They reasoned that as
best. At this point in the campaign season, we know only that been found in. we lls in 24 st.ates. cited in the EPA 's Februal) repon.
a lot can happen before November. However, EPA officials verbal!) ac-October will be· too late to affect
Education· loans
As though 'it weren't enough that too many college
graduates. default o n their student loans, word no w comes
from the General Accounting Office that the lenders who
extend t~e government-secured loans are also gouging-Uncle
Sam.
GAO doesn't say it's being done deliberately. It just says
the lenders are getting m illio ns in excess subsidies each year
because th~ U .S. Departmenl of Education is lax in checking
the accuracy of their bills for the loan inte rest the government
pays ....
The federal watchdog agency says that the loan act should
be rewritten to. allow the Secretary of Eduaation to charge
interest on overpayments made to lenders and alS<> to require
that the latter em ploy independent auditors to certify the loan
accounts and interest billings. _ _ _
Congress colild and 6lio uld do that before the current
session expires.
Artosas Democr•t, Little Rock, Art.
R ights in Romania
Congress has gone on record opposing plans of Preside At
Ceausescu of Romania to destroy more than half the
traditional folk villages in his country.
U nder a massi' e collectivization program, Romania
would bulldoze 7 .000of1 ts I 3.000 trad1 tional villages to make
way for government-o"'ned agricullural-industrial complex-
es.
The displaced people '-"OU Id be hearded intostate~wned.
standardized ho using u nits to be built in centuriC$-Old town
CentetS..-.---
'Violation of huma n nghts of all its citizens is pan of the
government's miserable record. It has denied its 2.5 million.
ethnic m10orit1.es the ~i~t to pr~scrve their native language.
R ecent congressional action expressina outrage at
Romanian repression will have little effect oftbe contempt for:
human rights and cultural legacies displayed by Ceausescu.
But it may give 5ome hope to the oppressed minorities in
Romania that their plight has not gone unnoticed.
MV'lbU (Ml•.) 1-hpeadeat
Da n Quayle ,
The na1ion has gone more than a half-week now without
uncoverjng anything new in Sen. Dan Quayle's past or
overstated in his resume.
It could mean the media are filled up on their latest
••feeding frenzy•· o r that Q uayle's closet of skeletons has been
deboned.
Whatever the reason. the break in the Quayle chase
comes as a relief, believe it or not, 10 the Democrats, whose ,...,...
presidential ticket was in serious danaer of beint:;_omS. ....... ... ..
ORANGE COAST ..., ....
........ _,.., .. ..,..,_,tll JO
W .., .. C.. ..._ CA AOdr-. ..
-CI ...... eo. IMO Coltt -.CA ... ..
,., ..
("IOI .. ,.,
-~UllDJ
'-Cll9 ._.t..., ......... c.,,..., ....c.-.
s..rtsl•
...,,*'* ,,.,., °""'°' ........
~ ......... """' ...
OilllW~: OwttllJI
~ ...... ..... .. ,.__
knowledgcd that between SO and 60 congressional debate over the issue.
pesticides were found in 30 states. Concern over pesticides contamina-his position
Environmental groups demanded 'lion of groundwjlter .reached Capitol·
to sec the da'ta earlier this um me~ 'Hill fastspringduringdebate overthe
The Washington headquarters of Federal Insecticide. Fungicide· and
Public · Interest Research Group Rodenticide Act. At that time Sen.
(PIRG}asscmbled the data in a repon Dave Durenberger, R-Mmn.. and
that is scheduled to be released today. Rep. Jim Oberstar. D-Minn.. in-
PlRG came up · with 73 different troduccd tough proposals to control
pesticides found in wells in 34 states, aroundwater poll~tion. But the
according to an advance copy of its chances arc slim that the bills will
report given to our associate. Stewart pan befon: Congress recesses in
president, Dukakis might w"°rk better To the Editor:
with a malleable .majority leader. Manin Brower would have us
More cynically, individual ;enators believt that he is writin~an objective
always have more power under. a evaluation of the Bolsa Chica de-
wcalc majority leader. -~ velopment project in his Aug. 26
A victory for George Bush woutst article entitled. '',A Soggy Battle-
change that. The Democrats would around for Developers and
want a strong leader in the Senat' EcoloaiJts.'' Not so!
Harris. October.
An EPA spokesmao told us -the Durenberger's provision has made
qency report in February used lower / it throu~ committee and is waiting
fia~rcs be<:ausc it counted onl y the for consideration by the full Senate.
cases that had been "confirmed" -by Oberstar·s bill remains bottled.up in-a
the federal government. "We are not House committee with little chance
trying to hide fhat issue at all. We are of making it to the noor before the
tryina to highlight it." the spokesman recess. · ·
They may have been willing to His bias seeps through when he
support amiable senators such as uses phrases such as "stagnant water"
-Daniel Inouye, of Hawaii. or Bennett to describe the tidally nushed water of
Johnston, of Louisiana, as long as a the Bolsa Chica and .. lovely Mission
Democrat was in the White House. Bly" to describe a water develop-
But rrow mhly a.re loo~ing to Sen. ment., visually pleasing 1.9 man. but
George Mitchell of Maine. He is totally unfit as habitation for most
likeable and intelligent, as are Inouye native coastal wildlife.
and Johnston. but he hu-a-stubbom Even more insidious is his state·
Maine streak that senators of both ment, .. Your client will never get
parties believe would make him a permission to develop the area no
said. The EPA has promised to The data from PIRG does not
release its own updated numbers io mean that one out Qf evet')' four wells
October based on continued work to in the country is contaminated with a
double<heck the information. A pesticide. The data comes from. I 0 I
aroundwater contamination survey studies by state officials, chemical
based on the EPA 'sown test data will companies and research institutions.
tougher negotiator with a Republican maner how good the pro\X)scd de-
president than either of the others. velopmcnt" or his description of the
Jad AllHnoo ud Jnqll Spear Bolsa Chica development pfojcct as ·
an •,YHlcated col•mol.i•. "another place of special beuaty in
which Orange Coast residents could
live and play." Sounds tragic doesn't
it? .
What is plOre tragic is the alterna-
tive. If we citizens of California preoccufJied·begi~la ~ure
hail few accomplishments
• develop the less than I 0 percent
which remains of o ur coastal
wetlands, entire species will not only
lose a place to live and play, they will
become extinct. We have other places
where we can live and play. Most
wildlife does not have this luxury.
M. L. ROSCZYK
Huntington Bcactl SACRAMENTO -The hst of benefits fof'both programs over the
serious public-policy iss ues that were objections of employers.
not addressed during the just-ad-Those increases provided ome
joumed strife· and scandal-marred relief for the affected workers. but did
session of the California Legislature is nothing to. deal with -the structural
._ lengthy"onc. -problems of both programs. The
The Legislature was paralyud by situation has been stalemated ever
DAN ~
WALTERS election-year maneuverini internal since. . powerstruales,'ll~occupationwith Du . , •••••••••••••• campaign fUnd-raising, and an 1 1th· nng that time, the purchasing .
hour revelation that the FBI had power of th~ ben~fits has continued to stalemate between the conflicting
taraeted some l~slators for soliciting erode with innauon. demands. Labor wants a benefit
bribes. Unemployment insurance is the increase while manaaement insists
Gov. Georae Deukmejian. for his sim_P-lerl?f!be two poliucal S}tuatio~s. on structural chan1es to cut costs by
part, demonstrated anew that he's a Cahfom1a s system, which aids reducina the roles of doctors and
mostly passive politkaJ partiC1pant. workeri who have been laid-off. has lawyers.
rarely proposana concrete act ions to a traditionally provided relativel y low In this instance, Deukmeiian ~ laraely hostjle, Democratic-con-benefits. u a tradeoff for relati vely ~
trolled Leaislature, and more liberal elicib1lity standards tbat who supports the employers -made
interested in ~rvina his 1m11e as a worked to the advantaae of those in a rare attempt to involve him~lf by
tiahtfisted • Iron Duke" than in such .easonal industries u aaricul· appointi"J a mediator to work on a
tettina a policy aecnda for the state. ture and construction. · comprom11C. But the effort failed
The two-year lqislat1ve scssiPn Employers, who pay for the pro-because the affected aroups arc too
that stumbled to a noisy finish in the • arun throuah payroll taxes, are powerful politically, and the &>oli-
wee houn of Sept. I was occasionally willina to boost benefits further (they ticians are too unwillina to buck them
entenainina. but rarely focused on top out at Sl66 J?Cr week now), but in the interests of workers who arc
the public's business. want eliaibiljty tiptcned to offset the disabled by job-connected injuncs
In such an atmosphere, httle or hiahercosts. and illncaes.
notbina wu dOtlt about h1ahway Annually, the Democratic l...qjs-Califomaa's work-comp syatem,
coneetlion. publicedua1t1on, onuto-lature pmllCS a bendit-increase bill, meanwhile, has become a national
inturance ratea. to name but a few and kills eliaib1lity-rcstrictaon lqis-jolre. Ill multibiUiolMlollar COltl are
casualties. Blatantly special-i nterest lalion. And annually, Deukmejaan 1ft10111 tbe hilhat in the nation, but
bills and minor housckecpin1 takn,buideof cmployeru nd vetoes ill benefits 10 ditabled WOl'bn are .........a were the only ones that lbe bnefit boost. amocw t.be lowaL
moved. Tbat"s bappenina ap1n this year. Left~ labor and manoe: meat
One of the more &larina fa&lurn The Dtmocrata killed the cli&Jbihty probably could find a solution that
W8I the collaplC tn efrorls tO do billl. ad ICllt 10 tbe JOVerDOr's dnk a would reduce middleman CONS Wbde
IOlllCthint consuvctive about the SlO-per·week benefit i~ that's raiuna beDefits. They've been Vft'Y
.-ioully deficiln~· t s that lllllOll cen.iD IO be vctoecl. dole IOsudaacompronuteon IC'¥eral ...,._,_....._. · and lives l(1•a•apftdimblellftW.and ocaliotd .
lft .. , .... , by cimam-die a.n • die ~ .. IMdocton. lawyers and othm
_.,. adlMircOntrol. ......~·-·iddlc. .... -..... Off ... System
t11Ju ol ..... pn11r1ms -WOlt comp ii more complicated ~ =-~~80•--.l~ W'Olllln" eolllpeaaatioD tbt ~re. 'I H•I ill ldclllioD 10 labor Ind -__....... m.-;• -
111111 ._.... and iln;wt, and arc S Mn&. llW)en and dOctOn tlia 1111 Wqw.
un •• lll'f91n• imunmcc-laat tttn Wllo IPldllin in com.le, cun. and me I•"•• iDClicUnl9c oldle lAlitlature
a ...... llleallXMDCe 1912.~ly ill•,_ amen Mile comp dlll ............. dlatto.ar.
bclore ....OOv. Jerry .,,... ~ ........ political pla~. .... ....... -;,. • .. a •••
oftlol. e. .._. IMllt tMt boosted IM.....t comp. coo. has bttn a 11! ' &.
ly 'he A...aalff Press
. Today is Tuesday, Sept. 13, the
2S7th day of 1988. There are' l 09 days •
left in the year, The two-day ob-
terVance of the Jewish New Year
Rosh Hasbanah concludes at sunset.
Today's hiahhlht in history:
Two hundredJears 110. on Sept. 13, 1718, the .S. Constitutional
Conventjon authorized the first na-
tional election, and declared New
York City the temporary national
capital.
On this date:
In I 7S9. durina the final French
and Indian War, the British defeated
the freacb oo the Plains of Abraham overtooana Quebec City.
In ll03~ Commodore John Bury.
COMiclaed by many the father of tbc
American navy, died in Ptai ........
In 115 I, Americ:aD medical pioH•
WalW lleed was born in Oloucealer C..ty,VL _
la 1157. Miltoe s. HenMy, rou.-
dar of die caady emfire~•'-'Ma
--. WM boril in Dlupbin COUMJ, ....
la 1921. ............ , Wilt ......... 11n1a·.~nnrdld .. El AliDa. ~· wtlK*
....... IJ6.• t S• ,.11.liL
la IMJ, ~ K811bill fJICa•
....... lola.iaL
'nalllll llrTGMy. ""DllDHIKY II ... _._ ....... .,, ... ., --=---·-...... -. .. 11lS, .... S l I J I
(I IN-IMS).
IAINT JOSEPH HOSPITAL
Aqutll
Marpret and John Lown. Ne" pon leKla, ait1
A•pttU
Canctyce and Robert Johnson. Lasuna Niaucl, 11rl
Liunnc R. and Wilham G. Tabrosky.
Ol'an,e,boy
A•p1tl0
Susan and Larry Slonam, Huntington
Beach, &irl
MISSION HOSPITAL
A•1•1t 30 Amy and Troy Clem Ill, Laguna
Niauel, r· rl TB WOMEN'S HOSPITAL
SADDLEBACI HOSPITAL
A•1•1t H
Linda and Howard Chasin. Anaheim.
girt
HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPIT Al
. A•p1t H
Mr. and Mrs. Robcn Skalada. Hunt·
inatoa Beach, girl
Mr. and Mrs. Robcn Kanta. Costa
Meu girW,a · ' ..,., .. t z7
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mount. Lake
Forest, girl
A•1•st %8
Mr. and Mrs. Stephan Goodman.
Irvine, girl
Mr. and Mrs. Scott unnctt. u1h
Laguna, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Jerem) Gla1er, Laguna
Beach, boy
August U
Mr. and Mrs Brad le} Kuluns. Costa
•
•
Mesa. boy
Mr. and ¥~· John \11llcr. (. osta
Mesa, 1trl
Mr. and Mrs. Gar} &-adlc Hunt·
1naton Beach, bo)
Mr. and Mrs Ra) mond Ratelle.
Huntington Beach. girl
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Grupe, ~e"-
pon Beach. girl ·
A•1•1t 38
Mr. and Mrs. Gar) Bray. Costa "1esa.
&irl
A•plt 31
Mr.and Mrs. Robcn Glenn. Ne"'pon
Beach, boy.
Mr. and Mrs. Dann Serq~r. Costa
Mesa. girl
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Elm. Huntington
Beach, boy
SOUTH COAST MEDICAL CENTER
J•lyH
Mary-and Ferren Chnstcn~en.
L..aauna Hills, Jirl
Lisa and David Gencarella. an
Clemente, bo)
Caryn and Gu} Grindle. Dana Point.
girl
July Z8
Katherine Butterfield and Jack Haro
Huntington Beach, girl
Gloria and Lawrence McLennan Jr.
Lau&na Bc.acll...bo~
July 30
Suz~nneand Marc Van Baalcn Dana
Point. girl
August 4
"Donni and Frank Wells. Laguna
Beach. girl
August 5
Donna Houston and Kcnrfcth Luna.
Laguna N11ucl, girl
Rost Mane Fernandez-\.1oms and
Charles Weatherl> Ill. Laguna H1lls. 11rl
A1p1t I
Laura and Thomas Hanalord. San Oemente, girl
A•pst t
Nata and M~rk Gallardo. San
Clemente, &.1rl •
A•IHt It Dorene and Mark Spearman. Laguna
N11uel, boy
Auc••t 17
Deborah and Make Sparkuhl, Laguna Beach , girl .
Au1ast 18
Temlynn and Allen Hardison Ill.
Laguna Beach, bo}
Carole Ltt Lombardi-Casale and
Roger Casale. Dana Point, girl
A•(Ht 20
Kam and Larr) Coulter. Laguna
Beach.bo> .
A1pst U
Ahcaa and ~lholt Stein. an Juan
Capistrano. girl
Susan and Noel Och"-at. Laguna Beach, girl
·August Z9
1 Cynthia and James Fletcher. Laguna
Beach. bo}
Aa1ast30
Melinda and Kendal Banks, Laguna Beach. girl
Au1Ht 3t
Paula and Darryl M~Fann. an
Clemente, tw1'!..g1rls
·-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. September 13. 1988 A7
For EveryBODY
• $100.00 orr ALL PltPllStRSHIPS
(expires 9-lf>.88) ~
• 2 complete weight rooms/fRff
instruction ~ ,
1 • OVer 50 aerobics classes each week , ~ ~>
with certified Instructors ~ \'19' 4
• RacquetbaJI &'squash courts ~1' ~ ~
fRf:f lnstructJon '~ 4111111.\. ~
•Sand volleyball ~~~ ~ 4llliii... ~
• fRff Child care ~~
•Private fitness training ~1'
rH.. ~ PORTl~G HOt ,E
Of °"[WP()AT 8£ACH
l601 Jamboree. Newport Beach CA 92660 (714) 752·0565
-.... ..
. Until -now;<tb enjoy the advantages
of Kaiser Permanente health care,
there was one disadvantage .
A freeway trip to· Anaheim.
Not anymore. Because our
new M.i&5ion Viejo Medical
Offices open this fall with
family practice, internal medicine,
~OB/GYN, pediatrics, dermatology,
orthopedie5, and urgent care. We'll even have
a lab, x-ray facilities and optometry services.
So, instead of you having to go the extra mile,
you can easily have a health plan that. does .
One low monthly payment prepays
virtually all your health care needs. With
only ririnimal office visit charges, if any. And
almost no papeIWork. ·
Grand Opening Celebration
and Health Fair.
C omt? get acquainted on
Sarurday. Ockttr 1. on Maquina Avenu1...
near kronim0 and Alicia Parkwa\.
'
I
. . All good reasons to choose ll5. fspecially
no~ since with us you can feel right
at home.
• .......... ___ ... _. ____ -------~---~ --------~
~ .
9 am Fun\ Valk
10. am-2 pm Health Farr
l<AISER PERMAtNENTE
Good J:>eople. Good Medicine.
' .
M DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, September 13. 1988
-R . ' . . . •
Crosby, Stills, Nash ~cOre
with ·nqstalgia in Mesa gig
BJ PAUL AAClllPLEV ................
If Baby Boomers went to the
Crosby, Stills and Nash concert
Saturday wondcrina what direction
the aroup bas h~ over the years,
they found a strangely sausf}ing
answer: Everywhere and No" hert.
By and large the trio "tuck to the
sonp of its past, offcnng onl y hints of
what the future could bring.
But for man) an the audience,
arayina and softening like the per-
formers on staac. that was just fine.
Graham Nash made a prediction
early on that proved prophetic. He
said. "I think it's going to be a good
Both were intact at the Pacific
Amphitheatre .
The voices were as strong as ever.
especially Crosby's. Nash still soars an
cnsp harmonies. And Stephen tails
demonstrated be s11U ranks among
the best on lead guitar -electric or
acoustic.
Old songs sounded fre h -"Dark
Star," "Love the One You're Wuh."
"Guinnevere," "Carr) On" and
"Teach Your Children" among
others during-a 2VJ-hour ~t.
ni&ht toni&h ••
And, in a nod to a ume "hen man)
men in the audience sported the
flowing mane that Crosby ha'i re·
tafncd, he sang ''Almost Cut· M ) --------a.wu· r .... Ordinarily. a group nsk'' a fufure
on the county fair circun when it
depends on songs that sometimes arc
older than many members of the
audience.
Whil~there was a notable lack of
freek flags fl ying. the feeling was
rcfreshingjust the same.
Never content to mtrcl} entertain,
the group retains tts poh11cal
emphasis. The c-oncen was ded1catrd
to Greenpeace. Nash called ·on thl'
audience to register and vote.
It will surface again on the group's
puppet leaders 1n foreign lands.
He also openly talked about the
cocaine problem that landed him a
prison term in Texas and sang a new
composition. "Compass," about the
journey back.
"I wrote this while I was in summer
camp," Crosby deadpanned. ''It
marked a turning point in' my hfe."
Always leaning on the heavy side.
Crosby apparently replaced a deadl)
drug dependency wtth a food habit.
Fonunatel)·. vittles ha,en't harmed
the nch vocals that arc his trademark.
And as the group has had to do
throughout wr rock) tenure. it again
and again endured the hollered ques-
tion. -When.~·s-Neil?"
"How the -· should I know? ..
Crosby asked. ''He's kind of skinny
for a Canadittn. but I like him."
The ethC-real Neil Youn~ has been
in the studio with the tno. but he
hasn't rejoined them on. the s1age.
But this group. beset b} creative
doldrums and mediocre per-
formances following i1s earl) suc-
cesses -and David Crosb} 's drug
ni&htra,are-needed to prove it could
still clink out the harmonic sweet-
ness and rock electncat\ i1 once
boasted. ·
. album -due the end of October
Crosby penned a song, "Nighttime
for the General.'' that focuses on the
rJ <\ ,..,d its support for corrupt
Saturday the) didn·1 need him. But
if the} want to take advantage of the
unique style and talents they've
reclaimed. they'll have to cast olT
their dependence on the songs of old
and move forward.
Stephen SUie at the Pacific
Amphitheatre. ,
"WE HAVE A LOT OF COMPETITION •••
BUT OUR RIBS DOfMl"
r•c11111a
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Open 7 Nights-Dining & Take-Out
2000 Newport Blvd. ·(Corner of 20th St.) c......... 131-211
LIDO CINUU '"•P<><t Udo 873-aJSO
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8Ul.L DURHAM (R)·
1:00-10·15
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CINEMA WEST
Wa1lmln1t•r Golc111r.•f'1!
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FAMll Y aA"GAIN NIGHTS
12 00 TUUIWIDITHURS
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On Be.ch B•wd ·2 blcxlrt
norlr" of G1rd•n Gro .. Fr•y
891-05"6 7
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11:45-1:45-4:00·6:15·1:30· 10:40
YOUNG GUNI (R)
LOU lllAIDID Ml.PS
1.15·3:"·5:45-l:IO· lO:l 5
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CR) S·Jf. H5·10.00
YOUNGQUNI
(R)
'30·1:45-10:45
'Grease' a slick,
fun-filled show_
That Rydell Hi&h School class of
I 9S9 has had quite a few reunions
locally since the roclt musical
"Grease" first hit Southern Cali-
fornia back in 1973 -but none more
exciting. energetic and downright
enjoyable than the current pro-
duction at the Westminster Com-
munity Theater.
The first team of communlly
tJ\cater musicals -director Kent
Johnson and musical d1rec-tor T im
Nelson -has pulled olT another
whopping success. bolstered b> the
high-voltage choreograph) of Jen·
nifer Simpson and Lisa Coles (the
latter doubling wondcrfolly tJl the
leading role of Sand)).
"Grease" is one of the most
democratic of musical comedies -
virtually all of Jbe principals has ht
or her shot at the spotlight (unlike the
movie version). And Johnson's cast is
populated with certified show ~top.
pers. etchin$ splendid tndi' 1dual
characterizations while integraung
into a flflt-rate ensemble.
Nelson's hard-driving musicalit)
and the Simpson/Coles choreo-
graphic wizardry turns even the
mii:ior numbers (''These Magic
Changes." ··Fredd}, M) Love") into
sparkling sequences. And the big
band jive contest at the prom. in the
intimate atmosphere of West·
minster's horseshoe stage. is' irtually
overwhelming. •
_David Snow injects the central role
of Danny Zuko with as much parod)
as comedy. succeeding on both
counts. Co-star Coles. a Ram
cheerleader who's drop-dead
gorgeous befo~ her last-scene trans-
formation. ma) have trouble keeping
her sex appeal in check. but her
performance is excellent.
Carole Ball. a be her who csche" s
the use of a hand mike to sell her
songs. is outstanding as the raunch)
R1uo, while Jon Gale lends strong
support as the car buff Kefllcke. Tess
Skorzewsk.i's "Freddy" is an earl)
highlight. while Dexter Ec h1 verri
doubles splendidly as Doody'and the
super-spoof Teen Angel 1n the W<'ll·
staged "Beauty School Dropout"
number.
REHAIW DREYFUSS
. Now-PLAYING
·~-·~ =::. ... ~ '°" ,. -Ill""° _...... ·--•OOlaucM -
:..-:;: ~~~c-=~·
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Toi
T111s
In Jill Matson. Westmmstcr prob-
ably has the sexiest Patt) Simco~ on
record. while Lawrence Guzzetta's
nerdy Eugene and l\lene Duncan
H yatfs prune-faced Miss Lynch com·
plctc the school establishment picture
effectively. Marsha •. Aiexandcr's
raspy-voiced Frenchy 1s a treat and
John Diaz's Sonny could have step.
ped out of"The Blaclcboard Jungle."
John L. Marino as the libidinous
DJ and Marc Lc Blanc as the pop
singer add spice to the high school
hop, while Lisa Mayes as the pig-out
queen Jan and Scott Valles as the
mooning champ Roger make a fine
comic duo. Kam Maclean turns up
the temperature as the high-stepping
Cha-Cha DiGregorio ..
In shon. the Fifi1cs are back at the
Westminster Communi1-. Theater.
and they've never been ·more fun.
Performances of "Grease" continue
Fndays and Saturda}'s at 8:30
through Oct. 8 at the theater. 7272
Maple St.. Wesrm1nsrer. "'th re~r
vauons being taken at 995-41 13.
CALLBOARD -peaking of
"Grease." audttions for that musical
and the children's sho"' ··Wallie
Wonka and the Chocolate Factory"
will t;e held Saturday at I 0 a.m. at the
Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim b) the
Hunungton Beach-based Greater Los
Angeles Childrcn·s "lheater .... call
841 -2993 or 760-9253 for details.
The Buena Park Children's Musi-
cal Theater will hold tl)outs for "The
Nutcracker" Saturda) at 9 a.m. and
Sunday at l'O a.m . at the Community
Recreation Center, 8150 • Knott
Ave ..... more information as a,·ailable
at 821-1394.
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COCITM 1111 ., ...... ,. , ... 1•11 ........ ------... . .,,. ,, .. ,,,. ,:U .... .
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P. f' .. L ,\ ·" ...
Barlette Witmer with Etbabeth and~om Tierney.
......... _.. ......... ....,
-8blrley Goldert, June Donovan ad.mire .calptare.
Museum patrons
·----=---.eservihg su-i-tes-
By MARV LOU HOPKINS tensive recreational facilities. stroll
..., .... c.rn11 ...... through the gardens. and gather In
After a scorching heat wa\-e, a gourmet dinln~ areas to nibble on
ti ·n crepes or pastnes or hors d'oeuvre . ten e brctte dn ed across the Back And each hotel will serve comphmen-
Bay on a recent "8ficmoon creating a iary wine or champagn.e.
perfect sen_ing for a champagne tea. Hotels panicipating in .. A uite
~tea in the spac1ou Santa .\na Afliir--arcifiCF"ourSeasonsNc~port
Heiahts home ofEllubetlt and Tom Beach, Irvine Hilton aod Tov.crs. Le Tle'"7. was hosted by the Museum_Mesidie-n,NcwpoFt ~ach Mamou.
Council of the Newport Harbor Art Ncwporter Resort and her.Hon
Museum. Newport Beach.
Honorary chairmen Barbara A steering committee of 15 mem-
llewie and Harriette Witmer of-bers have been working d1hgentl\ to
ficiated at the tea table which was make the fund-Taiscr successful: ac-
laden with suC'h good1c as smoked cording to Jule Cllloag, co-clla1rman
salmon, caviar. crab puffs. e\otic of the event with Jaae Donovan.
fruits, shrimp. curried chicken. an '"Everyone has put in a lot of ttme
array of tiny tea sandwiches. rum and they arc a neat group of girl :·
cake and brandy snacks. Chong said. .. But we need 1.000
Patrons and supporters of"A u1te people to anend the benefit to mal..e 11
Affair," an upcoming fund-raiscr'fo success."
the museum sponsored b) the Mu-Chongalso1>Tarsed the coopcrauo n
scum Council, also were honored al' .they received from the Consul Gcn-
the tea. eral of Malaysia Zalaal Azmaa and
"A Suite Affair," scheduled from the M~laysian Airlines . .\tr France.
11 a.m. to S p.m. Sunday, Oct. 9. will Amc"rican Airlines and Four •asons
include tours of six prtstigiou,s hotels in Toronto.
in Newport Beach and lrvrnt:. Gue ts "Air France µ.ve us a round-tnp
will to ur the hotels' elegant suites. for two to Paris 1n business etas'). plu'I
v~ew its contcmporar) an and ex-six nights at Pans Le ~lcnd1en.
llalay.lan Conaul General Zatnal and Alai Asman (left)
with Junie and Kenneth Chong at m11MG1D benefit.
Mala~1an-A1rhnes ga"e a round-lR
for two tn busjness class to Mala\S1a.
and Amencan A1r1J nes provided the
round-trip flight for two to Four
Seasons .in Toronto. for a dra'>'1ng_"
Chong explained.
Among those at tltc tea were
.Museum Council chairman Peggy
Splc11, Nora Leitman, Sally Somers,
Beny Ssecle, Jo McLain, Mieltael
Ptttiu, Jue.CoaaeJt.P.iCox. Beuy
Keefe, Jessie o .. m, Jady and Rogae
Hemley (he's president of the mu-
. scum's board of trustees). Nora
Jersnaea, Lyu and Don Olson and
JuScymoer. .
Tickets for "A Suite Affair:· at S35
a person; may ~ obuuned from the
museum·~ special events office at
759-11 22. .
A grave problem-with ilo solution -.
DEAR AN LANDER ·. M}
Uncle Joe married Mar) 1n 19:?7. Ten
years later she died. He bought a large
cemetery plot with a place ne\l to her
for himself. Less than a )Car later,
Uncle Joe married Ruth. v.ho v..as
Mary's best friend. Ruth died in I 950~
He buried her on the other side of the
--pave-site.
In 1951. he married Minnie. This
marriage lasted 28 ~ears. then nclc
Joe died. Before his death. he told
Minnie that he wanted to ~ buric<;I
between Ruth and Mary. This reall y
hurt her a lot. After all, she had been
married to Joe far IOOfCr than both of
the other wives combined. Uncle Joe
hid become an invalid the la<>\ l'1ght
years, and Minnie waited on him
hand and foot. He never appreciated
athinashedid for him and treated her
like she was hired help.
A few-years ago. Minnie d1cd. he--was buried with her famil> in another
cemetery. Even though Joe was m y
uncle, I believe he gave that dear
woman a lousy deal, and so does the
rest of the family. Care to comment?
-KIN FLORIDA.
DEAR It: I lmow of DO sol•Uon lo
A11
_LlliDEIS
-die problem since nobody knows la
advaace wlao la going to go first or
.,... may spoascs may follow. It
don seem, llowcver, tlaat Uncle Joe
co.Id laavc arruged for MillDle to be
btlrted somewlacn near bim wbca it
became appareat tlaat-lte was going
first. It souds as if lac treated bcr in
dcatll die same way lac treated ber
d•riDI dlclr marriage. Shabbily.
• • • • DEAR ANN L.\ 'DER .
"Teardrops in hrevepon ·· wrote
that what had been a ~arm rela-
tionship with her husband has turned
into a cold w;lr and her mamage 1s
falli ng apan. You suggested that he
might have a fear of inttmaC) or that
he may be having an affair with
another woman.
r-
1
Pet~ Unlimited -,
I 113s Newport Blvd. 122-1210 · I
Ann. I could ha\e \\T1tten that
letter myself two ~ears ag_o. I \\Ould
~tanyth1ng1ha1 Teardrop· husband
is having an affair. not "11h another
woman, but w11h cocaine. Hi cold-
ness and 1nd1ffercnce are class1l
symptoms of an addict "' ho 1s hiding
1'1s-drug use:-
, ·Please make this ~oman av..are of
this. Take 1t from me. I've beeo there.
Two }cars ago m~ husband "ent to a
rehab clinic and he has be{'n clean
ever since .
We couldn't ha'c done 1t without
the excellent s,uppon prO\'ided b~
Cocaine Anon)mou . Ple'"'se plug the
growing self-help organizations . .\nn.
They do a fabulolls JO . -I RU E
BELIEVER IN LAKE ARIEL. P.\.
DEAR BE LIEVER: Cocaine
Aaoaymoas often sllttffds wllea
odlcr attempts to 1ct off tlae juk
laavc fallc4 .. nil or1uizatioa ....
more Uau l,080 groeps aH is based
oa tile c'oaeept of Alcolaolics
A.Hnym0tt1 -pcoete wlao share a
~..,..,.....m.
Amyoac lalercstecl iD learning
aboal a cUptcr near YH cu write or
call: Cocaiac Amoaym"•· P.O. Bos
1317, Clllvcr City, Callf. 90%39. Tbc
plaoee 11 (U3> 5S9-5833. . . ..
DE.\R .\~\; L.\!'.DER I ll1\l'
~ou1 lOlumn and thtnl.. ~vu g1H'
sensible ad' ice I need 1,.tlml' right
no"
Can OU .ldLme a.n)•llunµboul 1
group that has been running ads in
one of the tabloid'> recent I~ sa~ 1ng
the\ can re\ ersc the cu~co; of h<.>nd-
agc: remo'e e\ll 1nllul'nl-l''> gl\c \OU
the pov.er to tum ~our life around and
bnng good lucl.. 'l
For SI 0 the~ "111 send the l..e~ s that
car\ unlock the po'>'ers that ha' c
controlled )Our lucl.. and deo;tt n}
Sounds too good to be true
· Please tell me"ha1 \OU l..nov. abl.lut
this organ1za11on. I am thinking of
sending them S 10 but I \\ant to hl·ar
from )OU first. Thanks 'ei: much -
ANNIND.C
DEAR AXN: U t~is oelfl1 could
t•n a person's lack aroaad it
wHlda't be runlng •ds askiag for
Sit. It W .. 14 '9'11 ilUWlt twl ll"ffed
ud make so macla money It woalda't
laavc to advertise for suckers. Wake
•P· lloacy.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY llC.
.... ,_ .... C... llenl
IU2 UllOI IUI., ctSH --541·115'
(714)
581-61'1 l
Full ~rvrc~
R~rtrrmrnr l1vmg
from •J~
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Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT /Tueedey. Sep1ember 13. 1118
Sy SYDNEY OM.AJlll
We•e•y.Sepcnttlcr 1'
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Wriucn verification is received conocrruna
recent discussion, agreement. Your "role" will be expanded, your suantions
and style receive favorable attention. Virgo will fiaurc prominently.
TAURUS (ApnJ 20-May 20): 1.men and observe, realize that what you ll~ will be made available. You gain most through diplomacy, patience and
a quiet It.ind of pcrsi.stence. Family member will acquiesce to recent request.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20); Be discreet. play cards clott to chest. realize
elcmen1 ofsurpnsc can~ valuable asset. Someone is not tellinaentirc slory-
protect selfat close quaners. You'll rcoeive offer. Pisces involved.
CANCER (June 2 1-Jul) 22): What appears to be a defeat is due to !><><>m~rana in ~our favor. Auentton centers around responsibility, carccr,
intensified rclauonsh1p. Older 1nd1v1dual helps yo. u with property, sale. l;Jro (July 23-Aug. 21): Transaction 1s finished -tac loose ends. don't
rematn too long on the ~cne. Emphanze universal appeal. streu
compata'b11ity, barmon). lo'e Ongmal travel plans due to be revamped.
. VlllGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Stress tndepcndcnce 10 connectJon with
investments, possessions. sales and purchases. Many wiJI say rou a.re beina
dommccnng., but )our ov. n Judgment must prevail. You'I pin added
recogn1t1on despite contro,ers).
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. :!:!)· lntu111on 1s on target. family member will fi~ly agree despite hnr.enng doubt. You'll ~asked to mouvate charity or
pohucal campaign. Reunion "'1tb lo' ed one dominates exciting soe.nario .
SCORPIO (Oct. 13-:-.,.o\ ::! I l 'ou'll have additional room, there will be
more lecwa>: 10 connecuon v. nh plan~. design. color selection. Open lines of
communicatton, accept social 1n' uauon gmanan will play key role.
SAGITJ'ARIUS c:-...o, :!~-Dec :!I I" Check facts. fiJUres, accountmg
procedures. You arc·tn position to eam fnendsh1p ofver}' mfluential people.
What had been withheld ~111 ~released~ to )Our advantage. ,.
CAPRICORN (Dec :!:!-Jan 191· Emphasis on change, travel. variety,
ab1ht¥ to 1>Ut fonh unique lOncept~ ~11'.'m~r of opposite sex figures
prominently, could become valuable alh ~ 20-Feb. 181 Restraint is necessary. you'll uJumately ~nefitan_d lend 1mpetu to~ ourul11ma1c a1 ms.Domesuc adjustment is part of
sccnano. involves residence' hfestyle. Libra will figutt prommently.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Circumstances. events take sudden tum an
your fa vor. Terms will ~defined. agreement will ~ rcnegouated to your
advantage Secret meeung take place. involves secunty. -
IF SEPTEMBER 14 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have "writer's signature."
~cans you arc capable of t'\pressing ~ourself. of putting forth ideas. conccpu
!n entenammg. mfonnat1,c fashion. ~mini. Virgo. Sagittarius peopJe play
1mponant roles 10 )Our hfe You'll travel m October
BRiOCE
By CHARLES GOREN
aMI OMAR SHARIF
Neither vulnerable. Ea.st deals.
NORTH
• Q 7 3
v Q.' 0 K Q 10 5
WEST _ + K 10.5
• 10' 2
EAST . ,~'
<ii A K 10 6 3
0 '3 2
<ii 975
0 19176 + K 5 +A J 9
SOUTH
+AJ91l
<ii J l
0 A
+Ql 7 43
The biddina:
F.aat Sotl U1
I Q I • ·-'. ... West
2 <ii ... Nortll
l • ·-
Opeil.ina lead: Nine of v
If there's one thin& we rearet, it's
that we didn't learn to play brid~
much earlier than we did. The senior
..member of our wnnng team
learned while be was at McGill Uni-
versity in Montreal; the junior mem-
ber w1iile waitina for his scenes to be
shot on movie lots. When we see
bow some· teenagers perform today,
we are filled with awe. Two of the
bri&htest prospects on the American
ACRO~
1 Gaits
6 Big parties
11 Fuel
14 --costs
15 Lissome
18 SimPte IUg8I'
17 Monte -11~p11ui ;oe.
20 <Kavtty. tnm\
22 Feline
23F~
25 G«man name
28.'Hlfes out
29 Next to c.lif.
30 Light winds
32 LOYe'. It.
~ N.Y. reeort
39 Rees ......
42 Reepected
43 Pllinted
45~
46 Mouma_.for
49 '-Blas Of So=:-
54 Atrican land
55 Dtstended
56 Atrltan
58 S8n1ty
60 Sr. or Jr
63 SuppllCat•
66 French coin
67 Conduct
' 88 C.y
89 E.asenoe
70 Terminated
71 lmtable
DOWN
1 Moc:ca9ln
2 One --ttme !l Meat eaters 4 Ma. Terry
5 lnc:f'I by Inch
8 Abundant
7 Sufferings
8 Fleur..0.--
9 High In pl tctt
10 Denomtnauon
11 ChlMI
12 Reeource
13 Pntdlctors
19 Bother
21 Thrice: pr-et
23 Catch
24 Vlrt9e enaps
2e Emperot 270n~
30 Kind of nut
31 Economins
33 Colelde with
35 Next to La.
38 Prototypes
37 Frosty
38 An.Astaire
sc:ene arc DOUI' Hsieh of New York
and Richie Pavlicek of Fort Lauder-
dale. Thia band was played al the
recent Summer North Americ:c
Championships, held in Salt Lake
City.
South's jump to four spades was,
to put it mildly, agrcssive. Eveii a
trial bid of three clubs would have
been a distinct stretch. He paid
dearly for his folly.
Doua. West, led the nine of
hearts. Since be had raised his part·
ner's suit, that showed specifically•
threc-<:.ard hoklin&. Rieb won the
king and found the excellent shift to
tfic jack of clubs. Declarers queen
lost lO the kin&, and the club return
allowed East to win two more tricks
in the suit as West stuffed a bean.
After casbi.Qa the ace of hearts •
East led a third round. Declarer sucssed wrong when he ruffed with
the nine. West overruffed with the
ten and still bad to score the kin& or
trumps for down four!
The best East-West could do al a
bean contract was ciabt tricks, or
.nine if the ck!C1lK enc;stJtievowly.
Thus, the 200 earned for beatina the
contract four tricks was a clear top
for the tcen-qe stan. We wish
some of our partners could def end
that well today!
40 Vigor
4 1 Partly pr-et
U LOWY
47 A9Qulred
48 Pewtel' COin
50 Aevlte
51 Kept going
52 AS4an river
S3 Consumed
55 PO«er
57 OrlYe
59 Mrbecue rod
61 WMPOO
62 Refnoye
64 Ho••--
65 Howl
2 3 4 5 7 8 9 10 12 13
14
17
...
'
AlO ' Ortlft09 CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Tuesd8~. September 13, 1988
TBS·~~~-----~~~
PAMD·Y
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"That plane is scratching the sky."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"And don't look again until I'm dressed
and have my makeup on!"
PEAJruTS
MERE '(OU ARE .•
A HICE-SOWL OF-~R.ESM WATER
GARFIELD
MlRE.'~ THE NEW~! •.• OH!
GEE , nos 15 SMALL PP.1Ni .
DRABBLE
R08Sl8R08&
•
•
COUJllT&R CULTURE by Maratta & Maratta
•••
I
I
J
I
I •
-..
\-\OW /A &ONNA Ktf P Hil"\
1)0WN ON iHE rAR M ~ .
AfTE~ HE '.$ SEEN )'URE E?
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
~~
11 WE UON'r AAVE A ta.&. COLA ~ " -
by Cha_rles M . Schulz
by Jim Davis
by Kevin Fagan
. •
--
ARLO AND JANIS
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
JUDGE PARKER
f; - -
.,.OU SHOULDN 'T HANC:> UP ON ME
LIKE THAT, MARIGENE ... OR MARIGOLD,
• WHATEVER YOUR NAME I'S / ALL I
WANT TO 00 15 MEET YOU SOME·
WHERE SO 1 CAN RETURN YOUR
WALLET'
FUNKY \VINKERBEA1'
N O / JUST THROW IT AWAY ... AND STOP
ec>THERING ME I
--. - --- - ----~ --.~
#All. I \.
by Jimmy Johnson
~-~IW~YIS llll'f)ON FUND~~
DOWN Mt'~<».> A ..-r!
' by Lynn Johnston
I OC'N°I t'1W ~~1b t"'ty'Se1.F ..
11S1FE INSULTS
Tt-m" '-'Eft'E.
by Jeff MacNelly
. by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk .
DOONESBURY by·Ga~ry Trudeau
•
• ;;: .. i,09!·· r r r r r r r r 1
•~.X1tt•110i I I I I I I I I l
---.:: ....,.l ____ ..... ___ _
• ............ L __ ll_ .........
llllGIM -~ -,.., _ -----
r •
•
Potential there,
butj1iry still out
OD OCC offense
Pf rates can spread OFFENSE
things out more off . a_re_a_s_e-ffec-tl-VC_O_n_Ol:::S last \Car.
alanC d d -th we'd be I heck of a ·ballclub But Y.e e an ep haven'tprovcnourdcfense or putan\
points on the board ~et and ou·r
opposiuon is prctt> good 100 ·· By JON FERGUSON
Of .. Olllr,... --
Replacing a record-~ttiog trio of
offensive pla}'crs is an impossible
task. h 'smorea
matter o r com-
pensauon.
Gone arc na-
tional single·
season. all·
pu r p ose
rush1ng leader
tailback Ban
Re cktenwald, ·
. "' -. y.
~
1 .6..
j .
and Mission Conference record-set·
tcrs wide receiver Junior Tagaloa
(sixth on the all-time national career
receiving chans) and quancrback
Keith Jarrett.
Those three transformed the
M1ss1on Confer(nce·s second v.orSt
offense in Coach Bill Workman's
inaugural season into the top offense
1n total yards in one } ear. In 198 .
Orange Coast could again be near the
top of that hst, but don·Hook for an~
one player to grab the spotlight.
"We'll be more d iversified than last
}Car on paper," Workman said ... We
feel hke we have a betterdefense. lf'"e
Jn the new M1ss1on ( onfen:nce
Central Dtvis1on. ifs an' txxh ·s ~1
as to who wt.I I top the' 'ti\ · k""Jms
aJthouah Saddlcback ha1; tleM tabbed
as the early favonte
"This offense hasn·t made 11 \t>t ··
Worlman said ... There's poten11al
but we don't knowY.hat the personnd
cando yeL The ofTcns1\C hnC''"tll tlea
bi& part of how successful 11.e are··
The only re1um1ng stanen are a
pair of offensive lineman and full-
back Brad Rosenquist, 11.ho 1s heing
pushed. Tom Torpestad. who staned
at right tack.Jc 10 1986 before sm1ng ·
out last year. has moved 10 nght
guard. and Darryl Pcssler returns a'>
the starting right tackle. E'cept for
sophomore Bnan Allgeier. the rest are
freshmen.
''It's b111er (line) than "'e·, t: had.
but we've bad tiny ofTens1"C' lines."
Workman said. ··But rll tal..c that
over what Cerritos has (close 10 a 300-
pound average). If the~ fail all the
skill people arc wasted. It "-111 be a
while until we com<' togeth\'r of.
fcnsively."
But the potential offC'ns1" el~ 1s "ery
(Pleue eee OCC/83)
Orange Coast Plrates
ColOn Sor et eno Grev t• Sc:MdlM
7 rec04'0 C0<1ference 1-1, Ove•a1 1·1 •
Tvoe of offense MuJ'•P'• I
Tyoe of cM'fenu O'<ie
HUCI C06C,, 8 n Wor~man
Steff Georoe Mall•H tott l<l't D•"" ' Walttt\ tolf r.ne aul ), 8arrv Waters loet
coqcCll,,.tor, 1Mloe btlel>bdU!rU ?a..it
lrlvllt (off backfltlcl). Milte Rae (w•de
receivers>. M11<t T avlor ou•s•et
tlnetleeto.enl. Ricn JamH loel ne l Gret
$1\edlCI (oeftn1lve baCHI
Set Seot 17-t R•O HOf'OO Set , Seo• 2.,....,.,, ... ,.. ·1.-e
Set , Oct l-91 Mt S.11 .t.l'lon o• 1 30
Set . 0c1 t-Sen o-cc· "O""• 130
S.1 .. Oct 15-et S.11 0 t90 Mew·
Sal • Oct 21-Saooleo.<-• '~on>t I 30
Sat., Oct 29-et Fulterl0<1° Sat , Nov S-Rlveni<M • '>()me
Sat.. Nov t?-e1 GOIClefl Wes••
Sat .. Nov 19-RanctlO S."' 1100• !>Omel
• CleflOIH conference 1111me
• CleflOIH OIYISIOn 9el•Jt
AJ eamn et 1 u,nttu noreo
TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 13 1988
Freehm•n Royal Wilbon (above) and 90pbomore Ken
Grta• &l•ee Orange Coaat double punch at wide recel•en.
Irvine Belle-ringer-buzzed Trojans
Vaqueros· Mike Be lle
ran for 151 yards on Uni
By RICHARD DUNN
0.., ..... Cetll 191 I Ide ii
There's a baJa bug re'" 1ngupanddown the
streets of Irvine these da,c;. but watch out
because It has a I 1censc to S~ed (rom Ont' end ol
a football field 10 another. as v.cll.
Behind the wheel }Ou'll find ~hke Belle.
who aocs fut on the gridiron for frvine High
but likeS' 101ush for a~ ma~} ~ards as possible
on the road with his bug. ·
"I· like m y car," said Belle. ··ff ~~100-
h'll beat almost any car around:·
Sounds hke his rushing. which earned htm
to IS I yards last week 1n a 13· 7 'it'ason-opcning
victory for Irvine H 1gh O\ er 11s cross~to" n
rival, University High.
"M y adrenaline toot.. o'er ;rnd I did \\hat I
could," Belle said ... In the bcgmning of the
pmc, I d1dn'1,e1 an} }ards and I thought I~
aoina to act the kind or }3rdagc that I go1 last
year.
"But things JUSI worl..cd out. I starting
acttina 10 yards on some camt:S and then I got
that touchdown.··
So thinas tumC'd around. and qutckl).
Belle's runnina helped the Vaquero to an earl~
13--0 lead in the first quaner.
Robinson's
Rams haven't
any questions
-unanswered
Rams Coach John Robinson is aware th.at v1ctoncs
over Green Bay and Dc1ro11 don't prove h.1s team has
bounced all the way back from la l )C~r's troubled 6-9
leaJOft.
On the other hand, he hkes the progress the nev.-look
Rams have nuade whale acumg off to a 2-0 start.
The Rams and Raiders meet unda) al the .Los Aftllles Colittum. the Rams· home unul the} moved to
Anaheim Si.dium an 1980. The Raiders arc I· I. havm.a
beaten San Dieao 24-13 and lost 10 Houston 38-35.
.. Prior to the season. there were a number of
questions." Robinson said Monday at his wttkl) mtt11na
witb reponen. "Would we still be able to run. YrOuld our ....U..pme prosrns, would our def en~ put pl'e sure 011 thepuW!
"We .Utt mull act better. but at this potnt )Ou can't
•Y we're failina at anything."
ReDlacina the susptnded Charles White. Greg Bell ,ained 119 yards on 27 camn 1n the Rams· 17-10 wan ~Detroit Sunday at An&M1m Stadium.
After ~ pmes, third·)'tar quarterback Jam Ever· en's rati111i19(UJ rounh 10 the NFC . He's completed 36
fl 55 pm1e1 (oS.S prrunt) ror 32S \ards. thrtt ~.and just one 1ntm:tpt1on ·
~. the Rams rank !«Ond an total dcfenst and lllve ndeid up 12 quartttblclt tkks.
'"We'rt noc brill~t at anyth1na... Robtnson Qad.
°'but I libel the Ptt~I IPC'f<*h •-c took apan t Detroit. wtaicb 11 btt~ than r111ed.
.. And I like the fk••bihty of our ttam. We can dO
more llri• than we coukt last ynr."
A8d 1Mft'11till 1 lot that the Rams ha\cn'1 doM.
For OM thi"" Robinson wanH to 1t1 firsN"ound
ramtll '-' OatiOft Of'ffft aotna. Grttn. tht RamT top '6ct tom UCLA. aot ju" OM <"In) apan\t ~tro11.
Last )ear as a sophomo re. Belle ran tor 4.:!8
yards. Thi ~car 11 appear: he "on·1 ha~c 10-
worry about la~I ~car ~01 Jftl'r Thursda)
night's performance. v. h1ch propelled him 10
honors as the Da1h Pilot's Pla\Cr of the \\eek
for the Orange ( oa-;1 .\rca ·
The to uchdov. n he "a!> tall.mg a bout. one
from 37 \ards out "llh I ·l' left in the first
quarter. was an obstacle of Orts
"The touchdo'~ n run "3s a 101 longgr than
I thought it was," a10 Belle. "'ho~c older
bro1her Craig Belle "as a 1op no1ch running
back for !..lniver<;1t) High 1n IQ. 4 and ' 5 wh._~ _
Rick Curtis. In me·~ current co-head coach
along with Ten) Henagan ""a' the coach.
"I d1dn'11h1nl I "as running at fu.11 speed.
I JUSl faked OUl thal onl.' &U~ .ind made the
touchdown."
• "Has touchdown run \\a fabulous:· said
Henigan. who indicated that L'n1,crs1t) v.as
keying on In ine's o\her ba\'.I... Pat Wh11e.
"AJthough (Belle) made some nice moves
and we blocked well. 11 appears that L[nivers11~
was keying on Pat Wh11e outside. "hach opened
up the inside reall) ~ell for \,like." sa1d
Henigan.
Of course. none o fh1s 151 \ards came.easy
for Belle. playing on a hghll) in1ur1:d left
hamstnng.
"He was hm11cd m pra.:11ce. unable to run
full speed." Henigan added .. On Labor Day.
that was the first da) an a while that he was able
toao full spee<i. But he' 1111 not runn1nghkehe
-Player of the Week
normal]) does. although he had a fine game I
think he can run bcner. and our <.tall lcels tht'
same "-3).
.. You could tell has leg ""a' hothcnng h)m
Ph)s1call~. he was capable ol runnmg ~lier I
really don't kno"' 1fhc:'ll ha'c: that man~ \ard~
agam."
•Why would Hcnig::in fed that "a~. ~ou
ask?
.. We think oO°t'ns1' rh ''t· ha' c some
weapons, .. he said ... \'\,c I.. ind of <,prcad 1n.1u1 If
ooe team want 10 tr) and stop o ne gu). than "e
have others. hkc \like Belle "ho can cause
some damage.
"(Belle) as one of our stronge)t football
players.. Because ofh1sthams1nng inJu~ ). there
were tames dunng the game again'it L'nl'\ersll\
·when he could ha\(~ h11 the hole qu1cler and
harder. He can "-hen'he·s 100 percent. but "c"ll
take that kind of performance tht' had la 1
wcclc)." •
Sov.11l 8elle. a 5-10, I "'5-pounderv.ho run'>
track in the spnng(IOO. :'.()()and both rcla~sl
.. At the end of 1he game ·· Belle said. ·· 1
asked m) bro1her((ra1gl 1fhl' thnught I had ~00
y~~s. He said ~e~ The-n I lool..cd 1n the paper
And the facts sho'' l'd I:-I a" potent and
lethal as the} come
-Wllo 's-on first? .RocEi
.CAILSOI
-:
Fountain Valley is
the one right now,
but look at the field
lf~ou'yc been v.ondcnngJUSt
who sfirst. "hat'sS«ondand ma) be
you don't know about third among
Oranae Count) prep football teams.
.don'tworry, )OU'rt notalo nc
Serv1te:6.Espcranza . ., Pal1hca.lS ·
Woodbridge: 9. Edi on. 10 .\naht•1m
.. OrangcCount) Football' \faga.
zinc's prescason "-ent
I. Mater Dc1. 2. nta .\na "\
Fountain Valle\. 4 f\ ate ~ Valle\. bu11here are sc' cral "ho
Mission VaeJo;6. \ alt'n 1a. -Lo appearcapabl<'ol po1hnga good
Alamitos: 8. El Toro. Q Edi on I 0 thing.
Esperanza. Tht> underJ\1ng thing 10 all th1' 1c; ~Dail~ Pilot's prC'season Top 10 the number of polls Once upon a
went: time there "-ert' none I. Fountain alle". ~ \.later Dc1. l. O
Just about no one can com<' 10 a
mcetinaofthc minds. and 1rs not
because tMre 1s no ont v. ho stand
out. The problem is there arc too
many who stand out
Servtte, 4. Sana .\na. 5 Los Speakingofy,hochcl..ed and "ho
Alamitos; 6. Edison. -\11 ion didn't.. u "-Jsn·t too long ago tl)at all
Viejo: 8. Esperanza. Q El Toro I 0 an)one could tall.. about"'"~ '-"h) the
Top IOsonthepttple'"~I ha'e
become the order of the da} throuah·
out the media-an Oran1c Count)
alone there ha,·e bttn four different
v1e"'"S-from the Ora nae Count}
Times. Santa Ana Reg1Ster. Orange
County Football' 8 '1ap11ne. and
th11 ncwspaptr
Who's nSllt? \\ell. it'~ not too
d1fT1CuJtto~w1th1n> of them.
and It boils n,ht t.:k to the earlier
llaterMntTMrt'a~loo man) 'Aho
llandout
The Tuntt' ptt'Wat.On 1OS'I0 'ACnt.
I. fountaan Valle): 2 Mat~r Dea. 3.
SlntaAna" Ma on Va('JO, ~
E41JOft. 6. Sttvatt: • ~ lam110 EITOn>,9V•ncaa~10. o\nahe1m.
~ RqJsttr's prncason Top I 0
~·= I. f ouft&a.D Valle): l • .M1
Vitjo. l Santa .\na . .a Mattr Dc1: S. •
,.
Valcnc1a. Sunset LcaguC' "-aHaling11 on the
Confused., chm.
Sowt>re Los i\lam11osand AnaMim. Both~ lrnockt'd ofTin N.o .... F~l.3.Ul \I.a.lie' and Ed1r;c>o
tMfirstround(Los lv.uurob~ arcrunmna 1·5 m0rangc(ount~ and ' both arc locked into tht C'l F 0 1\ 1 wn KtnM'dy, 18-28)and '\nahc1m loM a 1 Top IOafler" inning thcaropcncr .
16-14dcciltontoFullcnon)b) tea~ 22-J7overMaterDeaand "·Oo,crfl
unranked in an) or the polls. Modena. -pcctl\Cl) And thttc wall be mort' ··u psct s," '"
bccautca.s1t as on the college k'cl.11' lt'samauna what o n<' touchdo"' n
only a matterofumc before the candofor)ou
IChed-.lt catches up Yr 1th )OU not her annual e e-opcner 1 the
Te.ms wtuch can 10 unbeaten mutt offirst·"-~k action..
tbroupouun en tart cam pa tan arc Evtf')one feels thai the~·, ea t 3
becom"'I more and more unnatural. shot. but after the first .-.ttl. mt and1t'1bttaU1Cor~o,crv.htlm•na thanp--.n to ink in.and from 1h1 balance 1hlt bas bttome apparent 1n -.. •\bt'IOI.. a~1t1~ancvef)th1n.\81dsi'
h's not tooofttnan\ mort that )(lU month aeoabout Fountain\ alk>
avupmt frelina )Ou *trt out· -and E41ton duthna for the un.-.ct
coecbed..orout-mu1ekd.M rtofkn l.npecbamptonsh1p.1 &01n&t
•haa.norn'uimpl ~hochclte<hnd hold up. ·
Mlodidn't. lfJ not that tM)t'an't hr heat 1n
Rilbtnow.1•',banito1m111nea ==-~lctlUepta byan oncclsc 1l''JU\t
ttamchclunabe11ttthanf"ounta1n •ha1noonecltc1 1.n 1010.i-1.
.... ...
t
Rai~ers nu-rsing
assorted bu111ps,
bruises in -wake
of 38-35 setback
EL Etrl 'l'>t \ '\J' l hl l\l\ .\ngcles Ra1ders
had a lonj. n1ur\ ,, \1 •· ,I ' in hr "al..\· ot their 38-35
loss 10 the H<'u \h1n 1 \ti\ ' la' rarl1cr
Ra1dtl"\ coa• h \ Jil.,\ ' l J 1ahan dct.a1kd the mJUI) It t
Monda' af\cmo.,n
-'itanm~ lrt(' •ntct''~I. I.. l rm \.1c0an1el has a
broken fibula in thl •111h1 kJl. and v.as placed on the
lnJU~ fCSCf'\ e h<il ·
-Bact..up left c1,mnh.1d. Lionel 'Washington 1s
sufTcnna from a I"('( umnF rullcd groin muscle and ts out
ailca.ntwo wttlu.. Hcm.!Jht be pl.11.ei.1 arun~e.
mean ma he'd mis;, a minimum of four games .
-Startmg lcfl oOcn''' c tack.le Don Mosebar has a
severch praincd an~I<' and w 111 be out at least one week.
-tarting nght 00e11"' c auard Bnan Holloway has
a separated houlJcr and 1 out inddimtcl}'.
-Ba kup "A1de rt'cc1,cr and ktckofT returner Chns
Wood · ufTel't'd a tom mC'd1otl rnHateral hpmcnt and wn ~on 1n,1urcd n:~nc He "-111 m1 the rest of the
season •
The Ra1ckt"'I returned 10 ¥-Ork Ida) after the loel in
Hou ton and rt'v1cv.od film and a'-5C\tcd the daruees.
"All in one pmc "~o.ahan Y.ad. "But lbat01 wby
)OU er teach peopk 1n traman& camp. IO IMI wMn
somtbody aoes doYrn, 1t· not a t tall) new~·:= ..
Shanahan. 1d the Ra1<k" ould uy \0 · bec.k
two (C)f'Mfbl\·k. pt'C IOU\!) ('Ut b~ the icam.; Ron
and mm)' le. and -..ot,l)d he I ""for hdp on tht
offirnsavc lint.
The Ra.tdc" lll hlel) continue •1\b ~·
man tc'c fkouet1~1n"'it quancrtiiack, althO\ilti
ta.id rteimtl KqUI~ JI\ .. a •(OMl~.
wo and hn m rt c llm ron bk .. ~ntb t.ht .-. .
r
-QrMie Oout DAILY PILOT I Tueeday, Septembet 13, 1988
The 6-foot-S, 269-pound cldemlve end was in on Ii~
uullisted., five auilled 1Kk.lel. and sill decleaten, .
ud •ved a touchdown. *
TTPltlCB
C--delllar
The 6-foot, I 8S-pound
tenior passed for I I 7 yards
and one touchdown on 12
of 23 attempts for to lead
the Sea Kinas to 7-0 win.
DAR PA TROl'fE
s.taacla
An inside linebacker, he
returned an interception 38
yards for a touchdo.,..n,
made 11 unassisted tackles
and collected one sack.
8SAll llALLETT
LapaaBeach
A 6-foot-1, 190-pound
junior outside linebacker.
he made seven unassisted
teekJes and averaged 39
yards on three punts.
JDIBASTIE
CoetaMeea
A 6-foot-2, 225-pound
middle linebacker and
pwd, played every down
apinst Estancia, making
14 unassisted stops.
1'._0LYM PIC GAMt~ - -
--Bio.ndi 's tasks
are more than
just swim field
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -It's impossi61=---,---
_ _.,r-....t•s what Matt Biondi says o( his chances of
winni"J seven swimming gold medals .. at the Summer
Olympics._. _
It's uncomfonable.
That's what he 5ays of th
media mob his bid to do that ha
unleashed.
It's not enough.
That's bow the taJI Cali
fomian describes the shon sup-
pon given by U.S. Swimming. the
sport's governing federation. for
Americans to train .,.. athout
financial concerns.
It's one of the big pre-Olym-
pic stories.
What does Biondi 1hink?
What does Biondi say? What will BloDcll
Biondi do?
Biondi. Biondi. 81o nd1. Bio.ndi. Biondi. B1ond1. And
more Biondi. , "
Seven tim~ ltiondi. Seven victories:?
It's aJI too much for merica's latest quadrenmal
aolden boy.
"It's not possible." he said of a seven-race sweep.
Reaction to that prospect also see-ms far-fetched to
tfie 6-foot-7. larJer-ffian-life Biondi.
"My sjtualJon bas been a real shocker," he said at a
wide-rangina news conference Monday. "'I've t>Cen a
world record holder since 1985 and ... the attention I've
encountered this year has been mo re than tenfold what
happened the past three years combined.
"I aot off tlle plane (Frida} night) in Korea and
literally was swamped ·to the point where l fell very
uncomfortable. People wuted to take my picture and
they would do anything to get it."
The 6-foot·S senior cauaht
1evm paun for 132 yards.
inctudJna a 9-yard touch·
down catch in a victory
22-17 over Mater Oei.
llATTllUln
llarlila
A 6-foot, 205-poundjun-
ior defensive tackle in his
first varsity pme, he was in
on two quanert.ck sacks
and recorded I 0 tackles.
CllARClt AGNEW
BantlnltoD Bch
A 6-foot, 200-pound
senior inside linebackerr.
he had seven unassistCd
and eifi:it assjsted tackles in
Oilers sea~n-opencr.
GUS lllRANDA
Bdleon
A three-year staner at
tailback. the 5-foot-9, 175·
pound senior rushed for
100 yards and caught three
panes for 22 yards. *
RANDY KARLINER
<>c..nVlew
A 6-foot-I , 180.pound
sophomore, he scored two
touchdowns on runs of I 0
and I yards. He also passed
for 179 yards and a TD.
SPORTS BREAK
~ ~~-
ek_ .........
Ualftl .. ~
The I SS-pound acnior
made nJne llCldel, four
unallls1ed. recovered a
fumble on a punt and
deftec1ed a pau attempt.
lllSltnm.KOVICB *
Woodbrldle
A 6-foot-1. 210-pound
acnior, he split time at
Inside linebacker and full·
back, makinJ 16 tackles.
and I 0 unassisted tackles. ~~~~~~~~~~-•
JUAN ACUNA
Saddleback
The junior wide receiver
playcT cauaht three pas5"
for 43 yards and bandied ~.., two punt reJums for the
Roadrunners. -----------------------'lft lllKlt BELLE
lnlneJUah
The 175-pound junior
fullback pined 151 yards
on 18 carries and pulled
down three passes for
35 yards for the Vaqs. ~---~~~~~~~~-'lft
JOB BAY
Weetmlnater
A 6-foot-3, 220.pound
senior. he was selected for
his defense at end, as well ~t
his offensive blocking as a "
tiabt end.
IN THE BLEACHERS
Dodgers r:oli on,
Leary after 20 -
after 5-4 victo'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -lt was a napt f'or eyei~
milestones. u tbe Los Antcles Dodaen elltended their
National Lape West lead with a 5-4 victory over the
hapless Atlanta Bnvcs.
Tim l..cary1 17-9, is attempt· DODe9ltl SCN•DULa
ina to hold a 20-pme win mark .._ •Iona with Orel Henh11her. If ,...__..,._., 1:n •"'-
ful th.v would be the s.t. ,...., • ...,.. •. 7:H • m. suc:cess • ~, .... , ......... fint Dodier pair to reach that AWAY
milestone an the same season s.t. tt-e• CllldMetl, us. · Bill s· d a d .... ,,....., ClftclNwtl, .., • 11nc:e 1naer an au e ..... ...._. c111c111ne111 n:ts
Osteen did it in 1969. · ..... ,._, """'°"• ''" •· .. I. t ~ tans .. •Oii ClleNlel " ve.f .our more s . • "Al ..,,. .. uac ('90) l..cary 111 Mondu-"so I m aoina to be pushing-for it." . --------~
The Braves whose 49-93 record is the worst in the ~on, bepn a sixth-inning rally as Ron Gant ~nd Di~D
James opened with singJes and Dale Murphy 11qled an
Gant with one out for his. l ,OOOth career RBI.
· ·•.it's a nice feclina to accomplish it," sai<J Murphy,
who was misdakenly told last weekend that he had
reached the milestone and discovefld later that he was still
one RBI shon.
"tactually thou&ht I'd had &otten it a couple of nip ts
qo in San Oieao in front of my parents."
Braves manqcr Russ Nixon hpres$ed his disap-
pointment in the offense.
••five runs were not' that much," he said. "We had the
auys up that could get us the runs, but they didn't do !
anythina."
Defensively, however. the Braves weren't too
shabt>y.
The Dodgers were held to a pair of harmless sinales 1
from the third throu&h tne e1gHth innings. as Jim Ac~er, 1
Jose A varez and Paul Assenmacher retired 18 of the last f
Los Angeles batters -20 of the last 21 including the last
two that Tom Glavine, 6-16, faced. ·
"Our relief pitching was outstanding," Nixon said.
"It's the best I've seen Assenmacher pitch." Auen· 1
mached pitched two-hil relief over the last three inninp.. I
Ktn1• •lln other twd playen
K.rushelnyski and Many Mcsorley. ac-•
The Village, it's
an international
salad of athletes
INGLEWOOD -Forwards Mike ~
quired last month by LQs Angeles 1n the WELL, FLOYD, Gl.£5) trade that also brought Wayne Gretzky to ITS TiME I fNTRCXU:f the Kings. have agreed to m ulti-year contracts. the
Frem ne A11oclaled ~ress
v"U 'T'iQ vtouo NHL team announced Monday. H.1 11 11 r-... No terms were announced. O Krusheln ski 28. had 20 goals arid 27 assists in 76 ---r--"--+--t--=.:..i.....-.....-.£L.J....__........-........ _,,:=:Jt-Y-----------..-. .. mcs or monton last year. Mc r e). , 11 mne ~ unganan team mem·
ber shoots down Zeros in the\ 1deo arcade.
Next door, American gymnaMs Yollc) at
table tennis. The French pla) pool do\\n
U-e haJI while the Danes \\atch "'Conan the Barbanan."
That's life at the Village. -
Tho ugh thousands of 01) mp1c a1hlctes are busy
preparing for the Games. there is still time to relax at
Athletes Hall, the huge, grace full) cun cd glass building
that serves as a son of global shopping center for village
residents.
It's the place where the MorocC'anc; chow down
next to the Indonesians. "here So' 1e1 . French and
Germans crowd around a dcpanment c;1ore telev"1on
to watch "Top Gun." and \\here Pakistan and China
confront one another over 1hc snooker table.
"'These are · the places that helps one meet the
people from· other countnes:· said Som)a Man· ·
eypanda, captain of 1he Indian field hockey squad. as
teammates tned to top.each other at Shooting Master, a
video game that ·pits the pla)cr against a variety of
armC4f'(oes. -
The Indian team "asn't the only group taking 11
easy on a rainy afiemoon. Lance Rmgn;\IQ:a g) mnast
from Albuquerque. N.M .. tned his' hand at some
..
unning backs In-hell..-...___.__
Cowboy• 9C1ueeze·by Phoenl.z
computer games and table tennis. TEMPE -Herschel WalkeT ran for EE
"It's great," he 'i.81d oft he free arcade. -you save a 149 yards, scored one touchdown and set •II•
lot of coin." upuother as the Dallas Cowboys beat the
Much of the building 1s taken up with a sprawling self-destructing Phoenix Cardinals 17-14
cafeteria where an m1crnat1onal cuisine is offered to an Monday night to spoil the Cards' home debut in
intemauonal clientele: Swedes and Senegalese alike A,rizona. ·
dine on ch1lh and cod. Spanish rice. potato salad, pate Walker. who.earned 29 times. scored on a 3-yard
and kimch1. the fiery Korean pickled cabbage offered at ·run at the end of a bang-bang 79-yard drive in the
every ~cal. • . second quarter.
This day. howe\er. the ltahan team gets a special Then he carried nine times for S&-yards on a 13-
aoals and 17 assists with the Oilers.
It was also announced that defensemen Steve
Duchesne and Jay Wells have informed the Kinas that
they intend to play out the options on &heir contracts
this season. Both would become free agents after the
season if no new contracts are signed. ·
Duchesne. 23. has spent the last three seasons with
the Kings after being signed as a free agent by tti.club in
October of 1984. Weirs, 27. has spent his entire nine-
year NHL career with Los Angeles after being selected
by the team in the first-round of the 1979 entry draft.
71-year:old 1oea for a •Wim
AV ALON -Ashby Harper. who has 13
been the oldest {tlan 10 swim the English
Channel and the oldest to swim around
Manhattan, doesn't rest on his laurels.
Harper, 71, was preparing Mo nda}'_tO swim the
19.1-male channe ffiat separates Si"nta Cata 1na bland
from the Los Anaclcs coast.
The swim was .set to beg1rr at 11 p.m. at Emerald
Cove on Santa Catalina, and was expected to take t 3 to
IS hours, said George Harris. skipper of the escon boat.
Harper planned to come ashore at Point Vicente, on the
Palos Verdes peninsula southwest of downto9fn Los
Anaeles.
"Havina done Manhattan and the English Chan·
net, I wanted fo add this to ljsf' he Said in a telephone
interview. ••1t•s one of the main long-distance swim-
mina challenites."
----__ Security guards._ pushed..and ran--10..clear_a_ path
throup the news photographers as a silent Biondi pushed
his luaage can to a team bus.
tre~t. An ltahan chef. spotting his .c.o untry'!'en, gr~bs play, 81-yard drive in the founh quan er that was
theu .. plates-'lnd returns from thC-ki1chcn-witluervmg_cappedbyquarcibackSteve.Pelluer:tl-Yard sneak with .
-
It's aJJ because Biondi has a chance. however sniall,
to match the milestone of seven swimming gold medals 1n
a siqle Olympio Gamcs achieved in 1972 by America's
Mark S~itt. Hes come this far. he said. without the training
suppon aiven to other Olympic athletes from the United
Scates and other covmncs; He said he wi II retJre ri'1t l a ner
the Olympics, due in part to financial constderallons.
.. I think I can stay in swimming and be competitive
on the international level for a many as eight years.'' he
said.. .. Our system doesn't allow that.
"The money"s just not there so we have to get out. We
have to cam our own living. plus swimmins. and that I
would definitely be bored with."
Instead, Biondi said he will tum to water polo with an
eye toward the 1992 Olympics and with hopes that
endorsements and public appearances would enable him
to suppon and devote more time to his traininJ.
Hit training for swimming has brought him to this
hiah·profile point. Like the ~l ~ard_hc__w.iUshave off
the day before his. first. race Sunday, he C:[lpeCts talk of
acvcn sold\ to vanish once th'e r~ce 1s over.
World-~ord holder Mlchael Gross of West Ger-
many. he said, probably will win that 200-meter freestyle
competition.
after serving of spaghc11i 10 the grateful cries from the S:23 left 1n the game. -athlet~s. That put Dallas at L-1 and spoiled things for tbe
Sitting alone a t a table. Vaughan Thomas. a crowd of 67 139 at the Cardinals' first game here after
member ofthe.~!ah ro~ng team,"asn'.t eating. -Uyeanin St. b:rois. That-wan.036-shon of-SU-n Devit-
" I'm the cox. he said. a l11tlc mournfully. "'They Stad ium capacity although a local television station
don't like me to. put o n ~eight... . bought 3,000 seats so game could be shown locally.
Thomas saj{1 the Bnush team )Vas a recent am val Most of the empty seats wen: in an upper comer of the
to the villa.ge antr spend1og several "'eeks al a training top deck along the goal inc.
camp outs.de Seoul.
"The accommodations are quite nice." he said.
"The pro blem is there 1s a lack of quiet places to go.··
Quote of the day
"l want a chance to contribute to this team. I
~wake up Monday momingand I have no bruises.
That ain't right. I should be bruised. I feel I'm
,etti!1J paid dam ~ell, and I'm not able to do
anythma for my money. I feel undcrworked an~
overpaid. l-want to feel hke I'm pulling my-share
of. the load." -Chicago Bears third-string
quarterback Jlm Harlta•p.
Nordako1 powen to victory
MARINA DEL REY -Bob Nor· ;a =k of Van Nuys, Calif.. set a powerboat
record Monday, traveling from San
rancisco to Marina del Re}-in fi ve hours.
S7 minutes and 22 seconds.
The time was documented and sanctioned by
Pacific Offshore Powerboat Racing Association of·
ficials.
Nordskog. 75. had the pre\ ious record of seven
tiours;two minutes and 39-sccond~.
Actor Chuck Norris holds the diesel record of
seven hours. 41 minutes and 19 seconds, which he set
last month.
TELEVISION-
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: New York
Yankees at Oeveland.. WPIX.
4:30 p:m:--BUEBALL!Clllcago'UiDS at
Philadelphia, WGN.
6:30 p.m. -BEACH VOLLEYBAlli Pro
men's competition from Santa Cruz (tape),
ESPN. -•
7 p.m . -BOXING: Manin Quiroz vs. Joe
Rivera in 10.round super-lightweight bout from
the Forum, Prime Ticket.
7:30 p.m .. -WATER S&JING: National
Barefoot Championship from Houston (tape),
ESPN.
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Atlanta at Docteen (may be blacUd out in some areat),
TBS.
RADIO
7 p.m . -BASEBALL: Kansas City at
M&els. K.MPC (710).
7 p.m. -BASEBALL: SanErancisc<utSan
Diqo, KFMB (760).
7:30 . p.m. -. BASEBAlli Atlanta at Doden. KABC (790).
Samaranch rips dope users Ashe undergoes
tests to find out
numbness caQse
.
G WC spllrers sharp
SEOUL (AP) -The head of the International
Olympic Committee used his harshest words yet Monday
in condemnina drup in s~ns. saying the users were no
better than common cnm1nals.
.. Dopinaequalsdeath," IOCPrestdent Juan Antonio
Samaranch said tn opcnma the committce·s 94th seis1on. ~I use has come in for tncreasing anentton from
Samarancb in recent yean. He focused on it durina his
speech at me open1n1 of the last session in CaJpry.
Alben&, last February. and helped put tQldher an
international conference on the subject in Ottawa 1n June.
But the lanau.aar in his speech, presented at South
Kora's NatWnal Theater. was his strongest ever. puJhn1
no punches When tt came 1011hletes. coaches. tr11ners and
docton who bttak the rules in Karch of bttJer
perfonnanca throuah chemical means. "Alu. &be thieves of sports performantt. hke thetr
criminal countttpans in 50C'tel). are f0tt"er stnv1na to
find new methods. often assisted by sp«1ah1t1 who attach
tittle amportanc:e to their oath or the code of tthao they are suDOC*d to respect, .. Sama ranch said'. .. Yn. dopina equals death:· he rqatcd. "Dalth
pbyllOlopca.lly. W'lth the profound. 10mC11ma tr·
~--aJwrauon of the body's normal ~ tbrollll incKU•bte manipulataon. Phyiical dt•th. at
cenaia ll'llic ~ an rec;ne yan have shown.
.. And tbe9 aho death ofchf sptnt and antetl«t, ~the
8CCfPIAIKlt of chratina. b)-d1ttu1t1n1 one·s potential. 1n
NCOlftil:illf OM'• irMICkqu.cy or unwalhnJMIS to bt ••it&d wtth oanelfor tran~nd one·, hm1t•o.
.. And finaH~ mor.ll dtalh, I> ,,r~insonc lfde tacto
'
outside the rules of conduct demanded by any human
toeiety."
Last week. the Seoul organizers' doping control
npen said that if results at recent international
champsonshaps hold true for Seoul. about IS athletct coul
fad dope tests at the Games. The e~pen, Dr. Chan K.i-
hona. also said the number reflects a '1dccreasin1
tendency" .. ..s the dangers of drug use become better
known.
Twelve athletes amona the 7.0SS entered in the Los
Anaeles Games in 1984 tes\rd positive. At stoul, more
than 12,000 athletes are expected to compete, and tesuna
will be broad·bascd. wtth at leaS1 four athletes in each
event undcraoin& unnalu1s.
S.maranch c:aUed on an 1ntcrnat1onal c:onfermtt of
sports ministers in Mo;co~ 1n No"·ember to accept an
anti1trua charter dnwn up at lht Ottawa conference and
prnmted to the IOC on Monday.
··we sincerely hope that the wholf of the anter·
nauoul commu~ 11r1t1 JOlft 11r1th us '° that this
necalU)' fiaht may at last be conducted on the required
ICale .. he ta•d • ~ 2Ath Summer<1ames tieain Saturday. in a s\lte·
of-me.an siadaum about fi\t m1ln ano•• the Han Rivef
m>i1i thi site of Slmaranch's 'PC«h. The president
praitcd the South K0ttan IO"ttnmcnt and sports laden for their prcperauon1 for the Games. an whiCh athlttei
from a record 161 nation arc d~ to comptte and Ent
will rn«t We" 1n Ol~mpic comJ)l't1tton for the fint USM
tnl.)'Ca~~~·~====\~
NEW YORK (AP) -Former
Wimbledon and U.S. Open cham-
pion Arthur Ashe said Monday he
hOpes to be released from a local =by the end of the week after
ina tests to determine what ca numbness in has hands.
.. , had t0me problems with mr,
hands but I can't give more detaals. •
he •id from bas hospital room at New
Yort Hospalal·Cornell Medical
Center.
"We're try1na to keep it H con· wned as potltblt until ~know more
aboul the ftnal diapom, .. Ashe ta id.
He •id M felt numbness in hlS
buds while attcndina the flnt Wttk of'* recently mmplned U.S. Optn ....... Tiw 4S.yar-old Ashe rehttd from
tlle pro tmn11 tour an 1980 af\er
tuflmas a bean attack 1n 1919 Wlownil an appearance at a ttnna• 118daaasdinic .
Albe unclerMnt quadruple b\ipess
hllft ....., in I 979 and had a dcNblt..,.... fout ~liter afkr a
llCOlid Mlrt 1nack.
i,
BJ JON n&OUSON ....... ,... ... .
Golden Wat women·s volleyball
Coecb Al Glsparian has had his share
of IOOd teams .nm the Rustlen
winni• over IO percent of their
malehel durina his ftve-year tenure,-
Comina otr a third-place finish at
tbe Mate tournament a year qo."'this
MUOD has o.p.rian more ~xcated
1Mn ev«. WedDaday. Golden West opens ill -.on by hostina a pool
play tournament.
"from 10p to bouom. this 11 the
mOlt athletes I've ever had." =-llid ... Riahl now, 1f the llU pus out. wc•re bt'tter now IMn we were th~uanen of' the
wa~•~ the teat0n last year:·
ne .._,. IOp playen from the 1987 ...S a.ve movtd on to Otvaaon I dooll. todle optimism staru wtth
Nebratb ltlnlfer Jeckte Cook. a
1916 1Nd111e Of Fountatn Valle') ~Who...-multi~spon Alf· "IJ':e~ have any kind of year,
• tril be tM bat pla)ef we've ever W." OHJIW ...... f.~ Md at
._ 10 Top JO tchooh cell for htt for
niex.t year, She's capeble of domi·
nabna any same:· ·
A ICCOD4 transfer, 6-loot-1 mtddle
blocker Sabrina Dennis. staned at
Fresno Slate her freshman )Ur. then.
red-tbined and took a year off. •
"They Jive us. two proven top
Division I players." Guparian said.
Blttlina for the setter position are:
Dannie Doll. an outside hitter _,
Trabuco Hills who it the best alh~
competias; Corona del Mar produa
Jennifer Noonan. the 1tt1er for tbc
S. KinD' 1915 CIF title equad who
returned ftom the Univenity tA
Arizona; and Troy freshman Lall
Fallda.
Other ltlrtina outside bitten ift.
elude Maureen Flanapn. a (rnhmn tom Maacr ~ ud Sbaroa l.aWIOIJ. a talunan tom leftcley wbo wnt
to Lona leKll Slaw but left tht
.....,... DoD's natusal mster cou~
lllerlha\lineup. ••'*• tor lbe other tiriddtc blodllr_JIDllllOll :*Deann.,. J.-Fa1c:oae. a ... wlllO is IM .... ,= ............ .. .... ia Hollywood. f1a. ..._ 1Rll•ct w, OW. .., Nia,_ ,..,.._. 5'MMt AUi Ill; •
,
'
~c ... ....... ,
IDOd. Unlike lat year when no one
behind ltecklen'lltald carried lhc bell
fnOftlt\uJ.Stimetperpmcand 1he
tecond lelldant outside receiver on
the team caytht 24 pa1ses, there is
trealdep(ll.
By poaidon, they're an 1mpre'i~1ve poup:
QUARTERBACK -This t!I 1he
least of Workman's worries Wlth
sophomore Mike Angelovic, a former
Al1;-CIF B!a Five quanerback who led
..
. .... ........... '--.....
llarll Crati often • blC tariet for PH••n1 aw. Edison Haab to 1he CIF Bia Five co-~hampionship in I 98S before spend·
ana a year at Weber State, set as th<:
1taner. 16 times for 78 yards as a freshman: tiaJ to ao deep from almost an>-whcre.
Aqelovic is the third ma stnng of Maier Dei product Mike McGhnn 1s "What we've got tQ do as ~t the
former Ch&JJCrs to start at q1,1ar-movins into the pactutt also after an youna receivers v.ath ab1fit} to ex-
1erback for OCC since Workman's imprnsive intra~uad scn!"mafe ecute and do the 1h1ngs tha1 Jeff
anival in 1986. He follows Jon Saturday. All will see acuon in Bamhan and David Lorenz d ad last
Nowotny and Jarrett. Saturday aftunoon's opener at Rio year. Those guys were 1echnicaans
"It just so happens lhere were a lot Hondo. . Royal Wilbon as 'cttmg there fHter
of nice quarterbacks around playing Jl'UUJIAC'K -Rosenqu1s1 is ,the than anyone. He packed 1t up fast and
at Edison," Workman said. "The incumbalt(l61 yardsayearago)and hcwas1othcall-suupmesobed1dn't
reason was when a freshman class wiU start the opener. but he as being have the summer \\Ork:·
came into Edison, we found 1hc best pushed by frnhmen Travin Lui, who TIGHT END-Three freshman -
auys to play quarterback and they JUSt averqed 8.1 yards per carry a1 Bolsa red-shirt Bill Dorman of Edison.
happen 10 still be around.'' Grande. and Jason McGehee, an All· John Apostle of Hunungton &ach
Hecompletcd 152of250passes(61 CIF Bi& S selcctaon who averaged and Shane Talben of Costa Mesa -
percent) for 2,359 yards and 22 Q.verseven yards per carry en route 10 will all play and are dead even in the
touchdowns while throwing only· pinina l ,S70 yards. banlc for the stanan' berth.
seven interttplions his senior )ear at "Brad is the veteran." Workman "We'll have 1odec1dc down the lane
Edison. At Weber Staie, he became said ... He picks up blitzes and picks who wall get the JOb and any of those
disaruntled with what he perceived to up thinp on the run. H e has a slight three could wind up stanmg. Two
be a poor situation after a red-shirt cdlC in blockin&, bu1 1he 1wo weeks ago. I'd have said Dorman
freshman season and returned to freshmen have an edge carrying the would start. Bui ..... c looked at the
Coast beU." scnmmage film and no" "e don't
While it's been nearly 1hrcc )Cars WIDE RECEIVERS -The last l'i know."
since he saw ex1ensive acuon. like impressive. startina with sophomore Gnwma} bc.ilsedauhe.ught-end
Workman says, nil~ not li ke he's Ken Grius Wflo caught 5 passes at his ongmal pos1t1on. IO passing
been working al Amencan Can Co." Utah in 1986 before returning and s11uations.
In limi1ed action last season, he sining out last season. He "'as an A.II· LINE -From lefl to ngh1. tbe
completed 5of12 passes for 79 yards. C lf Southern Section pack m 1985. o ffensive lane conS1Sts of freshman
"He does not throw the ball as hard Mark Craig, a two-time 11-CIF tackle Mark Fely (6-foot-5. 2701 of
as Jarrett, bu1 he's a more accurale Central Conference receiver with 129 Edison. freshman guard Tim Warad~
Iona passer." Workman said. "The catches for 1.889 yards and 17 (6-foot. 225) of Un1\erSll).
_ Iona ball is probably the best ball he touchdowns his final two years at sophomore center Brian .\llge1cr <b-
throws. He has enough arm strength Newport Harbor. left Long Beach foo1-3. 245), Torpestad (6-foot-4.
and that's partially covered wiLh his State before bis freshman season 265) and Pessler (6-foot-4. 275).
ability to know where to throw and started last year but e nrolled at Coast "There are a 101 of 1hingc; to be
• when to throw it." too late to play. pro,•ed." Workman said. "lt''i a good
Backina him up 1s Ste\e Calhoun Two freshmen, Ro~al Wilbon of r.roup. but }Oung and untested
out of Santa Ana Valley, who "im-Santa Ana and Tim Parker of Gar-including 1he 11gh1 ends ...
pressed us with hisathleuc abilil)' and dena. offer great speed. altho ugh Fcly. a "pleasant urpnse." mo\ ed
throwina the football. He did real well Parker is a transformed tailback "'ho from No. 3 on the dep1h chart in Just a
at the beginning, hil a flat spot, and is still learning 1hc position. Trabuco couple of ""eeks, and lis backed b~
then boom. too,k another giant step. Hills' Jeff Dooley, an All-CIF Desert-Jerry Carbajal and K C\'111 Le\\1S. who
Two weeks ago, I was no1 comfortable Mountain Conference selccuon. ha'> can also play guard. Dennis
with him. but lam now." worked his way into the p1llure Wilbanks. his bro1her Dan Wilbanks
Red-shirt freshman Mike Crowe recently. and Craig Wille back u_p Warad~.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tund•y. September 13. 1... -
Bi h school football.log~
_.__. (·----) ~ •LMAa (1-t) , .. .,... L.-.-1
·~~ I \t-91 left o.n-.. ID-"-'fleeo (el NH I
lo»--4 eei-H•ls (el MV
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Nl~lllll•nt10tl BMC!! let OCC1
MUWTINOTON tc:H 10· I) ,._. ... _,
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(~ C.tt LAMlle) OCorOIM ~Mar
MATm• Dtll 10·11 ,.,..,..~, cs-Y'9w ~) tt 1 lrvlne 11 F-taln Vellilv
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s l~eelflc:• (l'IOml) S~t HhlOOfl Heroor
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0 1-0-Hlh (el ln1lne)
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S»-Me'-0.1 re1 S• ao .. 01-SI JoM 9otCO let HB 0,.....1 HYftllftelot1 &eK't' 0!1~111 Velie\/' (el OCC1
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Nl~n'te' lat "''"' Seat r
Game-busters
Last week's plays of 40 yards or more
•57-Kednc Po\\e 1Founta1n \·all~). run.
•41-Al Togonon (\\esumnster). pass from Bobby Elhou.
•40-Tony Pena <Mater De1 I. TD pass from Danny O'Neil.
•40-Kealii Clifford C~tater Dea). pass rrom Danny O'Neil.
•40-R.yan Nash (\\'oodbndge).
interception return for touchdo"n.
•43-Ryan Nash (\.\.'oodbndge).
pass from Fred.Schweer
21
0
weSTM1M1T•• <•· 1 > (I--' uee-l
t V•lenelll SI0-.1 Mltllllell' ~_.. (l'!IOIM)
~ Vellev (1*'Nll
07-Mlulon Vieio (nomel Ol~lne' Cel Wm\lrl
• 011-0C..n View"' (l\Ol'nel
o.--f'tll V111e¥• (II H8 1
N)-el Hut'llnelOfl IMee!'•
Nlo-EdfMlll' (N>tne)
WOOOMIOGa-11·0)
(l'".c* Gem ~)
2'2 Ml' Clement• Sl~ootnlJj (el TLAlllll
SD-Univen l111 (el !Nine) S>C>-lrvlne (11 lrYIMI o.-<e1won (et trvlne)
0 1......C.oste MMe' (•I OCCI
07l-t.,evune HI'!'' let lnl!NI <>a-Or•""' let Et ~> N-.1 LeouM h•Cll' NIC>-Trebual HlliJ' (et trvlnel
•42-Huy K.i eu (Costa \1~).
pass from Rtch Schones
Last week's rushing leaders Top·lO
I. Mike Belle (II"\ 1ne). I -I 5 J: 1.
Dean Manmez (Ocean \'1e~ ). 17-94:
3. Kedrick Powe (Fountain Valle)'),
21-94: 4. Tony Bonilla (Costa Mesa).
9-92: 5. Cus Miranda (Edison).
17-100.
Orant(e County
hlafi K hool
rootball
•
and freshman Jeff Bailey. who suf-"That's the most qUlllit~ since l''i: Pe~sler and Torpestad respectt\el~.
fercd a rib injury early m camp. are been here." Workman said. "Somt> of "'htle UTEP 1ransfer Warren Ta~ lor
also available. it is a little green and will make some would have a ood shot at starting
1-4;:_ _______________ ..,.__-miitalcesfo1:awhite, ua 1 ) I'> • had he not in1urcd his ac nda\:':'
TAILBACK -Robert Lee's two-very, very good. We have 1he poten-Wednesda ): a look ac rhe detrnS<'.
-1A1t week~• passing leaders --
1. Fred Schweer (Woodbndge).
17-33-0. 227 yards. 0 TDs: 2. Bobb}
Elliott (Westminster). 16-43-2, 196.
yards, I TD: 3. David Henigan
(fountain Valle)), 14-19-0. 181 ~ ards.
2 TDs: 4. Rand) Karlmer (Ocean
View). 16-23-0, 179 )ards. I TD: 5.
GrcgAngelov1c (Edason). 20-29-1. 158
Dally Pilot .el~ttoo
j
..
time All-CIF Southern Conference
credentials at Sana-Ana speak for
themselves. It was bard to 1ell just
what Lee wanted before landing at
OCC, stating at one point he was
retirina from football indefinitely.
1. Ftn. Valley (1-0)
_Pirates' tqp offensive prospects
Ht. Wt.
6-3 :?45
2 . Santa Ana (l-0)
S: SuvltF (1-0) He's currently battling a back
injury which has allowed him to suit
up for only four days since practice
but not once last week.
Pl8yer,PMIU.
Brian Allaeier. c
Mike Anaelovic. qb
John Apostle, 1c
Mark Craig. wr
5-11 190
6-1 224
6-6 203
6-3 231
6-5 270
5.9 185
'6-5 230
6-0 212
6-0 :?15
Commnts
returner. staning
red·sbirt transfer. starter
incoming freshman
red-shin transfer. staner
incommg freshman
incoming freshman. sumer
Bakersfield College transfer
red-shin transfer. s1arter
inJured freshman. taner
incoming freshman
yards. 0 TDs: 6. Tim Newben; (:-.lc"'pon Harbor). 12-28-2. 142 yards. OTDs.
7. Dave Lincoln (II"\ me). 10-10.1. 138 )3rds. I TD: 8. Danny O' ctl (Mater
Dei). 8-18-0. 131 )ards. I TD: 9. Rich Schones (Costa Mesa). 6-14-1. 129 yards:
10. T) Pnce (CorQna del Mar). 11-23-1. 117 yards. I TD.
4 . Mt•ton Vjo(l-0}
"There's no doubt he can play,"
Workman said. ..The problem is
eettina to the point he can play m o ur
system. He looked good those four
days and he was practici ng on a tender
t.ck.
"We're not sure what his condition
is. He did not respond 10 1reatment
and he'll ao to a back specialist on
Wecr-ncsday. Leci s Ocfinilel y way In
the futu~. lfhe plays the third pme.
it will be in upset at this point.'
·But there is depth behind him with
Bakersfield College transfer Brian Georac and retumer T yler R1ddet
out of Costa Mesa High. who carried
Bill Dorman, te
Mark Fcly, t
Brian Gcorse, tb
Ken Grias. wr-Le
Roben Lee, tb
Travin Lw, fb
Jason McGehee, fb
Darryl.Pessler. t
Tyler Riddell. tb
~ Roseuquist. fb
Shane Talben, 1c
Warren Taylor. c
Tom T orpcstad. g
Tim Warady. g
oyal Wilbon. wr
. ~·
5-11 !00
6-4 :n s
5.9 175
6-0 220
6-6 223
6-2 252
6-4 165
6-0 225
5-11 270
incoming frc hman
rc1uming staner
returner. pwshmg
fCLUrni1*Starle:t'-
mcom mg freshman
UTEP transfer, pushing
returning '86 starter
incoming freshman. starter
incoming freshman
Last week's rettivta1 leaden
I. Mike Cook (Foun~m Valle)). 7-131: 2. Warren J ohnson (Corona del
Mar). 6-89: 3. To ny Pena (Mater Dei). 6-86; 4. Jim Stanley (Newport Harbor).
6-71 : 5. R}an Nash (Wbodbndge). 5-3: 6. Patnck Reilly (Edison). 5-26.
Last week's scorhl1 leaclen
I. Rand) Karliner(Occan Vie"). Ryan Nash (Woodbndge). Ton) Bonilla '
(Costa Mesa). 12 each.
Corona del Mar, Harbor roll in ten.nis
Corona del Mar H1gh's girls 1ennas
team pu1 host Valencia a\!.a). 17-1.
and Newport Harbor was an ea-5)
victor at Sunn) Hills. rolling to a 14.4
#
non-league \lCtoi:
Corona lost.a shutout "hen illness
forced a set of singles to bt' defaulted
Dawn Baird sv.ept 1n single!>
5 . EcHeon (1-0)
8 . Eape~na (1-0)
7 . Mate r Del (0-1)
• ElToro {l-0)
9 . Valencia ( 1 -0)
10. Cdll (1-0)
•
SoxpUll out to 41/2 ~ g~me AL East lead over Yanks
' ~ ·•• T~eb~~crs_h_a-,·e "on onl} fou r ol thearlast 21 games. snapped St. Louis'~' en-game"' inning streak. combm~ wtlh cnug Leffens Roger !)amuC'ls. Scott •rem 'he Atseclate.d Pre11 . Tbc.&pos set a sea so-i..Ai. "ou:u~nd-broke OUl of Ganclt.s.andJoc Pnce for-1he \ ie10n_. .... ____ ....,..u-.,i I05t 1~ ia l fQ.U.r~dunng-thc SWttJ> an-New--~· Carmelo uamne1 It'd off the Padres· ninth with hlS ..----\ ---York. ~ "'.Ceken~ sconng drought t~a1 sa" 1hem go 22 1·3 I"• l This time, not even C1audell Washington could save WMte Sox!, Brewers l : Mike Diaz and pinch hatter innings without a run" hile being sbut out t"1ce 1n three 14lh home run to break up the <;huto ut b1cl and Keith
the New York Yankees. Russ Morman singled homt" runs with two outs rn t he -games by Nc.v. York at Olympic Stadium. . Moreland foJLo"ed "tth anothC'r homer off Samuels..
• Wuhin1ton, whose two 'game-winning homen ·ninth inning. foiling Mil"'aukee's trategy as Chicago .. 'Bf}n Smith. 11 ·?· ~ent ix innmg for the vte"tory Garrchscamc on ~ndgot Ont' ou1 before PnC'C finished for 1durinf the weekend pulled New York back into the rallied to win. wHilc Joe Magrane. ~9 took the loss. his third save.
iAmcncan Leaaue East, struck out lo end a furious ninth· . With t~o outs in the ninth. Harold Bajncs doubl~ G.lallts t,Paclrcs %: Dennis Cook allo~ed no runs and * *
'innina rally Monday night as the Cleveland Indians held off Dan P1C$Ac, 1-:?. The Brc"er then mtenttonaJI) t~o h11s O\'Cr 5 1-3 annmgs m his maJor-le.1g\Jf debut as ~ 4. ~•drft 2 Eoea 14, .ea,..... 2 ,otrtb.;Jay~~!6~1ippcd 41/: games behind division-walked Carlton Fisk. but ~lorman and Otaz follo\\ed vasmng San Francisco beat San Otego .._ .. ~~~,.; ,,. .. Otuo....... n .LOUIJ ... _.. _,.. ... L .......
ileadina Boston, which beat Baltimore 6-1. Detroit. with RBI singles. Cook. JUSt recalled from Class .\ o\ ~ Phoenl\, :-,:::,. ;: ~ . ;::--~~ ?c : : ~ ~ c::;:g ~: • ~ ~.Cf." ~: ~:
'winnina for j1Kt the founh time in 21 tries, defeated run ~:fl":s~·i~g• ~:n~e~;?k;~~t~~~t 3P1l~i~~~h~~~ .._ • *--...... 2 __... ~, c-. 1 ~... ·,.;
00
0 ~"·, ,; : i: ~~ H H ~=-.·~. ;i H
1 Toronto 6-S and remained 3'h behind the Red Sox. ,..... ., ,.,... ~ ~ ---••. • -·-
T ·1· 8 I h y k 11·ed t'. fi · th hjuer as Seattle beat Minnesota in 1he Kingdome. ""1MlltOM •tr• you OCAeO l'llf\.AD9""'" ..... > • > u .. e.' • o o o ..._,. 1 o • o w-10 t o 1 t
raaaoa • ,t e an ecsra 1 aor averunsan e Cotto's eighth homer marked the first by the ...,.. ":'~~': w ...... o ~;~': •••• ••• ., =' ~~=~~:-~ "~ =:. ~n: =i:. ~:~~ ninth on a three-run homer by Jack Clark and solo M . lead' ff h Ii h C .. .,.,. ,0 1 0 _.,19 .,,, ....,0 ,000 •·-· •o•• ~· ,., • .-...... ,.0 _,,,. t110 ...._. >1 >1 bomenbyLuisA&uayoandJoelSkinner. anners 1ngo 1e1rst1no1ng 1 is season. ono .,_0 u 11 icH>r"'"'' ·1 ••• ~· •nl o--•c< n11 c-· ,,00 ..,.._ .. •a• ._,. , ... .,..,_,. 1110
Rafael Santana and Rickey Henderson singled wilh connected apinst Allan .\ndcrson. 13-9. who lost for 1he :;:::,. 1 • • • ~ 10 1 •, 1 =:,. : : ~: !.":',; ! : ~ ! ~· • • • o ....... c ~ i ~: =:i-• ~ ~ ~: ~.::.."":• ~:: ~
'
twoout• brin•in•upWashington. sec:ondtimeinninedemion . °"-1• !g: ~~,. :::: Y.JI ••tt se.._11> 1 1 11 .=.-: ::::~:,~.~· "' ~11 1111 ... _,. s1 u ., .. ~ In the National League·. __ Lwr•c •o t1 ~" •••• ,...,,....., 1 ••• c...,....• •••• ~· 00 1:°'..-."" c ~ Mc:8e• >tea_ -A¥tn" •••> On Friday n~I, Washington homered in the ninth ~u .,...~, ~"• ... a:r'°""~ • •: • -tt., "'ti• t c. t ........ ... = n ....... .,. • 1' ' .-. > • • e
I to ....._, '"""'tro•L 1~s tw""-run homer in the 18th i nnina Mell J, Pinta!: The' e\' York ~cts' countdown 10 a....•... 1 o o' c ..... c " l· 1 ~.. > • • °"'""" 31 · • ,_ • ., • t-n : • 1 IMeo'-• 11 • • ........ .., ' 0 • • ~ ""°"' v-ha • j·-· 0000 , ...... U Jl l O -· Jt•t .w'JD 1'01 • ~D ettO ~""· t tOt Sunday alsb meant victory and a four.game sw"p of the t t m111c moment is s1an1n~. o.-,. ,.. o o o.·-· 1 1 1 • C.-• • .-. 0 c.........0 ; ~ ~: -~ .., "'"":;'0 •• •-• t,._... 1 • 1 0
facina Oevcland relief ace Doug Jones. Washington innina to 11ve e" Yori.. :i v1ctol) o"er '1s1ung o....... • • • • ,_ ~:..,::,. 12 s wt ~"-~:..-..~:...,...:,. • i::.""' .·: ~: T-21 Mu" !Tiaen · Gary Caner hi1 a home run \!.llh one out in the ninth ~"" ~::: °"""u d o o o o :,-: ~ n: ~=:" 00 00 _.._ • '* oe1-1 ;:::,:... ! : : :
hitilinedrivedownthcriaht-fieldlinethatlandcdinches 7.tt~rahth· ~ucmfc 1h!o Met' magic number for ='" Jl,U!,. :_ · n ate J ~ 1 :: = :::=: o•u Loe-s.-~••"O(.~· ~ ;)'"9· •-,_.. ... -:' •• .,_ 1 foul. c an ana e st tat e 10 . ~ ,. ,. __ , o.-... w-... 0 , _ °""".., 2 ~-t••""-':,,'°'::.. 0 _ • .,, •-M
E·l-whe~ 1'n lhe AL Mondn'.'· It was the Mets' fifthstra1~ht \lCtory and 1he1r l5th1n .... .,..... ., ., .,_, l-Jt>li•• OP-<"'<.-I ~-·~-:-Ult .. so r....:.":."'9 ~ ~~
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Bruins move up to No. ·2
--but Don~hue not ready for it
UCLA coach war ns one game
doesn't m ake football season
LOS ANGELES (Ae) -In the wake of a stunning
4'1·28 victory over Nebraska. the UCLA Bruins moved
up to No. 2 in this week's Associ3ted Press footbaJI poll. h was the school's hiabest ran Icing since the 1980 season.
While C:O.Ch Terry Donahue appeared pleased wi th
the hiah rankina. he's not abou1 to lay claim to havi ng a ~m.ready to contend for thr nauonal champ1onsh1p at
thas tame.
.. It means a great deal 10 be ranked No. 2." Donahue
said Monday during his tAeckl ) meeting with reporters.
"(But) I don't think the poll'I ha ... e any meaning until
about the e11hth week of the '>Cason.
"Thas isa young team. Ut' not put 11-1nto the Hall of
Fame this week. Give 11 11 "-cek·s. One game does not a.
·.season make. as we know That sounds tn te. but It's true ·:
The Brums tACre ranked fifth btfore whtpp.ng
Nebraska Saturday night in a game which wasn'1 a clo..c
·'11 the score indicated ( L.\ led :!8-0 a~4 minutes of
play and 38-13 a t halfume .
UCLA. 2-0, accumulated three first-place votes a nd
1,019 points in the \.Olin& of sporuwnters and
sponsc.sters. ~fending nauonal champion M1a m1. Fla ..
idle last w~kend. remained :'.'io. l with 46 first-place
votes and 1,082 poin ts The l:fomcances are 1-0.
Nebraska, 2-1, fell nine pl3ccs 10 I Ith 1n 1h1s weck·s
poll. Clemson 2-0. and Oklahoma. 1-0. continued 10 hold
the third and fourth spots, "'htle Southern California, 2-0.
moved up one notch 10 fi fth
Roundinaout the top I Oare Auburn. GcorgJa, Not~
Dame, Louisiana State and Florida State.After Nebraska
are West Vir1m1a. Alabama. South Carolina. 'Mich•gan,
·Penn State, WashJngton. Ohio State, Iowa and O klahoma
State. •
UCLA, which has never won a national cham-
pionship in football, was 6-0 and ra nke<J sccono cxhrnd
Alabama in 1980 btfo re losing at Arizona. The Bruins
finished 9-2 that year.
UCLA has bttn one of college football's bttter
~ms 1n rttent )Cars. a\ c-v1dc-nctd b> bowl victone1
an each of the last Sill season~. But the Bnuns haven't bttn
ranked higher than fifih at the end of a season since 1965,
wlten \My were founb.
Donahue has often sara that winning a nauonal
championship isn't the pnmary goal at UCLA.
"One of the goals v.e've had is to win the fiational
championstup," he said. "but a morejmmediategoal is to
win the (Pacaf~O) conference title and beat our
crosstown rivals {Southern California). .
"We try to win every week that we play, but 1(
somebody asks me if Nebraska is as imponant as the
pme up at Washington. 1he answer is no ...
The Bruins open the Pac· I 0 season at Washington
apin.st thc 17th-ranked Huskies on Oct. '1.
"I think beating Nebraska was an important hurdle
for us," Donahue said. "Jf we're going to win a national
championship, we ~a ve 10 beat a Nebraska an
Oklahoma. a Miami. I 1hink this game took us to a new
level. That may bt·a break.through toward a national
championship.
· ") sec this. team il'I a different li$}1t. This team has
~ten a Big Eiaht cor1tender. Bot this team has not won
on the road. That's the next tesungground. We're going to
. know the answer to that in about three weeks ...
The Bruins would appear to be a lock to bt unbeaten
soin& into the Wuhington game. On Saturday night
UCLA entertains winless Long Beach State. and then bas
an ofTday.
UCLA entered Saturday n1gbfs game having lost
three umcs to Nebraska in the last fi ve }ears -by 42·10
in 1983, 42-3 in 1984 and 42-33 last )'C'ar.
''This was a pmc that v.e pointed to. there's no
question about that, .. Donahue sa1d. "This team ticked
me off. I wanted to put tha t skeleton to rest. I think that we
were frustrated With our previous losses to Nebruka. We were seared up to play ...
fhc win was the IOOth for Donahue since he
becomina the UCLA coach tn 1976. His career record 1s
I ()(). 36-7.
UCLACJuar1crbac'kTroy Aikman. who completed 13
of 22 peacs for 205 yards against Nebraska, reacted
positively when informed that the Bruins were ranked second thas week.
"f t.hink that's areai. •· he said. "1 thmt it's nahtfull1.
deserved. We played well enou&)l to be No. 2. But we can t
,et caught up irr all that right now. We've sulJ aot a Iona
way to IO· We've aot nine games lefi ·•
NL MAa ....,..,.. .. -.n
T.-~ • ,.,_ .. lllACT• H I .... ..,,. ............ ,,_, ,. Jte ,. lllrftl ll.tC9 • ~
~ .......... ,.....,
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~, ... ~. .. .. no. I 111 • laaCTA 11 '1 _. ..... -ua •t •..,. ---0.-,,....,., , •• , •••
.,..... -loalwt!V 1~J9 l t .. _..._,v_ ••
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OI -· ~I J• 0.-. 0 f~l •• Ht -,,_., ..... ,.,_._, ..
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...,._ llACa I • """ .., Oi.rl IM!Cf• It-II -1119• ._. 0.-1-i •• Ht lit • -~1-1 l •n -1.-.. .....,_ f'**t , .. •• IM .... -• ......... _...,. II• c...... .... tori-i '" ..... , ,.. .,,. """ "' ........ ~ '"'·~---...~~,,__ ......... .....
,,... ........ alll1fltn ~
cou•M ... ,. ........
UCI •I UCLA, l, Pacific Cllrltl'-'1 ti Cllrlll c-.. !NIN.) --· c..i Lutwen ., UCI, t.
CCM.L8H WOMaN ...... v
StMford •I UCt, J;lD. .,...v
UC Devit ti UCI, '· s.tw9'1'
Cel Stele He'fWPfd ti UCI, noon.
COMMUMl'fY CCM.LIO• MSM T•v G01CMn WMI •t CerrllOI, ), 0r9119e COHI vi
Cuvwnuc. al Gr°'-'• l :lO TtlwWY le\' DleeO Mew Pl Orentt COPll, l
~ ~ WMI Soccer C~. ,..30, OrPlltlt COH I
t i MW.Coste T°"""*'*''• 10 • ._.. GOld9ll __, Soccer CUP, "30
co•"•.-TY cou.•Ga WOMaN T•v Or1"9fd el Go10tn Wnt, 3.
F'*Y
Oranee COMt Golden West
ll'•ll1ttl, I s.tw9V
leltersfleld Festlvel. s.MtV
leker-sr.eld Fes11vp1,
~ , •Law ••h
American Scott Rohr of Ore.ham, Orea .• •••• u be ram
throUCb Ka n11e>n, Korea, near the demilttarl&ed .one San-
day•• be take. part ID the Olympic Torch relaJ. T•MNtS
Hlltl lcMel eltts
.......,, ~ 14, Sulwl't ""' 4 Slllll9I
•
Baird CNHI def lttdmtn. ,.,, def. JohoMll'I.
6-l; def LM, 6·2, Luets INHI I01l 2-6, 4·6,
won •·O, SMn (NH) lo'I 2·6. •·•. won 4·0
OeUllltS
hnedlct·9U!ll'lll (NH) def S. PPCll·f Pact.,
4·1, def Poner·J_., 6·3, 1191. Cetes·Slltlto
6·0; Smlltl·Cr•rv {NH) won 6·2. •-1. 4•2,
Ktlldell·Crooll <NHl won 7·•. 6•3, ,_O
O...MltllNftl WAT• .. l'OLO
T'tlf1 ....... , .. ~
COLLI GE
C:-dll M9r 17, V.-.cJa I
SlNl9I DAVEY'S LOCKER C......,, a..ctl) -6
Ffi4Mv 1no:eri lfO DOnrto, 1' ve1iow1e 1 s
l'I, 141 caf\C:o oan . 73 w nd oan. I ctr.ertt 3 Oi\ie inerlt, 31 wl'lltt ie. oau . 186
KulO./I, I ceDtron. 3 ... n.1efu.11. 4 ~l'IHO
UCI T-ntment t i Her1tege Pertr.
~.,
l(e. The«>us (Cl def W11tit ms, 6-0. def·
tttodle, ,.,, def Grtnoer, 6·0, &tin ICI -
4-4, 6-0, 4-2, Kr. TIWOus (C) losl tlY default;
-4-1. 4-0. ~
1 bllla oerc11 , UCI Tourntmet11 et Her•tt11e Pertr. SJrt u.n ·McFt.rltnd CCI def Hu kel·Ku¥Mn·
dd. 6-l, dllf CrutR.a)!llUutn. 4-J . def. !Owbl· Eneler. •·O, Ho-·ltiSleu IC) wOll ,.2. 4-0,
•·2, Frencl,·Mtncl\e\ter CCI won ,.,, 6·1, 4-2
SUftMy NE~T LANOIMG -S bNIS, 7S
ellllltU 7• sanes DtU 76 bOIHIO. 4S ~at..
111 roe"-h~I\ 13 \CUIO•ll '1 \heect\f\Md 32 calico Deu IS m11ctlttnaous
• .UCI Tc:v.ir.Nmenl t i He"19" P ... lt
COMMUMll'Y COLLEGE
Tfwndllv
Ortnoe Cotsr t i lJC S.nhl aer~rt JV, 10
t m . Goklen Weil et UC S.nrt Berl>er• JI/ I o.m
FrilM'I'
Orange COH I, Golden Wtll •I CueSI• T0ur t1tmen1
Stturdtv
CUHll Tourname111
HIGH SCHOOL
WtdMM!tv
VOLL•YBALL ™' WM41'$ ., .. Sc.Md\lle'
COLLEGE
T.Uv
Founl••,, Vt llev 11umn1 111me 11 c;wc. 7, Trov ti lju11tln11I011 9Hc,,, l , St dd'tl>eCll. ti
Woootirick>e, 3'1S, S.rvflt •' La111.1n1 8Hth,
l.IS, El Toro er Unlven11v l d
MendlY'• tr'MllcfteM
IAH IALL
New·Yn ,._ L.-..
LE.AGUE OFFICE-Granlld (;Onc:lihont t eo·
orovtl 10 move 1,,. Wtlerlowri frencl'llse lo
Welland, Ollltrlo A11rHd 10 tdO two fra ncl'llws
'" OIMn, N. Y , t nd t c1tv to oa namad leter for IN lflf seHon, sul>Mc1 to t DCN"o'1'at bv tl'll
N•tlontl Auoc:ltrlon ot Minor LHllUft
Tllul'Mlllv UCI •• U,,.versltv St n Oleo<> 7.30, Tl\e
Mt"er's •' C,,risr CoP-Irvine 7.JO
Frldtv UCI t i Olllo Stett Tournamen1, Cl'lrtll COi·
ltH trvlnt " L•V•rne Tourr•"'lell•
FOl.lllt•ln Vtrltlo', We"mln•\ter e1 Mlll•ktn Tourntmtnt. Edison •1 T11'1•n. ), Saooietiectr.
11 El MOOene, 3
Fr\dtv
S.NrdtY
°"lo Stett .Tourneme11t L•Verne Tour· nttnelll
Minitr.en Tournament, Corona •oel Mer t • El
Toro, l, Ltouna Beten t i Hunr1ng1.,,., linen.
);IS, woooorlcllle •I ClltOW Cl< l IS
FOO'TIALL ................ u..u.
CLEVELAHO BllOWNS-SioneO Don Strock
eno Sieve si.voen, Quar er1>tai C.OMMUMITY COLL.EGE
w~v GOl<lefl w~1 POOi Plev 1ouu1amen1 2.
Fridtv GrosJmonl t i GOldetl WHI. 1
HIGH SOfOOL
Ttdlv Newoor' HtrDOr tt Ftunt11101on Beecn, l
Eiltncfe •I CeP slrano Ve '•v 3.JO lJn vtn1111
ti Mission V1tl0, • lO, lrvo11e •' Corona Ciel Mar S, Woodl>r1d!le ti Sen C emen•t 7, Loouno
a.tctl •1 Mtltr o.. 1
St~deY M•tt"-an Tournatne111 M.IAMI DOLPHINS-Signed Jon GIH!er, of·
leMlw ltdtlt. HOCJCEV
......... ~l ......
HAltTFOllO WHALERS-SioneO Kevin 01·
nHft, rkllll wlrie. Roger KorlkO, Cellltr, Gt'enl
~. delenlemtn; tl!d Ed ~tslellc trlCI
TOM Mertlrl. i.11 wlf19S,.lo 1wo·v"" contrPCts ~ Ille! SYiva uc-99CKI, ~t wl1111, t!IO
si-er1 Gevon, r •• g, h•ve eltcltd 10 Olev out "" oot r of rhtlr curre111 contrPCt\
T1MH"l4tv •
FOunlfl'\" ~ •C E•lt~dt, l , <Xtan 'Vrew
ti TrttluCO Hllll, 3, Coillt Mei• 11 LOllO S.tel'I
Jtotv, 3 lS, Merine ti Newoorr Hart>Or, S, Loi Aml9oi ti Wesrmlniler, S, O•na Hills al
Leeuna l!lttcll, 1
C .. OSS COUNtllY -LOS A G LES ICINGS-AgrMCS to lerl\'ll
-.... un Mlkt t<rVIM!ii~. center, end Mtrlv
McSortev, .r19t11 wi1111, on mu11;.vetr con1rac11
Announced me retlremerit of aoo Bourne,
TNI ,...., '"' ~'
HIGH SC.HOOL aovs. Glltl.S
Tlwt'Mllv center. · ,
Stturelllv
Mtltr 0.1, Foo11>1n, Buen• Ptrli •nd EIMrtl\Lt t i lrvlM Ptrk, ) IS NEW YOllK llANGEllS-Sillnecl Jt me1
Palrktl, ~wn•n.
• S.turwv Corone del MMr, <keen \/ltw, ~rlna,
Hunt11111ton 9Httf.-Unlvt rs•tv Eolson, Wooo·
llrldet, Leeune leKh In OrtnH Cou111v Cllarn·
olollll'll~ •I we11m1n,1tr •no Eolson.
. Coron• <let ,.,.,, HuntlnglOll Betch, Wood·
llrldee, Unlvenllv •I Leou11• Hiiis lnvifetionel,
•; Meter Del ti Crelo Perk lnvlte1lon1I, a. Merine ., S.n cr.rnenle lnvlt11lone1, 8
PtTTSBUltGH PENGUIN~AIUIOUllCtd Ille rnleNlloll Of Ooul Wooeb, scout.
CO\.tlG~
CLE\tELANO ST A TE-Ntmtd' SUt Ptl· terlOft women's track allel cron counl(V
BuuET IN Bo~RD
Jla.t hrlect Bpdy Conte.t
The." MostJ>crfcctBocl) COf\tC$t'-'-v.'lll be one
of1hc main auractions at Che Health. ports a nd
Funcss Show No,•. 4-6. at the Anah.e1m
-C-onvenuon Ccnttt.
O~n to women 18-30. 1hc con1cs1 will be a
sw1msu11 and aerobtcwcar COO)pcltuon. The
winner will rttc1\.C S 1.000 10 cash plus a
comme rcial cont ract and other gifts. Runner-up
will receive $500 while third place collects Sl50.
Celebril) Judacs will be on hand for 1hc finals
on Nov. S. En1ry dead line is Ocl. 28.
En111 bla nks a rc a va ilable a{ various Sou them
Calrforn1a healch and fitness clul\s and spdns
equipment s1orcs. •\pplicauons may a lso be
o b1a1ncd 11 Mv.la Markc110g Group. 2730
W1lsh irc Blvd . Sullc 600. ·a n1a Monica or by
"-riling BMW Shov. Productions. 3201-b
Harbor Blvd .. Su11e 116. C'osia Mesa. 92626.
Bod7 board Clab .
A SOulhttn C'ahfom1a group of v.omcn ha'e
JOtncd lo form the Pacific W o men's Bod)'board
C1ub. the first o f lls kind o n lhc Wtt1 C<>"t
The m•tn pufllOK of the club 1s for -omen
bodybolrdtn or 111 aaies and le \ els of abth\y. lO
.ap1n tC)ltthcr and suppon each other in both
ru-n-atronal and C9m~t1t1' e aspcctS T he d ub''
aoel ts to promo~ wo men 's bodyboard1ng and 1nc~st the number of"'omcn 1n~olvcd m 1hc
$por1. ' U nder the d1rccu on ofR~na Mone Ill, a crew
of tnlhu"uoc: vo luntttrs hn dtvelo~d a
communicattnt prusnun to o r)in11c a nct"-o rk
of membcn (curttntl)' numbtnni 20 and sttll srowintl for turlina u c urs1onsand skills chntcs.
Tht club mttb frtquenlly 10 \hire infor·
m1tto n about rontes ts. ~u1pmcn1 vano us "'rfi"I bea(hft Ind lhC 1nte retlS o( v.omcl' llS
bodYhoudtn. "We M>pr to rach •JI ""om~ 111r11h even lhc
altptell bit of 1ntcrbt 1n bod)board1na."
MOM1U laid. ··The dub is ()f)CJI to 1hc t:qinn•nc
ti wtU • \M adva~ bodyboa.rder:· T1w chlb ... ahady vcmucd to 'f Stl"Mt m
Sen Cltmtn~ and to 40th Strttl 1n Ne11opon
" le«tl (of llilh chnic, Mo Mtll utd.
A run surf di) tt ptatuwd for Oct l •I lake
Scrttt "' H11nu111to n Btach W o men netd mtfy "'vea ttrioitdnt~ IOsutfand have fun toJC)tn
• .......... pu11ft ml) phortt 67).6()19.
• #
Bealtla, SpdtU and Jl'ltne. Sbow ~
The Hc•llh. Sporu and Fitness Show. one of
the i.raes1 sho "'s of 11s k1n'd o~n 10 lhe pllbhc.
will be held Nov 4-6 at 1he -\nahellJI on\'cn-
u on Ccnlcr. Htthhaht~ by m ono-lhan 500 bOolh~ and
demonstrauo ns. the l*alth. Sports and F11ncss
Show wtll fcaturc the newest 1n producl
technoloay,duplay Lbc latntfitneSS.andcxcrasc
, equ1pmen1. pro vide daily dcmonstralio ns v.ith
experts 1n aerobics.. karacc. g)mnastics and op
•nd offer the l11cst d etails in helalh-rela1cd
trends and scrv1cts.
-·
"Ourshowwlll aivc the public. sports-m inded
tndividuaJs and many o ther people lhc op-
portun11y to sec lhe la1est producls and 1rcnds as
well as meet man) e:cpens 1n \arious rcla1cd
industries, .. uid N ick Bartle11, even t o rganize r
for BMW Shaw Prouctions
Show hours ere noon-9 p.m . on Nov. 4 and 10
a.m.-9 P.,m. on the final 1wo da)s. Sen1orc111zcns
and children (qe S • 12) will be adm11lcd for SJ.
Children under 5 arc free.
Qnc. of the rnOSl e;tiCtltng aS~ClS of the show will be the .. M ost Pcffec1 Bod) C'on1cs1." O~n·
to women q c 18-30. the 'ontcsl 't'll M a
swimsuit and aerob1cv.ear compctitron with
S 1,000 •wudcd to the 11o mncr. Ent11 blanks a rc
•v11t.blc at v•nous health and fitness clubs or
• throuah the Maua Matke1ing G roup (l13)
829-4401 •nd BMW Sho11o Produc11ons
567-3222.
nu fll Baa~11 Beadl
The ninth •nn~I IOk f!"un Run and 5k
Walk/Run. 5P0ntottd by the -\m11os de Bol11
Oiai. wilJ be held Oct 22 al the Bolil Chica
Stat.e ae.h 1n Huntancton Be.ch
Res-1v-uon pnor to Ocl. I 0 IS S 12. 1nclud1nc
T 4en. •nd SIS •f\tr Fot more 1nfonna11on . phone Arruaos de
BofM Checa at 897· 7003
~ .. ,,,,,,,,,,.,.
Tiw unu~ ae.h CommunU) Servtcn
°"8r'metl\ wtlt hold it\ fall racquetball tour· ummt Sepe. J().()n. 2 •t Edison Community
Cmtn Mat'• doubln and s•naln for optn. 8. C 1nd
.-...(llMd over)~u wclln u.,.,u
and lowlr diVltlC)ft m1ud doublet Ind JIHhOf 1tllllel ( 16 ud uftdir) Aft ofttted .&wy .. 11 llS for dcMtbln and 11 S for
dou*8 and SlO few do\ablt\ and S20 for silllles m *°""di.._.. TM fet ffttludn a T-tlnn.
i_, ...atne tt S.,. 24 ApphcaUOftS IN ~ 8' Uitoe C ommun1t -Ctn~. 21J77
M Dlia ~ .... a~. phoftc '6().8170.
..
.
Bl.SIN~FSS Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuelday, Silptember 13, 1988
Karcher' s son oi:dered to pay $1O,500 F-luor's
earnings
reported.
at$32M
-
LOS ANGELES (AP)-The son of
the founder of the Carl's J r. ham-
buraier chain was ordered M onday to !":lerSlO,~ as pan of a federal
tn tradinJ suit apinst him and
U other relatives and company
ofticen .
Carl Leo Karcher was ordered to
live up the a mount he avoided 1n losses by aciina on inside information
to sell debt securities in Carl Karcher
Enterprises Inc. in 1984.
In ordcrina the penaJty, U.S. Dis-
trict Judae Edward Rafecd1c declined
to impose treble damages, as had been
requested by the Securities and Ex·
chanae CommissJon, which filed the
insideNradina civil sun. The judge
issued a permanent inj unction bar·
rina Karcher from future insider
trades. '
The case continues apinst other
defendants, includin& Carl's J r. foun-
der Carl N. Karcher, his brother. and
various of their spou~ and children.
The SEC case holds that K.archers,
their in-laws and one non-family
official ofthe West Coast hamburaer
chain acted on confidential, advance
notice of an unfavorable camin~
report to sell secunues and avoid
potential losses in October 1984.
They arc accused of avoiding losses
totalina $300,000, and treble damag-
es could brin& a total judgment
apinst them to over SI million. ·
The attorney for Carl Leo Karcher
claimed that MQnday's ruljng rep-
K.ANDELMAN BENEDICT
Kandel1nan heading
Freb:enet USA region
Larry Kudelman is now western region~I vice president for
F relxaet USA, responsible for sale of the company's five brands of .
methode champenoise sparkling wine throu&hout 13 s~tes.
Motivated by a 15 percent sales increase in 1987 and consistent
m arket groWlh, the company noted for its top sclhng Spanish
sparklin.J wi~e in ibe utllqu1tous black bottle huopencd West-Coast
s&1cs offices in San Juan Capistrano. _
• • • Crawford Lee Benedict has been appointed vice president and
aeneral manager of the data services division of Ualted Ed.calloa Ir
Software be. (UES) and will be in charge of its guaranteed student
loan service center in Costa Mesa. ES. a rapidly growin• integrated
educationservices company. established its GSL. serv1c1ng oper-
ations in 1983 and today service GSL portfolios totaling more than
S l billion for financial secondary markets and institutions. UES aJso
owns and operates 33 accredued career school locations and a home
study school.
••• Laguna Niguel resident Carrie Cox haSJOIOed Robert Borden Ir
AalOclates as director of bu incss development. announced Roben
Borden , president of the Newpon Beach-based architectural finn.
• • • Jn Fountain Valley Natloaal Lamber & Sa pply lac. has
appointed Wllllam S. Takacs as ns nev. director of planning.
Previously he was vi~e president, administration for The May ~o. in
Los Angeles. Nation~I Lumber 1s o ne of the princi pal factors. in· t~e
do-it-yourself home1 mprovcmcnt 10dustry m Southern Ca11fom1a
with 20ccntersin Los.Angele . Orange.San Diego, Riverside and San
-ernardino counties. • •
, Bus!NESS No1Es
·MSI Data·' s directors
evaluate tender offer
Charles S. Strauch. prdident and
chief executive officer of Costa Mesa·
basecf MSI Data Corp. has sent its
stockholders a letter stating that "on
Monday, Sept. 12. Telxon . Corp.
published, on an un.sohcited basis. a
tender offer to purchase any or all of
the outstanding com mon stock of
MSI Dali Corp. We expect that )'OU
will soon receive the Telxon offer.·
"MSI's board of directors is cu r-
rently evaluating 1b1s offer. On or before Sept. 23, MSl's board Wlll
advise you of 1ts position. The board
believes that it 1s not in your best
iJ\tet'C$t to ma.kc a decision....whelher to
acc:ep1 or reject the offer until the MSI
board, with the help of its financial
and lepl advisers, has completed its
review and has advised you of its
position.
"Shareholders arc requested to
defer making a determination
whether to accept or reject Telxon's
tender offer until they have been
advised of the board's position." • • •
The Borden div1s1on had sales of
SIS m illion in the fir.st s1.x month of
the year. The acquisition will be
fina nced initial)) from a combinatio n
of cash reserves and shon-term
borrowings.
Borden's Car Car'C di,·is1on mar-
kets car wax>products under the Ram
Dance arid Rally brand names and a
line of engiTie additives and per-
formance chemicals under the No. 7
label.
Jeffrey M. herml\n~ president and
chief cxecutjve officer of Armor All.
said, "We'rcexcited to add these Y..ell·
known brands to Ollr family of
prod11cts. Rain Dance and Rally arc
perfect complements to Armor All
Car Wjlx, which was successfull)'
introduced late last year.
"This acquisition clearly puts
AAnor All into the leadership pos-
ition in the car wax category of the
automotive af\ermarket. ..
Armor All is a leading supplier of
automotive appearance chemicals.
In the fiscal year ended Ma rch 31 . Armel' AU Prodacts Corp. m I rvme
bu sianed an aarcement to acquire
the Car Care division of Borden Inc. ·t ror about $26 million in cash. .
Armor All reponcd net in.come of S 22
million on revcoues off 126' m1llion.
(Pleue eee GA TEW A T /86)
I ..................................
. .. 11h111"e""tl#m . · :
•ATE8i
i
OY TER & llELLFI H EXTRAVAGANZA :.
(fE~T\ RlD \ l tt4PP\' Hot.RS}
TARTI NG ERTEMBER 13, 1 9~ •
TUE DAY -FRIDAY -4:00 • 7:00
Happy Hour pri~ff -Wt'll Drtnb 12.95
t
F e at•rln•
Clam chowder Steamed clam•
Calamari Shrimp eoekaaila
Li•e lob.Ser Jumbo ahrimp
8 PECl-'L -'TrllACl'leN
f!U1.JM d#t 7M ~
• • • • • • • : I
I •
rttented a partial victory for his
client,. who maintaJncd he d1dn ..
know be had broken a ny Ja-.s by
eelhna Karcher dc~nturcs in Octo-
ber 1984. Jn refusina to impose treble ~ the judac 1n essence found
Karcher hadn't committed an
eareaio us v1olat1on of secun t1tS law,
the attorney said.
Armstrona said. The defendant. who
was a vice presjdent of A.nahe1m-
bued Karcher Enterpnscs at the lime
of the trades, ~ntl) operate~ a
ltrina of 16 Carl s Jr. f ranch1ses 1n the
Palm Sprinas and Yuma. Anz . areas
ina the Olympic Games. and have
since been ·reversed. The com pan)
made a S 16 million profit on sales of
S369 million 1n 1987.
Jn Monday·s case. Karcher didn't
contest the facts of tile case: That he
put in an order to his bro ker to sell 75
debentures, a form of corporate debt ..
the momin& of Oct. 19. That after-
noon, after being told by a company
official such a sale was improper
because it was based on an unreleased
caminp report. he ordered the sale
stopped. But SO of the debentures had
been sold.
"It indic.ates to me that the j ud&c
concluded that he was not a willful
violato r of the law," Armstrong sajd .
''We're disappointed the coun found
there was a v1olat1on because
(Karcher) dLd ~lieve he had the nght
to to sell."
The SEC case, filed in .\pnl
revolves around trading 1.1Tegulan11es
uncoy ercd in ~andom computer
checks by the Nauonal Assoc1a11on of
Securities Dealers.
It shook many in Orange Count).
where the elder Karcher. who appears
in folksy commerctals for the 45~
outlet hamburacr chain. 1s regarded
u an American success sto" and Named m the EC c1' 11 suit, 1n
addition to Carl Leo Karcher and his
father. Carl N. Karcher. are the cider
(Pleue aee K.ARCHER/86)
The SEC will attempt to find the
buyer of the sccuriues a nd give him
the money assessed Ka rcher.
social bene factor. ·
Tfie 1984 losses wert attnbuted b}
some to a business dov.'Jltum follow·
Maximized netwO~king
spells efficiency for DMI ·
Com pany in Irvine Spectrum
speeds product development
BJ ILENE SCHNEIDER
hlPf "9t C..1 Elf I ....
Take two men with more than 50}ears of combined
expcnencc 1n the electronics industry. Add a network of
3.000 people. including domesuc and international
manufacturing and marke11ng contacts. _ •
Combine the above with an operating philosophy of
identifying market niches in the computer industry and
fillinJ. them with system-oriented products and a strategy
of utilizing worldwide resource to get work done 1n the
most efficient and economical manner. The.result is DMI
Inc., an innovative Irvine Spectrum-based company that
introduced 30 new products and ach1e"ed $500.000 in
sales in ifs first full )ear of o_pcrauon. -~ .
• e ops produets by combining cx1sung
technology wnh its own technology and' proprietary
products. Its products serve the Digital Equipment Corp.
(DEC). IBM. specialty and data security systems
marketplaces. Among DMrs latest products are a
microponable hard disk system and a microponable
streaming tape S)Stem for lBM. DEC AT&T and IBM·
compatible m1crocompu1crs.
Now a public corporation, DM I evolved from
Duncan MacDonald Inc., which was incorporated in
1980. The com pan) had concentrated on a single product
in a.narrow marketplace. Founder Duncan MacDonald.
who now serves as presid~nt ofDMI. wanted to broaden
his base
In 19 6 he !>Ought the help of Al Rose. who had JU St
founded TIPSCO. a finn that was designed 10 help small
high technolog) companies to improve international
d1stnbut1on and procurement through networking. Rose
JO toed OM I as chairman and chief execuu vc officer
"In 1987 we went about repos1t1on1ng Duncan
~1acDonald Inc in every possible wa~:· Rose said .. It
v.as a ~ear of new products, new markcts. a new customer
case including Fonune 500 companies. a nc"' supplier
base and a new team of people.
.. DMI wants to be a product compan), lfrov1d1ng
mnovat1' e solutions for the computer industry. we·re
end-uscr-onented. We see what the customer needs and
tum 1t 1nto an end product."
DMI. which has only five full·t1 me employees.
netv.orks v.1th other companies to manufacture the
products 11 develops. By cutting out the bureaucracy of
r.e vie.v. commmecs...DMJ can go from a concept to a
product in as little as 45 days, according to Rose.
"We can offer products that customers want but that
lal'ge companies haven't provided," he said.
DMI also applies the networking concept to the
distribution of its products. Such com panies as Micro D.
Harris and Bell Atlantic distribute various· DMl product
lines.
.. Ttrcsc companies have large sales and scrv.cc
orpmzauons. so the customer has a lot of options," Rose
said.
.. The old concept that you \'lave to own it to control It
1s backward thinking. Even big compamt-S arc network-ing. ..
Fluor Corp. m frvine an·
nounced on Monda) net earn·
inpofS32.8 mLlhon.or41 cents
per share, for the nine months
ended July 31 , 1988. nus
compares with a net loss of
S 118. 9 million, or S 1.50 per
share, for the same period in
l 98i Revenues for the first
nine mo nths were $3.5 b1lh on
compared wnh S2. 7 bilhon last
year
For the third quarter of fiscal
1988, net earnings were S 13 4
million. or 17 cents per share.
· compared with a nC1 loss of
t 32.9 m1lhoif. or 42 cents per
share in 1987. Revenues for the
third quarter were S 1.3 b1lhon.
compared wtth S909 m illion for
the third quarter of 1987
David S Tappan Jr .. chair·
man and chief executive officer.
said. ..Third quarter results
reflect continuing strength in
A u ors operations and markets.
New awards for Fluor Daniel.
our engmeenn& and construc-
uon unit. conu nue to ~ robuSl
and bus1ncss condluons for our
natural resource investments
remain favorable.
~The improving trend in
Fluor Daniel's earnings con-
tinues 10 pick up momentum.
and the company's natural re-
source in vestments also added
solid earnings contribuuons."
Fluor Daniel reported third
quarter earnlJlgs above the level
recorded in each of the first two
quarters this year. and substan·
tially above results reported for
the third quancr of 1_987.
N~ awards for Fluor Daniel
dunna the quarter wett S 1.5
billion, mere than double the
amount of the third quarter a
year aao.
It's been a waiting game. You've
been waiting for certificate of de-
posit rates to go up because you
didn't want to wai t years to get a
good return. Well. now Home Federal
is offering CDs that are ahead of
their time. 'They are so different. iQ •
fact we've given them a diffe~ent
name: Insured Term Accounts..... .
Tenn: 6 up to 12 months ited interest whenever vou wish.
So waJt no longer. For a limited
time. Homefecf will pay you our
high one-year rate fo r a six-month
i mestment or, a high th,-ee.year
,rate1 for a two-year investment.
• 'Open your ITA with just S2,500.
If you have ~.you 'II earn
more. becauR Home Federal ITAs
pay hilh rates on h~r baJ.
ances. And you atw.ys earn the
highest pcmible yield because we
compom1d your Interest daily.
Now If that interest ls important
for you to uee, you 11 be glad to
know you can withdraw your <:rf'<I·
•
$20,000
Rate
Yield•
Defer your earnings
until 1989.
Asl< us how.
And though tret> checking and
special services are 1ust wishful
thinking -at other institutions.
HomeFed make' them a reaJity.
Just open an rTA with $5.000 or
more and you'll have all t~ spe-
ciaJ advantages of our ln~t9r
Club. .
Call HomeFed today to open your
account. Or visit the nearest office.
Tomorrow you could be ea.ming
higher rates without the wait.
Dir~t &nlung Center
1 (800) 554-2626
Or-. Coelt DAILY PIL01'1 T•..S• ~ t3. t•
GATEWAY EXPANDS ••• ...... ••• lrvine-MICCI Gateway Com·
••11811•1 IM., founb 1a.-l ven-
dor worldwide of nmwomnc prod·
utta and ~ auDOlier of com-munkalioaa producti for the I BM PC mllbt. announced on Monday itJw ei.-nded its operational base to
include a Gaieway European office,
now open in Abinadon, EnaJand.
Tbe new office, providina services
and IU~ to the European markel thl"OUIJl Gateway distribulors in 13 E~ countries, is under \he
supervision-of Alwyne Sinclair,
Gateway's recently appointed dircc-
tor of European operations. • • • ,....... Amwtea t.c.'1 lnfor·
mation Syaeemt Division in Irvi ne
bas joined with lieut Bu1Ms1 c.ters in a stnaesk alliance. adding
Sean to lSO's nalionw,de d1Stnbu·
Lion network.
Beainnina this month, Se.ars Busi· ~ stores throuahout the United
States. will carry l SD's full family of
IBM-compatible ponablc personal
computers.
The PC productJine ranges from a
6.4 pound fully funclional baltery-
KARCHER FINED ••. ....... t:='' brother. Donald F. , president and chief opcrat·
ina ofticer the Karcher Enterprises,
and AJvill' DcShano, a vi~ president.
Also Carl N. Karcher's son,
Jerome; dauabters~ Barbara Karcher-
Garrett, Marprct J. LeVecke.
Catherine Karcher-Everl v and her
UP~p ~~ ljl
S: t:I Up ·' UP 1 UP .2
8: N'·,. UP
8: u u. p .9 UP .7 ~: :t UP .6 UP .6 UP
husband, Daniel; and Carl N.
Ka.rcber's son-in-law, Donald E.
fCf1USJr. Also Donald F. Karcher's daugh·
\er, Doncta Ann Thomason and her
husband, David; and Mrs.. Doroth}
l(archer's sister, Rosemary Bruns.
and her husband. WilJiam.
Ill.,~ s
Semi WI p ,.
c:,red laptop \0. powerful 80386-• ~ pound p0nable system .
ISO, recopiz.cid as a teader in the
portable PC arena, alto providci 24-
pin dot-matrix printers, laser pnnters
and related peripherals lO the U.S.
mark(..l. . oeu Centers, with head:quarttrs an
Chic:qo and 59 f'rec-st.andina sped.el-
OTC UPs ~ DowNs
f'd .
Up tt·O Up .1
Up ·' ~~ 1r~ Up Up
UP Up UP
The Award-Winning Chefs of The Lotus Await Yo
-~ -L
•
MANDA.RIN A SZECHW AN CUISINE
•LUNCH • DINNER • PULL BAI• BANQUETS • TAKE OUT • Mm.DAY BUFFET• CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH
2300 HARBOR BOULEVARD• COSTA MESA• 545-3331
Lotus Express~Now Open at Fashlon Isfand's Atrlam Court -
• . ,
(
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuetday. Sept..-nbet 13, 1"8 * 97
AMEX LEADER S
TUESDAY'S Ct:OSINQ PRICES
Mf!r~et fin ishes h igher
~EW YO RK (AP) -The stock market
finished lulher in mostly sluggish trading today.
setting a [ast-minute boost from remarks by
Treasury secretary designate Nicholas F. Brady.
The statemenlS touched Joff a late buyina
wave. after stocks traded shghtl~ lower through
most of the session.
Adv~ncing issues narrowly outpaced declines
on the New York Stock Exchange. wtlh 705 up. 681
down and 545 unchan~
1 7 14
NEW Y~K (AP) Seo tJ
NYSE LE~O[RS
NEW YORK !AP) -.. 5*1, • Pm Tueldey P<iee end net dlafl9e of the 10 t .ctlve Amerlc&n Stoett Ex~,...,_ tr.Olno Ntlc>Mllv at m<>re than s 1 VII LA\t CM. • 11 .. ..:.-·i:. L.Of'lf'llerh~ ,500 lJ~ -I. E~vc .900 2 + • AU~ .soo 22 -'9
., .900 16 ., + -1-! :ni.ooo •i.e -~
... ~lrCP ~~.000 127• --iw ·lentFOOd' 169,700 21~ + ,,. WentLatlB tSl,900 I\. --. FrultLoom 157.IOO 6-1•
GoLo QuoTES
METAL S Quons
NASDAQ S uMM~Rv
=·• . .t . r ~~n · ~l .1 F.oretin trade deficit
, ijHj li~~1~hrinKs in 2nd quarter
•
1
;jl,, :·1, :-. u; WASHINGTON (AP)-The defi-C'fedjtor nation. a distinction it held in .. .,._ • cit tn the broadest measure of . 1982. to the wortd•s largest debtor •• • fro .-• foreign trade narrov.'Cd sharply m nation. ~ ': Apnl 11\rough Jutlc. despite the fact That means that forci&ncn now t • lbat Ameriaa suffered the first deficit own more 1n U.S. investments than
IJ ''-• in 30 yeArs an the catqory that Amenca.ns hold in fo~ invest-
,,,.. 1 • ii"• • includes '°'-estment mcome. mcnts.. ~t the end of 1987. America's
, 1.§ 'i ,· ffi ! The Commcrcc Oepa.nment said net debt had arown to S368.2 bilhoa..
fi "' the defiot in the current account Reflcct1n& that transfer of ~.
1 • It 1 ';. , sh"nk b) 9.8 peroent in the tcCOnd the aovemment reponcd today \hat 11' 1 ._ • quaner. fallina to $33.3 billion. the country suffcttd a S•92 million
' " ~.!. ·~ comoared to a firs1quaner1mbalantt deficit tn tbe«f"''iciescateaory, wbic.b
+ , ofS36.9 billion. traieks the no r 10"-cstmcnt cera-~ • l\wastbcsbarpcstnarrowsnaofthc irws. It wast first defk1t in this
ddkluancca 20.1 peroent dropm the cmtCIO'}' sance 1958.
founh quaner of 1987. The dcfictt ill 9CrVlOC$ was a small
'the current account 1s the mo t ooe and could VU)' we.It be reviled
important of all the aovcrn~nt's away in futlft repons. In &ct, lbe
u.de s\lti.sucs bccal.lSC it co~n not to-wrnmcnt three moolbt llO re-~trade 1n 1MtChand1te but also oonedtbaunn<lelooseedtdcfiotof in terv•~. •b1ch primanly S6SS million in the fif1l quaner.
rtftec1 the flow of mv"tmcnt cam. Stlll, ~isu •Y the day 11 not di&t betwmt countnes. far away when tef'Yi<les will tumble
Fof 16 of the &u1 I )ears. tbe i.nto a ddiat and stay &here for tome
countr)' bu run def.au an lbe ume • 1D<ft and more American
machandiJC trade c:at~r). But the wealth wtll have to be transfemd
aarftftt 8'XIC>Unl rqi.nemt a urplus oveneu to ltnice forcisn inv t'·
as recently as l931 bttau Amen· ment in \J\.ttcown1')'.
•CMI• eanaiftlS on ~\c.t11CU tn¥t1•· May ecoaom.am ba~ warned
meats were enouab. to offtct the that tbt ~ terVlc:e burdc1\ W1D
merchanditt tnde aer.cat C'Vefttliilly ~ Americus' Slaft.
In this decade. ho'A1:Wf. Amen-dard Oflivartd\l!Cint the amown
c:us ha~ handed O\'et billions of ol fada 1 in \blJ country rot
doUan '°~an nt._.. for eownmmt ~ butiftell ••
i.mponed ~ ' uanuomu~ t'hc val.IDClll and ""'' I.du.al "•ump. cou.ntrv ftoOm thf :Oi\ii' llnat lion.
'
f
f
ONnge eo.t DAILY PILOT IT~, Sep ...... 13, 181f
DAILY M.OT
ClMell'llO OfftCf HOUl'll T---~M·f. 1.00 AM-6 30 PM lelwllllt I 00 AY..11 30 AM
....,_0-...M·F
IOOAM-500 PM ..........
l'UkleoUION -~-
.,11 .. . .
,-,.. o •• "14lclt t.~ ••t ,., .... ~ ..
•~ 9«-""'' .._..,.v., en•~~
fllf•H • •twt ... '°* """"" .,...,
¥W'tid,. ........ ~~""""'
...... •Nett ... ,.,,~ ........ , •• .n lit1't ,,..o..~ .._ __ ~,.. ...... w..,. .... .,.,.,, "'.~ ... .,.. ...
tNt"f ....... " .. -. ... ~ .... •• ,~ ,., ..,. ... ~ -. .-.n
~ .. ~ ... ll!!lt'f'f'fJI ,, ... c.•"' ..,..,. tw • ... .... .... tin• _...,,.,. .a
A•, •""ltMr! NI NI •""'...A ••--• .. , ............. ~ ...... -
~· · • ''-... ,P"\,~ ~ ''" ~ ... ,._.., ...... ....
~ .. ( ""'...-: ~.,.. .... .. , .. ...,. ..... ~ .,,,""'"
......, .... ••• ... ... 1111 ....... .... ••• ..... C..1t •••11 .. c... ....... _._ .. _ .................. , ..... ,_* 493 Morning~.._, 19RIM,...,2ceroer· llM
_,. 38A.. 3 cer 2 RV a. Cd\t. New. a. t>eeutlfui 1119· Wiie bell. poota I ctiXN 11M X/c CONOO. aaJ... tfl Id attention to' detall 1300ef deted oondo. 2Br, teMl9. 11100. AYI now. AcMt, QUleC, geted trect. j •VL'W --:-
1412 000 846-2187 Agt 28a, ~ tub, lrplc, DOCKSIDE RE 722-9730 N. of ,..._, M40 w/mo.t
' . k~ to prtyate bMctl. .......... lltll. 775-2UO, 841-140e lfll1ml1
av ow11er: VerHlllH 11350/Mo 1eo-eo11 End Unit. HR 2'-"BA 1900 m•ll Lwve lttrectM Apt• In • condo, 1BR. Geted MC, • .==.-beeutlful gerderl MtUng. undergmd petting. good OLD CORONA DEL MAR .,, .. nwty redecoreted, POOie eer.-No pet• -
.... S111,000 813..1443 31Rl2BA home, ~· •• MW home. Pool. 1 il.ctroom'SMo . • ............... ""'pd, atr..c•1es01Jo.~;.2':•1 , ~S::arB«~1X: ...... MM 21drm 11e11eo Hfllllrllff.414-1521 ....;.. ______ _
wt•••1111 _...,., . 1i1aM1T11. •11J11111 .. lamliJ:ld Bit 1111 tr.em1u1o •HDl .. 11 SPACIOUS, Sunny 2Br ..... ILi. 2bdrm, 1bath, gerege COSTA MESA avau ··u ----/d tlkupt,ger •• _pe24tt3 • Prime NB Helg~t• lo· 2 .. feetlnt trplc, lndry -• ,5 ..... 19t10 l 1115/mo.Celll62-c:atlon. Over 3100.f of rm, ger1199, ywd & pvt Av.II NOW. No fM. Agt puklnQ. 1 1o7 Imo. MJ.... 18', 11e 1750 i-:.=~---=-'."".".:"~
Cuatom·bulll Archltee-pello. 11350/mo. Avail Marti~ 842-7708 A~..._~J~:" •BACH 1515. ()(Mt Eut· HOW BIG IS IT? ~ ~!eland, no ~~=-0':!,~~P~:.
ture. Frencil wlndowa. Oct 1. * M0-8413 ' 11Ml12 aide loct 0., cable •~I. . •1500/mo. 7400 W. ~,,.,:.::~ telil ... 1114 PENINSULAVEARLY ~RM~~,;: =~~.1:S:r~: ... ~r11 ,.w.*P..£•!ove ()owlfront,7224314
den, dlnlno rm, 4Br. ;wwm.m .1.,. 111A. apeckMl8 & .......... 175-770ITh-Sal Sorry,Nopeta.131-MV ~I .... ~ • 55 OCEANfAONTlhwp28r.
3'Mte +lg lndry rm. PTo-Mgb WM, frplc, petlo, new""* 08'll99 $850 (111)7t5-2te5 Sun-Tuea BAY TIMBERS •• n llLllE Ind. No P9tS 645-4 Fur11 wlnte<. Gerage, ~~~ YetY 1nlcemo.·.,,.37~27r?,?le*•E ·~ ec1or.bJe 28A • 28.\. LOWER LEVEL 2Br, 288 1BR. frplc, cable, pool, 1 aw t-J·I. •-* ,_ ... petlo. No pets. I 1050/mo '825 000 NOWI (001) IMO '" ~ , 2 cw ger. wld, W6nter 11350/mo. pedo, ger. No pets. 399 -_..,. Frig, dlehwUhef. 1tove •175-8141* GNbb I Ellis 854-8001 grMt loc, lg petlo, 11200 • ..., ..... ln w Bey St see!. 650-1357 •NewGE d/w, Stow, & Incl. No,,... 54~855 OCEANFRONT Studio •
..tr2 •GrM• 31R 2'i+BA 2 Mlcrowa.,. -..rty partlelly furn .-1nr 9e8'illJIH atory. Nr bMdl. Ger1199, , WINTER RENTAL BEAUTIFUL 2BR 1BA IN •NewWtlltaCt!Ret& •EASTILUFF Tw111\ae ,_ • utllltlae •
_...,_ trplc, retrlg,-S13$0 mo. 1557 Mnmw. PENll" PT °'*" comptex; S.CUrlty °""'8 Apt 3BR 28A. 2 CW 08'· trn9I pdO, =· ••21 Ill I -*Ct\arrnlng3BR 18Afum 28r 188 1M111.JtoOCM110f buldlng. Pool, ger1199, •ao.to3Fwys NoP....11025/moyrlM. s735i mo. *"850-1
TWo 2:C,rm 'units. Over 1111111 Ill hM on Peninaula Pt. bey. N..pett. HOO Imo c:abte TV, all util pd (405,55,73) end South 844-1010. 5-5 Mon-Fri OCEANFRONT -w-Wlnler
132,000 grou Income ...... ,..... WID, 08'~· big petlo, 175-4142,811n9e-1133 1725/mol22·1832 eo..tPlau llllll,_IUll aw,,ttu1ey rum. 3 Of 4&
w/dbl 08'1199 end lt'1 In F~:a:.·~~:~ ,l.1050wlmo-.Eln1Tteronlylu· YRLYCHARMINGBVF~~ IUl'IRLUITSm =~~:: 31R 21!aALD'ftrUnlt.Ger· :=y2t:;7~~1e.4
the 111 blk to the beech. & epe. Sorry, no pets. 28R 2BA. '2000/mo . ...,,. 281\ H~BA Twnhae. Frplc. Entry Alarm sv-tema ege. W/D htlup. Verd. _ _..:.._· --~~~-.llCllS IL n 28drm 2'~88 f1070 bdl. ut .. pd. W/0, =· ger, y111d/=· lndry rm, •c.bteTVAvllll•bla Next to~· 11175/mo. ~ YILf
ee& W 11th St 842~905 UtmlT Jlr JlYe n/tmler pref'd. 875-quiet loc. Imo. •New L.9undry Fecllitlel TSL MO~ RIV~2•1603 2GBr,... 11~ cerport~..i<.. Nin:~: 111-1111 Ml-1141 Single atory rem/room 11. p I la 2817 Orenge •Collwed Perklno ,,_, ..,
NEWPORT 1BR condo loceted In • fOrrnal din ;oom epproii I •II ta 818 TSL MGMT 842-16.93 •Prtvatee.lc:onyto •WllTD/fUILf* PORT PACI R.E. Cell
CONDO with oceen & bey g~t r~:1'o ~it~~~· 2400 alt. $l050/mo, Lie 2117 25 BRANO new 3Br 2'AB1 GardaM •18111.1• DAVE 845-3883
vi.ws. 1tep9 to beechea. r. j:,ooi & apa. Avl no~ Cell 844-7211 Agent 2BR, get1199, n;:ty a;c:Of. epta. Attached dbl ger. •Elegent Atmolhpere 3BR 2BA yWty 11800 ~MONTH FREE RENT
op qufllfy 2.bdrm. den.&. 138eor A32 .. U68 Yllll-llft ated, 1t9P9 to bay/beech I 1050/Mo +aec:. Micro, •Sorry Mo Peta 3IR 21,. Ocnft wntr 11550 3Br 2'MM on the bey,
trtpia gerage (over 2000 28e 2 910 W. Belboe Blvd. rm petio., w/d hkups., ,_ Mii 31R 2BA winter 11150 Conv. loc. Lg decl(, "''*,
eq ft) In ""811 Medlter-2BR 1BA. lrplc, yard, fi•· 1~R&~ FP ·=•= SIOO/moyrty. 876-M50 gar-door opnr1. 2110 2881Bear5t.Cornerol 2BR 19Awtnter $875 Nw. Yr lee. 12395/mo,
reneen complex with root ;99· 179~~/ Btth w°i: 2-c:er ger, geteci 2BR 1BA rumilhed up-Thurl n St, CM. Agl en.tol, Coat• Mete 1BR 1BA wtntar $695 333t Vie Lido. 875-9289
terrece. s::-''eo.tiow':; 224~ ~m pool&apaonlhe ttelrlunll wlthflreplace& 850-51l8 Open dally 11•/Ml-IJ44 •flifDJlll STEPStobMdllSpedou1
831-1400 ....... $499,000 ry • bey. Walk lo Balboe 111. carport. $1000/mo. 12·7orW.-ends 11-6 MESA VERDE. 2BR 1BA. lll-IUI 2 & 38r, 288,.F/p tum
-
"-All HI HO" •EASTSIDE 1BR 1BA. $2200/mo * 240-1752 N0-3812/d 953-5577/e o.tuxe owner'a unit. SBR ""* <Nlat CUI de sec get ... Winter rental .
1m'1t., hoc. i::8No ~ =· 1 BEACH DUPlEX 28R 1BA, ratrtQ. c:arport. 1~BA. frplc, dlw, micro, 1700 . + tut. ..-depotli 1 .. 1111 llfl 1976-Up. 213/M2-7577
REAL ESTATE Scotti 548-2301 mo. Lerge prime urut. 38r 288. = rm, 1 blk lo bch. ft deck. 878 Center St. 491-193&, 751-IM83 Urge apettment. w~ In ......, _
frplc, dlsh/w, petlo, ·~ blk Imo + MC. Avail 75 Mo petl 989•5321 t11-••• cloMll, garage, fire-2 BR/2BA, DR, Frplc, REALTORS •EASTSIOE 1BR 1BA, to belt beactl. 11200/Mo 9/2e. ~t 751-3261 EASTSIDE 1BR 1BA. W/O ... ,_ p4ece, petlo, dlsl\WaShef, carport pool Adutta. No 1111111_~----i=iiiii~rn-m!ii' .. -lar1199. WIO htlup. 1 yearly. Call 833-3650 ••WINTER RENTAL** llkup, ,,... c:rp1 -&:-p.int, 28r 1~ WIDW. etpt1. WALK TO BEACH! pets. ... 50/Mo ~402 ••--. dult. No pe111850/mo. (Judy). Or 494-n48 F~ Bey 8ellCtl encl ;arege. No pet1 ~~In•;..~ patio Cell fOf eppt. 10 .... ...:== MTI ----.-------1 ,_..all IHI Brend new, never llvad In Scotti 548-2301 IG CANYON ~-2bdrm. 2battl pt .. ..-S&~S/-ntt> _..120 ....JJ 1-'SPM 975-1177 ... _ .. iiic:::!!!r:1~~~~;~~rNewport North homes u IUIT ·-••La• 2Br 2'~88 ....__..,, Cell 723-1417 857-2523 Of 751-2787 . •1 Vlctori• 'E'. ... sno ........ w. n....---1ront 3BR. 1--'"nw m :i A"'-'--··..... w/aJr, NC 1)'9, dynemite * ·-•,._Lowly ·den. ·on ~· • u.-t ecrou the 1trMt .....,.. '-"'-' _. ._... ..._ r•-• locatlons. Jult reduced Frpl, ~yd, getdener. QOlf courae. 2 car gerege. w•-.-na EASTSIDE large quiet 2Br. '28A fr~ new crpl & Annuel rentel. Frplc, w/d, tat.-New carp•t• &
T ..... Two-38r, 288 '0 r I a I I I. I a . 2 98' w/1tor1199 E'llde 159-0079 $1995 ------· .. ,.. Nice c:wpetl end drepes. ' ' 08''09· all bltln1. 11800 drepea, ¥tew. petlo. utlt OM-2Bedroom. Winter -3 BR I • 4 • 9 o 0 0 . 11275/moyrlM. 548-1936 View, tum 1BR reer ept new pel11t lndry & petlo paint 825/mo. 1865 mo. 619-944-0030 peld 1575/mo 543-7375 lummerAanUll 1990 000 • • · •CONDO FOR RENT* w/ptillO garage w/d I ·,._, .:.. 1 · Irvine Ava #6 720-9422 ' ' 4BR/l4H,OOO. Cron 3BR 2BA Executive Home 2BR/2BA, Prime location, Avell 9j 17 1850irno +. 775tMo . .,.., _ 363 CUTE Peninsula 2-BR 2BA. IUll:: llatail
at,,_a, Jembor .. & Ullf· wlpool 111 preatlgloul Col· walk to bcil. & lhops, frpl, utMlt .... 875-5449 E'SIDE 28r 188 , upstelrs. HWPT HGHTS 1BR. Huge fully tum, ~ blk 10 bch . .,,.,.,ty. Open noon-3pm. lege Pk. Wkly pool & gar· 2-car ger, $1050. Cell; freeh peint, lndry rec. no llvnn w/frplc. Kitchen· Wlb, gar, wl11ter rental ~-Dll
Robirl Tenctl 131•1266 den ave Incl S1395/rno Deborlh Smith 989·5428 C... .. Illar MU pe11. 1875/mo 271 Eut ett•. petlo, wld hkup. No 1950/mo. • 873-i333 ---. ' -pell. 1725/mo 846-9439 .. , _ C'~ the.____. 11000 MC dep. No pets, WEST ,Newport 38 R. Bid, Grlllfu, bMUt 2ir 2L llth Pl. 844·0.52 FURN 2BR 2BA. lg patio. Wkty ,_.... now eveii. ~· 1~ lwlmmera only. 850-8129 roofdedc. $1275 "' bctl. Sundk, frpl, wld E·SIDE amall 1Br Cottage, pool, overlooking Bey. $147.00 wk &. up. 2274
associated
... . ' .. .,. ~ '
" ', • 1 ',. > r~ WM~R
.. 1 :. . • • • 11111 fMI ... ... 1122 3BR 2BA HouM w/frplc, WESTCLIFF 28 R, dbl gar-hkup, ger. Pelnt, carpel f/p, encl petlo. No Pets! ""3itfleld Avell tmmed. 11395/rno Nwpt 81Yd, CM 846-7445 • •11 ~ yerd. Cleen. 2533 1199. flreplece. $1350 1 1200/mo. 875-4991 1580/mo+ S680 MC d 84&-8350/D 875-5494/.E 1~-----"="'--~~~I ,:S hOm. )ult llltlllll·ftlW VILLA Belboa penthH. FC>fdl\em. 11200/mo. N BAY[RONJ ~CQrulo ~ O~r dupfx 81 !721~5=72°3 ••-y aallTllm 38r 2ba, Frplc. w/d, Furll ltatlh ti ·~!!' ., __ h-4Br 2•LB• ta 2+den. pro dee. MC gate. PETS'. * 498-8500 f1l50 ._... ... t Mt -..-f St t •• -Nor1h or 405 . 4 BR,~-......... ,.. • pool Witt t beh ___ ,,,_ ____ PENINSULA Steps to .. _. ger1199. P•• Ir . Lim 111 1U Sparkling CIHll large or un urn. •P• 0 ... ----"!"'"--'!""'!' 2~ I A with custom room, 2 trplc. 3-c:er gar, ~9~900 S:2.2134°Agt · 4BEDROOM,familyroom, beech. Approx 2000sl. non amkr, quiet 11100 Convenient toe. 1550 "'" Apta. Famlllel watcom•. Nech. Ocean IQew. Off. BXCIOX. Rmmt wented: anteneinment center In Spe, Lg lot. 1749,900. By gerage, big bacil yerd, 2BR 2BA l1l50 Imo. No pell. 87~·7787 MC. 846-8982 Lv Mtg Pool & ape. Shopping & 1treet p(kng. 9moa poss-Student or prof. prafd ::t::"'s*~~~~:~ ~~~~~d. e:1.~J3R1v!~ =h~oN'!~:,.s1~~ ~~Nr~~e:ootrptc. celia !fll 'MM LARGE 3BR 2BACupper, =~~nopS:.k,_naxt ~~-4mr:!av!= ~...::~;~4Shawn/E •tt ... BYOWNER-Seveblg$$$!1 CovaStCM848-<t818· BAYFRONT Condo 2BR, ............ get •. NearOC · 28drm 1V.Be$785 NB 1"R St t beh
*11.11-L
• .. • ~~·,c~•!., :looew.,, oftf 4-plex .. fOf equity In BACK BAY-EASTSIDE den, dodl fOf 80' boat. A tmllll. quiet complex, 1040-C Valencia. $875 28drm 288 $810 . "" ep1 o .. CdM M/F n-amk, Prof. to
··-·----_,, ,., .. , • .,.. .... ·Newport5'4~c1~ home 2BR 1BA w/gerege. New ~750 Studio or 2BR 2BA "like mo. No pets 545-7993-Ill W. WUM ~~{i!1"~ric1~ar~~ ~!~=: =·~'ti~'='· The• ::owe ~aran-I monlhl new. 673-5896 ...... pelnt/cerpel. 1850/mo. WllerfrHf ......... new" wlbalcony Of prvt Lg 1BR, d/w, cable TV COSTA MESA 1700/mo. 723·.1292 S500+1A ut. 721 .. 135 ?.-!~~L NRETL WWOIRDKE1-or_5_21_~_____ Avail llOWI 546-0645 1111.Tm 111· 1• petlo, frpl, pools, ape, ldry, hkup1, .";,_0 pets .. Reis 111-1111 NB 28r •t--to bch, perk-.... -..... -.IT
.. ,..., llel Cell 24 "mLl-flDI •;;m-~.-... ~..,,n ·-~.r,1F~~ •. n31'!; ....... --MC. VELMA 549-2447 Miner •B 845-8161 ..... Ing. Lg. front petlo, utll H 50/mo. Cell Lynn•
r'""'~ la~ pvt. No pell. 550 Up... req'd. ..,50/mo. 2273 ..... --trll•••
hours, (714) 775-6492 FUii OC48ll & City Vtew •BR iill -·-· ..,....., ... .,. -• ••w -... PUt _.. Incl. no pet1. u11turn. 7•8000 or 175-4666
2_'h&A, corner lot w/pool, 2'Mta condo, wld, pool. 1mmac 38rl28e. rem rm, . *Liii .. * fmW-UYmJ 11175/Mo. 723-1292 _ ... NnuTf 1829,000. Agt 723-0545 ~ .. iiiiiiiiii!.~~.~-~"!! .... --... ~ epe. 11200/Mo 131-1153 pvt pool, 198. grdnr. Lie Come ... the d1"erenoe. Jog to bMdl. 2BR 28". ... Pl& IDT NEAR Hoeg, 2er H'tBa M/F prof atv quiet dMrl
w.·1 gl¥e you the down '"wAN·T OlDE CdM p,..... ·----ti/Hou... -IT•-• 119951"'° 551"1900 Agt. completak. remodeled. flreplece •. patio, 1BR 28Rl1BA ar1CI .... 110 ...... · / .... 38A Coete Mele home for _.. r . ..... ....,.. ... _. ~ ... , ... -• _. · TwnhM. D w, w/d , ... up, cat ok 1325 + ~ utMa . .cflg • .,,.,.. o own· erty CMh Of cuh 10 your YEARLY "Weterfaltt & St s" LIDO ISLE aw,,lful 2BR tlPll Pool. llt/lort, view. jecuzzl. Iott or gtUI, 1760 & end gar N-.. ·1850Mo · •
ar8fllp. You mue lhe toM "f~ ok CALL AGENT 875-4000 1BR 2BR I 1~Mfl'l2BR 4BR 2'hBA, FR/DR. lllge rec. room, laundry room. From 1950. Ullls pd. 1715 •. 24551 Me Vlt1I. 54&-03io, lie 1.2538 c.11 Oevtd 646-2722 ""'11'1 pymta & • lhere __. 1'0 ....,., .... ,.,. 67"5599. • , Of """llo. 45' lot. St 10 St. Lie Ready for lnatent move-131-8107 Of 855-0665 498-335' • NB _ loc st-.A appree. ¥ou rec"ve~' .. .__'...,'.,......--"-•-·_"'""':"::::~ UnmT ·wi den. Frp c, wld l'lkup, ii150 873-7787 Avl now lnl Only S640 to "50/mo •-· ·• _... "'
100% tU baMftt1 Must C.ta 1114 BRl2'M5A. newty decor· pool, Jee gar w/Of)flr, + S200 OFF MOVE-IN SPACIOUS 2Br 188. $650. lat. INc~ JMt bdl, 2BR, Fam looking
,_,. daat'I credit. Agt!Wii.,;~~P!'ftl'!""""~ eted,fum,;ar.&carport. 175041050 -MC, No ..... TTIUlll IU .. APTI. 18' 1Ba., $550. New •11•1-IPTI ::_,~,==~~79~ 157~ Dys, Ev. Wknd• Unique townriou-. P~ S3000tmo 675-95'6 or peta. Vetma 549-2•47 3BRl2~; condo, ger., 530 w Wllaon pelnt, cerpet, ctrapes, Cd &X Sar 2e. 1 loft f/p, •WITH BOAT SLIPS•
.. I Jacuzzi Cell 1 811n90-7302 CLEAN 2Br 18• duplex, l t050/mo. 845-9219 TSL MGMT etc. Nlol, deen. quiet w/d hkup, nr Hunt ~111-llJFlllT NWPT Bdl:MIF straight,
...... D ~~;~· Prlnclp~l1 onl';. CHARMING Cottege 2Bd 1725. G~r. sml, yerd. OCEANFRONT duplex, 722-9012 Of 042-1603 E'alde locatlon. No pell. ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~ 580 rel!POf'I non-tmkr, qwlC .__ • --533 2Ba. e..m.d calllngs. Credit cMck req d, no upper; furn. 2Br, 188. Sorry Ito Petal Open 6-4. Cue del Mar i..tge 1IR, 1, 100 aq. ft. but funl S350+'h .utll I f&JBDI 474-9320, 842·8 frpto, ·& faf'll#y room. J)ttl. 54~~· "fW· n-petl, Winter~SIOO~ Apta, 147 E. 18th $t. SPACIOUS end CLEAN Frplc, mlc:ro, dfw, 08'Jl99 dep by 9/14. 722-9155
... Will "=~It= l f275/Mo. Call Natalie Completely ramodeled Agent 988-3480 Sparkling clean 2Bdrm 2Br-2Be 1770/mo :, ~mo~&!~~~ Shr-aeA 28A NytJonC Ml llllY MT. R 1$9..MOO ()( 543-6569 3BR 2BA + femlly rm()( Oceen1ront new custom melltiB"H me. $740 All utlls pd. 1Br-18e 1595/mo ... Sorry t on ....... M!!IO mo. ~ ' ' t..,... & guestl. 5B 'den, Merrtn Lync:ti Realty 4th bdrm. O/W, W/D, condo. 3BR 2B... fully F~. ~··Sorry, no pet1. CIOM 10 beech, no pell. re. 'nope'· utlls c.11 714-e73-74C>a POPULAR "+woL• To1o1r" 3 car&Q~ + much ,.. 2 90"' "'243* ••• I •11-111r 21 ............... JIM • fnc:d yerd, 2 car gerage, ... m ca...._ TV 2 ... r gar. . ••UTllllTI 1 ellace 84 -• " ••·• · ....., ' or -~ • modal with master ·mote. • · DUPLEX 3Br 3Be, 2-car .-,,... .... $1275 "' · """' ' .... _..
bedroom autt•uect1 wl1h ..... lll-l2M orttt prtcng, 2 door• from ~f.2t23(;7s1-27e;"o. No pees. UtN• pd. Winter Sperkllng clH11, large
119 own bath. Beautlfut TORELLI RL TY 540-SELL So, Beyfront. No pe11. 12400/rno. 873~7 Giiden apt1. Beeutlfu11y
vW of ooaan, bay & city . 1 1800/mo yrty. 723-0674 E'SIDE 1Br hte. cu1e OCEANFRONT nt Balboe la11d1caped 'ground1. 1gMa. Vwy convenient MESA VERDE 48r, 2Be. ctaen, yerd, 1825/mo. ..._ 3BR/2 .... ~er ..., Pool & apa, petlol/deci<I,
locMton. Walk 10 the ........ naw carJ*, paJnL LBG tux •Br 288 upatre ·--z• ..--..... · .. 'V Sor ··-.......... x. ,,___ .. , g11, ..... t.. -IUndack, )ult r odeled 08'1199 or carport. f'Y, _.or an)oy the lovely 1219,900. By owner. ..._.. .,..... -" no pell ~. pool, & ape. 854-0759 eel( new kltctl. Av.ii fOf E'SIDE Condo 2BR 2BA. new ~rum, etc. 1 ~room $«70
0..... community end SP•...,•.ING 3'"-/288 wi1h enn\Jel leaae Oct. 1. Yd, tml comptax. $1375. $800/wtdy or 11800/Mo. 28drm tVoBe 1795 --.......... , Im "~ .., 1 1800/mo. Refs r~'d. • ... rtr........... By owr.. 78CMl18 -.. ~ ........ ~g • offtca or aewlng room! -·--JJllYlllllDWIY ........ mm on Approx. 2,000 aq..h. This 175-9908 8181346-9 111Ltmll1·1• .....,.,a COSTA MESA
1114,IOO hOmehaabaencomptet• TERRIFIC So. Bayfront BJILI ...... 141-llJI 111-11• 1y ~. Gr .. t c:uJ. winter. 3BR 2BA furn mllJM-CALL 842-38508kr ,_E7rvlr"E-t:t KJN d.aclocatlonS209,900. lowerdupi.x,$1750/mo. For anwt81nlng w/pool.1--------38r 2tMI, ~e111ga, w/d ~I ~ I~ • ~ Muak:k agent. LIGHT ' airy Llttte lei 48" 11800/mo Incl pool .. ~ hkup. P•tlo. no-pate .
.. O:lt-.W\.'"\ 540-7355 or 751.oeei upper duplex. 3BR 2'ABA & lndecpa ave 545'-7506 2 St~"'=~~o 1925 Meneger at 181 O.. llE\L~~ ..... IMC• iW ~o winter, $1850/mo. NEWlY built 14l0sf 3& ~ Maf"AcJt.I H. 845-9455 ;=:~~~~~~~n;:r.~~ll":"==t: Agent. 47~ 2'Mle ~ilh-twnhme.1_...:.;;,_-,-• .,,...-.--n~.~"--DAIL y PILOT
...... Frplc, dbl ~· w/d hkup, 38A 21MIA on 1g gmblt Classified Pages tawala 1117 dlahlw. 11 50 131-3786 •1eoo1mo. Submit o~ Turn unwanted
LUXURY DUPLEX Fur!i TRI 19"91 2Br, 381, den, pets. 720-1704 Bkr 1't""ms Into
2 2Br 1300sf lndry rm. frplc, dbl gar-I .. • , ltepe lo 1199 e/c pool spea Tne bllgeln110 be tound 1n tod I
all"""' f100M ocean. frpl, °'*' bMm 1125o1m0 1yr +~rity. ci•-1ied .... rul llelrt cm.o,n, 2~ . .9. ,~. cell, ~k. cable/HBO. r . d stoppers! --•• 4Br, tern rm, nu kit, huge WlnlerN-pet$950-11ooo r e eranca1 req . ..---------...:..---------, lot, quiet cul de sac. 831.5167 ll&-988-4352 721-0935, 546-1923 •ft
l949K. 759-1397 ' 8pm evall 1011
-----~-~ "AT THE BEACH" 2Br
lullury condo. ocn vu. By owner. 1251,500 Call
117-1112Of131-3094
OCEAN~RONT APT. 2BR ---~,,.-..,,.---.... 111.IW llllln 2BA -Den Furn/unfurn. Weatllde 3BR 1BA + tam·
Newport lownhome. 11 Parkt11g avl. 11300/mo ~~~ ":~~~81o~f
Y99f new, view, 2BR winter only. 7"'1908 11050/mo. 752-2811
1198.500/or ~-C.rtu ••I ... I ut. ~ 214G
·11llyPlat
...._ .... 1r--------'"' ; * ExTRAORD I AX RV aM/ ill new carpet ,.. --·--·~·-fi~ -38A--3t.+M oonclo, dbl • Tnro F'"JUUV'IH-\.. garege '°" or the llna all pelnt' In/out,·~ yard, I
Clenlfled
142.5171·
714 M ALTY · grdnr. no pets. 112001 t
(1M)""'4r7M ,,... w:~k~=~ mo. 1•t+ IHI+ MC,
...... ~. ~ • ., ... ~-847-«M 1 M·F. 1-1 Of I ~----.;.__,;;..;._-11 •TOWNHOUSE 28drm, 184 Ml after 91•nd1
...
· -·-. Merrill Lynch Realty , ....... .
Pool. ve., Cemeo Shof•. 4 Bdrm, 3 Balh. s.,,.... ~ Next '° Downeoatt 0.
¥110prMnt. Wlldem .... S795,000
111-1111
288. den, dbl 0-1199·
wndeck I 1JOO/mo. 2144
543-8341 •tiiiifi66-~& ..... •&-.-MV,.._ec:•-1
JASMINE cr .. k 3BR, ..... petlo, dbt garage,
furNlhed 12750 --. All emanftlel. No
FABULOUS New cont*91-...... 167-1n&
porary. a&R 38A condo. liiiiiiiifiiiil Panoremle views ocean I ., lltm W
harbor '3600 19dnn, ale,*"*· pool.
.................. llH,lllNMO-e181
-lmll1·1• .......
mr&•HIWIT
JENHIFEAENCAANACAO
HAMOR REAL TV
Oflloa 173-4400
Ruld1111oa 176-2M8 .......
== l lii Will ....
\IW. Lii LI'. frpec. deal( ..... IOAlao 8cfl. I 1400
negoci.11.494-2174•
ffM COTTAGf, ocean ... .,., geraga, deck,
walk to bch. Avell now
• ' 171 "" Incl 417-3144
Lar11i9 CllffrfuJ room
l4001mo Incl uclMtlal. A.,..... now. 9y appt
ltf Ut ""' y !' Two .:; 1:::-~ rwoapo "°" ....... for' tellof'
NiW TOWNHOME 28r/
• .,.... ...... ded!. canyon
llW, 2-cet ger., pool I
... l 1110. 71t-740I
Sell y .. ,,.,.,.,, =,.::. :.::.-:,
~SI*''"'""' Cal ea..ww, 'f~1u,,,;, tk/. fln1
Mt-5671 •. i'~'fH'''"'J
for Inform ation 671-1 ~.9~ _,l.~ ..... Wll & surprisingly c.. 28A 111A ~.
I j ...... "'1Mc. 19 1M PllCiO Ow Cost ocaanald• ot PCH. !i!!:::::;-:=~!!!!!!"!!!!'!!!!!~~!""'!'i!!!!!!!!"• ~I ~~-~. •75/mo 81'""912 Agt • ..
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