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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-10-24 - Orange Coast PilotMONDAY, OCfOBER 24, 1988 Suspect claims courts stol_e girl · Grandfather charged with kidnapping tells his side of abduction, family strtf e puddaupter have criSSCl'Olled the nation under a slew of assumed names. li vina life in the shadows, always one step ahead of the FBI. Unlil Friday. BJ LANCE IONON .............. When 7-year-old °'1.fY: Freeman went for a Sundax viJit to her arand&tber's rural home · outside .1"oledo, Ohio, be told her they were· JOloa OD a trip to see Mickey Mouse. Indeed, they eventually made it to Wilson slaying verdict awaited Jury resuming its deliberations on CM killing motive By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .............. Jurors resumed deliberations today to determine whether Richard Dale Wilson came to Costa Mesa on Aua. 2, 1983, and fatally shot the man suspec1ed of k.illina the woman Wilson planned to marry. If convicted of the first-degree murder charaes, the 47-year-old San Francisco tax accountant could be sentenced to life in prison without parole. Attorneys for both sides offered final instructions last Wednesday, then Superior Coun Judge Luis Cardenas instructed the jury to be&in deliberations, which continued Thursday. Jurors were given the day off Friday and did not meet over the weekend. A.rJuina last week in Cardenas' Westminster counroom, Deputy District Anomey Doua Woodsmall accused Wilson of seek.in& revenge for tbe death of his fiancec, Joan -Mdhane Mills. The prosecutor said Wilson killed Jeffrey Molloy Parker in the doorway of bis mother's Costa M~ home. The fatal shooting occurred the day Wore Parker was to appear in court Oil c:ha.raes that he killed Joan Mills fODowina a niaht of chugs, drinkina and sex in a Beverly Hills hotel room. Parker, 38, was found by police beodina over Mills' dead body. When an autopsy revealed Mills had been brutally beaten to death, Parker was ~with her murder. Mills, a 33-year-old Sao Francisco IOCialite, was Wilson's fiancee and altbouah the two were separated at the time of her death, the prosecutor arsued that Wilson still bad reasons to seek revenac. But defense anomeys Joel Baruch and J. Tony Serra araued that there was no direct evidence linJrin& Wilson to Parker's death. Durina the trial -which bepn July 21 and was interrupted by several delays -they praentcd witnesses who said they Md talked to or met with Wilson the ~-'!f and the day after Parker's ~re never was a case here. Do ,ou understand? There is no cue,•• tmid Serra durina closing arauments last Tuesday. • ..What is the crime here? The crime iJ ~bane. bana.' That's what has to be ptoven beyond a rasonable doubt. Has be (Woodsmall) proved who shot Jeff' Parker7" fie prosecution's case included leltimony from two witnesses who . (Pl_.. ... WIUION/A2) DilDeylaod.,.but not for another· six years. . . . Autbonties m Toledo alleac that Leroy Freeman kidnapped his arand· daUlbter, who be had raised from mtaDcy, after the mother won ~ of the child. Since the abduction, Freeman, the suspected leader of a satanic cult, and his That's when Huntington Beach poliCle and two FBI a,eots from Los ADF&el aPer"Cbeoded the pair at an a~t an HuntinJton Beach as they tried to escape vta a oeiabbor's belcony. Freeman, 62, was arrested on suspicion of fleeio& to avoid ~ (PleueeeeTWO/A2) ..... ................... Wind'• in hi.a favor · TaJdDt ...._._.. of tM warmth and wiDd OD a pictare. perfeotOeta• ••7• RlolaerdllclAaD of eoetall .. lldee Illa uu. ..U• OD tlM lf••port Slemeatary Sclaool planroand. <>ranee home. bis riaht arm is ~in. toftcut and still · with •bout l' lh<Mpn ~~hm.J::~ o:;;.r-' t>waca. no IDiltooll a ~lwll~fora • .,_. dllililed ia a di9atdacall. . lll'pM's left um ii• •pended llOrillld lD ..... all&.. it will ................... ......................... ......... _ .......... ~ .... _,[ z: ~ ...... ..... .............. ~ . ...... _.. . Kidnap saga "IJaunts BB woma·n BJ JONATBAN VOLD.£ Of ............. A Huntinaton Beach woman whose father allegedly kidnapped his aranddauahter six yean lllO said today she plans to move from the aputment where ibe lived with the man and sirl because of the intense pubticny surrouodina the bizarre cue. Nicole AldeD IUd ber fa&Mr, Leroy Freeman. 62. brouabt 13-,_..~ a..nty Freeman to Hua~ &acrl about a moath aeo. and aayed tberc util local police and FBI aemts amMed him Friday at tbe Waner Avenue aputmept. ' - . On the ND. the pair tnvdlld the COUDb'y, movina often. police in Obi<> aid. ~ while livina in (P'aa w KmfCAP/Aa) Defeated Laguna re~all leaders plan to relocate Westbrooks awaiting city inspection report. will reside on San Diego ranch the loq-ddaycd results o( an Aus. 31 inspectJon of their Llpna ee.ch property. Two bWJdina code impecton. armed with a city-iaued .arch -BJLANCEIGNON ... BOB VAN EYIEN °' ............... Barbara and Paul Westbrook-the Laauna Beach residents who helped lead an unsucocssful attempt last summer to recall three membcn of the City Council -said they will carry on their fight ap.inst local , s<>vernment from their mountain ranch in Sao Dieao County. Barbara Westbrook said the ten- sion of fi&htina City Hall proved too much for her nerves and so the couple decided to set up permanent resi- dence at their ranch. She would not disclose its exact location. The couple warrant, toured the Westbroub' moved their beloaainP Oct. 6. ~~O: :::r8b ~ "We're battered and bruited. I feel d .yon • .__ · · ..... _ we've been misused, "sbesaid.. "They wma WE Aupll ·~ -~ · ffi · -i. Westbrooks bad prolullited aty ac-(aty o cials) removed two ~ -c:a.s to the p1opcrty for about eilbt who spoke ouL" Their political u said that months. • _ while the West~ out, feW Auiswl~ Oty .Attorney Patrick listened. Despite a noisy recall cam-Raftieltysaidbebelievedtberesuhsof · tba chaqed a · · f the the i.mpectioa Md been lelll to the ~ eo!ncil with ~ .. !!'..~' ': Wcstbroub either Friday or 10day. private property npb~ . The .w~ ~ Get ~ mlsmanqcmeot, the ~t tiaiJ. ~ w m reuihetwt fortbeir ed in Aupst to ptber en~ part i6 the a~pt U?OUll Mayor~ sipatwa to force a special dcction. Keaney and Council members Lida Witb the recall a bitter memory, tbe Lenney and llobat Gealry. Westbrooks are currently awaitina (P'••• w mmc•u /Aa) L~ police ignore teen 's lessons on drinking-, driving Mother is angry that son was advised not to file accident report By LANCE IGNON °' ... ....,,.. ... The mother of a Laauna Beach teen said that a lifetime or tryina to teach her son to do the r:ight thioa was nearly obliterated when police ap. parcntly told her son not to file a report apiost a hit-and-run driver because it would increase his in- surance rates. Jason Cartee, 17, was waitlna on a red li&bt at El T oro and Laguna Canyon roads on the ni&ht of Aug. 23 when bis newly purchased sports cars was bit from behind by a sedan. Tbouab it a{>pearcd there was no damlF to either car. the Laguna Balch Hi&b School senior said be asked tbe woman to follow him to tbe police department after smellin& al- cohol on her breath. "Basically I was mad because sbc hit me and she was drink:ina ... and I wasn't toina to let her act away wnh it,•• be said. But after following him into Lacuna Beach, the woman took off. Thouah Jason chased the woman beck past the crash sate. he lost her when be pulled over to alen an OraflF County Shcnffs deputy of what had happened. The deputy allqcdJy told Jason that unless authonucs cauaht the woman before she got home, It would be impossi~c to arrest her for 4fi:e:cs=1~till, Jason said the 0 . . to file • bit..a,nd.. run report with Laauna Beach police, who were responsible for the cue since it occurred in their jurisdiction. ..1 Qntcd to prove ~· that a kid can try to do the npt thina, .. Jason said. But Jason sa.id that when he went to report the accident the next day, a Lquna Beach officer allqedly told him not to bother. The officendvised that the car apparently hadn't been damaged and the net result of filin& a report would mean an increase in insurance costs. When Jason told the story to his mother1 Barbara Van Slyke, she nit the ocihns. It was bad enouah that a drunken driver bad bit her son's car. But advisina him to forsct about it, that was too much. "EvCrything I'd told him about driokin& d dri . tall knocked d~wn by~~ 1&.c~ Police Department, .. Van Slyke said. After rctumina from a vacation. Van SJykc said she went to police hcadquaners Sept. 21 to rcpon the bit-and-run for her son but was given the same advice. Stt. Raymond Lardie, spokesman for the department, said he bad not beard of the incidents but said that it is not the department's policy to discourqc people from fihng crime re pons. .. To my knowledge that doesn·t oocur," said· Lardie, who asked the mother and son to contact him personally. l.Aauna Beach, wtuch has Iona suffered from drunken dnvers o n twistina Laauna Canvon Road. was (Pleue Me DR111USN/ A2) R11ldentsln~ '*-'~the-.... from. hurnc.n. that killed 13 S*>Ple Md left thouWMta homel111J M lndez • A3 AM 85-7 A10 Al· A7 A9 A3 84,I 81-4 A2. AU ()qnge Co.t DAILY PILOT/ Mondey, Oc;toblt M, 1118 TWO SIDES TO ABDUCTION STORY ••• h.-Al ecwtioa. a federal dwwc that will prombly be dropped when be ii utndited to Toledo and charsd with kidaappiq. aid Lt. KiJt S'ur-erite of the Luc:aa County Sheriff's Deputment in Ohio. Meanwhile, Owity, DOW 13, is underlOina P.fychiatric evaluation at MediciJ COneee Hos~ital in Toledo before beina united Wlth her mother, Karen Sue Creswell. The girl is scheduled to a~ at a custody ~ todJy before Judge Andy Devine at Lucas County Juvenile Court. The story of Charity's abduction, which at times attracted national attention, has at least two distinctly different versions, one told by Free- ~ the other by Lucas County Shenfrs deputies. • · Durina a telepbone interview from Oranac County Jail on Sunday, Freeman said the real kidnapper was the court system in Toledo that denied him cuttody of the child he had railed. Freeman said his daughter bad borne the child when she wu 1 7 and bad sbo~ little interest in motherhood, leaving heT father to care for Charity. But seven years later, apparently after bearina rumors that her father was molesting the child -something Freeman vehemently denied - Creswell decided she wanted sole custody of Charity. Freeman said he was waiting in the hallway of the courthouse when his lawyer announocd that custody ~ad gone to the mother, thereby denying Freeman a chance to present his side of the case in person. .. In a sense I didn't take her," Freeman said. "She had been with me. I think they stole her. They did a letal kidMppina. '' 'Tbrouahout t.Mir ~year journey, which took them to at least Ill states and three California cities, amona tbem Huntinaton Beach and Anaheim, Freeman said Charity was happy and showed no interest in retumina to her mother. "People arc aoina to say she's aoina back home. That couldn't be further from the truth. She was at home." be said. "We had each other and we were haprY· • talked to her and she said abe didn't have apeatdesjrc (to return to her mother}.' But two Lucas County Sheriff's detectives who escorted Charity b9ck to Toledo said Charity was anx.aous to be reunited with her motheT and hadn't realized that an cxten~vc effort bad been made to find her. "Charity's very cxcitcd to see her mother. She always thouabt her mother didn't like her," Detective Pam Crum said in a telephone interview from Toledo. "When we were comina from Detroit airport she said. 'Ail I want to sec is an Ohio license plate to know I'm rcal.ly here,' "Detective Ron Keel said. When Freeman and Charity first bit the road in September 1982, the sto. ry didn't bave much of an impact in Toledo. But it made national headlines in 1985 when former mem- bers of a satanic cult told Lucas County Sheriff's officers that Free· man had once been one of their leaders and had taken part in human sacrifices, Lt. Kirk Surprise said. While no human remains were ever found, detectives did dig up three knives, a headless doll nailed to a board with a pentagram ornament tied to its wrist and a sip with occult marti~ at a site near Soencer Township wbeR utanic ntuafs were allemDd to bave taken plaQe. .. On thia ataniam thins. I don't have the alithtat idea where they aot that." F~ said, addina that be baa always bad a cteeJ> and persooal relatioubi with Ood. While ~ty was bavina trouble in fint p-ade, she and Freeman under went coi.mselina. Freeman said be POUred out bis life ''ory, includina his belief m reincarnation, and this may bye led (>COl>le to believe that be was anocculusL Freeman added that if he had been a satanist he would not have ooo- tae1Cd two ministers at a church in Huntinaton Beach after bis arrest to look in on his family. Still, Lucas County Sheriff's in- VC?,ti&ators have neveT found any eV1dence, other than the unnamed sources, to directly link Freeman to the occult. Charity had trouble ac:f justina to tint srede at Swanton Elementary School. Shi was shy, -just like her arancffather had been as a kid, and liad poor grades. For this reason and because Free- man bad always been affectionate and attentive to Charity, he believes that school officials began suspcctina him of molesting the airl. One day Charity returned from school and told Freeman, who she called Leroy, that a bearded man had asked her where her grandfather had touched beT. ' Freeman denied ever having abused the child. Surprise said that so far Charity has said nothing about being molested by her arandfather. KIDNAP PUBLICITY HAUNTS WOMAN ••• From Al Huntington Beach, Charity was taught at home and did not attend public schools. Authorities found Freeman after a car bclongmg to A.Iden was repossesed. Alden earlier had changed her last name. Alden, who ioit.ia.Lly rented the apartment with her father's parents, because of the notriety of the kidnapping case. Freeman was arrtsted on suspicion of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution and held in Orange Coun ty Jail on SS0,000 bail. He will face an additional charge of child stealina after he is extradited to Ohio, Huntington Beach Police Lt. John Foster said. An official from the Orange County FaiT Housing Authority said landlords do not need a reason to evict a tenant. as lo.ng as no discriroination is invofved. But Alden, who said she knew the kidnapping would catch up with her sometime, said she plans to move from the Warner Avenue complex. The publicity surrounding the case has scarred her, she said. She will probably stay in Oran~ County. He is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday in Orange County Municipal Court in Santa Ana. Officials al the Huntington West Apartments, meanwhile, said today they are considering evicting ' Everything is falling apart," she said today through tears. "I'm afraid to even go to work. "I just don't want to stay here." VICTIM DESCRIBES POLICE SHOOTING •• -. From Al bulancc,' " Bryant said. "All I could feel was pain m my stomach that was unbearable. I couldn't feel my anns. I couldn't talk. I didn't know what was going on," he said. A teen-ager was later found nearby with a paint pellet gun that apparently was the source of the report of an armed man on the beach. The pellet gun was similar in appearance to a sawed-off sbotaun. Bryant also couldn't believe some of the comments be claims to have beard durin& the next few hours at Fountain Valley Regional Hospital. He said be heard the comments clearly, but was simply too weak to speak or react. "I remember hearing a lady say, 'He's not goina to make it,"' be recalled. "I beard them talking to each other about what happened and beard one of them say, 'Oh, he's a-thief.' They said. 'Well, we did the best we could.' ''My mind told me. 'You're a dead man.' I just lay there and waited to die," he said. Marlene Bryant S&Jd hospital of- ficials at one point told her the 5'me thin& as she waited 10 police custbdy at the hospital. "They walked out and told me that my husband wasn't gomg to make iL Not long before that., they said he'd be fine,•· she said. Bryant said there was a point where he rcalazed he was going to live, but said his memory 1s blank from that time until he awoke in the hospital's intensive care unit four days later. It lNasn't until then that he discovered he'd been shot by police. "I just couldn't believe it." he said. Marlene is still bitter about the shooting and has claimed from the start that it ~as racially motivated. "They thou&ht. 'He's black, that looks like a shotgun so it must be him,' " she said: Bryant, however, refuses to give in to that theory. "I don't believe it. lf l knew Duncan, then I could pass judgment on him," be said. "But I don't know him. I don't know ifhe loves blacks or hates them." Bryant does not harbor any ill feelings toward Duncan, but rather hold• the Police Department at fault for not training him properly. "The department is rcsponsible. 1 think they encourage that k.iod oftoo- quick reaction," he said. "And that's what happened. He was just too quick. I don't know ifbe was scared or nervo'1s. B'1t I don't hold any animosity toward him." Lawyers are handling what is likely to be a lucrative lawsuit against the city of Newport Beach, but the Bryant.s are concerned with day to day living. Doctors have told him he won't be able to return to work for at least eight months. Since be probably won't regain full use ofbis left arm, returning to his old job as a shuttle bus driver may be 1mpos.sible. Because of his need for constant care, Bryant's wife also is unable to work and must stay home and tend to her husband and four children. They have been primarily living off dona- tions from friends, family and anonymous sou.recs. The Bryan ts are together 24 hours a day, but both 'said the forced close- ness has not yet been a major strain on No one wins top lotto prize SACRAMENTO (AP) -Nobody picked all six winning numbers in the weekend drawing for the S 19. 7 million "Lotto 6-49" jackpot. and the rollover wiU boost the next jack.pot to about $30 million, the California Lottery said Sunday. The winnin& numbers picked Sat- urday nitbt for the twice-weekly pme were: 18, 20, 29, 32, 33, 35 and the bonus number, 39. Five players picked five numbers plus the bonus to win $452,541 each. Those winnina tickets were purchucd in Livingston, Union City, ~AA~E lailj Pilat MAIN OFFICE »ow ... hy St Coete """" ~ Mtlll lldclf-lo• IMO Coele Mtu. CA 1111~ C...... I'd• ._.2 M79 ~ ' ~.°' ... 10.uJI Burbank, ln~ewood and Buena Park. Tickets wtth five winnin• numbers but no bonus number paid SJ, 108 each to 375 people, while four out of six paid $60 each to 17,460 people and three out of six paid $5 each to 337,835 peQple. The sales from Wednesday ni&ht td Saturday's drawing were S2 I .2 million. Prize awards totaled $6.2 million. The next drawing is Wednesday ni&ht. The numbers are chosen durina a television broadcast oriainadn& in Sacramento. JustcaU 642~ ~ I~ NO-Mon., 11U91teflON, eO!torW ...... ., ~· -~ IM'y Dt ,.__, ................. -.. -~-What do you like about the OeUy PilOc1 WMt don't you lite? CAD lhe nwnber 8bove '7'.r metM&t will be recorded. traDtCrhd .. Uv~ to the ~le editor. YOLtt;MO.- • The -.me antWeri• tet¥ice may ._ \lied to l'ICOl'd lcteen to tbe editor oa Mf IOpic. C.ontributon to ow l.ettas ClOlumn mUll iDdUde their name ud telephooe n.amber for Yli"t&itioa. Tell 111 wbat'• on your mind. • .. 5 ... 'I_,,_ "V914*' _ ... ,..,..... ... •• ,... ...... 1 ............... --.................. ........... ""' W::' ....... • ...=,......, .. Clfl $ 2 I ' 111' II " Hazy days continue on Coast U.S. Temi-...... "' ., C.llf. Tempe • .... one.. " 14 ... ., .. Olly 57 u .. Le ~City 71 .. :t ... ...,,.._..,...,M . ........ 71 .. O!Mll9 N u .... . .. Mdlot ... ,, ao OltlMo . , .. .... .. 47 ....... 71 54 "'IP IJIP• .. .. ,,_ .. .. ..... City to ... ...... ,, 70 ~ 74 "' ....._.. ... .. =:=:r ..... N ... " .. ........... 13 .. sa 4t ::.:· 'd Clly .. .. .... .. ,. ......... (ft t7 47 .. N 9oMGf\ 51 ... =~ "' .. ...___ .. sa ..... 52 ... ,, 40 ...... • ... ~ac. .. to to M IMO!llo 17 a c::NrtotW. c ... A ..._.. 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Alrpot1 ....... ~._., OMlrto ..... ...,... ......... ...... =~ ...... ..... Ml ........... .......... .......... TIMIVlllr T-' ....... • 51 74 u 15 • a to to 46 • a • a .. a 17 If 71 .. .. .. 71 II n 16 71 .. 71 to 74 115 n to II II • 13 .. ,, 10 2' 11 II • to Tides 1'00A\' teoond low 3:*t p.m. -0.7 a-.d .. t :4A p.m. .. .• TUSIOAY Arel low 3:1t a.m. 1.1 I ::':7"11-.. .n .. m. u ...... 4:11 p.m, 1,0 .__,high t0=*7 p,m. •.• .,,, .... toelay et 8'07 p.m., ,_ Tu.dliY II 7;06 a..m. end -et L'OI P.11\. ..._""' ~ Ill 5:42 p.m. ..... T~ 11 a2t Lift. end ""9 ~Ill I: II p.111. RECALL LEADERS LEAVING LAGUNA .•• P'romAl Barbera Westbrook said today she believes city officials are ~laying politics with the results of the inspcc. ti on. .. They've been telHng us for eight weeks that the report was on the way," she said. "I thin~ they don't want to make waves until after the (November) election. Think about it. If there were such serious health and safety threats that you had to have an adm1nistritive search warrant to get in, would ~ou wait eiaht weeks to report on it. ' Lenney, one of the ta.raets of the recall drive. is runnina for Conaress. Council memben Neil Fi~trick and Martha Collison are seeking rc- elcctioo. Rafferty said the inspection was merely an attempt to find out if the property was up to code. He said the delay in issuina the repon was partly due to caution on the part of city officials. "Given everything that's hap- pened, l think the city wants to be sure everythinl is done thorouahly and corrcctly, he said. .. My under- standina is there will be a p.mut of tbi nas to be corrected." ~erty wa be could not com- ment on the euct outcome of the inspect.ion until the Westbrooks bad bad a chance to sec the report. ButapparentlyC. Christopher Cox . the Republican nominee for the 40tb Coqressional District. shares the Westbrooks' sentiments about the inspection. In a letter addressed to the Westbrooks dated Oct. 9, Cox wrote: .. lshareyourdcepconccrnoverthe J<>vemment abuses that have infr- ~ upon your personal freedom. 'One doesn't think of city aovem- ment officials as storm troopers in jack boots. But when a ~h warrant mto your very home is executed, the power of government to harass its citizens is made equally pla.in." In his congressional-bid. Coll i$' running against Lenney, a target of the failed rccaJI, Althouah the recall fell by the side of the road, Westbrook said she and her husband have not abandoned' Lquna politics. · After the November election, the couple will launch an effoJ1 to convince i...,una residents that they would be better off with a dircctlr. elected mayor and seven council members chosen from seven wards from throu&hout the city. She said they also wiO advocate.firing.the city's law firm, Costa Mesa-based Rutan and Tucker, and hiring a full-time city attorney. . WILSON VERDICT ••• From Al claimed Wilson bad confessed to killina Parker: But the defense at- torneys attacked their credibility, claimina the two had lied repeatedly dwina court testimony and have long histories of alcoholism and psycho- lof.cal problems. 'We have never gone into bar- rooms to seek beaters of truth," Serra said. "Can we convict on the word of an alcoholic, uncorroborated?" DRUNKEN DRIVING REPORT THWARTED.;. From Al the ftnt city in Oranae County to rcinstate sobriety checkpoints last year. Van Slyke said she is leavina it to ber son to follow up on the blt-and· run report, but Jason said be bas "pretty much forsotten about it. I see no importance in aoina down there." Still, Jason is peeved about the wbole affair. "I hate seeina dnlnkeo driven always killina someone else," he said. He's alto irked becaute bis car, which his pareau boulltt for him last aprina, developed problems after the accident. The rear-wheel =ment was thrown out of whack later, the clutch broke and now lhe griftd. After bein& hit. Jason said the woman PUiied over to see if he was injured. He said he told the woman be wu fine and was about to part ways when be smelled alcohol on the woman's breath. He said she ad· mined to bavc been drinkin&. That's when he told her to follow him the Lquna Beach police station. Juen said the woman tailed him into ~ drivina ematically1 but kept OD IC>IDI when be turned mto a ~ spot at police headquarters. seem.a no potic:emen bandy and not wanuna to lOIC the woman, Jason aot beck iD his car and cbued her back out Llpna canyon ROid. The womu: turned riaht o.n El Toro Roed and JMOD followed. At one point he managed to pass her. wavina at her to pull over, but to no avail. "She was trying to swerve around me" he said. The woman kept on going on El Toro Road when Jason P.ulled over at Valencia Street to notify a sheriff's deputy. Jason said be aot the woman's license plate number, which matched a car belo~ to a woman living in Million Viejo. Van Slyke said she contacted the woman, who denied knowina anythina about the accident or chase. The woman could not be reached for comment. .. She's an adult." Jason said of the drunken driver. "She's supposed to be tettina an example.•• • Tips on plannin~ weddings slated" at OCC workshop Planni~ a M4dina? Onqe Cout Col.leec has 10me tipa for this often complicated process in a worbbop called .. Fifty Romantic and Unusual Wedctinp" ICheduled (ot Wednnday. Robeft Badal, .tlo publiabet the newsletter .. Ro~ LA.'' will cover both the inexpensive vet "different" ceremonies and the expenSive '°lfuid aature." The clus is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. and the rqiltration fee is $20. Call 432-5880 for the location and raervation information. NegotlatbJ6 cla• .et A aeminar on improviq your negotiating style will be offered Wednetday &Om 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at Northwood Community Park, 4531 Bryan Ave., Irvine. · Dr. Thomas Overbauab will conduct the course iD bandlina conflicts with family membef'S, co- worken and othen, The fee i' S 19, and reservations are beJna taken at 660-3920. Mataal land .embJar Mutual fund investon are invited to attend a free lecture by portfolio manager Jeffrey Kilpatrick Wednesday at the Pacific"Oub in Newport Beach. The prop-am is scheduled for 7 p.m. and is sponsored by Newport Securities Corp. Call 957-1081 for reservations and further information. Detllgnen to convene The Orange County chapter of the American Society of Interior Designen will meet Wednesday at 6:)0 p.m. at the Countryside lnn, 325 Bristql St., Newport Beach. Dextra Frankel, art pllery director at Cal State Fullerton, will discuss "Space, Illusion and Glamor in Interior Desian." Call Elaibe Redfield at S2S-2394 or the AS ID office at 643-l 549 for reservations. DAR meets In Newport nie Colonel William Cabell chapter of the Dauahten of the American Revolution will meet Wednesday at noon in the community room of Glendale Federal Savings, 100 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Allel Zanelli from the Newport Beach Fire [)epartment will speak on "When Disaster Strikes." Cafi 968-7016 for further information. TOllCanlnl lecture at UCI Joseph Horowitz, author of "Understanding Toscanini," will speak Wednesday at 8 p~.m. in the Science Lecture Hall at UCI. Call 634-1300forticket reservations. Meu chamber •ealon Jan Skellinger of the Costa Mesa Police Department will speak to a sunrise breakfast of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce Wednesday on preventina company losses from bad chcckS and credit cards. Call 6Sp-1490 for reservations and additional information. Open hoa.e at CCA center The Center for Creative Alternatives will hold an open house Wednesday from 3 to 7 p.m. at its new office in the Rea Community Center, 661 Hamilton St., Room 600, Costa Mesa. Services of the agency include family counseling, drug diversion, support_ groups, community education and professional workshops. French official to •peak Bernard Myet, the consul general of France in Los Angeles, will speak at Wednesday's meeting of the Alliance Francaise de la Riviera Califomienne. The session will be held at 7:30 p.m. at the Neighborhood Congregational Church. 340 St. Ann's Drive, Laguna Beach. Admission is $4 for non-members. Monday, Oct24 • 6 p.m. Newport Bead! Ctty Coucll, council chambcn, 3300 Newport Blvd. Taellday, Oct 25 • 6:30 p.m. ln1M City Coadl, council chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd. • 8:p.m. Foutalll ValleJ City Coacil, council chambers, I 0200 Slater Ave. LOS ANGELES (AP)-Strikina Team-sw driven and tbe producen Wlion bave •tali~..-to tetde tM )..wm-old T•mlWI tCiike.. it WU reponed &oday. Tbe Loa Aaeeles Times, citin& IOwta, said tbe llftjCIDalt WU reacbea Sunday durina Wb at OreneJcfe Resort. about 40 miles hm Ortando, Fla. Nqotiations resumed ~ lut week because the Teamsten executive boerd bad been ~at tbe resort. The pouible aettlement ii ~ect to a_pproval by North HolJyw -hued Teamsten Local 399, wrucb ~presents the 2,200 strildna studio driven. The 1e>un:ies did not di1close any details of the .aettlement to t.be oewsp1per, except to say each side pve in on some of their demands. According to the newspaper, those praent at the Aorida talks included William J. McCarthy, the T e&llU1a'S' ~ praiden~; Nicholas Coun1er, president of the Alliaooe of Motion PK:ture and Television Producen; and Earl Bush presidentofl.oca1399. ' However, local Teamster and producers' union re~ntatives were unaware of any poSSJble settlement la&.e Sunday. "I wi'11 it was ltUCt" said a man ans~ the strike hotline at Local 399 la&.e Sunday who declined to live his name. "They're still piclcetins._" "I don't know aoytb.ina about it," said producen union spokesman Herb SteinberJ. The Teamster drivers transport actors, equipment and props for television and Record stores' can . nOwCustom-make musi cass-ettes LOS ANGELES (AP) -Music lovers can now custom-make their own music cassettes, mixing and matching various artists, usina a device in ruord stores that crosses a jukebox with diaital technology. The new pdJet, in record stores t~y. has drawn muted reviews from some plajor record companies, which fear it may cut into album sales, and some arc not participating. Customen can select from up to 2,SOO sonp. A store clerk punches in the buyer's selections, in the order chosen, and the customer gets a 90-mioute tape with up to 25 songs. The cost is SO cents to $ l .2S a so~e store's copy of the music is recorded on an optical disk, allowing all those songs to be copied onto th-e tape in just five minutes. Personics System Co. of Menlo Parle hopes to have as many as l S,000 songs availabl~ eventually in its monthly cataiotue. Personics is introducing 25 systems at record stores in California and hopes to ex~nd to other areas of the country. 'Personics from day one will offer a vast constellation of musical artists ... You will be able to personalize music like never before," said Charles Garvin, founder and president of Personics. The Personics system will give smaller record stores pressed for space a deeper offiring of songs. The price includes fees and royalties for artists and their labels, 't'ho otherwise wouldn't &et a penny if consumen made their own tapes from radio or friends' records. Penonics has attracted at least 30 labels, including Polygram, MCA, Wamer- Elektra-Atlantic, Chrysalis and others. Personics bas not yet been able to attract g;iant CBS Records, home of Bruce Springsteen and Michael Jackson, or the BMG group, formerly RCA Records. A&M Records, with such artists as Sting and Janet Jackson, is not interested, spokeswoman Diana Baron said Friday. Record companies are cautious about Personics because sales of sin&le songs could cut into album sales, said Michael Greene, president of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. "For the most part the idea is a good one," said Greene, who P.raised .. any system that would cut into (illegal) home taping and give artists their royalties." Billions of dollan a year are lost worldwide throuab record pirating and home record- iDf: industry experts have estimated. 'The problem I'm con~ed with is what happens when people to into a record store and start doin~ compilation tapes of hits?" Greene said. 'The artist may have other material in the album they consider necessary for a listener to understand what they arc doing musically." Garlin said Personics' test marketing in two stores showed it brought royalties from "new consumers l"Jw would not have been album buyen, ..rpeoele whqwould not have bought the music at all, but probablr would have home-taped it." Growmg record companies like 6-year- old Enigma are making available their entire catalogue. "It's another way to sell songs, like K- Tel compilations1" said Eni~a co-foun- der William Hein, who said Personics could be a way to rekindle the dying market for single releases. Other companies are more cautious about lhe system. which took $8 million and five years to develop and market. Capitol Records, one of Penonics prinC1pal owners, has made available its cWTCnt single releases and older albums, for instance, but not material from its current albums unreleased as singles. And while the Capitol Beach Boy cataloaue will be avallable, t.he lcgaJ tangle surrounding the Bealle~· music means they won't immediately be in the Personics catalogue, said Personics board member Elliot Goldman. "The industry has a ri.&ht to be skep- tical, .. Garvin said. "But r think we have convinced everyone this is an effon of, by and for the music business for continued control over its product." film producers. Their strike~ Oct. l after marathon CODU'IC1 nceobatlOOS collapsed. The 11.rike came u ftoll~ production was pr· ins up apiD afte1' tc:nptwriters ended their S-moalh IUib in Ausust apinst the producen. Tbe Team1&.ers union voted 441 -196 on Sept. 29 to reject the final contract propoeal subrnitLCd by the producers union, wbicb repreaenu more than 200 film and television makers. Joinina the Teams&.en on the picket lines are 1,000 memben of two other so-<:alled Buie Crafts unions, the electricians and the laboren. Tbe strike by the three unions bas bad lets of an imPICl on Hollywood pro. cluctioe mu the tc:npcwnten' = altbo!ilb -1Y re.oru o( violea(e tbe QinaelJ !kudiol IO bait productioa momentarily OD the NBC 1Cries .. Hwner" and '"Soony Spoon" dutin& the strike'' first week. Key i-.es dividina the Teamsten and the oroducm include overtime rules for weekend wort. ea1ary rates, waees for out- of-toWD film and tdevUioa prod\ICl.ioo, studio aeniority and &Wdelines fot the maldnJ o( aoo-wUon films. Some Team- lter driven wese beiDI ubd to take a pay cut from $16.61 to Sl4 per hour. The producen oon&.end the Teamsters must :!f manar mowitinf production COit.i iDc:reued oompet:Jtion to stop oroducm from leavina Southern Cab· t'ornia far lell expensive locales.. .,, p?tl Dlaney'• Boclg ---. Loe Aneel• Dodaen 8t:ar pttclaer Orel Benlal.Mr atne tlae tllami. ap to a crowd d111'fa& a parade at Dlaqlaad Sa.Ddiy. Benlalw' wu laoaored for Illa llo9t "alaable Player performaace that lead to tile DocfCen• Yictqry ID tile World Serlee. Five dead in weekend gang shootings LOS ANGELES (AP) -Five people were killed and 12 wounded in week.end pna violence that included a stabbing death ata .. sweet 16" party crashed by locaJ png tou&hs. Two of the injured were sheriffs deputies. ln the latC$t incident.. one person was ittjured Sunday night in a driv~by shoot- ing outside a Mexican restaurant in South Central Los Angeles, said police Lt. Roger Fox.. Restaurant owner Salvador Castellanos said POI members tired on 30 gang rivals standing outside his restaurant. Friends drove the injured man to the hospital, Castellanos said. In the "sweet 16" shooting. a 16th birthday party was being held for two girls in West Valinda on Saturday night when several local gang members amved unin- vited, said Los Angeles County sheriffs Depu~ Dan Cox.. "A fi&ht broke out in the street and M1gel Cruz, 21, was fatally stabbed in the chest." Coll said. Brothers Azael and Obed Martinez were lreated for wounds and released from a hospital. The victims were friends of the hosts. Early Sunday. a man was injured m a drive-by shooung in Boyle Heights. Elsewhere, a reputed gang member identified as Anthony Seynos. 20, was wounded in a drive-by shooting at Lincol n Parle at 12:45 a.m. Sunday after an argument between two groups. police Detective Robert Sua.er said. Two young men were being sought. Seynos was in critical condition at County- USC Medical Center. In another attack in Lmcoln Heights, Alfred Raya, 20, an alleged gang member. was shot multiple times Saturday ni&ht. He died at County-USC Medical Center. Sua.er said. Two hours later. Timothy Simos was standina in Lincoln Park when he was bit by gunfire from a passing car. He died at County-USC. Police said the attack may have bttn retaliatory. One man was killed and another wounded in a pna-rclated sbootina Satur- day in Koreatown, police said. A group of men were drinkina beer on a porch on Catalina Street at l 1:20p.m. when two cars drove by. The occupants sbo'1ted PD& slopns, then opened fire lcillin& Herman Lazo. 22. Set. Alan BolJ.inaer said. Earlier Saturday, Oeeing youths weft shot at by reputed p.na members on the door of the sheriff's Lennox station. None of them wu bu.rt. A 14-ycar-old boy later was arTCStcd in the shooting. Two sberifrs deputies were struck by bottles thrown at them as they tried to close down a party in Norwalk late Friday. A reputed p.na member, Ralph Gon.z.aJcz., 23, was 11TCSted. South coun teen, cyclist die from ace dent injuries erton Street and Tustin Avenue. Neiabbon reported seeing a Volvo 1n the area and a pudgy man k:noclung on doon offtrins a spa service. One resident ~poned, however, that his sp1 wu not visible from the street. and must have bttn seen from a neiahbor's backvard. .. , .. and the license plates were still mtact. • • • Police arrested Samuel Wellmen Parsley, 2A of ~una Beach on suspiaon of possess1na a controUed substa.oc::e and driving under the influence. Panley was UTCstcd shortly after 2 a.m. today at South Coast Hi&hway at Calliope Road . $649. • • • A resident on the 9000 block of Acklay Circle complained of loud voices and splasbina from the neiab· bor's backyard pool Saturday be- tween 8 and I 0 o.m. • • • An 111ument over bathroom j)rivi- leacs Saturday night at a home on tbe 18000 block of Brook.burst Sne1 turned tntO a fist fiaht with me resident reoe1vina a swollen cheek. bruises •nd chipped tooth. By GREG ltLERltX Of ... Dllr "94 ..... A 15-year-old Laguna Hills boy died earlr Sunday from injuries sustained m a Fnday evening crash. according to the Orange County Coroner's office. Derek Gre8' died al 1:30 a.m. at Mission Hospital Regional Medical Center of massive head injuncs. Greg was a passcnaer in a Datsun that was struck broadside by a van at r the intcaection of Moulton Parkway and la Paz Road. The 16-)'ear-old driver and another passenger. a 14- ycar-old Laguna Hills girl. were slightly injured. The driver of the van. Gerald K.raten. was not injured in the accident and was not cited, accord in., to California Highway Patrol rcpon' which did not list his age or residence. The cause of the accident is still under investigation. -" Also unda~. an El Toro man died of injuncs sustained in a motorcycle accident Frida)'. Cesareo Vargas. :!6. died of head and internal inJunes sustained ~hen the motorcycle he was nd1ng was hit b) a car on Mu1rlands Boulevard m El Toro. according to CHP reports. The headlight on Vargas' motor- cycle was reported!) not on at the timeofthcacc1dent. The dmerofthe car was not Cited. day. ••• Someone punched the lock on a BMW and stole \be stereo while the vdlidc was parked in tbe I 00 block of Lemon Grove sometime Friday. Somebody~apparcntly parked nght on top of a 20th Street "No Parking" siani bendina the standard and caus- ina s 25 damqe. a.attactoa Beach Somebody reported beanng a bang· ina noite in the steeple at Hunungtoo Bac:b Hiah School, but a d1ruict lealricy olfic:er already was at the "tcbool and said 1t was just steam m the pipes. • • • A resident said It sounded like '1somebody was bouncing off the walls" at an apartment on Brnokhur'Jt Street. but ofli~ sa1d nobod)' was home. • • • A Wauninstcr mother reported her 12-year.old son had 001 bttn home ab weetend, and told Hunt· iDP.19 8-:ll pob<lC she thouaht he miPt be at the beach. IAS-•Bnoll Polioe cited two men early toda) on = ol lewd conduct. A~ at 1 :SO Lm. at Brooks 8-cb ~ Gustavo E1.&1ebto =M--~IGl~~!4~~~ Elaore. • • • A "'* 191J Qevrolet Cavaticr ..... ......., .. R)Mted ~ oovlNd ,.,..., ia Wlliailr. Tbe c::ar .. .oc wftlctl!d. ...,.. or aripped Foaatala Valley Someone entered an open prage on the 16000 block of Mt. Hutchlllgs Street early Friday niJht and stoic $800 'WOl'\b of tools. • • • An unlocked car parked 1n the driveway ofa residence on the 16000 block of Helcna Circle on Sunday just after 7 a.m. bad a mobile ham ndio and stopwatch stolen from the ve- hicle. • • • • Orante and limes shattered ap- proximately 16 sJass p1ncls when thrown at • pttnhoute at Nauonal Growers, Inc., 17742 Ml!pOlia Ave .• Sunday niaht. • • • Someone kicked in a front door of a doctor's office at 1 7900 8rookllunt St over the weeund and ranac:ked the busuw:ss tabnt tw0 cash boJtes conta1nina money and cbtcb wonb • • • Two wooden ca.mpaian sips belOt\111\1 to a Qty Council candidate at the southeast comer of Mapa,aia and Warner Avenue were destroyed Saturday ntahl. • • • A resident on the 16000 block o( Daisy Avenue reported conllQUOUI threatening pbone calls from bs ex- husband. • • • • An ice pick was uted to punctlft four tires of a car pltbd in a dri~ of a residence on tbe 11000 blocll fil OU Circlt early Slnuday monilll. • • • • A borM on tbe I 7000 bloct ti Cohambla llaverCeoterbed a pGltiillt • of tbc .... fO"IY p9inted bhle llli Saturday ftilht. • A••aalt 11119pect lrlllecl In fl Soviets o help free 2whales BAR.ROW, Alaska (AP)-Soviet tlotillu chUrned toward Barrow to oft'er bclp (or two uapped whales u retCUen tried to lure the mammals to freedom, but biol<>sista said they may have ~to airlift the animals to open water. .. We're havina a net built right nbw" to carry them, David Withrow of the National Oceanic and At- mOIPheric Administration's Marine Mammal Laboratory in Seattle said Sunday. . He emphasized that an airlift was the leut. prefem:d alternative, to be Uled only if reeuers fail 10 coax U\e California pay whales tq open water thouah a ICries of freshly cut air holes Mexican officers' lirreat thwarts heroin operation· NEW YORK (AP) -Plana for a $$0 million-a-month heroin pjpeline &om Mexico were foiled with the anat of two Mexican police com- manden who ofticiala say boasted ihey could close airports in their home state to help the smualin&. Pedro Guillen, 39, and Mirptitan Villa&rana. 42, commanden &Om the state -of Guermo, which includes Acapulco. wereio be anaiped today, authorities said. They were anestecl late Saturday in a hotel following a four-month anveatiption, said Rot>- en Strana. a spokesman for the U.S. 1 Enforcement Adminstration. hid the arropnce to travel the nited States to peddle their IQOda," said Robert M. Stutman, Special qent in charae of the DEA in NewYort. . "Wbe¥ver ~u have poli~ of- ficiala involved in the traffickinl of ~or amountJ of drup it ii truly the wont betrayal of the public trust. To have f'oleilD police oftk:en come 10 the UnitecfStates 10 traffic in drup ia even wone." The auapecll llfeed to supply SO kil~ or 110 pounds, of heroin manufactured in Mexico each month, Strana said Sunday. A kit~ of heroin baa a street value of up to SI million. . Mexican heroin .. is not tomethins we normally have available to ua here in New York~' because virtually all ~e heroin amualed into the city comes from Asia, said Straq. · . "These two defendants ~ usina ... their 'tiou in tbe Acapulco "lion (of J:lco) 10 afelJ ~ the heroin to t.6e 1.Jllilad Stalel. Strana Mid .. 1J .s. atents polina u drua traf- ficUrupokc with IM men in Mexico by telephone. &Dd tbe pair flew here f'"riday to complete the deal, Strana uid, . . . After dina~ with the MeJUcana Saturday niabt. two undercover qentJ went 10 the men•a boteJ and pve them S 15,000 u putial pay- ment. be said. -, I A surveillance team then moved in and made the arrests, Strana laid. Tbe two were clwted with con- spiracy to distribute heroin., a felony that carries a penalty of 25 years 10 life "' priton, he ~d. in 1be iee. . . . A third whale. the imallest and ~c • Btolotiata ue r0pe to m9ua.re trapped ;bale. yo~ of the mammals \rapPcd Ul • movma ice more than two weeks ago before they could migrate south, from the Barrow area, the Soviet news ••we're marcbina out to the lead disappeared Friday and wa s agency Tass reported today. wjth Jnu~iat (Eskimo) power," said Millions in U.S. lacking in basic scientific knowledge presumed dead. Another flotilla unloaded equip. Morris. • The whales are responding A pontoon-mounted ice auger ment for a Soviet station at the North 10 the boles." known u an Archimedes screw Pole before beading immediately for The breathing holes extend more tractor wu delivered during the Alaska, Tass said. Tass did not saw than 11/J miles from where the whales weekend by a huae Air Force C-SA bow many ships were in the second were first trapped. · ~ plane and wu reassembled group. The Eskimos connected several Swlday. It was unclear what good the holes, converting them into a narrow Thedevicewasto~worktoday icebreakers could do in the shallow pool2S0feet.longtosivethewbales o•th.e outside edae of an ice pres.sure water near the whales. The ships need more room to resL They made a ridae that stands between tbe whales 39 feet of water to operate, Tass said, similar slot in the ice over a shoal and freedom. and the whales were trapped in water about five feet deep. The shoal --CHICAGO (AP) -Nearly SOO yean after· C.Opemicus postulated that E&rlh revolve$ around the sun, millions of Americans think other- wise, sugests a poll that found vast numbers of the nation's adults "scien- tifically illiterate." In a July telephone survey, 2,04 l adults l8orolderwereukedabout 75 questions on basic science, Miller said. The survey had a DWJin of error of plus or minus 3 percentqe points. Fony-five J>CfCCDt co~y said it takes a year for the Earth to orbit the sun, but 17 percent said one day, 2 pen:ent said one ronth and 9 percent didn't know. "That's the next bi& project for us,.. 12 to 25 feet deep. apparently deterred the w~cs from said NOAA biolop.t Ron Morris, Even if the icebreakers cannot movina farther towlird open water. Asked whether the Earth Joes around the IUD or f.he sun aroun the Earth, 21 percent replied incorrectly. Seven percent said they didn't know. ••The resulu show that on very basic ideas, vast numben of Amcn- cans are scientifically illiterate," Mill-er said Sunday. ..It's a (airly dire. situation." coordinator of the r'elcue. reach the whales, the ships could help The whales appeared to be in good NOAA asked the Soviet Union for clear a path to open water about 200 . health, althou~ a patch of skin tom help, and America's Arctic nei&bbor miles away, Petersen said. off one animal s snout appeared to be ordered the icebrcaken Adiniral As hi&Jt-tecb heavy equipment worsening, said Jim Harvey, Many .Americans· also mistakenly belieYe that laser beams are focused tound waves and that atoms are smaller than electrons, said Jon Miller, director of the Public Opinion Laboratory at Northern Illinois Uni- versity, who conducted a nationwide survey for the National Science Foundation. Makarov and Vladimir ·Aneniev to poured mto this whaling village Withrow•s colleague. · Barrow, said NOAA Rear Adm. during the weekend, EslOmos used Biolosists believe a bone infection Siamund R. Petersen, director of the chain saws and muscle to make the may bave contributed to the death of Plcifi.c Marine Center in Seattle. most progress toward freeing the the smallest whale, which had been In the early 16t)lcentury, \Jl,e Poli~ utronomer Nicholas Copernicus laid the foundation for modern astronomy with his heliocentric the- ory of planetary motion in which the planets revolved around a motionless SUD. The results of the survey baven•t been fully tabulated yet, but tt appear1 tbat93percentto9Spercentwould have to be considered scientifically' illiterate, lackina fundamental knowledp of scientific vocabulary. The shi~ were 140 nautical miles animals. named Bone. Campaign '88: Accentuate the negative Cartoonists to ai1D their pens at ho1neless plight WASHINGTON (AP) -To hear George Bush tell it, Democrat Mich.el Dukalcis is against every new weapons system "since tbe slinphot." From the Dukakis per- spective, Bush was winking and nodding while Panama•s Manuel Antonio Noriega went wild dealing drugs. Both assertions arc part of Cam- paian ·ss, and neither bean much relation to provable fact. But they typify a campaign in which be1Uddled voters arc bom- barded with negative campaign infor- mation and are faced with a nearly impossible task of sorting out fact from distortion. half-truth and flat. out fiction. "I don't recall an election where the ads have been as nCP-tive as this year;' said political ari&lyst William Schneider of the American Enterprise Institute in Washinaton. "If things aren't aoina too badly, and the election looks like it's going to be close, they've JOl to have something to talk about So they tallc about each other." Most recently, Dukalcis wa.s angrily displaying campaign literature mail- ed out by the state Republican Party in IllinotS, which be called "political prbqe. •• The brochure all~ed that Duk.Uis. "let murderers, rapists and child molesters free on weekend puses" and sugcstcd that in Dukakis• home state of Massachu- setts, Illinois mass murderer John Wayne Gacy, now on death row, would be allowed to go free. The Bush campaign disavowed any connection with the fliers, which cite the case of murderer Willie Horton who escaped while on a weekend furlou&h from Massachusetts prison, then raped a Maryland woman and slashed her bo~end. Dukak.is aides said Gacy would bavc been ineligible for release under terms of the furfou&h program, which has since been amended. Schneider wa ffiC candidates "'aie careful about outright lyinJ. •• but that in an era of complex issues, the advertisements and campaign" slopns "become more and more simpleminded. .. For instance, Dulcakis ads claim Bush "personally cast the tic-break- ing vote to cut Social Security benefits.•• ~~~~~~~~~~~~..,.-~~~~~~~~~~~----. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC • ..... , .... e....~ llZZ -llll~ CISTA IW-541-~15' But in reality, that 1985 vote by tions before the Justice Department Bush u vice president was not to cut indicted him, and Bush bas denied Social Security, but to temporarily any such knowledge. He counters By Tiie Aaeda&d Presa "1i'eeze Social Security cost-of-living allegations that the CIA under the w ASHINGT-ON _ The trqedy of bomcJessness will be featured in increases as part of a broad budget Reapn-Bush administration kept hi 1 · th · • T esda ' tha IOOcart · resolution .. Duka.leis, as a member of Nonep on the CIA payroll by stating araP c Sty e 10 c nation s newspapen u Y •as more n oorusts the National Governors' C.Onference, it was that same admirustration dedicate their work to that national problem. Both comic-strip and editorial bad voted in favor of the same thing which indicted the Panamanian. cartoonisu are joining the effort. inclucfina lomc of the best-known panels and f f · strips. said Barry Zips of the National Low Income HousiDJ Coalition. "The as pert o a package 0 economic Dukakis is j>articularly miffed aoaJ of the project is to tua at America's heart strinp throuaft its funny bones. recommendations. But Dukakis said about Bush's claim that be opposes Tomorrov."s funny paaes are no1 aoina to be so funny," said Zips-at a news he had first fought unsuccessfully to new weapons systems. In his strategy conference announcing the project. Similar news con~erences were tebeduled exempt Social Security from the to portray his Democratic rival as soft in 22 other cities across the nation in an etfon to focus attention on hwieer and federal budaet freeze. on defense, Bush often says on the homelessness, Zips· said. Canoonists taking pu! include Oarry Trudeau. The Democrats also like to zing stump that Dukakis bas opposed author of "Doonesbury"' "Garfield•' creator Jtm Davia; Mell Lazarus, who Bush on drugs by linking him to every weapons system since the draws "Momma", Dile Browne, creator of"Hapr the Horrible;" "Wizard of Panama's Noriega, who is currently sliDJS.hof, and did not support Prcsi-ld" artist Johnny Hart; Doua Marlette who draws "Kudzu;" Tom Batiuk. un~der indictment on federal drug dent Reapn's invasion of Grenada or de¥eloper of"Crankshaft." and many othen_ c d th B b •• hin.ir-attaclc on Libya. sa states at us was . made responsible for stopping drug . Dukakis says he <ltd not oppo~ the traffic from coming into this.coun-Labya and Grenada actions, Veteran•· n.. .. ...,_e .. t _ ... __ •ftJDlnd ollJc,6-1 ~·a reference t<>Busti s clWr~~ys ~ suppofts ~ ~ -~~ -• ~ manship of the South Florida Drug V&n<?US new military technology 10-WASHINGTON -President Reapn will sian lepslation creating a lnterdiction Task Force. cl~ina the Stealth ~~ber and th~ Cabinet-level Department of Veterans Aft'ain durina a Tuetday visit to the "What hapj>ened?" the ad goes on. Tndent 2 sea-based missile. National Defense Univenity at Fort McNair, in the District of Columbia, the "Cocainetrafticup300percent. More Bush also hasassailed Dulcakis for White House announced today. "The presidcnt•s remarks will focus on drugs in our classrooms. And Pan-his state•s program to furlough pris-propess made in the field of defente and forei&n a1fairs in the cou.tse of this amanian drug lord Noriega kept on oncn. Bush neaJccts to note that the . administtation," ~pokesman Marlin Fitzwater said. Fitzwater noted lb.at theaovemment payroll... furlouah system wu installed by a Tuesday in the fifth anniversary of the U.S. invuion of Grenada and said, There has been no proof that Bush Republican aovemor who preceded "The president will take note of that event as an illustration of the wisdom or knew about Noricp•s drug connec-. Dukakis. his peace throuah strength doctrine." Joan renamed Miriam~ hits PS:cific SAN SALVADOR.. El Salvador (AP) -The aovernment declared a state of emcrae.ncy and evacuated residents from ftood-prone coastal areas in the 1>9th of a tropical storm that re-eneflized in the Pacific today after killina 111 people as an Atlantic hurricane. ~ Killer typhoon rips Philippines MANILA (AP)-Typboon Ruby roared across the Philippines today with heavy rain and winds topping 100 mph, causing mud slides and tidal •WJCS that left thousandt homeless. Officials said at least 13 people died. Some fliahts were canceled and schools were closed in'Manila. The U.S. military'• television network re~ wind auau u~ to 140 mp}l. All six U.S. military in the In Nicarqua. the storm killed at leut 50 people and left 300,000 ----------..,....------------------1 homeless as tt crossed the Central The military reported anoth""Cr 30 people were missina and feared dead in a storm-related bus accident and that an inter-.island veuel with 481 passengers and Philippinea were put on maximum storm alert. States or emerwency were declared in some areas of the toutbern MiWuo Island, ao4 thouaands-0f people were evacuated. llNITEI YOU TO JOI# OUR A##UAL SKI SWAP SATURDAY, OCTOBER'29, FROM 10A.M. 70 5P.M. Bring yru lsed ~ng. st<is, bros' and blndilll)S ni sell them at rur ~ U. 5'<i SWap. Immediate C'A5h wtlen yax meft:hanclse is sad. SPECIAL OffEA for people wishing to sell sJ<is·and boots: sell 'f'U ~ In 1tle swap ~ ~ wlH 1S.5Ue Instant 509 ae<lt b Ile amcut we estimate 1tle Item to be wonn. The S1ln credit nut be l8ld tJf Ot1. 30. ($2.00 cilalge tor each Item brought to swap.) Kids' equlpmertt and ~welcomed! .•• A#D OUR lllCREDlll.E SKISAl.E SA1VflMY, oc1w a, ,,,.10A.11.,,,,,, .... ._ OCTOBER 30, ,..10,.11. "',,,_.. lJP TO ·-io~ OFF 0# 111741,..,.,,,,.,, CLOTM#8 IUIAllU llllllJCM.IG See us ~ Oldl1lng clfllae(! ..... ~ kids RI mnatf ........ ~--oa.,ur.,...,~ ClU*Y «Mmenf ..S cd1ilg t> ,._,Dr• If A • ..0 }IOU'l QI( I -~ b .... d 'f(U tbml, pU ,au1 be~ ..... 1111 ...... wit .. '*'*' ll1d ............ __ .. American isthmus, its r2s mph winds weakenina to tropical storm stalus alona the way. But the storm pined str:en&th over th~~ waten of the -Pacific. F ten Slve what bad been Joan a name, Miriam, and'· said it could become the fint Atlantic hur- ricane to pin the same status in the Pacific. "We are ready for it," declared Interior Minister Edprdo Belloso Funes as rains bepn fallina in IOUtheutem El Salvador. He said a burric:ane last struclc El Salvador in 1934. At 8 Lm. PDT, Miriam's center wujuat off the coast about 75 miles IOUtb of Guatemala City and just IOUtbeut of San Jote, Guatemala. wilb mnimum sustained winds near 55 ma laid the National Weather s.viCe in Miami. It Mid the l10rm wu centend at latitude 13.S north, lOftliblde 90.S crew was missina in stormy teU. , The coast pwd said the missing vessel, tbe Marilyn, ~rted engine trouble en route from Manila to Tacloban Ctty and could have ~en shelter in an isolated harbor. It wu last reported about 200 miles southeast of Manila. The aovemmeat warned of more floodina u the storm lPPfC>9cbed Manila. At 4 p.m., the storm sustained winds on 02 mph and ill center was movins nonhwest at 16 mob toward demely populated central Luzon Ialand. "'Thia ia one oftbc wont typhoons this year," said Juanito Urioa, deputy weather tcrVic:e director. "Manila it in peatdaqer. Let ua not take chances. If we do not take care tbeo there could be a p-eet loss of lives." Welt and wu nearly stationary thia mornlDa. The atorm was expected to bellD rDovtna slowly wat-nortbwest \lriilaia 24 boUn. T~ atonn warniall covered die Pldftc eout of El Wvador and o..temala. Flub flood aod mud llldl WUD.iQp a1lo were in eft'ect in Ruby is the 18th typhoon or tropical storm to hit the Philippines this year and the eecond in four daya. There were conflictina reports on casualties becauae the storm knoc1ced out communications in the affected areas. Rodriao Roldan, civil defeme director OD Panay Ialand, sak1 at lealt five people were killed today when a bus canyina about 90 people careened off a bridee during bea~ .willds and rain &ncf plunpd into a river. Tbe army said another 30 pueeneen were miuin& and pnsumed dead. Tbc State-run Phili~ News Aaency laid most of the puseqm were lleepina when the accident occurred and were unable to acape... Day• are numbered • •n.,.,tm for Datl;Tlmen Inc .• checb 1989 p0cket dluJ/~ at compan7'• headqaarten lD Allen- towa, PL October 8taJ1a the buleet Milin& MUOD for the natloD'•l•"Mprodacerofpenonalprodactl'rity•upplle.. • OrlflOe COMt DAILY PILOT IMoncMy. October 2 .. , 1N8 ~· Al Buyout binge has benefits, danger a, carr etra.RID propoted an s 11.• biW011 offer for ,,......_.._ K.raf\ and RJR Nabsico laid it WU NEW YORK (AP) -The conliderina 1 Sl7.6 billion man .... takeover-bQyout mania DOW sweep. ment buyout Dlu. . in& tbroUlb corporalC America bas If such deafs can be done, an'.alysts 101DC Wall Stnlelen applaudina and say, there appears to be vinually no otben th•kina lbeir heeds. limit to what mipt be attempeed in Tbe fans of tbele multibillion-the future, no company too bia to be · dollar dealt say they are powerful ruled out as a takeover or buyout meclic:ine for 1 stoCt market still--candidate. l1l'Ualina to recover from the crash of That ~pect helped propel stock l 91'7:--1 prices hiaher in the put week. The · In tbeablellceofbuyiqbyindivid· Dow Jones avcnee of 30 industrials ua1s and many institutional money rose S0.32 to 2,183.SO bittina its m1n•pn, tbey Ilk. where .would the hiabest levels sinoe the~ of.'17 as stock market be today without the the fint univenary of that deb9cle leverqed-buyout specialists and the puled. ~known u arbitrqm, wbo The New York Stock Excbaqe follow ID their wake? composite index Dined 3.96 to What's more, they say, takeovers 1S9.42· the NASOAQ composite and buyouts are a loa,-tcrm plus for index for the over-tbe-oountcr mar- t.be maiket becaute they reduce. the ket~ 4.00 to. 381.S9, and tbe •¥PJ>IY of stock in. the marke~l.ace, American Stock ExchaQIC markn llVl"I an upward~ to ~e pnoes of value index was up 3.S2 at 306.07. tbe shares that~!' avad~le. Volume on tbe Big Board averqed But mo~ skeptical observers, 170.63 million sham a day up trom w~i!e acknowledaina so~e of th~se 147.0S million the week before. points, arsue that all this wbeelmg "The short-term rewards to selling and dealina is contributing huge new shareholders in tbe fotm of capital amounts to an alrady dangerous gains are indisputable, .. analysts at accumulation of debt in the U.S. Wriaht Investors' Service in economy. Bridgeport, Conn., observed in a And the activity it aenerates in the recent appraisal of the metJCl'S-'&nd· market, they say, ·represents un-acquisitions craze. healthy -speculabon rather than But .. the longer-tenn effects of stable, Iona-term investr:n~z:it.,.-. takeovers are less healthy for the Tbemeraenandacqumttonsbmge economy and for equity investon is nothina new. of coun:e. Takeovers 'generally." . , ~ • ~ and buyouts were a dominant force m Excessive debt-leverqina of cor- the 1982-87 bull market. -porate assets makes companies 01ore A similar phenomenon occurred in vulnerable'in the event of a recession, the 1960s. when conalomerate-build-the report $aid. ing was tbe financiaf nge. "ln fact, there is the potential that Lately, however, the game bas been defaults arising from higb debt ser- played on an expanded ~e. In ~e vice reqwrements for companies past week alone, Philip Moms with ~uccd cauh flows will even 111nvate the economy's troubles., w1iea the next recession comes. .. AJtbouah industry consolidations and restructurinp may often be utefuJ for strenathenina the com· petitive edle in alobal markets, the trusbmation•oJ' billions of dollars of equi ioto debt is erodina the fi · f'ootinp of U.S. industry. .. volatility atRI instabllity have i as a ·~ult of the takcovet wave, with the effect of drivh~ 'many individual investon NYSE UPs & OowNs I out of •mc:t IDmMl few ymn to come, it aot for IOOd." it said. Wfilbt DOtecf tbal the peatat takeover wave in biaory was • buic caute of the stock martct decline lut October. Tbe collapec WU U tevere .. il ... "'pncildy becaute the takeover wave bad pushed stock prices to artificially hiP levels." .. For tbat reaoa alone," Wriaba concluded. .. one sboWd find link comron iD the cootiDuina biah level of takeover activity." OTC UPs & DowNs ANEW LOOK INTO BEAUTIFUL EYES. ~ ~fc ... unlN F.i.~t 1.~r . .11c! .\ nc.~ .,ll'llh.~ pro('('Ju~ ref"lll' lhl' nmwr •• 11 l)( "'* Jnd tl1r~ ... 1i.~k "'' fl\>O\ u111.lc:r tht-c:'\'\°' "1th i'k • >.l..1n it)l~"m .ind \1tiUJlh 1111 J1'4.'\•0ll\\rt \\lthln houN .lltcr "\I~'" ew m.1kr- UJ'I lllJ\ ~ -..1IC'h .1ppllC'\I .1n,1 • 11\t' 1n.t1 l'\.'funi 10 1\1 .. ,,, her n<•rnul .k11\lfl0. n u .. hlt(hl\ >phl'-<t..,11~'1.I vphth.1hmi. pl'\.'() '"~" f>I\ 11."\'\lll~ ltt".11\'"' ll)• Jll~"ll\ .ii hk-ph.tn. 'f'>ll.'<\ l dr.im.lll· II\ ~u,"'t"'> t~ rL"'l.. \)( ~"lllllphc·a l•t\f\,, .mu chmm.ll ~~·-:mi~. vn· .. l)thth '01~ • .iod l~llJ<1h\ ~1l\\.'" 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I• If s -~ f I 11 l .._.. ._ = ' Sj ( ,._,,_. a 1 • : l'D', ·~ Stock market declines NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market pulled back from last week's 1988 hiahs today in a session dominated by takeover and buyout news. WHAT AM EX Dio WHAT NYSE 0 10 NEW 'f'OAK (AP) Od. U 1 AME X L E~OER S NYSE Lf AOfR S i GoLo Quon s : D o~ JoN f s A ~F RAGES M ETA LS QuoH s NASDAQ S UMMAR Y ". ' • t , ' f Election '88 yote 'no• on Proposition 99 If awards were pven for initiatives that should not be on tbe bellot next month Proposition 99 would be a front-runner. Tbe intent of this measure is to tax ciprettes and tobaoco oroductl ~.heavily ~t the expense will dilcowqc youths &om acqwnna the habit and encourage adults to quit. Ex~ predict the new tobacco tax would raise about $600 million a year, so Proposition 99's .supporters propose splittiq the mo~ amona popular causes to add some '· support to their efforts. Here's bow Proposition 99 would distribute the money: • Twenty percent -S 120 million -for health education and atop-smoking campaigns in public schools and community health education pr<>srams. • Thirty-five pcrcent-$210 million -to hospitals that treat patients who cannot pay. The medical care is not limited to treatment of tobacco-related illnesses. • Ten percent -$60 million -to pay doctors who treat patients who cannot afford to pay. The doctors' care is not limited to treatment of tobacco-related illnesses. • Five percent -$30 million -for tobacco-related disease research. • Five percent -$30 million -for programs to protect, restore, enhance and maintain fish, waterfowl or other wildlife habitats or to improve state and local parks and recreation areas. The remaining 25 percent -S 150 million -could be spent for any or all of the above uses. If approved, the measure would also exclude the new tot.cco tax from the Gann Spending Limit so it would not be subjected to the same restrictions as other taxes. The opponents of Proposition 99 have not helped the credibility of the initiative process with their style of campaipina. but they do bring up one interesting point. If taxes on tot.cco products arc tripled because smoking is a health baz.ard, what new tax will be proposed next? Drunken drivina accounts for hundreds of aeaths and thousands of iltjuries in Oaifornia each year. Too much red meat, dairy products, fast food and coffee can also cause health problems. Should their popularity and use be .. di~uraged with a staaerina new taxes? Proponents of the initiative could have strengthened their position by restricting th~ proposed new tobacco taxes to anti-smok:ina programs and medical treatment of smo,king- relat.ed illnesses. However, what they have proposed is subject to suspicion because it would tax tobacco products under the auise of health concerns but use pan of the money for prosrams not directly related to tobacco-related health problems. Proposition 99 should be rejected because it tries to do the riaht thina the wrona way. Vote 'yes' on Proposition 85 Approval of Proposition 85 next month will continue California's commitment to public libraries. Until 1982 cities, counties and special tu. districts paid most of the cost of building or restoring libraries. However, six years aao local libraries began receiving money from ~e state and federal governmcnt:S tOpay ~~ costs, new construction and renovation projects. Proposition 85 is a $75 m~llion. bond issue that wi.11 continue that state-local relationship for bener pubhc libraries. . Local libraries that want to participate in ttie program would have to pay 35 percent of the cost of a new or renovated buildin& buy their own books and operate for at l~st 20 y~ any library acquired, built, remodeled -0r rehabilitated with state arants. Public libraries arc the cornerstones of a community an.d a valuable supplement to our commitment to pubhc education. They deserve the support ofth9oters next month with a yes vote on Proposition 85. __,/ Adult magazines It was disappointing to h~ the ~ninJ being expressed during a recent Turlock <;:1ty Council. ~eeung as to why this community needs an o!Wnancc ~wnng-stores to . put "blindcn .. over adult mapzmes. Azauments from "protecting our kids .. to "encouraging public responsibleness .. were put forth as reasons why the law was needed ... Council members Ron Hillberg and Maurice Palmberg were cheered by a packed audience ... when they expressed wholehearted support for the proposal. It is expected to become law in a little less than two months. It was the kind of atmosphere that can prove to be quite intimidatina for anyone who might be inclined to take a stand ap.inst such a ridiculous law ... Listenina to the proponents of this law, one ~out~ have to wonder if parents have any con~I over t~e1r ~h1ldre.n anymore. RespoJlsibillty to deal with somethina like this should start at home, not at Ci'>'. Hall.. Parents, not the aovernment arc the sole guardians of their children's . upbrinaiq. .. Perhaps the ordinance proponents should ~ve d~ their mus audience efforu toward the stores displayma ~e material they object to or orpnized a boycott of stores which refbled to cooperate'with their dem ...... Instead. they now have another law aoina into the ~b, ud the heavy hand of force backed by aovernment will be buna over the Fint Amendment ri&hts of private property owaen. , .. , .. (6t0f .. ,.., -....c .. 1-CW. "'"""" .......... City l• .... c.... s.mt• ........ , ......... CIRll ... ...... ....... ~-­_.._ ~--.... .... ~'t.: ... ~ .. c..... ~=::.. .... ~ ..... _ .... ,,..... ..... ... L· .. -- MeasureK better than saying no To lbe Editor. . I feel quite oenai.n tbat many of your other laden really tel fed up I wilb politics and politicians: It's llUial IO you can't believe anyth.mc they my or anytbiD& printed about wbal they 1ay. Some or OW' hopefuls keep ravine about bow they are oot aoing to raise• wa. We do want that, bot when I wat to ICbc>oi° we were t.auabt that !• ' o ·-··I ..... ,,' ,.l... ~. . .... Q ., ·.: ~ ... -.... :. . . ·california now a stumbling block tODukakis campal~ bad tbe job of enact.int n that would affect taxes and : president could do is veto, wbicb of coune can be overridden by C.oapea. So assuming this bas not = bow in the world can a tiaJ ho~fuJ say what be says and keep a straight face. Wone than that, both sides accuse acb other of so many offenses. lf we knew that at least SO percent of the accusations ~ factual we should have a whole new slate. Althouab we don'thave so m,ucb of that kind of thin& on the local level, we do have some really o.eptive thinJtin&, I am reminded that we were all warned of the evils of Proposition A. not the least amona them was that if passed, Proposition A would cause an iDCrQSe in bousin& costs. Well, Proposition A failed and ~ prices reached an all-time hi&b any- way. So much forthaL State Democrats may have to swallow bitter pill because they had a chance Now fonunaldy we have a second _._DAN ::n,,:.~~~':i:~~~r We arc warned that the measure as SACRAMENTO -From the be-it bad improved their view of Bush W•LfERS .,..,;"-as· •--than --'ect and will &inninf, California assumed a pivotal while damaain& Dubki5. n ~~tin all~ of'ilb_ role an the 1988 presidential "The deb.te was the defining I suspect that these nay sayers arc of sweepstakes. moment,•• pollster Field said. the same ilk u those that made the The state's 47 electoral votes were Al.thouab, u noted eaf!ier Cali~ol-in €tiifomia as if 1!e were dire predictions for Proposition A absolutely vital to Michael Dubkis' fornia appeared to be. a rna.JOr ttle--runnina for aovernor, punchiog the and probably have the same validity. ho~ of winnina the White House. poun~ lfom the earliest ~ys of the strona-defense, anti-<rime and anti-1 am aoina to vote for Measure K Without them, Democratic campaip. tbe two candidates aP.: tuesbuttonsaieveryopportunity. andbopeyoudolikewite.Evenifit stratCJists could not envision a com-proached the st.ate in markedly dif-Bush did that He campaigned lhould be. poorly ~ncn at ~ its binauon of st.ates that would add up fercnt ways. . . personally in California not so much puaaee will result in some acttoo and to the 270 needed to win. Dubkis, displayma the Boston-to win the st.ate. one suspects, as to tbOIC that say vote no are not And while George Bush's knows-~t arropnce that bas been deny its electoral votes to Dukakis, proposinaan)'solutiooatall. strateaists could aeate a theoretical the hallmark of bis national cam-who needed ~cm more. Atleasdet'st.ryanddotom~if scenario of winning without Cali-~. all but ignored the advice of The Duka.kis non-strategy fal~ it does not work we can try something fornia, it was a difficult one, although California Democrats. He dispatched wbjle the ~~ strate&,Y. succeed~ else. . it turned out to be cloSC'J' to the truth. a former aide to Sen. Edward Ken-Ulllll teleV1sion adverusmg heavily, Just sayina no will not act us Ultimately, what has occurred in nedJ., Tony Podesta, to run the Bu.sh was able to define Dulcak:is to · anywhere at all California durin& the past three California drive. and treated it as if it Californians u a soft-on-crime. soft-ALAN L BLUM months 1cptcsents a microcosm of were just part of the laraer picture, on«femel bard-on-taxes liberal. Balboa ls1and the la.racr ~mpaign. Du~s began rather than an ind~odently import-And that nas worked amona Cali- the campaian season with what ant arcDL In brief, the Duka.kis foruians because the state's voten appeared to be a comfortable margin people never pve California the have a decidedly conservative be:nL of support oveT Bush, only to see that attention they themselves were say-At the same time, an ...-cmvc edae shrirtkand finally vaniSh, qeJy int it deserved. med.iacampai&n focusing on polluted because of his own political inept-Dukakis never developed a Bos10n H.arboTUndercut the one issue ness. m~ for California. His sto_J)S in ~ ~Y had an Mervin Field, the state's most the st.ate were perfunctory -keyi(f" edge among Californians. en- rcspeaed pollsteT, confirmed this more to raising money than to vironment.al protection. ~k that Bush now enjoys a str'Ong penuading voten. And many of his The DulcaJcis people are making all leadoverDukakis-withlessthanthree ~· themes were counter-'ll be" weeks remaining before Election uctlve in California. such as of the usual noises aboui stJ ing competitive in California. Day. ,. cutting. back on defense s~ding or The lead, SO to 41 percent, is an erectina trade barriers. Its cle&T, at But Bush plans to spend a whop.- almost exact reversal of the positions least in retr~pect1 that Dukakis and ping SS million on media advenising in mid-July, as Duk.alcis came off a bis Boston-oaseo advisers didn't in the st.ate durina the final three successful Democratic National Con-understand the st.ate and didn't know weeks. Barri1)J some cat.acl~1c vention. Even a month ago, the bow to deal with its quirks. event, the presidential contest lD the contest in California wls dead<ven. a Bush has no greater natuTal affinity nation's laraest st.ate probably is over. toss-up. for California, although bis service to and California is headed for another But in the aftermath of the final Ronald R.capn probably wa.s a plus in a lon1 string of Republican vic- presidential debate in Los Angeles, with most voters. torics. It will be an especially bitter Dukakis' position bas deteriorated in But unlike Dukakis, Bush was pill for California Democrats to California and that of Bush improved willina to Piac'.e his California ~-swallow, because they really bad a markedly. .Three-fourths of those p&iP. larJely 10 the hands of ~·-c~ ~-~~n· questioned an the latest poll bad seen fornians. Gov. George Deuk.meJ1an n-.ioc. I• • syMJcafell the debate. and the vast majority said reputedly advised Bush to run for :el •efec. Differences among· NB 's candidates are not bland Despite campaign talk, there are two camps heading In opposite directions City Council elections arc non- partisan, but if you listen to our Newpon Beach candidate$. they sound u if they all beJona to the same party. They all say they arc responsive to the people, will protect property vaJues and the environment, will work on our traffic problem, love Newport Beach and have lived here since '03 9r thereabouts. Despite this appearance of bland Wliformity, there are actually two camps that would ao in euctly oppolite directions. You can tell them apart by theiT votina records, ud by the oonuibuton who are ftnancina their campaians. One camp comists of Paul Ryckoff, Geneva Matlock and Jean Watt, 1Upponed by the memben of SPON ud ill lister orpnizations. Tbe other comists of John Cox, llutt.clyo f'tummer and Ralph llodbeim. aupponed b)' the chamber of commerce and ita 11ster orpnia- tiona. The rec:ot'd sbOWJ thctt differences ....._ntbem. · ne Ryckotr-Matlock-W1n camp would work OD uaftk by limitiQI tM •DUD& of .. ~" ... ~:.[l•mmer-llodbc1m ca~p woill OD ttaflk by CDCOUf'llllll •wmc·· ---ck1ielopers to~• •t:vemeeta. u111acrwt W1u _.. ...... property v.-.,, •-lcdl4cc&»11 frola MW ct.. ::1:,:~ l"*Cl"-:'..:.1 .._.., .-.~-~to•ma • =-IB .. ilia IO ret8r9 I ....... .., ........... commera.a.I propen y. Ryckoff, Matlock and Watt would rather have a shorugc than an excns of oflice buildin&s and hotels. Cox. Plummer and Rodhe1m would rather have an excess than a short.age, Two yean aao. Ryckoff. Matlock and Watt opposed Measure A to doub&e the office towers in Newport Center. Cox. Plummer and Rodheam IUpponed Measure A. R.~koff. Matlock and Wan arc almost e•dusivcly finan~h con- tributions from Newport rcsi- denu. Cox. Plummer. and Rodhe1m are heavily financed by developen IUCb a Seweastrom. Twenty percent of R.odheim's contnbullons arc from outside Newpon Beech. Wba Ryckoff was mayor. he oalbed flaroulb a con01ct-of-1ntercst lew IO ~ CXMlncil mcm bt'n from ~ heDdal favors to thclt cam- paip coetribu1on. Co.l and Plum- _. rilpeeled lbis Jaw, and Cox never di1da.d that he was $100.000 in clebl to 1lw lrviM Co. wbc:o be vo\ed ia •~Of their new office bu11dinp .. Newpon Caier. ·~Madock arid Wan bcbeve .. public lliiould be involved m cny ,, m.u a.s lbould voce on the ~ 6'-.. C:O.. Phammer and • •1ia .....,,.. tbe pubbc bas ••amf 11111 Citf Counal ~ , b I -decitiGm ._ it. Waa .... , 3 ., circilated pclldom 10 =a• • I I to I,._ of '9!e . .. ,, ............ ••11-rlllil •a •' ILll .,..... Hada l:i and waa .... , 10 • • ...... , fllmaa111 f'ftidm- ALLAN BEEK tia1 subdivisions. Cox and Plummer have voted to cn::atc more bomcs by aUowial already-subdivided lou to be funbcr raubdivadcd. Ryckoff, Matlock and Watt oppose effons to attract more tounsu to Newport Beach. Col and Mummer spent nearly half a nulhon dollars to anmct more tounsts to fill up the empty bot.els. ll~ Matlock and Watt SUJ>-pon Measure K which requires *'-elopmmts to improve the streets eDOQlb to lake care of the traffic they will tenente. Col, Plummer and Rodheim 9PPC* Measure K. ~Madock and Watt belte,·e diet .,_ ere loMr and lift more ~ i8 a eown than in a city. C.O... Phmmer ud Rodheim bdJeve tbat pVWlla cnatei income (such as Illes .._. tom depanmellt stores and bed_ &om bolell)wbich Pl~ Aw dly .. •ka (1ille IO"eet matntcn-..,. ad pobice protec:tion) wttbout ,.... ..... NolS la m.s wbele llodbeam bu DO l9COnl but tM c:Mlnbef Of~ ..... ot ........ piaidenl, ..... .,... C.C.ad Plulamer, I uve HF BJ f ... aodlU'• 1i1'W Mio. tte,or..,...IMftmi:wep1111-. Ma ... Wllb ID .. .a.DI d9e ~allliP¥1111 a1••11ia. n.e '°' lmwe ..... w. n.tdllla olviewl •' Ji?J!"' -• _.., .... .., ... Mimi; Aaa .... Ir • ,.,. .. .. II ;$ I Consu111ers - need~ful ---­ disclosilres ( To the Editor. The barrqc of ads from various special interests oonoerning the car insurance initiatives shows once apin the need for full disclosure about who's payina foTcampai.gn ads. The Consumer R.iabt To Know Initiative will require that initiative ads f\J.lly discl09C who is really payina for them. Proposition lOS also bas other truth in advertising protections for consumers -like better disclasutt about numna home safety records and waroinp about the proper dis- posal of touc household products. The Consumer ~t To Know Initianve's bottom line is sim(>&e: oonsumen get more information from oomme:rcia.I advcrt.iscrs. Proposition IOS oo tlus Novem- beT's ballot protects consumCTS, 1C11iors and our environment from shoddy pnictices without cre&UQ& an expensive bwaucracy. That's wby 30 consumer, senior and environment.al groups support Proposition 105. includin& CURE (Consumers U nited for Reform), the ConJrCSS of California Seniors. Cali- fornians Apinst Waste and the nursina home reform ~up BANHR. The Consumer R.iabt T o Know lni uati vc 's only purpose is to protect the public. The special 1nt.etats won't do 1t. The politicians haven't done iL Now we can do it ourselves! JACXLEVTTT Sant.a An.a . TooA v IN H1sToR1 r Aa DAILY ~LOT/ Monday, Octot>« 24, 1988 Rt' t't.. 'I ' I , I 1 L -- 'Oklahoma 'glven a ~plendidrevlval • • IAT 21 (R) ll:H J:111:H1 IOt H JODlf fOSHll *THE ACCUSED (RI 1J JI J H i 11 1 JI t 41 • PUNCH LINE (RI U .. Z HS IS 1q11 IS oo• AMfCME THINGS CHANGE (Pl;) 11,lt J·IS 4: .. 1-11 t:U A FILM IY CLIU USTWOOD *BIRD (RI \: .. I •:II Oolyl * GORILLAS IN THE MIST (PG-13) 1Z ff Z H 5 00 1 35 11:11 *ALIEN NATION (R) IZHJSIS1512SNS •II :M 9!>-0~ DRUCI HEARTIREAK HOTEL (PG-13) PLUS COCKTAIL CIU A FISH CA~LED WANDA (R) PLUS llC IPCI ELVIRA (PG-13) PLUS NIGHTillAll( ON fLM Slllf[T IV (Ill ·------._,...,. ""-.,_ •--•w•• ---··-lllllr11op0111•n01 41 l IWIS ,-"'• CITV S"OPOtnt Cf'nter "'tt 4w 1"1 1.w•_..t 1 &'""t C'N&l ·=---·· ·--. ,,,.,,. =------•CX.TAmlA ·----a.-wt-41'1 .,. ~ ... _ ._... ....... -11-. ---"'-IR-l211 .. AT21 --UNnt ... ,_,"' -.... ...,. -"1--1==..=1 t--------t----------1 '"> QOftM u~%~:HE Mll T •u• ..... 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' r MICIWL Ruzns11 pu de deux and vananons from OeorJe Balanchine and Jaor Stravt!Ukf's .. Apollo .. and the pu de dewt froni Marius htipa's "Le Cor· uire.'' They thus became the tint Soviet dancer..SOviet defector team in U.S. history. Liepe proved no mere prop for Kozlova in .. ApoUo... Even when supportina her, be exhibited a sub- dued but evident theatricality that complemented without ec:lipsina her. It wu Kozlova, thouah, who prevented Liepa from completely dominatina the staae. She practically matched him tum for turn and fouette for tour• l• ~nde, particu· larly in "Le Corsaire." Her 32 viaorously executed fouettes elicited an ovation rivaling any Liepa re- ceived. The rest of the proaram paled by comparison but was enjoyable in its own riabt. Anton Dolin a precise and quaint reconstruction of Jules Per· rot's .. Le Pas de Ouatre" allowed a alimpse into mid·f~-century ballet and mannen. The late Antony Tudor's .. Little Improvisations" fea. tu.Rd chanlcterizatJons of a cute pre. adolescent "couple," while Tudor's darker ''Sun.fl.mvers''_showi what happens to a sroup of girls when men invade their circle. Edward Villella's "Elegy" and "Ro- mance," two pas de deux based on Omitri Shostakovich's music, were revived with litheness and, especiilly in the latter, sensuousness. UCI dance chairman James penrod's "Varsavia Variations" sported an elegant Spanish-flavored $Cttin.a, dancing and music. Burns' book lauds Gracie NEW YORK (AP) -George "I have to be honest. I was a lousy Bums, who for years uraed his wife lover," Bums writes. ••But Oracle and partner in comedy Gr1Cie Allen mamed me for lauahs, not for~-Of to "Sayaoodniaht, Oracle," still has C0'1!'1e1 she aot bot.6 of them -when something to say to her 24 yean after we nao sex. she lauabed-.. ·u--·u-(1t4j--b~~e;~, ·be bas collabora•__. wt.th In 1964, when the heart disease that ·~ bad piqued her for years finally took •lllltXWT'mf'llf~ &bostwriter David Fisher on the Gracie's life, Burns wu inconsolable. book, .. Oracle; A Love Story," due For a time, Bums says, "~ were t---------------'-o_u_t_ne_x_t.week.. _________ _, very, very-bid for me. My life was ...._. COITA•IA llOUNTAINWW.SV~ IMTAANA l'lctllc"I A,.,_ ~Ill Edwanll Hl1110f TWiii fllfrltf Fu AMC e>r.,,.. Miii Ullllld A1ti1t1 f79-9950 631·3501 91).f307 637·03'0 $40.0514 .._. CY"'°9 fUlUATON OftAMOE WU,._..TU• UA Mo¥lll Fllfrltf Twlll l'Allf!ll AMC fullltlon 8 UA City CirwN Paciloe'I Hl-Wty 31 990~1 828·1MO 192.eooo 634-3911 DIM-111891·3693 IUPIA .. AR.C ll Toi.o GAM>EN GA0Y£ SANTA ANA WUT .... Tl.R Uo\ Mo¥w EWJldl SlllllllOldl Eelwlldl WtJtlrook Edwsdl Hunon C... UA Mii c.n.na 952-4993 5'1·5880 530·"401 &62-22M 1t3.0541 =Olll1127t-tl80 ~~523-11511 1 ~~.1 '°"' 11lllO "'"' ••lll!OM ...... NQl,ll Ill 1)140 HIS I~ Ml 1•.JO UlTllA nmlO IWLOMlll• 111 ,,,.,, • ., .... Ital ..... -Of·--121•»•t1H ......... .. ............. ,..._ G.W1-CN-llt 11•"" .... "*' .... ll•~•owa DOUY ~wu .. UT 21 111 80IAW ICM 11$1 1,.111 1121 J! .. 6:001111 1-l)!JI J ... s.-l lU 11,M IOUJ SftllOI "'"' .. lMOM MMl$ NClll,llllQ 1tt• , ... ,, ••• , ... ICIUY,_ ...... Ill 12'• t :U 4>41 MS l:tt II• ...... ..... IOUYPlllO MIOIMl ~ ICMeUY .,,.,., A (QI INt t:Ulc'JIStM..-11111 642-5678 Gracie." Tbinp eventually turned around, but be still visits her grave monthly in Glendale, bringina flowers and con· venation. "I talk to her," Bums says in this week's iasue of People magazine. "I tell her what I'm doma." Bums says death holds no•terror, because .. "I know Gr1Cie's up there. And if they've 'ot vaudeville, we can be headliners.' c... to --'°' .. ,_ """ lloont .... Ollfr ~ CM tene J011 perflctly. ~EN'S 1"3 ,...._ k . Clltl Ila.a. CA (71«) ~ ~ lUTQ FACTS ~ YW S,1111111: .... ,,.. ........ .,....,., ...... Vlcld and Brace Stamp with Lama Kata Hathaway. PeaJ' B ... uid ADlta Feqmton -ten ln. Model m other s lend P ega sus School a hci.nd Four of the eight good-looking models at the Pepsus School fashion luncheon held in the Balboa Bay Club were moms of students at the Foun- tain Valley school. Model moms on the ramp with pros to show off fashions of Llacla Bea$1ey of Nc~rt Beach were Au Bales, <Sbwa Elliott, Joane Hut and Slleny Sdlalmu. Joining them wu Marilya GGuow1tl, Pegasus teacher. The 2SO fashion viewers stayed busy durina the social hour checking out items in the silent auction and holiday boutique. Jou Peffer was at the piano. Vicki St8mp waschairwomn for the event, which was expected to provide Pegasus' developmental fund with more than $8,000. ·•we_ wiJJ be moving in the near future to a larger location," said Laara It.ah Hatllaway, founder and director of the pareotsupported school for gifted children, preschool through fourth grade. "Our goal is to arow from preschool through 12th grade. • • • Pat BJtt of Corona del Mar, foundin1 president of Chapman Col- leae's Town and Gown were among the guests attending the organiZa- tion 's 20th anniversary celebration. The nostal&ic setting of the party was the El Oorado Ranch in Full- erton, family home of C. Staaley C..pmaa, son of school founder Charles Chapman. Guests lunched on the patio and then toured the 6,000-squarefoot home and viewed Chapman student artwork. ~ . Jo the past 20. yean, T &G has grown to ncar.ly. 300 and has con- tributed S 125,000 to Chapman. See Lameveu of Irvine is the current president. Founder and past president BettJ M .. a attended alona with other pest presidents Plyllll aa,, and Patricia lt-*lek, both of Newport Beach. e>r.,... COMI DAILY PtlOT /Mond9r, October 24. 1-A9 'heMaJ, ~r H BJ SYDNEY OM.ARR Drivin demands.Your full attention AIUES(March 21-April 19): Full moon position accents care of valuables. personal possessions, ways to obtain bargain or increased income. You 'II be under pressure to re~t a recent "victory." Capricorn plays top role. TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): FuJI Moon in your sign emphasizes sensuality, individuality, ability to reach more people in unique manner. Personal magnetism "flows." Native behind scenes adds to your reputation. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Study Taurus message for valuable hint. Be discreet, realize something "cJandes~5" is taking place. Assert yourself. don't be intimidated by bellicose person. o 0is in picture. CANCER'(June 21.July 22): Family member has something to say but fears "reprisal." Be gentle, use powers of persuasion, realize you get almost anything you want by turning on charm. Spotlight on friends, hopes, aspirations. · · LEO (July 23-Aua.. 22): Display humor. versatility, sense of fitness. Full moon hiahli'1tts career, business, ambition. communication with those '"at top." Lona-distance communication relates to social evenl, possible travel. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Lunar aspect coincides with dissemination of infonnatioo, laJllUage, education, speculation, sex appeal. Break from tradition clearly indicated. Shofl trip likely to involve Scorpio individual. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Delve deep, satisfy curiosity, have frank discussion with mcmberofopposite sex. You'rclikelyto hearthesc words: "If I didn't hear you, I wouldn't believe it" Gcmiru fi$ures prominesatly. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Full Moon posiuon accents mantal status. partnership, contracts, public relations. Emphasize diplomacy. protect assets, ~to pay premium price for-non;;descriptim>tfutt Libnnnvolved. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently you printed a letter warning your readers to drive as if every person on the road was drunk, on drugs or crazy. You said, "There are an awful lot of goofy drivers out there." The very next day I read about an accident in Midland, Texas, that upsc1 me ter- ribly. A 23-ycar-oldguy was driving a van that plowed into an oncoming truck. Five beautiful young men, all mem- bers of the Midland Boys Oub, died in that crash. Thirteen people were injured. At first it was reported that the 23- ycar-old kid who was driving the van had faJleo asleep at the wheel. Later the facts came oul He was trying to dislod&e a soft drink can from beneath the accelerator. Ann. tell your readen that dnvtng requires total concentration and to L.M. Bovo ~ ---- Al• lMDEIS take o ne's eyes otTtbe road for just a few seconds can be disastrous. -AJ. IN DAU.AS. DEAR DALLAS: YM did, ud la a moat effective ••z· Bles11 ... • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I love your column and you usually malce sense, but the advice you gave to the couple in Atlanta who complained about the neighbors who had knock· down drag-out fights wouldn't work too well in Memphis. If we were to go over and try to talk SAGlnARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 ): Check records, keep resolution concerning diet, nutrition, general health. Individual you trust Wcely to say, "I would love to accommodate, but it simply is out of the question ... Virgo involved. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on deadline, minor crisis. pressure of added responsibility. Full moon position highlights challenge, chan&c, variety, sensuality, sex appeal. Cancer. another Capricorn figure prominently. 'Thin a s a rail' for the birds AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): More people will be attracted to you. you'll learn more about property and art of negotiating. Aries person says. "You should have known better, but I'm still in your corner.'' PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Take special care while driving -tendency is for motor to be overheated. Be aware of electrical outlets, remove safety hazards from home. You'll receive '"unusual" communication from relative. IF OCTOBER %5 IS YOUR BIRTBDA Y yoo are spiritual, psychic, your own most severe critic. Pisces, Virgo people play important roles in your life. Current cycle emphasizes ability to perfect techniques. BJ~OOREN ... OM.AR SHARIF James J. Audubon wrote about a bird that could squeeze itself into narrow shape thus to work its way through heavy marsh grass. The bird is called the "rail." It's to this bird that the figure of speech originally alluded: "thin as a rail." Foxes cat worms. Whoever labeled brain ttssue as Q.l-Neither vulnerable, as South Q.2-Ncither vulnerable, as South partner can bid again voluntarily, you hold: you hold : chances or game are slim. Be con· ·~ \JQJ ¢J109 •QJl74 •AXJ952 \JQ93 .:)7 · •A61 tent with a two-spade rebid. Partner opens the bidding with one The bidding has proceeded: Q.3-As South, vulnerable, you "gray matter" didn't know quite enough about it. Color ofliving "~y matter" ranges from lavender to pink. lf"&r&Y matter" is gray, it's dead. Q. How much is gasoline now in the Soviet Union? A. $2.9S a gaJlon. Self-served, super-leaded. t'. Queen Victona stood 4-foot-9. circumstance, you should make a waiting bid of two clubs, then jump raise spades at your next tum. no trump. What do you respond? South .~ West North East hold: Q.4-Both vulnerable, as South you A.-lf you only count points, you l • Pus l NT Pus • KQJO \l K93 <.. 165 • AQJ6 hold: have a maximum raise to two no 1 Partner opens the bidding with one • KS4 \l KQ95 0 KJ42 +AK trump. However, you have a rca-What do you bid now? spade. What do you respond? The bidding has proceeded: sonable five-card suit and ¢xcellent A.-Be careful. Partner might have A.-Whether you play foul' or five-So•tll Wat North Eas1 intermediates, which make your been forced to respond one no card majors, you should have four-I <> Pua 2 <> Pass hand worth more like 11 than 9. trpmp wit h a sintleton spade. You card suppo·rt for a jump raise of 1 Jump to three no trump. have a six-loser hand, and unless partner's suit. Thus, under either What do you bid now? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~A.-Youha"l9h~h~udpoints, · a balanced hand and stopper an WE HA VE EVERYTHING YOU NEED! FOR YOUR HALLOWEEN PARTY . PAPEA & PlASTIC PLAlES • CUPS • NAPKINS • lABLE COVERS • kNIVES • •OAKS • SPOONS • llS~Ul OECOR.\T10NS STREAMERS • HATS • BALLOONS • PINATAS • PARTY FAVORS • GIFl WRAr • RIBBON • BOWS • B~E,S OECORAllONS • CUSIOM INVITATIONS • PUNCH MIX • ROlUD TICl<HS • WEDDING SHOW(R & BIRl~OAY SUt'PllES CHRISTMAS NEW Yf:AA & SPlCIAL OCCASION SUPPLIES , W~ RENT HELIUM TANK:> ANO MUCH MORE• ...... ........ ... ... ,, ......... OPEN 7 DAYS• MON.-IAl. 9:30-5:30 - SUN. I HO-S:ml Ten-.. .. ..,. .... '--...... ., ...... ---·· • Ctlllti lllJI .... ...... 111 1m•m.mi 11t• 11••• every suit. Partner has shown a minimum of 7 for his rai e, so you should have enough for game. Jump to three no trump. Don't bid 2 NT • and invite partner to do whac you should have done yourself. Q .5-Neither vulnerable. as outh you bold: •AS t:7 Al7 'AQ8 + 109862 Your right-hand opponent opens the biddiq with one hean. What action do you take? A.-You could have the best hand at the table, but there•s nottung you can do. You can't make a takeout double without spades, and your clob suit is nowhere near good enougb for an overcall. Q .6-Neitber vulnerable. as outh you hold: ' •AS Q All 0 AQI • t""l nc biddiftl hu Pf'OC«lded: ... S..• W• N4"11t I Q PMa 1• p._ J Q T WMa action do you ta•d A.-Uldc hM cha ..... acepc r°' ... r.a tbM JO'i haw leamc:id thM dlle -r prohbb' lllU dM bt'rsce al power. A....._ of two belnt .... ...... " ,.....,-ori•tJCI • (Ja. C0.W ~ da 1tll1d OM Mllit .. •1181), .. ., _... CIRllt be ••h' 1 IM _, to MDd '°"' .... ,. -..... ,a.nw. , with that couple, as you suggested, and explain that their ~cots can be beard aJl over the nci&bborbood, chances are that we would get shot. If we called the police they would like my life history on the phone, and 30 minutes later, a squad car would. come roarina up our driveway, blue lights flashing and sirens going full bfast. A 90-pound policewoman would bounce out to like my life history again. Meanwhile, the squabbling couple, having heard the sirens, would have turned out the li&hts and become quiet The policewoman would come back to my place and say, "Your imagination must be working over- time. There's nuthin' goin' on over there." After the squad car dn vcs away,' the couple who werc battling would come over and set our house on fire. I wouldn't even sign my initials to this Just say J:m-WISED UP IN TENN: DEAR TENN: YM're ~ awftl- ly bnl • ,..,. pelk!e ~at, becaaae JM are ~ diem ef uprofeulou.l eeMllCL S.t die police la every city .i1lllle dledJa1 oet domestic vlelellce, UNI •M cu blame diem? More oftea tllaa aot, alcoltol UNI/tr •np are lavol•ed ACROSS 55 Cut to size 1 Custody 57 Egg-stieped 58 Augury 5 Mailing cost 59 Clay 10 Affirm 60 Ytefd 14 Bofder on 61 Gnme 15 Doonl8898' 62 Old-fashioned 16 Antitoxins 63 Three-spot 17 Nero·s .. bonfire DOWN 18 Speectlify 1 Combs 19 Shear 20 Duffer 2 Almost 21 Greelc god 3 Dance 22 Conveyances 4 Greek lett9' 24 Knited 5 Warehoused 26 French queen 6 Jaded 27 Archale 7 Unhappy WOl'd 28 Wary " 8~9ed 31 Sound out 9 FOl"ecasted 34 Paokages 10 Atteck 35 And not 11 Retaliatton 36 Intent 12 Pennsylvania 37 Eminent port 38 Skin diSOfd8f 13 Clouts 39 Elec. unn -21 Oualified 40 P•meates 23 Mr Speaker 41 Flotlna 25 Industrial 42 Schootboo!(s diamond «Muffin 26 Standtsn 45 Seuts 28 Bewitches 46 Squashed 29 Nothing 50 Ofesses up 30 Wetght 52 Lath allowance 53 A Gabor 31 B1kin1 tops ~Lewi 32 Torch 33 Cenape 2 3 • 6 14 17 20 24 39 42 I • 7 ... die wurilc e..,ae .... am.. .... 111 ...... die ,.alee. n.en are•..., UIWen t.e .... --. ne ~ Ila•• my .,..,..., ....... dle ...... n . . . _. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My mother is in a difficult spot. Please advise. Her brother is sufferin& from cancer. She wants to visit "Uncle Burt" but bis wife keeps saying "Not now." "Uncle Burt" lives far away, so they haven't seen much of each other .in ncent yean. He is in a arcat deal of pain and tires easily. Mom bas rapccted his wife's wishes for several months, but now sbe is coocemed that ifu.e docm 't JO soon sbe .on 't be able to see her brgthcr alive. Mom js.tempted to go anyny, call from the airport and let the chips fall where they may. ~ou think she wouJd be doin& the . t thina? -BEFUDDLED IN KIT ENER., ONT ARJO. DEAR FUDD: I llellne ... , ,._ medler ...... .,.t••~­dle~--lalm If ........... laer' .. w . It II ,_,lllle Cllat ._ ...WradlerdlatU.•t.eeMm• ~tely lll llJs wt.Itel.._.. M reapecte4. PMVIOUS PUZZLE SOt.VED 34 Max and Buddy 37 Mopes 38 Dole 40 Garment 41 eues 43 Sad song « Classified 4e Freshman 47 Divide 8 9 48 Escape 49 FOl"mer Ch~ma)'O' 50 Thrust 51 Branen. 52 Study hard 56 Gin's name 57 Month: abbr 11 12 13 0r.nge CoMt OAJLY ptLOT/ Monday, Octob« 24, 1988 by BU Keane COUNTER CUL TUR& to ,. - "Daddy, our backyard'ls eig~ty yards too short." RUB iK'S BLENDf IZ llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE J ' I l ' 0 by Hank Ketcham ~-·--14·2.lf "That's enough, Marmaduke .. .I only dance on paydays!" '1 ~l lHINK HE HASMUo4 ~IN HI~ ST~ ~WE 00 'DAU ~YS He'SJUSTFUU.~~ AIR.' PEAJftJTS SO#WiPA'< TME~'S 60IM6 TO 8C * MONUMENT MERE.AND VOV l(NOW WMAT WIL.L 8E ON IT? :_-_--:;.-_-._ ----_--=--~ 11 TMIS IS W~ERE SALLY SROWN WASTED TME BEST 'f'EAR5 OF MER UFE WAITING FOR THE SC~OOL SUS ... '' by Charles M. Schulz '' SME COVLD MAVC SLEPT ANOTMER TEN MINUTES!'' FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston SHOE JUDGE PARKER -~&TER THE 'AMeuLANCE TAKES CAL TO THE HOSPITAL~ THE POUCt: QUESTION RICK ANO ~VEfl PVT OFF 'II&.~ ... 0 e ~ • ~ by Harold Le Ooux ..N.OW Tl:tAI.S NOT Wl::i.AT -I WAS-TOl..O &Y THE BARTENOER ANO OTHER CUS10M· ERS I THEY SAID YOU V-.ERE SEATEO AT THE BAR WITH CAL WHEN ~lCK WALKED IN ANO PUNCHED HIM OUT! GARFIELD by Jim Davis MAR16eNE! R08£18R08E .,_'SCUM .. wmt .... 1 by Kevin Fagan t5CM.lM&M6 ~ME.. 1 O\OM'T Gf.l AU.. tMf. ~Q)t~~ &WRl~~. • HOW L.ON6 HAVE 400 BE.EN OOING 1141 s I NEAL .i;. DOOKESBURY by Garry Trudeau by Tom Batluk '! 'THINK~ NEED A Ne.UJ A&EN'T . : • IO·l ,: r MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1988 .. Barons did what theyha.dtoin big game . ' . 'Powe one key factor for FV's success; Angelovtc out 3-6 weeks. broken thumb BJ ROOD CARUION ............... ~ Fountain Valley H~'s Barons roee to tie top Friday ni&bt -their fowtb victory in the j_)Ut six yean IDimt E.dison Hiab•s OWJen in one ol Southern Califo~'s pat prep football rivalries. Here•s what the coaches bad to say . foUowina the 28-21 spectacular,. as well u the~ of the leque's coaches: P .. &aia Valley CMek MJke MUiier: "I feel very aood because of the way we played, and with the fact we took one step further toward -competjna for the leque cbam· pionship. .. We went into the pmc, and I tbouaht we could run-block them. I tbo•t that was a priof'.ity, and Ked.ric (Powe) bad a pat nipt. ''The offensive line played very weU. and we came up with a couple of the bia PM' plays. "We cauaht them in a four-across man-to-man coverqe, and we check· ed from a run to a pass. and it pve us theJJ&SS plays to Rick Mock. 1bc bia one to Mike Cook was a run called in the huddle, but it WU checked ofl'at the line of scrimrnqe. .. Some of the sbiftina and motion we did were tbinas we hadn't shown before. .. I was very surpriled that Edison didn't show the shovel pus. lt'a been a bi& play for tbem in previous aamcs. ancf we wotk.ed liie becK aIJ.week on the shovel pus. .. I felt aood about our performance. It wu a bia pme with a lot of thinp ridina on it We played extremely bard, and in the end we held on and did wbtt we bad to do. .. The defensive line played ex- tremely well in terms of containing An,elovic's scrambles. Our down pays. Brent Hickman, Jim Garvisch and Drew Edborg. played extremely well. "They didn't run the quanerback draw as effective as they have against others. Zampese 's lnfluence sends Rams skyward Everett throws for 311 yardsin31-10 win over Seattle BJEDZINTEL ~,..Co1111 o• •ut We -never thought it could ever ti.ppen, but the Rams have chucked their around pme for now. Seems they prefer to chuck the ball. How does that grab you, Chuck Knox? Knox, who had an offense named after him (remember Ground Chuck?) when he coached the Rams in the mid '70$, returned Sunday to Anaheim Stadium with his Seattle Seabawks to see what his old team was up to. He found out they were up in the air with Ernie Zampesc, their new of- fensive coordinator. Air Zampese was flown up here after bei.na cooped up in San Diego for many years and it appears that its primary facilitator quancrbaclt Jim Everett. is ,ettin& i.be bang of it Everett bad another excellent per- formance for 1988, as he completed 2().of•27 pu9CI for 311 yards and three touchdowns to help the Rams beat Seattle, 31-10, before S7,033. The Rains (6-2) have now defeated the Seabawks (4-4) in every one of their four meetings since 1976 when Seattle joined the Nft. as an ex- pension franchise. What's more, the Rams stayed a pme behind the New Orleans Saints Sunday's scores once or twice today." Is this a crazy pme, or what? A few yean 110, the Rams brought in Eric Dickerson and put their ears to tfle around. We'll pass on ""the pass, said the Rams. In 1987 Zampese was brought in, presu~~ to take the Rams to the air. In Charles White, a running beck. emeraed as the offensive threat ~season, whcn._Wb.ite.._ was suspended to start the sea.son. who came forward to carry the offense? Grea Bell. a fullback. Now, the passing game suddenly s.ln18top,,.,.,.._112. bas come to life while the Rams rushil'.'f bas disappeared. ltam.*31.Seahawks 10 Saints 20. Raiden 6 Lions 7. Chiefs 6 Jets 44. Dolphins 30 Colts 16, Chargers O Eagles 24, Cowooys 23 Bengals 44, Oilers 21 BtllS 23. Patriots 20 Giants 23, Falcons 16 Steelers 39, Broncos 21 Redskins 20, Packers 17 Browns ~9. Cardinals 21 Vlktngs 49. Buccaneers 20 Is this a si&n of things to come? "I hope so, said Everett "Call it a groove or whatever, but we're playing Zampesc's offense the way it's sup- posed to be played." Meanwhile, as veteran Dave Krieg , recoven from a separated shoulder suffered Sept. 18, Knox bas rookie quarterback Kelly Stouffer tryioa di~tina the offense. The Rams took_ the opportunity-to lf'Ound the Seahawk:s. Stouffer com- pleted 16 of 24 passes for 10 I yards and no touchdowns. And as for Ground Chuck, well, there wasn't much meat there either. •••••••••• --The seihawlcS gaincd:Jusrrsl'"yal'tU rushing. Seattle's offense accounted for just a field ,oai. leaving the Rams to put on the air show. in the NFC West goins· into next M_Qn~y_'! ~me in New Orleans. ••weneeoedTh1g pme like this," said Everett, suddenly the Rams' big straw tbat stirs the offense ... It was one of the most fun pmes I've ever played in. It can be that way when you get protection. I got touched maybe The rcsWtWllTlmgheT. Good thinas got going early for the Rams. On the first play from scrim- mage, Seattle's Craig Warner fumbled as strong saftey Michael (Pleue eee a.AllS/82) Sea View stays on tight cour~e CdM. Tustin, Uni remain the teams to beat in title race 9j BOGER CARLSON ... ...., ....... The blanket prediction in the Sea View I..eaaue-with Corona del~ Tustin and Univenity called upon as the teaml' to beat -is holding up after two weeks. Each shares the lead with one victory, no defeats, and one tie1 and winiest Newpon Harbor is still in polition to pull out a CJF Division VI pla~otrberth. That's how it wu billed. that's how · it's toinf and that's bow everyone believes 1t will continue. Here's what the Orange Coast area coecbes in the Sea View bad to say about at last week's pmcs: c.,... ... Mar Cad Dave B•llaH. following a 14-7 win over Estancia: "I really felt better after this one than any other win this ~· It was a pme apinst a"leam which was well·prepared to beat us. They had 17 pays wbo pla~ us last year and they bad been pointioa and preparing for us. "We bad been slumpina to a dcVce, and it was a satisfyjna win . "All teams like to win their district ·~· "I see in the 1>9per about the fact interceptions won the pme, but we bad three turnovers, too. Their only score was a 20-yard 'driv~.' "Our guys came off a little banaed up, bruised and bleeding, but every- one's in good shape. It was just a real satisfyina win. "Estancia is a really good football team, and John (Liebengood) has done a aood job. They were IUdly to play. On the other band, we didn't Just drop in. We played well and eamedi~" (Pleue ._ UA VISW /BS) 111111 ...-. ... SI Jiii I ell C$A ... , .......... °""") ............... , .... ~ Ult ... ,_ , I --.., (J-1) *'· ..... •21 '1'1111 ........ ~(atH•> Flft. V~ Cat H9) .Mertfta (at OCC> °'*'t YW (et Wm> Ecllon (et OCCl HM.. ..... (et Wrft) .... ..., .. ""'v..-. •21_ • (lot) -~Yl9w.•13 ldlCM, .......... 2Ht \ n ................ n-11 0.. V... •1> ... 11 CM *ti•. •13 Frt. Frl Frf. · Frt. Frt • Frf ''Tbey-tot l 30 yards in the last fou.r minutes. but we were tryina to bend and oot ,et beat We didn't play a lot of man-to-man, and not a lot of blitz. But on the pass that was dropped, we were in a man-to-man. Our comer tho~t be bad inside help and he didn t But they probably would have beaten us on that one anyway." .. The Barons were the recipients of the biJ breaJc. ·¥:'d moments later An&elovic was SJdelined with a di~ located thumb, rendcrina him absent from Edison's fi~ thrust .. In the pasl it seems they (Edison) did get'some breaks, but that miaht sound like sour arapes. comin& from the losin& end," said Milner. "But in the la.st couple of years some breaks have gone our way." On a rou&bin& the quartert.ck penalty, wbic6 sent bisquartetbeck to the sidelines with an 8-inch psb on his chin: - "I didn't see it The official said it wu a leaitimate bit, but then M pusbedott" One player somewhat lost in the description of a pme filled with bia momenu wu Fountain ValJeis Mock., who caQlbt three puses' for S9 yards and WU a standout OD defeDIC. "He bad our Hit of the Week and was in de four 0r five other very physical laCkJes. .. said MilnC!' ... He wu an exceptional player &Oina almost exclusively twO ways." ......._ Ceec:l Dan w.l&e: .. We didn't play that well. but we never quiL We still bad a chance to win it (Pleue ._ IOUNTADl/fJS) llama ~t end Pete BolobaD watcbee la.la famble rou away .. Seattle eafety S.,eae ......................... . aobl..-...,..... to pwace oa t:M IOOM ball dartJaa MCODd qaarter action 8aa4ay. Baldwin firids loss frustrating · Mistakes, flags, loss of Leffingwell put Mesa in a hole BJPATLU&.IN ........ -, 0 3 1 Tom Baldwin's frustration is Start-in& to show throuah. After watcbina his team take a 12..0 halftime leapc apinst;Trabuco Hills in PacificCout Leaaue action Thu~ day, the Mustangs proceeded to SWTender 21 suai&bt points to lose their leCODd Jeaaue pme. Mesa now must will its three remainina league aames if they hope to make post· season competition. "This is definitely the most frus.-tratina loss rvc ever had in over 300 emes of coacbina," Baldwin satd. 'Mistakes and penalties just killed us. .. -while mitcues can &i ve a coach the fits, latt«aJon injuries can also take their toll and Baldwin, alon& wath 1.quna Beach coach Lyman Qmcy, saw tbetr share of injuries. Baldwin saw one-third of tus wish- booc, balfbeck Shawn LeftinsweU.1<> down with a Jhoulder injury, while Lacuna is prcparin& to play the rest of the season without defensive back Darren Webb, who suffered a brutsed spleen. lo ~t contrast. two othCT Or- IJ\IC Coast area teams enjoyed fine weeks, with Qranae,,Collllt)''$ N a,_3 ranked Woodbrid&c burying Laauna HiUs 28-6, and Mater Oei brelling Into the AntcJus League win column with a 21-7 win over Bishop Mont- gomery. . Irvine dropped a 6--0 dCIClsion to Capistrano Valley that evened 1ts South Coast l..equc record at 1-1. . Here's what the <>ranee Coast area coacnes had to say about last week's compct1t1on. Cotta Meu'• BaWwta. foUowina h11 team's 28-12 loss to Trabue<> Hills: "Two penalties and a return of a fumble recovery really-COM US. 11-WU just one of thote t.hinp. .. (Pleue_.A.SA/aS) ~-­io.ttoTr• ....... ., '---••••uc• .,.., .,,1u11tua:.v-1 ........ 1 ..... .... ,.....,., =·~·1 .............. C:..CIA...., .......... ..., •r... .......................... c.... ... Illar,. ..... back one ••ell m09e9 toward • ~ for ,_,... dubli rrtday~ pme wt~ ltetancla. ..... ~.~ ....a....-. .. l&lilteC-v.lw.H ····~··•.11-1 -_Wi_eekend o_rep_ f eetball had its character, characters I I • . . . ,. . .. i . -0...,.. 0oMt DAILY PllOT/ ~.October 24, 1111 HeywaWd spikes Rai ders, 20-6 satnts' back can't ~et Clance to work, ut scores anyway NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Craig HeY'W'!d had his end zone spike dance all planned, but it was the only thin& that didn't .work for him Sunday. The 26().pound fullback ran 73 yards for a touchdown on the first play of the third quarter Sunday, aputina a second-half rally that gave the New Orleans Saints a 2°"6 victory over the Los Anaeles Raiders. He just drop~ the ball in the end zone after bis sci>ring run ... My bands were sweaty. and I lost control of the ball," be wd. The Saints are 7-l and the. Raiders are 3-S. Heyward. called .. lronhcad" dur- ina has collqiate days at Pittsburgh, took a bandoff on a play designed to 10 over left _auard, and he was hit at the lint by Greg Townsend. ran throuah that tackle. \hen carried comerbac\: Ron Fellows on bis beck for about 4 yards before bn:akina into the clear and outncina the rest of the Raiders into the end zone. .. It was a play dcsiped to tct you into 1he secondary. and after that it's up to you," be said, ianori1'1 the filct that he was hit twice before he aot to the lirie of scrimmaae. Pressed, be said, .. Thlt'1 What separates the peat becks from the averqc becks.' His touchdown overcame a 6-3 Los Angeles lead foraed by the Raiders on an 85-yard pus &om Jay Schroeder' to wide receiver Mervyn Fernandez in the second quancr. Chris Baht'1 conversion kick was blocked by Saints lineman Jumpy Oeatbcn. Bahr was also shon and riaht on a SO- yard field loal attempt OD the Rai~ers• first possession of the pme. Morten Andcnen kicked a SJ-yartt field:goal for the Saints in .the first quarter and ~ 25-yarder in the fourth Quarter. , ,, ...... "'"''' Condit ions p r ov e too 'iff y ' for sailin NOSA Bank Race features only one off)ctat finisher llJ ALMoN LOCLtBBY ..., .... ...,. ..... Newport Ocean Saillna Auocia-· lion's ••iffy" 14-Mile .Bank ~ became another neptave stausuc Saturday when only one boat official- ly finished the 21--mile course around die Lausen~ Mount. A 10Cal of73 boats were entered in the annual race, but because of liaht wind and low vasibillty, nine did not bother to start. Al it turned out, all of the others should have "sta~ in bed." When the firush deadline rolled around, only two-boats bad crossed the finish line, and the skipper of one of them admitted be bad not rounded the stake boat on the 14-Mile Bank. Andy Zinn of Cabrillo Beech Y Oub deferated ti rivals. SwMlay capture the McCuUouah Trc>f.by fi Sabots in a five-race repna sailed o of Newport Harbbr Yacht Oub. Winch were so li&bt Saturday only one race couktl>e finished. Fo races were sailed on Sunday. He bounced off that pile, headed riaht and was hit almost immediately by linebacker Linden King. Heyward Bo Jackson started at runnina beck for the Raiders. pined 2S yards on bis first carry, 20 on his le<lODd, and then went to the sidelines with a pulled hamstring muscle. Jlfew Orl-.u wide recelYer Lonaell Bill trlee to •bake looec from Raiden defender Rwll carter ID tbe Sabata Tlctory. ' That left the overall and PHRF winner to be Malcolm Tuttleton's Olson-40 Loose Olange out of Oapna Point Y:icht Quh Runner-up in the fleet was Bentley, Nwport Harbor Yacht Ou and third wu Jory Twist, NHYC. SPOR TS BREAK .____ -~ Chicago seeks pride more than revenge in game with 49ers CHJCAGO -It could be a classic football matcbup if for no other reason than it pita the No. I offense of the San Fnncitc049ersapinsttheNo. I dcfenscof tbe ~Bears Mooday ni&bL But toss in the 49ers' 41-0 victory last year for the wont defeat administered to a Mike Ditka-coacbed team, there enters a revenae dimension heightened by the r.ct the Bears will not admit it exists. . .. No revenge," Dilka said ... We'll try not to make ffic mistakes we made last year. I don't know of any team that looks forward to playing the 49crs. We didn't fare well the last time we played them." This time, the 49crs, who are aiming for an NFL record 12th straiabt road victory· come into Soldier Field with the most explosive offense in the league. They are averqj,ng 41S.7 yards per game. Roger Craig leads the NFL 'with 764 rushina yards and 1,036 scrimlllllt yards. .. ReveQIC is a strona word, but I think it will be emoti~na11" said C'hi?JO_ ta~e Dan Hampton, who bu joinea Steve McMichael. Richard Dent and Al Harris in formi.naoneofthe strongest front fours in the leque. ..Last year, the 49crs were a game we were tarJetina. But we turned flat and got outplayed in everr, pbuc of the pme. We have to atone for that disaster. · Quot e of the day Brace S.yMI', c.aJ football's head coach, on the way the Golden Bear's have faced a lot of blitzes their put three games: .. Blitzing is lilce a t.d rub. It srows, and you've got to get it stopped." T immons lead• team to title. Team Labatt's defeated Maui &. Sons • in two tight matches to claim the Great ~ Western Team Cup volleyball cham- pionship at the Forum before an event . record crowd of S.S66. Laban's was led by tournament MVP Steve Tlmmou, one of several Olympic gold medalists who returned from the Summer Games in Seoul, Korea to take part in the two-week, four-team professional meetina. The team from radio station KLSX, led by Olympic team member ltardl IJraly, beat T cam Toyota Sunday ni&hl in a consolation match to ta.kc third place ... Tim Rabies passed his chance at .. new look" free agency by agreeing to a three-year, $6. 3- million contract with the Montreal Expos. The Major Lequc Ba.seball Players Association has asked arbi- trator Ge9rse Nicola• to Jive playen involved in the tee0nd collusion case another chance at free agency. DoaaN F.U, executive director of the union, wd Sunday that be expected Nicolau's decision on today .. . Am*ew M.acee earned his first victory on the PGA ~~ shootina a 6-under-par 66 Sunday to win the >«AJ,000 Pensacola Open golf tournament at Gulf Breeze, Fla., by one stroke over Brwce Lle&alle-, T•m 11,nm and Item Greem . . . The Chicago White Sox announced they have signed Walt Hrtaiall to a multiyear contract as hitting coach. IN THE BLEACHERS Wh-D: ·-----''r"" ....... _ "Th~y had to replace the goal post.'' Ad•m• l lfta Oilers in OT, 6 -5 Gree .uam.• goal early in the third ~ ·oo helped the Vancouver Canucks , roks off a furious Edmonton comeback in a 6-S NHL victory over the Oilers Sunday ni&bt The Canucks led 6-2 in the third pes:tod before the Oilers ICOrcd three st.raiaht goat • Threanuctr aot soais from six different pla)'crs. including the eventual clincbina score by Adams ... In other games: Jim Pepllutl scored with 37 SC(COnds left in overtime to ai ve the Ca.l&atY f14mes a S-4 victo~ over the Philadelphia Ayers Sunday ni.&ht Peplinski beat Ayers goalie RM Ben.II with a wrist shot at the top of the left faceoff circle at 4:23 in the overtime period ... Ju Erb• Scored two goals to hiJhligbt a four..goal first period, leading the New York Rangers past Quebec, 8-2 ... Detroit's Pau M'acLeu scored two P.Ower-play goals as the Red Wi~ and New Jersey Devils skated to a 3-3 tic ... The Winnipeg Jets struck for three second-period aoals, two on the power play, and went on to beat the Washington Capitals 3-2 ... Due Newell sc1'a.n 'NHL record Sunday ni&ht when be referce4 bis l ,076th pme as the New York bnaersptayed the Quebec Nordiqucs at Madison Square Garden. 1 · T elevi sion, radio ' . . T•LllVISIOM 6 o.m. -NPL POOTSALL: San Francisco at ChlcaOO. Channet 7. • • 6.o.m. -U.....-noN a ASKllDALL: Laker'S vs. New JtrMY from Buffalo (Cleleved), Channel 9. 7 o.m. -llOXIMG: Sc:MdUled: RodoHo Aguilar vs. ROdnev /IM«e kl 10-rOUnd .uper-t18trtwe'9hl bout from the Forum, Prime TlcQt • 10 o.m. -VOLLllYaALL: T .. m Cuo eomoetllk>n from the Forum (teoe), Prime Ticket. RADIO 6 o:m. -NPL flOOT'aALL: San Francisco at Chicago, KNX (1070). • 6 p.m. -•XH191TION aASK•TaALL: Laktr5 n . New JtrMV from auffalO (Cleleved), KLAC (570). . '. AREA COACHES REVIEW LAST WEEK ••• From B l . .. Our quarterback Rich Schones concentrated more on passinJ, so he had a 68-yard run called back on a didn't carry the ball as much. Schweer clipping penalty, and then we fumble has been the most consistant quar- and they return it 87 yards for a terback I've seen this year. touchdown." .. We came out of the game healthy .. I thought Schone and Manny after a physicaJ contest. Anytime Bonilla, along with David Salladay, you're undefeated everybody is gun- played very well on offense for us. ning for you. You live to play the How often do you sec a team have 300 undefeaJed." yards on offense and lo~?" Ma_ter Del Coacl1 C.•ck Qa_llo, .. Schones should have bad about following bis team ·s 21 -7 win against another JOO yards in offense except Bishop Montgomery: "It's one of for the penalties. We were playing those games that you're expected to reaJly well and t.hings didn't come win. but they're good enough to beat totether against Trabuco. Give them you ... credit though. they'rc....a VCI:Y-i®d "I tboufv't it was very difficuh football team." · fi b Beside their second Pacific Coast emouonal y or us, ut we overcame the emotion by playing very con-1..cague loss, the Mustangs also suf· · I bo h ffi d d f4 tiered another loss when Leffingwell s1stent Yon t o ense an e ensc. We controlled the line of scrimmage, went down and may be lost for the and we were able to throw the ball season. · consistantly to Tony Pena. They .. We think he may have a broken didn't generate much offense." collarbone, but we're not sure. Losing Gallo says the Monarch's came out Shawn is really going to hurt us." of the contest "happy and healthy," and was obviollsly pleased with his Wooclbrtd1e Coac)1 Rick Gibson, team's performance that evened following bis team's 28-6 win against .Mater Dei's Angelus League record at Laguna Hills: "Once again our of-l-1. fensive line had a good game this "We were focused and intense the week. We're.gettin$&ood blocking up· week before against Bishop Amat, front from our entire line. It enabled and we wanted to maintain that. They Scott Seymour to go over 100 yards (Montgomery) came in with a 4-2 rushing. I can't say enough about how record, but their caliber of opposition well they've played. wasn't there. Danny O'Neil had a fine "We've got a lot of juniors on that game at quarterback for us and Kealii line, and J think they remember Oifford ran the ball Vo'ell. losing 28-7 to Laguna Hills as .. In the~' Mon•'""mery has done so~homom." "' .. ~ some di erent .things on defense red Schweer and Seymour led the · .1 b ... : b Wam'on• offense, combining for against "s, ut uus year t ey came out In a standard defense and we we're _almost. 400 yards between. ..1bc.m. able-to-move the ball at will-against Seymour gained 102 yard rushing and them." 6S yards receiving, while Schweer completed 16 passes for 202 yards. "We knew Seymour would be a good one, but early in the season, we Lapu Beadl Coacla Lymu 018ey, following his team's' 28-3 loss apinst Orange: "I think that we played solid on defense in the fi half, but we weren't able to capitali on some of their mistakes ... Oran was able to conve11 our mistakes an that was the key to the contest." "In the second half. we gave up football on our first two posscssaon and they were able to convert the into points. They kept coming-u with 'good plays.'' Injuries ·took their toll on Artists, especially the loss of seni split end Darren Webb, who on fi diagnosis is thought to have a brui spleen. "It's a very serious injury. We' nor exactly ~ure-1f the injury is severe as first thought, but it's a ba loss for us reaardless." · Don Nettfeman returned at ru nina back for Laguna, and along wit Shan Gray, Olney thouaht the Artist mi&ht have been abfe to pile u r.usning yards. "The second half turnovers rcall took us out of our gameplan, and w weren't really able to take advantaa of the situation. We couldn't establis the run early on, and when we g down in the third quarter, we we forced to go to the pass." lnlae Coadl 'l:erry Beataaa. fo lowina bis team's 6-0 loss t Capistrano Vjlley: "We played hard and defensively' we did a job. They're one of the best teams o our schedule and they played physical game ... "On offense. we moved the ball times but we couJdn 't get it in the en zone. Mitch Steinke had a good pm for us once again, an Twas pl - with our effort. We came out of th pme without any injuries which good. We just need to rqroup an prepare for Mission." RAMS BLAST SEAHA WKS, 31-10 .•• From Bl Stewart jarred the ball loose. Stewart recovered at the 14. Bcll aot all of the necessary yardage- yardage for the score on three running plays, the touchdown coming on a 1- yard plunge. The Rams couldn't believe their luck on the next series when Mel Owens picked off Stouffer's pass intended for Steve Largent at the 20 and returned it to the 9. But Bell returned the favor on the next play. Seattle safety Paul Moyet picked up the fumble and lateraled to cornerback Melvin Jenkins. who took it to the Rams' JS. The Scahawks could not convert, howeverl as Norm Johnson's 33-yard field g0&1 sailed v.ide left. Everett then drove the Rams 58 yards 10 the Seattle 22 where Mike Lansford kicked a 39-yard field goal to make it 10.0. Everctt1 who had his third straiaht game in wnich he threw for at least three touchdowns, com- pleted thiw passes to Ellard on the drive•for IS, IS and 20 yards. Stouffer then put together Seattle's ·Only scoring drive of the first half. He took the Sca:hawks from his own 36 to the Rams IS where the drive stalled. Johnson kicked a 33-yard field goal and it·was 10-3. But Everett answered with an 8().. yard drive, capped by a 37-yard touchdown pass to rookie fullback Robert Delpmo. The Scahawks had a cban~ to get back in it as Stouffer drove them to the Rams 8. But on third down, his pus intended for fullback John Williams was tipped in the air by Shawn Miller and into the bands of stron& safety Michael Stewart. Stewart returned the ball 43 yards to theRams46. The R,ams then blew it open. Everett threw 16 yards to Ellard. On his next pass for Ella.rd, interference was called on Seattle comerba!:k Terry Taylor, aiving the Rams a first down at the Scahawk 4. On fourth- and-aoal from the I, Everett hit tiJh end Damone Johnson for the touch down to make it 24-3 at the half. By haftime, Everett had complet J()..of-J 3 passes {including five t Ellard) for 148 yards. Everett threw bis-third touchdo pass of the game to open the thi quaner, a 32-yard bomb to rooki Aaron Cox. That capped a 88-yard, play drive, inctudina a Sl-yud from Everett to another rookie, th Jona foraotten Willie .. Ripper Anderson. It was Andenon's ICCO catch of the season, followina a fin J>l'C"'SCUOD for the UCLA product . which he caught nine paucs.. The score remained 3 J-3 until earl in the fourth quarter when Seattle' most famous player, Brian Boswo blocked a field aoaJ attempt The ba was recovered and returned 62 yard for a touchdown by free safet Vernon Dean. "That wasn't enouJh to set u aoing," Bosworth said. • Marinoha.scai'eerday,'butJetspickoffwi Miami QB throws for 5 2 1 yards: NY intercepts five towtn 44-30 Fr.-TM.U11da ... Pn. In the end, Dan Marino dido 't set any of Wbat be wu sbootiq for. The 11&rquar1etb9ct of the Miami Dolphins had the =peaai111... day of bis career and the ICCODd-most in NFL bisulo, S21 yards. It wasn't eaoUl)t 1ay u \be New Y oft Jcu beat the Dolphins 44-30. Marino'• Yudlle was ICCOnd to Norm Van Brock.lin of the Loe A..aes Rams, who threw for S~ yards apinst the New Yor"k Yanbet in J9SJ. But Manno aJso was in~ five times. Three were taken by Erik McMillan, wbo returned one SS yards for a score. Tbe Jets built a» 1 O halftime lead. Jettint 24 poi nu ia tbe ICICODd quarw. Then. Mariao really went to work. Bu\ cedl dme 1be Dolpbiu So' withia a touchdown, the Jeu would ICIOfe or make a key defeuivc play. .. It's Diec IO -the yardt. but it docln 'I man lllucb wben you lole," MmiaO Mid. WV ou caa tbtoW far 900 ~but ilJOQ dllr'Owdle u.......-.. itdoelll't mma. M8riao camp! reed 3' of 60 .,._. aDd dlrew for tbtee ~ W&. lie brolre llil OWD ..... Ncald for =tl!"M::it.4:o':J!'';;~iaA:.~ (IN¥1alii...._ neu.,_, vewu IOpped theQ>-.t 1w • ~ time m Im cmeer, mnidi91 Ju. NFL ..... 0 1 I a'3ira ia die Nfl: Cllll II. QI Fi • Eric Dlc .. NA ll9it1t1 dill ...... NPL...,_ Whit men &Im 9.000CW'IS ,....._ ,.,.._ ... Jot/ 169 at Sa J>ielo, 0.. ... I Cd kicke&l thiw field aoal• and the Colts defense did not allow the Cbusn DUt tbc'lndianapolis 2S. ......._ • ..._. .17; AL .Milwa_ukec, Doll& Williama made a triumphant return from five weeks on the sidelines after an appendectomy. The Super Bowl MVP led Wubi~a two Iona 1eCOnd-balf scorin& driveund Kdvin t rushed fore,40 ards. Williams connected oa 2' of 4 paec1 f'oY-22S .,..._It,~ 11: Bernie osarretumed from abt weeb off with an elbow in.hary, coml)letina 2S of 43 ~ for 314 yarda and three iouihdowns which mcluded 20 o( 28 for ll4 yank in the fint balf. The loa knocked the Cantinalt out ofa llrst place tie in the NFC East. 11111111111..ill .... n 111~ llr PitllbwJh ended its lonpt losina ltrMk in ~ 1eMOns 1t six pmcs u Gary Andcnon tied • club record with •ix field goals. Denver, plarina without the ::J.':.,red John Elway, turned o"cr the beU four tima. ind three interceptions of ~plac:lcment q~ o.."Y Kubiak. ....... ... C....,. U: Host Philadelphia fcU behind 20-0 ie illl ftnt half, but l10rmed beck and won it on lantn ~·· l-yard pua to Anthony Toney wida bit Mcoadi to IO• .. U. ....... It: Scott NOi wood's thard field lllill.• J~ wialt 13 teCOndl remainiaa. wudecisivc ., ...... wMda a.datbcAFC Eut by2~~at 7-l. I Sh ••= WIN loat taraonn and W8I bdped by Neiw = ..ar·T~ Ouda, wbo milled tlarec fteld • CDllvermoD. .. •111n IHI M: At Tanape. lbc Vlkin&t Vluy T ... Wlde lix times -he a.di· die _... 21 ill~ Ind Edw8rch muned one UI Wpliods 37 jaldl for I IOHCi9&JWIL Ide · Willoe. f'i'ec"!ll Tommy Kw ia die =-.e1~-~p; ..... far 3lS ,... llld tMie . " ll~!t 4', OU.rs 11: James Brooks sparked a 28 point firit quarter, the fastest start ever for Cincinnati Brooks1 pla_yina with a brace on his broken left ban tcored two toUChdowns in the period IDd IOl anothe touchdown in the third quarter. I.a-1, CMefa I: The two weakest oft"en1a in th lcque did u npected. Rusty ffilltl' thttw a 14- toUCbdown pue to Jeff Cb8dwick in the ICCODd q just enouah to~• pair of fidd aoeJs by Nick Olaall U, Pale9el 11: The Giants didn't aeeaa know mucb ot an)'lhins about Atlanta, but tbcv IOl blab at the end of lbeir uoinspired eff'on. Tbe F 1-7 and 1o1cn of ftq ltnliPt., reached the New York J o the final play of tbe pme. ..... , hard to belieTe we lost:" said Miller, who returnint &om an ankle if\iury. • We can pow from tbi losa, but O'• hard to keep arowina from all these losacs.'' .. • t ' \ .,.., ..... ,......,, ....... lllb Cook of l'oantaln Valley pal19• ID a flnt quarter --noeptlcm darlnC J'rl4-y nlCbt'• btj Samet rlrury at occ. - l'OUNTAINVALLEYDm WHAT IT BAD TO ••• W..-81 We Md cm dropped ia d9eend zw, ad it ---...,,. ..... Orea vie'• ...... ol dac llilbt. we Md odlllf rt •:. I •qJ 111 ..... VcleraD.I bavc to come~ ad we didn't make the bia plays. H8d the CMrmn ICOl'ed and drawn 10 widliD 21-27: "We were deftnitety IOina for two. .. aid White. Tbe loll wu a bia one in 1erms of cbampiombip bopea for f.dison but ID even biller' loll cornea in the fonn of an Utjury 10 AAldovic. The lelUor sipeJ.caller is out for' 3 to 6 weeb with a broken thumb. "It'• a broken left thumb and is in a cui. •• uid White. ''The cut comes off after three week.I. so it's possible he could be ready for Week No. I in the Clofl's ... but we have to aet there '1bat'11 bia sett.ck for us. Donnie Smith is the l\IY for us now at q~sa p>Od quarterback, but be bu no vanity experience and we're PDI 10 have to be a little more simDler in our offense. "\Ve can win with Donnie Slllith, but everyone else is p>in& to have to pick it up I little bit.' As fortbepme itself, White added: "I think everyone tot their money's worth. I felt il would be that kind of score. I thou&bt both offen5es were prettyaoocl I couldn't believe it when I look at the statistics, us getting 24 first downs and 382 yards. "But we pve them a few big plays that we talked about all week, and we weren't agressive enough on de- fense." On the roughinJ the quancrback penalty, when Fountain Valley's ~ ... llllt 10 ta. liddi"'F "1\e bit ... • IOOd bk. it .... I.be push after wbicb ... ttupid. The push tot him the peuhy. ''I Mill IMU wt'N I~ fooct.11 \tam. We're 6-1 and can t do anythina about that. I wasn't aurprited 11 I.he runnina of (K.edric) Powe (who scored row-touchdowns). "I wu Just bopiaa be wouldn't do it I felt if we could ,et to Powe early, be miallt be a little eenaative. Maybe they would ao to the air. But ~ wett never able to l10p the run tint. We didn •t do what we bad to do 10 win." Another ~ setbeck for Edison is the loss of hnebecker Vinc:e Cun-niftlham (tom elbow lipmeot). who is lost for up to t~ weeks. Brad Sherman moves into the st.arter's role. Elsewhere in the Sunset! ........ C.eed ~ ~. fol- lowi111 a 21·10 1oa 10 Hwuinaion &c.ch: .. Huntinaton Beach p&ayed atmnely bard in the second half and Ibey wen there to take advanta1t or OW' play.. I reall y feel we p ve the ~away . .. They tot their touchdown after we fumb&ed, ~·re dQwn on the aoaJ Linc and came up with no points, and there wu the blocked punt, whfob is somethina we've worked on." Fate wun't kind to the Voonas. as wcU. Frank Vacarro downed a punt on the HB 2;J:,Cd line, and accordina to R.Jmsey. s show the ball clearly hittina a Huntington Beach player's foot before the ball was downed, but the officials did not call it. "I know we played them at least even," continued Ramsey ... We lost the pme on mental errors. Georae's (Pascoe) kids did a good job geiuna after it in the second haJf, but~ p vc them 14 points. It's the tou&hcst )oss of the vear for us ... the one that got away." a ........ 8eecll Ceec* Geerse PueM, ifter I 21-10 vi~ OVCT Marina: ''They aot control inude our ierritory and put toeether a nice dri vc, and they (Marina) were eucutina. ''They went in and scored and all of Oceu View Coacll G•y Carrouo, a sudden our auys are aoina into the following an I 8-t 3 loss to Wcst-tank. minster: "We had the lead (io the "We sot their attention a little bit third quaner). (at halftime), aot excited and "We had played well defensively 1n chaJlenaed them a ljttJe bit. They the fi rst half. Westminster had a came out and did a job." couple of dnvcs, but had to settle for Wh ed bo ha two field Joals." " at happen was a ut w t Wcstmmster went on to go u~ 12-0 we expected. Marina does a pretty · h .i.: food job of runnin1 that option and 10 t e uurd quarter. but the Sea awks it's tough to get a good look at it m responded •With two touchdowns to Practice, especially for a Thursday take the lead, 13-12, before seeing at mclnrwayin me-lasr pcriod. same. "I was proud of the fact that after "You practice against it at three-being <Sown, 12-0. they were able to ~uarter speed. and all of a sudden it's hang in there and show some chaf'JC-- hvc and aoma full tilt. But we did play 'ter and come back," cont1nued Car-. well in the second half." rozzo. "I WIS surpliled OW Oftilnlc Md U mucb uoublc 11 it did ia IM &ta bAlf colllideri.. ...,_, wi-. West· minaterwu J"WUli-aadtiw we Md ex~had 10 make IOIDe adj~.\d~t~-_,,_ __ menu at halftime 10 try and com- pensaie, and it did open some boles. "We've IOI a loc of bwnJ)I and bruilel, Westminl1.er is I pretty physical team. But I don't think at'll keep anyone out for ow-pme with Huntil}at<>n Beach (Friday). W•tmlaster ~ lau ~ after an 18-13 win over Ocean View: "We're stilJ killins ourselves with mistakes. averaaina S.S tumovm a prne in l~ue. We can't have those kind of thinp. We bad another touchdown called t.ck. We bad two called back apinst Marina. We can't do that and expect 10 win. "In some way., we feei real for- tunate to come out on top. "Todd Norman (Ocean View's guard-line*ker) wu every bit as &ood as we exPCCted.. That rascal was all over J,he field. We tried to run away from him and couldn .. t. He stopped two of our two-p<>int attempts and almost stopped our last touchdown. His ability to punuc laterally for a big guy is phenomenal. "I wu also impressed with our Joe Hay. After dropping two balls, one a sure touchdown, he came back to make the spectacular catch to set up the 'Winning touchdown. He kind of redeemed himself. "And our quarterback Bobby El- liott, be Showed I fol-Of ppisc after havi nf ~ many balls dropped. Our offensive and defensive lines played really well." WEEKEND PREP FOOTBALL SHOWED A LOT OF CHARACTER, CHARACTERS ••• l'roaaBl it out, c:ertainlJ,.fn'kc the Barons somethiaato about.And it ha nedl ·b. fl!Toaju'f.1 :23 of playina time, Edison Posted a touchdown and ran fortwopointstoclosetheppto 28-21. And after missina on an on--sides kickoff attempt, the Chargers got the ball anyway with a fumble recovery. As f&ie would have it, quancrback GreaAqelovicwentout with,!' dislocated thumb on the most 1m- ponant play of the ni&ht -fourth- and-four at the 13, and bis replace- ment could net just 2 yards on Edison's last shot. ' The only bad taste from the game came in the form of'WhJt appeared to be a very cheap shot when he WClS . . . roughed up when down. -0 Halftime: It's often the turning point ofthePJllC. What's been said earlier, what's been practiced. what's been pre.ached, "nothmgquitcsets in as well as what's -being donnrha:lftime. It's your last chance. Uruversity Hiah footbaJI coach Mark Cunnin&ham watched his team take a I 0-0 hall\ime lead over Newt><>rt Harbor last week, but con- sidenng the monumental advantage his team had durin' that span, well, Cunningham wasn t thrilled with a 10-point lead. Harbor was JOing without six of its starters, and without setting each party up on some sort of witness stand SEA VIEW ROUNDUP.•. homBl : EtlUda cMcll Job IJebeagood, with his team's ovcraJI effort, it was m followin& a 14-7 loss to Corona llel the penalty dcpanmcoL Mar: .. Wesbo1.tldbavewon it. I'm not "We maybe fCt called for holding 11,Yina we tea it totally statisti~ once a. game,' said Cunnin~am. wt~z ~t we had our chances. "That part of t.hc game was kind of .. we intercepted three passes, and disappoinling." for examination. suffice to realize it wis the heart oft.be Sailors' pmc-but it didwt include quarterback Tim Newberry, who was nevertheless on defense because the Sailors wanted to try someone else there. Jn reality Harbor had nineof22 spots manned by new personnel Eight spots because of the absence of six players at the prcpmc meal, a ninth simply a cbanaie (Newberry movina to the teeondary). But Newport was stiU in the game, holdin& on, and Cunnin&bam knew it could all blow up in bis face in the final two periods. So he let his Trojans know exactly where they were comina from -from a football program which ovet the course of two decades had dis- tinauisbed itself with one of the worst W<>n-loss records in Orange Cournr. "l said some thinas to them at halftime because I was disap- pointed," said Cunninaham. "I was disappointed. I challcn&ed their character. We had played pretty sloppily in the tint half and made some really dumb mistakes., like having a fieldgQal blocked. ··1 told them we wcren 't aoina back to that land of thing, and it was either shape up or sh1p out "They responded very well and ~ bacloo take control I thouaht they rose to the occasion ... Bnnklcy rose to the occasion~ wcU.O Newport Harbor Hi&h baseball coach Wayne Heck, entering bis seventh year on the Sailors' diamond, is seeking two assistant walk-on coaches. Heck needs an assistant for his varsity, as well as a bead coach for the junior varsity. Interested parties can contact Heck at Harbor at 760-3327. 0 • Newport Harbor's m::ent Heri~ Run, which brinpin some $30,000 t~ the school, wuaoother bi& suocess. But fortbe record-monies earned are ticketed toward the entire educational propm at Harbor, oot simply to boost athletics. mm~mm OLDSMOBILE/GMC TRUCKS 2860 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa (714) 540-0713 2850 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa (714) 540-9640 that's 16 for the year and must be Uruversity bad 13 flags thrown some son of school ~rd. But we against it for 100 yards. Four of those didn't-capitalize-on• takeoverarrtre-n~ci~1mea.. so it coula have ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji 10, a fi'ld pl was blocked, and we been for much more than 100 yards. I I bad a aood drive to the 20 and Newport Harbor Coacll Jeff -· fUmbledtheballaway. Brbatley, following a 24-8 loss to "\ d . dK ··e· 16 .. Defenahcely we p vc up oqe University, accented by disciplin~ry rill .I · I N . ·, .· ~ .~ . :-. lesitimate 60-yard drive. We bad two moves which scrambled the starting _ _ , aood drives and fumbled one away, units for the first half: "It's behind us and an interception killed the other. no~ and it's time to get on, but no, we "Nobe>dy was hurt,. b~t a lot of won't forget t!1at C?nc. It was just an pride was hurt. We'V'e JUSt got to unfortunate s1tuat1on that we had to ' · · . accept it. It puts Holland right in the deal with. THINK 6 MITSUBISHI BIG SCREEN'· . TVs ·· driver's seat. They showed a different "It (the infraction -missing a Ill'& . . ·, defente early, but we were throwing team pregarnc meal) w~sn't a major D the ball and it didn't mean anything thing, such as destruction of some-TH INK OF REAL BIG SAVINGS AT REEL TIME VI EO. to us. • thing. or this or that, but it was 'Some of our linemen just didn't something that ~as requir:ed by the play well. If our line doesn't get off team and they failed to do at. We had and block people, we can't run the to act accordingly. ball. "I know there are thousands of "Welhink we p ve one of the best opinions. I could have been m~re Nnnina t.cks around in Josh Wo-lenient, I could have been more stnct. jtkiewi<:Zi but if be can't get 100 yards "But it wasn't the team that was tM>v can JUSt tee off on us. punished. It was for the program. Any -:1Corona del Mar is a fine ball club. decision is made for the entire (Holland) has aot athletes all over the propam and the effects go far beyond pt.ce ... we•re lackina some." the kids on this team. It filters all the , ... .· ... ~ ..... .. .. way down. There arc certain stan· Ual•enlty Coecll Man Cu-dards we -eJq)leet them to live up to, t etepem, followina a 24-8 victory and the prcpmc meal is one. of them. over Newpon Harbor: "I thought we "It's the past now, and we vc aot to played much better after the first aet prepared for Tustin." quarter. SadtOebaell Coacll J~rTY Witte, "It was really a surprise that after a 17-7 loss to Tustin: ."We iot Newport was aoina without six back into our turnover thing with starten in the first half, but I was very three interceptions and two lost im~ with their coaching and fumbles. . their kids who filled in. "Tustin ran almost I 0 minutcs .. otr • ••A lot of them didn't have a lot of the -clock, we got one play an~ time to prei:-re for it, and they did a fumtslcd. it away and they had the ball peat job of coacbin& and playina.. the rest of the first quarter. . . · Actually, I'm not very surprised at aU. "We missed some opponunitics, They do a put ~ob of coacbin1 butthekidspvea~teffon. Maybe tbtoUfbout the year. ' ~ we played too hard." Uruversity came out of the pme Tustin forced four of those. five illj~-free_ and it appean .6-foot-7, turnovers, and ~onte Jon~ was 1n on 2U-pound Marko Ropn will finally two of them, 1i&Crcepuna • pass be ti.ck after missina over half the intended for out of bounds and ~n with a shoulder "burner." retumina it for a touchdown, as well If C\lnninabam had any problems u fon:ina a fumble. l · ICiiii"iiiAiii"iiiil-------~---1, ( I .., t ' I i COOLING SYSTEM 1 1 FLUSH I S2971ls TAX • INSl'ICT COOUNG SYSTEM • l'WSH COOUNG SYSTEM • CHICK HOSIS AND RLTS • ltUTOltl \IVrTH UP TO 1 GAL ANT,,RIEZE I ON SALE NOW : *2599°~· 35" DIGITAL STEREO • MONITOR RECEIVEll WITH RE~OTE PtC1m; 35" F~squve. llclKOfltrast. llllcl m1tr~ CWnond VISIOn· • pectin t• • 560 ~ llonzontal rtSOlubOft • Hllh<urrent Scandium oude Cltt.ldl etlclfOll""' • [)ynlft!IC BtMll For ...... l111t-1Pf'IUrt Mvlt• Slt.$1 fous • tt11n1oMa1 I> Cwcu.t • Yetoclty Sclft ~ • Autom1t1C Picture l*-* Clrc.itry (AP\.C} • Comb tilter • -.bind W • Wide-band ¥1dfo .,.._ • Vldlo noae reduction • Notdl fitter • Vrf«l/wdlo lllfmO'J • Dlcital SJftt. mT• EfRCTS: Po$itl0l\lble picturHt-p!tturt • Plct1111-1n picture/Nin screen lft"'1IOll • -.tll·streen preview ( 4-d\lnMls) • 4 scretn sequentlll tr1111e-~ ($trobe) -.salDf .UlS: Mtnv sW1tt11tna ot T11nt set ''Ol''m bl'ltf;ChlMll led • AV lvnthons • Tit11e • C111nnel • Off llmer ~ S VHS VCR input • 2 video t. sltito audio lllPlllS • Video output • T 11fltf Oll'Ptt • Var11ble hied sttieo atldlo e>11~ts REEL TIME VIDEO. WE'RE LOCAL A.ND WE'RE COMPETITIVE. NO ONE'S PJ;lICES ARE LOWER THAN OURS. WE'RE REEL TIME VIDEO, THE LITTLE GUYS WITH THE LOW OVERHEAD AND THE REAL SAVINGS ON MITSUBISHI LARGE SCREENS. TIUNK BIG BIG VALUES AT REELTIME VIDEO REELTIME VIDEO at WEBER'S WORLD j 149 Riverside Dr. • Newport Beach OPEN 1DAYS A W.•K ·5U·2 I '· t - HeyWard spikes Raiders, Q0!9'6 saints' back can't fetdancetowork, utscoresanyway NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Craig Heyward bad his end zone spike dance all planned, but it was the only thine ·that didn't work for him Sunday. The 2~pound fullback ran 73 yards for a touchdown on the first play of the third quarter Sunday, aputina a second-half rally that pve the New Or1eans Saints a 2()..6 victory over the Los Af\ICles Raiders. He ju.st dropP:Cd the ball in the end zone after his sc:i>ring run ... My hands were sweaty. and I lost control oflbc bell, .. be SI.Id. The Saints are 7-1 and tile Raiders are 3-S. . He~ called "lronhcad" dur- ina rus collqiatc days at Pinsburgh, took a bandoff on a play designed to ao over left pa.rd. and be was hit at the line by Greg Townsend. ran tbrouah that iackk, then carried cornert.c\ Ron Fellows on bis blck for about 4 yards before breakina into the clear and oatracina the mt of the Raiden into the end zone. .. lt was a play desiped to tet you into the teeondary. and after that ifa up to you," he wd, iporina the fAct that he was bit twicie before he aot to the line of scrimmqe. Pressed, he said, "That's what separates the pat backs from the averaae backs. His touchdown overcame a 6-3 Los. Angeles lead foraed by the Raiden on an 85-yard pass from Jay Schroeder to wide receivCt" Mervyn Fernandez i n the second quartCt". Chris Bahr's conversion kick was blocked by Saints lineman Jumpy Geatbcn. Bahr was also short and riabt on a ~ yard field goal attempt on the Raiders' first wssession of the pme. Morten Andersen pcked a SI-yard field aoal for the Saints in tlle first ·quarter and a 25-yarder in the fourth quarter. ""l.111 ,.. .. Conditions pr.ove too 'iffy' for sailing NOSA Bank Race features only one official finisher IJ ALMON LOCK.ABEY ............... N~ ()er.an Sailina Associa- tion's .. iffy" 14-Mile .Bank ~ became another ncpuve stattsuc Satwday when only one boat official· ly finisbcd the 28-mile course around 1Ke Lau.sen Sea Mount. A total of73 boats were entered in tbe annual race, but because of liaht wiDd and low visibility, nine did not bother to start. As it turned out, all of the others ahould have "stayed in bed." · . When the finish deadline rolled around. only two boats bad crossed the finish line, and the sk:ippet of one of them admitted be bad not rounded the stake boat on the 14-Milc Bank. How Ulht WM lbl wiedf A number of tki~ told ol Dl'Yet" makina the• buoYofrNewport Pier -about 3V. mllel from lbe llln after more lhao tbree bowl ol llitial - pAl1 of it mmnt stcm*8y • the advene cuneot WIS u ltl'Olll or stroneer than lbc IOUthcrtY ..,_., • Af the NOSA annual bnmc:b at Balboa Yacht Oub Sunday, Doug Wall was c1ected pretideat of the orpniz.ation, sucx:eedina Jim K.er- ripn. Wall announced that the date for the 1989 Newpon to Entemdl race bu been set for 5"rid8y, April 21. ZbalJ def•,. aJJ d,,.,._ Andy Zinn ofCabrillo Beech Yatbt 0"1.b deferated 11 rivals Sunday to capture the McCuUoulb Trooby for Sabots in a fiv~nw:e reptta salW out of Newport Harbor Yacht Oub. Winds were so liabt Saturday that only one race could be finished. Four races were sailed on Sunday. He bounced off that pile, headed riaht and wu hit almost immediately by linebeckcr Linden Kina. Heyward Bo Jackson started at runnina back for the Raiders, gained 25 yards OD his first carry, io on his second. and then went to the sidelines with a pulled hamstring muscle. !few Orleana wide recelnr Loaael1 Rll1 trlee to ehake looee from Raiden defender a ... u Carter ln the Salnta Tictory. That left the overall and PHRF winner to be Malcolm Tuttleton's Olson-40 Loose Otange out ofDapna Point Yncht C'tuh Runne~up in the fleet wu Craig Bentley, Nwport Harbor Yacht Oub, and third was Jory Twist. NHYC. SPORTS BREAK Chi~ seeks pride more an r~venge in game with 49ers Prom fte Aueda ... Presa CHICAGO -It could be a classic [!] football matchup if for no other reason c II • than it pits the No. 1 offense of the San Francisco 49ers ,.ainst the No. I defense of tbe Chicaao Bears Monday niabt. But toss in the 49en' 41.0 victory last year for the wont defeat administered to a Mike Ditka-ooacbed team, there enters a reveftiC dimension heightened by the fact the Bears will not admit it exists. AREA COACHES REVIEW LAST WEEK •.•. ·From Bl .. Our quarterback Rich Schones IN THE BLEACHERS ~ ·-, ........... .._.. .. ''rt'" .. __ bad a 68-yard run called back on a clippina penalty, and then we fumble add they return it 87 yards for a touchdown.•• ,.. "I thouaht Schones and Manny Bonilla, along with David Salladay. ------t-t-OMt·yecl-v~F)l-WCU on offense for us. ow often do you see a team have 300 yards on offense and lose?" "Schones should have bad about another 100 yards in offense u cept for the penalties. We were playing really well and things didn't come toaether q,ainst Trabuco. Give them credit though, they're a very good -football t ." Beside their second Pacific Coast Leaaue loss, the Mustangs also suf- fered another loss when Leffingwell went down and may be lost for the season. concentrated more on passinJ, so he didn'tcanythe ball as much. Schweer bas been the most consist.ant quar- terback I've seen this year. • We came out of the game healthy after a physical contest. Anytime you're undefeated everybody is aun- ni.na for you. You Ii ve to play the undefeated." . Mater Del Coacll C'aacll Gallo, foUowina his team's 21-7 win against Bishop Montgomery: "!t's ·one of tllo5e games that you're expected to win, but they're good enough to beat you." played solid on defense in the first half. but we wcrcn 't able to capitalize on some of their R'istakes. "Orange was able to convert our mtstakes and that was the key to the contest.•• "In the second half, we gave up the football on our first two possessions. .. and they were able Jo convert them into points. They kept coming up with good plays." Injuries took their toll ·an the Artists, especially the loss of senior split end Darren Webb, who on first diagnosis is thQught to have a bruised spleen. "Ifs a very serious injury. We're not e.it~ctly ~-if-the 1njury is-as severe as first thought, but it's a bad loss for us rep rd less." · "No revenge," Ditta said. "We'll try not to make the mistakes we made last rea!· I don't know of any team that loob forward to playina the 49ers. We didn't fa.re well the last time we played them." This time, the 49ers, who are aiming for an NFL· ~~~~~ record 12th straiaht road victory come into Soldier Field with the most explosive offense in the leque. · They arc avcrqing 41S.7 yards per game. Roger Craig leads the NFL 'with 764 rushing yards and 1,036 '.'We think he may have a broken collarbone, but we're not sure. Losing Shawn is really going to hurt us." "J thouaht it was very difficult emotionalfy-or us. but we overcame the emotion by playing very con- sistently on both offense and defense. We controlled the li11e of scrimmage. and we were able to throw the ball consistantly to Tony Pena. They didn't generate much offense." Gallo says the Monarch's came out of the contest "happy and hcaJthy," and was obviously pleased with his team's performance that evened Mater Dci's Angelus League record at 1-1. Don Ncttleman returned at run- nin& back for Laguna, and alona with Shan Gray, Olney thouaht the Artist's miabt have been able to pile up ruslling yards. "The second half turnovers really took ~s out of our pmeplan: and we weren t really able to take aavantagc of the situation, We couldn't establish the run early on. and when we got down in the third quarter, we ~re forced to go to the pass." ICrimlDllC yards. . . . .. Rcvcqe is a strong word, but I thin1t 1t wiJJ be emotional, .. said Chic:a.o tackle Dan Hampton, who bu joined Steve McMichael, Richard Dent and Al Harris in forming one of the strongest 'fi"ont fours in the leque. "Last year, the 49ers were a game we were tartetinc. But we turned flat and got outplayed in every pb.ue oft.be pmc. We have to atone for that disaster." Quote of the day Bnee SQW, Cal football's head coach. on the way the Golden Bear's have faced a lot of blitzcs_their put tbtee pmes: "Blitzing n like a bad rash. It srows. and you've got to get it stopped." Timmons leads team to title Team Labatt's defeated Maui & Sons • in two tight matches to claim the Great Western Team Cup volleyball cham- pionship at the Forum before an event record crowd of 5,566. Labatt's was led by tournament MVP Steve Timm.,, one of severaJ Olympic gold medalists who returned from the Summer Games in Seoul, KorQ to take part in the two-week, four-team professional meeting. The team from radio station KJ..SX, led by Olympic team member Karell Kiraly, beat Team Toyota Sunday ni&ht in a consolation match to take third place ... Tim RalHs passed bis chance at "new look" free agency by agreeing to a three-year, $6.3- million contract with the Montreal Expos. The Major Leaauc Baseball Players Association has asked arbi- trator Geor1e NlcolH to give players involved in the second collusion case another chance at free agency. Dou.Id Fm, executive director of the union, satd Sunday that he expected Nicolau's decision on today .. . Aadrew Macee earned his first victory on the PGA tour shooting a 6-undcr-par 66 Sunday to win the S400.000 Pensacola Open golf tournament at Gulf Breeze, Fla .. by one stroke over Bnee l.Jetlke, Tom Bynun and I.ea Greem ... The Chicago White Sox annouocied they have sipcd Walt llri8lak to a multiyear contract as hittina coach. "They had to replace the goal post." Adams llfta Oilers in OT, &-&· Gres .uam.• goal early in the• third Iii riod helped the Vancouver Canucks ' raid off a furious Edmonton comeback in a 6-S NHL victocy over the Oilers Sunday ni&ht The Canucks led 6-2 in the third penod before the Oilers SCORd... three "1aiaht pk.-Tbe-(?anucb got aoals from six different playcn, including the eventual clinchina score by Adams ... In other games: Jim Pepllutt scored with 31 seconds left in overtime to ajve the CalorY Flames a 5-4 victo~ over the P~delphia Ayin Sunday night. Peplinski beat Ayers goalie Rea Beztall with a wrist shot at the top of the left facieoff circle at 4:23 in the overtime period ... Ju Erk• scored two &oals to hiahliaht a four-goal firSt period, I~ the New York. Rangers past Quebec, 8-2 ... Detroit's Pa.i MacLeu scored two J?OWCr-play aoals u the Red Winp and New Jeraey Devils skated to a 3-3 tie ... The Winnipeg Jets struck for three second-period &oals, two on the power play, and went on to beat the Wasbil!Jle>n Capitals 3-2 ... Da•e Newell set an NHL record Sunday ni&ht when be refereed his t,076tb pme as the New York Ransers played the Quebec Nordiques at Madison Square Garden. Television, radio TELaYIWft 6 P.m. -NPL POOTBALL: san FrtnclKO at Chlcaoo, Channel 7. 6 p.m. -•XH191TION BASK•TaALL: Laken va. New Jeoev from Buffalo (delevecl), Channel 9. 7 P.m. -llOXJNG: Scheduled: ROdoffo Aguliar Ya.. Rodnev ftl..t:>«• In 10-round auper-lltltltwelotit bout from the Forum, Prime Tlcket . 10 p.m. -VOLL.aYaALL: Teem Cup comoetltlon from the FOf'um (tape), Prime Tk:ket. RADIO 6-.P.m. -NPL POOTBALL: san Francisco at Chicago, KNX (1010). 6 p,m. -EUtlBf'nON BAll(•T8ALL: Laken vs. Hew.,_...., nm .,,,_ CclllllV9d>. KL.Ac min. Wooclbrid1e Coacll Rick Gibson, following his team's 28-6 win against Lquoa Hills: "Once again our of- fensive line had a good game this week. We're gcttini good blocking up front from our entire line. It enabled Scott Seymour to go over I 00 yards rushing. 1 can't say enough about how well they've played. "We've got a lot of juniors on that line, and I think they remember losing 28-7 to Laguna Hills as · sophomores." . Fred Schweer and Seymour led the Warriors' offense, combining for almost -'OO~rds be~n tbcm. Scymourgaioed 102 yard rushing and 6S yards receiving, while Schweer completed 16 passes for 202 yards. "We knew ScymO-'tf would be a aood one, but early in the season, we "We were focused and intense the week before against Bishop Amat. and we wanted to maintain that. They (Mo11taomery) came in with a 4-2 record, but their caliber of opposition wasn't there. Danny O'Neil had a fine game at quarterback for us and KeaJii Clifford ran the ball well. "lo the past. Montgomery has done sC:>me different thfoas on defense aga1nst us, but this year they came out in a standard defense and we we're abte1o-move-the ball at wilhgainn- them." Lapa• BUcll Coacla Lyman oa.ey, following his team's' 28-3 loss against Orange~."( think that we lmae eo.d Terry Healpa. fol- lowing his team •s 6-0 loss to Capistrano Valley: 0 We played very hard and defensively we did a aood job. They're one of the best teams on our schedule and they played . • physical pme. •• .. On offense, we moved the ball at times but we couldn't aet it in the end zone. Mitch Stei~ ·~~ for us once apin, and I was pleased with our effort. We came out of the pme without any injuries which was good. We just need to rcgrou and prepare for Mission." RAMS BLAST SEAHA WKS, 31-10 ••• · Prom Bl ' Stewart jarred the ball loose. Stewart drive for IS, IS and 20 yards. and-goal A-om ihc I, Everett bit tight recovered at the 14. Stouffer then put togelJlcr Seattle's end Damone Johnson for the touch- Bell sot all of the necessary yardage only scoring drive of the fLrSt half. He down to make it 24-3 at the bal( yardage for the score on tbrcc running took the Seahawks from his own 36 to By haftime, Everett had completed plays, the touchdown cooling on a 1-the Rams 15 where the drive stalled, 10.0f~l3 passes· (includin& five to yard plunge. Johnson kicked a 33-yard field goal Ellard) fof, 148 yards. The Rants couldn't believe their and it·was 1()..3. Everett threw bis third touchdown luck on the next SC{ics when Mel But Everett answered with an 8().. pass of the pme to open the third Owens picked off Stouffer's pa.ss yard drive, capped by a 37-yard quarter, a 32-yard bomb to rookie intcnd('d for Steve Laraent at the 20 touchdown pass to roolcic fullback Aaron Cox. That capped a 88-yard, 4- and returned it to the 9. Robert Delpino. play drive, includi.na a SI-yard pass But Bell returned the favor on the The Seabawks bad a chance to get from Everett to another rookie, the next play. Seattle safety Paul Moyer back in it as Stouffer drove them to long forsottcn Willie .. Flipper" picked up the fumble and lateraled to the Rams 8. But-on third downJ his Anderson. It wu Anderson's 1eCOnd comerback Mdvin Jenkins, who took pass intended for fullback John catch of the season. foUowina a fine it to the Rams' 35. Williams was tipped in the air by pre-season for the UCLA product in The Scahawks could not cooven, Shawn MillCt" and into the hands of which be cauaht nine pastel. however, as Norm Johnson's 33-yard stron& safety Michael Stewart. ThcSClOre remained 31 -3 until early field goal sailed wide left. Stewart returned the ball 43 yards to in the fourth quarter when Seattle's Everett then drove the Rams 58 the Rams ~. most famous player, Brian Boaworthi yards to the Seattle 22 where Mike The ~s then blew it open. blocked a field aoal attcmRt. Tbe bal Lansford kicked a 39-yard field pl Everett threw l6_nrds to Ellard. On was recovered and returned 62 yards to make it 10-0. Everett, who bad his his next pass for Ellard, interl'ercnce for a touchdown by free Safety third strai&htpme in which be threw was caUed on Seattle cornerback Vernon Dean. for at least three touchdowns, com-Terry Taylor, ajving the Rams a fLrSt "That wasn't cnouah to get us pleted three passes to Ellard on the down at the Seahawk 4. On fourth-aoing." Bosworth said. Marino·ha.s career day, but Jets ]?ick off Win Miami QB throws for 521 yards; NY lnt~rcepts five to wtn 44-30 f In the end. Dan Marino didn't tet any of what be was thootina for. The siar quarurt.c:k of the Miami Dolphins bad the bigest l>U1iD& day of bis cateel" and the leCC>Dd-moet ~ardlee-in NFL bi.ltorY, S2l yards. Jc wun't, enouah ·Sunday u tbe New Yon Jf!'S beat tbe Qolphin• 44-30. Mari.no'•~ wu leQond to Norm Van Brockll.n of the Loi AQlela tttms. wbo tblew for SS4yards111in1t the New Yen Yaaba io 19' I . But Marino mo was i.nten:el*d five times. 1Jme were taba by Erill McMillan, "° rehlrDld one 5S yank for a ia>ft. ' The Jeu bWlt a JO. I 0 balfti.me ae.d,Jldti• 2-' points in tbe lllcoDd q_...... "l1IMm Mariao reury weat to work. Bu\ each lime ibe DOlpldm 11J1 witbia a toucbdowa, I.be • Jets would ICClft Of mUc I Uy .... ft play, "It'& Dice 10 te' .... ,..... but ii ..... IDIU much ~ you lole." 1'stllO llid. '°YCMI elm tlwoiw .. 900 yardt, but ifyou 11WOW•ia•xp"-.il._'l•ner. Marino ca ••hUd JS ol 60 ..... wt tb.rew for 1bree IGWNAJ ·~· ..... °" ........... ... ...-is.:·""'~I; 111i1LoiArarh a.Wen ia.19R .0 S7 ...... iattiat ...... bit l!Nri_... ..,. fttnll IOpped tbe 400 mart for ....... , ... 19 Ms mnier, otendi11 lait NFL reiooftl. n IAliiN ia dlil Nl'L: ~~-~-~-:':i:S ,.... ..... ., .... ~o.. . three field aoals and the Colts defense did not allow the Chullen out the Indianapolis 2S. ......_ M, heUn 1'1: At Milwaukee, Doug Williams mMle • triumphant mum from-fiw ~ on the sidelines after an appendectomy. The Super Bowl MVP led Wubi~on two Iona second-half scoring drives and Kelvin nt rv.-.hed for 140 yards. Williams cooneceed on 2S of 4 ..-a for 22S yards. .....,. lt,Cu.._ldl: Bernie Kosar returned from Ill weeb olf witb an elbow injury, comp&etina 2S of 43 ~ for 314 yards and three tourlbdownl which included 20 ofll for llA yards in the nm halt The lou knocked the Cardinal• OUI of. ftnt place tie ia the NFC f.ut. ..... , .. 11i.1nrs 111!1'-ll: PitUburah ended ill loqest io.iftl ttnak in -m aeMOnt at Ill pmes u Gary Andcnon tied a club record with six field pis. Denver, playina without the injured John Elway, turned over the ball four times. indudiDI three intmicpbons of replacement q~ 0erY Kub6ak. .... 14.c.-.,1 U: HOit Pbiladelpbia fell behind 2().() m 1M ftna half. but l10rmed beck ud won it oo laedall c:...wnatwm•a ~yard,.. to Aatllony Toney witb fbur secoOdl '° 90. ... U. Palrtllll te: Scoct NOi woocra third field Pl, a J~yardlr witb 13 leCOftdl remaiDtl& WM decisive llrllftlllo, w11ic1a ._. dae APCe. by ~·~as 7-1 . . ....,ova ,..,...., • .,. ........ __.byNew ...._. ldCIDlr·TtddJ Omda, wbo mimed tine ldd -----~--... .. • 11 IHI .. At T~ me VildaD = Vlaily T-••de * dlDla -lie _..die .. DGi ... doM ...... _ ........ _ ·-•:»,. .... .......... Wliel .. _Cl hr' I 'Sw·J IC F i9 .. =-:. .... " ...... Ii ,,, ,... -...... • 8"'1ph ''· Olien U: James Brooks sparked a 28-point fint quarter, the fastest start ever for Cincinnati. Broob, playina with a brace on his broken left band. tcOrcd two 1ouellclowM in the l)Criod and aot another touchdown in the third .9UU1er. U-'1, Qleh I: The two weakc$t off'en1e1 in the leque did u eapected. Rusty HU1er threw a 14-yard touchdown put to Jeff' a..ctWick in dle teCOad Quuter, ju.st~ to ofaet I pair of &dd I09ll by Nick Lo-=ry . O•a. II, P.ac.t II: The Giants didn't teem '° know mucb of an~ftf about Atlanta, but they Sot the breaks It the end of dleir uninapired effort. The r&loont. l-7 ud lolmolflvellrailbt. reached the New Yort l on tbe ftnal play oflbe pme. "It'• bard to betine we~ .. said Miller, wbo wu retunli~ ft'Olft aa aUle injury. We can pow from this loll. but at'a bard to keep srowi"' &om all lhele to.cs. •• I FOUNT All'f VALLEY om WHAT IT BAD TO ••• .._.I . . . .,..,,...~..,-----. lllke Cook of l'oantaln Vallq _pan. In a · ftnt quarter ncepdoD d1U'bal l'rtdaJ ntpt'•bll 8GDMt rt~ a t. OCC. We Md-dnlHlll ill 1Mead ZODC. ud ii illilbl. MW been Orea fl -.... ol dlle aiabL w-..rt1 • e dropped m ...._ Vetcn.ns bave to came~ IDd we didn't mab lbe bia ~,.. Hiid tbe CU.... IC:Ol"ed and dnwn to within 2&.27: .. We were deflDi1ely tolnl few ~" Mid White. The ao. WM a bia one in 1mn1 of c:bampiombip bopeil for Edilon1 but u even biller' ao. coma in the 1onn o( u injury to Anldovic. Tbc ICOIOr lipak:a1lef is.out for 3 to 6 weeks with a broken thumb. .. It' a a broken left thwnb and is in a cut. .. said White. "Tbe cut comes off after three weOs. IO it's possible he could be ready for Week No. I in the ~of& ... but we have to~ there '"Tbat'aa bi& teit.ck for us. Donnie Smith is the IUY for us now at quanert.ck. "Donnie is a aood quarterback, but be bu no vanity experience and we're aoina to bave to be a little more simpler in our offen1e. "\Ve can win with Donnie Smith, buf everyone else is JOin& to have to pick it up a little bit, Asfortbeprneitself, White added: "I think everyone tot their money's worth. I felt it would be that kind of ICOre. I thouaht both offenses were prettyaood I coukin't believe it when I look at the statistics, us getting 24 first downs and 382 yards. "But we pve them a few big plays that we talked about all week, and we weren'l agresaive enough on de- fense.'' On the rouabin& the quancrback penalty, when F'"ountain Valley's HaiDD -lat to die licWi-.· ·-n.e ~t ... a IQOd bit. it -tbe pulb after wbich -atupid. Tbc DUlb tot him tbe ~. · "1 still think w'n a ~ football &cam. We're6-l 1Ddcu tdouytblna about that. I wasn't aul'Drited at the runnina of (Kcdric) "Powe (who scored foW' touchdowns). "I wujust bopina be wouldn't do it. I felt if we could tel to Powe early, be miabt be a little teotative. Maybe they would to to tbe air. But we were never able to atop the run 6nt. We didn't do what we bad to do to win." ........ C.... a.ta 11:9:.-1, fol-aowina a 21·10 loa to HunnQl10ft 8eacl.:: .. Huotincton Beach played atmndy bard in the aecond balfand they were tbete to take advantaee of our piays. I really feel we pve the pmeaway . .. They JOt their touchdown after we fUmbled, we're down on the aoal line and came up with no points, and there was . tbe blocked punt, wh.ich as 10methina we've worked on." Fate wasn't kJnd to the Vikinp, as well. Frank Vacarro downed a punt on the HB 2-yard lane, and aocordina to Ramsey, films sbow theball clearly h.ittina a Huntinaton Beach player's foot before the ball was downed, but the officials did not call it. Another b~ setbeck for Edison is the loss of linebecker Vince Cun-nin&bam (tom elbow lipmeol), who is lost for up to tbrec weeks. Brad Sherman moves into the ~s role. - "I know we played them at least even," conti nued Ramsey. "We lost the pmc on mental errors. Georae's Elsewhere in lhe Sunset: (P.asooc) kids ciad a good job gettJng BatlqMe Be.d C--* Geerse after it in the second half, but we gave Pucee, after a 21-10 viC!«Y over them 14 poiqts. It's the tou&hest loss Marina: "They aot control in11de our , of the year for us ... the one that got territory and put tosetberanic:edrivc, away.' and they (Marina) were executina. . "They weru in and scored and all of Oce.,. View Coacll G•y CatHUG, a sudden OW' auys are aoioa into the · following an 18-13 loss to Wcst- tank. • minster: "We had the lead (in the "We got their attention a little bit third quarter). (at halftime), aot excited and "We had played well defensively an challcnaed them a little bit. They the first' half. Westminster had a came out and did a job." couple of drives, but had to settle for "Wh ha ed · bo ha two field &oals." at ppen was a ut w t Westm inster went on to g~;-0 we expected. Marina does a pretty an the third quancr, but the ks Jood job of runnina that option and responded with two touchdowns to at's tough to get a aood look at it m practice, especially for a Thursday takc·thc lead, 13-12, before seeing n melt away in the last period. pme. "I was proud of the fact that after "Y°'Ou practice against it at three-bcmg down. 12-0, they were able to ~uarter speed, and all of a sudden it's hang in there and show some chara~ liveandgomafulltilt.Butwedidplay ter and come back," continued Car- well in the Se<:ond half." rozzo. ...... ...,,.,_. ... ~Md u mucb trouble a1 ii did ia dl9 ._ Ulf couideri.. ......._... West- minster wu rwll8ills•••,. we bad u~. We had to mae eotne ed,iuat· menu at ~me to try and com- pensate, aod 11 did open IOIDC boles. .. We've tot a lot o( bumpe and bruites. Weslmlmler is a pmty ob)'lical team. But I don"t tbi.nk it'U keep aoyone out f'or our pme with Huntinston Beach (Friday). Westmiu&et ~ .... a.rt. after an l&-13 win over Ocean View: "We're still lcillina ounelves with mistakes, avenaina S.S turnovers a aame in ~UC. We can't have those kind of thmp. We bad another touchdown c:alled beck. We bad two called back IPiJllt Marina. We can't do that and expect to win. .. In some ways, we feel real for· tunate to come out on top. "Todd Norman (Ocean View's auard-line~) was every bit as &ood as we expected. That rascal was • all over the field. .w c tried to runaway from him and couJdn't. He stopped two of our tw~point attempts and almost stopped our last touchdown. His ability to pursue laterally for a big guy is phenomenal. "I was also impressed with our Joe Hay. After dropping two balls, one a sure touchdown. he came back to make the spectacular catch to set up the winnin& touchdown. He kind of redeemed himself. • •'And our quarterback, Bobby El- liott, he showed a lot of poise after havin$ so tnany balls dropped. Our offenSJve and defens1ve'lines played really weU." I WEEKEND PREP FOOTBALL SHOWED A LOT OF CHARACTER, CHARACTERS •.• l'romBl . ' it out, certainly Jive the Barons roughed up when down. for examination, suffice to realize it could all blow up in h.is face in the IOmatbi tothinkabouLAndit 0 wasthebeartoftheSailors'game-finaltwoperiods. ba apin Halftime: It's often the turning butitdido'tincludequartcrbaclcTim So he let hisTrojanslcnoweuctly sin&juat l :2J of playing time, point of the prne. Newberry, who was nevertheless on where they were comioa from -from Edison posted a touchdown and ran What's been said earlier, what's ' defense because the Sailors wanted to a football program which over the for two points to close the gap to been practiced, what's been preached, try someone else there. course of two decades had dis- 28-21. noth1ngq\1itcsetsin as well as what's . In reality Harbor bad nineof2-2 tinauisbeditselfwith oneofthewom And after missing on an on-sides being done at halftime. spots manned by new personnel. won-loss records i~ Orange County. kickoff attempt, theCharacn got the It's your last chance. Eight spots because ofthe~bsence of ''I said some things to them at ball anyway with a fumble recovery. University Hi&h football coach six playenat the prepme meal, a ~ftimc because I wasdisap- As fate would have it, quarterback Marie Cunnin&ham watched his team ninth simply a cbanie (New~rry pointed," said Cunningham. "I was Grea A.nadovicwentout with a • take a lO.Ohall\ime lead over movioatothesec:ondary). disappointed. lcballenaed their dislocated thumb on the most im-Newt><>rt Harbor last week, but con-But Newport was still in the game, character. We bad played pretty portantplayoftheJli&ht-fourtb-sidenngthemonumentaladvantage h Id" and""· -:A.a.•-le: 't sloppilyinthefirsthalfand made some really dumb mistakes, like having a field goal blocked. "I told them we WttCO 't goina back to that kind ofthang, and it was either shape up or ship out. "They responded very well and came back to take control. I thought they rose to the occasion." Bn n Kley rose to the occasion as well.O Newport Harbor High baseball coach Wayne Heck, cnterina rus seventh year on the Sailors' diamond, is seeking two assistant walk-on coaches. Heck needs an assistant for his vanity, as wc;ll asa bead coach forthe jun ior varslly. Interested paniescao contact Heck at Harbor at 760-3327. a Newpon Harbor's recent Heritaie Run, which brinp in some $30,000 to the school, wuanotberbiasuciccss. But for the record-monies earned are ticketed toward the entire educational prop.in at ff.art>o(, not simply to boost athletics. and-four at the 1-3,andhisreplac» his team haddurin,thatspan, well, 0 101on, '-'un.._..-.u new a m~co~~~2~soo Cu~~~mtth~edwitha ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Edison'slastsboL 10-pointlead. I .- Tlieonlybad tastefromthegamc HarborwasJoingwithoutsixofits SJI&.. SllllWIC• AMr. came in theformofwhatappearcd to starters, and wtthout setting each be a very cheap shot wheq.he was party up on some son of witness stand .. SEA VIEW ROUNDUP •.• l'romBl Eltuda CMcfl Jou Uebea1ood, followiq a 14-7 loss to Corona del Mar. "We should have won it. I'm not aayina we led it totally stati$tical- wise, but we had our chances. with h.is team's overall effort, it was in the penalty department. "We maybe fet called for holding once a pmc,' said CunninJ.ham. ''That part of the game was kind of disappointing. .. mm~mm 2860 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa (714) 540-0713 OLDSMOBliEf GMC ·TRUCKS 2850 Harbor Blvd. • Costa MeS8 (714) 54()..9640 • "We intercepted three passes, and that's 16 for the year and must be 10me son of school record. But we llidn'rcapitalize oo a-takeover at t~ 10, a.field aoat waa blocked, and we bad a aood drive to the 20 and fUmbled the ball away, U01versity had 13 flags thrown apinst it for 100 yards. Four of those flags-were-~eclin~utdhavc ~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji been for much more than 100 yards. I I Newport Harbor Coacll Jeff Brillkley, following a 24-8 loss to University, accented by disciplinary moves which scrambled the starting units for the first half. "It's behind us now and it's time to get on, but no, we won't forget that one. It was just an unfortunate situation that we had to "Defensively we gave up one lesitimatc 60-Y&td drive. We had two eood drives and fumbled one a~y. and an interception lcilled the other. "Nobody was hurt, but a lot of pride" was hurt. We've just got to accept il It puts Holland right in the driver•t seat. They showed a different defense early, but we were throwing the ball and it didn't mean anything to us. 'Some of our linemen just didn't ~well. If our line doesn't get off block people, we can't run the ball " deal with. "It (the infraction -missing a team prcgame meal) wasn't a major thing. such as destruction of some- thing, or this or that. but it was something that was required by the team and they failed to do it. We had to act accord1ngly. "I know there are thousands of opinions. I could have been more lenient. I could have been more strict. TlllNK BIG THINK A. MITSUBISHI BIG SCREEN TVs T HINK OF REAL BIG SAVINGS AT REELTIME VIDEO "We think we pve one of the best runniftl becks around in Josh W~ j~ewicz, but if be can'tiet 100 yards the)' can JUSt toe off on us. .. Corona del Mar is a fine ball club. (Holland) has aot athletes all over the ~ · place ... we're lacking some." "But it ~sn't the team that was punished. It was for the program. A!lY decision is made for the enure Prosratn and the effects go far beyond the kids on this team. It filters all the way down. There are cenain stan- dards we expect them to live up to, and the prepme meal is one of them. Ual.en lty Coacll Maril Cu· 1 ....,..m, following a 24-8 victory over Newport Harbor: "I thouabt we played much better after the first "It's the past now, and we've got to get prepared for Tustin." ' Sacldlelted Coacfl Jerry Witte, after a 17-7 loss to Tustin: "We iot back into our turnover thing with three interceptions and two lost quaner. 2.. "It was really a surprise that Newport was aoina without six stancrs in the first half, but I was very '111~ with their coaching and their kids who filled in. "A lot of them dido't have a lot of time to prepere for it, and they did a areet job of coaching and playina. Actually, I'm not very surprised at all They do a put job of coachin& throufbout the year." Umversity came out of the game iltjury-free and it appears 6-foot-7, 27s.pound Marko Rosan will finally be t.ck after miasina over half the lellOll with a shoulder .. burner." If Cunnil\lbam bad any problems fumbles. "Tustin ran almost 10 minutes off the clock, we aot one play and fumbled it a~y and they had the ball the rest of the first quarter. "We missed some opportunities, but the kids pvc a arcat effort. Maybe we played too bard.'' Tustin forced four of those five turnovers, and MonteJoncswasinon two of them, interccptina a pus intended for out of bounds and reromina it for a touchdown, as well u forcina a fumble. : . ICiiiliiiliilsiiil-----------1 COOLING SYSTEM I • FLUSH ·1 S297LLTAX • INSNCT COOUNG SYSTEM • l'WSH COOLING SYSTI M . • CHICIC HOKS AND •LTS • BSTOlll WITH UP TO 1 GAL ANT11'REEZE PtNse present coupon at time of wrlt~-up. One coupon per person per tr~tlon. Only tor Mitsubishi vehldes arM1 Chrysler~ MltsuOIJh~ ~hfc~ . ....._ 9P"' wut •IS• 7:JO.l:JO VaN lhN Ocu•1r SI, , .. 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WE'RE REEL TIME VIDEO, THE LITl'LE GUYS WITH THE LOW OVERHEAD AND T HE REAL SAVINGS ON MITSUBISHI LARGE SCREENS. . I TIUNK BIG BIG VALUES AT REELTIME VIDIXJ REELTIME VIDEO at WEBER'S WORLD • Newpott Beach ·• II .. .. ,, .. Ola .. 0-.. DAILY PILOT/ Monday, Octobet 24, 1088 -------- I '1 I I f '1 I" I ' , . -.,.----<LP Newer... ... S.ffrMCllco Attente • CNc9IO Mlla•IOta Detroit Of'tenlay T"""a.y Pct. f"fl PA .175 llO 137 .no no 1• .71• 1" 1•1 .125 1'2 220 A57 1'7 7' .'25 "' 131 .250 102 1S1 .250 160 159 .250 151 216 N.Y.Glentt W..,._.on ......... le PhoenllC 0 .'25 177 "' 0 .'2S \'9 171 o. ... 0 .500 17' 160 0 .500 191 116 0 .250 13' 1'6 Anwtc:M c ..... •ice 8uffMo N.Y.Jtta MIWnl lndlMepolls New England ·w.o W L T ' ' 0 ' ' 0 3 s 0 2 ' 0 1 ' ~ c.... 7 1 5 3 5 3 2 6 .... 1 1 ' 3 ' ' 3 5 3 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 S..'f"l SC.... .... 31, Seem. 10 Pct. PF PA .500 167 1• .500 1'1 160 .375 17' 206 .250 102 16' .lM 102 132 .175 '236 155 .625 130 116 .625 17• "' • 250 169 213 . 175 171 139 .563 112 16' .soo 159 161 .375 150 156 • 375 125 192 .... °'1111111 20, ...... ' ,..,ttldUJf<lle M, o.tte1 D PlttlllUreh •• o.i-It Detroit 7, ic-. CltY ' ClndnMtl 4', Houlton 21 iw-te 4', Tempe lay 20 . ...,_21,NewE,_,...20 New York Gi.nts D, Altente 1' Wellllneton 20, Green lay 17 New Yen Jtti 4', Mleml 30 lncllenNolls "· Sen Dll9o 0 Clevelend 2', Phoenix 21 T......,, . ..,._ Sen Frencltco et Cfllceeo. ' P.m. SllMllY, Oct. a ..... , New OrtMnt, 10 •.m. K-City et _...,... 1 p.m. Attenle et Ptllledelllllle, 10 e.m. QllQeo e t New Eft81end, 10 e.m. Clndnnell ., Clevelend, 10 8.1'1\. Green lay et 8uffelo, 10 e.m. Miami et T~ lky, 10 e.m. fllt!MN~ et Ollllel, 10 e.m. Plttallurlfl et New York .MIS, 10 a.m. New YOl'tt Glentt et O.troll, I P.m. Sen Dll9o et S..1118. 1 p.m. ~ et sen Frencltco, 1 p.m. Weshlneton et Houston, 5 p,m. MlllilllY' Oct. Jl Demler et lndlllMPolls, ' p,m. ...... Jl, s.Mwtl• 10 SC... .. Qllef9ln Seattle 0 3 0 7-10 Rlll'M 10 14 7 0-31 '1nt0... Items w 1 run u . .ensford kldtl, 1:51. ltems-f'G l..enliord 3', 10:17. SeaM Ollertw s.-f'G Joflnl«I JJ, :k •-~ l1 "" from Everett (Ulftlford kid!)'. 2:5'. ,.__Johnson 1 _. from Evltl'ell (LAMford l\.lck), 1o:26. Tl!Ho-r'9r lt--<ox l2 -from Everett (Len•ford llldl), !:30. , ... GWf1W S..--0.n '2 ll'Odeed fleld -I return (JoMIOl'I kick). 1:46. A-i7,0J3. TaAM STATlSTlCS COMMUNITY COLL•8• STANDINGS Mtslleft c.•~ TW "1Y8 (Al~) TMm Fullerton c:.M. Owr"9 WLT WLT 500 ,00 ltencllO $enlle90 Mt. $en Antonio $addlet)eC:k '0' 501 4 1 0 s 1 0 L01111 BeeCll ' 1 0 s 1 0 lll 321 CINTRAL DIVISION Dtv. c:.t. °""911 TMm Fullerton ltancno knll•GO Seddlebec:k ..... w ... ~CNlt ltlvenlde WLT WLT WLT 100 500 ,00 100 4 01 501 1 00 410 510 010 221 371 010 230 330 010 320 4 20 DfV1SION NORTHERN El c.ro1no Ml. Seif Antonio l..onO hec:h Paiadana· Cltl'rltoi 100 31-i 41 1 100 4 10 510 010 4 fl 3 21 010 320 33 0 000 050 160 SOUTH•RN DtvtSM>H PlllOmer 100 1'0 2'0 SoutllW9'19m l 0 0 1 4 0 2 4 0 Groumont O O O 14 0 15 o Sen DleOO 0 l 0 0 5 0 1 S 0 S.nDleOO MeM 0 10 230 240 SetuNlrt'a SC... Seddlebeck lt, ~ c.R 17 F~tqn 3', ..... welt 17 Renctw> S.nlleeo 3'; lflwrslde-n El Cemlno "· PeMdene 20 Mt. Sen Anto!\lo 21, LON 8Mdl 0 Groamot11 lt, Ctrrlloa 1' PelO!nw 50, Sen Dlello CltY 20 South1"Stern 31, Sen Dlello Me111 35 Setw4911Y'• °""'" 0..... c.R et F~. 7 a... West et ltencho Sentleoo, Seddl1beck et ltlvtrSlde, 1 El Cemlno at Mt, Sen Antonio, l:JO Lone 9"Cll et C....,.ltoi, 7 PaMICleM et Soutllwfttern, 7 Patorner et Sen DitOO MeM, l:JO Gronmonl at Sen Dlello, 7 ~Y'• 0.-s-.s W..-W ... Ccc*•M lkkanfltld 31, Sent• Monlee 11 Sent• a.rMre 30, Venture 17 ~ ,5, LA Soulll-t 2• Mool'.MrJI 32. U Hartior 0 LA Velev %7, Comcioton 14 LA Pierce C , W9'1 LA ' , .... CHfU-AnteloN ValleY 14, EHi LA 7 Sen 8ehlerdltl0 Veley 10, Cllett.Y 6 Dewr1 t , Rio Hondo 7 Mt. Sen JKlnto SS, Vk:tor VelleY t HIGH SCHOOL SunMt .... ..,. Founteln Vellev Wftlmlnater Edlion Leque W L T 2 0 0 2 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 Huntlneton hec:h OeM11 View Marine 0 2 0 ,,..Y', 0- 0-el W L T s 2 0 3 4 0 6 1 0 2 5 0 3 4 0 0 7 0 Marlne YI. EdllOll <•• er.nee COH I) W9'1'711nater YI. F-l•ln V...., (et Hunt· ,.,.,on lkeclll Hunt,.,.ton a..c:n v .. Oc:een View (et W9'1· mintier) s.. View~ Corone de! Mar Untwnltv Tutltn hdlltlDeck ~•tencla NewPorl Harbor ~ W L T l 0 1 1 0 l l 0 1 l 1 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 o-81 W L T ' 0 I 3 3 I 3 J I 2 s 0 S 1 I I 6 0 ................ UftfvtrtllV ... l•tellcle let Neweort ......,, .............. CoteM clal MM w. lld'901cts (et a.tit• Ma IOWI) Neweort Het1ler et Tuatln Padlc C.lf ~ '--'-w L T t 0 0 2 0 0 1 l 0 I I 0 0 2 0 0 t 0 , ........... o-.11 W LT 1 0 0 • ' 0 l S I 2 5 0 2 4 ' ' ' 0 WOOdllfldtt VS. OnHlee (•I El Modenel L.-Hiiia vs. Coate Mew (at ~t Hanor> L~ llaech 'IL TrlllluCO Hitt\ (et Nlktlon Vlelo) S....C•l1 ......... L ...... W L T Mlu lon VltiO 2 o o lrlllM 1 1 0 C.istreno Velley 1 l 0 El Toro 1 1 o Dane Hiiia l 1 0 Sen Clfmante 0 2 0 , ....... 8-1 Min ion Vlelo et Irvine El Toro •t San Clement• Dena Hlk et Cnl•treno VehY ~ .... ..,. L-.W W L T 81allOP Amel 1 0 0 SI. Peul 1 .0 0 Servi!• 1 1 0 Metw 0.1 ' l 0 81afloc> Monlpomery 0 2 0 TilwMllY'a 0-Cr•PI VI. Mater Del, •• Sent• (non•IMouel , ........ Gemes 8111\oo Mont~ et• St. Peul Set!INIY'I Gelne OWWlll W L T 1 0 0 s 2 0 • 3 0 • 3 0 2 • ' 1 1 ' 0 OVerell W LT • l • 0 s 2 0 6 l 0 3 4 0 • 3 0 An• Bowl 1111/!oP Amel YI. Servfte (et Sent• An• 8owl) VOLLEYBALL SCH•DULES ~ ...... TU•SDAY Cel Luther•n et Chrl•t COlleOe Irvine, 7:30; Wfttmont et Southern Cellfornle COfleOe, 7:30. W•DNHOAY Lone BHCh Stet• ., UCI, 7:30. TitUIUOAY Cel 8eptlat et Cllrlll Collttlt, Irvine, 7:30. ,.UOAY United St•••• lntarnetlonal UnbtarJllY •I UC!, 7:30; Frt1no P11Clflc et Southern Celifornla ColltOe, 7:JO. SATUltOAY Southern Cellfornle ColleM a.I Christ Col!e1141 1rv·1ne, 7:30. CemmunitY c..... ..,.., WEDNaSDAY Golci.n W9't et Or•nee Coa1t, 7 o.m. ,RIOAY Fullerton el Orenee .Coeat, t o.m.; Go4dtll Wfll et .CyprHS, S:JO. """ scMlt tlftl TUUOAY Newport Hertior et Corone del Mar, S; E1tenc:le et Tustin, 3; Edlion et Founteln VeNty, S:lO; Oc:Mn View et ~8'tmlnater, S:JO; Huntlnoton 8Mc:ll et Merlnf, S:lO; lllSllOP Amel et Mat« Del, 6:30; trvl.M eJ Dene Hiiis, 3:15. . waDMIHDAY Tret>ueo Mllll •• Cost• Mfte, S:30; Wooo· llrld9e et i..eune Hlltl. S:lO; Lffune a..e11 •• Orenoe, 5:30. _ TitutltSDAY Sedclltl>ec:tl et CorOn.-Oel MiF. 1; Eitenc:fe et ,.. __ , Herbor, 3:15; Huntlneton 8ffdl •• Oc:Mn View, 5:30; Merine et EdllOll, 5:30; Wftlmlnster et Founteln Vehev, 5:30; Meter Del et St. JOMCim, 6:30; lrvltle at MINlon Vlelo, 3:1S. fflltOAY Coste Mew et Letuna Hilb, 3:1S; <>t-et Wooelbf'fd9e, 3: IS; TretJUc:o Hflll •• Laouna &ffc:ll, 3:15. NI.IC NOTICE MUC NOTICE rta.IC NOTlCE . ., Ctllll .. •WDT uc .... ....,.i.uci1 UC Sellla ..,.,. ~ cwmen l, ~ 1, JcWwl l. 0.... MWa: "*'-J, UCI ~ l(fndl t. Golll N¥et; lllls S. Helftlrne; UC ,_.. ..,._., 2 ... Ctllll -. NOtl-COMP8•8*8 UCS.Dllle4.UOI UC Sell 04"P -'"': Mturo 2, Fwo 1, leYOY 1. , UCI tc0rlne: lreal'OI I. Goelle Mvts; Mitter 2, Teft 2. Helftlma: UC Sell Dleeo, 2-0. • SCHSDULSI Ctllll""" TOGAY alele et Cllrlll C-.. trvtM, '-TUmSDAY Cel Lullleren et Cllrlst C*9e tnllf!e, 3; Sou!Mrn Callfornle COl!lea at W..tmoftl, 3. PIUDAY UCI et F,,_ Stele, 7:30 p.m. ' SATutltDAY Aruae-~lflc et SoUtNrn C.tlfwnle COlleee, 3; Chrlat. Colleee Irvine et Point Lorne, 1 p.m. , SUNDAY Sen JOM Stet• •t UCI, 2 p.m. Cenwnullltt all'.lle -TU•SDAY ltanchO S.nttaeo et Golden Wat, 3; Or•noe COllll el CYllf9'1, 3. THutltSOAY ltlvenkle CC et Orenee Coest, p.m • l'JtlDAY . FU41erton et GOiden W9'1, 3 . c..... '""*' THutltlOAY UCI ., UC Sent• larber• Tout"nemenl (YS. Celltornle, 5:30) . ,ltlOAY UCI •I UC Sent• lkrber• Tournement (VS. St. Marv'a, 3 p,m.) CemmunltY alleee Wtmeft TU•SDAY Orenee Cont et Oxnard, 3 P.m.; Lone 8MCll CC et Golden W9'1, ' p.m. 'ltlOAY El Cemlno et Oranee Coaat, 3; Golden Wt1t ., AIUM·Peclflc, 3 p.m • WltHTLIMG SCH•DUU CelmMlllV ~ W•DM•SDAY Golden Wftt et El Camino, 7:30. IATUllDA --i Golden WHI et CtrrllOI lnvltetlonel, 10 e.m. °"" .......... ¥"' OAV•Y'I LOCKa• (......., e.dl) -S boats, 175 antlers. l 57 bonito, 7 c:od. 109 c:etlco NU, 31 Miid NU, 104 medlltl'el, 170 Ku!Pin, 35 wtllte flall, _, blue _.di, lS '8rto. '6 ·~· MEWPOllT LANDING -3 boell, ll •nelert. 35 sand N•'· 's ketP ""· 1 bonito, 3t blllll PPrCll, 31 meckeref, 24 rocil fll h, !Al sc:utptn4 lt allMOlllMd, 113 white 11111. WAT•R POLO SCH•DULES c..... SATUltDAY UCI et 819 W9't·Pec·10 Tournament et llelmont Pleia. SUNDAY UCJ al Bia Wes~~·lO TourMmanl •• eatmont Pleia .• ~~ TU .. DAY ~ Rend!O S.nttaeo at OranM Coeat, 3:15. RDltUDA't Ofente Coe1t et Goldlfl W9'1, 3. fllllOAY Or•nte Coeat •I CVorft1, 3:1S; Peiedane et Goldlln W..t, 3:30. SATutltDAY Oran.t-cNlt. GOldln West •• SV111•ss Toumemant. """ scMlt TODAY cor-e1e1 Mer et Et Doredo. 3; Mat"' 0.1 •I Seddlebeck, l. TUUOAY Wooclltld9e et Mll9nOlie, 3; Coste Mesa at Lone IMcf'I Pott, 3; un1wrs1ty et Lone hKh Wlllon, ' p.m. W•DNESDAY Tuatl!I et Cor-de! Mar, 3; UnlWtMIY et Seddl1t11dl, ~at~I .... ~ ~(tlOr. 3) Huntlneton 8Mctl vs. W..tmtnster <•t Golden Wetl et 6); Edlton 111. ~ View (et Golden WWI •l 7); MetlM Yi. Founteln ValleY <•• GOiden W9'1 at I); Woodbl'ld9e et LilouN hedl, 3:15; Coat• Meae et Orente, 3:15; L.os Arnleoa vs. Meter Del (et SecldleOeclt HIOll), •:30. THutltSDAY Seme Ane Vellev at W..lf'lllnstar, 3:\S; Dene Hllll at Irvine, 3:15. ,.. NHL ~,,_... WIM"*' 3, WMlllfletOn 2 New JerMY 3, Detroit 3 CelMIY 5, Ptll1d1IJ l'lle • (ot) OT New Yor1l It.,..,. I, ~ 2 v~ '· •dmonton s T ........ , .... No ""'" acMdulld ~ .... E *'-'On et K1191, 7:35 sun. Mon,,_. el lolton, •:35 PJTI. Cfltc:ffO el Qulllec,. •:JS P.tn. CeleerY el """*"1ltl, •:U P.m. 8ufl9lo et New JerMY, t:4S 1!.m. Toronto et New York tllendln, 5:05 e.m. WesNneton et Vencouwr, 1:35 P.m. .... -... ... TMIDM.Y OT CLAIWllD OfflCE HOUM T---er.ic. M·' lilOAM-130 PM .._ .... AM-1130AM .,.,_ C:-... M·' 100 AM-5 00 PM ........ 0.40\,INC »> ltJIJUo\ -UlflM rS.. U1 "M CHmCK YOUR AO T .. PlttTDAY , ... ~ -........... ---· ..,, .CCIJ!IH V ...._.._ ~ .,. .. , -"""' ,... ................. ......... ", ... ..,..,..~ .... .. ~ . ...,. .,, .... .,..,........., .. .., Mn;Tlot Oelw "91 --.. ......... .,..,.,,., . .,,_ .......... ,.... .., ~ .. "'9\' -,.....,.. ,.,... • •• cw .. -...c• KJIWiel\' ea~..,. """ .,,., (,.. ,.,_ ............. ..,""""' -,.,,,,,,~,.. ..... ......_ •• V\ M , ............ ....._, "~,... _,.._°"" __ ··j~ ............ ~.., ,.,..,....., .. UllK•llM ~ .,... ..... , ......... ~.fllle\ FROM NORTH ORANGE FROM SOUTH ORANGE ............. c... ..... 1111·~~ 1111 ......... 11111c.e.... ........ antic.ti... ...!I!! .... -••BtG CANYON Nahl. 8paclou1 18r oondo 76dlMNidOXNSi .. Liii.. iWWWWWWIOd 1W•1U221• a .... . btlaht 2BR 28A, 0uttid9 ~. wld, FIP. wet/bW •GATEOCOMMUNtTY* Baactu1-8ayfron t 1 I 2 lldrftl mpt9 IC.rt ~-ft· Ape -~\aimo 8-ll 39t .. ....... ~ mdl. Frenctl doort. 911. $1060. Mona egt • • 111111 w/docll-ow.t Fam hn'99 1115. Ger. ~ a\11. ~ ......:..-----. e..2 7334 "/C · 1 .. '* ...., erownmoldlnge,newcetl-72•-.otoa.5M·F BEAUTIFUL 28A 2BA NOFEElt Agt5'1-9'49. Ombltwl841Q.~~· ·----·-·· -~,-........... Ing a, ate. $515K. "~t lltta Zllf w/QOHeoutMVIEW. Alto OCEANFRONT-Belboe Sorry, No '*9131 2 ...,....,. MESA VERDE. 28R 1BA, track llghla. oell fllft, nr Ownr/Agt. c .. collect 0t _.I 1B" aveil. Frplc, wet bet. 38<12ea 1g IUndlc Spetliii'ng -cTean~-18,g• upper. ow.t ~de uc:. Hoeg Hoap 11100/mo celllvmagl819)511-1657 mlc:ro,W/Ohk111>9,2cat ramodeir.·u 800/mo •e•• ..... ~den apla. aeauufu11y 1700+.2M7Hldtory 4101 ·._. ' ILlffllfllTIMAI ..,...,_.all get w/xtra et::8, c;:.-780-8e18,87M1'8 ~-.... e_.,.., 1end1capad grounds. 491--1931. 751·9'83 TSLMGMT M1·1tll • ~~,_ 1ral air. All t. · Pool & spa pa1loe/decl(1 M... Yarde apaclout 2 liiiii:.iiiiiiiil. ,.. _NW Sorry. no p9te. 844-0509 Sunny Big Canyon condo. ••• ii gereoe Of Cari>on ' BR 1w 2 Mory petto &lllU ,_ _ End Untt "f·T -,...,,, Two lftlllllll 22s.ar11enc1.2BA.2BA. a...utlfuly .landec:aped. Bactleiof. seoo ge~. wio ho~kup'. CLEAH 2M. ta"'""' fir.,._, 3 peUm. Only ·~ f INt 1• wna. NW trp1cJ. trig, la patio. poof, CIUlet ..... deer1 Apt&. 1 Bedroom S695 1750/mo 121-0118 ~ "'* Ind. No the flneat In ~adea. -tr EnjOy tndttatclnO ._.. MCa1515Skr780-1'88 Poo1&-.pee1ocwdeck 2Bdrm1'1·81 sa15 -..-1175.723-12" 1525,000. cal beta F~':f':;·.::;~:'.";:i & .,,..., from u.a. 3BR THE BLUFFS-FULL BAY Prime IOailfon. · 131E18th St 6'6-6818 mT IEE 111111 ,_.._ ~ & Sor no pets 2BA t>eeuty w/feeturaa VIEW ... 3 ~room. Peb .._,_,MOO --------2BR 1'..w.A TOWNHOUSE. ~ 1 ,::;Oom ry. $120 too numberous to men-oil. Avallebte. $2100/mo. 1 ....._.,.116S 28drm 28a twnhla S865 New carpet, lndry room, ..... 28drm 2'i1Be S 1090 lion. lrnmed occpy poss-Agt 780-1108 2Bdnft 1'Ai&e 1105 825 Center St 642· 1•2• 8111*.n. peUo. Good lo-MR fM LcMw UNI. eee w 18th St 642-'905 Ible. Children & petl OK. Upper 48R H'·BA 2 car Hll fWJtr •• , c:atlon 1795/mo ':-~· 1:.t• ~ $2850/mo. Doug Herblt getage ttnall pailo 112 COSTA MESA •• 2071 THURIN &IP.,--. to_ ... OCEAN VIEW. La twnhse 720-3te0Ot160-5000 4"h si. $1850/mo'w •• •• •"'2:atfleld TSL MGMT 8'2-1803 $1150~/mo. DtUrR 2 rns1r BR. 2.59a. 2 car RfAW A"• 21"597-'7 ""'~ LIDO ISLE-Charming gar. frplc, spa, new paint, / .. , now. " EASTSIOE 18R upstelrs _,. lllJ TSl MGM M2-1I03 3bdnn,den. l0Yelypallo, cpt 11295/mo. 968-2717 \t'"'J '11~._,,1. lu'" 'I I I Htl AH tif ti cableTVhkup,reflreq'd'.'Large 'ft~~1 tn a 2==.2BA. f~ :-'-tneearpet. EASTBLUFF 28R 11Mla. will axch for dupl or trip! 2BR. den. 288 duplex. . \\ "--~ JI " ZIM No pets. S575/mo. 352 t>eautitul den _,1 · gar • · ,,.... frplc, poof, $950. ..a In COM. Irvine, leg.Bch. Quiet E'alde loc. $850. REALTORS" Victoria. 845-1181 Pools o-':.s No per: lhopaifl~i~A Aml901 Way. Apply °'Leg. Mtg Pral 2 lldull1. 1 child. NO 1BR unfum house • patio IUll I OIZY 1BR upttfl, pool, cable Tvl 1 Bedroom.IMO TSL MGMT 8'2-1803 Apertmant l. 6'e4 OIOI CALL C.otyn ROIS at pets. 175 Tullp. 8'6-9038 on ~ Peninsula. 2Br 1Ba house, $725/mo. & gas pd. S575. No pets. 111 IWIUll FURNISHED 2 BR 2 BA M«n:[~761:...i, *2BR Duplex. quiet. lrg No pets. $650/mo yearly. No peta/smkfl 861-8615 fWI req'd. 1•7 Flower COSTA MESA SHARP & CLEAN 1 & 2BR. eondo. oc:ein ...;, pool, ynch Y y .. •d front unit get.,.. •98-2195 -Call NOW 645-1181-._.. IUI a..nwahet. encl garega. ~ Dix $1100/mo ..._ -• • _,..... --~TV From 113$/mo · ••Ill •ST good erea. $780. 5'3·A 211111a AEatah 2BR 1BA get. $650/mo Sorry NO pet• 8'5-5577· 22-35'5 or 6504522 ...aTIWllT" BernardSt.6'7-75'0 . j •l BA 1BA $565/mo. BEAUTIFUL 1BR 1BAln • •-•ul• Beeulifulty decoreled 4BR •NPT HGTS loc lg 3Br Parkt'1. S 1000/mo. I Wellace Streat C.M. Call Quiet complex. Security Sparkling clean 2Bdrm ._ .-& + femily rm. $275.000. 2Ba frple. ger:. patio. 2BR + 1'~ 650"1~' it ldaU 2111 for llPPf. 131.1'a19 ~~'1\1 :~uTY~fM ~i;,~s1~~ :,* ~· u;:i P~~. :~~~2 d/w, Cell Barber• Chambers =I~ m~:c,o /:o~si~~ Condo, 2~~A~~8: ~~~ l&mlW Lfftte 1111114 * •.U .... * . PAID. SS85/Mo. CALL 1MO w·--.. . 642-'90S Man~ to choole from. Stu.- pool, tennis, S 1950/mo, 4 28<, 181600+1/l,leundr-y A small. QUMtt compln. 722-1832 •TOWNHOUSE• dioa, 2 & 3 bedr~. •Clean Mesa Verde lg mo+ Ok 720-9680 fecllillas. no petalgetage. Studio $585. 18R $650 & BEAUTIFUL 2BR 1BA tn 2BR/1'._.,BA trp1 lg patio Graat )Ocatlon. S'8rtlng 3BR 2BA;d/w, 2 car gar-Yeerly $1100. 673-3878 2BR 28A 1850. "lllce Quiet complex Security l*POrt ;940 • W&llece et 1575/mo. 17~ ege. pet lo, fireplace •111111 llW HPLDI CHARMING Cape Cod 2Br new & WllY pv1'' Frptc. building. Pool, garage. $800/Mo. 548-53'8 '1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii S1100 No pet• 6'0-2495 3BR 2BA. 2 car gar. lrplc. Wlnter/yrly N-pets pool. spa, lndry. 1st ... cable TV all new C!eoor 1• •LARGE 3BR 21/tBA, 2 OIW. micro. w/d hlcups. 675-n08 fhufl-S•t" MC. NO PETS. 5'9-2447 •AU uTIUTIES P~IO'.. ..... .... ... .... , _ ... lliilll..... story gatege lirepl.ce trash comp. Vrty Sl400 (818) 795-2965 Sun-Tues •BACHELOR E'slcle apt $725/Mo CALL 72M832 28A ii( new Lf&; •WITH BOAT SUPS• f• Ille llOO patio: laundrY hook-up: Agt 675-667o1722-8520 NEW decor. spacious~ Kitchen. pehO, quiet, EASTSl~E Sherp & CIMn crpt, co'mplately rt· EX~~ WIRfEA Xf THE eEXcHI $1300 Agt 875-•912 3BR 2BA. freshly painted. 2Bf/1Yt8• F/P, deck. prl(ng, lndry rm. No pats. 2BR. W11her/Oryar rnoda6ed. gar. g.rt loc Has baeUtth.ll 18R 1BA on We have one rental lrevel •LOVELY. neel. clean Upgreded crpt & window d/W, w/dry. gar. n-pet1 '595 lnc:t. ut. 720-1585 hkup. pvt llJnded(, encl 1750/mo 7~-7543 the BAYI 1100 alt. W/O tralter leftl EnjOy lull uM 2Brl1Be. lrplc, lndry treatmenli Frpk:, ~sys Yrty. $1500 837-85'7 •BA. Y TIMBERS• Qft. $740/mo 5'6-9950 28R 28A'Condo E.ndo9ad htlup, ="*'°· OIW. houMandothetfeclhtles. patio •5'8-5827• ·7,,,. """"• ••-patio, gar. No pets. 399 ,, ...... encl 1 • tpa.Wlhr/dfyr.$8.45/mo •Boet Extra• ~ -, ~'· j )f' • , , 4 r~ ; A • ' . ' . ,.,.,. . 1 . .. .. -----.. r--~:,.,~ ... ,"~-_. '"•RlAlTV 11 I ""1.41 •fl\110 0 ! •• I I • • ... J ' --- of heated pool. apa,_club hkup, no pets. $800/mo. :::~t a1~~ N:~~ ~~~i -.a LI 1ll l&n.J 1BR. frplc, cable. pool, Eastside 18R Cot~ garaoa. fitepia(,., pool & gar -En our~ bdtl ' $525 per month 3BR2BA 211 twnhouse $1950/mo . ...,..~ w l frplc. sundack. W&.ySt.M7585G-6357 ...,.., paio.+ • l650 dep Not• pany Sorry.no.-.., .... lltill r11 Salt lalMi 536-3316 btwn 8etn-6pmj new c:arPel/~t 2 car oar: •HARBOR VIEW HOME S 1000/mo. 675-6565 II.Ill JI lU :1ts-J~O ~I complal * 8'3-2-'5' ULI. 1 ... 11 ...... /,._ ... ~ -P..Wall 1117 t11a I w/opnr, D/W W/D pool 3&-=+~~oom.up. 11 H Pnian I 2e't 1BA. lndry r!m. pau-·-2BR 2BA. garage + ona ON THE BAY 1Bf/1Ba ~ S 1000/mo. 839-9673 f, · g • • . 2117 doae to 1 buteS: ~ w•-. epece. nw new'"no pat1. 1100 .,, 1.,...~pool, GMIAI . iRi -=m.,, ;-1~....3: 2BA condo. lrgd m~1f ~~~~;o~~; He! 6 ~ew getege • We'll ~ Sect. a "fit.~~.~.~ ~ 11111 ........ , lndry .... to 891 I .... IX ACRE (no. h&se prop-Buotlful remodeled aerll ZHZ pe;:·,~~?.';1:' MOnl~ Ille. ca.rpet, paint: 4Br ated'. steps 10 bay/beach ~s:SM!~TI· w/loll. ~law. jacuzzi. REMODELED. 4-Plell, g•ya~~l~u~ 8~s1"8 ~·: erty,38Rhoute.~ tiome. CIOM to sa1i1ngl ftMXlsXVXilXe[e Visla.•6'2·3812 2Ba. fam rm. S23501mo 910W.Balbo1Blvd. TSLMGMT 1o42•1803 :3°"' :50~. 28R.1BA.ger.patio.grd. .,._720-*1 8adt a.y area. Open Sat Clubt for ocean & bey Short tetm & wlntet 3BR house. Den. dble er. * 760.0715 * $900/mo yrty. 675-9650 x 1-61 or fir. no '*'· $715/mo "" ~=====-===-- & Sun 12"5• 20291 vt.wa.PvtdodtaYl.Cell $850toS1400 clean . Wes111Se. •NEWPORTCREST • ATIRACTIVE2Brtwnhae •••••llenl• MC.968-1'87 Rllll ... ~~~:·1~:r~: ,.;n• Mlc:hael Brytli S.95,71• Watertr:!ai~omes. Inc. $1000/mo + $300 dep. TownhOme. 2Br. den. nice. neer Ferry. ger, patio, Quiel btdCI on E'~: cozy RENT FREE Till NOV. 1 $1100/mo YEARLY 28r. • · 215 Merine ~bol II credit cheek. 5'8.J898 s 1550. Avelt 1211 or lndr-y. M•M• tennent1 w/lot1 of wood. AUigned t..g 2Br 28a In >4-plax, encl 1~ gsaga, .peitio. no ILlffl .. 673-6900 AVAIL NOW 3BR 2'hBA before. 722-8567 S1050 Yrly 67l-'&e8* parl(lno & laundry leeW-ger. hkupe, dl w, patio. pets. 546-5812 LI ' 2B b ..,.. .... 1 tlel. $530/Mo. 938-0552 1716+$500 dao. EIMe nr ~e_.._---.-----lff•ll · LI ... I I • 21H new crpt, very clean. xlnt •NEWPORT SHORES• r. 1 a cover ..... pa ... ~· ldl No.-..,~ ~·-1 furnlaMd. 1 lmLI Lnll. m lllT I H loc S 1300 mo. Margit. •Br 3Ba hse on canal. lrg lndr-y rm,Nr bay & t>eae . *~* · blk to bch. Winter Nntal, E.AESHL.Y palntei:I wltll l/(e[k tQ_ bay, 58" JBA Agt 979·828015•0-7355 tam & h11-tms,..new carpet 1234 W. Balbol. $850 LG 2Br 1'hBA Townhou•. = ~·IC~ ... M60/mo, Couplee only. new carpet, new pllotlell Home. 2-car gar. w/d. 9 CLEAN 2Br tBa duplex. & paint. Yeany $2150/mo Yrly. Agent 751·3261 Garage. patio, laundry _!!! _ 65CMI038/E21~1977-Mt8 slow & oven. new Ille, IU mos at $1600/mo or yrty $725 Gar. sml yard. nol NEGOTIABLE. 675·5'•7 •NEWLY FURNISHED• room. $850/mo. ups • \VIL. p:t\O, llfCO ...... counter toPI, fbttur" & * • ,.. et $2200/mo. 721-1196 pets. 1954 "A" Meyer. 3BR 2BA DUPLEX w/lrptc OCEANFRONT 1 BDRMS 2629 ORANGE .. kitchen downstairs. mirrored clOMI dodra. •·Plex with panoremlc * * *2BR + Den. lBA Credit cl\tClc. 5•9-3•8• & patto-On Balboa Blvd. Availeble. Greet location. TSL MGMT 8'2· 1603 cable rfl#ty. No pets. -1111 Air conditioned ~· air views. 28drm1 with fire-cottage. 214 Apolena. COLLEGE Perk 3Br 1"·B• Walking distance to thel Musi Mel Bltr 87~ ltlll ll lW IVllUILE Ht~ J._~IFF ffilXle weni:d, ddiCi aleetrie c:teanar ... pieces end balconies. Close to town $1350/mo home Fr~ di*! gar lrg beaCh S1100/mo lse + 38R 2BA deck, 1300 Yny llM lff OK. l.eundry I kftc:Nn eurltyaya~.=~& $975,000. 30% Down. yearly 673-5686** cover9d patio. fenced.yd. sec. Jeck 818-98'·2•8" Studio, k'ttchan. $600 Yrty 2Br lB• Ealtlid• loc: UI 1~~1.1. z ... I llW pfiv Included Cell ~~ & pool. V~ Detnon, Agl 863-1500 3BR 2BA lower, Im-$1100/mo. * 556-03•7 CARPORT. PETS OK BBQ, pool, laundry rm: ~ 2BR 28A. 191Wegt epeca. 546-7513 After lpm. ronvenlent locetlon • Dyl. 1$.42~2 Wknds. macutate! New carpet, IUIUTIO IWPl ••Tl 8111 IUITY 606 W. 8albo196'-8058 $725/mo. E-Z in. s• n •a• •11 Yrty seoo. Agt 751-5235 •IN FUANISHED• we1k lo Ealtblutf lhop-Al_ ......... paint & drapesl V 1g 2Br 2Ba dble ar Featurtng•BR2'nBA.pvt3BR2Bastepatobeach. 1'9£.Bay ...... •WALK TO BEACH, eo..MeeehofM. ping C*lttr, COM high LOWEST PRICE 2 sty-3lfr $1600/moyrty. 759-7602 :kk 3.,1y. o9i1 Frn ~rs· professionally land· greet condl Cerport, TSL MGMT 6'2-1603 Lim 1.J-J•AfTI NEAR t-te>AG • lrg 2BR Kitdwl ~I eehool, c:hurc:MI, tennis lam rm 2'it81 guard gete cua•H iro.u,,g stelrease s1050' seeped. Patio & UP· balcony. eppll, lndry. •UU ... = IDnlrT 28&. MW carpet S450 •S325mo. .... " & park. TIMe property 11 In S.29:900. '891-f702 Agl 2BR 2BA HOUSE 722-0939 °' 548.0397 grade_s loo numerous to S 1300/mo yrty 973-2980 Come the d ff ence NJUU I • llg 1BR w/mt/CfO, gs .• IRVINE. Room for rant mint eondltion & reedy mention This Bluffs FURN & 2BR & ... 1 • • poof. spa. 1750. W01 Su-dm9 to el.. WIO "**-' for you to mew. Into. RE-NEW · OCEAN VIEW Beam1 1cedlngs.1 ·· bficit ·~~c, E'SIOE 3Br 1'..,Ba. den. re-I be11uty will not last Bachel;im~s ,0-o:n ~ifult!IJBR,amodelePoold. 111111• pancw A\118 8tl 1131 DriwiaQel lltll. ~ OUCEO $275,700 Watch the <boats enter the • m Y rm· P • 0 model. nu crpl/drps/k11c. lmmed occpy possiole · . · ' apts. • • ..-.aa '385/mo • 559-<>711 711-1111 ~ harbor. Large •BR1 $1275/Mo Call NATALIE mirrored werdrobe. fp, 2· Children & pets OK s~:i&° ~~l~e rec room. laundry room. ...s-. ,.. ...... .-· • 3 'n BA . Qua ll! 5'8-6569 °' 759-6600 cu ger $1395/mo I Short or long term lse. or Aeedylor lnatentmov. •NewGEdlw.StoYe.& 2Br/2 pefl•nQ spaces. ~--C.E~E El .KJN craftttnaolhlp $899,000. Merrill lynch Reelty Sandt. 673-2749 $1875/mo. Doug H•bst S!EPS TO BEACH. 2BR 1n! °"~~~~~mo. Mt0owa... Xtra 1g petio. IUOOtmo. 91111. 1!!!!0.)'.11'\N\ Unda -721-0116 ON Bay. 3Br 38a House TOWNHOME 3Br 2,..,Ba. 720-3980or760-5000 W11h gerega. Yearly, S •NewWhrt.Carpet& ~1824bnwthm--5c>m Wkly rartUlle s155 a Up. r.;aJ R T~R'-• Lois · 760-838' Slip, view. deck. ger, 1 etlo $lOOO Rf# &V $1000/mo. Agt 722-7776 lU .UIPTS. Orapaa ...... IP Color TV ha oof'Jlae. L\L • Grubb & Ellls Reellors newly redecorated. E'~lgE cOndo 28R 2BA rrWh 1 Evening. 760-1755 530 W. Wilson •Clo9eto3Fwys •• &_ ~-· ,__, p0oi & ..... to • ~6200 I $3500/mo 8181790-7302 Yd ttnl complex. $1275 · .. . . . TSL MGMT (405,55,73)andSou1h Frtg, dtlhw • SlOYa ~ ...id...c& lcllcft'I .... A==.~i SPYIUSSllLL RENTALS AVAILABLE wit.rtr ........ '" \r\x r\~I llj \ 11 c11 .. • ••• •11 zuz 122•90~t!;~e~:?3 ·==~"'.. Ind Nopet•5'5-'855 "· • N. Coe9C Hwy. 5Br 38a Lux Home. Lse Shortterm&wln1ar IUUIUll1·1• REALTORS BRAND NEW •lnd1ViduallyControlled •1--* t.gunee.:fl....._584 COLDW<?U BAN~eRLI option eveil 11111 '850to$1400 · Ill Jl912 2Br1Ba +lergetolt. $525• dep 18R mobile EntryAlarmSystems Frtg. dllhwuhef. stove Share w/2 gefl CO.M $750.000, 831-5866 W1ftrfrt9' lle•ts l /li4e hlu1 TnltH ... Huot aundeek. $1195/mo home. Sewra. M•1Ur• •CableTV Available Incl. No petl 5'~55 hOutl, qui..,.. Frp&. 2 WANT OLDE CdM _ I ', 2Br 11/tBa. gar $825. PENINSULA YEARLY Avail now. 6'8-08'5 lldulls. ~~ ... Pt:-s.s1~1 •New laundry Fecllltles •CLIFF HAVEN 2BR 28A. ear gar, S425 ut11 Incl. ..... ··-" h 1 prop 10, 25•3 Orenge. 6'2-2520 *Cute 2BR 1 BA, shr Liil llW Newport ..,...... •Covefed Perking new deoof vaulted cell-Eileen 759-1808 E:~1thebest .. ,y,..._.orcaa oyO\lr I It 17• 1100 lndry No parking $825 •PrlvateBalconyto I ' pet iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii x...-~ . loan. "foreclosures Ole. •• trl •• LIKE NEW. 2Br 2Ba beeut. PENINSULA WINTER 211 11&, htJ ,.RI•& WTSlll IPIOlllS Gll'denl ~/ 0-~·64';' 213-4 ... ULllA net 10 you" Agl 673-5599 . twnhse. xtre lrg, $1050. •FURNISHED* ' fer J ' 2BR l 'nBA getage w/d •Elegant Atmoshpere mo g • SO. COAST METRO . ...,.,.. Cntl .... 1024 ... ~ 1 7 ~is~':S,69:!8~i~; ·~~:Ab=yd~~o 111111.::.2 hkup S850imo 5'8--0168 •Sorry No Pets •• Tll UY• ~ & =in& 2 k~~ HIGH income from duplex dReeReftook's URd -Pn1a1al1 2 1 LUXURY 2B 2aa condo Jlg. 3BR 2BA IOWef dptx. s·••r"'"' LI W E/SIDE 2BR New paint. 288 ~s'!.~ 1 3BR. 2'.\BA. c:loM to lhot>-prMtageL G,..t tor cot-loeated In the heart of EST FLOOR PLAN! m; .ywiy 28R 2BA r · $ l300 • drapes, ga.r .. lndry. good 1....., t, .....,.'* o ping & dining. Super Y19W leQe ~IL $325/mo. where ell Iha ac11on II on Xlnl condl Prime loeatlonl • ..,. le H... Obi 'l;r. frplc, pool. lg patio. gar ... ., 721-IMO loc $780 666-401910 Bristol. Costa Mesa Slg-dedc. YrlM $2250Mo cALL 5'0-7716 Iv meg ~ :::e= p:~n S3'0.000. Margie. Agl Bkr 642-3850 !~ ~2-~;~ & IH I OCV.NFRONT WINTER ""• 11111 ~2'26/~nds 71'/Ml-1244 ~Via Udo 875-9289 144-tMI 979-8280 or 5'0-7355 WELL furnished 3Br 2Ba NEWPORT HEIGHTS 210 •Nicely furn 2BRdu 1B~ 2BR 1'it8A, close to -------------~ Home on lg R-2 cornef 101 oceanfront. $1600/mo. •'B' E. tSth St. 3Br. 2Ba. ~,..: $~/mople beech. $950/mo 900 .U ... Plml1'1 on 18th St 1 Blk ... t of 2Br 28a close 10 oc.en. gerege lrptc vacant g ..,. · · Sea Lane. 6''-2611 We'• gt¥e you the down In Newport Blvd. Asking $900/mo. 8181«6-9392 $1200 T56-85Sa · YIW REITILS ON BEACH 2BR 2BA 9ICchg for a ltlare of own-1235,000 Owflr 675-0647 11:: • I .. __ zt•• F enhlp. You make the I •u-' IHI "9&HI t ,_. -Newport Heights 1 BR. 1 BACHELOR PAD. almost ='°';s lneW, lg deott. mthty pyrma a we lhere -up x. BA. rear un11, $800/mo oceentront $950/mo. dbl ·.~~~ 1,1?:~· apprec. You receive atura reliable loc:et deck. No peta. Walk 10 rent, • S800 sec 2BR w/vlew $1050/mo __ g _______ 1 100% tax benefits. Mu.t N.B. couple experience"' baacll. $850/mo I net 979-5257 2BR• Den. S 1350/mo . .---------• tiaw deef1 credit. Agt aalate mgmt will HOUMlit waler. ~ Newport Heights hm 2BR DOCKSIDE RE 722·9730 t57.ec>02 Oya, Ev. Wknds Your Home while you'r ••• -• -·-lllT 1BA. Q•r. lg yard, w/d W&LI Tl l&lllA ISL gone. F.. negotiable .• -&-_. hkups $1100/mo Quiet Bonded,,..,,, 751-3510 $2000/mo. & 2Br 2Ba neighbomood. 6'5-369611BR & den, 1'>r8a 2-sty ........ lll'J LIDO ISLE Nloel Frplc. Agt 673·S35' XLNT E'slde loeation. 3BR ~ tw;irr;:: 1~~:::. fliii ~ "BEST BUY" on large 1~111 2BR + Den 2 '.AaBA H•BA. gar. frplc, trJ-.ptex., w/d. 2-car ger, gated U Traditional 3 bdrm witll w/SPECTACULR VtEWI 380 Woodland. $995/mo comm. pool & spe on the •38f Ba= beamed callings, re-2723 Ocean Blvd Aveil 1113 6'6-9906 I bay $2250/mo 240-1752 1795 000 modeled kitchen & Fr. $2600/mo. 675-6900 ' doors opening to south •TOWNHOUSE 2Bd UI p at Beautiful lrg 3BR Duplex, Patio lrom ll·"ng room & rm. furn or unfurn. Xlnt W . .. , 2'i'!B• den dbl gar O\IH ... nus rm. 2 m111er bedroom Air-• · • Bay toe. -car garage. c dllioned just siepa to sundeek. pool, tennis. 1BA. fenced yard 3 biles $l500-Sl750/mo, yearly on 1 & ..._.:.~.. $1700/mo. 1t 673-7362 to Doheny Beh. Avl now 558•15,510 52'-63•4/e tenn a ..,.....,,, $985/mo 650·4029 , 831· 1•00 Altrectlve duptex-3 BR, 2 ' BLUFFS • $8.49,500 BA, patio, deck. F/P, IO taall a 3BR 2',.,BA. end unit, pool, Clssociated •, - gar.pule view S 1650 Yill 2134 mini cond. gerege. "All HI HO~l Lind• 721-0116 Grubb & s 1425/Mo. 760-338• Agl ttOMI ' ·--Elli• Reeltors . lov y llN.'.; • .IY ..::• REAL ESTATE poof/spa RV prtcng. Incl BLUFFS Condo. 3Br":s~""',""'•·111 SELL ... -grndr & Poot fees S 16001 2''»B•. end unit. Frplc, lrg :$ ,..~ REAL TORS WILi nm~ mo. 71'-892-0579 patio. garage. pool ? • E= ~~ lt~u!>:.!! SPACIOUS 38< 281 home S1•501mo lse. 640-7185 ~ ~ ~ throuch classif 1ed .. . .. Merrill Lynch Realty Sell y .. ,,.,,,.,, e. ....... '41-5671 for information & surP,iaingly low cost. 38 R 2'1\.BA buuly. with pat1l-llk• backyar.dil BALBOA 4Br. fP S150o ..,. ·~ lmmed OCCl>Y PoSSlble. '"s13000d5/ Mlgh~ BAYFRONT Condo 2Br """",....,.., .. Shoft or long term I•. ,25/mo gar.,..,-'"" $1650 Children & pets DK Hl-2•20 °' 983·30•8 I I BALBOA CoY8S 28r. den. f~~O.. ~~t>t• ut. 4 e'~~R~f~B<. ~ ~.A.V r •. den. dock for eo· bolt ~ .. J ffplc, 2 cat gw~ in· YNrly. S.750 \'f:"\V.i"'l.--t"VJ' i,u•" ll etudel lllfdener dultl. LINDA ISLE 2 story 58f, '4 • W .. "\.. "'-' I JI '-n-pets S 1350. 640-0020 boat <Jock, $10,000 REALTORS Ask '°' Chuek .................. NEW luxury 3bf 3ba,pool. IUl.llll 111· 1• FABULOUS New contem-spa 2 911ega, welk to ---------11 pot'wy. 28R 3BA condo. beach. Move In ellow-llUT LllATmlll P91\0femlcviawlooean& anc:.11215/Mo 111-+dep Beaut upgredad v.,....... harbor. $3500 teo-338.t PENTHOUSE. 1BR over WallftrMl ..... IH. 3BR tBa hM near Marina toolclng ettrec:ttve ptua. 1111.nuu1-1• HI. Nice ...... ICJ\OOIS. See gate. lovely clu.,,_ Refrlg W/d d/W I 1200 & pool, gym $195 mo. ON the beeeh, pvt rd, ct. 831~51 (,, !Me-5186 ChelHre RE 75t-1177 luxe duplex. 3Bf 2'A8a, 3 R 2, 8 x G ~ fully equip kltet't, w/d, • -\ A. wnhse. • HI Hl Y upgr~ New-apectatui. \llew $2000 tre lg. Matt BR. 2-car get, port North Condo, 28' 873-0.-210t983.3177 . terlOed )'d, Ffplc. W/D. 2'~811. $1700/mo. Witl hkup. llJIS ll).et58 contldaf ..... ~tlon. Spadoua & contemporwy RUSTIC 2 ledfoom HOUM •97.t918 2BAt1-t&A 2 atory. frplc,IL.Mge Front & Aw Yd ••Ill llJllRI n4c9 earpe(. 0.:r.Jt No,,.._ Uhta Pd Cute tM prd .... ger. dedl. Ooaer'8lda 1750 Mo+dep 831-' 147 ., Avi t 1/ t Drive by S1350Aot 87&--4912 c::r_ I"" 3306f.19"1St MTS mo i PACiOUS. SuMy 2• IRUll "" ~a t-12t1 n. ...,,.. lrplc. tndry ""· 1••t jtrd I pwt peelO, I t1GOhnO Awell w .••t4U 5048: Crunchy crocheted cables and popcorns give a choice of Designer ,., .. looks. Oirections tof 2 cafdigans & coordlnllting tabllld. U..worsted. $Z9934-46. $3.25 PLUS St.25 PH FOA EACH MTTERN OAOEREO The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn your Hidden Treasures into CASH · $ 1. wi~epay~nt 4 ·Lines-7 Days s 10.80 NAME AO ORE SS PHONE CITY ST A TE l" ..___...._ ........... ......._ ___ ..__ AO COPY 4 I~ minimum. ~~ 4 words per line. --Nilff. ENCLOSfO--. ____ _ ' .. .. • CALL 642~333 between 7 AM &. 7 PM Orange Coast Dally Piiot CLA§§U7ED ADl'Blll'ISING SALES We are ADDING to our aales staff. If you can type at least 45 wpm and have great tel~mmunication skills -We can off er you a base salary + commiMion AND a q.rtplace to work. hU 'D•e .t ,..,,, 'l'&te .4 f'•ll•-6le. Do yoanell a ra•or -f.all at. Peto B levl• er~ I• V euea• 842·4321 • FUN AM'ER SCHOOL WORK 11 Yea.re & Older Work Eveninqa & Saturday YOU CAN AVEltAGE PER WEEK s7500 OR MOREi PHONE: 498-3321 All Tranrportatiou Pro..Sded By An Adult Superrit0r W8111HR ..... 1 111111 .-.-......___ ---~ PM $400-$1006/11 NEW oeybed White l Br.... WllNIHt 111 11 l tNndle~ltitS ..... , ..... (WM9t -1111m111 ......... '231Arm Earn up to $600 a mon1h working part-time delivering newspapers. Monday-Friday 2PM·5PM. Week- ends and Holidays A~-7.~M. Must have reliable transportation, i~ suranc• and a good driving record. Call 714LU2-4333 Ext 205. Ask for Rodger, lttw11n 7'AM-7PM 't .. : .. ' . . .. • t . • • ·c L A s ·S I F I &· D 8 4 2 - 5 8 1 8 BOATS MOTORCYCLES · :10 4 WORDS DAYS Move Oat! Need to sell anything that rolls, floats or flies? ... We have a Fantastic Special to help you Move 'Em Out for only ~7'' Extra word&-50$ each,. Ads that run 7 days are an additional $4.00. Call for more rnformaflon. Because this 19& special rate, we request prepayment by check, MasterCard or VISA. ·' . -----------------· ~ ----------------- PH~O~.__~~~~~~~~ CIRCLE ONE MASTERCARD/VISA DRINT AO BELOW . ' .... . f . " . . 1.-~ , . ADDRESS STATE ___ _ ZIP AMT ENCLOSED S £xP.OATE . . . . . . ... -~ .. J ~ . -. 842- 4' "9CI MOTHEM ..UMOADWAY MortUf'ery • Cb11P91 110 Bfo.Gwey, Coata M-. M2~9150 FIND through clauified ·STARTING A NEW B.USINESS?? The Legal Departmeni at the Daily P1Jot 1$ pleased· to an- nounce a new serv.c:e now avail· able to new businesses. We will now SEARCH the name tor you at no extra charoe. and save you the time and the trip to the Court House in Santa Ana. Then, of course. after the search is completed we will file your fictitious business neme statement with the County Clerk, publish. once a wee« for four weeks as required by law and then_ file your proof of publi- cation with the County Clerk . Pleue stop by to file 'f04ir hct1tiou1 bullnaS statement at ' the Dady Pik>t Legal Depart· ment, 330 West Bay, Costa ~. Caaifornta. If you e11n not stop by. peeae c8'I us at (714) 642-4321, Extenlton 315 or 316 and we wilt make arrangements for you to h.,. this procedure by mail. , If you should have any further questions. please call us and we will be more than glad to assist you Good luck in your new business!! TU RN UNNEEDED MERCHANDISE TO '4.80 . .... , .. ,.__ ............. .. ... , .• • z:. ......... ... -.., ... a.. .... • ......... ._.._ .. ,. ...... ..... ... _, __ _ .. •nsCHEVROLET g', . Home of the Serengeti Blazer Mi:tf@Jf H• Call our friendly salesmen f0< details 5 79·5100 1·800-228·7240 17071 E. Im penal Hwy ·Yorba Linda. California c.,,,,.,.. ,., • S•rrio• I S•IHlio• THEO~ ROBINS THE 9»> STORE 2060'liarbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-0010 o SADDLEBACll Sales leasing & Service Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-&®-831-33n 714-380-1200 2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 8 JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS M•c.de9-8enz ACURA 11tt Quell ••• 1001 QUiii ... .... ,.,. 8Nctl ....... 9wtt 0 8 .... •LeMing • S....•~ Pena•~ ~ • Pllttt ..... 71--ACUM 112·872 "CMI Your ,,,...,.,_,.,, $ S~~~Y.IL~& 0 .. NEW LOCATION! SANTA ANA AUTO MALL 1500 Auto Mell Dr., Santa Ana 135-3171 Newport/SS Frwy. at Edinger iSales Dept open 7 days Semce Houra: Mon.-Frl. 7am-10pm BUENA PARK STANTON GARO N GAOVE PACIFIC OCEAN 2MO HAMOR BLVD. • COSTA MESA • • 23863 Rockfiekt Blvd .. Lake For .. t, Irvine Auto C9nter .. HUNTINGTON •&ACt-4 ·' • ACUAA ULEl-''11• . • ... _,llTI 11111 lllill .... · 1 Ill • lllU . lwl&illll119'Mllla(l1t)IG ... ,.,~ ·AttEN • OLDSMOBILE • CADILLAC • GMC TRUCKS ·-· . m/582·0800 LAGUNA NIGUEL • NO MASSI.LS • HO OVEftf'RICIHO •HO GIMMICKS 0 HOUSE of IMP.ORTS, Inc. Mercedes-Jlenz 6862 Manchester Boulevard Buena Park 0 llBVICI 213 or 714/MERCEDES,M_.,. 8a-6p M·F 7a-6p ,. Where 1·5 and 1·9lmecl. SaL 8a·2p Garden City &n VOLKSWAGEN~ ~ IN WESTMINSTER.~ 7600 Westminster Blvd., Westminster (71,)891-9378 (213>130-28'3 • Go.~ . , G\\0-~s Orange Coast Jeep Eagle c.tolHr S.df/ad.Jolt • Sales (JW' #I f'rl#lct • Service ~8023 • Leu.la' 2114 Barbor Blvd: • Coata Me•a ~ • c: ·CAMPBEi I ~ NISSAN/~~ lfl(H • low PH<•• • No G1mm1ch • Greot Selectto,, • friendly People • hcellent Service 11135 leach lov.._d ~ 9eodl (714) 142·7711 (2 IJ) ff2· 1"63 •&EACH LINCOLN •RCURY . ••JI" SALES -LEASING SERVICE -PARTS (714) 848-7739 18800 leech Bl•cl. (714) 9~1008 Hu.Attnqtce IMcb, CA 92647 • • • "':S a.H "l BORDA DSAlD 111 OllAllO& CO . Salee • 8'n1ce • Parts Lftalnl AD Makee 988-1969 11132...._ ...