HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-10-05 - Orange Coast Pilot-..
WEDNESDAY, OCfOBER 5, 1988
..
25 CE T
Man convicted of CM mUrder freed
After 7 y~ars in prison. lifer gets release
and invitation to lunch from retrial jury
By GREG KLERKX
Of .. DllllJ ..........
Af\er spending nearly seven years
in state prison. a Costa Mesa man was
acquitted Tuesday of robbinJ and
killing a hair salon owner in 1981 - a
verdict that one of the prosecutors call~ "incredible."
Ram1 K. Duwiche, 32, was re-
leased from Orange County Jail late
Tuesday and went home with his 22-
yeaf-<>ld wife. Tammie. Earher in the
day, a jury founJ him not guilty of the
1981 murdt!' of Carl Lawson. 31 , of
Placentia.
The jurors felt so strongly about the
acquittal that the)' invited Dal'Wache
and defense attorney Jade M. Earley Harbor Boulevard in Costa M~.
fora celebratory lunch laterthis week. which has since been con,-cned to a
''h's been a Ion' time. I've lost a lot ~oeo·s Restaurant.
of time, but I'm JUSl dad I'm frttif' The hairdresser's bod) was lound
Darwtche said upon fi1s release. He tf\e following da) an has car. 1.1.h1ch
had spent most ofhts incarceration 1n was left 1n a Santa Ana industrial area
Folsom prison. near Edinger Avenue and the Cos1a
Darw1che. a Lebanese 1mmigranr, Mesa Frcc;way. He had been shot to
and his former roommate, Sam death. police said
Monsoor. now 26. were charged WJth Following the k1 ll1ng both
the Apnl 13. 1981, murderofl.awson. Darw1che and Monwor Oed tQ the
Witnesses testified that they saw the East Coast. Monsoor eventual!\ sur-
two men beating Lawson in his 'car rendered and Dal"\\ 1che v.as arrested
outside a JoJo's Restaurant on in El Paso. Texas. after crossi ng o'er
from Mexico Some of Lawson's
Je"ell) was found an Darwtche's
possession. pohce said.
Neither Darw1che nor Monsoor.
\\ho v.as later acqum~ in a separate
tnal. disputed being in the car v.ath
La~son but each blam~ the other for
the shooting.. However. a 1982 JUt)
con\lcted Darw1che of first-degree
murder along with armed robl'>e~
The add1ttonal rO'bber) charge auto-
ma11call} ga' e Darw1,he a sentence
of hfe in pnsoP "1thou1 parole
Has con' 1cuon v.as appealed an
1984 but the 4th D1stnct Coun of
Appeal 1n Santa Ana uphcJd the
onginal JUT} dcc151on. But the state
Supreme Coun a'Warded Darwtche a
nev. tnal an 1986 on the premise that
the first Jury wa~ uncertain whether
Darw1che was the actuaJ ~ Juller or
simply aided and abetted Monsoor
Rose Bird was ct11ef Justice on the
high coun at the t1me.
"Earle) ~1d a vanety of evidence
not introd uced at the first tnal made
the difference in Darw1che's acoun-
(Pleue eee llAN/A2)
Pet Committee
severs.ties with
~aguna shelter
" Dodger catch.er Mike
Scloscla misses the ball
as Kevin McAeynolds
scores the Mets' winning
run Monday In the first
National League playoff
game./81
Nation
mcrease killings
of animaISSJ:>arked
mo~e. group says
Byl.ANCEIGNON
OfhOellJNe4 .....
The Pet Respons1b1lm Commn-
lff. tnc has scvemJ 1rs-lles-with the
Laguna Beach 4.n1mal Shelter. charg-
ing that the shelter has abandoned its .. pro-hfe" ph1losoph)
longer fund half the cost of fo.ing
animals and special med1caJ treat-
ment. Committee treasurer Marry
Kane sa1d the four-member _group
contnbutcd between S5.SOO and
S".500 per )ear to the shelter.
-· The committee's dec1s1on end~ a
long penod of somet1 mes strained
relations with the shelter In October
1982. committee members stopped
working as 'olunteers at the shelter
on Laguna Can).o.n.. Road.. 'Qycr dls-
agrecments wnh the management.
McMenon) said.
The commmee's dcc1s1on was an-
nounced onl) four days before the
Cit)' Counc1l ~ompleted rev1s1ons to
the shelter's guidelines fo r putting
animals to sleep. •
Shelter staff had asked that they be ·Police In Atlanta arrested
more than 350 abortion·
foes in what protest or-
ganizers have dubbed the
"siege of Atlanta." I A4
Index Annual blessing of animals
·The Re•. Kenneth Kraue bl..-pets of
madeata at St. Joaelalm 8claool d1irlat a
celelmltion of the P•n of St. Praad• of
Established in 1975 as a J01.nt
venture bet"CC:n the co mmmec and
the cny. the shelter gained a repu-
tatton for exemplar} treatment of
animals, v.h1ch were put to sleep onl)
if tbeY suffered severe illnesses or we~over1) aggrcsswe
But Gen McMenom~ pres1deni of
the commmee. s-n1d the cm-run
shelter has recentl~ been k1lhng ·more
animals than necessan
"It isn't v.hat v.c staned. so v.e
don'1v.ant10 be affiliated am more."
allowed to "euthamze" arumals_after
holdtng them for ~ ve work.mg days.
Tl\e council extended the period to I 0
calendar da)s. unless a ~net com-
pnscd of shelter \l.Orkers. an anl~al
control officer and a ,·etennarian
determine that It would be more
humane 10 put an anamat to sleep
Bulletin Board • A3
BuaJness A 7-8
Classified 86-8
Comics C8
AMlal. Some 150 •tudenta carted dot•. ca ta,
rabbtta, bamaten and. ln ee•eral cues. rata
to die Coeta lleea campu for the cenmony.
she said. -
The brcab. v. 1th the sheltet "111
n -:an lhat tlx com rn1tt('e ,.,lf no
sooner . .
The council also iacluded an
(Pleue eee SHELTER/ A2)
Death notices 88
Entertainment C7
Food C1-4
Mind & Body C6
-Opinion 85 Attack maY be tied to failed busine$s deSJ-
People .,.PS
Police Log A3
Public Notices 88
ByPAULARCHIPLEY _
Of tM OellJ,... .....
Sports C1-4
Weather A2
Weddings A6
Police are investigating the possi-
bility that a failed business deal 1s
lmked to the · beatings Monday of
John Wayne's daughter and a New-
port Beach malhonaare.
A1ssa Wayne. 32. and mongage beate apmst the P3' ement One-of
financier Roger Luby. 52. v.ere at-the suspects also sliced pan v.a)
tacked in Lub_y's garage a1 has 22nd through the .\ch1lles' tendon on
Street home after the couple returned Luby's nght an~lc
from a morning workout. They were treated at Hoag Mern-
in what appeared to be the v.ork of onal Hospital in '-e .... pon Beach and
hired thugs. the couple were ttcd up . released. A spoke man at Lub~ ·"-
and pistol whipped and their heads home said th1 mornrng that Lu?'
JaschY' s doggone good oµ
Costa M~sa' S tl-:r:ug patrol
8yJONATRANVOLZKE
Otlhe OellJ ,.... .....
In Germany. Jasch) means Joey. In Costa Mesa, Jaschy
means trouble for bad guys. especially those who deal drugs.
While the 5-year-old as one of three dogs -two Uerman
shepherds and a Malinois -in Costa Mesa's canine corps,
Jaschy is special. .
All three are trained to search buildings, look for"' missing
people, find evidence and help arrest suspects. but only
Jaschy's sensitive snout can smell drugs. •
Cocaine. Manjuana. Hashish. Heroin. Jaschy's nose
finds it all.
In a recent training session. an instructor placed a dab of
cocaine-the most difficult drug for Jaschytosmell-on her
finger, then on a piece of tape. She placed the tape on the
underside of a table when the dogs were out of the room.
Of eight do&s in the coucse. only Jascby found the tape.
said Officer Mike Ma1net. Jaschy's handler.
While shepherds and other breeds are used by dozens of
police agencies to find drugs or assist patTol officers, onl_y a
handful arc cross-trained for both duties, Costa Mesa Sg•.
Tom Wamack said.
The talent came after an extra month of training for
Jaschy. The dogs were bought from and trained by Alderhorst
Kennels in Riverside.
But not everythin& a dog needs for crosrtraining can be
taught, Magnet said.
baJI. With s6me dogs, )OU throw a ball to them and the~ JUSt
look at 1t and walk away ...
Even when the .dog 1s working. he thanks he's pla) mg.
Wamack said.
• In the ground-floor ret-esscs of the Costa Mesa Pollet
Ocpanment. Waf'J.lack and Magnet put Jaschy through the
paces.. ·
Wamcck took plastic bags filled .with vanous drugs and.
one at a time. hid them in cupboards and drawers throughou1
the station's briefing room and kitchen.
Magnet unlea~hed his panner and walked about the
room, pretending to hide Jaschy's favorite toy -an old sheet
tightly wrapped. hke an cu roll.
Think mg It was a playful game of hide and seek. Jasch~
took off at a gallop. He quickly found several ounces of illegal
drugs.
Although Tuesda) 's demonstration was onl) a training
session, Jaschy performed just as well wbik searching a Costa
Mesa apanment a night earlier.
Costa Mesa's three dogs arc spread over two nighttime
sh1f\s and a rchef sh1f\. -
The ckpanment needs a fourth dog. Wamack said. to
covCT all oflhe sh1f\s, but the SS.000 must be raised through
community donations.
The extra training means extra work for Jasch~ and
Maanct. When the team as not working with the depanment's
narcotics officers, 1t 1s on routine patrol.
"He's actt1ng used ... Magnet said. "Ht$ training IS not
wasted."
was "fine.. He dtthned funher
com mer1Lco__~
\\ ;l\ ne's mot er Pilar said Tue -da~ th.al her daughter v.as cmo11onal-I~ sh~nercd b~ the e>.penence. sleep-
ing tatfull~ and c~1ng "e'e~ 10 minu tes ... :\1ssa \\a' ne could not be
re.ached for comment toda~
Oellr .... ,._.,..., ....... w.-. The 75-pound shepherd, trained to control crowds and
arrest cnminals. has to be playful.
"They have to have a high play-drive," Ml&Jlet said. "If
you throw a tennis ball. thisdoa will aocrazy. He loves to play
Jaschy-w1th Officer Mike Dclpd1llo.and h1sdog ero
and Offittr Gerrv Stuklue and hts dog Nico -trains "cckh
(Pleue eee .JA9CHT I A2)
Officer lllke llafnet and s,t. Tom Wamack
wit.ta Jucby.
suspected slayer's alibis u:iJder fi~e
ly BOB VAN EYKEN °' ..............
The protttution in the •rial of a
man Keutcd of murdonna h11 11rt-friend'1 suspected k.tller anempt~
today to poke holes 1n a pouabk ahbt
mealed by !he deftnte Monday.
llicbard OaJe Wilton • .., II ac·
a.cl in the shoouna dath ot JefTrey
Molloy Parker. Parter was band shoe
in Ute head on the front ••Cl'I of his
mother's Costa Mesa home shOnl)
before midnl&ht Aua. 2. 1983.
Plrkerdatd Aua. 3. thuameday he
was to ha\le hid his pftlimalW) hcanna to detcmune whether theft was enou&h evldmce to try him on cbarss ihat hf mu1dc1ed Joan
McShanc Malls, whom Wilton said he
an1elleled to many.
Motlday Pa.,a leaneu and spnt
Knst,JaMSOn pve ttstimony andacat-
1na that W tlson was an San Francisro
on Au,. 2 and on the momanaof ""-
l.
Kris~ftllOl'I. a Phoenix a1rhne
pelot, llid he spoke to Wabon at his Oftke ahrft uma A.., 2. Has tele· ,._. m:onb .,. .• , calts ~
inldt to Su ff'UCllCOlt the umn he ~ ... _.. .. w,ttoa.
In IHI aoea .... i.abae of the wunae today, Deiputy Oistnc1 Al·
tO~) OouaJas \\ ood mall tn~ 10 trom his home an Phocn1~ lt..n t·
establish that Knsvanuon wu not Janqon ~1d he nttdcd to I l at
urc ,..hethef he hid actuall) Jpolen pho~ tttOl'd to f~n has memol)
to Walson when ht calkd bis office. Bennett 1esufied he had hrnlt111
Knsuan t0n tncificd toda) lhat he 1n San Franc15CO 11 a.m. on ~UI 3
had had e•ten51ve dealjnss v.1th and that W11JOn $bowed no "*" of
Wilson. Who Pft'Plttd hai \ll return stress or cd\1ust1on.
On one 1ftMant'e 1n Jul) lq 3. 1 8cnMtt •·as aJt0
Kn1tJ1nSSOn appeam' to hl\IC cross--t~amancd b
trouble rccatUna ~whether M had toda • • -
called Waboft ft'Oftl Ni-W Vort. ~ (fteue .. ALBll/A.I)
• \
' I
Poh~ sa~ 1~ t\\<rmmute attad.
was a message. but It remains unclear
what that message was. One of the
attacke rs .told Lub} ... , ou'rc (mess-
ing) v.uh the v.Tong gu}.'' pohce said.
Police spokesman Bob Oakle)' said toda~ tllat m'esiigators are loolung·
(Pleue eee BEATDfGS/ A2)
HBcondos
puto~hold
as dump
issue rages
By ROBERT BARKER
Of1MO..,Ne4Se.B
Rcque~ to change zoning to
perm11 ronstructton of 900 con-
dominiums on a 38-.acre dump con-
ta1n1ng hazardous materials ha'e
been dda~ed until owners determine
'how to 1c the matenals arc and how
much It will COSt tO remove them.
Esta mates to clean up the dump m
Hun11ngton ~ch. across from
E.d1son H1a.h School at Magnolia
treel and liam1lton '\venue. range
from S5 m1lhon to SI 00 million.
officials said Tuesda) night.
'\ on Propen 1es Inc of Hunt·
angton Beach. v. h1ch also v.ants to con truct commercial buildings on
61 ;.acres Of the Sile. IS see.long zoruna
ch3nges to finance cleanup costs
Tucsda~ the Planning CommlSS1on
put off a pubhc heanng on the matter
until Ott b
The landfill. which was the dum~
mg ground for 011 v.-astes and related
produC'ts over the years. ~as the target
of a suit filed last 0ct()b(r by the
uth Coast Au Quality Manqt'-
ment D1s1nct. which imposed $7 3S
million an fines 1&11nst Ascop for
allqcdl) perm1tt1na ofTms1ve fumes
to csc~pe from the around
1Con compan) officials.. who
bought the $1te in 1983, filed suit in
I Q85 ap1nst a dozen compe.nia that
allqcdl)' dumped toxic matcriah at
the location. The suit 1s unretol\'ed.
Plannin.& C'ommiu1oner Tom
L1Hnaood said toda~ that a malhoa
cubic yards of din may have to be
rcmo' ed. Cost! tanee ft-Om $5 to SI 00 per cub!( )'atd. depmdi.Qs OD lilow
tOJtl( the maimal an.nd hoW ferit llm
to b( transported. he said.
Chns Koerner. a leftiar c..-a
for the bet.au Corp. of Sam 1•10
that's ptrfonned 1at drillillp. ...
C'1t) CWl.I oftkiats McMldlJ_ilillll
that a &abontoey tsa~....-.
from lbt sew. Koerntf laid. t~ .._. .....
• (Pl• ..... _,
-D ..
a
I
' I e
p
l n •
•
AS Or~ Coatt OAIL Y PILOT I Wedneeday, October 5, 1988
Warm and clear when f Og lifts
An lncteuingly hNvy !eyer of !Mtlne elr will mean mote i.te
night and eerty morning fog owr the next f9w deya. but Southern
CelifomW lhOuld be werm and dear moet of the rnt of the time,
the National WNther s.rvlc:e Mid today.
flit ._.W .. tMI .,_, let I, .. ,~. Oe/ltMI t
• •
The tog 19 expect.c:t to be pettla.llatty hNvy over aome
lni.nd valley ar ... tonight and Thursday morning, torecaaters
said. But It thOuld fade by mid-morning ... It has tor the put
MY91'9' daya.
Along the Orange Coast thefe wlll be low clouds night and
morning floura with local areas of deoee fog over the Inland
valley.,..., otherwlM falF through Thursday. Slightly cooler
d1ya. BMch lows tonight 55 to 60. Highs 86 to 70. Valley lows
tonlaht 54 to 58. Hight 78 to 86. • • • ~rom Point Conception to the Mexican Border -Over ·
Inner water•. south to southeast winds 5 to 10 knots night and
morning hours through Thursday becoming west to southwot
10 to J5 knots durlnv afternoons. Seu 2 feet. Southwest swell 3
feet. low clouds night and' morning hours.
U.S. Temps .....
71 SS
41 ,31 71 ...
83 43 .....
71 44 ... 41
51 44
81 42 at llO 69 47 » ,.
~ r. Calif. Temps.
1' 83 Hlafl, low fO< 24 ~ending et $ p.m St 50 e.il!Wlllleld 12 5t
15 49 Einll• •1 5$ .. ~ ,,_ tO 61 n 7I Loe~ 78 61 ~ 4 7 OelcJencl ., $7
I 12 : AeClwooCI Clly 71 51
57 41 s.cr-10 &4 51 ee eo s..,_ 10 55 Sen Diego 71 63 ff 46 Sen Ftenci9CO 72 51 49 40 SenJoM 71 •1 14 44 ~Lule ODllPO ff 55 13 5:1 Slodtlon 11 e1
:: :: High. low lot 24 hc>url ending el 5 pm a.retow ff ee 71 60 8-lmonl 95 65
81 44 Big a.er 74 40 .. .. llWIOP .. 48 se 35 ~1'9 101 et ~ ~ Celallnl 64 57
.. 51 eutv. City 72 62
Extended
~ nlOfll anc1 rnomno 1ow delude -fog mainly *"II IN coaet. Ot,.,,.. tw. Wwmw Silluroey Ind S\lndey.
HigN -10 II the.,_,,,..,
Surf Report
LOCATION Im IMAN HunltnglOll 8-:11 1-3 , ...
Alvw Jel'Y. Newpotl 2-3 ,.., 40lfl SlrMI. Newpotl 2-3 ,..,
22nd 6= ~ 2-3 ,.,, Balboe w 2-3 ,..,
L.-1·2 l>Oot Seil E:Mmente 1·2 fell
Wlll«\em9:15 Swell dlrecllon;South/Sout"-1
Deir ..... ,......., ... s.uu
Driveway of Roger Luby'• home where he and Alua Wayne were attacked. ·
•2 37 SS 42
•1 40 7t $) 81 ,.
$1 ,.
53 30
55 41 44 21
M 51 511 42
38 21
76 44
50 38
1.--. 12 50 '2 42 Long IMc;fl 73 eo
L.A. Altl)OM .. 81 Tides
NewPof1 8Mcl1 es e2 TOOAY
BEATINGS, BUSINESS LINK SOUGHT •.• ~ ~· 58 37
75 '50 eo 13 58 41 57 35 17 73
73 43 87 31 ,, 43 ., 75
Smog Report' Onterio M 55
Pllm ~lnOI 103 70 PIMdeM II 64 ~ .. 64
s.cono iow 1:15 p.m. 2:4 s.con<t lllQh e:M p m. 5. 1
• TMUR90AY From Al
' into both the personal and business
'... contacts of the\ 1c11ms.
Nothing was taken. and robbery
was ruled out as a motive.
Luby and Wa yne. the eldest daugh-
ter of Pilar and John Wa)ne. have
been dating for several months and
are well known in Newpon Beach
social circles. Both arc going through
divorces.
But police believe Lub> was the
pnme target of the attack. "The way
the attack went down. It looks like she
(Wayne) was in the wrong place at the
wrong ume." said Sgt. Mike Jackson.
Among the leads police are in-
vestigating 1s a failed real estate deal
involving the one-time Broadway
department store on Wilshire
Boulevard in Los Angeles.
The collapse of the deal forced
ALIBIS ...
From A l
Wilson. a San Francisco acc~un
tant. was charged wnh the cnme
based panl) on statements by his
brother and his brother-in-law. both
of whom told police 1 m est1gators
they heard Wilson confess to the
murder
The brother-in-la". Roben Hale.
has since recanted much of his
tesumon). although he has stuck to a
statement that he o"erhcard Wilson
boast to an attornc) in San Francisco
that he killed Parker
In recent testlmOn) at the mal,
however. Hale said he did not believe
Wilson was telling the truth when he
boasted of the slaying.
Hale also testified that Wilson ..-..as
in Southern California Aug. 2.
The trial 1s expected to last several
more weeks.
Luby and his estranged wife. Sassy.
into bankruptcy.
Sassy Luby, a real estate sales-
woman now living at the Balboa Bay
Club, declined to comment this
morning.
She reponedly has been showing
the SJ million home to interested
buyers. Written in concrete at the
base of the driveway 1s the message
"Sassy loves Roger.·
According to the Associated Press.
coun records show Luby agreed to
purchase the Broadway building in
May 1985 for 5_4_5.million.
He then arranged for a $56 million
loan from Savings Investment Ser-
vice Corp. to conven the building
into a 500.000-square-foot office and
retail building.
SISCORP turned to several other
financial finns to bac~ the loan. but
was unable to secure more than SI 5
million.
Luby then decided to assume the
risk for financing the balance. but he
too was unable to secure the n~ed
funding and the project collapsed in
Sef.tember 1986. .
San Beawellno tO $1 SanlaAhe 7e e1 Santa ..,.. 611 $4
Sanla Clul 73 $) Sanla Metta • 7 $)
Santa Monocl M 62 T"-Valley 7t 3 I Ton._ 73 5t Wellwood • $1 51 3' Y~Vly II 47
n July 1987. two of. Luby's cpm-
panies, Founh and Broadway As-
sociates Ltd. and RLW Realty Ad-DUMP CLEANUP STUDIED visors Inc .. filed for reorganization • • •
under Chapter 11 of the federal · ll'rom Al
bankruptcy laws. pits in the dump appear to be said'. ;;;
1 43 am 0.3
1:15 ..... 4 7
1:47pm. 20 Second hlgfl 7 36 p.m 5 2
Sun 1941 toctey et e·30 P m.. rte. Thur*Y 111 8:50 •. .,, enc1 •• a1 8 21
P·:oon -. 1oe1ey 111 4 oe p.m.. ne.
Tiuldey •• 3:00 a.m. ..0 ..... 4 35
p.m
The seller of the building sued Luby shallower and Jess toxic than antici-The city's planning staff has rec-
for defaulting on a $4.5 million pated. ommended a medium-density pro-
promissory note. Luby had made an Koerner made his statements at a ject of 450 condominiums. just half
~ ( EOISOH ~ COMM
EDISON ~
H .. S.
initial J?!Yment of$500.000. City Council meeting Monday, where the 1otal proposed by Ascon. to offset Luby in tum has sued the lending a zone change that pennits the cleanup costs.
institutions that were shareholders of drilling of three oil wells was . ap-··.;rhe repons I have read clearly
PARK e
H . .moon • A>
SISCO RP for fraud. proved for nearly an acre of the site. ·-sho~ that a high-dens~tr residential _____________________ ml!_____ A request by neighbor ~v~~ly • pr~Je~t ~f9Q6 homes-w1! not work at
Titus to make Ascon carry hab1hty this site. Livengood said.
Qua k e.r e ported in San Ferna ndo insllrance for residents who may Increases 10 traffic and impacls on
become ill because of the eanh .the are.a's sewer system are ·•strong
disruption will be put off until the arguments" against the project being
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A small
quake in the mountains of the
nonheast San Fernando Valley
today. barely relt by residents. was
apparently the second a~ershock of
last Sa1urday's quake. se1smolog1sts
said.
,;We gO't abQut five calls around l company returns for a conditional located in a predominantly low-
a.m.," said police Officer . Ka1hy use pei:mi.t. . density residential area. he said. Marcum at the Foothill Station. A s1m1lar request by Titus t~ .. Nobody felt 11 here... designate net profits from the 011
~ operations for cleanup activities also At 4:03 a.m. Tuesday. the same w11J be decided at the t1me. offic1als area 20 miles nonhwest of downtown
was Jiggled by a small temblor that
A major C'oncem . he said. is that a
traffic study for the area was done in
February and not in the busy summer
months. The area 1s muated near the
beach.
Several people in the Sunland and
Lake View Terrance areas telephoned
police to repon feeling the 12:5 I a.m.
quake. but there were no repons or
damage or Injury.
re_g1stered 2-.8 on the Richter scale.
Finn said that was also believed to be
an aftershock of Saturda} 's 10:56
a.m. quake. MAN CONVICTED OF MURDER FREED •••
The temblor registered 2.7 on the
Richter scale of ground mouon and
the epicenter was four miles nonh of
Sunland in the Angeles National
Forest. said Roben Finn. spokesman
for the California Institute of Tech-
nology in Pasadena.
"It was probably an aftershock of
last Saturday·~ 3.5 quake m the same
area." Finn said.
The Richter .scale IS a gauge or the
energy released by an eanhquake. as
measured by the ground mouon
recorded on a seismograph. Evef)
increase of one number means a
tenfold increase in rtl}gnitude. or the
helght of quake-generated shock
waves recorded on a seismograph.
Some expens say the actual
amount of energy released may be 30
times greater. I
From Al
tal. One major piece of evidence not Conley, who prosecuted Darw1che's
available at the first trial was the first triaJ, could not be reached for
murder weapon, a handgun owned by comment this morning.
Lawson that Darw1che claimed was Deputy District Attorney Mel
tossed into the ocean by Monsoor Jensen. who prosecuted Darwiche
after the murder. Monsoor said during his _second trial. said he was
Darw1che kept the gun in order to "amazed" at the jury's verdict.
threaten him. "It's incredible that Monsoor and
About two years aio. the gun was Darwiche were the onl y two in the
found by a recreauonal diver off vehicle with the deceased and he was
Newport P,1er. exactly where beaten severely and shot two times
Darwichc said 11 would be. Earley said -and 1hese two are free," Jensen said.
tests indicated that the gun had been "He (Darwiche) got on the stand and
fired twice. as Darwiche <.1aimed. and apparently made a sympathetic wit·
yeaFS, whom he met at Folsom while
she was visiting another inmate.
"He {Darwiche) isn't bitter at the
system. ' Earley said. "He just wants
to be able to get on witfi his life. He
feels he has a new lease on life and he's
glad this nightmare is over."
Woman thrown from
car on 405 Freeway
SHELTER LOSES PET BOARD BACKING ••• not five times. as witnesses testified. ness for the jury." A tractor-trailer rig sideswiped a
Other e\'ldence also helped Earley said vinually all of the car and triggered a three-vehicle pile-
Darw1che's case. Earley said. Some of evidence in the case now points to up on the San Diego Freeway in
the jewelry fou nd on Darwiche when Monsoor as the killer. But because he Fountain Valley that left one ~rson F~mA l ·
amendment that will allo..-. sheller
workers to treat animals for minor
illnesses after 7'!. hours and put them
up for adoption after se"en calendar
days.
;\t the urging of Councilman Roh-
en Gentry. the council added the
restnctton that an animal beha,.
1oralist appro .. e of all k1lhngs ·
"The onl) wa~ ~ou should put an
animal down 1s because of its health.
behavior and in some cases its age ...
Gentl'} said.
Although McMenom~ praised tht'
council's actions. she said shl"'lter
employees _100 oftt•n determine that
an animal should be killed
In 1987. 86 dogs. or 50.8 percen t or
the canine popula11on . ..-..en.· put to
sleep. In the same )Car. 79 uncla1mt'd
cats. or 47 percent or the populat1on.
were killed. according to shelter
stahst1cs. From January to June of
this }Car. 22 unclaimed dogs. or 32.2
percent. and 53 cats. or 69./ percent.
were k1Ued.
Dcput> Chief of Pohce James
Spre1nc. who oversees the shelter.
said th'tre are explanations for the
high numbers. The statistics shot up
1 n 1987 when the shelter was forced to
kill 20 dogs that had been abused by
an owner. he said. Also. numerous
ailing p ts were killed to control
contageous diseases.
Spreine and shelter workers argued
that overcrowding can be cruel to the
animals-and that animals can gocra1)
when penned for long periods. A!.
such. the sheller had a policy of not
··warehousing" animals that had little
chance of being adopted.
The shelter had asked that the he was arrested didn't belong to was acquitted. Monsoor will likel y injured Tuesday afternoon. officials ordinance include four criteria for Lawson. who was known for wearing remain free. he said. said.
putting animals to sleep: when th~ nashy and expensive jewelry in ··All of the evidence points to him According to California Highway
are injured or sick. when their public. Earle y said. (Monsoor)," Earley said. Patrol repons. a truck driven by Jose
"adoptabilit).. is doubtful. when A Texas border patrol officer also Darwiche was described as a model Sanchez, 28. of Santa Ana hit a
their is overcrowding or when the tesufied 1hat Darw1che had a bus prisoner by Folsom officials, Earley Hyundai in a southbound lane of the
animal is at an advanced age. ticket to Cahfom1a and was planning said. "They couldn't believe he freeway near Harbor Boulevard at ~ut the council. again at Gentry's to surrender to authont1es at the time belonged in prison1" he said. I :20 p.m.
urging. eliminated the overcrowding of his arrest. There isa possibility that Darwiche The Hyundai was spun around by
stipulation and changed "adoptab1h· "The DA who tned the first case may return to his old Job m a local the impac and its dnver, Susan
ty' to animaJs with behavior prob-did an amazing Job of convincing the mcat-~cking plant. Earley said. Hermann. 29. of Huntington Beach.
I ems. Jury of ct'nain things despite a g(neral Darw1che's employer was supponi ve-ejected. ·
The shelter also asked that it Ix-able lack of evidence," Earley said. "h's of him throughout both trials. Earley Hermann's car was hit by a van
to charge a Oat fee ofS75 for each dog not his fault. He just did his job." said. In the meantime, he plans to driven by Gabriel Bauer. 27, of South
and cat to cover the cost of neutering Deputy D1stnct Attorney John spend time with his wife of three Laguna. or spay1n~ shot~ deworming and a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
flea bath.
The council decided to postpone action on the fee to determine if the
cost can be lowered by local veterin-
arians donating some of their services
to the shelter.
JASCHY DOGGONE GOOD1DETECTIVE ••. Flowers for Fall From A,#
with police canine crews from Santa
Ana and Newpon Beach.
The three Costa Mesa officers are
due to return to the R1 vers1de kennel
with their dogs within months for
more extensive training. Wamack
said. '
The officers don "ag1tat1on suits"
that resemble suits of carpet. In the
suit. the officers take on a threatening
stance. That's what sets off 1he dogs.
~~~~E Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFICE
~ WHI 1111 SI COii• Mesa t. ..
the sergeant said.
"If he's searching and finds you. as
long as you're not running or fiahun~
he'll JUSt barlc at you and guard you. '
Wamack said.
"Personalities don't mean any-
thing to the dogs. They don't g~t mad.
He can be barking and guarding you
whtle he's working, but two minutes
laler he can be playi ng ball."
But never. never mess with his
handler. Wamack said.
"He's got a \,,.ck instinct and a
erotcction m~" Wamack said.
'Jaschy's the pack and Magnet's his pack leader."
Magnet, a police offi cer for three
years. said a I ifelong love of dogs,
panicularty shepherds. drew him to
the canine corps when it formed in
Costa Mesa a yea r ago.
••Jaschy's a happy dog." he said,
bnskly rubbing the shepherd. "He's
my panner."
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YOL.11,NO.m
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The same 24-hour answtnna service may be
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Tell us what'• on your mind.
Set11tel91 llftCI ~.., ., '°" do no1 ·-'°"' COO,llF71111 -~
10 • "' "'° 'fOl+I' COC>J ... ....._ ..
Clrculetton
t 111, .......
Moel 0r-..c-11 .,_
'
a bouquet
for
the new season
,
Insurance baliot
initiative debate
slated in Newport
A debate on the various auto insurance
initiatives on the November ballot will bt presented
Thursday at a cocktail reception hosted by the
Roundt.able of the Orange County chapter of the
American Jewish Committee at the Villa Nova
Restaurant in Ncwpon Beach.
Speakers will be Richard L. Kaine, a vice
president of Uniguard Insurance, and Jeffrey C.
Metzger, an attorney specializing in insurance and
personal injury litigation. •
The event 1s scheduled from 6 to 8 p.m. and will
include hors d'ocuvres and a no-hos\ bar. There will
be no admission fee and no solicitation of funds. Call
660-8525 for more information.
Supervlsor to speak
Orange County Supervisor Gadd1 Vasquez will
discuss his experience at the Republican National
Convenuon at Thursday's breakfast meeting of the
Republican Business and Professional Women.
Federated. at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in
Costa Mesa.
The meeung will began at 7:30 a.m. with
breakfast ser:ved at 7:4-5 at a cos ofSLO per--~on.
Reservations are required and mi)' be made by
calling 852..6208.
Parental semlnar set
A seminar on teaching children how to become
successful will be presented Thursday evening by the
Irvine Fam ily Services Program at Nonhwood
Community Park, 4531 Bryan A vc. in Irvine.
Laura Rydell will conduct the workshop wh ich
focuses on positive di scipline. The cost is S25 for
individuals or $30 for couples. and reservations are
bemg ta.ken at 660-3920.
Gershwin dlsplay in Mesa
An inscribed. signed photo of the Pulitzer Prize-
winning composer G~orge Gershwin will be on
display through October at the Gallery of History at
the Amencan Museum of H1stoncal Documents m
the Crystal Coun of Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza.
The gallen 1s located on the third level of the
Crystal Coun and adm1SS1on IS free. Also on display
arc over 200 documents signed by prominent
history makers.
PR seminar aboard yacht
The Orange County chapter of the Public
Relations Society of America will hold its annual
Professional Development Semioar Thursday
aboard a luxurious yacht in Newpon Harbor.
Richard Warner, execu11ve vice president of
public affairs at Securi ty Pacific, will be the keynote
speaker. The session is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m., followed b> a cockta il cruise.
Health lecture planned
The American Institute of Health and Medicine
will offer a free evening seminar on optimizing
health through diet and exercise Thursda> at 5:30
p.m. at 3200 Park Cen ter Dnve. first floor. in Costa
Mesa.
Dr. Leigh Enn Connealy will conduct the
presentation. "h1ch will feature speakers. slides.
calorie worksheets for -weight loss and other free
literature. Call Joe Prick1tt at 66:!-2600 for reser-
vations.
Bike club to meet
The first fall meeungQfthe South Coast YMC ~
Btcycle Club will be held Thursda) at 7: 15 p.m. to
discuss deuuls for the first group nde Oct. 22.
Club membership 1s free to' Y members and
offers -weekend ndes and other group cycling
ac11v111es. Call the Y MC ~ at 495-0453 for more
information.
Irvine tax workshop
An economic update and 1ax strategies work-
shop will tx· prescn1ed Sawrda} at the Hollda} Inn
in Irv ine b} Consolidated Financial Management
Corp. The presentation. from 9 to 11 a.m .. will include
a free breakfast buffet at 8:45 a.m. There 1s no charge
for the workshop and rcsen ations ma} be made b}
calling 859-7368.
CALENDAR
Wednesday, Oct. 5
No meettngs scheduled
Thursday, Oct. 6
No meetings scheduled
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT !Wednesday, October 5, 1988 AS
Mesa rejects agreement with Arnel
By JONATHAN VOLZKE °' .. .,. .........
The Costa Mesa C11y Council has
rejected a development agreement that
would have gi ven the Arnel Development
Co. 20 years to finish its tvfetro Pointe
project in txchange for Arnel's early
payment of S2. 7 million m traffic im-
provements.
Councilmen Dave Wheeler and Peter
Buffa opposed the agreement, 'as did
Councilwoman Mary Hornbuckle.
Through the agreement. Arnel sought to
protect tlle final phase of its three-phase
project. Construction of the first phase of
the business complex is complete and
work on the second phase 1s under wa~.
The pro1ect is nonh of the San Diego
Freeway and west of &ar Street.
.
The final phase ot tht> se"en-bu1ld1ng
complex has bctn approved, but Arnel
must finish the prOJCCt within 15 }'tars and
wants 20 >t>ars to complete the prOJt>Ct.
Amel repre~ntall\e David Ball said 1be
sro.,.,1h-control·1n1t1at1ve on Costa Me~·s
ballot this o~ember. Measure G. was not
behind the request for a development
agreement because the project already had
the city's approval.
"The agreement. from our '1ew. 1s
'simple." Ball said. '"The offi ce market
today is overbuilt and v.-c're not sure how
long 11 will take to build out. In an11c1-
pat1on of a difficult economic climate. we
asked for a guarantee."
In return for the agreement. .\rnel
proposed to pa} $2. 7 mLlhon for traffic
improvements as man .. as se' en }ears
earlier than the companf' would wnhout
the accord The cit) alread) charges
de"elopment fees for traffic 1mpro,e-
ments. much like th<' proposed measure
But Whet>ler argued that the cny would
not &ain an) thing from the agret>ment that
\\Ouldn't come without 11.
.. I'm against developer's agretment!.,"
Wheeler said "I don't see what 1he c1t) is
gaming and v.e're t}tng the hands of future
councils ..
Hornbuckle said she saw the advantage of' getting mone) up fiont. but \Oted
a~m-.1 the agreement becau'iC she oppo<,e\
Metro Pointe.
Ma)or Donn Hall and Councilman On
..\mbur"ge) supponed the accord
"I su re v.ould like todn"e on a road v.Jlh
more lanes than cars." Amburgt>) said "I
OB ITUARIE S -~
thsnk that's "hat th1 1~ going to do "
Buffa the ~wU'lg '01e on the issue. did '
not co mment as he cast the' ote that ~1llt'd
the agreement.
The dec1s1on does not afTt>Ct the prOJCCl
l ndcr Pha!>e.:? 1mpro' cmcnts. Arnel mu.st
complete 1mpro~emen1s on 1n1er~tion!>
at Baker 1m·1 and Fa1rv1ew Road. Bristol
treet and ~untlov.er .\ venut> and Bear
Street ar\d Paulanno.
Under thr final phase. 1hc intc:rsect1on
of Bear S1rce1 and unOower '\' enue must
be 1mpro,ed. a northbound offramp from
the an D1ege> f rcewa) at outh Coast
Dn'e must be_Jbu1h. and the Fa1f\1ev.
Road ofT ra.nPs from 1he San Diego
Free"' a) must be w1d<'ned
All 1old 1ht> 1mpro,cments a~ IAOl'th
nearl~ $5 million ..\rne'I ollic:1als said
t..
Circle K stOres face
court action over
squalid conditions
Harp ld Willats, owned
-L-agtina Riviera H
Harold P. W11lats of Laguna Beach thl' ov. nt•r and o~rator ol the Laguna
Rn 1era l:iotel for 40 ~ears. died Sept 30 at tht :igc vf 01 •
• V.illats.v.hov.asbornNo' :!~.I 94 v.a,lung.tlll'l'1nthl'L.tgunJBe<1 t han·a
He v.as a member of Knights Templar (Mastin 1 and lht' Laguna Beach Rotary Club
v.a~ a founder of Opera Pacific. the Moulton Tht«Her and tht· Laguna Bearh
Beaut11ica11on Council and was a founding member ut the <.cn1er Cl ub.
By The Associated Press unsuccesstul in .ittl.'mp1s to negot1atl' a
settlement "'•th the district attornc) ·s
office. A preliminary 101unct1on has been
issued in Orange County Superior Court
against the Circle K convenience store
chain alleging th e business has failed to
correct unhealthy cond111ons including
rodent infestation· and improper food
storage.
A hearing 10 consider a permancn1
inj unction "'as schcdukd for this morning
in Cent ral Superior (oun
He 1s sun 1ted by h1s'wife. Ph~ Ills daughtl'r Mani~ n Pcar\on !>On. Brun·. son-
in-lav.. \' 1ctor Pearson. daughter-in-lav. '1.1anl) n V. ii lats and Ii' c grandchildren
A suit tiled .\ug. 3 b~ the d1stnct
attorney's Consumer Protection Un11
seeks up to $:!.500 per' 1ola11on or a total
of at least $400.000
t>.temonal sen ices" 111 be held at 4 ~(J pm Ott 1-1.tt the LagunJ R1' 1era Hotel
Memorial contnbut1ons can be madl' to a chant~ of the d"nor·s lho1n·. the fam11'
requestl'd.
The inJuncuon. issued Tuesda) against
the Phoenix-based chain. allows the coun-
ty distnct attorney's office to impose
penalues 1f violations persist.
.Tht> count} ·s Hcahh Care ~gene) rncd
Circle K stores 63 times m 1987 for
alleged v1olat1ons that incl uded raw se"'·
age on a storeroom floor. mold) soft-dnnk
dispensing noules. rat and mouse drop-
pings. stench of uane m a trash collect100
area. poisons stored near food and food
stored d1rectl\. on lhe noor.
Yachtsman Ramsay MacDonald
Ramsa' "Bud .. MacDonald a longum e member of the "'e" port Harbor Yacht
Club. died of cancer Saturda) at his home m "'!e\\ port Bealh. He "as 56 , .. An y establishment that senes food 1s
gomg to have v1olat1ons:· said Deput~
D1stnct Attorney Wend} Brough ... The
problem 1s the number of v1olat1ons. the
types of v1ola11 ons and the perslSlencc of
the v1ola11ons that cause our offrce to file
the lawsu11 as a last reson."
Memonal sen ices "' 111 be he ld at 4 p m unda\ a1 th~ '-ev. pon Ha rbor \ acht
Cl ub. Th<' fam1I~ has suggested that memonaJ contnbutions be made 10 the Hoa(l
( ancer Center MacDonald v.as born in Oregon but h'<'d 1n '-ev.port Bca~h for the past 25
\ears. He "as a L . ~ml' 'eteran ol the t-.orean \\ ar and "'a!> an e\eCUll' e ~nh
bunn and Bratlstret't In anta ~na
Circle K has corrected man~ of th<'
problems. said us attorne~. Janet E
Jackim. She said the chau1 has been
Other ci tations '"'oh rd "consistent''
lack of hand washing b) emplt>)ees
following restroom use and sales of food
such as hot dogs that had not been heated
enough to kill bacteria
He 1s suni,ed b\ his v.1te. Bette daughter Christine '1acDonald parents.
Gordon and Helen MacDonald a mter. \lanon Mc( an-,. and t\\O brothers
t>.talcolm and Gregon, \ta Donald
" ,RV owiiers defend plans f Or FV boosts.
Huntington Hai--boui--camping commercial · , trash f ees
By ROBERT BARKER The par~ 1s m unincorporated Orange do.~·n td.mger to go to the deh °' tMOellr,... .. .., Count' temton adJacent to Hun11ng1on The~ re not going to chm~ tenc~ to go B.Y JOYCE BODLOVICH Beach· The ell\· proqdes police and fire sv.1mm1 ng 1n the pools. The} re not going Ov. ners of recreational .. chicles and sen ice · to be breaking mto the home's··
boats defended their good names Monda) · BannlSler alsc said the campground night as a contro .. crs' h<'atcd up owr Resident) opposed to the c><pansion could lessen traOlc on Edinger. snstead of
proposals to dC\elop camping faC1ht1e<, al argue that the prOJCCI \.\OUld spa\1,n traffic mcreas1ng II b~ prOJCClCd Q00 trip a Ja,
Sunset Aquatics Park near the e·q>ens1ve jams on Edinger .\ \ l'nue increase cnme because R \ people tend 10 l3~ m one
homes of Huntington Harbour and ma~e thl'1r home) 'ulnerablc: to place
"We're not the kmd of people to Jump cam pers "ho "ould nol bl-content to sta~ Count ' officials asl..ed C'l t' leaders 10
the fe nces and sw im in Huntington m !he par!..~, a use ofa lad .. of recreauonal endorse tht· plan. Instead. the (It) Council
Harbour ~ls and break into their faoliues there \Oted to form a omm111ec.-1ncorpora1 mg
homes." V1rg1I George ofFountam Valle~. Cit~ Councilman Tom Ma}s called interested groups to "ort. o ut a com-
a member of the Good Sam Camping Club count' otlk1als 1rrcspons1ble for proceed-promise
and RV owner. said. 1og ..;.1th plan) for the part. "'1thout Ma\or fohn Erskine said toda} tht> part.
.. If they {residents) promise not 10 pilfer sohc111ng op1n1ons lrom Hun11ng1 on Har-""oufd bl' a pnme area for rede' elopment
our recreauonal \Chicles. we promise not bour residents. 1f ll "ere in the Cit~ ·· Bui he said nothsng
10 pilfer their homes." she said "The plan 1s detrimental to the art•a:· he should t'C J one 10 senoush impact the
Touching off the clash bc1.,..een the said. nc1ghbon
homeo .... nersandrccreational ad,oca1es1s But councilman \\cs Bann1~1er. an In add1uon to the 2"6-sllp manna the
a $3. 7 million plan b} Orange Cou nt~ ·s o"ner of a ~at and a rec:rea11nnaf 'chicle. part. has a boat-storage area. launching
Environmental Management .\gene~ to eatled the propo ed campgrou nd .. a ramp. tra1le1' parking. boa1 repai r ~ard.
develop up to 152 camping sp:i~·es for trcme~dous asset that v.ould '°~.Pro' e the manne suppl) store. harbor patrol com-
recreat1onal vehicles at the 63-acre tac1llt~ area. ~ov. 1t loot.s hl..e a dump mand post. greenbelt and p1cn1e area
There are also plans to add boat-tr.uler .. The~ (R\' o"'nersl are not all lll..e me Smee-11 opened m 1%Q. the par~ ha'
parking spaces. more boat storage. a ca mp the~ ·re no t unde 1rablc ·· hr sa id "'1th been 0' erburdened ti' largr public de-
store and 65 boat slips at 1he 276-sllp tongue in chee~ "The~ an.· la mil~ people mand tor boating facll11es 1..ount\ offic1 alc,
manna park off Edinger ..\ .. enuc and \\On ·t go running hdtcr-sl..eltcr up and said m a report.
UC students de$cribe racist acts
I,,OS ANGELE I ~Pl -l ' "'' ersn~ of ne'er made to teel thc' tx-h,ng · Ja, 1er L.1
California students. rt•counting acts of ianza . .\ssoc1a1ed tudenh pn:s1dcnt Jt
d1scnmmat1on the~ sa) 1hc} and others the L'm,ers1t' of ( ahl•lrnia. ~nta
have faced. told leg1sla1 or. m1non11es are Barbara. told 'rucsda' ·, hearing at the
bcmg dn .. en from the state' college Unl\ersll\ of Cahfom1a lo) .\ngelc~
campust's b) racism "College 1s d1tlicult cnough ac. 111 . to ha' e
to "Ort: if people don·t ht.c mt• bel.'.'a~.<;,r ol
"Studentsol ~olor lea' t• lx·~au!>C lhl'\ arc the color 01 m~ st.in or m' \urnamc
The heann& v.as prompted b' an
incident at L CL.\ las1 'pnng m "h1ch
Llo'd Monserran v.a elected under-
graduate p~1dent b' the <-tudcnts then
disqualified b~ the admin"1ra110n "hen
ht• \.\3S ruled academ1lalh 1nehg1t'llC' to
hold the olliee \fon..erran argued ht "'.i' ou ted becau e ht• 1s H1~pan1,
Of tM Dellt "1tot l\efl
The Founwm \ alle' C 11, ( ounul
appro' ed a ommerc1al ·trash fee hi ke ol
I~'\ pen.<'nl Tucsda) efft'('ll\t' '\o' I.
RJ1nbov. Disposal to tht' 1..1t~ ·s com-
menca.I trash colle1..tt r Jlsov. 111pa'S1.200
J 'ear 1n addi11ona. rranch1se fl'es under
the Cl\Un\.il acllt)n
Tht' currcn1 S -)5 mun th I~ charge for
res1dent1al trash en KC' "'111 remJin un-
changed until JJnuci: 19 CJ, "hen the
count ~ v.111 ra1$e m dump fee!>. ac<:ordm~
to Ra~ Kromer assistant c-n~ managc-i
The rnunt\ alllOn 1.;ould cost residenh count"~ ide an add1t1onal $1 per month
"The rea on 11 "111 change 1s stm tf\
ba t-d on the count' s dt"C1s1on 10 raise the
fee trom )b 12 10 s~ . .so:· hl' said
.. la'it 'ear the problem surfaced "'fien
the count' ust'd S 15 million des1gnatt'd for
future du.mp 1te dosures 10 hel p balance
thc count\ ·s gt'neral fund V. hat the' did
"a) h> drastrlalh reduce the fund .. he
'31d ··'\o" 11 must be made up ..
Tra)h fc-e' Jre e\peclcd to n~ a~m m
the spnng bt'("au~ of the closure ofCo .. otc
l 3n, on dump 1n In inc and opensng of Ike tan, on dump above the El Toro
\1anne .\1r tauon "'h1ch v. ill increase
tr.in ponat1on cost
La t 'ear 1hc council av. arded a se' en-
' ear tran\.hi'>l'. tl'l Ra1ntx">" Disposal The
a~recmt•n1 31tl'rt•d .t u'mpl1cated formula
t<.'r 'e111ng rate., bJ,t'd t1n actual costs to a
tnrmulJ tia ed \ln 1he 3'erage rt>sidential
ml1nthh charge 1n "'comparable uues
Th<' lllll'' Jrc Huntsngton lkalh C..ar-
Jen (1rlnc:-( 'f'rc.,, Lo ~lam1\0'-L.1
Palm" .ind "1.inhtn
Woman denies abandoning
11-year-old mute daughter
...
-\. h1n t.'k .. alut•d .u -oo "'J\ ~tolen
from a· garage m th(' bt\l block of
Prcs1d10 treet The th1d apparrnth
left behind his O"n hcapc-r. bile • • • .\ rcnchng bin ~ the Pla\port
\lllb1k Home Part. t>n I -th trt"t't
"'a~ l:turglamcd tll 10 "on~ of
ne" o;papc-r and tir1 can'
tx-cn .. wkn jnJ that 1hu~' "t'rl'
thrll"' mg tx111l~'> .tl thn1 1rul ~ In .1
o;eeond 1m1dent JU'en k' in a v.h1ll
p1C'l uptrult.,ellrdlht·' v.cre rNX"d
off" in a dru~ dt·a l J , ... MdinE. 10
re pons
1n l m nl'I T uc~d•' JI I 'oO~
l3rU\llhu1 '' "' \\hen a \11 irt• t·mplo' t'l'
nwmentJrih ''' ppeli mill thr had.:
• • •
An Orange Count} woman pleaded
innocent 1n a San Diego counroom
Tuesday to charges of abandoning her
I I-year-old mute daughter 10 a de-
panment store.
May has denied abandonsng her
daughter. Tanya Tegerdmc. and
claimed a fnend had taken tht> gtrl to
San Diego. police havt> said.
Tanya, who cannot talk because of
a mouth disorder. was fou nd Sept. 14
by clerks in a ~1ay Co. store 1n nearb~ u Jolla. She 1s now m a San Diego
foster care home. Her 7-}'ear-old step-
brother is Sta)'tnf with relatives.
Torrance home of her s1ster-m-1a".
-who called authonues after reading
news account of the mc1dent. The
sister-an-la" told authont1t's at that
t1mt> that Ma) "a planning to Jca, t'
the state.
Laguna Beach. .
Police arrc'ited ( oh n "iicholas
do"-;l1 of LJguna &a-..h on su p1-
.\ man srah~·d ~ pur..c tin tl'le
shoulderola ""mJn J' ht' "'all..ed in
the area ol The 1 x ~t.·d \Jar~et
I "4-1 Beach Bhd Tut•,Ja, t'\t'nin~
Th~ mult1colored 'hCluh.kt g LOn-
tained S~ 2 CJ \h. '-h<" '-lld The
a s.a1lant lleJ on '°"'' in thl' area C'tl
Rl1h lUtll't' "ere use-d ll' µ1n
l.·ntr3nl.·t 31 Rurl.t 'alfold1ng 1114 1
T .1l~·n .\ \C' car ' l ucsda' morni n~
in \1rdt•r to qcJ s: {)O(l \\\)nl\ of
'"JOolding tx-am' and a chain hnl
ll'n(t: • • • •
mwnnt' tne'd un UC\:l"'lolulh to
pn orx·n .i door l·arh T oc\da'
mC1rn1ne at Re,all Dru~~ at I tl
\\ arnrr .\' e Dam 111 the metal
dOM Ir.trot \\.3S I.
Municipal' Coun Judgt> Roben
McDonald also set bail at SI 0.000 for
Karen Amy May. 37. of Anaheim.
who is charged with smale counts of
child end angemlent an<f child aban-
donment.
Prosecutors believe May. who cur-
rently is gomg through divorce
proceedings in Arizona. abandoned
her dauahter in the store last month
because she was afraid of losing the
girl in a custody hearing scheduled for
next week.
"Ccnainly sht>'s upset (about the
charaes)," defense anorney Dawn
Beebee said of the defendcnt outside
coun. BeeBee declined to discuss the
ca1t funher.
Newport lleacla
Two Kp&rale buraJantt wt"rc re-
DONd at the Newponcr Rcson hotel.
l 107 Jamboree A Wash1n1ton O.C. ~ker ttponed the thd\ of t<h•mond
eamnp valued 11 $900 from her
room and a c11y ldmtn1stT'ator from
Buena Park ttponed th<' theft of
)tWtlry valutd It $99$ from her
,
Deputy Dsstnct Attorney Ham
Elias requested bail to remasn
$20.000 as was set when May was
initially jailed, arguing that she ts a Oi~tru~ •
"At no time did the defendant
come forward and say her daughter
was gone. had left home or was
missm&-" Elias said in coun.
The Judge refused to release Ma y
on her own recognizance as rCQue ted
by the defense.
May was arrested Saturday at t~
room. • • • R1np. camnp. bi'lctltts and other
jewelry valued at $7.200 ~ bUr·
&11nied from a home on Co"entry Whert paintm and carptt la "Cf"I •"ttt
at work. _, ,. . . ..
A pair of counter rotatin1 suunlesl
tctl pro~lten \'lll.ied ., s 1.000 Yrtrt
detaehed from a J.l-foot powtr boat
\
Ma\ mo\Cd to .\nahe1m m .\ugust
asdl\ oree procetd1ngs began \.\llh her
hu band, Haskell Ma\. of Camp
Verde. Anz .. v.ho 1s ffo)d's father.
her attome) s:ud. Tan)a·s father h.ts
not been 1denulicd.
She had been an owner opc-rator <.'I
her husband'~ truck dn' ing firm for 10 vears and -worked booU.eepsng
JObS through ia temporat) cmplo' •
ment aacnc}' m Orange Count). her
attomc> said.
The Judge Se't a bail re .. IC\\ hcanng
for Fnday. a d1spos111onal he3nng for Oct. I 2 and a prtl1m1~f') heannr for
Oct. 17
on a trailer near t~ Nev.port Dunc
launch ramp.
OIMi llila
A ~ •••h mOft CMn one bid habit $mahtd a wtndo'* and too._
mOft tban JS canons of ciprtttt>S
from 1 Harbor Boulevard hquor
stort lht' 1mokcs wnt' ,-.lue-d It
SJ70
1on ol ,u111,.111 ng manJuann
,adll\""' v..i) arrc tcd Tuesda' on
Roo!'>e' cit Llne after officers ob:
tamed a 'll'Jrch "arrant the P~' 1ous
da' He"j hcld1nheuofSl.OOOba1I • • • Report<., ol an mJurcd deer brought
om~rs TucsJa~ to an area behind
l ll\ Hall on Forc'>t ~'enuc. iht>dt't'r,
ho..\c.-.. er. \.\3'> .llrtad ·dead. -poS!.1hl\
from shoe!.. • • • TM O\\ ncr of a blue--anJ-" h1te
I Q7'1 Ponti c Bonne\ ille rtcx,ncd the
car c,tokn Tuc)(ia~ on C'etahna and
• • • "Polll<' arrt tcd t\\ o mo ton \ Tue •
da\ on u p1c1on of dn"IOI under the
inlluence of alcohol 9'enMth Ed·
ward orv.ood. IQ, f Corona dd
M r was Utt 1cd at I SS am on I\" n le at 'pre Ten Hatlebc"'-40. ortlT oro \\a arrt\tcd It :!:30a m on
(enter and ulh C out H11h•a)
RmatblpNi BMcti
Two po 1~ ct,,. ck'lh that ~nt
aw" \o\t'f'C rcpc>ncd 1n the Com·
modorc Cude arta. In the fint
10c1dent. wcupants of a blue ptc\up
truck. \Creamed that their walk-ti had
latt•r and 1'.ttlson • • • .\ man complamcd tha1 people
\\Crt' \Clhng and reaming al1er 10
pm at a oAl:ta ll ~amt at \\ onh' P:ir~ .H \fain and t tu:a t.ecpin~ h1
t>nlln-tam11\ •"ale The man t~r,.at
cned to tale ht \Ompla1n1 to the
cit' 's Par~s and RC<"rrJt1on DepJrt·
ment and (It\ Council • • • ~bout 10 angn people: reponedh
"<'rt hitting each other about ~ 3 m
toda' 1n the part.inf lot al the RC'd Onion .it Peter's ~nd1ng 1 t\40CI
P:mfic c t.\as1 H 1ah~B\ • • • \ man rtportedh tncJ tll tntc
home in tht" b 00 bl°'~ ol &rr n
thrugh .in open door The dau hter of
th<' 1am1l~ riu hed the would-he
intruder out and \Jammed tht> door at
a fev. minute' bt Clrt ~ a.m toda~.
..oantaln Valley
But•ne c-1pttttt h&httrl "'onh S ~ere ~toltn from Chnc Offil:'e
Products a1 I 0 8 rookhu.m \ Monda\ nt t"'hfn)Omwncopcnc-d
I d1•...t1 \ CIS(, ""' . . ..
meone t It a · S ~ mulK I
carousel ho"" from Ca\altna' < oun·
• • • ml'Onl tote S SO tool baA
tmm a I %4 \ \\ fotla parkrd m the
l,)Q()(l bkx l ,,, 'hl C..lenn Lane.
lmne
&. gun-wrcldmg bandit robbc-d 1n
lr\lne ~ ~t 11on of S60 ~honl~
tx·ll .. m: m1dn1gh1 l Ul"~dA)' The
u Nd l.k nflcJ 3 3 \\h1tc male "~'UI ~\ \t'31"!> old Wtth rN hair.
\\;lll..rd ur to the ca h1C1" at th e E"on
\talllm t'll "-1111.1 ( ao~on .\Hnue and
d.:m.,nJn1 ~a\h The cuh1er com-
phl"J anJ the ,u,pc(t 1ume>cd into a
"11t1nJ \Chide; ro tblyaCadiUacor
Id "'''hilt', ;anJ ~pcdotT. Thecuhttt
"" 'not 1nJurt'd
I
• !
I
I
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/ Wednelday, October 5, 1088
NA TI ON
Reagan gave ariti-terrorist
CIA agent~ 'license to kill'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reapn signed intelligence
authorizations in 1984 and 1985
giv!ng CIA agents broad anti~t~r
ronsm powers that some adm1n1s-
tration officiaJs saw as ··a license to
kill." according to a published rcpon.
The aulhonzations "deemed" as
lawful any coven actions -including ~tentially violent ones -taken in
'good fa11h" by · U.S. 1ntell1gence
agents against terrorists. according to
a repon in today's editions of Tbe
Washington Post
The language of the findings see~
ingly was ambiguous. 1he Post said.
Actions taken in good faith and as,
part of an approved operation would
be deemed lawful in advance, but also
the)' ··must be .. lawful. sources told
' Textile bill
backers vow
comeback
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sup-
poners of a bill to impose t0ugher
restnctions on textile 1mpons. after
failing toovemde President Reagan's
veto. promise to renew their efTons
when Cbngress returns next year.
"We'll be back," Sen. Ernest F
Hollings, D-S.C., said Tuesda) after
the House voted 272-152 to overnde
Reagan's veto but fell 11 votes shon
of the two-thirds needed to enact the
measure over his ob1ec11ons.
the Post.
The newspaper quoted a former
White House onicial, whom 1t did not
identify, as saying the Reagan orders
were a "go-anywhere. do-anything''
aulhorlly.
The language of the find an gs caused
disputC$ among adman1strat1on of-
fic1als, the Post .said. because actions
that could be authonzed under the
findings might conflict with earlier
presidential executive orders banning
an}' direct or indirect involvement of
U.S. intelligence agents in assassina-
tions.
The Post quoted a source as sayfog
the lansuage was specifically designed
to "circumvent the assassination
ban" and protect CIA agents who
might Jake pan an foreign stnke
teams.
White House spokesman Bob Hall
told The Associated Press he knew
nothilll about the findings late Tues-
day night.
The Post reponed that unidentified
White House officials said Vice
President George Bush would have
been aaven a copy of or would have
had access to the findings.
Reagan signed the 'first finding on
Nov. 13, 1984. shortly after his
landslide reelection victory. the re-
port said. because U.S. officials had
become frustrated with car-bombings
at U.S. facilities and the taking of
American hostages.
Congressional intelligence com-
mmees were not informed of the
crucial language in the fipdings:
Simple teStproposed ·
for cancer detection
NEW YORK (AP) -A si mple
unne test that detects bladder ca ncer
at a treatable stage ma)' be used to
help diagnose prostate and some of
the other cancers that affi1ct nearl) a
million Americans annuall). re-
searchers sa)'.
~xisting tests to diagnose bladder
cancer. involving removal of tissue,
pose nsk. are often painful and
sometimes do not detect the cancer
until 11 has spread and can no longer
be cured. the cancer institute said.
But Gu1rguis. Elliott Schiff man
and colleagues. whose study is pub-
lished in toda1s Journal of the
Nauonal Cartter Institute. said their
test can identify bladder cancer at an
early. treatable stage.
• -
.,.._,. ...
-
Atlanta ftiht&
abortion, f'Oes,
350 arrested
ATLANTA (AP) -Abortion
protesters prepared ror m~rc demon-
strations today after pohce arrested
more than 350 of them usina act·
tough tactics that organizers blamed
for an 'injury and caused civil
libertarians to register a complaint.
"I could not beheve lhe level of
brutality that was going on here,"
Q_rotcst leader Randall Terry said
Tuesday as police dragaed or carried
protesters who -resisted arrest by
crawling on hands and knees.
Police placed heavy security
around seven Atlanta (\linics that
perform abortions today. because
they dad not know which one wouJd
be the target of demonstrations ln the
second day of what protest Off,lnizers
dubbed the "siege of Atlanta. •
Backers of Operation Rescue. a
New York-based anti-abonion or-
ganization, tried but failed to close
three dint~s with sit-ins Tt.lesda J
They said they would hit one t y
but did not identify it in advance.
Police.spokeswoman Myrna May
said most of those arrested Tuesday
were charged with criminal trespass
and that none had posted bail.
Operation ·Rescue spokesman Bob
Nohe complained Tuesday evening
that the protesters were not being
processed properly or read their
rights.
Court appearances for those ar-
rested Tu~ay were scheduled to
begin late thiS afternoon in Atlanta
Municipal Court. '
The action appeared to close the
book on the battle for textile legis-
lation this y~. with two weeks at
most remaining before lawmakers
adjourn to campaign full time.
The test detects a protein as-
sociated with the spread of tumors,
said Dr. RaQuf Guirguis of the
National Ca ncer Institute. The pro-
tein also has been found in patient..$
with kidney cancer. prostate cancer
and a nervous S\Stem cancer called
neuroblastoma. ·
.. It seems to be in all the cancers we
have screened." Guirguis said.
They said they do not yet know
whether the test will identify cancers
other than bladder cancer at an early
enough stage for them to be effedive-
ly treated.
An Atlanta policeman arreeta an anti-abortion demon-
atrator Taeeday near one of the cllnlca where proteata were
planned for thla week. About 350 people were arreatecl.
Over the summer. the New York-
based group led demonstrations at
Atlanta clinics over several weeks
during and after the Democratic
National Convcnuon, resulting in
700 arrests. Three of the 700 remain
in jail.
The bill. designed to protect Ameri-
can industry from foreign competi-
t10n . would freeze current textile and
apparel imports at 1987 levels and
limit future increases' to I percent
annually The same would appl) to
non-rubber footwear except that no
future growth would be allowed.
Countnes that increase their
purchases of U.S. farm goods would
get larger shares of the U.S. textiles
market .\ pilot program would be
established. allo"'ang fhe go' emment
10 auction off 1mpon licenses.
CIA ready to pay $150,000
to end LSD-testing lawsuit
WASHINGTON (AP) -At-
torneys announced in court today the
tentative settlement ofa la\\su1t filed
bv Canadians who suffered emo-
11onal trauma from mind-control
therapy. includin$ doses of the drug
LSD. give n them an the 1950s.
Lawyers for both sides sought
postponement in the trial of the 8-
)ear-old case that was to begin
Thursday. telling Penn that the
Jusuce Depanment will soon review
the negotiated settlemeot.
SmGg alerts ignored; Congress
fails to strengthen Clean Air Act
Reagan \etoed the measure Sept.
28, sa) 1ng It represented "protec-
t1on1sm al Its worst .. and 'hOuld not
onh narro'll. consumer choices but
inhibit trade and cost .\menca over-
seas sales. Sponsors said 11 "'outd save
Amencan JObs no"' 1n 1eopard)
because of a "'a'e of .\s1an teAt1les
and apparel crowding l ' .S merchan-
dise oua of stores.
Lawyers for the go,ernment and
the nine original plainufTs did not
specify the amount of the settlement
dunng a bnef hearing before U.S.
D1stnct Judge John Garrett Penn.
But sources speaking on cond111on
of anonymity said the ClA had
tentauve_ly_agrecd to pay a lump sum
ofS750.000 to settle the ca~e.
Outside the U.S. Counhouse.
James Turner. an attorney for the
plaintiffs. praised CIA Director Wil-
liam Webster for playing "a very
importan t" role in the agency's
decision to agree to the settlement.
"This is a statement that ever) part
of our government 1s under the law.
that no pan of our go' ernment ts
above the law, .. Turner said.
OFFERS. ••
%
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Con-
gress split by economic and regional
differences has proven again that
cleaning up air pollution from vehicle
tailpipes and industnaJ smokestacks
remains the nation's toughest en-
vironmental problem.
Only once since the Clean Air Act
was enacted in 1970 has. Congress
been able to agree on maJor amend-
ments to strengthen the basic law. and
1ha1 occurred I I )ears.ago.
Two years ago. environmentalists
in the House and Senate renewed the
......
• Current Rate*
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•NO PENALTY FOR FARLY WITHDRAWAL! YOUR RJNDS ARE AVAil.ABLE WHEN YOU NEED THEM
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS RIDARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS
WE WELCOME YOUR CALL.
1-800-247-7197 Mon.-Sat. 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.
"Certain restrictions apply.
nu. ral.f 111 offtf'fd for a lmut.c>d ti~ only and 11 sub]«t to chan withouL notn :rbe ral.f Will tl'l ldJ\Ulted it the l»lanc. dropa b80W 110,000 Annual yield
but-d oo monthly C'OO'lpoundinJ whM\ tnin.t 11 k-ft on d~t for °""'*' tmn
campaign to escalate the battle
against urban smog. acid ram caused
by coal-burning factories and power
plants and to~1c fumes from
chemicals.
On Tuesda). the) tossed in the
towel, vowrng to try again next )ear.
"There has not been sufficient
w1llinjness 10 compromise." said
Sen. George Mitchell, D-Mainc. who
spent much of 1988 trytng to put
together a consensus on a clean air
bill.·· As a result. we" 111 do nothing.··
Mttchell, citing this summer's
smog alens a'round the country. said
the technolog)· e'\1sts to control air
pollut1on .. "All we lack is the political
wtll to do so ...
Am ong those he cited as res1sung
compromise were the environmental
lobb) and the two behemoths that
would be most affected by such
iegislat1on: electrir utilities and the
auto industry. domestic and foreign.
The bill's death left the nation with
no new tools to combat the ozone and
carbon monoxide -chiefly from
vehicle emissions.
Quayle, Bentsen
tell str~tegies for
tonight's debate
By Tbt Associated Pre11
Vice presidential candidates Dan
Quayle and Lloyd Bentsen co unted
down the hours to tonight's national-
ly broadcast debate as the two
pres1dent1al contenders vowed 10
help America's forgotten cla ss.
The debate begins at 5:30 p.m. PDT
and will be airecl live on ABC. CBS,
CNN and NBC.
Republican Quayle -promised to
focus his attack on Democratic presi-
dential nominee Michael Dukakis.
not his debate opponent Bentsen.
when the two running ma1es clash at
the C1..,1c <\ud1tonum in Omaha.
Neb.
"Dukakis is running for president.
and he's the one I'm very concerned
about becoming ptesident. It would
be a very troubling notion for many
Americans... Quayle told reponers
Tuesday on his campaign plane from
Washington. D.C.
Bentsen 1s hoping to counter what
he believes are distoruons of
Dukakis' record, espec1all> the
Democratic presidential nominee's
stand on defense and crime.
"Tomorrow·night we're gomg to
have 90 minutes to present Mile~
Dukakis' vision of Amenca -an
Amenca on the move, an America
that bchcves an excellence tn educa-
tion for all ofourchildrcn," the Texas
senator told a flag-waving crowd or
more than 500 people at the Omaha
airport. ~ ·
Bentsen's running mate -the
Massachusetts governor-was hmit-
ang his campaign appearances toda) .
tending to gubernatorial duties 1n
Boston and later attending a debate-
watching party.
George Bush was speaking 10 high
school students in L1ttlc1on, Colo ..
before addressing rallies in Denver
and Oklahoma Ctt}.
The prcs1dent1al candidates will
meet in their second debate next week
in Los Angeles, but apparently they
won't confront each other on ABC-
TV's "Nightline" -in an open
format outside the other two debates'
ught restrictions.
[?ukakis accepted the network's
10v1tat1on. with spokesman Da y!on
Duncan saying. "We thought 1t was a
great opportunity for the American
peQple to get beyond the slogans and
balloons and b'1ng George Bush out
from behind the nag and get him to
talk about the issues.''
Bush spokesman Mark Goodin
said toda). "We committed the
campaign to two debates. The Amen-
can people will have. at the con-
clusion of the debates. an opportunity
to look at both candidates. Frankly.
our campaign schedule requires the
candidate to be on the road after the
second debate. taking his messqclo
the voters d1rcctlr."
The vice presidential candidates
were planning walk-1hrouahs at the
refurbished Omaha Civic
Auditorium today before last-minute
preparations for their own debate.
Orpnizcrs said Tuesday that the
·hall was ready Jor the debate. ~
Researchers may use AZT
in pregnancies with AIDS
WASHINGTON (AP)-Preanant
women infected W1th the deadlv
AIDS vm1s would be 1rea1ed wuh the
druJ AZT 1n an attempt to protect
their unborn children 1f an experi-
ment bcina planned by researchers
gets the go-ahead from review boards.
Ho1h ~1d Tuesday tha1 the stuchcs
arc still at least sc"cral months awa).
as a formal proposal has not yet been
completed. and the proposal would
have to pass many hurdle in the fonn
of review boards concerned with the
safety of such tests.
~AMERleAN
"The reason we thank (prevention
of anfcc:uon of the fetus) m1gh1 be
possible as thJI AZT prevents 1he
rtplic1t1on of the virus." said Dr.
Daniel Hoth, director of the IDS
prOlflm ll the Na11onaJ Institute of
Allt'})' and lnfecuous Otstasts.
··111 thtorttially possibk that the
AZT. tf 11 tt.tches tht fetus. m1aht
prevent 1t from establiUlma an infcc:-
t1on;• he ,aid. refemna to tht drua
formally known as a11d0thym1d1ne.
Patricaa Randall, the 1nst1tute's
spoke woman. v.ent even further.
S1)1n1 the likelihood of an early s&art
to &uch a study i.s "still tenuous ...
s of Sept. 26. AIDS b8d been d1~ in 7•.447 Alftlli of
whom I, I SS were chlldr9 ..... •
ll, aod 924 ~q 1n1ccted at bl • ftdttalC~terilr A FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 1he •1.925 ,.... =• pet~n•s. 67l .... .. ' J
•
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Octob« 5, 1911 M
" CALIFORN IA l __
AIDS safety probe
set for California
Vons pulling
t obacco items
from shelves
Teamsters' violence forces
Hollywood stud:io to close
LO ANGELES CAP) - A state OS GE ES p I SAN FRA NCISCO (AP) -Pri-protectJvc gloves. masks and other law requmng warnings about prod-L AN L (A ) -n t~o
vate health-care facthucs and personal protection 1tems.'' he said. ucts and materials that pose health da)'s of p1ckeun,. the Hollywood
monuanes in California will be the The inspections will be conducted hazards prgmpted Vons Cos. lnc.;_the Teamsters stnlce has accomplished ~rsct ofa federal inspection pr~ram at private hospitals. blood banks. state's lar~est supermarket chain, to what scnptwritcn fat led to ach1cH
0 k t t d d I ffi · h d v over ti v• months an their wt!~o~n: the ensure w r ers are pro cc e rom enta o tees, nursing omes an began pu 1ng a vancty of tobacco " exposure to the deadly AIDS virus mortuaries with I I or more workers products from us shelves. shutdown of a studio.
and other blood-related diseases. and that deal wi th v1ct1m' of blood-Not involved are-cigarettes becauSc As the Teamsters stnke enters its
Federal Occupational Safety and borne diseases. tllcy alrcad)' carry a federally man-third day today. the Cannell Studio~
Health Administration inspectors Last year, two unions peuuoned dated warnmg label. and certain has stopped productwn on their
will take a close look at training OSHA to draft an emergency tempor-brands of chewing tobacco which tclev1s1on shows "Hunttt" and
programs, educati on, housekccpil)g. ary standard to regulate workplace carry warning labels. the company "Sonn) Spoon." • how needles and waste products arc exposures to AIDS. The agency said Citing death threats, bomb scares
Plcket a eel dentally hit by car'at film •tudlo
BURBANK (AP)-A woman walkinJa Teamsters picket line outside the
D1sne) Studios earl)' Wednesday escaped tnJury when she was struck by a car,
apparcntl\ by·acc1dent. officials said.
The umdcnufied dnver of the ear stopped and waited for police to amve,
said Sgt. Wilham Barry.
A Fare Depanmcnt.paramcd1c examined the woman and dctc.rmine.d she
~as uninjured. Ba!11 said. , "She's fine. She s back on the picket hne " B~IT) said.
Officer J. Jette said no charges '.I.ere sought b) e1thcr the woman or the
dm er. He said the onl) thing linking the accident and the strike was the
\\Oman's presence on the picket hnc at 5:40 am dcalt.wditdh and whc1thercmJ?loyees~re rcJectedh t~e peubeuon. saby1ng hat tdh1e "Al such time as those producu and sabotaged equipment linked 10
prov1 c persona protective equip-time t at tt was ttcr a le to an c become labeled w~·wiJl carry~them the Teamsters walkout. the Cannell ment, Mel Cassidy, the agency's the ~roblcm on a case-by-case baSIS. studios will resume work onl~ when ll · · 1 d · · · h bee f. again," Vons spo csworpan· M!!) " ffi 1 d 0 1 assistant rcgJona a mm1strator in T c agency. owevcr. ame su • McAboy said Tuesday nighlis store 1s sa1c, 9 1c1 a s sa1 . • picket was cckased on S25 ba1 . cc1,cd a bomb scare. spokeswoman
San Francisco. said Tuesday. • ficiently concerned with the problem Y.Orkers were compleung the task of The Cannell.Studios said ll stopped .\ spokeswoman for the Cannell Lisa Le"' 1nson said. '"(he office build-"lnsJ)CCtors from our seven OSHA • to pUt fonh a permanent national od work on the two NBC sencs because tud1os said that the·programs "'ere ing. containing several hundred cm-
arca offices tn California will be standard, said OSHA spokesman Jim removing the contested pr ucts. 1ts emplo)'CCS received death threats closed after urcs "'ere slashed br plo)~. 1435 e' acuated for more than
making unannounced visits to Foster in Washington. The proposed Tobacco manufacturers and dis-and its equipment was sabotaged deflated on nine vehicles. a brake hne 1~0 hours Monda).
health-care fac1lit1cs .... as pan of a rule is scheduled to be issued in tnbutors ~ere told tn August that Monda). the first da' of a stnke bv 14aSS(\ ered on a sem1-tra1ler. holding
national empham program to reduce December. followed by public hear-Vons would require warning labels on 3.200 Teamster dmers. laborers and tanks were punctured on a mobile Le"' inson said in a statement that
the n sk to workers of on-the-Job ings. A permanent standard should be products b) ept. 17. she said. That electnc1ans • dressing room. a trailer hitch 143S the com pan) "'as "outraged by the
ex sure,"· •id Frank Strashe1Jll. in place by the end of 1989. he said. deadline 1.ater was extended until In a separate 1nc1dent. one picket sabotaged and at least three em· acts of '1olcncc. vandalism and •---~ A.:s-ChieLadmi01strator in -~~-Strashe1m said cxpens behc''C that Monday. "'as arrested for batter; Tuesda~ plo,ees "'ere ph~s1call) assaulted threats \O our employees and prop-
Franc1sco. up to 1.5 million people 1n the nat1on Manufacturers told the store "the) mornmg at n1versal Studios. ac-c'annell emplo,ces '.I.ere also the em .. The studio planned to resume
"We also will be taking worker have the human 1mmunodefic1cncy did not have any plans to label cording to Lt. Ron Young of the Los subjects of deat~ threats and the pr0duct1on "as soon as possible with
complaints on any lack of propett virus that causes AIDS. products." she said. .\ngelcs Police Depanment The compan) ·s Los .\ngeles o1Ikc. .ie· or "'nhou~an end to the strike."
~_;;,--------------------------------------------------------------------------~----------------------------~--__..:.,----------------~ -........................ .
Panel asks
reforms in
defense of
indigent
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A state
watchdog commission called for the
abolition of the state public de-
fender's office and the establishment
of a new agenc) to represent indigent
defendcnts in a more cost-effective
manner, It was ree:oned today.
"Caltforniacan tafTord to continue
-with 1!s scanered. uncomrolled sys·
tem of defending 1nd1gents," Na than
· Shai>ell. chairman of the L1ttle 1100-
vcr Commission. said in a a 40-page
report obtained in advance by the Los
Angeles Times and reponed on
today.· · The watchdog group. officially
known as the Commission on State
Government Organization and Econ-
omy-, said the cost of representing
indigents appealing cnminal convic-·
lions has tnplcd in the last six years fo
$32 million. Add111onally. there are
fewer lawyer-represented convicts.
"It 1sn t fair to the defendants
whose cases may be delayed or
bounced from attorney to attorney."
Shap~ll said. It isn't fa1rto the state's
taxpayers. who pay for the over·
lapping and duplicatl\ e admin1s-
trat1on of these programs."
Harvc) Zall •. appointed to head the
state public defender's office six
months ago. defended the office and
called on legislators to throw out the
commission's recommendation.
"Ttie state public defender is an
absolutcly indispensable pan of the
criminal justice system." Zall said.
"It is wrong and I hope that the
powers that be will disregard 1t.. .. I
deserve an opportunity to deal with lo~~standing problems of the agen·
cy.
Court 'not
motiva ted
byel~ion '
SAN FRANCISCO (.\P) -The
chief justice of California's Supreme
Court says he has no e>.planat1on for
the difference 1n .death penalty de·
cisions between his conservat1ve-
dom1nattd' court and the coun of
former Chief Justice Rose Bird.
Chief Justice Malcom Lucas. in his
first news conference in more than a
year, also discussed his coun's cffo~&
to move its backlog of cases and its
Pohtical independence.
"I can assure you our coun does not
look at clectton returns in resolution
of any of its cases." he said Tuesd.a).
Lucas, named to the coun by Gov.
Gqorge DeukmeJian 1n 1984. was
pr6moted to Chief Jusucc in 1?87
after voters removed Bird and JUS·
tiets Cruz Reynoso and Joseph
Grodin in a bitter elcct1on that
centered on allegation that the Bird
court was sof\ on cnme.
Dunng a sevcn->ear penod. the
Bird court reversed 64 of 68 death
penalty cases.
But 1n the year smce conservauves
pined a maJonty on the {'Oun. 40
death penalties have been upheld and
15 reversed. Lucas said.
,
Medny spray plan•
bring proteats ln LA
LOS AN GELES (AP)-Residents
of several West Side communities
protested plan$ to spray a JS-square
mile area wlth a pesticide to faaht the
latest outbreak of Mediterranean
fruit flies 10 Southern California,
officials said. Thru helicopters were to spra) the
pcstiClde over a 35-squarc mile area
west of downtown, includin1 p1rts of
Beverly Hills, Wett Hollywood.
Rancho Park. Baldwin Hills. Century
City and Palms. officials said. How-
evtt. recent heavy foa that has been
movifts ant~ atta late . at niatu
could dtlay \M~y1na. they ldded. Meanwhile, ans b)' county aan·
cuhural off'.aa to drop the stick>
pesticide Malathlon''On the infected
.,. weft met with complaint Tucs-
dly by midtftt&. OffK'lllS tltd.
,.
..
ORT SALUTE TO
I
TS 1988 A BLEND OF BUSINESS,
·crry AND THE ARTS
OCTOBER6-8
AT NEWPORT CENTER FASHION ISLAND
~~ Q r R
on't mi ss the 6t h Annual
ewport Salute to the Ans! A three-
day celebration featuring music.
·dance, drama, strolling perfonners
and art exhibits.
Thursday, October 6
S:OOpm-~:OOpm
Sample culinary delights from over
30 of Orange County's finest restau-
rants! Enjoy the musical sounds of
brassJ>ig band . dLxieland . vocal
ensembles and jazz! Experience che
beauty of dance with ballet and
f olklorico.
Friday t October 7
10:00am-9:00pm
View the winners of the juried Art
Competition sponsored by the
Newport Beach City Arts Commis-
r Ji F w 0 • a ..
sion. Enjoy musical entertainment
from 12:00pm-2:00pm and
6:00pm-8:00pm .
Saturday, October 8
n
11 :OOam-S:OOpm
A Salute to Youth in the Ans! Student
art competition. music. dance, puppet
shows, mimes, The Bower ~\obile
Museum. balloon painting and much
more!
a n r a • ti UT
lt'ntt'r hN1r .... \\~'nda~ Frida) t0am-9pm.
Sacurda~ Wam-t'pm. Sunda' '-oon-Spm. valet parhlll~ cl\ atlarle. (her 100 tine scores including
't'tman \\;m ll"-Bulio(h·~ \\'ibhire. Robinson 's.
Tht' Br~'ad\\<l\. Butt um •. :\men Wardy and •
lr\'mc R.11llh Farmer'~ .\\arket Center
In il'rlll,Utl'l1 1 -14 1 7.:! t 2000
l \' I ._ . ._'\I f\\' ••
,,, '"''"'""
NEWPORT CENTER
FASHION ISLAN.D
'
Freed hostage in
West Germany
f or-medica:l tests
WIESBADEN. West Germany
(AP) -Doctors said today freed
hostage Mith1leshwar Singh was .. in
g_ood sp1nts" but would sta) 1n West
Germany for another three days of
medical tests.·
Dr. Roben W. Gilmore. head of the
U.S. Air Force hospital 1n Wiesbaden.
told rcponers a prehmmar} examin-
auon indicated Singh. a 60-year-old
d1abet1 c. received adequate medical
treatment dunng his 20 months of
captivity in Lebanon.
.. He lost s1gn1ficant v.e1gh1 and
muscle mass. But he was afforded
v1s1ts by a ph) s1c1an and treatmen1
was appropriate for his illnesses:·
Gilmore said of the Indian finance
professor.
The doctor said tests done since
Singh's arnval at Wiesbaden toda)
conJ!rmed his pre' iously known
medical problems-diabetes. h) per-
tens1on and "possible coronary arter:
disease."
"Overall Dr. Singh is in good spin ts
and though very fatigued has traveled
w<:IL ··Gilmore said.
He said Singh. a resident alien of
the United States. v.ould hkel) re-
main in Wiesbaden for another three
days of medical tests.
Singh was freed Monday night in
Beirut. and taken to Damascus. "S\ na.
He was nov. n from the Synan capita I
to the U.S. Air Force's Rhein-Mam
Base outside Frankf un. arrh ing at
2:20a.m.
The former hostage did not speak
to reporters ·upon arriving 1n West
Germ;rny. He was 1mmediatel.Y dnv-
en to the Air Force hospital m
Wiesbaden, 24 miles west of Frank·
furt.
Singh's release leaves nine Amen· cans and se\en other foreigners
missing in Lebanon and believed held
by extremist Moslem kidnappers.
Held longest 1s Ter:r) <\. <\nderson.
chief Middle East correspondent of
The Associated Press. who was ab-
dutted March 16. 1985.
Armed men dressed as policemen
took Singh hostage Jan. 24. 198 7. on
the Beirut Un1vers1 t) College campus
1n Moslem west Beirut. along with
Amencan educators Alann teen.
Robert Polhill and Jesse Turner.
.\group calling 11self Islamic Jihad
for the L1berat1on of Palestine
claimed respons1bilit}, and said it
freed 1ngh as a goodwill gesture.
Nearl> all the foreign 'hostages in
Lebanon are believed held l5y Shiite
Moslem groups lo)al to Iran~ .
In Syria. Singh said the three
American educators were ··oK."
Then he add,·d: "It's better for me
not to make am statements because
we don't knoV. "'hat might hun
them .... Plcase let me be qu1et .... lt's
be tter form) colleagues ".
Mlthtlesbwar SlftCb arrl•ea
In Frankfurt after releaae.
In Washington. White House
spokesmanMar1nrf'itzWateT said the
U.S. government was doing "every·
thing possible" to free the hostages.
President Reagan said Tuesda)
that QO negot1at1ons would be hetd
wnh the captors. He said liberating
the hostages ··has been a great
problem for us and it's very much on
our mind~:·
In Pans. former Iranian President
Abolhassan Bani-Sadr said an aide to
Vice President George Bush named
Richard La\l.less negotiated Singh's
release and that Iran received arms-
poss1bl> 1n a deal to free him.
Bush denies arranging release
of Lebanon hostage in arms deal
P.\RIS ( <\P)-~former president to Iran," he said. "Does that have
of Iran said an a1dl' to Vice President something to-do wuh the release') I
George Bush negotiated this week's don't know." Hegavenodeta1lsofthe
release of a hostage held 1n Lebanon purported arms transfer.
and that Iran ~ved aFms ~ !._ A-ampitign spokeswoman for
poss1bl) in a deal to free the capu,e. Bush, the Republican presidential
Howe"er. tormer Pres1dc.nt nominee. termed Bani-Sadr's re-
Abolhassan Bani· adr said Tuesda}' marks "absolutely false."
he did not kno"' 1f the shipment of The disclosure of clandesti ne arms
weapons v.as related to the release sales to Iran. aimed at secunng the
Monda) of M 11h1lcs.hwar Singh. a 60. release of the hostages during 1985
year-old Indian professor and legal and 1986. led to the Iran-Contra
U .. resident. alTair. It was the Reagan's adm1n1s·
"There has been a deh'er) of arms trat1on·s worst foreign policy con-
Comt to AldtM tor 11 JN oiyl lloe!111 ~tds •
()Ny 'l>ttllhb un seur •OU oerteclly
Onr:H A\Ail.ABLE J
Rm A LIMITED j
'IlMEQ1y
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
-. hlf .... c...i lhrt!
1922llAIUI1u1 .. com 1UA-m-11st
trovers). ·
Bani-Sadrsa1d that according toh1s
information. a man named Richard
Lawless negotiated the release of
mghv
"It seems he (Lawless) has denied
11." Bani-Sadr told The Associated
Press 1n Pans. where l}e lives in exile.
·· 1 am trying to verify it."
White House spokesman Marlin
Fnzwatersaid in Washington: "There
as a fellow named Lawless. He is over
th ere. What he's up to. nobody
knows ...
A.'4t\tlfl\I '"1 ('"Ii)'>~! ~IOI. ~IO\ \l.1gnol1;1 I hind•\ ofl lnrnln ~U M 0 ('"I ti $-t9 H(lli. 2.~10 Hal'hor HhtJ. (l~h1rnJ rhnft\ Drug) FT fl mrnN Lonm' i-l-41 X"',..,iClll,
.?46 L Or.m~l:lhorpt: .u I unon I hlod:
of'JI f\\\ & I hkK.1. E ofll.1rhor nl\ll
Hl'4TI\c,1us8f~H Q ( ll)HtH)'JttJ, nl'JI tk.1 hfih\.l
.11 \\,uncr 111 thr < hJru:r t'nln: Ml~MO.~ Vlt:IO (""I 1) "''°'' llttl.l. 21 tOI A11l 1J Pk\\\ JI "Jn l>k~o h' \ 01w--<tE ...J ("'lif l(1¥:) !HI, (12.! f·~,, l\:.tt'fl.1 AH.· \\t:,1 n fTtNm .\\(.'
I
Honduras seeks U .N. force .
to evacuate Contra rebels . '
UNITEONATIONS(AP)-Hon-
duras is calling for the creation of a
United Nations peace force to evacu-
ate theusands of Nicaraguan rebels
based in Honduras and relocate thc-m
far from its borders.
The Honduran proposal. un veiled
Tuesday night by Foreign Minister
Carlos Lopez Contreras. also would
apply to the comparatively small
number of lefti st rebels from El
Salvador who operate out of Hon-
duras.
providing to the United States by
allowing the anti-comm~n~t rebels
to use Honduras as a staging area for
attacks against N.icaragua.
Underscoring Contreras' apparent
effort to disassociate Honduras from
U.S. policy was his description of the
United States, along w11h the Soviet
Union, as a "hegetllon\stic power."
The unit should locato the comba·
tants in Nicaraguan and SaJvadoran
territories, "far away from Honduran
borders," he said. "Their reloc-ation
in third countries should be carried
out from sites in Costa Rica and '
Guatemala. whose gove rnments have
declared themselves neutral." he
added.
State Department spokesman
Charles Redman said Tuesday night
he had not seen Contreras' speech and
had no comment.
Nonetheless. the speech appeared
to signal Honduras' determination to
end the tacit cooperation it has been
Contreras called on U.N. Sce-
retary·General Javier Perez de
Cuellar to oversee ihe creation of a
peace force compriscd"Of troops from
Canada, Spain and West Germany.
The force would guarantee the
· "nt>n-usc" of Honduran territory by
foreign insurgents. he said, adding
thai the proposed unit shoufd be
autflorized to use force. 1f necessary.
to achieve its objecti ves.
The proposal represents a revised
and updated version of a plan which
the Hondurans set fonh in November
1987. At the time. however, there
were relatively few Contras in the
border era.
Honduras. as a front-line state
which shares a long border with
Nicaragua, has been a majo~ pillar of
American policy toward Central
America for more than six years.
Israell.party disqUalified 135 nations
for~nti-Arab,racistview accusedof . .....
By The Associated Press
J ERUSA LEM -The Central Elections Committee branded Rabbi Meir
K'ahanc's anti-Arab Kach party racist and anti-democratic today and barred it
from co mpeting in the Nov. I elecuon. "It was a political lynching." Kach
candidate Raham1m Cohen said. Kahane vowed to appeal to 1he Supreme
Court. The committee's head. Eliezer Goldberg. said: "'The request for the
barring of Kach has been accepted. It is still subject to judicial review.·· Jn 1984.
the Supreme Coun overturned a similar committee decision that would ba ve
barred Kach from competing in parliarpentary elections that year. Since then.
Parliament has passed a bill bflnning racism from political acuvny. "In 1984.
we d1dn 't have an anti-racist law.' Today we have. and I hope (Kahane's) appeal
to the high coun will not be successful." said Police Minister Chaim Bar-Lev.
Philippine fugitive's aide..arrested.
MANILA -Police arrested an alleged aide of former Lt. Col Gregono
··Gnngo" Honasan today. and a senior officer claimed investigators were
closing in on the renegade leader of last year's bloody coup attempt Col.
Manuel Oxalcs. deput}' m1htarycommander of Manila, told reporters former
Master gt. Godofretlo Gamboa was arrested early today during a raid on his
home 1n suburban Cafoocan City.
Hljacker dies alter..lnterrog-ation Jn Brazil
. RIO DE JANEIRO-A 28-year-old man who hijacked a Braziharl'jetliner
With more than I 00 peoi>_le aboard has died following a five-hour police
1nterroga11on, t\.osp1tal officials said. Raimundo Conceicao. described by
authonues as a ··psychopath ... died Tuesday of kidney failure after five <bys of
steady progress. accQrding to a medical report rele.ased by the Sania Genovc' a
hospital in Goiania: 850 miles northwest of Rio, On Sept. 29. Co nceicao
underwent surgery to stop internal bleeding caused by police bullet wounds
sulTered as the hiJacking drew to a close. Sunday. Conceicao underwent five
hours of intense questioning by police on the hijacking.
Introducing our old fashioned
Yankee Pot Roast Dinner, just $5.95.
Our Yankn· Pot Roast dinner is n:rtain ·to hring hack tho'><.'
rich mcmork' of the great hifit meals mom Ul>ed to cook
for JUM S5 95 you'll get our delicious pot roast along
wilh a dmict· of soup o r salad. frcnch
frl~'> or hakcd potato,• our new fresh
vegc:tahkl>, and grilled s4u~w bread or
a hludx·rry muffin ~l vb.it the: Grinder
1n your art.·a , anu have a yankcc:·
doodk·dandy fca.,t 6eurfltrl fA/IJf SJ..,,a
l'Alth• ( t1a.'1 "" ~ '41 ,,, Pkr-. lfun1ln~ltlfl llt':lt;.il (..,I )~ \<l· IC1'1 •·
I 1110"' P.lnhl C.112..'-' ""' 'l\ewpon B~Kh 1-1-.) (l 12 Kt!HI
I~< 1m\cmcni IA1<:.11111n' 111 '4>11lhl·m { .diforma
•-.Cf\l'tl rrom 4 cu 9 fl m
rights abuse
LONDON (A P)-Amnesty Inter-
national accused a record 135 nations
of abusing human rjghts in its annual
repon today, but it hailed 'the creation
of more than 1.000 human rights
groups as well as new laws to protect
prisoners.
The violatipns charged by the
human rights group in its repon
include execuuon of a mentally
retarded man in the United States
and killing of unafrTled Afghan civ-
1hans by Soviet and government
troops.
Amnesty said the list of offenders
for 1987 was the longest it has
publ~hed since the organization was
founded in 1961.Amncsty. which
won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1977.
recorded abuses last year in more th~n 80 ixreent--of-the 159 U. N.
member states.
But it said 1t was encouraged by the
emergence of more than 1.000 human
nghts groups in recent years and the
proliferauon of la ws to protect pris·
oners' rights.
It ~dded: "'More than ever before in
world history, government$ are ex-
posed to the glare of international
publicll) __.. the greatest weapon we
have."
It said at least 760 political pns-
oners were executed in 39 countnes in
1987 but estimated the number
probably was much higher because of
secret executions. It atso reported that
governments used a variety of
method$-l0..4eflect cnticisr1>ii includ.
ing death squads in Latin America.
81 \tlRT CllEAP'S IACIC
• Ulll ltW PltetS
• u•1 Leunot1
41'-"'-oHlll'All
2400 tq " of lll9fl ~ --pl9nll ~ .. ,,_ ~ bellltl•
DIRT CHEAP PlAllT CO
411 (. U t• St. Cttt• ....
Exhibition '88
Meet Robert Lyn Nelson
Submerge yoursclr in a "cckcnd or run and festivities with the
undisputed mas1er of underwater art. Stt his latest originals and
limited edition~. tncluding the 1989 triptych and Nelson's bold
excursion 10 a new dimension. "Elements of the Universe!'
Deep Sea Weekend· October 7, 8 & 9
Opening night reception, Friday, October 7, 6-10 p.m.
Saturday soiree, October 8, 6-10 p.m.
Special rates are a\'ailablc for those who wish 10 slay either
niah1 and dine \\'llh the artist.
~mand 1radi11onally cxcttd~ space ai Nelson's shov.s. Advanct
reservations arc recommended. To havt your name placed on our
aucst lls1 or 10 rcstrvt your room 'I'd table. please caJI toll-free
(800)367-8047,cxt. 108.
@ Lalminu Gall ri s
~ Meridifn ~i><>n Beach • 4SOO MacArthur BoulMrd
Newport Betcb, C.lffomia
Ocean An Exhibirioa '88 will conunuc 1hrou1h October 16.
Valet parkina IVlillble.
' '
'
M UTUAL FUNDS
'
Orange coast DAILY PILOT /W~ay. October s. 1MI • .,
S&:L cleanup to cost $50B
WAS HI NGTON (AP) -federal
regulators estimated today rt will cost
betv.ctn S4.S billion and $50 b1lhon to
clean up the a1hn.& \av1n&$ and loan
and ust I). mcrcuana earlter prOJ«-
11ons b_} more than a thud
·b1lhon tO SI 00 b1lhon.
01in.g that 1he bank board ha~
resolved 12:? caSt'S so far this year at a
co!lt ol $20 b1lhon. Wall ~1d 1t v.ould
cost an add1t1onal 524 9 b1lhon 10
S!9 9 billion for the work that
remains to be done.
per S 100 re,ulat a ses.sme.nt i-id by
commerctaf banks
M. Danny Wall. chairman of the
Federal Home Loan Bank Board,
which regulates the nation) 3.000 S&Ls. told Congress this summer the
cost v.ould be $31 b1lhon.
Wall said tha\ cost could be
CO\ ered b) the current resour-ces of
h1<> ag.enc), but only. 1f a '>P«1al
a'J~ssmc:nt on health)' thnfl 1n tllu·
uons 1s e)(tended over the ne>.t 30
)ear'>.
The 'ipcc1al asttSsment for thnf\.s
hfld bctn scheduled \o be phased out
When \\all u11estcd earlier this
summer that the nstnment would
ha~e 10 continue over IO years, he
unleashed a Oood of protem from
andustl) lobb) groups.
The bank bOard s new esumate
comes at a ume of nsang deba1e over
14hether ta~pa~ers v.111 t>e required to
rl'.~ue th!.'. thnft andustT). Senate
Banking (ommlllee Chairman Wal-
ham Proxmire. D-Wis.. satd last
month.that tu.pa)'ers likely will have
to contnbute S20 b1lhon to fixing the
problem
Toda) he revised his fiaure upward
to bnna 1t more 1n hne v.tth other
go vernment estimates. including tht'
S45 billion toS50 b1lhon projection of Congress' General Accounung Of·
fice. But lhe figure 1s sull far shon of
pnvate estimates rangana from S7.S
S&Ls curren\ly pa) 21 cents a )ea(
in regular and special assessments to
the bank board to insure-ever: S 100
10 deP<J'illS. oearl) double the I:! cent
--:-(tJlllJIOll...----------------
NEW YORK CAP> -Tne tOIJOw1t19 1is1 1y woo-,. ,. •'• + 1 • UP 1• ~ A 0ce41!ffrf"'' 'l -l9
"I sno11t~ IM Over -lhe -CQ\Jnter I ~rnwl~ s lL i 1~ UP 1• ! HHB S.>' 10 -I~
11
\IQCl(s an<l warranrs 1na1 have. oone uP 13 ester e UP 14 rmro•nc 3. -,
lhe most '"d ctown .,.. mosl base<l 0 ... I ' """o UP l• 1 I -.. i>erce.n1 o c'1an e for Tue!tda 14 mt lore "' 1 9-16 + S-16 ~P ip ~l0 fvs• J , -I •
No securllles Pradlng below s1 or 1000 JS A~llOrf'I. ?oro J ~ ~ p l} ~ CM unB , -,.
shares are Included '' &otrCom un r· 1, Uo I ~utnwlTcn , -'· ~et and oercenra'rn changes are the 1 enM1croel • ~ Uo 1 0 1 CM Teen l , -,
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I
FSLIC
•
•
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'
0nnge Coat OAILY PILOTf W9dneed•)'. Oc1obef !5, 1988
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
----~
,.
W!DNE8DAY'8 CLOSING PRICES
Stocks post slight gain
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market eked
out a small ga in today as traders awaited the latest
government statistics on the employment situ-
ation. Analysts said nothing had taken place to stir
the market out of Jfs recent lethargy.
Traders' hav~ been leery of-making big
comm itments for several days now, awaiting
Fnda} 's report from the Labor Department on the employment situation for September.
WHAT AM EX Orn WHAT NYSE Dio
NEW YORK (AP) ()cl. S Prev. NEW YORK (AP) Oel. S Prev.
Adv~nced w~ 1 Adv11nc30 w\ -~ yec' neo Vecllne nchanged nchal'!Qed 1 .. otall)SUH otal lf:u" ~ew h~hs 19 7 New h '" i. ew lows 12 New low'
AM EX LEADER S NYSE LEADER S
GoL D Quon s
Dow J oNE S Av£RAG£S
M ETALS QuoTE s
NASDAQ SUMMARY
Consumers warned of
unjustified increases
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two whale the pncc that livestock
farm-stale lawmakers arc adv1s1ng produc-ers get for cattle act1.1ally has
consumers to watch closel y for food dropped I t percent since April. pr1~ increases th~t may not be R1sina feed prices have accelel"lted
Jusufied by the summer drou,ght. lhe sale of cattle and thus created a
.. Consumers should be aware of bu)'cn' market. th1~ s1tuat1on and should use thcar Fruit prices rose an averaae of 12
clout through comparison shopp1na percent, while bread prices increastd
to fi&hl unwarranted price 1umps. 4 ~rcent, accordfoa to the GAO.
said ajo1 nt statement issued Tuesday The lawmaken slreued thal the
by Sens. Patrick J. Leahy. [).Vt .. and GAO fiaum represented national
Rep. Byron Dorpn. D-N.0 . avcraacs and that thcre could be
The lawmakers pointed to in· differences from one rca,ion to another. creases in the pnces of bread. pasta. Two consumer orpnizations is.-
beef and poultry found in a study by sued a rcpon Monday sayinf there
tht' General Accoununa Office. an had been no "price aouatnt" m July
investiaauvt' •nn of Conarcss. and Au&US1 but "substantial" in·
ThcGAOstudywastobcd1scusscd creases in ~( and some other
today at a h~na of the Senate qricultural aoods 10 June.
Aancuhure Contm1uec. which Leahy Thueport was iHutdjoindy by the
ch11n. Consumer Federation of Amcnca The OAO study said pest.a pnc:a and Wuh1n1ton,.besed advocacy have ,umocd more than 8 percent °"·bl· v · Food Health sin~ Apnl. Reta.ii increases of only 4 lfOU~, .-u ic OK't on •
pcrctnt to 5 pttttnt vrere wamntcd. _•_nd __ o1_...1CY_·---------
Lcalty a.net Dorpn 111d "food procason and maUcra
need to know tMt we are 111 watchn'I
and they must be hdd ac:wunt.bk for
any food pnce sncratn not d1ttetly
aunbueabk to hllhtt COltl. •• the
lawmakers ....S.
Tbe $l=r tboftd ,.,., * price of around lw incttated 3 pcrornt,
, W~DNESDAY, DCTDBE~ 5. 1988 1 :J
Area teanis ~ake f~nal non-league tests
FOunTain Vailey:-Poly matChup laeads
am es f eaturtng Sunset League squads
CdM. Costa M~sa tangle for 23rd time;
Es.tan cia seeking to protect CIF ranking
By ROGER CARLSON °' .................
Sometimes there's fl method to the
madness of scheduling teams such as
Long Beach Poly - if yo u want a
measuring stick for your football
team's chances 1n the CIF playoffs.
it's not ofie• you won't get a true
reading after playing the Jackrabbits.
Win or lose. you know where you
arc, and Fountain Valley High's Mike
Milner is hopeful he's nght about
where he has his team's chances, but
anything less may well spell disaster
Fnday night.
The non-league game, the last
befoTC'"league ~rayforboth team . 1s
set for 7:30 ,t' Veterans Stadium in
Long Beach.
The 3-0 Jackrabbits are ranJ(ed No.
2 in the CIF Div1s1on I poll. fountain
Valley 1s No. 7 with a 3-1 record.
"As a resull of watching them on
film the last couple of days, they're
wi thout question the best team we'll
have played to date." said Milner.
"It s probably the best offense that
Poly has displayed si nce we began
playing them.
"They've got a quarterback.
Michael Carter, who as a man in boy's
clothin~ He's definttely a Division I
player.' -
The 6-foot. 190-p(>und Carter runs
the option and can doll all.d isplaying
a deep and accurate arm while ltadi ng
Poly to vactones over Bann ing of San
Pedro. St. John Bosco and Bishop
Amat.
"He's JUSt got all the tools,"
continued Mainer. "He has great feet.
great escape abahty ancj JUSt runs the
option .extremely well.''
...
One of Carter's fa voratc targets 1s 5-
foot-1 1. I 6S-pound Stanley Alex-
ander, who is adept al the deep route.
.. He's probably the best receiver
we'll face all year," said Milner.
Additionally. the Jackrabbits fea-
ture strenath at tailback. led b) 6-1.
190-pound Bill Harns.
.. We're going to have to play more
disciptined than we have ex h1b1ted an
the last few weeks," said Milner.
"Carter is a three-d1mens1onal type.
He can throw deep. runs the option
extremely well and can break the
option at any time."
And that's not all. The Jackrabbits'
dcfen..c;c 1scve!)_b1tau~pectcd as Lhe
9ffense. .. It the best defense b} far that
we've seen." said Mainer. "It's an
even front -and vel) talented as
usual." Among the standouts in a
bump-and-run secondar) as free safe-
ty Jason Jones.
Offensively Pol) starts an all-
senaor lineup.
Carter is a three-year starter at
quarterback for Poly. as as David
Henigan of Fo untain Valle).
It was Pol) which the Barons upset
a year ergo. 7-3. which tnsgered
Fountain Valle y's nine-game winning
streak on the wa) to the Cl F finals at
Anaheim Stadium.
Henigan completed 12 of20 for l l3
yards and the Barons' defense suflcd
the Rabbi ts to the tune of 95 )ards
total yardage.
CartcrcompletedJUSt 5 of I 5 fo r 53
yards and was hmated to JUSt 18 )ards
on the ground.
Elsewhere this week for Sunset
(Pleue Re SUNSET /83)
---
By ROGER CAR~N
OllMO.., .........
The~·, e dueled 22 umes and 11 has
been Corona dcl Mar pro' ing su·
penor 17 times in the ~nes -Fnda~
night the Sea K.tngs and Costa Mesa
H1gh's Mustangs tangle once again
The non-league duel at Ne" port
Harbor, the final round of non-league
football actaonJOr both teams find'>
( orona del Mar oner again 1he team
to beat.
The Sea Kin~ of Coach DaH'
Hollatld ~nter with a 4-0 record and
are fa, ored b' a touchdo""n to ma~e
( osta Mesa the fifth '1ct1m and the ~=...--..-..--=-="---'---~~nrtTTITmn11onrr1 not-f-aa ~ prcSl"llson
cw, ,.... .-.. .., _.. ao..u the first since Holland's !S-1 I I.HI 1
Newport Harbor Bleh tight end Ernie Reinhardt. club
Corona del Mar as ranked !'.o I 1n
This week's prep games, odds
Thursday
Orange ( 1-3) vs. Estancia (4-0) (at' Ne" port Harbor Estancia b' 3 Canyon(0-4)\S. Woodbridge(4-0) (at ln1nc) Woodbndgl'.b\·I~
Friday
St. John Bosco (0-3) vs. Edison (4-0) (at Htn Beach) Edison b~ i
Fo untain Valle} (3-1) \S. L"Hl>ol) (3-0) 1a1 \'ets Stadium) Pol~ b~ fl
Mater Dea ( 1-3) vs. Hunungton Beach < 1-31 at((){ C') Mater Dea b~ Ill
Ocean View {3-1) at Tustin ( 1-3) Tustin b'"'
Manna (0-4) at Malhkan (0-3) M11l1kan b\ 3
M1ss1on VaeJO (4-0) at Westminster C 1·31 \.f 1ss1on VaeJo b~ "'
Costa Mesa (2-1-1) vs. CdM (4-0) (at :'l.e" port Harbor) ( d \t b~ 6
ewport Harbor Cl-3) at Long &ach Walson (3-01 LB \\-ilson b' J
Saddleback (1-3) vs. SA Valle' (0-3-1) (at .\ Bo"I) addk'bad h~ 6
Laguna Beach (0-3-1) at San Clemente (0-41 E'en
Saturday
the CIF D1v1son VI cla'>s11ica11un
Th~ Mustangs. ranked ~o 9 a \\~·d.
ago in D1v1s1on VIII pla~ t.Ont1nued
to receive \Otes after laM "eek.,.,_.,
11~ v.11h Kate la. but fell out ol thr Top
I u. '
Mesa Coach Tom Bald"'" as a"arr
of the task for his Mull and Jeff team.
a squad which features a big and
strong front hnc. but "uh small and
quack backs and rece-1,ers
··corona del Mar 1s ranked eighth
an the count~ according to the Dail~
Pi lot and is ob' 1oush a good team ..
said Baldwm. "It as the lo nd 01 gamt>
"c want to pla~ JUSI before league ~ c
want a feel for the tough compet1t1on
in 1he Pacific Coast League ··
The Musta ngs pre~nt a package
w!uch could well 5pnng the up~I -a
commodtt} Bald"an has made a
---_ill:in~ ••••••••••••••••••iiii•••••--' "The running game 1s reall~ gcll-
Foothill (2·2) at Irvi ne (3-1) Foothill b~ J
1ng." said Bald"an ... Naturall). you
al"-aH need to im pro\e -"'e had a
little. problem "'Ith our patchout -
but thangs arc begrnning tQ fall
together w11h league JUst around the
corner
"\\-c feel that "'-C have' to throw the
football apanst the good teams. and
passed etTectt,~h against K.atella. We
aren't going to biat the tough teams in
our kafue unless we thro" the football ·
Holland "atchcd his team JUSl
escape the up<;et bug last "eek against
Laguna Hill!> 114-11 1 and 1s a"'are of
the tas~ \k!>a presents.
"Tim.r-qua~ci<-< R~Jl~es)
ha\ hel'n running that opuon game
and although the\ arcn·1 real big. the)
an.· 'el') ()u1ck.. (t's a true wash bone
attad. and 11 takcs quickness to do 1t.
.\nd the) ha\C some prett) big gu)'S
up front The)·, e been getting 300 )arcs a game·· ,
Holland !>31d it's that quickness
that as h1s'ma1n Loncern. ··v.e can't be und1sc1planed on·
defense ~c ha'e to sta\ home. It's
real fundamental footbail "hen }Ou
pla) that offense ··said Hollan~
Pat Johnson. a special teams play-
er. 1!1 probabl> out after suffenng a
slight co ncussion. and the Sea Kmgs
don't figure to ha'e "'de rece1 \er Jeff
Clark a1 100 percent. ·
.\lso. rece1,er 'Warren Jo.hnson
remains out "llh mononucleostS and
Ba 11 Rauth. although pla) mg. 1s
nursing a shoulder separation.
Mesa wants an upset '1clOr) -
Corona del Mar l.\OUld iikt 5--0. but
Holland said he's not talking ·s-0.
(Pleue eee·Cdll/83)
into their indiVidual a nd team makeup firstgame to turnthcudc ona The Metsv.on 19gamesinthc1rlas1 Clead • miserable season series. J at bats. lost onh three games .tfter the
-- -Therewasaproblem. The~ had to ON e1ghth 1nning.'4creJl-~l 1none-run
LOS .\NGELE -When }ou're
good and you know 1t, certain lhin~
come a httlceas1cr.
For the New York Mets. those
certain things arc wins tn the most
d1reofs1tuat1ons. It might be said
they ha ve a lot of characters. but the
most apparent quahty as their charac-
ter. the1rab1hty to come through an
the clutch.
This yea r. at has been as apparent as
any. Tuesday night an a 3-2 Game I
victory an the Nationa l League Cha m-
pionsh1pScnes. the least ex-
pcnenced. thard baseman Greg Jef-
feri es, be~n bu1ld1ng the reputation
for himself early. and those with that
Dodgers -.
giVecredit
to Carter
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ace
reliever Jay Howell thought he made
the patch that would settle Tuesday
night°s opener of 1he Nauonal League
Ctlamp1onsh1p Scnes. '";ir<t
He was right. ·
··1 made the patch I thought would
win tl for us and I came up empty."
Howell said afkr the Mets. trailing
2· I. beat the Dodgers. 3-2. on Gary
Caner's two-run. bloop double w1th
two outs in the top of the ninth innmf.
"I've got to g1 ve these guys credit. l
was a pitch down and away. I did
what I wanted to do with at."
Carter's broken-bat hit came on an
0-2 pitch and scored Darryl Straw-
berry from second base and Kevan
McRcynolds from first.
Randy Myers retired the Dodgers
in order in the bottom of the ninth to
complete the comeback.
Dodgers center fielder John Shelby
made a dive fo r the game-winning hat.
but failed to come up with it. and the
ball dribbled a shon distance away.
"I felt it hit my glove and I missed
it," Shelby said. "I knew he didn't hit
it hard. If I think I can catch the ball
I'm going tod1vc for at. When he hit at.
I thourt I had a good chance. so I
dove.' By the time Shelby recovered and
threw home. McReynolds was just
strides from 1hc plate. He banged an to
catcher Mike Sc1oscta a second before
tht ball amved. "I made the best play that I could. I
tried to catch it. I can live with it,"
Shelby added. "Somebody had to
win, l wish we could have.'
Sc:ioscia called the decisive pitch to
Carter -a breakina ball down and
away -a aood one aod pve the
veteran New York catcher credit.
.. Oary did a aood JOb ~tuna his bat
on it," Sciosc11111d. "Its a break for
them, no doubt. He (Howell) struck
out (Howard) John10n with bttakmg
b911t and came blck with brcaklf\&
Miia to Cartff." ~·1 throw home .. kind of died
1 li11lcbit," Sc101C1a 111d.
"I thouaht II had mOR on h at fint.
It wa 1 little off·hne. I had atrady
commnltd m)tclf when Mc Reynolds '"' ....... Lola tft the Wiid fin1Ml WIS the
ouucand•"IPIM ptt<'Md by Dodatn
~-DOD0-/91)
pla~ the 1nn1ng that belongs to :\e" ,,. ,,, ga111es. 9-5 an e:lltra 1nninp and came quaht~ an their veins made the York -the nan th. f '... r from behind to " tn .is t1mt's
Dodgers bleed later. Jefferies got a h111n has lim pla:--oIT ERGUSON ·· s·s bttn kind ofa ~ear "hert'
It looked hke 11 "ould be Dodger at bal and then started the game-"e·,ecome from behind so man)
blue pulsing fo rcaght 1nn1ngs "Ith "inning rail~ Dari) I tra" berT} times." Johnsop said.·· ·ou don't
Orel Hersh1sercru1sang11long. then doubled ham an. and he.-and M' in realh than~ about v.hether 'ou "111 or
rece1\1ngan insurance run fora ~-0 Mc Re} noldsscored "hen Caner. not ihe) bunched their ha is against
lead with three outs to go. ot e'en long a clutch hatter but struggling "ho "ere tabbed \tsraclc ~fets and Doc. He was p1trhang 'e~ strong. aoo
Dv.1ght Gooden's best -he struck 0' erall the past l\\O seasons. came up .\ma11n· Mets an 1969 The~ came up Orel was unbelae' able "hen Dam I
out 9of 13 an one stretch -wasgoang w1th I he.-ga me-" annnag hit. "Ith clutch pcrtormancc\ an their h11 thedouble. l lelt good ...
to slop the Dodgers from turning .\nd so 1t goes. anOThcronc-run final at bats 10 "1n three pla~ofT Game I "as a macrocosm otthc
around a season's \\Orth offrus-'1clof). gamesagaan<;t Houston an the 1 Q 6 I'> \1ets II -a bag 1f -1t'\ a 1gn of
I ration. "Thisone. l'\cn though "'e "on 11. pl3\Qf1~and "on in e\t.ra 1nn1ngs.. things to come. \OU can" nte 1h1s
No need to worn about that l ·I 0 doesn't feel la~c "'e won 11:· !>aid "1th their bacl..s 10 the "all against scnesotT. ·
record which incl uded fou r o ne-run Manager Dave~ Johnson. Fcehng.s Boston 1n Game 6 o l thc ~nes It's hke a d1' er "ho·sahc.-ad ofGrt.'g
wans by the Mets. No need to worn don't make the Dodgers fed an~ t n 19 8. these ba\ttons of the big Lougan1s. butt he latter" an on has
with Hersh1sertackingan extra eight henc.-r. pla~ arc uncann~ last dt' e:or Rock~ on the ropes but a
1nn1ngson his record 59 scoreless This ts no1hing new for the ~fcl'I. ··1 ihank ma) be ~ll tames 1has ~ear 1 (Plea.eeee METS/82)
I NL Championship Series: Mets-3, Dodgers 2 I
I
Kenn McReynolda reacb• bome plate wi!Jl came-wlnnlq Mike Scloecla (left), tba eacbaqa iu.h-five. with Darryl
nan 1n nlntb lnntnc after bowllDC o•er Doc1&en' catcher Strawberry who at. ecored on Cary e&rter'• btt.
Strawberry's hit may have turned series around
LO ANGELES (AP) -With one v.ing.
Darryl StrawberT) ended t~o streaks
Strawberry failed to act the ball out of the
infield m his first thrtt ll·bats tn Tutsda) n11_ht's
openinaaamc of the National League pla)Ofl! a&
Dodger Stadium.
Bul whtn the pme was on the hne 1n lhe ninth
1nnina. ht doubled to dnve m the first run allo"'cd
by OOd~ starter Ottl Htrsh1scr in 68 1nn1nas
··That was my most 1mponan1 lt·bat It could
tum the scncs around for u :· tra-.bcN") Mad
"It's aoina to 11ve me more mouvat1on.'' It pvc Henhascr a ticket to tht howcr. and
tht Mets went on to beat htS rcplKcmcnt Ja) Ho~ll. 3-2. on Gar) \ar1tr's ~~MC.
Htnhaser htd 11\ttft up onf)i '" 9'1tt wtwft ht
faced trav.bcn') for the founh t1mc tra•bcn')
fouled off sc,eral pttehts before 1tnd1naa i.~ p.tch
tov.ard the alle an ri-ht \:tntcr
.. •
Grt"gg Jt'ITenc . v.ho had 1ngled to open the ot C. 1ncmnat11s chgablc
inning and ad,anC'cd to ~cond on a grounder. "Enc an ccntcr.me 1nngh1anJ l--1rU11h~onan
came homt' "'llh the first N«;" York run. left The Dodgers "'ould ha' cad' na I\ lor H~ar> t<.l
"I rcall> had 10 battle. 1ra"bcm said "h come," trav.bcm said
atn'teasy It \\3SdoorJ1c. h' a 1gn of thr matunt~ lrl""beWo. 26 "asa tandout at Lu~ .\ngrlc:''
I've dcveloptd o'er the ~ear . renshaw Hi hool and "3 the '-1tt\' \io I
"I'm mott rtla \cd 1n situations lake that I "11~ pie~ in {he 19 OJunc amateur draft.
•UR:UI\ e all the "'") .. I ' U'IV.bcn'). a ~uthem ahfom1a name. "'as San~ he came up to the maJor' 1n q •
quoted on Tue..da) a st) ins he v.-.ntcd to pla~ traV.brn') has had penod\Of up and do"n and
somcda) m Los n les before ht!. hometov.n fans ha\ often e,pttUrd • hope 10 mcJa pla' in l
Many of the ~ fan~ 10 Ood~r lldaum nst~
taunted Stra*bcrt) v.1th a chant ht fi~t htard an "People talk about pttS urr pla"nJ at home,
8oston'1 fen~" Park dunnf the IQ 6 World but I don't ttt ti. I think 11 9.0uld br run to pla)' for
Snln-"Dlaal'~r)I. 01.aar-r' " "--======~ or homc1own icam." U"l•berr) .said "I think
To Sar1•bcfn·; ll •as a lullab' ifs tht onl} ~)OU can roll) ht' happ~ and I'm
"It WIS~t;:You'\'f aot to 10'<' 11, Tl\af' th< ~tt1naanuous \O 1tt v.hal hapPtn~
name of tlw pmf.°' "But all th1 1s noth1n& 1111n1t the r~ \or\
tr'l•bnn will be-come 1 frtt •&C'nt af\cr the Mets I ull have t•o )Ca"' ltft on m) rontl'll(t 1nJ
l ~ WatOft. the SI~ \.car cloW> fn~nd t m.: 0.\ I\ I plan to pll)' hard.''
By ROGER CARLSON
OllMO.., .........
Loe; .\!'l-GELES -Does one loss
lOftSlltULe the end'>
.\ccording to a lot of people
suppo!itd~ t~no"· it's a direct onc-wa~ street tor th l" Los .\ngcles
Dod~ers. v..ho lost a 3-~ dec1S1on to
the cw'\ ork. \1cts Tuesda~ night an
the opener of the "ataonaJ League's
( hamp1onsh1p Series.
It's a best of~,en. but the openang
lo son home turf v.ent a lot deeper at
Dodger tadaum sam pl) because 11
"as a game the Dodgers could ha' c
~on. ma)be should ha'e won. and
didn't
Orel Hersh1sers remarkable streak.
of 'ICoreles!> 1nn1ng.s 1A.as snapped an
the ninth. although 11 doesn't affect
NL Championship DODGER~ VS. MET~
Tue Ocl 4 -New Yor~ Mel' 3
Dodear'I 2 !Meis •eeo ~nes, 1-0J wee Oct s -New York Meis 11
~ 7 om
Fr Oc• 7 -Docteen 11 New York. ,..,..,., s 0,.,.
Sat Oct II -~' ~ Y-ori.
Mt•~ 9 I rn
Sun Oc1 9 -DOd9tn a l New Yortt
• Meis 1f 'le<euarv S o.m
Tut Oc• 11 -New York Meis 11 DOdf9n f 11ecnsarv1 S om
.,.,~ 0c1 11 -New York. Mets a1
Docteen ·f .,eceua,.vl. 5 om
A games •e ev sec on Channel 7 and
0f080CHI 01'1 KABC (7'°) e nd KNX
1070
ht'-\tre~k. ol 5Q <,eoreJe.ss innings an
reiular ~ason pla\ •
But thal "'a~ nothin~ cons1dcnn1
"hat 'tran<,pared after Hersh1ser was
htled a~ Thl' \klS ~ent on to put
acros' the 1~ ing and "inning maraan
on liar. l arter's d utch two-stnke.
t"O·c">ut double
~o 1he que~t1on "as put to a d1<.rnn~late Tomm) Lasorda. the
'eteran manager of the Dod_gers. Was
ll a !lag lo~.,' -
... udden death and 1t would have
bttn a 'Cf' important loss.'· said
La orda "But v.e sull ha\C thr« game to go ··
The Freudian shp ma) •-ell tell the
talc The \1e1 ha'e lhree games to go
The Dodgers ha\e a lot more 1han
that 11 the' 'rt to "top the Mets from
mo' ing on 10 the \\orld Scnes.
.\not her q ue lion for Lasorda.: \\a
1h1s as dC'moralmn" as the loss to the
t Louis Cardinals. Lasorda looked
up and a ked. •'That ...,.._, the end of
the scncs. "asn't 1tT'
He "a' refcmna to the Cardinals' +~edge 1n the 1985 pla offs, and >~s.
at "a the rnd.
Lawrda and the Dodacrs ma) not N' ~1lhng to wa\.c any white flqs ~t.
but 11 "'ould appear the Mm are
read\ to mak.c their dauns a.t lbc earla~t date
··tt v.a a m t ~·"otal win," said
aner. the former Sunn) Hilb (full·
c:rtonl High luqcr 11trho providtd thr
l\in& and ~1nnin1 n.an with hn
douMt
.. The Dodaen had tht1r ~ oe \bf
mound and ht wu twarlina 1 .arm.
Thi 1 really a·~ hf\ for -. WMll
)ou're up..-1nst him tttenhtlet')8Dd
he' do1n1 hi S9 plus )OU bt:lin IO
~ondtr;_· -----1 n F_ncTal tht mcca... LOa~
I\ ~n IS C'W \oft typn. .. ~ ~nctd1111 thc ••iOllll ~-lht Met VStftl tbr II ol IJ"'tlllll • (1'11111_ .... .,..
,.
•
a Ofanoe Cout DAILY PILOT/ Wedn.day, October 5, 19"
Finley's prediction:
Bis old team will
prevail as champion
WALNUT CREEK -Charles 0 .
Finley, the insurance tycoon who owned
the Oakland Athletics when they won three
straiJbt World Serie$ championships in the
early '70s. predicts the A's will come out on top again in
1988.
Oakland, which won the Amcncan Lciguc West
crown with the best record in baseball. 104-58, opened
their assault on the title today on the road against the
Boston Red Sox. The winner of the ~st..of-seven series
· takes on the National League winner, either the Los
Angeles Dodaers or the New York Mets . .. They have pitchinJ. They have hitting.. If they get
into the World Series -which I tnlnk they will -I
think they'll meet the New York Mets." Finley said.
"l predict the ·same team will win again," said
Finley, thinking back IS years to when the A's ~at the
Mets in seven. "That's my pltdictlon. Yes. indeed."
Finley rcmem~rs 1962, the year he flew to Tam pa.
Aa., to sign a high school. hotshot named Tony La Russa. La Russa now manages the Athle11cs.
"I thouJht he had exceptionaJly great talent then."
he said. ''I s1gned him to the tune ofa ($50.000) bonus.
wbkh was the highest bonus I'd ever paid a player at
that time. ------
"I just hopped on a plane. I wanted to meet Ton>
personally and 1 wanted to meet his parents. Nace
people. His father drove a milk truck. I take pnde 1n
di~overing Tony La Russa."
Finley, now 70, says he continues to be involved 1n
bis insu~nce business, and spends his weekends at his
farm near La Pone, Ind.
"All the flowers that we en!oyed smelling all those
years. we had our share," said Finley. "My teams
accomplished a helluva lot more than I ever expected.
We had our share.
"Let someone else smell the flo.wers. •·
Quote of the day
David Cope, Mets' starting pitcher for
tonight's Game 2 of the National League
Championship Series, on how he'll approach the
night ~fore his first career playoff stan: "I plan
on gettingagood mght'ssleepafler I check out the
mud wrestling over at the :rropicana. As long as I
get in by 4 or 5 in the morning. I'll be ready."
Driver Yarborough to retire
Cale Yarboroa1la, the only stock car • dnver to win three consecuti ve Winston ·
Cup driving utles. announced Tuesda ·
that he will retire at the end of the season ... )
just feel that 1t 1s tame to do something else,"
Yarborough said dunng a news conference at the
Charlotte Motor Spttdwa y. "I have been working
toward this end for the last couple of ~ears and no\\
seemed the ng})t ume to don." Yarborough. 48. a 31 -
ycar veteran of stock car racing. has 83 Winston Cup
victones. founh-h1ghest career total in the spon. Has 50
superspeedway '1ctones also as fourth all·time. He won
Winston Cup ulles an 1976, 1977 and 1978. and an 1977
became the only Winston Cup champion to start and
finish all races in a s1nale season. He ranks second all-
time with 48 superspeedway poles. and sci a modern-
day record by w1nn1ng 14 poles an 1980 ... A federal Jury
has found Rody Lanier, the 1986 Indianapolis 500
Roolue of the Year. guilty of running an intemauonal
mult1milhon dollar drug-smuuling operation. Lamer.
34. of Davie. Fla .. and two orTus ·three co-defendants
face a mandatory hfe sentence without parole on their
conv1ct1ons for engagJng in a continuing cnmanal
enterpnse.
Johnson denies be used drugs
TORONTO-Ben Johnson. st rapped m of hrs gold medal in the 100.m~ter dash in
the Olym_pic Games at Seoul after testing
pos111 ve for steroids. said Tuesday he has
never used drugs and 'owed to be back in the 1992
Olympic Games. -When I was a kid I never took drugs." said
Johnson. reading from a prepared statement at
Toronto's Sutton Place Hotel.
"People who knew me in Jamaica and people who
know me here know I wouldn't take drugs. I have never.
ever knowingly taken illegal drugs. and I would never
embarrass my famil y. my friends. my country·and the
kids who love me.
"My mother taught me that there isonlyone way to
win -and J plan to come back - still a champion and
a winner at the next Olympics."
Reponers and cameramen ha\C been ~mped
outside Johnson's home since he returned from~oul a
week ago. He and his family ha "e scrapped with
reponers seclong his comments. In his statement,
Johnson. who declined to take questions. asked the
media to respect his pnvacy.
"My family and I need some time and space.
Please . please grant us that."
Johnson was accompan ied by his attorney, Ed
Futerman wh o told the press conference that the
runner had never g.aven an interview to the West
German magazine, Stem. which quoted Johnson as
screaming. ··r 11 pay back whoever did this to me."
IN THE BLEACHERS
Embarrassed by the 105-0 loss, team execu·
tlves later flled a multlmllllon-dollar lawault
against the helmet manufacturer.
GM Thrift fired by Pittsburgh
Syd nr1tt, the general manager whose •
successful trades tu rned the Pimburgh
Pirates from baseball's losingest team to a
pennant contender in three years. was fired
Tuesday in a dispute over authority. Thrift was fired in
a unarumous vote of the team's 16-member board of
directors, apparently after hi s second attempt in as
many years to cxen 11\0re control over the Pirates' day-
to-day operations. Thrift pulled off a.successful power
pla}' last October that led to the resrgnation offorme·r
team president Malcolm "Mae" Pri.De. But despite
landin3 a pay hike and a new contract. he wound up
altenaung the same people -team president Carl
Barger and chainnan Douglas Danfortll -who had
supported him ... In other baseball news, Toronto
Manager Jimy WIWams, who feuded with outfielder
Geor1e Bell throughout the 1988 season, was rehired by
the Blue Jays for 1989. Williams. who turned 45 on
Tuesdav. fought with Bell from the first day of spring
train1og and benched him after a July confrontation in
Minnesota. Toronto finished 87-75. tied with Mil-
waukee for third place in the AL East. But the .Blue Jays
never were in contention. winning nine of their last 10
to pull close after playing under. 500 tbr most of the year
. ::-Duty1hker,whujomcd th" San Fr.mrisroGrants'
coaching staff this year and served as first base coach.
will~ the balling coach next season. General Manager
Al Ro•en announced. Jose Morales, batting coach the
last three seasons.;.s not being retained ... The San
Diego Padres said ffie cost of do1 ng business is going up
and so are ticket prices for 1989. People wanting to see
the Padres play at San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium
generaJl y will ha ve 10 pa} SI more per ticket.
NFL reinstates Rams' White
The National· Football League an-5l nounced Tuesda) that running backs •II•
Cbarlet White of the Rams and Calvin
Thomas of Chicago have been reinstated
afler serYing suspe nsions for substance abuse. Com -
missioner Pete Rozelle allowed the pla)'ers to return a
few days earlier than their scheduled re-entry dates, the
NFL statement said. The early reinstatements. the
league added. were an accomodation to the players.
who have missed four regular season games. and their
teams ... The lnd1anapohs Col ts traded guard Roa Solt
to the Philadelphia Eagles (or future draft picks,
1ncludmga No. I choice next year. Solt last week signed
a new five-year. S2.6-milhon contract with the Colts
after a lengthy holdout. He was cmical of COits Owner
Robert lrsay when he signed ... Center Doti M•cek, the
stmor player on the San Diego roster. will undergo
surgery to repair his battered right shoulder and
Qrobably will miss the rest of the season. Chargers
Coach Al Sauders said. Macek. 34. a I 3-year veteran
and the last remaining link to the Chargers' storied" Air
Coryell'' era of th e late 1970s and early 1980s. was
scheduled to have the anhroscopic ~urgery today.
"They'll have to make an evaluation once they get
inside to sec what is wrong w1th the joint.." Saunders
said. "There 1s a num~r of\hings they could find when
they go in: none of 1t 1s good:·
Television, radio
TELEVIStON
S:30 p m. -POOL: 19te Snooker Challenge from
Oeauville, France (tape), ESPN.
6:30 1>.m. -.OWLING: Women's Vlrolnla Cl.isle
from Virginia Beach, ESPN.
7 P.m. -BASEBALL: Nellonaf League Cham·
olonshiP Serlt5 game 'l -New York Mets at
OodOen, Channel 7 7 P.m. -BOXIN(;: Scl\eduled -OllUll Oh1on 111.
E1111els Pedroia In lO·round sucier·li911twei9hl bout
trom lhe Forum. Prnne Tkket. • P.m -HOttSE RACING: Oak TrH ree>tavr..
Channel S6 (Prime Tlckel, 12:30 a.m.>.
9:30 P.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: use al
Arizona (tae>e), Pr ime Ticket.
RAOtO 7 1>.m. -BASEBALL: Nallonal League Cham·
pionr.hlp Serles game 2 -New Yori!. Mets at
Obd~h. l{N)( (1070), KABC (790).
THURSDAY T•LEVIStON
1 e>.m. -GOLF: Seniors tournament from Clem-
mons, N.C.. ESPN.
CdM's Siposs chosen
to compete in triathlon
He'samon 1.200
selected orevent
in Hawaii Oct. 22
The triathlon ~gan W1th only IS
competitors in m first race in 1978.
and has steadily vown to draw
athletes from around the world.
The success of the lronman 1s
credited to the mon: than 3.SOO
volunteers and many corporate spon·
sors that donate their time and money
to the Hawaiian event. Allan Si poss of Corona del Mar has
been selected from mo~ than 4,000
international applicants, comina
· from over 40 countries around the
world. to compete 1n the I 0th annuaJ
lronman Triathlon on Oct. 22.
Siposs. director of Oien1 Services
forGcncva Corp .. will tnivel to Kona.
Hawa11 for the compctilJon. More
than 1,200 ttiathletes from around
the world will compete in this year's
Dave Scott, a 33-year..old pro-
fessional triathlete from Davis. and
six-time lronman Champion. holds
the course record. Davis clocked in at
8:28.37 in 1986.
Erin Baker of New Zealand. set the
women's rc<'Ord in 1987. fin1shin111
9:35.3S.
event. • .
The lronman. the most prau11ous
trailhlon in the wotld, consisu of a
2.4-mile ocean mm. 112-mile bike
nde and a 26.l·mile marathon, aJJ o(
which mull be completed within 17
• ho.f:1nina for the race typically
r l'C!QUita an athlete to work out 20 to JObouna week fOr at leatUi• totiaht
• moadtl to dtvdop the 11tmina and enctunnc:e to complete the naorous
140.6-mile ennt.
f
Sipou. 29, a consi1tent top finisher
in tnathlons in the Southtm
Cahom11 area. qualified for the 1988
United S\atn Tnathlon Series Na·
cjooal Championships. Sipou hat maint.11Md a JO.lS hour
trainina rqimc, woron1 (ull-t1me
and fin1hin1 his master's dqRe in
buincss It UCJ. .. h is a rart e>pponunlty that a
pcraon is tested to hit or her J>h)Skal
and emotionaJ boundann. S1pOS&
s4dd "The lronrun 11 the pt of
e\'ery tenous tnathletc. as it provides
lhis ultimate test
(
"Thro...ah tninin1 fOr the Iron-
man. l have had the ~nunity to
bllanct the many physical and emo-
t1onaJ clements 1n my life,'' he said . "Tht successful compktion of the
lronman Wiii be the puinacle of my
tnatblOn ldaievnntntl. ..
AIC"s "Wide Wotld ofSpons .. will
tckvia IM e""'' on a dtll~ but
(
SteTe Sa.z of the Dodilen acupts con·
gratulatlon• from llanater Tommy
Luorda after .corbul the Ont ran of the
game. ln the ftnt tnnlq acatn•t tbe Mets.
METS HA VE WHAT IT-TAKES TO WIN· •••
From Bl
blood\ opponent on the floor at the:
end:orChud..Noms1nawater ·
submerged bamboo trap an th e Jungle
butann1h1l:ning the enemy in the end.
Forget the Fearsome F11.esomc.
Th1s1sa Fearsome Team.
"This was a tell tale sign of how the
season went fort he most part."
Mc Reynolds said. "This rs 10 our
advantage now. Every game 1sgo1ng
to be kind ofhke th 1s one. The
pitching keeps us close. 8" es the
offense a chance 10 come back.
i\n) Time (0-pponenm-oTrly lr.rretwo
orthrce runs. res· not a 1.cl) big
deficit."
It's not enough to patch well aga1ns1
this team. To be sure. a foe had better
shut them out. Because chanct•s an.·
it's not going 10 hght up thl·
scoreboard against 1he1rs1arl
"It's not so much w(.'won th r
ballgame. or how we \\On 1t ... said
center fielder Mook at• Walson. "Orel
had a great 'ear •He was thro" ing hard. had gOod brcalung balh and \\C
were soil able to beat them
"When we were struggling at m1d-
scason. 1hat's the way "e won ball
games. The p1tch1ngkept us in it. Last
month. we scored a lot more runs. but
this 1s the way the Mets are capable of
winning. This 1s the kind of game that
shows we ha ve the kind of character
to win these ballgames."
Take Jefferies. a .32 1 hitter the last
fou nh of the season after being
recalled from Tidewat('rwho has Met
wnttenalloverlum. Th1sguycan't be a rookie. He's growing too fast. He
had three of the Mets'lirsu.lA b1IS
Tuesda>:. and the final one ignites the
game-winning rally.
"When the) introduced me. I really
had theJ1tters, but as soon as .1 broke~
S\\Cat I was OK." Jeffenessaid. "I
dont thank we were flat. You have to
look at who was on th e mound forthe
Dodgers.··
I 1 d1dn 't seem to both er ham. But
then. he'sa Met
Cancr empllomues the amazm ·
thing about this team. He hll .242
during the regular season with his
to" est home run and RBI outputs of
his career over a full season. Butafter
never getting a hit1n 27 career pinch
hits. he goes four for seven this
season.
Tuesday. it's the top of the ninth.
twoon. twoou~ two strikes. It's his
secondatbato11988againstJay
Howell and he gets his second hit of
the year -what else but a double -
offthe Dodger reliever to drive in two
runs. This is too much.
"You've got to~ ready to reach
back and try to get a little extra when
you're down tOlh~aststrikeorlast
pitch," Carter said.~ All through m)
whole career. I've liked pressure
situauons. I love to be in those
situations all the time. It IJ"~ you a
chance to concentrate more.
''The wa)' we came back in the
ninth inninpnd scored lhrce runs,
hopefully its what can pick us up and
continue through the next few ball
games. You never know what will
happen in these kind of ~mes."
Come on Gary. You're a Met.and
the Mets sure seem to know.
LOSS TO METS COSTLY FOR DODGERS. • •
From Bl
back rt up. .. , aperec1ate you r gl\ 1ng 1t to u~
alrcad,, ·said ( ancr. "hut there 1s a
long "a} to go. Th1) "as do" n 10 t"o
strikes and t\\o outs and \OU tlunk
)OU ha\C.~ n \\On. and )OU come up
empt\. Am thing can happen.
.. We losi a game 10 Make Scott of
Houston in 1986 and he )truck out 14
of us."
ca med a i.pecial tag for him consider-
ing the s11u11tion.
"The ninth. It showed what type of
club we arc." said trawbcrry.
"The} 're down 1-0 now and 1t
makes 11 vel) d1tli cult for them. John
Tudor 1sn·t p11chmg and we have
Davey Cone (20-3). I thank mey·ll Bil
Oa~ •. "The Dodgers arc in a hole. we·ve
got Cone and the) don't ha ve Tudor."
. T udO't is bet ng held out until Game
J in New York. because of a spasm 1n
hrs right hip recently.
For the Dodgers, who needed the
victory so badl). who had so many
things going nght for eight innings.
well, it was enough to cause a manager
to ~hevc there were 1ndeedJUSt three
more 1ogo.
"It looked like we were fOmg to
win." said tht Dodgers Mike
Marshall. "But it did n't work out that
way." New York went on 10 take the series.
from Houston. but that '"ai. a Mets
crew which wa<1 conco1dercd a "reek··
1ng crew. with man) ufthc same face!>
still in the lineup. Mets Manager Da ve} John!>On
agrees. he feels ht\ Mrts ha'e the
momentum to carl) them through.
DODGERS FALL SHORT • • •
"I realh lcll for the Dodger .. to
change th'e momentum (of a I· 10 ~ason senes again!>! thc Mets). the)
had 10 win Game I so badl). Now
they have 11 going against them
"The margins ha'c been close. but
any time you beat any club I I of 12. I
guess yo u'd have to say they "ere
mastered."
Darryl Strawberry·s ninth-inning
double broke up the shutout bid and
ehm1nated Hersh1!><'r from th e
mound. and he called the blO\\ ~JUSI
pan ofm> JOb." but admitted 11 also
A EA RouNDU P
From Bl
stan er Ord Hersh1ser. who had
c-omplcted the regular season wtth a
record 59 consecutive scoreless in·
mngs.
Hersh1ser continued his mastery
Tuesda) ni&}lt. blanking the Mets
through 81/\ innings.
But he left the game after Straw-
berry's one-out double to right<enter
scored Gregg Jeff cries to break tbe
shutout streak and pull the Mets
within a run.
"Yoo couldn't pitch a much better ball~me than Orel 01tched tonip,ht."
Sc1osc1a said. "I ttunk he got a lil\le
tired at the end."
Howell came on and walked
McReynolds and struck out Johnson
before Caner came through.
Hershiser. 23-8 during the regular
season with a 2.26 earned-run aver·
age, didn't sccond~guess Dodgers
Manager Tom Lasorda for taking him
out.
"l twas the nght move for sure. You
go to the bullpen." Hershiscr said. "I
wasn't the rip.ht gu) for the s1tuatio
OCC women allow llrst goal
But Pirates· soc~er
team stays unbeaten
by edg~ng_El Ca mino
Orange Empire Conterenc-e victory
over ()pre\S Tuesday.
L1twak scored five goals and
Wilson added four, while teammates
Modesto anchez and Rick Rose-
crans threw in three goals apiece for
OCC. Goaltender Zolton TegJas shut
The unbeaten Orange Coast Col-the -Chargers out tn the first quarter
legc women·s soccer team allowed Its when the Pirate • 11·1 , \OOk a quick
first goal of the ason Tuesday. but • 6-0 lead and a 1()..2 advantage at
managed to earn a South Coast halftime.
Conference victory at El Camino. Mr~helle Forgette's score off Deb-
bie Bontra1er's .penalty kick IS
minutes into the sctond half gave
OCC the 2· I victory.
The Pirates. 8-0. took a J -0 edge m
the fi'lt halfon Bontra.ger's ,oal off an
assist from Mitch Nadon before El
Camino notthed the tytnJ score later
in the first half. Goalie Kam Carl~rg
stopped I J shot~ for OCC.
Jn another women's match·
Goklee Wes& 1, On.,d 1: Amy
Newlander scor~d the Rustlers' goal
16 minutes Into the second half. but
the Condors earned the uc on a
penalty kick 14 minutes later.
In men's se>«cr
GeNM Wat l , C.y1mac• 1: Jason
Bntton kicked tn a ricochet shot v..1th
1•:30 rtmaanina in the fim penod to
aive the Rustltn the early !Hd, but
allowtd Kevin Pohlc to tie the pmc
With a nne ShOt from the left S1cfe.
Ooalttndtt Rick Hollis saved 12
s.hots for Golden West. wh1th ran its
record to 6-3-1. Cuyamaca as 6-l·l.
OCC polol•i. roH, 20.7
Tony litwak and John Wilson
combinfd 10 ttortd nine aoals as
Orlnac Coast ran •"•> ••th 1 lO.. 7 •
Jn prep water polo:
Marina 11, F1tlera.. t : Down 9·6
wuh 39 seconds left in the third
quaner. Jason Cox scored thrtt of the
Vikings' fi ve straight aoaJs to help
Manna even its re<:ord at 7. 7 in tbe
final tuneup . pnor to the Sunset
Leaauc opener torulht a111nst West-
minster at Golden West Collqe.
Cox scored four aoals dunna the
game and tc:ammates Bob Haefner
and K.cn Schwanz added two apiece
to pace Manna, ranked eiptth in CIF
3-A . Vik1nas' aoalle Kevin
Dillenbeck turned away I I shots.
includina two an tht founh pcnod.
Mttoe 11, Leu leeda P.ty t :
Brent Warde S(Ortd six aoals. aivint
him S3 lh1s season, u the Chal)C11
caKd past the Jackrabbtts at Ookkn
West.
Edison aoahc Todd Robty stepped
11 shots •nd kept Poly scoreless 1n the
first half. Beau McC'rancy and Oint
Nichol$ dupptd in _.th two . Pit
aPt«C for Edison. which meets Hunt· mason Bach 1n \hcSumetopmttal I
ton11.tn at Ookkn Wnt. Sfo.Me" ,...,.,. ...., ...
The Sa1lon. ranlt.Cd tcVanh in C1F 4-
A. dl'ODOtd tht dttiaaon It home to
No. g· ll Dofldo. Juon Morpn
scored four goals for Newport. now
5-3 overall.
Ball~ br~e ln tennl•
Dana Birch lost onl) one pme 1n
sweeping her three sets, while the
doubles teams of Kari Ocutsch-
Shannon Suzuki and Debbie Bowen·
Lara Pierson breued 10 three
lopsided victories as the Estancia !"f 1gh girls tennis team turned back
Saddleback, 17-1. Tuesday. It was the
Sea V 1ew League opener for the
Eagles. 8·2 overall.
In another Sea View match·
Corou del M.r Ji, lJ•lvenlty S:
Kan Phebus cruised to easy 6-0, 6--0.
6-0 victones in the Sea Kinas· league
opener.
In the Sunset League:
MariM 18, Westmluter t : No. I
11naJes player Jenny Bivens swept. 6-0, 6-0, 6-0, and the Vikinas' top
doubles team of Mary Ann Nauyen
and Thu Cao brtaed \O 6-0. 6-Q, 6-1
victories as Marina improved to 2.0
in tc::.~,Y· 1·S overall. r ValleJ 17 0.:.-Vie• 1:
Keltte ThomP10n rot\ed to 6-1. 6--0. 6-0 v1ctonet to improve the Barons' l~rdtol-0. 11, B•~ ~ •: N1clu Turner and Tracy Qocsckc
1w_epc their doublet matchn. 6-0. 6-3.
6-3. to imJ)(Ovt IMChal'lt"' Sunset
l"CC'onl lo 2~. 1-l ovtrall. Hununaton
Bach falls IO 0.2 in asue play.
In the A•lu1 t~: tllW Oil 11, ...., I: Vtck~
COl'doYa swept bcr liftlla malehcs a\
lht Mourch1 cruiled ao their 1«ond Aatttut Laauc v~ an lbree ton
;~SETLEAGUE .••
• ~ ttams involved in t~ir final superior size.••
: non.a,ue pmes:
~ Cbrfen n. Brave. Ocean View Hiah Coach Guy
Carrozzo acts his first crack at
Tustin's MariJon Anc1ch and his
Tillers. Ancich s personal record a1 a
hif!! coach is 21 S-S2·6.
.
:. It's lhe haves (Edison, 4-0) vs. the
have-nots (St. John Bosco's Braves
are l-3), but Charaers Coach Dave
White said his team goes in with a
very cauuous attitude.
. "They've lost three times and each
1s to a ranked team -l:isenhower.
Lon.a Beach Poly, llnd Lynwood," said.
White.
"They're young and staning about
half-juniors with wttat is called one of
the best junior classes ever at Sb John
Bolco."
One of Bosco's threats is wide ~iver Martin Meza, the younacr
brother of Oscar Meza, who led the
Braves to the CJ F finals two years afO.
"We've had somearcat battles ~tth
Bosco and we JUSt ttave to take care of
ourselves and execute;: said White.
"We've talked about a letdown. Good
teams can't have a letdown ...
Friday night's game as at Hunt·
mgton Beach.
OUen n. Jlonarcb•
It's the fourth meeting between the
Huntington Beach Oilers and Mater
Dci Monarchs. and both enter with
1-3 records. But the numbers are not
'similar.
Mater Dei has lost to wwerhouse
units from Oceanside. Fountain Val·
Icy and Edison. and whipped highly
reerded Santa Ana. .
'Huntington Beach is a hungry
team that likes to scramble.'' said
Monarchs Coach Chuck Gallo. ""This
is the last tuneup for (A ngelus) league
but it is scary because we both want to
win but don t want to come away with
any injuries 1n the process .
.. People tell us we are the best 1-3
team in the county. True. we do have
a tough schedule, but I'm getting tired
of people telling how good we arc."
··we're Just trying to get ready for
league." said Huntington Beach
Coach George Pascoe. whose teams
arc 0-3 against Mater Dea over the
pest three ~cars.
··Mater Oct's always a challenge.
We thank we'll sec the option and
they've controlfcd games with tfie1r
·we had some great pmes apinst
Ancich and his St. Paul teams when I
was an assistant at Fountain Valley,"
said Carrozzo. "And Bob Bell, our
offensive coordinator, played for
Marijon and coached with him at St.
Paul." Ocean View's staff watched Tustin
tum it on in a 17-14 victory over El
Toro last week.
.. They seem to &rind it out and
attack and sec how you adjust, .. said
Carrono. "The reason we wanted
them on our schedule a.s the fifth
p(T\c j ust prior to Sunset ~uc play
1s that they·re very much life other
Sunset teams. It's a good preparation
for us.'' It's on the Tustin campus Fnday
night.
Westminster's Laons conttnue the1r
CdM, MESA TANGLE •..
From Bl
demanding only that has crew play
well.
"Hey S-Owould be nice." admitted
Holland. "but this 1s a big game for
both 1eams. It's an anterd1stnct game
and we lake to win all of our games to
the d1stnct." ln other games this week involving
Orange Coast area teams:
Eagles vs. Panthers
Orange's Panthers are I ·3. but
Estanc1a's John L1ebengood said
there will be no problem 1n ma1n-
tain1ng a hungr) attitude for his
Eagles.
Ats team as present I) rcs1d1ng in the
No. 7 slot of the CIF D1v1s1on Vl
rankings. the first ume the Eag.les
have.been recognized an the CIF polls
since 1981 . "What's coming as harder.··
L1ebengood said ... now we have
Orange. Tustin and Corona del Mar
coming up. We can't keep fumbling.
The· kids know we bavc to pla) some
football, because Orange as bag and
phys1ca1.··
The Panthers operate a wingcd-T
and an c' en fron t defens1vel). giving
the Eagles a good look at what the) 'll
face "tth Un 1' ers1 ty's offense to
league pla'. -Junior quarterback J?ff Dcsandro
as set to stan has second game at
quancrback and the Eagles arc Josh
Wo1tk1e"1cz can bolster has running
stats. which now rcflcet 483 yards on
52 cames (9.S a' erage) The game as Thursda) night at
Ncwpon Harbor
s.Jlors vs. Brulns
Warrion-ComanclJe11
Canyon's Comanches, who arc
coac~d by Bob Rau and assisted by
former Marina High Andy Donegan.
are 0-4, in contrast to the 4-0 Wamors
of Rick Gibson. "They run the wt.sbbone with a lot
quick passes:· said Gibson. "tryin& to
spread the defense out. They haven't
had a whole lot of success. but that
could all change next week. You can
al....,ays improve.
'The Can)'on game as good because
11 will be back-to-bade games against
teams with the wishbooe offense ...
continued Gibson. "It as a good
tuneup for our first league game
against Costa Mesa. As we get further
into the season with league ap-
proachmg. 11 seems that more than
an)'thing else the Pacific Coast
Leflgue ts going to be very tough ...
Thursda)' night's game is at Irvine
High.
' Vaqs vs. K1;Jl.gbts
lrvine's Vaqueros try to get back on
the winning path after absorbing their
firs\ loss oft he season last week. while
Foothill as an the same boat. try1n1 to
rebound from a 7-6 loss to Univcstty.
which dropped the Knights to 2-2.
.. Foothill appears to be the exact
opposite ofWoodbndgc ... said Irvine
Coach Terry Henagan. ;:They love
running the ball. but don't have much
of a th~at with their pass1ns pme
It's an excellent running game. They
run the option well and have four
guys in tt1eir backfield to watch out
for. .. There 1s no one runnnmg back
that ~e can key on. because the others
are nght there to take the ball when
you do. The)' are go1na to get their
vards. but the ke y to•w1nning will be
io isolate one side."
Saturday·s game as on the Irvine
campus.
Newport Harbor's a11ors(l -3)are
trying to avoid their worst stan since
1981and11 "'on't be eas)' -Wilson
awaits with a 3-0 record behind a
stronJ 01Tens1ve unit built around
running back Scott Bemauer and Artls•-vs. Triton• quarterback Tim Wtlhams. ~
Bemauer ran for 91 yards on 20
H Be h I The Laguna Beach Anists hook up amcs against unllngton ac ast with th e Tntons of San Clemente for we:.~·rbor was limited to 41 yards net the 22nd lime. hoping to improve on
h db H Be h a 13-7-1 sencs deficit. on t c groun Y unungton ac a The Artists. 0-3-1 after last "ear's week earlier. ; "We've Setn them 1wicc," said Pacific Coast League champ1onsh1p
Newport Coach Jefr Bnnlcley. "J run. nave been limited to Just three
thank Wilson probably runs the touchdowns an that span. but ha1.e
winicd-T better than an) one we've shown explosive potential behind the
seen. The) h:n e some real speed. passing of Aaron Scheid.
which wall present some problems San Clemente has had an e\.en
and their tough on both sades of the tougher time to thu point. gotoa 0-4. ball." capped b> a 47-3 loss\o Trabuco Hills
Fnda) 's game 1s on the Wilson last "'eek. campus in Long Beach. located at Fnday night's game ts at San
4400 E. 10th. Clcm~c.
Zack Hickman of the Da~a Hills
Dolphins as the focal point for
University's Trojans, who are trying
to mainlain a high which ma-
terialized with a 7-6 victory over
foothill on Saturday. "Dana Hills heal a real quick and
physical team. an Santa Ana Valley,"
said University Coach Mark Cun-
ninaham. " nd they lost to a couple
of teams which are pretty touah."
Dana Hills as 1-2-1 overall and
opeatcs a w1natd·T. as docs Un1vcr-
1nv. h ,._ h .. "Hickman 1s cveryt "'f 1or t cm. ,.,d Cunn1naham. "He s probebly
\htir kadll\I runn1na beck and !tad·
1na_ rtttivcr. he docs a lot for them "
Deni Htlh' pme bas revolved aroued &he nannanaand ~·kickuaa
ofJim Robenon 1ftd tJae p1111~1 and
natuHnaofquarterblckJuntOC'Ollv_tt.
The same 11 Fnday niaht 11 IN1ne
H.P.
· Roadrannen-Falcon•
Saddleback's Roadrunnc!'1, who
snapped into the victory for the fim
time last week. and Santa Ana
Valley's Falcons collide wtth a twist
-the pmc has been the scason-
opencr for the two for the last seven
years. "We finally act to take a look at
them on film ," said Saddlcbaclc
Coach Jerry Wille.
Santa Ana Valley. although O-J-1.
1s considered a da=rous ofTcns1vr team with Aug1.tstin uar1 operat-
ing the offense at quanc k. becked
b) Jesse L)nch at tailt.ck: The Roadrunnen nsk over-
confi<kntt 1ffor no other ~•son than
that the) ahvc the services of two-way standou~~ucl Ochoa at Ll(klt. Cons the 'ban of Seddte-bedc's hne. C>dlc»lm m11M'd Ill but
the first IWO ~Y1 of the IDtOft
opener bttautr Of a apmncd ankle.
Ifs Friday nllht at the Santa Ana
&o-'I.
SAU fllttCfS EfFKTIVE
THROUGH OClOIER I, 1911.
"NNZOtL MOTOROtL
• L.-....... "•""°'" 87~
AUTOUTE SMIK ~LUGS
• l.-..,00-. ..,._ P'"'•
HON tfS610ll 77c
•lS!SIOll 87C
fU.M
OU f1LTEIS
All OTMllS
. -00"""~1·
f"\f>O'' • "' • ••• .5'0
1699
~
.... ,,....,~ ,..
• & ....... _. . ...
•-.,.. I Mr »
• .. ~t-•• ............ -1 .... . .. ..
Orange Cout OAILV Pll.OT/Wednesdey. October 5, 1MI •
Edison, Marina
sweep in openers
CdM, Newport also
collect 3-0 wins tn
Sea View matches
EX*>H MOTOa on
33!. ·~ -- --
""'"I -o• ... ~ e • IO .... •,..,,. t.-1 f • ·~ -at•' b.;"1 1 "id iio-<•.,., ft o--too••~ • •f" C]OOtf"'~ ... ~ .......... , .. 00• _,_p fOl.I \'°tOQ • ~..,
.......... .-. ..........
SIN I lANTHN
ADDITIVES
. . ~.,..
' '
IM Or~ Coast DAILY Pll..OT I Wedn.ctay. Octobw 5, 1981
,' I I .' / \, I I' I ' \ I\ '. ,'I ' \
PRO GAMES
The Bob Harmon· Pro Forecast
FIR SUIDAY I llOIDAY, 10-9 I 10
"llff IU .................. 2• llllAUPOLIS ........... 21
COlll, BUia split lut season, keeping Mf'i.s tied 17:7 ... Colts blasted
Buffalo during atrl)<• 47-.6, Gary Hogeboom throwing 5 TD passes . In
2nd, Jim Kelty led 81111 27-3.
CllCAll .................. 21 ... ETIOIT ................... 21
Beers have tamed Lions seven years running Including last year's 30-10
win In Chicago .. Oetr.oltheld to 30 yards rushing. Jim McMahon leading
Bears. Kevin Butler kicking 3 FGs.
*'*CllCllUTI.M11m1111n 21 IEW YDlll JETS ...... 20
Jets belt Bengals 27-20 In ·97 on blocked FG In final two minutes, Rick
Miano running 67 yards for winning TO • many one-sided scores in this
aeries: ~7. Jets: 32-4, Bengals.
*'*CLEYEUll .............. 20 SElnLE .................. 17
Browns have had difficulty with Seaha~ks. losing last three meetings
trail In Mries 2-7 .•. howeveILH't'en of nine games have been played in
Seattle ..• still -tuff at home. -""'
**IALLJS .................... 23 WASHlllTOI ........... 21
Redskins beat Cowboys In defenlble struggle 13-7 in Monday niter last
year during strike. then held on in re-match to win 24-20 after holding big
24-3 lead fn third quarter. • . · ,
**HOUSTll ................. 21 UISAS c1n ............ 2C
Chiefs hold bl~ 21-12 lead In series with Oilers ... alter making playoffs In
'86 tor 1st time since winning AFC West In 1971. Chiefs reverted to 4-11
basement finish in 1987.
**L.A. IAIDEIS ............ 20 •11111 ...................... 13
Raiders only NFL team to completely dominate Dolphins starting In
'66, series stands at one-sided 15-3-1 tor LA .. Raiders winning la.st SI•
meetings • L.A. to win seventh.
L.A. lllllS ................ 30 **ITUITA. ................. 17
Falcons beat Rams during strike in '87, coming· from 17-0 deficit at
haJftllTle to win 24-20 led by Chas. White. L.A. took Atlanta apart In re-
match. blanking F~ns 33-0.
**lllllESOTI ........ "' ... 30 TAllPl IAY ............... 10
Sues broke 5-game loslng streak vs. Vikings in first meeting last season,
winning 20-10 on two big turnovers .•• Minn. won second meetlnq 23-17
after trailing 7-6 at halftime.
IEW EllUll .......... 17 **SllEEI UY 13
Pats Packers have met Just three times. all peculiarly at 6-year intervals
. . there hasn't been much Joy in Pack-country since ·12 when GB won
10. lost 4, winning d1v1s1on
IEW OILUIS .......... 27 **Sii DIEIO ............... 23
Starting in 1973, Chargers have not only won three out of three in brief
series. but have run up 66 points to Saints' 14 . N 0 overdue to win a 1.
and this should be 11
PlnSIURIH ............ 2• **PHOEllX ................... 23
Steelers lead series with Cards 29-20-3. and have won last three meetings
Cards' last great years were back-to-back NFC East title years In
1973. 1975 beaten 1n playoffs
**SAi FIAICISCO ....... 31 DEIVER .................... 2•
ii yoo remember. these two were to have been last year's Super Bowl
opponents. but V1k1ngs and Redskins got 1n the way Broncos have won
3 straight over 49ers. teed ser~
**PllUIELPHll .......... 23 MEW YORK lilllTS ... 20
••1AF-G1ants have swept three straight 2-game series from Eagles
including two 3-p01nters last lall NY won first 20-17. then beat Eagles
1n OT 23-20 after leading 20-6 in foorth
COLLEGE
Sat, Oct. 8 -Major Colleges-Div, 1-A
·Air Force 38 Navy
'Alabama 35 Missiwpp1
·Arkansas 26 Tex as Tech
Army 35 ·vale
Auburn 30 ·Ls u
Ball State 21 "Kent State
'Baylor 28 SWTell89\
'Bngham Young 33 Colorado State
Central Michigan 23 "Eastern Michigan
Clemson 31 "Virginia
'Flonda 42 Memphis State
'Florida State 4-0 Georgia Southern
Fresno State 26 "Fullerton State
·Georgia 30 Vandert>tlt
'Hawa11 22 Texas · El Paso
·Houston 23 Texas A & M
'tlhnots 27 Purdue
'Iowa 24 Wisconsin
·1owa State 23 Nort.hem Iowa
·Maryland 24 Georgia Tech
'Michigan 27 Michigan State
'Minnesota 26 Norttiwestem
M1ssoun 31 ·Kansas State
Nebraska 49 'Kansas
'North Carohna Stale 35 East Tennessee
Northern llhnots 24 ~oledo
Notre Dame 24 "Pittsburgh
Ohio State 27 'Indiana
Ohio U 27 'Bowling Green
Oklahoma 34 Tex as
Oklahoma $late 31 ·colorado
'Pacific 21 Nevada-Las Vegas
'Penn State 35 Cincinnati
South Carohna · 4 1 'VP I
Sovth'n M 1ss1ss1pp1 24 ·Tulane
·southern Cahtorn1a 22 Oregon
·stanford 28 San Jose State
SW Louisiana 24 'Louisiana Tech
"Syracuse 21 Rutgers
'T C U 33 Rice
Tulsa 27 ·Lou1sv1lle ·u c LA 38 Oregon State
Utah 28 ·New MexlCo
'Utah State 28 Long Beacn State
·wake Forest 24 North Carolina
Washington 24 'Anzona State
'Washington State 28 Cahfom1a
West Virginia 38 'East CarOlina
Western Mletligan 30 'M1am1. OH
Wyoming 34 'San Diego State
21
13
21
7
27
14
14
14
21
10
6
7
14
14
20
14
24
10
20
23
14
13
6
6
6
20
22
23
20
10
24
20
10
6
14
14
17
8
17
7
21
7
7
21
21
17
20
8
10
13
SPONSORED B .Y
cono1 CREEK
71418 Edinger. Huntington Beach
J. C. McLllS
18121 Beach Blvd .. Huntington Beach
CHIRLIES
6041 Boise. Huntington Beach
SHIPLEYS
2201 Main S&,, Huntington Beach
Harbor & WI son. Costa Mesa
~847-7427
. 841-8417
894-1181
liMlll
111-3222
I F II ~ ; ., R ~ ' i I 1-': !
---
NL CMAMPIONSMlt SaRIH
Metl 1, ~ 2 ,._ n
N•W Y<>l'K LOSA•a1.t1s
WltJon('f
MYtrl 0
Jttttrl• 31> Hrnndl ID SlrWbfy rt
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C•rltl' c BdllTVI ~
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• I 3 0 4 0 I 0
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E-9ac1unen. OP-Lo. Anetltt t lO~•w Yont S, lol Anetlff '-28-Scloscla, Str•wl>efrv, Carter. SB-Su U1 s-Bac•~n.
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McSl'lerrv; Second. WHI; Tlllrd, Rennert, Lift, Ortlchon;Rivtlt, Runge-.~ T-NS. A-SS,512.
CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
Nattonal LN9Ue
Tue,01v, Ocl. • -Naw York Mel' J, °""'' 2 (Mets IH O wries. l·Ol. Wednesd•t , Ocl S -New York Meh 1t Dedeln, 7 P.m. Frldev, Oct. 1 -OOd9tr'S er Ntw York Meli, S P.m.
S.turoev, Oct. I -OOd9tr'S 11 Ntw YOfk
Mlli, 9 • m. • Sundey, OCI 9 -Dedeln •I New YOfll Meis (If necnserv), S P.m.
Tuesci.v. Oct. 11 -New YOfll .Mtll •• Dedeln (It nKHservl, s 11.m. WtCIMSdeY, Oct. 12 -N-YOfk Meis •I
~ (If MCtUUY)r S P..m.
American LNtue CharnlMOftsNlt Series
Tod•v -O.ll.llnd -' Bos1on, 10-.20 •.m. Thondev, Ocl. 6 -Oakland 11 llo$1on, S
om
S.turoev, Oc1 8 -Bos1on 11 0.klencl, S pm
Sunaav. Oct. 9 -Boston •• 0.llleno, 1130 1 m MonOev. OCI 10 -Boslon 1r, 0.kleno Clf necenarv), no6n
Wtdl\ftdlY, Oc1 12 -0.klenO el Bo,lon Cit
neceuervl. noon
T,,ursdev. Ocl. 13 -Oekleno •I BollOll (If
necHservl. S o.m
World Seri.s
S.1uro1v, Oct. IS -et Netlonel Lee11ue
winner, S Pm
Sunde..., Oc1 16 -er Nelionel Lt111ue winner, S P.m
Tuesoev. Ocl 18 -•• Amtf'lcan LH llut winner. S om.
WtdnHOev. Ocl 19 -•• Amtrlc•n Ltlllut
winner, S P.m. • -Thursd•v, Ocl 111 -et Amtrie1n Lee11ue winner (II nece"erv>. S.JO-.c>.m.
S111urd11v. Oct. 2'1 -111 Nalional Lee11ue winner Ill necu14ry), 2 Pm.
SundlY, Oct 23 -I I N•llonal LHoue winner (If ntetnervl, S om.
NFL
Nanonat C~
R•m'
New Orleans
San Francisco
Altanta
Chicago
M 1'1neso1a
Tampa Bav
De.1ro1t •
Green Bav
w.,,
W L
4 1
.. 1
4 1
1 4
Central
T
0
0
0
0
4 1 0
3 2 0 2 J 0
1 4 . 0
0 s 0
EHt
Pd. PF PA
.800 145 106
.800 117 95
.800 129 104
.200 112 134
.800 106 60
600 107 71 .•OO 87 118
200 78 93
.000 64 122
N Y. Gianrs 3 2 0 .600 111 118
Phoenix 3 2 0 .600 129 110
Dallas J..
3
J 0 .400 91 90
PhlladelPhla /. 0 .400 12°8 105
Washington 2 3 0 .400 111 120
A m.rlan ConMrtMe
Seattle
Denver
Raiders
San 0 1990
K•nsas City
Wnt
3 2
2 3 2 3
2 J
0
0
0
0
1
Clncinna11
Cleveland
Houslon
P1llsburgh
I J
Central s 0
3 2
3 2
0 1.000 135 88
0 .600 72 76
0 .600 112 132
1 • 0 .200 102 127
EHt
Buffalo • l 0 ti Y Je1s J 1 I
M iam i 2 J O
New England 2 3 0
lndianaPOlis I 4 0
I iouftdlY'S ~lnfl R•m• at Atlenta, 10 1 m. M1am1 II ••lder1. I p.m
C,,1t•110 at 011ro11. 10 a.m
.100 77 82
.100 lOS 61
. .00 74 12 ,.oo 75 103
.200 76 91
1nc1<1n•POlls •I Butf•IO, 10 a m K1nsH City 11 Houslon, 10 •.m
New En11l•t1d vi.~~ B•v 11 Mllwaukff, 10 am
No1 York Jel' at Clnclnn1tl, 10 • m.
SHlllt a• Clevet•nd. 10 •.m Tampa Bn •t M lnnesot•. 10 11.m. Wesr11n111on el 01llH , 10 e.m.
P111,our11h at Phoenix, 1 P.m. Otnvtr el Stn FrencllCo. 1 P.m Ntw Orleens el Stn 0 14'00, 1 o.m.
Me!Ml9Y's Genw New York Glanls •I Pnllea.le>/11•, 6 P.m
c:.t'
S..• Ram' 1 over •Allen!• 'Rl!Wrl 2 OYtr Ml1mi
Ch•UllO 1 O"tl' 'Detroit
'Buff110 S o"'r lndl1NP011t
'kw Enoleno 2'2 over 'Gretn Bev 111 MtlW•ullN)
Wunlnv•on 1\l'i over •0111u 'Concin,,.11 6'1 over New Vort1 Jet• •Houllon S over K•nses City •c1tve1eno 3 over S..tti.
•M1nnesol1 13 OYtl' TetnH leY
.
Defendlnf title
Cllaatal Vandierendonck of
Bollaad will be amoq the
competlton at tbe trnlted Stat• ()pen Wbeelcbalr
Teaala Cliamptonahl))9. Mt
to~ rrlday and nann•na ~ Oct. 18 at tbe Rac-
quet t:lab of 1"tne. Van'-d.lereadonck, tbe No. 1
ranked player In the world,
will be defendlai her title
••· women'• open •ln&IH champion.
•Pnotnl¥ 6 ovt; PillsC>ucgn •
New Orie•"' ,,,., over ·si n Oleoo
•s.n Francl,co 6 over Denver
c*" Too 20
Rtcerd ~ ~ I. Ml•ml, (Sll 4·0-0 I, 1S3 l
2 UCLA 131 •·O·O 1,088 2
3 Soullltfn C•lll m •·O·O 1.0l1 3
• Auourn 4·0·0 9S9 4 s Noire Olmt 4·0·0 910 s
6 Flor Ide Sta It 4· l ·O ne t.
7 WHI \llr1>1ni1 S·0-0 751 7
I Soutll C•rotina S·O·O 732 8 9 Ntb<uke 4-1·0 t.92 9
10 C>ki.nom. J-1-0 606 10
11 Clemson J-1-0 574 11 12. Al11>11m1 J-0·0 SOI 12 13 Ol<lel'IOl'nll Sl•le ,.. J·0-0 415 13 14 Fronci. s-o-o 424 11
IS Geor11I• 4· l-0 39S IS
16 Wvom•nv s-o-o 137 11
17. Mtet11111n 2·2·0 1'6 19
11 Oreoon 4-o-o m 20
19 wunlng1on J-1-0 171 16
20. Ark1nM1s 4·0·0 12
011\er receiving ¥01"' coior.ao "· LSU SS. Haw•ll 42, Duke JS, Hout1on 24, Ru1111n 24, tnol1n1 IS, WHllinglOll. Sl•lt 12, Ptnn Slale 11, Brivh•m Younv 6, W1$1trn MlcnlCJan 6, Svr-
•cu" s. Tues S, Pill 2, Soulilwtttern Lou1,1-
1n• 2. Bell St•le I
Communltv c*"
SATU•DAY'S GAMl!S Mlulen c.....,_.
Sen Diego cc al Or•nvt COISI, 1·30 El C•mlno •I Goldltn WHI, 1
Long BHch at Gronmonr, I.JO
Ctrrllo' et 'Riverside, 7
Fulltrton al S.n Oieoo Mesa. 1 Ml S.n Antonio at S.Cklle.,.ck 1
P1lom11r •I Puaoen•, 1
Soulhw"rern 11 ••nrno S.ntiellO, 7 W"twn s .. te C.....,tft<t
8•k•nlrel0 I I LA Sout,,-r"'· 1 Compton er Gttn0118 l JO
LA Potret al Mooroerk, 130 WeSI LA el Vtnlur•, 7.JO LA \11lltv ti LA H•rOOf, 130
S.nt• Mon1ce el S.nt•· B•rt>v1 7 30 ,. ..... c...,_,
Ml S.n J1cln10 at Rio HonOO, 1 CheHtv el AnttlOPe V1llty, 1:30
C11ru' 11 Vietor Vellev, 1-JO San Berneroino V•ntv 11 COii-ol m. Outrt, 130
Hlttl Schoel
THURSDAY'S GAMSS (Nen·lt .. uel
Or•n11e vs Esranco• <•• NewoorrHerOOfl
Canvon v' WoodC>rldQe (•I lrvlnel
Butn• P•rk "' A,,.ntim (•I Grover>
l..onll B .. cn JOfO.n "'· s.t'vlte (el W.'ltrn) WtSltf'll •• Fullerton
<G•rdeft G..-~I
Lo' Amloo' "' PKlflc• 11 BOIU Granat F•IOA Y'S GAMES
(Nea·.....,.l
SI John Bo'co v' Edl\On tal Hlfl. Bell) Founl•ln \11i11y vs. LB Potv l•I Vet' Sl•O.I
Miier 011 "' Hunllnvro,, Bt1eh l•I OCC) OcH n Vltw 11 Tu1lln
Merl111 11 Ml1t1k•n Min ion Vlt lo 11 W"tmln•ttr _ NtwPOrl Hartlor •I Long Btacll Wol'on
Co••• Mu• v' CdM l•I Ntwoort Haroor1 S.ddte.,.ek n SA V.ellty lel SA Bowl)
L•oune BHCll •• S.n C!emtnlt o.,,. HIH• v' UnlYtl'SllY ,., lr¥1nt)
Brte·Ol1nd• V1 Sunnv Hill$ 1•1 B-P•rkl
Cvortn •• V•ltncl• El Oor•Oo vs El Toro (•I Mlu lofl. Vlliol fu11renr• II 81snoo Atnlll
L• H•C>ra 11 Ptrr15
LlktWood v' Lol Alem1101 l•I G•IVI
L• Mir•O. "" K•ttlla (I I Grov ... Sl•dium) Lc>er• 11 El MoOene Me11no111 vs Sonora Cel La H•tlr•l
Po•nl Loma •• C•ol,tr•no V•llev St v•n,,. vs Troy l•t Fulltrlon)
\/Hie Perl!. al AllltlOPe Velltv
(Gtrdlll Gr9" LMeuel
G•ratn Grove ti BOIMI Gr•ndt u Qu1n1• v• Ktnneov (el Western)
S.nHe110 v' •1ncno Alemllo' (11 GG) U TU.OAY'S GAMU ,...,. .... euel
Foo1n111 al lrvlnt
S.nta A,,. vs. LO\IOI• (•I GltllCMle) Tra1>uco Hltl• al Sr Jo''°,,'' ISM), 2 o.m, All 01mts el 7.30 unltu noteo.
...........
l•A YWW LeMU9 • ..._. 17, 11Jf I ldi 1 ...... 81r~ (El dlf, Ly, 6-1, dlf J. NCIUYtfl, 6•0,
dlf. TI'en, 6-0, Curre11 (E) won, •·•· •·t, 6-2, Oeearlo (El IOll, 4•6, won. J'O; 6·3. ~ Colllm·Romm CE) def, Merlno·Howlend, •-o, otf. Cllecon·Ptll.lne, 6·3, def. Q, Ntuvtfl•Muvnll,
6·3; Oellt1<11·Su1ulll CE> won, 6-0. 6•0, 6•11
8owen·Pltnon CE) won, •·o, •-1, •·I.
C.... till MM IS, UMwl#V J ...... Ptlebul jCdMI def. F111r>M, .. o. dlf. Ermert, 6-0, def. F nkle1 ... o, Streust (CdMI IOI!, 3-6,
won, 6-1, •-2,o McCllntock (COM> IOll, 2·6, won, ''"°· •-2. ~ Ad9ml·N\cFerleftO (CdM) def. Klm-LM •·I, def. Briltlk1·Hew1"9 •·O, oet l rown·Moon, •·O. Moffmen-Ernenon (CdMl won, 6•3, 6-l,
6-3. Kl<kr>etrlek·Rlno (CdMl won, 6·3, IOll, 5•7, won. t-t
IUMSaT LaAGU• ........ .,.... 17. 0-View ........
ThorN>son IFVl dlf Ju, •·I. def. Olol, 6·1, ·def. ROHi', 6·0, s. Urricerlet IF\/) won. 6·0, 6-1. 6-0. R. Urrlctlerie1 IFVI won, 6·0, 6·0, 6-0 ~ Merinl·hrkowit1 (FVI def. Trlfl·PfleulO·
11v1k•se. 6·l , dlf. L.el-5c.helflnt>uro, 6-1, dlf ScnevleorHer-RU$1ln, 6·0; Gouerd·Kll,,.rd (FV) won, 7·6, 6·6, 6·4. M'fktls·FOflltr (FV)
IO•t. 4·6, won, 6-0, •·l.
14IMll 1J, H.,......_ llMdl S ..... Amm•nn (El IOSI to M1n1111, S-7, def. Pl, 6·0, def. Woods. 6-1; warren <E> toll, S-7, won,
t.·1, 6-t WUleUtr IEI IOSI, 2·6, won, 6·4, 6·2.
Oeul*s Turner·Goteltckt U!l def. Woods·Rllenour, 6·0, def. Harl-Wolff, 6-3: def. J6llnson·LHCY. t.·3, GOlfo,·Oltson (El won, 6· 1, 6·0, 6-l.
Oeniker-B11rd (El won. 6-2, 6-2. loSI, 6-7.
Mllrllll 11, WM""'"'ter 0
ANGILUS LaAGUI
Mitter Oii 11, tteserv o , Sklllet
COfOoVt IMO> def. L• Merdld, •-o. def. LtDoel. 6-0. cllf, l(releclc, 6-0. Conttr IMO)
won, 6·1. ,.2. 6·2 Good (MO) won, •·•. 6·0, 6-1. . Deulllts Smilll-Donohut (MOJ def Furtonv·Conktv,
6· I, def. RobtrUon·lruno10, 6·0, Clef l<lm·
K•wue. 6·0; Wlneert·Ote IMOI won. 6•4, t.·3, 7·6. Grlmn·Conttr IMO) won, 6-1, •-o. 6-2
socc•• C..... men
GOLDIN STATE ATHLl'lllC CONf'aRI NCI Cel ... , 2, Olrbt ~ lt¥tllt I
Ctt B•Plfsl scoring. Gu•rdaneoo I, O•le 1
Goelte """· Bono 2 Chr"' COllel>e lrvlnt scorlnv ~e•re 1 Goelie .-ves: Morenc S
,,,.._ f'1dflc i SeCll c-.. 0
Fruno P•cific scorlnv. Ruli I. Cr•nt 1. Goelie uves. Vtlln S
SoCel Collelle ooelle uv9' R1rn111e 1
Communttv c*" ~
HON·CONFHIEHCI 0...... WU! 1, Cunm.ce I Gotoen Wt•I SCOl'inv Brillon 2 Go•ll• uvH HolJls 12 ·
Cuv•rnK• 'eor1n11 Ponle 1 Go••lt se"" Hail"-6, Butek 2
communnv c*" women
SOUTH COAST COHf'E••HCE ~ ..... Ctut 2, El c.mlne I
Oranvt Coest KOfll!ll Bontre111r I. For11tllt Goelie UIYH Carlt>trv 13 H•lllltnl Tltd, 1-1 ..
• NOH·CON,.RINCE
Oxnerd I, ~ Wnt I Oxnero scor1n11. lkl'9no l Goe1i. saves
Bt111no 1 Golden Wtsl .coring Newlendtl' 1 Goel,.
MIVt!S EHi •
WAHR ~LO
ConwnunlfV c .....
O.AHGI ~ COH'••ENC• ~ ..... CMtt 20, Cnretl 1 Cvprtn O 2 3 2-7
Oran11t Coesr 6 • 4 6-20 Cvortu ic:orino·.cemeron 2, Coo•C>e\11111 2.
Altonotr 1, Oii I, Sl'llrmonur• I Go•lle sevH.
StocllO•le S.
Or•noe Coa't scoring Lllw1k S. Wll'°n 4, S.nchtt 3, Ro~•"' l . Pllll I. Mletdo I,
How.ii 1, KIMtOv I, Bredv I Goelle ,.v".
Ttl)leS 10.
Hlttl 1dtoei
NOM·LEAGUI El OW.de 14, HtwPW' HlrMr 10
Et Oor1d0 • l l -u Ntwoorl H•roor 1 3 2 >-10
El Oor•dO scorlno Mecot•r '· F1ircni10 3 M~ton J, Uhum• 2. 8til 2
Newoort H•rOOf SCCl'lno MOrHn •. Ptllltlc>' ), Sticll.ltf' I, 01"'°'1 I. Edit!' l
I.,_ II, LIM hedl ....... 4
Lono Btach PolY 0 0 l I-4 Ed1M>n 1 4 2 >-11
Lono 8elGh Potv scorlno Vlr•k 2, Mertlntt.
I, Jtnll• l Goelll sev" Rv.n f
EOIM>n Korino. W•rdl '· McCr•nt'I' 2,
NlcilOls 2, McCeln I Goell1 ""'" Robey 11
Mlrilll 11, jr.....,,.,. ' Fulltrlon 3 4 1 0-t Merine 4 I 2 4-11
Ful!lf'lon scor1n11 Cortntv •. MecOonelO 3, Lew 1, Mull 1 Goellt ._,.,, H•rtlOur t
Merl,,. SCOfln11. Cox 4, Haefner 2, Scnw•r•r
2. W•vner 1. K111v l, Rol>lrh 1 Goellt Hvff
Dillenbeck 11
.
Ce .. N Ser-10·-'"""' JOO Wv~~le II-. L" tLewtO To,.,.. 0 11 '7 Time tn-'O •
Wl.Lnu&.L
c..........-w all9I -OltAMCM awtal CONl'••1..c:• GOICleft WHI def ltlwefticM, 15• 12, 15·1, IS-4 H• scMel llrtl
llA YIUW L•Aeu• COfont def IMr dtf. Unlwer1llv, U· l, IS.·S.
IM. NewPOrl Ml1110r dlf. Tutlllfl IS· I, l S-3, IS-I. ESl•n<:I• dlf, SaddllMCll, 6·1', lS-7, IS-0, IUNHT l•Aeu• Merine <tff WtstmlMltf', IS-•. 15·6. IS-7. Edison dlf. HunllftllOll leecll, 15·6, 15·7,
15·1J • • Founl•ln v ... v Clef. OcMn View, J$·t , 15·t,
IS-I. SOUTH COAST LaA9Ue 1rvlne oet. Eil TOfo, 9·15, 15-2, IS-7, 15·11. s.n Clemente def, CIPlslreno Va .. v, 3·15,
IS-12, 16·14, 17·11
ANGILUS &.•..W Meltr Del <tff. SI. P.ul, 15-2, IMS. IS-9.
15-1.
ACADaMY L•AOUe Liberty Ctvl1llen def. Merff... Cllrlttlen,
1$• 1, IS-l, lS·O.
o._ ..........
OAVIY'S LOCK•tt C.......,, llMdll -4 tlOllt. 103 eno,.n. 33 l llOnlto, 5 vellowt•ll, I
Cod, I helll>UI. 203 ailico NH, 60 Mnd NH,
1 m•Cktrtl, 261 l>lut oereh, 3 .)CufDln, 71
SklPll Ck, 9 Whitt nsh, 1 MrllO. NIWll'OltT lANDtHG -2 tlOllt, :M •n1111". 20 und t>us, JO l>lue oerell, 3 t>onllo,
I ~lleo l>l!n , 3 m1clltrt1, 2 rock fll ll, to sculPln, 2 whilt fi,h, 10 sole.
Tiiis Wtelc 'S treut lllaftta
LOS ANG.LIS -Crvst•I lAkt , El bof•oo Perk Li ke, Pecll ROid Pllfll Llkl, Plru Cl"Mk
(Frtnch!Nn'' Fiii), San Getlrltl River (H si fOfll).
SAN al9'NARDtHO -9111 llffr L .... e. Cotoreoo Ai ..... (Needles). Grevorv Llfl•-
V•NTuttA -,.CH ilH l •ke.
SANTA auaARA -Cecllume Li ke INYO -B•ktr CrMll, 9111 Pint CrMk. BIPIOP CrMll (mlOOlt Ind llOUlrt forlu Ind
lnt•k• II), lnatcltodence CrHll. Llkt S.tlrlne,
Lone Pine Crttlt. Noni\ LAii•, Owens RIYtr (Lews Brldet OOWMlrHm lo Sl-ard ~ne •nd t>etow TinemtNI. Plffsenl van.v Rfllt'-
voir, Soulll l •ke, Tat>oose Crttll, Tinemehl Crte11.
MOHO -Rot><nson Cr•. Twin Lekff Brlclgepor I.
Tuesdlv's transadlefts
aASEaALL
AmtricM leHUt BAL 'flMORE ORIOLES-N•med C1I Rloken Sr lrtlrd·bllse coecll, Tom MeCrew hllllnci COICll, Al J•Ck$on Pllclliriv eoecll .no JOllnny
O.lt• t>tn<:ll coech. · TORONTO BLUE JA Ys-Rllllrtd Jlmv Wll· tlem,, m•neoer, for lht 1999 W•M>n.
N•fllMI lMeUt PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Fired Svd T!Vifl,
ventr 11 m•ne11tr. SAN F~ANCISCO GIANTS-~nnounctd thet
Jo" Mor1i.s, 1>111tlnc1 eoecll, •Ml not lie rt·
reined N•med Ou"v Bek., IMlllino coecf'I.
Wendell Kim llr" l>He eoecn, i nd Gorov MeeKtn1le ~""" of Phoenix of Ille Peclfle COHI LH9ut Aoc.Mel to team wJtll AU.tr.
flol> Liiiis, Norm Srttrrv •nc:I Bill Fehtv,
eoec~. on OM-VHr coniracts. HSKITHLL NetleMI ........ AllMidM
MILWAUKEI; BUCKS--Tr.otd .J«ry Re· 't'nolds, ouaro·tOf,.ard, to tf'lt Seellle Su11tr·
SonlCl !Of I 1990 ~-rOYl'IO Clflfl CfloiQe
f'OOTaALL ........ , ..... LM9Ue
CINCINNATI BENGALS-Sllll!td Mere Looen, rUMinv l>Kk. Plectd Oervr Smith,
eornerbllck, on lnlurtd rewrve.
INOIANAPOLIS COLTS-Trldeel Ron Soll.
llUlrel, 10 Ille Pnlledl!Clhill E11>1H for I flrsl· round dr•fl Piek in 1919 end orlltf undlsclostd
dr•ll Pbs. PHOENIX CAROINALS-N•mtd P•ul
Jenten Cllrector of PUl>llc rNllons. AnnounQtCI
lll•t Lerrv Wiison, lllNlr•I ~Miit!', wlll •I'° H sume Ille dutlt• of vie• ornldenl. Promoreo Terrv B1tc11oe from dlreclOf of out>tlc rNllon• lo vice oresldenl fOf communleetlons. PITTSBURGH STEELERS-W•lveo Tn.o
Youno, 1111111 end. TAMPA BAY .BUCCANEERS--t ·l lllned
Pet•. Nelerl•n, llnebecker Welveo Kevin
Thomes, etnltl'. HOCKIY .
NetleMI H.cllev l.-.ue HARTFORD WHALERS-Se,,! LlnOH Y C•rson, fefl wing, eno Cl\ef'IH lourttOls ano
Lerrv Tr•°"· oet.nwnen, lo Blnthllmton of tht Amtf'ic•n Hockev Lffl>UI. MINNESOTA NORTH STARS-Aoraect lo
ltrms wllll Dino Clccerell. ril>lll wino NEW YORK •ANGERS-AulllMCI Mllo.t '11Cllttr. 11011141, to Denver of lht lnltf',,.llonel Moekey Ltffllt,
PMILAOELPHI~ FL YERS-Assi9ned J.J
O•l1>nHIAt, oe.nswn.n, to HerMltv of '"' ~ic •. n tiOCMY Lelllue.
IOCUll ~ ...._ Seceer LtMUe BAL TIMOAE BLAST-Announced Mike
HerrlM>n. llOllll-, f\I' felled 1111 PllvSIGel end won't t>t otevlno tor"tl'lt IM m 1111, tMson COLLICH
G&ORGIA TECH-N•meo L_, Wurth es· l i'l•nl bl!Mil>el eoecll. LEHMAN-N•med Ed Zau 1rlno, HSlll1nl men's bH kelbltl coecll.
WEST VIRGINIA-Announceo '"' rttlv· nellon of All•n JOMM>n, foollMI• "'envtll coech. effective No" 2t so ht cen t1k• • 'lmller oo'ltlon with rne B1lllmore Orlotes.
'oil LOI Al•mltol
TUU OAY'\ HSUL TS Cl6lll ef$f.......,_,......,.., , .. IT •ACI. >00 ver<I\
U lllACTA IM I 0.ICI UOM FOU.TII •ACL JSO n r<I\
$2 I JIACTA IC JI N.O SISOO
SIYINTM •ACI • .act ,., ..
l.flle OOI 10-tOM<\I ) 10 140 7 fO
Av-Ne1o .. tCeroo1e UO l IO
C11er1•11tJ ( l.ff<lll • 00 T-. 0 tS•7 U l llACTA 11 J .,.,., UtlO
Fe1?:.c':;','!.!,~,• >so ·r: uo '•
Sltt4CIWI Te SM t~• ... I UO 1 IO ~I -· ILK• ... I ,, 140 T-. 0 11 U tt I JIACTA 12 '1 .. .., \IUO
""90 •""· ...... T...,. ,., M.fc IA .. I st• J 00 HI
l -"'-1-'tl HO HO
Ar1 Vo.. WIClll>t (H<'tl JS40 10.0 •IO
Ft(•le Fr-ILtwoO IHO .. 0
....... 11.eCUVI .. 0 Tlll'W Otten U IJIACTA 16-ll .. .., lift• U OAIL'I' ntW'LI 11+•1 NCI .,. ..
PWTit •ACI. l• •••lb lleo N 1eo 1~ ... 1 it• i• JIO !1'-l MarC\I\ fTl' .. l<nl 2IO ,. a-'°"'" .._ 1c.r ... ,., s 10 T1mt •17'7
SI l lUICTA 11-ll -m • "' SIJITM u ca. 1• ,.,.,. u
H .... , Ori Ytv lleeclll J .. 1• Ut
l'r4CI l'rK"°" 1"-1 •• 1 ..
Tole< T ... IDICler<h ... I IS OO 100 HO AlltH OI Tiit Geme IC•"l •IO J 10 Stree1u11 Gerrlllt IH#!I 7 IO
TltM •JO I• u ••ACTA 1•·11 -nuo U DAILY nt.ul 17 •·•I M4 Uto• llGHTM I ACC. UO ,..,,,. °" r ..... w• ·-· IUI , • • ,. DotlOr "" .... 11. ..... 1 •• '" $wtM Te Me 11..lld.,.I J 00 h M Of.IOI
U ellACTA t> fl -ITUI ~ •AC.i )Jt ,.,,,
Slfe!lv Wu. .. IN~l ti• 'It 4 .
lt"'911f\ -10.U.tnl , .. ) •
·ooct9r says Tyson not manic depressive
NEW YORK (AP) -Undisputed hc.avy-
wtaaht champion Mike Tyson is not, and has never
been, 1 manic depressive, a psychiatrist said aner
euminina the fi11ner on Tuesday. Dr. Abraham Halpern, the chairman of the
psychiatry ·t nment of United Hospiaal at Pon
Chester, N. .• satd Tyson ''ahowed no ••an or abnormalit . He hid no delusionary ideas.··
Tyson hat been bcsi~ ~ prrsonal prob-
lems si nce knockina out Michael Sptnks 1n h11 l11t
title defente in June.
After an auto accident last month at Catskill, N. Y .. Tyson wasevaJ uatcd by Dr Henry McCurtis
It the uflJn& of the fiahltr's wife. Robin Givens. and mot1'tt-in-law, Ruth Roptr. McCuntS. a
psych11tnst. d1a1nosed tyson., 1 manic dtpttss-1ve and hth1um carbonaae was Pftl(ribcd.
,. Hall)ef" u 1d on Tunday , ... , tie Md spot~
to MC'Cun1S, •ho denied thakina t ... t dilpolls.
.. Dr. Mt'Cun11 uled 1he npraeion 'mood
.,
rcaulatory problems.' There·s something in that,"
Halpern said, dncribins the fi&hter's frame of mind as "most of the tame witfiin the ranac of
normal. He·s under more pressure than most of us.··
Hal~rn, also a professor at New York
Medical Colle,e, examined Tyson about noon on Tuesday.
"He seemed a little under tension. He was uncomfonablt talk1n1 to a psychiatnst he tlld never ~n before."
H1lpern'1 euminataon came at the uraina or
Btll Cayton. Tyson"• cstranacd manaeer. Tyson
1nd Cayton met at the manqrr's Manhattan office
on Monday.and Tyt0n thtn accompPted fo rmer
wtlttrwe'lht champion Mark Breland to Breland's Lona_hland tra1ni~ camp.
Tyt0n and Ciyion feuded ovtr C1en·1 of the pnu money from the ks R:ta"i':~)'IOft went to coun in an tfron to
their contnct.
"When he p here he came bounctina up the
Slain Ind llYC me I naDy"" ........ Clyaon Mid.
"It WU hke old limes. Mite illD*tll to bl OK."
TYton it ..... to ....,-nia1111 in prep. ,
aration tor a schcdu~ December fiaht apinst Frank Bruno in London's Wembley Stadium. The
bout has alrcadv been P<>StPoned twice.
.._ "Mike said he's look:ina forward t9 acuina
blck into trainina." Cayton said. '1He wants to act
on with the Bruno fiaht. ..
Tyson, 22. ~med to have evetythina ~ina
for him after his first>·round kRockout of Spinks,
but has had little lO cheer about since.
The liiett incident was 1 heated 111ument Sunday momina with Givens in the couple's
m1nt1on 1t Bernardsville, N.J.
T~ reportedly hurled a supr bowl and
chain lhtoUlh . W'lndoM cl~ a fit of Inter aJ)P'tently IJ)erked by interviews liven to Betbeta
Waken by 01vm1 and Roper on AIC'1 ... 20-20."
Muy ofT~·· &ieDds caprmed Ulltf at
the way Oivemud Roper h8d ponnP.CS the boxer
dunrw &be .. 20-20" br<ledca11 IMt Friday.Oivens delcn'bed TYIOll u .. ..,, .. and Slid be Makes. .,... ..... ~~·-. •1fdl81 -Illy.._ linillt acat to me and ·:1· .._ ..... rMNld havedd:ed ber," u E ll. ow.. Of die IMxnc Wllcre Tywoa lived
"" lie .. 20. ~
..
•
Communit)r.spirit
and flowers bloom
at 2 CM schools
Jfit is good advice to stop and sm ell the roses, it is equally
wise to pause and notice those who plant the petunias.
Some 200 ":'Olu~teers came together last week to keep the
flowers' from w1thenng al two Costa Mesa schools suffering
the effects of dried up budget funds.
The fl owers beds at Tc Winkle and California elementary
schools had been showing signs of neglect since
groundskeepers were laid off as part of a districtwide S4
million cutback. But teachers, students and parents__-with help from the
business com~uni ty -put new life into ~he school grounds.
Armed with rakes and shovels, the ·volunteer gardeners
gathered Thursday to weed the schools' flower beds and
cultivate some donated plants.
Lloyd's Nursery and Armstrong Nursery donated plants
to the spruce-up effort. C.J. Segetstrom & Sons promised the
volunteers they could have the plants that are regularly
rotated out of the lobby or the Orange County Performing Arts
Center. , ...
Meanwhile, the Carl's Jr. restaurant o n Adams Avenue
provided sustenanceby supplying lemonade and discount
food coupons to the volunteers.
Of course. the volunteer effort doesn't address the bigger
problem of cultivating an adequate and reliable source of
funds for public education. The state of California has too
long neglected to tend lo its most precious crop, the minds of
its young people. 6
But the volunteers more than demonstrated how
community spirit can bloom in the face of adversity.
Election '88
Vote 'yes' on Propositi on 91
It's difficult to imagine that California has counties
where the residents are served by second-class courts. but it's
a fact. ·
That second-class status is not a reflection of the judges ~ who serve on justice courts or the type justice they dispense.
But the fact remains that justice courts are J)erceived and
treated as stepchildren in the judicial system.
Californta has 76 justice courts, which serve judicial
districts with a population ofless than 40.000 people. Jn some
instances these couns share jurisdiction, but not legal sta ture.
with municipal courts.
The difference is the designation as a court of record.
Municipal courts arc. justice courts are not.
The types of cases heard by municipal and justice courts
are often the same: however. because j ustice courts are not
courts of record they can noLdeal with some legal matters.
In counties served by justice courts.only. the tack of a
designation as a court of record has serio\IS effects on some
cases, and residents of these areas face legal shortcomings.
Proposition 9 l is an amendment to the state Constitution
that would designate j ustice courts as courts of record. There
are other changes that come with that designation.
lt would require, that justice court judg~s ~ave five years
experience as attorneys before they become a 1udge. It would
also prohibit justice coutt judges from practicing law part·
time while they are on the bench.
The Legislature would set the salaries and retirement
benefits of thesejudaes, and responsibility for the payment of
those costs would remain with the counties served by the
justice courts. The extra costs incurred by residents o.f
counties with no court of record would be balanced by the
increased level of judicial representation.
Voter approval of Proposition 91 would gi ve all
California residents the same level of judicial and law
enforcemena services from the state's court system.
OTHER V 01cEs
-~-----
Lobby def eat
Slow-growth advocates won a stunning victory in the
state Legislature the other da> -and at the same time carried
the flag for the right of local communities to legislate on this
crucial matter without interference from Sacramento.
Any special-interest lobby can find a sympathetic ear in
the state legislative chambers. There is always a lawmaker
wilting to come to the rescue of the monied interests, usually
with no questions asked. • It happened again when lame duck slate Sen. Jim l!llis, R-
San Oi~o, carried a bill for the Californi~ Building Industry
Associatton whose purpose was to neutrahze the effects of the
slow-growth measures that a~ on the November ballot.
With an outpouring of opposition from stow-growth
aroups around the state ... Sen. Ellis abruptly dropped his
efforts to pass the bill when it became apparent it would not
rec:eivc the necessary votes to be eligible for emergency
implementation.
This is not an endorsement for any slow-growth measure
on the ballot, but it is a defense of the right oflocal people to
vote on this question without the state Legislature attempting
to make their decision .moot the moment the vote is cast.
c.l/Joralu of El C.}a
Comments from readers welcome
The Daily Pilo1 welcomes your Optnions on matters of public interest.
Letters and lonaer ar\icles of commentary must be signed, tyecd or clearly
wnttcn and sent to LETIERS to 1he EDITOR. Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560.
Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Please include your address and telephone number so that we may vcnfy
•"tbonhip. If you prefer to make a verbal statement, you may call our WE'RE
LISTENING telephone numbcr-642-6086-and leave a recorded message. ..
OAANGf COAST
Pillt
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DA"
WALTERS
State
ignoring
school
problems
S.\C'R .\MENTO -EH!') couple
ol months. a Cahfomaa organazauon
stag~s a little ceremon}' to release a ne~ repon on the sad condi tion of
public education tn the nation's
biggest and nches\ populous state.
The repor.ts bear a depressmg
s1mllant) The post-Propos1tton 13
penod ~f spending restraints has
Des~• gner pet ac cessqr1· es ~·;~;~t~~;·i~~:orl~~:it~nd~~~~~:a~ d1' ers1t} and the result 1s a cns1s.
There are 140.000 new }Oungsters
coming into the system each )Car but
P T e h -Caltfom1a ranks near the bouom of Prove Barnum rig t the states tn the propomon pf
personal income de' oted to edu<;a·
e e . !~~~\ al~da,":~g~~la~~~d~r ~~~~:;
¥-1th tugh dropout rates and mediocre
test scores: It ~ould take biJhons of
dollars moii each )e•fr JUSt to move
both measures into the a' erage ranJP,C.
Docs your dog have a warm-up
suit? A desip,ncr sweate r'? A four·
legged raincoat complete with hood?
Docs your cat have the latest
battery-operated ball to (?lay with? A
charming planter filled with catnip? A ·
hand-decorated pnvacy screen for the
litter box?
If your pets are lacking any of the
above. or a number of other luxunes.
I have the solution -1f you ha ve the
bankroll. The pet catalog I received
recently has 42 pages filled with more
items than an) dog or cat needs or
wants. There are also two pages with a few
things ror birds -cages. fan cy
perches and treats. After all. yqu don 't
walk your bird so it isn't necesary to
spend a bundle on a wardrobe.
Spealcang of spending bundles, 1n
this catalog there 1s a ~horce of 10
different sweate_rs ranging 1n price
from SI 1.95 to $49.95. The mort ex~nsl\'e ones art hand knit out of
I OOC!b v1rg.an ~wool For on)) S.8~9 5
more you can QU) a matching hat.
These items are for dogs. of course.
Any one who O"ns a cat or has a
fnend or relat1'e who owns one
knows a co0ar is as far as )OU go
wardrobe-wise for that SP.CCICS.
I don't disapprove of sweaters. for
dogs -I have one for my hule
Poodle. Tan~a. ll doesn't ma.ke se nse for you to · bundle up on a cold
morning and put nothing but a leash
on your dog before you step outside
I do thtnk 11 1s sill) to bu~ designer
sweaters. Most dogs aren't pick~
about what the~ wear·and the other
dogs the' pass on their walks ne'er
notice. None of the dogs on our street
ha 'l' e'er sniffed Tan)a's s~eater. She has nc' er sniffed tlle1r'!>. Th ere as
a lot of mutual sniffinl going on. but
noJ 1n the sweater area.
And a matching hat? If I passed
someone walking a dog wearing a hat.
l would follov. them back to their
house. get the address and make a
rcpon to the SPCA. Dogs don't hke
anything on their heads - not even
fnendly pats. (The) la ke to be
scratched behtnd the ears. under 1he1r
chins and (>n their chests.>
Hats aren't the only rtd1culous
items in the catalog. How about
denim bib overalls? You can buy
dogg1e T -sh ans with cutsc) saymgs on
them, bandana scarves. velvet coats.
They also offer reversible coats.
warm·up su1tsand-I'm not malong
this up -denim diapers. The> call
them "&cunt) Bntches:·
For only S20 plus S4 50 handling
and insurance. \OU can ge t cuf'fed.
four-legged. high necked pajamas
Just the th ing to keep )Our dog awake
all night ti") 1ng to get out of them
~ext to the pajamas. the ~1lhest
thing tht'~ otTer 1s a set of "Dogg1e
boots:· ~our '10) I boots wnh ad-
JUSlable elas11c suspenders that comr
up and cross ll' er the dog's shoulders
and hmd quaners to kee p them on
No self-respecttng dog would take a
step weanng these.
I received this catalog in earl~
September. so of course V 1s the
Christmas ed1t101\ and offers nu mer·
ous holida~ 11ems. You can order' red
ANN
-. WELLS
or green collars with batter} opernted
bl inkmg lights. ceramic feeding dis·
hes decorated wnh a hohda) theme
and sweaters wnh appropna1e pat·
terns such as snowflakes and
Christmas trees.
The com pan) peddling these mane
items knows what 1t ts domg. There
are people who are stll} enough about
their pets to send an their checks
Tht) won't be bu' mg for their pe1s-the~ 're bu) mg (or themsehes To
paraphrase P.T. Ba.mum. -Most of
the suckers born e' en mtnute ha' r a dog." .
There 1s nothing "'rong v. tth bu' 1 ng
a Chnstmas prest'nr for )Our pet -
most of us do. But \OU do n't have to
go to absurd lengths. ~ package of tr~ats. gJft ¥-rapped or a nt'" chev.
bone is enough
\\ell, Chnstmas ts a special o<:-
cas1on. I ""onder ~hat TaO\a "ould
look la ke rn that "eh et coat. Or ma~ be
she'd rather ha \'e tht' collar wnh the
bhnktng hghts. To be safe. I better
order both.
Co/um.oist AD.a W~lls 'ilw~s la
Laguna Niga~I.
Bush out of mainstream
on weapons freeie stand
When George Bush castigated
Michael Dukak1s dunng the pres1-
dent1al debate for ha' mg supported a
nuclear v.eapons freeze. the GOP
White House no m1n(C overlooked
somcthtng important. His Demo-
cratic ri,al wasn't alone m backing a
bilateral freeze. It was Bush and the
rest of the Reagan adm1nistratton
who found themselves outside the
poht1cal mainstream in their opposi-
tion to a freeze. . This occurred rn I Q82. when. in 1he
nearest thing. lo a nauonal refer-
endum the United States has ever
conducted on an) subJ~t. voters over
much of the nation strong!) sup-
poned ad v1sot) ballot measures call-
ing for negot1at1ons between the
United States and the Soviet Union to achieve a mutual!) venfiable
frttu on the num ber of nuclear
weaf:?OnS deplo}ed b) each COWltt).
Cahfom1a vote rs J01ned in support of
such n~ot1at1ons This occurred ~hen the Reagan
administration's ha~ k1shness v.as
helping rev1\e pubhc conctm o"er
the p0ss1b1ht) of nuclear war. Measurescalhng for a bilateral freezes
were on eight statewide ballots and
before voters 1n man~ local com-
munities. including cv. York. Chi-
cago. Ph1ladtlph1a and other major
cities. Altotether one foonh of the
nauon·s voters expressed thetr views
on a frcue that fall . The resp<>nsc was overwhclmmaly
favorable. The onl) statcv.ide loss
was in Arizona. Pr<>-frttze ad vocates
went down to O\erall defeat in onl y
two other elections. One was in M~
County. Colo.. populauon 8 1.530:
1hc other wu 1n ll.ard Count) . .\r~.
population, IO. 768.
Cah.fom.ans .»"e a 5~ 3 J>(rcent
ml)onty to 1u frcetc proposal. Prop-
os1tton 12, wh1le the ~•• other tate
and most k>c:al communit1~ ap-
provtd the icb by iarttr ma.rtins
Thetc v~onn ~ 111ncd despite
the frequently 'oi<:ed oppos1t1on b P\'isidtnt Reaean. Bush. Defense S«tttary CuPer Wttnbtrier and
othtt h.ah edmin1$tratiQn officials.
MARTY
SMITH
freeze ad' ocate" and strtngthened
t)le defenses ot this countr). \l.e no"'
have 1he first arms con1rol agrttmcn1
an the nuclear age ..
CaJhng the recent· aC'cord li m1u ng
medium-range m1ss1ll''> the first nu· dear-age arms 1.ontrol 1rrat' is a Oat
masstatemem B<'ond that the truth
1s much more complc' \ anou
forces. s1 m1lar to 1ho<ic.' amrclhng the opponunit~ w cnt1c1tc freeze So\'lets to"ard a morr conohato~ pro~sals eH·n 11mc the} --.ere 1n foreign polln . ha \C affcdcd \\ash·
tahfornia. angton pohC\ -ma~er. .\mong them
"The) wcrr J eo;,pcratcl) anxious to are the huge tederal defa.11 and an
defeat the 1nit1a11, e here." Willens elcctora1e an ,1ous 10 see a n·dul uon
said. "h was the largest state. and 1t Qf 1ntemauonal tension'> ThC'' ha' e
was Ronald Reag..:in·s state " helped t on' '""·e an unu1.ualh ha¥-losh president that an 1mpr\" cd Weinberger sounded lhe general understanding ~tth the '°><" H'I ' 1 1n
adm1n1strat1on hne in a spe-ech an San the L'. national intere-;1 Francisco. ~ hcrt' he told the Amen· can Bar Assoc1at1on that such an One Cahfomia pol1t1cal ka~l'r ¥-ho
agrccmcn1 v.ould ··freeze (the l, mtcd earl) predicted 1h1s "ould \)('\.U r
States) mto a pos111on of permanent db.ring the Jte~gan 'ea~ .. a, Demo-
mfcnonl) to the , rets .. f ..& era\ Jen) Bro"n He made h1~ R·~ lo\c-d hnller rn etonc. fo recast an his final ~) s a.s go\ rmor ... n emp h in mld-Dttember l q ~. "hen a~ He to d an Ohio aud1t nce a mo~t requirtd b) Propositi on I~ he for·
bcfort the .. eltc11on lha~ them m~~/ mall) nottfi ed the president ol the
ment -.as 1nsp1red b 0 e , ote and u~ acuon to bnngahout a want the "caken1ng of ~menca and " .... "' so arc manipulating man' hone t and bilateral ,~ze.
sincere people." "'months later the Bro\\n said th"n that Reagan rnuld
FBI indicated that the president had "ell go do .... n in ht tof' for helpmg to
bctn .... rong. h pubhcf\ rtport~ negotaat" an end to the arms ra e
"Based on the tnfo'rmatton a\aal-Both nattons. said Brown. "'ere
abtc to us ...... e do nnl bchc'c the dmcn ~~ .:·polmcal and econom1
So\'1ets ha'c ach1t\ed a dominant J\ecess1t1es to moH' to¥-ard arma·
role an the . pea e and nuclear· mcnt reduction.
f~1e moH~mcnts. orthatthe~ d1rt'Ct· "This 1s almost an ha tori 1n-I> control or man1pulat" the mo' e-C\ 1111b1ht) that can onl) be put ofl'thc
ment." trnc~ b\ bad lu k." declared Bro~n
Sudden I~. howe' cr. the al· H 1st~f') , shaped h' ccmplc-.
moSJ)Mre belln to chanae for a fOrcts, and the pr~frtt1t mo\.emcnt
'anety of tt.a50ns One ma.ior lad or was onl'\' pan of the p~ tires ~n 1\11·
WIS a new So\ IC't leadership that "3~ 1ng thlS adm101strtt10n lO the n~ for dei~rate to sol~e its internal prob-bcttrr L . .• , 1e1 rclattOn\ The
lem andtttmC'd morcccnc1hatof'\ 1n prt"\ident de:scl"-e prt1\.C. too. for
1l •PPf'Okh to fore1an relation To "orlr.Jn& to reduct ten ion O{\<'C he
l\S ctt:cht, the Rcapn adm1n1 1ra11on and tns offina'5 -.ere con' 1nccd that
1ot out from undtt its own rhctonc thtrc had been a acnu1nc cbanat of
and povod wtlhna to \\-Ork 11 auuude an Mosco¥>. • ~senma U • .SOv~ tension Rccotn1t1on of me of the~
But no•• Re•" and B~h O\'Cr· complu rulUiC$ ....!-or. 1n Jel'T)
1mphfy t~ ' uc and "> tt\a\ the Brov.n's 'erm: "neccssn1es.. -
1mpro"C'd ret.t1onsh1p-as the di~t should not br biumd n0¥1' b~ Bush'
result of tM Rc.,.n administration s O\trbloWll t'httonc cttdilJni 1t all to m1htary bu1ktup, R~t•na ,te.ott tiWitnnu~
The repons -coming fro m the L~aslature. 'anous educat1onal
groups and business assoc1attons. ~
generall) agrtt That mofe money ts n~ed but the) disagree on how
much, on the sou~ of money ~nd.
most sharp!)'. how the structure of
educauonal financing and gov-
ernance should be altered to en·
courage bettei: performances both
from schools and students.
The onlv consensus is that the s~stem 1s deterioraur\-g rapidly and
that 11 threatl'ns the state's ~nom1c
and social well·be1ng.
That should be gnst for a scanng
poht1cal debate. despite the un-
fonunate tendenq of Capitol poh·
t1c1ans to bus~ them~hes with
matters of the m·omenl.
But 1t does not occur. despite the
prohferauon of rnt1cal studies.
Pubh education. the largest s1ngle
a ll\lt' of go,emment and one of
o' emdmg importance. seemangl ~
has bttn remo"ed from the agenda.
The L~1slature and the go' ernor
got themscl\es through another ~ear
¥-tthout addressing ll. and there's no
panicular reason to behc' e that
la"'makers. · preoccupied with FBI tn\l'St1ga11ons. factional infighting
and other ~mes of 1ns1de baseball.
w 111 deal with at 1n t-989 or an' other
lcg1slat1' e sessi on to come. · The rea on fo r that. one s~pects. is
the as pect of the educational cnm
that none of the rc pons address. It 1s
that the vel"\ econom1C'. social and
demograph1r C'hanges that have
produced such pressure on the
schools also produced a ,poh11cal
'aC'uum The latest of the studies. entttled
··Return to Greatness .. and produced
b~ the pO\ ate Commu saon on Public
hoot .\dmtn1strat1on and Leader-
ship under 1he aegis of the A.ssoc1a-
11on of California School Adminis-
trators. 1s t~pteal of the genre.-
It contains the usual ht.an} of
~ta11~11cal woes and ns particular ~t
of remedies -more monC), deccn-
trah zatron of educatro nal gov-
ernance rewards for 1nnovat1on, etc.
The rec o m me ndatao ns a re
reasonc-d and made. one is certain, an
J.)('rfectl) good fanh. The)> deserve a
spot at the table 1f. and when.
Cahtom1a decides to conduct ns great
debate on the schools. 8u1 a!> w 1th the other repons that
ha' e been sho~ercd upon the Capnol
1n recrnt months. 1t ignores the
es\Cnt1al po hucal cnsas..
The ul\erest of parents. and their
w1ll1ngness to ta" themselves to
uppon the schools. have been the
trad111onal pohucaJ bedrock of pubhC'
~ducaHon But (n Cahfom1a. an aging. over· "helming)~ .\nglo eltt1oruc has a
dt'Creasang le' cl of direct connection
to the schools: that 1s. with e'ery
pa sa ng election fev.-er •nd fewer
'oter. ha\ e chlldrcn in pubhc schools
and therefort have some personal sta~e 1n -their performance. To in·
\'.'.rca,ina numbers of \Oters. the
\Chool art 10st1tut1ons that sc:l'\e
\Omcone else. not them or thetr
famihes.
Thr rrpons, anclud1"1 the latest
one. ~ontaan the tmphcat auumpt1on
that public education retains its
tradmona\I) h1&h ~vel of p0h\\cat
suppon It 1s a false assumption. as
demonstrated by the willif\lneu of
poht1c1ar1 to ignore the tchooll'
phght.. b $C\CraJ au1tud1nal surveys
and b>v clect19n resu.hs themtelvea.
\UC'h ai tbcdcteat of Propoliuon 71 in
June On the scale of relative pohtal
va\ut . holdint down ~ncbna and
ta\ts ha'c a h1a,htr prionty than
1mprov1n1 tM KOOol'-
Before tM echocates of educ.
t1o nal 1m~\Ctneftt ~~1111 t~r pentcWir poltq• \My'd
btncr sptnd '°~ llnw on •a
fundamcnt.al contrnsus for the tua.
spcnd•na and ttNC:tunl ~ oa
doint a 1rlhn11ob ~ aa 1Kre11-
lnal) diticon~ ~. lf t~ dOft't. they 1R dac•1ll • HatOICt W11Jc'M. the l.ot "nteles ~ aftd peK"f llCUY\$\ _.ho
c:oonlina'C'd the cam.,.. in fivor of
Propmauon 1 l. rttalfed that the
prajdeftt and b.&1 to, aickt took the
l.$Stn.ton1 an the presidcnttal aebe1~.
Bu$h dcdarcd: M8i'UI s.J• 1J • • ..,,_,etl fail • 0.. a.
al ··Becaux wt d1dri'\ liJtcn lO tM twl 'IL
'
\
..,
Ora11ge Coast DAIL y PILOT I w~~ay, October 5, 1981
C.ALL 642-5678
You can now cell the Delly Piiot Cla••lfled Dept. on Saturday morning from 1:00 to 11:30 a.m. to. piece your Sunday and Monday 8de.
•MDIAft _,._., 117$
_,. ... ,,., MISC. llNTALS &1••••11-.1 ,....&_ .O.t
... IAU c_., l-"""' tlU '-" .......... JIM 'C.-fl-''°' .... ~ -......-tOSS _, ........... IJU ~c.--JI .. o..i--,~ !.-&'-•. ,.,, ,__,°'-tOSt
HOUSIS/CONOOS l ... ~ .. Id """"''-JI .. -110t .......... >001 ....,_ *° ~ .... .......,
CMOIC. "'-un ,_ J lfO --"" ................... >OCW ~~ _,
0.-e! 1001 CM OI to-.,._., ISJO v--1Tn S.-..&-->Oil "'· s.-. """'-:• "* lllWP•tAnom ---1006 -1-10.-.,,, APAITMINTS _, ...... 2n• , ..... JOI• ----1007 -"'-"' ueo ....... w .... ,,,. GAllA81AUS c:..o---~ 1011 r---. ISfO a-... ,.,,., '"'-'·-J'7f0 aOATI c...... .. _ l(ltJ If e..._.. 1.00 ---2.0. ,..._
';;?-11112 a-... "°' G....I 1011 '--tot• I( W-.1 I.,, ---111» --27 .. ---tlO. -'°" 0.0.'-1076 I c.----,.,. .....-.. 6107 Ml 7'014 II-1032 WIAU c-.--. ,.,., , ...... -c..-.. _ .,,., -v-, "10).I c--U2• ' ,..,..._..,., )100
, __
t lJ• s.-l/51w 7'01•
~ 7'011 ,___ 10.0 HOUSIS/COND05 0...-,.,. IM ... OYMlllT -)105 0...-.,,. S.-.1l...-1'""""' 7010 . ........... -1()0 (I I.,. JUJ a.-.~ S.00 ·-v .... •ISO -IC)M ~ 1101 •-v-. 1630 ~->011 ,..._."_ uos ...__ .. 00 S-.'¥-1--7011 ·--I~ ---JIOt ~-1640 ,....,,..._ J»O t..--UIO ...__ t l•J MISC. ·--1010 ----2101 ........... -,.., fMiP"07,...M WOil't4•d SW a.~ UJO -ti ... ._ ....... 1037 c:...---JI II -,..... 0-,., SllO ~-.1 .. ,..,.,.,,. IOIO ·-~ ICIU c...-.. _ ,.,., ,__ ,... ,......,__... UlJ ,__ tUO '-"'"'''-.,,. -"'-lo.7 '--JIJ• '--16$0 '-...... •HJ --...-is.-'°" ...__ 1069 --,,,. l_ ...... t6" -v .... •167
-~ •07• tlf-Jll1 ...... ,_ 76.SJ ...__ •169 AUTOMOTIVI --c--1079 ,_v..., JIM
_ .. _ ,.., •••••SSA ...... 6010
_,. ...
6190 --ICllO ..._..,.._ 11.0 ...__ ,_ ~ 6011 -............ •111 "-~ --........ '°" ..._....,_._. J l4J -~ ,.,. .-..llCIM ,._ tOIJ ..... s.-,.,,_ -'--· IOlt ..._ ,, ... __ , __
2'79 ...._.. tol• -w---l-1(111 '--, ... --,.., ..._~w. "°° -tOU ·-°""''-·-1090 ·--JUO --"°""" , ... ..... a...-.... 1tOo '-''-6016 ----.--'"""' i..-,......,i 11'1 -'--· , ... .-W.-.1 ,_ c.....-. tOlt -VICI v-MISC. I.I. ...... -JISJ -·-, .. -cw.....-,.. .... ,.v ... 60'H .....,.,a-.a .......... ,,., ,_ 26'0 _...,..... 2'12 ,.,_,,,., ,...,., .· .. ,602S ~-y ~ ......,_ JI .. ""-'•'--,., . ..... -tOIJO s.c:-Jll• ......,_,_ 2'1• ---., . 60.S -~c:..--217' "" C1911m. '-· & • ...._
CLASSIFIED INDEX
642-5678
' FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY
FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY
540-1220
496-6800
-.-.. l.O. . .
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Mondey ........... Sat. 11:30 AM
Tueedey ........... Mon. 5:30 PM
Wednesday ..... Tues. 5:30 PM
Thur9dey .......... Wed. 5:30 PM
Frtdey ............. Thurs. 5:30 PM
S.turdey ............. Fri. 5:30 PM
~ey ............ Sat. 11:30 AM
CtASStFIED OFFICE HOURS
T~s..-vlce
Mondey-Frlday
11:00 AM-5.30 PM
Seturdey 8:00 AM·1 l:SO AM
Buslnul COvnter Mondey-Frldey
&00 AM-5.00 PM
642-5'71
_,
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DIRECTORIES s.r-()l(eclc><y Oelly
Orww,ie COHI Cat Guoot ~ey & ~
Au10 l'llOI FricMy
RHI ESlale Ta-Selutdty
()pen Homes S•IUtd•y & $;lftCley
New HonMs SYnda}'
"'"Y a<'f!OU"' not II-' "'"""' 30 Oeys • ,,.q...,.911 W1ff bit lUDf6C\ 10 Dul not -eel 10 • ...,_
cha•ges CQ"19Vl9Ci 11 1'1'% ol lhe unpeid .,...,_
pet mOl'lh aM c.ollKI-COltl 8"CI W't •-1~ all~ 1~
IHI Eat1te Fer Slit c.reu .. J lbr llZZ ...,.,, le1ck ltlt 'costa Ne11 2124 1Rut. leecla 2140 !twpert It.cit 2llt ltQtrt leacla 2169 ltft!rl ltacla 21'9 l11'N j11lltu Peaianll
ltUH/C••••I--brick & ::': r~in!'oot LIDO ISLE I La Cuesta Racquet Ctub. *EXCLUSIVE GUARD• * * .. IAIYll* * .......,, LIDO tSLE hl11• 216'1 ZH7 ifttrit IAz Sho_:s like • model. ~2:1yatory& f!,mbdalrmdlnwil,!!: me8tiBllU 31800BR 25!!BtwnA. h2~-~·· end~.· •GATED c~~=ITY• Lovely 28f. den. 2'A8a, on •.BR,lo2~B5~1otFRS/tDI Rs. tlarlge cozv 1BR on Uttle lslend.~1 EPS TO OC~N I
$527 000 759-8973 ·-'" .... ... ,. ..... ---.... -·-. golf OOUfM. 2 car garage. pa . .. . 0 .. $850/mo. Incl. utlt. YR!'· CLEAN 2BR $1000. 3BR 8 X N k F 6 R c [ 6 s E · rooms plus office. Gar· 1 spa svc incl. $1 /mo • BEAUTIFUL 2BR 28A NOW s1895 759-001~ $275Q 673-7767 Avt now ly. Prol'I. non amkr. AYWI. 51200. •BR 51600:
HOMES No money .IASlllH CIUI_,._ I den Pitt.lo & roof deck TIWlll•ll 1st, las• & S650 MC dep w/QOff courM VIEW. Alto WEST..........,... 2B $8"'" NWPTTerrace 3Br 2·~B. a. lmmed. 673-5561 I Yeettyw/gerege. Agt
downl ALL AREAS LOWEST PRICE 2 sty 3Br with panoramic views. 0tHes ftr .... Dys call &47-6041 or 1B~ avail. Frplc. wet bar, BALBO'A4~af' $~socl gar, carport, patio. refrlg. Large Br Yearly Nort 722-7116 ev.-780-1755
(213) 83S-7155 ext H·1 lam. rm. 2'h8a, cmt lot ~~.!~~t. beactl just Flfeplace. vaulted c:eillngs, Eves/Wknds 964-6988 micro. W/D hkup1, 2 c. BAYFRONT • 0 28' stove. w/d, pool & spa. BayironL c1ecil. trpJc, un-
S.29.900. 891·1702 Agt 631•1'°° · s7•5 000 dbl gar. lndry hkup, pOOI RUSTIC-tttedroom House gar w/xtra 11oraoe. cen-51650 $1250/mo 818-359--0943 furn, view from Bdrm. IC.. ... _1 u: llD
AMEMBtROFTHE ' c.... .... 1624 ....... . & spa. Sorry. no pets. Large Front & Rear Yd tral air. All malnt. lnci. PENINSULA taps to 11/lfF a.tH•-AllT $1300/mo 675-3457 _,....ft ,..,
PllClllllCH! IAATIHIHO" 666W 18th St 642-4905 $750Mo+dep 631-'4147 Jlr/Jla I 2Br 2ea.Sl850 • Whtfer/YrhlN11l1 II H Pea1a11l1 4331rls,SouthofPCH.
SEARS AHAHCIAL NETWOAK -2Bdrm 2'~Ba s 1070 No Pets Utils Pd Sorry, no pets. 6«--0509 be8Ch A OJt 2000s! ..-.-I • 28R/18X front xPt· trpi
COLDWC!LL
BANl(eRO
Mesa Verde 4Br. 2Ba. llOMI "' l•c. Parkin . $I tOO/mo. BALBOA Cov.s 2Br. den. From $9006.t./-3850 Bkr 2M7 Open SAT 10·1.
frplc $214,900. 3253 REAL ESlAlE 121 'I' lrtMWl1 Walk lo ~ac:hl New luxury lg tr le dock s2•00 $775 yrl 661 9170 1Br/1Ba stove. refer. Va-3Br 3Ba, G/gate. pool. 714/ 650-1824 1rp ·spa. · .. TOWN>iSE 2 master Bdrm garage n y or-Y· •
Iowa. Open house. By REAL TORS I cant S500. 756-6556 spa S129li/mo 1st month *BRAND New luxury OCEA1 NLFI ~~T532~.(. frptc:. 21hBA, frptc, gar.. nr ated', steps to bay/beaen 2BR 1BA over garege.
owner 854-0759 I · +deposit. 960-338• pat o. o .... r. ..oo pool/ocean, quiet area, 1 910 W. Balboa Blvd. Clean, quiet. Available
MESA YEllll-POIL I IHI FH YIEWIH ! * 111 CUllH* rriat 144 l ~~?sf.'~'.n2~~r~ ga~ B::.R~~ ,~ii~ t!'!~: yr lease S1150. 642-5201 $900/mo yr1y. 675-9650 Nov. J, $875/mo. Plea9e Outstand1n~ Bucolla built f11A.& J 10TIL 2 Refrlg, yard. S~?5 No $2700/mo. 720..9422 Yeany $4750 VERSAILLES 1Br. 18a YEARLY $600. Small furn. call &4(),.5633.-
IL.I! Cll B 1......,,, -pets. 642-3765 CM0-0751 r. yar . • · P S ~ home.• w """"'spa, 151nvemess ameorties Avail 1011 *H v HOME lmmac: LINDA ISLE 2 story 5Br, enthouse ec:urity Studio. 1 person. Non •BEAUT. 381 2Ba. w/d, $411,000 lam rm & formal dining. Big Canyon •Clean Mesa Verde lg 51275/mO. ~161 · J 28f+ den or 3br. 2ba. uP: boat dock. $10.000 pool, gym, etc. $825/mo. smkr pr•f'd. Pvt beach, deck. frptc, plantatlon
TWO sec>arete houses o<i Upper ..Bird St location. $1 .195,000 3BR 2BA, d/w, 2 car gar-graded great loc: gardnr W•rfrNI .... I IH. Sandi, 673-2749 utll paid, W/D. 675-3063 shutters. $1625/mo. 520
•Ott. tot South of PCH ~~ ~e offered at CUll.Al.USll a~e. patio , l ireplac:e IUllETIU CllH rnc1. s2'100. 760·5<>64 IW.TllS IU-140I IU Cltatalt 217l t 1BR Apt wll•rr patio.,_. Iris. Avt 11/l . 720-99M ~!8:i!k~ti/~~~s ~~~ 5i'(,E~~D~~1;~~,~~s G~1::2E~[~~~~~s :E!~~~o:Sts,::-2,::. 1~i~ ;;:. ~·~h~1~.:S~~-•RE ALS* HARBOR VIEW spacioos FURN wleveryihlno 28R.I ~~ae~~e1s6151m':.rk~~8 ~ ~~ !':;..1
• ti
plants and llowefs Great . t garage. W/D hkup 1 1A1C11 ••• aa.&AMll 2·5br $900-$5000/mo. egt 5Br 3Ba tam rm formt nr beach/pool, view 33rd St ~-7322 view $1075/mo 673-71M2
lnc:om9opportun11y1 Supet Triplexes in great t• I Adult NopetsS650/mo., ....,....... Mart1Ferguson642-7706 din 2 F'/p neut 'tones $925/mo.Noprepaldlatl *$975/MO YEARLY a.4-IOIO area ol Costa Mesa. Caltl~Hltl/~H·" Scotti 548-2301 SPECTACULAR v5tEW pla~tatton • stMt~ lg 818-44&.5377 3.,._ lB · •-t * mft. IMIS Siu for f\Kther delalls ON GOLF COUR E 111 11.912 ' gf a, Mar.,. ty 2BR 1 ~BA close to IHI ... PlYIHT't 631-1266 itllJ11• zlOC 3 BDRM, 2BA. new carpel. ,Penthouse. 2Br 2B• & den. ~ = :i ~ car,~ii 2133 Mlramer. Balboa beech S9Solmo 900 We'll give you lh9 down in paint. dbl gar w/opener cathedral ceihngs, frptc, PENINSULA WINTER N C s pat: h ~atatl Ft P, nice kite 67S-5030 Sea LW 644-2&; 1
Hchg '°'a share of own· ··~ii i'~· ... /2Uwi.ter/1Hr'1 on Plumer St Very clean pool. 2 car gar. S1,500 I *FURNISHED• wpt enter eac . •NEWLY FURNISHED* . erstilp You make thel ft: ;ij !Furn hse. frpl, washer/dry. $1050/mo 673-5771 832·8555 Of 854-2470 •2BR IBA uppef dtx. No EasJwn~~ ':C;l.2:f'°· L OCEANFRONT 1 BDRMS On beach 2BR 28A, lg
mthly pymts & we share _; __ ••• patio. gar. 673-3039 ATIAACTIVE t>ut Small WESTPARK NEW HOME j~RN'f:AM= d=X eg J1J1.. ztOI Ava1tabte Great location. =· ::C~"*'2oi'si~
epprec: You receive •••• ltac' 1040 Lg deluxe 4BR 2BA upstrs I Unit, suits 1 person Gar· 3Br 2'h8a. Oill~e-sac. 21 Garage. Patio. $875 . UM um11r •SE •111 ... Must seal Bkr 675-4606 fnc:I • utll. 213-928-1844
100"1. tax benefits Musi • duplex. Deck. gar. cath age Gardener/water pd. car garage. $1750/MO. 3BR 2BA I d·...i... • l•Y BAY FRONT AGE Pl . 7 1~7S-77&4 have clean credit Agt hbi to beach• 1Br/1Ba ceilin s.newkftc:hen An.I ~75Mo lse548-1366Agt *Cal1Haven261·9879• * ower _. .... x. Watch the Boats go by. 2BR/2 BA wlgarage • er 957-6002 Dys. Ev Wknds condo FIP encl gar. al f S1800/ R f Lg patio, garage. $1350 Wnter 3Br tum 67S-8507 $1300/mo 840 2770 pkg, 2Br $1100. 1Br11':..:~~.-•• ~-----u-u-r ated 'pool spe cibhse nu . se. mo e 1 BACK BAY·EAS'fStDE Woodbridge 2BR 2BA. up-$850-$750 utl pd. 303 E . .,._._ tM --lfWNRf lbClf g s 1 i2 500' 847~ 1610 . req di7 \~~~t~38 or 2BR 1 BA w/garage. N~ graded condo. A/C. w/d OCEANFRONT WINTER UH ISLAll/llCI Wlml IWAl Edgewater. 87 t-2866 ~ ... G .. re"""a~t e•as""'!"!"'tilde"""'"'IOC'"""""I BdlP!"!'P PflTlllSE . 1 pal'!t/c:arpet s795tmo hkups. Nr pools & parka •Nicety furn 2BR lBA 6BR FURN Winter rental 2bdrm, 1b~th. garage NEWPORT Island 1BR $595. Gar. cable avt. NEU a UY BEAUT 4BR 2 ·BA. faml' CHJlllll Avail nowt &46--06•5 $995 Avl now 786-5135 upper or lower dupleX S.250/m~ L ne Valen: parking. $875/Mo. Avail-with encl gar s9oo1mo Clean & cozy 18R $615.
YJhfSU ~:·ldl~pl~~a~~st'ioc:a~'1~~· 2BR 2BA HQUSE *B::AUTIFUL park. nlte. WOODB~IOGE 2 story. ;~~Teflsig~~~ de-tine Propa·6~9333 ab~~81~~:..So:;,~~:99 yearly only. Rell req'd. Gmblt :/BB~~~l.';;·
POPULAR "La Tour . $267.500. Call Rachael Beam oelllngs. brick frplc, ~nset, & ocean vu. 3Br fresh paint, 2 car gar~. luxe turn lower duplex. 536·661f after 5pm Sorry, o pet
mod., wnn two master Giiien. Agt. 846-0093 I am 11 Y rm • Pat Io 2 1'B; ~d~ wt:· ~~ l BR ~BA. pools, tenn · Family rm, wet bar, lndry, VILLA Balboa penthouse. CHARMING Cape Cod 2Br PENINSULA POINT small 3BR 2BA Apt., downatalr1,
bedroom wues each with le L I i $1275/Mo Call NATALIE spa 11 I o 1-11 $1300/mo. 786-0262 2 car garage. $1600/mo. Ocean & c,1alina views. tor 2 Adults. Wlnter/yrly. studio $475/mo $225 garage. Near O.C.C.
Its own bath Beautllul t1rp0rt IC• I 548-6569 or 759-6600 CLEAN 2Br 1Ba duptex. WllllllllE UTATES VI W REITILS over 2000s/f, $1900/mo. N-pets. 67S-7708 Th-Sat i sec. depotlt. One quiet $825 + $600 MC. No
view of ocean. bay & c11y BYOWner Harbor View Merrill Lynch Realty I $725 Gar. sml yard. no L 3BR 2'."rBA f II 631-6052/d 722-7265/e (818)795-2965 Sun-Tues. adult. Ref'a. 875-e915 pets.• 969-3737
lights Very convenient Home Somerset model. Very a11rac:t1ve,. 2BR, 1BA pets. 1954 "A" Meyer g r. rd ·~ y ~~·
toc.t1on Walk 10 lhe SBA 3BA $595.000.1 cottage. completely Credit cheek. 549-3484 ~p~;;11~ 631•61f8 ' BALBOA PENIN 2BR 28A
ocean or en1oy 11141 lovely 546-1330 days f\Jrnished. lrpk:. garage. E SIDE 3Br 1''1Ba den re-' Upper duplex. Gar. frpl,
ciubhouse pool, & spe 6'4·5554 iwes/wkend1 carport $ 1O0 0 I mo model nu c:rpl/drps/kltc W.!al luc~ 2141 sundk. No pets. $1075 +
Gated community & se· BY OWNER Highly up-837·1826 or 673·6297 m1rror9d wardrobe. Ip, 2~ n'oAfH"'mORX guest utll. Onr/Bkr 650·0389
cunty building Owner will o<aded detached 3BR 2 la car gar S 1395/mo house 1Br 1Ba58arage IAYFlllT Ha HA carry 2nd trust deed And r_ . s di 673 2749 • · $8• Cu ' fast possession •s v ' BA condo on majOr Ptaia1al1 2107 an . • ocean view • rt Upper level. Gar, d/w, pvt, Possible ery green belt $349,000 1 TOWNHOME 3Br 2,ltBa. 721-5225/W 497-7457/H yrty, sml boat OK. Avail
,.ICE 11( •• cirl TO 759·8099 or 6«-6327 Beautiful l lg turn 3BR Ip. patio StOOO M' " y· . zlE? now. $1500. 673-3722 ~ Duplex Xlnt W. Bay toe. 2 E SIDE Condo 2BR 2BA IH&ea II)! • Sll0,000 car gar. No students or Yd.smlc:omplex.s 1275 2BR Hi.BA condo for lM IAYSlllCIYI 711-1100 "E PUI" pets. S 1750/mo Dys W1t·1rfrNI 11----lu w/gar&Q9. A/C. Indoor 18R & den. 2Ba 2·•"' ex9C 558-1545 Eves 524-6344 .._. lndry Clean & neatl AVI '' Ill TllE ILIFFS! NB OCEANFRONT llULTlll 111· HOO 1mmedl $800/mo. 26108 =-~ F~ar~~:.:; ( ,I l )\{l ,I I I hJ '\"-Bay canyon. & ci~ laghts 38' 2'."i8a. furnished. hke TOWNHOME 3Br 2'nBa, Via Pata. Call Sally AnM. comm, pool & spa on th9 rr.:::. •\' '', view 3BR 2 ltBA separ-new. fantastic: view! fp, patiO $1000 Agt 559-9'°°1786-7485 bey. Walk to Balboa 111
&2J Ml 11 111t1,• ate family rm Lovely Monthly or aeason E'SIDE Condo 2BR 2BA I rt If k 2llt S2'°°/mo. * 240-1752
court yard & morel Will $2750/mo. 4409 Sea· Yd. sml complex. $1275 I twp K ---------1
lllki hlu TOH n~~1\a~!A!:;~~SSER shore 5 OP2E~ SA!jSUN W•rfrNl ... tt IH I BAYRIOGE CONDO 3BR with Spectacular
--------760-5000 or 6'•-6590 12-' 44. 4 wk ys llULTlll 111·1400 Gated comm pool & spa OCMn. city views. Glted ISUll IUml Rf.I Newer yearly 2BR 2BA Pvt patio. !>dutiful view. I community wtth tennis &
6BR 3BA w lBR i BA Apt l~A..V •I Ste,I tt ~Helt LUXURY 2Br 2Ba condo 2BR 2BA. 2 ear pV't etec: pool. 1yt lse. $3200/Mo
3 car garage.·~ block 10 rF'lra St 120/mo Bk 642•3850 Obi gar, lrptc:, pool gar aoe. $1300/mo. Mike CALL Bill Hiil 64•·9060
bay! $730.ooO By Owner \t\\l \.1.JI I~ \ ·11 r $995/Mo . 1st & last 721..()607 1 Coldwell Banker
675· 1466 REA TORS , Hal t Mir 122 ~ $300 642-5290 1...------------------.
rn. -. 2BR 28X-NtCEi Fireplace. MESA VE~DE 4BR 2BA on
•11"1 IEWPllT IUCll Fiiia ALSO 3BR 2BA ocean-quiet street Lg fenced Ptaiaaala 1007 5BR 38A or 3BR 2BA t fronl$2000/mo. Walk tol yard w/grdnr. No pets -l!••flOITDIPL'X mother in-law quarters beach!Agt673-5354 please. S14 50/mo __,. c on cul-0.-uc rn lovely 857-2523 or 751-2788 ... Br/2Ba UPPi!r lamll neighborhood L 2BR Ouplea. new remodel -~--•3Brl2Ba tower I I & ~ 5395 OOO 'c ~ Frplc, yd. lndry, blk lo N.E~PORT HEIGHTS 210
$795,000 ° Liz Of' Chuck ·J~ a ooean 30' Iris, $1275 B E 15th St. 3Br. 2Ba,
631 1266 &46-57•3 Avail now * 968-7271 rr~e. lrplc. vacant.I I . 0< 1 •Spacious 3Br 2Ba vWN ~ 75~·955_5 __ _ · I decu , blt·lna, gar•, NICE 3Br !Ba. family rm.
View "' tle 7'aelt Tuc:ked eway In northeut CM· dehghlful 3
Bdrm, pool, apa and quiet street Kids'll
pley In an entlr• parkl $325.000
1&1-1100
clean• S t600/mo 712 lrg backyard. new paint.
I PoinMttla Agt. 87S-8688~ C8fP91. 1100/mo + sec I 1714J 63s.rr53
OWNHOUSE 2jldrm, Nr Nv.pt Hgts 4BR house •.\ea. den. dbl gar. 2BA lg country kllc:Mn
sundeck. pool, t~ms w/d . 2 ear gar pool a spa I
$1800/mo. 673-7362 _ S16So + uots S4S-8051 I
FABULOUS New c:ontem--•111un1c porary. 2BR 3BA condo, n llllMI • I Panoramic vl9wl ocnn & 3Br 2Ba. frptc, open
harbor $3500 kllcn.n. ~ yard Gar-
•• ~TMNll ... ,.1 •1•.':!· e:, 1&NAuni11~: 1 ,,..,..,~----•-·_..,......-.-6-42·9797 Or 631-12&6
ON the beach, pvt rd, de-
luxe duplex, 3Br 2'."r8a •• •~•~'• fully equlp kltc:h. w/d, ••!1!.....1r•~-1-m~. spectacular view, $2000. ~
673-0421 or 963-3977 I
SOUTH OF PCH II Ttrt 1132 3BR 2BA, frpk:, 2 car gar-age & ltOfage. AVI 1111. 48R 2'-'BA. 3 car. Baut.j
S1500/mo 75•·1888 taro-El Toro hou• with spa $1400 or S1800., SPACIOUS, Sunny 2Br 581-9122 0< 859:6381
2Ba featur• frptc, lndry rm, getage, yard & PV1 .---:--s--.----.l"T'l,..i
I patio. Sf300/mo. Ava11,urt·~~~--~Pl now * H0-&483 'T
Daily Piiat
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Send lo; OMMOI COAIT MILY NOT, Rea<* Mail, Dept, 0171, 8oa 4000, .......
Ml., ~9120--4000.
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HO Wt'SI B.-.y Strl't'I Costa Mesa Cl\ 92626
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642-5678
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c...... 2124 ~·noe COUt DAILY PILOT/Weon.d-v. October 5, 1988
~-----..=.::: Ctata Itta 2114 C..11 ..._ 1124 C.... .... 2124 ...,.,. a..c~ 1111 c.-.rdal MAit HOUIE 18R, MW ALL UTILS PAID -"-"'' ..... Zl1411cMtb I ,..,.... SUI lllJkJ •t .. ::=.. ~11~152: A9deeof la 18', 1,
19
, ~ IWllllll....U SHA"P&CLEAN 1&2BA 28A 28A oc:eanrront. ~Wfllf! IMb... Jiii * * --
c . pets $550 HC).37a °' .iu.1 r~ 28', 18&. ~.encl oat-0-· baiCOnY w/~ -Mw. II I f ... •mll 11 lalfllll nrd 1213)161-1890 · 846-
8277
* garage. new carpel. cableTI/ FromM35/mo d/w, w/d , g1r1g• .... Gil 4 mT. T ..... /l .. Ane~0rWomen ••1115i
11f( U09(alre cable TV i\i. BEA T !>Wit. mini blinds. no Sony. No pet• 145.5577 11200/mo. Bkr 142·3'50 ., M llf f..-..r Wltl M« ~ Cfllldt-. LA Pleemtnenl ~ I
up, rtft recl'd. No pelt U IFUI. 18R 1$A In pet1. 1t4 Mon\e VIiia. m •-u x T~ e1>Pf0¥1it t.~ 1-1 on~ CIOthlng ttlop Mekl~ 1575/mo. ss2 Vlcto<la. Quiet COfn91e• Security S795/mo. 250-8002 or ... ...,. PIW t1M1 .. ....S 111•nd M•r•ne Av• .. Pro~ creditllneom•.1 Pfo0'99 ~· DfiQM. cNattut. ltnowt· M&.
8181
bulldlnQ Pool, o-tllQe. 65(>.5194 28' 1'"81 w/t'lft CC>tl 28r/2 petlln\ 1p1cet. upper $300/mo. foreelOeUf'•. t>Mkruptcy provtded for ~ & edgaable candiOa ... lor R••~lble . se ll~ cable TV ALL UTILITIES Ofpe, blt1n1. lned PlllO Xtre IQ pet.IO 1200/mo Us-1177 ltt, 2nd & 3fd TD'1 par.ma,. C .. ~ 1634 Mor A .. I Mof/Sai.t mot ~ tot
19R ~lairs P11IO. new PAID $585/Mo. CALL LARGE 38A 29A uw«. e3t-' 120 C811 1·5PM 850-1124 btwn hm-Spm A.E. 1oat1e any reeson Flit/PT Salee, Fttl« at pidl~ Wld ~ oe
CfPlt & drpe StOYe frig 722 1832 18:0~ =n~•~ .,87 2819 Sant• Ana L', 1735 ·-~· WllTIUff ..... {714) 253·4et4 iE!t Cry9111 Coun f« 11188 ~ ed119rtltlno IS! Nc • &__. * Cotner VIEW 9u1W (213)426-ese& -opening Call 8ruee matetlala. F~ TU.
mo No pete 545-7983 Frig, dlltlw , stove FUl.L SERVICE lt••lflill ..,._, Jiii 213/31~ Fri (eem-lom); ParMlfM
.
P1111• uw.1 We9tfield inci Ho~· 54~855 W•tdltf' lrMa. Hpt kh -eAILBelNt -A .. a r•· s-t ' Mon. ~'
Jog to t>eacit. 28R 2BA. wCUFF HAI/EN 28R 28A. Sign IP809 IVI on Weetclttt p:::: ~~or hu ~ h•bi.. attentl~ care· *"" •LPll * ~ benefttt. Afl9ky
llreplac•. p1110. 1BAl fAlltU &PUMITI new Oeec>t. v8Ultecl cell· 141-1111 A E. loent Ho ::,11 or QMt for 2'~ yr olO bOY In Window ttnlln /Auto In peBOn It:
W71olt, view. Jacuul. Sptrkl1ng clHn l1rg1 lngs, gatage. no "911• *" It ..... -....* BK o.k Mr L .. 972-8888 OUI CorOM del M• home GIMI Bu.eneee Pmmedl· lllLJ PIUJ From $950. Utile pd. Apia Famlllet we1eome USOLmo A.Qt 642·~13"4 t II ---. 1 3 dye/wk Oco er· ., F 631-t1070t855-0e&6 Pool & ape Sl\opPlng l 1tEASTBLUFF Twnhse 2............... *WIDOW HAS rand1/evea Own car. ~tlll~~n,,lllnUI~ llrN 330 W a-.th.
nelghb<>rhood park neJ1t Apt. 38A 2BA. 2 C8f oar flll Ull 11 ... 1 f« T~I s 1o.0001up No1 Eno·IPMklnO non·ernkr term o.dlc8tecl ~ Coe1• M:..
door. Sorry, no pets No pet•. $1025/mo yr 111. Sll25/mo •11 'If lellle Cfed /no pen. C8ll Oen· Reft. good P9Y ~39 OMV Printout required ,..,..,,..,.,..,.~.,,.,,...__,....,........,...,........
28drm ma. SJ* 844-1010, 8--5 Mon-Fri Pvt entry & r•vd perttlng. nleon AMOC 813•7311 * UllE·OU1 needed to watchl s.nd r .. ume to ELITE ADVANCED WINOSHIELO
28drm2B•SS00 Cnarml 1BR At over Amftlegue91pefklng. 7mo babyglflMM-Frllnl GLASS&WINOOWTINT· REPAIR It IOolcing '°' HI W, WILlll gerag':!. Oul•t P neigh· ut111i.. & 'Cl llQn Incl. dJ1ftl4 .D. l NB Enolietl .,..1ng, lit• ING' 7.48 w 17th SI. -D mollva11 eel .. ~.. a.nd1
COSTA MESA bomOOd $650/mo Incl lmmed poa. 8'2·9,.7 d faD'miXTE cXsA for hOUMkPlna. Appro•·hfl Colll M .... CA 92627. or ,,,., o ,,_... '~ t
111-llH. u1lls. Avt'now 673-53.49 ..... , .... " Truat o .. os• Private 7:30-5:30+. M$-;1273 I Call Robert 650-0393 =:I~:;
IU Ptlat EASTBLUfiF 2BR 28a, 16171WESkLIFf 01\IVE :;r..:i ,:: ~~5: MOTHER'• HElPER Mon-ln<X>fl'l9 CllM tor Interview ~~~---..;;,;;,.-lrplc, patio. pool $950. Nwpt Bch. Ag1 541-5032 ' Frt 2pm-5pm Hetp Run at 1...S00.272-'AWR
S 50/mo. Adu111.' o
pets. 979-4410 By appt. BEAUTIFUL 2BA 1BA In
Quiel complex. Security
1BA uPelre.~ool, cable TV bulldl"fv Pool. ow:r.· ~pd. 57$. No pelt cable • all new P, nt.
req'd. 147 Flower. catfL:'· C1r8')91' lloori~
-Cale NOW &45-8191·· * LL UTILITIES PAID ........... 1725/Mo. CALL 722·1832
A email, ~i.. complex 25"8RXi'Jo new 3Br 2'~8•
1BA l 2 A 2BA "Ilk• apt1. Attached dbl gar.
~" w/P•llo or b1lcony $1050/Mo TMC. MICro,
flfeplta. pool, epa, !eun: pvt .palloa, w/d l\kups,
dtf pvt ger?o•· NO ¥er ·door opnrs. 21 1 o
P S. From $6 /mo to hurln SI, CM A~t
$850/mo. + security 850·5116 Open d11 y
DAI/ID 549-2447 12·7 or W.-k.,,dl 11-8
*UITSllE* CUAIUIAU
LG 28' H.,BA T ownhoute. 400 Metrlm~ Wey
-"= MESA
GARDEN
APTS. ..w LI 111.fOUI YllW a.48 Amlgol w .. / Apply I hehld, Ill• clunlng AllHUT91 ADI
Frplc g111ge lndry tac Ap.runent L 644-0906 F• IDT lfflM IMM Mata $4.50/hr IMne. Cell forl •DATA. EN1RY
l'&lu.LE
$800 +dee>. 6e1.
36
53 · 20·x20· $300/Mo 1nCrut"9 ...... 11 ,.... w25, 1ntervift as1.e110 •A1P E•t'dCd,M Retalleo. mart·
---=-__,,---,,--..,..........,.,..,.FURN 2Br 2Ba. 1rg pa110.
1
722·~2 Costa Meaa -•• Uro-ntty neeoecs EJtcep. lnQ 1n-houM agency Ndt
*Liil llW*
,,. HUG[lf ut. ltac rniss1::~~~ 1~~~ 0111ce 1p1ce-Aet•ll· ,Ea.,_.t SSH uonat P•Y :~';:f;:n•url•~ type
... -BACHEL.:0R. 4 bio&a 10 okay. Available 1mmecl. Storage . ...0 E 17th SI, 4'Uiti'.f2•is•J'F Temp to per-m usion· lkrlla l18K~% ... =
Come ... 1he dtffttence 650-8252 or 640-0751 I . '' be8Ch Stove & Ing. No 84&-6350/d 675-5-494/e ti.ck bldg 400 tit i 7~ f"" 1111'\ ADS . PER HOUR rnetlts POS1tions av811· Laur 'SM-'42
COn'lplel•ly remodeled 'J CLISI Tl AU SQ " ULORE ··u75/~ .~~: • .:d Maoy to -''""' t 2 ., .. ""'utl~ .... -uunu llilaWtn••n -j!; ~' .z~~.. -ti
Gareoe. patio, leundry 18R utll ~· $590
room, $850/mo. 2BA 1'.t A. $725
26290RANGE 979-1911
TSL MGMT &42·1603 CWllH1111U
Verd. refng. No ta. S625
Beeutl1ul 28R apla Pool. 2BA 1BA tndry room I Ulll
1 2
I 1 & 3 bedrooms. Gr .. 1 1<>-SMALL OFFICES IDE fRE£ Great JOb-EZ ttour1. llP· TEMPORARIES ~oc:m·,taundry room ciose to itiops & buses: • • II &PTI 1 BEDROOM, PATIO. cation. Startl/\O al FROM $375/MO M Ible .~ WIN tr81n 50--0~50 100-AFAEE CMDA/
PLATEllAKER In~ On~ ~'11:"~': We'll accept Sect. 8 1~£ IDOlJT enclosed garage. l•undry $575/mo. 67~606 Full wvtce 17th St. CO.t• Cal·. °'! JOb Bue ... com· + $200 OFF MOVE IN o. Housing. $675/mo. • NJ laeU11..-No pels Call M ... 646-9M3 m!SSIOn Mull be nMt & &P&amll ll'IMI • 2257 MAPLE 01 OIRISTM•• 963·5237 or Iv msg NB 2Br st~s to bch. P•GI<· ._. personat>'e. New office S tt d 1
Wllll&Anl. I TSLMGMT 642-1603 , ...
12
BA
2
BA-..' lno. LO. tront patlO. uuls TllSPAlllT&nll -2·Hll location H8fbor Blvd ;;'~~· .~:.,.;~c:u: •
530 W. Wilson SPICllL · garage ~ OM l,,ci, no pets, unforn Representing over 325 CM. c.11 Cindy Det\lfMll • TSLMGMT EASTSIDE 2BA 1BA spaee.nearnew.nopet-"'$1175/Mo.723-.1292 t>ulldings1nOr9"941Co. 10am-8pm.75S.1155 maff\ttnance CALLI medl I f
7229012 &421."'3 I w/garege downstalrs1•NewGEd/W,S1ove.& 11110/•t 1411001 0 II d I I I • 837·99560t85S.0665 m iteopenno «•>1· • "' • UV small ya;d No pets. Microwave • • NEWPORT HEIGHTS ne ea oes t •1 ()( FOUND BtACK caJ 10/2 •WORK WHE~E & WHEN --pet'~ c.mer• Opel'·
Sorry No Pets! S125tmo
722
.5
29
4 · •NewWhrteCarpet& SPACIOUS and cTEAN'Triple•·2 maste< suites. ~~~g~leaSI~~~ vlclntt(Magnoha &. ,...,....; YOlfWANTw l /I CLlll •t«/platemoe< Some Jll· 11& con111 I . Ofapes lBr·· 18a S595/l'f\O each w/tull b81h. Beamed s 0 you. • 18tld Fountain Vally/Hunt E.xcellent )ObS IV8111ble SO!M compulef exp neip-bUI~ -51IIP1>
1
no ...
W/D ..... "'00 t N EAST SIDE """ •• , tBR. •Clooe to 3 Fwy• Clo .. 10 ...... hO .. ,, ""''· l•plc, ... -· ... •••trcial ,,.,.r1y a.-. ........ ... , ... tO "" "°"' . lul but "°' , ... d Coll .... -........ t -~
peta S850imo 72; S29~ small back yard. Gasw/d ('405,55,73)and South •969·9243* $1025 N-peta. 759-9194 2111 F d c •Clefkl Pacific l/1ew Memorial at· · · • hkups. No pets. Adults! Coast Plaza , ; ~ oun amera. Canon •ReceQtiornst Park 644-2700
$525+ dep. 1BA mobile prefd. $535/mo + utlls. •Large Pool & Deck Area lrvtae 2'44 I iAEtXIC SPACE• AE· 1.in Ensenada after
1
•secretaries •HOST /HOSTESS
home. Secure. Mature 6'45· 1631 aft 5pm. • •Individually Controlled I UNIV p RK a ••• checfte llWPllT IAlll& &PTI Appro• 1200 slf. xlnt loc ~U10~ Call to I 0 I •Word Process.og PM Shltts
adults No pet$. 1991 EASTSIDE C.M. 1BA Apt.I Entry Alarm Sys11ms 18A studio. $400>mo. •WITH BOAT SLIPS• near Newport City Hall. ,J •Wateh<XIM Full 11me positions 1v1ll·
Newpoc1 Blvd. 646-6373 With frplc, retrlg., & all •Cable TV Avaltable Utlls pd. Comm pool & 11 JfROIT Agt 873-5354 F 0 U N 0 M 1 n 1 1 u r e I NORELL SERVICES able Apply
utll. Included. $625 mo., •New Laundry Facrlltles spa Call 786-8728 2BA .. J"•'f VIEW Corona Del M... pr me Schnauzer nr West· •IAVINE 474-0972 "-.-'11-....__rMt
l&IU"Ll1 330 W b8y St.
Costa M .... Ca 92626
642-4321 If 292
Ask lor Pat or US8
10
mo 650-589
4
•Covered Parking • ,.pt w <>" \ ,....
1 minster & Ogle St CM •SANTA ANA 5!>8·9021 .,_., -me8tiBllU
1
· •Private Balcony to •1HI ltack ;i Fri»<:. micro. d/w, gar8Q8 corner ret11I on PCH Call to 10 63 H;046· 2131 Westelln. N.B WTUR 11111 Garden~ fB--& lovely pvt bcl'I. S 1900 1385 s/I Ample pvt P•rlt l=---------2 Ba $ •EJegantAtmosh r 18A. oceanside •ALSO* Ing Ownr 497·2351 free twin 7 month gre ··-----------------~------• &PAITllm Br 1 i{t.r1dt77895/mo •So<ry No Pets pe e PCH, view. pool, laundry, 1Bdrms starting at $1025. eets. ve<y 04!'\tle H•v
Sp.,kllng cleen. 11rgel ,. .. Siii s750. N~C:.t~~r·smkr * eoe1 Shps Extra• I . . anots & spe)'8d 548-570
Gar<Mln apts. Beautltully EASTSIDE. Newly deCOf· 2881 Bear S1 Corner of • Sorry. no pets asaana lUM LOST Lae11es opal
landscaped grounds. ated28r1Ba.tower.ehlld Bristol,eoStaMesa LAGUNAlgS..VuStudlO OAU.1IO-lt11 1iuiae11 ftr bit dtamond nno SaksFltt'
Pool & tpl, p1tloal<Seci(t, <>'<& • Nopet
63
s. Near sehools 11_.111_.. 12 ._. Deluxe furn. Decks-trees oc~ .. NFAONT YALY BA --Ave in SC Plaza. (F8mil
g8fage or catpo<I shopa. 1-6155 .. -· -He8r t>eau\11\11 beach ~ 1 ....., heirloom & sentrment81
•SEVERAL LOCATIONS Pets okl $600 Avail upper. Quiel CYI de sac kl en . '· /mo st•tion beauty salon,h:-=,--,---'=""'"-1
MANAGEMENT
JOIN OUR TEAM -Sorry, no pets I E'SIDE 1eR. etean & pvt. MESA VERDE 2BR 1sA. $650 util Inc 499-4124 ~· tasssmkapt.5M900odlfied I befitEAt <>PPIY t:elV9 REWARD• 49~554
1 BedrOOl'I\ $670 lmmed. 2627 Sa~ll Ana $700~ 2.867 HICJCory ltw;rt IC incl ALL util. 650-3823 Money muer In NB. prtn.. LOST Large OESEA
28dnn 1'/•Ba $775 Ave • D 645-0968 498-1936 751·9483 -' •1•••1WS elples only 67$-1215 TORTOISE. S.t. lOl 1 VI< 2250 Vanguard 540.
96
2
6
· • 3BA A Furnished 2 car •. -I Racquet Club Nonnwoo MANAGING CARRIERS ------E'Slll 211 UUIE llST SHI parlung St99s 10 t>eaen Full security tBr ... ck.lb I . REWARD 559.9097 T HE DA ILY PILOT IS Bachelor $S80 r Wlnler·9 months o noose . pool. walk to a1ut11 LOOKING FOR TOP QU A LITY MGRS WILLING ,0
120 E. 20th St. $775/Mo. ~BR 2BA, frplc. encl gar· S 10001"'0 675•2232 Bir be• c; h. n 0 p e 1 s --1 • .-.. • llEWAll WOR 1 Bedroom $685 CALLNow631:J59~ ege. all t>ulit·lns, near _ 1 5775/Lease TRW ~.,hn ._, K HARO WE OFFER XLNT BASE SALARY
2Bdrm 1'/•Ba $800 E'SIDE 4-Ple f shops."l7507mo • Orr28tfl Street ,_ A-VATL ~Bl: NOW it i . Pbfi!AtiXC Lost 9129 Lg btn lelthf PLUS OVE.R..SJOO IN BONUSES E
161E 18th St 642~
1
Br··S
5
T
5
No ;e
1
s 810CENTEA Winier rental tBr. turn. 644-72 U-A9eflt 1v endlnQ Roule/Local. tote,~ wf~liathf VERY MONTH
546 1665
· TSL MGMT 642-1603 w/2 car garage S7501mo• New 8alketb1ll Ga,,,. llP9 • pw P8c:1t1F411-_.).._ENERQUS GA'S A LLOWANCE & OPPTY FeR
• PRIME location Eastslde Call 498-4328 West Newpon Yearly. I m•c:htne Great Lo· ~ ...... ~~ J®:_n'!_,s. 7vi7 A~~VANCEMENT JOIN O UR TE.AM & BE ELIGIBLE 28R . house 10 beach 38A cations Posttble groa ...... ...,.... •r.. nO A E'SllE ~~o 2~~s8araoe &j 2ILICIS11 IUCI '2BA. AvaTI 1 11 tr Hch macl\lne ssoo-Mlfed 21~77-3199 FUt.:L ~-MEDICAL "COVERAGE. CREOIT
&PUT911TI Sharp and clean 2Br. r~_9797P81' mo. 2BA 2BA. t gara~e space 1 $1200/mo. 642-3850 Bkr I $1000 weellly. CtM J8Ck tJi .. N , 401K PLAN IF YOU'VE GOT WHAT IT
Large 1ttr8CtlV9 APll In a Washer dryer hkup. pvt Yrly S900. Agl 1 1·5235 WINTER-Oceanfront 3BA 1-800-346-0645 Ptra .. als TAKES. CALL ERIC. 642-432 i EXT 209 OR SEND
Deautlful g8fden Mttlng. sundtck. encl gar. Rear 1BA Ilse, clean, new! 1'1·BA $1200/mo Avl $300 A DAVI Pool•. g•ragee. No pets.
1
$7.40/mo. 545.9950 cpt. No pe1s. $675 mol lCllOSS FROI IUCI 1 mm '8 d Ma r 1 ah Taking p'"o 0 d RESUME TO: DAILY Pl LOT. 330 W BAY ST 1 Bedroom $&40 incl elec nn; E 23rd Avl 3BA 2BA Lower Unit. Gar· . II ne r ere. COST A MES ., H1 AYll&ll E'SIDE small 1Br Co111ge. now 213-656-8890 age. W/O hkup. Y•rd Mgmt/Ingrid. 579-7482 ' Pe o PI a c •II You I DEE All A. CA 92626
COSTA MESA !role. encl patio. No Pets!\ Nextlo pt(k s l 1TS/mo HI 1111 t tr t 1 8 0 5 126 4 • 1 5 0 6 or -· ,..---------...._--------------=~
I S5e0/mo+ $680 MC dep.l llyov cll'l'1t1nd 111n classi· U09 RIVER
8051949
• 172
7
E.tt L
1 I DEWVll M2-lllO 187 E. 21st. 645-723"4 fled,1fsnot for !We ITSL MGMT 642-16031 2116 Metal Bu11d1no Mlf\ufac-
INCREASE YOUR REACH GET IN OUR IMPROVED n-•n ..,....,......,
TIUIWPAlll
F« more lnlom1•tlon
CALL TODAYll
ISi FIR LOIS
Your
SeMoe Olrect«Y
RepfetentatlV9
142-4321 ed. J10
bXeXAtAOR V1ilaoe i8r turer wm dev9IOP dealer
Condo. Pool. Jacuz:z•. rn select open erea.s =~ I I tennis. gym. sec gated soon St8rter eds. tr8ln· No pelS. $825 854-6221 ·~ and engineering SYP. -I t·• port pitlYlded Custom aac. ea •JI . buildings our spec:ielty
llit•I ZlH Call for apphc111on WedgCor Aceep11nce ILi Tl IUCll Cotp 8800 E H•mpden,
Yrly/carport $305• sec Denver. CO 80224
650-3352 303-7551-3200 EXT 28
l
'" ,,. ' '"' llinff Fn.Hn P~Contect
Patty 540-7796
Does Anyone Know
Where She 11??? ..
F'teate Call Me
FUN
AFTER SCHOOL
WORK··
11 Year~ & Older
Work Evenings & Saturday
YOU C AN A VERA GE PER WEEK $7500
OR MORE!
PHONE: 498-3321
All Transportation Provided
By An Adult Supervisor
.............. •....•. , ... ....
Kff t .... 1.00
Motor Routes
avadable in
Westminster
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
and proof of insurance
Call 842-1444
Ask tor Joanne Craney
For t•.•• you can advenise
your Garage Sate 1n the Oa1ty
Pilot There Is a • hne minimum
and the price is the same
whether you advertise 1 day or 3
days It's a great way to turn
those hidden treasures Into
cash
We are also offering a •••• t• .. ff• G •r••• , ....
for t t .M. This guide Includes ideas on how to advertlae,
how to plan, what Ttems to sen. ptus Ideas for a better
garage sate; also a garage sate slgn, pr\clng stid(ers.
rntormatlon on crty ordlnances and Inventory sheet.
You can purchase your Garage Sale Kit for $1 .00 when
you place your ad at:
Classified Advertising 6&2-16'18
Mondey ~ f'*'Y -• 00 /ttM '° •• ...,
S.turd.y I 00 AM -11 iO AM
•.
•
I
r
-Ormng1 Cout OAIL 'I PILOT I Wedneediy, October 5, 1111
JI
r
~ -... .-J,..;..;_. I . ., . . ., ~.
'
S.rlwt •• SIM sue ""I,.... IUI ... a... ........ ••• MUC .,TIC( Mt.IC TIC( Ml.IC llJTIC(
..... ...../..... euun ····-111111.11111' -~n·~-G ~.o::i~TH .".::::.. l*IC,n.:.~.. ... ~ C.:=r' . 1711 1111 ~.~rll ~~5:! 'ull time Mon-Fri Tw-Mwpm, COtllOUt« ........ -11 ---· "'ND-~N (crTACICMIJUDCMl) U..STAW To11 ..n. ... .aOWt11. For Op•h•lmologlet "'_, __. · _.,.,.. "'· .111m-3:30pm $4150 Hr. akllle, locel poelllon ~ · ..._.... ~TO ... ~r'"llinr:'''""A NOTa TO DUDIDAHf: n.e ._...,. '*'°"'.,. =•..,. orecl-~ Delver ,,.... to home No lence len-CALL P9flOI".,.. .. 0,.,.. Coufler ,.,,.. ~-CA*° a AamdOI AlD· doMa.,.,.. a a. Md ,._. wflO ,,_, bond a.nlon, Cotta eM eKf*• I\ nK. (503) 27,,_2323ft Ext 91 Ofounda. eoete ..... ESTAT F: ANOEA OALLO. MAIVO COLCO ~. L.P .. .._~.....,In Ola
• R Meea.,.., U. pyt ...._ L A"""1 ~ Enter oft Mlngton Sl. OAR91 JAMES GALLO. THEAOA MAl'll a~ llMAed partnet· °' -01 bG11ft .-
•HOST/HOSTESS hide w/reln\butM, OMV .... TIPI TINT CREVIER RICHMOND AKA DICK. end DOU 1 ttwOllP etllO. 17330 "9dtllll Avenue, E M M A ' J E ;. N •COCKTAJl. WAITRESS print-out t•Qd. Call 721 Fared St , C.M· Fast & accurate 10 enter 9' ORRIN J . RICHMOND 50, lltdulM .._ 1to, !MM, Celdornll KIJZYHOWIKI. ella lMMA
Day9 e>Nv. 1MO Dove Shalon. 220-0224 •54a.-~* date on ~1.,, WIU 'ti ... lt.lll-11!1 AKA 0 J RICHMOND YOU AM IEINO 8U£0 12714 JEAN LOVO .. EMMA ~!!:..!::P°".-~· 1111•1111mn ..... 111 ... tr9in.Funofbntalrpor1 CAsENO A1'5043 8YPLAINTIFF:(AUd.le•• JefMI E. ~ 3eo3JEAN IHE .. PA"D..: all•
...... _. ·--..--1.,, ..,,. Xlnt 1W>ln8 Top Pr::. .... 2 250-1150 1111 Ill To ai1 heirs ~~=~•ndol PATRICE :=.=:.mt;pO(t EM~~~o: ..... -o..-.l~ili~ii+i°'ittTfiif.-..,..-:-: =: J:.~a,'f. comm ~"' =·~ = W/~~~~eb-eoodltlon a41i. 40 HP .:.':.=-.:. ~Credi~ D::: = :::::.: ~~ =-~r!:. = ~~
nu 842-GOl4 ~ + ...... tum "-di rouf, M Mercury ~ 13 JZOI ~-INdld mm pen10ns Who rrey le ...., • ,.. • .. • °" Mat. Cellfornia "'v tom1a. County~ Oraneit,.. 1111 lllaa CALL PATRICK T!NORi Wied ......... r • on· condldon.., ~ 31St AT.io.Md """°' othefwlle lnt8f'ested In ............ , ........ al Thie butln ... 1• Con• Qe11ttlnt1 tflet WllllMI I.I • • IPll l11W11n Fn & PIT. Wiii tr.in. OOod 121.1200 :~ltya-1T~rr.:O'~~c~ =~# ~ ~ '3Scsi •Ytoloadtcl nn111 Wll °' estate, °' both, of ~ ~ _._ ..... duc1.,ed by.• llmltec:t pertner· l(UIYftOWllCI (netned ~ F/T ••petl•nClld whti pey. AWf In penon. . 1 1 . t t • ICltd asocm ORRIN . JAME .. __ •...--WlllWn Joeeptl Kuzynowtlll toollt. Own cat & ,.,.,_. 1960 ..._...,. Blvd CM 979--0 4 16 l~ >SOd lo RIC'-' .. ONO AK"' ORRI ........... rw; ,._ .,,. lit reglttr1nt com· be ~ M cite. 931~41 ,,..,_.,.,. • · • · W thOUll ~ • 11 315 SSOCI lolded 6979JS """ " """"' ,.., 1 w .... '" mencecl to trllllMCt Ml· __._. ... i... 10 -..,.._------• ...,..,. &llllTUT ., ngEW ENO. CIWter Statt-Of· a JlM S19'.IO* 2tll\0961 J. RICHMOND AKA 0 . J 111 ......., ...., """ • ,_ ,... under the flctltlou• ~i;';t....-0."0.. deCedeflt. tu•ln...,...._ a.-. Newport Center Co. I .. ~~ ~~~1-!f'G100 Sales -Service Rl~HMPETONITOION .. ~ .....,. walil ... -' 10....,,.. ~boW""':i ~0~~ THE PETITION r~ e..-. . ..,.., ~~ ,.... a pereon with In. I ... u--un11s ._ w --· u 5-fi Parts -Leasing " .......... -. us SS tiuthOrlty to ldlftlllitter .... Front._.,.........,.., ltliltM ambition & bUlc: ,,s_ ID /DNb/I fited by MARGARET J. •,_• .... •,..CONDUCTING 8 INE ••ta under-. lndtptn-
tOp -·· ... ....... • ..... "tot> w/a ... , I IPEllll ,. -~ 131-3111 CROU~ (MARGAR =· :-:.:-·.:-= i:V ~it'=9 .... tiled dent Admlnllttatlon ~ e:: ......_ 1'111111' -.. llt the amlHtloue Limited~ to join ,... 1500 A t M II D JEANNETTE CROUCH __, _. .,.. With Ille County Cllrll of Or-t.tea Act. CT'* 1Uthor1ty
tomw .,..,. ... -or1ented. Reale.. natlonlll .... --n.ar-(Hll/W ... ) 168 H a::p water = u 0 a . r. WILL) In the Superio a:_.:... '" .... ....,.lanoe County on Augutt 15. lowt 1N per90NI '•.a-::. rnuet. 9houlcl be OOfn" , ... 11c deelted. iM not ke11ng l)'ltem with un-12 P~ton• 111 OUf ottlce bJY .iif> tor rent. Wll t•• Santa Ana Court of CaJHornia, Coun --. .._. "" 1Na =~0 t-. ~ _.. SIM 10keyfnendly, '*· o,_. ..uwy poten-llmHed Mmlnge. For In-u 2 smaMer boat• Brok.,. 55 Fwy at Edinger of ORANGE reques*' ...,._ ,_ =-=lnl°"'alr\
bookkMPlna duties. tlal. c.-(714)84(Mll7 tormatlos".LeccaTll Jack r:::~r:i:y IV~oab:!~ OK. 173-2086 . OPEi 1 llYS that MARGARET J. TMre ............ ,.., Publllhtd Orange <:out=::. hQwewet. tha ,,.,. UIM. x·tm 'beMtlts. A~ •t ~ J • call CROUCH be appolntld ........... , .. ....., ..... Dally Piiot September t4, '°"" ;~ .. ,.
S111ty ~ With BETTER HOMES & panel"'~-~ 80' MOORING, !.i: Service Hrs Mon·Frt personal representative 1 ...... • ...._, ,._... 21. 28. October 5, ttea qutr.d 10 ~ ~ to ..,..ice. A.flfll't In per. fmt ... -GARDENS ..,..... • Beech. 1 ol 10 In , 7 00 am 10 10 pm administer the fftate ...,. • ,_ • • .._... w1as lnt.-ed .,.,.,,,. .,,,....
eon. 540--1182 C8fe of For P1aetic Sufgeon. New-REAL ESTATE 751·5000 wllh bo11, 125,00 . the dltc:edent -~__, ... .,. they hive weMc1 ~ °'
CottMn. Stu.,de/Al'ln port, nr Hoag. lmf'ned. RECEPTION/DATA 548 lttO Ive meuage ••BMW '84 3181, red, THE p :':;:'Jd·---=: eoneented to 1N pr~
Stuard. South Co11t '122-6006 or 7~163 EHTRY FIT NB corf\rao--Ill enrf, air. loaded, new requests authority .._ ,.._ ...,.,. action.) Tllt lrldtptt _.
Pim Mal, C.M. IAllllO n ' tor. HeavY phonea. 80 w te w c er UP TO 11' MAX. tlr•. 1 owner. xlnt $8950. admlnlsler lhe esta ..,.... • .. la _. rt8.JC M>TICE :!"":,'!'n~ ~= an fA-PllTTm Experience a must. call wpm •• ftllng. computer turn.: 3 cnalre. ChalM & $80/mo. 85CM145 497-™5 under the lndependen :': .... .,..._ ,... ~ ir,t.,...ed Pi"IOtl ftlel an F~~~7~ DaVk1Glbr1el.966-1955 ~-!~1~.~~-c:ouch :;~~ tlnk. lite.,,...,........ M.::~~nc:~s;·r.~I~ ~~~~~tyE:a ::::=r.~~~ (CfTArr=.=cw., =E""'~:;:
II-,/T llllUI. lff1ll IEllPlmS1 p /f ROCK OLA, 5e Slot Mch ••• .__ .. , 1-ownr. IS8K ml, Carolyn, the ' person ,11111 ill It: _... a ,..._ ~OTICE TO DEFENDANT: court not Cl'ant
-Good typing, salary com-€$t otflcle 1915 Edleon Oitc P1ay9r, ·-•,• 13~2100 Ext 208, 8:30-5 representative lo ........... oarte (Av1to t AcuudolRICHARO authority. !-
Retail Nunery needt a menturate w/exp. John,~~ p~~~ ~t· 50'a p..,.i Motl Cendy & IHI... ... TOYOT"' .83 CRESSIDA manv actions wltttou UM..,..• -ie.ede MICHAEL JANE L. IDEAL A HEA~Ofl t~~ weekend PIT ca.hi«. No 751-8810 aft• 6Prn "·-·-· ,..,.,_, "V" f'l.. ~ MoOe. ~ " . f I ...., TRANSPORTATION. INC .. lion w111 ... ._,on.,..,.,._ up nee. Call IOf appt. . typing. Pete 151·5000 ....... Aolt dUc 85().9897 111111111 Leathef lnterlOr, aunroof. obtain ng ~ approval. •11111:"'":.: M " t! CUONG KHA.NH PHUNG 27. , ... at 1:45 P.a,t. In Mon-Frt &46-74-41 IAlllTTIJST "" GP Like new $6000 OBO Be~0<e taking certal IN'• uaa • ':-Ind DOES 1 th<OUOll 100, Dept. No. 3 loclted et 100 •'"lllllll IEIEPTlllllT I-,~·;v; IOll 211JL 845·2277/W 722·t550/H actlOl'IS, however,. th ~lr~lat t':':'. 1nc1u11.... Civic Center Dftw Wtll, ...... UUI --·· AdYwtillng Ifie. loolclng ~ personal represenlallVe r YOU ARE B.EING SUED Sant1Ane,Celltornla92701 . .. w:rt:itn all Dept1. Fulltlme/Pertl .... rentOt tot.,~ ~; ..... ,. Aal•• hmntic 9311 required to give notice I .... ~ 1~:.~ .... .::.•9J:: BYPLAINTIFF.(AUd.1 .. •ta IF 'tOU OBJECT tcfttlt
Wiii tr.in. Mutt be evall~ comm181ion • ..._, ceptionist to hendle ttllff .__ 11M lll-Hll 2800 mi1et Interested penions unle ::. Pia cort. eec..:. au demandendol HOANG GIA ~renting 01 tt1t petition\~
Ible eome .-..n1nge & WHI MT&l•s of 12 Lloht typing & 111-_,.. Take Ollfll( peyments. they have waived notice -. TRINH. EIL6EN HOANG lhould ":;:' .. r • ob-
..-encte. FT/PT. GrMt _ , !"9· '6.25 per hOUr. c.u lllllJIUwm•r 111·1Ht cof!S4Hlled.to t~ pro 11......, •,,.._..au ~g~~~N·0,: T~\~~~ H~~ ;:'~°"""\lfrttt~itC-
beneftte. Apply tn S*90n The·~ COMt Dally 'rim Gueeman, &42._.321 . Good oondltk>n. $15. Call v I action.) The 1ndependen """' ' ... :':T:' .:.-=: GUARDIAN AO LITEM tlone with the court befOI'• lll Ni fDY 11111 Pflot Is lookJno fof an IEOEmMIST NOW 721·87511 Ive msg 18 adminlsltation aut =: =.:,..,....,. You "'"ao CALENDAR the hearing. Y01Jr appw-
1212 S. COAST HWY. ..,.,getlco per90n to ... ~Reale t t , lnNpt ···--1HJll cAeW·86X1tro Van.V-i . 546-1200 wil be granted UAleSS ' •• , .. anH d• tu DAYI ....... IUMiltCIM ancameybelnper't()nOl'by
LAGUNA BEACH "'' our.strle1 ~ ..-: ad~dable "lmond-COI Ilk loaded. tow pacllage, etc. 2121H.t1ot ·Co••• 111na Interested peeson files a IN'•Pl•llad tlll .,,._ ... II ..,.... 4lft JOU ta tla a your •0ttoru ~E· A C"""'OITOR 3 days during the..-..,..... " or. e new $12,200 obo 861·1319d objection to this peli6o ~ partedale...._ tnew'"left ,...._ .. et IF Y AAI "~
weekend• and hollde.,.' person to handle phones, $300 obo. 645-97o t or 66 t~3806e FORD E 150 1984 van and shows good c:au == ..,.. ,., .. ..,_ thle wt. °' •·contingent «edit<>< °' C.1.-·mc , .. typing, flllng & mino< er • ............... A ..... or,.._.calt .. tlledec:Hllld,yGUtnu1tllll r-~t m~st have re-rands. llam-5:30pm. call tart 14 latn aaprw 1110 conv. low miles, orig why the court ;;floUld no ......._,.... .. -.... ..,.._. ,_ ,._.,... )'OUl'cteimwttnthacourtand
llslnllT Mable ear with valid CA u 1211200 _ owner. real clean, auto, grant theaulhor1ty. .-,.....,a ....... .,.....,.. w1--.,.,... icopyto lNf*.anal
drl_.. llcenee, proof of sa, • A NTIO U E d re tu r lull pwr $8900/0BO. A HEARING on fl '""'' .... ,, ..... llMCIOft-IR rt~~• JOU ,......,i.iivell090inted by
Front oftlce, ~le a. lnauranee and OMV ~ w/mlrror. paintings & 768-8295 any11me petition will be held o eoe • • •111••• I:':: .:-tC' eowt .. ..._ ,_, 1N court wtttn IOur monttlt
cheerful, good office ~~-out. =~ pey 19 With or without typing, :=-s.~·~n, director's 1114 llDA Ul HWD•Ell UIDI October 20. 1988 at 1 :'4 =:: =n :'; :.... p -"°"' ": d9te °' ~
MMll, c:ompe1ltlw UINlry, per gu needed tor: V .... '--I S100 F"'d• P.M. In Dept. 3 located a _..-....Ila.,_...._, W ,_ • Mt .. ,_, tuar'C91 ___..__ laner99100 ~~ ,.._,. FIT Ind. Sat. Contac1 allowtnee. •Short-term BAR stool with brass rail, Whit matoon Int.not 5 .... ic ... rom · "" •· 700 Civic Cenler · C." dlrectorto teJe. rn111,.. • ....... JOU IMf n _,..,.,, "' .... ,,_,.. C.ol 831.seM Come In to~ at: •Long·term dining rm Mt e enaics -~ _... -~ Mercedes. CorvettH. W 1 S ,A ,..__ C L. .... .._ MM, alMI ,_. fomla Probele Code. TM
T P • & " .. ,_· ...,......., -....,._, __ ,., chauua Surptu• Buyer• es · an... "'""• • ....., -Md .,.. time for fttlnQ cMllftl _..not • emp.to e<m oak end co" ta.,..,, AM /FM _ t;ueette, ~-(1) aos-ee1.eooo 92701. · Na.~ eftf ..................... prtor to four monttll CUSSlflED lamps. 721-1081 sunroof, 59,000 rilllea. t S-23005 IF YOU OBJECT T The name .and addrtst 01 """* ............ hilt "'9 from the de'9 of 1N '-1nl1 ... ..._. Several poeltlons available NEW Daybed White & $57001 MUST SEE Ex · the granting of the petition the coun Is. (El nombre Y aourt. noticed above. llYDTillll -· r-.. In Huntington Beach~ Braa.. w/matttelMI & . you should either appea ~~~~~r~:it Tw. .. ..._ ..... ,.... YOU MAY EXAMINE 1N
• :,;1~-:r.:. all °' tNndle Complete. S245 N,...ll at the hearing and Slat FORNI.A. COUNTY Of OR· .. a"' .... YM ...., ..... ,.. k~ by ttlt 1nc:"...:t::
The Orange Coast Dally UI West.., It o L. WEAVER •8"0-t133* your objections or Ii ANGE. 700 CMc Center te ........ :-:11: = ~ m8y 1111 wlttl
Pilot has an Immediate U uin TE.MPOAARIES Designer goof: New white writ19n objections with lh Ortve Wnt, Pott Office Box ::.;,: _. • 1N c:ouft '1 forme1 AtQua1t
opening '°' tetepttone =i:; & Som au: 714/547-0550 100%.FREE sola/ChalM 194. HI wtae. S..,.rl/n. court bef0<e the hearing. :r,02~. Ana. Callfornl• ....,_, ~~or tor ~ Motlet of tt1t fllo-salee 11t our tront counter. Or call Erle at ,..2~21 Coat S1500 Saeflllc:e IV Your appearance may The name. add,..., tnd a...., .id IMoa (...., • Ing of an lnV9ntory and• t::1ui~t r.:rr~ ext. 205 $WOO 780-3&4t ~ Of-by-~ tilepti'ont number of pllln· ... ,..._ ~._ ~ 9fto ~~::.. .. .=:
d be o gen I zed • Rettaurantt Dining rm Ml, oak w/6 BM allor~y. tiffs •ttorney, or plalntltt .,....... .C.: ,... a pr= In MC11oa t250 :~wpm typrlng. ca1i JAllTll •HOST/HOSTESS en,. & buffet. Bronn IF YOU ARE A without "' attorney. ls: (El =:..::-...... 11n of 1t1e Clllfomla Prot>ete
Peggy Blevins for lnte<· PIT evening wOl'k. lmmed. •FOOD SERVERS Chendeller w/6 lights. 3 Uf fUlllM CREDITOR °' a nombr•~: d~n~ el~~ da • DtAI CAL.IND= Code. A Requtat fO< Special
view appointment. hire. Huntington Beach •BANQUET SERVERS draW« chest, 2 br•ss OF NEWPORT~ Lncoln Mllf'cury Merkur
1
conllngenl credt0< of the :i::adodtl oemindintt 0 p•ra ,,. .. ,.,., una Notlettonnleavallatlllfrom
714-642-4321ext301 • area.(714)4'7-3118 Varlableshlfts30-35Hrs lamps.N8759-1540 :Jegu~r ltuzu 'Honda ·deceased, you must file del oemendante que ~0 ,......ta ...._a,..... thtcouncttftc.
PITH W WT /CllllH-. per ~ t nt FORMAL Dining Room
1
l•O·I•.. Voikew.Qen ' your claim with the court uence at>og1do, es): LAW .,..._ • -~ 4:!'i....ede K Petltlon~r • ~lllrem J.
Fast & ~urate typllt to Aeltable car' a. neat ap-~ ~~ E'!ftpti1 • table, 6 chalrs, 3 1e1ves. 1540 JAMBOREE ROAD By Appt. Only Contact and mall a copy to ~e ~:ti~fJ ~77? 6 f 0 ~ N .. :.:: no .. .....,_ ~L. &WON), A~
d pearan<le Mon-Fri after· llLIO& l&Y CLll custom pad & hutch $600 Open 7 daya. a week Linde Colletll or Jim personal representauve · en er v· ,..0,11 clan· au ,..,_... ..,._, .. uw, 111 "' •• .-~l~rtra~~a g~~:,u~~~ noons:wui train. 642-8206 Or belt offe<. 840.8588 Extended Service Hours Palme<I at 830·7000 appo~ted by the court :.':11su1~.~~,-n7~nt9j>J~ ;e_...a~ttaM.-A~ 1u11a . "'C", a..e
port. 250-1150 I •..&. I I 1 7 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon· Fri Irvine Auto Center within lour months from Phone: 7t41848_..849 c1ti11pllr con IH tar-......, c....... •M. At· L..lllSCAPECI. a"-4-rm I thedateoffirslissUal'1()80f DATE· tFtch•) MAR 9ftulldadu ••1a•u ..,_,..,,.. ••• ., ..... . •STllCTill Looking for up gardener 1· Restaurant$ 2 maftre.Ms. trundle. new
1
letter.; as provided in 1988 · . _. 111. 11 dH II ueted ..,. UA.11 J. llu.nMOWllU
Ram Gutter instalt1t1ons w/lruek for N.B. 548-1099 llW llllHI I S265 ernplte 840-8733 DRIVER section 9100 of the Garf L. Qr....., Cllftl, ... la aorta ......_ 18 Pubtllhld Orenga Coaat
Exp'd Installer 854~89 LANDSCAPE ~4AINTEN-1 For New Or.ange Inn Cafe QUEEN ANNE Calilomla Probate ~· 8J ~ 0eN. DlputJ ca:-wted no ., ?:I Piiot October 5• I , 12•
COUNTER PERSON PIT ANCEIHANOYMAN & Marllet, Old TOWM Thomasville style Cher-WORK PART-TIME DELIVERING The lime '°' ril~g claims D·~~Oct °=V 1~ ,.., ..... a~=··· WUl1M Weekends & Eves 30-35hrsperweel<.Main-lrvme. rywooddlnlngroom.O<lg w11notexpire pnortolour 26~988 t 0 • • ·,._e1ceae.r ,_...
Vogan Shop Bilbo• Fun t11n 4 Corona del Mar • AITERIWAITRESS $4000 taenfiee s 1ns. NEWS PAPERS. EARN UP TO months lrom the dale of • W1117 ............... IU ...
Zone 714-67S-3830 properties No equip-~KS Mat.ching coffee table I $600/MONTH. MUST HAVE RE-the hearing noticed above J etrat 0.... d• tu ment needed Reter:en-:BUSPERSONS set, formal so11 .. 1ove YOU MAY EXAMINE "8.tC fll)TICE pr111t1111d t111 ..teo adf. LINKER ClllSE UIP MS! oes required. Own car & •HOST /HOSTESS seat (blue/rose/ creme). LIAB LE VEHICLE. IN SURANC E. the file 1!.ept by the court 11 -.,:.c parte Ila le_,., 8 A R 8 A R A
Immediate Openings• experienced Salary •BAKERY-DELI Brand new 973--0653 AND OMV PRINTOUT MON-you are a person • NOTICI Of' ,,::;: := J 0 $ E P H I N E
Seasonal & Career op-open 675-23 11 days, •CASHIERS QUEEN size etistom m1de lnferesled In lhe estate. AV~ Of' ....,a ... -...-LINKER. age 75,
ptys Xlnl pay. W0tld 67S-3311·£ves.-Wl(nds Apply at: 14962 Sand studio couch brown/~ DAY-FRIDAY 2-5 PM • WEEK--you maylil4fW!th lhe court ANNUM. M~ 11,...,..................... pa!9ed away October
Travel• CIJI (Refundlble) Lfl!.11 s1c•r9••y Cenyon Ave ltv!ne /gold tones Uke new. ENOS & HOLIDAYS 4 7 AM a formal Request tori Purtuanl to Section aoe a WI ........ ...... 988 . N 1·518-459-3535 x P3 11 --·-. I ·· Steo OBO &40-e930 -· Special Notice of the fifing 810-4{d) of the lnt~al Rev·......., a ""..,...;._,.._ 2, 1 m ewport
ll'Vlne office has tmmed llfllll IELP , NEWPORT /CORONA DEL MAR ot an lnvento an~anue Code. nota 1• here.t>'f .,..... • d111a •11 • a Beach. CA. Born De· ClltSEUIP.lllSI open1ngl0<C1vllt.Secty.,College students s1075I OUEENSIZEMATTRESS & LAGUNA BEACH AREAS. alse t /Y tat glv9ntnattheannualrtl90<. t UMallcMa. ..,.,..._, cember 17, 1912 in Immediate Openings• IBMIW0<d Perfect exp tarti PIT FIT II & BOX OUIL TED' appr men o es for the Fllcal year July 1, ~et dtfKlorlo teJe. B l ' h A l
Seasonal & C•reer op. I helpful Compe11t1ve 5 nt ex BRANO.NEWt 1155 assets<>< ol any ~t1tion o 1987 10 July 1, 1988 of ~). ur ang1 ~m , a -
ptys Xlnt pay w orld salary & t>enetita. CALL I hours. o exp. nee. Call M&-4293 account as provided I Edwin Taytor Sctlolarahlp e...... ..... bama. She lS survived
Trav9f1 Call (Rel\lnd1ble) (714)553-t808 1 Call 10•2 541"6796 S3 I CALL 642-4538 EXT. 205 section 1250 of lh Trust.• privet• fOIJnd•tlon, The n1mt ~ eddr ... ot by her loving hua-
1-518-459-3535 LEl!.11 SECln••y I anllL SALIS PEISll :~i~at~~~~~~ton:1 A SK FOR ROGER STARKEY ~ Cahfomla Probat~ Code. A1 :1t:,-':'~':rncr~.1t~~°':~ the court it: (Et nombr9 y band. Charles P.
EXT P2912B8 I --Exp'd & dependable f0< bel·...,l pelCh SSOO Other Request 1or Special Notice lnapectlon during ragul1r dlrledon de 11 cort••l: SU· Linker. Private fam-Fnendly & casual gen prac sweat bo llQ e In Nwpt •y · form is available from th -•-~-1 8 PERIOA COURT OF CALI-.1 . h ld ClllS( SllP JllSI firm In HB 2 yrs CA leQal er u u furn & misc. 642-9281 ~ • ""' -. I lerk bu ... -hours rom 1.m. FORNIA COUNTY OF OR· I y servlces were e .
lmmediale Openings I I exp nee. Sal depends on ::~fh~~,:~ rt;:~~ SOUTHWEST I Lamps ................... ~. ~~ytor PetJttonM: ~::u:;rr.· ~y~~~"t'&O d~ ANOE,. CEWNTRAL JU-Pierce Bros. Bell
Seasonal & Career op· exp. Call Qulcil, we hate can Keren at 645·8503 sofa-+-lo11eseat;cha1rs: t Newspaper t REID & HELLYER after the d•t• ot tnlt publl-gici~L c~1~f;~cToRT~g Broadway Mortuary,
ptys. Xlnt pay World I the stress! 847-604 t Mon·Frl 12.s fOf' appt. chaise (peach/greenlwht)! t t ATIYS. 'cation w1~JT SANTA ANA CA Director, Costa Mesa.
Travel! Call (Refundable) I 1 nMuTill SECn Stone/glass or whlt1Wash: t s p RE AD t A PROFESSIONA The toundttlon'• prlnclpll 9 70 • • 1-5t6-459-3535 11CP212H 1.11iwa llnllL SILIS CollenCI tbls; dm sets: wall t t CORPORATION m~oft11etounc1111on11 2T~ name addr ... and •
SMALL Pacll89' delivery !Laguna Beach ~/T Perm. PIT New Nor1h umtsl Pine logs Pole bdrm, -• 3llO t.mon StrHt Wettam Gr~• /.uocl•· tti19hone nUmber ol plain-PACIFIC VIEW
Mon-Fri 12_. 30pm. Mutt ~~~~04',s ~~71;r~~ Laguna snop Pref mature Qnlkg mettress/bx sprngl t P.o. Box 1300 ''°:;avid L Moore Prlncl 11 tiff'• 1uomey. °' p111nt1tt MEMORIAL PARK
have car. S4 75hour exP r~ CPT pref will re5f>· lady w/knowtedge ol Wholetale pres. 973-0653 t THE •• Riverside C M1n1g•r Don1ld ~ without en attorney, It: (El c.m.1ery. Mor1uary
+mileage. 631-0416 train. HNvy transcrlblng. ~:,~af1 ;~~.,S:,.~. llCtl UH81 0 t 925021300 Ofetller. Attorrlty II Law: =~·d~d~n~ .. ~~j 3~~;;:•~
DEITlL Flo.T I last-paced but casual ot-days 497-2227 cAIAX cXeiAEt 1275. • • Orange Coast Daily Pilot 17620 Fitdl StrMt. Irvine, abogado dtl demandant•. 0 ~Newport BMen
floe ToS15/hr 497-4433 I Tea can $125. Pro! mat t NEWS : Seo.27.28.0d 4. 1988 CAP9~!~ 0 c II del oem1nden1e que no 6«-2700
.FF.CE ISaJes . • u ...... _, renge OI tletlOl lbogedO .. , REMO LfYl·tl ClllPAllll Onve a 750 11 BMW Wear 1 culler S125· Huge rare f'tll.IC fll)TIC[ Oalty Piiot Oc1ober 5, 11188 O TA.BELLO. 'ESQ .. 700
Good Ulert & benefits ... FOf eldlfly lady Lovety 1a11or made clothes =~~ue c~';i!ru~~ •. Work in the ever expanding News-: ..._ -w19s South Flower Street. SYit• HAM<Hll LAWN-
peclally IF etrong In in-I home. prvt room. Exce4-$ lOK/mo 966-5105 $ 1 2 5 AL L Re AL oaper Promotion fleld I If you are flCTmOU8 .,..... 2200• Lo• Aneei... CA MT. ouvE
tur•nce & colleellOnt :~-5pmpay. 1f~~~~J;" SALES PERSON NEEDED I BARGAINS! 67~1978 •• salt-mot ivated and like working wtth • Nam 8TAJDmff togl~~~,~~ok 01 Mor1Uety. c-tery Must have dental •x-For S T A T I 0 N E RY -t The lollowlng per.ons er H . Cfemat0ty
perience 4 days P9f llUllTEUllE/lllYH STORE CdM. Fl t, 5 WUTD: t teenagers. this may be the op-t CSolnQ bullrleM u : 1 a!i,, L ~ c..._ t82S 01t1tr Ave w.-& "!ernatt Satur-Good dmnng record tun days. Xlnt woncing con· into on 16' Oonzl lnboerd t p ortunity you've been waiting for. t MATCO. to&a1 Flowe ClllB.. bf-...., L ~ ~ --coat• Mete
days am•· &40-1122 time/benefits Bendable, ~!~~Ex~~r~"!.~pnet I lpeedmol"' •boand !., wltouthr':!~ntt t t Ste~~.i:c~· ~ eor ~!~~.... "Pu ...... .._.. Or • ,.._.. S40-S~
DISTRICT must hive reterences "'-·-· r,,..,.,,,. "' ..... "' '"" "' ,...,,_ Th' ' GUARANTEED INCOME f t1on to&a1 Flower St •...-_._ ..,....,_ lflQ9 ._. NB A/E office. 615-e 110 673-4782 ski boet. Hert evenings • IS IS a . 0 • rir.::ton.' CA 90elO .• ... ., .... Delly Piiot Oc1ober 5, t2. t9,
11.lf!EIEIT I u--··--•s I Fii I 722-3512. • $400 per week to start with poten-: Thi• bu9lnes• ls con· .... -· 26. 11118 W186 NftCf •O'OtfftS • IHICAL lSSISTUT -•-•-tt11 1 1 : tial earnings of up to $1000 per OUettd Dy.• ~tlon ., --NLl UOADWAY Front office Full-Time Part time W/Pef'fect/Org Ht t ta t Th• reg111r1n1 com· .. ~ MOf'turary. Chtpel
The Dally Piiot l1 look1ng Mon-Frt Medical office., skills FSHN ISLO, N.B.IX3ora6'muttpuppiesara . week. •. tnlnQec:I to trlnllCt bull-taclaudled. "8.IC M>TtcE t10BroadW1y
tor qu•llfled lndlvlduals Lelle F0<est (El Toro) Tom RaguM ~242 welting to be adopted! n-. under the tlctllloua Costa Mete
to manage youth carriers. (7 14)770· 1950 I ucn1·--1TIH &46-5672 • A n insured van. wagon, pick-• butlnest Mme OI' nlt'l'let t .... 1MM1 642·91SO M nagement experlen-Oe .__, .. t llttedaboYtonJuly27, 1988 ~ 1 NOtlCI Of' ~ATM ~olul. but wlll trtln I IEllCAL·NlllTRY 1Arch1~ectural lirm requlre1,Female Rottweller/Lab I: up/shells ar e a MUST. • BLI, Inc .. Joteph A. Bee, AND OP PIT1'T10N
Ba:. ul S37Slwk + Nwpt Bch ofc. Full-Time. exp d Adm1n person 110 lbs. Tan, well-man-Pretldenl TO All•llTE"
GAS ~ ~NUS PLAN Back/front office ln-1 wl strong Secty/Acctg nered,gd .secur l ty t Thlt tt1ttmen. 1 wu tiled .....<.:::i..-_ HTATIOfl 0.IHJ'I flt,Wlrt
HRS· 11AM-8PM M ~ I surance bllllng exp req'd. atcllls. fBM computer 546-3716 or 646-6230 I• t with the County Clerk ol Or· --" ( l..U .-Mt
Fri. · on 63l·4099 =g~C:U~~~:iar~ twt ry an I/ • F o r m o re Information t ~9~nty on 5-c>temw • • .-~ K~ 2:N 2983 Harbor Blvd.
Cell Roger Starkey. IEllCALSECn I nego1 Send resume to MZS '• • "'1904 (') To;:,-... ..,. Costa Mesa, CA 842-4321 l(20S 9-1 l AM 1 0 N · a 10 -...... I • ·
1
• t Publlthed Orenot Coall ,.. _,,_. dallyforapPointmenl Full time. experienced .. egus. v ·~-........ SHoPEXRNt Call Mr. James Dally Pilot Sept1mbef 28 "\., ..,..._,...._, .... •1•1
must tcnow 1nsurlllC8 blll-
1
Certter Of •850• Nwpt Buy your w1I• a m1n11 coat t t October 5 t2 19 1988 · -·~N~T-....,... • Inn 364-0564 Bch, CA 92860 Of call C I '"LSOl t . t ' · ' 9311..-........1ur..;;-.__....:.a.._..._., _.... """ .~uMn ·~ M~~t 1~~1581 I ~~:~~ • (213)477-2870 ~==~~w~1~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~=~~~ Ill w. a., St. llUllE CllST 11m•1tn• 0r1gina1 846-9245 1+ i .. .')'> J •
'""•m .... ••' ca DAILY PILOT 'L:;~~'5!l~E ,c;,.:r;,;',' ~ ~··••••••••••••··~4!. STADJING A NEW BUSINESS?.?.
eral office exp. 55•. word Plan ~ai;; drah-t. 1111\
Auto pel111t0<1 needt de-proceuino exp pref bUt Ing table, 42"x31" Incl I
llWf'Y perwn Need OMV Pert-time AUlstant Dis-wtn train. tss.-0905 T·tquere, lamp & varlouS
prlntOU1 See Claude" lrlct AdVleor needed Sat-SEClllTJ/A•TE drafllng ln1trumtnll The LAnal Department at the PleaM stop by to file your HUB AUTO SUPPLY urday. !Miday and Hol--$250 Call 261· t9t 1 I -. 2120 Harbor Blvd . Costa ldays 3AM 10 t tAM. Must position available Swing & ! Oalty Piiot Is pleated to an-fictitious business atatement at
Mell. &46-2484 1 be 18 or over. ftlld drtv~ Gf'tlVe)'Sl'd & ftekendl ttt nounce a new servlee now avail-the Dally Piiot Legal Depart· .WO/Fiii ye er·s 1an•. current 1n-Apptylnper'°" Newport BEXOTIFOlcoonAouna CALlrORMIA abtetonewbuSlnenes. ment. 330 West Bay, Costa ~ be ciMn rtll•ble surenoe. ~ drMng r• °"'*· 1t31 Bactc '-Y neec11 home. Current~ In u rM HLP We w111 now SEARCH the Mesa. California . If you ca,,.. not
21 e~1ith·•""""'11~ c<><d s7 per hour, OM Dr .• Newpot1 BMch. CA kennel. Fem•I• t ~yr name for you at no extra c harge , stop by, p .. aM call us
0¥9( • ........ mileage. Cell Aoger ..... ,, "'-n ..... aa15 ( 1 .. ) .... 2 ..0321 Cw -· Ing, 5to /hr .. t>ei:'· j Starkey Tuesd• thru Fri-llOIAL lllftlll _,. an . ..-.,...,.._. and save you the time and the at 7 .. v.. ~ • llOAten .. on em.. DMVto L<><I • day, &42·432t ~t 205. c... worker/vol, eoord. FRE£ kittens to good trip to the Court Houae In Santa 315 or 318 and we will make
IOtc:Nn. 9--0747 IC>f non profit Ho. Meal home. 1 blacil. t tabby r =JH( [WM I) WIN" Ana . Then, of cour1e, after .the arrangements for you to handle lllYEI PlllTD WAITll1 Progrem Cotta M ... .,.. c e 11 e 4 O • 4 3 31 • r March It CC>n'ls>leted we wtll file this procedute by mall.
Spr•y. brush & roii. 3 yrs Exp. w/..Oerly Pftf'd. M0-9001 Ltelle. 'your fictitious buslneas name II you should have any further
F« ~ tuP90ft groupl exp. $9/Hr. 84 t-5891 Some euperv. ••~ ~-"The Drive to Win" ( atatement with the County Clerk, qu .. tlont , p ..... call us and we
hm-:30 Mon lhru Fri. PART TIME GENERAL . 220-0224 s ron • ....-a.. f f will be mor• than glad tb al8'st Muet ~~ ... ~~n car OFFICE Mue1 type, end publish once • ~ Of' our have~. Flexible hours. EARN Some cancer patients nood o weetcs u required by law and you.
Mon ~ ~T Flower ~~ue. call Br*1d• $400-$lOOO/WK ~~~~~= ~':'~~,,'~ =onfl=t~~ 6'~~:y ~.::bll· ~~~"sfr'ur
Shop In N.8. 852-9155 week pleoso COii vour IOCOI •mu Amerieon C ancer Society w. M--f. ""'9"f at Matt• o.~1C:e ..IOln The Onvu to Win
lluepM1, 234 F*tltr. Ond QISCOV 'thO reword ot eo... ...... $40-4 t74 helping 1n the hghl OQOtr'ISI
cone
r
•
~Piiat
·october a month . .
of food celebrations
Octoberbrin$S in bountiful fall harvests, so
naturally it is the time chosen by many national food
associations to salute tbeir parucular fare,
For instance:
-October is designated as national apple month.
-It's national seafood month. .
-And it's also the lime for a national celebration
of cheese-our cheese recipes salute two other
national food celebrations: pizza and pasta. •
-and, of course, it is known around the globe as
Oktoberfest, Germany's annual folk festival.
Apples are among the most universally popular
fruits around. While they're perfect for out-of-hand
snacks, they aJsoare ideal in traditional favorites like
bread pudding, hearty muffins. rich cheesecake or
warm baked a{'ples.
These recipes feature Golden Delicious apples,
the best kind for cooking, teamed with the lively flavor
o-Oemonjuice and sweetened condensed milk.
Seafood lovers wiU have plenty lo celebrate, as
many popular choices arc in excellent supply of.fering
consumers good buys, according lo the National
Fisheries Institute.
Good reasons to eat searood ~according to the
institute, include:
-Seafood can be prepared in a variety of ways
including Cajun, Chinese, Italian. Southwestern,
Caribbean and Mexican.
- A gourmet seafood meal can be made in a
microwave oven in less than 30minutes.
-Seafood is an excellent source of complete
protein that's low in fat. sodium and cholesterol.
-Seafood is low in calories; a four-ounce portion
containsabout IOO calones.
-Eating more seafood in place oftnrditional hi&b fat foods can help tower the risk of cardiovascular
disease primarily by reducing the intake oftolal fat and
saturated fat.
Seafood recipes developed b) the institule isa
culinary salute to the Mediterranean. with a collection
from Italy, France and Greece. .
The wide variety of cheese offers an array of ·
actually is held at the end o fSeptemb(r. but around the
&lobe, similar celebrations are held throughout
October from which lbc festi val gets its name. •
LEMON APPLE OAT MUFFINS
leg
¥1 cap milk
'4 CUP. vegetable oil
i tablespoons bottled Lemon juice
% cap qllick-cookiag oats
114 caps u11fted flour
¥1 cap firmly packed llgbt brown sugar
1 ¥1 tea1poon1 bakiag powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 &ea1poon g,round cln11am on
¥1 teaspoon salt ~ .
14 tea1pooD ground nutmeg
1 cap (aboat 1 medium ) finely chop~ Golden·
Delicious apple
¥1 cup chopped nuts
Lemon Icing
Preheat oven to~degrecs. In medium bowl.
beat egg, stir in milk, ~I. then lemon juice. Add oats;
mi~well. Combine dry ingreruents~add to oat mixture
with apples and nuts. Mix. o nl y until moistened(batter
will be thick). Spoon into greased o r paper bakingcup-
lincd muffin cups. Bake 20 minutes or until golden.
Spoon Lemon Icing over muffins. Remove from pan.
Makes about I dozen.
Lemon Icing: Combine 12cuppowderedsugar, 1
tablespoon lemon juice and I tablespoon melted
margarine or butter. Makes about 1 ~cup.
GOLDEN APPLE BREAD PUDDING
• ou.aces French bread. cut into "'2-incb slices
14 cap margarine or bu tter , melted
i Golden Delicious a pples, cored, pared if desired
aadcubed (about 2cups)
3eu•
l '4 c ups warm water
--1 -ounce) can sweet eneocondensed milk (NOT -
evaporated milk)
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 tea1poon-vanllla extr act
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1988
---"'ftavor!f'or casseroles, sauces. pizza and pastas. It is an
exceptionally nutntious food. being particularly high·
in protein and alsocontain1ngall the essential amino
aads. A half-pound of most cheeses has as much
protein, calcium and phosphorous as one and one-half
·quans of milk.
~ teaspoon ground gitJ1ger
'i'¥ teaspoonsaJt . Dellclou baked, applee a1110 add appeal to maftl.Da, cheeee cake and bread padcllJll.
ItisaJso agood soUt'ce ofcalcium and
•phosphorous, contains vitamin A and some of the B
vitamins as well.
Although some might think Oktoberfest isa
tradition dating back to medieval days. the first wasn't
held until 1810 . when Crown Prince Ludwig l (who
later became King of Bavaria) married Princess
Therese. A bigcelebrauon was held that included a
arandhorsc race staged by the Bavanan National
Guard in Munich.
The next year, the horse race \.\aseApanded to
include various agricultural C'(hibtts and over tbe-
following years various contests of skill and marks:
manshipwercadded. -
The modem Oktoberfest 1s a celebration of
German food~nd drink. H o rses no longer race but pull
the ceremonial beer wagons fo~he breweries that
sponsor the festival. In Munidi. the celebration
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Brush bread slkes
with margarine; in bunen-d 9-mch'square baking pan,
arrange bread with apples . In large bowl. beat eggs: add
remainingingred1ents. Po urevenlyoverbreadand
apples, completely moisu·ning bread. Bake 40 to 45
minutes or until kmfc i ns«rted near center co roes out
clean. Cool. Serve warm Makes 6 to 8 servings.
Refrigerate leftovers.
' ' APPLE CINNAMON CHEESECAKE
¥1 cap plus 1 tablespoo'..1 margarine or butter,
·softened, divided
14 cap flrmJy packed Ii gbt brown sugar
fcep 11D1lfted flour
14 cap quick-cooking oats
1.4 cup finely cboppetl walnuts
~ teaspoon ground cinnamon
% ( 8-ouoce packages) cr eam cbeese, scftened
1 (lf-ounce) can sweetened condened milk (NOT
evaporated milk)
3ea• . ¥1 cap frozen a pple juice concentrate, tha_,.~--
l n;ied.ia.m Golden Delicious apples. cored, pared
aad1Uced
ChuaamoD Apple Gtau .:¥
Preheat oven lo JOO degrees In small mi~erbowl.
beat 1h cup marganne and sugar unul fluff) . .\dd flour.
oats, nuts and cinnamon. ml\ "'ell Press firmh on
bottom and half" a) up side ofQ-1m:h spnngform pan.
~kc 1 Om mules
Mcanwhtle. in large m1\cd>O\\ I. beat cheese until
fluffy. Gradual!) beat in S\\l'Ctcned condensed milk
until smooth. o\dd e-ggs andJuH:e-cpncentrate-: mix
Cbeeee ID a nutty eauce dreeaa up paeta and •eaetablee (left) and lt
la the prime tncrectrent of Southweet Pizza. lleata and cbeeeee
accompanied by potato Mlad, plcldea and beeta are Included ID a
traclltional Oktoberf eet buff et.
..
well. Pour into prepared crust. Bake 45 minutes or
until cake spnngs back when lightly touched. Cool
slightly.
In large skillet. cook apples in remaining L
tablespoon margarine unlll tender crisp. Arrange on
top of cheesecake; dnzzle w1th Cinnamon Apple
Glaze. Chill thorough I). Makes one 9-incb
cheesecake. Refrigerate leftovers.
Ciuamo• Apple'Glaie: In small saucepan.
combine 11• cup frozen appleJwccconccntrate.
thawed. I teaspoon cornstarch and '• teaspoon ground
cinnamon; mix well.O 'er lo"' heat. cook and sur until
thickened and clear . .\dd fe"' drops red food colonng
1fdes1red.
SEAFOOD RISOTTO
1 tablespoon olive oil
t,., cap ffnely cllopped onion
1clove1ar~lc. minced
1 cup Ions graill rice
t caps clllcken broth, divided
'rt cap diced iuccblni
¥. poaad raw mediam shrimp, peeled, devei.ned ud
laalved lenctJtwl1e• ·
¥. poad scallops (quartered iflarge)
'"& cap frozen peas. thawed
•-. cap mlaced parsley
3 tablespoon• grated Parmesan cbttse, pl••
adclJtioDa.lfor1erviDg
Heat 011 m large. hea '') skillet. Sautc onion and
garhc over medium heat unul soft . .\dd nee and sautc
unttl opaque. about 3 minutes . .\dd 1 cup broth 8Jld
bnngtobo1I. Cover and simmer about IO minutcsor
until hqu1d is absorbed . .\dd remaining broth and
zucchm1.co,erand si mmer S minutes.
Add shnmp. scallops and peas. Simmer. covered.
I 0 mmut~ sumng o nce. ur in parsle) and cook
about 5 minutes or unul hqu1d is absorbed. rice 1s
tender and seafood ts o paque throughout. Stir in
Parmesan cheese Make -'servings.
•one Pound shnmp or callop can be substituted
for the combination
FILLET OF SOLE MEDITERRANEAN
1 pound sole or flounder fillets ( 4 fillets)
3 tabletpoons finely chopped-onion
t cloves 1arlic, mlnced
1 tablespooD olive oil
1 cu ( 14 to 11 ounces l whole tomatoes, well
dralaed and cltopped OR 1 large tomato, peeled,
seeded ud chopped
a., cap sliced ripe black olives. well draDed
"' teaspoon dried oregano, crushed
1 tablespoon fresll parsley, minced
C'ombme onion. garhc and 011in4<up glass
measurt M1 ro"'a'con High :! mmutcsorunlll soft.
Dram tomatoes. rcscrvmgJu1ccs and chop. Reserve a
fe"' oln e shct"S for garnish . .\dd rcmainm_gohYes, '
to matod.. o regano. parsle) and 'a teaspoon EACH sail
and peppertoomon m1>.ture.
Pat hllctsdf') 'pread tomato mixture on fillets.
roll up from narro"' end and place scam side down 11}
01 led or non suck sprayed m1crowave·safc baking dlSh.
C'O\'Cr"'llh 'cnted plastic wrap. Microwave on High 3
mmutc . rotating dish once. Let stand. covered. 3
minutes to fintsh cooking. •
Ft sh 1s cook.W when ltJUSt flakes when tested wuh
a fork. Place reserved tomato liquid in a 2-cup
measure: m1crowa' eon High 2 minutes. SPQOn some
of tomato hqu1d over fish and garnish with reserved
oh'c . Makes4scrv1ngs.
IT ALIAN..sTYLESEAFOODSTEW
1 me11 .. ..-,da1Pfetl
ldPeeprUc.~
l tlllilH•I l•I .Ufteil •c..-••ter l~*Jwtlllte .... ................. .. ~ ..... ..........
~., ......... .....
.. t111111•a wl1•M1 .... , •H 11 ...._ u..r...,
.. tsr 11111tACll_._.,.".
fPI••• -cm -•ftlal
•
C3 Or9nQ9Cout DAILY PILOT/ Wedneeday, Ociobet 5, 1918
CELEBRATE HARVEST •••
From Cl
1 poud mixed firm fl1ll, Hell a1
llallbtlt, sea ba11, red 1aapper,
roctfltll, . nt Into l Ya-lllcll
cllakl
Ya ,...d raw med1•m 1llrimp,
peele4 aad develaed or U
1crabbed and debearded
m11sel1 or a combination of
botll
In large soup keJtle, combine
tested with a fork. Remove and
discard bay l~f. Makes 4 to 6 main
dish servings.
NU1TY CHEESE SAUCE FOR
VEGETABLES, PASTA
Ya CIP b1ttet
% cup laalf·Ud·laalf
l CIP walD•t•, flaely cllopped
1 c•p 1llredded Miilerey Jac'i-
clleete 1
Ya cap dlce4 Callfornla Brie
3 tablespooa1 crambled Call-
f ornla blae cbee1e
onion,• garlic and oil. Saute S
minutes or until onion is son. Add
water, wine, tomatoes, pasta, basil,
red pepper, bay leaf, salt and
pepper. Bring to boil and simmer,
panially covered, 10 minutes. Add
seafood and simmer, covered 8 to
I 0 minutes or until fish Oakes when
Salt aad pepper to taste
Melt butter m saucepan; stir in
half-~nd-half. Heat gently and add
nuts. Whisk in cheese in small
-----,.---------=---------'---------------....;.;.....--------------....;.:_-----------~ amounts until melted and smOQth.
THE BEST COUPON
OFFIR · tN-TOWNI I
HUGH1s ~RS
WINI.
DfTAILS IN STO•l
WE ACCEPT COUPONS FROM OTHER SUPERMARKETS PLUS UNLIMITED DOUBLES
llONILISS ~ PORK LOIN ROAST r. 3 (
FARMSTEAD 3 29 . ~ La. •
.
ROUND STEAK
BONELE~ BEEF, LIMIT 2
SKINLISS
LINKS
8-0Z PKG . 69 PORK SAUSAGE I.A. •
37
LB.
HILLSHIRI PARMS
SA USA el
SMOKED. POLISH. BEEF 2 2• 9
,Ol.ISH OR POLSKA La. •
.....
DOYa SOLi FILI.ITS .
BAKE BROIL
OR FRY La.3.49
Pilgrims Prtde 2 2-• Hughes I -Lb. Hot Or Mild Louis Rich Fresh Hen
BONELESS CHICKEN THIGHS., LB. • PO.RK SAUSAGE ROL ............ cA. 1-.39 HUGHES ITALIAflTSA1JSAGf ... l B 2.29 TURKEY WINGS OR DRUMS... . LS .79
~ HUG HIS
,r PAP& TOWELS
if.l} SINGLE 5 9 ~I ROLL ••
Hughes lb bz Reg Or low Fo t
COTT AGE CHEESE .89
RAMIN NOOKE SOUP
\ . ,
(fl~U
RAMEN CLASSIC, 3-0Z. ·ASSORTED
CRISCO
OIL
48 oz CORN I 99 OR VEGH ABLE • I
.F
0 • LIMIT 8
DUllCAll HINIS
CAKI MIX
LAVER .VARIETIES
18 25-0Z ·.69
8-0unC4" .59 Rogu 32-0z A ssorted
SPAGHETII SAUCE ..... 1.79 OANNO N YOGURT
.
GOLDEN BANANAS
SWED, RIPE ,. ...
~(\·
(
'I
s
)
1/2 eAL
APPLI 'UICI
APPLE
VALLEY
10-0z A ssorted Sondw1ches
HOT POCKETS ..
.1.09
2.19
Makes about 2 cups.
Note: Sauce may be tossed with I
pound hot cooked pasta. Seasonal
sauteed vegetables may be added.
Pour over cooked vegetables, such
as broccoli. spinach, asparagus or
on baked potatoes just before
serving.
CHEESY SOUTHWEST PIZZA
Crust
1 package dry yeast
~ teaspooa sagar
1 cup warm water ( 100 to 115
de1ree1)
Z tablespoons vegetable oil
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespOOD dried. r..ed pepper
flakes
•;, cup chopped cilantro or 1
teaspoon dried
Z 'fa cups flour
'fa cup cornmeal
· Topping
Z tablespooDI olive oil
3 garlic cloves, minced
4-oance can cbllles, sliced or
· chopped
3 medium tomatoes, sliced
1 cup sliced ollve1
Ya cup chopped cilantro or 1
tablespoon dried
Z teaspoons oregano
Salt and pepper
1 cup 1breddtd Cbeddar cbeese
1 cup -shredded Moaterey Jack
cheese
Dissolve yeast and sugar in 1'2 cup
warm water. Add remaining water.
oil. salt. seasonings. flour and
cornmeal beating vigorously.
Knead into ball and let rest I 0
minutes. Pat or roll into 14 K 18-
inch rectangle or 16-inch round
peased baking sheet.
Brush with olive oil and sprinkle
with garlic. Top with remaining
ingredients; bake at 425 aegrees 15
to 20 m inutes until crusty. Makes 8
to I 0 servings .
OKTOBERFEST POTATO
SALAD
WITH BACON
5 poaads potatoes ..
'fa to ~ pound bacon, diced
1 to l lfa caps green onions, sliced
:11, cap vlne1ar :v, cup beef stock
3 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon pepper
Z tablhpoo.01 sagar
~ cup minced parsley
Cook clean. unpeeled whole
potatoes in boiling salted water to
cover until tender. Meanwhile, fry
bacon in a large skillet until crisp.
Remove pan from heat. When
potatoes are done. peel and slice
them while still hot. Place them in a
large bowl.
Add vi negar. stock and season·
ings to skillet~ be careful of splatters
when adding liquid to hot bacon
fat. Bnng mixture to a boil; then
pour the dressing over the sliced
potaotes. Add green onions and
parsley.
Fold gently.just to coat potatoes.
Serve warm with imponed Ger-
man beer. Makes 20 servings.
Tender
SWEET CORN L8 .• 39 Fresh
LARGE AVOCADOS . Fool Wropped -----------lA .89 6·1NCH GLOXINIA ........ • . EA 3.ff Fre\h
ITALIAN TOMA TOES s lAH $1
( ASIA.NND•aU'9CIALa ) .. , AL"RC9Al•IM )
PEARL
12·PACK BllR -KIKKOMAM
AJI MtalM
NAlllCA Al-N ............ s , ......
. LOftOll
l:>OZ CANS 2 99 • 100Z .. 25 t Otlll ,Ae 12.oz PKG
ASSORTED I.A •• 59 IQ.OZ REG I 89 OR EXTRA ORY •
Conodoon Whosl<v
l 75 LITER BLACK VELVET
750 Ml Cuvee Nopo Bru1
DOMAINE MUMM CHAMPAGNF
9.ff
10.H
Dynasty 7 75 Ot Pockoge
SAIFUN
Oyna1ty 5-0unce
SESAME Oil
.... , •••• TBAft
\
• LAK .. TCM.AICI . , , ~·iuU111cA• s•••n
. HB. PKG I ,&.. /. CHEESE FOOD I • 99
12 01 Pl<g Beef or Meot
FARMER JOHN BOLOGNA
Hughes
MOZZARELLA CHEESE
1.29
l8 2.79 i·-·-··· 5-LB. MN' ..... CH•••• MIATS ~ ~ •OZ PKG 69 TIN ASSORTED • '----~;:.-~L_.!_~~
......... 1.19
......... 1.59
0 5 Ounce
VISINE EYEDROPS . . ....... ... . . 1.79
Printed
VELOUR KITCHEN rowELS . . . .. ................. 1.M
l ~ SWAN••• .Q ' ...... .
t.~. ~ 1075lO115-02 I 69
4 COMPARTMENT •
Steok Umm 14-0z.
SANDWICH STEAKS
Soro l-. IO·Oz
HEARTY MUFFINS
w1•a•10000
Citrus-glazed
chops terrific
Better Homet ud Gardens
Your family will love these
citrus·glazed pork chops because
they taste terrific. You can feel good
about serving these chops because
they're a healthful choice. Trim·
m'iif· n ff fat and broiling the meat
k atones. fat and cholesterol in
c k.
ORANGE·GLAZED
PORK CHOPS
1 tablt1pooa browa Hl•r
1 teaspooa cora1tarcll
Ya tea1peea flaely 1llredded
oru1epeel
Ya teasp'ooa 1rated gtD1erroot
'4 tea1pMa,...... red pepper
Ya et1p oru1e jllce
l tat.lespooa •Y uace
4 pert lolll clleps, e.t ~ lltcll
~ (IMt l ~ ...... total)
For glaze, in a small saucepan stir
together sugar, cornstarch, oranae
peel, iinaerroot and red pepper.
Stir in oranse juice and soy sauce.
, Cook and stir until thickened and
bubbly. Cook and stir 2 minutes
more.
Trim any separable fat from t~
chops. Place chops on the unheated
rack of a broiler pan. Broil 3 •o 4
inches from heat for 20 to 2S
minutes or until pork is no lon,er
pink, tumina once •
...... -..,.... dlopswim·11ue hqUelit· ,.,,_ __ a_._._. ____ ._~_._.. ___ ._·-___ _, ~~urina broilins. ,.. mnaini11
911'1'-...cAn ........
1 . Maten 4 KTVinp. •
•
· Former Safeways Are Now Vons.
Lb .•
Camp bells
Tomato Soup
10.7 5 Ounce Can
Limit 4 Per Family
Half Gallon
App!~Juice
Wilson
Jum ho Franks c
16 0 101re Package Gre.u /Or Srucks
lJmit 2 Per Family Lunch lJm fir..onr.e
00
Re ome ue49 ~f}!~ or & Dtg . ..
Joy Liquid .99 ~~~~!!tBotdr
R~r Prrtt 1.>11("
.,
Hunt's ~39 Tomato Sauce
11 Ow1u Cm
AON-$
Friskies .. 29 Cat Food
StftlH FM.on
6 0 ...aOrn
SER \'ICE DEi.i
=T-&179 100~ ""°'11
.. Ensalada Del Arf'Cll,. Con R:>llo 499
0,.""1t vvh Ru s.J.I. """°""' RtQ/'t 0
\.bns Fried Chicken 499 • I Pt«r &.d11t1
Sour Cream 197(\ ~Salad ~ .17
Limit 2 Per Family
00
\l ~lttri
Swift~~-..;;;..~----:"'
Beef or Pork
Sizzlean
8ri.d<?j.l•l ~tnp•
I~ 01ouc l~uk.iRt
Vons Longhorn 219 Cheddar Cheese
w llCl7UIDn Ottv L L F.uruly P«lt P
Vons Sliced
Cooked Ham
8 o,.n S'I""'"' Po1<Jr.irr
11 Owrn Sq"""' P«~-: :!9
159.
Knudsen -2 F 88 ~rts ~.
80111nCt'Conhntr
BEEH -IJQt()R-\VINE
Stroh's Beer 940
Suitcase 30 Pk. ~,
• RtpiJT« Uib•-11 Oz. c.m ~
t L m 7b.m l T 90 Prr 6 PKlt I '(::JI
Almaden Mountain Ch3hlis~329 Blush tx Wlml' &rHt.-U ~ Botdr Q17
Kam chatka \bdka a
JSO M'"'" Bbttlt qp
Tanauerav Gin ~ no MJllurr &dt •
Scoresbv Scotch a I 7J t..... Bottlr qj7
3 99
9 99
1099
HEA I.TH & BE .\ l'TY AIDS
Ri~ Guard Brooze DeoOOrant , ~
J-Uj & ~rs Lotion 11 ~ ... ,.,.,.,.Dry.,.,.,... Otly
1 94
369
Contac Cold
Medicine
10C.Wllir
Ofh•C.-.
4ss
.
~ Jerseymaid3 Fsoo Ice Cream OR •
AIJorfroJ Fl.Aon
H.Jf G.Jlm-Sq ... rr C..rUJ <
Pringles <-
Potato Chip
~~(l'I/ l.1rr1•
1. I ri -I 0 "'", •• ~ .. ~ ·
Mother's
Cookies
.
llClT R:\KEH'
Fnuc Ba tons
I Id S.u--W ~
D inner Rolls ()w/M('fl~-
French
Bread
I ~"'-I" ltWtFdl>iJy
~.59
' 1' \ 1 ' \ ii +f , .. I ...
..,
I Qt RNtangk, I J Pt Square, JO 01. or
1.6 Pt. Cyu1iders, I l Pr ur J.~ Qt &w/
'
Bever~es
Rcgu/.ir or Owt
: 4sS<JrU'd f Ln 01l
"'tt11 r~ rm("ll\l ·nu~''
"" "' n."4n Thn. " ....... ·~
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-..-i ..... ....-,1.. ..... • ....................... . • • ....... ..-..I
Adwrti4ted ltems
Are-Good Only Aa \OOs.
~
' .
' •
°' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Wednelday, October 5, 1988
Great chefs to show skills
Great chefs of Orange County will show off their donallnf tame and food a~ Michael Watern, MoreU's:
culinary skills dunng the annual Kidney Foundation AruJc • Lucky'' Teacharona. Bangkok 3; T.im
fund-raiser in Dana Point. Dobravolskis, Prqo's: Guy Sockrider, J. J.'s Bistro;
More than 25 county restaurants and 14 wineries Murat DayioeJu, Chez Cary: John Mcl.auahlin, JW's:
will offer their finest creations for public sampling Scott Raczek, Mr. Stor.George Kookoot~ John between 4 and 7 p.m. on Oct. 30 at the Dana Point Dominis; Thomas E. Verne, Ron's in laauna.
Resort, 25135 Park Lantern. Proceeds will benefit the Others are Ern~st Mergenthaler, V\~ova: Earl
National Kidney Foundation of Southern Ca1ifomia Schryver Towers: Peter Striffolino, Watercolors·
..
Elegant
en tree
fixed in
minutes to support its public service !rograms, including Mi~~ael Shafe~, Dover's; ~argat Singh, Gandhi Indian
research, public educatt on an summer camp for Cu1s1ne: Dennas Brask. Five Crowns; Rene, Le Saint· "kidney kids." Tropez; Ange Lamonica, Cellar: Jeffrey Milnes, If you want to prepare elegant
"Guests will ha ve the rare opportunity of Alfredo's: Russell Armstrong, Tree's House; Cormac dish in less time than it would take
sampling a lavish array of hors d'oeuvres. entrees, Devine, Granville's· .Kelly Cain, Geppetto's: Jeff to fire up the grill, try Shrimp Al
desserts and wines from some of California's most D~gger, Savannah Grall; and Godfrey Cardillo, Las Minuto, which is high in flavor but
renowned restaurants and wineries." said Mike Bnsas. low in calories. And since it's
Boone, chairman. Tickets. at $75 per person, can be purchased in prepared with All Natural Butter
Some of the pan1c1patmg chefs and restaurants advance by calling 962· 7675 or at the door. Flavor Pam instead of butter or ----------------------------------------...;__ __ .::__:_...:...::...;...:.;;.....::...::::=================-. margarine, it's low in fat, too.
SALE TODAY THRUSAT OCT 11th
OUA,.T "I> _,MT<. l'l£S£1'lvEC'
EK~.
• CYI
~ -... ---
OLD SPICE FASTEETH LISTERINE CLEAN & CLEAR CVS CHEER LIQUID
~ .. .,. -1.77 OR FIXODENT OR LISTERMINT HAIR CARE SALINE SOLUTION ,,. p, .. 2.99
"''' .... , -1.77 266 .2ss 1~~ 119 "' ·~· ~ .. t) •• , ~,,_,... .. It -1.00
YOUA 00 YOUA 199 •Ends Blu"ed •
FINA!. COST • FINAL COST Close-Up Vision
Our .Regular 2 29-2 49 Our Regular 3 87 ·3 95 Our Regular 3 59·3 69 Our Regular':, 19 12 ounce lor sens1li.f' eve~ 64 ounce laundry •Available In 8 Styles
2 5 oz Sttc~ 2 oz So110 2 7 oz · 3 oz Fasteell"I 24 ounce mout~wash t 1 en Shampoo or COMPARE TO A.1u~,, ~ tomo at 2 19 deter9en1
or 1 5 oz L•Qu•d St•c~ Powder or 2 5 oz F1xoden1 Cond111oner 4 oz Styling •Nine Magnification all types Cream Gel an types Powers
SPECIAL VALUES
KOTEX
UGHTOAYS
2~~ 99¢
Our Req~ar 339 Our Reg~ar219
30 count Ma•• 24 'ount 26 pan1111ners reguiar Prohlf' or 15 count or unscented
OverN1tes
NEQ-SYNEPHRINE
DECONGESTANT
.. 2~~
Our Regular J 29-4 19
0 5 oz Nas111 Spray or
Nose Oroor; d ll 1ypes
Fl BEACON
LAXATIVE
511
Our Rt>guiar 7 •9
60 tablet5
I
' . ~ ..
NU PAIN
IBUPROFEN
3J.~
Our Regular 3 99
50 count
Tablets or Caplets
L'OREAL
' COMTREX COLO RELIEVER
2 ?.~
Our Regular 3 77
24 Tablets
or 16 Caplets
FREE HOLD
STYLING MOUSSE
211
Our Regular 2 99
2~~
Our Regular 3 29·3,79
84 Was'1 Cloths or
S 75 oz Baby 011
Mousse
CONAIA
HAIR CARE
88 ~CH
Our Regular 1 39
5 oz Styling Gel.
BONUS SIZE 20 oz
Snampoo Of Cond Of
9 3 oz Hau Spray
111 types
COSTA MESA FOUNTAIN VALLEY
(..mnl'• Ot Rrook"'-•IM S1 8
Ell•I Av!!! Nfl•I To t uc ~v 11 SENIOR
CITIZENS
10'lt SAVINGS
ONAU
"'9eawTK>fltS °"'..,''"SIM
rr ... Couny11os SnOPPtl\Q Cl'"'ll'• Hart>nr Blvd lntetM'Cl<>n O• HltMr
6 ~pnt1 Blvd 712 I 1~
HUNTINGTON BE~CH
loehtNnn • ~ Poonts P'au 1968 1 B M1in $1 111 D@ecn B•va INe~I To Tr*"'• .199 II 847· 3$1S
J '12
LAGUNA Hll18
2eS3I Mo!llton P11 *llY
• I ll Pu Ra.a
643•1"9
• REESE'S CUPS OR KIT KAT 99¢
Our Regula~ 1 29 Pa
10 P';'Ck
POND'S
SKIN CARE
2~!H
Our Regular 3 19-3 59
BR AC H'S
CANOY CORN 99¢
One pound oaq
Sen,."'°''"~ ,,
Ocean Spray
Cranberry Juice
Cocktail, 48 ounce Our Regular 1 99
Welch's Squeezable
Grape Jelly
22 ouncl' Our Rt!Qular 1 59
Pepperidge Farm
Amarican Collection
6 s oz Hsof1eo cooi. ,.,
Our Reou11r 1 79
Lay's Potato Chips
7 ounce oao
Our A~ular I 29
COKE.
COKE CLASSIC
66~CH
Our Regular 99
4 oz 8 oz Chips
Anoy Fig Newtons
Oreo and more
I DIET COKE OR
SPRITE
-139
88¢
SCOTCH TAPE
OR POST-ff PAO
~~R/100
3 5 oz Cold Cream
reg or lemon 3 9 oz
Ory Skin Cream
.,.._1.,. Our Regu1,u I 49
'\....;&.;.;.;...;-..-One pound kills •• ii•
Our Regular 59 .7g.
Transparent Tape .,
1 2 1n x 500 in or
Post· It Pad 3 1n ,
L'EGGS
CONTROL TO~
PANTYHOSE
149
Our Regular 2 39·2 SI)
Reinforced Toe or
Sartdalloo1 a~rttd
s'1ades & ••l~
COSTA MESA
Fatn11ew Rd & Baker St
Nelll To St•ter Brothers
5'15·5'66
New Mote Moun:
Front Store
M ·S.t &-10. Sun 9-7
Phumacy
M ·S.t t-9 Sun _9-7
clotnPS moms & larvl\e
PLASTIC
ATTACHABLE
HANGERS
89¢
Our Rttgular 1 99
6 PICll
NON-PHARMACY STORES
LAGUNA HILLS
Uguna l'Ma Mall
£1 loro ROM!
770•361
MllSION VlEJO J.18 M.HiOfl V .. ;o ~Ill
3e4·1~J
OMNOI
2111 Nufttl O.t n91' Me• N7.._
....... --...--..-..-'-' 3 in 50 shef!ls
CVS
LAWN & LEAF
BAGS
144
10 co11nt 39 gallon
Cl~Ctly
SHRIMP AL MINUTO
AJl·Dahral IHIUer flavor Do-
stlct cookha1 spray
1 poud sllrlmp, sllelled, de.
velaed
1 lar&e clove 1arllc, mulled
1 medJam oaloD, sllce4 (1 cap)
% lar1e, ripe tomatoes, peeled,
seeded, dopped (! c•ps)
~ cap oru1e J•lce
1.4 teaspoQD 1roud camla
I small 1reea clilll pepper,
seeded, sliced
Spray large skillet with cooking
spray. Add shrimp and garlic; cook
2 to 3 minutes, stirring constantly,
until shrimp-turns pink. Do not
overcook. Remove shrimp and set
aside. Discard garlic. Wipe skillet
clean.
Spray skillet again. Add onion;
saute over medium heat until
translucent. Add remaining ingre·
dients. Cover. Cook 5 minutes.
stirring occasionally. Add shrimp,
cover, remove from heat.
Makes: 4 servings; approximate·
ly 141 calorics per serving.
Blind taste
test selects
Cellars wine
By MIKE DUNNE
MoCletcll, ..... let"ftoe
Somefhing peculiar kept occur-
ring recently as I held a series of <J
blind wine-tastings involving.three
varietals: Releases from the same
winery -J. Carey Cellars -
repeatedl y scored the most points.
Regardless of varietal. the wines
consistent!> were fresh . clean, live-
ly. com pl ex and soundly structured.
What l liked most about each was
its varietal clarity: they made
forthright statements, without am-
biguity or hesitancy.
This consistency was surprising
on several counts. For one. all the
fruit that went into the wines was
from Santa Barbara County, gener·
ally the Santa Ynez Valley. a region
still att~mpting to establish itself as
a reliable producer of premium
grapes.
· Secondly. J. Carey Cellars. based
in Solvang. has had a somewhat
tumultuous history in recent years.
Turnover among winemakers has
been high. and a year and a half ago
the Carey family sold the winery to
A. Brooks Firestone. the tire heir
who dropped out oft:orporate life in
fa vor of grape-growing and wine-
making about two decades ago.
His. Firestone Vine_yards estab-
lished in 1973. generally is credited
with sparking the revival of
premium winemaking in the Santa
Ynez Valley.
~pile the unsettled conditions.
the folks at J. Carey Cellars -now
under the direction of Firestone's
wife. Kate, who wears the title
"vintner" -have turned out
sever.al impressive wines in recent
years.
J. Carey's 1986 Santa Ynez
Valley sauvianon blanc and 1986
Santa Barbara County chardonnay
were both outstanding, but the one 1
liked best was the 1983 ba Cuesta
Vineyard Santa Ynez Valley
cabemet sauvignon ($12). In color .
it's imposing, a deep and dark
garnet, but on the palate it's gentle.
with soft tannins and a supple
structure.
The smell suggests cedar aAd
cass1s. and the concentrated flavor
is pleasantly fruity. accented with a
dash of dark spice.
That could be because of the
ullUsual nature of La Cuesta
Vineyard, a steep and sunny slope
of gravelly chem 1se shale that yields
little more than one ton offruit per
acre. It's also a small vineyard.
planted to just 8.8 acres of Cabernet
and 3.5 acres of Merlot.
Food sugestions: Kate Firestone
sugests that the wine be served
with game, beef and blackened
redfish, while the winery's wine·
maker, Kent Barthman, new to the
operation since the wine was made.
likes it with barbecued turkey and a
manicotti of veal and ricotta in a
red sauce.
Demonstration set
Manon Cunruqham. author of
the "fanny Firmer Cookbook ..
and "The Breakfast Book." will be
in Hununaton Beach to conduct a food c:krnonstration and 1ipina of
her latnt cookbook.
Cunninaham aJIO coeuibutes to
Bon Ape_etit, _ Groumet ··tine
and The San Francitro Cbonicle.
She wtll be 11 Horne &preafrom
l 10 4 p.m. Suftday.
4..
Chorale's .
luncheon
applauded
By VIDA DEAN °' .................
"Let us entertain you" was the
deliahtful offer on the fashion lunch·
con invitations mailed out by the
Guild of the Master Chorale.
Baritone Mic Bell did his pan in the
entertaining doi ng "Old Man River,"
••Lady," ''New York. New York"and
other favorites of the mostly female
audien<%. ..... ................ _..,
Gypey Pulliam, Jeanne Moriarty and MUil cache'• Debbie Chuba and Lynn Galt check
Wleeeneck with new hairdos. oat fuhlona.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneed.-y, Octobs 5, 1881 C8
1'111rsclay,Octoberl
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) In recent da)s you arouse~ envy in people
who feh you were being •·too flash)." Now 1s tame to wnhdraw, to temporanly
be pri vate. Those who acu,aall y care wall comprehend and will be on YQUr side.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Focus on responsibility, deadlines,
addauonal information concemans insurance policies. Check legal documents,
be positiv~ you are not dupllcaung health plans. You'll learn more-about
propeny value.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You've made numerous contacts and now
some of them begin to pay dividends. Honzons expand. you perceive
opportunity you never knew existed. Focus on romance. achievement,
presuge. ·
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Streu creat1v1t). psychic ability. willingness
10 make fresh stan. You team secrets, people confide in you, you arc invited to
101n unique organizauon. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You'll knowwherc to go an connection with unique
sale. possibly auction. Special 1n1eres1 group extends anv1tat,aon. yo u mi&ht be
asked to speak. Focus on dlrecuon. purpose. motive. Property mvolvcd •
VIRGO (A1.1g. 23-SepL 22). Someone claims 10 have been left behtnd -
tb1s merely 1s attempt to make )OU feel guah~ K.no" it, contmue to express
cunosat). to plan ahead for _r,>mble JOU me~ ~m1n1. Sagmanus play roles.
UBRA (~pt. 23-0ct. _2). You could be "chomping at bit" due to last-
manute postponement. lntncac1es are 10' olved. subtle approach 1s required.
The Friday event was htld at the
Turnip Rose headquaners in Orange
and in the limited space for about
165, 20 more were squeezed in for the
fun . At the ~uffet. a good choice of
salads were available along wnh stea
diane and desscns.
Sixteen models wore fashions fron
Cache in South Coast Plaza, but only
two were p rofessional models -the
others were G uild members or sup-
porters of the chorale.
ments. For mstance. viewers learned
1harch"orale board president John and
Kathleen Rbynerson of I rv ane met
while attending UCLA and they nov.
have two little girls. Wbltoey, 2, and
Kristen, 4. wearing apparel from
Cherul>s joined their parents on the
stage. (J ohn modeled clothing
provided by Alex Sebastian as did
chorale director WHllam Hall.)
Focus on employment. health. pets. dependents. .
No". 19 Opera Ball and that Gypsy three-year-old guild and Lya.n Galt SCORPIO(Oct. 23· 0' 21 > You'll disco .. er mouve ofone who promised
Pulliam was making tr~n:!ebut as a was fashron show chairwoman. "We promouon and then uvanashed .. Reahze th is could be pan of the game.
model. expect to make about $2500 today:: Emphasis on achae,ement, ~~er. contact "•th higher-up. _
Other mannequins who had a said Galt. · SAGITTARIUS (Nov. -2-Dec 11 l Emphasis on daploman . pa'ments.
datTerent co1,ffure with each change by The chorale:S 33rd season be1t1ns • collecuons. receipt of gift. Fam al~ member ma kes goo<! will g~sture. seeks
a stylist from Christopher's of Full-Oct. 30 at the Orange County Per-rapprochement. You'll get what )Ou v.ant Libra involved. ,
Instead of describing the fashions
being paraded, commentator Donna
Buce talked about the models'
personal and community invol ve-
enon were Gayle Aaderson, Dawn ' forming Ans Center."On open ing CAPRICOt\N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You leam truth concerning snuauon
Cooper. Carole Follman, Marcia night we will do" Amadeus .... Lave at which apparently com banes fact. 1llus1on. Define terms, keep open mind while
Giesler. Jeanne Moriarty, Nancy Segerstrbm." said John Rh ynerson. refusing to be gullible. Yo u could be invited to attend seance.
Sorosky, Diana Sterling and Debbie The program includes Clive AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb I ): Older individual knows plent} -about
Williams. s,,usbourne, a pianist fro"l.E ngland inves tments. finances and wall share knowledge. Emphasis on legal papers, Bunce also re vealed that model
•MUii Wleseneck was co-chainng the Katie Duncan 1s president of the and the Pacific Symphony. public image. reputation. Love relauonsh1p underg6eS test. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 101· What had been merel) a hope can be
transformed into reaht). l>racucal wa)S are found to ach1e\e goals. aspirations.
Co-worker plays key role. proves lo) alt} .. Aquanan says. "You are beautifu l."
cradle robber courts trouble . '
OEARANNLANDERS: Mysonis . who have a senous heanng problem Life s too
ERMA BoMBECK IFOCfOBERf lS YOUR BIRTHDAY )OU have unuNal voice, aP.prec1ate
music. art. drama, gourmet dining. You can be self-indulgent. possibly have
.. sweet tooth." You are attract I\ e. dynamic. sens1t1ve. sensual. Taurus. Libra.
Scorpio people play important roles an your hfe.
20 years old, a college student who refuse to ad mat tt? I have a dear fnend
lives at home. He has been seeing a and bridge panner lo\hO drives us all we1· rd to girl who will soon be 15. "Suzy" looks All crazy because she can ·1 hear the .i 1
older but when she opens her mouth bidding.
you can tell .she as.Nery young and not I .... My mother-in-la"' is the one who t • •
too smart. . . LARDERS sends me around the bend. It IS sa 1r1ze ~veral evenrngs dunng the sum-am possible to ca IT) on a conversation
mer Suzy would come by an~ she a~d with her because she 1ust plain can't
Lloyd w~uld watch TV until I :30 an hear. When I suggested that perhaps
the morning. When he took her home column._ RICHMOND, VA. she ought to consider a hearing aid
he rare\y came ba~k before 4:30 a.~. DEAR VA.: My first question Is, she blew up lake a-vo'ltano. I didn't
Ail t_h1~ was with her mother s wbat's a %0-year-bld college student mean ll as an insult. Ann. I wanted to
pemuss1on. I called up once at 5 d l 'tit u Id l I? D * •t be helpful
o'clock in the mo~nin.g to ask i,f Lloyd b: :!o':: t..;t ti/:::.-: bega~rest~ /1or To be hearang-1mpa1red 1s not a
was there. S~e said. ·Yes. hes here, contribtating to tbe delinquency of a disgrace. Why are women panicu-
but you do.~ t ha ve to worry. I trust minor? larlv SCl)Slll\'e about th1S? Please repl y
them bo~h. u tbe grl's mother tbinks It's an the paper. I'm sure there are manv I can t uoderstano her attnude. 1 1 K 1 h d 1 readers who would like to be en._ Ann. If I had.a da~hter that age I per ect Y to et er a 0 escent lightened. -LA PORTE. IND. h daughter keep sacb bouri It meaas would be womed 10 eat~ to ave her tbe elevator lsu't going all tbe way ur. DEAR LA PORTE: Hearing prob-
out so late. When I hinted that I to tbe top. y 01 aced to take contro . lems often suggest tlaat tile years are thought she should impose some sc:>rt H d t .. l 1 l u d d t 11 beginniag to take their toll. Of course
of curfew on her daughter. she said, bi: to :V~~ou;'::d :mellytbea~off:e. this Is not necessarily so but it is a "~onsense! You have to let your Obviously tbe attraction Is pltyslcal. common notion. Peopl~ wlto, for ch1l~n know yo u have fauh an He could be beading for big trouble. vanity's sake, refuse to admit tlaat
them. • •. • tbey can't bear miss a great deal in Wh~t about this. Ann? Am I DEAR ANN LANDERS: W1ll ,ou life and make things difficult for
wrong. Please ans~er an )Our oleasc tell me wh) so man} people those aroU11d tllem.
GM:,
The First Official Disney Silverplated Spoon
~'MICKEY MOUSE''
It's getting tougher and tougher to
use exaggerauon as a tool of humor.
Why? For the same reason 11 gets
tougher and tougher IQ v.ear some-
thing far out at Hallo~een. You can·t
outdistance realt tv an} more.
There was a ume that if I suggested
we left a lud m the gas station
restroom on 'acauon and d1dn'1 miss
ham for two 4)ours. the absurdat)
would have gotten a laugh. A news
item recentl) reponed a vacationer
drove 100 miles before reaJmng he
had left his wife behind at a gas
s1a11on. .\s the state troope r said.
"The) ·re 'cry nice folks and Mrs
Hart ""asn 't th.1t mad ··
If I e'en suggested 1 had a
collecuon of more than ~ pairs of
shoulder pads because I kne .. some-
da' I'd ha'e a use for them. readers
"ould sa'. "'l ou sound lake that
woman an Fon ~a\ne. Ind .. "ho
inspects 1.i.000 pounds of potato
chaps on an assembh hne each da\
and has a collec11on of more than 200
chips that reSt"mble. among others. Yoga Bear and Bob Hope .. When
Yo~1 Bear broke. she said. ··1 glued
ham back together. hut he' not r~ll~
'aluable no" ··
BR IDGE
By CHARLES GOREN
-uc1 OMAR SHARIF
Both vulnerable. South deals.
ORm
• J 7 3 2
-A 6 5
7 3
• 7 6 4 2
WEST EAST
• Q 9 6 • K 10-'
-10 7 4 2 -; Q J 9
! K 98652
• Q J 9 8 3 • 10 5
SOUTH
• A 8 5
K83
' A Q J 10 4
+AK
The bidding:
South West
2 NT Pass
3 Pass
Pass Pass
North
3 .
3 ~T
East
Pas~
Pass
Opening lead: Queen of +
Card combinataoqs are peculiar
animals. Ho" you play them often
depends on ho" many tricks you
need in the· suii.
The · auction "as routi ne. A flcr
Sout h's 21-22-point two no trump·
openi ng, North used the Slayman
Convention to check on the possibil-
ity of a 4-4 spade fit. Wh~n that did
not matenalize. three no trump be-
came the obvious contract.
West led the top of his broken
club sequence, and declarer won the
ace as East made the fine play of the
ten. D«'larer crossed to lhc-lcina of
hearts to take the diamond finesse.
\\!est scooped in the king and pcrse-
\ ered with clubs. Declarer cashed
the ace of diamonds. When West
failed to foUow, declarer could
score only three diamond tricks and
eight tricks in aJl.
Declarer's play in the diamond
suit was correct if he needed five
tricks in the suit. Then his only
chance would be to find East with a
doubleton king of diamonds. But
declarer needed just four dwnond
tncks. If the suit split 4-2 or 3-3, no
matter what he did would be ri&hl.
The one troublesome distribution is
~-I In that ~cnt, declarer could
collect four tricks only if the king of
diamonds was singleton in one hand
or the other ·
Correct play, therefore, was to
ignore the d iamond finesse and sim-
pl) cash the ace. If the king does not
drop. declarer must hope that the
sun breaks no worse than 4-2. The
odds of finding West with a sinaf~·
ton king are slightly more than t
percent. but even such ,a mini$Cule
extra chance sometimes yields huge
div1dends . That was certainly the
case here.
Created by
~o~·
Reed & Barton
Silversmiths
Fraokly. I can·1 began 10 compete
"11h the headlines tn the datl~ newspaper. no matter how far I
stretch m" ··""eard factor ·· I open m~
paper and see a StOI') about a ~oman
who 1s building an 86-foot-long. ~O
foot-v.1de. o5-foo1-h1gh boat tn her
back)ard tn 'e" Jerse~ he bega n the proje\'.'t 1n 19 I. usang lumbe r
sah aged trom demolished bu tidings
Her plan 1<1 to sail 11 home to Japan.
.\sked al there v.asn·1 an easier wa' to
get therc. she replied. "I don't 11~.'·
--bMtmm~-------
• Walt Disney's classic "Mickey Mouse " is
beautifully sculpted, and lavishly electroplated
in pure silver.
• Exclusive First Edition officially authorized by
the Walt Disney Company.
• Hallmarked, registered and accompanied by a
Certificate of Registration.
• Not available in stores.
• Priced at only $15 .00.
What ench.mttnent ~d JO\ \\.ih D1,n~~ t-n'u~ht '" th.: world' HIS
speet.tl magic v.\ll ne.. er be equaled'
And nov., for the first rune l'."\.:r the t'.N Eiland Cofrmors
Society, e~um·e}\, .iutht,nzed bv. the Walt Di_ i."\ Company. 1s ~roud 10 prescn1 "~Itek~ Mou'.: ' th.: fira 'PIX 1n the Disn'}_
Classics Spoon Collecnon and the f1l"'lt Offiml Di~ S1lverpb ted
Spoon t'\cr issued'
Each spoon in thJS collernon ·~ m..-nculousl~ ~lptcJ anJ b\1shl}
sil"trplatrd to fouthfulli pormv a v.orld l.unou~ Dl_}ne:y character
Each spoon"''" be creited ,,dus1\'dy for th• \J~ t:.ngt~ Collet ..
tors Soacty b:. Amenc.11's forem<ht 11\.:l"inuth.s. RceJ ~ Buton
The cnchannng "M1ckt\ Mou~( roon IS hallmarbd anJ regis-
terrd. It will be accom~rued !:')a Ccrt1ficatr of Rcgutranon 1nesung
to the exclUSl\.1~ of this tmpottant First EJ1non
Here 1s an heirloom quahl) collector\ Sp<X'n m honor of one of the
best IOVtd creanons the world h3s n .-r knov.1\1 Nl?\"!r issued or
available before• OrJcr now
r-----------------------CNE ~=.:.t=.~=tH41¥W\.CT0'5lt 0501 4 7
PteaM encer my or<* lot Tl\9 F11St Of!~ Disney Si~ted Sooon 'llllldtey __,_A
--$po0n(al 11 SIS 00 .. ci'I ( ._$ _ _.__,
Ol'Y
Shipping.~ 12 50 '* IQOOr1
fOQI Amount EncloMcr 0 Olirgl MCll ..,ootl .. II II allopped IO,,,., ~ ~
~NumOef ________ ...__ _____ bi> , __ _
" Nlrle----=------------"-------~---------------------n, N1t1 &tloJ CA11«ton Sontty C4lv -. --?.cl ---=--=
M • ...... ~ R..J ~ .&IMI ~/u.. " ..... ~ «~Ofllllr~ IO 1?le Nlw E~C.......~ -~ .11::...-....-J.O"t~ •tt~80dSl.31.,..CA,...,..cictSI O!tl*~lor--• ._ ___ -. ___ .,_.,_-_,._-~_ .. _sw_'_°'_"'_· __ __.. __ =::~..!!:!.~'!~-----.-----___ J
..
Just 1~ to get more outrageous than
the gu~ 1n '\e,ada "ho "1red his
athlell\'.' supponcr to a hidden micro-
computer on has calf 10 am pro'e his
odds of "tnning blad.Jack Or the
long-d1s1ana operator an Pelcang \\ho
has memorized 1.5.000 phone
numbers and hopes to memonze I .000 more tl\ the end of the \ear
.\ fe" 'l'arc; jgo I spun ait amusing
little talc of m' son dn"1ng for the
fi rst time on the ewress"' 3) and
gemng packed up for dn' mg 35 mph
-in re' erse That stor. doesn't hold
a candle to a ne" c; s1or) about an 80-
'ear-old "oman "'ho hat a b1C)Clts1
but dro' e on because she thought a
golf ball hat the car She said v.hen she
looked 1n the rear '1cw mirror and
sa"' a man h mg 1n the road. she
thought he "'a~ ,.,,ork1ng on a 'an
When she gOl ~ome. she called the
police to repon 1he damage to her car
tione ~'\the "gi;ilf ball ..
· Ma'~ an can 1m11ate hfe. but n
can't top at
, L.M. Bo vo ' --
Timeout
~ for reason
ACROaS
1 Outbu11dtngs
6 Seasoning 10 Pleudtl
14 Juniof
15 Sickness
18 Chart•
17 Marshal
18 Composmons
20 Wot>l>ly
22 Jargon
23 Sarcasm
24 Highway
25 Pelted
28 Holiday song
29 Watered down
30 CollapMCS
35 Absent
36 Meal Ifs!
37 Pnor to
38 Obviates
4 l Espalla
43 Fettsh
" Dotts. slang
45 Persplra
48 Gem
50 Bustle
51 .. Praise -
55 Sequel
57 Clamor
58 0elflate
59 Within
2
17
20
3
..
4
60 Dandles
61 M111udga
62 Afriean
rulers
63Weuel
DOWN
, On your
way
2 Corona
3 Copyread • Tooth tissue
S Navigattd
6 Fabric
7 Otstress
8 Atr bladder
9 Links area
10 Cnucill•
11 Fatthfut
12 Metal suit
13 Bothersome
19 Reduced
2 1 Angling gear
24 E11celfent
25 BoullQ\.19
26 Junket
2' Bone pref
28 Goobers
3-0.Wtther
3 1 Eure>pean com
32 Ga"*
33 lrOQUOtan
34 Haunt•
36 Otvtdel
5
Mother of the bnde p vc the I
ne~l)\>.eds t~o httlc ea& t1rner!>. each /. _....,.~_.._ ...... _ _.,_
about the-size of)our thumb. In h1ah .. 29 humor. the)' took her adv1~ about
how to use them. and )tars later said ' the humor of at probabl) sa' ed their I 35
marnage An)tame the) aot mto a ~--1~-..--fight. one or the other ~ould whip out 38
a tamer. and sa)" nothing more until •
the nd ran out
In almost all nudist colonae\, the
I ten-age otl'spnn' of members art not
mlU1rtd to s1np.1fthc don't v.ant to
TC'Cn.aatn b thcmstl\C't attn't al·
lo"'~ to J01f\ ~ lepl maucr.
Q I knov. -...l\ac an 1ntro,en '"and
what an C\tro"en 1 but •hat's an
ambhtrt<t
. Half and half. The 1mb1~n in\'1ltUllthc~plctothe pan • then
wncts thmt all homt.
'
39 Hollows
40 Metric unit 48 Smalt-Ume
4 1 Thr .. ds 49 Mqral nature
42 Wllhdraw S1 Scourge 44 -Paulo
45 Scrape 52 VenlOe bMCt1
46 S.ked Item 53 ConfuMd
'7 Chemical 5' !Wding
compound 58 C..,tr111
7 8 9 11 12 13.
~ j,
..... _ .·
.. ;
/
ce 'Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Wednesday, October 5. 1988
Cross-training: Fitter, stronger, more inteFested
:Jr~~~~~~t
Muscle fatigue. Persi stent
boredom. Eventually, quming.
This progression onen charac-
terizes the exercise rouunes of many
who try to maintain a ~rsonal fitness
routine.
Though Jogging with a friend.
walking to the beat of a Walkman or
buying stylish excerc1se clothes can
increa~ the fun of a workout, the
problem which bnngs even a realistic.
moderate fitness program to a sur-
prising halt 1s internal.
It is this struggle that cross-training
can help" 1th.
In cross-training. a specific com-
binat}on of exercises 1s aimed at
increasing athletic potential in the
primary sport.
Although the term "cross-training"
can incorporate m ) nad spon com-
b1nauons. 11 realh began when the
ancient Greeks de' eloped sports to
train their warriors for combat skills
needed in anctcn1 ba ttle si tuations.·
Five of those e'en ts came to be
kno"'n collecuveh as the premier sponsofthe a;1C1en·1 Ol)mpics known
as the pentalhloo. Later on. another
cross-training sport called the
tnathlon 1ncorpQrated runmng. cvcl-
1ng and swimming skills. ·
Tyne said the anaerobic manuevers
in football require the partiS)pant to
be proficient in sports requinng other
types ofsk1lls. •
Early in the football ~ason, heavy
weight-training is prescribed as cross-
training, followed by li&hter and
higher freque)lcy wcightlillfog as the
playing season draws closer. Middle-
distance running also provides cros~
training.
Another advantage of crosHrain-
ing is that variety makes the workout
\-.._~ _ _. more interesting to the athlete.
Io cross-training. "one uses all
,....+--+--f alternative means for training to
improve physical skills. to increase
one's power 1n th~ chosen span\" says
Michael Clark. the strength and
>---'---1 conditioning coach of the USC Tro-
jans. "By varying trainin~. there is
-+--i---!t--....,;r-+--t less boredom or bum-out:
A marriage of a primary eport with a
''helplnl" a port pri>ducea better raulta than
,ptactlclng juat one. accordJn& to aporta
trainera. The above llluatratlon la uaecl to
advertlae Nike crou-tralnm. athletic ahoea.
Clark says an athlete in any sport
who lifts weights is "ut1lmng cross-
training to increase his power in the
main sport where he needs to excel."
He suggests that ttie primary sport
be practiced three limes per week.
In the 1940s and
0
the 1950s. when
the Soviet Union established 01) m-
p1c traming camps, toaches found out
tbat alternating exercise routines
helped prevent burn-out. decreased
boredom and exte nded athletic hfe.
The pros believe 1n 1t.
Ph!l!p .Tyne. the stre n(t(h and
cond1t1oning coach for the San Diego
Chargers. says "Cross-training can
..
help. Hy uulmn~ d11Terent sets of
muscles and varied ranges of move-
ment through combining certain
types of sports. it is P,Ossiblc to
exercise ~ore effectively. •
alternating wi th twice-weekl) work-
outs in the hel ping acth 1ty.
While the extent of cross-training
depends on personal goals. Clark
says. a training sport high in duration
and tow in intensity should be
ahemated with a helpina sport which
is low in duration but hiah in
intensity. Amateur athtletcs benefit from
cross-training. too, of course. Says
Janice Patriclc, executive director of
the West County Family YMCA,
"My triathlon training has includ.ed
swimming. runninj and cycling. w1th
running as the main spon . It uses all
of my body -the upper and lower
muscles are being trained. My cycl ing
helped me develop my leg muscles so
it made ~ea stronaer runner."
A former physical ed teacher,
Patrick swam 1h-r mile per week, ran 25 miles a week. d id indoor cycling
four 10 five limes per week and
outdoor cycling one to two times per
week. all in an attempt to try to
improve as a runner. Some of the primary/helping ex-
amples cited by Tyne and Clark are
foo t bat l/spr 1nt1 ng. basket-
ball/jogging. ltght weightlift-
i ng /racquet b a 11 . sw im -
ming/weightlifting, bicycl-
ing/volleyball and tennis/aerobics.
A.-cross-training routine can be
tailored to the participant's own
sports needs and ioals. and can help
all eviate muscle imbalances and re-
sulung injuries to overstressed or
weak body parts.' The result can be an
extended athletic life.
'Killing; P~tients
majr save liv~s . _
Suspended Animation
Brain
ee. ... fund»on
9C>e5 ~a rtWWnum
d~.·F~
occur ar a sJow rate ..
M blood vessels ate
almost~
~'8d..
Chest :-·
Thef e is. no
~tottle
he3't ot lu~. The
lung$ colai)se and
.,shriri( to half their
~e. The 1'ean lees
~not .
beatillg "' the ~.
Motor System
Thefe 11S no
b'oodftow to ttle
musde systecn,
~-Skin grows
cx>'d: the body
takes 00 a very
pale appe¥ance.
What.' s true love
got to do with it?
..
Suspended a nimation allows surgeons
~ ------to get preyiously inoperable aneu_ris m ~
PITT ·s u RGH ( .\P) -To save
Ethel St La" rl'nce from the
ancui:sm pr:cssrng on her brain.
doctor!> "lo..11led" her for 40 minutes
The~ put her in a· coma. stopped her
hean. ch1lkd her b) 40 degrees and
drained her hod' of blood.
St. La" rcnce was back at "ork I 0
\.I.eeks aftl'r "'hat she calls "a conon-
ptckin' m1ralle.'' a son of suspended
animatton that lets <,urgeons cure
hard-to·rcach. ht~h-nsi.. aneuf') sml>
that onl'e \.l.ete considered rnoperabk.
"It 1s e'er) thing that technolog)
can poss1bl~ offer." ~aid "er ncu-
rbsurgcon . Dr Roben Spetzler at
Barro"' Nl·urolog1cal Institute 1n
"Phoen1\.
"ll ma) oc the.suitei: of the future
1n case<; \\here bleeding poses the
greate<it risk to the operation." said
Dr. Julian E Baile.,. a neurosurgeon
at .\lleghen ~ General Hospnal here
''ho studied "1th petzler. ··Th~·s
the biggest cause of death in surger}.
If }OU could pul someone in a state ol
suspended an1mat1on. ~ou could
operate in a 101all~ bloodless field."
·in a scH~rcl~ cold. bloodless siate.
the brain can be depn"ed of ox~gen
up to ~5 minutes. g1' 1ng surgeons
ume to rem o' e the ancun sm -a
bubble rau<ied b~ "eakness in the "all
of a blood 'cssel -and clip anenes
feeding 11 "1thoo1 the danger of
mas\1vt blcedrng and cena1n death
)Ou're going to be.OK.". · , . But the nsks. inclodlllg that the
heart won't restart. are too great to use
the procedure where normal
anesthesia can adequate!) dQ the JOb.
"It's "hat Btrdse\e disco,fred. It
\OU freeze a fresh I.sh 1t wUI ~ome
back and you can use it. The ~oblem
1s. some people don't." sa1cf Dr. Louis
Caplan of Boston's Ne"' England r
Medical Center and chairman oft~·
.\mencan Hean .\ssoc1at1on's Stroks .
( ounc1l. . ~ 1>-----........;z:::::,,--
.\nd because tht• patient has to.be
taken to the point of clinical death.fcir' •
the operation to succeed'. doctors •
approach 11 \\tth "a lot ofrc:spect."
said Shedd ... £,cl) ttme I do.one of .
these I get \.Cf) nervous. , ....
'"You're ta~1ng a patient that's alive.
and breathing and stoppOlg their
hcans and putting thef!1. into this stat~ The) arc nothing. 1 nere 1s ,110
brcathrng. no heart function. The
brain function 1s nil. We't1lt the tablc-
up and drain all the blood into the
----IOdneys ~\OOneys de;> not
make unne during
suspensioo.t hef'e IS
no~tt>~
.~
Abdoml~~ 5ection
M digestive Ot93'\S ate $hut
down. Thete is no motlOI'\"
wt\atsOeve< Qn;gs are no~
metabolu:ed by the live< The
digestive tract no '<>ngef digests.
pump. · . . . .
"I don't. wan( to sa5·· 1he · word '. "I Just ,t\acf th ts immense fo~l!ng ··Quite frankly. I'm worried about,her
'dead: but the patient 1s deftnttely that r was being cared for.)t felt 'like becau$e I would have thought she
suspended at that point. Celluldr . somebody ."as. JUSl holding me in would have come out of 'It b) -now."
act1,·1t) 1s still occurring. but at a rate thetr arms and taking care of me and Bailes said.
so low that "'e can't detect it They're that I "ould be OK. It \\3S JUSl a "It 's an extr~me wat of doms an
not doing anything. We're talkJng feeling of peace:· operauon that requires e~treme
cold.·· Four months ancr surge!). she measures ... said Dr. Anhur Day of the
need!i no med1catJOO and the severe University of Aorida at 'Gainesville
St. Lfiwrence. a 61-)ear-old headilchcsaregonc.thoughshes11U1 s aridchairmanofthecerebral vascular Phoenix secretan-. was rushed IQ bl f "I h · Barro\~ on June 1. suffering from ·a una e to u1 ~ open er eye. department of the Amencan Assoc1a-Bailes 1s confounded. though. b)' tion of Neurological urseons. severe two-day headache and un~blt' ('cc11ta DutTy. a 76-ycar-old Pit-"The side effects are quite subtan-10 open her right eye. Tests sho"'cd b h 1.. I
"When yo u were a child. I crept
into yo ur dreams. Dazzhngl)' attract-
ive. glamorous. and mystenous. I
promised to make you happy fore ·er
after." ..... I am false love."
So begins a hot"1ew book written
for those romantic souls who endless-
. I) pursue "true love and yNfin"tl"trso
elusi,e. .
If 11's passion and magic and tales
of happtl y-.,·er-after 1llus1on you're
after. stay away. This book 1s one big
illus1on-k1ller. The authors talk about
shared goals and commitment and
about ho"' 11 ts the process of living
which creates "true love:·
.\t times. they make true lo"e
sound ltke work. The authors are
correct; true love does take hard work
to maintain. "False love's greatest
downfall 1s 'that 1t retreats from
problems. True love panners con-
front and resolve problems."
So you probabl) "'on't be too
interested in reading "False Love and
Other Romantic Illusions" by Dr.
Stan Katz and Amy Liu (Trtcknerand
"Fields. 1988) unless you·, e been
burned b~ too man) unhapptl) ended
affairs. or b) a mamage that's left you
drsappo1nted.
The authors challenge their read-
ers: ·· "What do )OU look for in love?
"Would you agree that true love
means all of the following?
• Finding the one person who is
rtght for )'OU. •
• Being intensely attracted to your
partner.
• Feeling excited whenever you're
with )'OUr panner.
• Rarel} fighting.
• Rarel) wanting to be apan from
your partner.
that you seem · to be destined for
nothing more than an endless series
of "terrific-for-awhile" relationshi ps
which ultimately come to seem
unsausfactol).
But if romant1C-)OU maintains that
"temfic-for-awh1le" is worth it, then
do 1t yo ur way -and stop complain-
ing. You may not yet be ready for the
challenges and JOYS of what "true
lo' e" has to offer.
The theme of "False Love" ts that
\OU cannot "find love" but that what
}ou should be searching for is a
"person with whom you can establish
a lasting and loving relati onship."
Wny should that be so difficult?
One disillusioned young woman
I'll call C'ind) told me that she loses
herself regular!~ in so-called "ro-
mance novels: She admitted to
reading one "love-Junkie" book a
da}'.. five nights a week after work.
Occaslonall). she says. she goes
out. And from time to time. she says.
she "81' es love a chance again" -
onl} to be disappointed.
"I won't settle for less than the
best ... she says, "and the men I meet
don't seem to measure up." How
could they?
0114 patients \.I.ho ha' c undergone
the· procedure a1 Barro"'. one has
died. Bailes said. Most had .. excel-
leni" reo,ults. a fe" reported some '~-weakness bu1 otherwise dtd well. and
most ~ma1net.I 1n a coma no more
than fi\ c da~ s
that a sinus aneurysm detected fci"u'", rs urg woman wno-spent 51 113 potentially," Day said. "So it's
years ago had grown. minutes in suspended animation not an operation technique that we do Aug. JI while surseons removed an for the run-of-the-fl'Mll aneurysm. But
Panly because of hea\ )' do~es of egg-s1z~d aneurysm that had almost for certa111' uncommon ones 1t ma) be
barbnurates given before surge!') tt> completely d!sablcd her. the only wa).
• Having great sex.
• Ne\ er being sexuall) attracted to
anyone else.
• EnJOy1 na constant romance.
I don't blame Cindy for her quest
for the best man for her. That is..
unless her idea of what he should be is
based on some un rea listic fictional
image she's conjured up, including
the promise of impossible devotion
and a perpetual. magical state of
problem-free existence.
"lt's getting through the surge!').''
said Dr Ste' en Shedd. a Barro"'
neuroaneSihes1olog1st wh o worked
on St. La"' re nee_ "If you've tolerated
t~e pcocedure and )'OU wake up.
h.elp prevent c;trokc or brain damage. DufT) hasn't come out of the drug-·"The problem is. what would you
t. Llt"reoce recalls norhing about inducedc;o~a.even.thoughherbram behketf)oud1dn'thave thesurgery?
the J"ne 6 operation. But she.-does ac11v1ty 1s improving, there ts no Mosi oft he ttme havi ng the aneurysm
recall experiencing a .,l'f) strong evidence of brain injury. and she is such a bad thing that you're willing
sensation moves her legs when stimulated. to take a much greater nsk:·
• Never needing an)onc but )Our
partner in your life.
•Complete fu lfillment."
If these are your ideas of true love.
Katz and Liu sav that it's no wonder
Powerful 11lus1on can cloud the wa}
to more realistic and rewarding
oppcnunity for teal-life relationships
based on trust. respect. caring and
commitment .
'Real f bod' campaigrj ig·rtores dangers of eating too much beef
. " If Mad ison .\\')!nue and th e meat
tncWstn ha\C thelr "a'. ~e should all
be COnsum11:ig larger quont1t1es of
w mump11on uf '>ubstantJ&I quan-
t111es ol' meJt t"an "'reek )our health
hJ' ne'er been a maJor concern of the .
mea t 1ndus1n
ti) 's expensive ad campaign. If ~e
bu) the 1mpltcat1on that to be real we
must eat hamburgers. the decline 1n
heart dt!lease will slow.
quite d11Jerent from those of several advertising agenc) 's decision of
· ... real food :· their pscudon~ m for
meat. The\ ha'c recruited. at con·
<.1dcrablc (~1st I am ~ure an 1m-
pressn e bcv) of emerta1nmen\ and
sports lelebn11cs -indud1ng ( )b1I
hepard, Jame's c,arner. Lauren
Bacall. Larn Btrd o f the Boston
( cl11cs and Michael C oopcr from the
l os Angele~ laker!! -to hawk meat
lnoid<.1111on 10 g1"'ing the apple and
lOUntlc<i., other "unreal foods" an
1den111-v <'rtSt<i. this "real lood" cam-
pa1gn could 1ntensil) some real health
problems. However. the fact 1ha1
..... Hear1 d1,c:ic;e. the country's No. I ~1llcr. k.ills close to 600,000 mc.n and
"omen a ~car Put tn perspec\1\ e.
1hJ11s mort' .\merJcan lives lost from
. .... ·
. .. JULIAN . .
WHITAKER .
th1c, disease tha,n were lost: tn fi,e
'C<irsof\\orldWarll.Ofalltnefoods , • \haring blame fo( this nutnuonal part. bt..uu~ there has been a steady
disorder. bccf1s the No. 1 culprit. not· declt(IC in co.ns~mpt1on of beef and
'lo much ~ause of tts cholesterol otherlugh-f~Jugh-cholesterolfoods.
rnn1ent but because 0L1LS b turated Wr ha ve itlOD&.WB)' to go before thlS tat ~tiler stopsstalk.mg. but we seem to bl;
going m the nght d1rect1on. The good news 1s that the death ra1e lt 1s ihts dedtnc in beef consump-
from heart d 1sease 1s declining in large tton that ~tim ulatcd ·the beef Indus-,,. ,.
" ~op 1?iJL°fRrin1 A :
to all our pall~ with Octolfto:;.~.
from
'·
Dr. Les Starnes and Staff
J.nntftr M11'-r 1().1
Alhley Lowy 1().1
Ryon O'Toole 10.2
Jenntf•t lomber1 1().2
T llMI Mort!NI .. 1().2
Rffd Rochord,_ t ().3
S..trO Wolliere 10.•
IC ll'ftbefly Oiomond 1().4
CorO-.. Mce>on..i 1°'6
Jcx.,.i.n. ThomM 10.7
lukeW~ 1().7
Motp Almi. .. .. ...... 1().8
Stoey lolfout .... .. ~ ......... ~ ..... 10.8
.>.nnof., Gde ... ........... ········ ICH1
TOIM'ylC~. ·----.... 1().9
Soto Udall .... .. --··-·-··· . ... 1().9
1401 Avocodo AV9. Suite 308
N.wport hoch
Rtthofd Coto 1().9
v-uo c-me 1().10
5teph-O.S1l...o 1().10
Jolh S<Mtter . 10 II .. ........
Ryon Wong 1011
ICaftlleen Towle ... .. ............ 10. 1 1
h~rict OQd.i,011 1 ().11
AdO..-Gou-I(). 1 l
WoJton Einlbefly 1().13
MoryEllen~ ··•······· 1()13
Joc.tyft WOf19 . 10 ,,
JefffC'Y McO.Onnon ............... tO 1'
Reb«co Onlflth .. .................... 10.IS
Zoro Cul'llf!'ir19 ................ . 10.IS
~c~ .. ....... , .... _. 10.16
. .
IC.-ltown 10.16
ICmhll ICohilio' ... ......... ... 1(). 16
'1;:•1y Honwn . • •I •• IHllt•oOt 1().'°
tOfl $(hMtet 10.20 .......... ...
~!ll;ott ........ : ........... .. 1().20
W1IWom 11 ... rMft .. ......... " 1().'°
Oo>11d Wlrgler ........... .. 10.2•
Jotc)., ·~g .............. 10.2•
A fttOft li'I09 ................ 10.2.S
MOfCvt GuofMt 10.lS
Sot· Otlando 10.26
Nkholette Gtohom .... . ....... 1().27
Ali $orharl9flOV' ... .. ................ 1().~
Meoori Wey .. ······ ....... 1().30
Jlll.e 5flow .. . .................. .10..SI
' 4'°2 lrvlnt Ctnltr Dr., Sulle 11
Irv Int
f,.
Ironically: James Garner recently
und~rwent bypass surge!) for dogged
heart arteries. This not-so-subtle hint
did n01 seem to quell his passion for
meat or the mdustl) ·s view of him as
a spokesman. This 1s vaguely rert11-
n1scent of the Marlboro men who
hawked smoking tn tile 'SOs and early
'60s. We \Jlow know that a high
pcrcen&..age ·died prematurely from
luflg call'Cer. while some still ride the
• .('llnge Wlt h an OX)'gtn boule strapped
·to their horse.
Ad vcnising techniques today are
decades ago when product descnp-which 1rrat1onal consumer button to
tton and cost "'ere key ingredients. push.
Today the pitch 1s to associate the As one who would like to see less
product with ? "feeling·· or status . meat eaten. I am mildly gratified that
Madison Avenue knows that your th e indu.stry does have to resort to
decision to buy something as a result expensive advertising techniques .io
of their advert1S1ng 1s 1rrat1onal.' maintain their market share. but
I bou.Bht a Coke the other day Just mildly concerned that their current
to see ifJ would e~plodc with joy and efforts may be working.
excitement and do back fl ips in the Just remember. you can get into
rain. I didn't. but I :im not dis-some real trouble eattng a lot of"rcal
couraged. Pepsi. Dr. Pepper. Sprite food.''
and Mountain Dew all promise the Jo/lao Wtitder, M.D., .. ,..,. of
same thing. If they fai l. I can al~a)'s "Reversbl1 He•rt Dl•eHe" UHi "Re--
buy an Oldsmobile. veni.1DJabete1"(W•nerBoM1),l1
Just be aware that th e only rational dinctor of fte WllJtder Wellff1S
aspect of modern advertising is the ... 1•11/tute I• Newport BHci.
ENETIA N GONDOLA" \\'EDD l~G AT
OLO \llORLO ROMANCE AFLOAT
Gourmet baskets w/champagne & roses
IRVINf COAST CHARTERS 675'47o4
PROFESSIONAL PLANNING
Aboard Luxury Yacht. All ~rv1ces arranged .
IRVfNE COAST C_HARTERS 675-4704
I
I
'South Pacific'
la lively rev~val
Of all the overproduced musicals
which lap up repeatedly on the shores
of the Oranac Coast, "South Pacific"
pTobably is one of the most enjoyable
its splendid Rodgers and Hamme~
tein scoreamong<the easiest to absorb
after repeated exposures.
And, since the show 1s by definition
a period piece. there's lntfe chance of
it b«oming "dated, .. even though its
overtones of racial prejudice seem
quite insignificant by modern stan-
dards. hs well-bala nced mixture of
comedy. drama and music remains a
model for other composers and
lyricists to em ula te.
The latest beachhead for "South
Pacific" is the Grand Pin ner Theater
in Anaheim. where a livel} company
overcomes some 1n1t1al m1sgivin$S
about the interpretation of this
American classic. Paramount among
them is the volume of the recorded
musical background. which often
overwhelms the soloists.
Director Jack Bunch leans heavily
on the d own-front, presentational
method of staging the musical
numbers, sacrificing much of the
show's character in the process. Even
though it's over 40 years old. "South
Pacific" must succeed on the strength
of its character relationships. and the
conccn -rec1 tal style of sell ing its solos
was an anachronism when the show
• was written.
These defic1enc1es are largely offset
by the sterling performance of Tracey
Williams in the centra l role of Navy
•
Toi
T11us
nurse ·Nellie Forbush. whose ro-
mance with a French planter on the
island is the core o f the show.
Williams exudes zest and energy.
bearing down on the .. dingbat"
nature of her character -although
emergjng from the shower with nary a
hair out of place is a nagging bit of
artifi ciality.
-Ron Waldron as the Frenchman l's
a strong actor with limited vocal
range whose biggest credibility prob·
lem is his apparent vouth. The May-
December aspect o(the relationship.
crucial to the story. simply doesn't
work here.
Solid performances from Joseph
Paur as the Manne lieutenant and
Valerie Kassel Jr. as Bloody Mary
bolster the show considerably. Paur is
a powerful presence as a combat
officer who loses most ofh1s heart to a
native girl (gracefully enacted by
Kimbra Westevelt). while Kassel's
island huckster 1s somewhat sh~ter
than tradition dictates. but h1ghl)-1,
spirited nonetheless.
Rusty Meyers 1s the standout of the
supponin1tcast as the Sea bee wheeler-
Ron Waldron, Tracey Williama in "SouthPaclflc."
dealer Luther 81lhs - a robust.
raunchy role interpreted to near-~rfecuon. Will MacMillan as 1he-
1sland commander 1s staunch 1n his
m1htanst1c bluster. \ 1nuallv over-
shadowing Frank Manone ·as his
e"tCCUU\e onicer
Mus1call>. the Grand production 1s
h ighlighted b} the strong choral
arrangements on ''There 1s Nothing
Like a Dame .. and Kassel's haunting
rendering of ··Bah Ha'1 ... W1lhams
and \\ aldron strike a splendid l hord
w11h ·· ome Enchanted E' ening ··
while Paurs .. Younger Than Spnng-
t1me" 1~ hke" 1se memorable..
·· outh Pacific .. co'nunues n1ghtl~
except Mondays at var} ing cu na1n
limes throuih NO\. 27 at the (,rand. 7
Freedman 'Wa, in .\nahe1m. ~1th
Cole Poners .. KLSS Me. Kate" sched-
uled to foHo'W overthe holida' s. Call
the box office at 770-7710 for 11d..et
information.
DAILY PILOT/Wedne.day, October 5, ,.., C7
Violinists show
talents at OCC
Solo v1ohns ruled the nigh~ Satur-
da) dunng South Coast S)mphon)
O rchestra·s opening fifth-season con-
cert at Orange Coast College's Roben
B. Moore Theater.
Mo h~ Hammer, normall} the
orchestra's concertmaster. took
cetiter stage as soloist in Beet ho' en's
V1ohn Concerto In D Major. Op. 61.
His seamless. sweetl)' sean ng tone in
the violin's higher re_g,ster bespolce of
!>ubhminal beaut), thus empahazing
the 'A-Ork's more melodious nature
Yet his more decalmatOr) passages
possessed an emouonal 1ntens1t~ that
occas1onall) threatened. but never
managed. to become overpo"enng..
• Hammer'spla)mg. "h1ch began on
an aggress1vel) sure footing. became
e\Cn more focu~d as 1t prog.res!>ci:I
Masterfulh as~ruve bowing con-
s1skntl) balanced b) dulcet I) m.1sm
dominated the performance nghl
through the finale.
Hammer espec1all) shined during
1he cadenza. -with double-stop mel-
odies and omamenta11ons ol ~u
preme clanty. H1~strong. fl ourishing
finishes in the opening and clo~ing
m o,ements would lead into or-
chestral passages of pronounced.
stead) support that.. nonetheless
d1dn"t get 1n his wa}.
In fact. Hammer and the orcht:!ltra.
under John Larry Granger's hveh
dirC<"t1on. "ere in nearh Ila~ less s~ nchronizat1on 1hroughou1 the Lon-
ceno. including the somewhat thorn)
trans1t1ons from the first-mo' cment
cadenza and between the second and
third movemen1s.
MICHAEL
RYDZYNSKI
technical eAemse. the .. Praeludium"
"as transformed in10 a musically
expressive piece wuh an expanded
d) nam1c range under Ham mer's
lingers
Neal Laite. who served that eve-
ning as concen master. likewise d1s-
ungu1shcd himself dunng the first of
&la Banok·s "T-wo Pon ra ns,'' Op. 5.
H1-.achmgl~ arching. melancholy hne "a~ soon Joined by a few other violins
in creaung an 10t1matel} lovel}
picture of Steffi Ge~er. a v1ohmst
Banok kne~
The second ··Ponra1t" involved a
"a'enng. uncenam South Coast S~ mphOn} that nC\ er quite jelled.
pan1cularl) with us unsynchronized
p1zz1ca11
Mozan's S~ mphon) No. 36 in C
Major. t.... 4:!5 (the ··Linz:· bacause
that's where 11 premiered) began with
a some" hat lethargJc slow introduc-
tion that led into a spnghtly paced
allegro ma non troppo ("not too
quick"). Granger made a littl e too
much use of the full-orchestra sound
!50-plus stnngsJ rather than concen-
trating on a more proper chamber--
like quaht~
_Moviegoers going ~pe ovei: 'Gorillas.in_ Mist'
For his encore. Hammer pla)ed the
··Praelud1um .. from one of J S
Bach's chaconnes for unaccompanied
'1ohns. Although pnmanh a df".11
The ~cond mo ' ement was marked
b} carel'ul prec1S1on and a deliberate
}'et mo' mg d1rect1on. The minuet
"as a little &lo". wh1Je the finale
concluded the v.ork at a crackling. cnsp chp. ..
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -"GoriUas
in the Mist," which de1a1ls the tragic
life of nature researcher Dian Fossey.
was the nation's box office leader last
weekend with total ticket sales ofS3.S
million.
faar lx. hmtted release. according to movie thc pre' 1ous weekend. fell to
Exh1b11or Relations Co. No. 4. with reve nues totahng $2.04
Claiming 1he No. 2 spot was m1lhon. One of the summer's endur-
'"Heanbreak Hotel.'' a new twist on mg hns. ··Die Hard." finished at No.
the Elvis Presley legend. with receipts S. with a take ofS2.02 m1lhon.
newcomer ··Etvira. M1str~s o l the
Dart..." "h1ch ended up in sc,enth
v.tth sales of SI. 7 m1l hon
Rounding out the 10 best-selling
movies "ere ··cocktail" 1n eighth
-with $1.544 million. ··w ho Framed
Roger Rabb11" in nan th "1th SJ 543
million: and ··Young Guns" in 10th
w1th $1.3 million.
Raquel Welch hospitalized
S4.CRAMENTO (~Pl -.\ctress utter Memonal Hospital.
Raquel Welch has been hosp11ahzed. ~ • Welch. 48. appeared 1n such mov-
bu• hospital officials "on't sa) v.h). 1es as ··Fantasuc Voyage:' .. One
··Raquel Welch 1s here and that's M1lhon Years B.C." and .. Myra
tne onl) mformauon I can 'cnf} :· Bredmndge .. in the 1960s a nd early
said Diana Wilson. spokeswoman for 1970s.
Starring S1gourne~ Weaver• as a
passionate protector of animal rights.
the film was 1n its second 'WCCk of a
of S2.06 m1lhon. It "as followed "Crossing Delance~ •· collected
closely in third by the well-cstab-$1 .8 m1ll1on for Sl\th place and had
lish.ed hit .. A Fish Called Wanda," the highest per-screen average of all
which grossed S2.05 Jnillion. the Top 10 movies. It was trailed b) "Dead Ringers,-the most popular ,-------------------------------------------------------
Practice didn't make perfect
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Oscar-
wmning actress Sall) Field and
.. Punchline" co-star T om Hanks
practiced comedy rouunes on stage
before nightclub crowds to prepare
for their movie roles. But both agreed
it really didn't work out.
"The first few u mes I was terrible:·
said Hanks. "I tho ught I would have
fou r or five minutes ot material and I
didn't. I had about a minute. T he rest
was all stammenng. ··
Field turned to fnend Lil} Tomlin
for ad vice on stand-up corned) and
was told to get up on stage . .\t a
corned} ~lub m Manhattan Beach.
her 45-minute rouunc turned into a
q uestion-and-answer session.
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GENERAL AOMISSIOH SJ SO
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4'T $1 JllUl(O SCIU£HS
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C8 Ofange Coast OAIL Y PILOT I Wedneaday, Octob« 5, 1 ...
by Berk• Breathed by 811 Keane COUKTER CULTURE by Marana & Maratta BLOOll COU!CTY , -------------------------"
.. At least it gets two small
thumbs u;>."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"This may mess up your TV-rating system.
but we're all watching a dog-food
commercial "
PEANUTS
lo"i
r
J
J
I
'
you DECiDE
Li GHT AT THE END Of THE Tut·JN EL
OR.
T\1t ViEW fRO M INS\D£ A (Olf\ CAN
DENNIS THE MENACE
~ ·<>-S
by Hank Ketcham
Jl \ I'
~ I 1..-...,,~~
• MR WILSON MUST BE PRETIY cx.n1 ALL H\$ ~
PICTURES AAE. IN 81.ACK ANO WH\TE .''
by Charles M. Schulz
/\\A'(6E WE ~JULD
A~~AN6E IT ...
TR'1 TO GET THEM A LL
IN ONE ROOM .. I HATE TO
SAV THINGS TWICE ..
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
··n11s 7 A ?'l1lKuP~
&IMIV!E: l~R PUR5E .
DRABBLE
ROSE IS ROSE
•
t
-l
by Jim Davis
IF YOU OVEREAf, 1~15 GOY
NAME.D "RAMONE. "COMES 0Y
AND FATTE.NS 'r'OlJR LIPS
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
ARLO AND JANIS
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
JUDGE PARKER
DOONESB~RY
I~5
AFRAIO
~r
•
by Garry Trudeau
I o
/D,Stf.~ fNWllJ.Y, J'M
A IA1"8
JUl(T.
iii';iiii;;;i\_
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk
"VlllO 00 ·-·~ ......... -..-. .... 1~ ........ .....-n -~-.. ..-.-..... ...--.. llMO 00 ----.,..,, -,_.. -MllloO
"•' • ru unwua
•