HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-10-13 - Orange Coast Pilot•
Dodger pitcher Orel
Hershlser kneels to pray
aft~r shutting out the
Mets 6-0 and giving the
LA team the National
League pennant./81
Nation
Polls show Bush leading
Oukakis ill Electoral Col-
lege votes as the two
presidential candidates
prepare for tonight's de-
bate./ A4
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1988 .
$1.00,000 Offered
for LUby' s ·attack~rs·· .
NB magnate hires psychic~ detective,
tells o'f atta'Ck on hi·m and Aissa Wayne __ _..,-r - --
By PAUL ARCHJPL EY
Of -Delly ..... llelt
Newpon Beach millionaire Roger
!-ub) has hired a ps~ch1c and a pm ate
10 ves11gator and offered a $100.000
reward to find those responsible for
the brutal assault and threat to kill
-tum and g1rlfnend A1ssa Wa~ne.
daughter of the late actor John
Wa yne.
In a press conference Wedne!lda~ at
Luby"s Newpon Beach mansion. the
52-year-old financier admllled he
was scared but wanted ll known he
wasn't running awa'.
Christopher Norgaard. an attorney
with the law firm Hill & Weiss ihat
represents Luby. read a statement 1n
which Luby said he couldn't specu-
late on who was responsible for the
Oct. 3 assault because ol 1hc cont1nu-
1ng '"'es11ga11on b~ :-.:t.''11.pon Beach
police.
But hed1d agree"'llh tn'est1gators
"'ho believe the assailants 'II.ere hired.
.. I don't think the~ ~ere thugs at
all." Lub~ said. ··Just plain. pro-
fessional h11 men ...
.\nd he said he "'as baffied b\ the
incident. He reccl\ ed no pnor "arn-
1ngofan) lond lhal someone m1ghl be
oul lO get him .
.. It's maddening.." he said "It's
vel) fruslrat1ng and confusing. I'm
getting a hnle scared."
Lub~ has hired Harr) Block. a
Ncwpon Beach pn,a1e in'es11ga1or
who also 1s providing around-thc-
clock guards for both . Lub~ and
Way ne.
He also hired a psychic who
-
surve"ed the cnme ~ene Wedncs-
da) 5he declined w gJ ve her name or
talk to a reponer. ~ trail of blood Slatns from !he
garage lnto Lub~'s game room re-
mains as stark e\ 1dence of the
tcmfymg experience he and V.a)nc
suffered after rcluming togclher from
a mommg "'orkout.
Describing the assault. Lub' !>a1d ~hat seemed hkc hours probabh "'as
O\ er 1n aboul lour m1nules. ·
Wa)ne. J:?.. was dm1ng "'hen the
cou ple passed through the elec1ron1<
front gate to Lub\ 's 22nd Street
home. The' were follo'ktd inside b'
the assailants. ·
The two men. dressed ltkc con·
strucuon workers. easil) could ha' c
blended in on the street v.herc se'eral
homes are undergoing remodeling.
Lubv said.
One of them came up 10 the
passenger wmaov. and asked 1f he
were Roger Lub}. When he said ~es.
the assailant pointed a gun at him
(Pleu .ee REWARD/ A3)
CE NflGHB<l&IOCI} RXl.S
25 CE TS
o.9r"94 ........... ._
Roger Luby, on crutches. meets the preu at hia boqie.
Index
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
A7
A9-10 .
84-5
Three flee after run n1ng over injured Inen
Death notices
Entertainment
Opinion
People
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Weather
A1 2
85
A6
88
A 11
A3
85-7
81-3
A2
By ROBERT BARKER
Of 1M D.itr "lot Steft
_ Huntington Beach police are seek-
ing three dnvcrs who sped off in their
cars after running over a trio of men
who had been struck moments early
by ano1her vehicle and "'ere lying
injured on Beach Boulevard.
Officers said today thC) have a
descnpt1on of one of the veh 1cles and
are developing info~ation on two
HB gets go-ahead
for redevelopment
parking structures.
Commission vote
.reli~v~s stringent
on-site provisions
By ROBERT BARKER
Of !he Delly "10! Si.If
The C'alifom1a Coastal Com-
m1ss1on on Wednesday ga ve Hunt·
mgton Beach -down-town rcdevelop-
mcn t projects a shot in the arm b)
approving c11y pa_rk ing plans for the
area. officials said toda).
The approval means that officials
can accommodate the e'pected park-
1ng crunch through use of a scnes of
parking s1ructures rather 1han more
stnngent requirements to accommo-
date up to 75 percent of park mg needs
on the commercial s11e.
''I'm opt1m1Sl1C and I'm loving 1t:•
satd Cny Adm 1n1Slrator Paul Cook.
who cla1 med that the action clears the
way for development of the down-
town blocks on Main Street as well as
the massive Waterfront Ho1el pro,ect
stretching along Pacific Coast High·
way from Hu nungton Street to Beach
Boulevard.
Cook said that the more smngenl
park mg recommet\dauons, w h1ch
"'-NC backed b) local slo"'·gro"' th
groups. ··woald have set the dock (on
redevelopment plans) back 20 years."
It is cssenually the pauCll) of
parking space 1hat has slo"'ed up
redevelopment for two decades.
Cook said. ··we're running about a month
bthtnd. but when we·, c been tr; 1ng
for 20 years, it"s not so bad:· he said.
Cook. who's been crt>dited "'"h
turning downtown redevelopment
away from h1gh-nse buildings 10 a
village t)pe or development. said a
de(\siorr to require ex1ens1' e on-site
parkmJ ··could have stopped e\'Cf') -
thin~·
Cuy offi cials had proposed de-
creasing parking rt.'gulat1ons to re-
quire business owners 10 meet onh 50
(PleaH tee PAKEL/ A2)
others. Police said the' intend to
arrest the dmcrs 1f· the) can be
loc-a1ed.
··1 would definite!} press for felon)
charges." police traffic '°'esugator
Bnan Da' 1dson said
.. h 1s 1nconce1,able that a person
can hn a human being and drl\e
a"'a). ll 1s inconn:1' able. but the~ do
It. ..
The three men. who reponedl)
Danny Ornelas
v.cre locked arm 1n arm while
crossing Beach near Blaclock Place at about 9·50 p.m. Wednesda}'-. \l,ere
reponed in cnucal and senous con-
dn1ons in a~ hospitals. Their names
were not a\a1lable at press 11me but
police said they bel_1e'e all are
res1d.en1s of Huntington Beach.
Da' 1d!>on said that one oft he three
men men was struck in111a1h b' a lar
dn"en b~ Denise Fote< 1 of
Hunungton Beach. The others ap-
parenth fell to the pa,ement
Fole) braked and honlced her horn .
but the three men reponedh failed 10
ta~e e' as1' e action.
Pohce said Fole~ stopped her car.
\I, h1ch 'll.3S tra' cling south on Beach
Bouk,ard. and v.as rendenn.g aid
"hen four other car dro'e o'er the
men. Onl) one of the four dn"ers.
1~nt1lied as Jennie Fullenon, 27. of
Hunllngton Beach. stopped 10 gJVe
assistance.-
Davidson said that nellher Foley
nor Fullerton would bt cued.
Two of the 1n1urcd men were taken
to Fountain Valle y Communuy Hos-
pital and were reponed in cnt1caJ
condition. A third. Oown by hclico~
ter to UCI Medical ,Center in Orange.
was reponed in senous conduioa
V.ideo of fatal B'cilhoa crash
leaves courtroom stunhed
By GREG KLERKX
Of IN Dlflly '9ol Si.It
l oud mus" pla~s against a
bacldrop of an anon} mous outhern
Caltfom1a s1dcstrec1 The scrnc on
the '1deo1ape 1s ub \ 1ousl} shot from
"'11hin a mo\ 1ng 'chick "I oung male.
\ 01 es can be heard chauenng anJ
ho"' hng 1n 1hc baclground
"Have ~OU gu~s seen uh ·\\ho
Framed Roger Rabbn' \Cl ' .. sa~sone
'01ce. "1':o 1s that " The sentt-nce 1~
ne'er fin1shC'd.
Swttch to ano1her scent>. a close-up
shot of a \Oung man 1n a sPQns car
1aun11ng the cameraman 10 "get m the
~ar · The lc1mcraman gets in
'o"' anothrr scene ag:un shot
from inside 1he car The car 1s
roe eung do'4n a" alle~ "'llh houses
on either side In the distance to the
nght the ligure 01 a perS()n can be
~l·t.•n t:inding in the c:ir's path The
car dra'4S cloX'r The tigurt" -a
"Oman standing \l,llh legs spread
apan. hands on hips-doesn't mo\~
Less than a !K'(Ond later. 1ht
"'oman 1s a fe" lcct 1n lront of the car
and the scene gcx·' ha'"1re .\Jumble
of unagcs follo\l,s Blue-sl ,, pa\C-
ment. the 1ns1de l•I .i car a garage
door. Moans are heard. then h\sten-
l.tl screami. ·
.\ child's \01ce cut throuf,? thr
Cl>nfus1on "Where's m\ mom ·· ~nothcr '01cc. a male '01ce. 1s also heard ... , ou f ..... bitch.··
The \ 1deotape lasted less than one
m1nu1e. but 11 stunned a pacled room
at Harbor Mun1c1pal Co un on Wedne~a) afternoon as dozens of
pc'Ople watched the '1olen1 end of
INbb1e K.tlklea·s hfe unfold btforc
their e,es.
The\ 1deotape wa s the centerp1ttc
of the prosecuuon ·s c-ast dun ng the
(Pleue He VID&O/ A2)
Shots fired during :Mesa gang f~ght
By JONATHAN VOUKE
()( IM Oa41y ~llol Sta"
Gunfire t'lrol e out dunng a bra"'I
bet"'een doLcns of suspected gang
mem~rs at an upscale Cosu Mesa
shopping center Tuesda~ e\ening.
but no serious tnJunes "'ere reported.
pohcc sa1~
The incident. hov.e' er left at least
one businessman at the l"t"nter con-
cerned about 1he poss1b1h1~ of in·
creased gang lll ll' 1\' 1n Costa Mesa
Pohce "ere called b' busmc-sses m
the Mesa \'crde Cenitr on Harbor
Soult'' ard :ilxiut ' I) p m . Lt ~Ian
Ken! ~a id ln111:il reports of
susp1C1ous mrn in the par~ing lot
\\Cre upgraded to repom ol gunfire
before officier<:. .:im,ed
"~1d came runn.n~ in hrre
screaming, about ~orlc 6t t!lng beat
up 1n the parling 101 \\ l ,:illed the
police:· said Ron "-uhl'l 'l'\ er -nan-
a2cr of the "-ona Lane'.., ·'Im~ allc)
1n the center .. One g1rt was almost
h~stencal ··
The ce n1er holds the bowling alley,
an ice slattng nnlc a g~ry store.
~\era I restaurants. a mo' 1c theater
and numt'1'0us shops.
Lt Rick Johnson said no arrests
(Pleaee see POLICE/ A2J
Brown bags improve green thumbs Mesa will build .
seniors' center By ROBERT BARKER
Of .... .,..., ,.... •• .,,
It 's great 10 be ali' e and well and
dig10g in Southern Caltfom1a
flower and vegetable gardens this
time of year.
Hummmgb1rds flit across the
yard. dipping their tiny beaks for a
S(>lil second Or !WO into pink
h1b1scus blooms. 8uuerfl1es float
prcll1ly from restin1 places on green
stems. gwmg a sen~ of peacc and a
,.esptte from nnging 1elephones and
other workaday stresses.
Doves alaghl to staJk for seeds and
earthworms and 01hcr morsels 10
the freshl y turned gr-ound. Even the wocms seem 10 wnuJe with re-
newed vigor after a long,. dry
summer. It's a hft for the old ph)sical and
mental wcll·beina to plant veg-
etables for winter harvest and
perennials and bulbs for neitt
spnnasbloom.
Some of the more 1mb1t1ous
urdencrs s&nvc to &et s-...eet peas 10 &loom by Chnstmas. This amateur
ncr has nt"er achit~td that
But he's aro~n broccoli that•s
CDJOYtd With Oanstmas din·
Powerful display 1n th~ spona and
early summer ran out of steam b)'
late Au,usL ,
October on thl' nr;ingtt oasl \hat
make planllng ..:l•ndt11t1n<; o ideal
are a far c~ trlirn tllht'r rans of the
conntn .
Nev.p;i~rs .:a1T11~J J photograph
this week sho"' ing. lh1IJrcn ma ling
a sno'.l.man 10 Bangor. Maine.
There \\ere fon:~J)tS of freez ing ram
across the nonhcast -detintd~ not
plant·1tro"'ang "eathl"r
But here. 10 \h(' "-1ed1tcl'T3t1can
ch mate on the \.\est Coast. con-
d1t1ons are ideal and n's the be 1
time of the ~car to plant things.
aC'Cordmg 10 "-ath\ mmer. a
hon1cultum1 v.1\h R0ger's Gardens
in Corona Jcl \tar
l'ht so1l 1s sull "'arm and the rOOt$
of the small. 1ne\~ns1'e plants ""'It
ge1 cntrtnchcd and b«ome moTt'
drought-tolerant before summer
In fact, planllnJ some drought·
tolerant plants this month should
pa) olTv.nh requirements ofhttlc or
no v.ater v.hen the hot month)
am,c. ht said.
mmtr sa~s her fa,onte df)·
v.cat~r plant 1s the aiant MahhJa
P<>PP>· a nattH to u\hcm (ah-
rom11 and Meuco. that 1rl>w1 8 10
IO feet tall v. 1th JU~t a httk ca.re and
has large ""h11e blooms on lona
and need stakina. They should be Items
read) to eat frc\h oil the' 1ne b1 \Ate >.notl\(r p(ant that's C'$1>"C'l•ll) Januaf) Of fcbn.a~ • w11td for btach urdcns that "'-On 1
·on Mardan site
By JONATH.\'li; \'OUKE anC'e. He said he thought the non·
0thOe11yNou1.., profit corporation v.as go1n110 ra1st
The ('Q~ta \te-..J \tt\ lounnl monc) to pa)' for the construC't1on
agrtt'd \\ edni:!>dJ' w hu1ld a S~.5 The non-profit corporauon will
m1lhon senior c1tiien l·en1er al the 'tease the fac1l1t) for SI annually. and
former \fordan School s11r and als.Q as~~ for SI 00.000 a year for at least
v.111 e\amine the poss1h1ht' ol c<'n-thr~ )ears to pa) for operat1n1 the
truC'tina senior hou"ng llO the \3me center The ctt stipend -.oukf end
s11e "'hen the organ11auon raised a SS
m1lhon endowment But the rorpor-
auon could continue to need city
a s1stan~ 1f 1t fails to meet 11s fund-
ra1~1011oal
.\fter <,0mc une\pedcd dt"Ntr the
council appro\.ed the long·plann('d
prOJCCt 4-1 "'1th Councilman Da\ 1d
\\ httkr cuttn@. the d1sSt>nl1n11 'otc
The C'Cntcr v.as pre!iCntC'd to the
council an a stud) sewon Monda'
and )ttmed to appeal to the mem-bt~ bul \\ httlcr -v. ho missed Monda~ ·s informal mC'tung -and
Ma,or Donn Hall argued that S! 5
n11ll 1on wu 100 mud\ to 'pend
"I thinl ou as.k too mu"Lh..'"
\\ httk'r ~td to \1chacl Nuner. an
offia al 1n the non·P.rofit corporation
wt up b) &he C'Ounc1I to run th( scnior
ttnttt.
"What 1t amounts to 1s that ~
build 1t. lea~ 1t to someoM for SI a ~car and then Jl'e them St00.000 a
car to run 11.·· Hall said ... We may u
~ellJUSI ll"·e 11 to somebody, and thtl
conccrm~"
But behind 1ns1~tent araurnca11 •
from Cown cil*oman Mar)'
Hombuckk. 11\f mot.on ~
~~le~·* lO pie« tM ~
at Mardan wu a.Ito 4-1 , but 1M
Oppoll"I \'ot~ amt from Com-
C'tlman °"" .\mburary. wtM> _..
Mafdan -toc.wd °" l 9dt S.-ntat Pcnw A~ -w IOO ..
Mr. This ~r. tM Joal 11 to ha"e tt
tad) for Thanktt1vin1. TomatOC$
also shoukS npcn by then and
should &alt &hrou&h Chnstnw.. a& lratt. The vines that put on IUCh a The Pttfm Man·fil9'd day1 of (" 1111 ... -'Oft/ A2)
Hall aJ~ said ~ haJ rc1Cf\1t1oni
about tht pn>Jttl .. h1cb could cost ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~&htnQMM~uSbmill~n~~ • tht cost ()(the~"' and rna1ntrn·
Suear snap pcu ha'°' ~ 1.&p &oiil~llOl'elwl °'*' .. .,... ~ "1 "'"°"'
'
Orange Coelt (WLY PILOT/ Thuraday, October 13, 1181
San Onofre nuclear-·plant
threatening sea creatures
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Tbe abun·
dance or at lcut two types of fish off
the cout of \he San Onofre nuclqr
power plant bas declined by about SO
pcn:ent over the last 14 years. accordina to a preliminary report praented to the state Coastal Com·
miMU>n.
A S46 million study of the power
plant'a effect on the marine environ·
ment is beina financed by a trust fund
set up by Southern California Edison
Co., which operates the facility. The
interim report released Wednesday
indicates that San Onofrc's cooling
system may be responsible for dam· aae to kelp beds offshore.
.. What we've seen is that in two
species of mid·water fish, the queen·
fish and white croaker, there arc
substantial reductions in abundance
near the plant -on the order of SO
percent." said William M~rdoclt, a
UC Santa Barbara biolotf professor
who represents the commtssion on a
three-membercommittccconductina
the study.
"There's evidence that these de· creases are actually quite widespread
in the (other) mid-water specie.,"
Muirdock said. "We think that's a
substantial negative dfcct of the
plant:'
Fish that swim and feed above the
ocean floor are known as mid.water
fish. Murdock said he believes many
such fisb die after bein& sucked into
the plant's cooling system. Also. since 198.S the Marine Re-
view Commincc has detected a larie
layer of "cohesive sediment" cover·
ing pa.rt of the kelp bed near the plant.
Murdock said.
The layer, which covered 25 acres
in 1986, apJ>'.llrently has grown to 70
acres. be said.
Irvine hosts a r t s c on fe rence
Registration 1s be mg accepted for a
statewide Arts Marketing Conference
to be held Saturday and Sunda> at
Irvine Valley College.
The conference is designed for
visual anistsand craftsmen who want
to find ways 10 market their an and
skills. legal issues and publicity
techniques will also be covered.
Heading the list of speakers at the
conference will be Robert Reid.
e>.ecut1ve director of the California
Ans Council. a state agency that
awards more than SI 0 million a year
to an1sts and an organ1zauons.
Also scheduled 1s Romalyn
Tilghman. regional representative for
the Nauonal Endowment for the Arts.
The program 1s sponsored by the
California Assembly of Local Ans
Agencies. a non-profit organization
dedicated to openmg new op.
ponun11ies for California artists, and
Irvine Valle) College.
Information and registration forms
are available bv contacting Michele
Weigand at (21 ~) 690-2860.
.. It's ktUina. so far as ~ know,
evttythlns that's underneath it."
Thccormnitteewascreated in 1974 as a condition ofSouthcm California
Edison's pc1'11)it to operate the plant,
located about .SO miles nonh of San
Dieao. Its other members art micro.
biologist Rimmon Fay and Southern
California Edison representative
Br.ron Mcchalas. .
·While reco&nizing the value of the
final rcpo~ which is due in June
1989, some coastal commissioners
questioned the amount of time and
money spent on the study.
"We continue· in the South Bay in
San Diego to have 25 milliongallonsa
day of raw sewage (flowing from
Mexico)," said Comm issioner David
Malcolm, who also is a Chula Vista
City Cuoncil member. "This money
that was spent on this rewn could have cured that." .
Baby's death in hospital
fire under investigation
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Authorities are investigating whether
a hospital where a premature baby
was fatally burned was violating l\n
order to stop housing newborns
where the fire occurred. a publ ished
res><>rt says.
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center was
directed during an.April 1986 in spec·
tion by the Department of Health Services to stop using Room 422 Sas a
neonatal nursery or a newborn in-
tensivecare facility.
POLICE BREAK UP GANG FIGHT •..
From A l
were made. although authonues se1z·
ed a car and a shotsun that apparently
was used 1 n the fight. The owner of 1 he
car. registered outside Orange Coun-
ty. has not been located.
Johnson said he was unsure how
man) sho1s were fired 1n 1he 1nc1dent.
but officers determmed at least one
round from the shotgun and an
unrecovered handgun wentoffdunng
the brawl.
One vehicle was damaged by the
spray of the shotgun pellets.
Johnson said the fight ma} ha ve
been gang related because one group
-which brought the guns -wore
··gang-style'" Jackets.
The I I teen-age rs at 1he scene when
pohce arrived generall) were un·
cooperauve. he said. One \Outh
suffered mmor m1unes 1n the fis-
tfight. but refu~d med1calattenuon.
The teens were believed to be from
the Santa Ana and Costa Mesa area.
the lieutenant said. No names were
released because of their ages. Police
suspect that as man) as 2.S teen·agers
Oed before officers arrived.
Johnson said he does not re-
member a similar incident in the cit).
but sa1d the fight does not signal
increasing gang acuvity in Costa
Mesa. which has been virtual!) un·
touched by the violence in neigh·
bonng Santa Ana. .. So far. this appears to be an
isolated incident. and we're going to
do our best to ensure it remains that
wa,." Johnson said.
Kona Lane's manager Kuhlme)er
said he hopes Johnson is right.
.. I've never seen anything like this
in the cit).'' he said. '"If the gangs are
coming 1n. I'll be the first one to do
whatever I can to get the hell out:·
PANEL OKS HB PARKING PLANS.~.
From A l -
percen1 of1he1r parking n~ds on the
SllC.
The Coastal Comm1ss1on stafThad
f"C'Commended a 75 percent require-
ment. But the Coastal C omm1ss1on
members. meeting 1n San Diego.
'oted unanimously to require owners
to have the ··maximum amount of
parking as possible" on 1he1r prop-
en). ·
The actton. accord1 ng to downtown
resident and parking cnt1c Doug
Lange vm. gnes 1he c1 l) ··cane
blanche'" to do "'hat 11 wants in the
area w11hou1 making parkmg com-
mitments.
Langevm. who tra,cled to the
meeting. also said toda> that he's
cons1denng tiling a compla1n1 w11h
the Fair Poh11cal Practices Com-
m1ss1on about 1he alleged involve-
ment of Orange Coun1y Supervisor
Ha rnet Wieder and Hunungton
Beach Planning Commissioner
Roger Slates 1n the decision
Lasnge,·in said 1ha1 Comm1ss1oner
Don Mcinnis. a former mayor of
Newport Beach who now 1s a resident
of fallbrook. said from the d1as
Wednesday words to the effect that
Wieder had called him the night
before and asked 1f Slates had taken
care of things and if not to ha ve him
fix them.
Lan&ev1n said he believes 1t may be
that officials used their influence and
connections to unfair!\ influence
dec1s1ons b~ the Coastal Com-
m1ss1on.
Slates toda~ called Lange' m's
statements .. a bunch of bunk." He
said Mcinnis said that Wieder called.
asking him to make sure tha1 Roger
gets 1h1ngs done. or words to that
effect.
Slates said that t.he call -and he said he questioned whether there was
one -was probably mentioned 1n
lev1t). Slates said he introduced rny
stafT members to Coastal Com-
mission officials.· but left things go at
that.
Wieder couldn't be reached for
comment.
JOYS OF GARDENING NURTURED ... From Al
need much water 1) the purple sea
lavendar. she sa\S
The ideal pla.nt1ng conditions for
delphiniums. columbmes. pansies.
Iceland poppies and other perennials
and drought-tolerant plants should
continue until the end of the month.
shr said.
But gardenrrs should wall until the
first of ~o,ember to plant daffodils.
anenomes. crocus and other bulbs.
because of the threat of ho1 weather
1ha1 "armed 1h1ngs up last weekend.
Hot "Cather now can curtail blooms
ne~t spnng. she said.
how to grow tl}Jngs while backya rd
gardeners munch on their sandwiches
in the nursery's amph11heater.
Here are some tips that Sommer
:to~ out at a rettnt brown bag
session:
• If you plant pansies now and 1f
there·s no heal wa\e. the>'ll bloom
until April.
• Drought-tolerant plants aren't
reall) drought-tolerant in the first few
weeks. The) need deep watenng
every couple of weeks to promo1e
deep roots that can reach down to find
moisture 1n dry times.
six weeks to make the bulbs thmk
they've made 11 through winJer and
that spnng has arrived. Bulbs should
go 1mmed1ately from the refr%erator
into the ground. If they're allov.ed to
sn 1n the sun. they'll get confused and
start the blooming process.
• The S«ret 1oa beautiful garden is
consistent care -correct water and
fert1l1Z1n' and ba1t1ng for snails.
• Don t ~ overhead watmng. 11
creates a wet environment that's
conducive to fungus and mildew.
Chilly, possibly drizzly a ir due
A co6d front ~ In from 1M nont\w•t ~ beclln PMl"1a through 8outhein c.tomle , .. 9¥tning, bflng6ng wlth It IOw ~ Ind too and a cMl'°9 of ctrtat., mainty at the
bMche9 and In the VdeVs, for ..... Mid. Moetly ~ • ._ ere ...-:feel OWt the coaatel and
vfilWy ., ... tonight and Friday, the Natlooel WMther SeNtoe
Mid today.
Atona the Oreno-Coast It .... be mo.11y doudy tonlOflt and Friday wffh ~ drlzzte let• tomgtlt Ind Fridey ln0fnif1g.
Coot« dl)'9. BMch lows tonlaht In the mid-SO. to tow eo.. Hight
Friday In ttM mld-eot to IOw '10.. Valley lows tonJght In the 5Qs. Highs Friday In the IOw to mid· 70..
From Point Conception to the Mexk:an Border -Over
Inn« w1tett, 10Utherty winds .... than 10 knott In the nfQhi' and
mornings through Friday. w .. t to touthwest Wind• fo to 15 knots tonight and west to northwest 15 to 20 knot• Frt•y
atternooo end evening. Seu to 2 feet. Swelt west 2 feet. Low
Clouds.
U.S. Temps H.-Otie-74 S7 Calif. Temps. ~Yor11C111 56 IH Olli-. C.I> et 50
Extended
"' l• OmeNI 6S « :;%: low lot 24 llOull ~II 5 p M AIOU<l'*Q ... 70 4S Ottanoo 79 60 ·--13 56 ..._. 37 '° p~ 56 32 Eurelll 13 S4 Allll\la 6$ 44 ,,,_,,. ~s 72 Fr-12 55 AllanltC C.ty 66 . 31 P1U':f.n « " ~~ 76 62 ean.-. SS ')4 Port .M-S3 32 5t 53 &.rtntnonam 61 3A POf118nd O<e 6S se Reowooc:t C.ty S$ 5e 80tM 77 SI ==r'c.1, 60 32 Sacl-10 15 53 Bo51Qn SS 39 71 41 SelonM 17 53 8ul!81o 44 3A Reno 12 ., San 0..00 72 13 Cl\w,..1on SC 71 41 "Ao<tvnono ·60 3) ~F1811CAXO SI u CNt1oue.N C 63 37 SI I.OU.I SI 39 $A11JoM 67 5t ~. 41 2S S811 LMl•C.ty 61 •7 5.,. 1.. .... Oolte>O .. 51 S2 25 s... ""'°"'° u " Stoc111on 76 S3 Cle...-no 41 41
Surf Report
las SftAl'I
1·2 poor
S.a111e ., ~ Columt>us Oftoo 48 28 SllOll-76 52 Hogft io.o '°' 24 l!Ou<• encltng •I s r m 0..-Ft WOflh TS 50 s,.ac .. 141 A4 37 Betti-I SI
2 pOOf
2 POOt 2 pOOt o.vion 41 27 l~·S1Ptr~ ., SI o.n-71 '4S fOQella 70 45 °"""-St 38 T~ 90 ... Oel.1041 45 33 TUIM 70 47 Ov11;111 43 27 wa.,.ong1on o c ~ 37 El Peto 77 so Wte:l>tlJI 70 so Er .. 4S 40
Felft>A.nkl 26 13 Flag stall M 36
Gr11nc1 Rap.os 45 31 Smog Report Hono4Ulll •• 78
Houston IO se lnd..,.,ap04tJ S4 24 POllulMlt 1 llendatd tl>deJl (PMt 0·50 Jad<son,Mou 71 37
Jacli1orw11le 78 47 good Sl-100 mooerere, 101·191 un·
Junuu S2 45 *llnt111. 200·299 very Ul'lnut1nlul. 300
Kanu1Ci1y M 45 ana •DOv• nazwooua Fttst 119111• 11
LUV9g8S 90 63 P<evto..• o.y s anainecs 11$1 S.C.ono 11
LlltleRoci. 69 42 IOCl8y Sp .. IO<«ast
l..ouo5Vtlle SI 31 s..I 6eKh lo M8CArlllur Blvd S0..2
Mamp11o1 M 41 t<W>e. SaooleOKll Valley 33-42
MIMli8Mcl> 80 71 Laguna Buen (I0<-11 4~ ...... _ .. 47 21 loe A~ A11p0t1 33-50
S.--l'l. 15 Bog Beat 10 8dllop 11
lllythe IS
C.l*"'I ...
cui-c11y 72
LMICUlef 13
l..ClnQ e.ecn 71
l A l<1rpor1 71
Hewpon BNcn M OnlWIO 12 Palm Spttnga 92 Puao.i• " ""-..o. 83 San S.nara.no ..
StnG•br ... " San1a Batt>ar• 71
S.,.11 C.w 71 San1aMa1ta 87 Set1ta Monte:a 69 ,.,_v.-y 115 '°''-73 W.-...ooct 70
SI
45
41
67
60
61 50
63
63
82 60 M r.e M
St
60 SI 56 s.
62 32 .,
62
2 poOt 1 pOOt
•·2 -
Tides
TOO.AV SKor>a to.w S 37 pm 03
36 Second IWQll I I 55 p m
TMUlllSOAY 4 24• m
10S.•m 625pm
2 4
57 OS
Sun Mii toelay et 6 20 P m , ri-
Fudey 116 Siam -Mllll 6 18 pm
MOOft MU 100.Y 81 7 44 p m • •-fodey el 1043 a M anotetut127pm
VIDEO LEAVES COURTROOM STUNNED ••.
From Al
first day of preliminary heanngs to
detcmune whe1her Danny Orntlas,
19. of Hunung1on Park.:should stand
trial for second-<iegree murder for
K1llelea's death.
The prelim1naf) hearing was ex-
pec1ed to conclude toda). and Judge
Frances Munoz will decide whether
10 order Ornelas to stand tnaJ for
murder.
Ornelas was behind the wheel of a
1984 Nissan 200SX that struck and
killed Killelea as she walked down an
alle~ wit h her 1wo ~oung sons.
according 10 police n')>on!>.
Thebo) s. ages 6 and I 0. Jumped to
safct) as 1he car came toward them.
but Killelea wa~ pinned against a
bnck wall and thrown about SO feet.
She-died 1n surger} a shon time later.
Blood alcohol tests on Ornelas John Lozano
1nd1cated a blood alcohol content of
.18. nearl~ twice the level at which a All 1bree )Oung men had been
motorist 1s presumed 100 drunk to dnnkmg beer and rum at the beach
dnve. He has been held 1n Orange for most of the da}. Lorenzo said. At
Count) Jail on SH0.000 ball smce his the tune he got into 1he car with
arrest. Ornelas. he sensed the ·alcohol was
Through an unusual set of c1rcum-staning to alTcct him. he said.
stances. a passenger m Omelas' car. Lozano said Ornelas told him ht
18-\ear-oldJohnlozanoofH1'}11and was going.to repark ...lhc car. bul
Park recorded the accident on ins1ead turned down the alley behind
videotape. Ocean Boulevard. Dunng the enure
Clad 1n a yellow 1a1I 1umpsu11 anCl nde. which lasted less than a minute,
handcuffed to a chair. Ornelas was Lozano said he had 1he hand-held
1mpass1ve throughout 1he all-da} · camera up to his eye and claims never
heanng. occasionally jotting down to have seen Killelea or hlfrthildren.
noiesand observmg w1tnenes as they He also said he didn't know the
testified. His family sat on one side of camera was running.
the counroom. while family and Depu y District Attorney Rick
friends of Killelea sat on the other. King spe1•t most of the hearing trying
Ornelas. Lozano and another to establis"i that Ornelas drove 1n a
friend. 20.~car-old George Herrera. straight lire down the alley until he
were at the tail end of a da> of neared Kilielea. and then accelerated
bodysurfing and dnnkmg at the and dehberatel) swerved to h11 her.
Wedge when the 1nc1dent occurred. Timothy Jessup. 20. who lives a
challeniing the car to slow down, but
by the 11me she realized the car wasn'1
going to stop. it was too late. .
"She did not really have time and
she was hit by the car." he said.
:Jessup said Killelea was struck at
the legs and tossed end over end
"about as high as the house." Her
children "-'ere out of the way, ap.
parently behind a nearby sound wall.
he said.
Gale King. a friend and neighbor of
K1lle lea's. tes11fied that she looked
into the alley after hearing a loud
noise and saw a twisted body and
someone climbing ou1 of an over-
turned car.
.. Hc was enraged. He was mad,"
she said.
King tentauvel) 1den11fied Ornelas
as the man climbing out of the car.
and said he heard him swear at
Killelea.
"'F ...... bitch: I heard him say." she
said
The transcript of the videotape also
hsts a s1m1lar statement from one of
the two persons in the car. although 11
doesn't specify whether it was Lozano
or Omehu. wllo madc.tb.c_comment.
The videotape was shown toward
the end of the day. and ii lef\ many
observers shaken and in tears..
"It definitely shook me up. es·
pecially heanng those children's
voices. her children." said Judi Dut-
ton. a close friend of Killelea's.
King said the tape was one of the
most extraordinary pieces of
evidence he's ever dealt with.
.. , think tpe tape speaks for itself.''
he said ... Its an incredible piece of
evidence and homfytng to listen to."
Lozano tcsulied Wednesda) that fe" houses from thCllf scene of the
he and Ornelas didn't plan on dnvmi incident. said he "1tnesscd the col· 13 boat pauengers killed anywhere that da). The car belonged hs1on.
to Herrera. who had done all the "Themothermadea~ture ... put '-NEWDELHl.lndia(AP)-Aboat
drt\'lng that da). Lozano said he and her hands on her hips.' said Jessup. capsized in a mer m the nonhern
Ornelas 1n1t1all) 1 ntended to grab the who was walk mg through the alley 10 state of PunJab and at l~st 13 people
video camera. which belonged to a fnend's house at the time ... I saw the drowned. United -News of India
Ornelas. out of the backseat of the mother take a shght step (loward the reported today.
Ntssan and film girls at the beach. center of1he alley). put her hands on The accident occurred 1 n
"I started y.ralkmg back to the beach her hips and s1are directly at the Ferozpure district late Wednesda).
then I heard the car start .... He asked dnver. the news agency said. The boat
me ~f J was 401ng to get in lhc car_ l ··About a second after that. the car caf'T)•ing 35 people overturned 1n a
said ·1 guess.·· said Lozano. who was made a swerve at her ... he said. nver between the villages of Khidar
17 at the ume of the accident. Jessup said Killelea appeared to be Pmd1 and Casuwala Sommer. and her fnend C-nsttn
Fusano. are the two restdent hon1cul-
1u ns1s al Roger's Gardens. The' take
turns each Wednesda~ giving free 11ps
at the pres11g1ous nurse~ ·s ··erown
Bag It tor Lunch .. kcture series.
• "Ratt}-look1ng .. perennials that
are finished blooming need to be
pruned. but not below the bottom leaf
node.
• If there are big holes 1n thetlower
from the outside in. snails are the
likely culprits. But 1f the hole 1n the Oower1sfromthein~deout.thepe~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1s probably a caterpillar. ----------
The~ ofTer their food for thought on
• Tulips and hyacinths are the only
bulbs that need refrigeration before
planting. The) should be chilled for
• So1l 1n the area. although near th~
beach . has a lot of clay and needs to be
amended with organic material for
ideal dramage ... You should be a61e
to dig down about eight inche~ with
\'Our hands and not break your
Two to s h a r e $1 1 . 4 million
fingernails.··
• P,lants prefer deep irrigation
instead offreq~nt shallow watenng.
li..\\R..\ME~TO (..\P) -A lotto
pla)ers in Redlands and another 1n
Santa Monica correctly guessed all six
num~rs in the mid-week .. Lotto
6-49 .. game to sph1 a pnze pool of
S 11 .4 m1ll1on. state lottery officials
said toda).
The winners. whose 1dent1t1es are
unknown until the) claim their
pnzes. will each receive about SS. 7
m1lhon. officials said.
The winnmg numbers chosen
Wednesday night art 37. 35. 38. 28. 11
~~~~E Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFICE
»O w .. 1 B•y SI Coet• "441U CA .... ~ ao, 1!.eO eo.1a ~ CA 9262e
C6IMllled .ot. 6•2·~78 t>u•.._. a .0110<•"4
... 2"121
and 32 -with the bonus number. I.
Seven tickets hll fiH of six
numbers plus the bonus to wm
S229.647 each. The 178 tickets with
five corrC<'t numbers arc wonh
S4.653 each. Another I I. 903 tickets
had four numbers for S63 each. An
automatic S.S aoes to the 237.397
tickets with three numbers.
The numbers were chosen by Lotto
machine dunng a 1elev1S1on broad-
cast origmatina in Sacramento.
• Employee~ at tho nursery
fen1hze each plant twice a month. But
Sommer said she fertilizes her plants
at home JUSt once a month.
.. The day I pay the-rent I fertilize.
I've ruined the day. anyway."
She fertilizes every month except
December and January and except for
plants that Oower.
• Don't cut offfohage of bulbs that
have finished bloomina. Bulbs need 11
for photosynthC$izing for new year's
flowers. ··~avt them on until you
can pick ahem off hke tissue paper."
Just call 642-8086
What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What
don·a you Okt? CaJJ the number above and your mesuee wilJ be recorded. t.nantcnbed and de-
hvered tot.be a~ae editor. The same 40llO\U answcnna 1UVice may be
utcd to rtJCOrd letten to the editor on any •opic.
Conuibuton to our Leuen column must 11'Ctltde theilnameand aelepbone numbet for vcnfk:ation.
Teti us wba1·1 on your mind.
. .
•
.. Handknit Sweater
Corduroy pant and Plaid Shirt
from
JOSEPH
ABBOUD
119 Fashion Island • Newpon Beach • (BUUOCkl Willbin Wini)• 759-1622
•
' ' • •
•
,
(
Five congressmen
will air views at
county breakfast
Five members of Oranse County's con-
arm1onal dtlegallon Will discuss the issues facing
Conircss at a spec1aJ congressional breakfast Fnday
sponsored by the Oran&e County Chamber of
Commtrce. 1• Conarcssmen Roben ~. Badham, W11lia,m E.
Oannemeycr. Daniel E. Lungren. Ron Packard and
Roben Dornan will speak at 7:30 a.m. at the Red
Lion Inn 1n Costa Mesa. --=
Following a brief talk from each cOllgressmen.
there will be a question and answer period.
Klsslnger ln Irvine
Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger will
speak Monday at a dinner meeting of the Industrial
League of Orange County. to be held at the Irvine
Mamon. 18000 Von Karman, Irvine.
Ttte dinner mecung IS scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
\n the Rancho Las Palmas Room. Call T.odd
· Ni"cholson at 476-2242 for funher information.
Debate at Golden West
Students for Excellence 1n Education and the
League of Women Voters of Central Orange County
Area will sponsor a debate for candfdates running
for the 42nd Congressional District seat Oct. 26 at
Golden West College. Republican candidate Dana Rohrabacher and
Democrat Guy Kimbrough. wh o are vying for the
seat currentl) occupied b~ Rep. Dan Lungren. will
debate the issues at 11 a.m. in Forum I I. Calr
Caroline Sobelman at 895-8781 or Denese Wecker
at 963-0704 for more information.
Glasgow rally slated .
. The Fncnds of Ed Glasgow. a candidate for the
Costa Mesa City Council. will hold a fund-raising
evening Oct. 20 at the home of Councilman and
Mrs. Orv Amburgey. 945 Coronado Drive. Costa
Mesa.
The session. which includes cocktails and hors
d'oeuvrcs. will run from 6:30 to 9 p.m. A donation of
S95 1s being asked.
Traffic lnltlatlve forum
The Newpon Center l\ssoc1ation will sponsor
an mformauon forum on the Newpon Beach traffic
management in111auve known as Measure Kon the
November ballo~ Wednesda} at the Newpon Beach
Mamon Hotel.
A no-host continental breakfast will be served at
7:30 a.m. and the pfOV<lm will begin at 8 a.m.
Dcbaung the measure will be Newpon Councilman
Clarence Turner and Allan Beek of Stop Polluting
Our Newpon. The cost 1s SI 0. and reservations may
be made b) calling 640-1861.
AIDS issues weighed
. Dr. Michael Gottlieb. a pioneer in clinical Al OS
research in Los Angeles. will discuss his opposition
to the XIDS 1n1t1attve. Proposition 102. Fnday
evenmk at the Re, ere House in Tustin.
The event 1s sponsored b) the Log Cabin Club
of Orange Count). Reservation information is
available at 494-6271
Newport debates planned
Upcoming debates among candidates for the
Newpon Beach Cit) Council ha'e been announC'Cd.
wtth the ne\t torum planned for Tuesda\ at I 0 a.m.
at the Manner's Commun1t~ Center. sp0nsored b}
the Women's Cl\1c League.
Other candidate forums ..-.111 be held Oct. 20at 7
p.m. at the Lido Isle Clubhouse. Oct. 26-at 7:36 p.m.
at the Balboa Ba' Club. Oct. '!.7 at 7:30 a.m. at the
Manatt Hotel and that C\ ening at 7:30 at Great
American Sa' mgs.
Oliver North to speak.
The Zion Chnsuan Center and the Joshua
Generation will sponsor an address b)· former
Manne colonel Oliver Nonh Nov. 18 at the
Anaheim Mamott Hotel. 700 W. Convenuon Way
in Anaheim.
Nonh will discuss commatment. dedication
and personal testimony at th e dinner meeting.
scheduled for 7 p.m. The cost 1s S35 per person, and
ladvance uckets may be ordered by calling 997-8881 .
Thursday, Oct.13
No meettngs scheduled
Friday, Oct. 14
No meeungs scheduled
Irvine citizens will vote on parks
8)' LESLIE EARNEST °' .. ~ .........
In the plannt'd community of Irvine.
1here arc more parks planntd than funds to
pay for 1hem. 'Thus. the Irvine Cny
Council has decided to let r~tdents vote
on whether they wan110 pay htaher l.U« to
make lhosc parks a reality.
. A general obhgauon bond issue wi ll be
placed on the November 1989 ballot as 111'
result of the council's• unanimous vote
Tuc5Qay/ AhhQ\!&h the amount of the
bond 1s unknown at this ttme. the city has
REWARD ••.
From Al
Luby laughed and asked 1f it was a joke.
He qu1cicl> found out otherwise when the
assa1lanl struck him on the head wtlb the
pistol and told htm . ··vou make one more
statement like that and }ou·rc dead:·
He told the couple to get out of the car
and tied up Luby . telling him. ··vou
cooperate and )OU might hve ...
He grabbed Luby by lhe hair and
smashed his face into the concrete floor srx
or se'en times. Lub) suffered a broken
nose. bruised cheekbone and splil laps. He
also required more than a dozen stilches in
the forehead where he was struck "llh the
pistol. The assailant then took a knife or other
sharp object and cut threc-quaners of the
wa) through the Achilles· tendon on
Lub\ 's nght foot. He tried to cut his left
foot · as well but only sliced through the
tennis shoe. Lub) said.
Lllb). who will be 1n a full leg cast for 14
weeks. sa1d doctors e>.pect him to reco,er
95 percent of the use of his foot.
The assailant then went over to Wayne
who was being held on the ground b' his
panner with a gun pointed to her head. He
tied her VP and smashed her face 1nh> the
floor at least twice. Lub) said.
She has had plasuc surgery to repair a
SC\ ere cut over one e) c.
The assailant told the couple. ··You're
(messing) ..-.uh the wrong people.'' Luby
said . .\nd the)' left.
Speculation su rrounding the e\enl in-
cludes Lub~ ·s financial dealings and a
bmer di\ orce between Wayne and her
husband Thomas A. G1onis. In coun
documents. Wa)'ne alleged that G1onis
had threatened her.
Police believe Lub) ..-.as probabl} the
main target because the assailants asked
for him b\ name. He IS em broiled In a Cl \'tl lawsull With a
group of Oklahoma investors o'er a failed
redevelopment prOJeCt 1n downtown Los
.\ngeles.
His com pan~. Founh and Broadwa)
Associates Lid .. v.as de' eloping the former
Broadwa\ depanment store into an office
and reta1f comple\.
1denufied S46 mtlhon in .. potential ·perk
bond prOJCCtS •.
The bonds would be paid paid beck
throuiUt a propcn) tax as~nl.
··we'd be looking at 0011d1na a proeram
that v.ould begin to addrns some or the
needs~ ha,·e toda)'."sa1d Patm1a Fierro,
manager of cultural affairs and pro1cct
strvices for the Cit). "We have compiled a
shopp1n$ hSt. 1f you will. at this point ...
The hst includes only plans for com-
munity parks. which are at least 20 acres.
and not smaller neighborhood parks.
AccordtnR to Fierro. the cit)' council's
num~r one park pnon1y is C'f'tanon of
Woodbndgc Community Park which. 1n
add1uon to its recreation area. *OUkS
include a stnior center, ch1&d care center
and an adult day center. That project
would cost an esumated SI I m1lhon
Other projects stalled for ~k of moMy
are a c1,1c center park. planned for the SS
acres adjacent to the new c1y1c center. and
expans1on of Harvard Park at Walnut and
Harvard l\'enucs. ·
The Community Servicn Comm1ss1on
will provide a hsr of candidates to the
council for a stecnng comminet to guide
the bond pro,Jttt Over tM cornana
month\.. that commmet will ptMr anfor·
mat1on from the commun1ty about park·
related concerns.
Detailed plans and cost esumatc"S must ~in place before the bond measure can~
prepared for the ballot.
In other acuon. the council:-
• nanimousl~ approved a 1988 com-
muntJ)' parks master plan that Wlll become
an advisor) document 1n developing
futuTe parts.
• Denied a permit that would have
allowed de"elopment of a health club on
Michelson Dnve 1n Rancho San Joaquin.
Attorney Cbdatopher 1for1aard (left) join• Ro&er
Luby at presa conference annoanc~l00,000
reward for the arreet of tbe two men who attacked
him and.John Wayne'• daacJater, .U...
Lub' said he had rece" ed a S56 m1ll1on
construction loan commitment from the
investors but onl} rece1,ed $38 million.
He tned to raise the difference. S3)1ne he
went in ··prctt) deep" to keep the proJeCt
going.
Last vear. he filed Chapter 11 bankruptC~ papers and his S3 m1lhon
home 1s on the market.
Norgaard said no tnal date has been set
for Lub\ ·s suat. tiled October 1986 1n L' .S
Federal' Coun in Oklahoma Cat~. but he
expects the tnal to begin w1th1n the next
four months.
Newpon police spokesman Bob Oakley
said detectives are conunumg to in-
' esttgate "all avenues."
He said both Lub)' and Wa~ne ha'e
been cooperauve. and pohce "ha,·e no
reason lo believe they·re not" telling all
the\ know.
Lub' said he hopes to revive the
BroadWa} project and is in the process of
de' elop1 ng a reorganization plan
..
But he 1s able to conduct only a linle
business b) phone out of his home, fearing
for his safety.
Se' era I of has fnends put up the
SI 00.000 rtward for information leading
to the arrest and conv1cuon of those -who
are ult1matel) responsible for this vicious
attack." Lub\ said 1n his statement.
. ~n~one wtth mformatton is asked to
contact ewpon Beach Police Detective
Mike Jackson. 644-3717. or pnvate in-
"esttgator Ha~ Block. 720--01 SS.·
Mesa council delays final action Rep. Badham
. will donate on Triangle Square development papers to uc1
By JONATHA~ VOLZKE
Ot ltM o.,.y ~1101 Steft
.\t1ornc~s and Costa Mesa propen~
ov.ncrs banhng a rede' clopment pro1ect
persuaded the Cit~ Council on\\ ednesda~
lo postpone lhe linal reading of a de-
velopers agreement with the project's
builder.
The council earlier this month approved
the 1n1t1al reading of the agreement with
de' eloper Je~ Klein to build a 185.000-
square-foot retail and business com pie>. in
the so-called Triangle Square -an area
bounded b\ Harbor Boule' ard. ~e"'pon
Boule' ard and 19th Street. '
Klem sought the agreement becau~ he
bought some propenies in 1he pro1cct area.
and wanted a guarantee tht' de' elopmen1
would go through even 1f a pendtng slov.-
growth measure 1sappro,ed b} 'oters ne't
·month.
Klein bought one propen~ v.h1ch no..-.
houses .\d,enture 16 camping supplies.
for SI ~ m1lhon. and asked for a guarantee
that the pro1eci ..-.ould conunue
The opposing speakers . cued a m~
ord1nanct 1he~ contend sa)s 1f more than
half of the pro~n) o..-. ners surrounding a
parking lot tn the pro1ect are against the
prOJeCt. 11 cannot proceed.
Cit) staff could not tell the council
v.hether the ordinance could block the
prOJCCt. leading the panel to 'postpone the
final approval of the developers agrttment
to a special meeung Oct. '!.O.
Ghild:rep' s bus crash inju:riesminor
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
CMIMO..., ..... Sleft
The I'!. ch1ldrt'n hun v.hen a car colhded
"uh their S£hool bus " ednesda) morning
1n Fountain Valle) apparent!> suffered
onl) minormjunesand ..-.ere released from
the hospital shonl> after treatment
"The) "ere all minor. ~ome bumps and
bruises." said Diane Turner. a
spokes..-.oman at Fountain \'alle~ Re-
gional Hosp1taL
The children. "ho attend '\onhcutt
Elemental') School in Fountain \ alk~.
wtre all back in classes 1oda' a school
admunstrator said o\nQther school bu .
operated b~ the Garden (1ro'e l n11ied
School D1stnct. replaced the damaged ~0-
passenger bus on 11s reitular route
The adult dn,ers of the bus and the car
Jn\Ohed m the accident. as "ell as adult
passengers m the car. also suffered onl~
minor 1njuri~ and '4Cre released after
treatment at tlle Fountain YaTie' hosp11al
Mean"htle. the Cahforn1a H1gh..-.a~
Patrol intends to Sttk charges of s~d1ng
and failing to stop at a red traffi c signal
against Tomas Velardez. 33. ofSanta .\na
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Rep Robert Badham. R-Newpon
Beach." 111 donate his papers from 12 years
1n Congress and 14 }ears in the. state
.\ssembl) to UCI.
Badham will sign documents turning
o"er the papers at 10 a.m. Fnday on the
fifth floor. room 5b0,oft~ lrvinec•mpus·
library.
He will offer bnefremaru and sign the
deeds of g.ift. a maJOr step 1n the transfer of
the documents. Eventual!). most of the
tteords will be organized and opened to
thefubhc. •· hope this collcc11on will give scholars
a better understanding of hov. con·
gress1onal 'arid .\.ssembl) offices operate, ..
Badham said ·· .\lso. there 1s a great deal of
h1sto11 in these tiles. espec1all~ concerning
Orangt Count~ "s rc:lanonsh1p wtth the
tate and federal go' emments. but also
concerning slate and federal pohcy m
general ..
Documents relat ing to specific problems
that con utuent ba"e had v.11h the federal
go,emment ha'e b«'n rcmo'ed from
Badham's til~ to protect thei r pnvaC)
Ex:.teacher faces federal
m<>ney.:Jaundering charges
!)omeone Ul\l•d boll \Utters tO fo rct'
their ..-.a, 1010 L1bcn~ Liquor. 17685
Beach Bh d and \IOlt' SC\ en cases of
beer. .\ pJ'>serh' "ho heard a
"1ndo..-. brea~ an d alarms go off. said
three subJt'l tS 11cd the ~enc in a darl-
colored 'eh1de ••• Thie' es uxd a b1A roe~ to break a
"1ndo..-. to a I "ti" onda at p1re·s
res1auran1. I ~ 10 Beach Blvd .. and too~ a pur<,e rnnta1n1ng about S50
('(!u1pment was stolen rrom a Fischer
Street computer StllrC' v.hi'k the
supen 1s0r "as on 'a cation· One
customer m Eurori.· reponrd he
rtcel\ed an empt' tx:i' ln'm the lirm
rather than tht' lap-tl1p , omputer he
ordered. • •• ;\ 28-,ear-old nt.i .\na man "as
mom1ngand $ • .i~o wonh ofpnnttng
propen' was stolen
Newport Beach
.\ handgun ..-.as stolen out of a car
alon.g with the 'chick 's front Ileen~
plate on the 31 bloclofCla) Strttt • • • Burglars hauled ofT a hea') -but
11 JONATHAN VOLZU ..............
Former Edison Hiah School
teecber James Hoyland was arrested
by Internal Revenue Servioe agents
Wedoaday on the same moncy-
la11nderinach&r1C1 that landtd him in
jail last year.
Hoyland, 43, was a science and
bonkulture teacher at the Hunt-inlton Beach hiah school in Decem-
ber 1917 when he was arrested for abemedly launderina more than
SJ0{),000 throu&)l severaJ banks to
avoid currency rcportina laws,
authorities said.
Five can, including a Muerati, a S~foot r1cina 11ilb0at and S 1.3
million in cash and gold were seized
when Hoyland and John Ford, of
lelmont Shore an Lon, Beach, were
arrested.
Jnvestipton would not say what
Ibey belae'ved to be the source of the
money. Nodrup were foW\d in any of
lbe Mllr'Cba or ams's.
a.attapm Beacla •
A wommn \ltd her punt c:on1ainana
S lOO cath and credit cards was atokn
while * wu PIYl"I for ps at an
AM/PM s10tt • • •
Hoyland was released on those
charses after postins $250.000 ball
and returned to clencal work at lhe
Huntington Beach Union High
School District offices.
But a federal grand jUf)' m Los
Angeles returned a s1x-coum indict-
ment IP.inst Hoyland Tuesda .. lead-
ing to his second arrest. The Orange
County charges arc expected to be
dropped. Assistant U.S. <\ttomey
Steve Wolfe said.
''The federal authonties have been
in contact with us all alona. .. Oranae
County Deputy District Atlomey
CraiJ Robison said Wedn~ay. "it
was just decided they should pick up
the ball and run with it from here."
Wolfe said the penalties facing
Hoyland are much more severe at the
federal level than in state coun.
If convicted of the 11x counts
allqcd in the federal indictment.
Hoyland could be xntenM to bO ~a.rs in prison and fined S3 million.
He faced up to a yHr in jail and
S2S0,()()() fine, or l"'lCC the amount
AS 1.500 ~nerator •-as stolen from
a motor home "' the 9000 bk>ck of
Crawford • • • A man said thal a cable from a cable
1n\.Ol"ed. 1f convicted in the slate
coun.
Ho) land 1s scheduled for arraign-
ment Mond3} in U.S. District Coun
tn Lo Angel~. He was held in the
federal pnson on Terminal lsland in
Los Angeles on S250.000 bail.
Ho~land allegedl) used .se"eral
banks and several small deposits to
avoid a federal law the requires banks
to report transacuons 1nvoh 1ng
S 10.000 or more. On two days in
Janu3f'}. Ho) land alleged I) deposited
$20.000 in eight transactions at
'anous banks. The follo'4ing monlh.
he allegedly deposllcd more than
$20.000 in three lransactions.
Ncwpon Beach police tn\CSt1gatC'd
Ho) land. who eamed $44,000 a )'ear
as a teacher. for more than a )Car. The
Lona Buch Pohcc Depanmcnt. slate
nart'ottcs tn"esllptors and
C oa t Guard also "ork('(f on the ca~
The 1nqu1n bcpn •hen 'the 8.anl
of Ne"pon upped off poltet that
Ho land made ~"eral larsc cash
<lcposil$.
causing a po s1btt. hazard to pau1na
vehiclt$ • • •
" rnicknt tt~ n~c shots lhal
apperntl)' came from an Utt of
NK:'hob and Slater at 5.•3 am. 1oda). • • • TV company "1 l)1ftl in the roect-
WI) an the 1600 blod. of Grttn. ~--~~. ...
Laeuna Beach
.\ P1 nee rest On' c resident heard
noises 1n~1de the home ~ednesday
aflemoon and obsentd an 1ntru<kr
-a \Oung man" 1th blond hair and a
musiache. t>-ft"tt lall and 180 pounds.
"eanng a ..-.h11e \-nee~ sweater. gn)
pants and bro" n gardening alo"es.
No loss. ho"t'' er. v.as reponed • • • Je..-.elr'\ 'alued at S650 and about
S 15 cash "ere rcponed stoltn
Wednesda) from a home on ,<\ha
Lagun3 Bouk,ard • • • Officers re ponded to rtpons
\\ ednMa ~ of an tnJurcd <kCf" alon&
tht 1900blockofTempte H1Us Dme.
But when pohCC' an"I' cd at the Sttne.
the dt"Cr "" gone.
CoetaM_.
It v. as a touah -.ttk for bl(')-clt
ov.ntrs 1n Costa tna T..-o rai1'& b1._~ 'alutd at S•.200 were takm
from an open Pratt 1n the lOOO bl«k
of \\ e-s1v.ard . uttt. ano.her ~
taken from the 1j()O block of Gttea·
boar Dn't and"'" one more. -onh $800. was \lken from South COISl
Ptara's pa41na kM. • • • Matt than S 12.IOO '" rompu1tt
arrestecffor a S4'ut11c 1.'n thl' "l.1n Diego
Frttwa\ near Fatf' 1e"' Rl'l.ld afiC'r a
manor traffic accident • • • Tv.o thugs pu hed J ti '-\~Jr-old
v.oman and stole her purse from a
shopping can as she ..-.al~ed to her car
tn the Luck\ 'sparling lot on Harbor
Boule,ard The th1c 'C'' e<;0f'ed '41th $61~ •
Foantaln Valley
.\ burglan that nrned s~.420
v.onh of s1ereo and T\ equipment
toolr. place 11 a m1denC'<' on the I block of Santa Cathennc Strttt.
Wedn~a~ morning. • • • While a homeo~ncr on the 10000
block of Cm o De Ma~o ~•~ct slept
Wednesda' nlJht. someon<' entert'd
the home· throuah an open "'in room v.1ndov.i and lOle a \CR.
ponablc stcro. a lencr and cuh. • • • " blunt instrument v.u used to
unash the ..-,ndov. ofa I qs l Ponuac
Tran' Am late \\tdndda) ni&ht
whtlf tht car~ parked on the 9000
blot't of ad1nt R1,er Circle. • • • Someone dm "" a 191 TO) ota pic'kup put SS -.ortl'I of ps into h11 car
11 Tony:S Shell Wednc1da> mom1aa
and drove IWI) wtlttout pay1l1I • • • P.p Pmn,. .. 11.us ln>okhW'lt
St. WU tnknl 1n10 t'Ar1\ Wednoda
emph -safe along wtth ~me
je"eln and old coins after p1ckang the
front door lod. of a home on Seascape
Dn'e
Jrrine
.\ aun·tottna h1tchh1ker robbed a
truck d"' er of an undetenmned
amount of mone\ early Wednesda)
afternoon after secunng I nde from
the dn,er The dmer of a Niapra
Dnnkang Wuenruck from R1vtts1de
Qlcled up the suspect at tbc comer of
Cowan and Fitch around noon. The
suspect then pulled a sa~-off
shotaun from Mncath his sweater and
demandNi monc)' from the dnver.
After ta.long the monel_. the suspc'Ct
fled the truck on foot The sus~ tS
descnbcd as a white mak: an his JOs..
about s feet 8 1tichcs tall with sandy
brov. n hair and a mustacht. • • •
mcone fired a BB tluoup dW
"1ndow ·of a BMW WedftellllJ .
f\.t'ntn& then folk>Wfd 11p by IOmlll
tM tnure aun thl'OUlta lbc •. EM.
TM incident OttUtftd' It a li9• • aa
tht' 9.tOO block of Jcronuno lloM. • • •
A woman •alk•• out ot IM
M 1tiubiiht lank on M'ttbdloti Dri" Wf'd~ ~n, .... _....
Whm 1WO ... ,.,, .... "'* bU*' a.ad nfC*d ........ .
her. Tiie mm Red• foM.
"
..
er.,. ec:.t DAILY PtLOT/ Thuraday, OetOber 13, 1918
sporty
rivals
debate
tonight
8y 'nt Associated Presa
George Bush and Michael Dukakis
tendt"d to last-minute preparations
for the Stt<>nd and final round of their
prcs1denual campaign debates as
polls suggested that the Dcmocrauc
nominee must deliver a solid punch
ton1&ht to overcome his Republican
n va[
The two White House contenders.
in a day filled with spofts metaphors
-and even a. sponing event -
hinted Wednesday at their strategy
for their face-to-fa~ confrontation.
··Fastball. curve. slider -maybe a
knucklcr." Dukakis said when asked
what he planned to toss at Bush
tonight.
fhe vice president said he hoped to
show the Amencan people "what mx
heanbeat is. what I really care about. •
Neither Bush nor Dukak1s planned
anv campaign appearances today.
Th·e two candidates were conducting
walk-throughs of the debate area
before their 6 p.m. clash at Pauley
Pavilion. better known as the home of
the UCLA basketball team.
Republican nee pres1denual can-
didate Dan Quayle was campaigning
1n Montana. Oklahoma and Arkansas
whale his counterpart. Lloyd Bentsen,
was on Capitol Hill. urging Demo-
crats 1n Congress to wrap up their
session qu1ckl~ and hinhe campaign
trail for the Democratic ticket.
Po lls released Wednesday showed
the GOP nominee leading solidly in
the state-b)·State race for Electoral
College votes. although nat1onw1de
surveys suggest a close race.
Vice President Georae. Baab
wa•e• while watcbln& DocS&en win Wedneeday.
An ABC News-Washington Post
SO-state poll found Bush leading
firmly ,in 21 states w11h 220 electoral
votes -SO sh' of the total needed to
win the pres1denc). Dukakas led in
three states and the District of
Columbia for 30 electoral votes.
The poll of 9. 778 hkel} voters was
conducted from Sepl. 21 through
Monda). Margins of error ranged
from fi ve to I 0 percentage points in
each state where I 00 to SOO voters
were interviewed.
States in Bush·s column included
Texas and llS elec1oral pnze of 29
votes. and New Jersey. with 16
electoral votes. Cahforn1a. with the
bigest electoral prize of 4 7 votes. was
leaning toward Bush as was New
York and Its 36 electoral votes.
according to the .\BC-Post poll.
Ho~ver. a survey relea~d today
by The Buffalo News found Duk,.akis
holding a 9 percent lead over Bush -
49 percent to 40 percent -1n New
York state. including a commanding
62 percent to 28 percent lead 10 the
New York City area.
Political-Media Research Inc. of
·FRENCH
DOORS COMPLETEL l.
INSTALLED
Me=1clauetta GoY. lllke
Dak•kt• toeeed knackleball
wblle relazlDC Wedneeday.
Washington. o.c.. c~nducted the
survey of 8SO registered voters Mon-
day and Tuesday. The poll had a
margin of error of plus or minus four
percentage points.
The ABC-Post poll also conducted
a standard national survey of 1.187
likely \-Oters and found Bush leading
Dukak1s 51 percent to 4S pe~nt. The
survey. conducted Oct. S through
Tuesday. had a margin of error of four
per~ntage points.
A CBS News-New York Times poll
had nearly the same result: 47-42 for
Bush. That surve) of 1.009 probable
voters was done Oct. 8 through
Monday and also had a four-point
margin of error.
Horserace 'polls indicate popular
strength nationwide. but the Electoral
College decides the winner.
Bush called the state-by-state
survev "interesung and encourae-
ing." but said he would stick to ha$
strategy. Dukakis adviser Ron 'Brown
disputed GOP claims that Bush has
the backing of the South, West and
Rocky Mountain states. and said the
Electoral College race is still close.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC •
.... , ..... C...Skt!
1122 llAllll IUI., CISJA IUA-S41-ll5'
We wt11 a1aary vl•lt
your home with a
FREE ESTIMATE
What shall we do about Mother?
Oh, I knew tht:· children Wl'rl' concerned.
evt!n though they re .. pectt.•d my
independence I wac;; conct:·rnl'd. too
This ne1 ghhorhood ha .. hct'n home for a
lon g lame. and 1t "'a""" ca"y 10 get around
when I s111l had m ~ dri\·cr·s license. Now
even a trip to the hatn.lresser has become too
much for me lo manage on my own. But how
do you pack up your life at my age -and
just mm c a war /
Then. one day I happt:ned to see an ad for
In n at the Park in Irvine. I noticed the
location first. because it would be so-
convement for visits from the children ... and
grandchildren. Then as I read more about
the companionship, delicious food. careful
housekeeping and chauffeured
transportation of Inn at the Park, I began to
see how I could really take charge of my own
life again.
But It wa s my visit to the Inn at the Park
that finall y convinced me. The apartment
was roomy enough for all my special thinas.
cleverly de igned with a convient
kitchenette. Jt.was entirety pr1•ate. yet' just
j steps away from alt the companionship and
entertainment I could want. And it was
reassuring to learn about the many safety
features and caring staff on duty 24 hours a
day. Were I could relax.
•
1 thought the children wou ld be surprised
when I told them. but they weren't. Pleased. but
not surprised. They'd been to Inn at the Park
themselves. Now I think they left that ad for me
to fmd. but they aren·t adm11tmg a thing.
They've always been such clever children.
For information or a personal appointment.
please call (714) 854-3766.
ff~ INN Full service
if~ a partments for ;.,J at the Se nior living
ff~ nA DI( 10 Marquette
iww 1-/"'\1'1 Irvine, CA 92715
American Senior Inns . rve Mher commun1hes m
Southern California Please 1ndie.1te which Inns
interest you. We'll gladly ~nd you mrormauon. Ullillcrest Inntrhc>usand OakR
O lrvlne
L .Sterlin~ Canyon Inn, \'alenc11
N1me ~-------~---"----~~ ,.._,,, ... ,
Addr«•---------~---""----:---
---Z•P----______ I'll
•lallff
J 0 Marquette
Irv .... CA
JS
~-------~~---·---.-..--------
Military base-closing bill
OK'd; shifts heat to panel
W~SHINGTON (AP)-Military
betn built to protttl itaettoach
routes from attackina Indians or the
nation's East Coast from British
sunboats may finally be closed under
lqlslation which ttie h ntqon says
could save up 10 SS billion a year. ·
"Conams handed. bearudginaly.
the administration an ax. T1'ey
shouldn't hesitate 10 cut the dead
wood from our. domestic basina
struct ure," said Rep. Dick Armcy. R-
Texas. chief author of the bill.
The measure. which did not in-
clude any Southern California bases,
easily cleared the House and Senate
on Wednesday and was sent to
President Reagan. Who is expected to
sap It.
The Pcn~on estimates that S2
billion to SS billion 1 year can be
saved 1f It i~ permitted to pare down
the list or 3.800 U.S. mmtary installa-
tions.
The bill sets up 1 complicated
procedure which essentially cuts
th·rouah the thicket oflaws enacted by
Congress. l..qjslaton. loathe to per-
mit the loss of jobs which accom-
panies base clos1nas. have blocked
any facilities from beang shut in the
last I I years.
"It's been 28 yean since we've had
a two-term administration of one
pany leaving the White House whit~
the other pany controlled Congress.
said Armey. "Only under-.=ti-
cal confiaurauon could • na
bill like th11 sc1 throu&h Coatrna."
The bill endorses a ~n1110n-
1ppointed ~ommissfon wh~ has
been rneetina for months. try1na to
put t~ther a list of besn to bt
clostd The current pantl would bt
expanded 10 12 members by the bill.
The panel will make its recommen-
datioos by_ Dec. 3 l and ~tie
Secretary Frank C. Carluca~ld have unul Jan. IS -five da ore
he leaves office -to either or
rtJect the enurc list If ucci
approves. Conaress would have until
mid-Apryl to overturn tlK proposal
. .
EPAto·oK
lower-risk
additives
Speci·a1 session planned
to renew aid for Contras
By TU A1Mclatt4 Prt11
W i\SHINGTON (AP) -The En-
vironmental Protection AJenc> says
tt wall define a one-in-milhon chance
of getting cancer as effectively zero.
permitting it to sometimes disregard
a legal provision that outlaws can'cer-
causing additives in food.
Paradoxically. the agency says this_
could reduce the pesticide threat in
the diet by speeding the introduction
of pesticides that are weak causes of
canctr but safer than those being used
today.
WASHINGTON -President Reagan plans to summon Congress i~to a
special session to v<?te on renewed ~ilitaty.atd to the Nicaraguan Contras 1fhe
believes the Sandinista aovernment as ~ov11~g to mop up re~nan~s of the rebel
forces. While House spokesman Marlin Fnzwater, speaking wuh reponers
Wednesday evening. confirmed earlier reports by sou~s that Re.apn h~d
settled on a special session as his conditional plan for scek1~s new m1htary aid
for the Contras. Fitzwater described it as a fall-back pos111~n to ensure t~e
Contras' suFvival into the next U.S. administration. should Nicaragua's leftm
government attack the remnants of ttte rebe! move ment in an .effon to
eradicate it. Fuzwater acknowled&ed that there as. no chance to obtain funher
money for the rebels before the I oeth Congress adjourns. ·
Nuclear test blast shaJces Vegas hotels
Though EPA doesn't reaulate most
food additives, it does regulate
pesticides. Federal law defines as an
additive any pesticide residue on
food that is concentrated by pro-
~ssing..
L.\S VEG .\S - A major nuclear weapons test registered 5.8 on the
Richter scale today and sent a swayinJ motion through high-rise hotels and
apanment buildinJS in thii-gamingcap1tal. 80 miles from ground zero. The 5.8
• readinj at th~ National ~nh<1uake lnformatadn ~enter in <;:;olden. Col~. was
one ot;..the highest readanas from a nuclear test an some ume. accordina to
spokesman Russ Needham. The 7 a.m. blast prompted calls to operators at
sos;ne Las Vegas resons. with guests asking if there had been an eanhquake. The
test. code-named Dalhan. was the 11th conducted this year at the Nevada Test
Site and the 686th announced shot at the remo1e desert si1e since testina bepn.
ALGIERS. Algeria (AP) -After a
week of riots that left hundreds dead,
President Chadli Bendjedid has un-
veiled a series of reforms that be says
will allow Algerians to change the
constitution and bring this restless
nation closer to democracy.
Bendjedid announced the
measures, including a Nov. 3 refer-
endum that ~uld end the only legal
p<?litical pany's grip on power, after
lifting a six-day state of emergency
and curfew imposed as riots swept the
country.
Despite Wednesday's an-
nouncement, however, new rcporu
said at least l 0 people were killed
durina demonstrations in Tiza-
Ouzou. the provincial capital of
Kabylie. in the Berber region about I 0
miles east of Algiers.
An estimated 176 people have been
slain during six days of rioting.
according to lnformauon Minister
Bachir Rouiz. But unofficial totals set
the number of dead at more than SOO.
with more than 1.000 injured.
More than 3,000 demonstrators
and agitators rounded up by police
were being held in temporary deten-
tion centers.
The French news agency Agence-.
Fran~-Presse reponed about 10
people were slain Wednesday after a
clash between pro-and anti-Bcnd-
jedid demonstrators in Tizi..()uzou.
Shroud of Turin's dating
tests sliow clotli is a fake
TURIN. Italy (AP) -Sc1enufic
tests on the Shroud ofTunn indicate
it 1s no moFe than 728 years old and
cannot be the bunal cloth of Chnst.
the archbishop-of Turin announced
today.
The scientists are .. 9S percent" sure
of the accuracy of the tests. Cardinal
Anastasio Ballestrero told a news
conference.
Carbon-14 tests conducted by three
labOratones . put the date between
1260 and 1390. Ballestrero said.
··1 Stt no reason for the church to
put these results 1n doubt. ..
Ballestrero said.
The shroud -14 feet. 3 inches long
and 3 feet. 7 mches wide -bears a
faint yellowish negative image of the
front and back of a man whipped.
Speared. nailed io· a cross and
crowned wath thorns.
Forcentunes It has been revered by
some as the bunal cloth of Jesus and
dismissed by others as a clever forgery. --
Ballestrero stressed the imponance
of the symbolism of the image but
repeated that the Roman Catholic
Church never claimed the shroud to
be a holy relic. He said he personally
saw the shroud as the "revelation of
the face and the body of Christ."
"The church believes an the ima'e
and not in the histpry because this
image of Jesus Chnst in fact is very
interesting and the people believe
deeply in Jesus ... Ballestrcro said.
News reports for some weeks have
said the tests dated the shroud 10 the
Middle Ages and therefore it could
not be the burial cloth of Christ.
Secret Marcos papers tell
plans to become dictator
By Tlte Auoclattd Presa
LOS .\NGE(..E~-Ferdinand Marcos secretly formulated an the 1970s an
elaborate plan to wipe out dissent and seize dictatorial powers while deceiving
the PhihpJ?tne people and the U.S. government. it was rcponed today. The
ousted Ph1hppine president even ~nt so far as to foster civil unrest against his
own aovernment to JUStify imposinaauthoritarian rule. the Los Anaclcs Times
rcponed. quot1na previously undisclosed handwriuen dQCumenll penned by
'Marcos. "I have that feelin.J of ctrtain1y that I will end up with dictatorial
powers tf the situation continues -and the situation will continue." Marros
wrote an 1970. A Marcos spokesman blasted the papers' rel~ as "an invasion
of pn vacy" and said Martos may ao to ~oun over their release.
Deng says '89 Soviet '•ummlt likely
BEJJ ING -Senior leadtr Dena Xiaopina said today China and the Soviet
Union arc likel)' to hold a s umm it ntxt year. accordina todiplom1t1c sources.
It would bt the first such mcetina in 30 yun. Deni! in a rnttt1na wuh Finnish
President Mauno Koiv1s10. also ex~scd confldentt 1hlt Iona-strained
relluons between Chana and the Soviet Unaon Wiii improve. sources in the
F1nn1sh dtkpuon satd. Chana·s Forcian MinittttQsan Qtdlcn 1s to travel to
Mos<'ow later this year to d1~us. thc_propc>ttd M1mm1t bttwttn Soviet
Pttstdent M1kha1I S. Gorbachev and Chutete ladttl. and ii as ttnerally
bthcved Gorblchev wall v1sat kiJ1na neu year.
SIUp HJud by Cuba.a•.•ll• lor NY
MIAMI -Eiltat Amcncant and a New Znlandcr wrrt 11fc and haded for Ntw Y otk City Ins than 1 day after their rMtehant thip carryi"-New
Zea&and's Amcnca'sCuptntry Wllseiml by Cuba in a di.,utc ovn wmtonaJ
,,...,., C11• ldellCld IM· C'ttW memberl tom a.Mdy WedMlday 8ftd
neoned 111t TamP9 Seahont ~·aa lht rKtftl Yldlt 1n19 1nwma1ionaJ
Wiien after ~Ju,. paeepom and •nlPKt ... lht vnect •id Coast 0'*11 Lt • J~ Karon•'-• .
The agency said anti-Bendjedid
demonstrators joined a march by a
group supponing the president, then
moved toward a police station where
police were gathering. It said shots
were fired shonly before 4 p.m., and
I 0 people were slain.
The district governor of Tizi-
Ouzou, Amara Ahmed Salah, denied
there were casualties and said security
forces fired onl y warning shois. AFP
said.
AJgeria's ambassador to France.
Messaoud Ait..Cnaalat;-also denied
on French television that people were
kllled. Any injuries. he said, ·•were the
result of groups of demonstrators
among themselves."
Face tmace tllat appean OD
tbe Sllroait of TarlD.
Professor Lutai Gonella. scientific
adviser to the Cardinal of Turin. said
late last month he was told the news
repons were correct.
Egyptian
author wins
Nobel Prize
STOCKHOLM. S.weden (AP) -
Novelist Naauib Mahfouz of E&Yot,
who chronicled man's search--ror
values an Stories set from the Nile
delta of the l)haraobs to the busy
strttts of modem Cairo, today won
the 1988 Nobel Pnze for litcntu~.
The retired civil servant. who ontt
had has work binned in hi• na\ivc
cou9try. was thefirstArabic--lanaaa11t
writer to win the award.
The 18-member Swedish
Academy. which awards the priic,
c:iJed Mahfoui. 76. as an author
"wbo. throuah wons riC'h in nuance
-now dear·saah.ttcdcdllyy ratlstic, now
tVCX'IUVtl)' ambipous -bas for-
med an Arabian namtivt ut thit
aPOlics to 111 manlund ...
· Mahfouz.altlf~ftl~
habitue. ~uctd 1 baJkeatury of
htemW'C.. Tbc Madcmy laid laiJ woit
··hat meant a po-crf\al u~ tbr
the novtl as 1 pre Ud lbr die
~v~t of die lilft9rY 'r:CW an Arabk-'Pf9k1111 culhanl a
"'The f'l'!ft as. howewr, INI• tun that. H11 ~..-..•al."
II Mid. • MMfOul Mid ia 1 reccat Unemlw.
..lftllf llfl' IO wnw thcMild nw •ve
mt. I want 1lle1 day to bt my..._ .. ______ ,_
Defense to seek additional Sea lions
d • · i 1 •-M M • suffering lSm SSa S.ID C art1n Case . new illness
LOS ANGELES (AP) -~fensc
attorneys an tbe abruptly reduced
McMartin preschool molestation case wckomed the prosecution's
ttduct1on of charges and said they
will push for d1sm1ssal of 60 to 70 per
cent of the allegations~
Superior Court Judge Wilham
Pounders, actin& on a prosccutton
request. on Wednesday dismissed 27
counts. nearly a third of the charges.
against Raymond Buckey and his
mother. Pcgay McMartin Buckey.
Those counts were based on claims
of molestation made by three child
witnesses who failed to testify. Pros-
ecutors at.so sought dismissal of eight
other charges hnked to children wbo
did testtfy. ·
The prosecutton said the absentees
'Were too traumauzed to come to
""Court. The defense contended the
youngsters were purposely excluded
because their testimony was too
bizarre to be behe,able. ·
It Y.as the second tame m the
tumultuous five-)ear history of the
McManin case that prosecutors
moved to substan11all}' d1min1sh the
scope of their charges.
In 198~ alter a two-year
prchm1nary heanng. District At·
tomey Ira Reiner moved to d1 sm1ss
charges against fi ve former t~chers
onginally arrested. He said evidence
against them was ··1ncrcd1bly weak."
Instead o(alleging that 41 children
had been molested. the prosecutors
then scaled 11 down to I 4 children.
Wednesday's alteration reduced it yet
again to a total of 11 children. Only
nme of those tesufied at t~e trial.
Deput) D1stnc1 '\nomey Lael
Rubin said the eight pending d1s-
m1ssal requests are based on "a
review of thee' 1dence:~1ndicaungan
apparent findingof1nsuffic1ent proof.
"We conformed the pleadm~s to
what was tesufied to tn court, · he
said.
~fensc attorney Dann} Dav1s
said he and co-<ounscl Dean Gus will
µrge Pounders toda) to throv. out
more charges. claiming the acts pf
molestatton alleged by at least four
children occurred beyond tbe srx-)eU:
statute ofhm1ta11ons for prosecuuon.
.. If the statute of hm1tat1ons argu-
ment bolds. we'll see 60 to 70 percent
of the case (thrown) out." he said.
"We have a hnle math game to play."
Pounders recessed the case unul
this afternoon in order to stud) law on
the SUbJeCt.
• Buckey. 30. and bis 61-year-old
mother had ~en charged w1th 100
counts of molestation an"d conspiracy
unul Wednesda} Then ·prosecutors
unveiled a new ('Omplatnt which
contained onh 65 counts -51 accusa-
tions against Bucke} and 12 against
M~. Bucke) as "'ell as one J01nt
charge of conspirac~.
The mo'e came after the last
wunesses had tesufied in the 17·
month prosecution case. The defense
1s scheduled to begin Monda~.
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ANNIVERSARY
S~LE
S.\US.\LITO C ~P) -Alrcad) h1t
b) one disease. California ~ hons
are now threatened by a m~stel')
illness marked by sc1zutts so violent
some have bmen offtttth. according
to the Califom1a Manne Mammal
Center.
So far. 28 sea hons stricken with 1he
new malady have bttn found on
beaches and trucked to the center.
located at an old Army fon tn Mann
County. said center spokeswoman
Mary Jane Schramm.
Twenty of the sick mammals were
found on the San Luis Obispo Count}
coast whale others were scauered as
far nonh as Santa Cruz.
Etsht sea hons have died. including
one that had a very high level of lead
JO ltS bod).
Schramm satd the center 1s testing
for lead poisoning as v.ell as arsenic.
cadmium. copper. iron and zinc.
Other tests are designed to find
natural toxins or other compounds in
the food chain.
•
..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, October 13. 1118
.
Arniy's policy on gays
facing its toughest test
S>\N FR.\NCISCO (AP) -The
Arm)'s exclusion of homosexuals
from Strvtee ts unJUSllfied and caters
to "pm ate bigotry." a lawyer for a
discharged gay soldier told a federal
appeals panel in a historic discrimina-
tion caSt.
But the government. dcfendanJ the
ban. said the Army had the ri&ht to
follow "society's moral Judgments"
against ga) people.
lnapackedcounroom.an I I-Judge
panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Coun of
Appeals heard more than. an hour of
arguments Wedncsda) 1n rcconstder-
mga dec1s1on by a smaller panel of the
coun that ruled 2-1 that the Arm~ ·s
ban on homosexuals was invalid.
That same panel also declared that ga~ ·people. as a h1stoncall) per-
secuted group. were enutled to the
same stnct constttuuonal protccuons
against d1scnm10._uon given to racial
ar\d religious mtnonucs lt was the
first federal appellate court to reach
those conclusions.
The laW)er for former soldier Pe~
Watkins oflacoma. Wash .. told the
11 Judges Wednesday that the Army
has no more JUSt1ficat1on m bamna
homosexuals than 11did1n lock1na up
Japanest-Amencans tn Wor1d War
ll
"There ~as no evidence to support
the Arm} 's assertion that all
Japanest-Amencans wefe not loyal.
There 1s no evidence to suppon the
Arm) 's assemon that all homosex-
uals canROt efTccuvely serve the
m1htal)." said James Lobscnz. an
Amencan C1v1I L1bemes Union law-
)e~he Ann> 's oal 1n ~eluding
homose>.uals. Lo~nz said. 1s .. to
cater to pnvatc b1gOtr)."
But Jusuce Depanrnent attorney~.
Ro~ Hawkens said the Army had •he
nght to fOllov. "soc1e1~ ·s moral Judg-
ments" against homosexuals.
"Congress has gJ\en the m1htary
broad authont)' to detennme what is
appropnate conduct ... he said. The
CWlfi ned m1l1tar~ envir~nment
"pro' ides the opponun1t) for
<homosexual) conduct. which 1s d1s-
rupt1\'e." Hawkens argued .
,
POMOMA MAU WT • NEWPORT FMHION ISlANO • SM ORO MSllCll YM1EY • tMMIA lll1S IMll • SMTA ANITA ~ .... WMM
WESTMINSTER MAU • GLENDALE GAUERIA • PW.A DE IA r.MAM • LOMAS SANTA ff IUZA. SOI AHA BEACH
•
Cellist superb in Arts Center recital
Resplendent chamber music of the
h1&htst order transpired at the Orange Count~ Performin1An$ Center Mon-
da)' evenana.
L)·nn Harrell. tht' world-~nowned.
mate knowledat of the ~llo rcpcr-Op. 69 ( 1807-08). After some inl1ial
to1re were Harrell characterisllC"S that mur1untss in the cello's lower reamer
came through clearl y. -due mamh 10 the hall's sometimes
Mozart Camerata
turns baCk clock
By MICHAEL RYDZYNSIU
Grammy Award-winnina celhst who
served as Los Anaeles Philharmonic f nstitute anistic director th is sum-
mer. made has Orange County recital
debut in an incomparably rich. main-
count program ofRoben Schumann. Franz Schuben and Ludwig \•an
Bttthoven. topped off w11h a dessert
of six -count em. six! -encores.
MICHAEL
RYDlYISll
Effonless phrasina and a araccful unforg1' 1n1 acoustics -the cello
h ncism of ebbs and now marked the responded to the occasion with clean.
first pan of Scumann's Adaaio (orig-\lbrant mt'lodic Imes and that res· inall~ Romanze) and Al~gro in A-flat onan1 s1"n1int quahtv lfl 1as1cfull) sp1ntcd fast11on . 1he
M · r c II · · Mozan Camera ta opened \Cl ano1her
Mozan C1mm1a concenmaster
Brian Dembo" and violiQ_ist Kathlc~n Lenski teamed for Moz~n·s
fam1har ··sinfonia Conc.enani.c in E· Oat Major for Violin. Viola and
Orchestra:· K. 364 (I 778) -the
"con~no.··
8JOr 1or e o (ong1nallv French The aaaress1veness continued into scasol'I of distinguished and varied Horn) and Piano. Op. 70 (I k49). The the sonata's second movemt'nt but fare of the known and relaiively
program with conJrolled physical lauer ponion. though. occasionally "ithout the harsh edge. replacing it obscure Saturda~ eveninJ at Santa
mo\'emt'nts that belled an incredibly too stndent in the cello and too instead with an almost ironic wist-~na High School Auditorium.
devtloped technique. understated in the piano. showed fulncss full\' bome out at movement's Founder Ami Porat conducJed the Harell transformed the cello. so 10 ncahh) aaarcssl\ eness and e:mte· end. The shon. slow third movement speak. into a genuine. exceptional mt'nt. actuall.' scn·ed as a prelude 10 lhe all-professional chamber orch strain
bl f 1 ~-h ..... • So · M. r. fi I f1 a class1calh balanced program· of an singer -an instrument capa e o n.x: u~n s natamA inor1or ina e. an exuberant!)' as1-pa~d af-··o,enure.'' "conceno" and "sym-
producmg nea;-human emotions. Ju. Arpeuione ant! Piano. D. 821. writ-fair dis11nguished at one point b> phon~ ... "ith a smaller Jewel of a
d1c1ous use of '1brato. full lepto ten m 1814 for a s1>.-stringed. guitar-shon. rapid bow strokes. ..s, mphon' .. throv. n m for good
t'Xtens1on ofbow. rapid-fire precision like instrument. Harrell sponed ex-~moog the (rt<'Ord?) six encores measure ·(a1:tualh.. man'. good of sp1ccato pla~ing. incredibly wide QUISlte u~r-rcg1s1er pianissimo Harrell offered. Schumann's
Lenski's tone projected more
brilhanth. while Dcmbow's more mello" ·\'1ola pro\'ed a successful
complement. Thetr lyrical mastery
and decepu,·elr easygoing give-and·
take of themt's and motives were
matched b) as~ mpathctically accom·
pan~ ing orchestr~ ..
range of expressiveness and consum· bo"'in& and an infectious!)' buoya.nt. "Traeumera1.. lullab\'t from his measures).
-----------------------------. fast-mo' ing lilt. Smith com-"Album for the Youni." Op. 68. and "The lllustnuos Quant't .. -pro-plemt'nted Harrell wuh solid. rcspon-Fl") de!") k Chopin's Nocturne in• c. iram·s "hook ... as 11 ~ere -included
f>restnted as the first offering 1n the
Oranae Count~ Philharmonic Sc-
ciety's new Centt'nn1al Series and
accompanied with choice t.a.stc b)'
lon1-11me collaborator and fnend
Brooks Smuh. Harrell performed his The "jewel" was Vanhal's ··sin-
fonia 1n ~ Minor." which was
poss1bh rccc1nng ns West Coast
·prrm1ef-t. Sh&hth brooding yet dnv-
1ng mclod1rs and almost Mozartean
harmonies and cadences charactenze
this "minor S) mphon~ ... as suprrbl)
interpreted b~ all Camerata J?layers -e~cepung ofT-ke) horns 1n the
finale.
m·e suppon. sharp Manor -both an transcription v.orks b~ composers "'ho once prr-
Ha--11 ·-m-..a to pour out a re,eal--' th .. ~ull d am· 01 formed together as a stnng quanet: .. ~ -~ ~ -'-" ~ 11 )'n ic scopr Karl Dtn,.rs 'on Ditterdorf (as first torrent of f~lings and moods into the.-instrument using the most econ· ' Btttho' en ·s Sonata No. 3 in A Major. omical of means. noh n). Wolfgang ..\made us Mozart r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiP=Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ( ' io Ii st ) . Jan Van ha I ( ce II is t ) and Franz Jo~fHa~dn (second' 1olinist).
The concen began v.11h Von D11-
1ersdorfs ·· . ..\lkgto for Strings." a
shght work (the "ovcnurc" of the
program) t~atunng c~ stal-clear.
pleasant ,·1ohns.
The JO-member enstmble climax-
ed the e"ening with a fully robust
5, mphon' No. 44 in E Minor by
fia,dn -·the "Trauer:· or "Mourn-
ing'." s~ mphony.
..... 'llL.allTON u.-------__ ...... we•-• -· ... -1 .. -~ .... ·-ff·-·-m-wt "'-99' 1..0 1)1).fftt ~, ... -~ON ..... C>4 LA°'*AMACIO -8"'"AMA
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MOILM (II 7"'"4·1411 ""° llll (t) !MGM: .... UlillC* ..,
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* ALIEN
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STARTS TOMORROW NATION (R)
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PlUICOCllTAll CIU
--..,s--11 ......... W'-1>'~ ........ ~---..,s~,w-•MU. MltNI .,... Pim •EL TORO
Edwaros El T010
S81·9500
•WSSK>H VIEJO ECIWlnls Cf own Valley
364·0120
•SANTAANA EOWatOS Hutton Center
662-2266
IMAGINE (R)
USSJllSJl1UIU
MEMORIES OF ME
(PQ.tJ)
529.5339 U U Z •U 1t I U t •O * IUINA ,AR~ •IRVINE UA MoilteS Eowaros Ur11verS11y *ORANGE C1nedome s~-m3
•*STANTON
Eowants Village Center 891·0567
CROSSING
DELANCEY (PGl
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EOW.,OS CorON 11 Paclflt's La M1~ 279-1160 994-2400
*COSTA MESA
EOWanls Cinema Center
979-4141
ORANGE Stao1um Drive-in
639-8770
WESTMINSTER
Pitlfk:"s HI-Way 39
Drrve·ln 891 ·3693
A clffelfled eel I• en •••Y wey to Hll your merchendl••·
end It'• •HY on your wellet, too.
LIDO CINEMA
fl!Mwport·lldo 873·43SO
llUGM: JOHN LENNON
(R)
5:U -l:Ot-10· 1 S
\..
HARBOR TWIN
Harbot·Wllaon SJ1 ·3S01
CLARA'I HEA"'T
(PG13)
5-•S.1-00.10·00
"-ATOON LEADER
7·~~-
EDWARDS ORIGINAL
CINEMA
Harb0f·Adam1
~3102
ALIEN NATION (A) JAMES CUN
6:fS·l:15.-10.20
CINEMA CENTER
Harbof ·Adam a
97M1t1
IL VIRA MISTlltESS OF THE DARK (PQ13)
6 lO·l lO·IO JS
MEM<>fttll OF ME
ro13) s~ 1:0t-10:1s
RUNNING ON EMPTY
rcu~ S:l 7:JO.
A FllH CA&.LE> WANDA
(R) -Lll CU.TIS 7:0l-t.15
ME SA CINEMA
fl!Mwport 1911'1
846-507!>
All SCA TS SUO
ll!41<,TrJt r INF .. A
~
11 11<" M..-A, 'r«JI ""'' 'U..
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ALIEN NATION
(R) (TIO O<UY STCMO)
5:15-7:00-9:00
SWEETHEARTS DANCE
S:t5-~~·10:30
RUNNtNG ON EMPTY
(PQ13)
5:30-1:00-10:30
MEMORIES OF ME
(PG13) THl SW*'
S1•5-l:l5-lO:JI
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(PG13) 7:•S
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lltJC( WI.LIS
5'1S·7l.S·lD:lS
DWANOA (R) Mm lll MTIS ~~5-1:00· l t.GO
TOWN CENTER
SD Frwy-Brtalol 751-4114
F•M ~•r•tng '" Structure
1 ODA YSHS Ulll'l S 00 ,.,
GORILLAS IN THE MIST
(P013)
11.JO. 2:00.~•5--1,J0·.10;00
TRACK 21(R)
EXClllSM OUMil COUNTY
12 00-2 00·•·00-6:00·1'00·10:00
IMAGINE: JOHN LENNON
(R)
11.45-1 45-•00·"1S·l .l0·10 lO
GROUND ZERO
(PG13)
1 oo.J oo.s.00.1:00.,.00
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Brlatol Sunllower' o••' ,,, '"•
Pedl)'"''"''i A•t1 •
).6& .., , ,
J .. ._..,. "'U "-•'
l d•er d i Mow~et
CLARA'a .. ART
(PG1J)
"15-l·lO·l0:30
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(l'G)MCYIRVING
5:4S.7!4S-U5
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SAU Y fl1D & Tiii IWllS
5:JO.I: 15-1 O:J5
WOODBRIDGE
l:lmrr1nca Perliw1y f 111
' ulnr s~ 1 oe~ ~
RUNtMQ ON EMPTY
(P013)
5:•5-l:lS-10:30
PLATOON LEADER
us.1~rJ.10:•0
SWEETHEARTS DANCE
s:JOJ'U.u5
A FISH CALLED WANDA
(R) IM lll ClllllS
':lS.l:JO.IO·JO
IMAGINE: JOHN LENNON
(lit)
S·4S.l'06-1D:1 S
DEAD RINGERS
1J~30
HUllfTlNOTON TW1N
8eech-llaln~
MIMOfttEI OF ME (PQ13)
HS-1:00-10-00
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7:00-t.30
CINEMA WEST
WHtmlntl•r·GoldenwHI
89 1·3935
GENEltAL ADMISSION 13 50
F'AMIL Y BARGAIN NIGHTS
12 00 TUES/WEO/THUAS
AT ST Allll[O SCllUNI
ELVIM (PG1J) 9.00 ~
...il:ADOYltfACK fl (l'G1x 'R' 7:00·10 45
FOUNTA IN VAL l FY
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ILVMA (PQ11) l:JO
CADOYIMACIC I (N)
l:Jl.lt:H
CHARTER CENTER
Warnar al Beach
141--0no
CltOlllNG DELANCEY
(PG) AMT IRVING
US-1;45-10:40
SWEETHEARTS DANCE
(A)
5:30-7:30-9:30
IMAGINE: JOHN LENNON
J,R) 7: -9:15
PUNCHLINE \:1.c SAU Y flLD & TOM S
i:OO·l:l0· 10:•5
GORILLAS IN THE MIST
(PG13)
" 5:15-1:00-10:30 ,J
VILLAGE CENTER
On Beach Blwd ·2 block•
north of Garden Grove F rwy
991~7
TOOAT S2 95 IJlll 5 00 P II
GORILLAS IN THE MllT
(PG13)
I 1.30-2-00·U5-7:l0-IO:OO
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11 O· l :•5-4.00·&-1 S-1:30-10:35
HEART8REAK HOTEL
12;30·•:20·1: IS MOON OVER
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(R) 12:•5·2:.S·U~·&:U-US-IUS
MEMORIES OF ME (PQ13)
11 :30· l :lO·l:lO-S:•S.1:00-10:1 S
EL VIRA-MllTRE18 OF
THE DARK (PG13)
l:OO·l:00-510-7:00-UO·lO:•S
A FISH CAl.LED WANDA (R) •
n.ustto '"'
ELVIRA (PG·1Jl
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• • OllVl t•S OHM • • ••DAYS I M / WCUDU JI
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CROWN VALLEY CINEMAS
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lll·STAR PCTURES.A.STIW.FUM ~1191
A TRILOOY f1LM PfOOOCTlON •-.RICHARD 8. LEWIS A PEN [WiAM FlLM
"THE KJS.5" JOANNA PACULA MEREDITH SALENGER MIMI KlJZYK N®AS K1LBER1US
.JAN RUBESl.i "WillUt' FCRiESMITH URJCHARO B. LE.WIS l'llSTEPHEN WlK
IRl~l~..;:~=:~::i
S'DlllTS TOMORROW
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NEIGHBORHOOD FOCUS DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, October 13, 1988 CEA7
n
Bouc••
Dream home opened for annual tour
Nurse .
to head
national
g.roup ..
Congratulations to Carla
Harrta, an employee of Hoag
Hospital in Newport Beach.
Harris. a resident of Hunt-
ington Beach. was voted presi-
dent-elect ofNAACOG: a na-
tional organization for Obstetric.
Gynecologic and Neonatal nurs-
"es. She is head nurse of the
labor/delivery/recovery unit, ·
mother-baby unit and fetal
diagnostics unit.
She assumes hernew position
on Jan. I . 1989. and will serve as
president in 1990.
The organization is dedicated
to promoting and establishing the
highest standards in OGN nurs-
in& practice. education and re-
search. and boasts a membership
of more than 20,000.
As one of her present duties.
Harris will travel to Washington
· O.C. to represent the organization
on nursing issues. • • • And speaking of Hoag Hospi-
tal...
William F.CappsJr., M.D ..
begins his yearlong!erm as
Hoag's chief of staff this month.
Capps, a specialist in
colon/rectal surgery, has been on
staff at Hoag since 1974.
He received his M.D. dcvcc
from Washington JJniverstty in
St. LOuis.
A resident of Corona del Mar,
Capps and his wife. Anita, have
five children. • • • Looks like the Newcomers
Club of Newport Beach ended its
summer season with a picnic on
the beach at Corona del Mar.
It was not only fun . but mem-
bers got some work done in the
process. such as electing officers
for the 1988-89 season.
So ... let's welcome Terri
McClffd, president: PaaJa Kruse,
first vice president-programs: Pat
Fox, second vice president-mem-
bership: and PllyUi1 Posner, sec-
retary.
And there's more .. Jeaae Tea·
... ,, treasurer: Sblrley Kroeaert,
newsletter: Doris Fonytll.
gourmet: Ca11ie Coaut, tele-
phone: Katllrya Mallonee and
Miriam Demmel, bridge: Nora Nnmu, hospitality: Dee Epley,
historian: Pbylll1 Bruau,
philanthropy; Barbara Strodel
aH Georgia Pomerantz, enter-
tainment
I \.. '
Delly ..... ,....... Illy L .. ,.,...
Suzanne Skinner'• updated beach cottaae la one of ab homee
10 be· opened for the annual PT A tour. Tlae laland alnk CrlCht)
In the kltcben/famlly area keepe thl• actl•e hoetea ln touch
with her peeu.
BJ KATY BOUCHER
9' ................
Suzanne Skinner of Corona dcl Mar alwa)'S hoped
that one da> she would be able Jo build the house of her
dl't'lms.. Not onl\' was she fonuna1c cnou&h to make that
dream come ·uue -she's shanna It with others.
Skinner's houst is orie of s1x routstand1ng homes
featured this year in the Corona del Mar High School's
l.Sth annual PTA Home Tour. The commun11v fund-
ra1str. which will be held Oct. 25. benefits the school.
··we tr) tO att a cross-sec11on of homes and look for
a blend." saad Pam Howard. PT A spokeswoman. "We
annuall> t~ 10 find a home in old Corona del Mar. look
for a remodel. and tf) to act some of the pted
communaun. Pcop&c really enJO) sec1,,_ a vanet).'
Slunntr's home WUJUSt what organizers of the fund-
ra1ser ~re lookana for. "l.basacally bou&ht \he propen) from a builder and
the plans were already drawn b~ architect Don
Mentelone and approved b) 1he lime I fo und 1he lot.''
Skinner said.·· 1 dcs1&ncd the entire house inside and out
-from ever) flower to ever) carcfull" selected piece of
an work and fumuurc." ·
Skinner ettated a aardcn atmosphere inside wnh
nvtr rock. Italian marble and tons of fresh nowcrs 1n a
ara~ and whatt dn1an scheme.
The"' 1nJ room 1~ adorned '41\h a collcct1on of blue
and '4h1tc chana. and hanaan1 abo\c the fireplace as a
patnung of .\'alon b' Michael Hallinan. who was named
anist or the )ear at thf Laaupa Beach fcs11 val of Ans.
Skinner said her home ls aboul 2.000 square feet -
located on a narro-. lO b) 1)8-foot lot.
"When ~ ou come 1 n the front door you don't realize
wha.:s toin& to happen." she said ··Each Ooor is totally
d1trcren1. h looks ltlcc u would be ltn) " The d1nan& room features a wall size contcmpory-
. abstract paanting b~ Terry Manchester. an award winner
an the recent Ncwpon Beach cny an show
Sk1nntrsa1d her home wands upandaround-threc
le\Cls h1&h . wnh a deck and loft o .. erlooking the ocean.
Her combination of an. rock. marble. "ood and skylights
arc something she ad mus she's' Cl) proud of crea11n'-
Bccausc her 1v.o sons attended Corona del Mar High
School. Skinner said she 1s looking foN-ard to opening up
her home to benefit the school
• The }Carl> home tour 1s more than JUSt a walk-
through oflocal houses. organizers sa)
In add111on 10 1he tours. Ho14ard said a picnic·
atmosphere luncheon 1s ser. ed 1n Sherman Gardens for
tour a~sts. The lunch muu 1s arranged and assembled
b' the PT.\ members.
· "This }ear the presentation offood '4tll be sened an
{Pleue eee DUAM/ A8)
Fashion
savings
designed
· Thank a' ant-garde clo\bing at less
1han half pnce ·
Corona dd Mar's R~cled Rags
offers Just 1hat -and more The firm 1san unusual secondhand
store that takes onl} top quaht~
clothes. furs and accessones on
consignment. Store co-o" ncr Gar) Richards said ol the pnct's. ··Things
go tor an~" here from SO cents to
outer space.·· .\ bcauuful fur coat. he
said. "'as cons1de~ a bargain at s 10.000. • .
However. Richards doesn't take
crecht for the idea of an upscale
consignment shop. Thal came from
his mother. he said
The Newport Beach New-
comers is a club for women who
have lived in the city for less than
five years.
They have a monthly general
mtttin& the first Wednesday at
members' homes at IOa.m. fot
cofftt. or at a local restaurant for
lunch.
Art deco furnisllecl here
··t v.as working as a manicu{!st
"hen l got the idea." said Audre>
Pa uerson. Richard's mother. "l
opened m~ ~op. and m~ mamcunn~
cltentclc staned bn ngi ng me clothes ·
Panerson felt there was a market
for .. sh&htl~ used" clot hang that could
be sold at less than half of "'hat n
"ould cost ncv.
Within the group there arc
s~ial interest groups such as
bridge. book review. and
1ourmet. as well as occasional
couples' parties. Dues are $20 a
year.
Newcomers can call 759-9248
or675-2927 for information
aboutjoining the club.
(Pleueeee ARTISTS/ AS)
By KATY BOUCHER °' .... o""' "°' lt8't
.\ctress Barbra Streisand and actor
Jack Nicholson arc more than JUSt
faces on a movie screen to David
Meno of Corona dcl Mar.
In fact Meno. 48. has hobnobbed
with Barbra. Jack. and other
celebn11es in their homes. Through
his business. he has contact with· the
rich and famous.
Meno is owner/designer of Room
Service. an an deco furniture shop recent!~ moved fo the hcan of Corona
'"'9
del ~tar. ··r opened a shop 1n Long Beach in
19" 3 1hat featured an deco fumature
and acccssoncs... he said. "Then I
mo' cd to ,.\1clrose in 1977 There
"ere onh four stores at the ume.
Mine "as the fifth on the enure street
that dealt 14 llh an' thing 'ansy-crafls~ · 11 "as ,!Pore o(a service street
-11 "asn"l'posh. II had the shoe-
maker. cabinet makers. and ps
stations
"Just to g1'e \OU an idea. I rented
m' storc for S315 a month." he said.
"Last I heard. that same store 1s
rtnung for S4.>00 a month ..
Ho"e' er. Mcno·s designs "-Crt the
talk of the to"n bcfo~ he hll the
trcnd-scuang Melrose .\' cnue. ~
··Barbra · msand actual!> dis.-
co' c~ m> store m Long Beach." he
said. She '43s buildang a house an
Paradise Co'c 1n Malibu. and bv
word-of-mouth. she heard about the
store. "She came all 1hc "a' to sec
"hat I could do I ended up furnishing
(Pleue eee STORE/ AS)
O-"t~.,.... • ..,c.-,.._..
Da...td Meno check• .oat a
floor lamp. ChaJ.e lounge
{at left) ls typical of art deco
furnlahlnga at hJ• 1tore.
She said that she 10,es people and
clothes. and at Just made sense to offer
first qualll} uems -espcc1all~ for
special occasi ons
.. 'I ou "-Ouldn 't come m ~ tO)Ust
bu' classic looks ..,..c alwa\-s ha' e
d11Tcren1 and e\c111ng thing$." Pat-
tcrwn said "Ourclothcurcanythmg
but mundane \\.e know our cus-
tomers and '4e kno" "hat the .. want
That's 14hat ~e !.Uppl~ \\.e normal!}
\C.'ll about QO percent of "hat we bu~ ·
(Plb.e tee SAVINGS/A8J
'Band tour:nament set cit Or8.hge Coast Colleg~ Saturday . -... .
Orange Coast Collqc and Cost.a Mesa High School
will co-host the SttOnd annual South Coast Invitational
Feld Band Tournament Saturday evening in OCCs
LeBard Stadium. Between I 0 and I .S bands•~ ex~ted to participete
in the competition. prcsentina their full 1988 halftime
lhows. The competitors include University. Saddleback.
Cosca Mna and San Clemente hip schools. . TM ptcs will open at 3 p.m. and the competition is
scheduled from 4 to 10 p.m. Admission is $3 for adults
and $2 for senior citizens and children under 12.
Chancellor to •peak
Alfmt Ftrnandet, chancellor of the Coast Communi·
ty Collqe District, will address patrons of Golden West
Collcet at their mcctina Friday at I l :4.S a.m. in the
Community Center on the GWC campus. The luncheon is priced at $6.SO. Membership
information on the patrons. a volunteer suppon aroup for
lbc coltcs. may be obeained by callina Beth Kennedy at
147-SUJ. ·
Coln .i.ow at Irnae Hllton
Over SI 0 mi!Uon wonh of rart coens and colltttibles
wil be°" d,tOlay dunns the Ncwpon lee(b Coin Show,
to bt Mid Fndly lhre>Ulft Sudar at t.M Irvine Hilton and
Towen HO.C. 17900 Jamboree avd.. Irvine.
A91W'nimetdy JOO MlioMI dealers ~nnna all -or coe• collccti .. will be mannirw booths at the ~ Hours arr Friday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.rn •• S.turday
..,. 10 to 6 p.m'. altd Sunday from 10 to 2 p.m. An MICliOft will be Mid Fnday at 7 p.m. ud S.tUl"day at 6: )0 ,. ..
..
Marina Hlgh annlversary
Marina H1&h School an Huntington Beach will
celebrate its 2Slfi anmvcrsaf) at 1ts homccomina pmc
F.nday at 7:30 p.m. at Westminster Stadium.
AU past araduates arc 1nv1t"1 to attend. Fonner
homccom1n1quccnsshould check 10 by callin& 893--6S71,
cxt. 28l.
Laguna.Garden Club meets
"The Crtatfon of a Bonsai" will be demonstrated by
Francis Watan of Costa MHa at Fnday's mce1in1 ofthe ~una Beach Garden Club. to~ held at I l a.m. in the
Ne1&hborhood Conarqataonal Church hall. 340 St. Ann's
Dnve in LaJuna. FolloW1nl a noon luncheon. Dr. Gary James of
Oran,c Coast Collete will prc~nt a slide ~m on M~scar. The aucst donauon is U . and further
information is av11la~ at 49~60.
Children'• prtJ6ram startlri6
Unevttlity Comm-..n1ty Park will ofkr an ewttt·week
PfOll'lm for dtaldftn 2 to 4. stan1na Fnday and rvnnena
throusl\ Dec:. 16. whtf'f duldrcn Wiii Mat storin and
cxpenmmt W1th arts.and ttaAs. The ~m is stn«d at $20 and c\asws w,u meet
tach fndly &om 9:JO to ro:lO a.m Call tM lrv1M
Communal)' Sttvtee1 Orpanmcnt at 66().311 l fof fui1hc:r
1nfonnat1on.
5enlon' 1Jearfa6 alJJJOUIJCed
TM Oran,r County Arm AerncY on Aai"I and the
xnaor Citizens Advisory Council will hold a public
hnnna Fndat a\ 1:30 p.m. at 1300 S. Grand ~vc .•
Bu11dan.J 8. an Sant.a '\na. lnfonna11on from the hcanng will be used to develop
proposals for contracted KTVICCS to ~niors. Call Hope
Haeen at 56 7-741 2 for details.
Medlcal aldes convenln6
The Oranac Counl)' chapter o( the Cahfom1a
Medical Assistants <\ssoc1a11on wtll present ats I 3th
annual fashion show. luncheon and boutiq~ Saturda)' at
t.ht Aarporter Inn 1n lrv1ne. I ~event as the o~nwuon 's biant fund-raa~r of
the y~ar. Tickets a~ s ... o. and many·aGor l'.K'itn will be
awardtd. Call Jackie F1~r at 861 -SSSO or 834-1 303 for
addiuonal 1nfonn1t1on.
Graduate te11t planned
TM Graduate Maftlf'mct\t Record Eum will be 11vm S.twday at Nataonal Un1vtt11ty's O..aec Count)'
Clml"JS. 8 ExttuU\e Cude 1n Irvine. ,..
1k mul~hoett test .. ~ eo-eeneral vm.I aad ma.-mallC'al lk.tUs aaoaaeed watb succeSo11n
tM fine year o( ~-" IMftllCmeRt ~ Tltt ftt IS S26. lftd ~ 1nfonnauon is available at 250-S471.
carttr management v.111 condu t the scmanar The f~ 1s S~~. and'Teg\Strallon ma~ ~made b) phone at 432·5880.
.
'Harbor Hlgh reunion set
The class of I QS8 of ewpon Harbor High School
v.111 hold lls 30thclas reunion Saturday at the Balboa Ba)
Club 1n "'"pon Beach
~lumn1 '41Sh1n1 to partmpate should contact Dia~
Marsac 83tlr' at 641-3353 or Pete 1Ubb111 at 631-7740.
F1re Department dl•play.
The Lquna Beach Fu-c Department 'Mii celebrate
National Fire Prevention Week with an open boutt
Saturda) fro m 2 to S p.m at the main fire station, SOl
Fore5t Ave.
Hchum-fiU~ bllloon wtU be offered and the fint·
10Qch1ldm\ attcnd1f\& wtll have their ptctuta takaa he
with p&rlc) the dot. Refreshments wall be~
Retired employee. to meet
Mtmbm ofthc Rctared P..wiC Em~ AmDria-
hon WIH mm ~t 10 L .. M w ·-Ollis 5nlior
Cttitn an C'oct>u.. .
Dr Jm>mcTobitof'UC1wil.,.Uoe-Masr11I '111
Good Heah.J\,·• tt.e tclllGa d .. 10 al ..... ~
ttnpto)1a.
..
Al OE 0rMge Coeet DAILY PILOT/ Thurldey, October 13, 1988
STORE •••
FromA7
1 major pon1on of her home -inside and out ...
And Meno said the star was grateful
for some rart furnishings he was able
lo supply .
.. , sold her a piano -a very
1mponanl piano:· he said ... ll was
very rart. On the sound board wcrt
more than 40 names of movie stars of that penod who must have auto-
graphed at .•• at panies. ..
Meno said he met Jack Nicholson
throua.h Warren Beany -also a very.
good fnend .
.. Nicholson was also a big cus-
tomer. who adored an de-co ...
Meno said that actors aren ·, the
onlv ones enamored with this style .
.. rve done rock ·n· rollers. too."
such as Daryl Hall of Hall and Oates.
Bnan Setzer of the Stra~ Cats. ··And
then Nick Rhodes of Duran Duran
wanted to surprise has wife with a
special sofa for Chnstmas. He had it
air frtaghted to London the da}
before."
Meno 58\S he's alwa}S loved an
and has bein designing ever since he
can remember.
"1t's imponant to be accepted b)
people who are not onl) cntacal. bul have a good e)e for an." he said .
.. Most of these people (his customers)
art cuhured and ha-.e tra' eled world·
wide... •
He said he's excited 10 be setting up
shop in Corona del Ma r because of
the special people who h\e here -
and he said he's alwa's v.anted to
expand his honzons to Orange Coun -
tv.
DREAM HOME FEATURED ON TOUR .. :
· His store features sofas. chaise ..
lounges. lamps. tables and fo lding
~ns.
Men6 said he denves special sa11s-
faction from crtating something and
knowing that people adore 11.-
··After _providing furnatu~ for a
house in German\'. six months later I
got a letter from· the owners saying
their home and famil } was ,photo·
graphed an Deutsch Vogue. a pres-
tigious magazine there. I thank that says it all. ..
We'r~looking
for good sports
The Dail' Pilot "ants to repon the
spon1ng exploits of you and your
ne1ll,hbors.
We're not looking for news from
.\naheam Stadium. that's covered.
We v.ould rather hear about someone
}OU knov. bowling a 600 senes or shooting a hole 1n one.
Send us a bnef account of the
sponmg accomplishment and a
photograph 1f ~ou ha\l~ one. The
Dail~ Pilot v.111 publish them m our Good Spans column. which wall
appear in Thursda~ ·s Neighborhood
Focus secuon
.\ddress ~our correspondence to
Neighborhood Focus m care of the
Daah Pilot. P.O Bo' 1560. Costa. Mesa. 9.:?626.
o.llr ...... ,...._It!' L .. ,.,...
Stain lead to .econd-floor bedroom aulte, featurln& a
fireplace, floral motif and 18th century antique•.
FromA7
a charming basket." Howard said. A
variety off ash ions will be modeled by
PT A members.
Howard said the PT A plans the
tour about a year in advance. and
selection of lhc homes often comes
from parents offering their houses.
"A lot of time pattnts of children
v.ho attend Corona dcl Mar High
School volunteer their homes. be·
cause ifs their way of supponing the
ARTISTS EXHIBIT AT CITY HALL •••
FromA7
Some upcoming events wi ll be
a "Lunch Bunch" on Oct. 20. and
a d iscussion of your favorite book
on Oct. 28. • • • Photographer Tom Campos
and oil painter Kay Gough are
exhibiting their work at Newp0n
Citv Hall Gallen· through Oct. 26.
Campas studied photography
at Orange Coast College. Chap-
man College. the Photographic
Centerofthc Monterey Pen-
ninsula and UC Berkeley.
He hasexhib1ted at the An
I nst1tute of Sou them Caltforn 1a
and panic1pated m the 1987
Newpon Beach J uned An Com-
pcttt1on.
He'salso P.ubhshed two books.
··First Light· and "Mixed Nuts."
both collecttons of his photos.
poetf}. and drawings.
His current show consists of20
%
images.
Gough received her bachelor's
degree m studio arts at the
UniversllvofSouthern California
and her master's in painting at Cal
State Los Angeles.
Her dream-like expressionistic
oil paintings have been on exhibit
m various Southern California
gallenes.
The Galler) 1s open Monday
through Frida) from 8 a.m. to 5
p.rp. • • • Fro m UCI I heart hat Timothy
Strader, chairman of the board of
an Ir' me-based real estate.de-
velopment firm. has been ap-
J>Omtcd chairman of the UCJ
ChtcfExccutivc Ro undtable'sex-
ecut1vc committee. Theround-
tablc ts made up of more than 50
Southern California executives
"ho meet with UCI faculty and
administrators to discuss issues
that concern both the college and
business communities.
..Tim Strader. who was a
foundingc~hairoftheround
table. has an understandingQfthe
group's goals and mission that
makes him the ideal ~rson for
this leadership role.· said Joba
Miltner, vice chancellor for uni-
versity advancement at UO and
a rfiemberofthecommittee.
Strader and his wife. Susan,
both graduates of UCLA. live in
Corona del Mar.
We lavl&e you to send 11
iaformatioa on commaaity bap-
pealags. We want to ~ear from
you about upcomlD1 events, local
people and neiglaborltoocl news la
general. Send to t~e Dally Piiot,
P.O. Box 15'8,CostaMesatHH.
Mark to tlte atteatioa of Katy
Boucher.
Annual Yield Curxent Rate*
ON DEPOSITS OF
$500 to $99, 999'
FOR 180 DAYS
%
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS
WE WELCO~ YOUR CALL.
1-800-24 7-7197 Mon. -Sat. 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. -·
• F-cdcral rcgulltJOO rcqu11ca a sub&tartial 11\lerut penalty for early w1thchwal. Annual yield blscd m daly ciom~ when
1ru~ is left on deposit for one-year tcnn. Ra&e, yidd Ind term subjecl 10 change w11.hout notJCc. . •
DEPOSITS FEDERALLY INSURED TO $100,000 BY TIIE ESL1C
AMER I GAN
A EEDEBAL SAVINGS AND. LOAN ASSOCIATION
school:· Howard· said.
··Tickets arc S20 and about 1.000
people usually anend. ·• she said. .. And it was sold out for the last five
)'ears -however. it's not sold out yet.··
The tour also includes Judie and
George Argvros· waterfront New
England-style home: Melinda and
Ste,·e Frohl1ng's county-style
Belcoun home: Mindy and David
Grubbs' house: Carmen and Roben
Smith's neo-class1c Mediterranean
villa. and Jan and Roger Scttz's
remodeled contemporary house.
HowaTd said everything about the
tour is planned to the last detail.
.. In the gated community they have a shuttle service for the people." she
said. "In the other areas people JUSt
dnve and park. There's a map on the
back of the ticket. and 1t shows where
you are. including the location of the
luncheon in Sherman Gardens."
~ ......... ., . ..., .......
Office manacer Suaan Weat and co-owner Gary Rlcb&rda
model aamplea offered at Recycled Raga.
SAVINGS DESIGNED ••.
FromA7
.\ brov.sc through the store shows a
sreat \'anel~ of merchandise. includ-
ing designe r labels such as Anne Klem. Valenuno and Ralph Lauren.
Opened almost 20 years ago. the
store's accounts have grown con· sadcrabl~ from me earl~ }cars. Rich-
ards said.
"We ha' e o'er 8.000 suppliers and
6.000 bll \ ers from New York to
Hao,1,a11. ·· k1chards said . "The clothes
ha' c to tx' in perfect cond111 on and
ha' e be~n bought "'athm the last )Car and a ha11.··
Richards said some of the v.omen
"'ho shop at Rcc:,clrd Rags belong 10
S<X'1al or political groups and want to oc 1he bcsHlrrsscd person ·:11 a gn en
social c' cot. He said that's the kand of
sen ice he and has mother hke 10
pro' adc.
His goal 1s for his customers to be
able 10 put together an outfit that will
knock c' CJ) bod~ out. without pa~ 1ng
full pncc.
.\s an example. Richards said a
dress priced at S 1.500 at one of the
more e:1.clus" e shops an town might go for S585 at Rcqcled Rags.
.\nd although the store has a
reputation k>t-cons1gnment women's
clothes. 1ts 1n,entor; isn't hmnca to
them
Richards recent!\ modeled a var-1et~ of men ·s clothing. including a
hard-to-find Ralr.h Lauren Pdl oover·
coat that "as sci 1ng for S240.
.\nd the alread) cheap prices get
e'en cheaper once a month.
Patterson l>ald the big markdowns
occur ~tan end-of-the-month parking
lot part~ held the last Sunda) of e;Jch
month. l
.\t that 11me. all merchandise that's
been there for a month 1s marked
dov. n 50 percent. she said. "We serve
hot dogs and bcHrages and have a
dra" ing at 2:30 p.m. for S 100 wonh
of merchandise.' ,
-By Katy Bo•ckr
Y'all dance on down to
Harbor View Hoe Down
Peaiv ~ ,na.a1•r1 ''~no. orpniicrs of a fund-raiser at Harbor
View Elementary School. are looku1g
foNard to meeung new people -but
the' 're not half as excited as the
children 't'ho attend the school.
That's b«ause students and
parents ronnecfed wtth the school are
&elllng ready for Saturday"s "Hoe
Down and Family Fund-r1iser,"
~nso~ b)· the Partnt Facull)'
<>raan1zauon.
"We have so many wonderful
thtnp planned.'' said Esposito.
~Thcrt wdl be a haunted house.
moon walk. cake walk -all those fun 1h1~ ch1klttn love to do ...
&pouto 11MI one spttial event
planned w.11 be a square dance
dtmoM1r111on b)' profnltonals. and
theft 1 c:onant for p1nte1~n11 with a
profnstOnll c1llcr. Mtehael Hay·
wonh.
Evtr)OM 11 ~komc to p1Mt<'1•
pete. 11.ct HO)t.
Espostto 11id the run will Stan II
l:lO p.m. and to unul 6 p.m
"Udt <'latwoom will hl\C ltl own
booth... Esposito said. "Each with
different games from dans. spin-an.
to a bean bag toss. Ah yes. then there's
the food. We'll have cotton C'lndy.
snow conh. caramel apples. pizza.
you name .n! ..
Ho~ t said that's not all.
.. Children wall be pan1c1patin110 a
pumpkin dccor111n1 contest. with the
Jud11ns at 3 p.m .. " Hoyt said.
"Catesoncs mclude the scanest. hap-
piest. saddest. most patnouc and. of
course. the most 'hoe-down:"
HO) t said it's • rtl~ op-ponunll)' to mttl your nt' bonand
w•teh )'Ourch11drtn have un. 8aldn
a C'lkt walk. toes of IOOdin wtU be
II' tn as pnzes and sold in booths.
"The ha11n~ houte lhouW be
pmty ncn1na.·· said Esposito ... My
S·ltar-old may not to in it. but I know
that'' one ttli~ my 9-)19'.:old es
rntly look1na fOfward to. AU • all.
n's 1 pat tmw and all ~CKadl will
IO 10 our Plttnt Facu ty ~
llOn,"
-8y«-(18111W
... '
Orange Coeel DAILY PILOT/Thurlday. October 13, 1888 A9
Women's self.:.employment grOws faster than men's
LOS ANOELf.S (AP) -Self-
anDloyment is the fast track for
Cafifoinia's wortina women, and
~ployment amona fem~ in the ~market has nearly been cut m half, Oov. Oeorse Deukmejian told a
butinuswomen's confere1H:e
Wednetday.
.. One of the-most promisina de-
velopments is that 1n California,
women-owned businesses. which
now tmertte S 12 billion in annual Us. are increasin& faster than those
M uTu~l FuNos
owned by men," the aovemor told the fourth annual Governor's Con-
ference on Women in Business at the
Westin Bonaventure Hotel.
"Self-employed are the fastest
arowina sroup of work.ins women,"
.the aovemor told de~tes at the
state-1ponsored eyent. • in the put
eiaht years, the number of women-
owned"1rosinesses in CaJjfomia has
increased by nearly SS percent."
The governor said the unemploy-
ment rate for women seckina work
five yean -.o was above 10 pcrccnt,
but c\uTCnlfy stands at s.• pm:ent.
He also o1ed inucs of concern for wotkina women, includina child care.
equal opponunlty for employment,
education and health care.
He claimed California now spends
more than S SOO million a year in child
care services and tax cnxhts, and told
'cktqates he recently sianed into
leajslation a law offcrina w credits to
businesses that provide child care to
their employees. The credit bas a
Umit of JO percent or $30,000 a year.
Terry MWtndy, vice prnldtnt of
corporate commW'licatioos for Pa-cifiC Btu, a c:o-spo1110r of the con-
ference, outlined IOtne of the iu~
fK'ed by womna womm.
..While 1t is true dlat ~men hold
.0 percent of \be middk manqement
positions in America, oruy 2 pcroent
o( the ICfttor man•mcl)t positions
in America•11aJ1111 corporations art
held by women," sbc &1.1d
"And u 1s esumaled that women
and minonty manqcrs drop out of
corporate Amenca at a rate nearly
double that of while men ...
She also said women with children
UOdeT SIX are the fastest &1'0"'1111 aroup an the Amencan labor force. ·
.. Cbili1 ca.re lS an Juue ... and tn our
soc1ety, child care is a woman's issue;• she said ... Fortune mapzine
recentlv said that in spite of 20 years
of libcnuon. we as a SOCJety tend Lo
look to women for the pnmary
re:spons1b1luy for reanna children."
Tbe all-day conference featured 3$
workshops OQ sucb items as bus1ncss
financ10J. contract nq.otiauna aod intcmatJonal trade, wtbch Otu·
kmejian encoufl.led women to enter .
"Oon•t buy this myth that you can
only be a Fonunc SOO company to do
bus.mess overseas," be sand.
. ~
~IN#Mle/I, t~e 4l'l'I~ "' '1Mr 74H /9SS e,&ctk1
Including Ruff Hewn. Albert Nippon. Cambridge Dry Gooo~.
Dennis Goldsmith and more ...
THE SPORT/ GLIFE
J 069 Fashion Island 721-829
..
..
..
6'10 * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thurlday, October 13, 1988
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSAC TIONS
0... P• '°*' LU I CM • 'i.\--ft~
t
THURIDAY'S CLOSING PIUCEI
Stock market advances
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market posted a small pin today. Sttmingly u·nfucd by
the news of a wader-than-expected U.S. trade
deficit l]l AUgtrSt. .
Before the market opened the Commerce
Depanment reported that the trade deficit ex-
panded fo $1 2.18 billion an August from $9.41
billi on the month be.fore.
The latest figure slightly ex~eded advan~
csumates on Wall Street. and ~nd the dollar bnefly tumbling in foreign exc hange. But the dollar soon steadied. . ...
WHA T AMEX Drn
NEW YORK (AP) 'Ocl 13 Prev.
Ao111nceo Thu1J CS.Jl
DtchMO ~ij vncnanoeo Olal tSSUU New n111ns 1! New tows 10
AMEX LEADERS
GoL o QuoTE S
METALS QuoTE S
NEW Y<>l'K IAPI -Soot llOnlettou. met• -TIMtdllY ~ 10300~1'1*~ NYC-a-'
monlll~Wtcl c...., 131 00 133 00 09nlS • pound us
oes1on11oons c...., 1i9 .)()~If pe1 POUn<I N Y Comea 9001
mon1nw ea L.-d 38-•0 c;en11 6 POUn<I
ZIM 69 70 cenlS 1 POunCl a.t.,,..tcl
Tift ~ SJH M1'11l1 W-~le P<-per 11> I
....... • $6 ~60 H_.., & H.,m.,. (only da.l)r quotel
......, S6 no o.-110y 01 HY come. spot "'°""'
CIOMO Weo
-.Cwy S3l'O 00 $3•S 001* 1&111na111.NewYoo
~ SS06 00 $5011001•0101 NY (con111e11 "ellnll"' $S7~ 00 H V M.,c tC>Ol per troy ot Wed
WH AT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (API Oct. 13 ~.-w.
Aovanceo Tilur'fl¥ ~ ~echned ~t 1114 ncnanged 450
01a11uu~ -19,1 ~ew n111ns ew lows 28
NYSE LEADER S
Dow JoN ES AvERACES
NASDAQ SUMM AR Y
NEW YOlltK (AP) -Mott ectlw cwtr-·ttle-counter atoc:ka IUOOlled by NASD. ... it ...... ~
-1,4) ~ -\4 +t -1 --Ml =~
Nation's traPedeficit
reaches $12 billion
WASHI NGTON (AP)-Tht U.S
merchandise trade deficit swelled to
S 12.18 bi I hon in August as a record
level of American u pons was
swamptd by an all·time high in
1mpons. the government rtported
today.
The Commerct Depanment said
that the imbalance between what the
United States 1mpons and what It
sells abroad climbtd by $2. 7 billion
over a July deficit ofS9.47 billion.
The July fi.f,urc hid been the
smallest month y amblllf'C' in more
than 1hrtt years. Econom15ts had
cxpttted an 1n~asc for Auaust, but
the actual result w1s worse than the
S 11.3 billion 1mblJ1ncc m1ny fo1t-
castcrs had 9rtd1c1cd. Even btforc 1hc fiaurcs were re-
leattd. fin1ncaal m1rkets headed
lower bcauK of undw over wt..t the
aovcmmcnt would ttpe>n. TM f>ow
Jones indumial l\'CfllC felJ by l0.2l points Wednnday. 1t11"18"1 d«UM
1n nnrly 1wo months.
The WwktHftf of the dtftnt ...
ctnaan 10 providt ammunition for
M.chacl Dukak11. who has d .. rltd
that tbt '°*""' tredt dlfki11 of the 1980s havr COil AIMl"tC9 milbons of
Iola ~ and r:r:nnn OM of tht paMM fadwn lM lleliln 8dm1a-
11tn1oon.
Vtee Praidmt 0tortr IUlh hu tolilh• to m1n1m1n month·tCHnOnth
venations 1n the deficit. pointing
1nsttad 10 the fact that the deficit for
the entJ1t ytar is headed lower.
For the first ea&ht months of the year. the trade defidt is runni!';lat an·
annual rate of S 138.2 balhon, a
substantial improvement from the
rerord deficit of S 170.3 billion suf-
fered an 1987.
lnd«d. the shrinkina of tht ddicit
hH been the principtl rte.son for the
bcueMhan-expectcd economic
arowlh so fat this ~Ir. Eronomi.sts
attnbute about half of ovtnll arowth to the 1mprovin1 trade deficit.
U.S. cxpon$ row to a rtcord level •
o( S27.SS billion in Aups~ an
increast ofS I .Ol billion over the July
level. After sufftrins hard timct from
mid-1984 throuah 1986. Ammcan
anduslf'Y has been enjoyanaa boom as
tht lo~ value oft ht dollar bu mack U.S. aoodJ competitive once ipln on ovnsen ma~tts.
But. unfonunatcly. tht wabf'
dollar has not Md lftudt ....... ift .aowina Amtrican1· apprbtc for im,.
porUd ~ c~ tbouP Ibey now
C'Oll more
Ana)ylb hllvt Mid thlt thr ~
has teen nous • ma ol an
impro'YftM'ftt II CU tit = frotn ~ taPG"-1 ad I shnnkina an ovrnll drftdt IMM
omar ~nail 1mpona belin IO fill,
A$10,000date
to help fight CJ~
BY KAREN REED Johns0n grew increastnJ1'' more o-.,,....c....--1 l'mbarrassed. clutching t1ghtl~ 10
The h1dd1ng \\US going on n iccl~.
Cclebnt> aucuoneer Ed Anold (of
tele' 1s1on spon scas11ng fame) was
husthng thecro \l.d forihc highest bids
possible for the near!~ 40 bachc:.lors
and bachelorcues aucttoned ofT dur-
ing the first C~stlc f 1bros1s Gu~s &
[)()lls Auction Gala.
Then HtlH JMllson, executive
dutttor for ..the-Otange-C~t~-CF·
Founda1ton. am ' cd on the auCIJon
block. Cheenng "as enthusiastic. but
the bidding stan cd ofTat $50.Just as 11
had fore\ Cr\ One else.
-\s the SCSSIOO conunued. hov.c\Cf.
her dale pacltagc (an all-1ndus1,c
"eekend trip 10 San Francisco "tlh
tickets to the Rams/49crs game) "as
upgraded dramaucall~: Bobby Atkins
of .\tkins Lt\Cf\ added lt mo ndes
(incl udi ng Dom Pcngnon) and
$1.000 cash~ Randy Blackwood thrc"'
in a set of golf clubs. Contmcntal
Capital Credit offered 1bc1r pn ' ate
plane: Linda Bentley ("ho dressed all
the bachclorcu cs in stunning designs
from her Ncwpon Beach shop) prom·
1sc(l Johnson a designer dress: and
Eva Mau added S300 more for
Helen to purcha~ add1t1onal clothes:
and the bidding edged into the high
four-figure area.
Randy Blackwood meet•
date tiuyer Zoe Slmeneon.
>
cscon Vince Ferra1amo's arm (he
and "11C Jody l'sconed all the auc-
11on,•ei.J. as three sentlcmen balllcd
oq;r the ··pnze ·· Ft nail\. the bidding
"as O\ er. and a shghtl~ (,, e~helme<l
Dao Wiicox too~ the enurc package
for a pmancc -S 10.000.
Going into thee' ening. benefit co-
ch:mman Sberry Anderson ant1c1·
pated ne1 proceeds "ould reach
'.S~U.000 to suppon the research and
programs of the C' F Foundation. but
that ''as Ix-lore Jotrn¥)n's price tag of
SI0.000.
.\ndrrson "as pleased "1th the
turnout fo,. thtS the ftrst C\ cnt of tlS
kind sponsorcJ b~ ( ~sue Ftbrom . .\
bachelor bid ''as held 1hc v.ecl.. pnor
b' 1hc Los .\ngclcs Chap1cr. and
afthough succ-rssful at S~0.000-plus.
.\ndl·rson knc'' going tn 10 the
Orange Count' C\Cnt 1hc' had
alrcad' e\cceded the funds ra1.scd.
The· po1en11al bachelors and
bachdoreucs -all professionals
from the Orange t oun t~ area -"ere
ncn ous. ( o-rha1rman Black"ood.
paced the floor pnor to aucuon umr.
His package. "h1ch tnluded a full se t
of golf clubs (he 1s VP ofcommunka·
ttons for P1nseckerGolfCorp.). and a
round of golf" tlh tclc' mon's ··Scrab-
ble .. and "LO\C Connection" host
Chuck Woolen. "cn1 10 Zot
Simenson for S675 (no" that v.as
more the a'cragc btd pn c-c).
-\lso auc-ttoncd olT 10 the sp1mcd
cro\\d \\ere Tim Cromwell (spontng
bnght pink h1gtr rops' and a muh1·
colored ttc and cummerbund v.11h his
Ging1ss tu~). former lootball hero and
no" count!"\ singer Jt ff ~vtrson (in
1eans. co"bo~ boots and tu'(edo
Jacket): ~ogun queen Heidi Mllltr:
aide 10 Sl'nator John Se' mour
Cbarlie Wilson, coupled "tlh · upcr·
'isor Tom Rile' ·s e'ccutt' e assistant
Cbristie McDaniel tor a "cckend at
Lake T ahoc: Caryn Buckenberger
(\\hO offered dinner and Michael
Jackson concert tickets): Rams Train·
er Garrett Git mont; and Rams
hnl·backer M'l Owens.
ftckelS \\l're $)6 prt.'·SUIC. $~0 at
the door. and some 400 hustled
en1hus1asttcall~ into the Re1us11')
PEOPLE
Dellp ..... ...-.,. ...... .._
S 10.000 bidder Daq Wilcox (center) with Helen Johnson
and auctioneer Ed Arnold.
Linda Bentley, Ga ry Werkmeister and Sherry Anderson.
Hotl'I''> ballroom \\omen \\ere 1n the
ma1onl\. ho~e' er. and the shortage
ol men madl.' 11 morl' ot a challenge for
-\mold tu_ Jur t ion o ff thr
bal.'hclorl'I h:'>
( omm11tcc members ha' 1ng run a
smooth and "ell organ1Lcd l''ent
1nd ulkd Regina 8ell, 1'oreeo Busku,
Barbara Cieeb, Haidu Daglisb.
Michelle Fraile). Laurene lrino,
Marilyn Kanarek. Bill Lilly. Debbie
Mclaughlin. Carleen Myers, Carol
O'Regan. Lois Pallson. Jack Ring·
qu ist. Jo) ce chnepp, \' alerie
SimpiOD, Barbi Sinasek, Tracey
Walter. Barbara \\ardt and u.san
Zazul ak.
Mother's sacrifice a true act of love
r>E~R \ ~....; l \:"DERS· Rccen1h
I mad~ the dec1s1on to g1' c custod~ or
m' three children tom' C\·husband
The responses r, c goucn from fam1l~
and friends ranged from msens1lt\C
to cruel. Soc1ct\ seems to assume that a \\Oman" ho doesn't ha\ C'CUSIO<.h of
hcr..cluldrcn...docsn ·1 lo' c them." r
that she 1s a child abu~·r
r'c been asked. ··Wha\ did \OU do
that "as so tcmblc that \OU ~crcn 't
allo\\cd to ~ccp ~our childrcn'l .. Jam
appalled that so man~ people rush to
make a JUdgml.'nt "'lh no info r-
m5t1on "hate' er
M' former husband earns l'-'tC'e
\.\hai I make.' I could nc,er ha'c kept
m~ fam1I~ going on m~ carnings.c,en
with child suppon. He 1s JUSl as good
a parent as I am. in SOIJlr "a~ s tx•11cr.
Wr both lo' e the kids Thcv arr as
comfonablc "' 1ng "1th htm· as 1hc~
\.\OUld be \\Ith me
Let mesa' this 10 thOSl' "ho ha'e
the nen C lO as~ \UCh a QUl'SllOn 'I' OU
re not cn111lcd to an ans"cr It's none-
of \Our business. Plerisc. don't be so
quick to pass1udgment until \OU ha'c
"alkcd in m~ shcx\
A1111
_Luaus
I don't need counseling. l"\I.' alrrad~·had plent~. If 11 "ercn"t fort he
counscl1nganLI thl·rap~ I \\Ould ne'l'r
ha'c had thl'l'ouragr to do "hat I dtd
It sa'cd m' life. ~ KL. I ~ MIL· \\'~L KEE ..
DEA R ~ttLWAl'KEE: I am sure
you speak for milllons -a~d they are
grateful. Often tbe motber wbo gives
up eustod) ls performing tbe most
heroic act of ber life. Such women
deserve praise, not criticism and
scorn. Thanks for a splendid contrlbu·
tion to tb is space. • • •
DE--\-R -\'\~ L'°':"tDERS: .\ le"
da~ sago. I 53\\ a ~oung \\Oman 1n her
m1d-20s 11.'a' ing a restaurant I "ould
not ha' c nouccd her l'\Cept for one
At Brandon's,
I had · the
1
Sau teed
Jumbo Prawns
and Prime Rib
Special
-for only $14.95!
Brandon's is featuring aged. midwcstem corn·f'-ed prime
rib of beef, lowly roasted to perfection ~ succulent
jumbo prawn saut~ in a sauce of garlic. white wine and
butter. rvcd with your choice of a fresh spinach salad
topFX-d with hot.bacon d res ing or soup of the day, savory
wild rice pilaf, fresh seasonal vegetables and warm
'sourdough broad . All for Sl 4.95 per person.
Offer vwd through ~t~ 31, 1988
IH~ Hl:\'fW,I) HERfl...._.t'. 1-t.. TH •
..
,_ . ..,,"' .... ,.,,,,.... .., ..
1800 Ba rb« w e. Mllptt.U (Q ) 432-6311
3150 Avt'l'U<' o( tht Am. Costa Mes. (71 4) 754-1300 •
Rncrv1ttom rte'OINnended
Adpc<'f\t to tht Beverly Hentage 1 lotel.
ec~-~=:===--==
,
thtng -'hl' "J'> "l'Jnng a dn.'~~ mJLll'
t'UI ''' Jn \ nl\'rllJn tfag II "J'> a
\lnlpk "rJp-aruund "''k "h1lh
mJdc OH' thtn l.. that 'hl' prn~.1oh
mJLll' 11 ha,dr
I "J' ra1,,·J .11J11nw "hl·n thl· 11Jg
"·'' hdd m h1~h re~.mi It" J., al" a',
tal..l•n tn Jt 'un'l't antl har1clktl "1th
grl'Jl \Jr\ \11 lhJI II Ol'\ a IUUlhl'd thl'
ttWU nd, I 1 \l"l'nl'> Ill ml' that thl'rl' arl· la"'>
ltmt amn1t inJppropnatc tfl'atmcnt ..
or thl' tlJg \\ h.it arl· thl' ix·nalue!> lor
ahu\tng < >IJ (1lM~ .l\ tht'> \h>mJn
J 1J . -R If (I 'f H
DEAR RH G.: There are penalties
t ftnt and 1mprisonmeo1 1 for bun11og
or dthltng the flag. but tbe \.\Oman 10
t-he flag dre s broke no la" be did,
ho" tHr . sbo\I, poor taste and a lack
of respect for tb1 proud S) mbol of
freedom. I hope she ues chis and
giHs that dres a "m1htar~ funeral."
•
Obs olescence sets in ea rly
It \oU llu ' a gr,·\·nhllU\I.' toda' 11
\\lln t tx· l:l1gl·nough J \l."Jr from no''
II 'IH• l:lu' J u'mputcr hJ1J-J1\l
Jn',. 11 "''n 1 tx-big enough. l'llha
\\ h1lc \\Jtltng i§;1uplrp.hl'> cnumcr-
Jll' .11l 1hl">I." thinth that '>O ~oon "on·1
t~: lltg \'Oough ~ltp l td'>. d~11h1ng
l 00 ,1b\ ll•U\ \tJrl "1th OHHOfl \Ck
do,,·t en, ,d,1J'l\:J1a. garage d11na
,Jh1m·1 ~'JI .ind phl>IO album
l l ,11 ,,1 ~" 'l urlo. t 11~ pohH'
otlil,·r., Jl'' l·lnp hcan twutik 11'<,
rqh•rll'd It ' .ll'l' r\·portnl _ 1ha1 an~
'l'" \ ,1rl l ll' police olllll'r "ho
di.'' dt'P' hl'Jrt trouhk ,·an d a1 m ,·11mrx·n,.11111n IPr .1 wti-n.:lateJ J,,.
.lhtlll \
dlrn , .. onH 11ul "l·ll I n, i.. "'\'U ,an·1
tndUlk lhl• \\Jll Jf'C\Llnd lttl' \\lndC'f\\
1n \ll UI n p1l\U(l' rl'.1d1ng It \l\U do
\\\\I till\ l'f\'\P'l'\'
In n'nll'll'rll'\ Jround 7,·rmall
\\\ttll·rlJnJ Jrl' ttr.l'l'' mJrh•J "•th
.f'll\ l..J\l'" 1•1d , lt mti1ng flll'l\.''
\n:t l'\ ' J " n 100
<J HO\\ OlJO\ 111 lhl JJ ... l1ght-
huu\4.·~ in th\ l Oltl·d \t.111·, arl' \ltll
mJnn,·d "' .,_,.,·per''
\ E:k' cn liut thJt 'tn l nJ 1n I ~~'1
\II" ·II hi.· .1ut1•mJll.'J lh\'f'eJlll."r
'\oml' bJJ' n,;,, "'II Sl'l' trl'1.' .,,1f1 dnn ~' tl' an' ~1J' 1Jl·nt1lil·d J' the
· dl''>1gn.11c<l Jrt\ rr Jlll•lllf"Jn\ tng J
hquor Jnni..,·r
• LIDO VALISE
CUSTOM CANVAS LUGGAGE
~ ~~
THE FALL/WINTER GETAWAY
SALE
• UP TO 60°'o OFF ALL STOCK LUGGAGE
• 20<\> OFF AL.L CUSTOM ORDERS
OCTOBER 1 0~20
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Ociober 13, 1988 All
HoR oscuPl
-"-----•
Frida\. <ktober 14 •
8) YDSEY OMARR
ARIES I \t:m h ! 1-.\pnl 19) \\hat had ~·n monbund "111 ' come 10 hfc."'
h.xus on chalknge. cont11ct. dash of ideas Tra' el opponun111cs "111 be
<U.ll\3ll'd \tcmber of opposite SC\ encouragt"S ~ou to read ""'l'
(ommuntl'ate
TAURUS 1 .\pnl 20. Ma~ ::!0) enano tHgbhahts 1)uuks m'stcf1 .
dct{'Cll\t' "Ork Emph!S!S on rest'arch. 1n,es11ga11on. rcah1auon that
"something 1inanc1ar 1s being "tthhcld. Dig deep. take 1n1t1a11,e ·
GEMINI 1 Ma~ !I-June 20): You·11 get backing of one fam1l1ar ""h la~.
Emphasis on pr~sure of deadline. respons\blln .. -strong lo'e refa11onsh1p
' ou·111x-asl..cd \o sign agreement. Manta I status will also command auentton.
CANCER (June~ I -Ju l~ ::!:!): Be d1ploma11c but be sure othl·r-s kn o" }OU
arc not "nhout alhes. Talk soft l). but cari: big stick. Message "'II become
1nncas1ng1' clear. Focus on emplo~ ment. dependents. baste nghts
LEO dul~ !3-.\ug. 22). fa, orable lunar aspect coincides " 11h charisma.
erca11' 11~. dtSCO\('I'). SC\ appeal. You'll make fresh stan. man~ "''II com men\
on ~our ab1h1~ 10 represent tnformauon 1n pro,ocatt,c. entcna1n1ng·manner
VI RGO I .\ug. ~3-Scpt. ::!::!). Deal gmgerh "1th famil~ mcmlx'r "ho
H'lcntl\ complained that. ··M, hfe is so routine and dull." Check details.
proh..'Ct propen~. do \I, hat ~ou ean concbful'!.$ restless relallH'
LI BRA t~.'pl ~3-0ct. ~::!). Keep opttom ppen. e\pand penonal hon1ons ..
ommun1cate ideas hon trtps. 'ISll~ surprises are pan of scenano Close
rrlatl\ e. poss1bl~ brother or smcr pro' ides ke~ to dilemma Gcm1n1 •n' oh cd
SCORPIO l<At ::!3-No' ~I ) ~1one~ that had been .. m1ss1ng" v.1llbe rl'lO\~rl'd. Let others kno" ~ou ha\e facts figures anq don't 1n1rnd to torg" e
and lorgct ~trong stand 1s neccS\31'\. '-'Ill pro'e bcncltl 1al
SAGITI'ARIUS t:-.:o, :!:!-Oct ~ 11 Moon 1n ~ours1gn al·cent'> pi.•r!>unaht~
l hamma. lOrrl"Cl JUdgmcn1and11m1ng \fan~ "111 rnmmcnt on ' our appard
~l·n\·ral appl.'arancc. ~' appc-al hort trtp ma~ be part of l.'\C1ling su·nano
CAPRICORr-i C l.A'C' ~~-Jan I 'II Dome)t1c :idJus1mrn1 fea1url·d rl·modl'l-
1ng ol homl· ba~ dminct p()ss1b1lt 1~ Fcx us Jl!.o on dl·altogs "1th 1m111ut1on'
\pcual 1ntere.,t groups Rcfu~ 10 bl: dtsturlx'd b' innuendoes
AQLARIUS tJal). ::!()..F.ch I ). Looi.. bl'' ond the 1mmed1a1e gl't hadstage
''''" rl':lhtl' ~ou Ka',. man~ lnendr, 1n high plat~l~ l 11h1e po"l'n ol pi.•rsua'>ton. push fo f".\ard and dl'linlll.'h ··prl''>'> 'our luci.. .. P1sce') pla~s rok
PISCES t I ,•b. I 'I· March ::!0). \ ou 1hough1 pi.•rhaps 'ou 11.crl' forgotten b'
P\)"\'r'> that be. 't ou learned d11T<·ren1I~ -profitable ·.issignml·nt featured.
promotion. a~' ancement pan of scrnano Ltl\ r rclattonsh1p tn tl•ns1fies
If OCTOBER 14 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY currrnt r~cle highlights lhange.
1raH·I. \artct~. crcatt\ 1\~. possible add111 on to fam1l~ Relationship 1s ~nous.
l'm phas1s an IO\<.' and marriage. publishing possible acll\ll~ connected "llh
thl.' media ucm1n1. Virgo. agtllanus people pla~ important roles tn ~our ltfe.
BR IDGE
BY CHARLES QO~EN
AND OMAR SHARIF
Bo1 h vulnerable. South deals .
. O RTH
+ K 6
8 s J
.. A 10 I 7 5
• 7 6 2
EA'T
• 8 s 4
WE T
+Jl09 7J ·
Q 10
J 6 4 2
K J 9 2
9 3
• J 10 + K Q 9 S
OC:T H
+A Q 2
·A 1 6 4
K Q
+A 8 4 3
The bidding.
outb West
I + Pass
2 ~T Pass
Pas Pass
~onh
l
J ~T
w 1
Pu
Pass
Opening lead. Jack or +
Folio" !he pla) br 1h1~ hand '\t
the end. deci de who. if ao,one. i guil1~ o f an error. ·
W11 h his balanced hand. ou1h
elec1ed not 10 bid his ~ ma1or
su11 in fa"or of the de 'rlPll\ e 1ump
to t"o no trump onh') ra1se to
game "as au1oma11c
v. est led the rop of ht~ ~pade e-
ACROSS
1 Strano
6 Nonsense
10 Sall supPort
14 Hano aroond
1 s Span1sn t1111
16 ·A or
AO
17 Poplar
18 Met1s leader
19 Lade
20 Santa -
22 Fallacy
2• Volcano
26 Condemns
27 tnh1b1ts
31 Bloodsnot
32 Crippled
33 Beverages
35 Pronoun
38 OfougMy '
39 Blase
40 Weather word
41 However
42 Ancestors
43 Montreal s
arena « Carnoe
45 Liners
47 Shrieks
51 Bon~ 51 Copses
S. Prudent
58 Cur11ng
palace
59 RostM
2
\7
20
3
27 28 29
32
38
41
61 Oay·s march
62 Instead
63 Lamb
~Dwarfs
number
65 Nettle
66 Depress
67 R1notet
DOWN
1 Qece.\
2 Itinerant
3 ~·tchen un11
4 Mlllgated
5 Etevated
6 Forbid
7 Str009-
smeo1ng
8 He>ne
9 Yelled
10 Congregated
tt No vol~s
12 Snub
13 Commun•\les
2 1 Massachusells
ca~ 23 Amerindians
25 Fighting
27 Fun
28 Unique
29 Give olf
30 P1aces
34 Aefll!S
35 8 011
36 T 1m~ penOd
3~ Trees
5 7
quen es To preser"e an entry to
dumm). declarer -.on 1n the closed
hand. He had e1gh_t fast 1riclcs. and
the obvious place 10 establish a
ninth was tn diamonds. So he
ca hed the kmg-queen, crossed 10
1he letng of spades and tried the ace
of diamonds. Smee these maneuvers
did no1 drop the Jack, declarer had
no "a) to fulfill his contract.
Ha\e you reached a verdict'?
Declarer was guilty of a major
lapo;e m technique. His.line was cor·
rcct 1r he needed five tricks in dia·
moods. bu( he required only four.
Wuh but one side enuy to dummy.
there -. a a far superior line 10 es·
tabhsh a fourth trick.
At tncl t"o. declarer should cash
the king or diamonds. then ovenake
the queen w11h the ace to l ead a third
round of the suit. That gives declar-
er thr~aftttS-to-sct-up a fourth
tncl.. m the u11 : I . If the diamonds
are 3-3. 2 1f either defender holds a
~tngleton or doubleton 1ack; or 3 if
e11her defender holds a singleton or
doublecon 9! In the lauer two ca.s.es.
declarer )tmpl) forces -out-the i:te-
fe nders' remaining tugh card in the
uu and he still has the long of
spades a a du mm) en tr) to cash the
C'\tabh'ihcd cards in the sun.
PftEVIOUS PUZZl.E SOl.Vf'D
39 Stewed
40 Business 50 Roman machlf'e
<12 Drench oar"'-nl
43 Most 1us1 53 Tenuoos
4A Nibbled SS Presented 46 Brown;e
47 Spread 56 Primates
48 Vocuna laod 57 Carmtra pan 49 Wun 60 En!Old
8 10 1, 12 13
16
19
) • •
,
I
l
Al2 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thursday, October 13, 1988
THE FAMD,Y
CIRCUS
J '
"Was ·once upon a time' when you
were little, Grandma?"
M .ARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
' ~··· ·....;. •• • • 1 ••
"Do you want to go outside?'
PEANUTS
.
l
f
t • ~
~ ,,_
-~ . n ~~·u .<&...~
§........._-
!"
"DR . f ~AN KEN.STE i N
R.VNS 0 UT o ~ BEAKER 5.
MR.WILCJ:>N SAID KE'S TRADEOME FORS£ AE
KIO ON 11-iE NEXT BLOCK~ '1 •
by Charles M. Schulz
OKA'f' .. RA'1'MOND MAS
6t<OU6HT TME WIENERS,
WOODSTOCK T14E BUNS ..
AND I SEE CONRAD 15
5ENDIN6 IN THE ..
.. WIENER FORK I
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
I 601"r.A R~Ft>R'f 1l-l~I FOOHAWK'
WAIE:RHOL£ No. ~ HAS oorur=
~! a4UK r1' Ol.J"r! __.....,........._-A,
DRABBLE
ROSE IS ROSE
t PONT ~ow .t
\W'VIM'RJ ~ Mllf CRITIC
WIOJE ~ ~/
l .
1),J, ,,/ / /,E ... ;
o -t ]
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
.... by Pat Brady
ARLO AND JANIS
SHOE
~ ME.. 5!R1 W~T
EXACTL.'< I~ IN ilh~
CA~f<DJ..E?
JU9GE PARKER
I THERE'S A NICE LOOKIN ' GAL WITH A B IG S M ILE HEADED TH?S
WAY, CAL / COULD IT 6E YOUR. DATE? ~~~ -~-=~~r
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
SO THAI NElA.l GIRk. S NIW.
15 ANGIE. SIMPSON , HUH 2
DO QC>u KNOW IF SHE'S
GOING wrrH. AN4'BOD'r> ~·
DOONESBURY
..
I ~------------""=·-
by Jimmy Johnson
Jf.f ~!»f 1 (At.)~
~&()[)YI
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Ooux
HAVE A SEAT AND I'LL HAVE THE SAME l GIVE THE BAR-' AS YOU ... BUT BEFORE TENDER YOUR I $IT DOWN. YOU'VE GOT I DRINK ORDER , SOM&~HIN& FOR ME / 1 MARIGENE .' REMEMBER ? IT'S CALL-ED A WALLET'
by Tom Batluk
(JX)UlD ~u .. 2
by Garry Trudeau IMI H ilt C. l'i'Q <'.) ,(\"' -J) C ~C. • •O ..
'llUUI \:)~ l'"'.1 ~a. <of.> {;,;(.r;:, UMI
----"'-' li>t (iAY I '°""H ----
l
llllyPlllt Sl>QKIS THURSDAY. OCTOBER 13, 1988
Newport· Harbor
High' s Jason Phil-_
lips (blue hat) drive•
past the defense of
University High'•
Garrett Martin In a
Sea View League
water ·polo contest
~ednesday in the
Sailors' pool. New-
port Harbor rallied·
behind the second-
half exploits of
Steve Moore to gain .
its second stralght
league victory ;1
keeping pace with 1
Corona del Mar in
the drive for the
title. For game de-
tails, as well as
other area sports
action, see B3.
LA·'S cheniistrysends·Mets doWri tubes ~
Team effort caITies DO<lgers from fourth
to improbable World Series appearance
IN L s· . Lb A . . ti Hershiser savors final mOm entSbefoi-e -er1es: ·WlnS I compleungfive-fiitshutqutmGame7----..... --
By RICHARD r1UNN
o....,,.....c~1
LOS .\NGELES ·-The canh-
quake )OU felt \\-ednesda) night "as
caused b) the rock'n and rotrn at
Dodger Stadium. •
An) tune chemistry surfaces above
talent. where the role pla)ers form in
unison like a tin) m1croch1p operat-
ing an a computer. 1s a time >Nhen
sluggers have to move aside and
scrappers nse to the top.
The Dodgers. National League
champions for the second umc 1h1s
decade. move on to the World Sencs .
The Meis. losers for 1he firsl time C\ er
in four d1v1S1onal pla)ofTs. 1ook•the
back seal.
··Don Ba)loi(ofOakland) said he
wanted to play the bcs1 1eam in the
National League and 1hat was the
Meis:· said_ Dodgers Manager
Tomm) laSOfda. "Well. (the A's) art
· going to pla) the team that beat the
Mets.
"Man for man. we beat the best
"team ih the Nauonal League ...
The 1988 version of the Cardiac
Kids. doing what resembles the
Mmneso1a T-wins ac1 of last 'car. 1he
Dodgers upset 1he Mets 1n 1he best-of-
seven senes to advance to the 85th
World Senes. Opening night 1s Sa1ur-
da,, here. "here it'll probabl) keep
shaktn' all w«k. "We re not the most talcnled
group." said Dodgers catcher Mike
Sc1osc1a. "But we ha ve 1he be~t
ballclub with the t>est role pla)CTS.
and that's what 11 takes for a
•champ1oosh1p ballclub ...
Senes MVP Orel Hersh1~r threw a
SUNsaT LaAGUE
lat """"'""*' 9Mdl) fl..W..1n vea.v at OC1M1t View
SEA VIEW LE=E (at s.-... )
.... ,., ........ YL S.S•Jhldl
(at ntM Hlttl)
World Series schedule
Sarurd~v -Oa'-ana ar Ooef9en, S 30
o m
Sunday -Oakland at Ooef9en , S 25
o m.
Tue!>dav -Dod9«rs. at Oakland S 30
om
Wedne!>dav -Dod9ers a1 011k1and.
S ?S o m .
·rnur\dav Oct ?O Dod9tts a1
Oakland, S 39 o m •salurdav Oct n -Oakland 111
Doef9ers, 2 25 om
•sundav. Oct 23 -Oak.land 111
Ood9en. S 2S om
·-11 nece\nr v
All games televised on Cttannel • and
oroaacas1 on KASC (7901 and KNX
11070)
fi, e-hll shutout and the bang·em up.
knock'em down Dodgers thnllcd
55.693 fans with a 6-0 '1c1of) 1n
Game 7 of the National League
Champ1onsh1p Senes.
··There wasn't JUSt one gu) who
earned us \his 'ear:· said Dodgers
nght fielder Mike Marshall. "Kirk
Gibson and Orel Hersh1ser had great
(Please see DODGERS' /83)
c... ... Mar YI.~
,-ACIPIC COAST LEAGUE •
(at ..... V.> '-"-9 ..._ ... ~Hitt
AP·i.-,....to
Dodgers Mike SCloscla and Steve SU embrace Orel
Henltlser aa Franklin Stubbe (at right) prepare• to join ln.
Leape prep football openen tonflbt -· . .. .... --" ..........
.. __. ...-11, wlda .JOel .. ._ •• (18). will 1te claiM., View'• ~ llaitlw ~rl,tlat), m•nwlLlle. will be trfllll to
.... 1111 ... ••••M••• ,_.,.., (7:90) la -View.__,.. plaJ. oeeu ;aftN P-tala van., • '"aefew ln • ha.et opener. ..
LO<; .\"'GELES -Imagine a
lisnerman silting in his boat on the
,,pond.castmgoul. hearing the bait
bloop) n to the" a ter" 1th cncl ets
ch1rp1ng 1n lhe background and the
sun beaungdov. n around the bill of
his hat on lo legs clad 1n shons. a
shelter of trees around and not a care
anthc"orld
One ofl1ft"s simple pleasures
See Orel Henh1seron the mound
\\ edne~a~ n11!.ht. eight tcammatC'S
on the ticld pufitng for him to finish
offthe final batterofGame 7 ofthe
'a11onal League Ch'amp1onsh1p
•1'1( s. all fan\ standm&and 'IC'U-'alJl=
mg. some I Ill OUOe,cs gu1de<t1nf1u
d1recuon
He'soneout from hfling the
Dodgers to the I~ \\ orld ~nes. ha)
JUSt induced tht' ~cond out of the
ninth inni ng from a \let namt'dGrt'g
k 1knrs"holl1\ ·tl0otlh1m fonhe
senes and IA all the e\t·11emct1t he
pa uses be lore 1ac1ng p1nl h-h1ttcr Lee
~tazilh.
· Th1s"1s not a momt'nt tov.aste Thi~
one 1sonh going lO happen once 10 a
lifetime Aut cons1denng the pitcher
on the mound.1tl·ould -.e~ "ell
happen again 1n ~ears,tocome
So one out trom hea' en for a man
oftheeanh. Hersh1ser ha\ lht:
presence to take ad' aniage of" hat
fev. e'er can rnJO~ Oneofhfe ss1mpk pleasur~
··eefon-1 e'en stan~ p1tch1ng to
l\i_aztlh..nu.~es "cllcd up and l _
almost staned tocf) ... H~sh1'>t'r said "ld1daslov. pirouette a .-..iv. tl\e
standingo' auon loo\..e at the:
dugout and lool ed 0' er at thl' pla~ers
• -~.JON
FERGUSON
in 1he Mt'ts· Qugout
··\\.'1th t<Aoouts I knc" then "-C
"ere going to v.1n the game. and I had
that moment all tom' selito enJO} ·
··\\hen I "asa Ii Ille k1d. I "ouJd be
"atch1ngourTV v.1sh1ng the h1gh-
hgh1s "ere abou1 me and heanng the
commentators talk abOut ll I" inted
to suck' up thr moment. so " hen I see
the highlight this ume I can hear the
rnmmenlators tall at>out 1t "1th me
out there ..
Thls "as his moment. a simple
plcasureota com pin m1l1ton dollar
"orld v.h1ch mom(nts later would
become a simple pleasure for most of
the 55.691Dodgerfans v.1th their t\~atli\ed
.\fterh1sshon pausetos.a,or Lh~
moment. he proet'~ed to pitch two
Stl'll..cs to ~a11lh .
.\ fan ran on the tield to do ..,
canv.heels. Hersh1scr tooli a1'rca --
and thre" t"o pitches from ht-hind
the mound b(-cause··hed1dn't "ant to
iet sutr ~tulc~un~ cscortedlhc
Jubilant Ian
Then came the bn'efbrcak of a fair)
tale ending He hit Maz1lh. but of
(~lea~ see HERSHISER/83)
.R .ecalling era w hen ·
U.S. basketball ruled
Ne\vport's Tomsic
played m ajor1t-Ole
in winning· 56 gold
By JON FERGl'SO:'\
°'-~,_. • ..,.
\\ h1lc Rl)O T om\lc h.id a dream J\
far back a1o the da'~ "hl·n hr pla~cJ
basli.ctball against tht' h~es of ~(.
Jone and 8111 Ru ~II at Fremont
High on the c.sst 1de ol Oakland. hnlc
did he ~nll" thoSt" pla'<'r\ "o~ld one
da' be h1~ teammates 1n an clTon to
rtahle s1m1lar ho~
Russtll. "ho later led the Boston
CeJL1cs· NB.\ d~nast). pla~ed m the same league as Tomsic 1n high school
and ap1nst him 1n rolkge
'"Hed.. I pla ed against 8 111 when I
v.-as taller than he "a ..
Thal' s an 1ron1c b.ackv.ard 1w1sl for
a man who was later the shonest
pla'cr on the I Q56 .S 01.ymptc
basket'blll team which mclutted the 6--
foot-1 0 Russell and cru15'ed past the
C'Ompc11t1on for the aold medal 1n
Melbourne. "ustraha TomsK hktl) wou&d haH b«omc
a busannsman aftC'f pduauna from
Stanford 1n I 9SS. but lus wo-)Ur
obhpuon to the m1htar) came as a
rnuh of enrolhn& 1n tM ROTC
prosram ~h1k a member of the
Indians But into the Air Forte M
~nt. and with 1t came the opponun1·
t to u·y out for tbt Ol)mpte tam.
"I -.s fQf'tuna\t 10 be an 1ht tcl'\.'IC'e
11 tht mne." Tomt1e Mid "'Tht on\y
WI) )W roukt ,rt •n•o tbe Otym~ ..
was to be '" the Knl<'C. bra rot all-star or play on OM of tht ~
( .\mateur ~thlet1c I,, nion) teams ...
Tomsic 55. no" runs his own
successful real estate developrticnt
and'"' estmeM firm1h In inc a~r 27
~cars v.nh Grubb and . Elhs. ~he
\C'C'ond larg~l real .estate service
com pan~ an the L S which he helped
found in I q59 ~ Newpon Beach
m14t"nt for I~ ~ear!>. Tomsic hved
mos\ ofh1s hfc pnor to that 1n the Bay
area.
He established the Sunford carttr
sconng mark. ~h1ch stood for nearly
10 >ears unul Tom Dose surpassed
has matt of l 416 po1nlS in l 964. ~h1le earning .\ll-Pac1ftc Coas1
uthem °'' 1 ion honon three times. He onct scored 40 points
aaainst U on 14 of 16 shots from
the Ooor.
Tomsac went on to pla~ for the Air f<>rC"Cm the Jn1c~rv1ct Touf'l\Ament
and for the 11-~nned fon:cs team 1n
the round-robin national tournament
from which the 0 1)'11\ptc team was
selected. Confirmation of mak.lnt ~
team v.as a moment nearly as tolClm
as s&andina on ~ vte1ory Mand
months lata
"After t~ final tournament prnt.
the romm1tltt ~nt into a f'OOl" 1n a
hotel. up 1n 1 mezzanine room." Mid Tomgt". who wn 2l )'ean okl 8t die
ttmt ··The1 didn't come dow1I aauJ
about 2 or 3 1n the momana. llld 18
lhe pta)'tf'S ~"' 1n tbc IObbY .... u..
to hear the l'ftUttl. When &My C8IM down and •nnou9'CN my Mmt. dlla\
was an unbdlf~•bk thins. ''Ontt I kMWIMt 1 Mda~by
qual1fytft1 \0 ...... ~Air fGKe twn anct AU;,~ F0tat .... E~pmc--•••lll'MferlM.
(Pl 11 j I .. LOCNiilHfml ..
I
l
82 Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT I Thurld1y, October 13, 1988
CdM' s Phebus not an ordinary freshman
By STAN GRANCH
0.-, .... C..; 41 M I
The Corona del Mar Hi&h g.arls
tennis team 1senJoyang what m) be us
best ~ar ever.
With six rtturningscniors. the ~a
KJngs have been JX'MCCI through 11
matches. However. the mosi success-
ful Sta Krng 1s not sen 1or. she is a
freshman.
The highhsht of Phebus' young
carecrcamecarlierth1s rearwhth she
represented the United States in the
14-ycar-oldand underd1v1sion in a
tournament played in Australia. Only
two players were selected for each
division.
"l'vealways been very selt-
mo11vated." said Phebus. "I havta
huaedcsirc to do well. because I bate
to Jose. I stt aoals before each match
and work on different strokes dunng thepmes."
One miaht think that with all this
suCCHS. SM miaht relax. However
Keri Phebus is not your ordinary
f""hman. She is currently the top.
ranked 14-year-old player in the
nation. She was also the top-ranked
12-year-old player.
Sta KinpCoach David Heffern
says Phebus "leads by eump&e. She
works hard in practice and 1n the
games. She is very disciplined and a
good listener.
takin1 it tasy may be the farthest ·
thina from Phebus' mind. After
practicing with the ~a Kinas. she
1oes to the Newport Beach Raquct
Club and puts in thr~more hours of
practice.
So far this season. Phebus 1s 33-0.
with 31 o(ihe victonescom1ngby 6-0
scorts. Tile others were 6-1 .
"The thing that makes Keri stand
out besides her great athletic ability ls
the fact that she concentrates very
well. l'venevttseenanybodywho
can concentrate like her. Her concen-
tration is S«Ond to none."
··rve rcally put in a lot of time and
hard work and 1t is starting to pay
off." said Phebus. "ThegruelinJ
practice sessions I put in with Sid Ball
SPOR TS BREAK
.Jackson back with
Raiders in time to
return to Kansas City
From Tlte Associated Press
EL SEGUNDO -The Raiders wel-
comed back football "hobbyist" Bo Jack-
son Wednesday as the two-sport pro-
fessional made his second seasonal switch
from the tunsas City Royals" outfield to the Los
Angeles backfield.
Jack.son. who played an seven games for the
Raiders last year 1n his first as a National Football
Ltague player after his rookie season in baseball's
American League. said he felt
right at home returning to the
Raiders.
"It feels better than it did last
year:· said Jackson. 'Tm not a
new J>('rson around here . . .
there's nothing here that I don"t
know as far as playing 1s con-
cerned."
The Raiders. 3-3. have added
a new coach in Mike Shanahan
and a new-look offense since< he
.Jacboa last played for Los Anaeles. but
the running game hasn'l changed much. said Jackson.
who won the 1985 Hessman Trophy at Auburn.
"I know the plays." said the only active two-spon
professional athlete. adding that he is physically fit for
football.
·-rm read) to pla) now:· he said.
Jackson·s final game with 1he Raiders la st year was
at Kansas (It). where he suffered a sprained ankle.
Sunda~. his 1988-89 NFL debut will be at Kansas City.
Jackson·s contract with the Raiders provided for a
I O-Oa' break aftrr the conclusion of1he baseball season.
He said that ~as more than enough time to prepare for
thr s~1ich from ba ts and balls to he lmets and pads.
.. Idle 11 me 1s something that doesn·t fit into mv
agenda:· he S..1d following Wednesda) 's workout with
the Raiders. ·:t ti") to keep myself bus). That's just the
way I am."
During his se'en games with the Raiders last year.
Jackson gamed 554 )'ards on 81 cames for a 6.8-)ard
average and scored s1~ touchdowns.
His am val Wednesday was 11mel) since backfield
male and fellow Hessman Troph) winner Marcus Allen
1s bothered b) a brokrn bone 1n his hand. Allrn. who
won the He1sman 1n 1981 at USC. missed the Raiders·
home loss to M1am1 last week.
Quote of the day ·,
Steve Kelley, ~attic Times columnist. on
how outfielder Kirk Gibson has affec ted the
Dodgers this season: "Before G ibson. the
Dodgers were a team of wimps. Gibson put some
irowl back in10 the team. He 1s a gamer. an
overgrown Pete Rose. He 1s Stallone without a
script. Kirkbo. He is Mike Tyson without a
driving record. He is the Boz and Butkus of
baseball. As a matter of fact, baseball seems
almost too tame a game for him. He needs a sport
with more hitting. Jungle warfare maybe."'
IN THE BLEACHERS
"You're right, Biii, it IS a nose tackle. Yo,
Holmes. You got a rear exit In this place?"
Montana likely starter Sunday
SANT A CLARA -San Francisco [i]
49ers Coach Bill Walsh said Wednesday •II• that guanerback Joe Montana wiU likely
start Sunday against the Rams in Anaheim.
Montana, who suffered severely bruised ribs in last
Sunday's 16-13 overtime loss to Denver, had been the
objec.t of speculation until he threw Wednesday in practice.
"He threw the ball well, but I think he's feeling the
ribs a little bit when he throws: said Walsh. foll owing
the team's afternoon practice.
"It looks as th ough he will be able to stan Sunday.
unless there is a setback," added Walsh. "He threw a
little less than he normally does. but I think he'll be
ready to go Thursday:
Montana said earlier in the day tllat the pain had
lessened, adding. 'TU be all right by Sunday.··
Tyson's hand to be examlned
Hea' ~"-eight champio n Mike Tyson's • fractured nght hand has been slow·to heal
but 11 probabl> won·t 1eopard1u his
sc heduled lltle defense against Fran
Bruao on Dec. 17. manager BUI Ca)'.tOD said Wcdnes-
da). Dr. David Cblu, who treated lhe hand after Tyson
fractured 11 dunnga street fight with boxerMltcbGreea,
probabl) will eAam1ne T)son later this week in New
York. Ca) ton said. Ca> ton said that Tyson apparently
had the cast removed during his trip to the Soviet
Union with his wife. Robin Givens. who now is seeking
a di vorce ... Atlanta Falcons defensive back David
Croudlp ingested a fatal does of cocaine in one dose just
hours before his death. according to a Georgia Cnme
Lab repon released Wednesday. The report. released to
the offi ce of Dr. Josepb L. Bortoa, medical exam in er of
several metropolitan Atlanta counties. said Croud1p's
-" death Monday was definitely caused by an overdose of Kings erupt in third period cocaine. l>eH Browning, an a~1stant medical uam-. 1ner. said the quant1f) fouod indicated the drug had
Wsyu Grettky and L~ k.obitaille ~en taken in one dost'. and not over a period of lime .
scored t~o goals each ~s lhe Los Angeles . a,udaJI C1UU1ioglaam ofthcPhiladelphra Eagles and
Kings exploded for five aoals in the third ckey Woods of the Cincinnati Bengals. both of whom
penod to defeat the Boston Bruins. 6-2. pla)ed college football at basketball-min.ded Nevada-Wednesda~ night at the Forum. The Kings got four Las Vegas. were named the Nfl's offenswe players of
goals 1n a span of 4:56 to take command of the ught-the Wtt1C7 Linebackers Kevia Grttne oflhe Rams and
chC'C'king conirst and posted th<' trarn ·s best start 1n its Conaellus Benaeu of the Buffalo Bills earned defensive 22-~ear hislol) at 4--0-0. After pla)'.ang to a I ·I lie honors . The merchant ship Tampa.~a Horse.
thro ugh the first 1wo penods. Robitaille gave the Kings can;1ng Ne~ Zea land's America's Cup racing yacht,
a 2-1 lead at 2:55 in1he third period. Mike Krw11telay11lJ was released from ( uban custody and escorted into
made 11 J· I with a goal at 5:03. Gretzky got his second 1nternat1onal "-aters Wednesday. less than a.day after
scorr ol the game and his sixth of the season at 7: 12. Its se11 urc along 1he boundary of Cuba"s ten1tonal
Bernie Niclaolls foUov.ed JUSt 39 s«onds later to make waters. th~ Coa!>t Guard said. Baraey Wlalle, a
11 5-1 Elsewht're in the NHL. consec uuve ttn rd-spoke~man fo r the ship's agent. Zapata Gulf Manne o l
penod goals b~ Brett Hull and Gino Cavalllal gave 1. Hous1on called the bnef detention "the manume
Loui s a 4-~ , 1ctol) 1n Toronto .. Carey Wllsoa and equl\alen1 01 ·pull ~ou o\Cr and check )our license.'··
rookie Jody Hull ~cored second-period goals. carrying
Hartford to its fi rst 111c101") of the ~ason with a 4-3
decision o'er the "'lew York Rangers at Madison
Square C..a rden In Mo ntreal. Walt Poddabay scored
t~1ce 1nclud1ng the game-~tn ning goal m1dwa}
through the second J>('rtod. as Quebec beat the
Canad1ens. 6-5 The Nord1ques had lost six straight
regular-season games to Montreal daung back 10 last
year .. In Buffalo. Dave AA4reyclaali scored three goals
and assisted on two others to lead the Sabres to an 8-.S
v1ctof\ o'er Pittsburgh ... In Chicago. Dea.ls Savard
lied a club mark ~•th a pair of shonhanded aoals and
added three assists and Rick Valve notched his fifth
career hat tnck to lead the Blackhawks to a JO. I
triumph o ver W1nntl)('g for their first victory of the
season .. In Edmonton. Gres Adams scored three goals
to.lead Vancouver to a 6-2 victory over the Oilers.
...
Television, radio
Ta La~
S P.m. -AUTO •ACING: IHRA Fall Natlonals
from Brl•tol, Tenn. (lape), ESPN. I P.m. -HORSE ltACING: O•k Trff replays,
Cl'lannel 56 (Prime Ticket, 10:30 P.m.>.
t P.m. -80XING: Scheduled -J•mes Klncl'len
vL Marvin Mack In a 12-round IUOef'•mlddlewtltl'll
flehl (tepe), USA.
AACMO f'.30 P.m. -N8A IXHt!NnON: -!Aken VI.
Golden Stall from HonoMu, KLAC (570).
'9UDA Y T•LIVISION Noon -ST•IP'L•CHASI: Queen Mol'-Su-
oreme Novice ChaM from .._lfWI .. , ESPN.
(a lormer Australian pro and her
coach)artworth 1t:·
After what would be a full day for
many JX'Oplc $he then starts In on her
homework. "I want toaotoagood col~. so I have to get niah aradcs ...
"'plaaned Phebus. Collett will be lhenutstep forth1s
S-9 stnsation and already schools arc
stanin1 to talk to her. "The UCLA coach comes toa lot of my matches
and he 15 very supportive," said
Phebus. ··1 am leaning toward UCLA
and Stanford. but more toward
UCLA. since that is wherc my pare I) ts wen1.··
Professional training can be very
expensive and Phebus 1sgra1eful for
GIRLS SPORTS
her parents' help. "They have been so
support1 ye." she said. ··whatever I
want to do. they back me. I started
when I was sax. and the bills have kept
oncomin.gcversince and fl\ey just
keep on pay1n1tMm."
0
Despite a narrow 15-12 loss to
Santa Barbara in the 13th annual San
Marcos Tournament ofChampioM.
thedefcndingStateCIF Division I
Champion Irvine Vaqueros have
bttn voted No. I in the first-ever
statewide coaches' poll.
Santa Barbar. may have beaten
Irvine on thecoun by three P.Qints.
bul lhe Vaqucros top the poll over the
Dons by the 11rM thrtt·poant maram.
190-187. lrvanewaspicked first or
a«ond on every bellot.
'Tm flantreJ." uid Vaqueros
Coach Mark McKenzie. "h iu.n
honorto be on top of any poll. Amona
the top five teams you can araue why
each $hould be No. I."
Besides the Vaqucro5, otheratta
schools ranked in the state poll att
Coronadel Mar(fif\h)andtaauna
Beach (e1ahth). Other teams to rc--
ce1 ve votes were Newpon_ Hatbor.
Mater Oei.and Woodbridtt.
Ron Tomalc, a Newport Beach realdent,
competed on the 1956 U.S. Olympic
Dlllr"""' .... .., ..............
ba$etball team which lacladed BW
Ruee!J and ciulaed to a aold medal.
I LOOKING BACK AT RON TOMSIC. • • FromBl ·
I knew I had a chance to make the
Olympics and I gave it my all ... The
two biggest tournaments I had were
the Olympic tryout tournament and
the All-Armed Forces. In all six of
those games. I was so mentally prepa~ed to do well. that I did well. I
was going to make that team."
When he was child growing up ··in a
kind of below the track neigh-
borhood."' little did he know his
parents' encou~gement to get tn·
volved in athletics at the local YMCA
would become "kand of my way of
getting out of the ghetto.
"I grew up in a kind of below the
track neighborhood 1n East Oakland.
so my parents always encouraged me
to get involved 1n athletics at the
YMCA. I was always on the play-
ground. Athletics was 'kind o my
way of getting out of the ghetto.· ..
But the headhnes later read "U.S.
Five Downs Uruguay. 10 1-38:
Tomsic Sparks Amencans· Attack
With 18 Points ... and tile story on that
semifinal victor) stated: "Ron
Tomsic, a former Stanford star. took
over as ·anchor man· in the scoring
department. dropping in 18 poants.''
He was the third leading scorer for
the U.S. team behind Russell and Bob
Jean-gerard with 11 points per game
on a team wh ich was as balanced as
anv. Russell led· with 13 per game.
Jean-gerard was at 12.5. KC Jones at
10.5. No player scored more than 21
points in any game. while Jean-gerard
and Russell led the team three times
and Tomsic twice.
"We had a really well-balanced
team:· Tomsic said. "That was our
greatest asset. We had good ball-
handlers. good shooters and we could
run like heck. And we had big Bill to
set the ball for us.
"I eOJO)'ed playing guard with KC
Jones. It was JUSt a pleasure. because
he's such a good ball-handler and he's
fun to pla> defense wnh. and I could
shoot better than he could so he often
, screened for me."
It was a ~tiod in basketball when
the U.S. still dominated the spon it
had '"'ented. The Americans
outsco. red 1he1r eight opponents by an
average count bf 99·46 with the
clostst game II'\ 85-55 win over the
Russians in the semifinal round-
robin segment.
It was also a time when big wins
were not loqked upon as tactless
s11uat1ons of runnina up the score.
··we pla)'ed up to our capabilitict
very well." Tomsic said. "We never
let down. Ifs nol that we were pouring
it on to beat anybody by a hundred
· p<>ints.
"It was inte1'C'Stin1 that the oppo-
nents felt that if we went out there and ea~ up. that 1t was an insult. You
beJter go out there and give II your when Russell flashed his famed stuff
besL And if you beat 'em by a shot."
hundred. you beat 'em by a hundred. There was a 7-foot-4 Russian. Jan
Then you could walk a~ay •• and Kouminsh. who had a inside shot of
everybody"s head was held high. his own. but he hadn't met the likes of
As high as some of the U.S. the defensive player like Russell.
opponents could hold them in the "He d1dn'1 move extremely well
first.round pool. Tomsic scored 15 to and he only had one shot," Tomsic
lead the U.S. to a 101-29 win over said. "He would put the ball against
Thailand. a team which the U.S. held the baclcboard, take his band away
a e1gh1-1nch J>('r man a~vantage. and the ball would fall tbrouah. It was
··1 was the shortest gut on our effective. but noupinst Russell. The · first time he made his move against team ." Tomsic said. .. he next us. he ate the ball. And then we didn't shortest was KC Jones. and he was a good three or four inches taller. And I stt much of him after that. They took
was taller than (Th~and's) center." him out of the game."
Russell played only five minutes at Teams didn't stall in an cfTon to
the beginning of the game and four at win. only to keep the marain under
the end. scoring eight points· includ-50. or 70. or 100. "They have a long
1ng the final two baskets which made way to. jO." said Russell of the
the U.S. the first team 1n Olympic coml)('t1t1on.
history to score over I 00 points. After a semifinal wtn over
In the second game. the U.S. Uruguay. a rematch with the
shelled Japan. 98-40. after trailing Russians was no contest for the aold
early. Russell came off the bench to as the U.S. won. 89-55. and would
tie the game and scored 20. supponed have moved its Olympic average
by Toms1c's 15. points J>('r game over 100 had the
The New York Times wrote: "The Russians not stalled down the stretch.
Japanese team. whose callest player The dream was realized.
barely came to the shoulders of the "When you step on the stand and
United States squad members. could they give you the gold medal, and
not cope with the Americans in the you're standing there and they play
second half." · • the nauonal anthem and you realized.
In the third game against the here you art 1n a world'class situation
pre viousl y unbeaten Phihppino and you"rc an a spon you love, ii was
squad. the U.S. earned the semifinal one of the most memorable moments
round-robin pool with a 121-53 win. of my life," Tomsic said.
Jean·gerard of Colorado scored 21 Russell ironically stated he had no
while Tomsic and Burdette plans for a professional carttr right
Haldorson of the AAU Ph1lhps Oilers after winning the medal. but later
added 16 each. went on with Jones to cam eiaht NBA
Having bccorl\e established. the tttles in a row and nine in ro yean.
U.S. team was placed on a pedestal. Tomsic. meanwhile. had pro offers.
"Unless the United States squad but elected to _10 into business.
suffers a sharp reversal of form. "1 was drafted by Syracuse and l
there·s no team in the tournament didn't want to live on the East Coast,"
that will offerit senous coml)('tition." Tomsic said. "And they weren't
one article read. "The general fcelin,1 paying very well. If I was aoina to 10
among the basketball eltl)('rt.s here 1s lave in i place wher'C I didn't want to
that the talented United States team hve fors1x toe1ghth months out of the
is loo good for the kind of coml)('ll-~ear. they were ioinf to have to ~y
uon it will meet in Melbourne. Its me to do it. I think made the right'
onr) danger is overconfidence.·· dec1S1on. ··
The U.S. proceeded to produce Later. the western-most team in St.
overwhelming victones over Bui-Louts obtained Tomsk's riahts and
gana. 85-44. Brazil. 113-51 . and tried to lure him to the pros. but by
Russia. \hen Tomsic was established in
Russell's dunk shot in the first half business.
against Bulgaria was dis.allowed by Tomsic later served as a com-
Singaport referee Charley Sien. ~\I.Ii.. missioner at-tarsc to USOC Prnident
the arguments to the Ol~pic baskM!) Peter Ucberroth prior to the LA
ball committee of U.S. Coach Gerald Games.
Tucker at halftime overturned the Bui the 1956 Olympics were the
ruling. games he'll never forsct
utcr Russell's dunk shot in warm-"II was a goal that I had in the back
ups befor~ the Russian pme drew of my mind all a Iona. to participete in
these words from a reP<>ner: "The it." Tomsac said. "Once you achieve
Russians almost to the man. had their that.. it's a feeling of accomplishment
eyes glued on lhe American players far superior to any other I can think
and roared alona with the crowd of."
Regattas give sailors chan·Ce to contribute to charity
Boatina fans who would like to
make acontributio.n to charity will
have two choices come Oct. 30.
Sailon who would like to make a
contribution while enPf)na in a little
coml)('tition might consider Newport
OccanSailinaAssociation's newest
~tta in 37ycars-the Padrinos
Otarity Reptta with entry fees ben·
cfittina theOtildrtn's Hospical of
·.0ranae (CHOC). NOSA is the foun-
der and sponsor of the Ncwpon to
Enscnadl race. laraest international
y1eht race in thewotld.
Boetmand landlubbers alike
miabt el\ioy penidpetina in Cali.
fomian Jubilee Olay with a chance for
I .-iided tourof lbe IUCC's famed tall
ship, and even a chlnoe totaU on at-
not co mention some toad food and
entcruinment-aU for a pnce.
The NOSA charity reptta will get
underway at noon from the 8'.alboa
Pavilion with classes for both inside
and ocean~. 01$SCS may be
established with fiveormortentrics.
Perpetual and take-home trophies
willbeawardedincachclass. -.
Two new trophies have been added
to the J>('rpetual collectJbn, according
to Lyle Kerr, reptta chairm&n. The
Comiche Trophy will be awarded to
the yacht club lend int the most
oulltandu•suppo~j the Disneyland "Ooofy·• Tl'OPhr, wiu be awuded to
theoutstandint •pr• ofthenacc.
Otbm art the BUiey Ttooby to the pmonor bulint9 who Inch tbe
putat IUpport CO the nice. The Lyle
Kerrfounckt'suophywill sototbe.
clubwithlhe mostentncs.
Entryformsareavailablebycalhna
NOSA116..o-l).S I· BelbM Y'1eht Oub,673·3.SJi~ Bahia Corinthian YachtOub, 9.SlO,orCHOCat ~Jl-8683. All expentct have been
5. byeontributors,theref'ore 100
ntoftheenuy fees to directly to oc.
Rescrvatiom fot the 1 p.m. a Wards dionen shoukl be made at the BalbOe
y ICht Club or CHOC PldrinOI omce.
The Califonuan Jubilee day s.aru
119 a.m. with a pJley breakfast 11 9
... m. ll the Cannery lt.estaurant on the waterfront at Newport lacb.
Ouickd tours will be ceoducted from
9 a.m. 10noonwith1 ~I hlnch It
themtaurant. Thepnciri1SlOfor
adultund S5 for kids.
You can Sail on the Californian
from l_.:30p.m. fora feeofS.SS.
Back at the Cannery there will bea
dinner show from .S-8 p.m. featurina
populart0nastyli1t Kevan Fehrmann
with IOme salty nautical d1Uiet.
Mastcrofcercmonletwill be Jim
Villers, with a welcome from the
Newport Beach mayor. Commodores
oflocal y1eht clubs will be prnent, as
wtU u the crew otthr Cahfomian.
Tickeucan be picked up at the
Cannery Restaurant, 30 I 0 Lafa~te
Ave., N~ Bae". The jubilee is ~nsored by the Oranl!r County
Q\laterdeck. a vohanteerpoup in
auppor_t of'lhe Cal1fonuan•1 youth prosram.
0
When •ilh• tams stan comoe1i·
•
80 A11~1.
•
in&Association MidwinterRc:pna. It
was donated by the Bob Wbice family.
~to the three-nee fonna.t
.... . 10 make the trophy
emblematicofone-detipsupmnacy
amona California yacbt clubl. This
yar4t will be~ in Etchellt-22
tloops_with Dia~ Ullman ofBYC u
the ddender.
Amonaothen he will be up-.aimt
will be Tom Hopn ofNcwpon
Halt>orYICbtOub, tbe~ina
Noni\ American cblmpioa iD the
class.
Othenupected to compete 1re
Santa..,.,.. YllCbt Oub. AlunilOI
layY1ehtC'hlb, Sea 0.. Yat
Oub.. labia Coriathian Yldlt O•
St. Frana• YICbt Cub_ and Su
Francisco Yadn Club.
Orange Cou1 DAILY PtLOTIThurlday. Octob« 13, 19N BS
H E RSBISER SAVORS WIN •• rroma1 DODGE R S' CHEMISTR Y •••
From Bl rourw to&a him ... rm sorry."
Howard Johnson came up to JfL Cllamploadlp
p1nch·h11 f'or Kcvu1 Elstcr and DOOG••s vs. MmT1
~nrs. but 11 lo\H a team effort b)
C\tf)bod\ contnbut1n11n their 1nd1-
\ tdua1 rofes:·
Hersh1serwentOand 2on him btfo"' ''*"'" w ......._ •·J> 1hrow1n11hreestra11tu balls.Johnson Ganie 1 -Meas 3. ~ 'l
E\tf"\bod\ knew the Mets could
come 6ack in this o ne h was their
trademark this )ear So Game 7 was
ne'er rcalh \tture unul Howard
Johnson lo\aS cauJ}lt looking at stnke
three 1n the ninth inning with t'lrO out.
s1ayed1Jiveb" foulan1oneofl)ef0tt G•me 2 -DMeer'I 6. Me11 J
t h 'k ~ b · GMM J -Mel' I OMeln • wa c 1nfasln ecomen t yh1.m. Game•_ o ..... rs's. Met'• 111 Endo story for Mets. hestad1um lnnino'>
trupts as Hersh1ser falls 10 one kntt G•me
and bows has head on thes1deohhe Game S -C>Nlers 7. ~11 •
6 -Mell s. OMeln l
1 -DedfW1 6. Mell 0 mound. G•me
··[Hnbod) kept sa)1ngdunng 1he
game to 'not get cock). but let good.··
said M1cke' Hatcher. the Ood1ers·
model this Season in terms of eharac·
1er. ··we kne"' the Meu could come
.. , had planned to say a pra)'crand
thank. God no matter what hap-•
pcned." Hersh1~r said after his tive-
h1t 6-0shutout eliminated the Mets.
"When I went to my knee. I said. 'Thank you.· ..
Then after the usual celebrauon
around the mound and the swarm of
fans on the field. Hershiserstopped
whale 1na pla)er'sarmson thedu1out
steps and waved to 1hecrowd. The
image-Hersh1scr with his left arm
high and sm1hng-was there at that
po mt and projected bigger than life on
the Dodgtr-v1s1on sctten"lbove left
field .
The moments in the nanth were
·Orel Hersh1ser.
Forget he's rtch ~yond the uncom-
mon man. Forget he recently threw 59
consecutive scoreless innings. 67
counting the pla)ofTs. Forget he went
23-8. won Game 7 of the cham-
p1onsh1p series and the senes Most
Valuable Pia) er award. 1s a shoo-in
forthcC) Youngawardand may~
C\'en the season MVP.
·-rm a tnsman being. Blood·s
running through my aneries. I just
g" e tt my best effort. and good and
pos111ve things come out of that ...
In has mind. hc'SJUSt a guy from
Buffalo. N.Y .. and he's verycmphattc
about poin11ng that out.
.. I JU St put my pants on one leg at a
time." Hersh1ser said ... , don·1 try to
jump 1n with both legs. l'mjuSt a
regularguv. I'm down 10 ear1h. and I
love peopfe a lot.
"When the folklore goes down 1 n
history. and they say the Dodgers won
the pennantand I had a great season. rn say to people. ·y cs. I did. I worked
hard and th1 ngs turned out nght. · ..
When Mets p11cher David Cone
comments on Hersh1ser in his news-
paper column. he has no comment.
When Don Baylor of the Amencan
League Champion Athletics remarks
he'd rather face the Mets in the World
Scnes because the) were a better
team. he has no comment.
When Hersh1seraccepted the MVP
award. his repl y was predictable.
·• 1 had a w1 n and a save. but the two
other games I lost. You have to reahze
1h1s 1s a team. Without the guys
behind me and working hard. I'm nqt
as successful. I pitched the same wa)
1n \986and '87 when I was a .500
pttcher. But put a good ballclub
~ • • ., ' ...
NL CH~NSHtf' SERIES
Oodten 6, Mets 0
NEW YO.I<
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behind \OU and )OU have a grea1 ' '·
..
season.
Sure the Dodgers scored sax runs
and staked ham 10 an early lead. but an
the end the moment was his. He ran
into trouble an theei&hth after hi111ng
Len Dykstra and wafking'flally
Backman. and there was a meeungat
\he mound including infielders. Mike
Sciosc1a and p11chang coach Ron
Perra nosh
··The whole night I kept my
intensit~ up." Htrsh1sersa1d ... Then
when Hernandez and Straw~rry
were came up and Ron came out. J
said. ·1want11. Ifs m) game.···
And p11ch he did -someih1ni he's
done so man\ ttmes in the last nine
da\S. . ~fterstartinggames last Tuesda)
and Saturda). throwing m rehef
Sun~a) and starting again on
Wednesda) .1s Hersh1ser'sarm read}
to fall off?
..lfssullconnected tom~ shoulder.
I said 11' be read} to pitch Saturday ...
Thank God for the simple pleasure
of Orel Hersh1ser. and that his head's
sull connected to his shoulders too.
AP l •-pl>otO
Ste•e Su ]eta out a yell •• he crouea h ome with firet run
of the eame for the Dodfen ln the firat lnnlng Wednesday.
back.''
Hersh1str did everything to pre-
' en\ 11 .\nd the heart of the Dodgers
"ent to one knee and bowed his head
"hen the 27 th out was recorded.
.. We ha'e a IQt of hean and we
shO\o\Cd tonight that ""e have a lot of
heart ... said Dodgers· ca tcher Rack
Dempse\ ... We put some pressure on
the Mets.earl\ wuh the runs and came
out on top:··
Oh. those Mets. tarter Ron Dari·
ing offietall~ pitched one inning and
the infield had its moments m the
!>tt'Ond 1'nn1ng. causing t-wo unearned
runs for Darlrng. which made the
d1fTerence earl~
F1' e Dodger runs an the sttond
made 116-0~fore Hershaser reall) got
"'arm. The Mets "ere their o" n "ors1
encm' iii tile second. 'lo: 1t "asn·1 Nightmare On Elm
Street for the Mets. It "as Nightmare ~t The Ra' me Freddie reared bis
ugh head an the SCC'Ond inning as
rookie third baseman Greg JefTenes
dropped an ea~ hopper and second
baseman \\ all~ Backman lofted a ball
Mets ' own blundersfueled big inning
Dod ers take a dvantage
to put game out of reach
out th9se two gu~s:· Darhn~ ~ad. "It was a
nightmare second inning. We didn't pla} well that
inning. I made a bad patch to Sa~:·
Sax hn a two-run single on that bad pitch 10
make 11 4-0 and Darling was )'anked af\er allo" 1ng
SI~ hits to the 10 ballers he raced. Los .\ngeles
scored tlo\O more runs while Dwight Gooden was
pitching. wuh the runs charged to Darling.
The ball tell and Griffin got to first ""ha single
"It "'as m) error an judgment." said
Hernandez. who was pla) 1ng deep .. ~lfredo~s
pulled the bal~tn the hole on me about five umes
this season. so I was pla)mg back 'Tomm~ ·s
(Lawrda) got to pla) for a run in that s11uat1on
'-'hen he bunted. I could have caught the ball b)
d1' 1ng l Just froze on 1t. ··
LOS .\NGELES (AP)-Ron Darling said he
had good stuff Wcdnesda) night. It j ust wasn·1
good en.ough to get the Mets through a disastrous
second mnang. ·
He escaped a ftrsHnmngjam by giving up JUSt
one run. but was charged with five in the second as
the Los Angeles Dodgers knocked Darling out the
game and the Mets out of the National League
playoffs.
.. The~ are a wonderful team. rll tell ~OU ...
Darling said of the Dodgers. "The~ gave us a dose
of our own mcd1c1nc. The\ ·re gamers:·
Se'eral Mets called the second inning. "ben
tht' Mets made tlo\O ph~sacal errors and a mental
blunder. the club's worst of the season
That loaded the bases "'Ith none out and the
Dodgers "ent on to score their fhe runs. one each
on errors b) 1h1rd baseman Gregg JefTenes and
se('Ond baseman Wall\ Backman. l\\O on Sax's
se-cond single of the game and the final one on John
helb~ ·s ~entice fl~. .. , felt real relaxed and comfonable out there.··
Darling said after the Dodgen beat.the Mets. 6-0.
in the seventh game of the playoffs at Dodger
Stadium ... , had good stuff. I felt fine out there. I
wish I could sa) I d1dn ·1. ..
Steve Sax singled. Mickey Hatcher doubled
and Kirk Gibson hit a sacnftce Oy for a run in the
first. but Darlmg struck out Mike Marshall and
John Shelb) to avoid further trouble.
.. It was a nightmare. It cost us the ballgame."
first baseman Keath HemandeL said. "When Orel
( Hershascr) got the 6.0 lead. he was a different
pitcher.
.. He struggled the first two IOl)tng.s. After he
got the big lead. he went for the throat. M) hat's off
to him ...
.. \\e reall~ dad nothing off Hersh1scr That
v.as the stor) :·Mets Manager Da' e) Johnson said
..We d1dn ·1 jump out ahead of this ballcub When
"e v.ere ahead. we d1dn·t put them 3\\3). We didn't
e'en score '\ ou ha,·e to give Hersh1ser credit
' ··rm proud of the gu~-s:· Johnson continued.
"I felt rcall) good after the first inning. striking
.\ftcr Mike Sc1osc1a and JefT Ham11ton staned
the second with singles . .\ldredo Gnffin popped a
bunt bet"Wecn lirst base and the pitcher's mound
.. The) battled a:id ga' e me a great season. We JUSt
didn't tinash 11 cp nght Right nolo\, I've got a bad
taste 1n m) muuth ··
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TENNIS
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WNNSCllY'J ~ :la-as 11' ~~ .. e-I U T-..,rs ~m.t c.-S•a•t ., u •en •' 11-.iv '30
OM
Ci.t•-"CI "' eos•O" •' PfovlOe<'Ct •JO om
r>c 41"8 ~ "'''" •' S• Gtotot U••" 6 lO 0 ...
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DAV.Y'S LOCKElt (....._, leedl) -•
0081\, '2 8"9~' 92 llOnlfO l vttlo•taM, 12t
uuco oeu l39 """ Dan 21 mec~lf'tl s
SC\llPOll. 16 OllA Pt<'Cll l •ll1te M!e bau.
WednndiV'S tr~deM
aAS«ITU-.L.L c ................... A•Mde .. •l.9AN'r PAl"R()()jljS-~ Clinl Smoll\
lotwWO
Cor~ll
10 tect 1n the air while a\kmptana to
tum l\o\O
Both went for errors. Even
Hersh1seraot in the act. dri v1n.1n the
Dodgtrs' flnt of' fhe s.ccond·1nn1ng
runs when JefTenrs m1spla)'ed his
bases-loaded a.rounder. .. This as a team of destiny."
usorda said of the Dodgers. dttaded
underdogs a,gamst the Mets and sure
to be accorded the same role •inil
the .\thleucs. "We beat what l 1h1nk 1s
the best -all-around team in the
Nattonal League.
.. It's not the biggest and s1ronaes1
team that"' ms. ifs the one that wants
It more. I told the wnters ~fore.
when David slew GolLath everyone '
\\IS be111ng~ll their rocks on Goliath.
but man' Oa\r1ds ha ve won since 1he
t1 me of Cohath. ··
Da' 1d got a lot ofhelp from Goliath
as the Mets. wmners of 100 games
dunng the season. commuted two
errors and made a mental mistake
dunng a fh e-run 1nnang that blew the
game open • Marshall. whose m~ nad of 1njunrs
in past ~ears had brought ham some
cnt1c1sm. felt e'en more of the sung
of cn11cal comments v.hcn the
Dodgers fell trom gra~ m 1986 and
14:187
"\\e came a long wa~ 1n a shon
period of ttme ... he said ... It's a real
tnbule 10 Mr. (Peter) O'MaJle~.
(ueneral Manager) Fred Claart" and
Tomm' Lasorda. Nobo<h thought
v.e could "''" the West. then nobod~
thought "e could bea1 the Mets. I
guess the~ bel1e,·e 1n us no" ...
Onl~ the Dodgers though! the~
could pre' ail
"Nobo<h thought we could win:·
Lasorda s.31d. "In spring traaomg .
<''er. bod' thought the l)odgers were
through 'To restore the trad1t1on of
1h1s organ1za11on 1s the biggest thing
for me:· ·
The tlo\O poor seasons b~ the
Ood~rs. v.ho finished founh in ttle
~L 'West last 'ear and fifth 1n 1986.
make 1988 and the Nauonal League
pennant <''en more special. second
baseman te' e Su said.
"People ""ere doubung what ""e
could do this season. doubuog what
"'<'could do 1n this senes:· said Sa.A.
lo\ ho had thrtt hats. tY..o runs batted an
and tlo\O runs scored Wednt"Sda}.
.. '-' e had to pla~ the best ball of our
h'es to wm Lh1s. and -we did." ·
Claire. "ho rose throu&h the
Dodgers organ1zat1on the fast 20
'ears. has txen called the arch1tet1 of ihc club's resurgence. '"h's a grca1
e~penencc to ~ back at the top. for
the orgamuuon to be back." a
champagne-tircnched Claare said
amid the JO~ous ~lam of the
Dodgers clubhouse.
AREA RouNDU P
~ ---------=-----=------
Newport
.pci10ist$
top Uni
Barn Dishon scored to break a 3.3
tie 1n the 1h1rd quaner as Ne"pon
Harbor High turned back stubborn
L'n1\erSI\\. 6-4. Wednesda' 1n a Sea
VtCY.. League \\atet:polo match 1n the
llors' pool
Un1Hrs1I} (0-2 1n league) had led
throughout the first half but the
Sailors <2-0. 8·3) scored three straight
goals -the final two from Steve
Moort -for a 6-3 advantage
In other water polo:
Coro•• de.I Mar IS, Es&ucia 3:
uunnar Gustafson and Chns Ocdmg
each scored four umes as the Sea
Kings. 11-1. ran their Sea View
t.rague record to 1-0. Hagen Grant·
ham scored thrtt times and Greg
Head a ~tr of goals for the Sea Klngs.
"ho led 10-0 at halftime. Edlsoo tt. Fontaim Valky t: Brent
'-' arde scored "'1th I: 13 left 1n
o' cname as 1hr Chargers escaped ~ 11h the un~t League win at Golden
Wrst College Edison's Beau
~icC'rane\ had ~nt the game into the
e\tra penod b~ t) ms. the game at q
\o\tlh 54 S«ond!> rtma1mng. Fountain
\.alle) was led b) 8f)'lln Fneden's
four goals
Marta 14, HutiagtOD Beacll t :
(Jeoff Ka&.' notched 1hree of his four
goals 1n th~ third quarter and Chuck
Ken, on scored all three in the penod ~hen the Vakmg.s scored ~'en 11mrs
as 1anna romped.
Lapu Bead! tt. Ona1e U: JcfT
Montgomery scored I 0 goal~ the
second tttne th as year he has reathed
double fig\Jres.. and Enk Weeks added
a J)(rsona\ high nine as the o\nlS\S
pos1ed t~ Pacific Coast League
\ 1cto" I\ home •
In girls tennis
Corou llel Mar It. CapiltruO \'al~y 6: Ken Phebus S\\-'(1)1 for the
Sica Kings. ranked No 1 1/IT IF 4-.\
circles. and the doublt"S team of
ourtne' trauss and lha.na Adame
\,\ere s1m1larh uettSsful as the hosh
put the ol.l.ars. rankC'd o 2 m Clf >· .\. awa) w11h relat\\IC ease
In women's 'olle)'ball: G.we. Wn' a. lla.cM Sutaap t :
JKtic ook had 10 kills and six~
Sabnna Dennis s1>. lnlls and four
blocks and freshman middle blocker
Jauna Falcone '"1 k.1lls and th~
blockus the Ru~tlcrs rolled to a I 5-7.
15·1. IS-7 Oran~ Empt" Con·
ferenet d«1$1on on tht DOM' court.
0 1 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 • •
0 • 0 • 0 • •
0 0 0 0 0 0 •
0 • • 0 0 0 •
Ml JI SI 1 1 J » .JM M< ....
toec•• c-..-90&.H• SUTa A'*-ntc COWl•llifCa ---a.~c-....-.. '#ft""*'I KOf"" ltlflt l . J°"""'911 1. G•• ..,,,
~ llJliCI I I i. -~ .. lie. , .... , 11 • •••• ""'--.. ....._, ,,. ,.
-·-,~· ... ,_ ...
• llUICT• '" .. -•1'.1• II IJUICTA •• II Ill -..,. ·--... ,, ,.,. •• ., •• •111
<>r-.. c..ua a, c,,r... 1: Jod)'
ftt•s 1 r k1lb and e...,t aces sparMd
tht PH"atn to 1 I j-10. I~. 16-1•
S'WftP of the ' 151 uaa Char'F!'L S-~ llall I. UC1 I: Onl'itr a
>,. ~am-ttilfl 11 \•lli fnMft tum COiiin ..
>" thr An~ dropped thr lia Wni
'"' MatC°h¥P 1n S.n DiCID. I S-1 f. ).15.
1.S.ll. I 1 .... ..... . "' ", ....... >"''''''··· )S •tOlt t.• )7 Jiit • Ut
l " l" • ' • 10 79' J '' 10 ' ' t • ... 46 6)JJS •• 1 1 II t 6 • J Ut
I 4 7 6 ' 1 S tl•
' .. n >• • •,. ""
(flrl\I , .... '"'"'9 ..,.... ..... ,_,_ t'.)
CM llltNrM l. leCat C-.. t tel \.""'91'~ KOtoftt ~ 1 T,.._ I,
OtMrlCf\ I 0...-.-"" \Ila ...... 6 s.ceic ... ...,.~ • ._.,
c-..-.. -cow ..... UD t. Cit ,_, ,._. t
_ ....... _ ............. , ...
--1.-•t t11•11••---( ........... I .. .._ ... 1u 1 •1tJwt•., ....... , -" ...... ---. ~ __ , -tU1•'9~ -_.,... .. __, ,_ -.
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LlllM a.a I. ,., ....... t:
SentOf middft tlocMr S-.mer -Md 11 kilh Md jdicw .... I fr
"'"" K.rmn 11 11• .... .... o~__. •• AftimhBO .awd
to 3-0t• \9* r.akC-l.elliltWitla a IS.9. IS.12. lS-lftllif~ .
M Onu'09 Coelt OAtlV PtLOT/ ThUl'tay, Oc1ober 13, 1918
CALL 642-5678
associated
R"'""'" >tiarw1Cf' o4 M 8 Int
~I Ii ll•lbcW •' J JM.l
, Merr1llLynchRealty
..
..
v
..
Of'enge COMt DAILY PILOT/Thurldey. October 13, ,... •
D £~TH No11ets
..-C."'°'1•• -.a.•O ... AY ~·~ ,. ........ c:-. ..... ........
t
..
If
•
.. Or-. C0Mt DAILY PILOT I Thureo.y, OctoDef 13. ttea
•n.s·CHEVROLET l:l'j Home of the
Serengeti Blazer
AinJfal•Ibl Can (Jur t•1fw J• / c;.~IP<:>men tor details
5 79 5 100 1·800-228-7240
1707 l E Imperial Hwy Yorba Linda". Catr forn1ei
Oomp1r1 Our O
S1rrit:1 I S1/11:tion
THEOBO~ ROB,NS
THEGQ9 STORE
2060 Harbor Blvd .. Cost a Mesa
642-0010
o SADDLEBACK
Sales
Leasing & Service
Pa rts
IRVI NE AUTO CENTER
1 -800-8~1-3377 714-380-1200
2850 HARBOR BL VO. COSTA MESA
G> JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
Mercedes-Benz
1301 Queff ...
Newpotthech
0 8 .... •L...ing
Patts • S-Vlee
133-9300
AC URA
1001 Quit I t.
.... port .. .ch
75-ACURA 752·2172
"C•ll Your Pro,. .. lon•lt1'
(9 CREVJ ER & ;coRMIERI
SALES • SERVICE • LEASING :•1 0 NEW LOCATION! •
SANTA ANA AUTO MALL Kl
1500 Auto Mall Dr., Santa Ana 835-3171 770-7001
Newport/SS Frwy. at Edinger G 23663 Rockft'Jfd Blvd
Lake Forest, Irvine Auto Center .,5ates Dept open 7 days Service Hoors Mon -Fri 7am· 10pm
BUENA
PAAt'
SI ANTON
NEWPORT I BEACH 1•u ,I f
r
...
L.OkONA
111 I MllR
PAC IFIC
OCEAN
1·r~
mm-.~'4~
"OMNGe COUNTY'S OUffT l l!AOEA OF THE IMPORTS"
• (714) 540-0713
2MO HARBOR BLVD.• COSTA MESA
Huntington Bea ch fJ)
Chr ysler -Plymouth
DAIHATSU
SALES -LEASING
SERVICE -PARTS
1•1 RACH •VD. 842 0831 HUNTINCITON •ACH •
•
MU N TIN GTON 0 BEACH .
ACUA A SILES -LUllll
111¥111 -PllTI 11111 ..... ... , ...... 11111 .
1111 ........... , II 12141 (114) U2 ....
GPRE PONTIAC
'sERVIC&l>EPT. OPEN MONDAY UNTIL 9 ·00 P.M.
171•1•M611
IHch ~ ' a.,., (ifoye fwy w.,...._., l &•L~
----
" \
• OLDSMOBILE
• CACMll AC
• GMC TRUCKS ALLEN iu/582 -0800
SAN DIEGO FWY ·AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL,.
We ate a HIGH VOl\JV E LOW PROffT 0.-""'P
Our Goal Is to Be Number One.
0 546-0220
1~ 1'UICI .... Or. (II Fw, & ldlllelrl Senta AM
0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc.
M ercedes- Benz
6862 Manc hcs\cr Boulevard
13ucna Park
A
_./
SE8YJCE -213 or 7 14/MERCEDES M-f~ 8a c.p M·f 7n Gp -v Where 1·5 and 1·91mecl. Sal. 8a-2p
Garden City
VOLKSWAGEN@
IN WESTMINSTER~
7«>Q We~tminster Blvd.i Westminster (714.~91-9378 (2 3)430-2843
C:> Gv.~ G~o'1s
il
Orange Coast
Jeep Eagle
2~24 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Meaa
• low P"<l!l • No C1mm1ch • Grl'ol SPIPtt1oro
• f 11,.ndly Pl"ople • E •<~""'" S.-rv•~tt
11935 t.o<t. loule,,ord
l7'4) M2·771l
•&EACH LINCOLN MERCURY
MEAKUA
SALES LEASING
SERVICE -PARTS
(71 4) 848· 7739 16800 Beach Bl•d.
(7 l 4) 556-1008 HuntinQ1on BMch, CA 9264'1
•
t1\'.\.; ~'."'" ~ 1 HORD~ DSALSa IR ORAKOS CO.
&ilt-t • ~rvlc~ • Pans ,,
&..taS&n& All Mak.ff
963-1969
.,
Pl&.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE NllC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTICE
.• PUBLIC NOTICE OF THE ANNUAL COST
OF WASTEWATER COLLECTION, TREATMENT AND DISPOSAL SERVICE
FOR USERS WITHIN COUNTY SANITATION DISTRICT NO. 11
OF ORANGE COUNTY
P\8.IC NOTICE
In 9CCOtdance wtth the provlsfons of Section 2CM(b)(5) of the Clean Wat8' Aci of 1977 (Public Law 95-217). County Sanitation
Dta1rtct No. 11 of Orange Cou"ty Is requtred to notify all UMC'S of Its 19Wef'age system of the rate and portion of the ad valorem
tax• paJd by Its uters which are attributable to watewat• treatment aervic.. Thia District. the Jurisdictional boundaries of
which are preeented on the accompanying map, recetves a portion of the one-percent ( w.) basic tax levy colleCted an(lually 1rom
preperty owner• by the Oranoe County Tax Colsector. Thl.-not~ It ~bllSfiialn conjunction with the malling of the Joint
Coneolldated Tax Biii by the fax ColleciOr to enable users to determine the share of their basic property tax levy which Is used
to pay fof watt.water treatment aervtcea provtded by this District.
Thia Otltrk:t annually receives approximately 3.1 w. of the w. basic tax levy COiiected from the property owners In the District.
The rewnuee generated for the District from the basic tax levy are not sufficient to pay for all the ongoing operations,
m8'ntenance and replecement/rehabllltatlon costs associated with collecting, treating and disposing of the wastewater
genwated from the propertlea·wlthln the District. Accordingly, all rnldentlal and small non-residential users In the District must
allO pay a tupplemental user fee, which for cost savings Is collected for the District by the Tax Collectbr with the annua.I property
tax•. The annual supplemental user fees In County Sanitation District No. 11 are presented Jn the following table:
Slngte-Famtt1 Mulll·femlty Smell Commerclel/lnduetrlef/
"-tldencee ~ GoolerntMntel U.....
$26.40 $15.85 P4lf unit $18.90/1,000 sq. It. of building
The following example Identifies the combined amount a homeowner will pay for the District's services In 1988-89 if he/she
owns a name with an UM$Md value of $100,000:
""9nue Sourc.
Property Tax
Supplemental
User Fee
8a•I• for Par"*1t
3. 11•1. x 1'11 basic tax levy
x$100,00 =
Annual fee for single-family
residence
Total annual amount paid to
. District No. 11 In 1988-89
for wastewater services
Annual Amount
Paid to Dfetrlct No. 11
$31.10
26.40
$57.50
Large Industrial and commercial users of the sewerage system pay their proportionate share of the cost of wastewater
coHec1k>n, trNtrnent and dl~I servtces based upon the actual volume of wastewater they discharge and tha.amounts_ of
l>locl*nlcal oxygenaemand (800) and suspended solidi (SS) In their discharge. The following schedule Identifies the rates-now
In effect for theM large users In fiscal year 1988-89.
Flow
($/mllllon gallons)
$154.91
BOD
($/ 1,000 pounds)
$95.02
88
($/ 1.000 pounds)
$117.27
Reven..,.. collected from th ... large users are also used to pay for the ongoing operations, maintenance ana reS"face-
ment/rehabllltatlon costs of the District's sewerage system. These Industrial users pay fees ranging from several hundred to
more than $173,000 per year for transport, treatment and disposal of their wastewater through our facllltles.
If you would like additional Information on the charges you are paying tor wastewater collection, treatment and disposal
services, please call the District's staff at (714) 962-2411, extension 5. The District's administrative offices are open from 7 30
a.m. to 5:30 p.m .. Monday through Thursday, and 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Fridays.
Published Orange Coast Dally Pilot October 13, 1988
GARDEN
..
PACIFIC.
OCEAN
COUNTY SANITATION DISTRICT NO. 11
•
COSTA
MESA
th999
Orange COMt DAILY PtlOT/Thur.dey, October 13, t... 87
NOTICE OF JOINT PUBLIC HEARINO av THE CITY
COUNCIL Of THE CITY Of COSTA •SA AND THE COSTA
MESA REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY, CITY OF COSTA MESA,
CALIFORNIA ON THE PROPOSED SALE av TitE AGENCY
OF CERT AIM PROPERTIES wm• TitE COSTA •SA
DOWNTOWN REDEVELOPIENT PROJECT AREA TO TRaANGU
SQUARE ASSOCIATES FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF A
COMMERCIAL RET All, DEVELOPMENT WITH A TOWN SQUARE
AND ON THE PROPOSED ptSPOllTION AND DEVELOPMENT
AND OWNER PARTICIPATION AGREEMENT
PERTAINING THERETO
NOTICE IS HEAEBY GIVEN tNt the City Counell of the Cfly ol Costa Mesa (the "City") and
the Costa Mesa ~t A~. City ol Costa Mesa. Cahtomla (the "Agency") will
hold a 1oint pobllc: ne.ring on Oc1ober 20, 1988 at the hoyr ol 6:30 p m . or u to0n thereetter
as the matter can be heard, In the City of Costa Mesa Pooee 0epar1rMnt Auditorium, 99 Fw
Drive. Costa Mesa, California 92626, porsuant to the California Community ~t
Law (Health and Safety Code Section.I 33000 •t -.q I tor t~purpote of cC>nlidwlnQ the
~proval ol a prc>p09ed Oi9poeltlon and Development and Owner Pat11cipa11on Agreement,
(the ' Agreement"), with Tnang .. Square Msoclates (the "Oew6oper") wt\ICh provideS fOC' the
sale ol the Site to the Oewk>per for the devetopment and opera1K>n of a commercial relail
Oevek>pment with a town aquare.
The ~t ~an tor lhe Costa Mesa Downtown Redeve4opmerit Protect pr~
for the development In the Project area of commerelal retait development. A total of UJ> to
205.000 square feet of mixed commercial uMS. including ret.,., r•tauranta. and tt!Mt,.,.. wttti
a town square, Is proposed to be conatructed by the Developer on the Site along With the necessary pa1klng
The pofPOM of the pobffc: healing Is to cons1de<
1 The proposed salt of the Site in the Costa Mesa Downtown ~t Project, by
the A~ to the ~ I<>< the devetopment and operation ol a mixed uM <X>m.1l'*d8I
retail development Wlth the MCeSSary pafklng and a town square.
2. The proposed doeurMnt providing for SUCh aate. tne propc>Md Otspositlon end
Development and Owner Pat1i<:lpatlon Agreement.
3. All eYidenCe and testimony IOf and against the approval of the Ag~1 and the
i)roposerd sale of I.he Stte to Triangle Square A.Moolat•.
Al the abOve stated day, hOUf and pl--. any and elt peraons haW'lg WIY obtectiOM to the
AgrMmef'lt or the prop<>Md .... of the Site or 10 the r.,ta.rlty ol wiy of the priOf Pl oo .. dlnga,
may appear before the Agency and the Crty Council and lhOW CM'9t Why the Afl! ~ or the
propoeed sale of the Site Should not be approved
At any time not later than the !\Our al0<esald Ml 10< l'INring, any !*'ton ob,ectlng to the
propoMd sale of the Site, or the Agreement, may ftle tn writing wuh the City Cledtastatement
of hit or her objec11ons thereto Any persons or organlZ.ahoos dairing 10 be hewd at the
hearing will be attorded an opportunlly to be heerd At the aforesaid hour the City Council and
the Agency snall proceed to hear and pass upon all written and Ofal obtecflOflS •
As the agency responsible for carrying out the Redevek>pment Plan lor the Costa Meu
Downtown RedeYe!Opment Pro,.c1. tne. Costa Mesa Rede'>8'0pment Agency, City of Costa Mesa. Cahlorrua and the Clty and Council ol Costa Mesa. riaw prevlously pr.,.,-.d and the
City and the Agency certified the Final Environmental lmpac1 Report fOf the Costa Meaa
Qowntown ~elopment Plan on December 17. 1973 Two Supplement• to the Anal EIR
("SEIR's" 1018 and 1026) have been prepared and oert1lled by the Agency and lhe City
Council on July 10, 1984 and December 18, 1985, r9199Ctlvely.
In connec110n"Wtlh its conskiefauon of the Agreement. the AtJe11cY haS further conouc:ted.,,
lnlti.I Study, wtuch 1~Uded a supplemental tratflC analyals to deterniN ,11 the pr-opoMCI
develoPmenl under this Agreement would nave additional ~nlf\cent effect• on the en"Mon-
ment not covered in the prev10US1y-oer11lied EIR and SEIR s The ln1llal Study~ that
although lhe propc>Md ~ek>pmenl d1tten from the project analyted 1n SEIR 1026, the
proposed development will not create any new significant env1ronmen1al 1mpact1 not
conl!CMr9d In the previous environmental d0Cument•tt0n, norhaw sut>st~tlat chang6a
occured w1tn respeci to the circumstances under whiCtl the propMed project wlH be
,. undertaken, nor tias any new Information ol aubstanll81 Importance beCOme avallabMI.
The lollOwlng documents are avallable tor public 1nspectk>f'I and cQPylng durtng regular
ottlce hours (8:00 a.m to s·oo p m . Monday th<ough Fndayl at the omoe of the City Clent and
Secretary ol INI Aoency. City Hall, 77 Fair Drwe Costa Mesa, Cahforn4a 92626
1 A copy of the Agreement oetween the Costa Mesa RedeYef<>Pment Agency. City of Costa
Mesa. Cahtorn1a and Trlangle Square AssOC1ates
2 A Summary Report whleh deterlt>M and specifies
a The cost of the Agreern.nt to the Apency
b The estimated valVe of the interest to be conveyed, delwmlned at the highest UMS
permitted under the ~I Pla_n tor the Costa Mesa Downtown ~t
Pro,ec:t
3 The 101tlal Stu~ prepared for the commefclal/retail develOpment considef"ed under the
Agreement and the final Supplement•I EnVlfontMr1ta1 Impact Report No 1026 for 19.5 ~
In the Costa Mesa Downtown Re<Mwel<>pment Area
DATED SEPTEMBER 30. 1988
EILEEN'·~. CttJ C*il of the CttJ of Coeta ..... encl Mehl8ftt ~of the
Coeta MeN "-d1nlDP"*"t ~.City fll Co.ta ...... C .........
th013 ... .._ ______ ,=====
c
l
1
Major firs~ st.ep
taken to start
voter's exercise
Jt i5 amazing what a little competition can ~o for
democracy)
Republicans and Democrats went toe-to-toe in shopping
centers and at post offices acros~·the state. In their quest for
victory at the polls: the two parties made-w:inncrs out of'
thousands of Californians by registenng them to vote.
The battle to sign up voters was a-bit more intense this
year because of the key role California 1s thought to play in th ts
prcsidcnual election. .
Poliu cal observers believe the next occupant of the While
House wjll be 'he candidate whocarriesCalifom1a. And man)
of those observers say the margin of victory 1n Orange Count)
1s the key lo carrying the Golden State.
Pany organizers arourl<I the state are working hard to
deliver the numbers needed.
Between May and September. Republicans and Demo-
crat~ combined to register almost 600.000 voters who
o therwise would have stayed away from the polls. .
That dfon helped register a total of I 3.1 mrlhon voters o f
all panics as of Sept. 9.
That means with another month to go. the all-ume high
of registered voters recorded in 1984 had already been
exceeded.
h also means at least 68 percent of the 19 m11l1on
Cahfom ians eligible to vote are reg.ISlered for the Nov. 8
election.
And many more were made ·eligible before the
registration deadline closed Tuesday ni$ht.
In Orange Count). the Democratic Pan~ added 7.00<J
registered voters rn Just the past three weeks. And Repu blaca n
reg1strat1o n 1s at an all-time high with more than 224.000
members of the Grand O ld Pany able to cast ballots on
Ekctton 0a).
There are no losers rn t.h1sreg.istrat1on war. I\ 1s a tnumph
of the democratic process that so many c1t 1zcns ma)
pamc1pate an directing their government.
Now. 1f pan) organizers can. onl) persuade all those
registered voters to c.xerc1sc that pn valcge ...
Minimum wage bill ·
.\ Rrpublac.an-lcd filibuster against kgaslatton w raise the
minimum -wagt rcu.·ntl) fom:d v.1thdra ..... al ot the hill from
cons1drra 11on
The same da~ the Republilan filthustcr prevailed. the
Senate Budge1 C omm111ce's Democratic. '>taff rclca~cd a
damning repon on JOb~ and wages The repon showed 1ha1
half of 1fie nc.·"' JODH rcated over the past nine ~ear~ don't pa)
enough to keep a fam1l} of four above the po ... en) le' cl
Republicans did introduce a C)n1cal ~ubst1tute to the
Democratic bill creation of a wbmin1mum "'age 10 be pa ad
ccnain workers mos1l~ 1cen-agers. dunng their first 1h rl·c.·
months on the JOO
Its purpo~ was not c:lcar unlcs\ 11 "'a' to suggest that
teen-agers don't need -or don't deserve -the minimum
wage If that sounds reasonable. look around at various fast
food outlets that emplo> mosllL tccn-agcr\. The) arc ha\"lng
to pa) more than m1n1mum wag(' JU\I IC> attract and retain
those emplo)ees
Through their ftltbu .. 1er 1hc Republicans reiterated
support for 1hc.·1r familiar ··m cklc down" 1heor) In th" C'a'><.·
the onl~ thing tmklrng down was w ntempt for the least
fortunate an .\mcnc.a's Y.C>rk force.
The Cbattaaooga fTenn.J Times
Airport traffic jams
Rea{ ting to a gro"'1ng numt><:r of m1\tal<e'> O) air tralfi<.
controller\ the.· f c.·dcral .\' 1at1on .\dm1n1\trat1on la\I ""l'<.'k
tUl JXak-hour landing\ al ( h1cago's lW() ffiajor a1rpOl1\
()"Hare and \.11d\.\<a\
()"Hare has a di,mal rc.·c nrd o f rnntrollcr cffi<.1c.·n<.., r he.·
airport has been the suh1cc t of three tn\Cst1gat1on\ f)\ tht·
'at1onal r ransportatmn ~dkl~ Board 1n the la\I '"''' \l'af\
J he hoard\ most r<.'ccnt report two month' ..tfO said
among other thin~., th..11 LUntrolkr.. a t ()'f1arc .ire undl·r·
trcsined and o'crv.ork<:d I hat '>Uggcst11 pan ol-lhl' rcmcd\
htn ng and 1ra1n1ng nwrr ton1rullcrs
But that w11l 1ah dmt <ind mont'} Fortunatt:h th t'rc "a
qutekcr t ht·aix·r rl'mcd~ t<> ( h1<.ago's ::11rli nt· u1ngnt1on
grcatcr.u\C of Mll\1.-auh·<"<i M1tl hdl .\arpon.
f hi\ up-to-date <11rpon tan tx-reathcd almo\t (J\ qllll kh
from S'>ffil' of ( hn.itg•> 'n'>rlhnn suhurh\ a\ M 1dY.a~ or t ' en
<>"Han:
Tb~ MJ/wauke~ Journal
Release of a hos~age
The release ,,j o nt ho!)tagc 1n Lebano n ha'> rnad1:
1ncvnable a \pall· of more ol" less informed surm1\C ahout
when others ma-, be freed
Inevitable ioo has been spcculauon as lo a) whether 1hc
action rcsuhed from a \Ccrct adm1n1stra11on deal with Iran 10
let a hostage go tx-forc the election. and b) whether wr can
rxpcct an "f>ctot>c"urpnse" meant to 1nnuencc the clc<'llon·,
outcome.
As to when other ho\tagcs may be rclea~d. the \hort
answer 1\ that no o ne can confidently say.
Overt act1 v1ty hy the adman1strat1o n that m1gh1 be
interpreted as "deal ing with terrorist "can probably be ruled
out. · lad~~od~ac~ (K•D.) D•llY R~porter
O~Ar H.,f COA~ T
Dally~
IOMNrJCludlnan
Pubf1sher
• ~ ....,.,...,"' ,,.. ,..., .. lJO
W 9e¥1t Cott•.,.._. CA AOdle_.
... •• --te ...... co.t• -~ ....
••
l•h•
(dlttl
0. '""" A"9(lalt (~
•• a..
""" [fl!tl .......... -C..y ("40t ....,c.-
541ot1' c~ ........ t ..... , .. (li!Of , .. .... ........ ( ....
........
A4ttrflllllt Ow (Of
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·~ M'mw.t ...... ,.., .... Cl""' .. Aihtrt-~ ,, ....
t.1t1• """ ..... ..,.,..... Ofllct ...,.. , .....
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, ... 0w ••
A city by any other name
would.need claim to fame
lt's "N11me That Town" umc down
in south Orange County where form·
101 new c1t1es has become as faddish
as dnnlung French mineral waler.
Last November 1t was M1ss1on
VtCJO that JO&ned the ranks of
cityhood and 1n June, 1t was Dana
Po1nL Now it's tame for the leftover
neiahborhoods, tracts and com·
muniues to Jump aboard.
Next month, residents an El Toro.
Lake Forest, Ponola Hills, Laguna
Hills and Aeseao Hills will go to the
po11sand decadt ifthey wish to form a
new Clty. And 1f they do that. voter-;
will also. decide which c1v1c do-
goodel"$ should represent them ·
Now Dana Point was already Dana
Point and M1ss1on V1eJO wa\ already
M1s51on Viejo. But th1\ new cit)
comes with so many name'> that
·nobody 1& qune certain wh~t to call
tbe place.
So. voters not onl y get to decide
whether they want to be a city and
whom they want to represent them.
they get to pick the name
For those who lack basic crca11v1ty,
the ballot card will be..arranged to help
foci the pump. Vote~ can select from
three proposals -Saddlcti4'ck Val-
ley, Laguna "Hills and Rancho VtCJO
-or wnte in their own choice.
This seems to be a rare moment 1n
votina history. Not often do ~oplc
gct to name their own cit y Let \take
stock:
. Huntington Beach was onginally
named Pacrfic;Cicy -seen by its early
settlers as being a pretty '>olld cho1lc
11ven the populantl of Atlantic (Hy
on the other side o the country But
the name was la\.CT changed to lure
Henry Huntington and his rail hne to
STEVE
MARBLE
·the beach cny. There yo u have 11 -
the city was founded on good old-
fashioned bnbery
Newport Beach as pretty straight·
forward. There\ a beach there and ll
was a pon of call A new pon of call
Fouma1n Valley was ort~nally
known as Gospel Swamps ~ d 1m -
agJne that someone - a real estate
investor, perhaps -decide that the
place's fate would fare far better 1f
thost swamps were 'ICcn a~ fountains
Where the valley 1s, I don't know
Costa Mesa 1sa preny logical name
It's near the coast and at"• situated on
a mesa.
lrvmc, of co"llrsc, wa' named an
honor of James lrv1tie, the man who
once owned all the acreage now
w11h1n the ctty's borden A httle
special interest there, I suppo<,e. hut a
reasonable choice Just the same
So what 10 name this new city in
south Orange County.
Saddleback Valley? Well, 11 1\· a
valley and th ere 1s a dip 1n the \anta
Ana Mountains known as Saddle·
back. Probably too logical a choice,
thoogh. .
Laguna Hills? I suppose you could
call those things hills but they're
really not that close to La1una. You
could probabl}' lead people to believe
you have an ocean vie w or \Omething
like that with an address an Laguna
Hills.
Rancho V1e10? ll's sounds nice. It
sounds hke a place I'd like to live and
1fthe voters go for 1t, l guess I will hve
there. But where's the ranch?
But this as a mult1ple-cho1cc clec·
tion and voters arc perm1t~d to select
their own name. How about Lake
Toro? Or Aegean Forest. Or El
Laguna? Or El Pollo Loco? T_he
options are JUSt about without hm u.
Personally, f 1hink attaching
Aegean to nearly an)'lhang 1s probably
worthwhile. Aegean Forest. Aegean
Lalce. El Aegean -they all work.
Forget the fact that sou1h Orange.
County hasn't the shahtcst connec·
tion to the Mediterranean or 11s
en vi rons. Aegean sounds hke u·s
going to add some equuy to the old
address.
El Toro sounds hkr a. Manne base.
B~g surpnsc. It asa Manne base.
Lake Forest, of course, already 1s a
real c11y located outside Chicago. But
there's plenty of duplication sn this
country so that shouldn't be too b11 a
stumbling block and at does have a
lake (two man-made ones, actually)
and a forest (a eucalyptus grove
planted by some pioneer who mis-
takenly thought the trees would make
marvelous fumature.)
The elecuon also offers a wide
opening for those wtth -well, ego
problems. Stcvcv1lle sounds like a
wonderful !attic berg 10 me. Or' what
aboul Marbleton? That sounds like a
fairly exclusive, 1f not downnght
uppity hllle town.
Of course, one vote docs not a city
make. Thank goodness for that.
Steve Muble I• 11'e Dally Pl/or clry
HI tor.
Charity begins at home
for animal rights execs
W>\SHI NGTON -Top dogs 1n
the animal ngtm busine1s ha ve
rallied around the Humane Society of
the Untied ~UJtn since we hinted a1
how much money there 1~ to be made
1n the top ranks of animal charat acs. 'JACK
ANDERSON
and DALE VAN A TT A
We reported that national Humane
Society Pre"dcnl John Hoyt and
Treasurer Paul Irwin were reaping far
mpre compensation for lhcar work
than e'en their own f>.oard member~ house 10 hve 1n." ..
knew. Last )ear. in hcu ofa ponaon of We reponed that Hoyt's and
his compensation. the Humane So-Irwin's compcnsa11on dad not stop
cicl) bouaht Hoyt a $310.000 homt 1n wath salanc:s. In all. their s.al:tncs and
Mar)land. It also allowed Irwin to benefits amounted to morr than
wnte himself SSS.000 in checks for S 139.000 and SI 14.000 respectively.
ano1hcr re1l-fitate venture. which ~ilybc our rcpon on the money to
was later considered by the board 10 be madt 1n animal chanues hit too
be a loan. ~ cl~ to home. Davi\ and Kulbcrg run
The Humane Society &el\ at\ weahhy non-profit oraan1tat1ons
money wnh hcan-1uu 1n1 pleas to themselves. A 1983 rcpon pubhshtd
donors Olat "The 1nim1ls nttd at by an Ohio 1nun1I ·MJ}lts aroup.
now." and contnbut1ons will be "pu1 Mobthzatton for Animals. noted that
into achon on the front hnc 1mmcd1· Divis' Massachu~tts Society for the
ately .. Prevcru1on of Crutlty 10 Anunals. The qocsuonablc financial ttant-waJ the wc~hh1cst animal welfare
1Ct1ons for Hoyt ind Irwin promP'cd 11oup 1n the country. wuh more than
the Humane ~1cly board to hire two S40 m1lhon in assets. Kullbera's
Wuh1n1ton law firms to conduct Amcncan Society for the Prcvcnt1on
scpetatc 1nvcs11pt1ons of the deal· of Cruelly to Ai1um1ls was 1n ninth
1np olace with S6 million an assets. Hoyt's
But. respected prn1dcnts o( \WO of Hum1ne Sc.x1ct)' of the United Statn
the wcaJth1ctt 1n1mal orpn111t1ons pllttd founh with 1siet1 of more than
1n the country wrote lcttns dcfendma S 11 m1lhon.
Hoyt. and complainina ,,..t ~ wcr, Peter Paul a San FrarK'1scojoumal-
ou1 of hnc to qunoon tbe fin1f'Clal i.a. ~ntl)' fin1thcd a four-year study
dcahnp of cha"llct 1n the United Statn ind
Frtdmck J. Olv11. president of the abrOlld. H11 u~m1na book. "E.asy
Mas.achuwui Society ror the Ptctunas:· arK'ludcs a chapttr on
Prtvcntion of Cnatt1y to AnamaJI. an1m1J orpn11.1uons. Paul told ou.r
ddendtd Hoyt: "I am confadml that liSOClllC Jim Lyn(h, "I \ell P'(>Pk if
fuh.1re d11dowrn ohll thc fact1 Wlll )Ou want 10 ,rt nch. ec1 into AIDS.
documtne lut ••ltl''llY·.. animal ~''or m1uu11 children.·· Jol\n F. Kullberl. prnldcnt o( the Plul thinks Humane Sottny htcra-
Ammcan Society few the Prevention turc should 1ndude a dudlimn that
of Crwlty '° Am...._ wrow thttt tht n11eonat IOCttty 11 not mnn«1Cd was noth••-• ......, ...... Hoyt's w11h l«al bumant tOC'~tn that mu"
•llry. Kunt:rt llid · tht a= f"lltC IMJr own funds to run anunal •lar)'. for tht PfCIJ lll'M of a DOn• t shthtn and other prOje(tt. Tht ~·~'°" ii ._ SI I .IXJ), H•manc Socttty of tht Untted Stale$ a1~-. ht ... mdll IO add • ti"°'• umtwdla ()rll•mtlOll (Or "llljdtKiac ............. 11111111""'· .. • lril OWR ..._, 11 ml hument *"'WI. ht~-. lnethlnHoyfund .. lamnotp\'tnl Dr. (;ecqr Cave. pmident of :.. .
Trans ~pcc1cs Unl1m1tcd of W1l-
hamsport. Pa.. thinks too many
animal welfare groups are more
concerned with ra1s1ng money than
wath animal sulTenng.
Trans Species Unhmncd crusades
for animal rights al)d works to ell.pose
what in ( ave's op1n1on as "animal
welfare fra ud.'' Cave maintains that
the animal rights movement hu been
slowed because most of the donations
arc sponged up by some large animal
groups wuh h11h s.alancs and ex-
ptns1ve corporate assets.
PENSION SKI MMING -Con·
vcss 1s l9(>k1n1 into increased skim·
min& from corporate JX'nS10n fundl.
A ~ompany can lepl.ly skim u ceu
ptns1on fu nds when 1t temunatcs 1
IX'ns1on plan. The only rcqu1rrmcnt
1s that cnou&h 1s left Jn the plan to pay
1X'ns1ons at current levels. Bui the Jk1mm1na wipn out any hope of
future cost-of-hv1na increases for
pcns1oncn. Rep. Tom Lantos. 0-
Cahf., rcporu that nauonwide. more
than SI 8 b1lhon has been taken out of
pension fu nds 1n the pHt ei&ht years.
The practice appears to contrachct 1
1974 law thll says pension plans arc
Suj)l)OIC'd to manalfd for the welfare
of the ~n11oncn. not the ronve·
n1enct of corporations lookina for
quick cash.
MINI-EDITORIAL-Sen. Lloyd
Bentsen. 0-T cut. borrowed the
Mttt( dcfcnw when ht wa1 put on the
s_pot 1n the vict prnldtnual dcbltc
lknttcn was mtic1ttd for his SI 0.000
"bttakfttt club" and ht rnpondcd
that It WIS -kpl,'" ShalM Oft the
Pfmoct'ltic SiCnalor for JIOOPl"I to
1ht ethical standard of too many 1n
IM Rapn era. T ... t standard MY'
anyone ~ Jta\'ft offtc:c wiW>ut
bc1,.1ndicwd ''clean. To lcnttm'•
<'ttdn. hf admnltd 1JM braltf'ae club wu a "ml.IW&c."' but only after
mn1nd1na aht votrn IMl he did•'l
bftak &ht .... ~ lftl tndacted -~ .... ...,-. .. .......... -MiiilJit...., .,.. arm•rnlllf "' 1 ..
Thuttdey, Octot>« 13, 19M -
Campaign
coverage
shouldbe
balanced I
To the Echtor: f would like to encouraac yoo to
offer a more ba!4.nced election cov·
erage. including coveraac foe, the
Laberurian Patty. and its candidate
for president. Ron Paul. lfhalfthceligJblc voters vote 1n an
elccuon. 11's con.s1dcred to be a &ood
turnout. In spite of numerous gam·
m1cks and pleas from officials.. par·
t1c1pa11on 1s dechnana. After much
thought. it's clear to me that the
Rcpubhcan and Democratic panics
only sJ)cak for about ~If the elec-
1ora1e, which as the half that votes.
The other half of the electorate is not
representtd. and consequently makes
an antelhgcnt dccis.on to not panici-
pate. Both of the major panics have
simply run out of ideas. They don't
want to di scuss the issues. because
they don't know what they can say.
gi ven the state of 1n1cllectual
. bankruptcy that exists. Instead they
talk about a lot of things that really
aren't relevant to the day 10 day hves
of 1he c1t1zens. h 's a smalJ wonder
that so few people choose to volt. ·
The Libenanan Party. on the other
hand. has fresh ideas and a fresh
approach to the problems that face
this country. The ··Reagan Revol-
uuon" was a L1bertanan blueprint.
althoua,h at was abandoned shortly
after the elcctaon. The Repubhcans
continue to do l.Jp service to some of
these ideas. but they have never
supported them by any acuon.
Spcakani as a business owner, I am
sincerely fnahtened by the scope and
breadth of the programs being for-
mulated by government at all levels
which are aimed at the pnvate stttor.
This 1s happening while the most
··conservati ve" administrauon an
man) )Ca~ is calling the shots. The
popular conception 1s that the gov-
emmen1 has bttn cut back and ta.xcs
have been out. etc. No1hu1g could be
fan her from the truth. 1 can cenaanly
say that I am not represented by either
the Republican or Dcmocrattc
panres. The press should recognize ats
obhgat..aon to infotm the people of
what 1he1r government 1s up to and
the optaons which are open 10 them. I
strongly suspect wt would hav~ much
h1Jher levels of voter pan1c1pat1on if
the voten we-re-aware thaHhere are
altemauves available to them. LARRY WARNER
San Dieso
Youth n eed s
t o fi n d place
in politic s
To thr Ed1tor-After observing the vice pres1den·
ual debates. listening 10 Michael
Dukak1s and Lloyd Bentsen. and
v1t'win1 the obsession by the press
with Dan Quayle' sage and matunty. I
am left to draw a disturbina con·
cl usa on. I am left with the impression that
someone young(although I would not
consider someone in their 40s youn1)
and 1nex~nenced {although I wou ld
not consider one who has served as a U.S. Congressman and is now servin&
an his second term as U.S. Senator
1nexpcnenced) is not 5u1table to serve
this country ,s president • .
The premise that es beina made 1s
that challenging and in•olvsng
younger tnd1v1duals an our ~litical
system from the bottom up 1s not enoucraged. In fact. it appears that
our nt'xt and future pr"1dents should
onl) !)(selected from an elitist voup
of old men 1n current hiah ·office
pos111ons. Tha~ troubles me. Isn't this
the way the Soviet Union is run?
JOHN M.W. MOORLACH
Costa Mesa
TooAv IN H1sroRY
Today 1s Thursday. Oct. ll. the
287th day of 1988. Tl'ert •~ 79 days
len 1n the year. • Today's h1ahhaht an history:
On Oct. 1 l 1192. the cornerstone
of the cxcc:uuve mansion, later to t,>c
known as the White Hou~. was laid
dunna a ctremony in the O\stnct of
Columb•a.
On this date: In I 77S. thc U.S. N1vy belln 1s the
Continental Conaress onfered the
constl'U(1\0n oh na~at fleet. , .
In I SO. the Jtwtsh ~1zat1on
B'na1 B'nth was founded in New
York.
ln 1943r Italy declared war od
Gttmany. its one-UIM A•it penncr.
In lffO. the thnd prniclntial
campep dtblw wn ~ witJt lttpUbhcan nomanre R M.
Niaon in Hol~ and Demoaat
John F~ Ktnnecly 1n New Yort.
In 1962~ E.chnrd Albft"1 ••"• four<MrK'ltr dra""' .. WM'• Ahld of Vupnaa Woolrr' opr11ll oa
lroedway . .-itJt uaa ....... Mlnlla
and Anhur Hill • Oeofll .
Thouflll• ror aodly: "Oood ... • 1M.,,. Vitt~ la•cwlld." -.__ Uida ...... !llllilte ...
(IU1·1 .... a. ., n. A rlll9' ,,,_
"
..
I .
15viefor3HB
council seats
IJac>llDTl~KD ...............
The I) men and two women vyin&
for thrw Huntinston Beach City
Council seats on Nov. 8appcartobea
plCk of pojiticaans search ins for a hot
ISIUC.
Many complain that somethin&
should be dont about the ever-
incJnSln& trafrac ,ams. They all have positions on downtown redevelop-
mtnt. some happy that it has been
scaled down. othen unhappy that it
has not moved ahead quickJy enouJh.
Othcn want to have more police
and firtfiahte~ some hate the idea of
havina a navipblc channel cut
throuah to the Pacific Ocean and
want to kttp the wetlands of the Bolsa
Chica free from development.
Some don't want any buildin_a on
the ocean side of Pacific Coast
Hiahway. 1n particular the 75.~ ~uart-foot P1enide Village and an
80<kpece park1n1 structure.
Othcn support somethinJ called
controlled arowth. as the city's de-
velopable land shnnks to a precious
few acres. Some want the pier rebuilt
immediately. if not sooner.
Thethrttwinnerswill take office in
late November or early Dcctmber. as
soon as the election results can be
certified. They'll fill the four-year
tmns of Jack Kelly. Ruth Finley and
Peter Grttn. The City Charter
prohibits Kelly and Finky from
scekina rt<lcction because they've served two tmns. Green is windina
up his first term and is the only
incumbeDt in the field.
City Council members are paid "'65 a month. The person who is
elected to the larJClr ceremonial
position of mayor w1I att an extra
S IOOa month.
Followina is a brief look at the
candidates and their positions.
Oeoqe ArJaold
........
Bob liddk. )~. mana,rr of Hilltop
Liquor. uid cop auues 1ncluck
pro1«1ion of tht Bolsa Chica
•tlands and .. wnsible arowth" with
a conctm for traffic. parkina and
safety of ntilbborhoods.
He said he 11 aptnst vananccs from
zonina restnct1on1 that allow in-
creases in density or decttases 1n
park1n& spaces. He also opposes
public financ1n1 of q~tionable pro-
JC'ClS.
··0tvelopcn who choote to build
should take the profit-loss nsk. not
the city." he said.
He also said-the en y shou Id .. stop or
slowdown" S1pal Landmark's plans
to develop the Bolsa Chica. He said
the S. 700 homes planned on the
crwironmentally sens111ve land aJona
Pacific CoaJl Hil,hway would put an
addmonal I S.000 ca.rs on tangled
streets.
There should be efforts to act the
state or federaJ aovemment to buy the
land for a wilderness area. he said.
Jeffrey Barn•
Jeffrty Bums. 33. a carpenter. puts
the preservation of the Bolsa Chica
wetlands and reasoned arowth at the
top of his a~da.
Bums also said the Police Dcpan·
mcnt "is dcs~rately undermanned"
and the city is short of paramedics. He
guesttoned a council dcc1S1on to put
S I mil hon into the cultural arts ~ntcr. sayina the money should have
been used for cmcrJCncy services.
He.also said the southwest pan of
the etty rs especially vulnerable to Ooodin~ and .. that basically,
nothing s bcch done on the Santa Ana
River project"
He said he'd put pressure on
Conpess for asststancc "bcausc of
the potcnt1aJ for danacr:·
Peter Green
Napp&
DAILY PtLOTIThuredey, October 13, 1911 N A7
t
JOYCE
BoDLOllCI
Class
pursues
life's
perks ..
~re,ou mterested m~tting
'-"hat you want from life. Who
1sn 't'>
Psycholog.ast Vlrclaa F .. ter
and financial services expert ltay
Bynm-Ellermaaarc prcscntmga
seminar. "The Quest for Love
and Money:· sponsored by Or-
ange Coast College's Community
Service Office.
The seminar is scheduled on
Oct. 29. from 9a.m. to 12:20p.m.
an Room l08ofthecolltJe's
Counschngand Admissions
Building. Registration ftt 1s S35. • • • Good for Fountain V aJIC}
grand pnzcwinncrR.
Fntde•rpr. This lucky man
won a SS.000 shopping spree at
f e<ko. He will choose from nearly
100.000itemsat the store. with
the exception offood and liquor.
F rudcnbergcr entered the draw-
ing by fillms out an entry blank at
one of the nme Southern Cali-
fornia stores. He will spend the
SS.OOOat the Costa Mesa store. • • •
GeorJC Arnold. S91h, self<m-
ployed. says that city government 1'
unfair and shut down the pier in July
.. for no aood reasons." , ·
Arnold . said that local enainttrs
and d~vefl have found no cracks in
the pier and char&cd that officials
.. closed it for political ~asons."
'because they wanted to run. busi-nnses out of town.
.. Arnold said traffic is a major
~blem. panicularly in the areas of
Edinaer and Warner avenues. He
favon tum1n1 Beach Boulvard into a
super strttt. addina a lane of traffic in
each duttt1on.
Peter Grttn. 62. c1ty councilman.
CCOl<>gJSt and educator, said the Mt1re
lowlands iri the Bolsa Chica should be
set aside and purchased for rcsto-
rauon ~s soon as oil drilhng oper-
ations are phased out. · He 5aid complaints about drug use
arc. spreading throughout the com-
munity "ahd no lonacr are confined
to the Comm~orc Circle and down-
town areas." He said he'd like to be((
up anti-drug forces so ttiat police can
respond to ne1ahborhoods. He'd al~
suppon <trug programs in schools. he
said. He ravorsdowntown rcdcvelo~
ment and the 6h1ft that it's 'taken in
recent months towar~s a v11lagt
atmosphere ··and more to the hdman
side.··
Now this sounds interesting: A
retreat to the ~awlc country .. of
Oak Glen will bC sponsored by
CoastlineCQmmunityCoJlcgcon
Oct 20. The mountain villafc is
noted for delicious ch ickcn-an·a-
basket. homemade hot aPs>lc pie,
fresh apple cider and other aP1,>lc .11 goodies. The tourtncludcS3>vtSit ·
tb the h1st0ric pioneer museum
'tocattd an an authentic one·room
Arnold. who also once ran for state
a<>vcmor. saJd he'd work to save the
Bolsa Chica.
FV man-to.pedal
a ·rotind the world
&y JOYCE BODLOVICH day. and the bike weighs approt-imately I 00 pounds when fully
, OfW.OellrNM..,.. loaded. It 1s a moun\ain-Jype bacycle
Khin Palmquis1 cSf Fountain Val-wittl. minor modifications for tour-
ley has chnstened his solo around-ing. ..
the-world bicycling journey .. No End The well-cquipocd bic:yde 1s like an
in Siaht." adven1S1ng billboard. , Palmquist
That should tell you something says. :
about the lack ofume constraints the-. "People-arc alwar,s stoppma me to ~year-old veteran cyclist has placed talk about my btke. • he said. "I have
on himself. Palmquist reccntry met so many people. It 1s hkc 1om1 to
boarded an airplane with his bicycle collqe ... lcamina about other cul-
for the fim lq of his Ions-planned turts.
trip that will stan on the FiJi Islands. "On o ne triP. I stayed with a
Cook Islands. New Zealand and Portu1ucse family for two Wttks. I
Australia. and move throuahout helped them on then farm. We still
Asia. Euro~. Africa and South wnte."
America. Palmquist says if his lqs. cqu1p-
Sometimes. he sa~ the plannin11s mcnl and good fonunt hold. he hope-s
easaer than accomplishina the aoal. to finish pcdahna his way across
... take n one day at a time -every conunent 1n about five yean.
because any other way and you would The tnp will cost an estimated $6.000
be overwhelmed by the loaistics." a year. He hascnou&h moneysavccho
said the Chico State Collcat araduate: travel two years wunout workina. and
He calls the bicycle ~ rides "a once the money is siScnt. he will pick
human-powered mobile home." up work along the way. He has even
"House. bed. stove. sound system. planned ahead by scttina aside
I've l(>t it all ... u~pt the payments," cnou&h money for start-up needs
he lauahcd. ·~1 averqe 60 miles per (Pleue eee WORL~/A8)
"W.Nt Wlll be the ne.Jlt targtt. the Clement Doml.Dpes next toao? A houttnatractora mobile
Clcment.Dom1nguez. 44, systems ·home park?" he asked.
anal)st. argued· that the city's re-He said he t>chcves th< closma of.
development agency has too much . the pier was ··rontnved" by off1C1als
power. and he opposes its authonty to to ·clear the way for construction or
take pnvate land. the Plcrs1dt V1lla&t. He sttks tM
.
rt'\um of safe and sa·ne firrworks..
banned b) the-tit) Council for safety
reasons. Dom'1nfucz sa.ad the ban 1s
an mtrus1oq o -the nJ!its of the pcope. -•
(Pleue eee HlJM I µ.GTOPI/ A8)
_R9?~~ing-1;1p -funds
goa:I of Rotarians · ·
By JOYCE BODLOVlCH 1ng <''rt') one to attend ... ~ .... hllr,........ The SS per person adm1u1on
includes western grub. muSJc. danc-ls lhere noih1ng th<' Rotary Club or ang and games. L1braf) director Ron
Hun11n1ton Beach.won't do to raise Ha) den sa1d~he k-lad<'n complex funds for wqnh~ cau~~ • will be ..transfi cd into a western
Probabl~ not -espcc1aJly when showplace ror t e'ent.
the fund-ra1Str 1s to btneflt duldrcn. "What bett a.) 10 raise funds
The latnt prOJttl ur\dtttaken by the and !\Ive fu the same tm:ie. but
club and co-sponsored by Hunt-with good food.a vanct).Of1C1Jv1on..
inaton Bcxh Central L1nry 1s a great cntcrtarnmrnt and a fnmdt)
.. Rotary Roundup." scheduled Satur-~atem atm.osphm.. EvCt)·one 15
da at 6 p.m. 1ns1de the library guarani~ a fantastic 11me." Ha)den
Thc monc) will go toward a new said.
Ouldrcn's Resoul't't Ccrner u tbe ,· It Stt~s the dcsu-c: to bwJd the new
library. The cent~ will hou~ mott ch1fclren s ~ang has created a
than 70.000 books. a ch1ldrcn·s philanthropic att11ude from the bus1-
tbcater. computer station. science ncss community
labs and rc:adma workshop artas. Pnzes have been donated by
"Ifs been more than 10 )Cars since Medieval T1mc-s.. Las Bnsas res-
~·vc been 1n,olvcd in a ~all) taurant the Boot &m. Fifth "'enuc
ellc111n1 comm unit} rund-ra1s1ng Florut. B1lrs Camera Shop. El Tonto
event like the Rotart Roundup:· said Inc .. F1'c Crown's restauranl. Villa
club rcpcrscntat1vc [i)on LuQ,dholm. Nova restaurant. Man<' ~allcndcr's
·1Mos"t. 1mpcmantl)'. v.e art com-Pie Shop and Four Seasons Hotel.
mnll'd to 1tt1s bcca4sc v.e behe\C an Some of the ad1v1uts for the
the s1an1ficanc<' of dcvelopanf 1he evening arc a S2 big beef raffie.
.,..,,...,......,,.,.....,... •1 (luldrcn's RcsourC'c Center fs a bnproo coun . a tontlla toss. Nerf
Kmn Palmqalat ,. vef)' wonh~ cause. so v.c·~ en~a~a; (Pleaee eee ROUNDUP/ AS)
schoolhouse and stops at special-
ity shops nestled among oak trees.
The S 18 tqJStration ftt in-·
eludes bus transponation. The ·
bus wall leaveCoastJi~Cotlege
Center. l 1460WamcrAve .. ·
Fountain Valley. at 8µn.and
return b)·4:30p.m. Forft'SCf·
vat 1on s. cal I the office of Com-
m unit) Services. 241-6186 . . . . . " Th'e Costa Mc.saK.t~s Oub
·has named a..r1aMartel as -
KJwam4n of the Y car.
-when c'hOOSUlg our member
of the year. we look forso{tleone
whouactt''e m thcclu~ detnon-
stnhes honcstv and integntyand
bas a genuine concern for others.. ..
said Itta Dilley, immediate past
president of the Kiwanis Club.
Markel has a long history of
community involvmcnts,mclud-
ing lca~icrsh1p posiuons in the
Boys and GtrlsOuboftttc tfarbor
area.. the Food Oistributs.on
Ctnttt. the Mesa Pride and other.
orgamzations~· . . . ·• The 19890ran~County ·
T cacher of the Y ur Prograni~s
hononng 2 7 teachers on~ 29 ~t
the Universlt} Oubat UCJ. The
hst has-bttn shced to four finalist
and Kalklea l•ena.l West-
minster High SchoOl teacberin
the Huntington Beach Union
High School D1stnct. is on that
presttg.ious hst. • • • Fountam Valley Fire Depart-
ment. in culmination of ats wttk-
long •· Ftrc Prcvenuon Weck
(Pleue eee PUBLIC( A.8)
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Band tournament set al. o:Fange COist.C~nege Sa.ttir~ay._.
Marina Hidb annlver.Bary Senior Citucns. .\dv~r) Council wtli hold a pubhc can-er managtmc,nt will conduct tht' scminar.Ttfe ftt ls '· Onnee Coast Colleae and Costa Mesa Hiah School will co.h<>St the SC"Cond annual South Coast Invitational
F~ld Bind Tournament Saturday evenina in OCC's uBlrd Stadium.
•· heannf fnda) at I JO p.m at 6-300 S Grand ~Ave . S~~ and reg1strat1on ma' be made b~ phone at 432~Sl80.
Bt1Wttn IO and IS bands att e•pcctcd to participate
in tM competition. prncnuna their full 1988 halftime
shows. Tht coms>ettton include un;ve11ny. Saddlcblck.
Costa Mesa and San Oemente hip schoors.
The 11cn will open at 3 p.m. and tM competition 1s
scheduled from• 10 10 p.m. Admiuion is S3 for adults
and S2 for senior c1m:cns and chtld"n under 12.
Chancellor to •pe•k
Marina H1ah School in Hun11n1ton Bnch will Bu11d1na B. m Santa "-na ~lebratc Its 2Stn anniversary at us homccom1n1 pme lnformatton from the heanf\J wall be used todeyelop
Fnday at 7:30 b.m. 11 WesvrunsLcr Stadium. proposals for contracted ~am to ~1ors.. Ca I Hopt
All past araduates art invited to attend. Fonner H•n at 567-741 2 for d<'tl1ls ·
homccom1n1quttnsshouldchcck 1n bycalhn189J.-6S71. . #' • ~
tn 211..... . Medical aides conve~l~g · ..
Laguna Garden Club meet• Tk Oranae Count) chapter of. the · Cahfom1a
Medical 4'ss1stants .\SSOC'1auon .»'Ill ,preRnt Jt.s I.3th
annual fashion shOY<, lunchcon anCJ boutique 5aturday at
t~ A1rponcr Inn an Irvine ·
Harbor High reuiHon.se~
The clu~ of tqs of ewp0rt Harbor HWt SchOOI
Y.111 hold ns .lOlh <'lass reunion Saturda) at the Balboa Bl)'
Club 1n \/ev.pon Beach •
<\lumn1 v.1shin.110 pan1c1pate should contact O&anc •
Manac Baik) at 64}-3353 or Pet( Rabbitt 11 631-7740. .. "The Crtauon of a Bonsai" wall be ckmonstrated b)'
Francis Watan or£'osta Mesa at Fnday•s mtttil\& of the ~una Beach Garden Club, to be held at 11 a.m. in the ·
Atfttd ftmandez. chanc:ellorofthe Caist Commun1-Nc1ahborhood Conatt11taonal Church hall. 340Sc. Ann·s
t) Colltte Distnct. will add~· patrons of Golde~ West Onvc in U,ona. ·
The eHnt 1s the o~n1ut1Q.n's bt.-St fund-ranerof
the )car. Tickets art $ .. O. and .min)' 4foor pnzes will be ll-,.., l
awarded. Call Jackie Fisher at 861-SSSO or 8.34-1303 for Fu~ Departm~t u.i•p ay.
Col• at \heir fntctina• Fnda_y at 11 :4) a.m. 1n the Follow1n1 a noon luncheon. Dr. Gary Jamn of
Community Center on the GWC campus'. Orantt Coast Concse wall prHtnt a shdt projrlm on
The luncheon is Jt\iccd at S6.SO. Membership ~~scar. The._J~t donation 1s S3. and funher
infonna .. on on the patrons. a volunteer suppon aroup for 1nform1uon IS available 11 •94--6460.
the coltes. m1y be obtained by Hllina Beth Kennedy at • 141.sau. . · : Children'• pro1nm •tartliJ6
· Cobf ao• it Irvine Hllton
Over S 10 mallaon worth of rare coins and «>!lcctlble1
wdl btoesy= ~Newport Beach Coin Show. 10bit.td Sundlr1tthelrv1ntH1honand
ifOWtn Nolet. 19.a>Jamboftc lfvd .. lf"Vl M .
• ~ JOO n11ionll daJcn rt~nt1na all .._ OI coia collictlnt w'lll be mann1rt1 booths at the nnt. Hounlft Friday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m .. Saturday "°"' 10 IO 6 ~ Ind Sunday from 10 to 2 p.m. An aucuoa will bt fnda)' at 1 p.m and S.1urday at 6:30 p.m.
.. ..
Un1vtt11ty Communll)' Park wall ofrn an cilhl·Wttk
prosnm for ch11drn 2 10 "· Nn•na Fridly lftd"' n1nn1ftl throutb Ott. 16. •Mrt ch11d~n will hear sionn ud u~t with ~sand craf\s. •
The ~m 11 ~ at $20 a.nd clasta wall lftft1
each fndl)' from 9:JO to 10:30 Lm. Call ebt '"'• Communny Scrvaccs Dqianment at 66(). JU I tOt fianhn-
1nformateon. • • • .
Senion• limrltJI aaJJoaaced ·
T~ OrantC County Ara Aetnc) on Ali~ dli
..
add1t1onal 1nrormatton.
Graduate te•t pl•nned
~ Ciraduate Ma~mcnt Record Eum ..,,II be
IJ\tft Saturday at Nattonal Un1,·cn.aty's Ora• County
Hmeus. 8 Elccuu"c Cut'lt an l1'1nt
The muluplco<hotC'C tHt 11dcstped tOUICSSltntfll
vnt.lwnd mathftnatacal 1th ltlOC'Ulted wnh W«nt 1n
tht firM )Uf Of~uMe ~t IChool. The ftt lS U6. and rnott 1nformat1on 1s avadabk at 2S().S471.
\
The laallna Beacb f1rt Department Mii 'celcbntt
Na1Jonal Fltt Prcvenuoo Weck with an open houtt
Saturday from 2 ~ p.m at the main firt S\ltaon. ~I
Forest Avt.
Kehum-fillcd t.Uoons wiU be offcrcd and the ftnt
I 00 cb~n attcndi1 Wlll ha~ ~ ptetura takn tee
*tth Spet1ty the q efmluneou will be tCrYed.
RetUed emplorem to meet
Mftftbn1 oft.ht •~ hblic E'i:,en A 11 u• ttOa "111 mftt SMwdly .M 10 Lm. It Ollis 5-iof
Cnnt''f en Corona*' Mar.
Dr. JnVmt Tc*sof'UCI wtD speMOft ·Mm•' "nh•
GOod tte.1t1t:• ... ---" .. '° ... ~ ,.-c e ... ,...
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' A8 N Dr.,.. CO.I DAILY PILOT/ Tllul'odlff, Octobol 13, 11118
Hunt to head Pegasus board
IJ JOYCE IODl.OVICH ................
Pqasus School in fountain Valley
ha$ named Gary Hun1 u i1s new
chairman of1he bolrd oflt')!Sltts.
"Wt: arc very~ Mr. Hunt has
accep1td this 1ppoin1mcn1." said the sc~ founder al\d dircaor. Laura
,. K.llz H111'iiway. "His enersy and
dedication will be a major factor in
htlpina us relocatt: our campus to
lat,1tr facilities for our bri&hl and sifted at.men.··
t!athaway founded tht school in
1984 with a belief that students
should learn 11 their own i-ce. The
school currcn1l y 'has JOO pupils ~ ..
tWttn tht Dtt--lunclnllnm' and lhlrd aradn and a Nfl' of wvca f'uU.time
tt:achen and wveral pu1•1ime volun-
tttn.
Hunt aCCH'Oftldel Marrnidtnt, is
stnior vk't prnidtnt. corporalt staff
and rnourtt cn1iltm.cn1 tor The
Irvine Co. He will be assisted by
Sidney Weiner, stnior vice-~dent.
Rt:publtcan NatiOftll Bank of New
York. who w1s n11mtd the board's
vict c~irman. I
"I-am pkalt'd 10 be assoCiated with
1eachers who care a amt deal 1bou1
the dcvclopmen1 of the educational
and social 1"alun of their s1udcnts,
.
and "'"-" who *" dedka&cd 10 ~aunna 1ht nmtinuity, arowth and
amprovcment of this unique and
varuablt 1mn110 communi1y life in
Oraner Coun1y."
Hunt, whost two c:hiklren attend
tht innoY1tive •tchool, has held
numerous appoinltd pos.i1ions in
state and fcdffal aovemmtnt. He it
c:hlirman or the Irvine Medical
Center, aod ICl"\ln on 1he board of
dirtt'lon for thl.Jrvine Health Foun·
dation. Bia Brothen/Bia Sistm or
OranJt County. Oranac County Per-
fonn1na Ans Center · and Oranat·
wood Children's foundation .
!!'!'TINGT?N COUNCIL RACE DRAWS 15 CANpIDATES •. ,,
. . ... '
1Kari Oeller coaceatratee oa •etiDC·
Tom Ll'""C-
Tom Li vengood, 49, planr1ing
commissioner and director of collct;e
auxiHary services atU>na Beach City
Collqe. said h'e 'd work hard 1oannex
Bolsa Chica into the city and takr
action to prolect 1.290 acres· as
W"Ctlands.
musician. said revitalization of the cist and business ow,\er, said lhc No. has a ra110 of I.I offittrs pc:r 1,000
downtown has 10 be done responsibly I issUe is rtdcyclopment. which he population.
and that long-range effects on traffic c:alJe~ esStnlial for life and sn>wth of
nttd 10 be considered. business. Redevelopment upgrades · llltellell Tracy
He is apinst ··1arge, grandiose.. quality of life in the project artli 1nd
plans and opposed" .to development increases Lax revenues thlil can be
on 1he be;1.ch. He said parking ustd to improv~ community services.
structures should be located inland. He said the p1eris the sr.mbol of1he
inslead.ofonth~beach.andthatsome city and should be rebullL The pier
form of mass transit such as a trolley. also is a factor In Huntincton &c.ch's
tram or bus line should move people image .. as Ifie surfing capital of U.S."
--Mitchell Tracy." 25. an owner of a
limousine conipany, said he's for
reasonable srowth but onlr if traffic
problems set taken care of first.
Physwal struggl~s
take center stage
He fa vors a village a1mosphere and
low.«nsity development in !he
downtown and lhe rebuilding of the
pier. Traffic solu1ions need to be
t1ckled. but they require ci ty. counly
and sllte efforts. he said.
He said Beach Boukvard could be
helped by synchronizing traffic sig-nals. elim.inating on-strttt perking
and adding more 1uming lanes.
Dou MacAl.lllt!!r
Don M1cAJlister. 55. fonner two-
tenn councilman and a businessman,
said the city and developers should
move faster with redevelopment to
gel · rid of the "eyesore' in the
downtown. He said the P.ier should be
rcbuill as fas1 as possible and that
state and frderal govcmmenls should
be tapped for fina ncial assistance.
MacAllis1er said the city needs to
take a more active role in drug
rducation. He favors streamlining
Beach Boule vard lO spttd traffic.
JooephNappa
Joseph Nappa. 34. auomey and
··1 want toSttus build s1rcets before
buildin•<." He said that trams or By LESLIE EARNEST -Id h OI' .... .,.., .... St.If
downtown. and should be preserved. he said. trolleys cou cany pcos>'e to t e lkforr she got sick. Kari Geller
downtown and that streets could be used to act. pla)' soccer. ski. surf and widened. fkx.ib~ work schedules Na~ predicted there will be
beach cfos1on if development plans
arc allowed to proceed at Bolsa Chica
and said :.1here are no good plans 10
deal with erosion ...
Gerl<>rteC•
Geri Onega. 45. a planning com-
missioner and mother. said all 1,290
acres of the Bolsa Chica should be
saved and there should be no navi-
gable cut for boaters to the ocean.
She said Pierside Villaae should be buih on Main Strttt .. nbt on the
beach." and th11 the pier should be
rebuilt immediately with redevelop-
ment agency funds, not-city funds.
current traffic problems are !he
"'direct result'" of poor planning. she
said. Densities of new projttts should
be look rd at carefully. she said. I
Anthony PaNannante
Anthony Pa~sannan1e. 62. phanna·
Linda lloDlton-Patteraon --~ d _.... do gymnastics. encou. ~" an pa1 •Ing structures Now she conccntrales on acting.
Linda Moulton-Pattenon, 4S, a built near the downtown. In fact. Geller. who starred last hiah school 1rustee and vice president Bolsa Chica is another top issue. he h o(Rogen Cable TV. said top issues said. He fa von preservation of the weekend in the Laguna Play ouse
include preserving the quality of life, wetlands. production of"The Liule Prin«ss."
k d '·nd d said she·s found ways 10 generate beaches. par s an wet... s an inspiration in her acting roles. having ··reasonable. planned JobD Valenti.Do The l(>..year-0ld San Clemente
growth.'" . . . John Valen1ino. 68. retired engi-H.gh •·h 1 · · · k th. Traffic1sab.~pro. blemandcou.ld n-,,sa,·dheope'1channeltothe I ~ oo 1un1orwass1nc rn is
d ha ...... year with a mys1erious ailment that be eastd by w1 en1~ roa. s. v1ng Pacific Ocean rom Bolsa Chica but baffled d.octors and left in its wake a
car pool~. urginJ ·· e~ times" and believes that local pec)ploare fighting variety of physical impairments.
en.couragJng people 10 ndc;busq, shc__a losing battle. ··1 got sick Jan. 1. 1988 -happy
said. . . ··The prople might gripe·and com-new _year.'' Geller said with a lauah.
She ~1.d. ~ea~~rc J. !he slo~-plain but the Sllte ·and countr, "Al tint lj!!St had the real bad flu Tor
growt.h 1n1t1auve .. :-vould_!l t wor'k in politicians will do what they want,' lbout ~ a week. Then I got de-
Hunungton lka1;h_ ~~seonly .10 he said. '"They'll let us voi~ our hydrate'd.'"Hersymptom~.including
percent of1he land 1n the cny remains opinions." · -severe he'.adaches. worsened and soon
undeveloped. A member of the Valentino said traffic: is bad and she was in the hospital. Befort ii was
Amigos de Bolsa Chica. she's 1gainst that something -such as 1he over. Geller had lost her vision and
the proposed entrantt to the ocean. elimination of some traffic signals -memory and could no longer hold her
needs to be done to alleviate con-neck up. She lost 20 percent of her JlmSUYA &nted intersections. • body wei~I. Jim Sil,·a. 44, businessman. Valentino said he's the only can-··1 didn t start getting any better or te~cher. and p!an~ing CO"!"missioner, did1te living in a mobile home park anything," Geller said. ··They knew I
said that traffic 1s 1hr bt~t over-and pledged to give his council salary had some kind of a virus. but they We 're lookingfor <food sports rid;ng problem because .... been 10 charily. . d;dn'I know Whal ;1 was." O' neglected "except in spots." Thirty doctors later. Geller had a
The Dail~ Pilot wants to report the sporting ex.plaits of you and Fie said . forexample.1hatcan hive Henry Tee corrcc1 diasnosis: enttphalitis -an
Your neighbors. to wail four or five light changes to Henry Yee. 62 .. managinJ partner inflammauon of1he brain.
make left turns from Warner Avenue of 1 CPA firm. said density limits Allhouah many symptoms have We're not looking for news from Anaheim Stadium. that"s onto Algonquin becauSC" there's no must be placed on development and improved" or disappeared, Geller still
covered. We would rather hear about someone you know bowling.a left tum signal on Warner. But thettis thal developers should be required to struggles with muscular problems
600 senes or shooting a hole in one. a left tum on Algonquin to Warner, pa y for any roid improvements, and his dffficUlty with balantt and
Send us a bnefaccounl Oftht sporting accomplishmen1 and a e\·enthoughithasaboul IOtimesless educational programs and parks coordination. Currently. she has the
photograph 1f )OU have one. The Daily Pilot will publish them in our traffic, hr said. nttded to accommodale their pr6-use of onlyJourfinscrsand must we:ar
Good Sports column. which will appear in Thurs.day's Neighborhood ' He said he·opposesdenlity bonuses jects. a bra« on her right foot. When her
Focus section. gran1ed to developers to build low-. .\ top ~riority is to__prQtCCI the left foot can tolerate ii. she will get
Address your correspondence to Neighborhood Focus in care of cost housing because the unils lose shoreline from offshore oil drilling_ another brace.
1he Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626. their low cost on« they' rt sold. he said. He said he pledges to clean up The-San Clemente teen. who lives ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=::....'.."'S~i~lv~a~sa~;d~h~e=a~lso~w=o:_u~ld~Sl~r<~n~g~1h~c~n~1~o~x~ic~wa~s~1es~a~n~d~p~r<~v~c~n~1~d~um~p~;n~g~o~f-, with her mother, father and older the citv"s politt force. which he said hazardous matenals in the city. sister .. s,aid she has been told her
illnt'Ss could get worse. better or stay
the~same.
"I thought about being like this for
the rest Of my life . 1nd I thoqht,
'Nope. 1~al's not gonna hal)JJfn.' ..
Geller sa id.
As 1 way of geuing the upper hand
on her symptoms, Geller said she
spends two hours three days a week in
physical thc12py. Her mother. who
had polio. has helped a lot. Geller said. I
"'Li ving with somebodywho's been
through somethina like this 111 her
life. it makts me know how much
more I can do than what people new
to this subjec1 may think. .. Geller
said·. '
The _young ~c:tres.s, 'who recently.
landed another role 1n San Clemente
High's nex.t schQOI play and is in the
process Of signing with an aaent. takes
perfonning very seriously_ She ~·
Hccted on what her most recent role as
an actress meant to her, and on how
her illness has changed her life.
··it opened my eyes to the world a
lot more ... she said.
As a mull of her illness. Gellet said
she felt such a stronl identification
with the heroine . of "The Little
Princess" - a wealthy young girl
whose.brig.hi fu1ure ev1porates when
her father dies. leaving her destitute.
"She had everything. now she· has
no1hing. She has to find ways to make
i.t throui,h.all her hard times." Geller
said. "In a way her story is somewhat
similar to mine in that she had a lot
and then she lost it ...
But the story has a happy ending:
Geller hopes her story will, too.
··finally. in the end.~ she gets
everything back." Gtllcr said of the
liulc princtss. ··rm hopin& that -
hin1. hin t -my story will finally go
tha1 way too:··
PUBLIC OPEN HOUSE •••
•
•
%
,
Annual Yield -Current ·Rate*
·%
..
• •
ON DI;:POSITS OF
$500 to $99, 999
• -FOR 180 DAYS
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING ~CAN SAVINGS
WE WELCOME YOUR 'OALL. .
1-800-24 7-7197 Mori.;.:.. Sat. 8 A.M. t.o 8 · P.M .
.
• Federal regulation requires a slilislarlial inlc:resa. penalry for early wilhchwal Annu.I yidd bMed m daily c:ompoUndinc wha:'
1nl.C'n:st is Left on deposil for one·ycar 1tnn. Ra&c:, yidd and tmn subject IO cMige without notice. . . .
l, I, •
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FromA7
1988," is inviting community
members to an open house Satur-
day at Fire Station I on Bushard
Street across from Fountain Val-
ley High School. Activi1ics from
JOa.m. to4p.m. will incl ude a
balloon launch. tour of the station
and refreshments.
"This year's theme is 'Test
Your Smoke Detector: It's A
Sound You Can live With."said
fire education specialist Carol
Rea. "Weknow7S percent of
American homes have smoke
detectors. but due to age. dead o r
missing batteries or lack of
cleanup ... as many as tw~thirds
of those do not work."
Nationwide. Rea said. 80pcr·
~nt of all fire deaths occur in the
home. Vcryyoungchildrcnand
thtelderly arc at high risk. The
majority of fatal home fires occur
~t night when families arc sleep-
ing. ·
'"That is when smoke detectors
arc needed the most forprotec·
tion." shC said. ~ ••• Have y_ou ever wondered what
it would be like to bt a fl ight
attendant? A thrtt·hourwork·
shop is slated for Oct. 2Sat
Orangrcoa-stCollcgcat 7p.m. to
be led by Diua Bell, an attendant
with United Airlines for eight
years. She has also been a head
flight attendant with Hawaii Ex-
press Airline. Registration fee is·
S25.
Another class offered by OCC
on Oct. 2Sfrom 7to JOp.m. isa
seminarforsmall busincssown-cn that offers tips on purchasing a
computer. Lecturer is Peter Hoyt.
who has more than 20 years of
cxpcricnccwith"computen. He
has been involved in program·
ming systems·analysis, software
rcqu1rcmcn1sand hardware selec-
tion.
For additional information on
any ofOCC'sclasses, call
432-5880.
We la vile YH to seH ••
lafonnatiH Oii commulty bp--
penll11. We wul to ~r from
yo• abHI •pcomlq evnts, lecal
,eo,le ud aetpborltood •ew1 ln
1-ral. SeM to Ille Dally PUo~
P.0 .Bo•UH,CoslaMesatHH.
Mark to I.ff atteati• of Jeyce
llo41ovld"
WORLD CYCLE TOUR •••
From.A?
when he retum5 home .
To underwrite the trip, Palmquist
worked long hours at a s~nina aoocts
store. He·also tauaht bicfcle-touring
and moun1ain<limbin1 classes.
Palmquisl's i-ssion ror lona-dis--
tancc cyclin1 bcpn while a colleae
1tudmt. His first Wesl COlst lour
took th~ months to com~te.
• "I .-.s hooked.'' he sa1~. "I took
two six months toun in westrrn ind
eastern Europe. and most m:cnUy a
tllrtt mon1h tour or the southwest
and Rock its:. This was 10 tel lhe buss
out and compkte mx tou~ -~· aro~nd:·
Palmquisl J.IYS he has never en·
coun1ertd danaeroussituations in his travels. ·
"Who is livi ngdanaerously? Thctt
are drive-by kiUinp hcrt evfl')!day,"
he said. "I have found there~ more ·aooc1 peol>le than bocf pcopl< out
there.·. · ·
The oklest of fivt children, Pilm·
quist sayi his family is supponive or
his unonhodo• lifrityle.
'"Ont time I asked my mom whit
she tells hC'f friends about me, .. he
said with 1 laqh. She said\ 'I Ill
Kevin's not like fftOl\.JO )UtOkts.'
~_J • •
..
,
.•
DAILY PILOT/TJQ9dey, Octobet 13, 1NI S A7
7 ~andidates seek _two Laguna seats
USUE
Eu1EST
By LANCE IGNON think I can brina some balan« ... he °' .. ..._........ added.
All~vtncandidatesfortheLaauna Black. said ~.council ha~ IOlt
Beach City Council say they att aoucb wtth • m&Jonly of~ rnide!Jll
defendm of the crescent-shaped and ~1 t~ ~uch tame r_u~s;tina
swath of propeny that insulates the from cn111 to ms1s .. He al~ Cf'!UC1ztd
city from the sprawlina suburbia in n for the method wtth which It plans
SOJlth Oran,e County. to pey for a 471 -acre hunk of
They also decry the traffic and undevel~ . land known as the
perkjna problems in dowr\lown Carma-Sindhna property.
Lguna and the prospect of offshore In November. the city struck an
oil drillina. 1pttrMnt with WBM Inc. a wholly
But IM five challcnscrs and two owned subsidiary of the-' Bank of
incumbents runnina for two seats on Nova Scotia. to pey S3~9 million for
the council takeseparatt paths on the the pn)perty. SI million then and the '
tt.aulation of business sjps and rcma.in<kr by Dec. t. 1988.
d1~ys. Tbev also disqree over how At the time, City Manqer Kenneth
the City shoufd have handled the sale Frank said the funds would come
of portions of S~camore Hills, a either from Proposition 70, a subse-~ped section of city-<>wned qucntly successful initiative that gave
propet'ly at the junction of El Toro the city SJ 0 milfion for open space
and Laauna Canyon roads. acquisitions. or from the sale of about
The election on Nov. 8 will be the $7 million worth of property to the
first to includ~candidatcs from South county for a right-of-way for the San
Lquna, '.A'h1ch was annexed to JO@qutn Hills tollway.
La.f.una this year. The right-of-way money is due Oct.
• O~e of the reasons for coming into 31. but county officials recently
the clly was to get some local indicated that there might be a delay
representation." said Ann Christoph. in ttie payment. whicfi could jeop-
one of two candidates from South ardize the timely payment to the
Luuna. The ~t~er is MaJY, Reynolds. Bank of Nov.a Scotia: The money
The rema1n1ng candidates att from Proposition 70 might also come
Donald B. Black. Paul Munoz and after the Dec. 31 due dace.
R.ickey ~later and incumbc.nts Neil Black said the city is gwlty of
F1Upatnck and Martha Collison. duplicity because on one hand it
Doaald 8. Black
Donald B. Black. S6. is a local
attorney, past president of the Laguna
Beach Chamber of Commerce and a
curnnt member of its board of
directors.
He ran a~ a write-in candidate two
ycan aao and garnered nearly 3.000
votes. Since then Black has been a
frequent speaker at council mectinas
on issues ran&ina from support of
downtown busancsses to his work on
the board of directors of Friend-
shipSheher. which recently cstat>-
lishcd a sheller for the homeless:
Black said the city needs to do more
to enhance its reputation as an art
colony and thus anract tourists mott
likely to patronize local hotels and
_restaurants instead of those who "just
... lie on the beach."
If the city could attract people who
spend more monc~. local govern-
ment would have more revenue from bed and sales taxes to hitt police and
firc personnel and to make repairs,
-Black said.
"I would like to Stt a City Council
that's not so loPSided in its voting. I
needs the county money. but on the
other it has filed a lawsuit to try to
block the transponation corridor.
"I think all of us want open space ...
but we can't do it unttahstically,"
Black said.
ADD CluUtopb
Ann Christoph. 43. is a landscape
archilect and a member of the South
Laguna Specific Plan Board of Re-
view and the South Laguna Civic
Association.
While Christoph said she agrees
with the council's approach to open
space acquisition and its stand
apinst development, she-believes the
council and city staff could do mott
to difTu~ issues before they tum into
devisive battles within the communi-
ty .
For example. she faulted the cny
for ~nding a bluntly worded letter
earlier this year to about JOO home--
owners tn South Laguna with houses
that had unapproved additions,
The issue en4cd up splitting the
community into 1wo camps. one that
favored leaving the illegal units alone
and another that felt the houses
Physical struggles
take center stage
By LEsUE EARNEST struggles with muscular problems °' .. .,_,,...It.fl and has difficulty with balance and
r . . coordination. Currently. she has the ~.ore she got sick. ~n Geller~ useofontyfourfiltJtrsand must wear
used to act .. Play soccer. ski, surf and a brace on her nghl foot. When her
do gymnasucs. . left foot can tolerate it. she will get
Now she concentrates on acung. another brace.
In fact., Geller. who starred last The San Clemente teen. who lives wceke~ an t~~ Ua'!na Pl~yhou~ with her mother. father and older pf!>ducu~n of The l1ttle Pnnccss. sister. said .she has been told her ~id. ~ s found w~ys to generate illness could get worse. better or stay
msp1rauon m her act1na roles. the same.· ·~
. The 16-yc_ar~ld San 9emen~e "l thou~t about beln1 like this for
H1&h S,Chool 1unior. was s~ncke.n this the re5t of my life and I thought,
year W1th a mystenous ;lll!Dent that 'Nope, that's not gonna happen,' .. ba~cd docton. an~ left !n its wake a Geller said.
vaf.'C'Y of physical 1mpa1rments. As a way of 1enin1 the upper hand
I got ~~ck Jan. I .. 198~ -happy on her symptoms. Geller said she
!!'w year, . Geller said with a lau&h. spends two hours three days a week in
At first I JUSt had the real bad flu for physical therapy. Her mother. who .
about a • week. Then I . got ~e-had polio has helped a lot. Geller hydralcd. ' Her symptmns, ancludmg said. ·
Paal llanoz
should be brought into confonnity. a
view that Chnstoph supported.
"I don't think that whole issue had
to blow up." she said.
Christoph is acnerally in favor of
controlling what kinds of signs and ·
displays bus1ntSSCs put up. an issue
that sparked an unsuccessful recall
drive tiy merchants who said the city
had no business telling them where
and how they could display their
watts.
ll•rtlaa -Colllaon .
Martha Collison. S4. is a Realtor
and one-term council member.
As with Munoz and Black. Collison
believes the cny needs mott long-
i"angc planning and advocates a
busmess study that would help local
business better plan for future market
trends.
Also hkc Black. she supports Plan-
ning Commission recommendations
to deal with parking and traffic
problems. .
Althouah Black and others charie
the city with nsky financial manage-
ment. Collison said that the city 1s
csstnt1ally in good financial shape
bccaU.st it has tradnionally run on a
pay-as-you.go basis and has not
accrued a laf'lt bond debt •
Much of the probkms with busi-
ness in the downtown area, she said.
an be blamed on escalating rents.
Althouah she said that landowners
arc partly responsible for the tren4.
"the. business ~rson is to blame
beau~ he·s paying for it. h 's sort of a
twofold problem thett." .
Collison has been a tradinonaJ
favorite among local merchants for
her less stnngent stand on code
enforcement and because she is the
only current member of the council
who works in town.
Kell Pltspatrlck
Neil Fiupatrick. SJ. 1s general
man.qcr for PacTel cellular phones
and is Sttkmg his third term.
The group that tried to ttcaJI
Mayor Dan Kenney and council
members Robcn Genlr)' and Lida
Ltnney vowed to dcf~t Fiupatnck at
the polls-in November. The Commn-
ltt to Recall City Council charsed f 1upatnck w11h being anti-business.
"h's JUSt not true. lo fact. I think
I've bttn very pro-busintss,"
F11zpatrick said. ·
The councilman cited the ~onstrue
uon of a two-story parkina lot on
Glenneyrc Stttet. the purchase of
~veral other parking lots, improve-
ment of downtown storm drains and
the planting of trees in the business
d1stnct as proof that he supports local
commerce.
He also defended the city's right to
le\'Y a fee on mercha.nts who move
into a new bulldma and 1n~sc the
intensity of the business without
providing additional parking. In sucb
cases. the city ctwies the merchants
$8.000 for each in-lieu parking per-
mn. The money 1s then eannarkcd for
future parlong improvements
el~whett.
(Pleue eee COUPfCll./ AS)
Children's
h ome new
m ission
Mike and Manh n Whitman had
1wo teen-age dauitners when the)
ckc1ded they wanted to adop1 anothtr
child . .\fter considenng vanous o~
lions. the Wh1tmans set their sights
on an international adoption.
"We fell thtrc were so many people
here who ~ childless and wanted
to adopt a child.'' said Marilyn
Whitman ... The children here an this
coun1ry would definnely be placed.
whereas the children from another
country might not find a home ...
And so bcun a process that ended
when the Wh11mans traveled 10
South Korea to pick up a 2-)'ear-old
11rl they named Lon. ·
Adopt
a dog
new pet
• • ·pro1ect
A dog many be man·sbest
fnend but sometimes it•s hard to
believe the reverse is true. Every
year. 13 million dogs arc left
homeless and abandoned, accord-
ing to Carl Paguo, super-
intendent oflrvine Animal Ser-
vices.
In an effort to put a dent in this
dismal statistic, members of the
Irvine Animal Care Center arc
puttin.s special emphasis on dog
adoption during October. which
happens to be .. Adopt-a-Dog"
month. As ~n of the pr0JT3m.
now in its eighth year.animal
lovers are encouraged to find a
friendly dog and give it a happy
home. More than 800 shelters are
panicipating.
The Irvine facility. located at
15129 Sa.od Canyon Road, will be
open from lOa.m. to S.p.m.
Monday through Friday and from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday.
Formorcinformation,call 559-
PETS. • • • B)'.theway. ifyoudogeta pet
and find it could use a course in
obedience, IJ!csia Park in Laguna
Hills isoffenng Dog Obedience
classes on Tuesdays front 6:30 to
7:30p.m. Thecost for an eight-·
week class isS40. Pups must beat
least 6 months old.
Call 532-3647 for more infor-
mation. • • • From UCI I hear that Tlmedty
Stra41er,chairman of the board of
an lrvine-bascdrealestatedc-
velopment firm, has been ap-
pointed cbairman oftbc UCI Chi~~Executive Roundtable·sex-
ecutive comminee. The round-
table is made up of more than 50
Southern California executives
who meet with UCl facult)' and
administrators to discuss issues
that concern both the college and
business communities.
"Tim Stradt"r. who was a
founding co-chair of the round-
table. hasan understanding of the
group's goals and mission that
makes him the ideal ~rson for
this leadership role: said Joa
Millller, vicechancellorforuni-
vcrsit_y advancement and a mem-
ber of the committee .
Strader and his wife. Suu,
both graduates of UCLA, live in
Corona del Mar. • • • And members of the Irvine
~verc ~chc-s. w_orsened a~ soon "Living with somebody who·s been
she was in the hospital. Bef~~ it was through something like this all her
over. Geller had lost her v1s1on and life. it makes me know how much
memory and could no longer hold her mott I can do than what people new
neck up: She lost 20 percent of her to this subject may think .. Geller
Karl Geller co ncentratee on •ctinC·
But six months after bnnamg their
new daughter home 10 Amenca, the
Whnmans learned somethina im-
portant about Lon -she had two
brothers and a sister back m South
Korea. Now the Wh11mans have six
children.
business community might also
want to know the Irvine Ow:nbcr
of Commerce will hold its next
mixer on Oct. 20. The meeting,
which will be from S-7 p.m .. will
be held at the Irvine Marrion
Hotel. Non-membersarcaJso
welcome. bod( ~··ht. .d . •• . <If:' . • sa1 . ~1dn.~ start actt.m~.any better or The young actress. who recently
anything. qellcr said .. They knew I landed another role in San Oemen1e ~ some kind o~ a virus, but they High's next school play and is in the didn't know what It was." f · · th k Thirty doctors later Geller had 1 process<? signing w1 . an agent. ta cs . . . • .. _ perfonnmg very ~nousJy. She tt-~rrcct dt&JDOSIS. cnccp_bahus .an nected on what her most recent role as
1nflammat1on of the brain. an actress meant to her. and on how
. Althou&h "!any symptoms ha~e her illness has changed her life.
improved or d1saoocared. Geller still "It opened my eyes to the world 8
BuLLf TIN BoAR D
I --=-------
lot more." she said.
.\s a rcsuh of her illness. Geller said
she felt such a strong identification
wnh the heroine of '"The little
Pnncess" - a wealthy young girl
whose bnght future evaporates when
her fa1her dies. leaving her destitute.
"She had everything. now she has
nothing.. She has to find ways to make
it through all her hard ttmes." Geller
said. "Jn a way her story 1s somewhat
similar to mine m that she had a lot
and then she lost It.··
But 1he s1ory has a haPP> ending:
Gdlcr hopes her stol') will. 100.
"Final!~. m the end. she gets
everything back.'' Geller said of the
little princess. ''I'm hopmg that -
hint. hmt -m~ slOr) will finall} ao
that way too ...
"That's how we went from two
children to six:· said Manlyn Whit·
man. "How 10 grow in a hurry We
thought we'd have one hule girl and
wt ha'c four. And. of course. we're
delighted to have them."
As a mult of this expenencc.
Manlyn Whnman and the Geneva
Pre-sb)tenan Church 1n Laguna Hills
(Pleue eee CBILDU!f•s1 AS)
For mort information, call
~9112. • • • And congratulations to a cou-
ple south county residents. First.
BlD Jeffs ofLaauna Hills and
Mary Pritt of San Clemente~
among those honored for their
vol unt~rwork bv theOran,c
(PleueMelUW /A8
.
·Band tournament set at .Orange Coast College Saturday
Orantt Coast Collqc and Costa Mesa High School
will ~host the second annual South Coast Invitational F~ld Bind Touma'9ent Saturday evening in OCC'i LtBard SUldium. .,
Between JO and IS bands arc expected to perticipett
in the compctitio~1 pmentina their full 1988 halftime
5"ows. The compcnton include University. Saddleback,
Costa Mtsa and San tltmente hi&h schools. The ptes will open at 3 p.m. and the competition is
ICbeduled from 4 to 10 p.m. Admission is $3 for adults
and s2·ror senior citizens and children under 12.
JCh uicellor to •peak .
Alfred Fernandez., cl\anttllor of the Coast Comm uni·
lj' Colleee Distnct, will address petrons of Golden West
Collctr 11 their mttti• Friday at 11 :4' a.m. in the
Communuy Center°" t~ GWC campus.
· Tht luncheon is ~ at S6.SO. Membcnh1p information Oft \he pe\l'Ofts. a volunlttr suppon gri)up for
lbc collclf. m.y '* obtatned by ca.lhna Bech Kennedy at 141.saJ.
'CObi o oiv at Irvine H1Jton
Marina High anniver sary
M'arina Hiah School in Huntington lkach Wiii
cekbrate us 25 th anniversary at its homecoming game
Friday at 7:30 p.m..11 Westminster Stadium.
All past araduates a~ invited to lttend. Former hom~min1quccnsshould check in bycalhna 89).6S7l. eu ~8 l.
Laguna Garden Club meet.
"The Creation of a Bonsai" W'tll be demonstrated by
FraMis Watan of Costa Mesa at Friday's mccuq of the ~una Beach Garden Club, 10 bc held at 11 a.m. in lt1t
Ne1ahborhood C'on~ttonal Church hall. J.40St. Ann's
Drive tn LaJuna.
Followtna a noon luncheon. Dr. Oa.ry James of
Oran,e Coest Collete will pment a s!ide ~m on
Madapscar. The JUOt donat10n is Sl. and further
information is availabk at 494-6460.
CblJcfren '• prtJ6ram •tattba6
Senior C'111zens .\d' 1sory Council will hold a pubhc
hcanna Fnda) ac I 30 p.m. al 1300 S. Grand Ave ..
Bu1ld1nJ B. in Sanu "na.
Information from the heanng will be used to dtvelop
proposals for contracted scrvK'CS to sc_niors. Call Hopt
Hagen at S6 7-7411 for details.
Medical aides convening
The Orange County chapttt of tbe Califom1a
Medical Assistants ..\ssoc11t1on v.-tll prncnt its 13th
annual fashion sholff'. luncheon and bo\lttquc Saturda) al
the ..\uponer Inn m Irvine.
The event 1s tht orpniz.auon's btaiclt fund-raiser of
the )car. Tickets art SlO. and many a<>or pnzn will be
awarded. Cati J1Ckte Fi her at &61-SSSO or 83'-I )OJ for
add1t1on&I 1nforma11on.
Grad uate te.t planned
The Oradu.tlt Maftllrmcnt Record &am ~ill ba
IJ\Cn S.1urdl 11 attonal Uni~tf1 Ora.ner Count~
caml)Us. 8 &«uu~ Cudt in lrvu~.
Richard K..rask1n. president of a ronsuhina firm on
career manaaemcnt. w1ll ronduct the seminar. The (ft is
S1~. and regisuauon ma) be made by phone at 432-SllO.
Harbor High r eunion .et
The class of I 9S8 of N~ Harbor Hp School
will bold its 30th class ~union Saturday at the Balboe Bay
Club 1n Newport Beach.
~lumn1 wish1na to pal1tC\p&te should c:onl8Ct 0..
Mars.a Ba1lt\ 11 642-3353 or Pttt Rabbttt at 61I·7740.
rue ~eat dUpJa79
:rM i..a.una 8eecb Fare Drpartment Will ~
National Fire Prcveouon Week with an opm a.-
Saturday from 2 to S p m at \he main fif't ..ac.. 501
Forest Ave.
~~--~
Univtnity Communtty Patt wdl olJer an~··~
pr<>pam foe duldren 2 to ~ saanina Frida) ancf rvanif'I
throuth Dec. 16. •heft children will hbt seonn and expeommt wuh ans ancfcnfts.
The molupte<hottt '"'is~ 10 astns eencral
Vtttiel and ma1Mm&ucal SU.Its auocilltd with WCCft1 an
the fitlt )dr of ~·e m&NICIMftt tchool. The ke IS
S26. and more 1nforma1aon "ava11ebk at l'°'s.t7l
Helnacn~fllled baUooM will be ottnd aid 1M 1111
'00 child.rm •neadlfta wan have t.hCit ~ ...... wath Sparty the dot-Reftalune111a wiD be.,._.
'
~ S 10 million wonh Gf ratt co1ns ind C'Olkcubks
will be oa dito&ay durins the NfWPO" Bach Coin Show. '°be Mid Friclly thl"O\llft Su_nclar It the ·~M Hllt90 and
To-en Hotet. 17900 Jambofft llvd.. lrv&M.
• ADDroa1m11tly JOO natioftal dellm rtpfttfnuns 111 .,.. OI coin coll«tm1 will be mannina booths 1t the
CWld. HCMll"l lft Fnday tom I 0 a.m. to 1 p,m .• Saturday . ._ 10 IO 6 p.m. and Sunday ftom 10 to 2 p.m. An a~ W1U be beld Friday at 1 p.m. and Sacurday at 6:l0
p.m. . ,
Tht ~m IS pnt'ed II S20 Ind clastcs """ mttf each Fncley from ~)O to IO:lO-1.m. Call the lmnc
Commua1ty ScnlCtS ~tat 66().)18 t few ftanhtt
infonnauon.
Sealon' 1Jeari1J6 aan oaaced
Tht Orans Countv Arn ,\lftCY oa Ali-a llld die
•
-• 1
·~
Expansion unveiled at Chiist College
By LESLIE EAllNESr ...............
Organizers of Christ College lrvint's .. Festival on the Hilt" arc
hop1n1 the celebration they've
plan Md for Satufday will help answer
the Question: "What's that on top of
the hill?"
~ 1 2-~ar-old tulltopcol~. still
relatively unknowtr in Onlnsc Coun-
ty. is in the process of an $8.8 million expansion. With the first phueofthat
expansion complete. officials arc
holding a daylon& festival to show off'
their buraconma campus to me
community.
"P~ say. 'What's lha1 on the
hill?'" said la Veda Caner. director
of pubhc relations for the colleae.
"We're hopina peopk will come up
and stt what's on the hill."
The festival offers residents of the
community an e>pponunity to Adm
about the colqe ' ~mit pro-aram' while tak.ina a close look at
facihtin available for communaty
cvenli. EnrollrMnt at the four-year
libnal ans colleJr has arown from 36 students when 11 opcntd in 1976, to
600 student' today.
The day's events are beina spnnkled across the 13-acrc campus as a way of callina attenuon to
individual faci lities. A symphony will
take place in the ntW 60Q.sea1
Performina Ans Center and an an exhibtt and a lecture on writina will be held in the new Ans and Library buildi (
In !Jdruon. organizers expttt a baseball d init. which will feature
hitti"S and pitchina tips, and a ~lebrity tennis clinic to draw ~
crowds. Amons. the stars at the tennis
tournament will be television actor
Doua McClure of "The Viflinian"
and actress Marion Ross. the mother
in "HIPP.): 0.ys."
In addition to the usual festival fare
of hot ~ and . cotton candy, a spqbct11 dinner will be served in the
colletc's Eaalc Rock Cafe. next to the
aymnasium. For information about
fees or, other activities. call 8S4-8002. extcnuon 314.
Artiat'• renderiDC alacnn completed center with library and arta balldhlC~
''We''! ho~ng for a really large
turnout. said Caner. "We really
would like to sec S.000 or more."
NEW YOUNG MISS •••
FromA7
County Red Cros·s recently. icfTs,
who has been a volunteer for 65
years. was one of the nation's first
CPR instructors. Price works in
the organization's blood servi~
division. • • • And the Laguna Beach Ans
Commission has elected new
offi cers for the next term. Iris
Adam, a memtierofthecom-
miss1on for several years. has
been elected chairwoman of the
group. JeDllifer Griffltb1, recent-
ly reappointed for a second term
on the com mission, has been
chosen vice chairwoman. Bobbi
Cox, appointed for the first time
in July. will be secretary-
treasurer. • • • And an El Toro resident has
been named execuuve director of
United Cerebral Palsy Associa-
tion of Orange County. JoaD.De
Miner, who received her doc-
torate degree from UCL has a
strong background in the field of
development d1sabili11es. • • • For the college-bou nd. Laguna
Beach High School will hold the
I 5th annual College Roundup
Oct. I 8 at the Girls' G ym. More
than 90colleges will be rep-
resented at the event which will
run from 10: I 5a.m. to 12:30 p.m
and from 7-8:30 p.m.
For more information, call
497-7760or497-7727. • • • And here's news from the
pageant circuit. Nataslaa Had1i-
Pavlovic of Mission Viejo has
bttn crowned 1988Tecn Young
Miss of America. Hadzi-
Pa vlovic, a 15-year-old
sophomore from Mission Viejo
High. won $4.600 in scholarships
and $500 for high school at the
contest. which took place in
Hawaii. • • • A. nd. finattv. state Sen. Marian
Bergeson wili talk about child
care during the next meeting of
the Irvine branch of the American
Association of University
Women. Glenda Riddick,
professor of early childhood
education at Orange Coast Col-
lege. will also speak at the get-
tog_ether.
The meeting will be held at the
Irvine Senior Center at 3807
Sandburg Way on Oct. I 9 at 7:30
p.m.
%
Annual Yield
ON DEPOSITS OF
$500 to $99, 999
FOR 180 DAYS
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS
WE WELCOME YOUR CAIL.
1-800-247-7197 Mon.-Sat. 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. 1
•• • ,.
• f-edcral rcguJ-1on requires a sut.wtial interest penalty for early withdrawal. Annual yield bllcd on dilly compoundi• W'heft''
mercsa is left on deposit for one-ycc tcnn. Rate, )"dd and tam su bjcct to chln&c wathoul ncticc.
DEPOSITS FEDERALLY INSURED TO $100,000 BY THE FSLIC
AMERICAN .
A FEDERAL S VINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
•
Todd LJDCla and 8=1• Metcalf play clown• for the
11.aJ'Yeet Feetlftl and ftl.
-CHILDREN'S HOME .••
From A?
where her family anends services
launched a drive to build a home for handicapped orphans in Seoul. South
Korea.
According to Whitman. when an
orphan reaches the age of 18 in South Korea. he . must move out of the
orphanage.
While some children may be ready
to suppon themselves. handicapped
18-year-olds often have no choice but
to move into a state-run facility.
which may seem much less like home
than the orphanage to which they~v~
bccomo accu$tomed. accor.ding to
Whitman. The Joal of the church's
Korea Project Com mittee is to gjve
the you ng adults another option.
··The church picked up on it as a mission and they all have been SQ. respon~ive and ca!"lna." said Whit-
man. whose family ~ moved from
Laguna Hills to Anahe im Hills three
years ago. ··our church is aoina to buy
a home for them to go to where they
can continue to live as a family."
To raise funds for the home, the
church will hold a Harvest Fair Oct. 22 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The fair. which will be held at the church at
2430 I El Toro Road, will include
carnival rides. crafts and live enter-
tainment Admission is-free.
For more information, call
837-2323.
-By Lfllle Eanni
We 'te looking for good sports
The Daily Pilot wants to report the sporting exploits of you and
your neighbors.
We're not looking for news from Anaheim Stadium, that's
covered. We would rather hear about someone you know bowling a
600 series or shooting a hole in-on .
So. if your recreation league team finished on top. if you led the
pack ma 10-K run. your neighbor landed a marlin or your spouse
won a tennis tournament. let us know.
Send us a brief account of the sportinJ.accomplishment and a
photojrap~ 1f you have one. The Daily Pilot will publish them in
our Good Sports column. which will appear in Thursday's
Ncighborhood focus section.
Address your correspondence to Neighborhood Focus in care
of the Daily Pilot. P.O. Box I 560. Costa Mesa. 92626. ~ .
COUNCIL CANDIDATES •••
FromA7 ·
Many business owners decry the in-
ILC\LS.XS\em and also oppose the ci ty's
sign Ofdtnance. as well as a law tliat
proh1b1t~ outdoor displays of
merchandise tn the downlo~n busi-
ness d1stnc1. a law that Fitzpatnck
defends.
Fitzpatrick defends hi s su ppon for
open space Wlth his record. which
includes support for 1he Carma-
Sandling purchase. Although Fitzpatnck said the
council wenl out on a financial limb
to purchase the Carma-Sandling
propeny. he doubted that the Bank of
Nova Scotia would cancel the agree-
ment knowing thal the city is guaran-
teed S IOm11lion from Proposition 70.
Fitzpatrick said he suppons a plan
to sc1-a11dc..Sl50.000 a yearin_a fund
for the purchase of undeveloped
propeny inside the greenbelt.
Some of his opponents. namely
Black and 'Munoz. criticize
F11zpatnck and 01her council mem-bers for the sale of a ponion of the
Sycamore Hills propen y for pnvate
development Fitzpatrick and others
said the sale was necessary to fund the
purchase of the entire area.
Others say the city should have
gone ahead with an earlier pla n to
build a golf course and hotel at S\camore Hills. tnstead of the con-
dominiums that now bonter a p0r-
11on of El Toro Road.
Paul Munoz
Paul Munoz. 32. is an tnsurancc
salC$man and former alternative
energ) products salesman. He is
making his Sttond run for council.
As a councilman. he said he would tni to implement recycling and beuer
p0llut1on control that would shine as
an eJtam~ to other cities.
He-said ~ ~uo wou work with
other c111es. 1he county and state to implement mass transit and so cancel the need for the San J<>1quin ·Hills
tollway.
"local governments have to be
suppon1ve of that (mau transit)." he
said. "'The effort has to be mack."
Munoz faults the city for not
mitiauna a recyclina proJJ"am that he
suacsted Sill ycar5 qo. Rccyclina, he
said would reduce the nacion's
dependence on fossil f~I' and nepte
the nttd for offshore oil drillinJ-
As a staunch envaronrMntahst. he
would also live no quancr to busi-
ncssn that violated J)91lution laws.
"If a business is found tuilty of
dump.na toxic waslt. 11 must be
cl<>Kd. not merely fined," Munoz
wrote in one of several position
papen.
He said the city needs to re-
eum1nc its conu·1eu with •ndeDen-
dcnt buunn.ta. such as tnsh collec-
tion. to tee tf 11 would be man 8dvantae£0Us for tbr cny to takr over
IM(b ICIVK'n.
fou nd ing member and co-chairman
of the Association for Diversity in
Southl.aguna-and a mcmberof a
ciuzen's advisory committee for the
South Coast Water District.
The a.ssociation for diversity led
the ban le for those who wanted illqal
housing units in South Laguna lcf\
alone. That put Reynolds at odds
with Christoph. and the schism has
remained. Reynolds said the present council
has put the city in a precarious
financial situation by aa.rccing to
purchase the Carma Sandling prop-eny before it had the funds in hand.
She is also opposed to the city
making plans to spend the S7 million
from the Sycamore Hills right-of-way
while at the same time opposina the j project. She said the City should take
the money. if it is forthcoming. and
put it into an escrow acco unt while it
wages its battle against the transpor-
tation corridor. "If you'r( really opposed to some-
thing you don't take the money," she
said. "I think it's a matter of pnnc1pal."
As for dealing with the traffic
problem. Reynolds sugests that the
cit) trv to persuade the state Oepan-
men1 of Transportation to synchron-
JZC traffic signals on Coast Highway
and rcarran~lantt to accommodate
rush-hour traffic.
Compared to Christoph. Reynolds
takes a more relllled approach to
detailed plannina. such as the °'5ian Review Board's policy of approvina
shades of patnt colors and exterior
landscapin&-
Rickey Slater
a
Rickey Slater. S4 · janit -. l-alt1na hirlounh nm at the council.
Slater attends JUSt about evcey
council mttt1na. but never spcab at
the podium. content instead to take :
notes and offer suacstions on the '
Stde.
"h's just not important to mt,"
Slater said about public ~ina. "I'm l>bscrv1 na and learni na. '
Slater satd he has painstakinaly
avoided special intemts in Ltauna.
and therefore has purposefully not
attended any of the many council
el«t1on forums sponsoml by various t
community ~Pl· "I don't think tht fonam' arc done
comctly." be setd. "They're ineerat t
&f'OUPI and they only a5': you queto-
tions that arc 1mponant to iD&emt
voups."
As for 1saun. Slattt said be ~
solve the ~rkina problem by riddina
tht cny of its partina meten Md
bu•klinl "'°" putana 1tn1etum. Slater. toO. it opplied to Iliff
ordinanca aimed•• riddina tllc towJt.. of ....... ~ .....................
door clilDll!i-. Ae • ldvocun mn coaatol.for.buliMW"
A 1ne11111itr ol IM .. lllibion
CommiNI lor IM ,_ ft~ ~
SIMrr ."" a dlwip ol .... Canoe .... ~ ..... it ..... Cldllllt. Tin •~can call it a~ mm,oe ...