HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-10-04 - Orange Coast PilotT\JESDA Y, OCTOBER 4, 1988 25 CENTS
_MilJionaire~· Wayne kin .:attac.k~d
Roger Luby, Duke· s daughter assaulted
. uporrarrtval aihts gated Newport home
head was beaten against the pave-
ment by one assailant The attJcker
also tried to cut the Achilles' tendon
on Luby's riaht foot. ·
Wayne's ficad also -was pound~d
apinst the pavement.
Luby.
Luby told police he thought the gun
was a toy and started to laugh.
The su~pect struck Luby on the
head wuh the gun and ordered him to
get out of the car and on the grounji. He then bound Luby's Wrists and
ank1es with • plasuc "n«:}tc:uffs."
grabbed his haJr and repeatedly
struck his head against the pound.
•
BJ PAUL ARCHJPLEY ...............
Two thup assaulted a Newport
BeKh millionaire and his compa-
nion, thedaupterof Pilar Wayne and
her late hustiand John Wayne, in a
bizane anack Monday.
NEWSLIN E
Freedom
Freed hostage
Mlthlleshwar Singh says
he Is sorry that three
American colleagues ab-
ducted with him are still
held In Lebanon./ AS
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In the Servk:e
Opinion
tt.ople
Roaer William Luby, S2. and Aissa
Maria Wayne. 32, had just driven
into Luby's garage at his gated home
at 232 l 22nd St. when they were
attacked at about 11 :30 a.m.
Luby, a mortgage financier and
formerly an Amencan Express ex-
ecutive. was pistol-whipped and his
DumplD.g
ofsewag~
lntobaf
probed
By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. .., .........
Criminal charges are expected to be
filed against owners of the Reuben E.
Lee restaurant for operating a plumb-
ing ~stem that alleg~dly dumped overflow raw sewage into Newport Harbor ..
Newport Beach police in-vestigators say the sewage may have
been dumpe(J at least three to six
times a year. whenever the res-
taurant's plumbing system malfunc-
tioned. over the 24 years the Reuben
E. Lee has been in Newpon Beach.
The dumping went unnoticed until
an anonymous caller, who identified
himself as a former· restauran em-
ployee. notified NewJ><?n ~.ch pohce last July, prompting an m-
vestiption by police and state water-
quahty officials.
According to Newport Beach
Police. the assailant$ followed the
victims 1nto Luby's garage after the
electronic sccunty gate opened. With guns drawn, they approached the
couple on each side of lub)"s car.
One assailant pointed his gun and
asked the victim if he was Roger
Old Yeller
• Finally, the·assaillJJlt tned to cu.t Luby's right Acb1lles' tendon. but
failed to cut through 1t. said Sgt. Mike
Jackson.
Polee Log
Pubflc Notices
=~r ·Weddings
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"No one ever dre.amt \hat a system
like this even existed' that would
dufnp raw sewage rig'1t into the ba y,"
said Grea. Armstrong. the Newport
Beach Police Department's en-
vironmental coordinator. "The sys-
tem was flawed to begin with."
Armstrong said today he 1s com-
pleting the police investigatiO{I and
prepanng a repon to the Orange
County Distnct .\ttome) ·s office,
(Pleue tee llEUBE1'/A2)
A ~d wareboue ha Old Town tmne, oace .... to
atore llma bee••, la it•eo a facellf't by .J. Ray Con8t111Cilon
Co. Put of a iu.er rencnadon project. tbe 22,GOO-equre-
foot ba1Jdln1 wtJl nentaally boue a reataarant and retail none. Tbe wareboue la on tbe .oatbeut corner of Bart
Road and Sand C&nyon Annae.
Mesa hiri~g h&ll off to Slow start
Only.four immigrant laborers get work
ascity'sjo centerbegtnsoperation ---
By BOB VAN EYltEN °' .... ~ .......
The gray floors and walls at the new
Costa Mesa Job Center were little
jlifferent from the sky outside.
That may be why many of the
lpproximatcly 20 immt~nt workers
there chose to stand outside instead of
inside.
Another reason may be that they
arc used to standing outside waiting
for work.
"I was in the park waiting for ajob
and the police came and asked us if we wanted to come to this employement
office," said Francisco Ayala Rios. an
agncultural worker recently arrived
in Orange County from central ~li
fomia. "I said I did, so they brought
me here to see this place:·
Today was the first da}' of oper-
ation for the new city off1ee where
legal residents can go and sign up for
day labor jobs with local emplo).ers.
street comers in the city.
One place in particular. Lions Park.
had sparked complaints from nearb
.residents who accused worke rs con-
gregau ng there of ro\\.d~ behavior.
and oiunnaung and de fecating in the
·part.,
The new iol>center. a convened gas
station on Placentia Avenue. 1s only
for worlt.crs with legal rcside~cy in the
United tates.
Those see king Jobs must sign up at
the front desk. produce proof of legal
resident" and rece1'e a.number. The) are then gn en Jobs. as ava1 table. according to the order tn wh1ch they
am,ed "Toda~ ,,e·re JUSt tl')·mg to fam-
ilia rize pcopl~ "1th the p~ures.··
said Chen l Fnedhng. Costa Mesa·s
.inte'JO'ernmental relations officer
"We re gJ\ 1ngout brochures to.every-
one . .\h). emplo~ers v.ho come b~. "e
JUSt grttt them arid ask them how man) v.orl..ers the~ need and v.hat
kind of kills ..
.,..._. Ollw let!' eaPIOJIDeot from Werner TOD
llutmaDD at tbe new ca.ta 11-Job Center.
The brainchild of City Councilman
Orville Ambur:acy. the new center 1s
intended to eliminate the unofficial
day labor pickup points in parks' and
<\s c'l:pectcd. things went slov.·ly on
the first da\. B 8.4S a.m .. about :!O
(Pleue ~ llllU1'0/A2)
..
·. TeaC"iiei-wiih AIDS gratef Ul
for nof~alcy of classes, life
81 GllltG IU.EIUtX ........... -
.. Vincent Chalk has had enouah of
the limcliaht for one lifetime.
Months after a landmark court
• decilioD ~ him to continue
e.dh .. ewa lhoueh he has AIDS. . a.a • llill .... just that -
.mil& ~ffe __ ltiJI ~ to woR It
VftlCIOMiddlllciool ad Univer· -=-Scbool ln Irvine, where he ile ~IM~Coun1y ~t Ol Education II a
.-..o1 ... '-"ll~red.. More ..... two ~ after be•DJ d ...... wiU AIDS. Olllk. 43, ..,. lie ii sail belkby .... buDier *-lae'1 ben in 1 loita time. He is = fWI .... tiil ,. ... • llil lll[IMllll .......
~
. ~
lut year while embroiled in a
controveny that had rcpcrcussiont
throuahout the nation.
He and his employer were not
always on such aood terms. After
rctumina in April 1987 from sia
weeks leave of ablence. Chalk found himself~ to a dctlr job. Tbc reason: 'sleavcof'ablencewas
for treatment of' pneumonia. wbicb
docton COllCluded Ml the mull of
acquired immune deftcieacy ~ drome. Tbc district Md dilcoveied
Chalk's aflhclioa and waa COlt-
cerned he ..... UUlmil * -cue to his stuCSents.
This tchool Y'89I'. the hOODla 11
IOM· For Vinmtt Chalk. lift bll more or lnl fttUl'Md to llOlmll. "h ______ __
'1d IO ..-till 11111 ,_--~Ill)..
year." Chalk said this wuk ... No
medaa. "° court problems. '"'That's
the wax I wish It would ha'\'e been all
along. , Unfortunately. thinp were not
that easy for Chalk. whose AIDS
odysxy tqan 1n ~ 1986
what he came down with pneu·
monaa and moMaudeosas. He told
doctors he had fdt naa down for a year bcfott that, bu~ blamed his
slUlll ... nns on alleraieL
A ~r latcf, CMJk went to the IM>lpital1111nwilb~
Dis time, ioc'4M'.1 IOld lim M Md
contncted AIDS. for .WC...._ ii
80 known c.we. 1"' llid lat '-I _.,_,_,,..,live.
"At._. I Dew what I was
11 'I I .wida. aAlr bri1t1 sick to ·
. l'IEM-Ame/A.91
The assailant then -.ent to Wa) ne ued her wnsts and ank:.ks and struck her head apmst the around while the
second suspect looked on.
The assailants. both descnbcd as white men in their mtd-to late 30s.
then drove off 1n a late model red
Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck. The
victims were not robbed.
Luby and Wayne were found b>
Luby's houseboy, wh~cut them loo~
and called pohce. The) were treated
at Hoag Memonal Hospital and
released~
"Obviously, some~ ~hired these
gu s." Jackson said. ·· 1 ~ went in, ·
did their thma and aot out. • . •
Luby is an avid tennis player,
whfch may be why the attacker tried to cut his Achilles· tendon. Jacbon said.
Lub~ appeared to be the main
taryt of the attack. he said. althouah ·
the mouve remains unknown. .. The way the att.,ck-wmtdown, it
looks hke she (W,ync) was in the
wrong place at th~ ~rong ttme. •
(Pleae eee llJL IOJIAIJl&/ A2)
T
~Xpartctect sos ;
facilities OK'd
by CM Council .
Charity's backers
seek urther study.
of Rea Center use
But pohce, wh o often ' sweep the
school at night to roust bvemitbt
slttpers. 58)' cnme 1s not a prob&em in
tht area.
Those who support SOS apparently
outnumber those who condemn it.
.. The people bavealrtady spokm."
Councilwoman Mar)' Hornbuckle
By JONATHAN VOLZIE · · • said. waving a fistful ofletters sent by °' .. ..,....... · ·supporters of tl\e expansion and the
.\n expansion of the Shatt Qur SOS program. The 18-ycar-o&cl cbar-
Selves communit) center. which lty. a non-profit aroup funded by state
some residents fear will draw more and federal grants. donations and the
transients into the , ne1&hborhood Cit). provides food and medical·
surrounding the Hamilton Street · 9Cn,ccs to the poor. mostly Latinos.. charity. was approved unanimously Hornbuckle said she rec:ei~ Monday~ the City Council. about I 89 letters -half from Costa
Althou the council chambers Mesa l'CSldents -in suppon of SOS,
• were fill with a standma-room-onl) and about 30 ~pposed. . ·
crowd -with many people wcanng ~ expansion ~ pro~ a red beans with the lctten -sos-__ 300=~'.lfoot trader for additioftal
the council straYect from normal pre-natal ca.re. salcJ Tean Fort.th,
procedure and approved the ex-who ~ns SOS. . .
pans1on before hstenmg to the pubhc. ..This sm_all enlaraement wil~ ~
.. The 1$Sue here really isn't the us to see seven to 10 add.!Uonal
expansion It's Rea Center as a · pregnant women each week. For--
whole." Ma) or Donn Hall md. bath said. ••RJabt DOW, women. must
Man) human services orpnizauons wall three to four~ for their fint
share the former elementary school appoantment - a cf\lcijl fK1qt' ~
with SO . all helping the poor and the man) of these m~thcr:s "!Ye waited needy · far too Jong to begin with.
The. center has dra"·n the ire of But several people. who spoke
nearb} residents who complain users dunng after t~-counal" vote. •Y
of the center unnate in public. harass they've waited too k>na for the
chiTdren and make the streets unsafe. £Pl--.. fllOaJ d)
........ _._ .........
.
lmmtcranta adll &atber at Lion• Park.
J
Friend& shocked
by youth's death.
By GREG l.Lf:ftll °' .. ..., ........
1t "a hard not to h\.c \hke Rus1d.
To hear fnends and relat1' ~tell it.
Mike had 1t all. He •'Is aood·look1ng.
mtelhacnt. athletic. "1tt) and Jund.
an ex-star '·ollevbt.11 player for Estan.
c1a High hoof. act1H in the Church
pf Jesus Chnst of Laner-<ia~ Saint\.
popular wt th '1nually e' Cf)'Onc
.. You elther kne• tum or -heard
aood th1np about him." said fnend
John Gra>, a ttn.or a. Estancia RUSK~ 18. graduated from Estancia
1n June .
Toda). t.k )OUftl man who .. rail)
hild evttylhu ... bis ltft lholt who
lo~ him W'llh CMfy IMtnOUH1
llUSld was killed 11 9:17 p.m.
Friday on a damned su.et in Sin
Marcoa. He WU -oitilll II a valet fbr On~ Aftl'h fleet VW. Servu. wtrida Md coatiinid to
pro•idc vat terY1Clf .. • 10.. •.... , ...... ...,, . .
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lroaldult.F_.....Valew ., .. ., 11 ntnlUenw:,.... Md "9ol"11Maa. Or·• ITO. 111 form Clmall ftlll --.. tlcttltoul D.-.Cltm'OP ~ ~ COMI dclllll11~9'; _ &''~ 11711 ... "4r' ON IALI UNIVERSITY SPECIAL,..... COlll Dlatrtcl. ,., ...... flr ..... and ............ or WW ~ ~ ............ DllrNolOctollerl, 10, 17, fMml?A -Alllft-CON-~.-~~TIN8 PROGAAM TAUIT, !8l8b-lftlal,_. LW. ._....,. Cer111ca11on Aequlat) and lllMd ebcM °" lepllmlMr lllC'l'ftall •ll•H ,._.,....... ,.__. M , lat ... 721 la .. , tMllnglOn IUL ANTlllNGtNllM.
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M740 ..-out ~ • .,,_or Md p1sae "-.. be .... .,_ • w1U1 -~a.ti CJf Or· BEACH ANO ~. CWA WllUr. 1nO. .... -......... ---... -------· ........ ,...,dli.-. .... -...... and ,..., .... Your ......... Oiied IO ..... County on...,.._., SWIM et.ue. 17lllO..... PllllC ll)TIC( ~ "°"" ·Wauwortl. 1.0S ....... 1111 Hudllft ~ _.....,~.....,.. ......... "" ...... '~ ....... --lllSlon, or ~ c IN waiti •tot-ti•• "Nondlacrlmlnatlon IO, 1111 Ave., lnllne. Callf.12714 <llll••• um 1Talr'zT L0ata. Anallelrn.. Callf. ~1 • .._..... ._ T... to,_ .... Clf peat dll9 a.-" ... tor111or....,,., W1 Tiie Luak COIRJ>any, PIC'llllCIUI• ___ l2IOt • Tiiis bu11M11 11 ..,._ ' Hoiw...... I I ...... UrNlh all lat>or and ............... IPllk ... PutllillllCI Orenea Coaat Ctaltomia. 17960 W1e --"""I II .... _..,.,.,....,. Tiiis bualnMe 18 con· dUC:ladllr.• ........ y~ 4: '=AUt. T rwonably ......, ..... ooal9, 1111Jlpmallt NC 1 y to: .. , IO .. non., .... .,. ..... con-Delly Plot Septeiilber H . Menue. lnllne. Cell. 12714 The folcMlng ,..,... .. ~~-CA-LIFO-NIA duc:led by. • IRdMdllal Tll• , .. 1 .. rent 00111• tw. clWala. • .....,.. ~ (Grede) l1ruc:Uon OOI*-and aub-Oc:10ber 3, 10, 17, 1111 Thia bUalMM I• con-dclllll .,.,._. • "' " · Tiie '"latrant com· ~ .. .,..... ..,.. ~A N011CI Of DE· dueat .. lnieof .. nollce --~~al ~onfconlrect8 endtollle"Stan-M-111 dueted by. aoorporetton HUNTER YACHT HA· 17110 Giiiette Avenue, merlCed to 1t8MaCt bUll-ftlll --.......... ~~~~Nl lntlleamountofl1,IM.OO. l18te Madi encl 0r~ldard c'amornla Non-_.,. llJM Tiie re9latrant com-VJCE8,2431W.COMI~" ~~·~12714 ............ undel "" lc:tltloua ..,._,... • ,..... • • DATED: ...,..,..., 21. Clllu .... leaclft. ClllOl".mlriellon COft1ltNGtton ..--~ merlCed to tranaact lbull-Newpol't8Meh,Callf. .,,. .._ • ..,_... ..,._ rw or ,.._ llatedabOWeORNIA
• ' llll. UHl.US YOU TAKE 1111 Counlv,Ctlfomla,.._. 1Contr8Ct8pec:Pc111D ,...... w --tM ftctttloua ,,..... K. Hu!Mr, 1Mt fornla, 17590 Ave., llatad~or1Aprt14, 1111 HOMnlD Ufld9ra.Cl.0 ¢8J:.O~A~A~T~~ Ullft'allTY ~-tM bllle nil and IRAln-fCwt11 ...,.lrl:c....., to ~ lllCftllCIUI WM bulllWa name or Mmll Lullaby. Anaheim, Calif. nine; Cellf. 12714. ,,_Irby Tiiis ......... w ·..;
BE AT A• .......C TY A880CIATIOll, ft: ..... a IOr ...,_,. (4%) ..i ConclltlOne. DPR 413, MAim ITAl'W !lated abo¥1 on Auguat. t2I04 Tiiis buelnw la COii· TNa .... ,,. ..... lllecl wllll tM ~Clark Of Or· ffl llOllM.D .. _,,, A LAW .,_Of .. beaeft. Section 00700). The loloMnt perlOnl •• 1MI Tiiis buaiMN la con· dueled by. • corporation wl1h ._County Olertl Of Or· .... ~ on ..... ,...., ~A:l~"'f;':.Al!,~E COllPOllATIOtf, Htlt flrHJp1ctM llldclara ..._ DIPAllTlllNT OF dOlna ........... ; RM:tierd T. Oellll, Sec· ducted by: .. lndlvldual The re911-:,~ com· .... County on September 2t 1111 N AT UR a o· F T H E I.Alli Clll'nlt DMYI, ..... and ot>laln btd PAM8 A11D MCMATION, KELLY CONST.AUCTION retary The r .. lllr ant colft • IR8nced to tr ~ IO, 1111 • ' -· ~ ., ~L.MI POMaT, fanM, ll*flk:allolil, and.._,, IL AM111a, D1rMter COMPANY, 4145 Felr1ield. Thia atatlfiilnt w llled menc9cJ to tranaac:t bu8I-Mii under IM flc:llt..,... ,_.. Publlaflld 0ranaa C..
• ~~oc:~l~A= -(1W) pllMbyaallngatormalllng ~Orange COMI Cotonade1Mer,Callt.92tl0 wltllthlCountyClerkofOr·,... under ""· flc:lltlou• ~"""'or .• Publlahed Orenga Coaal DellyPlotOctobeiJ,10,·11. TACT A LAWVP m.-. . a,..... to ltil ofllCe of Ille Daily Piiot ~ 21, Jen K"Jo, Jenkina, 4645 ange c:o.,,ney on September bualrlW ,,.,... or nemea !lated • ebove on Auguat. Delly Piiot Sep.....,. H . 24". 1111 • ~~=:=!!,~~°:rs\,~===·~~~ October3. 1 .,191 ~129eo ona del Ma:·~· 1981 ,_.·~:"'on September t~ t. Deihl. Seel· ?e'ober.3, 10 •. 11. 1':-eee · • M-731
1... Dlslrtot. 11331 ThfS buain111 11 con· Publlahed Orange eout Janet Hunt• retery • ftBJC llJllCl trance: OLD COUNTY .,742 ~ Hl'lnttngton Beacll, ca "8.IC NOTICE ducted by: .. lndlvlduel o.iiy PilOt Oc;tober"'3, 1o, 17, Thia atatllMl'll waa tiled Thia .. .......,,. w tiled __ .,. -TICE =THOUIE, Comer of • l2t4I Th• regl11rant com-2,. 1981 wtlhtlleCountyClerkofOr· wltlltMCountyClerkofOr· ~"" , PICrtrlOUI••••
In ... ~ ~ ~ "8JC NOTICE unlW If la l'Mde on a atan· NAm STA,._.,. ,,... under Ille flctitlou1 21, 1918 2t,, 1HI FICTITIOUI .,..... The 1o1ow111t PINON .. Bhid ... lft0f'9 and S..C. Ana No bid w111 be OONideNd PICTITIOU9 ..,_.. merlCed to tranuct buli· ' M-730 enge County on September .... County on September .._,. ~ NMm ITUIF n
_,,. ..,._ dard llld '°"" fUmillled by • Tiie to11ow1ng perlOl\I ere ~ """' 0< nMMll ,_ --..... YAW--,..._llu1l111111 •·
ii::.+--.;,,:.:_ __ Cowliy.of <>ranee..... . ..., .... Depertment of Partee dOlna bualrllll u · lilted above on September • Pia.IC NOTICE Publiahlel Orange COMt Publllhed Orange COl9I The....-.. ..... .,. THE IOU ACE e .
c ....... UIMlar .... pow PICTITIOU99UH•• andAecfeetlon,endlemadl L.QY LAGOON 1593 13, 1118 o.llyPilotOc1ober3, 10, 17, Delly Piiot October~. 10, 17, ~-· STAuCTIOHANOMALES-~~~~'!_'!I ~~-~rrn .. In accordance wlthlf!' "In-llek•St.Coat1MeU,Clllf. J. KellyJenklnl ... _ .. ~~"~ .. ~ 24, 1988 24, IHI ~ IFOANIA 'COM· TATESEAACH.2201Pdlc: "' •---• ...,...._, ,,.. . . Jo..8ldd9o ~ Thia at~t WU ,,_, -1111 M-719 M·731 SR-AT-AllL Sta. 2...C.. Colta...MllL ~_,....~---Oondllloiw, and A8lfiictkWia Cloiiilillwrr~ . Tiie ~t 1oW bicfder James Stldll9n, 1593 frtfle'"CMIY Clerll orOr-MloWlnG pertOnS TAAIO 17550-CMilette Av· Cellf. 92127 • •
r9COl'ded or1 July 3, 1111 • M". BUCI< S LIQUOR. w111 be required to ex9CUt• • Bek• St., Coat• M .... c.m. _,.County on September doing bUe1riM8 • PIB.IC NOTICE NOTIC( .rvtn. Cellf. 92714 j' ~ L ~. 2201
I
1
~ MIO, p_. , .. In-2N8 FalrView Aolid, Coeta contrac:tural 89'..,_t 1ft t2l2I 20. 1918 H I R E D H A N D S ~ luak' C'pn Call· P8Clfk: ~ .• Ste. 2·C, Coate ~.of onic.J ........ of ..... Calf. t2l2t Ille '°"" of • "Standard M•jken Ycl1ngqul1t 95&2 ,... G RA p H I c s . 2 0 7 2 2 . "..,. ~ I 17550 ~ A 'MIN CJJlf 92127 Or ... Courtty. Cllllornla: J I "' s u" • a•. 5 0 Aigl....,... -Fonn 2" wtllc:tl BIM• AWi G8i'den Grove Publialled Orange Cout Goah••k . Huntin-gton '1CT1110UI ....... PICTITIOU9 ........ omla.IMM Cellf 92714 V• Tllli buSineaa ,, con· Ronald D. Roup,• LA-. Cor· Meadowbrook, Garcten ltlel be binding upon "" C8llf ·• '!Dally Piiot September 26. Beac:h, c.111. 92&41 NAm ITATIMEMT NAm ITATamlfT en1ue. Flnaiic:.cOr tlon lclucted by:.., lndlvlduel • ~~~':: Gr::gc.rUk-::h. H50 8tateofCallfomla1=~ Leilani Caldwell,. 9562October3.10,17,19:-689 20~~~= cJ::=:-"'•.,. Tiie=:'°"' a.re c1117::f'.118, 17550~rilette The re9l1trant cOIR·
SOCIATIOfit llleU.'*81 MHdowbrook Gerd111-c-'by"'i'S j I 818keAwi .. GardenGrove. Bw:t1Calff926441 CALIFORN IA COM· Ll'S PHILADELPHIA Avenue,lrvl!MlC8111.92714 menc«I to traneect ~
under 111111 .; rrr:.. Uen Grove. calf. ..... contrac11.':~er:; "·o:, C.:~i. bu1ln111 11 con-"8Jc NOTICE Thia' bu.i..... II con-MERCE CENTER: 17550 ST£AKS & HOAGIES. 16(1.81 of°::" o:n.~~ Trs= :: .... "'*' .,.,.:.11e or tic= . . recorded Febru9ry 3.. 1HI -Thi• bu9iW .. COii• .. ilated In the General dueted by• I general part ducted by."' Individual Gillett• Avenue. Irvine, Calif. GoldeliWMI Sir .... Hunt· Revocable . I T • di listed atlOve on September aa ln1tru1nent No . duetedby:~ Coodltlonl DPR 483. Sec· Nrlhlp · . · FICT1110Ue-•• The reglatr•nt com-9271-4 . tngton8w:tl.Callf.92t47 Julu 5 1~';\)r~ 1 1981 . ll-050927. of Ille Oftldel Th• regi.trant com· tton 00100' Th 1 t t MAim 8TA'RmNT menoed to tranaact bull· The Lusk Company, 1 Julie M. Yu, 13601 '' · • •Samuel L F
Aecordl of aald County. and menc«I to tr...-ct bua1--1n accofdance with the menc:c. rrJI :,~~ c~: The lolowing per1ons are Mia under IM flc11tloul Calilornl• corporation. Alderton L•ne. Cerrlto1, ~ =~ ~u~• 9f~ Thia ateten:r= !led· purwt to Section 13'7 of nw under IM ftctlttoul provlakll• of Section 1770 under the licftlo doing bulinlU u i bullnW name or Nmll 17550 Gillette Ave., Irvine, c.111. 90701 · ....... ...,. • · • · with (lie County Clerk of Or INCMICodeofllle.Sta .. ol tlUlll'9ll name or '*"'81m end 1n3.1 ol ttte =-,,.,... Of ~ WILLIAM Dill & ASSOC. lilted •boY9 on October 1, Calif. 92714 • Ryen Jin Yu, 13,601 d~":tt,~~·1:,:ed1:.,.c;:: ... Couoty on~ CalllOrnlL Will SELL AT llsted above on NIA Labor Code the Depart· !lated above on September 1645 &upertor Ave., ·eosta 1988 Inter Finance Corporation, Alderton Lene. Cemto1. ll'llp · e 20 1981 ~ PU8UC AUCTION TO THE Yong Sult Sull """'·hM .icerte1nees ltl•t 19 1981 Mela, Cllllt. 92t27 K•th!Mn L Mangela CallfO<nla, 17550 Gillett• C8111. 90701 . • ,_
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR Thie .................... ""ganerlll pr""9illng rat• j..,,.. Stidham Wllll•m M. Diii. 1724 Thia ltatement ... filed Avenue, Irvine. Calif. 9271-4 Thia bualnlll II con· ~ rrgt:tr•~ C~· Publlellecl Orenga C0191'
C"8H, peyable at time of w11t1 the County Clerk of~· of wagea In !tie county In Thia atat'"*'t was llled Tr•dawlnd1, Newport with tlle Count~ Clertc of Or· Don81d W. SNw, Trust• clucted by: Co-t*tMrS unO! ~: flctltl • Deily Piiot September 21 .-in lewful money of 11'18 ange County on Septel;iber wtllctl'the work la to be done wl1tl 1111 County Clerk of Or BMch, Calif. 92660 1nge County on September of Ille Donald W. Shaw Tiie ••till rant com· neu ou• October 3 10 17 1ttll ·
Unlt9d S1atea. 1111 riotll. title, 28. 1988 . be • !lated by the Depart· ~ County on Septem~ Thia bu1lne11 'ts ·con· 27. \988 . Revocable living Trust u/dlt IR8nced to tranuc:t buli· ~ ~ O<M ~ · · · M-883
and ~..,_, In 1M follOWing - --,.... ...,.,-.. l~rlel Retatloni. 27 l981 ducted by: en lndlvlOuol ,_ ""*' 5. 1963, 160 Nftpoft ,.... under Ille flctltlou1 Net •...,, on •Y · ~=====~~
in Mid County and State: Delly Pl6ot October3, 10, 17, • ""addreu lllted above. Publlllled Orange Cout menoed to. tranuc:t bull· Deity Pilot Octobei3, 10. 17, Nftpoft Beach. Celil. 92680 llated abOVI on N/Af' Richard T. Deihl, Sec· Ing"'°'• drivewey than .• ~property altuated Publiehed Orenga Co811 Aoopyoftllilllatingllonflle • ,__ Th• reglatrent com-Publllhed Orange .coutlCent• Drive. Sult• 250, bulinlU name or names 19M urourcams-_.
Lot 108 of Trect 123& u 124, 1981 P,...•a Will be granted Daily PilOt Octc>ber 3, 10, 11.
1
,,... unct. tl\8 lictit1ou1 '24, 1981 ,. Thia buiineu 11 con· Julie M. Yu retery -carnpalt•? Sell It wltll a
ll'io.I by map on.file 8odt M-727 eo bidder ~ooertv 80Clfoved 2-4, 1981 M-720 bulill9U name or names . M-718 ctutted tw: 1 limlted partner· Tllil ~ •• flied Tiiie 1tatement wu llled claulfted8!'· 'I.
»BCHEVROLET
Home of thfJ
Sefengeti Blazet-
c au our friendly sal.esrrie~ for details •
579-5100 ·1-800-228-7240'
17-07-1 E:--tmpenal Hwy. ~Yorba 'Linda. Cali'forni~ -
,,,.,.,.. '"' . o
S1rrio1 I Selection
THEQ.ROBINS
THE · STORE
2060 Har~or Blvd. · ~osta· Mesa
842-0010
o IADDLIBACll ~ . ,r
Safes . "'· leasing "'1IJ1 Service
Parts
IRVINE AUTO CENTER,
1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200
· CONNELL CHEVROLET . G 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa ·
Over 2,;3 Years Serving Orange County -£: ="'-Sales • Servi~ ~ zq .. ~ Leasing ._ .. _..a.._
~=~ -
546-1200 Special Parts ~ine 546-9400
2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA
G)JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
&·SA~~Y.IL~&• ·-l .,..__:_~-NS~4/.bOcATto --.-4 · ~ _ i '·SANTA ANA' AUTO. ,.ALL. ~
1500 Auto Mell Dr.; S.ta Ane . ·. 835-3i71
' ~. :l\tewport/.5.? ·Frwy. et Edinger ., •
,S11tes Dept. OPen 7 days Sernc,. Hours: Moo.:Fri 7am-10pm
..... .,
BUENA'
·RARK
...
·s.1~<;m ..
PACIFIC
OCEAN
.. .
...
< • I , ,
. -
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• OLDSMOBILE
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Ak-CustomerS~t!On1----.--~~-.r::---~-..... c.... '• GMC TRUCKS --1'91r-111---..:._....::. ---: E•eellence Awlrd Winner .
17.0-1001 '
... 23663 Rockheid Blvd
.Lake Forest, Irvine Auto Center. ,
. ) .
..
. \
. .
.. ·
o/~ ..
'I/} ~
.
$' ..
u.·1582-0800
SAN OIEGQ FWV ·AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL
. ' ~. ~· =~g;~~~~ClNO
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bur Goal Is to Be NumQ.er One' • I
0 ''HOJJSE. of IMPORTS, Inc.
·1-Mercedes-Benz
• 6862 Manchester Boulevard
tfucna Park
;l: ~· . (t)
SERVICE 213 or 714/MERCEDES . M-f:"" 7a-6p · M·F 8a-6p·
Where l-5 and l-9lmcet. Sat. 8a·2p
' : . ~·r--en CitJr:: rmx VO~SW~GEN@ w IN WESTMiNSTER ~
7@. Westminster Blvd., Westcninster,
(714)891 .... 9378 (213)430-28'3
\ Go~c; · Orange CoJl&t '
. ·: (j~~ . .Jeep. Eagle .. ~· : ~Sail.I~• Sales ~
• ~ ) . Ow -; I l'rlodl1 • Service
541 1023~ ·• 1as1ai
· 1 M Barbor ~Bl_vd.· • Coata Me•• .... . ~ 1.~c CJ\MPBELL ·~ .. NISSAN/~~-~
• Low p,.,., • No G1mm1dn • Greol Selecho"
• Fr1•. ndly People • E.uellent Serv1te •• 1 aa35 leach lovle.ord
-1114> M2-n11 2131 sn-1~-: <
•11ACH -·':~·.
: . SALES -Lf:·'"~ING ·.: .
SERVICE -~~RTS c-
(714> 8"8-7739 16800 IMch Blwd.
(714) 996-1008 Huntington S..ch, CA 92847
•
ms .. ,.~,.
4' 1 HONDA DSALSR IN ORAl'fOS CO.
Salo • Servttt • Parts
Lt"aatng AU Makn
. 988·
...
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1988
• I • •
. . ,
.. ..
•
..
.~illiO.~ai re.·~~·.W aj.#~
-..
25 CE TS -
·kin attack~d
,,.. # • • .,.
·Ro er Luby, Duke's aughter_ass~ulted
. upon arrival at his gated NewP.b :home
head was bealen agaansl lhc pave· Luby. . ~ T~ assai lul then ~ent to Wa) ne.
.. n1ent by one assailant, The attlckcr Luby told police he thoughl the gun ued her wnst-s and ankles and struck
also tried t~~u~he Achilles· lendon was a toy.and s.t.arted to laugh. her head apanst the ground whlle lhe
on 'L~by's n t \. The -suspect struck Lub~ on the second suspect looked on.
, Wayne's ca also. was poun(led head with the gun a~rdered ham to The assailant~ both 'described' as
··Qbv1ously. somebody hired these
guys," Jackson said. "Ther, went in.
did their thing and got out.
Luby is an avid tennis player
which may be wh y the attacker tried
to cut his Achilles' tendon, Jackson
.
..
!'
By PAUL ARCHIPLEV °' .. ..., .........
against the pav mcnt. get o ut of the car and oo tfle ground. white men in ihear mid· to late 30s. said. , Roger William Luby, 52, and l\issa
Maria Wayne, 32, had just driven i~to1:uby's garage at/h 's gated home
Tw.o thup assaulted a Ne~pon at 232 1 22 nd St. whep they were·
Beach. milhonaitt and his compa· attacked at about 11 :30 a.m. .
A~rding to NeWJ)On ·Beach He then bound Lub)'s wnsls· and then drove off in a late model red
Police, the assailants followed the ankles w:1!h plasti c "flcxcutTs." Chevrolet S-1 0 pickup, truck. The
vit.rims into Luby's garage after the · grabbed his hair and repeatedly victims were not robbed.
electronic sccunry gate o,pened. With struck has head agalnst lh,c .sround., ' Luby and Wayne were found b)
• Lub~ appeared to be the main
\.aflel of the attack. he said. although.
the mou"e remains unknown.
"The way the attack went down, it
looks hke she tWayne) was in the
wrong place at the wrong time.
i Pleae eee MILlilOPtA.Dt.E'/ A2}'='
·nion, the daughter of Pilar Wayne and Lub)', a mortgag~ fina~cier and h~ late husband John Wayne, in a formerly an Amencan Ex?rcss -Cl·
btzane attack Mond! ~ -~ili'.e._,Wu..._pistahwhippcd. anlJ btL
guns drawn, they approached ·the Finally, the assailant tned to cut · L:uby's houseboy, who cut them loose
couple on each side of tuby's car. Luby's right· Achilles' tendon. but and called police. They ~ere trcalcd
One'a\sailant pointed h~s gun and failed iocut through)\, said Sgt. tdike at H~g -~emorial Hospital and
~v1~was-·&ogor-J11ck ~-;-., L-
NEWSU NE
Fr~edom
F;reed hostage
Mlthlleshwar Singh says
he Is sorry that three
American colleagues at;>-
ducted with him are still
held In Lebanon./ AS ,,
JD des
Bulletln Board A3
Business A9-12
Ctaaslfled 68-10
Comics 67
Death notices 84
Entertatnment BS
In the Se~lce A6
Optnlon A8
People 86
Potlce Log A3
PubHc Notices 84, 10
~s 81-4
eat her A2
Weddings A6 . .
·.
i I 4 • • .. Drimpip.g :
'of sewage
in to bt!-Y . ·
/prOb t:d: -·.
::;;;;a : '.;Bx..pa1;1aect sos
·:_facilities OK'd
.by.'CM '·Council ·
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .. W, ........
Criminal charges are expected to be
fifed against owners-of the Reuben E.
Uc restaurant for operating a Fl)lumb-
ing system that allegedty dumped
overflow raw sewage. into Newpon
Harbor. •
Newport &each police in· , vestigators say the sewage may have
been dumped at least three to six
times a year. whenever the res-
taurant's plumbing sys tem malfunc·
tioned. over the 24 years the Reuben
E. Lee has been in N~wpon Beach.
.The dumping went unnoticed until
an anonymous caller,\ who identified
himself as a former l:estaurant em·
plQyce, notified Newport Beach
. poface last July, prompting an in·
vestigation by-polieeand stale-water·
quality officials: ,
... ..
",No one ever-Oreamt that a system-
lif<e this even existed that would
dump raw sewage right into the bay:·
said Greg Annsu ong. the Newpon
Beach Police Department's en·
virnnment.aJ coordinator. "The sys-te'hl was flawed to be~n \\1th.'. A 93--year-old wareli'oue ln Old. Town lniner o•ce uMCl to
atore ltma beana,..-la 1t•ep a facelUt by J . Ray Con•truction
Co. Patt.of a 1ar11er reno .. ~'n project. the 22.000-8C(11Ue-
foot ln:alldJ8' wtJ1 eYeDtaallJ bOUJte-a reetaa.rant and retail
atorea. The warehoue la csn the aoathea.t comer· of Bart
Armstrong said·-today he as com·
pletina the police investigation and
J>rcpanng a rep(ln to the Orange
County District Anome} 's office .
(Pleue .ee REVBltN/A2) Road and Sand C&nyon A•enue. · ~ . . ,. . . ~
. .. . ..
Charity's.ba''ck. ers' But police. wbo often sweep the -school at night to roust overnight seek f µrtJ:ter U y ~~-:rr~: 5a}' Cnme IS 001 a problem in
__,f,,..R=-....,rF>--C=---t~---.-..-~ Those who support sos apparcndy 0 ea en er use oulnumber those who condemn it.
"The people ha vc already spoken."
Councilwoman Mary Hornbuckle
'By JONATHAN·VOl .• Zl.E said. waving a fistful oflcttcn sent by Of.,.Wr,..~ suppon ers of the e~pansion and the
~n expansion of the Share Our SOS program. The I 3-ycar-old char·
Selves community center. which · 1ty,a non·profitgroupfu"!ded by state
some residents fear will draw more and federal grants, donauons and .the
transient$ into tlie nt1ghborh00d city •. provtd~ food and m~
surrounding the Hamilton Strttl SCTVlCCS to the poo!'· mostly La~os.
chanty. was approved unanimously Hornbuckle said she received Monday~ \)le Git~ Council. about 180 letters 7 half from Costa Althou the 'cou.ncil chambers Mesa residents -in suppon of SOS.
· were fiH with a.st.andang-room-onl} and about 30 opposed. . crowd -with many people wcanng The expansion ~ould pco~~ a
red hcans wtth the letters --sos .. _ ~square·foot ~tier for add.iuonal
The cooncll Strayed from normal ~natal care. said Jean Fort.th.
proctdure and approved the ex-who ~ns sqs.. .
pansion before risten1og to the p,ublic. "Th1s small enlargement wtl~ ~
"The issue here really, ·~·l the us to sec seven to JO addj.Uonal
expansion n's Rea Center as a prcgnaru wo~ each wee~ ~or·
"1hdlte:" Ma\ or Donh Hall said. bath sa1d ... R,ght now, women. must
Man} human services organ~uons wall three to four weeks for their first
sh.arc the fonner elementary ~hoot appointment - a Cl"UClal faC\Or ~
wnn so . all helplOg the'poor and the many of these m~thci:s b!vc waited need:,-. . . · , · . far too long to begin with.
The center· has drawn the ire of B.ut several people, .who spoke
narby rcs1derhs who complain users dunng after the counol vote. say
of rhe ccoter unnate an public. harass the) 've waited too lona for .JM
ch1tdren ana raake the str~ts unsafe. (Pleaee eee 808/ A.2)
·Mesi!' hiring· hall Off ·to slO~ start
Only four immigrant laborers ge ·work
as city's job center begins oper~tion
• By BOB VAN EYXEN
Of .... Delly ,... ....
The gra y floors and walls at the new
Costa Mesa Job Center were lmle
dtfferent from the sky.outside.
That may be why· many of the
approx.imat6ly 20 immi~nt workers
there chose10 st.and outside instead of
i nside. ~
Another reason may be that the)
are used to standing outside waiting
for work.
"I was in the park waning for a job
and the police came and 1$ked us if we
wanted to come to this employement
office," said Francisco Ayala Rios. an
agncultural worker recently arrived
in Orange County from ce ntral Cali·
fomia. ··1 said 1 did, so. they brought
me fiere to 'Stt this place."
Today was the first da_y: of oper·
ataon for the new city office where
leg.al rcs1<knts can go and sign up for
da} labor jobs with local emploxers.
Delftao 0Uftl'U leta employment from Werner YOD
Bartmuua.at ~·new Coeta 11 .. Job Center.
The brainchild of City Cbuncalman
Orville Amburgey. the new center is
intended to eliminate the unofficial
day labor pickup points in parks and
~ f ••
/fea:ctl~r.wtth AIQS grateful
· (or.~~.oi¢alcy of classes, life
BJ GREG U.ERltX ..............
Vincent Chalk has had enouah of Jhe limelia)\t for one lifetime.
. t,\ont.hs-after a landmark court
dediioll aJlowed him to continue.
teachlnt even thoulh he has AIDS,
a.alk 11 still doina just that -
ee.chin&. ~He still ~ to work at VeMCIOMidcHe Sctlool and Univcr-
1'1y H~School in Irvine. where he is em by tM 9n-. County ~t Of Educ:atJon as a
teecbet of' the heariftl im~~. More than two yean after be•na
dilpoled with AIDS. Chalk, 43, •rs be i• Mill heal'hY and happier
tllaa he'• tietn in a '"-'.time. He is .mi.:! fUll time dNI yeer, u ,,.~ '° --·-tdaechale
last year while embroiled in a
controveny that had rcpercussiont
throughout the nation.
• He and his employer were not
always on such aood terms. After
rctumina tn Apnl 1987 from Sill
wteks leave of ablence. Oaalk found
himself assianed to a desk ,ob. The
reason: Cha.Jk•s leave of absence was
for tmltment of pneumonia, which
doclQrs concluded was the mull of
acquired immune deftciency syn·
drome. The di1tnct hid dite0vcred
Chalk's afthcuon and was con-
ettned be miltn trusnut the cm.
cue'° h11 &tu3ents.
This school year, the hoopla as aone. For Vincent Chalk. life hat
more or lat rtturntd to ltOr'INl.
.. It WU IO much easier ll"i•
"9ck '° tcachiat \his yar tbU mt
year," Chalk said &has v.uk ... No
media, no coun problems. TI\af s
the wax ( WISh It WOUid have been 3U
along.
Unfo nuna1th', thif\P Vttrc not
that easy for Chalk. whoK IDS oct~y bcpn an Fcbnaary 1986
when he came down with pneu·
mon1a and mononucleosat. He told docton he had felt nan down for a year before that. but b&amtd his
Sl&WJsbness on allerlia.
4 ~r later, CMlk went 10 the
hospltaf' llPiG witla PMWftOl'ia.
Tlus nme1 ctoaOn .-. .._ ht Md
contflctea AIDS.._lar.WC. dteft is
no known cure. TM.Y IMd a. Md
tbrtt ye.an 10 live. .. At ._.. I lmew wllM I ._
deMlll Wida. aftef lllilll ~IO Clll•W-~M)
Str~et comers 1n the CllV. ..
One place 10 panacufar. Lions Park.
had spa rked complaints from nearb}
residents who accused workers con-
gregating there of ro"'d) beha \'10r.
and of unnaung and defecaung in the
part.
The ne~ 1ob center. a con,en ed gas
stauon on Placent ia Avenue. 1s only
for v. orkers wath legal residency in the
United States. Those seel ingJobs must sign up at
the front desl . produce proof of legal
res1denc" and rece1,e a number. The)
are then &•'en JObs. as available.
according to the order in which they
am,ed.
''Toda' \\e're JUSl uy1ng to fam-
1hanze ~ople w11h the proccdurn:·
said Chel"\l Fnedhng. Co~ta Mesa's
intelJO' ernmeotal relauons officer
"We re gt' 1ng out brochures to e" Cf)·
one . .\n) emplo~ers v.,hocome b}. v.,e
JUSt greet them a1td ask them hov.
man\ v.or er-S the' need and what lu nd.of skills.. ·
.\s e\pecte'd. things ""e nt slowl ) on
thC' fi rst da-.. 8} 8.45 a.m .. about 20
(Pleue tee H1R.ING/A2) ,. Immtaranta •till catber at Lion• Park. ... , .
F r iends shocked ,
byyo~t~ 's death
B)' GREG KLERKX °' ... .,..,,... .....
It v.11' hard not to hke \\1ke Ru 1d.
To he.ar fncnds and rtlall' tell it.
Make had 11111 He was aood·lookina.
mtellt&ent. alhlctac. w11t) and lcand,
an Q•SW" voile' ball player for Estan·
Cla High hoof. a ll' e 1n the Church
of Jc u C'hnst of Lauer~~ Saint
popular ~ith 'anuall e\Cl)Onc.
'"You either ._new ham or heard
good thmp about him:· said fncnd
John Gra). a . ." senior at Estancia.
Rosie ... I 8. gBduattd from Estanc1a
an June
Toda • the )O\lnt man •ho "really
had ''")th•na·· l\&s atf\ '~ ~ho loYcd ham •1th Oftl)' mcmoncs.
Rus.ck was kilted at 9: 17 p.m.
f ndav on a darkened street an San
Mal"COI Ht was wortiftlas I vain fbr
On.-.ted Aftlds Flett Vakt Se~t«. •ha Md C'Oltnaed '° provick valet tcmee b' a I Oda ........ ,. busiw ,.ny.
M ' <>r.,.... CoMt OAlLY PILOT/ Tueeday, ~obet 4, 1"8
·MILLIONAIRE, WAYNE KIN ATTACKED •••
PNlaAl
.. It was meant as a messqe to birn.
As of now, we don't know what that
meslllt is."
Jack.son said Luby is involved in a multimillfon-dollar lawiuit, which
may or may not have been connected
with the attack.
He reportedly is involved in liti-
ption .and bankruptcy proceedings
over his purchase of The Broadway
dep&mnent store on Wilshire
Boulevard in Los Anaelcs.
Luby said this morning that he was
OK. but declined to discuss the AIM& Wavne attack. ,,_
.. As of now I'm all ri'ht, but on
advice of counsel l can r say any-
thin&," Luby said.
Pilar Wayne said today that her
dauahter was emotionaJly shattered
by tfic experience.
"They grabbed her hair and beat
her face against the concrete," she
said ... Her wrists arc~tting black and
blue and she breaks out crying every
IOminutes.
· "Imagine the horror of somet?<><f y
Newport pollce, flre
•tatlon•lnvite public
telhng you. Tm gonna lull you 11 you
say one word." '
Wayne stayed through the night
with her daughter. sleeping on the
floor beside her. She said the family is
very co ncerned for her.
··1 .ha ve no idea why anyone would
do this." sht said. "I'm baffled by 1he
whole situation. Why anyone would
want to harm a member of my family
I just don't know." Wayne said she would remain at
her daughter's side.
Aissa Wayne. who lives in Corona
del Mar, and Luby are both going
through dtvorces.
Lub)t's wife Sassy, a real estate
saleswomjln. is ltving at the Balboa
Bay <.:lub. Wayne's husband, ThomasGion11. is an orthopedic surseon. They re·
Ponedly are involved an a custody
benle over their I-year-old daughter.
Friends exprHsed shock as news of
the usault spread.
Beverly Thompson. who has
known Luby about a dozen years. said
there could be no plausible expla-
nation for such an attack.
She qucsuoned the idea that a
lawsuit was connected to the assault,
saying, "Half of Newport Beach is
involved in one lawsuit or another.
"We all spent the night in tean,"
Thompson said. "We CQuldn't be-
lieve th'5 could happen.
"Roger is one o those people who
lives by a stric1 moral code, so it was
doubly shocking to those of us who
know him.
"He's one of those rare human
beings who's always there when you
need him."
A neighbor said the street ha s been
"in chaos" for months because sev-
eral bomeowner1 are remodeling
their homes. Trucks, cvs and trash
dum~ters dot the street daily.
"It d be very easy for somebodyio
park out there and get away." the
nci&h bor said. "11' s j us ta mess."
The Coast won't be clear for long
Cooler e.rnc-atur• •eon the .,_ .. the piitchy wty
morning fog of,_.., days tumt Into•''**• thede of ttu. thet
wtll hena 9'ound et INet UflJtl mkl-momlng Wednetday, the NetlonefW•ther Service Mld"ftldey.
•• , ........... 0....... • ..
The fog, wNch lhould roll Into moet .,. ... by tat• this
ewnlng, will burn Off by the aft•noon Wednesday, tuvtng hazy
IUnlhine behind. fot9Calt•• Mid.
AJong the Orange Cout there wtll be hazy sunshine
Wedneedey after late night through mld-momlng fog and low
douds. Cooler Wedneedey. 8Nch lows In the tower eoa to lower
50a. Highs In the mld-ec>a to 70. V81ey Iowa In the mld-50a to
tower 60s. HIQha Wedneedey In the upper 70. to upper 80a.
• From Polnt Conceptlof'I to the Mexican Border -Qver
Inner ••t•a, Ught and varlebfe winds night end mOf'n(no hours
through Wedneiadey becoming southwest to west 10 to 15 knot•
with eeu to 2 feet •flemoon Ind evening hours. Soothwett swell 3 feet. Night and mqrnlng loW ck>uda with piirtlal afternoon ctearlng.
U.S. Temps HewOrlMnl IO 12 HewYOtll City .. 57 Extended Call_!. Temps. .. Lo OIOllllOml Ctly 73 $3 :r-=:24hOuf•~11 ~ m58• ~:t;'i°~mo;:::~ "' Otnel\I 61 31 ~Qu. ., S5 OrlMOo IO 13 Meflof9 52 « ~ .. 51 Ewell• f3 S4 o.,..,.... I blit llAly. HlgM lrClfl'I -
,Aden ta 13 57 ~ 10$ 18 F,_ 10 58 10 II bMl:lle9 = IOI IN9lld """''le City .. 51.~ 83 31 Loe ~ 11 It Yell9ya L-&GI UW io.. aoa.
8eltllnot• .. 51 .Mell>e 87 49 ~~ 1755 •
~ 14 .. PonlMcl,Ore 11 51 ·-AoOlle 112 49 .. 51 = 10 $7 Red llUf tt 58 Surf -Report loetott Ill $3 c.ty 55 33 Aeddlrlo 91 $5 ...,., se 43 Reno .. .., ~·~\ 72 S5 CN1tee1oo;is.c 1S er-~ It 55 .. 54 LOCATION llD8HAN
Cllettolt-. c 15 .. lOUie .. ~1 .. S4 Huflting1on ._,,. 2·3 -Clllcaoo 64 39 Salt Ii.ell• Oty as 50 Siii Diego 11 64 ,...., Jillty. H9wport 2-4 ,..,
CinciM«tl 84 35 Sen Anlonlo 83 53 Sen F rent:llco 13 54 40!11 Sir•. H9wport 2..C lelf
CllYeland 82 37 Selllte SI 55 SenJoM 78 ff 22nd Str•. Newport 2-4 ,..,
Columl>Ut. C>nlO 115 "35 lipokttne 71 54 sen Luif ()bllpo 1s se ..,. := 2 .. ,..,
OlllM-Ft Wonll 78 52 Syr IQ.IN eo " StOCllton M 51 L...,ne 1°2 poor
Dllyton 12 3' Tempe.St PlrtOQ ea .. Sen CleMente 2-3 eooct Oen-70 "O T opek1 S4 45 High. low'°' 24 "°"" etldtnO .. U'"'' Wiier ~ 15 Dee~ ew.t-15 ....... Olo9ctloft•WeelJSou_.
Tlie""Nc'Wpon Beach pofice and fire
departments' annual open house will
feature station tours, demonstrations
and TCfrcshmenls from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. Sunday. S. Africa seizes 'Freedom' cassettes Dlltroo1
OwlUtll El Palo
65 :l3 ,_ .. St 41 Tulta 72 4t 32 WUhlnglon.O C ea 83 49 Wklll&a 74
:10
S3 ~t M
6t lllgllMt 75 39 llllftop _.J"' . " 45 50 Police will demonstrate SWAT and
police dog tactics from noon to I p.m.
Firefighters will demonstrate their
skills in battling an auto blaze and
freeing trapped victims.
Children will be able to have their
photos taken on firefothting equip-
ment and with SWA I team mem-
bers. The event is free.
JOHANNESBURG (Af)-Police
ordered the seizure today of video
cassette recordinf.S of the anti-
apanheid film 'Cry Freedom."
which was banned from cinemas.
Police said local distributors bad
inquired about selling the video
cassettes and that illegal or "pirate"
copies of the film already were being
circulated in South Africa.
"Cry Freedom" tells the story of
black South Afriean activist Steve
Biko, who died while in police
detention in 1977, and DonaJd
Woods, a white newspaper editor
who befriended Biko.
Elle Feirtlenlla F...-n OtMd Allc>id• Honollllu Houston lndieNpob Jec:lllon,MI•
.19okl0Mlle .u-. "-City LMVegu
L.11111 "°'* ~ ...,...,,...
~'9Ndl ..........
1 1 44
47 32
78 41 St 39 Smog Report 91 72 111 se
Ml 37 77 55 P01Uten1 atllndwd ln<le• lPtil:. 0-50
77 64 good, 51°100 -••et 101-1" 1111-llMltllM. 20().2" -v unllMlllll\A, 300 59 ~ 69 •5 end lllloW lliimdOUL ,..., ••• .. 65 .,,__ Clef• 1111....ci pel. SeCond ..
72 •• loNY• I* tot-
Ill 42 81111 8Mcfl 10 M.c:Atttlur lll'tcl.. 50-7 5
73 52 lr'flnl. 6acldlebedl v.._, __ 11:>-113 ea IC). .....-llMc:fl llOnlcat)...... ...... .... 51
81 31 Loe Angllel Alfpon ............... .,_. 42·51
~ ICM fl9 Tides 15 55 eui-etty 72 57 TOOAV ~-.. 51 Second IOw t2;2tpm 2t Long ae.cll 79 59 Second high 5,05p.m 4.t lAAlrp«t .. 58 ftl*UOAV MonleC*lo .. .,,
Monterey ,, 12 49 Flrat low 1. ti Lift 02
NMdlea 102 17 =:,::rlow 7~7a.m. 45 ~ 1:15p.m_ 24 *-POrt .._,. 15 12
Onterto 91 S5 S«ol>CI lllgll 11:56p.rn 5 '
PMmSprlnga IOI 72 !Miii .... m ... ,,, p.m •• ,...
Sent• Monic9 65 5t w.clltlldetlll h .111 end-••·30 T.,_v.._, 12 31 p'" Tcwr.,_ 72 S5 Moon ..ca I~ et 3:31 p.m , rte. Wwtwood 17 56 Wedneedey •12 a.m. Md MCI el 4:0t Y_,,..VI) .. 49 p.m.
ESTANCIA GRAD KILLED IN SAN MARCOS ••
From Al
said.
Rusick's friend s and relau ves are
still . stunned by the death of the
said. -Rusick's mother. Mary Ann, said
. her home has been flooded with caJls
and cards expressing sympa1hy about
REUBEN E. LEEF ACING CHARGES •••
popular youni man.
''Everyone 1sjus1 quiet here.'" Gray
said of the mood al Estancia. "You
can really see a change. Nobody
knows what to say."
Gray said he had known Rus1c k
si nce the seventh grade. but said the
two became good friends about a year
ago while working together at the
House of Almonds at South Coast
Plaza. They also played volleyball
together. and Rusick was once team
captain.
Rusick was liked by everyone. and
·was popular wilh girls as well. Gray
said. "He was JUSl a good guy to be
around. He always had some1hmg
good to say and could make you
laugh. You never knew what he was
thinking.·· he said.
Above all, Rusick w~s a friend you
could trust. Gray said.
"When he died. part of me went
w11h him. 1"11 never get over 11." Gra)
her son's death. •
"It's just non-stop. it's just amaz-
ing:' she said. "He was a very well-'
liked young man."
Mrs. Rus1ck said cards from her
son's frie nds frequently describe him
as .. someone whcr brings a smile to
your face. l think that's the comment
we've heard most. He.was always a
good listener. more concerned about
other people than himself."
The Rusicks are a devout Mormon
family and Mike was no exccp1ion.
his mother said. He was preparing for
his two-year mission for the church.
whi.ch he would have been eligi ble to
begin on Jan. I . his 19th birthday. An
older brother. Richard. curreolly is
seryinga mission in New Mexico. she
said.
"'Our boys, when !hey.know 1ha1
they·re going 'on a mission for 1wo
years. they JUSt th ank abouf the mission." Ml'$. Rusick said. "He was
going to come back afterward apd go
to college.··
From Al
which will be asked to prosecute the
restaurant owners. That repon. along
wi1h recommenda~ions of misde-
meanor charges, is expecCcd to be
completed by early next week.
"What makes this case different as
that I'm approaching it as a criminal
matter," Armstrong said. "Usuall y.
with $eWage spills. 1l involves some
kind of an accident. But we ha ve
intent here."
Although invcstigator:s have no
evidence of actual spills prior to one
witnessed by 1he county HarboT
Pat(ol a week ago. Armstrong said the
design of the overflow system as
'grounds for.criminal charges.
The plumbing $ystem on the 190-
foot lon_g, 52-foot-high floating res-
taurant includes a J .{)()().flllon hold-
ing tank into which all sinks. 1oile1s
and other drams empty their waste.
An automatic ~ystcm automatically
pumps the waste from that tank
through a pipeline to a city sewer line.
But should the pumps malfunc-
tion. or if the lines become clogged.
sewage would overflow into a line
that carries the sewage through a fou r-
ioch opening in the hull. about two
feet above lhe waterline on the
restaurant's starboard side. Such a
system would prevent sewage from
backing up and fl ooding the decks of
the restaurant.
From the four-inch opening in the
hull, the raw sewage would now off
the side-and dartttlyinto-the-waters o
the Linda Isle channel. where the
Reuben E. Lee 1s docked. The
opening 1s on bay side of the
restaurant. making it undetectaQle
from .lhe parkirtg lot or from the
restaurant itself. .
Armstrong contends 1har although
the plumbing system dates back to the
restaurant's construction nearly 25
yearsago.1tsemployees wereawar~Qf
lls design and operation.
"They knew about it." he said.
"They did know how it worked: they
just chose to ignore it." f
The Reuben E. Lee restaurant is
operated by Far West Concepts, a
subsidiary of the Irvine holding
company Rcstauran1 Enterprises
Group.
Tim Bond. Far West's quality-
assurance director. said today he
personally was unaware of the res-
taur.uu'.$_bu1l6in ovcdlowdrain.until
it was pointed out by police in-
vest igatofllast week.
"And.as (ar as any violations, we
have not received anythins in writing
yet," Bond said. "We're sull tryi ng to
find if anything is on record regardina
the original plans for 1he restaurant.
Bond said once' restaurant owners
were notified of the overflow open-ink. it was capped the same day.
SOS EXP ANSI ON •••.. From Al ~
R us1ck as survived by )hree other
siblin_gs -Brent. 26. who is married
and la ves in San Diego: David. 16. a
student al Es1ant ia. and ·a sister.
Joilyn. 11 . He also is survived by h..is
father. Robert.
AIDS TEACHER SHA·RES LESSONS •••
problems at Rea Center 10 subside. in Costa Me~.··
Several applauded the services But Hall and Hofllbuckle said ~hey
provided at the center. but thought it live within blocks of. the center. The
was inappropnatc for a residential mayor told the ovedlow crowd that a
neilthborhood. -committee of ,representatives f'rom
"We are not apinst SOS. the)! are the Rea Center and ncarb)' residents
lhe greatest thing in the world," will be announced Thursday.
nearby resident Janice Davidson That committee will examine the
said. "'But we arc concerned about our operations at it he center and de-
children. We would like to see it temtine the feas1b1hty of spreading
relocated. It has outv.own our park, out the services wi1h small fac1ltties
and we want 11 back. ' throughout the City or seek ways of
Richard Goldstein said he was also minimizing the impact on the nei ..... concerned for h1i. children. borhQOd. &''
''When I take my children to
school, I see the homeless stopping
children on the slr~t asking them for
half a sandwich or mon~:· he said.
"The people in favorofthisdon't live
Rea Center supporters rapped thal
plan. though. contending most of
th ose who need the services live near
the center and must walk there.
From Al
Aside from volleyball. wh(ch he long." Chalk said. "flnding ou( was
played for three years. Rusiclt also actually more a relief than a 'horror-
was active an basketballl and ~cer. · stricken, 'Oh. God. I've got a fatal
Mrs. Rusick said. He worked wilh the illness' feeling." ·
Harbor Area Boys Club an~ recently ... The horror was to come later. but
completed a fo~r-year semmarx pro-not in the form of a phr s1cal ailment.
·gram thro!Jgh has _churc~, she said. Jhroush thflrumor mall. the county
Memonal services wall be held at Department of ~uca1ion· found ou1
12:30 p.m. WedneSday a( the Church 'that Chalk had AIDS before he even
of Jesus Chnst of Latter-day Saints. left the hospital. Officials blocked his
2775 Placen11a Ave., Costa Mesa. return to the classroom for the rest of
Attendees ma) greel th~ family at the school year. I ~ :30 a.n:i. pnor to scrv1ccs1 Bunal The situation went public 1n
wall be pra".alc. . August 1987 when • the depanmenl
The family requests t~al donat10.ns announced it .would seek a legal
be sent to 1he Mike RuSlck_Memonal opinion o n whether Chalk should be
Fund a~ Estancia High School. 2323 allowed to return to the classroom.
Placentia Ave .. Costa Me.,~. 92626. Chalk's was one of the first cases of an
AlDS..stncken teacheJ" <kmancling to
be allowed b=lc~ with his sludents.
HIRING HALL OFF TO SLOW START ••• From Al .
Chalk $lid he was unprepared for
the media blitz thal resulted from his
case. His -parents. who had been
aware of his homosexuality for years.
were forced to tell their ftiends about
their only son's lifestyle. Never-
theless. has parents. two sisters and ~as companion of more than six years
workers-had been processed bot onl )
two employers had come by and onl)
four men had been given jobs.
von Hanmann. said he'used to go to"
Lions Park when he needed tempor-
ary workCTS. .
But Ovane said he wasn't sur~thcre
wouldn't be problems for him at 1he
JOb center. ·
stood by has side throughout the
ordeal, he sa1d.
The early days were difficult. he
said. Chalk even talked with his
family about duck ins 1he controversy
and taking the desk JOb writing grant
proposals.
His love of teaching -and stu-
dents -won out.
"l just didn't feel right at;>out doing
that. ·he said." Doing that would take
my mind off the death sentence I'd
been gi ve n. l kn ew full well that being
a desk jockey was something I
couldn't endure."
Chalk lost hi s first court battle but
won on appeal when a ruled that
Chalk's illness was not sufficient
grounds to keep him out of the
classroom.
He returned to a hero's welcome
fiom his. st udents. complete with
welcoming banners and cheers.
fn May, the district elected to
award Chalk a $35.000 out-of-court
settlement. The dislrif! also picked
up all attorney fees. which soared to
$168.000.
In his spare lime. Chalk continues
to lecture on Al DS and put in a word
for gay rights where he feels it is
appropriate. Chalk also lectures oc-
casionally to sex education classes at
Cal State Long Beach.
At work. Chalk said students and
faculty members seem to have more
or less put the controversy behind
them. Chalk monitors his own health
and has regular medical checkups.
but said .he feels fine excep_l for the
same minor ailments that afflict most
everyone else.
"It seems when the flu goes around
I fet sick like everyone else," he said. .. probabl~gct more concerned than
necessary. -but il's usually nothing
bad.
"I'm not sure how people view my
absences;· he added. ··W!>cn most
teachers are ill, it's no bis deal. But
when I need a sub. I thank people
wonder 'How long is he going to last?' . .
"l can~ say I don't wonder that as
well sometimes.·· .. "That's actual!) better than we
expected:· said Evelyn Brewer. of th e
American Immigrant Fo undation, a
non-profit group that has been con-
tracted to help operate the job center.
"We expetled it.to be slow on the first
"I have used these guxs before and
I've always been happ-, with their
work ... he said. 'Tm an immigrant
mjself. althouah rin a citizen now. I
came here in f956 from Germany. I
know what it's like to want to work.
This place is great. I'll c.om~ here
again. I want to suppon the gu)'S who
are here legally."
"'What about those of us who have the r.apers saying we"ve applied. but r==:::=:::=====--=---------------------------------==--
don t have the tards yet?" he asked.
da ." r
kios said he was frustrated by the
slow pace at the center. But he added
that things were tough all over. He
said he hadn't been able to get work at
Lions Park either this week. ·
"I don't knowhow people expect us
to buy fdod and pay the rcl)t." he said.
Another worker also said he would
try out the JOb center for a whale. just
to sec what happened.
"I just learned abOut this place
from a brochure that 1 saw... said
Delfino Oliveras. "If I don't find
work here rll go back to Arizona .•.
Oliveras was lucky. Shonly before
9 a.m. his number came up and he got
a job witb a Costa Mesa buildmg
maintenance contractor.
The man'who hired him. Werner
~A~~E lllllJ Pilat
MAIN Of'FICI
**>WW 99y St Collt ~ CA
Meanwhile. back at Lions Pa rk.
there were sull groups of men seeking
work in the tame-honored, way.
Some, who displayed their legal
residency papers. said they were
cµnous about the ci ty's new job
center.
"Maybe it would be better for us,"
said Luis Ovalle. showing a piece of
paper showing that he had applied for
temporary legal residency as an
agricultural worker. "Sometimes
when we get work here. they don't
want to pay us the going rate. or they
treat us badly. I think it miaht be
better to have a place where ifs
regulated."
Acting as unofficial pu,61ic r~lations represe~rat~for the job cttlter
were two officers from the Costa
· Mesa Poh<"e Department's west
substation. A
"We're trying tQ let people know
about fhc center, not in a. heavy
handed law enforcement way. but iQa
helpful wa)',." said Officer Denitis
Jefcoat. ··we·re kind' of providing a
bus service for peo~le. We ask them if
they'd like to {o ovefto 1,heecnter and
check it out.
"We've been findina that about
three out of 10 are willing to ao over
with us and see. About another third
of them will followalonaon tbcirown
to sec what happens. And the remain-
ing third will wait for their friends to
come back and tell them about it.
"That's the way people arc aoin& to
find out about this. By word or
mouth." Jefcoat said.
D~
•• Ouerenteed
liilel Mdr-loa IMO Colle M4IM CA 91626 ~ elllt.. '42·6111 _, & 9d•IOf'91 .. l-4»\,,
c:..,t ..... ttA "°-... 111"9tfll--Oft.II
....... Or ....... II.hie,.._ IMJ C.. ·-~ .......... pellllMIRflf~I-What do you like about the Deily Pilot? What
don't you llke? Call the number above and your me-. will be recorded, tnntcribed and de-
livtftd to the aooroorilce editor.
Tbe Mme l4.b0ur aftl'lleri .. terVice may be
med to record let.ten to Ille editor on anr topic.
Coatributori to ow Letten oohamn must andllde
tbdr name and telephone number for verification.
Tell us whit's OD ~ mancl
ClratU•IR Tll1~lllftll
The
Chalk-Stripe
Suit
Enjoy the tlmeless _,
elegance of the most
classic of fall business
suits. Tailored of fJne
worsted wool
on our single or double-
breasted model. Offered
In shades of navy,
charcoal. and mtdgrey .
·Gentlemen's Oothins
561 NewpQn Center Drive
Ne'l(JJOtf lk«h 640-8310
• • -'
Orange Coul DAILY PILOT /T~. October '· 1111
Three workshops
set Wednesday
at Orange Coast
Slaying suspect may have .. libi
~If-presentation. bargain entertainment and
marriage are the topics of three special workshops to be offered Wednesday at Orange Coast College. all
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Author Brenda Blackman will conduct the
seminar on making positive first impressions. which
is priced at S25!The money-saving session, pnced at
$20. will be presented by Robert Badal aftd.Jean
Polacheck. while mamage and family t~erapist
Mickie Shapiro will run the forum on marrifge at a
costofS20.
Registration for all three classes 1s being taken ~ phone by the college's Community Services
Office a( 432-5880.
Airport expansion viewed
The Irvi ne Chamber of Commerce will present
a d1scuss1on on the expansion of John Wayne -
A1rpon at Wednesday's breakfast forum at the
Irv ine Mamou Hotel.
Architect Jack Spak wall outline the plans for
rcnovauon of the existi ng terminal and construcuon
of the new terminal and parking structure at the 7: 15
a.m. session. The cost is S 10 for members and S 12
fornon-members, and information is available from
the ch.ambcr at 660-9 1 I 2.
Candidate forum in NB
Seven of the eight candidates for three ewpon •
Beach City Council seats will part1c1patc in a forum
sponsored by Speak Up Newport Wednesday at the
Villa Nova Restaurant. 3131 W. Coast Highway.
Newpon Beach.
Amoni the topics of discussion will bevthe
candidates stands on Measure K. the traffic-phasing
initiative. The program 1s ~hcdulcd from 6 to 7 p.m.
and more information may be obtained b) calling
542-4226.
Irvine newcomers sought
New and prospecthe members of the Ne"-
comers Club of Irvine arc'"' 1ted to a membership
meeting Wednesda} at the home of Jud} Patty. 24
Alondra. In inc.
People \I.ho haH~ moved to the cit\ \l.lth in the
last three years art> eligible to JOIO. Call 552-6324 for
further information
Teen support group
A support group for parents of ph ysically
disabled teen-agers will meet Wednesda) at 7 p.m. at
125 E. Baker St .. Costa Mesa. There is no charge and
more information 1s a' a1lable from Jacquelyn
Adams at 957-8229.
Wo11Jen's medical seminar
A program focusing on hormonal imbalance 1n
women will be p_rcsented Wednesday from 1;JO t-0 9-
p.m. at Northwood Commumt~ Park, 4531 Bryan
_Ave •. Lrvme..
Ria Gagnon "111 conduct the session for the
Irvine Family Services Program. The fee 1s S7 and
additional information ~~ be obtained b) calling
David Anderson at 660-3'1~0.
Art League to meet
By BOB VAN EYltEN °' .. ~ .........
A San Francisco accountant charged
wuh k1lhng his fiancee's accu~ murderer
1n Costa Mesa five )ears aao may have an
alibi. according to the testimony of t\l.O
defense w1tnessn Monday.
Richard Dale Wilson. 47. 1s accused in
the shooting death of Jeffrey MoUoy
Parker on Aug. 2. 1983. the daf before
Parker was to have gone to tria for the
murder of San Francisco soc1ahte Joan
McShane Mills. Malls was engaged to
Wilson.
Two of Wilson's family members ha ve
given damaging tesumony apinst him.
His brother. Okel Wilson. maintains that
Richard\\ 1lson conles!oed to ham.
Wilson's brother-in-la~. Robert Hale.
also testified that he had heard Wilson
confess to the killing. although he later ~1d
he believed Wilson "as s1mpl) 'entang his
hatred for Parker and had not reall)
committed the cr1mt:.
Monda' one of the defen5C "'llnesses.
Sigurd KrlS\Jansson. an airline pilot from
Phoenix. said he had spoken b~ telephone
to Wilson three times on Aug. 2. 1983. the
day that Parker was killed.
Telephone records 11how that Knst·
Jansson's calls were made to Wilson's
office m San Francisco. .
KristJansson's tC$t1mon} ~ontrad1cts
statements b) Wilson's brother-in-law.
Robert Hale. that Wilson .was 1n Southern
. .
Brother Michael has ·
new borne by mission
By BOB VAN EYKEN
OflM Dlllr "9f • ...,.
Brother Michael ~id he wasn't 'real!)
worned that he would becomt' homeless. It
turns out he was right.
Although forced to leave his rented
!tome because Its owners wanted to
renovate, the 79·year-old Costa Mesa
m1ss1onary said last week that he "as sure
something else would turn up.
''The Lord's always provided before.
and I'm sure He w1ll th1s ume too," he said.
Whether the impetus was celcst1al or
terrestrial. something dtd tum up.
"\Ve got a real nice tw<J.bedroom house
with a garage on V1ctona Street onl~ three
or four blocks from the m1ss1on." he said.
Brother Michael. whose g1 ..,en name 1s
Michael O\\a1lccbe, operates a m1ss1on
that d1stnbutesdonated food. cloth1ngand
furm'tu~ ura~T.000 need) families a
"Ce~. .
Former!) a \\ea Ith~ ( osta Mesa real
estate broker. Brother ~11chael has for the
past three decades dc' otcd hi'.> time and
mone) to helping the poor. Friends 1ate
last week said that Brother Michael had
onl) unul unda) to find a ne" place to
live.
"We got 1t aturda~ and we're alrcad)
JUSt about mo' ed 1n .. he said Monda}.
. "The owner e\ en ~noded $25 off the rent
when l'le found out 11 "as for the m1ss1on ··
Brother Michael''> Chmt1an M 1~s1on 1s a
non-profit agenc~ (oninbuuons ma) be
Sc!nt to P.O. Bo' 1509~. "e" pon Beach.
-cJ7651T. ('aft 548-J.fQJ lor information or
pickups of donation~
(ahfom1a on ui. ~.
.\nother wuness Paul Bennett ~1d he
and 11o1.o other peopk had breakfast "•lh
Wtlson in San franc1sco at 8 am .. eight
hours after Par~cr v.as shot. and that
Wilson appea™1 fresh and composed.
Deput) 01stnc1 Anoroe) Douglas
Woodsmall said Monda~ he had kno"n
wt\al Bcnneu "ould 53) b1.1t had not
expected Kr1st1ansi.on's tesumon~. He
a9ked for a dela) in !ht: trial unul
Wednc~) .. to conduct further tn\cs11ga.
uon." .. I 1uess }OU could sa~ 1t 1s suU
techntcalh feasible for him to ha' e been in
osta Me5a at the ume of the shooting.''
Woodsmall satd.
W1l•n·s defense attorne). Joel Barucb.
Brother Michael
Residents claim own.er draggi~g
his-feet on mobile home repairs
By JONATHAN VOLZKE
Of tM Delly l'ltol Ile"
Cou n-0rdered repa1r11 at a Costa Mesa
mobile home park "ere done incorrectly
and too slowlv ~ 1f at all. residents said
Mondav. ·
Mary Ellen Man1net. the anornt>~
represertting the residents alons w11h
cit12en-nghts ad' ocate Richard pix. said
the complaints from her clients "'11 spur her to argue against a higher rent at a coun
heanng T~ursda). The hearing stems from
a rent stnke at the Aloha Palms mobile
home park on West 16th Street.
A heanng scheduled Monda' before
Mu01c1 pal Coun Judge Russell · A. Bos-
t'tom to check progress on the rep:uri. and
set rents at the park "as postponed.
In an earlier hearing. Bostrom ordered
residents to pa} 30 percent of their renL or
crbout $I 00 a month. after about ~O
fam1 1ies 1n the 59·unn par~ staged a rent
stnke in June The ..:"'le"pt>n Beach 1ud11e
also ordered the O\\ ner of the part... to repair
mob!le homes "h1~h the tenant~ rent
The residents complarn their homes are
falling apan. Cerlmgs leak. sho~ers and
heaters don't "ork and abd\:e-ground
l!v.er pipes break and spev. the1T con lent~
into the !>tree\. residents sa~.
Juha Jimenez. ·"ho has ll\ed an' ~loha
Palms lor more than four ~ears. said
\londa' that Bosttom s orders ha,en·t
been ~t
said he was pleased >A Ith tht tesumony. "It
sounds pretty good, dOt'~n't it," he said.
The prosecu11on contends Wilson lay u\
"all outside Parker's mother's home and
snot htm nur m1dm&ht Aui. 2.
Par,er. who was 18. had been cbaJ)td
\I.Ith the bludgeoning death of Mills on
~~'~ . Found bending over her body 10 a
Be\erl) Hills hotel room. Parker was
amstcd but later rekastd. He told police
that Mills had gone 1n10 convulsions
tollo" ing a night of drugs. dtmki ng and se>.
An autops} requested b)'..M1lb' family
later determined that she had died of
ex1ens1,e internal 1n1unes from a beating
1o1.1th a blunt ins1TUmen1 and Parker was
rearrt.>Sted
INSm"ciy
·prohibit
p l:l-~St:l-i ts-.
inchtirch
Hl \JTl"iGTON P~RK (AP) - Re-
ltgious ieaders blasted a federal agent's
pursuit of illegal a hens into a church as the
t\ pe ol amons found 1n a police state,
"h1le an 1mm1grat1on official hinted he
m;n ban such pursuits .
.\bout two dozen religious leaders.
including .\rchb1shop Roger Mahony.
head of the Los Angeles Cathohc
Atthd1ocese. gathered outsjde St. Mat·
thtas Catholic Church in th.is primarily
Lauoo communll) Monda) to protest the
acuon. \l.h1ch occurred last week in a
Cathoh lhurch in Orange.
.. \\ e "Ill not accept behavior fro m INS
that smad.s of a pohcc st.ate,·· said
.\u,1l1ar) Roman Catholic Bishop Carl
Fisher "ho Joined the protest orpnized
b\ the L nlled e1ghborhoods Organiza-
tion of East Los Angeles and sister
commun1t) oi:ganizauons in·South Cen-
tral Los Angeles and the San Gabriel
Vall<.'). .
Meanwhile. Harold Ezell. western re-
gional comm1ss1oner for the lmrni&Jation
and :'liaturahzauon Sen·ice, said Monday·
he"""as asked for a rev iew of his depart·
menl's '"hot-pursuit'' pohcy that allows
1mm1grauon agctnts 10 pursue suspected
illegal aliens mto churchs. •
Ezell said last week the mcidcnt... which
occurred during a sweep of Orange strttts
for 1llt'gal day faborcrs. was "regrettable"
but the agent in' olved had acted properly.
"Iv.ant to d~term1ne 1ftherc isa need for
fine-t uning the oolic) ."Ezell said .
The Huntington Beach ~rt League"11lcon,ene
at the Edison Center. 21377 Magnolia t.. Hunt-
ington Beach. at 7.30 pm. \.\edncsda~. and
members are asked to bnng 1n their an "ork for the monihl~ sho" b) 7: 15
Ryo Terasak1. a Chancst brush an1st and
teacher. "Ill be" the demonstra11ng an1st The
public 1unv1 1ed
Pilot names ..
circulation
Supervisors.advised to ignore
initiative ~~jail construction
Sleep series at Hoag
The Sleep Disorders Center of Hoag MemonaJ
Hosp11al wall present a four-an lecture senes on the
causes of insomnia and relaxation techniques.
beginning \Vedncsdav.
The sessions will be held from 7 to 8:30 1n the
cafeteria Room .\at the Nc""pon Beach hospital b)
chnincal ps)cholog1st Dr. Da vid Engstgrom. Call
Hoag at 760·2070 to register or for more infor-
mation.
CALENDAR
Tuesday, Oct. 4
manager
Thomas F. Budd. former as 1stant
c1rculat1on director for the Los Angel~s
Herald Examiner. has been namt>d head of
the Orange Coast Da~y Pilot" circulation
department.
Budd 1s one of se' era I peoplt• "ho have
been hired s1nre the nev.spaper v.as
purchased in ~ugust b~ .\dam~ Publishing
Corp.
Budd comes to the Dail) Pilot "llh a
v.ealth of e'penence 1 n ne'' spa per c1rcula-
11on. Before sen mg three \ears "1th the
Herald Examiner. Budd. Jll. "as d1stnbu-
t1on manager for t"o Times Mirror
newspapers an Connecticut. the Stamford
Oran~· ( ount' 'i. k-gJI ad' 1~r has told
the Boa rJ of 'UPt'P 1sor~ an 1n111at1' c to
:~tm•t Jail ron truct1on ma~ ~ on-
cons111uttonal and should be ignored -a
mo'e that ma~ clear the "a~ for a planned
Jail near .\nahc1m. Count\ Counsel .\dnan .._u,per. in a
ktta datl'd ~t onda~. told super' 1!>0~ that
the 1n1t1a11,e 1s too broad and could
improper!~ re-.tnll them from pre" 1ding a
ba'>ll lOUnl\ ~" ICl' The 1mt1at1' e. \l.h1ch "ould rl'qu1r~ 1hat
all ru1ure count~ Jaib be bu1h in, anta ~na.
qualtlied for 1he ballu1 in ~ugusl It "as
prom pted b\ the board' oassa1te la<11 'ear
ot a plan for a o.000.bed 1a1l 1n G} psum
<. an,on near ~nahe1m
L nder tau~ lav.. once an inmative
quahtit>s for the ballot supen·1~ gcner-
alh are bound either to put the measure on
the next coun1~1de baJlot -which is in
June IQ90 -or adopt ll as an ordinance.
But .._u~ per' letter suggests that the board
could ignore those requ1reme'!rts and let
the proponents of the tnlliat1ve seek a
Judge s riuhng on its \1lhd11~.
Rick ~ 1olett. chairman ofTaxpa\.ers for
a Centrah1ed Jail the group that sP<>nsor-
eq 1he m111at1' e. said the measure was
"n11e n b~ attome~s
• 6:30 p.m. Newport Beach Parts, Bncltes
and Recreation Commission, council chambers.
1300 Newpon Bl vd
.\dYocate and the Greenv.1ch Time. Pnor T homas F . B udd State gets beach campground funds
to that. he was a dmnct manager for the B~ Tbe Associated Pre s
Wednesday, Oct. 5
Couner News. a Gannett newspaper in .. The opponunll~ 10 ~rtu.:1p.11e m a
Bndgewater. NJ .. and helped launch USA reasonable }Cl aggre-.~1' c gr'l" th plan tor
Toda) tn that mar~et the Dail~ P1lo11s an 1ntl·rc:~11nFhallcnge ..
The tate rccen eJ S-L-nulliun ~tonda\
to pa~ tor a l:lmpg.round and ,,tht.'r
rccrt"at1onal 'lites-Jl "\an ()norn-Lah.·
Beach undc:r .; pn,gam requinn lQm·
pertsa11on tor de',. l'flme nt at.'n~ lhc
coast
Cieneran ng 1a11on rontnbutcd the mone)
to the ( ahfomTa Depanment ofPark.s and
Re-creauon based ona I q I agreement that
re,tm ted use of the beach for the
Cl'n,tru,uon ol t\l.O plant buildings • 9:30 a.m. Oraa1e Coonty Board of Super-
visors, board hearing room. Hall ofAdmm1strat1on.
10 C1v1c Center Plaza. Santa .\na.
Budd said he came 10 the Dail) Pilot for he said.
the challenge of ··organmng this depan-Budd is mamed and h." J J-,l'ar-old
ment in such a wa\ that am one" ho "ants dauP.hter. The fam1h "' ,., in PJ\:luena
to read the Dall~ l>ilot "11£ find 11 on their ht.It ~udd said the~ plan to m1•H' do\l!r to
doorstep or at their local nev.srack. . the Orange Coast The-O\\ner.. ot lhl \an Onl'lfl 'udt•ar
.\mong the planned fac1hucs arc 160
\Jmp,11t•s a campfire ce-nter and a beach
3llC ' trail
Truck fleei~g Border p.atrOl
crashes; two o(!eupants die
By Tiie Alsociaced Pre11
Two suspected 11legal aliens v.crc
killed and two more in1ured when the
car they were traveling m smashed
into a stalled truck on the San Diego
Freeway in San Clemente follow1ni a
Border Patrol chase. authori11cs said.
The names of the v1ct1ms. both
Latino males.. remained unknown,
said Orange County Deputy Cc~roner
Din Aikin.
The two 1n1ured occul)ants. 1nclud· ins the driver. \\ere taken to M1ss1on
Ca.talleu
A 25--year-old Huntington Beach man was arrested 11 South Coast
Plua after he alletedly grabbed a
.oman•s pul'1t and 1'led on a btt)·clc.
Dlv1d Rust was ta'ktn 1n10 custody
.,. a llCunty auard rtponcd ttt1n1
bim take tbe pune from a ~~-okt
woman 1nd ride 1w1y. The Costa Mesa Police ht'hcoptcr potted Ru t blod1 away and he 'A'Q am tcd
Without 1nc1Mnt. Mort than S70 wa
recovcttd. • • • A mUSIC suppl) miaht M hav1na a -.:I bnn 111f soon. SorMbOdy took ee Harbor BoUlc,ard music suppl) ._for a sona after they bouaht a S4ll ..-a. ~ the equip.
Community Hospital m M1ss1on
V1e10. said Dana Cunningham. a
supervisory ~ent for the Border
Patrol m San Dic~go. Their names and
conditions ~ not released.
The California H1~way Paffol was
anvestipting the accident.
.\ccording to Cunningham. Border
Patrol unns had tned to stop the car
soon after 1t passed through a.gene\ ·s
highwa · chcck~int at San Ono(re.
but 11 failed to yield and the pursun an
the northbound lanes began.
The Border Patrol unn chasing tht'
ment in the box with bncb. scaled
the carton and returned it for a full
refund. • • • A thief entered an unlocked
bedroom window of a Harbor
Boultvard house and ~ped with
S' '°kept in a de1lc drawtr. • • •
a.a,.-B11cla
Police ofticial1 announ<'t'd toda)
they w1tl ntabhlh a drunken~nvina
checkpoint Saturday nlfht al an
u.nd1sdotcd tocauon w1th1n the cny.
The ttmt and location of the ''Satur-
day N~t AhVf" Sobritt)' Check·
point will be announced about two
hour prior to 1mnlrmrnuiuon • ~··;•:. blur 1986 Nmaft pickyp truck
c;tr had broken otT its e1ght-m1le
pursuit moments before the crash.
Cunning.ham said.
He said the Border Patrol stopped
the chase because the speeds. \\h1ch
he dcscnbed a 1n ewcss of90 mph.
had become too dangerous.
W1tne scs told authont1cs that the
dmer of the car v.as >Aeav1ng in and
out of tramc durina the chase ,and
S\l.CT\ ed onto the right-hand shoulder
10 '"' to pass a slo"·mo' 1ng truc!I. \\hen the \Chicle struck the stalled
trud. officials said.
th at ~~ n:ponea stolen was re·
co,ered Monda) 1n Capistrano
Beach b) the henfrs Department • • • Vandals rcponedl> "'Crt tossing ea> at pa -.ing cars Mon<U> night
near V1ctona trec:L No uspttt~
ho~t\cr. v.c~ apprrhcndcd. • • • Police 1arn-~tcd· O.v1d Ltt RC()(. ,3, ·of San Juan Capislrano ·on
su,p1c1on of dm l!'I undn' the 1n-
Outntt of alcohol Reac ~ ,.~
1t ll:•S a.m. Monda)' on Se~nth
Avenue and out H'll'wa). •••• ........ y.....,
!ailte•r ~open tM front door O(AAJ ).-1H8 I 22 B~huN
5'. mty Malldly mornn'I and \tole
JC" eln 'alwJ at S l.1100 • • • BJ \ Pnn11n~ at IC>\)~0 HarbM
Bh d. "3' t1rl1l.t•n into earl~ \hmda\
morning anl1 It 11 \\ilS tal.l'n from a
cash bag 1n lhl rlJr •'llil.'l'
H u ntington Beach
..\ rl•,1dr:r11 1n tht' ~1000 block ol
ummt.'r t fl il' rcJX"1l"li that a hght
a1rpl.ine \\1th 1t' t.'n~inc culling olT
and on l lrl kJ l1lw l'' er ht hou~ for
about In '111nutt'\ \honl~ after 11
pm .\1 I I 1' pm another rcc;1dent
~1d that a hgh.t .i1rpl;me landed at
\kauo"lar~ .\1rp1..'n .n Gr3ham
trl"ct and\\ arner \ \Cmue The caller
said a 'l'h1de met the pl~ne o n the
run" a) C)\'l u~ant \\ere gonr "hcn
otlict.'r' arn' l'J • • • ..\ ,ro, .inJ ~131.. \ ol ~ \l.a1co bur
\\Ith thl' 111.'enl. plJ\(' ol ~r\\'H3~9 "J' r~'P' m;J rac111~ and \I, a'1ng in anJ out ot troffit. .lt about ~ p n\
Mnnda\ l'n Or~)o~hum Strel'I near
.\tlanta· \q•nuc • • • .\ s.ioo Peu~l.'ul moun\JIO blC\dC
\\JS tolcn at Hunllnit<'n Beach tit h
·hool • • • nn·one pH ~t.'d ;i lock to the front
door 1n the 11 l\ll) M k. ofBroo,hur\t and toll'~ S~50 t.:H."-' and l.~00 in
lothul&-
lrrine ~ I
lU~,JC\\dn anJclectronicC'Qutp.
mt"nt \\Orth more than S4QOl.Xl ~
c.tokn from a home 1n the I 0 N l; o(
Ha~11'1 m on Monda~ athmoon •••
\ 19 ForJ "''''ua:r w~' ''olcn trum a car dcah.·"h1p 1n the-40 bkl<'k
ot .\uw l l'nl\'1 Dr" l' ,,,mc11mc
\tond;i'
~omel'nt pun-.hcJ the 1xt. h' a
I\) ~ \ l'I"''' Jgl·r .kllJ 4nu 'toll' 1t<,
'>tl"n:o "tuk tht \chi, le "J' parl.cd in
thl' I -Mll.l t1lr'I\. l'l lnlklll' ..\' l'llUt' on
\londa' mcmnnf
Newport Beach
\n auto ~urgl.1r t1n lt' into :i
TO\Ola ·h4 r•dup n lhl' JlJ 11\)1 IN
Jt t orona dcl ~tar High School and
-.tok a C. D pln\er. amplifier. auto
alarm and about 3 compact discs.
The lo "a e ttmated at S2,400. The
trulk "as loc~ed. but the alarm had
not bet.>n aC"tn ated • • •
.\ 1h1ef toll" f\lo.O Book-0f-1he-
Month Club boo~s that had been
repa kcd for return b~ the recipient
and placed tn a mailbox at 1717
Bed ford Lane Lo was $17.95.
..
E x-Mesqn sought Qver
spa installation ripoff
8)'JONATUAi\ \OUKE
OllMO.., .... ••
". former ( 0-.111 \lcsa mnn allegl·d·
I> llcd to .\ntonii alter r:uhntt t<'
1MtJll more than '0 'rta' ht' )Id at
count\ fairs throu hnut C 3hlorn1a
j)()hl'C" ~Id \fonda\
VinC\'nt LOl)(l I SU Pt\ t<'d of
"or'-ma under the com pan' nam( of
• \mulfi ~farkctina u thl't't' la1"' m
'C'lnhem C'lah om11 aMS ~""'t'P""I a~
nluch ti U0.000 1n Pl~~nts and
4.ieposm tor. pas be nc' er install~.
osu J.k~ Pohce DC't~t•' c tc,cn
Labb1tt sa1d
"lthouah Loptz in 11lkd • ~
\pl m~t \ll ht U\tOmm nC\Cr Sol
lbt'lf fttl v.-c&, Ll~tt .Mid Y.1-cn
N\lomerl tncd 10 tract do.11 *
rompen). l~ fuund 1 rtntf'd PMt
oOicc bo\ on Harbor Boult'vard and a
• ant.t o\na telephone an wenng ~
\IC~
' Lopez appartntl) ne\er worked"'
hl O\\n nttlhborhood. the Mt«ll~
~1d Jam Fostl'r. an Oranlt' Coun'Y
Fair emplo)ct v.ho O\Cf1ttt tht
CH'nt' ,cn<k>f's. said Amulfi Martel·
mg ne'er Conducted bullnns at t)iie
(OUnt) faer 1n l \a Mae..
l.abb1tt uld poittt ~ t..opa •
fled 10 nionaelld ....Sa MW ftna
v.1th1n tht a. h 1aaMla &....-
app11rntJ) .... ied b-a '¥TI f'•"t
permn at t"1e ANoM 118W IW --
the nw -:T~"
..,
'~
..
Astro auts back .
in HOuston for
hero's welcome
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Discovery's astronauts came
home to a hero's welcome after a
nearly flawless mission that re1umed
Americans to space, and urged space
center workers to "make this adven-
ture happen ,a$Jlin."
NASA officials hailed 1he fou r-day
mission as a "stunning success" that
verified NASA's massive efTon lo redesign 1he space shuulc after the
Challenger disaster 32 months ago;
Discovery commander F.redenck
Hauck speaking Monday nighJ 1o'a crowd ' of nearly 5,000 flag-wa ving
Johnson Space Center workers. called
the Challenger accident a "tremen·
dous loss .... 1hat afTec1ed us very
deeply." ··tt also made us resolved to
recover from 1hat. and we have done
tha1;'" Hauck added.
Hauck, pilot Richard Covey and
astronauts John M. Lounae. David C.
Hilmers fnd George D. ..Pinky"
Nelson, and their wives waUced down
a red carpc!t between two rows offlaa·
waving drill team members whik a
high school band played the theme
from "Star Wars."
"We just got back from the greatest ·
adventure of our lives;• Hilmers said.
.. Each one of us knows where our
place JO the futu~ is, where Ameri-
cans should be -it's in space. So let's
go back to work tomorrow and make
this adventure happen again, and
again and again/'
The next sh utile flight 1s set for late
November, when Atlantis is to be launched on a secret Defense Depart·
ment mission.
Discovery landed smootblr on a
dry lakebed in the Mojave· Descn.
completing a 1.68-million-mile voy-
age that lasted four days, one hour
ancl57 seconds-. ---"" ...... ~ ....
l G/AsOught
sympathy
for Contras,
paper says
BOSTON (~P) -.The CIA or-p nized a w1de-ran11na domesttc
propapnda and di,ainformatio!' c.arn-
paian aimed ~t ~inn~na pu~1~ su~ ~rt for adrn11ustratton polacaes in Central Arnorica. the Boston GIQbc
reponed today.
The campaign was ~nceivcd by
William Casey. the late duectorofthe
CIA and implemented by veteran• CIA propaganda specialist Walter
Ra'ymo'nd Jr., the Globe said. citing
infor"m•tion gathered by con-
gressional investiptors: the General ·
Accountint Office ind the State
Dcpanment. . Th~ campaign included several
projects associated with Boston Uni-
versity's CoUcge of Communications,
the newspaper said. . •
"We will never forget" the seven
astronauts who died when Challeoier
ex ploded. he said. ''Vic will always
remember the sacnfice 1hat they
made."
The landing was witnessed by more
than 300.000 people. Many waved
American Oags and "The Star-
Spangled Banner" was played over
loudspeakers.
Crew membera of the apace ahuttle Dieco•ery a nd their familiea return to .Bouton.
The newspaper, quottnJ a recent
rcpon by the House Fore•"! Affairs
Committee, said the eampeisn w.s
conducted through an intricate
network of organizations, including
ttte "'National Security Council and an
obscure State Department bureau
called the Office of Latin ·American~
Public Dipt6macy. The apparatus
also included the panicipation of
U.S. Army psychological operations
specialists, the Globe said.
Hauck guided the 97-ton shut.tie
through cloudless skies to a pinpoint
touchdown on lhl' center line of the
desert runwa> at Edwaros Air Force
Base. Cali(. at 9:37 a.m. PDT
Monday.
In 1he most fest1\e wc.-lcome home
since early in the shuttle program,
space center workers. their families and fnends lined tht Ellington Field
runway Monda) evening 10 cheer as
the as1ronauts stepped from two slick
blue and white Gulfstream Jets.
1-t;luck. waving a large American
Oag.J led his crewmates through a
hatch and down a ramp to the
runway. where th ey were greeted by
Vice President George Bush and top
National Aeronautics and Space Ad-ministration officials.
At a welcoming ceremony, Bush
said he was proud to .. welcome \he
space shuttle Discovery back to eanh.
1back to America, and back to the
future."
He said the crew had shown that
.. the shuttle is a strong bird and i1
could and should fly again."
In a post-landing news conference.
NASA shuttle boss Richard Truly
called the mission "an absolutely
stunnins -success."
He said the SI OO million Tracking
and Data Relay Satellite, the primary
payload of Discovery's mission. has
rocketed 1tself"to precisely where we
want it."
Truly said there were only a few
small dents on Discovery's heat tiles,
and only about I 0 small malfunctions
to be analyied.
"I don't know ho~ you can get
much better than that.'' he said.
Arnold Aldnch said the shuttle
should leave Edwards ·Saturda y and
arrive at Kennedy Sunday after an
overnight stopjn San Antonjo, Texas.
The first shuttle flight si nce the Jan.
28, 1986, ChallenJer disaster went as
planned from beginning to end.
Discovery is to be ferried back to Discovery rocketed into orbit
Kennedy Space Center in Florida 'Thursday, and the astronauts
atop a Boeing 747 transpon . Space JJ,aunched the communications satel-
transpona11on sysiem manager lite five hours later.
·Second debate· to . . , Abortion 11rotesters
arrested in~tlanta
In a letter accompanying their
report, House investigators rec·
ommended further probes into the
extent to which the ClA and in~
telligence components of the Army
"conspired .... to use the State Depart·
ment as a cover for a domestic
operation .... far beyond the legal and
ethical scope of their authority," the
newspaper said.
According to the Globe, the NSC
allegedly su~eeded in pla~ing g~v
ernment-funded columns an ma1or
newspapers; arranged media inter-
views with Nicaraguan Contra
leaders by government surrogates
who were not identified as such;
booked speaking engagements for
administration advocates; and placed
large amounts of government-spon-
sored material in college libraries.
despite league
ATLANT.\ (AP) -Police began
arresung an11-Bbort1on activists in
front of an ;\tlan.ta chn1c today.
moments after· the opening round of
what pr,otest organizers ·say will be a
four-da y ··siege of Atlanta' got under
way.
WASHINGTON (.\P)-Michael
Dukak1s and George Bush are suck-
ing by plans to meet 1n a second
presidential debate later this month.
despite the League of Women Voters'
wnhdra"'al as sponsors in a dispute
over control of format and other
details. The bi~rt1san Commission on
Prcs1dent1al Debates. sponsors of the
first presidential debate and ~ednes·
da y's deba1e between "ice pres1den·
tial nominees. qu1ckl~ stepped 1n
Monday and agreed to take over
sponsorship.
The second debate. '1cwed as an
opportunity for Dukak1s as he 1ra1ls
Bush in most polls. was scheduled to
be held in Los Angeles Oct. 13 or 14.
depending on the length of the
Amencan League baseball pla~ ofTs.
The campaigns said the) would suck
to those dates.
Janet Brown. execuuvc director of
the comm1ss1on. said 1t hoped to keep
the debate in Los Angeles and was
seeking local groups to help it finance preparations. which the League had
es\imated at SS00.000.
But the League of Women Voters
has nghts to the Shnne Mem orial
Auditorium 1n Los Angeles. where it
was scheduled . .1.nd Vicky Hanan.
the League's debates d1rcc1or. said "I
doubt 'en-senouslf' 11 would relin-
qu ish its rights.
All sides said the~ would look
elsewhere 1fa Los Angeles site cannot
be arranged.
"I want to go forward in Los
Angeles." Dukakis said. ''The agree-
ment (wuh 1he Bush campaign)
provides that 1f for some reason the
sponsor decides to pull out. we still go
ahead. I "'ant to go ahead.'' . The comm1ss1on agreed to follow
the two campaigns' detailed agree-
ment for debate format and staging-
an agreement the League denounced
as a "charade" that would stifle spontaneity and a true exchange on
the issues. . "We have no 1nten11on of becom-
ing an accessory to the hoodwinking
of the American public." said Nancy
M. Ne uman. the league's prcside~t.
Neuman contended the campaigns
have so controlled the forma t that
question me b) a panel of JOurnahsts will be subject to "vcl) clear rcslric-
tions in terms of what they can ask ...
In a printed statement she did not
read at her news conference. Neuman
said the agreement "would perpetrate
a fraud on the American voter" and
"add debates to their list of campaign-
trail charades devoid of substance.
spontaneity and honest answers IQ
1ough questions."
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Garden Grove Anaheim
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About 80 demonstrators arrived a1
a midtown abon1on facility about
10:40 a.m.~many of them crawling up
the street toward the small brick
building. When some of tricd-'k> g$-
bc) ond a temporary fence installed
outside the clinic. police began drag-
gin_g the protesters away to~ard a
walli ng bus. ·
About·30 were arresled in aboul IS
minutes.
About a mile away. another protcsl
began a1 another clinic but there were
no immediate arrests. Abo ut 60 demonstrators also crawled to the
building. where they were sur-
Citizens join
police hunt
for sniper
•
MASCOTTE. Fla. (AP)-Enraged
townspeople carrying baseball bats
JOmed a police manhunt for a
camouflaged sniper who serious!)'
wounded a 9-year-old girl at an
elementary school playground ..
Police appealed for calm and
patience in the wake of Monday's
shooting, warning residents of this
rural central Florida town not to take
the law into their own hands.
"They should watc h their
ktds .... and leave it to us," said lake
County Sheriff Noel E. Griffin Jr ..
who described the gunman as "a nut" with an unknown motive.
.. We have a good suspect," Griffin
said. "They might get the wrong
man." ·
The gunman rose ur from behind some bushes around l a.m. Monday
and fired three shots at a gym class on
the Mascotte Elementary School's
J?laycround before--fleeing. Sheriffs Department spokesman Randy
Swai ls said.
Leah Wilbanks, a third-grader
from Mascotte. was the oo,ly one of
about 25 students who was wounded .
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rounded by abou1 40 police officers.
Earlier. cny officials had braced for
the expected demonstrations by ar-
resting the protest leader, and filing suit against others. claiming they
were engaged in a criminal con-
spiracy.
About 800 demonstra1ors. some of
whom attended a pre-dawn Mass.
assembled this morning at.a motel o.n
the edge of town. Protes1 leaders
dfs tributcd plastic bags to collect the
identification of those who planned
to be arrested. so ·that authonties
could not determine I heir names.
That ai:>,proach was uSed during a
senes of anti~abortion demon·
strat1 ons in Atlanta this summer.
Then. hundreds were arrested over
several weeks and many refused to
give their names to authorities. in
solidarity, they said, with anonymous
victims of abonion.
In a recent anicle in Foreign Policy
magazine. Peter Kombluh and Rob-.
en Parry wrote:
"By running the operation out of
the NSC, the (Reagan) adminis-
tration apparently sou~t to sidestep
restrictions on the CIA • that prohibit
the agency from influencing political
· processes, public opinion or the
media.
Both Raymond and Otto Reich,
who headed the State Depanmeot's
Office of Latin American Public
Diplomacy, denied the existence ofa
covert. CIA-inspired propaganda ef-
fort in the United States.
Raymond, who is now deputy
director of the United States lpfor-
mation Agency, termed the House
re{><>rt and magazine article a "con-spiracy theory lacking aity truth."
Federal panel clears way'
for altered cell injections
By Tbe Auociated Pren
WASHINGTON -In what could be a major step toward gene therapy, a
federal advisory board recommended that researchers be allowed for the first
time to inject fenetically altered cells into human patients. "If this protocol
were to work. I d expect that within six to 12 months there could be a proposal
to do a gene therapy experiment," said Dr. William J. Gartland, the executive
secretary of the Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee to the National
Institutes of Health. The goal of gene therapy -a much more controversial matter -1s to treat a genetic disea~ by replacing a defective or misstng gene
fbat causes an inherited illness. The proposed experiment would.not be gene
therapy but would use many of the same techniques.
OPEC hassle pushes 011 prices down
NEW YORK -Fresh threats of a possible pri~ war among OPEC
nations have pushed oil futures lower in a test of price levels not seen In more
than two years. The November contract for West Texas Intermediate. the benchmark U.S. crude skidded 31 cents to settle at S 13.06 a barrel on the New
York Mercantile Ex~angc Monday. The move follows a SS-cent plunge in the
previous session. Crude prices. which had not closed that low since August
1986. over the past five weeks nave slumped by about $2 a barrel.
Truck crash releases tome fumes
JENN INGS. La. -A tanker truck carrying hazardous chemicals
overturned and cauaht fire early today on Interstate l 0 near here, spewing toi1ic
fumes and forcing an evac\lation and the closu,.. of the hi.Jhway, police said.
Two people were injured, said state police spokesman Ronnie Jones.
Authorities said they had no idea how long the evacuaces would be out of their
homes. Jones said they numbered more than SOO ... From our point. the
situation is under control. It's a just a matter of lening the fire bum out."
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..
Indian hostage freed, but
3 ·Amerlcans still captive&
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)-Indian
profes19r Mithileshwar Sin&h said
today he felt wonderful 11\tr his
release from 20monthsofcaptivityin
Lebanon. but sorry that three Ameri-
can coJleques abducted with him
were still .bostaaes.
"Thank God I am free." the 6()..
year-old Sinah. a resident alien of the
United States, told reporters at the
Foreian Ministry. "But I am very
sorry that my colleagues and friends
arc still in captivity. l hope th~y'll be
freed :" Sin~lean..shaven and dressed in
a aray suit, spoke to rcportcn shortly after bei.,.1 turned over to U.S.
• Ambassador Edward Djercjian . by
Syria's minister of slate for forci~
affairs, Nasser Qaddour. The Indian
charge d'affaires, B. Balarishnan, also was present.
Asked about his captivity, he said:
"The treatment was better than l had
expected. -Sut therc~s no substitute for
freedom in this world." He said the
kidna(>pers gave him insulin for his
diabetes.
Singh said the thrct American
educators who were kidnapped with
him Jan. 24, 1987, from Beirut
University College were the only
forciJn hostages he saw in captivity.
Singh was a visiting professor of finance at the college.
Today, Singh tried to deflect ques-
tions. sayin~ he was tired. But he later
said he felt 'wonderful."
The former hosta~e later was
driven to Djerejian s residence.
where he was reunited with his wife, ~ Lamlani, who came to Damascus
from Beirut.•
U.S. officials said Singh planned to
WIJlteHouse: No
deal for hostage
WASHING TON (AP) -The
White House said today that U.S.
pleasure at the release of a Indian
hosu,e Mithileshwar Singh in Beirut was "tempered by the knowledae that
nine ionoccnt Americans arc amon¥
those still held hostage in Lebanon.'
In tclevis'ion interviews today, L.
Paul Bremer, U.S. ambassador for
counter-terrorism. reiterated Reagan
administration statements that
"we've not made any deals and we're
not aoing to make any deals" to gain
the FtostagCS' freedom.
Bremer said on .. CBS This Morn-
ing" that American officials have
spoken to Singh only briefly and have
no indication that he was carrying.any messages from his capton.
Singh, in a brief session with
rcponersat theSyrian Foreign Minis-
try in Damascus today,.said the thr
American educators who were ab-
ducted with him were the only other
hostages he saw in his captivity. •
American diplomats who took
custody of Singh were hopin~ the
freed hostage could give them infor-
mation about the nine Americans still
held in Lebanon. •
go to a U.S. base at Wiesbaden, West
Germany. A base spokesman, Air
Force Lt Col Pat Maloney. said a
C-1 41 transpon plane left today fo r
Damascus to pick up Singh.
Singh was freed an Beirut late
Monday. Syrian mtclhgcncc officers
drove him to Damascus early today.
His release came five minutes alter
a deadline set by his captors. the
Islamic Jihad for the L1berat1on of
Palcsune, for the release of a hostage.
..The three Amencans wbo "'ere
abducted with Singh remain in cap.
tivity.
The captors had said they would
rcleast a hos~gc as a &oodwtU-gesturc
to encourage U.S. support for the
Palestinians protesting Israeli oc-
cupation of the West Bank and Gaza
Strip.
U.S. State Depanment offioals
said they want to Lalk to Singh about
the other hostages. In telev1s1on
interviews today, L. Paul Bremer.
U.S. ambassador on counter-~errdt:lsm. reiterated Reagan admm-
1strat1on statements that .. we've not
made any deaJs and "'e're not going to
makt any deals" Lo gain the bostages'
freedom.
In Washington toda). Bob Hal~
White Hou~ dutc· Q.{lker.._"581Q
the Reagan .adm1n1 strat1on's
upleasurc ' at (Singh ·s)-rereasc IS
tempered b) the kno"ledge that nint'
innocent Americans are among those
stil h¢ld ~stase 1n Le.banon. ··
Jn an 1nterv1ew published today in
the New. York Times, the spiritual ~leader of a group believed to be an
umbrella for captors of foreign
hostages was quoted as sa)mg 11 was
"not yet the nght time for the
American hostages to be freed ...
Sheik Mohammed Hussein
Fadlallah. spiritual head of .the Ira-
nian-backed Hezbollah. or Party of
God. also was quoted as sa ying the
fate of the hostages "would have to
•
Mithllahwar SlnCh
OfMOe Cout DAILY PILOT ITueeday, October 4, 1• * M
s. ·Koreain leader
. pledges tO wOrk
to reunite nation
SEOUL(AP)-President Roh Tac a m-.,or effon to bmld a democrat1c
Woo haded the Ol~mp1c Games as a system and share the nation's pros-
m&Jor turning point an Korea's his-pemy. ·
tory today and declared he would He said he would present a new
launch new efforts to reunne the plan to build lies with the North .but
peninsula and build full democracy. gave no details.
Jn a speech to the National As-Roh ree_catcd'"ln offer maele in July
sembly, Roh said he would keep an to visit Pyongyana. the capital of
election promise to let voters pass North Korea. for a summit meeuna
judgment on how well hts govern-with President Kim 11 Sung to discuss
ment has kept its pfomise of demo-.. all pending issues."
cratic reforms. but he did not say what The two Koreas arc to resume talks
fo(lTI the Msessment wouJd take. Oct. 13 on \r)'&n& to reduce tension.
Roh said the Olympics, which Ncfouauons m August failed to make
ended Sunda)', were a maJor success any progress.
for South Korea and would help "I will endeavor to bring about a
wait for the outcome ol the Amencan pr~~~ea~~~;~1~~ !un~!e~~!~~s~f ~~~~ ~~d~h~ci~~~i~ ~~~~i~~~
presidenttal election ... He said lran history m which Korea should remained in a dctp freeze for 40
prefc:rred to deaJ w11h the Re· achieve-both unification and pros-years." Rob said.
publicans. . . penty and emerge as a maJor pla~er The Soviet Union. China and most
The ntne Amencans are among the on the world scene in the 21st other communist nations panic1-
l 6 foreigners _m1ssrn& .JO Lebanon. -eentucy.~· -----1)1! tcd m-t:he-Olymptes 1lnd-Roh said Heta longest 1slerry A. Anderson. The peninsula was d1v1ded into that provided an opportunity for
chief Middle East correspondent of communist North Korea and U S.-South' Korea to build ties with the
The Associated Press. who "as kid-supponed South Korea at the end of communist world that case tens1on
napped March 16. 1985. World Warll. North Korea invaded wuh the North.
"the three Amencans held with South Korea in 1950 and a truce in He also said South Korea would
Singh were Jesse Tu mer. 41 . a nati ve 1953 re-established a dem1htan2ed maintain l\sclose ues with the United
of Boise. Idaho: Alano Steen. 49. of zone dividing the countf). States. Japan and other allies, "Tbe
Boston. and Robert Polhill. 54. of North Korea bo)coned the Olym-Untted States 1s an ally with whom we.
Ne"' York Ctt}. ptcs after its demand to o-host the hue bttn defend1 ng the peace and
A U.S. official said Singh, who games was t'CJCCted. freedom of the Korean pe01nsuJa;· he-
cames a U.S. green card. has applied Roh. in the nationall~ televised said.
for U.S. c1t1zensh1p. Explaining wh\ speech, said it was time to O\-ercome But Roh also said the threat of war
he was turned over to the Amencans. the divisions of the past and called for wuh the Nonh still .existed .
the official who requested anon}'m1t)
said: .. He has put himself under our
protection and we will take him 1n charge ··
Captive's wife exhausted at Ilews Cfiileans ear riots
will follow election
JACKSON. Mich. (AP)-Virginia
Steen endured an exhausting vigil
waiting to see if her husband would be
released by his MosJem captors in
Lebanon, only to hear the bittersweet
news that a colleague and fellow
hostage had been freed.
"There's still no word yet," Mrs.
Steen, 31, said in a telephone inter-
view late Monday ... I am absolutely
e.lthausted. 1 hoP.C most of the calls
wilJ hold 01Tunt1I morning.··
Speculation built Monday that
AJann Steen. one of four Beirut
University College professors ab-
·ducted more than 21 months ago, was
about to be released by his captors.
Islamic Jihad for the Liberation of
Palestine.
But the organization turned over to
~yrian officials Mithileshwar Singh.
60, a visiting profes.sor offinance and
a legal resident of the United States.
Singh arrived in Damascus earl)
today and was scheduled to be turned
over to U.S. officials.
Singh. Steen, 49. and two other
Amencan teachers were k1dn¥pped
Jan. 24, 1-987, by gunmen posing as
riot police at the campus of Beirut
University College.
Bruce Steen, a brother. said he was
encouraged by a photograph of the
four hostages released along with a
statement announcing the impending
release of Singh. The photo showed
Singh shaking hands with Jesse .. Jon"
Turner. 41 , while Steen and Roben
Polhill, 54, of New York Ci ty smiled
as 1fb1dd1ng the Indian farewell.
"Alann lt>oks better," Bruce Steen
said from his home in Santa Cruz.
Calif .. where he gathered w11h rela-
uves ... He's sm1hni and looks hke
he's gamed weight. He's smoking
again. but wtto wouldJl't?.. •
In April 1987. Steen's captors said
he was near death and that his ~ealth
was deteriorating despite constant
medication.
Mrs. Steen spent Monda}" at her
22 Palestinians wounded
after Israeli army sweep
By De Associated Prell
JERUSALEM -Israeli troops shot and wounded 22 Palestinians in a
sweep of more than a dozen West Bank villages, Arab hospital officials said. A
aeneral strike a33inst school closuttS paralyzed the occupied lands. The army
said 11 Palestinians were wounded in violence Monday, and troops imposed or
extended curfews on eight refugee camps and areas in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip. confining more than 150.000 Palestinians to their homes. Dozens of
Jewtsh settlers wearing white prayer shawls and carrying machine guns danced
and sang in the deserted streets of Hebron in the West Bank to mark the Jewish
holiday of Sim hat Torah. Israel television showed dozens of soldiers on foot
and in jeeps guarding the procession. Hebron has been under curfew since
Friday, when a Palestinian merchant was shot and ktlled during a clash
between settlers and stone-throwing Palestinians. Since a revolt agatnst lsraeh
rule began Dec. 8 amons the 1.5 million Palestinians of the West Bank and
Gaza, at least 280 Palestinians and six Israelis have bttn killed.
Americans seeking MIAs arrested
BANGKOK, Thailand -Laotian police have arrested two Amencans
who had planned to float several thousand·u .s . dollars down the Mekong
River in hopes offinding American soldiers they believe are still being held in
Communist Indochina. according to the U.S. Embassy and one of Ilic
Americans. Embassy spokesman Ross Petzing said the two were being held" at
Ban SingSamphan in the southern province Laotian ofChampasak. ··we ha\e
advised our embassy in Vienuane of the arrest and our em busy is che<:ktng
with Lao authorities to determine what has transpired," Petzing said. t>onna
Long, one of the two Americans. told The Associated Press Sunday that they
planned to drop plastic bags.containing U.S. dollars bills and other currencies
into the M,ckona River and to pass out money in vill~es along the Laotian
benk. Long revealed the plan on condition it would not be released until the
two returned or were caplured. Each bill was stamped with a message offering
a $2.4 million reward to anyone who could bring an American prisoner of war
to the International Red Cross. Pomthipa Vajarabukka, a Thai hotel manager.
said Monday that Long and the other American. who asked not to be identified.
bad been captured by Laotian authorities.
160 held ln Pakistan shoot1ng spree
HYDERABAD. Pakistan -Police have rounded up about 150 people as
they investipte bloody ethnic-related shooting sprees that ~n Friday in
Hyderabld and spread to Karachi, a newspaper reported today. More than 215
died people died in H}'derabad and Karachi. l 00 milesio the.southwest. during
five days of bloody clashe;s between Indian immiJrants called Moh~1rs and
Sindhi separatists seeking independence for the southerQ province ofS1nd. The
official Pakjstan Times newspaper said forci,ners were included amona those
anested. They were not identified. Meanwhile, the death toll in the violence
continued to creep up today as police said ei~t peol?le we-re killed during a
curfew break the day before. There were no 1mmed1a1e repons of renewed
lhoolina when police allowed people out of their homes for two hours this
mornins,
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Vfr&tnla Steen
parents' home in Clark Lake. about
I 0 miles south of Jackson 1n sou them
M1ch1gan. fielding reponers· ques-
tions b) telephone and wa111ng.
Mrs. Steen. a fine ans professor at
the school v. ho returned 10 the United
States after the abduction. said she
and her husband, a Journalism
professor. _met Singh and his wife
when they arrived 1n .Beirut 1n 1983.
.. Of course. he's a dear fnend· and
his Wife I'S a good fnend of mine:· she
said.
In Boise, Idaho. Estelle Ronneburg.
Turner's mother. also "a1ted Mon-
day for a call that never came. .
.. l'm ternblyd1sappo1nted 11 v.asn't
Jon," Mrs. Ronneburg sa1Ci .. But at
least ifs a sign the) 're a hale more
lenient than the' "ere ...
:"oline Amencans are among 16
Westerners still missing in Lebanon.
Longest held 1s Terr) Anderson. chief
Middle East correspondent ~or The
Associated Press. v. ho "41~ kidnapped
March 16. 19~5
SANTIAGO. Chile (AP) -
Chileans stocked up on foodst uffs.
candles. batteries and other basics
before Wednesday's ref~rcndum on nght-wing Gen. Augusto Pinochet~s
preStdency, fcanng that violence ma>
follow the vote.
"I kno"' nothing and don't care
about poliucs. but I don't want to j!.O
hun81)." said Delia Maluf. a m1ddJ~
aged fiousc~fe at a supermarket in
ProvLdencia. a fastuonaple residen-
tial neighborhood.
Several supermarket managers rc-
poned a steep nse m bu~1ng 1n ~nt
days. but said the Situation did not seem elltreme.
.. I'd call it worl') buying. not pamc
bu}1ng." ~leJandro Baez.a. manager
of the Unimarc supermarket in ihe
southern Santiago middle-class
ne1Rhborhood of La Florida. said.
Shoppers "-ere reported purchasing
mosth non-penshable foodstuffs.
fearfui the> will be ltft ~ uhout
refrtgerators since blackouts are a ,
..
common occurrenct m Chile in times
of pohucaJ tension. .
Candles. flashlights and batteries
were in high demand. the ,manaecn
said. At least one manager_ reported
his store had run out of candles.
-Opposition leaders and -Roman
Catholic Church sources said Mon-
day they are afraid that ~vem
ment ajent$ may provoke viotcnct
dunna the referendum in which
Pinochci seeks eight more ~· n power
Several polls have put the ·-
ttoh ahead ofthe formeT coup .
In Washington. U.S. State Depan·
ment spokeswoman Phyllis OUJey exprcs~ the Reapn adminis-
tration's "scnous coooem" oVCT the
alleged plans to call ofTtbc ballo~!"l-
A 16-part} oppos1uon coaliuon
said in a wntten statemen that i1 had
evidence Prnochet supporters
planned .. blackouts and clashes wilh
the people to interfe~ in the delivery
of (voting) results."
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JllSWSLL-BROIUOCD
The prden of the Turnip ROSC' in
OranfC was the seuiq for the Sept. I 0
wcdd1na of Terisa Bronn ichc and
Michael Newell. The couple greeted
their auests at a rccepuon at the
llr. and lln. Newell
KltLLEMS-SCllNEIDER ·
Mr. and Mrs. Kennetn Kellems of
Co_sta Mtsa ha ve announced the_
engagement of their daughter, Suzy
Jean Kellems of Los Angeles, to John -0avid-Schncid~lscroftos--"ngeles.
-They are planning to marty Dec. 4.
in the Regency Cl ub in Los Angeles.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of
Estancia High School, Costa Mesa,
and the University of Southern
California.
Her fiance is the son of Mrs. Edna
Schneider of New York City. He is a
graduate of the University of Colo-
rado.
restaurant.
The bride is the dau&hter of Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Bronniche of Costa
Mesa. She is a graduate of Estancia
Hi&h School in Costa Mesa.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Newell of La
Mirada are the parents of the bride-
groom. He is an engineer with the
Beverly Hills Fire Dcpanment.
The couple att at home in Hunt-
ington Beach after a wedding trip to
Northern California. •
WILLIAll8-WILLIAll8
Linda Kay Williams ofHuntinaton
Beach was linked in marriage with
Tyler Bond Williams of Los Gatos in
a Sept. 3 ceremony in Sts. Simon and
Jude Catholic Church in Huntington
Beach. Two hundred fifty guests
attended their reception at the Sca-
cliff Country Club.
H1,1ntington Beach residents Dean
and Doi;is Williams are the parents of
the bride. She wore a Ooor-length
white satin gown with a chapel-length
MOORE-SOTAK
Elaine Moore of Costa Mesa has
announced .. the engagement of her
daughter, Stacy Moore, to Mictlael
Patrick Sotak, son of Mike and Patty
lace train embellished with crystals
and ~s. The bodice and sleeves
were made of Chantilly lace.
Sanna Williams. Janice Weaner,
Carolyn Hoff. Heather Beatty,
Tamara Owen and Brenda Curet
were the bride's attendants.
The bridcaroom 1s the son or
Donald and Shirley Williams of Los
Gatos. Theodore Bennett was best
man, and ushers were Chris1o&>her Walters, Ed Cordi. Jim Bertelfotti,
Don Gibbs, Mike Bewley and Mike
Ni&hswanger.
After honeymooning in Monterey
and Carmel. the couple a.e residents
of Los Gatos. She 1s an elementary
school teacher and he is an insurance
broker.
NOWACK-WURTS
Marcella Kay Wurts of Corona del
Mar exchanged weddinp vows with
Dean Curtis owack o Manhattan
Beach in a July 2 ceremony in St.
Mark"'s Presbyterian Church, New·
port Beach. The CO\.lple greeted 235
1uests at their reception at the
Ncwporter Resort and received I 00
guests at a second reception Aug. 6 at
Paradise Cove in Hawaii.
--,.he bride is the daughter of Caner
arfd Kay Wuns of Corona del Mar.
She wore a gown of white-silk-taffeta
with a cathedral train finished Wlth a
scalloped hemline trimmed with i.ce.
pearls and sequins. The fined bodice
was apphgftd WJth re-embroidered
lace, seed pearls and irridcscent
sequins and had a htah neckline, bisque waist and short puff sleeves
wuh an inset of match Ina lace.
Lisa Strand was honor attendant
for the bride, and bridesmaids were
Diane Sebastia,n Pestolcsi , Kari Rush
Campbell, Aileen Semonsen Kramer
and Mary Shoji.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Nowack of Man-
hattan Beach. Chris Wiesen was best
man, and ushers were Dennis
Nowack, Caner Wurts Jr. and Eric
and Jay Wurts.
After a weddina trip to BantT,
Jasper' and Calaary. Canada, the
couple are at home in Kailua, Hawaii.
She is a research associate with the
University of Hawaii Foundation and he is associate coach of the
University of Hawaii women's vol·
leyball team.
IB8EN-SREPPARD
Christ Church by the Sea in
Newpon Beach was the scttin& for the
Aug. 27 wedding linkinaJill Sheppard
of Balboa and Paul Ibsen of
Monrovia. A reception followed in
Sotak'ufBodcga-&y:----ow lo su mit wedding news St. Theresa'sChurch in Bodega Bay
will be the setting for their wedding
next summer.
The couple are graduates of Uni-
versity High School in Irvi ne. The
bride-elect is also an alumna of
Orange·Coast College. and her future
bridegroom. a graduate of UC Irvine,
is enrolled ~t UC Davis School of
Medicine.
The Daily Pilot wants" to .share your wedding or engagement
announcement wi th the community. We make it easy for you, too!
Just fill out copies ofour enpsement and wedding forms. You can either
pick them up in our lobby at JJO W. Bay St .. Costa Mesa, Monday through
Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m .• or mail your request with a stamped. ~If.
addressed envelope to the Wedding Depanment. Daily Pilot. P. 0. 8ox 1560,
Costa Mesa 92626.
Weddins and engagement news is pub/Jshed on a space·availablc basis.
the American l.qlon Hall, Newport
Beach.
The bndc is the dauahter of Shirley
and Charles Shepparcf of Balboa. S~
wore a tea-lch&th beaded lace aown in
a princess style and a wreath of white roses in her hair.
Kay Bullinaton was her sister's
matron of honor, ~d bridesmaids
were Elton Lindsey, Teri T1"1Cht and
Roberta Hall.
The brid"room is the son of
Lynette Ibsen of Monrovia. His
brother Dana was t)cst man and
another bro&her, Andy, served as an
usher with Ron Chana, Tim
McCrohan, Eugene Berkowitz and
Chuck Bullington. Nick Bullinaton
was ring bearer.
Following a Hawaiian honeymoon.
the newlyweds are at home in Santa
Monica. Both arc employed by the
Los Angeles Unified School Distric1
and teach in south central Los
Angeles. The bride is a teafher of the
deaf.
Mr. and Mn. Nowack
Mr. and Mn. Wiiiiama
Mr. and Mrs. Paul !been
~lsslon Pl~~~-Supply Co.
BATH
COLLECTION
BB cadet earns parachU.tist ba.dge
P1quam oy 1nttrna11onally known Ms19nt>r Mteh.lt'I dt Santts
32107 Alipaz
San Juan Capistrano
(Behind Capistrano Plumbing)
Featuring lnte~ational
Designs by EUer
Eijer commissioned internationally
famous designers to cntate bath-
rooms for today. These bath de-
...signs, like the one shown above,
are now premiering in our show-
room.
Mesa. has amved for duty m West
Germany. Anderson. a 1981 graduate
of Costa Mesa High School. is a
cannon crewman with the 35th Field
Cadet Emily J. McCracktD, daugh-
ter of Forrest McCracken of West-
minster and Rita Parker of Hunt-
ington Beach, has received the para-
chutist badge upon completion of the
three-week airborne course at the • • • Army Infantry School in Fon Ben-Sccond.J-t. Mare W. TraezJ. son of
Artillery.
· G Sh · 1986 d f Bill and Geraldine Tracz ·or Hunt· ~~~tm i~ster eHii~ Schoofa aute 0 ington-Beach, has arrived for duty at
•• • Griffiss Air Force Base. N. Y. Tracz, a Lance Cpl. Scott E. Waldron, son of 1982 graduate of Huntington Beach
Edward Waldron of Irvine, recently High School, is a na vigator with the
completed the radio fundamentals 668th Bombardment Squadron.
-course at the Marine Corp~ Com-• • • mucation-Electronics School in Cpl. Robert R. Bodemer, son of Twentynine Palms. Robe,rt Bodemer of Huntington • • • Beach, has been awarded the Marine Scaman Recruit David C. Wallace, Corps Good Condµct Medal. He is
son of Jo-A nn Wallace of Huntington serving with the 2nd Marine Aircraf\
Beach. has completed his training at Wing at the Marine CofP.S Air Station
the Recruit Training Command in New Ri ver m Jacksonville. N.C.
Great Lakes. Ill. • • •
Sgt. James C. Roaers, so n of
William and Robena Rogers of
Irvine, has re-enlisted in the Army for
three years at Fon -Riley, Kan.
Rogers. a 1982 graduate of University
High School. is an armor crew
member with the 34th Armor. • • • Pvt. Dou1lai" W. PrtDtiH "of
Mission VieJO has completed his
training at the Marine Corps Recruit
Depot m San Diego. He is a 1986
graduate of Mission Viejo High
Schoof. • • • Navy Fireman Recruit Doaclas A.
Wript, son of Allene Wright of Costa
Me5a: has completed his training at
the Recruit Training Command in
San Diego. He is a 1987 graduate of
Costa Mesa High School. • • • •
(714) 493-4591 (714) 830-2520
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9:00 am -4:30 pm • • • Army Maj. Nortnan J . Hoerer, Pvt. John C. AD'Clenoli, son of whose wife is the form er Terri Brown
James and Maf) Anderson of Costa of San Clemente. has arrived for duty ---;----7----------------------=---------------:.-=-L------...:...._--------. at Bolling Air Force Base. Wash.
Hoerer is an intelligence officer.
Pvt. Todd A. Byone, son of Allen
ByoneofLajuna Hills, ha-s completed
his basic trarnina.at Fort Jackson, S.C. " . . Marine Sgt. Kevin B. Carpenter,
%
I
·Annual Yield Current Rate*
ON DEPOSITS OF
$500 to $99,999
FOR 180 DAYS -
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS
WE WELCOME YOUR CALL. .
i~s00-24 7-7197 Mon. -Sat. 8 A.~. to 8 P.M. ·
• Federal regul-.ioo requires a substaitial irieresc penalty for C#ly withdrawal. Annual yield bac:d on dlily ~ When
irureat is "ft on depolil fee one-year tcnn. iu.e,. yidd and term subject to cblnge without 1'0CICC.
. %
• • • Navv Ai rman Recruit Michael P.
Dee, son of Gerald and Darleen 'OCe
of Huntington Beach. has depaned
on a .six-month deplorment to the
western Pacifi c. Dee, a 985 graduate
of Marina High School. is serving
aboard the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson~ based in Alameda. • • • • Robert E. Wb1'acre, son of Bonita
Collett of Costa Mesa. has been
promoted to the rank of senior
airman in the Air Force. He is a
general purpose vehicle mechanic
with the 66th Transportation
Squadron in West Germany.
• • • • Pfc. Timothy Lane, son of Frank
and Gloria Lane of Irvine, has
completed his training at the Marine
Corps Recruit Depot m San Diego. • • • Airman I st Class James R. Gm.
son of Robert Gill of San Juan
Capistrano. has been decorated with
the Air Force Achievement Medal in
Greece. Gill is a Morse systems
operator with the 6931 st Electronic
Security Squadron. • • • Navy Fireman Recrui.t Brlu C.
Mattson, soll of John Mattson of
Costa Mesa, has completed his train-
iuat the Recruit Traioing Command
in San Diego. He is a 1986 graduate Qf
Estancia High School. • • • • Pvt. William E. Balch, so n of
William Balch of El Toro. has
received the parachutist badge upon
completion of the three-wtek air-
borne course at the Army Infantry
School in Fon Bennin&. Ga. He is a 1988 graduate of El Toro High
School. • • • Airman Davld&.Powell,son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Powell of Huntington
Beach, has· grduated from basic
training at Lackland Air Force Base,
Texas. He is a 1987 araduate of
Marina High School. • • •
son of Carolyn Carpenter of Mission
VieJO. has received the Navy
Achie vement Medal for his superior
performance at the Marine Corps Air
Station in Cherry Point, N.Y.
Carpenter. a 1979 graduate of
Mission Viejo High School, is cur-
rcnt!Y stationed at the Marine Corps
Air Station Futemma on Okinawa. • • • Seaman .Cbrl1topber M. Zlm·
merman, son of Terrell ;md Lois
Zimmerman of Newport Beach. has
returned from a six-month deploy-
ment to the western Pacific aboard
the guided missile destorycr USS Lynde McCormick based in ~n
Diego. He is a 1976 graduate of
Newpon Harbor Hioh School. • • r· Petty Officer 2nd Class Robert L.
Wlllte, son of Dr. James White of
Corona def Mar. has returned from a
six-month deployment to the western
Pacific aboard the guided missile
cruiser USS Truxtun, based in San
Diego. He is a 1983 graduate of
Corona del Mar High School. • • • Pfc. MatOaew W. CJart, son of
Norma Clark offountain Valley, has
re~rted for duty with the 1st Marine
Division at Camp Pendleton. He 1s a
1986 graduate of Fountain Valley
High School. • • • Second Lt. Gary L. Cooper U. son of
Gary and Loretta Cooper of Hunt·
ington Beach. has graduated from Air
Force pilot training and received his
silver wings at Reese Air Force Base,
Texas. Cooper is a 1983 ~duate of
Ocean View High School and a 1987 graduate of the Air Force Academy . • • • Navy Fireman Darill L. Folke1tad son of Mike and Sylvia Folkestad of
Huntington Beach, has departed on a
six-month deployment to the western
Pacific aboard the amphibious trans-
port dock USS Ogden based in Long
Beach. He is a 1982 graduate of
Marine Hiah School.
All Arts & Crafts People
Interested in Participating
in Sawdust 1989 . . . .
Request an application in writing before
'-October 15th, 1988
·.Requests to apply after 10-16-88
will not be acceptecf.
Qualified applicaniirbiuatife':d!de proof of
residence in~ 1ince
November &th, 1987. . . .. .
TO RBQUBST APPLICATION WIUTB TO:'
SAWDUST PB8TIVAL
~ P.0.80.JDt · LAOVNA BMCB.CA .....
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:
Death
·sentence
reversed
by court
• SAN .FRANCISCO (APl -A
Kerman man's death sentence was
·reversed by the California Supreme
Court because of a mistake in jury
instructionsl but his conviction for killina his 2-year-old stepdaughter
# Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT!Tu.ed•y. OC1ober 4, 1988 A7
LA-Basin quake would bewc>rsethan 'BigOne'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A killer
earthquake in the bean of the Los
Angeles Basin would be more
catastrophic than the much-feared
"Big One" on the San Andreas Fault,
wrecki ng buildin~ and trigerins
giant fires. state officials said today in
a new report.
The report by California's Division
of Mines and Geoloay describes in
dciail bow a temblor measurin& 7 on
the Richter scale would knock out key
roads and ntnways and how snapped
utility lines would pour sewage and
oil into streets and waterways.
The studv confirms and exoands
on research reported by the U.S.
GeolOIJc&l Survey tn l 985. sho-wing a
maJor quake on the Newpon-fn-
aiewood fault zone would be more
catastrophic than a great quake along
California's infamous Sao Andrea5
Fault. Such a quake "would cause
markedly greater damage in metro-
politan Los An&eles and Orange
counues than would a magnitude-8.3
along the more distant San Andreas
Fault." said Joseph Ziony. an assis-
tant director of the division's parent
IJCncy, the Dcpanmcnt of Conserva-
tion.
The 4S-malc-lona Newport-In·
gltwood zone conslS\s of a sencs of
surface faults strctchma from near
Beverly Hills southeast through Cul-
ver Ctty. ln&lcwOQd. south Los An-
geles. Long Beach, Seal Beach. Hunt·
ington Be2ch. Newport Beach and
Laguna Beach. The south pan of the Newpon·
Inglewood broke on March I 0, 1933.
The resulting 6.3-magnitudc Long
Beach canhquake killed J 15 people,
injllred hundreds more and caused
ex\ensave damage. spumng the re·
form ofCahfomta butld1ngcodes.
Scient1s1s don't know how often big
quakes occur on the fault. but behC\e
a magrutudc-7 1s possible.
"There 1s no evidence this eanh-
guakc will occur 10 the near future."
Z1ony said. "We're providing this
scenano as a worst case for the L A.
Basin so that officials can develop the
best p,ossible emergency rcsponst
plans.·
The repon . written b> se1smolog1S1
Tousson Top~uda and other state
geologists. said a.. big quake would
cause shalong sufficient to reg.ister as
an 8 on the modified Mercalh
mtens1t) scale on loose sediments throughout the Los Angeles Basin.
That mcludes downtown Los Al'\&Cles
10 an area bounded by the ocean on
the west, cast as far as Monrovia.
north as far as San Fernando and
south to San Juan Capistrano.
Mcrea th mtensity-8 shakin& is
capable of damagtng ordinal) build-
ings and panly collapsing ·masonry
structures .
MC1"calh intcnsity-9 shaking would
occur on loose layers of.ground within
Smiles on either side of\he fault zone.
the repon said. Such shaking can
cause considerable damage and
partially collapse ordinary buildings.
was upheld. In a unanimous ruling, the coun 1-------------------------!..------------------------------------~----
said Monday th•t during the penalty
phascofDdnaJd Griffin's tnal.jurors
were improperly told the governor
could COl"(ll'hute or modify a ~tencc
of life in prison without ch'ance of
parole so as tQ allow parole.
The Fresno County Jury alread-,
had convicted the 30-year-old Gnffin
of the first-<tegrec murder of Kelly W.,
as well as rape, sodomx and commit-
-tin& a lewd act on a child.
"The instruction creates the risk
that the jury will be misled and will
make its penalty determination on
the basis of speculation and misin-
formation. We do not countenance
such a risk ," said the opinion written
by Justice Allen Broussard.
Although the defense attorney told
tbc panel in final argument that The
governor also could commute a death
.sentence, the Supreme Coun ruled
both commutation remarks invited
jurors to consider speculati ve matters
be)'ond the scope of their responsi-
. biluy.
The coun rejected defense bids to
have Griffin's convictions reversed
on a variety of grounds.
Altho6gh Griffin admitted the
murder, he den red sexually assaulting
his stepdaughter.
On the night Kelly died. the
unemployed laborer stop~d by his
wife's workplace and said he was
taking the girl to hi~ parents' home
nearby. He returned about 10 p.m.
and said Kelly had left the house wirh
a little Mexican girl weanng hom-
ri mmed glasses.
He left home several times during
the night to look fo r tier and reponed
her missing to police. Her body was
found that night on the side ofa rural
road. She had several stab wounds in
the neck and abdominal incisions
from the breast bone to the pubic
bone.
Discovery of
body parts at
homepr9be~
RIVERSIDE (AP) -Two Ri ver-
side County deputy coroners broke
no laws by taking their autops)' work
home with them. according to a
preliminary investigation. but the
new homeowners who discovered the
pair's "homework" remained fun-
ous. Alendra and Brad Birdsall were
placed on admin1strat1ve leave pend-
ing the outcome of fun her investtga·
tion into Sunday's discovery of about
25 boxes and bags of human tissue
and body pans at their former home.
Mark and Gail McClure, the first·
time M>meowncrs who found the
containers, said Monday the} no
longer want the .Dewey Avenue house
and arc contacting an attorney. •Tm angry and sick over this:·
McClure said. "We want to move as
soon as possible ...
"When I die. I want to be
cremated.'' Garl McClure added. ··1
don't want my body pans floating
around somebody's back yard ...
The discovery of about 25 boxes
and bags of human ussuc by the new
owners of the couple's house is not
expected to affect cnmtnal cases or
past causc-of-<feath ruhngs. Coroner
Raymond Carrillo said Monday.
A Riverside Health Dcpanmeot
sP<>kesman said the tissue samples
would present no risk of spreading
disease if they were preserved in
fonnaldchyde. as coroner's officials
reported. Don Cavallo. chief of health infor-
mation services. said the depanment
will refer the matter to the' county
district attorney's office for investiga-
tion. howe ver.
c • •
«I
...
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..
..
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It's a simple propo ition : taste theirs, tas te our
Theirs being other leading lights~ ours bei ng Merit. Th e
difference bei_ng Enriched Fl avo r.™ ~nly Merit has it. Whi ch i \\'hy, in a ·
nationwide taste test, a majority of ni okers rated Merit as good or better th an cigarettes
that have upto 380/o n1 ore tar. But taste for yourself. Compare th ei r
against our . We knovv which one will becon~r .
Enriched Flavor,™ low tar. A solution with Merit.
.::::.-. :i.r.:. ·;·_·
'
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SU AG E 0 N GE N E RA L'S WAR N IN G: Smoking
C a·u s e s Lu n g C a n c e r. H ea rt 0 i s e a s e .
Emphysema. And May Complicat~ Pregnancy. .
I
·-----·-~ -·
•
\
lings· 8-. "tar:' 0 6 mg nicotine 1v per c1g1rett1 by FTC lfttthcld
\ \
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•
Election '88
Votd 'yes' on Proposition 89
Proposition 89 is the most controversial constitutional
amendment California's voters will decide next month.
That's the way it should be because it concerns the process of
paroling con"icted murderers.
If approved, the amendment would permit the governor
to approve, modify or reverse decisions to parole convicted
murderers 'by the Board of Prison Terms or the Youthful
Offender Parole Board. ·
California law provides that adults convicted of murder
. can be sentenced to an indeterminatf prison term -25 years
to life -or death if the conviction includes a special
circumstance.
Minors, persons 16 years old or younger, are dealt with in
juvenile court or tried as an adult. The death ¢nalty cannot
be imposed if the murderer was under the age of 18 when the
crime was committed. Minors convicted of murder can be
confined lJntil they are 25 years old unless an order or petition
for further detention is made.
Murder is one of the most serious crimes in our society.
Proof of society's concern is demonstrated by the difficulty
the legal system imposeJ on the state to ;::on vict a person of
murder. But even after a person is convicted. the state
Constitution permits the governor to grant a reprieve. pardon
or to commute the sentence.
However, there is a flaw in our system that was
demonstrated by a controversy over the parole of William
Fain. who was convicted of killing a young man and raping
three women in Stahislaus County in 1967.
Fain was granted a parole date in 1982. but the parole
board tried to rescind the parole in 1983 because of public
outcry.
Fain's attorney went to work and an appeals court
overturned the boards' effort to rescind the parole. The coun
ruled that the bOard could consider public reaction to paroles
when setting a parole date but not after the date had been set.
Less than a month before Fam was scheduled for parole.
Gov. George Deukmejian issued an executive ord~r
rescinding thei>arole. -
Fain's attorney again went to court and won when an
appeals court ruled the governor did not have the power to
rescind Fain's parole.
That series of coun decisions is the basis for Proposi tion
89. I •
Proponents of the ballot mea!iure. contend it would
balance the_ scales of Justice. The~: base thaJ_opinion on the
safeguards in the, legal system. which.are designed to protect
the defendant. and t.he governer's constitutional powers to be
lenient e'en after a murderer is sentenced.
The change Proposition 89's proponents are asking the
voters to approve 1s to give the state's top elected official
power to \'Cto a parole board decision to set a con"icted
murderer free. In reviewing the parole board's decision. the
go"emor could use only that information the board
considered.
Opponents of the proposition argue that it would only
introduce politics ancf hypocris. into our legal system.
.But there are safeguards for the inmate before conviction.
controls on the information considered in parole hearings as
well as overwhelming proof that the public is not always
served b} the parole system as it now operates.
The question voters have to decide is. shouldn't the
parole of a convicted murderer be handled with safC$uards
equal to those used to protect the murderer's rights dunng his
or her tnal?
It would be foolish to ignore the arguments of the
proposition's supponers:
• F1rs1-dcgrcc murderers "ho were paroled last year
a H'raged less than 14 )Cars in prison.
• Between 1973 and 1985. 365 murderers who had been ·
paroled were sent back to prison for parole violations or
because the' committed another felony.
We believe the public 1s entitled to a safety net.
Dec1s1ons by the Board of Prison Terms to parole
convicted murderers should be reviewed by the governor. His
re' 1ew and action should be the public's safety net because the
go\ emor answers dtrectl) to the voters w~ile the parole board
ts insulated b) their appointment to the JOb.
Vote 'yes' on Proposition 88
When consumers look for a place to invest their money.
they want the highest interest rate they can find . Government
should ha ve the same option. but that's not always possible
because the state Constitution restricts where public funds
can be deposited.
Banks. savings and loan associations and credit unions
located m California are presently the only places where state
and local govenments can deposit the taxpayers' money.
Propostt1on 88 is a technical amendment to the
Constitution that would add industrial loan companies to t)1e
I 1st.
Why change?
Industrial loan companies often ofTer a bet.ter antere~t
rate and are insured and regulated Just like banks. savings and
loan associations and credit \m1ons.
There are two primary advan~es-of increasing the
places where public monies can be invested:
• ln$:reasing competition to attract public fund deposits
with higher interest rates.
• Higher interest rates on public fun""Us deposits will
generate more money to help pay for public services without
additional tax increases.
It's difficult to find something wrons with the argument
for Proposition 88. It is one of the few ttem$ on this year's
ballot that received unanimous support of both the Senate
and Assembly. and no one filed arguments against it for this
year's state ballot pamphlet.
Proposition 88 makes good fin~ncial sense. It will expand
government's options to stimulate higher interest rates for
deposits of pubhc funds and the taxpayers can benefit because
interest from those depostts will help ease the pressure for
higher taxes. It should be approved by the voters next month.
ORANGE COAST
DailyPillt
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Y•M CIJ~ b.ittlof -·---,,. .. Dwtc•
~!Jc trotD~ on 11Jorr hlu modung me.
sbouung: "•rrppt«' Wimp!" an~ ··euk!"
'(If IDUIJ m~ big flag Cll'in9 IJtgb
J PUI(~ tbat ~01t9n 8ruk.
•ubllrnl ~ J got rupcct.
tbt trotD~ btg11n to tlJctr!
J tgnorcb the quuuons Crom tbc prcn.
as the Ctnurb Inn brttD nur.
JBut s111J on e blunhr brl~ me buk
ralung tzun~ out or my nil: ~
t!IJe albatron aroun~ ml' ntck
began 1" smell ltkt Eluaytt~!~~~->~
...
..
Putting a political splri
on presidential debates
"Spi~ Doctor"... have you ever heard o such a job? I love the sound
of it. I t ink it is something I'd like to
be when I grow up.
After the presidential debate and
the experts had p1clc.ed it apart someone said, "Now we will leave it
to the 'Spin Doctor' to tell us what we
should really think." Doesn't that
sound like fun.
I am auditioning now to be a "spin
doctor." Please tell me if you think I
ha ve the ·•right stuff' for th e.job.
Since no one can tell me what a ~pin
doctor is. and 11 is not in m) s.trlc1:1t>ok -the newspaper's bible. m> guess 1s that this is a poh11cal operative who
tries to put a good face on a political
happen mg.
First of all. I don't warn to be a
newspaper Joe Isuzu.
Hard facts. thal'!> \\hat I \\Ould
want to deal with 1f I were Bush's span
doctor. For example. the American people want 10 kno..,. if Oukak1s stooti on a
box. We know his lectern was higher
than Bush's but 1f he wasn't standing
on a box wh,( wasn't he just peeking
over the top .
I thought. there goes the elecuon
wben I first saw them standing side by
side. How co uld Bush get such bad ad vice? He let his opponent stand
there in a power tie while he had on a
wimp tie. The only comfort I could
get out of th is rotten tum of events
was that Dukakis was wearing last
year's power tic. You do know that >
the red and gold power tie 1s out.
purple and gold as an.
As your spin doctor I predict that
on the ne;\t debate Bush won't even
wear a tie. He 1s tr)'ing very hard to
shed hi s stuffy image so he will come
in with his collar open. He will make a
big deal out oftakmg off his coat and rolling up his sleeves and gi ve us the
old "let's get down to work" bit.
His problem here 1s what kjnd of a
collar should he go for? He can't have
a white collar because that 1ust
reinforces his white collar image. He
~
can't have a blue collar, even Baker
(hi:n:ampaign guru) wouldn't make
him stoop that low.
. What about this ... he could go f<?r
the .. new collar" vote. He can get this
message-across 1 f he bas the price tag
hanging out.
This would be the perfect approach
to capture the now-adult baby
boomers. They don't like to be
referred to as yuppies any more. And
since many of\hem have rejected
traditional vocations. calling them
"new collars" wouldn 't stereotype
them. They could be the swing vote of
th1s election.
between 1946 and 1964. 76 million
bab~ bo<>m Americans were born. Jn
1988 they could constitute 60 percent
of the electorate. according to George
Will in his book. ''The New Season.''
A candidate. according to Will. who
wins. say. a 57-47 split of that &roup
proba bl y becomes president. Of cour.5e. thi s is why Qua)'IC is on th e
ticket. isn't it'!
The risk in all ih1s is Bush can'i let
Dukakis beat him to the gun on this
3P.proach. Bush has to take "bold" pills if he wants to be president. No
one told him 1t would be easy.
I am ple~d that the Bush handlers did correct one serious image prob-
lem. The polls made it clear that the
voters felt Dukakis has more presi-
cfcntiaJ eyebrows 1han Bush docs. It
was really hard for the men to do this.
but they were very aware of what happened to Richard Nixon and his
five o'clock shadow against John
Kennedy and his George Hamilton
tan. My 50urces tell me they put
mascara on Bush's eyebrows. No.
Tamm y Bakker was not a co nsultant.
So much for the cosmetic aspect oi
span doctonng.
Now. however. I can see wh}
"doctor" is pan of theJob title. The real ex pertise is nccde to cure that
dreaded political ~ourge. "Foot in
mouth disease." Remember Gerald Ford an hi s
JACKIE
HEATHER
debate said that Poland was not under
Soviet domination. Ronald Reagan
appe.ared so befuddled and confused
in his first debate it took. Nancy
Reagan and probab1y her astrologer
to straighten things out.
When Bush got confused on Pearl
Harbor Day the week before. I expected the disease to be in its
iermmal stage on debate day.
The questioning panel had some
very artful ... Are you sti II beating your
wife?" type questions.
Dukak1s did just what he was
coached to do, i.e .. avoid answering
the questions directly but tum them
to an attack on your opponent. You
could see that this confused Bush.
who was still laboring under the
misapprehension that this was a
debate and you were supposed to
answer the questlOl\. His rebuttals
were usually sputtering and de-
fensive.
The strategy here wa$ to goad him into a misstatement. The relief was
l,)31pable after each response. "Thank
God. Bush's foot was still on the
floor."
When we finally get to the first
Tuesday after the first Monday 1n November all th is will be perfccily
clear to us. Right now I feel hke Dizzy Dean
who announced on the eve of the
1934 World Series between the Tigers
and the Cardinals: "l'his Series 1s
alread y won. but 1 don't know by
which team." Ja~t/e Heatber 11 • resldeot of
Newport Bud ud • former mayor
of ttat city.
Bush's selection of Quayle
for VP a matter for debate
Within a day or two after these words appear. judgment wall be passed on the ab1h11cs of Dan Quayle.
•1t can't be supposed that Ocorge
Bush does not know that the selection
of Quayle as his running mate ha~
crystallized into the ultimate ques-
tion about Bush's capacity to lead the
nation. It isn't only the old business
about Quayle's joining the NatJonaJ Guard presumably to avoid the real
possibility of servina combat duty ,an
Vie1nam ("Why docs a chicken cross
the road?" 1s the latest taunt. Answer:
"TOJOIO the National Guard.") That was. of course. the maJor ant1-
Quayle launch. But since his se.lec-
t1on. Quayle has been chaperoned in
ways entirely inconsist~t with the
respect owing to someone deemed
qualified to ~rve at a moment's
notice as president. We learn that t~e
acceptance speech he gave was writ·
ten for him and handed to him a hour
or two before its dcltvcry. As to the spceth itself. which wa~ a tribute to
apple pie, the evaluation of it by
Roger Rosenblatt of U.S. News &
World Repart maaazine stacks hke
Elmer's aJuc to the memory: "What dtd )'OU think of the
speech?" he w~s asked by Dan
Rather. "Well,·• Rosenblatt said. pensively, "I have heard wooc. I'm
tryin& '°think w~n.'' But tbc wetkssinct the speech have
been ccnly d1scomfiuna. We saw him
10 to Indiana wbert at his hometown
he WJI veetc(MlkC Lindbcfah come
back from his IOlo fhabt across the
Atlantic. OK. that is hOw hc>ma~
U'C&t people suddrnly dnated IO 1111rdom. Thm there was an .,,_,.
ance befo~ 1 vettr1MlfOUP w~ M l'Cc:flV~ &ttlt appiauW, wflidt SUI· eested nothina·m.tt more 1hla lllM
VC1tranl o( dae Vietftllm W• MR . .,
tolerant of the practice of combat evasion successfully executed. No doubt most of them would. in
retrospect, have avoided combat if
possible. all the more since survivors
of that war arc perfectly situated to
pronounce that if ever there was a war
in which it can be said that American
men died in vain, that one was it. Not
since the cbal'fe of tbi Light Brigade were soldiers in vited" so ,cogentl y to
dwell O'l the,.dage that their~ was not
to reason why, thei rs was to do and
die. The '(jetnam War. in addition to pronouncing an end to the pohcy of
containment. catapulted the idea of
individual conscientious ob1ection to a panicular war to a dauling rel-
evance. The staff-upper-hp case can be made (and made by responsible
c1t1zens) that American conscripts
goddam-well-go-and-die wherever
the commander an chief backed by
Congress tells them to ao and die.
Future military enaagements. if con-
ducted w11hout clear evidence that
the safely of the republic ls in
1eopardy, will need to ~ foUJbt by
vol unteers. And the tolcrauori of
Quayle's conduct by veterans or-
ganiiations 1s the clearest proof of
this.
But af\er \~ bnef e•posure before
the veterans lfOUJ>I. tM 1mprnsaon
hardened thlt Quaylt was ~1na
tethered for far thal M would not ac1
...., could no1 act? -penuu1vely. ln
OM bul'SC of anafysit ht Fl 10 .. ritled
in his •:"Q.11111 bf IOUIMW noa only lde 1 E.iteftbowtr at hes
wont. but liU EdeaboMt dn1nk. Ah~aayoflM-.n 11111.,_.
willi .. and ap' l;O tnvilc him 10
.,,_ did .t0,. 5undlY after Sunday.
• 111Mined '" rdltivt r.haion. ddi~·only btt'ort mnow R.F.D
WILLIAM F.
Bue KLEY
crowds his stum_p speech. which 1s a
combination of patriotic bombast
and domestic treacle.
I owe it to this depressing account
to relay the results of my own
desultory investigations. When CBS accosted Jeane Kirkpatrick in New
Orleans on the floor of the Re.
publican convention to gjvc her the
news that Dan Quayle was the choice
of George Bush, she flushed with
enthusiasm.
Sen. Uoyd Bentsen said flat-out
that Dan Quayle was not qualifitd to
Krvc as vice president, that if the
Bush ticket wert elected. the duty of
lhc country would be to pray for the
longevity of George Bush. Such
animadvenions can be d1smisstd as mere campe11n hlraumcnt. Bur they
arc disturbina in that disparaaements
that o...-nic are not utually made by
orie sinint senator qainst another .
But 11 uunp now stand. bcf ore the
Great Debek. there arc many Amen-
ains who ~Y that if Bush is elected be will last for It last cipt yean1 Ind
that if Dukakis 11 clec\ed. he wall as
to0n as polliblt move on to pttncr
pesturn. l~vina the country 1n
Cbartc of the vice prnident who has di~ with DUbkis on a half·
doJin crittcal ilSUCI OVtf the )eaR.. ....... .....,,, .... .,...
a.-1 Lal I'll.
--.-.
DAN
WALTERS
·off-track
.betting
result of
pOlitlcs
SACRAMENTO -California has
adopted a peculiar form of ofT-tr.aek
betunJ. on horse races. While some other states and many
other nations simply allow bettin&
-parlors bC ~stlblishcd whe~ver the
market dictates, the California l..qi~
laturc has taken a different tack -one decreed by the vast political
influence of the horse raCin11ndustry
itself.
The horse track operaton, for
obvious financial reasons. wanted to
maintain their monopolistic control
over the horse wagering trade and
they persuaded the Legislature to
allow off-track bettins only at tracks which are not tJien being operated. Thus, for euhiplc. Sacramento
area horse players with. a yen to wager
ffi\ISt take themselves to the Cal Expo ·horse racing facility to view races
from other tracks on closed-circuit
television and place their bets. Profits
are shared between the host track and
the o~ratinJ track. This limited form of off-track betting. or OTB as it's known in the
trade, enriches the track owners by
providing them with captive patrons during periods when their facilities
would otherwise be idle and keeping
anyone else from entering the book·
making trade.
It's been an economic shot in the arm for the otherwise declining horse
track business in California. one
earned by political pull rather than
marketing prowess. and it has there·
fore increased the value of the tracks.
lt waMhe existence of this O'iB
monopoly that interested Ladbroke
Group PLC. a British conglomerate.
Ladbroke warus to become an imponant figure an American horse race gambling. It has acquired a track
near Detroit and an exclusive license
to operate OTB in Wyoming,
although it was rebuffed in other
states. .. With more and more states pa.ss-
ing legislation to allow off-track
betting," says the company's 1987 annual report ... Ladbroke is well-
placed to benefit."
The company has created an
American subsidiary. Ladbrolce Rac-
ing Corp., to explore U.S. horse racing opportunities and one of them was
the Golden Gate Fields track in
Alameda Count¥·
Ladbroke Raetng recently acquired
-for an undisclosed pncc -the Pacific Racina Association. which
operates Golden Gate Fields and
controls ofT-trackinJ bcuing in the East San Francisco Bay Arca. on two
conditions. One is that the California
Horse Racing Board approve the
acquisition and the second is that the
board gi ve Ladbroke a radna license.
The first condition was satisfied
when the board aP.froved the sale.
lhe license issue w1I be taken up this
month.
The transfer. however. is not
without its controversial aspects.
John Thorpe. a real estate de-
veloper who wants to develop a new
race track near Hayward to compete with Golden Gate Fields, is contend-
ing that Ladbroke should be barred
from operating in California until
there's a full investigation of the
company's gambling operations in
Great Britain.
British authorit1e too~ away the
company's 'licenses to operate four
casinos a decade ago after a sen~
sational irtVestiption into charges
that the company had hi~ shills to
bring in gambling customers and had
used police computers to check on
owners of cars at rival casino~
That ended the company's involve-
ment tn casinos, but it has continued
to operate off-track bcttina parlors in
Britain and other European coun-
tries. ., •
Alameda County Sheriff Charles
Plummer has taken an interest in the
Ladbroke deal and asked the Horse
Racins Board to give him time to invesuptc the firm before iuuina a •
license.
It's clear. however, that the board is
ready to issue the license and aUow
l.adbroke to complete its purctwe of
Golden Gate Fields.
Leon.rd Foote, the board's ex-
ecutive secretary. &a)'s he's satisfied
that the incidents in Britain aren'l a
serious taint on the firm's record.
.. h was not t.he compeny's doiftf
bul more the acts of individuals,
Foote sa.id last wtiek, noti"' t.hel lhe persons involv~ have tance left
Ladbroke.
Ladbroke. meenwhile, 11 1rtt.in1 ICX'Ultomed to the cozy rdauonsllip
bctMen Slc:rlmento politicians and
the hone ncina indusuy. ·
ll's biml PIRc Teny, a one-tune
Auembly bone rKlftl consultant. as its~ has been lptjnkli•a ~ wnpaip thccU arou"nd the C.,etol
and .... been wi~ -... aisll&on and_,..... ud ...
of tlw llorw l'Ki11 bolrd.
And t1•1 ... It dllilr IO~ iliil ii Wlldl IO Din a Wa ie
Calillr'lil M ..... lqllZ t ........... ,, ..•• .,
1' '[
r
..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT !Tueeday, October 4, 11U
American may be required to run 2 grocery cfiains
to prompt compromise in merg~r plan
LOS ANGELES (AP)-American
SIOftl Co. will be required tO run two
oompetina California supermarket
chains under ajudse's order blocking
the company's plans to absorb b.1cky
Stores Inc., for which it paid S2.S
billion.
Tbouah the order is temporary ana
Irvine-based American has vowed to
appeal, some familiar with the situ-
ation 1Uf1CSt the burden of the costly
dµplicauon could foree American to
seek a compromife with Cahfomaa
Attorney Gencnl John Van de
Kamp, who opposed the deaJ on
grounds it would lessen competition.
And the pros~ of American, one of the nation's lliQcst grocers, mired
in lengthy litipt1on and possibly
forced todis,orge Lucky, has prompt·
ed speculation the company could
become.a ta~t for hostile takeover.
Last ~hursday, U.S. District Court
Judge David Kenyon issued a
preliminary IOJUncuon barring
Amcncan from mergina Lucky with
ats Alpha Beta markets to form a SS()..
store chain. That order remains in
effect pending tri~I on the antitrust
issue, and Kenyon has )Ct to set a trial
date.
American officials refused to dis·
cuss the company's options, other
than to repeat a terse press statement
that the decision would be appealed.
However, the coun otaer requires
the company to keep all Alpha Beta
and Lucky stores separate, preserving
sc~te management structures and pncing policies.
That's an expensive proposauon
that can't be maintained for long, said
Edward Comeau. an analyst who
follows the industry for Oppenheimer
& Co. in New York. "I think tbey'U probably sen~ with
Van de Kamp, they'll have to,"
Comeau said last Fnday ... There's
too much money at stake for them to
get involved in a loo, court case.-
To compromise with the attorney
general, the analyst said. the company
probably would ha ve to scU of':!'lore
than the 37 stores at 1s rcquirco to
divest to 1ective FecteraPrrade-Conr-
m1ss1on approval for the merger.
The coun decision prompted
speculation on Wall Street that
Amencan, which nvals Kroger Co. of
Cincinnati as the nation's biggest
supermarket chain, could become a
tak~ver taraet if forced to sell Lucky
at a loss. ma1n~ins.
Van de K.amp. a Democrat said to
be posiuon1ni himself for lln attempt
to runJor lhc aoxtmor's office in two
years, continues negotiating to settle
bis obJecUons to another combina-
uon or supermarket chains.
The Vons Cos,. bought 172 Safe-wa~ ~arkcts 10 Southern Cahforn1a.
wluc 1 g.i ves It 3sostores in tfie region
That deal combined wuh the Alpha
Beta-Lucky merger would cut com-
pelition to the point that Cahfomaa
consumers pay S400 million more for
groceries a year. Van de Kamp
But Vons avotded a court battle
and is negotiating wtth the attorney
general. Neither side will reveal
details of an agrcemen1 an pnnc1ple,
but obscn·ers expect Vons will have
to stll more than the 12 stores
required to wan FTC approval for that
deal.
Bo1h Vons and American contend
the mergers will allow them to cut
pnces substantiall) because opcr-
.auons wall be more efficient.
Amencan has 1.600 stores na-
uonwtde. including Jewel markets in
Chicago, Acme on the eastern sea-
board. Skaggs Alpha Beta. Alpha Beta
and Buttery an the West and the 27-
state Osco drugstore chain.
Constriction spending down 0.6%
WASHINGTON (AP) -Con-reasons for the slujg1shness· ns1ng
truction-spending fell O;& pcreent in intettSt ntcs, the-cfTcct~ of the t9 6
AugusL the go vernment said Mon-tax law. high land prices, a no-gro"th
day, and economists blamed the movemen1 Oil the West Coast and the
lackluster performance on nsi'ng lack of public spending on sewerage.
interest" rates and pr~v1ous over-water systems and other public "orks
building in many regions. needed to support bu1ld1ng.
The Commerce Depanment said Despite nsang intertst rates 1n
buildinsactavl ty declined to a season-August. strength 10 hous1nLparncu-
ally adJUSted annual rate of S396. I larl~ single-family homes, panl~ ofT-
billaon an August. following a revised set weakness in most other areas.
0. 7 percent garn in July. The Jul) Residenual construction overall
figure had been preliminanl) re-"as up 0. 7 percent to S 190.8 balhon.
poned as a strong 1.2 percent gain. bolstered by a 1.0 percent Jump an
Factor) construcuon dropped for
thnhird t-onsecunve month. tt fell -
3 I ~rcent to the lowest level smce
Apri'l 1987. r\cuvn ) in this sector had
been rasang earlier this year as manu-
facturers increased capacity to meet a
boom an t':itpon sales.
Go' emment construction prOJCCts
fell 1.1 percent to S77.5 b1lhon and
included a n . 7 percent drop an
haghwa) constroctaon. •
C'onstrucuon of office bualdangs an
August rose 0.4 percent to $28 I
balhon. ·
For the first eight months of the construction of s10gle-fam1l) units 10
year. acfrvi1y was up only 0.4 percent S 115.6 billion anp a 0.5 percent nse in
over the same period in 1987. faahng a~nment construction to S-.2.0
· even 10 keepl)ace wtth the 1.4 percent balhon.
increase 1n construction costs. Construction ofcommerc1aJ bu1ld-
Mark Obnnsk). an economist with
the U.S. League of Savings lnstitu·
uons. said demand for office space in
the ortheast is ofTsettang the lack of
aruvtt" an states such as T~us. where man) ·now-vacant office buildings
were built based on the assumption _
that 011 phces would st.ay high.
Royalty visits marketplace
Prince. Chrtatlna of Sweden (left) and her
buband Tord Magnuon (right) opened the
ezblblt of premier deel&ner Erika Laa(er-
blelke (center) at the Oriefora Cryatal Cal-
lery ID Co.ta lleea '• ·cryatal Court.
Laeerblelke'• art aiu. .. characterized by
atronc tranaparenl colon which pj_a~ with
and &Calnat each other. The gallery featuree
the laraeet collection of Orrefora atemware,
glftware and art &lua In the United Statee.
"')
BUSINE SS NOTES _.. --
Alpha MiCrosystems to acquire
Doelz Networks;. reports profits
Alplaa Microsystems ha s an-
nounced that 1t has acquired the
option to purchase substantially all of
the operaling assets and liabihues of
Doell Networks of Irvine. . .....
Doelz provides data networking
solutions. with protocol trans-
~ncy, which allow a network to
include processing equipment from a
variety of manufacturers. The com-
pany's product line is designed for
organizations with multiple network·
ing requirements, such as banks and
universities, as well as for the small
networic user.
"By exerci~ang the option ~o
purchase, Alpha Microsystems will
be able to diversify and grow by
acquiring a complementary tech-
nology," said Roben B. Hitchcock.
chairman and chief executive officer
of Alpha Microsystems. based in
Santa Ana.
A Doelz networks representative
said, "Like Alpha Microsystems.
Doelz is a technology-oriented com·
pany. We have been iri business nine
years and have a SJO million installed
base. Our pending acquisition by
Alpha Microsystems has several ad-
vantages.
··we .will pin on-sate manufac·
tunng capabilities and increased
financial strength. plus technical and
managemen1 expen is.e. We believe
that it will be a positive move for both
companies."
The option granted to Alpha
Microsystems expires on Friday, and
ats exercise 1s subject to the approval
of the directors of Alpha Micro-
systems.
Also on Thursday. Alpha Micro-
systems reponed a profit for the
second quarter ended Aug. 28. of
$605,000, or 19 cents per share. on net
sales of $1 2. 7 36,000.
During the like quarter of the prior
year. the company reported a profit of
S 189,000. or 6 cents per share. on net
sales of S 11 ,058.000.
FOf the six months ended Aug. 28.
Alpha Microsystems reported net
income ofS 1.277.000, or 40 cents per
share. on net sales of $24.864,000.
This compares with net income of
$287.000. or 9 cents per share. on net
sales ofS22.029.000 in the hke pcnod
last year.
"We are excited by the continuing
improvement an revenues:· said
Hatchcock ... Revenue an the second
quarter ancrcased over IS percent
from 1he second quarter of the pnor
year..-We attribute thanncrease to the
success of the Alpha Micro dealers 10
delivenng quality soluuons "'-Orld1-
wide.·· . ·-· . Oiceon Electroalcs Inc-. and Con-
tinental Clrcu~ts Corp., a closely held
company with headquarters an
Phoenax, Anz .. have entered into an
agreement an pnnc1ple to combine
the t'-"O firms.
The transaction announced on
Thursda) calls for Irvine-based Da-
ceon to exchange 3.250.000 shares of
its stock for all of the outstanding
stock of Continental Circuits. The
agreement's tenns are subject to
approval by the d1rtttors of each.
sausfacuon of certain conditions and
to tht' execution of a definiuve
agreement.
Afier consummation of the ac-
quisition. the presenl managemc.ot or
Contanental wall continue operating
the business as a separate wholly
(Pleaee eee CONTRACT/ A 10)
F.u~l e.conomy standard set
at 26.5 mpg for 1989 cars
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Transponation Department on Mon-
day set fuel-economy standards for
1989 passenger cars at 26.5 miles per
gallon of gasoline. a le vel the nation's
two largest automakers say they could
meet w1thou1 layoffs and production
cuts. The depanment's decision kept the
fuel economy average required for
each auto manufacturer from increes-
in1 to the 27.S mpg enacted by
' Consrcss in 1975. Since 1986, the
automakers have been required to
meet a 26 mpg standard.
A hiaher requirement "would have
clearly put our domestic full-lane
manufaCturers at a competitive dis-
advan• compared 10 some foreign
manu'9Cturers, especially the Asians.
who have been building only small
can and can easily meet t~ fuel-
economy requirements." said Trans~
pocjalion Secretary Jim Burnley.
t The order issued by the National
t Hipway Tnftk Safety Adminis-
tration, an apncy within the Tran.s-
ponalion Depenmen&.. said 26.S mpa ~nted the level attainable b) ' General Moton Corp. and Ford
Motor Co. in their domestte ncets of
&>Ultft1Cr cars wnhout "hannful pro-d~muicuons and without any
' sipificint ratncttons on consumer choice ...
.. Th..._ no job or sales loun Jttould
sault from GM and Ford. as well as * snanukturcn of ll10$l fomsn l l llllr'a tOld in Ous counlt)'. mcet1na
tM ttaftdard: I ndecd, that standard
should help preserve the ability o(the
1wo domestic companies to recapture
sales and Jobs frol'T'I compeutors.." the
NHTSA order said.
GM and Ford. which had warned
higher fuel·economy standards
would force cutbacks of btg-car
production and cost the industl')
hundreds of 1housands of J_Obs. were
quick to praise the order. Consumer
groups were criucal.
GM said the decision "was in the
best interest of American workers and
consumer choict ."The company said
the 1975 law that established t.he co~rale averqe fuel C<lonomy. or
CAFE. standards was "outdated."
Ford said the aaency's decision
.. rccoanizcs that consumer preferc~ccs resuhina from low fuel
prices have placed a panicularly
heavy burden on our efTons 10
comply with the 27.S mpa standard."
The nation's third-larscst auto-
maker, Ch.rysler Corp., whose car line
is concentrated in the smaller. more
fucl<.fficienl models. said only that u
would bcttd 27.S mpa 1n 1989 and
said "a meaniftlfut psohne ta'
would elim1 nate the Med for a CAFE-
like rqulatory system."
Chrysler Chairman Ltt lac:occa has
araued that his compeny hu SUICUSl-
full)' met the fucl«0n0my le~ ttt
by Conams and ftderat rt1Ulaton
should not chars the Nies IO help
compa11ia that MVt been a IUC'-
cessful in mabqa fucl<ff'ic.ent can. The Cenatt foi Auto Saftt). 'Which
favon stncter fud.«onomy Man.
. '
dards. s:ud through Director Clarence
D1tlo" that the Transportation De-
partment's decision v.~ "another
cave-in b) the Reagan adminis-
tration" and vowed to g_o to coun to
trv to force tht' agency to let the
standard increase to 27.5 mpg.
Othercntacs. such asScn. Tamoth>
Winh. 0-Colo.. and the Energ)'
Conscnataon Coalition. called for
higher standards to reduce the release
ofga~s into 1he atmosphere. arguing
that automouve em1ss1ons con-
tnbute to a long-term warming of the
Earth's atmosphere through the
greenhouse efl'ec1. •
•· .\s the n1dence mounts that the
Eanh as getting warmer and ma)
c<tper1encc unprecedented
temperaturt ancrtases. the U.S.
should be 1mprov1ng automobile
efficienc) to redu~ greenhouse
em1ss1ons:· W1nh said
The Reagan administration. GM
and Ford contend that the fuel·
economy standards, enactC'd to ~
duce petroleum imports. have
outhvC'd their usefulness.
W11h psohnc pnccs now runntna
about Sl a piton nauonwide. the
nttd to conserve 1 le , p~ s1n1 than
it was 1n the m1d-1970s end con·
surMn want to buy largrr ~rs. tht
edmtnt\tratton and automakers ). NHTSA's dtt1s1on co1nc1dC'd with
rdene of a pubhc op1n1on poll concludlna that 90 percent of 4'men·
cant bthe~t the ao~mment $.hOuld
=re the automakers to but Id mort
ftkwot cars.
Michacl Sumichrast, an1cconom1st • ings including shopping centers "as
in Washington who publishes a down 6.0 percent to S.26.8 bilhon an
construction newsletter. cited five ~ugust. ·
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I L ~------,_.,
.. Takeover fever
is intensifying,
raises concerns
TARLO RINELLA
Personnel firm adds
· senior consultant
Vicki Heston of Vicki He1ton Persouel Servlce1 lac. in Irvine
announe6 the addition ofR01lDa Tarlo as senior consultant to her
permanent and temporary personnel business. Heston is celebrating
her eighth anniversary in business. ' . . Neal D. Riftlla recently Joined Newport Beach-based Tay lor &
A1aoclate1 Arcltltect1 as P1'>Ject manager. An acti ve member of the
American Institute of ~hitccts, Rinella currently serves as
committee correspondent for the LA/AIA Architecture in Health
committee and heads a task force sub-group whichis preparing a ~white paper" documenting problems inherent in the health facilities
building process as well as their recommendations for reform. • • • Sixty-Two Aetlrement Cou1eU.n1, which specializes in counsel-
ing corporate and private individuals on aJI aspects ofSocial Security
benefits, has opened an office in Costa Mesa. Owner Tonya J. Nieman
says tM firm performs such functions as filing forms and claims.
preparing filers for thejr Social Security interview and dissem1n at1ng
a broad range of infom;iation on such issues as Medieare eligibility,
spouse's benefits, taxiillon and work after retirement. • • • Costa Mesa resident Mary G. ~uett, a travel counselor with
Mesa Travel in Costa Mesa, has earned the professional designation
of CTC (Certified Travel Counselor) from the national Institute of
Certified Travel Agents in ~ellesley, Mass. Bennett joins more than
I 0,000 other travel professionals across the country in achieving this
distinction from the institute, which is a nonprofit organization
providing educational programs for travel industry members at all
career stages. • • • Re&11 Corp. of Minneapolis. Minn .. announces that Kl°'
Kamfermu of the Regi1 Hairstyllst11n South Coast Plaza in Costa
Mesa recently attended the Oairol Ad vanced Haircolor Institute 1n
New York. Kumferman and 12 other stylists were selected from
11 ,00Q hairstylists at 750 sJaons in the United States. · • • • Tiie AatomatJe Answer lac., authorized dealers of personal
computer-based electronic receptionists and voice mail, recently
opened its doors in Costa Mesa. The new corporation's dir~ctors
include David L. Woo, Dr. E. Timotlly Mor1u and Siamak Emadl.
Does activity hurt
1ioi1g-term Strength
of U.S. economY?-
By JOHN CUNNIFF
,,,.,....~
NEW YORK -The biggest action
in the stock market these days isn't
the buying and selling of shares in
companies but the buying and selling
of the companies themselves.
This 1s takeover fever. and rather
tharrdiminishing as forecast it seems
to be intensifying. In volved in the
action are corporate raiders, corpor-
ations see~ing new assets. leveraged
buyout funds and big financial in-
..stitutions..
The reheating ofleveraged buyout
fever was measured again last week
when Manufacturers Hanover Corp ..
once a staid old banking operation.
announced formation ef a buyout
fund that could amount to as much as
S2 billion. l'
Large as that figure is. it belies the
true buying power. When used to buy
out shareholders ofa target company,
it can be leveraged at a ratio of from 5-
to-I to even I O-to-1 . or SI 0 billion to
$20 billion.
Such an amount is sufficient to
frighten the management of all but
the biggest compa-nies in the United
States. but it is only a small part of the
pot. An estimated $25 bilhoo to $30
billion is controlled by buyout
specialists. • ·
The activity itself -and the
potential for more -1s generating
concern not just from business and
investment people. but from other
interested panics who fear that the
long-term soundness of the economy
is endanie~.
High on the list of concerns is that
sound companies, slowly built over
many decades, arc falling into the
hands of manipulators rather than
managers, and art prone not only to
immediate dissecuon but also to
eventual destruction.
Enhancing the powu -and per-
haps the danger -of leveraged
buyout money arc "junk bonds."
which art high-risk debt securities
paying high rates of'intercst. A major
role of such bonds is to sobstitute
long-tent\ debt for equity.
Debt does wonderful things for
those seelcing to buy existing ~om
panies. but it is generally thou~t to ·
be more dangerous than equity to
deal with. And, the critics say; those
dangers may be worsened by other
activities of the buyers.
One-of these activities is to thi,nk
shon term -to sacrifice distant
strength for immediate financial re·
suits -and that, say critics, can get an~y company into trouble. Such,
buyers also seek to lessen debt by
selling off pans of the company.
perhaps weakening it in the process.
The debt itself can become the
biggest problem of all, especially in a
downturn. Costly to begjn with, it can
become destructive!)' so in a re-
cession or period of high interest
rates, when even strong companies
m~ teeter.
There is another, more positive,
view of the scene: Leveraged buyouts
sometimes get rid of poor manage-
ment. and they provide a premium
over market pnces for shareholders of
the company taken over.
During 1986, -for exa mple, 31
percent of all deals were completed at
a 50 percent or better premium. In
1987. 38 percent of all deals were at
prices at least 50 percent hi&.her than
those that prevailed a montn earlier.
·Beadt;d wonders
Sclenttat. at W. R. Grace a Co.'• re•earch ceater la
Colambla, lld., ban fonaalated a ...,, beaded blolotlcal
fan&tdde that wW belp Jtr•••t .Ubonae plant ........ .
Showa here, tbe Ucndcf •ladoa la foced ~ a noale
and drlpe latoa wula where lt will bardeD lato I •llltmeter-
dlameter bead9. ThM .U laocalaata coald replace buard-
ou cllemlcal peRlcld• lD tbe home and la nan.rt•. w:a.
Grace, an lDternatloaal firm wltb latereeta la ebemleal and
CODRJDer .me.. maintalu an lntereet la Bl Torlto,
HoallhaD'• and Coco'• and ReabeD'• rmtaaraata.
"
CONTRACT AWARDED •.•
FromA9
owned subsidiary of Diccon Elec-tractors. and research and develop-
tronics. ment organizations.
Continental Circuits. ---a leading
independent manufacturer of com-
plex surface mount multilayer circuit
boards, had sales of S66 million for
fiscal year ended July 31 and net
earnings of $7.6 million for such
period.
• • •
Such short-term benefits cannot be
denied. The question only .llmLcan ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~sw~h ~tfi«~ese 1mmed~~ I benefits provoke distaot problems.
Diceon Electronic~otJy llal S:"&" m1 ion shares of common stock
outstand ing.
In Laguna Hills CommRD.ity P1y-
cklatrk Centen has announced that
earnings per share for the third
quarter of its fiscal yejtr ended Aug.
"31 , 1988. were 38 cents, compared
with 34 cents for the third quarter of
ihe pfiof year, ·an 11.8 percent
increase. ·
Total reve nues. net earnings and
average shares outstanding for the
third quarter of 1988 were
$87,332.000: $17.319,000: and
46.144.000: respecti vely, compared
with $75,417.000: Sl5.45~000: and
45.809,000 for the third quanerofthe
pnor year. ,FOR
MATURE
AUDIENCES
, ONLY
Introducing .
United Airlines Silver Wings Plus~~
Travel Club.
It's free -with our 1 year CD
and at least 60 .birthdays.
It\ a <>IH 'f' 111 -a liff't111w offPr from PacifiC' Savings Bank .Just l)pen
1111 r 1 n·ar CI>. wit 11 as ltt t le a:--$!''>,000 in funds new to Paciti r
Sm·i ng" Bank ancl »ou'll hP ahlt• to spend your high intc-'rPsl on
dts('ou11tt·d t ra\'f'J all ovt'r tlw world. BecausP when you open a
qualifying ai Tount, you'll recPtVt· a frpe Individual Life t inw MPrn
l11 ·rship 111 l nllt'd A trhrws Silver \Vi ngs Pl us 1'raw•I Club.
Thi.., l ~·par CU wtll giw' ~·<111 t ravl'I
111g mor1t·~ for .v~·a rs to <·om<'. You'll san·
with discounts 011 airfarc>s: cnlisPs,
hotels. rPsort s. ear rentab-PV('ll s pp
C'ial tours and PxotiC' cruise pac:kagf· .....
ht-cause ~·011'11 h<:> a Club memlH ·r
You must be at least ()0 t11 qualify
CURRENT
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8. lOCX,/8.43%
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But if you're a little younger .. \'ou l'a11 141\·t· t h P mPmbership to a family
member or fril•nd who does qualify
To open your CD, or to ~nd out h<1w you r an qualify (or this sp cial
o ffer with other Pac ific t ~rrn account s from six rnQnths to five year ~
JUSt call l -800-PACIFIC, or stop by yo11r 11Parest Pacific Savings
Bank office today. And get ready to •unnwoA.t,.uM•
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tomorrows
,
PAOFIC &\VINGS BANK
In our own small way, we make a bi1 dJff'eren~.
In the Co ta Mes$ area call: ( 714) 631-0SOO;
Costa Mesa ourtyards area call: (714) 831-7831
FSLIC
"The transformation of billions of
dollars of equuity into debt is eroding
the finan cial footing of U.S. indus-
try," says Wright Investors' Service.
It worries about the economic conse-
quences in a downturn.
Concern also is ex pres~ b)' man}
cntacs about the market volatihl) and
mstab1l11y 1ha1 ha ve incmised as a
result of takeover fever. with some
stocks rising or falling 10 per.cent an a
dav on takeover speculation. ft was. Wright S3)'S. one of the
underlying causes of the stock mar'ket
collapse of last October, and it also
seems to be high on the list of reasons
why man y individual investors have
abandoned 1he ri1arke1. perhaps for
good.
• • • Newport Beach-based EIP Micro·
wave Inc. has been awarded 3 new
$12.97 million contract bnneing the
total awards from the U.S. Air Force
for microwave couo1ers to S 16.82
million in the past 30 da}s.
Robert W. Austin. vice president
and general manager 5a)S the con-
tracts are from the San Antonio Air
Logis11cs Center and require that the
Air Force buy all its.requirements for
'"o tvpes of m1trowaH· counters
frotn £1 P for 1hc next 30 months.
EIP products are pnmanly de-
signed for the defense electronics and
tclccommunaca11ons markets. Pnnci-
pal customers include telephone
'companies. military and other gov-
ernment agencies. m1hta11 subcon-
For the nine months ended Aug.
31. 1988, earnings per share were
S 1.1 7 compared with S J.03 for the
first nine months of the prior year.
and lotal reven ues. net earninJS and
average shares outslanding for the
nine months ended Aug. 31 . 1988,
were $262.071.000: $53,886,000; and
46.034,000: compared with
$221,435.000: $46.747,000: and
45.564,000-for the similar period of
the prior year.
Available deductions listed
for older taxpayers.' benefit
Older taxpayers enJO)' many 1ax benefits not
available to other Amcncans. If you arc 65 or older and
married. and )Our spouse is also 65 or older. you do not
have to file a tax return unless you have income of
SI 0.100. That figi:Jre drops to $9,500 1f on ly one of you is
65. and to $5, 700 if -----------
)OU are single.
Your personal
exemption 1s now D.
Sl.950. but if you're RALPH married ~md filing
jointly. your regular Scorr standard deduction
of S5.000 1 ·n~ 11iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii creased by $600.for
age and b¥ another $600 if you'realso blind. Double those
amounts 1f your spouse is also 65 or older and blind.
For si ngle. older taxpayers. the standard deduction is
$3.000. with an additional $750 each for age and
blandness.
I f~ou receive the entire balance ofa pension. profit-
shanng. or similar plan wnhin one taA year. you may. if
you meet cenain requirements. treat some of it as long-
term capital gain and elect special averaging of the
ordmary income portion. Remember. to avoid a penalty
tax. you musr withdraw some retirement holdings each
year. beginning no later than April I follow1og the year
you reach 70"1.
You do not pa¥ taxes on Social Sccunty benefits
unless other taxable mcome plus one-ha~f of e benefits
(plus any tax-exempt interest) is more than 32.000 for a
married couple fihng jointly, or $25. or a single
person. Even then. only one-half of the benefits are
taxable.
All t~paycnage 55 orolderttavea one-ti~elect1on
to selJ a home. condominium orco-op. which they owned
and li ved in for at le:lst three of the five years preceding the
sale. and exclude up to S 125,000 of gain.
Finally. if your income" is below a certain level. the
law gives you a special tax credit for being 65 or older.
R•lpt Scoll J1 • «ttlflea pt1blJc accoutut ..,,,.
olflct1 lo Ntwport Bt•cll.
. We Have You Covered
Your money at Downey Savings is insured up to $100,000 by
the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. In order for
us to offer you thi s valuable free protection, we must continually
meet the FSUC's strict standards. federal insurance is safety
money can't buy.
We also can show you how to insure more than $100,000
safely and legally -through a prudent selection of individual,
joint and trust accounts.
0 DOW~.! ~AVINGS
"We last you a lifetime!"
MYVllW/NIYPOIT IWH • 3501 Jamboree Road • (714) 8S4-22SO
CDft'A lllM • 360 E. 17111 Sime • (714) 642-7422
OOITA llnVIOIJTll COUT • 3200 Bristol StMI • (714) SS'-9270
.
"I
\
Ofange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, October•. 1 ... *AU
NYSE COMPOSITE T RAHSACTIONS TUESDAY'S CLOSING PRICES
• f
OTC UPs :\ Dow~~
WHAT AMEX DID
WHAT NYSE Orn
AMEX LEADERS
NYS E LEADERS
NEW YORK !AP> -Sales, 4 o.m. Tuesdav price and 1111 ctla!lilt 21 the 15 most aclfve New Yorll Stock Exctlan~ IS~~lradfng natl~tJV al "'t .. ~ra~l.
Pilsburv lU j S7~ + 'l'~ ~AA~~;r.; 1·: A: i17~ ±1:: Seo Ud • o. _ )~ + ,,..
enkTr NY , 61,4 ''• -''• kfJ GE ,S94, '• + '• UnC.frbd' ,682, + 11·• ~i~i~~~s 1:1594: s~ -t ~ PhlhpPet , , 9' • I
Rvoer j• , 26 1 •':I Exxon • , CA -~ Kr~$ I, , Sr--; Mid uUt I, 02, l '• Arcll nM I, 70, + ~
Dow JoNES AvERAGES
NASDA Q SUMMARY
GoLo Quon s
META LS QuoTE s
Stock trading
flnlahes lower
NEW YORK (AP) -The tlodt martcct finished lower today for the
third consec:ut1ve session. Tnldi"I
was moderate.
Analyats said worries about ~ rates ~"4 the outlook for
corporate profllt"'COQCin.e IO "" on stock Drica. ~ Dow Jona avef'llC of 30
indusariab. Which ma 7.6.S poinu on
Monday and 14 pOHHI OYtt lbe put
two ........ ·)QM anOtheT l.20 10
doll 1• l.102.06.
Dedi9i11J itlUCI outp!IC!Cd ,aintt1 ~ 1 llllflln ol 7 to 6 ·~ illUCt liiled oa the New Ycwt SIOck El· ~. widl 636 up. 769 down
~:Ui ii·lf.li!Mdl;f!tHiit.llti ,,....,. ...........
IR.S seeks records
in laundering probe
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The lntcmaJ Rcv-
enu~ Service has subpoenaed documents on
electronic tnmsfcrs to California banks as part of a
nationwide crackdown on money launderina by
drug dealers and tax evaders. it wasrc1>0rted today.
·rhc IRS and ttrc Dcpanment of Justice hope
to penetrate the multibi\lion-dollar money·
laundering operations of drug kingpins and
uncover the methods used by tax. evaders to
conceal transactions, according to documents
obtained by the Los Angeles Times.
Records from banks mclud1ng Bank of America and the former Barclays Bank of
California werc subpoenaed as part oftbe cffort·to
trace funds transferred between U.S. banks and
Hong Kong. Panama, the Bahamas, the Cayman
Islands and the Netherlands Antilles-five known
tax havens where laws protect against disclosure
bank account infonnation.
The banks arc noltargets of the invcstigation1 but the subpoena noted that Bank of America paio
a S4. 7.S million fine in 1986 for failing to report 17.000 cash deposits and transfers in excess of
Sl0.000 as required by law. There is no )aw
covering wire transfers. '
I RS officials with the San Francisco district
office, which is conductina the California ponion
of the investiption, said numerous criminal and
civil investiptions arc under way as a result of the
records obtained from the banks oveT the put
several months. They refused \o identify the taraecs of the
investiptionsornameotherbanlcsinvolved in the su~enas. Other IRS offices arc conductina similar Inquiries, they said. but declined to name
them.
'
· RocE1
Clll.Sll
T-ables
turn in
foOtball .
It's Barons who
matchup this time
This sounds sort of familiar. with a
little twist, but I believe it was
Fountain Valley which bowed out of
its scheduted junior varsity football game w1th~ater Dei a few weeks
back. Wasn't that the rap on Mater
Dci a year or two ago?
Mater Dci Coach Chuck Gallo
confirmed the abstnce of the game.
but said in no way was he thinking of
aoing elsewhere for competition.
"I JUSt wish they (Fountain Valley.
Edison and l:I untington Beach) didn't
want to beat us so badly," said GaHo.
Don't hold your breath. Chock.
0
Fountain Valley·s response: "We
had to bow out of two games-Mater
Dei and El-Turo," said Barons Coach
Mike Milne"r. "We were totally beat
up with injuries to some key poeple
and we didn't have cnoogh to go
around." Rot-en_o_u~ footbafl pfay~ at
Fountain Va cy. home ofbilhons?
"We've always had a high nurnber
of people on our squads::. ~id
Milner, .. but this year we have a
squad of just 48. It's real hard. We had
24 quit since the beginning of spring
football.''
Milner cites declining enrollment
and the fact that the kids of the '88s
aren't willing to put in the time. Nor
arc some willing to put in the effort fo r
second-line status.
"No question." said Milner. ··w e
have lot of kids on the fringe don't
want 10 take the pounding and the
dlscipline. Kids have changed -and
the crowds arc down."
0
Costa Mesa H1Jh has a new
baseball coach in Jim Serven. who
replaces Kirk Bauermeister after the
latter's seven-year tour of duty failed
to develop into a fulltime teaching
position.
Also new to Mesa·s c.oaching staff
arc soccer coach Ed Lee (from
Padfica) and water polo coach Chuck
Olson (from Garden Gro"e).
Mesa Athletic Director said he's
still looking for a volleyball roach to
replace Ketth Wynns. wh o resigned
recently.
Hagey said he anticipates a major
shift in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District in terms of teaching
openings in the next two-to-three
years with expected ret1?ements.
We'll see.
0
Another honor has fallen Bill
Boswell's way. The fo rmer West-
minster Hi&h football coach. who is
still one o( the bif items in· Hunt-
inaton Beach High s football history
wflen he prepped there, has been
named lo chair the Natidnal Athletic
Directors Conference when it comes
• to Anaheim Corvent ion Ce nter in
1990.
Boswell, who has busied himself as
the Huntington Beach School Dis-
trict's Director of Athetics for some
years, was one of Orange County"s
premier football coaches when at
Westminster.
0
With the return of Ron LaRuffa to
Sunset League baseball, although it'll
be at rival Fountain Valley af'ter 13
seasons with Edison. thi ngs may light
upapin.
LaRutta said he'll to pursue a
return to ni&ht baseball in the Sunset
Leque, a feature which for several
ycan had a lot of peo ple happy with
the ability to see some of the best
durina non-workinjl hours.
He'll have his hands full doi ng it.
however, because of the over-
whelming push lO sonball al Mile So&&are Park. . 'rhe facilities arc there. it's just that
softball has the numbers and ap-
percnt innuencc to slop even a single
(Pleue .. CAllL80N/82)
•
.,.., ..... ,.__"' ........
Edl 80n quarterback Gr eg AnaeloYic, ahown with Cbaraen'
Coach Daye White, wu voted Player of the Week.
• 4
I
f ..
TUESDAY. OCTOBER 4 1988
Ang~~ovic .prt;1mpts .
Edison turnaround
argers' quarterback finds
confidence kic:_ks losing habit
By RICllARD DUNN ..., .... c.. •• , ......
.\s coaches. their respons1b1ht~ begin~ the moment
after their last gafl\11r nds. The} "'ork all "'ed .. 1.1.atch film
and 1echn1call) prepare their pla~ers for the ne"t
people back on first do\\nS. and on th1rd-and-shon. they
blitz a loL"
~ngelo' 1c 53\\ the holes. finished wJth 92 )ards on 20
cam~s. including a 14-)ard keeper up the middle for a
touchdown 1n the third quarter
Edison. 4-0. went on to a 21-9 v1c1of) over Mater Dci
last Fnda)-. behind the wheel of A~gelov1c. who also
completed I 0 ot 17 passes for I :!9 ) arcts .
A. win tor the coaching staff. indeed. And anoth~r
feather 1n ~ngelo' 1c·s hat. "ho took some bru1~s last
oppo~~e1~ 7:30 or so final!\ become!> a reaht\ on Frida\ P layer. of the week
nights after a grueling week: the exams begin.· omeume~ ---------------------you're wrong. and sometimes }Ou're right
Edison High School. which gues~ iigllt against
Mater De1 last week. passed w1th lh ing colors
Chargers quarterback Greg '\ngelO\ ll a senior "'ho
unlitungly scrounged up most of the haunung e}eballs
last \Car b' booster elub members a~ the \hargers 1.1.ent
2-8. had the kind of night against the \lonarchs that made
those same cn1 1cs think about· years past .\nd forget the)
ever said negat1' e things about Edison _l.a'>I )Car
Angelo\ IC made them lh1nk aoouL ~cars whc'n
Edi son meant football. not electncll\
Coach Dave Wh11e and his stattknc" the Chargers
couldn't possibl) go head-to-head 1.1.11h Mater De1. loaded
with much bigger linemen. so the) 1.1.en1 around.
Angelo' 1c. who would hke to run more but doesn't
get the chance as oflcn because of the t\~ of offense
Ed1son--:tJscs. ran against the \<fonarchs H1stoncally.
Edison teams have won when the~ ·,e had a running
quarterback.
"They told me before the game that I was going lo run
a 101:· Angelo\ 1c said ... I watch films with them• (on
unda)sand throughout the 1.1.eek>and (the coaches) 1.1.ere
telhng me that all week. Mater De1 drops about eight
~ear ff<>m mor~ depanmems-than one
··Mater De1 'sdeft.>nsegoes 101.1.ard the tight end. so we
went awa~ from the 11gh1 end.'' .\ngelov1c said ... On m>
1ou hdo1.1.n run t\.1ater Oe1 J brought C\er)body 1n and
that's 1.1. hat did 11 Our roaching staff did a great JOb. They
called e'er) pla~ :ind told us 1.1.hat Mater De1 was going to
do
"When 11 "341 man-to-man defense. our offensive lin~drc:hrguod'Jub 1.1. hen.M;itl'r De1 dropped e1gh1 people
back. And that opens holes for draws. I saw some
opcmngs and "cnt I didn't think I'd be that open (dunng
the gamel .\II "eek the coaches were S3)1ng that I was
going IO be open
··1 kept sa)ing. ·)eah. )eah.' You kno1.1.. e"ery wed•
goe!i b) and the~ Sil) that. but we don't for one reason or
another Either we d1dn"1 run things or 11 doesn·t work.
E' el' thing kind of 1.1.en1 together this week.''
this 11mc the coaches were absolutely right.
Angelo' 1c 1.1.as going to be open and run a lot. His
performance earned hun the Dail) Pilot's Pia) er of the
\\eel.. honor as the Chargers defeated one of the most
"' (Pleue .ee EDISON'S/BS)
National League Championship ~Series:_Dodgers vs. Mets
------Hershiser may need blanks
ffis last losswas ~-I-setback to Mets:
New York starter Gooden is 4-0 vs. LA
LOS i\NGELES (i\P) -Orel
Hersbiser. who hasn"t allowed a run
since August. ma) need another
shutout ,f he is to lead the Los
. Angeles Dodgers 10 VICIO~ O\Cr the
New York Mets tonight in Game I
of the National League plcryoffs.
The reason is his mound oppo-
nent. New York's Dwight Gooden.
who has a 4-0 hf~1me record af
Dodger Stadium. That srat1s11c.
-coupled w11h the Mets' I 0-1 record
1h1s ~ason against the ~.
means Hersh1ser probablv will ha' e
to pitch extremely well 1f Los
Angeles 1s to take the lead in the
best-of-seven senes.
'T ll be carT} ing the burden of :!.i
plavers and the Dodgers' fans:·
Hersh1ser said Monda' after a bnef
"orkout. ·:~~ 1ntens11~ "on't
change. r ,e got 10 execute the
p11ches and •hope for some good
breaks."
Hersh1ser timshcd -1he regular
season '«'Ith 59 consecutl\e score·
less 1nn1ngs to break tomter Dodgl·r
Don Dr)sdate·s :!0.)ear-old mark of
5b.
It's a record right up there 1.1.11h
Joe D1Magg1 0· 56-game h111ing
streak and~ Lou Gehng's 2.1.30
consecutive games.
··The streal... doesn't ha'e an~
bearing "-9"· 11 doesn"t even caIT)
into the plavofTs ... Herstiiser said.
··Today Is just another game. I
want to reduce 1t to Jts simplest
form . I'll look at (catcher Mike)
Sc1oscia's fingers and try and e-<-
ecute the pitches."
Hersh1ser lintshed the season :!3-8 with a 2.26 earned-run aver-
age. He had 178 stri keouts in 26 7
innings and pitched eight shutouts.
"He's had one of the finest years
ever.'' Dodeers manager Tommy
Lasorda said. ··t never thought
amone could beat Don Df)sdafc's r~ord. Orel has bttn something
special and he has kept us out of
tailspins all season. If he 1s not the c, Young .\"'ard winner in the
National League. I will see 10 tt
persona II~ that the gu~ s who are
(Pleatte eee HERSHISER/82)
NL Championsh ip.
DODGERS 'IS. METS
Tue., Oct. ' -New Vprk Meis
at Dodeen. S o m
Wed., Oct 5 -New York Me ts
at Dedewi 7 o m
Fri., Oc1 7 -Dod9en al New
York Meis S om
Sal., Oct 8 -Dod9en al Ne>N
York Mets 9 a m.
Sun., Oc1 9 -Dedeers al New
YOf'k Meis (1f neceuarvl. 5 om
Tue .• Oc1 11 -New York Mets
at Dod99n <•I neceuarv), 5 om
Wed • Oct 12 -New Votlt. Mel$
al Dod99n (11 neceuarv>. 5 o m -~~ .. ~en' Steve Sall led the National League West DtYialon
chaJilplona ln hJt• and atolen baaa.
Belcher to take Tudor's spot
LOS .\~GELE (.\Pl -.\
workout for the National league
playoffs on \tonda} turned into a
chn1c for the Lo" .\ngcle" Dodgers.
who announlcd that injured left.
hander John Tudor wa s scratched
from his scheduled tan in Game~
against the 'e"' 'oti.. \lets
Tudor <.Uffl'rl'd a spasm tn h1'\
nght hip in thl' .. ccoml 1nn1ng
Frida' nt~ht and had 10 h.'a'c the
game.agatn't \.in hJnusco
.. It felt hkl' J l..n11C 1.1.as going.
through me .. Tudor said. ··tt w:isa
pain 1 nl' er had tll::ftm· ··
Tudor. 10-1.1.1th a~ J~ earned·
run a' eragl'. thn'" on. ~tonda~
and t''\~ncnct'd some "slight pain .. according to Dr FranUobe.
the Dodgers t1.•Jm ph~ s1c1an
The lleta' Darryl Strawberry, who led 1'e National
Leaiae ID home nana with 39. la a llVP canclldate.
Dodgers managl'r Tomm)
Lasorda ~1d rookie Tim Belch<'r
\\<Ould tart (1amc ~ Wedncsda'
night against Oa' 1d Cone. :!0-'C
and Tudor "'II start (Jame .3 at
hea tad1um on Fnd3~
.. .
Par:rlsh hope$.·to rebound in AL
Former Ocean View pitcher .
Holdridge joins new system_ ..
Frem ~ Assoda&e4 Prns
Lanct Pamsh is coming home 10 the ngcl~. and he
hopes he cao leave his two-)car slump in Ph1lacJelph1a
"I have every ~•son 10 bchc,·t that I \hould be able
lo Fl myself back tottther on the this ballclub." Parmh
said Monday after he was traded 10 the ngcls b the
Ptullin for m1nor-lcqut pttchcr David Holdri<tac. a
product of Ocean View Htlft SchOol.
Hofdndae. 19. v.1 the Anecti· first-round S('l«tion
1n the 19 7 dr1f\ H compensauon for Rt911c Jack50n
111n1na v.-1th the 0.kl:and Athktl(' as a frtt •nt
Holdr .. mack his profeueonal debut &h~ "'-mmu
with the Quad-Cit)' naels of the Clau A Mtdwc'1
Lequc. He was wat 6-12 with a 3.87 c1f'Md..run a'craat
and struck o ut I J 0 bencn 1n I SJt<, 1nn1np.
·•The Ph1ll~had1rtal reponson him •hen hc-.Ha
'
high-school pla)er:· Ph1ll1l' gl'ncral m:inattcr Let•
Thomas said. ··\\c also had thr 'i:lmc l\pe ut \lp1n1\1n
1.1. hen I was~ 1th t Loui s:·
Whtie HoldndgC' 1 lea' 1ng hornl' Parmh 1..,
rtturning home. ·· "It' n1~ to ~ home." Pam h addl-d -rm 1u t
e,t·1tcd about 1t To be \Ct) hon~t. m) m<'ntal app
th1 )Car 1s 101ng to b( a littlt" d11Tcren1 than 11 wa 1n
Phlladclph1a "
Pamc;h. a ':!·)car-old catcher. ..1.nC'd "1th the
Ph il he~ as a fn-r~aacnl on Morch 1.\. I ~8 He 1.1.a a s1\·
ume-all-s1ar -.11h 1he-CXtro1t T1ttn but ~nc-d !-'5 \\1th
17 home runs al\d 6 7 runs blued in last )tar and slumpcJ
to .!IS -.uh 15 hl)met1and60 RBI this \car
.. fh1s " methina &hat l'\C ahu) wanted to ~ a
pan of." Pamsh '°''d "I didn't k.no~ 1f I'd r'cr gel a
chantt to pla\ out httt I h'c in 't orba Linda h'll
Pf'Obebl) &alt' me ~O m1nut« to &<'t (to .\nahe-1m
Stlldium). It'll v.ork OUlJu l n,ht.
• ··1 was hoPtnt 1ha11fl was to•na &o bf mo'cd tb111l
would be some,,.~re out ht°l'l'. 8as1cally m> •wo chotct\
-.ere here or hick to ~tro11. Wt ha' t 1 home hcf'l' ton
(PllMI w PAaa .. /98)
··This 1.1. a'. I udor can fl'\t
Tucsda}. \\\·dn1.·s<la~ and Thur'-
da,." Lasorda -.aid "\\c think he
1.1.1ft beOt..'
lnJune-s ar1. nl'th1ng 01.'" 11.1
Tudor. 1.1.ho cam, 10 the CX>Jgcr>
1n m1dsea~<'n 1rnm thl' \t Lt1u1ci
( ardinal'\ tn pl hangr tor .. lugger
Pedro uuem·r,, Last <>ea<.on l ud1.1r .. unaed a
broken kg 1n l.pnl ~'hen \lt-1c.
catcher Barn L' \ll\\ landl'J ,,n
him in thr dugout" h1k 'ha,1ng. a
loul ball
Tudor e\iicm:nccd \1.,me cl~'"
\Men~ 13\(.' l.1\t <,t'J\\)n and \p('nt
the 1irs1 month ot lhl' H'ar on thr
d1sabkd J1~1 Tudor p11chl'd 1n the '\L pla,.
oOs 13<;1 sea.son 1.1.11.h -.,\. I o«1!> and
in the V. orld ~nc-.a1ta1n t \tinne· ~01a. f31hng t<.' "hn. h thl' ~nrs for
th1.· Cardinal\ tn (1Jme t> at thl'
\ktrodome
The Dodger .il\t) annoum:cJ
that tell-hander Fernando
•
\'alcnzucla "ould not be on the
postk·ason fl' 1cr \'alenzuela. the
Dodgers ace this decade. went on
the d1"3bled h t Juh .30 because of
a <1ore shoulder ind made t1.1.o
rdtcl appearance<; late in th{'
\t'J<.On
· \\ c felt n would be asking too
mulh tor Fernando to pitch m the
pla,ofl\, .. Lasorda ~1d. "He has
. made c\.cellent progress and we
didn't 1.1.ant lo do an\lhtnft to hurt him ..
The Dodgers also ratched
1ntielder Da\C ~ndu-son bc'cauS<'
l,f J pinal sprain. Mtk<' harp-
er<ion 1.1.111 take h1 spot.
left tit"ldc.!r Kirk Gibson 1s
h,,h!'led b~ a ham tnng pull but
~1d he woOld pla ~ Tuesda> naght.
If he·., ah'<' he'll pla~ ...
L1 r~ !.aid
C11b :m had .:'.5 horn~ nd "'t>
RBI and S(ort'd ll>ti runs His
hJrd·no~d pla~ \\IS SCC"n has an
1n!io1ra11on for the Dodge"
I, AREA RouNouP
I
Lavelle leads
CdMtothird
P.\LO ,.\L TO -Corona dcl Mar Ht&b's Edd1c lafclle couldn't bok1
the lead bul earned an oumand1na
1h1rd plact fin1 h at the prcst\l)ou
tan ford "" 1iat1onal e_rcp cros countt) meet Monda> in Palo Alto l
The 5.00U-mctcr ra.ce CJ. I m1act)
mcludcd 68 school from ci&ht statn.
La'cllt'$ cnon led the~ ktnp to
a third place team fintsh behind
C 1m1nno (90 potnt\) and Bind Hiila
of °"8on (lJl poents). tbc ~
rated team 1n the nauon. CdM heel
\ IS)poentsandco.Whllvcbld .....
i' with I 0 laa 1tconch m t"G m'' 11 d
(1'11 •1 -Olll'IM•
-Ot9191 Coat DAIL y PILOT I Tue.day, October •• 1eea
SP ORTS BRlAK
Zer-O'a of baseball
try to find direction
after disaster of '88
' PNm TM Assoeiate4 Presa
BAL Tl MORE -They lost their Ill owner. They lost their trainer. And they
lost an awful lot of games.
Despite the death of owner Edward
Bennett Williams and a record number oflosscs on 1he
field, there were a few bright spols for the Orioles in the
1988 baseball season.
"I see some positive signs." Oriole general
manager Roland Hemond said last week. "The club has
gotten tounger and better as the season has pro-
gressed.
It could not have gotten worse af\cr establishing a
major league record l>)' los1ng lJ>e first 21 games of the
season. but the injecuon of young talent has been the
result of work by Hemond and Manager Frank
Robinson.
"We found out early in the season that we had to
take a new direction c0mpletely." Hemond said. "With
the cast that we had. we weren't heading in the righl
direction. It doesn't mean that some of those veteran
players couldn't contribute somewhere else. Fred Lynn
was perfect for Detroit. but in our case if Lynn were here
it would mean less opportunity for J~ Orsulak and
Brady Anderson ...
Orsulak and Ander~on arc two of the dozen new
lN THE BLEACHERS
~
' J
IJ u ..
"You'd better come look at this, Buford. I'm
getting a reading on the fish locator, but ll's
just one big smudge."
faces to join the club this season. hOne of them older Scott signs pact for $5 million than 28.
The 26-year-old Orsulak was obtained from 8 "-· fi Pittsburgh in the off-season and batted bettenhan }00 yron~ou signeda ivc-year contract •
h h rt ft wnh the Los Angeles Lakers Monday w en e got to pla y regula ya er the All-Star break. which will make him him one of the
Anderson, 24 and a product of UCI. was acquired highest-paid shooting guards in ths Na-
in late July in a trade for longtime ace Mike Boddicker. tional Baske1ball Association. Ahtrough the team did
and though disappointing at the plate. he sparkled in not announce the terms of the contract. it's believed to
the field. ---i-worth more than $5 million. Before last season. Scott "A lot of our improved pitching in the second half signed a one-year contract. hoping his barginin.g power
bas been due to our improved defensive play." said would be increased this year. The five-year veteran
Hemond, who singled out Anderson spccificall~ · responded with the best season ofh1scareer. lcading the
On Monday, three Baltimore coaches were fired NBA champions in scoring with a 21. 7-point average ..
and a fourth was offered another job within the . The University of-Cal,ifomia at Berkeley offered a
organization. $5,000 reward in connection with the shooting of a
Quote of the day
San Francisco Giants President AJ'Rosen, on
the subject of a radio report that infielder Will
Clark. who led the NationaJ League in RBI and
walk.s, and pi1cher Atlee Ham mater were aoing to
be traded to the New York Yankees for Oon Matting)y: .. h's silly. I don't know who dreams
these things up."
Police drop Tyson incident
Police on Monday said they handled a ~ domestic incident involving world heavy-
weight champion Mike Tysoca and his wife,
actress Roblo Givens, like an y other such
case and. as far as they are concerned, the auer is cto~d ... This 1s a domes11c violence incident not unlike
many others. ellcept for the fact that it involves a public
figure" police Ch1efTbomas J. Sdaretta said at a news
conference. The Ne w York Post and the Ne" York
Daily News reported in Monday's editions that T)'son ·s
rage was sparked by interviews Givens. a star of
tefe\ 1S1on's "Head of the Class:· and her mother, Rutb
Roper, had wllh Barbara Walters. In the interviews.
broadcast Frida)' on ABCs "20-20." the women
portra~ed T}·son. 22. as a scary and frightening person
to lave wtth. The Post reported that on Sunday morning.
Tyson hurled a sugar bowl and chairs through the
windows of his Bernards' die. N.J.. estate. The News
said Tvson brandished .. an instrument" from the
fireplact> and ran thrqugh the mansion smashing
windows. Police said no one was injured or arrested and
that Givens dad not want to sign a domestic violence
complaint .
football player on campus. Joel Dickson, 20. a defensive
tackle for the Bears. was shot twice early Sunday after a
shon argument outside of the Bear's Lair s1Udent union
pub, which had been rented for a private pan¥. The
Junior football star was listed in good· condiuon' at
Kaiser Hospital in Vallejo and could begin pla)'ing in
three weeks ... Stock car driver Bobby Allison, cleared
to go home from a Birminltham. Ala., hospital today for
the first time since a June f9crash. envisions a return to
racins after a long course of rehabifitauon for his
inJunes ... Two days of steady rainfall has forced
NASC AR to move the $350.000 Holly Farms 400 stock
car race at North Wilkesboro. N.C.. to Oct. 16.
ong1nally an open date on the schedule ... The Los
Angeles Kings acquired defcnsemen Dale Degray from
the Toronto Maple Leafs and James Hofford from the
Buffalo Sabres in the NHL waiver draft. but lost
defenseman Ken Hammond to the Edmonton Oilers.
Anderson's kick lifts Saints
NEW ORLEANS Morten m Andersen's 49-)ard ficla goal as time ran _•II•
out Monda) night gave the New Orleans
Saints a 20-17 victory over the Dallas
Cowboys.
Andersen's winning kick came after Roger RuLek
-who earli er had missed a 39-,ard field goal that hit
the upnght -connected from 3~ with :?4 seconds to go
to tic 1t 17-1 7. 1... •
But Mel Gray returned the ensuing k1cko1T39) ards
to his 42. Bobb) Hebert hit Bren Pemman w1th a 26-
yard completion io the 32. selling up Ander~n 's kick.
The win. the fourth straight after an opening pme
loss for New Orleans. was only its second ever in 13
meetings with Dallas and its first since Oct. 17, 1971. It
moved the Saints into a three-way tie for first in the
NFC West with San Francisco and the Rams.
HERSHISER VS. GOODEN. • • From Bl
'011ng will be under 10\est1ga11on b'
the Federal Bureau oflnvesugauon.''
W11h John Tudor ailing with mus-
cle spasms in his left hip. Lasorda has
hinted ht> ma\ start Hersh1ser three
times 1flht" series goes seven games.
"I'll take the ball eveT) game."
Henh1ser said. "I p11chcd on three
days· rest at 11mes thi s season and 1n
!tome instances prefer 11. When I've
got m) rh\ thm It 1s better for me to ha ve the b'all as often as possible ...
Gooden. whose only career loss to
the Dodgers "as in Ne" York. feels
vef) comfona~le in Dodger Stadium.
"The mournl is great." he said. "lt's
a nice and high mound. and that helps
\Ou get o'er the top with your
breaking ball. It seems hke )ou're
nght on top ol the hitter here."
While the Dodgers worr)' about
hitting Gooden. he's not worrying
about facing Hersh1sc r
twice in the eighth.
"Hershiser is an awfull y tough
pitcher to try and manufacture runs
against." Mets manager Davey John-
son said ... I don't plan on doin,J a lot
of strange things in one game JUSt to
beat one pitcher."
The Mets faced a s•milar problem
in the 1986 playoffs against Houston
when Mile Scott was just about
untouchable.
Scott beat the Mets and Gooden 1-0
with a five-hitter in Game I and beat
them 3-1 with a thrcc~hauer in Game
4. The Dodgers announced Monday
that Tudor will pitch Game 3 Friday
at Shea Stadium against Ron Darling.
Wednesday's matchup will see
David Cone. 20-3.opposcrook.1eT1m
Belcher. 12-6.
* Posltlon-by-po•ltlon
1¥•etlrlllwr111
Fir\! ....
. Rams weren't
Eckerely, Franco reap award
. Oakland's l>ftalaEcker~ey andCm· Ill ready to play cmnt1's J• rraace were named Monday
as winners of the Rola ids Relief Man title. -, _..::;;..---.---------:---
Eckersley narrowly defeated Minnesota's That s Robinson s assessment
Jeff Rea.r4oe for the American League award Wlth a 4-2 -• b l C d record and 4S saves. one short of Dave Rlpenl'• major of Sunday s de ac e vs. ar s
leaaue record. Franco was 6-6 and convened 39 of 42 -
save opportunities, easily beating Ptttsburah 's Jim Gou
for the NL title ... Pittsburgh Pira1es· officials held out
little hope that General Manager Syd nrUt, involved
in his second front office power struaale in as many
years, will save his ~ob dunng a board4lf directors vote
today. The Pirates 16-member board is expected to
ouSt Thrift m a telephone vote. then launch an
immediate search for 'his successor ... New Yori
Yankee manager Lou Pln1ell''' meeting with owner
Georce Stdllbreuer today in Tampa was postponed. a
Yankcesspokemansaid Monday.Steinbrtnneristn the
Midwest and the meeting has not yet been rescheduled.
Meanwhile. Dallas Greea, Pintella'i . reponed suc-
cessor. remains on hold. "The ball's in their court,"
Green said Sunday. "They have to talk to Lou." Green
has denied signing a tWq,y'car contract to replace
Piniella b\Jt has said he an<fYankccs general manaacr
Bel*y QUu talked about it last week ... The Houston
Astros started their search for a manager to replace Hal
Luler with early speculation centering around Astros
first base coach Man Galaace, former second baseman
Joe Mor1u and Piniella ... Orel HenlUser ofWestem
Division champion Los Angeles, who set a major teaaue
record by pitching 59consecutive scoreless innings. was
named the Nalional League l>layer of the \llcCk a,IM1
Pitcher of the Month. Kevbt Mcl\eyaolds oft he Eastern
Division champion New York M~ts was voted the NL
Player of the Month (.345. seven home runs, 22 RBI) •.
. Outfielder Cbet Lemon of Detroit, who hit :-412 with
thtte home runs, 11vc RBI. two game-winning RBI.and
six runs scored. was chosen as American League player
of the week. The Angels' Jobnay Ray was among the .
nominees.
Raiders suffer more injuries
EL SEGUNDO-The injury-riddled EE
Los Angeles Raiders recei ved more bad •II t
news Monday when it was learned that
runninJ back Marcus Allen and tight end
T,odd Christensen have sustained ~rious injuries. ,
· Christensen. who has played in the last five Pro
Bowls. suffered a partial tear of the joint capsule behind
his left knee and will be lost to the team for four weeks.
Allen. also a five-time Pro Bowler, sustained a
broken navicular bone at the base of his lefi \\Tist and is
wearing a cast.
··They sav it's a painful inJury. but that ~ou can
play. if you can stand the patfl." Raiders coach Mike
Shanahan said of Allen's IOJU~. "They don't get much
tougher than Marcus. so if an} one can pla) with this, it's
him .''
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S o.m. -BASEBALL: Nallonal League Cham-
oionshlo Series game one -New York Me1s al
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S o.m. -BODYBUILDING: Men's Junior National
Chamoionshio from Chicago Claoe), ESPN.
6 o.m -BOXING: Sd1tduled -Robin Blake vs.
Vicror Davis in 10-round iunlor-weller weighl bOul al
Atlantic Cilv. ESPN •
7-30 o.m. -WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL: Hawaii ar
Long Beach S1a1e, Prime Ticket
8 e>.m. -OLYMPICS: .Review of Games from
Seoul, Channel 4.
RADIO
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oionshio Series oame one -New York Meis a1
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WEDNESDAY TELEVISION
10:20 a.m. -BASEBALL: American League
Chamoionsh10 Series 11ame one -Oakland at Bos1on,
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10:20 a.m -BASEBALL: American Le~(Ht
Chamolonsnio Serles game one -Oakland at Boston.
• KNX C 1070).
Prom fte Ats~late4 Preti
The Rams fell from the ranks oft"' unbeaten Sunday
at home against the Phoenix Cardmals. Actually, they
didn'tjust fall they crash-landed. . . A week aher they defeated the New York Giants tn
the Meadowlands. the Rams gave up 519 net yards and
lost 10 the Cardinals 41-27. But Rams coach John Robinson said Monday that
there's no reason the team should start doubtina itself or
its new five-ljnebacker Eagle defense. "This is a 16-game dogfight," Robinson said. "lf you
forget the other doa has tceth,iyou've got no chance.
"Our own inability to be ready was the key. It sttms
to be happening to a lot of teams around tht league.
There's no reason )o lose confidence."
The Rams, us mg a new approach on defense, entered
the game with an NFL·leading 2S sacks.-But t~ey ne~er
rattled Neil Lomax. who was sacked JUSt twice while
throwing for 342 yards and two touchdowns.
"We didn't rush the passer very well." Robi_nson
said. "But we didn't cover or play the run very well. either.
"There·s no reason to believe teams have suddenly ~ QPt-outdefense..:...~ost teams play a version ofit.
Its not a novelty. "We just didn't seem to have the energy to make the
plays."
-:--• Robinson aedited the Cardinals' balanced offense
with causing some of the Rams' problems.
"When you don't play well.Jou tend not to give ~he
other guy enough credit," he sai . "They had something
to do with how we played. "We don't sec ourselves as superior to the Cardinals.
We just feel if we had played well. it would have been a
closer game." "' Robinson cited the San Francisco 49ers' loss to
Atlanta. the Rams' next opponent. as an exaruple of what
can happen when a team's not ready mentally.
PARRISH ...
From Bl
couldn't have worked out better."
Parrish has a .260 lifetime average with 246 home
runs and 820 RBI 1 n I I major league scasons .. He said pan
of his problem in Philaaelph1a was the team's poor
record.
.. It's been tough. I was under the impression that we
were going to be right ~n the rtlce,'' he said. "We struggled
for a couple of years. especially this year. I think people
thought that maybe 1n 1987 11 was a fluke that our ballclub
dad as poorl> as it did. This year. it was kind of hard to
believe we did as poorly as we: did from the outset. It 's no
fun losing. there's no doubt about that."
With the trade. Parrish waived his nght to a possible -
"new look" free agency that 1s being considered by
arbitrator George Nicolau. The Associated Press learned
Parnsh agreed t() a SI-million. contract for 1989 with a
pomble$400.000in 1nccnt1vebonuses. Parrish earned SI
. million this season and also in 1987.
Angels general manager Mike Pon said he believed
Parrish would be re\'1tali2ed b} his return 10th<' American
League.
"We know Lance Parrish lo be a very intense
competitor." Pon said ... We have seen situatiohs where
somc11mes people will go to an01herclub and try so hard
to JUStif) the fanh someone has in them that th ings don't
work out. We're confident thm he'll be the force. if you
will, that he was in the American League previously.
"I thank 1t'sgoing to be very important for Lance. the
{'.Onfidcnc~ Re has-base6--0fl l'tis--pasl peffefmtfttt1n-the
American League. He knows he's done it before in the
American League.
"We went about this certainly with no disrespect to
Bob Boone. We feel w~e in a very good situation behind
the plate, lookinj to Bo?> Boone and Lance Parrish and an
outstanding uuhty player in Darrell Miller. who can catch
and' play several other positions ...
Big numbers favor ·'
Oakland in ALCS ·
However. Boston
favored with four
gamesatFenway =:
BOSTON(AP)-Theb1gnumbers
favor Oakland. The Athletics won
more µmes. beat Boston more of\en
and hn a lot more home runs.
But the Red Soll are the slight ,
favorites. The main reason? The best-
of-7 American Lea1ue Cham-
pionship Series starts at Fenway Park.
"If we have any advantage. it's
having those first two games in Boston.~ Manager Joe Morgan said.
Dave Stewart. 21 -12. will pitch
against Hurst. 18~6. Hurst is 13-2 at
Fenway this year and 25~ over the
last two seasons. Clemens. 18-12 with
a league-leading 291 strikeouts. will
pitch in Game 2 against Storm Davis.
16-7. When the series moves to
Oakland for Game 3 on Saturday,
Bob Welch, 17-9. will oppose Mike
Boddicker. I 3-15. mcludmg 7-3 with
Boston after his July 29 trade from
Baltimore.
"If we do the things we need lo do
and are capable of doing. we'll be
tough to beat... sa1d Morgan.
* Posltlon-by-poalt1on
hnillll*. Bos
McG•1re.o.i..
earrett. eos
Huel0¥d, 0.11
...... , ""',. ,.,.., ....
25' .OS 47 103 13 70
2'° S50 17 143 32 " IKend .. M .m •12 um 1 u .255 m JS 7S 3 i3
.. I can't dwell on "hat Hersh1ser
has done," GoOdcn said. 'Tll have to
let m) hiuers take care of him.
Hersh1ser's nol going to be 1he one
that beats me. I've got to wolT) about
the Dodgers' hitters ...
Hersh1scr's last defeat was a 2-1 ~tback against the Mets at Dodger
Stadium on Aug. 24.
Slut>Cn LA
H1ICl!e<. LA
HlfMflOel, NV
S.• LA Be<ll"'9n NV
Teutel, NV
213 20 JO ·s.c • )4
193 ltl 22 3o6 l 2S
V6 lAI 43 96 t I SS
Se<end .... 2n 632 70 17S S S7
l03 ,.. " .. 0 11 ™ 273 JS 6A • 31
-~ Dodeen fint baaeman Franklln 8tubb9 Relde a 1roW1d ball
throa.&b bla leta while waJttq Illa turn for the bittlDC cace.
for the Red Sox.anything would be
belier than opening the series in
Oakland. Boston lost all sax games at
the Oakland Coliseum this year and
haswononl yoncein thelast lSpmes
there.
"People are making a great deal ou(
of our not being able to win a game in
Oakland this year. but I'll repeat what
I said out there on our last trip.''
Morgan said. "I said 'when' -that's
'when,' not 'ir -we return. the odds
w1ll be in our favor because -we're
better than one out of 14."
ltttel. Bo• Wei~•. 0.11
SMm•
.2'3 »I '° " 1 1' .uo m ~ 113 a 39
Tlllrtl ....
He led 1-0 unul the Mets scored
CARLSON ..•
From Bl
high school baseball diamond at Mile
Square Parle. D
Too bad they can't find a night site
for Fountain Valley's first showdown
with Edison in 1989.
"That's one aame you'll want to be
at ... said LaRufTa. who anticipates an
invasion offormer Edison players to
stt LaR4ffa f n a Fountain Valley
uniform.
0
Luuna Hills High School has
addc3 an assistant to its basketball ~m under former Estancia
Coach Joe Reed.
It's Cra11 Sheff. the former spons
editor of me Daily Pilot.
Said Sheff; .. My duties art one.
keep score for Joe, and two. yell at the
refs."
0
Comig up for a vote 1n January at
theCJFCouftcil Meetina iu proposal
to tct 111n for 1ehoo&t mee1ina in the
plaYC)f& which •~ more than I 00
mills ...,, at • apot somh'here
bd••• IM IWO tdloola. Wllit? No more journeys from
Woodbride in Irvine to Sin Luis
Obi1PO Oft a Friday aftmM>on?
Grlfli11,LA
JOMM>n. NV
E":er. NY
HamlllOf), LA
Wooelton, LA
Jeffeflft, NY
Gie>ton. LA
~Revnotd,, NY
$llelt>y, LA
Wu,on,NY
OV11trr1, NY
M¥•heN. L.A
Slrewberr't', HY
Sclotcl•, LA
Caner, NY
$1\er-M>n,LA
Oeme>WY,LA
HM9, LA Oevi,, LA
Gon1•1t1, LA
Sastt(1_NY Ma-11.~Y
L.'t'OllS, NV
Matrtlll,NY
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Frlllldl,NY Goodin, NV
Detllnt, NY
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* • Crenshaw Htgh <>School. Other NL Cbamplon•blp note. famous athletes from the school
Dodgers left fielder Kirk Gibson is
hobbled wuh a pulled hamstnng but
will start Game I of the Nauonal
Lca_auc playoffs Tuesday night
against the New YoJ'k Mets.
"lf he's altve. he'll play," Dodgers
manager Tommy Lasorda at Mon-
day's workout.
The Mets' scout1na reports indicate
Gibson will have trouble runnmg.
"Four of our scouts covered the
pme Sunday and G1b$on couldn't ao
out and act an award," Mets manager
Davey Johnson said "l hope he' well
for the senes. If he can't run. that will
re<)'. hm1t thctr ofTcnsc."
Gtbson had his troubles aaa1nst the
Mctca this season, stnk.ana out 19
llm~ in 36 at-bats.
"Kirk 1s a great fastball hitter so we
try and chlnat speed a lot." MetS
catcher Gary Caner said. a
Seven members of the New Yorlt
Mets• 24-man playoff roster were
bom 1n California: RM:k Aauilera
(San Gabriel). Bob MtOure (0.k·
land), Gary Caner (Culva-City).
Kcv1n Elsea-(San Pedro). Orea
Jefferies < Burhaeam~>. Lcnnr
Dykstra <Sen.. Ana ud ~I Strawberry. 1 nauvc of Loi~
StraYthmv was a IU.ndoUt ulett •• ....... Ud ............ .,
I
includt Marques Johnson. Wendtll
Tyler and San Diego's Chris Brown.
0
The Dodgers on Monday traded
left-handed pitcher Sill Krueger to
the Pittsbur&h Pirates for right-
hander Jim N"e1dlinaer.
* Serie. •t • llUJce WNt ._ .,._,, we-. CloM, 10w•Korln9
Mmet Tiit Oodeert dott'I INe'f tor bit IM1119t,
IMY 110ot lot bit •1·0.1•, •nd wtlel llle¥'0 low
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~ Ol'I 1>9M Maf\4199f T--. L..hW4lll lovn rne •ow.te Pin, anCI ll'lt Dod9et't llOOt
llleW t•nwt {omt dO•n to ~·rU!I OKl•IOM
TN't be-1ne U y '' to "I •'-"· rldt rnttr t18'111'1e Pllclllnl Into Ille lel• IMonft e()O '"'°" 11 O¥« ro their ~ Tiil• I• not • comeo.<11
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Boston went 53-28 at home. indud-
i ng~ L record 24-gamt winning
streak. 'and 36-45 on the road.
Oakland was 55-27 at home.
But cozy Fenway Park must sttm
hkc a nice home to Oak.land. The
Athletics hit I 56 homers, second to
Toronto 1n the AL.
Jote Canseco hit 42 homers and
Mark McGw1rc hit 32. The Red Sox,
who hit 124. we~ led by Mike
Ortenwell wuh 22 and Dwafht EVans
with 2 I. At 36. Evans is the only
m~or leaauc pla)'cr to hit )O homers
in each of the last ciaht seasons.
To-compensate for the power aap.
Boston hits s1naleJ and doubles. The
Red Sox blued .283 to l"d the
lcaaue, 20 points h1&her than Oak·
lan<i. Wide Botas tiit .366 for his
founh consecu11ve battina cham·
pionship and Green~ll hat .32S.
But dts&>i1e the offensive dif-
ferencts. Lfie rault WIS nearly' IM
umc. Boston scon:d 813 runs and
Oakland 800,
O..kland's piechina is ~Utt overall
than Boston's. but tk Red Soll havt
Roatt ~1Mn1 and Inlet Hum. sianm who cu domiutc. 11tt A'•
iam ERA wu l.44 while lolloa'1
WIS 3.92. In the playoft' opener. Oakland·•
&GK\, lk>• L•nsford, o.a
Gr MnWlll, 80\ Poloclia,OM Jev•.oek
lurk•, Bos H«ldttson, Olk
t::Yans, Bos
Canseco, Oltll
Cttone, los
GednMtn. lot SlelnlMKtl, o.t. Hauey,O.k
·* 514 111 214 s !I .m sst to 155 1 S7 L ........
.31S S90 M lf'l 22 l If m 211 SI .. 2 '17 .257 'W1 .. lot 2 ll (~ ............... ... .m 540 n 1,. " n JIM '°1 100 1$4 24 N .......... .m "' " I .. 21 Ill ,,,,, 610 110 1'1 ., 12•
C.tcMr _,.. H4 31 >• 3 f7
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°'""·'°' llomtre, '°' Romine, los c;.-.o.°" Ptl!llM, Oek
.M 411 S1 121 IS 71
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I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, Octobet 4, 1911 8S
erep football players of the week
BOBBY EDW.AllD8 · RICK llOCK . STEVE FOULKE
Newport Harbor Fountain Valley Unl•enlty
A S-foot-8, 150-pound
senior, he had five lead
tackles and three assists
from his spot in the second·
ary against La Habra. ----------· BRETT ALLEN
Corona d el Mar
A 6-foot-l, 20S-pound
senior, he had fOur sacks
and sil unassisted tackles
to pul pressure on Laguna Hil~s in 14-11 victory.
KEVIN THOMAS
Eatancla
A 175-pound junior. he
had five tackles. three
sacks. blocked a punt -and
covered 1t for a TD. a·nd
recovered another fumble.
DAN O'NEIL
Mater Del
i-
. A 6-foor-2. I 80-pound Junior. he passed for 249 yar~s and a 1oocndciwn.
completing 20 of 26 passe1
w11h one interceptfon. . ________ ........:.. ___ ...
HUYKIEtr
Costa Mesa
A 5-foot-5. 140-pound
senior flanker, he caught
four passes for 59 yards and
led 1he ream with six solo
tackles at safety.
.-
A 6-foot senior, he had
six unassisted and four
assmed tackles. knocked
down a pass and had team's
"Hat of 1he Weck."
PAT LEE
Marina
A 6-foot-1. 150-pound
junior safety. he had seven
tackles, knockcd-Oown two
passes a11d had three "big ·
hits" for Yikes.' ------------· DOUG CUNNINGHAM
Huntington Beach
Before injured 1n first
quarter. he caught 4 passes
for 38 )'ards and a TD. and
had four unassisted and
two assisted tackles. -----------· GREG ANGELOVIC
Edison
A two-,ear starter. he
com pjeted I 0 of I 7 passes
for 129 yards and ran for 92
yards on 20 carries an 21.-9
victory ~ver Mater Dei . ..
KEVIN MULLENS
Ocean View
A 6-foot-1. 170-pound
_ senior comer. he had two
~ -' intercepuon!.. two un-
• ~ ~-assisted and fi, e assisted
• ~,-1 tackles m 14-0 vactol).
.
A 6-foot-3 195-pound
senior defensi ve tackle. pe
had five solo tackle!.. fou r
assists and a ~c:k an Tro-
Jans' 7-6 v1('tor') ----------·, FRED SCHWEER
Woodbridge
The 6-foot·3. 195-pound
senior quarterback passed
for 21 7 }ardsand a TD and
ran two yards for another
touchdown 1n 27-~ ..... n. ----------· REY SILLER
Saddle back
• An offens1\e _guard. he
led the hne surge and
trapped excepuonalh .... ell
--for Kendnck lies. v.ho bad 132 yard!' on 19 camt"\. _ ___:;. _____ __:., __ _
RANDY MARTIN
Irvine
The 5-fooHS. 160-pound
junior defensive back had
fi ve tacktes and one .as!.1st.
force<i one fumble and
recovered another
OSA VALE FIASEU *
Westminster
A 6-foot. .1 b5-pou-nd
senior. he ran for 167 \ards
on 34 ca rries against one of
Or'lfn'ge Count) 's most effi-
cient defens1' e lines_
Sea Kings
take top
billing
Estancia(4-0)makesTop 10;
Edison, FV 6-7 in Division I
-r
CIF FOOTBALL RANKINGS
DIVISION I
Sc.,_ ( Lffei.te)
\ Lovola !Del Riv
2 Long Beacn Polv tM oore
J Serv1tt (Angelus>
• Fontana (Citrus Ben)
S &isnop Amat (Angelus)
'-EcltHfl ( Sunwt) 1. Founhlin Valev (Sun~1)
I Et~nno-Ntr ICttrus Beil)
9 RuDldoux <Citrus Bell>
10 St Paul (Angelus>
DIVISION Ill
1 Min ion Vie10 ISoutri Coasl) 2 Es~anza (Emo.rel
J Dominguez (San Gat>tr1t l V1llevl
• Loara !Eme> •el
S Los Alamltos I Eme>.rl!
6. Paramounl San Gabr t i Va11tv > T Lvnwood (San Gaor e Vallev
8 Sanla Ana ICen1urv
9 El Toro (Sout Coasr
10 Schurr Foorh II
OIVISIQN VI
I. Corona dll ~r (Sea View )
2 Valencia (Orange
3 Troy (Freewav
• Sunnv Hll s I F~wav
S Ariesoa Suouroan 6 Bellflower 1Suouroan
1. Estancia <Sea v,.wl
I La M oraoa !Suouroa'll
9. Pac1f Cl (Garde~ Grovel
10 Kenneov tGa'ot n Grove •'
OIVISION VIII
1. Woodbf"id91 tPatmc Coast)
2 Atascaoero 1 Los Paores>
l Btoom1ng1on tSunk st
4 Et Segundo <Santa Fe
5 Sal\la C1ar1 Frontier
6 Paso Rooies Los Padrtt
7 St Monica Santa Fei
I. Agoura F•ol'lt er
9 Santa Ynez F•Ol'ltoer> 10 Traouco H 1s Pacific Coast>
Others Cossa Mesa 2· 1·1)
Aecerd rtl.
•·O 1'9 3-0 130
•·O 124
•·O 107 3·1 ..
4·0 7S
3-1 57
3-1 3'
3-1 20
2-2 16
4·0 \00
4-0. 90
•·O 11 •·O 61
3·0·1 63 •·O .0
2-2 3'
2-2 JS
2·2 ll 4-0 10
4-0 77
3·0·1 7•
3·0-1 6S
3·1 SJ
3·0-1 •9
4·0 41
4-0 15
2-l 19
2-H 11
2·1-l 9
4·0 131
4-0 128
4·0 111
4·0 95
·4-0 86
3-1 61 4·0 SS .
2-1-1 33
3·1 29
3· l 13
Game-busters Top l O -.
High school·football Iog
Last week's plays of 40 yards or more
•Josh Wojtk1e..,.1cz (Es tancia), touchdown run. €1
•61--Ryan Nash (Woodbridge). interception return for touchdo"'"
•46--Stack) Kagasoff. kickoff return.
•44--Tony Pena (Mater Dci). pass from Danny O'Neil.
•40--Marco Vazquez (Estancia). interception return .
Last wee k's rusblng leaders
....----.-I. Osavale Fiaseu (Westminster). J5-I 6~:
~ Josh Wojtk1ewicz (Estancia). 14-14 7: 3. Ju n1or
1• t Ol,lver(Un1versity).9·19-0, 141 ~ards. I TD:4.
Kendrick Lies (Saddlcback), 20-1 12: 5. Manny
Bonilla (Costa Mesa).. 18-98: 6. Greg Angelovac
(Mater Dei), 20-92: 7. Kedric Po....,e (Fountain
Valle)), 21-86: 8. Gus Miranda(Edison). 17-84.
Last week's passing leaders
I. Danny O'Neil (Mater De1). 19-34· I. 242
• yards. I TD; 2. Fred Schweer (Woodbndge).
· 15-24-0. 217 yards. 2 TDs: J. Oa\1d Henagan
(Fountain Valle>). 12-23-1. 175) ards. :! TDs. 4.
Greg Angelov1c (Edison). 10-17-0. 129 )ard~. 0
TDs. 5. Aaron Scheid (Laguna Beach). 15-31 ·:!.
126 yards. 0 TDs: 6. Tim Newbcfl) (Ne"' pon
Harbor). 11 -30-3. 121 \ards. 0 TDs. 7 Rich
Schones (Costa Mesa ). 8·-19-1. 112 ~ards. 0 TD
Last week's receiving leaders
Tony Pena I. Tony Pena (Mater Dea). 11-187. :!. Darren Webb (Laguna Beach).7-66: 3. Scott
Seymour (Woodbridge}. 5-36; 4. Alex Zaldivar (Woodbridge). +. 71. 5 Hu}
K.ieu (Costa Mesa). 4-59: 6.·Greg Szuba (Ocean View). 4-54: 7. Kednc Po ..... e
(Fountain Valle)), 4-42: 8. Tom Walker (Newport Harbor. 4-3Q; 9 Doug
Cuol}ingham (Huntington Beach). 4-38... • · ·
• Last week's scoring leaders
I. Mike Cook'( Fountain Valley). Josh Woj1k1ew1cz (Estancia). Kendrick •
lies (Saddleback). 12 each.
EDISON'S ANGELOVIC. • • From Bl
powerful teams in Orange Count)-
H1s touchdown run put Edison
ahead. 21 ·3. as the Chargers' hne
opened man) holes for Angclovic to
fill. "We've always had good (running
quanerbacks) at this school. and Greg
is no exception." said White. "But as aood a running quarterback as we've
nad, It really depends On who we're
playing and what the) 're going to do.
In the El Modena game. our first game
of the season. Angelo\lc rushed for
over 60 yards. o 1t depends on who
we're playing.
"Some things 'are an option for
him. We really don't run an op11on
play, bul we do some things for him to
run on if the play is there.He's best in
the open field . If so me things are
there. he gets open. We try to adapt
every year to what "'t' ha ve (in terms
of talent). We want not onl y a
throwing quarterback. but a• good
runner. too. (Angelov1c) 1s one of the
best players on the team obviously."
So it's a tum-around from last year.
"We wouldn't be doing as good if
we didn't have the season wt had last
year (2-3 in league. 2-8 °' erall),"
Angclov1c said. "We look one week
off after the season last _Jear. most
teams take tv.o months ofT or more."
Everybody said. 'Hey. what's wrong
with Edison.' It rcall) digs into your
stomach. It makes )OU work hard.
"Coach Whne said last )ear that
losing is a habit. -'\nd at first I JU t
thought that was llnother coaches'
line. But it's true. and now we're
starting to get 1t up. I honestly went
into the Maler De1 game thinking
there's no wa> we can't win. Last year,
I didn't know 1f we .were going to wm
or not. But not this year. It's not being
cocky: it's just confidence."
Of course. beins good and being
confident go hand in hand.-One helps
the other.
"You need players to execute.''
White said. "Our whole coachina
staff worked hard all week prepanng
for Mater Dei. We went through our
game plan. But the bottt>m line 1 that
the kids executed.
"Everything we worked on \\.Orktd
out. We caught (Mater Dei) off guard.
They had held Santa Ana and we
rushed for o\'er 200 yards. And that's
a credit to our offensive line. Every-
thing went wrong for us last )Car. we
had tons of juniors and lots of
-Gold en West
Or~County b1fc school
ootbalf ·
Dally Pilot selections
1. Servite (4-0 ) .
2 . Mission Vjo (4-0)
3. Edison (4-0 )
4 .Esperanza(4-0)
5. Ftn. Valley (3-1)
6. Los Almits (3-1·)
7. Wdbrldge (4-0)
8. CdM (4-0 )
9. L oara (4-0)
1.0 .. Santa A na ci-2)
(' ~ IM.W Mme)
CotlOHA D~L MAit (4·01
(SU View LN.-) 1 Hun11no1on IHcl'I
23 San Cltmentt 52 Santiago
I• Laguna HlllS
01-<o,ta MUI Il l NI-II
013-1.Jnlvtnllv' la t lrvl~I 021-e111nc•a' 1a1 NHI 029-S.dclleoack • 111 SA Bowl)
N-Tu"ln' ler OCCl
N 11-at Ntwoort Heroor •
FOUNTAIN VALLE Y U·ll
(Sunset Lee.w l 11 Maltr P 17 O JS E TO'O J 31 o 3 M.u1on V1eio 2• I 21 E Mooen1 7
11 07-LB F>olv l•I Ve•s Ste<!)
013-0Gtan v._,... let HBJ
021-Ed•son• 111 OCCt
011-.Vtslminsler' 111 HBI
N-Mar1n1• 111 wu1m1ns1tr I N10-Huntinglon Btacll ,1a1 OCC
HUNTINGTON &CH (l·l l COSTA MESA 12·1·1) (SO!tWt LN9Ue)
(P'lcllk CNil L.--l o Coro111 oei Mar 7
13 f 11anc11 73 7 P1c1t.ce 7
27 RancllO A11m.1os IS 10 Newoort HarDOr 1 ~ Garoen Grove 1 7 Le>n11 Btacll Y\o1IW<1 16
1 Kattllll 1 01~1'1' 0.1 (et OCCI 07-<oM (11 Nt .. oort H1roor1 01-eo.wn: tl!Omel
01-WOOdt>flooe· (I I OCCl 020-Mari,,.• 111 Wes•m.nsftf'l
010-TraC>uCo Ho •s• Ill M Vt On-<>c.en v-· 111 Wstmttllt
02'-L111una H!llS" Il l NH N)-Wtttm.nst~· ,l>QMe •
N3--0r1nge• 111 E• Modena Nlo-f'ounte ,, V111tv• at OCCI
NI0-11 i,.~~ Beec11·
EDISON (4·11 I SUftwt LM9W I
7 E Ill'-• 21 Cao Slrero Ve""
28 Long 8tacn )0<01n
21 Ma•f" Oe• 07-St Jonn Bosco a1 HB.,
01-.1 Hunt0119ton 8ffcn•
021-Fln Va ev· al OCC I 02t-Mar na • II OCC
N~tan V ew• <•• HS
N 10-a1 wes1m "'"'' E~l•·O) (Su View LH.W)
:13 Costa MHa
11 Laguna H1tts
17 LOI Amroos
JS Laguna Beacn
Ot-Oranllt (a l Ntwoor•
01-ru,i.n• tat Newoo•I 021-CdM' (al Newoort•
021-Unlv,rsolv' 111 Ntwoori 1
N....,_at Ntwoort Harbor'
Nll-Saddtebacll' la• OCC
aVINE !l·l)
( s.utll CNst LNtue l o 1l Unovt o Iv 7
IA 1' V .. Per' IS IA 13 Tint n 1
9 7 Wooobl'•Ollt 11
Ot-Footn.• (hOme
01-San Clemen!e <nomtl 021-•I Cao•stra'>O Va ,,,.
~lSJOl'I Ve.a• nomef N-at Oana H ,. Nll-£ To<o' a• MV •
LAGUHA BEACH 10-l ·l)
CP'KHk CNlt L.--1
ll 1• Lturl~ •2 20 0 Norte V111a 23
1 3 Oena H•lls 3
1 7 E 111nc,. lS
01-1 San c .. ~,,
OIJ.-l.1t11Uf'e H111s• el MV,
021--0renge• 110me
028-Trabuco Hilts• Cat MVI
Nl-Woodor•dlH!' (llOmt
Nll>-<osta Mew• Cnomt~
MARINA (0·4)
• I 5-M! LMtiUe) 'b -EM>e'faN I
0 -Serv It
10 Foo•n
O LOS A~r•·"1°' 07-at M1 ·1111'1
01-Wts'"' ns1tr' 1a1 Wmstr 07<>-,,.tn &Qcll' lat Wms1r1
01t-Ed•SOtl' 11• OCC) 'N.,._,,ln Va ltV' 11 Wm\\r I
Nl0-0CH I' V,.w• la t HBI
~MATER OEI (l·JI (~I LN9W)
17 F01inta1n v-v
~ OCH •ll<Cle
17 S.n•a An• t Ecllton
07-+4untonglo11 8tKft
01..,._!al BolftOC> Al'l'\81"
II OCC
SAC>OLEaACtt (I ·l)
(SN Vlltw L.-->
13 U Car •Sl>IO 46 6 S.l'lt a it.na
2t 1 "Dom "'OU41Z ~ 2' 71 Seorra ...
n 36
10
21
07-SA Valltv (at SA Bowl)
01)-N-oort' lat SA Sowl)
021-1 Tuslott' O?t-<ON>' (al SA Bowll
NJ-Un Yef''11V' (I I SA Sowl) N,.1-1-E't~•_. lat OCC)
UflllV E llSITY ( M) (SM View U..U.l 7 1rv1ne 1
0 Mouoon Vieto
12 WOOdDriOge
1 FOO!ll••
11
30 20 12
13
41 u
6
02!>-B Monlgomerv• 1SA 8oKT
027-Crn o al SA 8ow
07-011\1 H Is (I I Irvine)
013-<aM• a l lnt1nel <no-et Ntwoort Herbel'• 017-Est1'1C>8' 111 NH)
N)-~· !SA 6owtf
Nll-Tusl•nt •' lrv1nel
N)-S1 P11,.1 11 OCC
N l~v•tt 1• SA 8o ..
NlW~T Hilaotl ll·l l
I S.. V•w L.--> 0 s. .... A~
10 Ocff 11 .....
1 H"""'"'O'ot' Be.er
10 .... ~•=><a
07-•I 1..0"'Q Bee " l/w "°" 0 :)-$a._~ •CMtC• • $A Bo•
02<>-U~ .,.., ••• ,,_
07'-at Tw\' n•
N•-E lf•nc 1 • ~ N ll-Co-o~ oe Ma" "O"'tf
OCEAN VIEW ll·ll
I S4lnwt L...,_ I
19 C..Dl'tl'
O Newoort Haroor
20 SaMa A"• Va '" 1• WtslfUI
07-a• TU\''"
OU-F•n Va ""' •' ~B 021 ..... 1 i/\lf\lf•"n'ltr. 02t-Htn Beacll· 1111 Wm\n"
N-EdrM>"' l4t Hlft ltaC'll•
N 10--1\A.t•ina· •• Ht11 Be•C"'
WESTIIVNSTER 11·l l
l 5--' L.ae9MI 2t • v • ....c ..
0 lO,,,. '•n 10 2 E~•~H
I• 1 C•o s''"•"O 'V-v 07-U<CIC\ l/1el0 rtomll
01-Mar•na' II Wm.sir
021-()cffl'I v-· fnomtl
02t-F1" Ve <tV-11 Hll
NJ-et Hu'll "111CWI ttaat•
11110--Ed.sor' nomt
WOOOUIOGE (4·01.
IP'ldk C•st L.-.uel
0 n San ,...,.,..," 6
10 73 FOOtnwt O
l t• Un vers1t'I 12
0 77 """" 1 06--<envon ta1 lrv1ne1 01.-<:ost• Mesa' Ill OCCI
021-Legune H•lt$' t•t 1rv1ntl • 0~•1191' 111 El Modienal
N'-' L•l'Ufll a.ecn· NlO--TreblJCO Htfts' (•I Irvine)
.CdM'S LAVELLE LE.ADS TEAM T O T HIRD •••
9~ An&elovtc
inJunes. So "'e have lots to pro"e this
year. and m no way arc ~e satisfied
nght now. We ha\C a good team. but
we have to prove 1f we are an
outstanding team ...
And who knows? Ma)bc your
elcctncny bill ~ 111 drop 1f Angdo\ 1c
kctps running the mC"ter.
From Bl
team tame or lirs1\I,1th I less second s
"This as the 'Jo I cross crountl) meet in nauon
said CdM ( oach Bill umner .. Mt ..\C had more
schools, but this ha~ more quaht~ Each race has~ I 0 J..1d!>
tn It.
·"If a"' one of our second to tifth (plaC'e) men had run
10 seconds faster ..... e earn second. I seronds beuer and
....,e ha ve first .\t onl' point. 15 runners finishtd "'llhin
eight S«onds of each oth<.'r It "'as \Cf)' compet1l1 \e ··
Winning the 1nd1\ 1dual .... as Da'e \\elch of Jest.nt
High in Nonhcrn l ahfom1a an a ume of 15 minutC'S . .i •
seconds. Da\ e \,cl~on ol Baca \Ille H 1gh took second in
15 51 and La\elle fana'ih<.'d an 15:55
• La ' elle Jumped to the earl~ lead and held It until the
two-mile mark "'hen 'd~on pa sed him . ..\ppro,1matd~
2'' males into the ral·c. \\.etch came b) and he Inter passed
Nelson an close race Other C'tiM linashcrs included: Greg h!)OC!.. in :!-th
at 17:06; Paul 011 an 35th at J 7: U. Hunter Pierce 1n 3Q1h
at 17: 15. and \1ar!.. ~lint an 49th at 17.:!4.
G WC, OCC top UCSB Jn water polo
..\nd\ Parnzl'ttt' ..,Cl,n.'<1 three goals .... hilt K' Tran
Pono Faulkncr and ~te\C f...1ddcr addtd tv.o each to
proQel Golden \\ e\I t olle-gc Ru tlen; to an 11 -6 non-
conference "'atl'r polo '1cto~ O\ er '1s1t1ng 'C nta
Barbara Monda' Parazette kl) \\ 1nes and Faulkner helped Golden
\\est ( 15· l l build a '·I first penod lead. and Kldder
scortd bolh of ha ~OJls an the second as goalie \hle
Community college
players of the week
GOLDEN WEST
For Ru tiers' 14-1 0 Mission
Conference victof)1 o'er South-
western.
OFFENSE
Darnll Pay•e
The 6·foo1. 170-pound
sophomore wide recthcr out of
Marina Hiah cauaJu clght passes
for 1l3 yards 1ndudina a kc)• 2>
)'lrd rettpuon on the pmc-
winn1n1 touchdown dme.
ORANGE OAT
For· Pirates' .:?"-1 3 M1ss1on
C'o nfc"'ncc v1c1of\ O\ er ~11 n ~ntonio. ·
ORFENSE
&nGrta•
The 6-foot-S. 230-pound
~phomorc ~•de rttt11'-tr ou1 of
Edison H1&h t'aU&ht fhe passes
for 5~ yarc!s. an ludm .. 3 ->•rd
1n1b ~h1ch ltt up a field aoal.
DEFENSE DEFENSE
Qeerp., . JM ....
The 6-foot•4, 22S-pound The 6-foot. 21().pound 1n tdC
fftshman de~St\'e tackk out of hMbltk<'r out o( Slddlcl>eck
Marina H lit! m.ck n1 nt taekl«. H iah haJ I 0 taeklH. eiah t of tbtm
lndudiftl llll pn~ hl\5. had. unusmC'd. Pf\"S$Uml tht quar-
oet Met and bu tM quar· lef'beck three t1m~ and !.hattd an
ICrbKk oa numctO\al orcu1on1. a 11Ck.
l ass1t\ (sc,cn ~'e I held l C B scoreless to build a
commanding)-I lead The Ru~tkrs \ 1s11 Orange Coast on
\\ ednesda\ altcmoon
:\lso ~1onda' Orangt Co:m·s Ton' L1f\\al. had six
goals and Zolton t egla stopped nine ofihe lX'SB'ssllots
as thl' P1rat~ 1ool -.·on1rol an the second half to roll to an
11 ·5 non"'-onteren c .... an at home
()( l Ill· I. ho ts(, press toda' 1n an Orangl" Empire <. onrerenle matlh
No. 2 Ha wall down• UCI ln volleyball
'o 2-ran!..td Ha\\a11 ltd b\ Ttte \\ 1lhams' 16 kills.
hdd on a strong l l I challenge an 1he first half of a Big
\\ l'<,t ( onten.•n-.e .... omen·-. college 'olle~ball matC'h and
"cn1 on tCI d_eteat the ~nteaters. 17-15. 15-8. 15-7.
\tonda' at l C I
l\.ns Rotierts and Kim Colian each had 5('\ en kills
tor l l I b·5. 1-4 ...,.h1k Roberts addtd 11 block ass1sts.
l\ ang hl'r l"I"-n !.tnglc·match team record. The '\nteaters
and \\ ahancs ~'t"-53...,.ed through the fin>t set. and UCI ltd
ti' as mu1.h J<, four an the second set. but Hawa11 held
<.1rong IN the .... tn 10 1m pro\ e to 10-1 4-0
Edlson glrls tennl• tum trina, JS-IJ
l ()~ ..\ \,l1ELE.'I -Edison H1gh's girls tennis team
ran!..ed 'o ~ant IF produet'd a 13-5 r«>n-league\ IClOrV
O\f'r 'o "·ran~d \\e tlal e Monda' af\cmoon. '
Doubk., tandouts N1U.1 1urner and Trac; C,~J~le led 3 ""~P 1n doubl<' for the Chargers.
Orange Coast
TI
IM Onwioe Coul OAJL Y PILOT/ Tueedey, October 4, 1181
NPL
AmertcM Ctl .... tnce
Wett w L T lltct. lltF PA
S.allte 3 2 0 .600 96 " Denver 2 3 0 .400 100 74
Raiden 2 3 0 .400 127 145
San Diego 2 3 0 .400 57 "' Kann' City l 3 1 .300 73 91
centr .. Cincinnati s 0 0 1.000 135 ..
Cleveland 3 2 0 .600 72 76
Houston 3 2 0 .600 112 132
Pittsburgh 1 ' o. .200 102 121
EHt
Buffalo 4 1 0 .IOO n 12
N.Y. Je ts J 1 1 .700 105 61
Ml•ml 2 l 0 .400 74 t2 New Enola nd 2 3 0 .400 75 103
lndlanaPOlls 1 4 0 .200 76 91
Natteftlll C• .... enc:• Wett w L T lltct. PF lltA
Ranu 4 1 0 .100 145 106
New Orlea ns 4 1 0 .IOO 117 95
San Francisco 4 1 0 .IOO 129 104
Atlanta 1 4 0 .200 112 13.t
Centr ..
Ch lea go 4 I 0 .eoo 106 60
Minnesota 3 2 0 .600 107 71
SeutNaftd ... .... ~c**'www •ec. ..... LW I FUlllrfon. Mission Can m >-<>-O llS 3
2. s.it!lllOedl, Mlulon Can. m J-<>-o 101 2
3. Bknfi9td, Wntem Sl. So m J-t-o es • '-Gltftdala, Wnlw n SI No 3·0--0 ., s s. El Cemlrio, MIHlon No ( 1) 2-1 ·0 67 1
6. 0r.,.. Coeil, Mlulon Can 2-1-0 '1 6
7. Rf......-'*• Mlulofl Clfl 3·0--0 39 t .. MoorNrk, WtSllfil SI. No l -0-0 21 "'
9 . .All~ llelllv, Foo111111 4·0·0 2S 10
10. Pa..oent, Mlu lon NO. 2·1·0 21 IV 10. RancllO San! , Mlu lon Can 2·0-1 10 7 Otl!an: Mt, San .Antonio, 2·1·0, S, ~n Dla9o ~. 1·2, ); LA Vt llav, 2·1, 2, Golelen WHI,
'2· 1, 1.
Mlulon Confertf!Ct standlnet
TOf' ~IVI
(Al OMWN)
Cellf.C>wrtl WLTWLT
200 3 00 20 0 JO O
200 30 0
200 71 0
I 0 l 2 0 1
TIMI Fu!Mrlon
Rlvenlele
~ Pastdena Rendle> Sanll•oo
CENTRAL
T..-n
Fulltrton Rl.,,.nlOI
SeodleOacl<
ltartet>o santlaoo ~ Wnt
~C.1t
NORTHERN
Pa~
Lono 8eildl El Camino Ml. S.n .Antonio Cwrilos
DtVIMON
(IM. o--.11
WLT WLT 200 3 0 0
200 JO O
200 300 1 0 1 , 0 1
1 1 0 , 1 0
1 1 0 , 1 0
CMVISION , 0 0
1 0 1
1 1 0
I 1 0
0 , 0
2 1 0
1 1 1
2 I 0
2 ' 0 1 l 0
SOUTHERN DIVISION
"""' ldlMI THUaSOAY'S eAMIS c ........ ,
~_,... .,,, l~i. I•• ...,_..,, HMDOf)
CllWOll "' WOOdlltlWt (at !nine) ~ Pf(k v• .Alltlltlton (al Git•) L0119 8aedl Jor.d#I "' $ervflt C•t Wtttttnl Wttl.,n al F1111tflO'I l~Otew~I LOI .Amleos vs. Pa<lflea •• lolw Gf'9110tt falOAY'$ GAM8$ , ......... ,
SI Johll 80"0 "" Edison ••• ~In fkfll Fovnte ,, V11i.v .,,. LB Polv 1111 Vets s110.1
Mat., Otl vs Hunllneron etac11 I•• OCCI OC•n View 111 Twst.ln
Marl11t a.I Ml"lkan Min ion Vlelo •I Wt$lmlnsl.r Newoort Mtrbof al Long 8ffcll WltM>n
Co111 Mt$a Vt. CdM lat ~wPOrl M..-w1
S.ddleOack "'· SA Vallev (II SA towll Lttvlll 8"cl\ al Sen Clemente
0-Mills vs. Unlvtull11 (II , IN IM )
8r .. ·Ollnde v1. SUMI' Hiiis (t i 8Uttna Ptrk)
CvPl'aa 1t· Veltncla
El Oorado "'-El Toro (al Min ion Vl4tlol
EsHranza at 81"-Amat L• Habra 111 Pwri5
LallewOOd n . Los .Alamflos lat Gahr)
U Mlreda vs. K1t ... (II GIOver Sladluml Loera •I E• MoOtN ~la n s.inor. (al La Habra)
Polril LOll'M 111 C.Pbtr1~no11 Savatw11 va. Trov (el F · I
Vltce Park •• .A"'"°" Va (~ GfWt ) Garo.II Grovt ti 8olH 0
La Qwlnla "" I(~ ( Wtst.,n) S.nlle9o vs. Ranchc> .Alamitos (11 GGl S.luraV'S Gamel (-·---1 Foo111111 al Irvine
S.nt1 Ana '" Loyola (•I Gi.ndaltl Tr111>ueo Hiiis 111 SI. JolaPhs (SM), 2 1>.m
.A" oamn at 7.lO unlffs noted.
Tampa Bav 2 3 0 .400 17 111
Otl~o1t 1 ~ ' 0 .200 /I 93 ----&M.-Oleeo Mew l 1 0 J.1...0 Palomlr 0 2 0 1 2 0 Green Bav 0 5 0 .000 64 m
EHt
N.Y Giants 3 2 0 .600 111 111
Phoenix J 2 0 .600 129 110
Dallas 2 ,J 0 .400 91 90
PhiladelPhia 2 J 0 .400 121 105
War.hington 2 3 0 .400 111 120
Merldiy's Sc-Nt w Orleans 20, Dall.s 17
SundllV'a ~rn.s Rams 111 Atlanla, 10 a.m
Miami at llalden, 1 1> m
ClliCH O •' D•lroll. 10 a m lndlanaPOlls at 8utfal0. 10 11 m. Kansu Clt11 at Houston 10 a.m
New England YI Grftn 8n al MllwaukH.
10 a m New Yark Jt ll al C1nclnne11. 10 11.m
Seallle al ClevN n<I, 10 11 m.
Tam1>11 811'1' at MlnnHOla. 10 a.m
Wa\/'llnoton 11 Dallas. 10 a m P1t11ourvn 11 '"'-tllx. 1 om.
Oertv., II San FraN:1sco, 1 1>.m
Ntw OrlH ns Ill Sal' Dleoo. 1 PJT\.
~ .. , GalM
Ntw York Glanll el Ptill.o.k>n111, 6 o.m
COLLEGE
AP Too 20
It.cent ~
1 M1am1, Fl (Sll 4·0-0 l, 1S3
2. UCLA 13) 4·0·0 1,0ll 3 SovtMrn Ca1121 4·0·0 1,037
• AuOUrn 4·0-0 9S9
S Noire Demt 4·0·0 910
6 FIOrlela Stall 4·1·0 nt
7 Wes• v1ro1n1a S·O·O 7SI 4 .>oulh Carotone S·O·O 732 ~NtDruke 4·1·0 6~
1 O Oil. lallOme 3 · 1 ·0 606
11 Clemwn 3· l·O S7' 11 Alat>ema 3·0·0 SOI
13 OklllllOma S1a1 l ·0-0 '8S
14 Flonele S·O·O '24 IS Georgia 4· 1-0 39S
16 wvomtng S-O·O 737
11 M•Ch1g1n 1 1·0 196
" ()f990" 4·0-0 l:t1 19 Wu'h1r>0•on J-1·0 12'
70 ArOl'l!>ll 4·0-0 t1
Pvs
' 2
3
4 s
6 7 • 9 10
11
12
13
11
IS 18
19
10 16
Otner rtce•V•r>Q •Off\ Co~··oo 68 LSU SS
Ha••" 42 Dulce JS Hou\lon 14 ~utgers 14 tno1ena IS. WUl'l•tliltOn S•elt 11 Pe<tn State 11
8rignerr> Ye>utlil 6 'lftsttl"l'I M•cn>gan 6 S•,.
ICU\a s. Tun s Ptl• 1 Soutn .. H IUl'I LOU•S 11n1 1 81M Stilt 1
San Dle9o 0 2 0 1 2 0 , Southwtsltrn 0 2 0 1 21 0
Grou monl O 2 O o 3 O
•team won onlv non·conlaranct gem. •cerrllo5 sptll 1wo non·conttrence oemH
• S.nir•Y's Garn.a Sin Diallo CC al 0!'111191 C1111t, 1:30
El Camino al GlldMI Wtst, 7
Long &tech et Gron monl. 1:30
Cerritos 11 Rlv.,,.lda, 7
F1.111tr1on at San Dleoo Mtsa. 7 Ml. Sen .Antonio at S.Cldlebecll, 7
Palomar •I Ptsadana, 7 Soutllwt$t.,n 111 Rancllo Santlaoo.
S.AT\MDAY'S OTHER GAMES ..._.._ s.... c.,...,.._
8ek.,sflttd et LA SouttlWHI, 1 Com1>1on at Glendale, 1.30
L..A Pierce at Mooroark, 1.lO
West L..A 111 Ventura, /:JO LA Vallll' at L..A Htrbor, 7:30
S.nle Monica 111 Sllnll llar'blra. 7.30
,...,. c~
Ml. San Jaclnlo al Rio HondO. 1 c~11 11 AnltlOl>t Valltv. 7.30 Citrus •I VICIOf" Valltv, 7.lO San Bernardino VeHev al CCllM9t of 1na
Oewrt, 7:30
Loes
OltANGE COAST (l ·ll
39 at Rio Hondo 9 Ef C•mlno•
23 11 Mt. San .Antonio•
Saturday-San Dle9o CC• lllOme), LlO
Slit., Oct. lS-11 Slln Diego M•se•
Sal . Oct. t2-Slld01tbeek • (llOmt l. 130 Sat., Ocl ~at Fulttrton•
Sal , Nov S.-Rlv.,sldt• (llOml)
Sat., No~ 12-al Golden Wtlf• Sat., Nov. l~RenellO Santlaoo• lhomel
lJ 10
13
CROSS COUNTRY
Hith scMcll boVs
CIF RANKINGS
4·A I. C.,llN • Mar; 2. C1mtrill0. 3. Ca·
nvonic .c .• 4, Dan• Hiii!>; s. TllouH nct O.k5, 6 Sllnl1 .Ane, 7 Sanll Ana Vallev; t. Viff1 Park. t. FIUl!flill Vaaty; 10. CaPO Vallev
Hlttl schMts e1t1s
01' •1tANICtN<PS
I 4•A
1 PalO$ lltrele!>, 2. IMWlltl't H1111er; l. Villa
Perk, •.San Clementt, S.. El Toro; 6 Sllnle An• Vellev, 7. Hllflltrlllltft ... dv t El ~, 9 LC>n9 Buell WillOll, 10. Dena Hiii\.
2·• 1 Aoour•. 2. Soulll Hills, J.. Wll~I .
L0"190C, S Arrovo Grandt, 6, ""°''o B11v; 1 Ellwanela, I. Yucaloa, 9. St. JOMOl\/s.M. 10
Norclhoff_
TENNfS Hith sdtoOI elrts
NON·LEAGUE
ECllMn ll, W11 .. kt S
~ GOLDEN wnT' IMI 17 Long 8HCll City
16 Puaelene CC 1• at Soulllwtsltrn•
Salurdllv-€1 Cam1rio· (llOmll
S.I,, Oc1. IS--.1 Pa10mar•, 1 30
Sat., Ocl 72-Fullerlon• ltiom.I
Sat . Ocl 29-et Ranetto Sllnll•oo• s.1 . Nov. S--•t S.ddleback •
Ammann <El Clef. WilleM, 7·S, '°'' to JOMI. 6 0·6, Clel Bruner, 6·3, Warren IE) I0'1 3·6. won
S6 6·1, I051 4·6. Willauer (E} IOlt 3·6, 0·6, won
10 7·6
Sat . Nov l~enge Coast Co!M9t' (llOmll
Sat Nov l~Rivtnicle CC • (llOme)
• Cll!noles eonftrence game • dl!nOtes C1lvf1t0n game
All oamn et 7 unle15 noted
A" hOme games el Oranot Coa.i '°"'"
o.u.s Turner·Gc>eOKkt (El Clef. Mosu·Corman,
6· I, Clfl Brn eman·Veil, 6·0, def Quaollno·
GordOn, •·•. ~fo!>·Olt50n (El won 6·1, 6·3, 6·0, Oanfk.r·llterd <E> wort 7-S, 6-l, 6-2
CIF RANKINGS
4·A 1 Mlr111t5t11, 2. C-• Mar; 3 Peios Verdes, 4. Sanll Barbare, S. S.vtrtv HIHs, 6.
Rolline M1 '· 7. Estancia; .. EclMn; ' WHllllkt AGlldemVILA, 10. Torrence
~ ., ,,
I .,
,,;/
MAJOll LSAOUI LIADIRS OOL.f' Anw1cM Lo....-.......... ClllHk
~IMAL let • ......_ Texts)
C .. IM • 4tt et Mft) Peeev Gutteftoll
CJ A• It " .-ct. Gell .Andel'tOll
toees Bsn 154 SM 121 214 .366 JeMv L~ Puck•ll Min 1st 657 lot 234 .356 J-lftr Cr...s
GrMnwMI asn • 1st StO U 191 JU CtvlsJa Ta!IO Wlnfi.111 NY 1., s~ .,. llO .322 Clnclv $cfv1y.,-
Mrbtll Min IQ SlO 75 1St .312 &rende Corri•
N\olllor Mii 154 '°' 115 190 .312 Sue Ttiomes
Malll""v NY 1'4 S" 94 1'6 .311 Hffll'ttr Kuimkll Trllml'llll Del 11t ~ 71 145 .311 Conni. McCain
W•Uleln NV 12' 45$ 62 140 .30I Kris Mal'ton
ClllM<» O.k 1st '10 120 117 307 Tisi! GtJIO RUNs-eoe.s. lostOll, ,,., C.nMCO, Oell· LIM $1aniev
land, 120, ltHlndtrton, Htw Vork, Ht; MOlllor, .Jennifer Mac:Curracll
MllwllUk•, HS1 Pudlett, MlnMM>tar 109. Kev ~ ltlt-<MMCO, Otklllld. 124, Purtell, MlcNll Redman MlnnftOle, 121; Gflltlwell, IOlton, 119; LIM Cornellus
0wEvt11S, '°''on· 111; WlnfWd, New v or11, Sllfen OtKr .. v
107, 8rtlt. KllflMi City, 103, Tartebull, ltat1sas .All9le It'--.., Cfl\I, 101; McGwlr•, o.liia41d, ft, LIM OtPeulo
HIT$--ftucktft, Mlnnetoll, 234, toees. 8ot· O.wnGIMatv
Ion, •214; G,_,..,.., IOlton, 191, Molitor. Mlf.-Sue Fooieman '"''*"· Ito; Vount, Milwluk•, 190. Julie L•rs.en OOUBLES-Boeei, loslon, 4$, BrtU, Kall· Kev Loflin
ws Cllv, 42, Pudltll, Minnltota, 42, ltav. PeooY KlrWI .,....., 421 Ftl'nendel, Toronto, 41. Crwis .....,,on
Tltf PLES-Revnotch, s..1111, 11, Wllwn. Panv Haves
Kans.s Cllv, ll; VOUlll, MilwaUkN , 11. GrHn· Shtllev Grffn
wail, 8otlon, t, 4 era I.ad wllll 7. Lit Smart HOME ltUNS-C.aMa<lo, O.lllalld. 42; Noe4lt 01$1'1e McGrlff.. Toronto, 34, McGwlre, Oeklalld. 31; CNf'vl SlllCY
GHlll, MJniwso••· 21, Murr1v, 8altlmort , 2'; · TruleTlmmons
C•'*• Cle~1.11..; JQer1', New Vorft;~7; ~~ Snvdlr, Clllltllnd, 26, T11rt1bUlf, Kansas Cflv. OOftne Llnotr
26. · Kltn«ltf'tv Dlnu
STOLEN 8ASES-RHtndtrM>n, New Yorll, Pamelt Wrlohl
93; Penis, 0.1ro1t, "· MOlllor, MllwallllH. 41, K.i1111s11111tt CanM<:o, Oeltlllnct, 40; Ravnokk. S.allle, 35; MkMile Bell
Wiison, Kansas Cllv, 35' Amv G•illlntr PITCHING (15 dKlslons)-lllola, Mlnnesola, Marv Sllnllaro
24·7, .n 4; MurSI, 8011on, 11·6, .750; Gubk za. Ca111v EcMltn Kanus Cllv, 20·1, .714, Kev. Toronto, 12·S, M~MeGann
.706; GOevls. Oakland, 16·7, .69', RoolnSOll, Kev Schneof
O.troll, 13·1, .414, SIMIO, Toronto, 16·1, .667; Robin Aber• W•ICh, Oeklend, 17-9, .6S4. Marv Belll ThObl ~$911n Natienal Lueue Palll a.rtne11
FINAL a·AblOall v.,-non
(lasad 11'1 450 at bltsl Gabrielle Matlock G Al ll H Pd. .Amv Fo• Gwvnn SO 133 S21 64 163 .313 l(alie O'Nall
Ptlmeiro Cll1 1S2 ...5IO JS 17' .301 Jullt H1,10llH llOblchllux
D•wton Chi 1S7 S91 1' 179 .J03 ~la ematawr
Gelarr11911 Mon I S6 609 99 114 .302
GPtfrv All 141 S47 61 164 .300 Grtee Clll 134 416 6S 1'4 .296
Landn Cin 1S1 Sii 91 174 .296
Law Cll1 IS 1 SS6 73 163 .193 McGet SIL 137 S62 13 164 m
Denltls Ctn 140 49S 9S lU Jtl
, RUNS-Buller, S.n Francisco. 109, GlllMll, ow.en, 106; Clark San Fr•nclsco, 102. Slraw-btrry, N-Vork, 101, VanSM<.11. Plllst>urvll.
101
RBI-Clark, sen Frenclsco, lot, Str•wblrrv. WATER lltOLO
N-York, 101; 8onitt1, PlllJbUrOll, 100, Ven· Cemmunltv c; .....
SM••· P1t1st1w111n. 100, GOevli, Hou\lon, "A. °""" CMll 11. UC I.ma ..,..,. JV '
McRnnotd,, New York, 99, ED•vls, Cincinnati, UC •·nia e arh•ra JV 0 2 2 2-' 93; Galerraga, Monlrtal, 92. .-.,. Hffs-Galarrllff, Monlrtal,-l...._ Oaw .. $Oll.,__--"'Or"-'a:;.:,n:!'.11t Coast 0 3 l S-11
c111caoo. 17', Pelmelro, Clllcago, 17t, Su, Oianfle C'oa'lriCorTl'Q Sant"4r 1, Vt na.t , Dedlln, 1751 Larkin, Cincinnati, 174 Rosecrans 1. Wilson I, Utwak 6, How•H 1
OOUBLES-Gelarraga, MolllrH t. 42, Goalie saves TtOIH , 9
P111meoro, Clllcaoo, 41, S.bO, Clnclnnall. 40. Goldtft WHt 11, UC Santa a.r1111r11 JV S
Bream, Pl1tst>urot1, 37, 8r00ks. Montrtal. JS. UC Sanla 811r1>11r11 JV I 0 2 2-S
DMurPllv,• All11n111, JS ' Golden West 3 2 2 f-11 TRIPLES-VanSIYltt, Plllsburgll, IS, Col· UC Santa 8trt>ert scorino GalbO 2, 811r1>1r
ernan, SILoul,, 10: 8 ulltr, San Francl,co. 9; 1, 8roches 1, Hagerma n 1 Goall• H vH
GV.ouno. Houston, 9; Samu.I, Pllilllelelt>llle. 9. Boserue> I • HOME RUNS-Strawbtrrv, N•w York. 39, Golden Well scorlne Paruellt 3. CllOm•n I. GDavls, Houlton, 30, Clark, San Francl!>eo. 29; Wines 1, Tran 2, Faulkner 2. Kldoer 1 Gotll•
Ga1err1oa. MonlrH I, 29, MeReynolOi, New '111as: Caull11 7.
York, 27; ED11vl5, 01ncinnell, 26, GlbStl'I, ~ U; VanSlvkt, PlllsbUrlJfl, 15
STOLEN 8A~E~oi.m•n, StLoul5, ti, GYOUllO, HOU!>lon, 6.S, OSrnHll, SILouls, 57,
ONlxon. MOntreal. .... S.bO, CinCIMllll, ..
PITCHlNG flS CIKl•ionsl-Cont, Ntw Yorll, ?0·3. 170. Browning, Clnclnnall, lt ·S, .713,
Perrell. MOntrtel. 12•4, 750, OJlld<wn, Clncin-
natt, 23·1. 7•?. ~. ~ 23·1, .742;
K-. He>1nton, 1'·S, 7l7, GMaOOVll, Clll· c.aoo, lt·t . 692. JROO.Mon. P1111t1uron, 1 l·S,
"'
Hkltt sdlool
Clf' RAMKINGS
4·A 1. C.,_ oel Mar; 1 Twstln; l Footnill, 4..
v1111 Park, s Sunnv Rllls, 6 Lono Btacn W11lon, 7 ..... ..,, Hertler;. t El OoredO, 9 Fullerton, 10 Mllllkan
J.A I El Toro. 2. Edball; 3 Minion Vltto. 4
S.o Cltl'l'll!flle, S. ltoval. 6 CaPO Valltv, 1 Peto'
Vtrdes. t. Mll""81 9 Oownev, 10 Muir
• >"'··
.,.... .........
OAVIY'S ~OCKD (...._. ..._, -4 tl99Jl+. 116 .,..We I !W<ec•• 221 Doftlto..-J 11lllowt1N. S roek fish, 6t Qllco !MU, l01 MftCI
bias, 1 lino cod, 31 scuiPln, 3 ....._slleed, 40
wllil• fllh. I s1111nllh lack, 1 Mll'to. l Iola. Nl~T LANDING -2 tioett, >4 •"'*"'-41 llncl beu, 24 ,,.,. moon. 1 bollllo, IO eelko blu, 14 blue percll, 10 ~lt..-'4, 1'
rodl llsll, • sculoln, 21 m..owtd. 13 wlllt• flstt. 1 llno cod, 2 wreo.
MondaV'S traMllctlens
IAUIAL&.
1-
MMf'IQll u..u. BALTIMORE OR IOLE5-Flrtel Tarrv
Crowlev. baiting coach, H.m Ste rrtllt. oltefl·
lno coaell. JOM Mart, tllirel·l>asa coed\, anc1
Minnie Mend011, flf\l·bl~ eoadl WetvtO Don A.Ht and Oouo Silk, 1>1leNf's, for ,,,. -POW
of 01viri11 '"-"' IMir UrtCondillonal ,.....,.,
Sloneo Bu1c11 Davis, outfitldtf. to a c:entracl
wllll Rodleller of '"' lnttrnellonal L'""'9. CHJC.AGO WHITE SOX-'Purdlesed Int CcOft·
traeh ot Ron Karkovlct, caleNf', and Jote Stllur• and Eel WOll\I, Pllcllan .Announ<lld Ille resJonahon of PaUI Jensen, 'llct e>rftldlnl tor
oubllc r.._tlons. w ne cen l>Komt Cllrt<tOt" of
Public rtlallons for the ~I• Ctrdlnell.
CLEVELAND INOIANS-Announced Illa Le~l .Jl1L.Scoll-.di!KlOC...oL-'COl.llfne. DETROIT TIGERS-PurCllllMO lllt COfl·
1racts of Dav• 8t1rd. Pllcllaf. from Tolcleo of
111-l11tarn.tlJonal L .. oua. and-Sllawn Molmart, p11ctier, lrom Glens Falll of Illa E9'1_,,,
Leaoue lt1ins11tt0 Jtff Robinson, pllcNt', !tom
Ille lS·dav dlsabltd lls1.
N•tlenel Lffellt LOS .ANGELES DOOGERS-Pwrc.asntO Iha conlraCls of George Hinshaw, oulflaldtf: Jotln
Glt>Oons, U lcller, and lln S.araM. Plldltf',
from Albu<luerQue ot Ill• Pacific Coest L~. PHIL.ADELPHI.A PHILLIEs-NamtO Hid<
Levve manaoer. Traded Lance Parrisn, calell·
er, to lllt Cehfornla .Angels for David Holdrioo..
OllCll•r PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Tradtd Jim ... ldl·
IMl!f', J>ilc:"9f, 10 Jiit I.OS """'" Oodtef'I for 8111 Krveo«. l>itcner. Slontd .\Ulllar ~111.
c.alclle'f. lo 11 two·veer eontracl. PurdleMO Illa
conlrect ot Oa'Ve JOftnson, ollellttr. ~ 9.,,,,. Tlll•l and Tom Romano, outflatdtn,
Kevin Oavls. sttorlslOP, end c:>orn Tavw and
8ob PalltrM>n. l>itcntrs, 10 mlllOf IM9Ut con·
lracn
PtJBUC HO TICE MUC NOTICE NWC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTICE Pl8JC NOT1CE
I 57M2 tlle Oecl•ralion ot Restnc· e1t0n. 3 100 Awwey Avenue.I NOTICE OF thereon. as provided In Mid IC.._ your hutbtlnd. ~ OITZENBEAGEA to ERIKA
NOTICE Of' t1ons rec:orded 1n BOOk "102 Co1111 Mesa C.A TRUSTaE'a IAL.a notes, aovtnees. If eny. FM:TITIOU8 ., ... ,, a n action IN DIVORC P.AIOE CONRAD
MLIC NOTICE P\8.JC, NOTICE P\lltC M>TICE D E~TH N OTICE ~
PU9LJC IALf 1178.4 Paget 139' 10 1431, 92626 T.t ..... 1-.s-f' under the1ermtollhe [)fed NAm ITAn.NT egatnst you fo No. 765 of IT IS HEREBY ORDERED cw PflllllONA.I.. 1ndus1v1 ot Offlc111 Re-Tiits bualneu IS con-1 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT of Trust, f ... charges and The following peraons ere lDel In !I'll Court of Com-that a1t peraons 1n1..-.. te0 In DALL Pacific View Mern-"'Ol'EltTY tr01204 s cords and In 8oolt 1175'. duet9d by:• corporation UNDER A DEED Of TRUST expenses ol the Tru•IM lllld doing bullneee a~ mon Pleas of lhe Twenty-11'11 malttf ef0t"4lld app911 ELIZABETH JONES • 1 Park Cha 1
No1ic.11 w eby given tt1e1 Pages 1432 to 1485, in-The regl1tran1 CO/Tl-DATED 61t5/17 UNLESS of the trust• crMted by Mid FR.AME OF MIND, 24452 Sixth Judic:l&I Dletr1c:t. Cot· bef0<e thlt coun 1n Oepett· DALL. a•rse 59 A Tonu~-y "'--"--pe4••
pyrsutnl to SecttOn 1988 of 1ckdlve. of OtflClel Recordslmenoed to lrtnMCI bull-YOU TAKE ACTION TO Deed ol Trust. to-wit. Multlanda BIVd . El TO<O, CA um b .. c 0 u n t y. • t rnenl No. 3 ti 700 CMc 'O • 'Cal<ll V\:WUllC"I
the CIVIi eoo.. State of Calt-ol said County. end any ness under the liC111tous PROTECT YOUR PROP-$59.081.97. II 11 ~bit 9M3Q Btoorn1burg. Penna)'l'Venia. Cenltf Otl'te W•t. Sente Costa Mesa resident 1988 at 7:30 P .M .,
fomie, Sec11on 2328 oft~ l•mendmetits thereto, and ~llMA neme <>< namee ERTY, IT MAY 8E SOLD AT that •t the time of Ille the Tao Due Tran. 722 N YOU .ARE HEREBY .Ana. Cellfornte. on October s ince 1970 passed I 3500 P1rcific View
Callfomla Butiness end Pro-located on that oenem rNI hl19d t bove on .Augull 31 . .A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU opening bid mey be lela Mountain View, Senta Ana. NOTIFIED: 25. 1988, 11 2.00 o'clocll a way September 26. Dr j v e , Newport 1-.ons Code. Section 535 propeny described u Lot 2 1988 NEED AN EXPL.ANAJJON th.Ill the total lndebtedneee California 92703 YOU HAVE BEEN SUED P.M., and then and there
olthe Ctlil0<nl1 Panel Code ol fract 9090, u shOwn on a Blomed1ron1x Corpor-OF THE NATURE OF THE OU.. Thll bu11n .. 1 11 con· IN COURT, It you wllh to snoweauae. lflny they hive. 1988 In Newpo rt. Beach. Fwleral tnU9
and ttll provlalom of the Mep recorded in 8oolt 366, •lion. Bernie Kempen. PROCEEDINGS AGAINST The beneflcilfY under Nld ducted by: an lndlvlduel defend against any. of the why said petition fOf chenge Beach, born January to be held at Our
c anromie Auction LiOenslno Pages 15 and 16. of Mis-Prealdent . VOii. YOU SHOUL.D CON· Deed 01Tru11 heretofore••· The reg111r1nt com-c:lalm• contained 1n this oC . name should not ~ 18, 1929 'in Elizabeth. Lady Queen of An-
Act. tne unoerligneo wlll NII cetlaneoua Mapa ol Orange Thia st element wH filed T .ACT .A LAWYER. • ecuted end delivered to the menctd to tranNCt bull· complaint, you must take granted.
et public ule by compelltlve County. CaHfornla. with the County Clerk of Or· On 10120/88 11 10:00 undeftlgned • written Oec:-MU under the flctltloua prompt ectlon within 20days IT IS FURTHER Ofdtrecl N e W J e r s e Y geles Catholic Church
bldd1no on the 19th day ot Peroel 2· .An undivided enoe County on September A.M. FORECLOSURE CON· l111etlon of Otfaul1 •nd De-bullneu name Of n11m11 .,._this Complaint end No-that a copy of this 0<der to Survived by her lov-in Newport Beach,
October, 1988, al ; 30 1155 lntll'est In and to ell of 15, 1988 SULTANTS. INC. u the duty mend for Siie. and• written Mated above on nit lice ere Mr'ved upon you. snow ceuM be publllhed In ing children, Eliz.a-Wednesday, Oc\ober
O'clock PM. located•• Pub-he real property deacflbed ,.,m appointed Trill!M unCS.r NotloLof Default mnd Etec· Tao Due Tran You tr• warnec:t U..t If you theOrangeCOMt DellyPllot. be h Mal C hi 988 O:OO AM lie StOfege 17792 Cow•n 1n I es Lot 2 on tile Meo of tile Publllhed Or•noe c&st end purtuent to Deed of tlon to Sell. The undertlgned This atttement wu flied ltll to do eo, • cue may a MWSpeper of ~rel t one, ynt ·8 ~. 1 at 1 • · ·
the City ot 1rv1ne. County 01 e bove referenced Trect. Delly PllOt September 20. Truat . Recorded on CllUMd sakl Notice of De-with theCountyCletlt of Of· PfOOMd without you and t clrovlallon, publlahed ln'\tll1 Dall, IOn Albert Dall In terment Pacific
Orange. St•t• of CellfOfnle. toge111er Willi a11 lmpro..... . Octobef 4. 11 .. 1988 08127187 u Ooeument no. fault and Elec:tlon to 'Sell to ange Countt on s.temt>er Dect9e In DM>tce Of Annul-county at leUI once• ..... all of Newport Beach. Vie w Memorial Park.
11\e •bandoned good•. cntt· ment tllereon, e•ceptlng ·-'f2Sll 87~ Of Offlclal Re-be recorded In the county 21, 1988 me nt mey be tntered for tDUr conMCU1f¥9 week• Memorial aervic;,es pa c l f 1 c View
tlee Of personal pr()(>et'ly d•· 1 theretrom Condominium cordt In the office of the Re-whet• the real property 11 ,_ ao&IMI you by the Court ~to the O.y of Mid"-· will be held Thunday M---u•rv, n._.... __
1Cr1bed below In Ille mal· Unlit 1tllrougll55, 1ncluaive. P\lltC NOTICE coroer of Orange County. located. PublllheCI Orange COMt wlthout further notice. A . ""~-J ~--
ters of located thereon Callfornlt. ..eeuted by D.ATE 9 /20188 Oetty Pilot September 27, lud9men1 mty 1110 be ted SEP 12 INS October 6, 1988 at 644-2700
Lynn Melll a rt Sp Pt rcel 3 .An exctustve 8..,... DANIEL .A. SALCED.A ANO 'OlllCLOIUflE CON-October 4, 11, 18, 1988 91'1-.d againa1 you for any .M.11 ~ c ..... 2·00 p M Staging ---------
B147-20 bu t>kCM l>d, ..-nent eppurtenant 10 NOTICI Of PATRICl.A A. S.ALCED.A, IULTANTI, INC., Ir: TM other delt'll « relief ,. l'lh1lrn• ef h ...._.. ' #.l . Ri 'd. WILLATS ~. rnllC. chr suoh Unit for the ute er'<! ~IA.LI HUSBAND AHO WIFE AS DANtlL W. OflMEflOD, queetecl by the Pi.Jntlff. Vou Cew1 area • versl e HAROLD p "Harry"
Andr...., .Anu tUIO Sp occupaN:)' of thoM portions Of' ""90MAL JOINT TENANTS WILL YICa ,,.._NT.L... 11'02 • "8JC ll)T1C( mey lole mon9Y or property Rooer• a Henley. A Law N~tional Cemetery. WILLA TS: paned
B155-cittlg. mMC 15 b1t1 of the RestriC1eCI Common PftONRTY •-a SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION ltYM 8lVD. In 211, or~ t1ghtl importtnt to CofpOratlon. 17111 8Met1 Riverside, CA. 1n ~u away c--......... ._.. 30
CSh regttr .Aree delton•ted In the Dec· Notloe II hereby~ thet TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER TUSTIN. CA ... ('114) IC ~ you. Btvd . St•. 103. Huntlr\OlOll of flowers memorial ~t""'""-· .
Henry Siiverman Sp leretlOn o1 RMttictlona end pwrt uant to S"ecUona FOACASH.~attlme n1.-0 FM:TITIOUIMIH•H IF YOU DO NOT FILE.A 8eKti.CA92647 contributions may be 1988 Ln La1una
8511-h.ot tub thOwl1 on the Condominium 21701·21716 of the C&ll-of .... lnlewfulinoneyofthe Publllhed O\"enge Coat NAm ITATl•NT CLAIM FOA ALIMONY. Publllhed Orenge Co81t Beach Mr Willata l<te>P• Slgm• Frat Sp Plan t0< sudl Unit lornta 8"*l8t9 and Pro-United StetH) et THE Deity Pilot September 27. The tolklwlng pereona are M.ARITAL PROPERTY. [)ellY Piiot SepMnlber 20, made \0 the Amttican . ' h
.A300-luml>f. pctr 2 lglllt. RECORD OWNERS WIL· ,fe1110ftS Code. Section 2328 FRONT ENTR.ANCE TO October 4, 11, 1988 dolnG ~ M: COUNSEL F£ES OR EX· 27. October 4. 11, 1N8 Heart Aasociu ion . w a s t e
mlle LIAM c WESSEL. A oftheCellfOfnlllCommerci&I SUITE 205 CSEC OND T301 CLbN CLEANERS 2239 PENSES BEFORE THE T2112 Pierce Broe. Bell owner/o~rator of
Allred S m1t n Sp SINGLE MAN Code. Section 53! o1 the FLOOR) 178Dl lRV INE Fw Vie'#"" c:o.ta M... FI NA-L .ll.ECR EE .0 f Laguna Riviera Hotel .A456-lrlg. dolly tbl gultr, COMMONLY KNOWN .AS: c.t1fomla Penal Code tnd BLVD .• TUSTIN, CA 92680 C.A ' 04VOACE OR ANNULMOO Broadway Mortuary, ff
pctr, misc, e bu 186 OR.ANGE BLOSSOM. the provllions of the Cali-.. right title and lnt••t P\B.IC NOTICE H In Kim 122,1 IS ENTERED YOU 9'1LL Direcion Costa Mesa for 40 yean. e Is
Stephen Pelrr.a. Sp B201 1IRVINE. CA 92720 f0<nl• Auetlon L~•lng con~ to end now held crw:r:.. Gtrden Grove CA LOSE THE RIGHI TO "8.IC M>TICE 642.-91~. SW'Vlp h y'vl led&_ a bywhiarll Wifal·,e • • 2 cabnta, bd. 8 chr1, crib,, PLEASE NOTE. THIS Act. the~wlllMI by It under 1tk1 Deed of It a?ta 92641 ' Ct.AIM ANY Of THEM.
gmdfttller cick. 15 t>xa. mllC PROPERTY IS BEING SOLD et publle U)e bycome>e11tlw Trust In the property tltu· ACTmOU8 .,..... Kim t2241 You we tunher notified IC G'741 MAC DONALD d ht M ll
Lendlord restrves tile SUBJECT TO REDEMP· IMddlng on lhe Uhtl d~ of ated In Mid County, Call-..._ ITATEMINT Ch~=:~. ~ne 'o•rden that"'*' the Ollloroe Code FM:11T10U9 .,..... y "Bud" Mac-p~~r 80r\ a~
right to bid II Iha Ille ITION PLEAS E REFER TO September. t988, •I 1 t:OO foni\a. 6Mc'r1blng the ltnd .. _,The!.~~ l*IOn• .,. Gro.e. CA 92941' you '"91 ,.queet that the NAm ITAnmwr Donald. ao• .. 6. w1·11a•-. aon-in -law Purcnuea mull be made C 0 DE OF VIC IL O'clock AM on the prernllee therein: ""'no,,,_,_•: This 1 Court direct )'OU end your The lollowtng per.ont.,. •"' ~ ..., -
wl111 cash ontv end P••d f()f PROCEDURE SECTIONS where Mid properly llH LOT 7. TRACT 93SO, AS IMAGELAND. •319t Red bullne9I •• con-~ to attend matrltge dotnQ bueineltM: puaed away in New-Vic tor Peareon:
at Iha llrN o( purcnai. . .All 1729 010-729 090 been tlOfed, and whlcll .,.,,.EA M.AP RECORDED IN Hin .A'venue, CO.I• Mell, CA ~~~%;;~com• counte11n9. A list of pro-TUMMY STUFFER 101 port Beach, October 1, da ugh ter-t n · law
purcllesed goodur .. Old H If the su bjee1 ol111111 ... la located at Publie S torage 18 BOOK 391, P.AGES 35 TO 92626-~98 menc:-d to trMMCt i>ull-~ manlage counMI· S.ANOWICH SHOP, 270 S. ftoe llll-Jo·__.. h Is.. and must be remo'tt9d at reel propetty end 11 hu no H.ughee In the C11y of Irvine. 37, INCLUSIVE OF MIS· Color L1114W Corp. (In-MU under the flctlt en II~ t1 the Court lklelot #112. Coet• Mell, 11PO • ur: ~ us-Marilyn W illa ta;
Ille time of Ule Sele l\lbje<:I strM I ecldr ... ()(other com. CoUnty Of Orange, S1•1• ol CELLANEOUS MAPS, ·IN CO<pOf&ted In Del•w•r•). AOl\'llnlttrttcn Oftlce et the CA band of Bette, and grandchildren Kort
to prior capletlon 1n the mon dellgnahon. dlreetlon1 Cellfomla, the good•. ef\et· THE OFFICE OF THE 3191 Red HIMA\llnUI, Coate ~t>ow"-:-ni: narnta Cot um bl• County Seon Keun LM. 490 S . father of Christine. and Crail Peanon.
even1 of MnletMnt between to 111 location may be ob-ties°' peraon&I p!'operty CS. COUNTY RECORDER OF M • • • • C I 11 f o r n I a Mono In Kiin Coutth.ouM In Btoomlbufg, Wr'IQhtwood Street, Orenge. Son of Doctor and David, Ami and An· Lendlord I nd obllgtted rt•lned lrorn the Marlhal'• 9Ct1becl below. In llle met· $.AID COUNTY 92626-~98 Thlt t 1 1 f'lled ~---Thie lilt wl• be CA t2tM
pefly Dated this •1h and Office upon request tera ot: PARCEL 1: Thia bu1lne11 11 con· with the.~C=of Or· meCle avtllablt to you upon Thlf bu11n .. 1 11 con-Mn. Gordon Mac drew Wll at.a. Mr.
11th dey of October, t988 Prospec:tlve bidders Blllupt, 0 ., Sp Et64-201 LOT 7 of Trtel No. 9350, ducted by: t COfpottllon renge Count September requeat dueled by: en lndl~I ' Donald. brother o f Willata was· \he pelt
Public S tortgt Mariege-,lhould refer to Seetlona b•1. 3 c:Na. lbl. ml9e 1n the Clyt of trvtne. u per The regl11rant com· 21 1988 Yon tt you delire to. puf9Ue Th• reglatrent c om• Marion. M c C a rty, ~·dent of c.oau.1
men1 Inc Tellptione (811 ) 701 510 to 701 680 , II'· Owner r...,..... the right map recofOed In boot( 391, mei1* 10 lrenuct bull· · ,_ c:CM1nMllng, you mu11 IMke rnenc:.d to tranaact but!-lm G •
244-8080 Agent 10< Land· clultVe, of tile cooe of Ci~t to bid at the...._ Putcn..... paoea as. Je and 37 oe Mt .. ne11 under the flct1t1ou1 Publllhed Orange ~ ~, r9qUt111 within twenty neee ""'* the 11ct111c>u1 Mateo and regory ames Inc.; paal
iord Procedure f0< provtalons muat bemadewllhcllflonty CllbnoueaMape,reoordtot bu9lnMI nerne Of namee Deily Piiot Septemt>er 27 (20) deye of the d•te Oii ~ neme Of namee MacDonald. Mem-president of NaUonal
Pu1>lllhed Orenge eo..t oovemino the term9. con-and paid tor 111 the time 0 1 Orenge County, Callfomla. .. .., aboYe on "°' llPPi-October 4 1 11 lMI • wtllCfl you ,.-... ll'llll No-lllted above on nl• orial aervice will be at Toilet Goods ~-
Dally Pitot October 4. 11.,ditlone,and en.c:t ot1heuJe purcn ... All pwrch•Md EXCEPTTHlA£FAOM111c:at>te ' 1• • T2Mttoe. Thll requeet muet be SeonKtu(ILM Newpo rt Harbor •"ion·. m•-ber of 1eaa and the llabllrtyof defl&Alliog goods ,,. IOld • 11, end ott. o-. IT\lnettll and other Color LHer Corp , meCle 11POft proper motion Thl9 .. atemant .,,.. llled • "' .. '
T305 bidders. mustberemovedt1tnetlmehydrocarbon1, below •Seymour li•bm•n. See-.. -ir-.llH' flledwtttltMCoutt.FllllUre wlththeCountyci.tlofOf· Yacht Club, Sunday, Knights Templar --------~ NOTICE IS HEAE8Y of ..... Sale tubleci to prior dtpttl of 500 ..... wlltlou1 '9lary .--""'"4 to do IO -conttltUt• • -Coufltv on September Oc1ober 9th at 4.·00 (Mason)· La~na P\8.IC ll)ncl GIVEN that on OCT08ER c:anc911atton In the l\lent of the right of turlace entry,• Thlt etalement Wit llled _,. of ~ rtgM to r• "f3~988 ., ' ' --------ta. t N8 at 2.00 P.M. at ..ntemtnt ~ Owr'9t r.......o 1n Instrument• Of wtttt tt1e County Clel'k oe Or· IC_., QUltt COUftllflnO. "'117• P M. ~ famUy sug· Beech Rotary b;
OMMGm couwn MARSHAL.$ OFFICE, .te01 and obligeted Pef1Y 0.'9<1 reccwd ... CountY on Septem4)er ACTITIOUI. 111111 VOU SHOULD NOTIFY PutJllMd Ortnge Coell1 .... that ln lieu of Founder o( Open Pa·
IUNNCMt COURT J AMBOREE BLVD AM 108. thfl 4tf'llnd 11th dfl of Oc-.AL.$0 EXCEPT THEAE· 13, 1Ma . Tum ITA~ YOUf' 1.AWY£A AT ONCE. Delly Ptlot ~-20, flow~ oontnbutiona clflc·\ Founder of
CA81 MO ... "1 Cit~ Of Mewport S.ach. tooer. 1988, Public Stotaoe FR.OY ... ..,.,. r}9hle, ,.,.. ht ~..... IF YOU 00 HOT HAVE A 21. Oc1otier 4, 1 f, 1MI ...__ --..L... ..... L-~ ..... a M -Tb ' ".AIMTI,,: O•ANOE County of Ortngt. Stal• Of Management. Inc Tele· without ltle right of eurlaoe Putllllled Orenge ~ ~ bullrleM.. 1.AWV!I' OA CANNOT AF-T2t0 UIC: .. _ ... me n..._ OU ton •• er;
T•ll CONDOMINIU Caltfomlll 1 Wiii -'i II public phone (8 \8) 244-8080. entry .. ,~ In lntef\lo-Orelty Piiot Sept ... 20.AET AAIJ ASAH LEGAL H~ FOAO OHL GO TO OR ~ Center. New-Founder of i......-
0---=tlon to tfle l'llOhMI bid-"9enl for Owler. ment• of '900f'd. 27. Oc:toe.r 4, 11, tMI IMnWe ~~,,~~ TEllPHC>Nl THE OFFICE port BHch. CA. 92663 Beach ae.uutadoft
..,....,....,, WIUIAM der. for C8ltl In leWfUI moMy Publlll'ltd Orange Coeet PARCEL 2: T211 Cellfofnlt t2e3o • RT FORTH ea.ow I TO PAC•tc VIEW Counct.l; Foundlr of
WIWL of tne United Stet•. ell IN Deltv Piiot OctOber 4. t •. E...,...ntl It IUdl...... ,_ .. ~ 2272 .. FINO OUT WHERE YOU •MONA&. PW CVNNINQHAM t ·-· .... a.-t. llalel
NOTIC8 OP fivM, mtt and Int•• ot ooiitli T~ ment• •• ~lculatiy 1t1 ..=.=. , ':;._ L • ,__: CAN Gel LMAL HlLP. r----. • Monuatv PATRICIA ..,. CUN· ~:':lion and a ~·1 aA&..-Mid JUOgmenl de«>tcw(t) In 10tU1 In tt-. Mlete en1ft9ed rtllJC ll>TIC( -·-• ,_,., • .,._., 9'lllqU'INlw ......... Ser• ............. , • c.. ~ ey vtrtve Of• writ,__ the aboV9 deecrlbecl prop-"8JC ll>TJC( "!liliemtnta" of fie o.cw. CallforNllM30 w.. 3e w... Mein acr.t. ~. Ctem•t~ NINOHAM. puMd charw member o1
on Mtty 25, 1MI In I eny. Of eo ~ thereof It • -MIOn Of ~. ~ II( -Cttot llh•1Nf'nt, 25052 ~ ~ 3500 tclflC View°'.,.. ..._ a _..,_.__ 2n h C Cl b ebove ci.t!Ontted Court. ~be neceuery to Mtlefy -··· dltlOrie lfld "-Mctlone ,... AC11TIOUI -H 'eeeo l~_e. El Toro, '7115171717t447IO Newportt 8"ch .,way ~,,_"",..,.... •· t e enter u •
upon • .tudament entered NICI uecutlon, wttl'l ICCtued AC11TIOUI -• !*deel 1n 11oot1 12231. _. MAim ITAT'lmWT C4lllfofnll ,.UO -. "' ,...._ ... ... ... 2100 1988. She la IW'Viwd Memorial Mrvkff
Aprll •. 1tA. In ravor lnterett and coet1 · • MAim ITATW l40 of OlllcMlt Aeootdt Of The followWl9 penone .,. TNe ~'*' le con· ..... ......, IW ......... by her hutlblnd John will t. held P'rtda1.
judgm«lt cnt<lllOf'(•I. Or· .APPROXIM.A TE MINI· fhe = l*90nt Mid Coumy, under IN .... doing~.. duCted by: • general pen ... .... .... ..,.... F Cunnlncham 2 ~ 14 at 4.!30 •noe T:ree Condomlnlwm MUM BIO Snl• dOlr'll ~ • don Medlnol In tudl Mlde Abb•y-Foater' 17ft90 ,,.,. ..,.... f.;":l'H•I• HAMOR LA . John F c' P.M r ,.!. ...... OWnetl AMocllOOfl and Otted e-21-ea AEl>HILI. STATtONlAS entl'*91tfOlowe: "Owner.' ltocM!h'"*' 8 tr .. t, SUltt Tiie re9111rent com-''J.,J~!?, .,,... aorw, · un-. a t ....... --~ avv-aoein.t Judgment jttOtort•l. C>Mttorl: ~-C>Melotl, 11...a Sk~ cwcte, Ile NgMa and °"'*= UIMmea 200. Fountain Vfltelt. CA menc:eic1 to tteneect but'-0r.,.. c... M MT. °'"c':. nlnaham Jr. and !era Hotel, 121 S. w-.m ....... lllowtng. 4'°1Jem~INYd .. Aoom .J·=·?I(~ 1714 Md Cable Tetevlllon", t270I =--~°'fief ~ ""°' .......... 1'7, Ott~tory ttwy David F . Cun-CoMt Hwy, i...,..
net ~ °' '3. 7" 62 ac-108, Newport 8etdl. CA 8 .. _...., Cl ~.... .1.1 , "~ Feotllttet e... Abbey Medlcalec;: Dela-___. ............_ n1 Oetoeer 4, 11. 11, 1111 1u 5 Gietet A.,,. .. , .... ._ .. _ 2 da"•*' Beem. CA. In u.u of lutlY ow on ll1lcl ~t t2MO • ••#.... ,,....1.._ • • " ,,_,. .. and ·party W• lfld ..,., clo The •tton __,_,_on • no2 Coe Meu ' ... ,.._.., .....
onthecWeoftneltluanee Jam .. c . B~ham . ln4nl.Celf«nit1R'714 '-Cet''. Trutit ~.' Or· J-*M.~.Cttol t• MafyT.Cwml~ flowMI ••mortal
of Nlc1 -"· I Mve ~ Marltlal. Orange County. .... I( l<arc:Nf,.17t4 The .. ,... ..... and ... Stretit. ~. .......... Pia.IC ll)TIC( 640-&SS.4 and ~ A. -CUn· contributionl ..., -
upon .. right, tlti. and l y· P, K~. DtOUtY Sllypattc Clrcte.:.._ Ste J otNi-commott d•l•IMlon. Dell<•• 1tl0t ' Tilll ll11111'11t -~ham. I brother m.detothldwtaJol
ln'-Mt of Mid ludOfMtlt "'btill'ltd Orange~ IM'it.~n114 If~. of 1N,.... ~ Thl9 ~ II con· .... ~a.ttOfOf WI •CCMMT H. F -........_
deblor1t) In tne PfOPltTY In Delly PflOI September 27, fNe buttMU It COf'I clHCrlbecl above It cM:9ed by.II~ .... County°" Of'~ NACI lllOTMIM iNn arn!ll. your cbc*9. ~--
11'1t Countyof Ofenge, t ttte Octooer4, It, tMI ~~~.-pur,orted 10 ... t• TM , .. ,.,,."' COlll• ao. 1• COWITTOPGllMt• ..UIMtOADWAY Recitation o f th• ~ltare'li7. Q.
Of Cellfomla. cleea-tbed TJOO ,,..,.:. ':' ~ com flllMAOCK. IAVIN(, CA ~ to .,..., ...... "'ti ,. ~ Comt "' ... Malter of .. AP-"'°'1Vtlty. Chec>el ac.ry to .. hlld at sw• .......
folow9 1111t ... w.-... llc1Mout ,_, ......... -.,,. J1 ~ Of ,....... IUf 110 8roedwty The~ Eat .,._ ......, IN The "'*'""*' TNIMt ...,.,,_ ntrN or ,__ ~ rwvoilflllober 8CHUMACH1fl on ..... of Coet• Meet
cone1811ng oC NI.IC ll)llC( • I =-lllowe Mlfte "'°' 8Ulll .... ~,., ~ ...... .._,.Oft nl• °"°'* 4• H. "· ,. l A I K A .. A I 0 f t42 t 1SO Unrt 7i..~ -~ ~ IMI ......_A. ~ tuw•--of .,.. ...... AbMy . Medic... Inc.. OfTZIHMWfl • mlnof
«*1.., ~ ~ ·-• -• .... .... OClfNMfl ~-u.o...I, ~ tota..otN.irii. raordecl '" loot tt7t4, '9ChJIOU99Ull Ill IC.~ :11111, If_,, .._. ..... , PmlJC llJTIC( lfO A144803 P ... 1312 to 1'83, In-IMmlTAW ,,.. lblt••f.. ' "'811 .... _. .. "1ld ON>efHOIHOWCAUll ~ OMolial .._ ... of "'9 ....... ,._.. .... ~-~c:-110f0f ._, ................... ----~c:-11of0r· _..Of' '0RCMANfll°'NAMa
Or-.. ~. ~ ... ~-... ~"' °" ..._ --·· OI W • ~ Couney Off llPl•i• MOW MmOll IUI ~ on on.NMn.1t?••·,..1 M ................ 11, 1• ~~-....... ,.. 11.-NOTICI II Hl,.HY ..,_ of IAtM ltAIGI ~ "' 9oot 11140, = ~-,.._, Ai:: PliMINd or ... C... :;;:;&. 1111111 J11n. • ~ G4YIN TO NANCY V Off~. 1 ._ =.o:.::k, .... c:.,.,,~--·-..,...... ... ·:.:.o:: . .'': ~·:::".::.:... "":r. :=:..::::.:-..:.... ::.. '= :.•=.: ..... Coun11. Calllornlt , on •~"°"' Corpor-27, Oc** •. 11. •• ~·..,,.. :&.':"OctOlta-•, 11, 11. 1MI •••" 1, ._.., c.. PICA ..
t. 117'.•,__._!! ...,_,., ~ ~· Tltl 0:.."';;'f'...e... 1 ntr ........... ~ 14, "':';:=•~•;;..I ..;;:&.;:::•~=c..i• l~lll!!!!llll!!!!!!!!!!~.t., •. .:=
ENTERTAINMENT DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Ociober •• 1988 -
IN HR~IS)IU~
l_ - - --
Ibsen's 'Ghosts' slow to
mate~ialize in ART Show
By TOM TITUS °' .. .,.., ........
"If.you really want to gel even with
·.a producer," a Broadwa)' veteran
remarks in Moss Han's "Light Up the
Sky," ··you get him to do an Ibsen
revival. ,
After viewing Ibsen·~ "Ghosts" at
the Alternative Repertol) Theater.
that pantcular line nngs true e.nough
·Despite the best effons of a strong cast
and sensitive direction. the here~
totore highly impressive ART ap-
pears to have lost a bit of tts foou ng
this time around.
·: Cbicato•e famed Second City troupe performed at Orange Cout College.
This century-old pla)' -"hich
deals obl1qu~ly with 1ncc?st.
euthanasia and sexuall) 1ransm1t1ed
diseases -was some" hat of a
$Candal when first produced "io-
where docs the playwright mcnuon
the word .. syphilis:· but this 1s clearl~
the definition of the "ord ··de-
bauched." which crops up frequent!~
10 1he dialogue.
. ·~econd City bounces laughS
.
off the wall at Or_ange Coast
By GREG KLERKX °' ... .,.., ...........
Some people enjoy their comedy
like their steak -served up raw.
Raw, as in a warped step-by-step
depiction of childbirth as seen
through the ~e~ eyes of a Lamaze-
shocked father. aw. as in a chain-
smoking priest "counselini" a young
couple about in-vitro fertihzatij)n.
If you're a connoisseur of comedy
tarur, then you may have missed a
feast of rare irreverence Sunday .night
at Orange Coast College, where
Chicago's Second Ci1( comedy com-
ny dimed up ltbera helpings of'fh
sharp satire that has made the group
famous.
The four-man. two.!woman
ensemble tore through a two-hour
show at a breakneck pace, taking only
a\ I 5-minute intermission between
sk.its lampooningeverythinlfrom the
presidential race to bar~r shop
quartets to the Japanization of
America.
Over its JO.year existence. the
Second City company has become
renowned as the Harvard of comedy. the Second City hat. however. The
producing such rioted performers as routines range from silly satire (a
Bill Murray. Ed Asner, John Belushi. group of Japanese-employed hill-
Alan Alda and Shelley Long. Im-billies livi ng 1n Nissan, Tenn.) to
provisation has fong been the foun-topical satire (a presidential debate
dation of the group. and there was featuring a suggestion that NASA
plenty on hand in Sunday's per-inve nt .. a big tea strainer" to clean up
formancc. Boston Harbor) to Just plain obscure
The grouP.demonstrated its patent-(a bunch of 1960s burnouts lamenting
ed "Switch • routine. which is son of the "Brad) Bunch" to the tune of
the comedic version of tag-team "White Ra bb1 1 .. ).
wrestlins. In the middle of an 1m· The group does have its senous
provisat1onal routine. a non-partlcl-side. A black humor routine about the
pa ting c~median will yell ··freeze!" -death of a barber shop quartet tenor
reprdless of what odd position the re veah;d undenones of rich pathos as
pertonnen are-m. One-uf-thrpe -th~sufvwing-quartet members slo"'
forme!} is then replaced t>¥ anothc:r ly realized how hnle \hey knew about
comedian who assumes his or her their departed friend. In ttle end. the)
position, then launches into a com-mourned him just the same.
pletely different routine. Throughout the sho". the audience
Through the magic of Swttch. was rarel) onl> an audience. often
performers who are stirring lima becoming the target of the humor.
beans at one moment become two During one rouune. the audience
safecrackers a minute later. A tango e\ en '"became .. a piece of an. begging
dance evolves into .a Nelson Edd\'-_the ques11on of who were the per-
Jeanetle MacDonald love scene. The formers and who was the audience.
possibilities are endless. With the Second C11y group. that
Improvisation is only one trtck in ques11on is trul~ tough to answer .
Thisconditton. inherited b' a no"-
grown son from his long-deceased
father. 1s the fulcrum on "h1ch
"Ghosts.. eventuall)' turns But
Ibsen's journey to 1ha1 plateau 1s a
long and circuitous one. trod w11h
"ary1ngdegrecsofsucccss b) director
Pat~ia Terry's cast members.
Myrna Niles portrays the w1dO\.\
MJtchell Nunn, Myrna Niles and Jack Thbmu {from left)
"Ghoeta" at the Alternative Repertory Theater.
and traumatized mother agonmng · h over the "sense of duty" "hich kept suffocating V1ctonan atmosp ere
d lul d h bad "'h1chpef"adesthepla~ herboun toap an enng us n . TomOrrenactsthestnc en,un.an
Hers is a sti'ong. stolid performance. amst "ho has seen his sic~nt''" sap
steeped 1n dignity as the facade of her him of talent and energ'· "ith a world caves 1n around her and she 1s forced to make an unthinkable de-forced pohtenes~ that should mask a rebellious spmt. 'A e are g1' en cmon. r. . prec1ou!. hllle of the latter. howe¥er . Less success1ul in his 1nterpre1a11on d the lack-of t dulls the potenual 1s Jack. Thomas as Lhe pastor whose an 1
ngid veneer masks (we are led 10 impact ofh1s gnpp1n(! cuna1n~ lo_illli_.
beheve)1l deccp~cttiypotnTtfar ~uenrr ....,.
nature. Thomas stru$&)es admtrabl~ Complettng the cas t 1<o Jennifer
to define his enigmauc character. but M)ers-Johnson as the maid sought
never full) succet'ds in bnng1ng the b' both father and lo,er Her earl)
role into focus. • scenes" 1th "iunn are cnsp and clear
The most pronounced character "h1le her segments "1th Orr require
strides are taken b) M11chell Nunn as more v1s1bk mot1\ auon.
the whiskey-soaked ,baruhwa~ Techn1calh. the arena-mlc pro-
scheming tosp1nt his daughter. Niles ducuon 1s ·qune anracu'( "Ith m~1d. awa~ w11h him -even though Kr 1stan C larlc.·s ,la)c-red setung and
hes aware that the rela11onsh1p is Karen Weller's must} penod cost um·
merely one of con' cnience. Nunn 1s a ing both "onh~ of al)plaust 03, 1d
welcome breath of foul air in the Palmer's hghtrng· design le nds the
proper brooding intensll} 10 a pla~
~hose cilaracters are steeped in 11.
··Ghosts .. is a producuon that may
require more lime to de,:.elop. a
Polaroid pi cture sttll stn' mg . for cdmpkt~ focus Performances con-
t1nut" Thursda~ s through aturdll} sat
l.'I pm and unda)S at 7 pm. untn "-'o' 5 at the .\ltema11' e Repenory
T~r 163tJ . Grand :\\e .. 'Sanl:a
.\na "1th rest'r' attons taken at b '\(l.· .. Q2Q • • • BACKSTAGE -Ri chard Hams
v.on·1 be bnngmg hi) .. Camelot .. into
the Orange Count~ Performing Ans
Center ne "t month. as scbed·
uled .. the national tour of the Lemer-
Loc"'e musical has been postponed to
the the stars 111 health .. producers
are hoping tu ~hedule the engage·
ment later in the season, and other
.mracuons 1n the (enters Broad"a'
Series remain unchanged. ·
/ .·i.. Oprah's loss bfggest gain
l
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -
Oprah Winfrey promises to reveal
how she lost 54.2 pounds -as soon
as she loses I 0 more pounds.
The talk show bost said losing the
weight was her "single greatest ac-
appearance before 4.000 people
raised about $40.000 for the United
Wa) of the Central Carolinas and the
Un11ed Wa) of Gaston Count}.
She decided to do the benefit
Sunday. she said. because the mone~
would help battered women .. who an:
trying to tum their hves around.''
complishment." ·
Winfrey's bnef v1stt here and
.~•;;:~., f,,,::!w•r • $3 2!> ;.~;!~• :;:.::: ~::~ :::~:: ::::~i.:::
lo-. Oh ·-5o1o ...... ·~ ....... At I•• Ott-I• O•,..I•
RUNNING ON EMPTY (R)
U 10 Z MU II 1 JO IO 10
CROSSING
DHANCEY IPGI
I Ul 1Hl01ztl11
• WHO FRAMED ROGER RAHIT (PG )
u • ., .. 4 '" ... 4S
6J4 ,.,,, ......... d 2~~J V III• °'"• '.,..,
• HEARTBREAK
HOTEL (PG·1ll
I SS l ssTsn SH SS
• SWEET HEARTS DANCE (RI
1 n 1 n s .. 1 "'' n
• lllUtl WILLIS
DIE HARD (RI
U • 1 JO SIS 7 •1 10 "
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-Or9nge CoM1 DAIL y PILOT I Tuesday, October 4, 1988 PFDPIE
Making music without harmony WMMtMJ, OellMr I
ly SYDNEY OM.Ulll
AJUa (March 21-April 19): focus on creativity. chance to express
youndfin dynamic, entertainana manner. You'll be encouraaed by auention
of vco-anractive member of opposite su. Taurus. Libra play roles TAURVl(April 2().Ma) 20): You'll be "interested'' in minerals, oil. land
surveys. Emphasis on practicality, Iona-term contracts, investments. You'll
ttccivt offer which requires funher examination. Pisces is in picture.
~~~~ .. ~~!.~
Tired of going to singles bars?
Finding your heahh club reall y hasn't
been a good source for dates? Just
want to go out to somettung cultural
for a change. and not worry about
having a date?
You could be ripe for Oassic
Encounters, the innovative protram
developed by the Pacific Symphony
specifically for singles. The Beverly
Heritage Hotel was the spot Thursday
night for the concert series kickoff
party, where singles mingled, learned
more about the • program and
subscribed. ·
The second year for the pr(>gram is
off to a promising stan. according to
Loe11 Spl110, executive director for
the symphony, wath more than 200
new subscribers already signed up. ~isto brought the concept to Orange
County, having initiated it when he
served as marketing director for the
Pittsburgh Symphony.
The two Classic Encounter senes.
each consisting of four' evenings.
include Pacific Symphony classic
concerts at the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center and pre-concert
tlllks. preceded by receptions in
Brandon's Lounge at the Beverly
Hentage. (The first one begins Oct.
I 2.) •
"We found last year that here rcallx
was a need for a program like this. •
said Sp1sto. "There are thousands of
singles in Orange County, pro-
fessional people who arc interested an
culturaJ events but arc often reluctant
to attend because the y don't want to
go alone. or feel they don't know
enough about classical music to
appreciate it."
"We like the idea." agreed Pamela
Jenal1111 and Karla Rensbaw, both
v.1th the 6ymphon}. but voluntcerin:J
their ume Thursda> to help solicit
subscnpt1 ons. "I don't reall y have
-any one to go with," said Renshaw,
"so th is works out well. ..
Sp1sto explained that subscription
pnces for each senes are leveled.
depending on the locauon in the
theater -$1 20. S 100. $80 and $40.
Those subscribing w11hin a given
price range are seated in a block with
other singles from the Classic En-
counters group.
"I signed up before I came (to-
night), so I JUSt wanted to sec who I
was going to be sitttng next to," said
single LJ& MUes. "I really lo"egoina t0
conccns and to try to find somcbod else to go -whaT a_m I going to dO.
call up and buy two tickets and then
try to find somebody? Also I don't
know if I want to be with the same
person the entire season."
Males was one of about I 50 singles
-ranging in age from f!lid 20s to :
50ish. from all walks of hfe -who
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20): You'll say, "Let's act down to bUSl"!CSS."
Some restless al$0Ciatcs acquie~ and you're on your way. ~tiliz~ intuition,
trust your own jud&ment. Shon trip may be necessary. Capncorn involved.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Define terms, reach wider audience. realize
that search eventually will prove fruitful. Don•t be discouraged by one who
lacks talent1 faith. Wish as due to be fulfilled. you'll ride tide of populanty. LEO (July 23-Au&. 22): Stress independence, style, design, pioneering
spirit. Emphasis on personality, spcciJI appearances, briaht colors. You'll be
concerned with price of JOld. Ag_uarius. another Leo fiaure prominently.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): What appeared to be a defeat will be
transformed into victory. Focus on teaching, lcamina. diredlon. purpose.
Much that you decided on 12 days aao will now come to pass.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Diversify, reach beyond previous limitations.
Current cycle indicates added p(>pularity, prestige and chance to hit financial
were treated 10 a taste of what the Robtn Olean .play. for JennUer ~'f::irn~~~o~i~s o~~o~~rl-0:~ !ft'~ Murphy and Hil&ry Banke..
..._,..._.._,._~ jackpot. Romance plays important role. morale surges upwards. Forward.
Van Rouum, Saaan SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Check dc~ils. read between lin.e~. emphasis
on contacts w1th the ''rich and famous. • Break from trad111on proves
beneficial You'll receive at lea.st three offers. one dealing with possibility or a recorded contemporary Jean Luc Ponte arrangement. Clad m black Alan Rowe Trio also pro vided lively
leather, with red leather shoes and background music. -belt. Olson looked less the classic Peter Kr1111 admitted he preferred
violinist and more the new age rock but was attending to suppon his mu sician. friends, Kim Reyaold1 and Frucls
The ample food buffet featured Reialllger ofCosta Mesa. (Kraus was
taco salad. m1n1 quiches, zucchini ta1sed in Lc1pz1g, East Germany, and
sticks and roast beef. which party felt he's seen and heard enough classic
goers devoured as they chatted with music throueh his childhood to last
others with symphony interests. The him for a while.)
·.·1 actually like classical music,." relocation. . . id-Reirtinger. ho had attended--SAG~~RllJS -(Nov.--22.Dec.-21): Discern mouv~ check ~cua
symphony concertf in 1he past. "I fulfil.I o~hgall<?n ~ce~tly made to young person. Focus on travel. philosophy,
don t know whether I want to publishing, d1stnbut1on. . , subscnbe yet or JUSt co me when I CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Domestic adjustment featured. you
want." he added. receiy~ Jift , one dose to you discusses travel plans. You'll learn moi:c about
Perhaps Reynolds said ll simply acqu1s1t1ons, sales. purchases. stock~and bon~s: Taurus nattve prominent.
and best "I like classical music and AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Play waiting game. check contractual
I'm singie." What more is there 10 obligation. lndivi~ual who talks a biggal!le mar a~tually be ta!1gl~ i!1 red tape.
say? Protect your own interests, eschew get-nch-quick scheme. Vargo as in volved.
· PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Task that seemed to "never end" w11l linall)'.
be completed. You'll receive reward. you'll get credit long overdue. Lunar
position emphasizes employment. work methods. pets. dependents.
IF OCTOBER 5 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY scenario highlights change. travel,
variety, marital status, possible additi6n to family. Major domestic
adjustment takes place during October. could include sale or purchase of
home, marriage. valid opportunity to increase income. Gem ini. Virgo.
Sagittarius people play important roles in your life.
By CRAllLES GOREN
ud OMAR SHARIF
Neither vulnerable. West deals.
NORTH
+A Q 8 6 'V K t-8.J
North's leap to six spades is beyond
reproach.
This hand was reported in lntu-
national Popular Bnage Monthly .
(Available from The Bridae World,
Peter Krau, Francia Retntncer and K1m
Reynolda.
Loala Splato and Lis llllee dlllcuN aingla protram. ·
0 A 4
+AK 8
WEST EAST
+2 +973
Q A Q 10 7 6 4 Q J S 2
Standing up for woman's choice "16, O KQ8
• 7 '. • Q 10 6 2
SOUTH
• k J 10 ~ 4
Q Vold
...37..Ea.sL9'lh St...-.liew York, N.Y.
10025 at $30 per annum.) The fact
that no declarer was named in the
article as being responsible for the
brilliant play featured below leads
us to suspect that it might have been
found after the fact rather than at
the table .
With a trump or a diamond lead,
the contract must fail. After a club
(or a heart) lead , though, the slam
cannot be beaten. Let's assume that
1he lead is a club. Since declarer bas
10 ruff three diamond\ in dummy,
he cannot afford r6 draw two
rounds of trumps. And since he has
to take a diamond discard on the
jack of.clubs, he neeas to find West
specifically with a singleton trump
and doubleton club.
DEAR .\SI' LANDERS: I feel
compelled 10 v. nte after reading the
letter signed ··Guilt) in Connecucut. ·•
She 1s the \\<Oman v. hose child died of
a rare blood disorder and blamed
herwlf. thinking that God v.as pun.
1shing her for havi ng had an abortion
several }Cars back.
I have three children. One v.as born
with a SC' ere heanng problem . I also
bch e\ed that I was be ing punished for
the two abomons I had had. I was not
very religious and didn't understand
where my pain was coming from.
After years of sil ent anguish J bega n to
meet other women v. ho had gone
through the same thing. Talking
about ll was enormousl} therapeutic
We all fell a wonderful sense of
release after sharing our feeli ngs.
All•
IJJIDEIS
I .:!-year-old daughter had .. bor·
rowcd ... them. ruined them and tried
to hide them in her brother's close t.
I d1dn'1 say a word to etther of the
-kids because I was afraid to face the
truth.
Today-I was 1n Jake's room again to
put extra blankets in his closet and I
nouced two pairs of his sister's bikini
underwear an the back of the closet.
Simpson from WyomiDI stood ap to Now I know my suspicions were
pro-life Sen. Gordon H•mpbrey of correct. My son •.s a closet queen.
New Hampshire and made It ablln-Please . tell me 1f I should ~Y
dantly clear tbatthey thocagilt women l something to Mm about .my das-
shouJd bave tbe rig.ht to decide tbls covery. Docs this mean he will be gay
issae wllhoat govenameat lDler-or bisexual? Should he see a psy-
ference. Bear tn mind tbat aborUo>na ch1atnst about this? I am really are legaJ in this country. tcmfied because of AIDS. I know that
As fon1 11 we keep aendlng men practicing homosexuals are greatly at
majority of trusveatltes are not
bomosnul, tbey jut Uke to dress up
iJI women's clot1Wt1. Tbey marry, bave ekildren ud lead normal Uve1.
But tbey do eajoy cro11-dres1lDg.
Tberapy·rarely gets tbem to s&op.
I see no need to tell blm tbat you
have dJscovered bJs "1ecret."
L.M. Bovo
Love salves
biggest need
0 10 9 7 l
• J 9 s 3
The bidding:
Wat Norlh
2 \7 Dbl
Pass 6 +
Pass
F.ast
Pass
Pass
South
4 •
Pass
Opening lead: Seven of +
Eveo seemingly impossible con-
tracts can sometimes .be made. All
you have to do is picture a distribu-
tion that will enable you to get
home, then presume that the vision
in your mind's eye actually exists.
South's jump to four spades over
the takeout double was perhaps a
trifle agarcssive, but it is not easy to
flod a bid that fits the hand to a tee.
Play low from dummy to the first
trick. Suppose East wins the queen
and shifts to a diamond. Win the
ace, come to hand with a trump and
~ For the record. I was not a tramp. 1
~n t v.1th the same man e'clus1vel}
for se'eral years. Both pregnancies
were the result of in11mac1es v.1th
him.
like Welcker ud Slmpaon back to tbe nsk. . Senate democracy and freedom will I love my son very much. He 1ssuch
be aUv~ ud well in Ulis coutry. a bngh1. a1trac11ve young fellow.
"Deepest need in man is the need to
overcome his separateness, to leave
the pnson of his ·aloneness... said
Erich Fromm. What satisfies that
need. he said. is bound to be the most powerful force in human relations -
mature love.
_then cash the ace-king of clubs. Re-
turn to hand with a heart ruff and
discard a diamond on the jack of
clubs. Now all you have to do is
crossruff the red· suits to come 12
tricks. Easy . isn't it I
-llMH1----------
Ann . I want to corn mend you fo r
having the courage 10 be pro-choice at
a u me ~hen 1he pro-II fers are becom-
ing increasing!~ m1htant -G R IN
DENVER
DEAR G.R.: I don't feel tbat I
deserve uy medals for courage, but I
can tell yoa two people wbo do.
Recently on "Meet tbe Press," Sen.
Lowell Welcker of Connectleat (a
very Catbolic slate) ud Sen. Alu
• • • Please help me to help ham. -
DEAR ANN LANDERS: r ve read CONCERNE D MOTHER IN
several letters 1n your column about W oi\SHI NGTON.
men who dress up 1n women's DEAR CONCERNED MOTHER:
clothing. I ne ver paid much attention You refer to yoar son as a "closet
to them. howe,er. because the> had qu eeo"andspeakofyoarfearofAJDS
nothing 10<!0 wit h me. Until nov.. It's as if be were a llomosexul. Claaltces
not m) husband; it's m) 15-ycar-old are very good tbt yoa ere wrOD1.
son. Your son could be a tru1vesttte or
A few months ago I painted Jake's be coald simply be a U-year-old wbo
room. While removing d uller fro m Is curious and find• female H111erJe
his closet. I noticed two pairs of m} "forbidden " ud tberefort erotic.
panty hose. I thought thi s was rather If later you lean daat a.e 11 a
strange. but reasoned that ma} be m} transvestite. be aware IU& Ge vast
Has she ever got experience
I ('anno1 belle' e that for the first
ume in m} life. I am 1n 1he right place
at 1hc nght time. Listen 10 1h1s.
The hottest career for women 1n
1988 is -the en,elopc. please -
hatardous waste ex pcn! Salaries
range from $30,000 to $70.000. Is this cra Z\ or what' Hazardous
waste ism) ltfe. l'\C been disposing of
It since the da}' I was mamed. You're
looking at a woman with 39 years of
ex perience as the top sho,eler 1n the
business.
The tnck of disposing waste is that
no one knows where you put 1t. No
one wants to kn ow. I discovered that
after the birth of our first bab)
Everyone wanted a diaper chanaed on
the spot, but no one wanted to take
responsibilit y for relocatin$ the used
diaper. Who got stuck? Mo1!
For years. I got rid of the No I
hazardous waste 1n the country: bo>s'
•
g}m shoes. You can'tJUSt dump those
liule suckers in the ocean and c\pcCI them to floa t out to sea No s1rce If I
had deep-s1xed ·em. the) ·d ha' e
washed up on the exact beach ""here
th e kids were. The kids would claim
them and stan wearing !hem again
First. y-ou have to sneak in during
the dead ofn1ght and gel them off the
feet of the boy and then bul) them
T hey rank (no pun intended) nght up
there with gym clothe~ that have been
in a locker for nine months.
rm not padd ing my resume. but
I've had to cart awe) chicken bo nes
left under a bed wh ile we were off on a
two-week vacation. a cage holding a
dead' horned toad, which took us a
month to find under the WCI towels.
and a collect ion of rocks covered wtth
moss and seaweed entombed 1n an
RV for three weeks.
I read stones 1n the papers all the
time about these so-called experts
roaming around the world with
barges full of garbage looking for a
place 10 dump it. I never had that
problem. All I had to do to get rid of
anything was to put a broken toy on
top of 11 and place 1t at the curb. By
nightfall. the box was dragged inside.
up tv.o flights of stairs and stored.
M) fi nest hour was probabl) lef-
tO\-Cr'S. I had some real nsky stuff m
there. ome of them used to get
restless, and I could never turn my
back on them. They weren't some-
thing )OU could get cartless with. I'd
dump them carefully in newspaper.
zap-lock them m plastic bags. then
encase them 1n a larse garbqe bag
before sealing them 1n the garba,e
can. Dogs would fly in at reduced air
fares to get to it
Actually. I may be overqualified.
The Greatest Sale of the Year
A Total & Complete $175,00000
Storewide Stock Reduction
..
Sale Start& Sat. Oct. 1st At
10:00 A.M. (New Fall & Holiday)
Now in PLUS any leftover.
Smuner Stock Otrertd at. ultJute SanapJ
Somethinr Special
feminine foshions
\\, "JX"~ 1Jl11" in ld~h1<>ns r01 ·~min~ hcurr sit~' 4·1A Jlso ~ltlt-s
250 E. 17th Costa Mesa,• Hilgren Square• 645-5711 .,. .
,
Claim as the oldest child in the
famil y tends to be neater.
Narrowest town 1n the United
States is Bingham Canyon, Utah -
one street wide and seven miles long.
The overlookin& houses cling to both
mountainsides. Says a nat ive: "Town
dogs have to wag their tails up and
down."
~ Tl'ltr<t of the world's potential
water power is in Africa. it's claimed.
A student of matnmony claims the
w1 fe and husband tend to take on each
other's personalit) traits during the
first seven years of mamaJe. And
each other's thinking abilities. too.
Then they stop. or almost stop. After
the children leave home. they quickly
go back into that matchup process
again.
"Every hero becomes a bore at
last.·· Ralph Waldo Emerson said
that. At a time when he was pretty
much regarded as a hero.
lCR088
1 Roman god
5 Olldlar~
9 Big Canacll.an
U,por1
14 Foreshow
15 French rl~
16 MC>Uem
college •
17 Ref!Md
18 Beyond
19 Swagger
20 Inner
22 Pub
2.t"'Checlt ~ate.
about
26 KMrner wor1c
27 SlnQM
29 Cerdlnal
30 Vicious
33 Slighted
37 Prlnc:lpfe
38 Entertainer
39 Fortify
40 Fabric
41 Beggarly
42 Jelopy
44 l.....,
45 Aeteln1
48 Pt'tllosopher
47 Maui's kin
49 Vulture
53 Tran9'ent s1 Mine
excavation
3
58 Buckle
59 Flower
81 -of Ma.rch
62 Cake
63 Off-white
64 Dragon
65 Furry animal
8& Humbug
67 Metlcul~s
DOWN
1 -me1al:
nickel alloy
2 Kind of ecid
3 Right-hand
page
4 Attack llyty
5 Soft drink
6 Mldeuterner
1 Map aectlon
8 Hindrances
• 9 Importuned
10 Singers
11 Inca-land
12 Ratlt•
13 Claaalfy
21 Moonfflle
23 Instrument
25 EqUfllty
28 Monasteries
30 Raymond -
31 SMwMd
32 Low
33 Mofst
~ Wine bucket
8
.. A taste of the bait JS worth the oain
of the hook." Who said that'! A
~htical candidate? A sex offender?
ho? • ~1~4--t~-t-~-+-~
George Bernard Shaw had a phobia
about bald beads. Couldn't bear the 17
sight of them.
20 What do you know about that
shellfish called the scallop? Not as
much as the Pila.nms knew. probably. 24
Most shellfish attach themselves to
something and hvc out their ti'ves
there. Not the scallop. It wanders.
Pilarims wore scallop shells on their
hats to show they'd made a Iona sea
ttlp. 38
Q. O( the onainal teams that
suirtcd the National football Leaauc 41
in 1922. which still plar?
A. On!Y two -the Chacaao Bears
and the Grttn Bay Packers.
Beans spiral up the pole from riaht
to lcf\. Ho~ spiral up the pole from
lefl to naht. Or so contend a sometimes a.rower of both.
People from Liverpool arc Liver-~-1'_....,_-ot1----+pudhans.
lfa polarbcarcha~syou.dodtc•o
thl· bl•a'lt'\ riaht. Eik1m01 MY most
putor ~;ars arc trn·p1~ .
7
~VIOUI "'ZZLE 80l.VED
35 Postpone
36 ChanMI
37 Hofdlng
40 Utah nowers
42 Act Wiidiy
43 Resin
45 ~tric1
47 Deed
48 Tr"
•
18
11
50 Artifice
51 Met Oft«lng
52 Aeedju•t
53 C>ubide: pref.
54 Stcwy Nne
55 Stag
5e PiM money eo au.,,trtv
10 11 12 13
I
by 811 Keane COUNTER CULTURE by Maratta & Maratta
·•we call 1t dirt 'cause it makes __ -'!
--------us \tiny."" - -
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"You mean a dog can be a member of your
club, but you won't let a girl join?"
PEANUTS
V.11-tEN WE GET IN, l1ll
WAHT SOME POPCORN ~!7 AM
EXTRA LARGER ;..:.o:...::o_r .:.6E:.:E:.:...R:..:.: .. ~~---i
GARFIELD
v.J ~i C \-\ \OOL WOU L1)
~ o U u SE To CH E CK
A R-A. W-N T's-R+ft Ett-5-?
DENNIS THE MENACE
" by Hank Ketcham
\\ I : I ~ \r ~~ ; ... / .. ' .. i
by Charles M. Schulz· ~
l-1AlF TO DRINK. AND ... ~ALF TO SPILL
ON TME FLOOR 6EMEAT~ T~E SEAT5 ..
by Jim Davis
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTITuesday, October •. 1988 87
BLOOll COUNTY
ARLO AND JANIS
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
rri}i:ow1ND/1bG9 a.m:.1~ wrrt-a.JT A
HAI MICHFleL
SHOE
. JUDGE PARKER
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
HERE'S A SCJEN11FC IHt. A\J'£RHGE. ll<££ LJ5f.S
FACf ~m"ll ~ ~ l LP -fO °f HRE:E HUNCRED
by Jimmy Johnson
I TOl.O V0U. IT~
~..:---100 EARLY FOe 'fOOR ~!>
by Lynn~Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly.
by Harold La Doux
by Tom Batiuk
500:$ OF~!' GAu..~ c+ ~ ol. • ...=-.,;....__;~~~~~~~'O~·~~ DAY
roMBLEWEEDS
'' ~ i,A,'Z'( ~OUl\lP '10...,...,-1'UOM~
A ~o~v· ,.M"*'OF ~1,-r(, H•6<'11~1"01H•~~~!
DRABBLE
c:=;J
c=::i
RoBSl8R08E
"
. .
i"~ urn.£ eofn .. e. l')
~~l~~E.. ~~M..l.'(
by Tom K. Ryan
~~--_.. ........ ___ ..,,,,
~
by Pat Brady
DOONESBURY
('AN YOO Be... El-~ ~
51R' "'r"1t~wos~ Pt5" V> ~I'& 7{JS5/3l)
.JS "'l)GCr-.tJ<. ~ '
by Garry Trudeau , .. , h llf
•wll tit
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I
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c
I
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IC
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le
l-
1)
ng
at-
rty
up od
I a
ed
ier
ed
tcr
is-
nt..
1n-hc
to ng
be
_tef
ys.
10
m-w
an
ft
ep
an
I) -,
d
!ef
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ss-
1d
ud
ng
.2) -• t .
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to
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for
-ocs •
\
91 Orange Coast OAIL.Y PILOT/ Tue.day, October 4, 1988
Making music without harmony WH...ay, Oetekr I
By SYDNEY OMARR
AJUES (March 21-Apnl 19): Focus on ~reat1v1ty, chance to uprc s
younclf in dynamic. enterta1mna manner. You II be encouraaed by a1tent1on
of very anr11ctive member of 08p<?s11e sex. Tauru~. L1br,a play roles. .
~~~~.~~!.?
Tired of going to singles bars?
Finding your health club really hasn't
been a good source for dates? Just
want to go out to something cultural
for a change, and not worry about
having a date?
You , could be ripe for Classic
Encounters. the annovauve program
developed by the Pacific Symphony
specifically for singles. The Severi)'
Hentage Hotel was the spot Ttuirsda)
naght for the concen series kickoff
pany, where singles mingled, learned
more about the program and
subscnbed. The second year for the program 1s
off to a promising start, according to
LouJa SpJato, executive director for
the symphony. with more than 200
new subscnbers already signed up.
Sp1sto brought the concept to Orange
County, having initiated it when he
served as marketing director for the
Pittsburgh Symphony. -
The two Classic Encounter series.
each consisting of four e\cenings.
include Pacific Symphon} classic
concens at the Orange County Per·
forming Arts Center and pre-concert
t~lks, preceded b) receptions in
Brandon's Lounge at the 13\'ve rly
Heritage. (The first one begins Oct.
12.)
"We found last }car that here reall~
was a need for a program hke this. ·
said Spisto. "There are th ousands of'
singles in Orange Count). pro-
fessionaJ people who are interested an
cultural events but are of\eo reluctant
Jo attend because thev dorr't want to
go alone. or feel they don't know
eno ugh about classical music to
appreciate·at." .
"We like the idea." agreeQ Pamela
JelUIJap and Karla Renshaw, both
"111\ the symphon). but ' olunteerinJ
their time Thursda) to help solicit
subscriptions. ·· 1 don't really have
any one to go wuh:" saad Renshaw.
"so this works out well. ..
Sp1sto explained that subscnption
pnces for each series are leveled.
depending on the loc.at1on in the
theater -S 120. $I 00. $80 and $40.
Those subscribing w1th1n a giveo
pnce range are seated in a block with
other singles from the Classic En-
counters group.
"I signed up before I came (to-
night), so I JUSt wanted 10 sec who I
was going to be sitting next to," said
single Lil MJlet. "I really love going to
concerts and to IT) to find somebodv
else to go -what am I going to do.
call up and buy two tickets and then
try to find somebody? Also I don't
know 1f I wan1 to be with the same
person the entire season:·
Miles was one of about I SO·singles
-ranging an age from mid 20s to
501sh.. from all ·walks of life.-who
were treated to a taste of what the
s' mphon) has to offer when first
,·1ohnist Robin Olsoa ~rfQ('med with
a recorded contemporary Jean Lue'
Ponte arrangement. Clad in black
leather. with red leather shoes and
belt. Olson looked less the classic
v1ohn1st and mOl"e' ttfe:-newage
mus1c1an. ·
The ample food buffet featured
taco salad, m101 quiches. zucchinl
sucks and roast beef; which paRy
goers devoured as they chatted with,
others with symphon} interests. The
...., .... ..,......,._ ....
Robin OIHn play•" for Jennlfer Van Rouam1 Suean
Murphy and Hilary Bankee.
Alan Rowe Tno also l?rov(dcd.livcly "I actually like classical music."
background music. · · said Reininger, who bad attended
Peter Kraus admitted he preferred S}mphony concerts in ~he Qnt....·".1
rock but'W<\S attcndingt<1sup1xm"hir don· know-whelllef ~ · wa·ni to
friends. Kim Reynolds and Francis subscribe' yet, or jllst come when I·
Reinioser of Costa Mesa: (Krau~waS' · want,1' he added. :
raised in Le1pz1g. East German). and: Perhaps Reynold~ said· it. simply
felt he's seen and heard enough classic and best, ··1 like classical music and
music through his childhood to last I'm single.'' What more i's ·there to him for a wfi1le.) • · say? · • ·
TAURUS (April 20.May 2 ): You'll be .. interested in m iner11ls, 011, la~d
surveys. Emphasis on practic.ahty. long·t.erm contr:acts. 10.vcslments. You II
tteeive offer which requires funher examination. Pisces e tn picture ..
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You'll sa). "Let's get down t,o buS1ness:·
Some restless associates acquiesce ind you·r~ on your WIJY· Uuhu 1ntu111on
trust your own judgment. Short trip may be necessary. <;apncor~ 1nvol' e~.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Define terms .• reach .wider audience, reahlc
that 5tarch eventually will prove fru1tf ul. Don t ,be ~•SC<?uraaed by on~ who
lacks talent, faith. Wish-is due to be fulfilled. you 11 ndc tide of po~lanty. LEO {July 23-Aug. 22): Strcn 1,ndependence, styl~. des11n, l>•One~r1ng
spirit. Emph•sis on personality, special ap~arances. bnght colors. You II be
concerned with price ofJOld. Ag_uanus. another Leo figure prominently,.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): What ap~arcd to be .a defeat will bt-
transformed into victory. focus on tea,ch1ng. learning, direction. purpose
Much that you decided on 12 days ago w1 11 now come to pass: . . UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Oivers1fy,,rcach beyond previous h.m11a11o~s
Current cycle inditates added popularity. prestige and chance to hn financial
jackpot, Romance plays important r~. mo~le surges upward~.· Forward.
•. SCORPIO (Oct, 23-N<?"' 21 ): Check det~.'ls. read between h n.e~. empha\1)
on contacts with the "nch and famous. Break from 1.rad1t1on pro'e~
beneficial. You'll receive at least three offers. one dealing with possib1ht) of
relocation. . · SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Discern mouves. check message~
fulfill obhga.uon,rcc~n~ly-mad~to-young-person. Focus on travd . ph1losoph~.
publishing, d1stribut1on. CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Z-Jan. 19): Domestic adJuSt~cnt featured . you recei~c $ift, one close to }OU d1~usscs travel plans. You 11 !earn mo~e about
acqu1sit1ons. sales. purchases. stocks and bonds. "Faurus nauve prominen1 AQU.~JUUS (Jan. 20-Feb. I 8): Play waiting game, check ~ontrac1ual
ob1iga tion. Individual who talks a b1ggame mar act ua lly be tangle~ 1~ red tape.
Protect your-own interests. eschew get-nch-qu1ck scheme. Virgo 1s involved.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Task that seemed to ~never end .. wall fina ll}
be· completed. You'll receive reward. you'll get credit long overdue. Lunar
• posiuon emphasizes employment. work methods., pet~. d~pendents.
· IF OCTOBER $ IS YO UR BIRTHDAY scenario h1ghhghts change. tra "cl. vanet~. mantal status. possible additio n t~ family. M~or domcsuc
·adjustment fakes place during October. ~ould inc.Jude sale or purchase of
Peter K.raue, Francie Reln.tnger and Kim
Reynolde.
LoaU Splato and Lb llllee dtacu .. elnglee
prOfram. J
~'home,. marriage. valid opportunity to increa.se income. Gemini. Virgo.
Sagittarius people pla) important roles an )Our hfe.
·ay CH.u\LES GOBEN
ud OMAR SHARIF,
Neither vulnerable. West deals.
NORTH
•A Q 8 6
~ K 9 8 3
O A 4
+A K·a
WEST EAST
•2 •973
~ A Q 10 7 6 4 v J S 2
"' 1 6 ' . <' K .Q 8
North's leap to six spades is beyond
reproach.
Standing.up f «;>r ·woman 's. choice • 7 4 • Q 10 6 2
SOUTH l ~--
• K J JO S 4 ~ ..
\J Void
This hand was reported in lnur-
nationa./ Popular Bridge Monthly.
(Available.from The Bridge World,
37 Ease 24th St.,..New York, N.Y.
10025 at S30 per annum.) The face
that no declarer was named in the
article as being responsible for the
brilliant play featured below leads
us 10 suspect that it mighl havt been
found after lhe fact rather than al
the table.
With a trump or a diamond lead.
the contract must fail. After a club
(or a heart) lead, though, the slam
canno1 be beaten. Let's assume 1ha1
the lead is a club. Since declarer has
to rurr three diamonds in dummy,
he cannot afford lO draw two
rounds of lrumps. And since he has
to take a diamond discard on 1hc
Jack of clubs, he needs to find Wesl
specifically with a sinaleton trump
QEAR A.1':1' LA NDE RS: I feel com~lled 10 write after reading the
letter signed "Guill) in Connect1cu1 ··
he as the v.oman "hose child died of
a rare blood disorder and blamed
he~elf. thinking that God was pun-
1sh1ng her for ha' 1ng had an abortion
se,er.il 'cars back.
I have three children. Onl' v. as born
wtth a se'erc hfanng problem I also
belte,ed that I was being punished tor
the tv.o abon1ons I had had. I was not
'cl) reltgiou.s and didn't understand
v.hcre m} pain was coming from.
After }ears ofs1lent anguish I began 10
meet other women who had gone
1hrough the S<\me 1hing. Talking
about ll "a~ enormous!} 1herapeut1c
We all fell a v..onderful se nse of
release after shari ng our feelings.
For the record. I v.as not a tramp. I
v.ent v.1th the same man C\clus1q~I}
for SC' era I )Cars. Both pregnancies
were the result ot 1n11maucs with
him
.\nn. I v.an1 to commend \OU for
ha' 1ng 1he courage to be pro-chmce at
a 11 me v.hen 1he pro-11 l'crs arc bccom·
ing 1ncreas1ngl} m1htant. -(, R 1:-.;
DE'\iVER
DEAR G.R.: I don't feel that I
deserve uy medals for courage, but I
can tell you two people wbo do.
Recently on "Meet tbe Press," Seo.
Lowell Welcker of Connecticut (a
verv Catholic slate) aod Seo. Alu
a..
LAllDEIS
Simpton from Wyomln( stood ap to
.pro-Ille Sen. Gordon Humphrey of
New HampsbJre aad made It abllD·
dantly clear that they t.hougb& women
should have tbe rlgbt to decide this
issue without government taler·
fereoce. Bear In mind that aborti.>ns
are legal in this couatry.
As tong as we keep aendJq men
like Welcker and Simpson back &o the
Senate, democracy and freedom will
be alive ind well in this country. • • • DEAR AN N.LANDERS: I've read
several letters in )Our column about
men "'ho dress up in women 's
clothing. I ne,er paid much attcnuon
to them. howc' er. because the) had
nothing to do v.11 h me. Until no" It's
not m) husband; it's m) 15-)ear-old
son.
A few months ago I painted Jake's
room Whi le removing clu11cr from
his closet. 1 nouced two pairs ol m)
panty hose. I thought th is was rather
strange. but reasoned that ma' be m~
12-)ear-old daughter had "bor·
rowed .. them. ruined them and tned
to hide them in he'r brother's closet.
I didn't say a word to either of the
kids because I \\3S afraid to face the
truth. -
Today I wa s 1n Jake's room again to
put extra blankets in his closet and I
no11ced two pairs of his sister's b1k1n1
undcr\\'car in the back of the close t.
Now I know m} susp1c1ons were
correct. My son 1s a closet queen.
Please tell me 1f I should say
something to ham. about m) dis·
covery. Does th as mean he will be gay
or bisexual? Should he see a psy-
chiatrist about th is? I am really
ternficd because of AIDS. I know that
pracucing homoscxoals are greatly at
nsk.
I lo' e my son very much. He 1ssuch
a bright. auracuve. }Oung fellow.
Please help me to help him. -
CONCERNED MOTHER IN
WA. HI NGTON. .
DEAR CONCERNED MOTHER:
You refer to yo1lr 100 as a '.'closet
queen" and speak of your fear of AIDS
as if be were a bomoaenal. ClaaDces
are very good that yoa are wroD&.
Your son could be a &raD1ve1tlte or
be could simply be a 15-year-old wbo
is curious and flads female llJlgerle
"fo rbidden" and therefore erotic.
If later you lean tlaat be It a
transvestite, be aware tht tJle vast
majority of traDSvestltes are not
homosexual, Ibey just like to dress up
in women's clotblog. Tiley marry,
have cbJldreo and lead normal Uvts.
But they do enjoy cro11-dre11lng.
Ttaerapy rarely gell &11em to ,-top.
I set DO need to teU blm tbat you
bave discovered bis "secret."
L.M. Bo vo
"" -~--=~ ---
0 10 9 7 2
• J 9 s J
The bidding:
West North
2 ~ Dbl
Pass 6 +
Pass
E1s1
Pass
Pass
South 4.
Pass
Opening lead: Seven of +
Even seemingly impossible con-
tracts can soi;nerimes be made. All
you have to do is picture a distribu-
tion that will ehable you to 'get
L 1 home, then presume that the vision ove sa ves in your mind's eye actually cxisls.
• South's jump to four spades over bi: d 11iest need •~be takeout double WaS:_ perhaps a 88.' ·rnfle aggressive, bur ii is not easy td
De . find a 'bid thal fits rhe hand 10 a tee. .. epc t need 1n man 1s Lhe nci:d to
and doubleton club. •
Play low from dummy to the first
trick. Suppose East wins the queen
an~ shifts to a diamond. Win the
ace, come to hand with a trump and
then cash the ace-king of clubs. Re-
turn to hand with a heart ruff and
discard a diamond on rhe jack · of
clubs. Now all you have to do is
crossruff rhe red· suirs to come 12
tricks. Easy, isn't it!
O\ crcome his ~parateness. to leave _ -
the prison of has aloneness,'' said --(!j·ui.~~"il L ....,_ ______ ....;...._ __ _
En ch Fromm. What sch1sfics tha1 11_ .. _11'11.lill.11i11!1i~i.111j'-1i11M-lillllllil1iiiliii-• need. he said. 1s bound to be the most •
powerful force in human relations -lCROSS
ma turf! lo' e.
Claim 1s the oldest child in the
family tends 10 be neater.
Narrowest town 1n the United
States 1s Bingham Canyon, Utah -
one street wide and se~cn miles long.
The overlooking houses cling to both
mountainsides. Says a native: "Town
dogs have to wag lh~1r tails up and
down."
A third of the world's potential
water power 1s 1n Africa. it's claimed.
1 Roman god
5 Discharged
9 Big Canadian
ell port
14 Foreshow
15 French river
18 Molfem
college
17 Refined
18 Beyond
19 Swagg4tr
20 Inner
22 Pub
24 Checil dlta
about
58 Buckle
59 FloW9r
6t -of M1rch
82 Cake
63 Off-white
64 Oregon
65 Furry anlmal
66 Humbug
67 Meticulous
DOWN
1 -metal
nk:kel alloy
2 Kind of ICid
3 Right-hand
Ptl08
ll'REVIOU8 l'UZZU aOLVED
Has she ever got experience A student of matrimOD¥ claims the
wife and husband tend to take on each
other's pt'rsonalit) traits during the
first seven year~ of marriage. And
each other's winking ab1l1t1es. too.
Then they stop, or almost stop. After
the chi ldren lcavc home, thcyqu1ckl y
go back into that matchup process
again.
~6 Kiimer work
27 Single
29 Cardlnll
30 Vicious
33 Slighted
37 Principle
4 Attack slyly
5 Soft drink
8 Mldeutemer
7 Map eec:tlon
8 Hindrances
9 Importuned
I l.tnnot tx·ltl'\C that for the first
1tml' in m' hit'. I am 1n the right place
at lhl' nght 11me Lmcn to thas.
I hl' hott'l-~1 career for women 1n
19~HI 1s -the en,clope. please -
ha1ardous v..astc cApert' alarics
range from S30.000 10 S 70.000.
h 1h1i. craz} or v..hat~ Ha1ardou~
"a~te 1s m) life l'H been disposing of
11 since the da'f I was mamed. You're
looking at a woman with 39 years of
experience as the top shoveler in the
bu'iiness.
The tnck of disposing waste 1s that
no one knows where ~ou put 11. No
one wants to kn ow I discovered that
after 1he birth of our first bab)
E\eryone wanted a diaper changed on
the spot. but no one wanted to take
respons1bihty for relocating the used
d1a~r. Who got stuck? Moa'
For yea~. I got nd of the No. I
ha1ardous waste 1n the country: bo}s'
g~m shoes.' ou rnn'tJUSt dump 1hose
!1111e suckers 1n the ocean and C\pcct
them to floa1 ou1 to s<.·a. No \1rec. If I
had decp-s1xcd 'cm. the} 'd haH'
washed up on the exact beach v.hcrc
the kids v.erc The lo.ids \\Ould claim
them and s1an wearing them again
First. you ha 'e to sneak in dunng
th e dead of night and get them off the
feel of the bo) and then bu!) th em
They rank (no pun intended) right up
there with g)m clothes 1hat have been
1n a locker for nine mon1hs.
time about these so-called experts
roan11ng around the world with
barges full of garbage looking for a
plal'e to dump 11. I never had tha1
problem .\II I had to do to get rid of
an) 1hing v..as to out a broken toy on
1op of 11 and place 11 at the curb. By
nightfall. the boit was dragged inside.
up l\\O 01ghts Of stairs and stored.
"Every hero becomes a bore at
last... Ralph Waldo Emerson said
that. A.I a tam e when he ,was prelly
much regarded as a hero. ~I) finest hour was ptobably lef·
to\ er!>. I had some real risky stuff in
there. Some of them used to get .. A taste of the bait is wonh the ~am
res ties!>. and I could never tum my • of the hook." Who said that. A
back on them. They "'ercn't some· political candidate? A sex offender?
thing )'OU could get careless with. I'd Who?
dump them carefully in newspaper.
~ Entertainer
39 FOf11fy
40 F1brlc
• 41 &.gg1r1y
42 J1topy
44 lewt"
45 Retains
46 Pttll09QPhef
47 Maui's kin
49 V\llture
53 T ranslent
57 Mine
••cav1t1on
2 3
14
zip-lock them 1n plastic ~gs. then George Bernard Shaw had a phobia
enca!lt them in a larse garbage bag about bald heads. Couldn't boar th~ 17
before sealtng them in the garbage sight of them.
can. Dogs would Oy in at reduced air 20
10 Singers
1 1 Inca-land
12 Ram ..
13 Clualfy
21 Moonllke
23 Instrument
25 Equality
28 Mona1terle1
30 Raymond -
3 1 S....ed
32 Low
33 Moist
:M Wtne~et
6 I'm not padding m) resume. but
I've had to can awa) chicken bones
left under a bed while we \\-ere off on-a
two-v.cek' vacation. a cage holding a
dead homed toad. wbich took us a
month to ftnd under the wet towels.
and a collection of rocks covered with
moss and seaweed entombed in an
RV fo r three weeks.
I read slorics an the papers all the
fares to get to 11.
Actually. I may be overqualified.
What do you know about that
shellfish called the scallop? Not as ,..,2-4-+--+--..__..~
much as the Pilgrims knew, probably.
Most shellfish attach lhemsclves to
something and lave out their lives
there. Not the scallop. It wanders.
Pilgnms wore scallop shells on their
hats to show they"d made a Iona sea The Greatest Sale of the Year
A Total & Complete $175,ooooo
Storewide Stock Reduction
Sale Starts Sat. Oct. 1st At
10:00 A.M. (New Fall & Holiday)
Now in PLUS any leftover.
s.-er Stock Ottered at ultimate Savtnpr
Something Special
feminine fashions
~c ~pt-l1Jlilt' 1n l,1\t11ons for thfo 1111ss~ t11urt lltS Joi A tllto ~tllH
250 E. 17th Costa Mesa,• Hilgren Square• 645·5711
...
27
trip. ...3'""9__. _ _..,_...__.,__
Q. Of the oriainal teams that ~-+--+--+-
started the National Football Leaaue 41
in 1922, which sttll pla)'..?
A. Only two -the Chicaao 'Bears 44
and the Green Bay Packers.
Beans spir11I up the pole from nght
to left Ho~ spiral up the pole from
left to tight. Or so contend a
sometimes grower of both.
People from Li verpool arc Liver· ~~":'--+_...,.._......,_
pudhans.
If a polar bearcharsts yoc.i. dodtt 10
11\c bca~I'\ naht Eik1m°' say m~t
potar bl·a., art 1cn.pe~ .
'
7
35 Poetpone
36 Channel
37 Hotdlng
40 Utah flowers
42 ACt Wiidiy
43 RM!n
45 R•trlet
47 Deed
48 Tree
a
50 Artifice
51 Met offering
52 RHdjual
53 C>utllde: pref
54 Story tine
55 Str.g
58 Pita oioneY
80 Quantity
10 11 12 13
'
.s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Tuesday, October 4, 1988 87
_, TBS
FAlllLY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane co·--T·R CULTURE urt c. by Maratta & Marana BLOOM COUNTY
,/?., J .... -r-·~
"We call 1t dirt 'cause it makes
us dirty."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"You mean a dog can be a member of your
club, but you won't let a girl Join?"
PEANUTS ·
GARFIELD
TUllBLEW.E.ED
,, ~ l..A.'Z'I ~ocJl\lP '10"ttr HGOMI.
A ~OC'Uef'lVe M&M~ OF ~1tf'(, H•~~~1'Ht~~~!
DRABBLE ··
~i~fU}\0\~
1"f. ~~(,l(V\1f.51
~\Qi
R08&18ROSE
..
Wr\1 C \-\ \OOL WOU L1)
) o u u SE To C 1-1 E C K
A ~P\TiE NTS Rt FL EXES?
DENNIS THE MENACE
ARLO AND JANIS
" by Hank Ketcham .
I ~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~
)
'
-by Charles M. Schulz
HALF TO DRINK AND l-IALF TO SPILL
OM T~E FLOOR BENEATH HIE SEATS ..
by Jim Davis
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
1 .
t r a
•
by Jimmy Johnson
..--..--I TOU> YOU, IT', •
~...:-.... TOO EARl.Y roe'IWR COROOfl.O'f S
by Jett MacNelly
by Harold Le oou x
by Tom Batluk
DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau ..... ..,,, ~ ,.;i ~ ~ \-I') c .N ... o ..
•v11.11 ..!.; l'<l'.J ~ V"I · ""''
I
by Pat Brady
)Wt "NAT A Aneft f'5-MCU.~/
C.A'IJ ~ 8£... &~t -
$/R., ...... t .t '-1.'""5 v=
~"'i0\:' "f~hf ~sez:>
µ'5 "OC-.£-...... :R ~ \ . ~
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CAP'fA f N. 'l()(J iXJ!f[
~ 100 1Mr(//-C.
10 $E£ -k '$ )tl'.J\C1
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STAl<T4 A LJ-IAl.,,CE ~~ .,,...,;;
()(fr ANO $HAFt: VP TOGE:. T ... ~R,
14/HO SAYS 7Hl3Jl£ A~ VO
$UONO ACT> .... ..; A~ttAJCA :: s1u ~o; ,
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-
-Orange Cout OAIL Y PILOT I Tuesday. October 4, 1988
CALL 642-5678
~ ..... lOlt ta Ttre 2131 ltwptrt Inell Ult Ill._ C"ta •111 2'24 Cetta ... UM Cttt1 •111 UM l!Wf111 IMcla l iLASSfFIED JN DEX 642-5678 I NEWPORT HOME JBA 2'X8X. 3 car. S:ut. lll-4112 l1l1d ZIOI * ••U ,.S* * l'Slll lllT 1111 •CLIFF HAVEN 2BR 2~
PaoM N0Rnt ORANGE CO. M0-1ZIO IN lovely Btck Bay neigh-large El TOfo hoo .. y;tth CHARMING Cepe Cod 28r A smaU, quiet compl9JC. Sharp and clean 2Br. 2BR 2BA, frplc, encl. ~r-new deCOr, veutted 09ta
PROM 80UTH ~CO. -IUD borhood. Fr•th paint l apa s1400 or $l800. PENINSULA WINTER 10t 2Aduna. Wlnter/yrty. 1BR l 2BR 2BA "Ille• Walher dryer hlluP~ pvt age, all built-Int, Mar lnQI, Qaf809•64'r.2134 '
landtcaplng brighten this 581-9122 01859-5381 •FURNISHED• N·i>etl\ 875-7708 Th·S.t new" w/patlo or batcony, '1und•ck, encl gar. lhOpt, S750/mo. SffO/f'T'O Agt
THE DAil. Y ftllOT CHECK YOUR AD 3 bdrm custom With large Ht • *2BRN1BA._~,!!!ydc>l9x.50No (818) 795-2"5 Sun-Tu-. I fireplace. pool, spa. laYn-S740/mo. S4&-H50 810 CENTER •EASTBLUFF TwnhH Cl.ASStFl£O~FlCEHOOAS THE FtAIT DAY lvate muter tulle and ' gar. .c:e ............. , 1 $I dry, pvt g~~e, NO TSL MGMT 642-HI03 a .. t 38R 28A. 2 eat ger. '~ ~: r , .. o •• h , ........... 4-• ro,.mal dlnlng & family 38R Hoose. 2-cw gar, lg •2BR 1Bl.tower duplex. COZY1BR on L1ttle laland. PETS. From /mo to EASTSIDE C.M. 18R Apt. R 1BR h ctean new ~Pet•·· $1025/mo yd•
S••..,«MylOOAa.1.1130"M .,. ................ ,.,_, room• lam rm. trplc. No pela. Garage. Patlo.S87!i $450/mo. lnc:I. utll. Year-$850/mo . ..-aecurlty. With trplC, ref~., & all ear ... se75 144•1010 &-5Mon-Frl S..:-~;.tt;,e;,~ r ~.:::.'': ;"..;' .. '°:::0 ~=·::; 63 t-1•00 ....... S365.000 2~~t=.1~i.~j~~/mo "t_~~I~:.~~= :¥f~x. ~=1e~s~~r. Avail. DAVID 5'49-2447 r~1~~94 25 mo. f,f~j.:: l~~·~· E 23rd.= ACROSS ~ROM BEACH PVlll<•~~~Ol.INE:F •O• ... , ~;:~.~=77:.~7• ·=·=-= -\~~~~,71,"~:;.' L~~.;:~w R~oqu:dc~~~· OCEANFRONT WINTER L~r~'t ~~~~~h LG 2t~~!'ouse. WTSllE •n· s~':R!1:~~:-:=~l 2BR. 2:~ ~~: .. •• "~,;'p ~
-·· w• "....... • • -· • ' ........ _.... REAL ESTATE B n2M. ' •Nlce!Y furn 28R 1BA lu vt9w "°"' Bdrm-Gatege petlo laundry 2Br lBa. y. ard. $895/mo D11hwaltler encl~· 1900/mo * 494 .. 791 •-· ..,.., ""' p" .. -... -....... --.. 3BR 2~ A. car garage, upper Of !OW« dUJ)lell rn. · Sa50/ ' 722-1 t77 • 51 · 1.-:.--__,~~=:-:=:-w-. ,..,, • • ,.., . , . . .. ... •·,... .... c.-• fl". 19a svc tncl. $1300/mo + / 510751mo $1300/mo 875-3457 room, mo ea.Die TV. From mo. 111111 ... llAll ~=:: ... ~: :: ~= ._ ............. "' "• .... REALTORS ~~ 1-:!1~ ~=,deg; ~~~:~RI::;= ...... • .. , ..... rsu1~~TORANJ!11603 e:,~~~~B~~~d Sorry, No petl ~:·5577 3::.~e:,'Er: ~-y~: -·-·--...-""~-' -"-"~·=",. :;;.:,~ .•. ,".-,:.:;:.:_~ .• '!.,'.",,: Hll 1 Eves/Wknd1964-6988 Famllyrm, wet bar, lndry, U07 *Liil llW* ok. Nope~r:fsr:hools 28r l'ltla~l'lflW cptt. Next to park. t"ft757mo.
•· . .,, ., · ·• • , •• ,.,. .......... HIH •• 11 ' RUSTIC 2 Bedroom House 2 car garage. S1600/mo. 2BR, gacage. newly a;co;. Come SM the dilferenc.. & •hops. • Drps, bltlns. fncd patio «09 RIVER ·
•' ' ' ,.,. "'""• •••""•.., 1 aa Large Front & Rear Yd YIW REITILS' ated, 1tep1 to bey/beach completely remodeled E'SIDE tBR, clean & pvt. 638-4120 Cati 1-5PM TSL MGMT &42-1803 ";:;.;. ,;:,; ;:-, ~·:· """ .... f;;,;;;;;.;,;.;,;,;,;,;;,;;..._.-...;. No Pets Utlls Pd 910 W. Balboa Blvd. Beautiful 2BR apts. Pool, Pets okl $600 Avall 2619 Santa Ana 'L' ... $735 Charming l BR Apt <NW
al/2U wlater/,.arfJ $750 Mo+dep 631--4147 BALBOA PENIN. 2BR 2BA $900/mo yrly. 675-9650 rec. room, laundry room lmmed. 2627 Santa Ana •TOWNHOUSE• garage. Quiet n-1gh-
Fum hse, lrpl, washef/dry, SENIORS condo. Security Upper duplex. Gar, lrpl, YEARLY $600. Small furn. Ready 1°' lnllant snov&-Ave." O. 645-0968 28R/1 '~BA. frpl, patio, borhoOd. $850/mo Ind
patio. gar. 673-3039 · features. Close 10 shop-sundk. No pets. $1075 + Studio. 1 pertOn. Non In~~~~~:~ ~~~~mo. E'SllE 211 UUIE carpon, 1940 Wallace, utlls. Avt now 873-5349
Lg deluxe 4BR 2BA upslrs ping. & transportation. utll. Onr/Bkr 650-0389 smlcr prel'd. Pvt t>Nch. AU llAIA am 120 E. 20th st $775/Mo. $715/Mo. 548-5348 EASTBLUFF 2BR 2Ba.
duple11. Deck, gar, cath PaUo & 11lew $600/Mo. IAYFlllT HI 2U utll paid, W/O. 675'3083 I'"' 530 W Wll • CALL Now 831-1595 frplc,. patio, oool. S950.
celllOQs...aewklli:t\en. An· 09~·5647 OJ ES36-~23 ,,..,.....leVel Gard'--•S975/MO -VEARLY''* --TS[. M"J¥n •EAST.SIDE 848 Amigo. Wev. As>tify nuat 1se. $1800/mo. Reis 1 ..,,,,._. · • .... " : 3B Ba · u .:... a&£..-•fiield A · t L &44-0906 · "d (818)346-9538 or Walk to t>eachl New uxury yrty. sml boal OK. Avail r 1 • near Jetty 722·9012 or 642-1603 •CORNER DUPLEX •WL"WL partmen •
req 1714)675 9908 3Br 3Ba. G/ga1e, pool, now. S 1500. 673-3722 2133 Mlramer, Balboa Sorry No Pets! Just remodeled 2Bd, 1Ba. 4 FURN 2Br 2Ba, lrg petlo,
-----· ~ _ spa S12~5/mo 1st month BAYRIDGE CONDO F/P, nlOe kite 675-5030 with garage. new carpel, FAl1t.Y APAITlllm pool, overlooking Bay.
Cldlllli +depo9ll. 960-338.4 Gated comtll pool & 19a. •NEWLY FURNISHED• paint, mini blinds. w/d Sparkling clean larg• S1395/mo Short term ~BR 2BA HOUSE rviae 44 Pvt p.atio. bea\Jtllul view. OCEANFRONT 1 BDRMS I meSliBJIU hk-up. N-pets. $795mo Apls. Famllles welcome. okay. Available lmmed. Beam ceilings. brick lrplc,, 2BR 2BA, 2 car pvt elec Available. Great location. 250-8002 or 650-5194 -Pool & spa. Shopping & 646-6350/d 875-549<4/e
$1275/Mo Call NATALIE amenities Avail t0/1 721-0607 . -door. Sorry, no pets. ..__ I• m 11 y rm . pa t I 0 2er. den large yard. gar ag"e. s 1300/mo. Mike Musi ... , Bkr 875-4606 1 u••n111Ts E'SllE ClllEI llPLU nelghborhoo<I park next Many to choose from. 1, 2
S48-6569 or 759·6600 I $1275/mo 640-6161 3BR 2BA, yrty unl urn. Sparkllng clean, large Just remodeled 2Br. 1Ba. 2Bdrm 1'A8a 5795 & 3 bedrooms. Gr•t ,.,.. ~~~!!!!~~ ..... ••••••ILi Merrill Lynch Really -·---ii--n * *111.c&IYll** Gar .. lrplc steps to Garden apts. Beautifully garage.. new carpet, 2Bdrm 2Ba S800 catlo.n-Starting _at ~-~----_,,. -" lLovely 2Br den 2'1tBa. on beectl, near evetythlng, landscaped grounds paint. mini blinds. no Jll W WILSll $5751mo."875-4eo6 IHI 1Bd, new paint. ate, ten-! goll courS.. 2 car garage. vaulted ceilings, new Pool & •Pa.. patios/decks, pets. 194 Monie Vista. COSTA MESA NB 2Br steps lo bch. park-rtaia1aJ1 2107 nls, pool. $625 640-6161 NOW $1895 759-0019 carpets. no pets. garage or carport. $795/mo. 250·8002 or a• 1,., .. Lg. front patio, utlla ,_ ... _,.~~"""I'--..,~~ S1350/mo. 833-8830 ask Sorry, no pets. 650-5194 H1·11 • ... t Beauilful A lg furn 3BR UICH Ill .1011111 3BR with Spectacular !Of Allee 5<49-5790/E •SEVERAL LOCATIONS Incl, no pell, un urn. Duplex. Xlnl w Bay loc. 2 SPECTACULAR VTEW ocean, city views. Gated ' 1 Bedroom $670 E'SIDE small 1Br Cottage, Daaa Ptiat 2'21 S 1175/Mo. 723-1292 car gar No students or ON GOLF COURSE community with tennis & NEWPORT Island, 1BRl2Bdrm 1v.ea $775 lrplc. encl patio. No Petsl -ira• YJRW Ni;WPORT HEIGHTS
pets s 1750/mo Dys I Penlhou ... 2Br 28• & den, pe>OI. 1yr lse. $3200/Mo. wlth end gar. $900/'!'° 2250 van uard S40-9626 $560/mo+ $680 sec dep. LI 111._~ ~" Trlplex-2 mllt• tutt ...
558· 1545 Eves 524·63'4 cathedral Ceilings, lrplc, CALL Bill Hiii 644-9060 ye~ only. Reis req d. . --~----187 E. 21st. 645-7234 Frplc, garage, lnd[l fee. each w/lull bath. Beemed
NB OCEANFRONT _, pe>OI. 2 car gar. $1,500 Coldwell Banker S3 17 all• 5pm I Bachelor $580 LARGE 3BR 2BA upper. $800 . dep. 661-3 53 cell, frplc. pvt deck, g•r.
3Br 2·~Ba furnished ltl<e 832-8555 or 854-2470 WEST Newport 28r $850 PENINSULA POINT smalll 1 Bedroom $685 garage. Near occ. But. lfac~ mo S1025 N-petl. 759-9114
new. fantastic ~1ewl 1 WESTPARK NEW HOME BALBOA <48r, Ip S1500 studio $475/mo $225 2Bdrm 1'/•Ba • $800 1 40-C Valencla. $875 BACHE(OR a bJO&s lo ====~==~=: Monthly or season. 13B.r 2'.ltBa, cul-de-sac. 2 BAYFRONT Condo . 2Br sec. deposit. One quiet I 16t E 18th St 642=0856 mo. No pets 5-45-7983 beach. Stove & frig. No il•UT llllm APTI
I I ... r s 1 !Ct • l • i-" $2750/mo 4409 Sea· car garage $1750/MO s 1650 adult. Refs. 675·6915 I All Ills d BOA'fSDPS• II wllte tr I e rlH I If vw. shore OPEN SAT/SUN •Call Haven 261-9879• PENINSULA St•ps 10 YRLY Charming BAYFRT • pe S:751mo 9~5-49J . *WITH
IHH1fC•ia•11 •Br 2·~Ba. lam rm. used 12-.4. 544-2484 wkdys Woodbridge2BR 2BA. up· beach. A$pprox 2000s!. 2BR 2BA. $1800/mo Ytil We!it:field 1 BEDRO.OM PATIO llJFlllT
brick, & Ille thruoul I M ~21'"2 A/C /d 2Br 2Ba. 1850 pd. Pvt bell. W/D. prkg, · • 2BR Apt /BAY VI~ Ciaera 1002 Shows like a model. trlH •e Ir H: ~~~~~~~~Is & p:ks BALBOA Coves ·2Br. den. n/smkr prel'd. 675-3063 1 APAllTlllm r"'ilfsed g~~age. tl:un8!ri Frplc, mlcr~. d/w, garage
8 X N k F 6 R c L 6 s E I $527,000 75g..8973 . 2BR fBA. frplc. o;r•g7e5 I $995 Avl now 785-5135 1Jg>'~Jf~o~~\Jr24~1c Coreaa ••t Mar BZ2 Large altraollve Apls In a e':3.;~~7 or 111 ';111·. & lovely pvt bcl't. S 1900 HOd~~ ~~R~ey osta Mell 1024 ~f~· 6~~~f!i.1rO':n s~~ & WOODBRIDGE 2 SIO!_Y. patio. L~1'Y· S240o . OY8f gatege. be:~~f~~=~N:~~· R-28A. ~ TB<Jr~.~~~1"1107 .
(213) 635· 7155 axl H· 1 PRICE IEllCEI' Sun 12·5 or call 548·2525 res paint, 2 car garage. IBd~AYFRdo~ .. 1Con0cl80'! ...... rt. Clean. quiet. Ava.Mable 1 Bedroom $640 JIPaGe. near l'lflW, no pets. •Boat Slips Ex1ra•
· • --3BR 2'!iBA. P<>C>ls. tennis en, .....-or ..,..... · Nov 1 $875/mo Please •o 1 .. -•-lllO/ a•• •-1 Sorry no 1)9ta. .--,.-.-E-M_8£_fl_Of_™E __ ' Mesa V8f'de 4Br. 2Ba. 2BR 2BA·NICE1 Fireplace. Sl300/mo 786--0262 Yearly $.4750 11 64(>.u..q_'t . • 1 •-llW ... ......., ••• • J.1Mt11
SE.MS Al'l'MQAL.NETWOAll Ir pie. S214,900 3253 ALSO 3BR 2BA ocean· LINDA ISLE 2 story 58r, ca -~· COSTA MESA ' SENIORS condo. Security -..
COLD Well
BANl(eRO
Iowa Open house By front s20091mo Walk to I WIOlllllllE ESTATES I bOat doc:t<. S 10.000 I Cl•PLfTI IE•IHL 142-lllO IYllUILE features. Close 10 snop-oc __ E_A_N=FR"'""o,,...N--=T~Y""R...,L Y,..,....,.,1B=R
owner 854-0759 , beachl Agt_673-5354 jLg 3BR 2'.ltBA, family rm, WattrfrHt le••• IH, 28r n~Ba 2 story apt. ping, & transporlallon. woo<I, glall apt. Modified
uper Triplexes In great 2BRDupiei,newremodel. garagse. Y00ard63. Ne6W,f8alnl.' llULlllSH1·1400 Newappllances.Covered UCIELOllCOO HUGE!! Patio & vtew. $600/Mo. kltoh. N-smkr. $900/mo area of Costa Mesa. Call Frplc. yd, indry, blk to' crpt, 14 1• parking for 2 cars. Relrlge<alor, u1ffl1ies pd 0963-5647 or ES36-7423 Incl ALL utll. 850-3a23
• Ski for further details ocean 304 trts. $1275 Ll~UI leacla 14 HARBOR VIEW Spacioos $1050/Mo. Call Mickey No pets '* 640·0751 ·SPACIOUS and CLEAN Step$ to beach 2Br/ lBa,
''-XJX.'t1 thelx....i. 631-1266 Avail now * 968-727 1 5Br 3Ba. lam. rm. lorml 723--0940 BEAUTIFUL 28R tBA In SQ n &ILORE 1Br-1B• $595/mo F/P $975. 3Br/2Ba $1125
•
? -· ---* ORTH LAGUNA guest din .. 2 F/P. neut tones. .. Quiet complex Security C ... _..... 1 ...
Ullll SHRH • • ·~i·~> -;TiWN~OUSE db~Bdrm. hoosa 1Br ~a. garage. plan1a11on shullars. lg llVE II In bu1ldlng. Pooi. garage. WIE 1-2.-111 am lose to ............ no pe •. Yearly New cMcol' .... arp.
I
1111 OIO ~ t i a, en. gar. ocean view $850 Cun encl. pa1to. 3 car gar .. 12BR 1 ~1;1A. cloae to cable TV all new paint. j •969-9243• &42·9336
SENSATIONAL 5 BR, 4 BA #L I ;u9gerk· ~~~~73~e2nn11 721-5225 .. '. w 4f/7. 7 457 /H Near schools/park/pool/ beach. $950/mo. 900 carpel, d;apea & floor Ing INQUIRE ABOUT lrYiat YEIUIWS = c~rt;~r~11 p~:~~ .... HC 1040 1JA~M~~~o. Cree~ 3BR. Missioa Viejo -rru ~;;~~cc~:~~~~:2·~· o~·~· ~e4~2~~1A. lg s~~;~~lJ~~LE:~~11~~ I out CllllTllAS :um~ p!e!,~~laS~/~: F~!:u~riZoi~B~.:.ccl~~
pool Formal d1n1gn 1 t MI to beacn• 18rl1ea lurn1shed $2750 2BR 1'lBA condo for tse Ownr/ag1 497·8486 deck, frplc. lam rm, pvt 2588AND 38 2• B SPECIAL Ulils pd Comm pool & beach, no pets .
room, parquet floors condo F/P encl gar FABULOUS New contem-w/ga.rage. AIC. indoor Ull/MCl gate dbl gar $2075/mo new r • 8
86-.8728 $775/Leue TRW solar pool heater -mo1e gated pool spa. clbhse porary 2BR 3BA condo. tndry Clean & neat' Avl LllOIS incl 'um 213•928•1944 a.pis. ft1•ched db~1gar •NewGEd/w,Stove.& spa Call7 AVAILABLE N OW i '" IOIO s1i 2 500 847-1610 Panoramic views ocean & 1mmedl S800/mo 26108 6BR FURN Winter rental 714.-675•7764 $1050 Mo +sec cro, M1crowa11e 1 ... eacla ~.7211 Agent
IEEIHWIPAYllHT1 BEAUT 4BR 2'·BA. la.m,WattrfrHtlltMHllO Agt559-9400/786-7485 '1 t1ne'Props-673-9333 Htl HI gar-door opnrs. 2110 Drapes . 18 18X. oceanside orwest Newport Ywty. 1
• --' ---harbor $3500 Via Para Cell Sally Anne $4250/mo. Lynne Valen· pvt pallot, w/d hkups.1•NewWh1teCarpe1&
. rm. frplc. custom 1<1tch • 1 Thurln SI, CM. Agt •Close to 3 Fwys I PCH. view, pe>OI, laundry, hOUM to t>Nch. 3BR Wellglveyouthedownm 1ns1de 1ract 1oca11on llElLThSl31·1•00 -.--,-. L 2169 LIDOISLE •GreatEastsideloc!Bach 650-5116 Open dally (4055573)andSouth $750.Nopets,non-smkr. 2BA. Avall 11/17. exchg lor a share ot own-$267 500 Cail Rachael-ewlfr HC• • 4BR 2''rBA. FR/DR, lfrge S595 Gar. cable avl 12-7 Of Weekends 11·6 c asl Plaza 497 6362 s 200/ 642-3850 Bk erShip You make the Gillen Agl 846-0093 Cute 2BR 1BA Duple11, tdci'.usiVEGUARD• pa1'o 45·101 SttoSI Lse Clean & cozy lBR S6t5 I •Lo Pool&DeckA -1 mo. r
mlhty pymls & we share __ · _ new crpt, garage. trplc, tg •GATED COMMUNITY• $2750 673-7767 Avl now 1 Grnblt w/8BO, lndry rm CW llAIUA •lna~~lduallyControl~a 1BR dul)lex, lrplc, gar, no Seat' Ctllt l1t11
ag&rec You receive Newrort leacla 1069 pvt palto, ocea6(17S~de9 oJ 11111 CUYOI NWPT Terrace 3Br 2'..,Ba Sorry, No pets 631-8.427 400 Merrimac Way I EntryAlarmSyttems I pets n/amkr. 1 pe<ton llH ~ave'!. ~~X.~ci~~I M:s: BY owner HarbOf View PCH S 1..?25 Agl •
4
_
1
BE'AUTIFUL 2BR 28A gar. ~arporl. pat10, relrlg; 3BR 2BA Apt., downstairs, I lBR u!ll pd, s590 •Cable TV Available ~;:~~49':!12:r.~· 6:!50 bXeXAfAOA Vlilw hit'
957.6002 nv5 E11 Wl<n3s Home Somerset model, ON lhe beach. pvt rd, de-, w/golf course VIEW. Also sto11e, w/d, pool & spa. I garage. Near O C C, 2BR971 ~8~, S725 i•New Laundry Facllll1es 1_,_,,,...,.,.'""'="..,.....,=--..,,.,.....,..,.--.:-I -.-
-~, · ' SBA 3BA S595.000 I lu11e duple11. 3Br 2''1Ba. 1BRevail Frplc.wetbar, S1250/mo818-359-0943 $825 + $600 sec No ,,,.t.,11 •CoveredParklnS> ILAGUNAlgSe•VuStudlo Condo. Pool. Jacuzzi.
WHTCUFF 546· 1330 days lully equip kilch.$2w000/d, mlero, W/D hkups. 2 car TOWNHSE 2 master Bdrm pets • 969-3737 CLISI TO ALL 1• Private Balcony 10 ~~~·r ~~u-10ec:k1 ...
1
t!! ... h. · ~s~25T~~-.EW Usft•~ 644-5554 eves/wkends spectacular view. gar w/xtra storage cen· , Gardens ,_ .,.. •u ,..... ,._ 673-0<421or963-3977 lral .ir All ma1n1: Incl 2 "1BA. trplc. gar .. nr 1BRupstalrs.cabteTVhk· 2BR lBA, lndry room.•ElegantAtmoshpere $650ullllnc 499_.124 iac.leat 1. wm LITS If IHI . --s t 644 0509 pe>Ol/ocean. quiel area. 1 up. refs req'd. No pets. clOM 10 shops & buses •SOf"' No Pets GREAT location Close lo U£ pi a11n !SPACIOUS. Sunny 2Br _ 0''.!1 nopes, -yr lease $1150. 642-5201 $575/mo. 352 Victoria. We'll accept Sect "'.8 "'F•ll •ltl .... , fiA
L 3 I.An 2Ba leatures trp1c. lndry 21 121 645-8161 Housing S675tmo " • ::.•;;c~t~:,:1~c~~:;::;1i~~rtll::'R':l'Qi;f."m1 IChool & shops arge 111 THE ILUffS! rm, garage. yard & pvt r I IVERSAILLES lBr. 188 I 22S7 MAPLE 2881 Bear St, Corner of cosvx:u;;: A:IOhta 18A bdrm home Airy & bright " • patio s 1300/mo All&ll Parking $ t 100/mo Penthouse Security 18R upstairs. Patio, new TSL MGMT 642_1603 Bris,ol. Costa Mesa 38 A Furnlehed. 2 car avail f()( working quiet M
with desen colors Inside IBay. canyon & city hghts now • 960_6483 7 t4/ 650-1824 • pool. gym. etc $825/mo., crpll & drps. Stove, lrlg ll•l l4l·l2C• parking. Steps 10 beactl. Of F non smkr. W/D kite.
laundry Patlo1soovered view 3BR 2'r8A . separ--•BRAND New luxury Sandl,673-2749 S550/mo. Adults No EASTSIDE 2BR 1BA Wlnter·9 months a prlv S350 642.5182 ''• acre Room for pool ate lamtly rm Lovely C11t1 •e11 2124 lownhorne In guard gated VILLA Balboa penthoose pets 979--4410 By appl w/garage, downs1au1. MESA VEROE 2BR 1BA. $1000/mo. 675-~232 Bkr · · '
Garage has ou11t-1ns court yard & more• Wiii Se 1 1 d 2BR oen & C . · small yard No pets upper Quiet cul de sac
1
ICIS Tl •lf•AI FEMALE wanted, child $389.000 no1 last S4 19 000 * JtsH twnhouse. Newport a s an -. Ocean atalina vi.ws. 1BR upslrs. pool. cable TV $725/mo 722-6294 $700+ 2867 H1cico . 2 ll ~ OK. Laundry & kltc"-1 10 759.9100 Call DIANA PROSSER Hgls area. frplc, pa110, s27ooi mo 72°-9422 over 2000slf, $1900/mo. & gas pd. $575. No pets. • 498.1936 751.9413 2BR 2BA, 1garage19ace. prlv Included. Call
I I L"I '" 7Rf}.5 or 644-6590 very nice 322 Oglei:E * H v HOME lmmac. 631-6052/d 722-7265/e Reis req'd. 147 Flower. WTSIH 2. Ill · Yrly $900. Agl 751-5235 548-7513 Aller epm. (,l()j~,I r""'" IAA ... V $980/mo.647-7540 * 2Br+denor3br.2ba,up·I I ·-CallNOW645·8161·-Gar,d/w,pallo.No.pels. NEWPORTHEIGHTS I FEW t te 41 ~11 •1 11·,·., ~rllW' graded,~ealloc.gardnr H leaHtt 11 3U1UClnAIE 5650 +sec.645"'4ll9 1BR. yard. gardener. n· 28r/2 :a~r~ng ~ces SOCOASTMETRO
HI 11 1"11'• • 1 \\ I ,., I'' \ 11 Mfe81iBAU Incl $21 750•5064 FURN w/everything 2BR, W/D hkupa. carpon No PlllSI• UVllll pets, gas/water paid I Xtra IQ patio. $1200/mo: Room· & bath In 2 llOtY ~~-....---..... llrlG \I •NEWPORT SHORES • nr beach/pool, view. pets $850/mo. 722-8294 Jog 10 beach. 2BR 2BA. $595/mo, 650·2256 650-1824 btwn 9am-5Pm home. Lndry & ktchn l1JNi lalaa vvv ni .-.._r 11~ TIWlll•H ••DUPLEX•• $925/mo.Nofrepaldlasl $525• dep 1BR mobile lireplace. patio, 18R PRIME locatlon, Eastslde *l .. lllOO* ~lleoea-Gr•t for col--
I•• ••1 IUlnl LIDO ISLE Charming F I 3Br 2Ba 2nd floor, !Ip, 2
1
818-448-537 home. s.Cure Mature wllolt. 111ew, 1acuzz1 larpe 2BR 2BA.g•rage & 1 student•. S325/mo . ._.. 3bdrm den Lovely patio C.1tl11 Ir HI decks S 1295 2Br 2Ba. , adults No pets. 1991 From $950. Utlls pd. RV storage. $95 per mo. Frig, dishwasher, stove C Ll 5"40-1711 Iv meg
63BRca3rBjA_·wa88{,/teB, ~ 1bBlocA AkPtlo CALL Carolyn Ross at F'irerlace. vaulted celllngs, l/p, new carpet. 4 houses JUtatatl Newpor1 Blvd. 64s-6373 831-8107 or 855--0665 5<48-9797 lncl. No pet• 5-45-4855 "' ' 673-7677 Or 759-6600 db gar. lndry hkup, pool 10 beh $995 646-5434 I
bay• S 30, By Owner Merrill Lynch Realty & spa Sorry, no pets -*REIT ALS * ,1£ · ·
llfHa 675
•
1466
LIDO ISLE-L1gh1&8try ~r,z~~:~~I 642~~~ 2·5br S900-S5000/mo ag1 1 btu• 2606 TURN UNNEEDED MERCHANDISE TQ
5Bdrm contemporary -----Marti Ferguson 642-7106 JOI R•~ I Pnia1al1 1007 Designed b~ Richard OCEAN VIEW Lg twnhse _ Neutra Best Bu 11 2 mstr BR, 2 59a, 2 car 2BR/2 BA w garage
ICUI FHIT HPLU CALL Carolyn Aoss al gar, trplc. spa. new pa1n1. IAYSllE COVE I $1300/mo 840 2770
U Br /2Ba upper 673· 7677 Or 759~600 cpl $1350/mo 968-2717 1 BR & den, 2Ba 2·Sty eKec WllTEl IEITAL •3Brl2Ba lower Mer Ill L nch Really --townhome FP. wet bar. $795000 r Y •111lClfHIH• w/d 2-car ga.r. gated2bdrm. 1balh, garage l
· :. IEWPOIT IUCI FIBI Retrig yard S675 No comm pool & spa on the • parklns» $875/Mo Avail-
5BR 3BA or 3BR 2BA -pets 642-3765 640·075t bay Walk 10 Balboa Jsl able now 673-4999 associated
A,•"'-\r"'•<• Of ~ 8 In<
'J<'1' "' BalbO.I 6'1 l66J l mother m·law quarters l •EASTStDE lBR lBA 1"2400/mo * 240-t752 I 818/888-505215059 I
on cul-de-sac 1n lovely garage W/D hkup 1
lamny neighborhood lg I Adult No pels $650/mo
IOI & pool. $395.000 Call Soollt 548-2301 Liz or Chuck Jones _
lrlH I Ir fOH 163t·1266 or 646-57'3 ATTRACTIVE but Small DlilJ Pilat · .. •Unit, su11s 1 person Gar·
2 BLOCKS top beach 1 ·ii~'\:·. age Gardener/water pd duplex, 2Br 2Ba. plus 2Br ••.. .: S475Mo lse S48-1366Agt 1''t8&, newly remodeled ' ''!"l' -· _ $529,000 675-3286 BACK BAY·E.ASTSIDE ~·~
--I -2BR tBA w/garage. New j
.USlllE CllHl-PIH I s ELL paint/carpet S 795/mo CRAFT 0 . LOWEST PRICE 2 sly 3Br I Avail nowt 646-0645
lam rm, 2~Ba, crnr lot CUUIH 111 .... ..=..+M~.J
'429.900 891-t702 Ag1 1hrouJilh cla(,'itfu>d Vard,relng No pell $675
1 ~ Merrill Lynch Realty
IELOHIT EITAR
Pool, apa, cabana. tennis and exquisite 5
bdrm hOme on 'h ecre lnterl<>< featured In
megazlne1: exterior won landscape
awards. Spectacular Inside and oot. $3.5
mlMlon.
111-1100
let U1 Help Yi1
Sett ~ ,., Prepttty!
Cell C11tttllt4,
642 -5671
for information
& surprlsingly_-
lpw cost.
640-0751
NICE clean 1 Br rear hse.
small yard A11a11 10/ 1
$675+sec 117' 1 E 23rd
213·656-8890/631 ·8229
CL.E.AN 18r1Ba dlJl)le11,
$725 Oar, aml yard, no
pets 1954 'A"' Meye<.
I Credit ctieck 549-3484
E'SIDE 3Br 1 'lrBa. aen;r.:
model nu crplldrps/kltc.
mirrored wardro~J Ip. 2-
c ar gar. S1 39:i/mo
Sandj, 673-2749
TOWNHOME 3Br 2118a,
Ip, patio. $1000
E'StDE Condo 28R 2BA
Yd. Stnl complex S1275
WatertrHt ..... IH
RUl.TllS 111· 1•
TOWNHOM! 3Br 21.;Ba, Tl : V•sotile and c.omfonob e, this open-front
fp, patio S 1000 YeSt spoM the seasons Crochet, vs1ng 2 colors
E'SIOE Condo 2BR 28A. of spon yom Eosy stitchn & popcorns WOl'neri'• Yd. sml comple.11 $1275 S,ze1 38.44
WlhrtrHt .... ... 4591 Fownte fitet croch.I fomts kNely doilt• b llllTlll 111· 1• your hocne or gills Rotes,~ & saolls ore
INSTANT IN 3BR 2•..tBA. choned, easy lo do lS" & 20 lf't No ~. 18• & 241h"'" ~eod lrplc, bedly•d, dbl gar,
apa, all xtr... Pet ok. 706h Old-hme ~quilts ore '°'ledort'
S 1245/mo. 648-6541 1temt Sl11Ch !flrt one ""!'fl kl~« 9
LUXURY 2Br 2Ba ~onctO'. co-ord1naMd fabnCI '*>f~. eheltts_ potdl •
Obi gar, Ir pie, pool pol'9ml rrw" for Stngle' Ooubl.i Si~.
'"5/Mo tat & IHt OfftROOOOf"'-'MIUOOt ... f l300. '42.·5280 A.llP\."91UIMt,__...,.,_,,,, K
NEWPOf'T HEfGHTi 210 Send IO: <MAW~ IMLV PILOT,
'8' E. 15th St. lllr, 2 .. , Re--u -11 ,_ --.._JI•-uu-...
18fagt, frpfe, •actnl --· ......,.. _,.,,'""' -.vuv, ,_.
t200.1H-85H 1~~~~~M~'~··~·~~20_-..000 ____ ~~~~
>t
1 4 .80
....... Eb ..... ••••••r•r• .. ,. ..........
For t•.ao you can advertise
your Garage Sale In the Dally
Piiot. There Is a 4 line minimum
and the price Is the same
whether you advertise 1 day or 3
days. It's a great way to turn
thoM hidden treasures Into
cash.
We are also 9tferlng a G•lll• •• ••H• •••••• .....
for St .00. This guide Includes Ideas on how to advertlee,
how to plan. what Items to sell, plus Ideas for a b4ttter
garage sale; also a garage late sign, pricing stickers,
Information on city ordinances and lnv6ntory sheet .
You can purchaae your Garage Safe Kit for $1 .00 when
you place your ad at: '
6~LS678
---~ -
Orange Coast DAILY PltOT /Tuesday, October 4, 1988 -
..... UM ... ,."•/OtUct .... Lest ' ,.... nzs .. ,..,_. HJI .. ,.,.... H H .. ,,.,.... SSH ..... , .... ** "=~ 2711 Found Ca,,,.,a. Canon .. •BARTENDER lllTllCT 18 ... TIAmU ...... lll7*1t ~ P'Ml•1•· *"•e.1111111-* ~~~1·~ac:.~~o ar~ m'ii~i;;., :~~~~~?~::,~RESS llUIEMEIT ~J. ~ .~..:n~l lllllEIEIT 111111 llAST
•S350MO 645-435• J............. 786-7072 Gt•I Jot>-EZ fle>un, flex-Daya only. 1660 Oove I e.it Cen• Glaa in El Tllml I llJLf PILIT Aoof'li Ill Euttlde Cott• .. MITTI •. 1 F o u No M 1n i tu,1 Ible ICMdute Will train St •B. Newport 8eectt Toro tor lnlervlew. S!IW•ll M•H ftom• w/kltch $425/mo vr/1 yr IMM. $c:hneuur nr WHI· on job. a... + c;om. Call tor .ppc. 752-2538 Th9 Deily PllOt 11 loo•ung (714)540-7880 •
prl!la/lndry. Pool, Pvt entry & r•vcs Pltktng. mlnsuw & Ogle St. CM ~ Muet be neet & for quel1fled lndMduatsl •••-._ Part-time AUistent o..
ISICJ/mo.541 3141 Aniotegue11pW111ng Catltol0631~ pereonable New omc:. to~youtncwtief1 _,,..,., WEU trlc:tAdvtlorneededSa1~ WI. UtlllU. l lg 8'Qn Ind. loc:ellon H11bor BIYd M~t e11perience "'TlllllT urday. Sundey end Ho6-
SUI
~ lmmed Poll &i2·93'e7 Free twin 7 monlh grey CM. Cell Cindt_ betWMn CAJIRA/ helpful, but will train jFuU time/Pan lime, rent or OeellnQ Wltfl
1111
aepecti °'l ld•YI 3AM 10 H AM Mull ~ *• 4JI 1111 II n ::,~i ~:.V~~~,.~;: 10em-apm, 75 1155 ~ ~;bN'di5~A~ comm1te1on 902-4074 our 1mport compeny be 11 Of 0¥9r, valid drlv. ~~~!!!!!!!!! ~~1.;":&":.~~~ 1117WEStCLIFFDAtVE LOST Ladles opat & •SMPIELPEI* PLAT£MAKER HRS 11AM-3PM MOl\·IHIRl ~G I Gov•rnement ~=l~lonmar!:~"'~~: :~·a~:."::X,~g~:: IEILDTJI
S 8'Yd CM 648-7445 Nwpt Bctl, Agl
541
•
5032
diemond ring, Sek• Ahh Fri '°tt1~~~~ ooo w111 u .. n right cord 17 00 per hour, gu 1 rMl lll I Ill
NwPt ' FM .. -~· AvelnSCPtW.(FamHy Wlndow tlntlng/Au1 olmmedlateopenlngf0tex-C•ll Roger Starkey. (G02)MS..WS i:398 1 =al Cell Susan 1mst'a',• .. •.gy•T ... ~!,1~1 1 .. Rruoger1·~IL1mitedopportUntty1o jofn •••• • •• HI . ~· .. ... heirloom & Mntlmenlel), Glau 8Uli""8. fmmedl· per~ CM*I opef• &42-432 1 1205 9·11AM 975 1215 "' ......... " F I al .., ••• ,,,., 1724 20 ll20 S3001Mo I ullls. REWARD! 495-4554 •II opening. Full time. 11or/pl1temaker Some dallv tor appolntrMnl .UOUAIUI • day, 642-432t I 205 I ~::,;; ~lem !t1h un: --.... .-~~~""Pl'~I 722·9432 Co111 M... Wllll".'Q to train • lof'l9 baalc: sl'rlppl~g ex· T Ille Pio me $200----llmlled earnhlgl. For ln-S'f'RXidAt n-smkr1 h Otrlc:e spac e-Retail· IEWIRI letm' dedleeted person perlence helpful. Apply IAILY PILOT $250/wlt days MuSI IDIUL lllllTllT P/T llOEPTlllllT tormallon. c:all Jeck
pref'd 3Br 38a. G/g11e, Storage 440 E 17th St 9 29 h OMV Prlnloul required. at· ••a W. llJ If, hive c.tr '122-9659 , Front office Full· Tim• !Flex hours, 1m1JI mtg shop AY9f• at SELECT pool 1pe HOO/mo bacl! bldg 400 alt ii 75c Lost I Lg. brn l .. t er Send resume to ELITE . •• Mon-Fri ~lc:al ottlee In So Cou1 Plaza erea BETTER HOMES &
+dep(,.i1. 99()..3384 sit. Incl u1i11 493·5460 tote bag w/grey '-•lher GLASS& WINDOW TINT-••11y-1y •-1111111, Cl WOii OUTIOOllS L.ak• Fornt (El Toro) Ll tvping Call 754-6822 GARDENS __ ,.-.;.,.,...="':;":'~=~ -----·----• appt. bk, person11 papera ING 748 W. 17th SI. •D -• r• .,. 50 I 7 5000
3BR Ai>I. NE! Pen. 1tep110 lfFIOl lllTI & psyc:h. Journal,. vie Coeta MMa, CA 92&27; or 330 w. bad: S1 I 1 (7 141770-t9 PIT WllE•N llLP REAi.. ESTATE 51·
beech, n-•mkr. Male, General Office & Medleal Pac.Amph.Park. No 71? Cell Robert 850-0393 Cott•....._, a~2826 lllYER• The Orange Cout Oaity lllllAL-Plll&TH F0< sml m4ldi1 c:o Outte1 RECEPTION/DAfA
S350+'hutll. 859-20~8 suit" from 650 sq. ft .• asked. 213-477-3199 642-4321 ~292 Autop1r111toreneed1de· Piiot II IOO!ong ·for an lNwpl BePI ofe Full-Time Incl Shipping. errands. ENTRY FIT, NB <lOnlJac>
<Sys Dave,
723
-4
209
· complete plumbing. only trMa&fl Need DMVl energetic penon to as-Bac:ttlfront offlc:• In-pno,,.. & cleaning Good tor Helvy phone.9. eo
BALBOA ISLAND.' Share S.59 per IQ. ft. lnlrodue. II SERVICES Ask for Pat or UM ~~:~ Claude 11 1111 our District Maneg«s su1ance billing exp req'd handwr111ng & 111n 10 de-wpm. lthng, comput.,
2Br 18• houH, tullv tory offer. Quiet garden IESSEllER HUB AUTO SUPPLY 3 days dur1% 1';: ::-"'· 831-4099 tail 1 mull SS 50/Hr e xp d he Ip l u I .
turnllhed. ~ $425/mo. Mt Ung SELECI B&G UIPET ....... n 2120 H1tbor Blvd Cotta ==: ~ull h~ve 'r! MW... Pamela, 6464488 Sal .. t>enet1t1. 720-0&84
173-7 18 751-5000 I DEE ••• F /T experienced wllh Men, 648-2464 liable car Wllh valid CA ~IT weekend & nightll m PllTll OEm• RECl"*IT. /T C
ru• Motn.r & daughler SMALL OFFICES DEURYll R••ponsl ble ... 11 . IOOll.0Wncar&ref9fen·1 drtvetS llC«IM proof of SUBWAYSANOWICl-iES "'--"1ng1n1nu11••tic ---F()( Real Est••• office ~·lhr cory 381 f~Ba FROM S3751MO. motlveted Individual tor 0... 631~7 lllfEl/f-IYC. Insurance 1nd OMV Westminster, 898--0305 ~ p }'T $550i;
10 1
';; Anerno()f\1. Pr.on., Ught
hou•. $550/mo. Llndal Full Mf'Vlee. t1th SI Cos11 pidl-up and delivery of W.I PIT Must be clean, retlet>le. pr1111-ou1 S111t1Dg pay rs 1 then n
3535
E c typing Pete 751·5000
640-512910 873-3005/E Mesa. a..&-~ _ I Ytt •.-t l~t .......... newsp1per 1dverllslrig need I ovef 21, Englllh-$9elll· S7 00 per nout plus gas PART TIME GENERAL Hwy CdM
67
J..
2930
Sa•~ I "' .. • m•te<lals. Fun-lime Tue-Re11i1 NurMty 5 8 Ing, up to $8/hr .. beo-lllowence OFFICE Must l)'Pe, and ------~ FEM. Prof. 26·38 to share . Tll SPICI STlTIOI fr I Fri (9am-6pm); P11t-t1me weetcend PIT CuNer No eflts. Bring OMV 10 Loris Come in to apply 11 h.l'lle c&r FleXJble hours •ECEPTIOllST Drive a 750 II BMW WMt 28R 2BA. ocean view Repr1Hnllng over 325 Please Contact Sii & Mon. Excellent e11p nee. Can for appt Kitchen, 979-0747 SS •Bonus .Call Brenda n 1a1lor med• c101P\es
Promonto r y Poi nt
1
t>u11dlngs ln Orange Co. Petey. 540-7796 c:om'*'y beneflts Apply Mon-Fri 646-7441 IYE S/llUYEIY 536-6178 "dverttsing ottiee 100!\ing S10Kl mo. 966-5105 S600/mo. Judi 673-860t One call does 11 all tor 1n person at· I IR I '°' an e.xpenenoed Re-
M/F Prof o-smkr for beaut your otflc:e !Msing needs. j Does Anyone Know CUSSIFIED eeded lmmec:ll Work 5-7 llifJ Pilal -PlE-ICHIL cepuontll to hl nclle steft NClnllY·•l I,.
1g 2Br COM. Wik 10 l>Ch., No cost to you. 540-5263 Where She Is???. DllLJ PILOT IDYEmSlll Ill day .Mon·Fn. $5.06 l'lr_ Teaching pos111on w1tn ot 12 Ughl typing & hi· Part time W/Peftec:t/Org s=·~tr.'/21 •. 413~· taatrcial rt•trtJ 330 W. Bay St. bond seniors. Cosie reqd. C.M. 546-32U Tim G...esman 642-4321 Tom ~UM ~-42•2 Fi A..,.U Pleal4tCalt Me I Oelill9f meats 10 home I 2'-?-3 yr Olds. ECE units 111g S6 25 i>e< hour Call sluUs FSHN ISLO. N B. ....,..,,.....,...__,.--:::~r::--::':""";".:'. 2771 Cost• Mesa th Ot noe Coalt Dally Mesa area use Pvt ve-HO ...... , It. M~hSPI~~ hr'b~ :~, tR€tXIL SPACE• plnaeat ADVANCED WINDSHIELD P~ot n'as an 1mmecs111e h~t~t~:~~imr~~: ~~~ Ct1t1 .... , CA 12121
...... ~h. ••50 ulll incl. Approx 1200 slf, xtnl ioc!Dta-nA:-rtlCI 4011 REPAIR Is looking for opening for lelephone PSharon 220-0224 be1ween 9am & Spm M-
2
F I
.,_. -.. motivated women end sales al our front counter. Or can Enc al S.2-•3 1 Brian/Tammy, 650-2063 near Newport City Hall.I di 1 I YEI ext 205
BR 2B" s::; Agt 673-5354 iCAAE for small mobile I men to nan e repa r Prior sales eicpenenc:e * II * ---:-:-:-:-=c=-=:----,-
N.B. 2 ... oceen view.• home 2 or 3 hours day or routes In your 1re1. Ex-helpful. Must like people we Need Drivers NOW JAllTOR ' Hatbor view penthou1e, I Corona Del Mar. prime evenin S.chOOI • lrl ok cetlenl oppor1uni1y and 1 n d be or g at11 zed. Earn according 10 pro-1
turn.'Pool. Jec. aaune. wt., c:orner retail on PCH. SS hou~· C M 722~1892 · lnc:ome. Call tor Interview 45wpm. t yping. Call ductlon. Avg exp'd dr1ver PIT evemng wC>f'l( lmmed
room. 24hr o•ted sec:.. 1385 sit. Ample pvt park · · · at 1-800-272-4AWR Peggy Blevins tor Inter· earns s1oofdey use own hire Hun11n~1on Beech
gar. $850/mo. 722·9345 Ing. Ownr 497-2351 CHILDCARE-Need re-SIH view appointment. econo c.tr l8yrs or'ov91 I area (714) 4 7·3118 I . r· . 1 liable. attentive care-UYERTI 714-642-4321 ext. 301. CALL 714/547 .5332 LANDSCAPE MAINTEN NPT C!esl 3Br 3Ba twnhm •118111 l al•Cll giver tor 2'h yr old boy In Esl'd CdM Retail Co. start-I ANCEIHANDYMAN •
nr t>Hc:h. Pool. IP•. ten· I 1 f S I our Corona def Mar home Ing In-house agenc:y Nds Clerleal ENTH USIA S TIC • n d I
nls. 25-35 n/amkr. $475 ....... " 29100• 3 dys/wk. Occ er-1 entrepreneurial '1ype Emf LML PISfT1lll mol•Vlled Person Friday. ~35 zrsc:r w~ IM:;;
631-5737 or 645-1553 • rands/eves Own c:ar w/1eleted ·~ & secty Small Newport BMcn Lew I FIT tor ch1109ractle in· 1 n ti on~ ~ P
Nwpl 8eh n/smkr 25·35 EXCELLENT oppty, i:::tve1 Eng·speakl~ non-smkr'. I stcllls. S18K + % ... bens Arm seeking FT lndivid-suranoe depl LI typing, =-rn:!,ed 0 Ret:~n:
prof fem lhr 1g 2BR 2BA stellon beauty salon, Refs. good pay 644-8839 Laur .. n 4!M·1142 ual. Cleric:a~ts r 8-5 Lisa. 631 -5664 c:es requ1red Own car &
c:ondo w/vlaw. Frplc, Money mekM In NB. prln· !uvE-out needed to watch &Pll•EIT IUIAIH quired. Wefd :i'ooe:'~ •EICRIW lfflCll* exper1enced Salary l
pool,5550760-1208 clptesonty675-1 215 7mo.babyg1rtMon-Friin ls em1-rellred c:ouple =~~t~ nSklffs a -AOMINOUTIES I open 675-2311 days,
PROF M/F N-amk 2Br 2B• ltajt, Tt IJMa 2914 ' NB. EngliSh speaklng.1l1e Some ex per le nee ... must. $6.SOhr. For appt. $1500/mo Confld re. I 67S-3311·Eves.wtcn<ls
BlkJo bc:h. Nwpt Shor... -F d h housettplng Approx-hrs mai ntenance CALL CALL Sherrle833-8191 sume toLIM .18Co<por· LEW.SECRn&H =-=19Ck gar $475~dep Pens on un IS un· 7:30-5:30+. 863-4273 837-9956 or 855-0665 ate Plaza• 104 Newport
11
__...
,. 2·0r g.2-6647 limited $$$ tor problem' ... ----. Beach CA 92660 IMne o IOe nas 1m .. -.. " I RE loans No credll or WOODBRIDGE. wanted l /ICLEll I v,wwr•'"" , 09et11ngtorCivL1t Secty ~R~OOM~,...,.ln_d...,.,bl...,.._mo-.,..bi"""le""'n_ome_ BK o k Mr-Lee 972-8818 xlnl babysitter, cook. & x hel Fast & aecurale typist tol IBM/Word Perfec;c exp
MANAGEMENT
JOIN OUR TEAM
MANAGING C A RRIERS THE DAILY P ILOT IS
LOOKING FO R TOP OU A UTY M GRS W ILLING l-0
WORK HARO WE OFFER XL NT BAS E SALARY
PLUS OVER $300 IN BONUSES EVERY MONTH.
GENERO US GAS A LLOWANCE & O PPTY FOR
AO\lANCEMENI .JOIN OUR TEAM & BE Et lGIB LE
FOR FULL M EDICA L COVERAGE. CREDIT
UNION, 401K PLA N IF YO U V E GOT WHAT IT
TAKES, CALL ERIC 642-4321 EXT 209 O R SEND
RESUME TO DAILY PILOT 330 W BAY ST .
COSTA MESA CA 92626 ~:·k~:1 ::· ~1~1 *WIDOW HAS SU ~~·-:-c:!rnrJ~~~:~ s=~c::rr::d ec':.11 p~ ::r'tr~~~~ gnfr;:n,:':~ I ~::i~u~ ~i;,~e g~r~
smkr $4s0/mo. 573.5100 for TDsl $10.000/up No l Reis. C111857-t81• I PP~fi~~:'lew2700Memorla port. 250-1150 1714)553-t808 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~f c:red., /no pen Call Den-a .... ~-·
Shr 3BR 2BA b•yfronl hml nlson Assoc 673-7311 . -t lffEITIOI CIUIHmlJ ewu--a•y LEW.SlHn&AY ·-----
Of) Bal "" $600 mo. Rain Guuer installat ns. _",_ Fnendty & casual gen prac -ulll9 Cati 714-673-7403 trlJlftlt T.D. Cll8ft ap STllEITSI Exp'd'installer 8~489 fM1n 1 yr ••P Xlnt typing hrm in HB 2 yrs CA legal
()( 213-926-8653 JIM RlbJle?51XTE CASH for .... l'M Sports minded lndlVlduals CQUNTEA PERSON PI T !~~!~ 6~:_j89{4 comm exp hec. sal depends on M'oto r Ro· u·tes Shr H<;pt Beh 3BR duplex. Trust Deeds! Prtvate •pedal Witla P•r1 ume work. $7/Hr Weekends & Eves eicp Cell quick we hlle
walk to beech, Prof M/F. party will pay escrow & oae of tbe plus. Call 645-5760 Yogarl Shop. Balboa Fun 4 llTI llTllLH the stress! a.7-60•1
S420/mo + s1oo dep. appr1tsal lees. 2 .. 0-3553 maay peta •HOST/HOSTESS Zone 714-675-3830 FIT & PIT. w111 traln. good LmUTill SECn *673
-
5014
* Aa• .. actatata act....tl... PM Shifts CHISE SllP .11111 , pay. Appiv In perso~· Lagun a Beien. FI T I __.,.....__..........,....-----r::1 If a ffz5 IA clualfted. Full time positions avail-Immediate .Openings! 1960 Newport Blvd c F/charge P11Fem1Cnm1
.... re -... able. Apply: , Seasonal & Career op-I mcmn &SSISTllT C1v 2 yrs recent & WP Ll. lal~a..t Olll'S l1ttur1at ptys. )<Int pay. World Small Newport Center Co I exp req. CPT pref. will
FOlN) •os 2131 Wnlc:lltt, N.B. Travetl Call (Refundable) needs a person with In· trlln Havy tran1C1lb1ng. lulatll/ Hct ltat n 1·518-459-3535 x P311 illatlve emblllon & basic tasl·paced but c.11sua1 of·
Z7H CllROPUCTIC SMALL Package dellvery buslnw skills A job w/1 f1C41 To $15/hr. 497-4•33 ""'IWB'l!!!~-~ .. =ll:i-11~11::-' IRE FREE Mon·Fn 12-4:30pm. Must Mure lor the amibthous LIYE·ll ClllPUIH
•H••.,.,wr n ISSISTllT have c.ar S4.75nour career-onenled Great For elderly lady Lo~y Corner VIEW ~ulle C I ' Front offiee. enthuSlastlc & -mileage. 631-04 16 salary poten11el Call hOme PM room Excel-W•t~~Li ~~I N:I Ben a : cheerful. good ofllce DEITIL FROIT 111•l&40-56e7 lenl PaY Call Mon·Frl Sign IP9Ce alli on w .. 1c11tt 142-1111 sJt111s. compefihve salary. 9em-Spm 714-953-154 l ..... •111 I FIT Incl. Sat. Con11c:1 Offlllr:-- -FAST growing messenger
_. C11ot 831-5664 V~. ~ MN!c:e seeks drivtlf's fOf UllTll&ICf /IRlftl
Good salary & benefits es-0 C & L A county Full or Good dnv1ng record_. Mtl
pecta.llJ IF strong 1n In-part lime Need your own 11melbenefrts Bond~Dle.
suranee & collecllons economy car • Insurance rnust haw references
Musi nave dental e•· and OIL. 568-1030 NB A/E ottt0e 675·6110 =:"~eatt!n:t!>'~,fu~~ FRHT IHI CLEllS Management
days em's 640-1 122 FT IPT Apply '" person. ClllECTillS?
1 Travel Lodoe. 1951 New· Oo you have strong con-IRIYEI port BtVd . ~sta Mesa necttons & influence With
For legal SUpPOrt groupl FHIT OFFICE •CR CEOs & ma1or corps? It
9am-5·30 Mon thru Fri For Plastic Surgeon New· ~~~~:Sh 667~~8r:: J.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Must ha~ own car ~rt. m Ho~ lmmed _
. Bad 953.9451 722-6006 or 760-6163 lfltoll
Ctraai! Tilt f1U! , I lllYH P/T HllEIH n Highland Foote.ere see«· lmii•iiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiiiiimjEXPERlENCE TILE Setlef' House'lro!Trepairs. paint, Mon & Wed tor Flower E
0 1 must Call 1ng exp'd trontlt>acll of·
available in
Westminster
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING ..
Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
and proof of insurance
$2.66 Per day & ROrywt aR11;~kReas650• 7P2rl1c:ea8 · d~~~~'.!'aryca~5~~177 730-1353 Shop in N.B. 852-9155 ~~deGe~riel. 966· 1955 flee personllet Challeng-es. "' • .,.. · CLEAN&EXPERT Ing Full-Time Start
That'• ALL you pev tor Showers-rtoors-c:ounter-•HANDYMAN• Lie:. Cal T· 158642 DRIVERS IHHll. IFFICE 1mmecs• G1eat benefits , , 311~.30-mWm~ -~Q~~~~.1s~~&~l~~~~~M 1 ••AOCMO~~·· 8-~M~~~~M~~G~~ng.~~~~~~~tt~s;~~,.~~~1~·~~~50;-~1~14~7~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In the Lie. Ref Pal 843·90•• \ Call Bruce 8.t7-0780 Quick & Careful T t38046 Blueprint, 23-e Flsc:ller. mensurate wiexp Jonn
Ask for Joanne Craney
SERVICE FENCES-GATESTreetrtm l LO RATES:--652-o.410 costa Mesa.S.0-4t7• 1s1-89101tter 6pm , OUR .F.'AMOUa I IH Dump runs. C.M.IN B. •GOOD MOVES• "" ~ "" lcloWlllP area. Jim Whyte, 642-7206 1 Low retn. Free Est DRIVER DIR CllLICAIE HOME REPAIR Cerpen-Uc T-151192 S.5-465• EC TORY P11no Speci•llll
velld onty for 2 & 3.,. Old try. plumbing. ren1ai • WORK PART TIME DELIVERING INCREASE YOUR REACH children We will 'iot1e1 property Rets 826-72"'5 l l8l&al -n-1.. program, 6am-6 30pm. Custom«s. Rlc:hard Sinor $600/MONTH M UST HAVE RE· 892-40n 247-549.t LT HAULING SERVICE (Lie Ina ~·> 645-7.808
....... ......, ' Ger/Yd Ctnups. Trees j LIA BlE VEHICLE. IN SIJRANCE, ftU.9•fA-~ met Jon 6-45-8192 T&J PAINTING lnl.!Ext. r ~Vniof-l;;;.i~;pR'i(~~llR'I"'~~ Bea1anyreuon1bleprtce A NO OMV PRIN TOUT MON-
For matlon iProf ~Ing FREE esls. tilt~, ltHty Lle.•45830 837-6761 DAY-FRIDAY 2-5 p M. w~K-CALL TOOAYll 7 dys wtt, 10 yrs exp. rel. f' --~.i;:;. ••• fll LllS Lie. Ina. a.2.5053* I at•n! PAINTER NEE. OS WORK 0 YS 7 A M
,... Your 1 •HOUSECLEANING• MISSING u nk-WtlY OlETS Int/Ext. c:etllngs. refin cab ENOS & H OU A 4 .
s.vtceOI ~ c STOM (llle rightwa ) donotwortc 6wttsS125.,25yruxp Refs 96.t-3837 NEWPORT/CORONA DEL MAR
Repr...,..'t""9 W~ty/bl-mo r9fs 673-~9 1 Free Into. 755-3238 VMI MICHAEL COX PAINTING & LAGUNA BEAC H A REAS ••2 ••21 .... •10 ••• ·~rntatatl $12/Hr . MATERIALS ~ ~ ... • SOIH-l·MI. Frtt ttf f Aetetences 675-4006
·-------· Jean &46·9896 63
1
•
7437 ~J~Ms;~~.,~~~f~ PAINTING & WALLPAPER CALL 642-4536 EXT. 205
PllUI... TIE OLW TUii REMODELING. 780-7333 REMOVAL. REl.IABLEI ASK FOR ROGER STARKEY Ile Callf. Public Utllf1iel Houaec:INnlng $1>9Clalilt • , 20 yr1 In eree. 642·5937 !!!!!!!!I
CommlMlon, REQUIRES Lie:. bond. rets. 780-7511 lt•1t11tt1a1 RAINBOW CIRCLE Melnt.1 !!!==== ""t efl uMd, hOUMhold BUSlness woman wiU take INT.JEST. QUALITY II I s
OOOdt movers, print t• ••tracttn lllnl care of your home. PAINTING EXP. 836-1758 A 1 POS1n I P.U.~. Cal T ~mbef. A.A. LXWfoN CONST. Loog Jef'm pref. Ret1. • limo I & c:haufftur I print Addltlon-Aemodef-Repelr Micki, 575.7390 TOM R~BERTS their T.C.f?. numb« In •II 20 ara e)(p Insured Expert. quaJ11y painting.
lldvertltement1. If you Llc•J:s227 · 64s..8439 a1t1 1t11• Cslm wrk. Call 875-2477
Nw a question •boul * IRsfXLUTloAs * VESCO PAINTING ANO
::, ~~~:,rmocv:r.: llh8L Faueet-Olap.•Wtr Heater• WAL.LPAPEAING. Qualtly Publlc Utlltlei 'com: Wetetproof ~tings ror D/W, Service 556-t730 worlt. Free Est 96t-83.t9 _.__.__ 11• •1r.• .. 151 dec:k1, bak:onlel, stairs .
.. _,,.,, ....... ..._ Ouat11y wor11 122..a169 Liu i• I •er L 'iii~~ii~ ._ ~·· I #~TR!Jm INteAIOR§ I ht Traiahat • -WllUN HANGING/STR.IPPING mm 'PAOBttas?is Fido Niii I VISA-MC 673-t 512
c:newtng, houM '°'"<!Of TQPPed/remove Cieenup 'GERMAN WALLCOVER· t:tp=1 ~-~4stN nu lawn/sprlnklr 751-3478 IN~ INSTALLATIONS
LAWN Malnt. Tree Trim & E1t1mat-. 511-8590
CIMn-Uf>. Reas. FREE ulu IWw'"""'"""-..~~~1 ..ia Valentin 64M1ot !~ .. ~~~~~~~·
Work in the ever-expand mg
Newspaper Promotion field If you
are self-motivated and like working
with teenage'rs. this may be the
opportunity you ve been waiting for
$400 PER WEEK
(To Start)
With Potential
to $1 .ooo PER WEEK
Insured Van. Wagon or
Large Sedan Is Required
CALL MA. STEVENS
(213) 4n-3163
FUN
AFTER SCHOOL
WORK
11 Years & Older
Work Evenings & Saturday
YOU CAN AVEflAGE PER WEEK s7500
OR MOREi
PHONE: 498-3321
All Traosportthon Pro•,d.ct
By An Adult Super vuor
'
NAM E
ADDRESS
CITY
AMOUNT ENClO SlO
•
1
)
4
.$
•
1.
HAS RETURNED!
8~c" t>1 POPIJ" Cl'"!l.''>C D ~·· "· .. "lt "'II •un Frid,.y Satur·
• .,. 1~, •--.; 'iu'lllch ro :s ,.. ~ ~H t c <'I 0" " tnt Cl<'U•l·l"d i\ds
' S1nct tn•s s a sprc.a otttr wt IMvt .J Tnu•sda)' noon ~adhllt'
tllnd ,uo. p•tPilY!Tlf'.,t tor l 11os Tn s 1s optn to "' pri11att party
-'C:ht t•st rs ror ~·cn.lno st not o~,., SI '>01pricr must~ hsttd
"' .JdJ <'Incl no aoort111dt1nn\ w 11 bf' 11cctPtt d Alt,ads w.n run
fC•·da~ Satu•day and Suf'ldd) T"'t •I' •S d S·llllt' minimum at 20C
p!"r 1 nt So ya.Jr low cost Olmu·A-Une .td Is only ...
S3.00. ,I I
M AIL TO ..
PHONE
ST ATC
OATH TO RUlll
'
ZIP
~o Co)m·
. •
642-5678
,_ ..
I '
I
) ,
l
J
s
r
0
n ,,
ll
G
I • 0 • I
aao Orange Coat OAIL Y PILOT I T~. October 4, 1tee \
------
h11t1 •t I .. lar!tratat IOI hi' az•t IUI .. ,.,..., SSH hraltut NH ,._ .... 1111 a.t. 11 •.... '*
';.:L!!\'J!lc?!l,Npt F~~S ~E~~~~~ ··~-,'11~1 IA~ :=J::ri!~= "~=n-Fl=fl':li' -:-._::-P._::::: :::!~~ c~.:i~ ~ I ....,. $400-$1000/WK Or *' ottet 1414588 12"·25" • lft ,.._.... Lincoln Mnufr, MftUt, = Ml'Q I ~ • «Ht.Iona. EJccept flr'9 A#/1'1 lft pert0n. N9wpon Pontoon boets. Stllnderd I,,.._, ..... Honda. rendl. ~·30pm. C: Ciient .... Phone tot IPP'· ~. 11'1 led& Bey •IA~12 Noon . MOVING beeut lg dtnlng, Of Cuetom bu1tt to epeca Vol&1 ••
J
u.a. 721-1200 673-4712 Dr .. ....._, lw:ft, CA •NO N~t1/Wkndt 3 ...,.., 8 cNIB. China on our ~•oona. 1 ~ 'l::fc:=t ~
llT&ULll,.I• 11m1&1lllZIM ~~ ;:~T~~''!"1'1no1 ::, s=:~1 ~2 1 •· ~:~~T't:1~ P1~ .. ~0~~ CLASSIFIED
64 .2-5678
Eap'd & chitec1Ul'al Hrm requlree tor owlt'9 MOft· • ---Of' llPPI. ..... .... 4hp electric lo 211.0""",.. • ,,._ ,_, ~
...._. ~~ ~ e11p'd Ad min. ~''°" geoe CO. In i M. Eaclllftt m1I U.111· 11• NEWI Buutlfut 44'1 glau QM outboWde. WNI bui6d LOS '13 5 a ~
Beedl. FT /PT PQeitlont w/stronft Seely/ Acctg pey a C>P9t'Y tor ...,_.d lal 8 m11 dlnlnCI table; t>oot<c..... =" t~your Of'~:::. full ,,_, ..,_ wN, -1 wN, ~ now. Sal & -comm. 1klllt . BM computer person. Call 646-2235 l ... 11'1 ti J ... 1112 BeulCMr v+deo <*'IWa. Billabong eo.t Co. plustl Int. c:t.n, 13100.
Call Karen at IS454503 beckground In acctg. & -••m .. Canon AE1; 722-1153 CALL 848-9318 646-43'0 ~rt 12·5 tor llPPI. word Pf'oceuinO· SaMlry .....~ TYPllT , ---'----------, ----------------, MQOI. Send r~ to: woril•/YOI. coord. Fut & accurate to enter ._....WI lfm t IC t llT& llLJI 0 Negus, 610 Newpof1 tor non Pf'oftl H.D MMI data on COMPUt• Wt" 2 maftr ...... trundte. new
Penn. PIT. New Nortfl Center Of 4'850. Nwpt Program co.ta Mee&.,.. tr8'n Fun otrlce nr airport $285 cmptte 840-8733
Laguna lhop. Pref mature Ben, CA 92te0 Of call Exp. w/~ Pf9f'd. . 250-1150 QUEEN SIZE MAnRESS r~ w/knowledge of Mon-Fri, 11·2 844· 1581 Some IUI*"· ~ helpf\H. & BOX, QUIL TEDI ~ed-Sat&l t~~ ~-llm p /T Pllll 22M224 S on ~tauM, ... I BRAND NEW! $155. ~ 417-2227 Clt)klng '°'bright pe(son , •• •ma FOf New Orange IM Ca CaN: 848-4293
* .... -· tor amall offa . Flex hfl. Ellper'd preferred Bring & ~et. Old T --appl'OIC 20 hrs/wk. Gen-OMV printout 850.oeee lrvlne. Drug & gift counter ...._ eral office aKp, 55+. WOfd • •WAITER/WAITRESS
penion J:IT, PIT. Must be P<oceaatno l llP Pf'•I but ... __..1....... •COOKS ,.,_.~. Store In wlll lraln. 955-0905 ••--••5• •BUSPERSONS
......,Beecn.CallM..f, ~ W/CM ~Mtvlce •tab-•HOST/HOSTESS
9-5 Mr. W..._ 71(M)111 Sollcttor Fund R*tlng. FT ~1pm, .:O°:"Js ~ :g~~~~EYR~ELI
Out of wortc? You"r• not out I & PT. Also dellY«y drtvw dally. Lori'• Kitchen. Apply at: 149'62 Sand
oftuca ·loolltoct...tlledfOI' Ad• & ticket•. Salary or 979-0747 Cany6nAve., lrvlne t m. 961-5260 Mr. K.
If you r e · 10 o r o lder. a 1ob as a newspaper
earner rrught be-just your ize_Jus.Lserut .in
this coupon o r ca ll: 642-4333. Rout es are
availab le now '
le so•ebody. le ~
Daily:Pifot carrier!
ANl tOUE wtllte wicker
turn.: 3 chairs, chaise ·&
couch Pine dry sink.
675-8869
ROCK OLA •. 5C Slot Moh.
1915 .Edlson Oise Player ... t-----------
..., "
lcMltll ....
1111 HllDI
2111L
2800mlles
Take.J>Yef Pt
711-1211
&
CREVIER
'II llW CLISE-HT!
SAYE Ill
& ffW EWIPlH If
HI PIE·IWIEI lftt
83 120. 5Sl)d.loldfd 1~418
15 32~ Al loldtO Jjfl)403 NEW Daybed White &
Brus. w/mattresses &
trundle Complete. $245
•840-8733•
15 6JScsi auto IOldfd 18PR 111 SIAMESE Kln ENS. 11 l6 J25n 5sod ~ ISOl415
wks, 1st shot, purebred. 11 125 Ssod "'~ 69793~
no papers. S 100-S 125.1 Designer gool: New white I 548•67 19 or 84~ 1965 ,a 32~ Ssod lo.cltd 1Hll0961 ~~=:ch~~o~t.s~~~fi~e llll&TllE IALTESE. 1 ~=~~: -E:!~:~~
$1000 760-3848 Shots & papers. Asking 135_3171 nlng 1m Mt, oak w/6 $400-$425. 543-6995
chrs & buffet Bronze !MOVING, must leave ram-1500 Auto Mall Or.
I chandelier w/6 lights. 3 1 1ly pet. M neYt Lab mlK, 2· I S an ta A na
drawer chest. 2 brau yrs. lie. shots. FREE to 55 Fwy. at Edinger --------~------------------~-P_~_N_B_1_5_9_.1_~_0 __ o~~~~~~~. OH•llOS
PlllltC NOTICE P\m.IC NOTICE Ptll.IC M>TtcE PUBLIC NOTICE POODLES 'R" PEOPLE Service Hrs Mon-Fn POOdle Pups. $250-$700 00 10 NOTICE Of' wllhOU1 covenant or war· '1 NOTICE TO 112660 ano me 1&11 csay tor IT•• Cup, Toy & Min.)I 7 am to pm
TMllTEE'I IALE ranty. e1tpress or 1mplle<l . ., CMDfTOfll Of' I filing claims by any cred1torl Home raised. 751·3465
YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T to toll•. possession or en-auut '"'ANlflfll Shall be-Ociobef 18, t988 al • . UNDER A DEED OF TRUST cumbrances to satisy the (S-. 1101 .. 101 5 00 PM wtuch Is the bull· DllCI attraatatl Sf , . ·G
DATED MAY 22 1987 UN-unpaid balance oue on the U.C.C.) ne$S day before the con-&055 er '"W LESS YOU TAKE ACTION note or notes MCUred by Notice IS hereby gr.oen to aummallon date specified
TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· anopwsuanttotlle ~or.creditora of the w11h1n l •bo~ 1 Owner--Lo Mllesl BM
ERTY IT MAY BE SOLO AT sale conferred in the abolle-named transferor(s) that a I Oiied. September 15, Bueschel Elk Hart Alto , A PUBLIC SALE 1F YOU jdetertbed dee<J ol trust b\Jlk transfer 15 aboot 10 be 1988 Su ophone Sacrltlcel
NEED AN EXPLANATION The total amount of t,... maa. on personal Pl'OC*1Y °""• H. ltilft, Krunt I . For detalls 722-1 153 OF N...,,_ BEACH OF THE NATURE OF THE unpaid balance of 1,... obi•· heretnalter delcflbed INn I ~nr-vn 1
PROCEEDING AGAINST gallon seaKed by I .... P'oc> The names and bus!,_ Publllhed OranQe Coast ffHI 140-14"
YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· eny to be SOid, 1ncklding ... ad<lreues of the intended Deily Pitot October •. 1983 6059 I 1540 JAMBOREE ROAD
TACT A LAWYER tlmared costs , upen-and l trlnSlerOl'S are BABYOOLL T307 0 7 d week On Oc1ober 17 11188 at advances. is $30,435 96 INC A California Corp . I KAWAI C.PNSOLE PIANO pen ays a
• 30 pm . Sherrill · L Smith. Tne name. street addrass 949 i Sean way, wesi: PlllllC NOTICE 1 W/bench. beautiful con-E7xtend~0Servi~~ H~r~
u Trusree °' Suc:onsor ano t~ number of minster c.itfornla 92683 -dltton. S 1200 Dys/Eve a.m • p.m ..... on-'
Trustee or SubS11tu1ed the trustea condVctlng the The IOc.tK>n In Callfom1a KU7'3 . 720-1704 Nwpt Bch ••BMW '84 3181, red.
Tru11 ... 01 that cert8'n Deed sate is Sherrlll L Smith. of the chief ekewll~ omee ACTTT10UI IU ... 11 a snr1 air loaded new
of Trust uecured l>y WIL-33971 Selva Road S0tl1 1 °' prlncipel bvtlnesa otfiee ~ I TATEMINT l1cyclt1 vi llreS 1 0.,;,ner xlnt Sa950
LIAM F WILLOUGHBY and ~50 Laguna Nlgllel. Call· I of the Intended tranalerOI' II . The following pertons .,. dlRi!s seA wlN eikE Top 497-S545 . EILEEN M WILLOUGHBY 1.0l'n••92&77(71•)496-0177 Nmeuabo~ • dofng bvameuas I 1 1 1 h I
and recO<ded on May 22 Dated September 7, 1988 All other buSIMtt names WESTPORT LAMBERT ~~;;311~ ~3~63~~g ·t~i MBZ '83 380 SL. fully 1987 as Instrument l'fumber SHEftftll..l L SMITH. At· and addreuea uted by the ASSOCIATES. a Calftorma · 4.30 ° 8 ~ loaded incl Becker radio.
117·2901125 ot Ott1t1al Re-lomeJ . ~tntended transferor Within gener8' partne.-Ship. 3151 • pm or • 1-ownr. 681( m1, Carolyn.
cords of Orange County win Publtshed Orange Coast thl'• yMrS lu t year.a tut Airway Avenue, Cott• Mesa.I terH lltctrtaiet 83S-2100 Ext 206. 8.30-5 under and pursuant to said Oa11y P1101 s.i>ternber 20, pall ao far as known 10 the Calllornla 92626 ' '
Deed of Trust sell at put>hc ~7 Oc1obe< •. 11188 'Intended translerff are Andrews Partners, Inc. a IOll ITOYOTA ·83 CRESSIDA.
auction for cash lawful T28 1 i nont CalllOl'nla corpore11on. 315 t 18 INCH ZENITH color TV Leather interior, sunroof. money o4 the vn11e<1 States Tha name(s) and business Airway AY9f'lue, Costa Mesa.1 • Lille new $6000 OBO
of America • cnruer s PllllJC NOTICE !address ot the intended CA 112626 no remote. cable 'seedy 1 645-2277/W 722-1550/H cneck p1ya1>1e 10 n od trantterM(s) n Dulle H Barry L Hoeven, clo By apptm only 200 ' .-"'Tll~
Trustee orawn on a state Of FICTTTIOUI ..,..... Shtn and Kyung s . Shin, Westpor1 Propertiea. 30llO 760-0370 AatH anhc
na11onat bar>ll 1 1t1te or led-NAME STA TUllllNT 18061 Son.Ind Or1"9, Hunt-PuUman St., Ste A, Cotta
8fal crect•t union or a Slate The fottowuig perton1 are 1ngton Beach, Callfornoa Mesa. CA 92626 1111 I II
or feoer11 savtr>g• and loan d0tng business IS 92647 Kevin M Green. c/o
association domK:lled in 11111 A) MBS (8) MEYER BUSI· Tnat the property P«ll· Gre.i ~I Com· Jlal;;tat ta
state at IN! main entranc. NESS SERVICES, 1550 nerit hereto 11 detc:rll>ed in pany. 4675 MacArthur i!!t aJ to the Orange County ~-B•)'l'de Corona del M.,. general u Bakety and 0et1 Court. SUlte 500. Newport -I, atr
penor Court 700 C1v1c CA 921125 and is tocated 11 30 1 Main e..ctl. CA 92660 17' Ao8drunner £Xc:;J;lt
Cef'lter DrlV8 West Santa I Elizabeth H ~ 28992 Stree1. BalOO.. C.lllOl'nla l'h11 businasa II con· condition $.495. 40 HP Ana Cal1lorn1e. all tne rlgnt. Lt Carrettrra. Laguna 1121161 ducted by· a general part· M U"" motor .,_feet .... .......,_......,,_......,.._.;;....~
lille and interest conveyed Nlguel CA 92677 The Business name used nerShip ere · 1 .,_.
to ano now held or 11 unde< S1epnany Meyer. 28992 by Mid transferors at Mid The 1egl1trant com-condition 875-6299
said 0..0 of Trust 1n tne La Carrelerr• Laguna 1oc111on 11 BALBOA menoed to tranllCt bl.ISi· IWll ti (
p<<>O«ty sllull90 on said Niouel CA 92677 I BAKERY ,_. under the hct11ious R.~fti'!Piiiti~~~~ County and Stete oe.c·~ Tn1a t>uain~ con-That -Mid ~lk transl« ts bvM!ess name or names 3f TtttwLER. aft cabin,
as ducted t>y a general part· Intended to be conaum-listed abo~ oo May Z: l988 time sflare rn exchange I
Lot 20 of Traci 5615.'u nersh1p ~~mated atthe ottlca of: NOR· Andrews Partners, Inc.. tor slip In Newport Beach.
per map recordeo 1n Book The registrant com-RIS & ASSOCIATES. INC , By Jonn K Andrews. Sec-631-~384 . ~ pages •2 1no 0 01 Mis· mer\C4ld to transact but!-4570 Campus Of'lve, Suite 9. nttary ce11aneous Maps rec0<ds ol ness under tne h<:llllous Newport Beach. CalllOf"n•• Tn1s statement wu flled ClaM1fled has 8'>eCial inlor-
191d Orange County bu11nas name Of nam. ~ on or alter October with the County Clertt of Of. matlon lot people with I Tne street aodress or listed above on nta I t9, t988 ange County on Septemberl ;:SDflt';.;..,•;,;;•;,;,' ,,-.1-.d.-s.._ ___________ ___
0111er common d"igna11on Ehzabeth H Meyer I Thia bulk 1ran1f« is sub-13. 19811 olsatd property 11purPQrted Thie statement wlS t'8d jeCI to Calllornla Unllorm F•1tal DO-IT-YOURSELF IDEAS to be 2300 La Linda P1ace with tne County Clerk of Of. Commeretal Code Section Published Orange Coast Newc>ott Beach Caltt0fn1a ange County on September 8106 oa11y Pilot s.i>temt>et 20. A READER SERVICE OF THIS NEWSPAPER
The Tru11tee hereunder 7 •988 The~ and eddress ol • Octooer 4 11, 1988
dilda1ms any t1•0thr1 u to f"11tl tha person with whom T291
tne COl'rectness or val•Olty of Published Orange Cou1 cialmt may be hied 11 NOR· 1
the •. treer addres1 shown Dally Pilot s.i>1emti. 13, RIS & ASSOCIATES, INC ,1 Huyour0041game 901f04J herein 20 27 Oc1ooer 4, 1988 •570 Campus Drive, Suite 9, groaning? Sell thOM clubs
Saki .... wilt be med• T280 Newport Beech. California ,...,ha classllled ad
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legal Department at the
Dally Pilot is pleased to an-
nounce a new ser vice now avail·
able l o new businesses.
We will now SEARCH the
n ame for you at no extra ch&rQe,
and save you the time and the
trip to the Court House in Santa
A na Then. o f course. after the
search 1s com pleted we wlll file
your fictitious business name
statement with the County Clerk.
publish onct!I a week tor four
weeks as required by law and
then tile your proof of pub li-
cation with the County Clerk
Please stop by to me your
fictitious business statement at
the Dally Pilot Legal Depart-
ment, 330 West Bay. Costa
Mesa. C alifornia. It you can not
stop by, please call us
at ~7 14) 642'-4321, Extenalon
3 15 or 316 and we wlll make
arrangements tor you to handle
this procedure by mall.
If you ahould have any further
questions. please call us and we
wlll be more than glad t o assist
you.
Good luck In your
new blJstnessll -
Otl1gt11 that spet1.11 en.Id 1n voui 111, oy tror.llf!tong
oM or more CROCHET KIDDIES ollered m 1111\ 15-PotQe
ou1debook P1tturPd •S AnnettP a 26 mth l1c1f1tno
c1otheted in skein$ ot whit• and yellow 4 ply yarn
Other pro1rtts 'nclude .a t2 inch Dulr~ G•rt and 17·
1nr.h Scolloe Strp Dy·\JtP •r\truthofls ,111d rnate11al
lists arl:' 1nc1uoeo tor each ol t~t 12 0011 pro1ec1s
F•n1~ned \1zeo; rilnQe lrom 12 10 27 inche•
s.fld dlttt to
()C1)I> Pattt111 O.,t , o eo. 2313
Vtn Nu1$. CA 91409
0 •M021 C10<h K,Od1tJ' S3 75
0 1 ll Pili• tJldlD~ S2 9S
1P1c tu11110 700 wooowor111no
And 111nd1c1111t PfOtttt51
SIAlt _______ /Ip _____ _
Price 1nctudts ht eta s l>Ott.avt
..
,,.
you'll find
A. NEW WORLD ,-
QF ADVENlURE!
ii1 the
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help. To care tor the homeless, the elderly,
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To help the community hd p itself O)r
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Your United Way gift does more
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which we ~y, "Thanks to you, it wOrks fOr
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THE WAY