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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-11-01 - Orange Coast Pilot• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER I, 1988 25 CENTS Children left alone; si'tter arrested Unlicensed woman faces child neglect charges after CM n eigh bor~calls police By JONATHAN VOLZK.E Of .. O..., .... ._ An uoliccnscd Costa Mesa baby sitter was arrested Monday er she allegedly left eight infants tod- dlers alone for at least an r while she ran errands: police 1<1. A neighbor called police when she Coast Irvine and Newport Beach agree on !Mze and use of theSanJoaquln Hills tollway./ A3 Nation New book, TV report lirlk John Kennedy's as- MaSlnatlon to a Louisiana crime syndicate./ M Entertainment The accent Is on com3dy In "The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940. "/A 10 lndez Births Bulletin Board Business Cluslfled Comics Entertainment In the Service Oplnlori People A7 A3 BS-6 87-9 A12 A1 0 AS A8 A 11 allegedly saw Stephanie Kay Young leave her Coriander Drive apartment The neighbor knew Young cared for several children dunng the day and became concerned for their safet). Lt. Alan Ke nt said. The neighbor knoclc:ed on Young's door and telephoned the apanment to no avail. and finally called police. Kent said. Wh~n officers am ved. they peered 1n a Wlndow oft he apan ment and saw a 3~month-old child lying o o a bed. The bed did nor have railings or any device to keep the child from falling, Lt. Gary Webster said Look.ing 1n another wi ndow the officers saw seven more toddlers. five in cribs and two on the floor. Kent sajd. It was la1er detemuned the children ranged in age from 3 to I 7 months. The officers crawled into the a pan- ment lhrough an open Wlndow and found the the children were alone 1n the house. Kent said All were 1n good health. Y,oung's telephone was off the hook Wlth the receiver stuffed in a drawer. apparently so an) parents who hap. pened to call would ~t a busy SJgnal and would not be awa~ their children had been left alone. Webster specu- lated. Officers .it the apartment called several women from the police dl'· panment to help care for the children "The pl.a.cc was clean. but the children needed their diapers to be changed and things like that·· Webster saJd. .. There were also lod toys around that they could ha .. e choked on_·· Authonucs said offic.crs found contracts and other pape~·ork ap. parcntly showrng Yo ung operated a child~ center o ut o f her hOml' aJthough she was not hcenst"d b~ the city. county or st.ate She charged rough!) $60 a week. according 10 reports.. "It appear~ 1\ was a mone~·malung business for her " Ken1 !>atd Whtie the ofT1ceN were at the apanment ) oung returned home wuh another Lnldnl 1n her arms, We~er said he told poh<.:1'. a neighbor was supposed to -.-.a 11 h the rhildren. but co uldn't remember the netghbor's name \\ ebs1er said He sa1d Young "a) S«n a1 a bdn "h1!e rhe children v.ere home: .tlonc: She 11.as arrt'~led un sus.p1c1on of (PleaK 8ee BABY/ A2) Lizard-like creature in bay still a mystery Police will call in experts in effort to identify creature By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of-0.., ......... Newpon Beach police said the~ are unsure of the 1dent1t) of a large llzard- hke creature haunting the Balboa Coves communn' and wttl ._,sk e\· pens to help determine "hat the' bave on their hands. The mvstenous creature has be-en described. by some as r~mbh ng a huge h.zard and by others as a ca1man a South American cous•n ofallig.ators and crocodiles. ··we really dcn't lcno "' ~hat 11 " but we're tr;.ing to find out·· pollcl' spokesman R obert Oak.le~ said .. We need to 1dent1f) 11 and 10 find uut what 1t cats.·· large P-:>hce and anrmal control officers plan 10 talk with residents "ho ha' e S«n the am mal a nd then co nsult an e~pen to 1denuf) the t rea1ure. Oak.le) sa1d One resident who has so«n 1t said she doubts :1 1s a c&men Barbara Fonev11lc ~atched the creature from :'\ewporfs lagoon dur· ing a lo~ ude S('veral weeks ago . It climbed along the bulk.head walls ixfore burying 1t~lf in the sand. she said "It looked hke a hz.ard."' Fon.ev1lle said "It had a he.ad hJce a ll2Md and a tonpe h ke a snake ·· Unhlce alligators -.tiose tudcS a.re rough and te~tured. this rephle had smooth. leather-like sk.JO. she sa.td. It was 4 to S feet long. gray in color and large bodied. .. It was the ughest thin@ I 'e ever seen:· Fonev11le !Wl1d. Neither could two animal .on trol officers" ho r~ponded to calls 1dent- 1f' the creature she said -..The' said the' 'd ne,er Sttn an~ thing llke n ·· Police Log Public Notices SPorts Weather Weddings A3 8 4,9 81-4 A2 A9 0.,.., -,.._.,lee...,_ Re.ldent Gene.teve Mace and her dog Sonny are on the looltoGt for the caiman. Oak.le) said 1t"~ possible the ucaturc 1s a vapet~ ,.f iguana and may once ha' e ~n a nc,use lilold pt-t tha1 v.-as relt"a5C\J "ner !I oc~4me ILlO Wbatevet 1t 1s. res.dents don't want (PleaK eee CR.EA TUR& I A.2 J Reagan visits Fullerton to stump for Bush I President lashes Dukakis. declares that 'he's no FDR. By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Ot 1M 0.., -IUi« Prcs1dent Reagan tnumphantl) re- turned today to the same un1vers1t) campus where he was once v11llied to stump for Vice President George Bush. About 2.400 Cal State Futlcnon students. most of whom wef'C' st1 II 1 n diapers when the president last v1~­ itcd lhe un1 vers1ty 1n I 970, a nd another 2,400 of the party fa11hful enthusiastically welcomed Reagan 10 the Titan campus. which was d raJ>('d with flags and red, white and hlue bunting. The president was Joined on !he dias by Gov George DcukmeJ1an. congressional candidates C-hns Cox and Dana Rohrabacher and other Republican leaders dunng a C-ah- fomia cem~ign swrng for Bush and vi~ presidential nominee Dan Quayle. Looking fir and soundin$ fiest} Reagan lambasted Dcmocra11c nomi- nee Michael Dukak1s. He picked up the GOP theme that Dukak1 s 1s a liberal. far to the let\ of mainstream Amen ca. "When our liberal fnends refuse. until the last week of the campaign. even to whisper the 'L word ' and insist that this election 1s not about ideol<>I)'. ifs about competence. they're Just acknowledging that where they want to ta.kc Amcdca. America doesn•t want to go," Reagan said. ln volong the names of past Demo- cratic presidents. the Republicans have practically claimed as their own Reagan said .. Our opponcnrs sa) the' 're in the 1radn1on of FDR. Harrv Truman and John Kenned~ Bu-t from the econonl\ and national defense. the\ '\e taken pos111ons onl) a McGovern could lo'e Don't be fooled. folks. G eorge Bush·s oppo- nent 1s no Ham T ruman and he's no FDR." The president ~as interrupted re- peatedly b~ the partisan crov.d It was a \'Cl) different rt"Cepuon that !hen-governor Regan rcce1' ed on Feb. 9. 1970. when hostile <otudents shouled obscen111es 1n protest of h1<. un1vers11 y pollC'1es The confrontation dunng the he1~t of the Vietnam war and national campus unrest prompted the angry Reagan to dt"mand the students .. shut up " Several day~ later. two of the hecklers were singled out and arrested for d1srup11ng an academic function and Reagan shut down theen11rc stale college and uni vers1ty system for four day~ to perm11 a cooling-off penod. Eighteen ~ears later. Reagan again had the students heated up, bu1 this 11me they shouted pra1~ for their retinng d'uef e-c.ecut1ve. He asked the students to carr) their enthusiasm into the polling hooth~ Tuesday. "ll'sd1s1urb1ng to me that so many of Amenca·s young people don't show up at !he polls to vote," Reagan said. "With so many years ahead. )'Ou have a big st.alee in the election ·· A group of about two dolen protesiers tned 10 disrupt an other- w1st" overwhelmingly suppoM1ve re- (Pleaee eee RltA.OAft/ A.:I) Slow-growth group rips HB developers' brochure Gary Valent B> ROBERT BARKER 01 ,,.. OeltJ ,,.., 11•11 \low-gro'A-1h pn1punt'nts and rt''>1· dents shouted foul lL°Xia) after •ht• J1stnbut1on in Hunttnglon Be.s,h 01.1 tinxhure b' hea' 11\ hankrolled dt' 1 rl11pmrn1 ;ntere~ts· fhe shclc -paper t"lr•\{ hure. h.1nJ- ' Jmed 10 h1Jme~ '''er thl "'Ct'l.en,l 1<. dece1' 1ng m 1~le .1.Jrng Jnu •~.1Julen1:· op~rnents da1mcd The brochure allege<. thJt 'Llltr' '113\ tta'e Ill ,l.)mc up -.-.11h S ''' m lhon 1fthC\ Jpprm e \lca<.un· J a ,1,1-.-..gov.1h 1n1t1J l1'l' ,,n 1he '"' ballot. The brochurt: put o ut tn thr '(1110 J .-omm111ee ..a1s .. l>un't Lei 1>1:· velopers OfT1he Hool>. -\•Ill",.,"" \1easure J ··The '-'o ,1 n I t omrn1tlt'L0 1 ~ fi nanced b' developer' Tom Hs.rnian the Lhamn.i.n 11! lht· 'i es on J C'ommm~ <.a id tc~a' the rnes\3ge ··1s totalh opixi~1te "' ,.. hat the~ (de1elopers1 rcalh ~t.rnJ t•1r .. The~ ·re sa~mga no 101c "dga1n <.1 che Je,elopers ~hen auuall' 11 s 1n fa' or 01 de' elope rs I hupt' tht: '•Hl'r' ca n ~ through 1he \mOl.l''l run Gar-\ ak nt 3h a <.Jle\rnJ n "ti• called -the nt"-.-.~paper h• ,1•mnl.:1 n said he belie' cd the brochure "3ldJUSt tt':c oppo-.1te df" h3t'<.realh intend ed ··Thc' must rcalh be k'ared. ·· loa•d \. aten1 · · ·1 J o n 1 see tha1 ~e need more traffi, and mo re compact h' 1ng and n<H st.itT people 1n hl.e craz~ Con- d1t1om art> a lot worst' since I moq·d here ahout I 0 ~cars ago · The brochure lms <,(',e-~a1 reasons "'h) people sho uld '1,tc nl un J - 1h.it 11 threatt'ns polite pro1ecuon. 1ha1 11 doc'> nothing t.i t•J,l' traffic on the San Die-go h("('-.-.a\., &ach Boulc:1arJ and Panfi, ( ,iast H igh- (Pleue 9eC SLOW/ A2) . Restaurant It's up to the voters on how1 mayface QC school chief is chosen 1 criminal By ROBERT HYNDMAN Ol_Dellr .......... Nearly lost on the cro-.-.ded "'n' ~ hall. 1 " .1 measure that asks whether the cou nt~ sup('nnit·ndrn 1 of schools ought to be elected t"I' \ oter. or a rf\\•I n ll'd b) the Board of Educa tion. And while 11 Wt1a> nor be grabbing a Int ,,, n••l ". on the long list of <.'and1dates. in1t1at1 ,e~ Jnd 1111.J' measures vying for vote~· attention th•' 'l"JI Measure <\ po101s 10 a funda mental d1r1ert·n,t' •'' op1n1on on how to choose a supennteneent • Dr Ro ben Peterson. "ho has been 1T-<'lt'\·1t·d ''' the post six times SJOC'e ta Icing ofli~ rn I "'ti· ha' 'did he believes an appo1nttd supen ntendenl "'t'uld t'( the "lackey" of the count~ Board of falu,Jt1on Jnd less responsive to ''Oters. "The appointment process turns a pu hh, servant into a burcaucnu ... he !>a•d •· -\n appo1ntt·d supcnntendent is insulated from the n 11zens bt-cau~· he no lonaer has to reoort to the voten. ln!ltend hr would ~ the JependL .... board " The voting pr<Xt''-' ... p.;rt 0f a 1:hn ~ 3:-ld halance <.)\tern des1gnt"J i1 ri1.i1ntarn e~uai •''"'' · ~t-.-.~n the supennll·nJt"r .•:i•' lhl· ,,h1)()l ~•'·"'' Pererson said O range Count' \Ola-. ..... :i '• .lgn"<' ~ rt'C'ent \une\ .:-<•n,1 u, ·c~ ..,, l 1-1 Pro lC'''''; \tark Baldas\are iound nc.i.~ ' . .,. •' 1h1rd' ''' th, respondents faYor a n 'nt11"11,i11 •n ''' 1hr c urrrnt s~~tem ofelec11ng the scho.,I<. ~ '1~r · 1)nh 1-rx·rcC'r• fa, or a s-.-.1t1..h to an app1.,1nted 'urc.·nn1C'ndcn1 and I" percent are undC<'1ded. the \JP c' ' 1 n,1 The O\tNhelmmg ''PP<'<.1111 n .,, J , hangl' 1\ found in nearl~ e'er. Jem ·g~.1rh11 .:atcg,,r. Baldassare found. and me.i n' thcrl" 1• h1tle chanl<' Measure A ~111 be ~pr<n ed \Jd "' lhJ: tht" h1q (1r\ le$SOn of 1918 when an '"e,.....hC'lm n~ '(ll rerct'nt ''' Orange ('ount~ \Oters reJe-ctC'd a '1md.i1 mca tun- Pleue eee SELECTIO?'C/Al) charges B~ ROBE RT HYNOM °'·' The 'i:"r<•r' Buch Poh~ Dcpan- mrnt re, om mended toda~ that felo n) d 1afl<'\ tit tiled apmst qpcntors of :h<' Rt'u~n E I~ restaurant for ~re-rati ng a plumhing system that .t tegedh Jumpcd ~" sewage into ''""' ix'n Harhnr r c1hcc '"' r\l1g.at,1rs presented their re~)n to l)cpul' D1stnct ."-ttorney Diane K..ldletz askin& that she file felon' cha~es o f unla•wful d1schaf)e of ~~age a '1olat1o n of the st.ate -.-.ater code Police spokesman &b Oakk' refrfl'C'd qu<'~llon~ concerning the case to Kadleu . who wu una\lulablc for com men I this morning. Pills found in trick-or-treaters' candy i\n 1nvntipt1on by polttt end state water..quahty o ffi cials de· termincd that scv.-age ma) have be-en dumped a1 least three to Sill UmC\ a year mro 1ht-wattn of Newpon Harbor. "hene''Cf the noauna fl:$· taurant's plumprng system malfunc- tioned By BOB VAN EHEN °' ... °"" ......... Two Hunt1naton Beach mothers found pills, o ne tentanvely 1den11fied as the d~ Stelazine. 1n theu 9·ycar- old dliu&hters' candy bap when they returned home tnck-0r·treat1n1 1n one of two t.11nted candy ttpons on the Oranec C0&4t on Hal\owcen "Apperen\ly they wtnt out tnck-or- treatinc tQfC\hcr and when thn returned home their mother~ found ~ pilh. IOOS< in their hnR~ ...... 1d Huntington Beach Police Lt. 8111 Mamelli. "One of them was a blue ptll, wh1rh the ~ysteians Desk Reference 1dent- 1f1cs as Stelazinc. The other wa'! a White rill and tbctt IS some WT'lllll& On it but can•t make it out. We have no idea where they came from. The rtpon says the kxls wrnt to m ore than 40 houses." ' Mamelli said there htd been no other reports of druas found 1n the ne1&hborhood fhe o ther report of tainted candv ' WU the muh of an a«1dent. accord- in& 'o ln-ine police. Tbe manaaer of Dan~r Druss 1n Uni~ty Part s.atd some PKUacs ofHenbty·s Kisses were left 100 loq nein lo moth belh and pic ked up a stronc odor. wh1dt alarmed sotM parents. .. ll was ev1<kntJy a small nwnbtt of that t0mcbow dida't 8et st0tt maftllef Bob Raia said. c chtcked further stock aftd found "° other ~~s Wlth tM ume problem. R'aht no ... we're Just wa111ni for any custome~ to call about 1\. So far. noth1na-" County health officaals said there was little danacr that any of the toiu cit) from the moth bells pen- etrated the p1Kkq1na into the c.an- dies. But offkials arc still a<h1s1ng that candaes lhat smell hkc moth balls "°' bt e.~ Another cue involVlnt a fom4J' subtta.ntt ~ '" caody OC'CUrrt'd 1n Su ~ Coun~. wbeft two Powa" *OCM'ft rcponcd fiftdl"I pills U\ ~ of jdly beens ~ aa a R.llDh s J supcrmarltel in E nc1n1t.a~ Th(' pellet\ were found to be non-toll.le ho we1 er Elstwt)cre in Oran&t' ount . thr~ O\nard t~n-aaers we~ attacked ~1th broken botUcs at Knott''> 8en) Farm m B~na Part The thrtt -l Q. ear- o£d Michael W Mams.1r IR-year-old Michael A Lamo n. and an un1~n­ titled l 6-)"QN>ld -'M'rT hospital· tttd Wlth s.&ab wounds. Othtrwi~ rount law enfort't'- mt-nt .,enacs reponed a mostly quirt HalloWttn ruab\. (Ph ah w CA1fl>T I A2) ,,.. . Tht Reuben E Lee ha& been 10 Ntwp<>n Beach for 24 years.. floaona in the Landa lsk channel Poli('( en' 1ronmen\a.I coord1nal0f G rq A.rmMrona said \as\ mon\h that the ~ of the ovnflow sys'em 11 arouncb for cruni.nal ~ ~ ~umbul& S)"tem on tbe 19(). foot.loft&. Sl·foot·h· ~t ia- d\ades a \ .000-foot '"*IU.. ...... wbd\ all gab. .... -.... draias~~;r ...._Art• M!I • -• w• • • Seg~rstrom drops hotel, wins OK on Town Center By JONATHAN VOLZ&E Ot ........... Development company C.J. for a smaller hol.CI under the council Sqerstrom & Sons sheared a 332- room hotel from its.plans for Town approval. Center to pin approval for the TownCenteralrcady1sbometo thc project from the Costa Mesa City Oranac County Performing Arts Council Monday. Center, South Coast RCJ>Cl1ory, sev- eral banks and the Westin South A 20--story tower, however, was not • Coast Plaza Hotel. With the new removed from the plan. additions, Sq.erstrom will build the ~trom sought an increase in 20-story South Coast Plaza Tower, the rJ\llimum square footage for the which will be the second tallest m the project, which is bounded ~ Bristol county. Street. Avenue of the Arts, Sunflower The tower is planned at 288 feet Avenue and lhe San Diego Freeway, high, roughly the same as Center but Malcom Ross, Segerstrom's di-Tower, also in Town Center and the rector of planniq and design, drop-highest building in the county. ped the rcquesL Segerstrom will provide for and .. 1 know staff is concerned about build traffic improvements at eight th~ addition," Ross said. ''Perhaps lcey intersections affected by the that's a well-founded concern. We'd project -Bear Street and the Corona like to take back the hotel.·· Del Mar Freeway on and off ramps; Scgerstrom could resubmit plans Bristol Strttt and Town Center Drive; Bristol Street and. Anton Boulevard; Bristol Street and the San Dieeo Freeway; Bristol Street and Baker Street; 'Anton Boulevard aqd A venue cif the Arts and Sunflower A venue and Main Street. Ross said officials aJso arc con- siderina buildina an overpass on Bristol Street that would take traffic on the anery over Anton Boulcva.rd to keep traffic moving as smoothly as possible. Sandy Genis, a leader in the city's slow-growth movement. said she could accept the project. "If you're going to have this kind of project, I'd rather sec it here," she said. "I still think it's too large, though." Councilman David Wheeler voted apinst the project. SELECTION PROCESS UP TO VOTERS ••• From Al Even so, the Orange County Grand Jury adamantly maintains that an appointed superintendent is far better than the current system. Measure A's placement on the ballot, in fact. was prompted by a 1986 Grand Jury report that said the superintendent should be appointed by the Board of Educauon, not elected by voters. The report said while an elected schools chief may be more responsive to parents and taxpayers, an ap- pointed superintendent may be more likely to represent the best interests of education for the county. "A superintendent hired by an elected school board is directly ac- countable to that board and the standards they set. This would preclude the cloudmg of issues characteristic of a political cam- paign," the Grand Jury stated. 'The office should not be within the political arena of elections.·· The JUry rcpon also noted that candidates for a board-appointed posiuon could be recruited through a nationwide cffon. An elected super- intendent draws candidates only from Orange County. Further fueling the Grand Jury"s enthusiasm for a cha nge was what 11 saw as Peterson's indifference toward its recommendations. And 10 Janu- ary 1987, former members o~ the Grand Jury called a press conference to complain that Peterson was not taking their past recommendations seriously. "We continue to believe that any county organization that has a $50 million annual budget should take public scrutiny seriously and not simply react defensively," said Marilyn Brewer, chairwoman of the I 985-86 Grand Jury education com- mittee. "There is a resistance to change and there is a resistance to progressive ideas that could be used for the betterment of the county." In response, Peterson aocused the jurors of simply trying to create dissatisfaction within the education department to "condition the public into giving up thciJ right to choose a superintendent." But what's really at stake bc?hind Measure A is whQ_gcts control of the district's $50 milJion annual budget. Although the board reviews the district budget, Peterson bas final control over it. He also has j urisdic- tion over the district's 800 employees and approves the budgets of school districts throughout the county. Peterson. who is not up for re- election until 1990, currently earns about $94,000 a year for his duties. In most California counties. the superintendent is elected by popular vote. But in such counties as Los Angeles, San Diego and San Fran- cisco, the superintendent is hired by Dr. Robert Pete.non the county school board. Should Orange County voters opt for appointment over election, it would be the first time in stat.e history that county voters approved a switch from an elected to an appointed superintendent. Election c~pens arc not surprised. California voters, they say, resi_st giving up their right to elect people to public office. SLOW-GROWTH BROCHURE ASSAILED .•. From Al way that are under state JUnsd1cuon. that ll requires Huntington Beach residents to pay for County flood control channels and that 1t also threatens the city's.park system. Shirley Long. chairman of the Huntington Beach Citizens Against Measure J. said today that Measure J would "slow down tremendously or maybe stop all development" in the c1tv. And 1f that were the case, she said. the developers would no longer Locusts invade Iraq BAGHDAD. Iraq (AP) -The southern city of Basra. devastated by the 8-year-old Iran-Iraq war, now has ~n invaded bv swarms of dcsen locust~ S1J1 separate clouds of the crop- devounng msccts were in the citv. have to pay mitigation fees already in effect to the city ~ausc the projects allegedly would stall. "I don't think anyone 10 the world can afford to buy properties 1f developers pass o"°the costs (imposed by Measure J to IJlCCl traffic, sewer. water. and flood control costs.) There's such a low percentage that can afford to now." Long also said that Measure J 1s virtu.a1ly a carbon copy of the coun- tywidc measure that dealt with large undeveloped land in south Orange C:ounty, Developers shouldn't be asked to make things right for Huntrngton Beach where only 1 percent ofland remains vacant. But Harman said the measure will require developers only to reduce traffic 1Lnd other problems that their specific project causes. The brochure also cited the large Waterfront hotel project as a case study. It sa1d,the proJect m the city's downtown area most likely would not be built if Measure J should pass and the city would lose as much as S 130 million m revenue. The Roben Mayer Corp. of New- pon Beach, which has received per- m ission to build the resort develop- ment, has contnbuted $75.000 to the 'campaign coffers of the anti-measure J forces. Chevron Corp.. and its subsidiary. the Huntingotn Beach Co .. one of the largest developers in the city. contributed S50,000 each. Gen Ortega, a member of the Huntingotn Beach Tomorrow G ro up that is fightin$ the measure and a City Council candidate. said Monday that she expects thcfro-growthers to pour as much as I million into the campaign. .. It's a shame," she said. "the money could be so m uch better spent on youth and elderly needs." REUBEN E. LEE MAY BE CHARGED ..• From Al sa.id. An automatic system pumps the waste from that tank through a pipeline to a ci ty sewer hne. But should the pumps malfonc· tion. or 1f the lines become clogged. sewage would overflow into a hoe that earned the untreated waste thro ugh a four-inch opening in the hul l. about two feet above Jhc waterline on the restaurant's starboard side. making it undetec- table from the park.mg lot or from the restaurant itself. Such a system would prevent sewage from backing up and flooding the decks of the restaurant. Armstrong said "'What makes this case difTcren1 1s that rm approaching 1t as a cnmmal matter. Usually. with sewage spills. 1t involves some lund of an acc1dcnL But we have intent here," Arms1rong said. Police were alerted to the plumbing system by an anonymous caller who identified himself as a former em- ployee of thc;.rcstaurant. When restaurant operators were noufied of the overflow opening, it was capRCd the same day. CREATURE HUNTED IN THE BAY ... From Al 11 around. The Balboa Coves Community Association distributed fliers to all 68 homes, warning residents the creature was a .. dangerous public nuisance." The neighborhood is located on a far comer of Newport Harbor off Coast H ighway near Newpon Boulevard. Although there arc no reports of attacks and the reptile would likely Oec rather than fiJht, residents say the fear of running into it is enough to keep them on the lookout. Genevieve Mace. who puts food 'b~A,.~~E Daill Pilat MAIN OFFICE ~ w .. r e.y Sr . eo.11 -r A out for the ducks that lounae around the docks. said she hears the birds squawk.ing on occasion, but can't say whether it's because they've become another creature's meal. "I've lived here 21 years, and t've never heard of such a thing before." Mace said. She isn't F.oina to worry about it, but "I won t fO swimming. either, that's for sure; she said. Forteville's husband cut his swim short for the same reason. He and a neighbor were in the t:.y when the woman said lhe felt 90methin1 brush against her leg. She quiclc.ly exited. He wasn't far behind. lf animal control officers can bag the mystery monster, residents will breathe a little easier. ''I'd really like to get rid of it," Foneville said. "We have a granddaughter, and there's a public beach right acr<m the war,. ·Can r ou imqinc if it went up on a beach full of people? Somebody might have a heart attack or som~ thing. .. DallJ Piiot Deltwefy It Ouerenteect MM 900<-9o• tsec> COlll• Meu CA 9?8111 ~ -84:1·M78 1>119'""> f, ec)<10<1~ '62~1 Justcall 642-6086 MQAcley-f rldey " ,..,.. do not ...... 10"' P"I* by 5 )() p "' c.a Dlolote ' p ,., -yOvt copy *"I 11e .,..._.., ~19fl! IM3 l'io -.,.,._ •llulf••l•Oltt 9d1!,..1el -or.,_,._._ .. ,__ "'"Y De """OCl\iOOKI -....,... ,,. ... llllD" °' GOP't''ll"' - lecond ci..:. pooM..qe P'*' 11 C:O.r• U..• Ca•l0tl'I•• (U!'S 1•4-IOOI S..0-"7110n l)y _,_ IS 2S IM" period .,., ..... 1100~ T1'e e>r.,... c-09lly Not .. ~ 1)\1 '""' ...... ~ Ce °' C.O..• ....._. IN. rwo ...... -~ Moncley thr°"9'1 ,,..,.., A ..... ,......, tdlllOrl • ~ S•""Cl"Y9 MO ........ "l1'e ~ ~ .-. i. ioc.ttlfl ., .... .., ... ~ ..... CAIH28 YOL.11,NO.• What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your mesaap: will be recorded, transcribed and de- hvered to the appropriate editor. Tbe same 24-hour answerina ~ioc may be used to record letters to the editor on anr topic. Contributors to our Letters column mus1 include their name and aelepKone number for verification . Tell us what's on your mind . S11tutcl"Y n 8'.ond•~ If ,.,.. clO not -"" YOU' ~ "' 7 • "' ~.or llelor• 10 • m Mel Y9<" cooy .,. .. .,._till • Clrcul9tlon T1l1phonM er moves 1n on-coast The per1y le juft tbOu.t 0¥Wf0t ..-who h•~ ~ NWlllnQ under 8ouf1ern c.lttomle'• wwm, ~ lklM, u lat• ntaht end Mtty mot'*'9 *'*end too end cooler W!Mther •• Of\"'-'"YI tor~ Mid tocley. The WNther oondttlont .,._,.no brought by an upper-level loW~ eyet_,, ttlet la moving In from the wMt. the Nlttlonel WMther a.rvtoe repof1ed. . =he Otenge Coat there will be low ctoud• end local too t end Wedneeday morning, otherWI .. fair. Cooler wect . 8ellch iowe tonlQht 55 to eo With high• Y@dnead•Y 18 to 73. Valley Iowa tC>Nght 54 to 60 wtth h1Qh1Wedneeday7-4 to 80. From Point Conception to the Mexan Border -Over Inner watere light and vwlabte winds tonight end Wedneeday morning b«:Omtng w8at 10 .outhwest 10 to 16 knots WedneedllY 90 en.noon. Seu to 2 feet. Sou1hwest awell 2 feet. Low cloud• :::::: ~_.a,_. night end mornlng hours becoming partly 94.1nny Wednead•Y. Cold w11m sr11•0N<Y e ,,.. -. a.c aft•noon. i..;;;;....;;;;;;;...;;;~-.. .. a. .... .-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii U.S. Tempe !! ~ Calif. TemP.. eo ._ .. 31 11 17 50 42 141 ,. S6 •37 42 25 81 '441 41 42 87 38 75 43 52 45 eo 43 73 '441 78 S3 as 51 87 40 47 31 83 87 .. 33 18 118 17 44 50 44 .. 39 Extended Surf Report _....,.. 1-2 poor 1 poor 1 poor 1 poor 1 poor 1 poor 1·2 poor .... -.-:w. Tides TODAY .. Lo 74 41 38 23 57 45 50 lM 41 40 S3 50 73 40 ... 38 41 38 eo 41 51 42 S3 34 57 38 51 lM S3 35 57 49 S3 34 73 33 87 34 4a 34 40 32 82 43 51 34 14 -04 ee 211 47 38 18 72 63 56 58 33 58 43 73 51 44 39 87 40 M 82 82 40 eo 43 64 41 eo 11 50 37 Smog Report 8-wl Mgll 3:00 p.m. 4 3 s-.ci 1ow 10:31 p.m. o.e ...,.. .. y CANDY .•. Prom Al "We had no major incidents on our log at all," said Lt. Dick Olson, a spokesman for the Orange County Sheriff's Depanmcnt. "I think the fact that i! was a Monday night ~ay have helped keep thrngs quiet. Although l can't remember any Hallow~n where things have gotten too berserk here." A spokesman for the California Highway Patrol also attributed the relative 9uiet to the fact that Hal- loween did not fall on a weekend. "Most of the parties were over the weekend," said Officer Ken Daily, public information officer for the CHP in San Juan Capistra no. "'There weren't really even very many kids out last night around here. In my neighborhood. I doubt 1fwe even got 20 trick-or-treaters ... Southern California's worst inci- dent of Halloween violence was reponed in Los Angeles where the traditional street party on Hollywood Boulevard turned ugly. with r ovrng youths reportedly smashing windows and vandalizi ng stores in a 10-block area between Highland Avenue and Gower Street. A force of 150 police officers. some wearing riot gear. was needed to restore order on the street. ""'high 6:46 .. ,... 4.4 Flr9I low 11:0e LITI. 2.1 l!lecond hlQfl 4:23 p .. m. 4.3 l!lecond io. 11:13 p.m. 0.7 Sun -t~ el 4:51 p.m •• ,._ w.oi~ 1111:.12 a.m. end -1114:51 p.m. Moon .... tocleJ Ill 11:51 p.111 .. -Wedneedlly ef.1:09.,.m. end,-.....,. • 11:151 p.m. Disaster drill set Friday at OCC By KEVIN DOYLE ~'9eCC.1111 ....... They're preparing for disaster at Orange Coast College. Since the Costa Mesa ·community college is one of the county's desig- rutted evacuation sites, officials arc preparing for an emergency by hold- ing a disaster drilJ at the school. OCC spokesman Jim Carnett said the~ isscbeduled8:30to I 1:30a.m. Fnday It will be the largest drill ever conducted on the OCC campus and will use student "victims," nurses from the schOQl's health center, faculty and staff members and six different campus response teams. Response team members arc selected staff members from the school's maintenance and physical plant department who have been instructed in disaster proc:edurcs, Carnett said. People acting as displaced com- munity members will be received at a campus facility and county response team members wiJI check campus buildings for trapped victims, dam- age, gas leaks and broken ps lines. The drill wiU not include local police or fire departments and is not expected to disrupt rcg\tlarly sched- uled classes. The disaster plan has been in place sinoc.sF.in& of 1987 and is designed to ' deaJ wtth such emerscncies as earth· quakes, radiation 1ealc.s, explosions., fires and utility failures, Carnett said. Con man gets 10-year prison sentence LOS ANGELES (AP) -A San Clemente man who pleaded guilty to bilking investors out of $2 m illion was sentenced Monday to I 0 years in prison and ordered to pay SI million m restitution, officials said. Michael Maddox. 40, also was ordered by U.S. District Judge Con- suelo Marshall to serve five years probation upon his release from prison, Assistant U.S. Attorney Ter- rcc Bowers said. The prosecutor describi'xi the busi- ness as a "boiler room" operation that used money sc.nerated. from new investors to repay old ones. "People lost their life savings," Bowen said. REAGAN ••• BABY SITTER ARRESTED ..• From Al ception. Members of the campus group Youna Democrats and the Coahtion Apinst Apartheid, were repeatedly shouted down by Reagan SUP.porters. From Al felony child neglect and booked into Orange County Jail on SI 0,000 bail. She apparently posted the bond and was released early today, Sheriffs Lt. Dick Olson said. Her arraignment in Harbor Muncipal Court in Newpon Beach was scheduled for Thursday. Kent said officers found evidence the children had been left alone in the past. "The nci&hbor made reference that this is not the first time," Kent said. The parents appeared defensive of Youna when they arrived to pack up their children, Webster said. Councilwoman Mary Hornbuckle, who is the director of a Costa Mesa ... •· .•,. ' preschool, said some parents think they have no choice but to take their children to any baby sitter a vailable, licensed or not. "There's a severe shortage of child- care facilities and an extreme de- mand." Hombuclc.lc said. "Parents get desperate." Hombuclc.lc said .30 children arc on the waiting list at her facility for the 3- year-old class alone. "My guess is that there arc a number of unl.iccnsed care-givers who care for children in their h°'ne." Webster also said he "wouldn't be surprised if there are a few more out there." ,. 'We're protesting his veto of sanctions qainst South Afri<:Ai not feeding the homeless and bis attitude toward tt)e poor," said coalition president DarnelJ Sherman. Reapn's speech inside the Titan aym was followed by a second rally on the soccer field, where another I 0,000 supponers cheered hnn. The president left on the Marine One helicopter enroute to Wisconsin and O hio as part of the GOP effon to keep the so-called Reqan Dcmo- cratics in the fold. From~ Cottage In Donegal Individually handloomed and crafted in Ireland of the finest cotton yarns, a sweater so comfortable it must be worn to appreciate. Our own design in eighteen distinct color con;ibinations and patterns. (~"} Gentlemen's Qothina I 561 NewponCenterDr. Fashion bland · (714)640-8310 t l '~-- candidate forums ·-lt-Ylne-,NB-ag~~8e·DD:...tollW-aF"-= . . .~--- slated in Newport BJIBl'.IEEARNEIT . 1otb~~~·prohib1u heavy trucks ~~r:~m. would eventually Irv.:: .. ·~ ...... wou.ld-t~o-a~-~--- d H After six weeks of discussions, the c.1t1es fi ,..--the 14 ~ ·' u -·,., b' b -....-..:: ......... _. --an UiltfngtOil of Irvine and Ncwpon Beach have .:~du~~Mict ~m<:o~~t""M~r Irvine Mayor Lany A1r1n said that =:::~~':. ~~ '· reporudly reached an qrcement on the Freewaf to the San Diqo freeway just altbo\llh city staff must ltiJl ••1n1 lbe final COu~BoardofSu-.---..a.:::: .. ~ size and use of the San Joaqu1·n H1·11s rth Sa J ea 1·-·--"o,f1tbe-11tCnt bec•--...tto 11...../1-_ ............. _ .... Candidates for the city councils in Newport tollway. no 0 n uan pist.rano. t;:~wrinen 1~t io di;~ at ,_. aovcmments,willhavefinahayon Beach and Hunttngton Beach will appear at forums A joint policy statement calling for The stick.ins point in previous dt.~ toniaht's City Council meetiQ&. Howevu, exactly where and how the toU-.y will be scheduled for Wednesday. initial COf!SVUCtion to include six lanes was cussions, accordin& to Irvine Councilma.o no vote can be taken since the matter was built ' . ~e West Newport Bcacti Community Associa-expected to be released today. Cameron. C0J9ove. has been when the not placed on the aaenda. A Special Accof'dtng to Coscrove1 wncy mem .. lion wlll sponsor a forum at 8 p.m. at the NeWJ>ort However, the statement also contains a seventh and eighth lant1 would be added. meet1na may be called in the next few days ben have bttn ~ of nqotiatio111 .. They arc open nun~ and receptive to what wt've come up with, and rm bopef\al tliej will be able to suppon it withu muda enthusiasm as the couhty's• preferred ahemative," Coscrove said. ~h~res Club~ouse, S 11 Canal. Those attendin& are ~vis!on allowin1 an eight-lane project, Irvine rcpresentativei had foul.ht to keep · Aaran sa.id · '· bttw. een• Jrvine'and N.-rnnn Beach. 1nv1ted to bnng questions. n t d n tw t fi the corridor to six lanes whife Newport . · · · · • --.,... The Associated Students of Golden West de~ndi~ 0~ r~~~orra~co~:ar~n~l!i Beach officials prd'efl'Cd a provision Coxwd~he~notexpecttbemat~to Copln6 cJau carded Coll~ will host a ~orum for Huntington Beach studies. according to Newpon Beach allowinguptoeightlanesintheinitialplan cometoavote inN~rtB:cachu.ntiltbe candidates at noon m the College Center patio. Mayor John Cox. to relieve traffic on Pacific Coast Highway. ~ula(Nov. 14 council 91!!11lOD. • • Students from GWC political clubs will collect ln add~tion to eia,ht lanes for rcgu.lar T 'ffj 'I expect full suppon· because the questions ~rom the audit11ce and Coast Community automobile traffic and car pools. the cities . ~e plan dt crs from the county's council ha1 been really concerned about Colleae District Trustee Sherry Baum wilPdire.ct have approved a lo~-term plan that on11i:i.at proposal that would have that corridor and that it ~ built," Cox them to the candidates. . prov1ded 10 lanes for. regular autor:nob1le said. "Generally speakma, l'•e been allowtna two addition lanes to accom-traffic al!Jne, Cox w~. Some esttmatC1 keepina them up to date on the discussions modate a monorail or train within the next have pro,JCCted the comdor. scheduled_ for that have been taking place with the cit) of 'I' "I think if we can act an agreement on it, it's goina to be a win-win situation for Irvine, Newport Beath and the county overall." A ~minar for pre-teens on the transition from elementaJ"Y to junior hjgh school will· be held Wednesday from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in the muhi-purposc room of Sierra Vista Middle School in Irvine. Paul Kaplan of the Irvine Fan:iily Services Department wtll discuss wha~ to expect and how to cope at the free program for youngsters and their p&!Cnts. Call David Anderson at 660-3920 for more information. Credlt forum at OCC A forum focusing on the nghts and responsibilities in obtaining, using. abusing and protecting one's credit will be presented Wednesday at Orange Coast College. CdM optician's retirement Seen as loss to friends . \ The pre~ntation will be held at 7 p.m. in OCC's Science Haft. It is free and open to the public. Call the college's Consumer Resource Center at 432-5732 for further information. Llbrary plans programs The Newport Beach Public Library will present a slide presentation on the Bolsa Chica Marsh Wednesday at 7 p.m . in the Mariners branch, 2005 Dover Drive. Call 644-3 145 for more information. ~ The library also will sponsor a seminar on sports injuries by chiropractor Shirley Garcia Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Newpon Center branch. 856 San Clemente Drive. Call 645-3191 for details. Irvine newcomers meet New and prospective members of the New- comers C lub of Irvine are invited to a membership meeting Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Irvine Fine Arts Center. People who have moved to Irvine within the last three years arc eligible to JOm. Call 552-6324 for additional information. Spanlsh class ln Lagu~a The Laguna Beach.Recreation Department will offer a class, in conversational Spanish this fall. beginning Wednesday and running ·wednesday evenings from 7 to 9 p.m. through Dec. 14. o.11)' "°' ,._.., 0..... - Taffy Coelow, a cuatomer of Richard Perkin•· optical' abop for 25 yean, ahare. a moment with the popQlar optician at hi• aurprl.e party. . By PAUL ARCBIPLEY Of .. ~ ......... Perhaps if Joanne King liad been a httle more farsighted, she'd have realized Richard Perlcins would stick to old habits and show up early. Kina bad devised a story to lUrt the retired Perkins back to his old optical shop With an eye on throwing a surpri~ retirement party for him. She told him a little fib about needing his be~~livcring a pair of_gla.s.ses. 'ns wis .more blunt. "She. hed to me,'' he said. But the wily former owner of Perlons • Optical in Corona del Mar amved more than an hour before he was due. as Kmg was busy preparing for the party, . He was surprised anyway. •• 1 t was a good feeling," Perkins said. ··1 had no mkJmg whatsoever." Dozens of former customeTS showed µp for the catered shindig at the store now called Joanne's Optical to honor the man who had 9e'rved them· for 20 years. King knew she '·wo uldn't nave any trouble getting Perlcins to come in on a Saturday morning. - "He's such a sweetheart," she said ... He would certainly help a damsel in distttss." That's the general ftttinJ,~'11 of"tus_ former customers have abou~e optician. Fi~ years aao ,wben----Pertins ~ to spend two months !n the hospital, a jroup I of customers took 0' er the business. All 'olunteers. thev filled orders, answered phones. soned through paper- work even brought m an optician part· ume. "\\ 11hout them. I'd be down the tubes," Perkins said upon his return. Whtie he was secmmgl,y gruff to strangers. customers who relied on him 0' er the )ears came to blow him as a bia- hcarted and canngman. · - Jessamine Hams. one of the many "ho attended the reuremcnt panv, said he tOok a personal mterest m each of his cus- tomers "He IS QUllC '3 cbat:actcr." Harris said. "He ~as so eood to pro;>le. He-gave me discounts. ma~e repairs for nothing. "Hc·s just a simple, kind man."' The fullness of his heart was matched onl~ b) the clutter of bis shop, considered something of an eyesore to most. "The place used to be a total disasier. •· King said. ··But that's the way be liked it." Gone 1s the man{lequin Perkins used to • · keep tn his v.indov.', dressed to fit-11Je season. It's now ta.kc~up residence on his froni porc.h. ~ · - The retirtd opt1c1an 'will be nearby~For the moment. he's not looking too far into the future. · For openers. he plans to wake up once a mbnth to collect hts Social Security check. /Otherwise. 'Tm gonna hibctnatc. likr. a .~ar ... he said. -, The class 1s for travelers and those who would like to learn the language on a functional basis and 1s open to people lj and older. Call the depanment at 497-3311 , ext. 1U I. for funher 1nfotmat1on. HB Art League meetlng The Huntington Beach A.rt League will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Echson Center. 21377 Maanolia St .. Huntington Beach. and members are urged to bring in their an work b' · 15 in order to participate tn the monthl) show. · Mesa approves developln~nt1 co-suSpect1n· -. • . .. slayingcalled Phyllis Biel will be the guest antst for the meeting and will demonstrate ~mung m acn hes. The public is inv.lted to attend. ... · ' CALENDAR agreement on Arnet project killer's pawn traffic improvements today that will not~ From staff aM wire~ ' By JONATHAN VOLZKE Ol !No.11)' ..... llefl project." Hampel said "Wh\ hasten 1t?" The first phase of the de.velopment ts completed. "'h1le construcuon is under way for the·k con·d phase. Metro Pointe is bounded b~ &ar Street. the San Diego Freewa\ and South Coast Dnvc. built for years. '.' Tuesday, Nov. l The Costa Mesa Cit) Council gave preliminary approval Monday to a de- velopment agreement that ~outd give the Amel Development Co. two decades to complete its Metro Pointe dc,elopment. The action. opposed onl ) b) Coun- cilman David Wheeler, reversed a denial of the agreement last month. If the proposal gains final appro\ al. 1l \\Ou Id become the city's fif'St development agree- ment -a legal contract ensunng the ctt\ cannot rescind approval of a prOJCCt · The ·council re versed its car~ter 3-2 decision against the development agree- ment after Amel agreed to Jo in an assessment district. 1f necessary. "The improvements u·p front are a small benefit to the city," Wheeler said. "The mljor benefit goes to · the developer because the fees arc locked in for the next 20 years and cannot be increased." . . Councilman Orv Am}>µrgey d1sagret'd. An attorney for a woman ac:cuscd of helping her boyfriend kill women in Hununaton Beach and Redlands was rrmiipulated by th~ man .. till she became unconscious." her attomcy arjucd in a Riven1dc County trail. The murder tnal of James Marlow and Cynthia Coffman bcpn Monday. TbeY. could be sent to the ps . chamber if convicted of fint-decrtie ~urder and special allepuonSJn tb.c.death ofC.orinnL Novi,_ 20. • 6:30 p.m. IrvLDe City CollDcll, council chambers. 17200 Jamboree Road. Irvine. • 7 p.m. Newport Bu~ Parb. Beaebes ud Recreatloa Comml11toa, council chambers, 3300 Newport Blvd .. Newport Beach. "Thts IS an excellent agrttment fo r the city," Amburgey said. .. H opefully, next week we can start construction on the traffic ~ovcmenl.S-.and..we ca.n travel on them hke ~c·re on a country road:· • 7 p.m. Butlal'OD Beacb Plalulillg Com- ml11lea, council chambers. 2000 Mam St. • 7:30 p.m. lrvlae ScMc»l Board, d1stnct office. SOSO Barranca Parkway, Irvine. • 8 p.m. Foutlu Valley City Cou<!il, council chambers. 10200 Slater Ave .. Fountain Valley. The agreement ~ves .\mel se'en ad· ditional years to build the second and third phases of 11s Metro Pointe de' elopment before previous council approval of the project expires. Amel attome' Lam Hampel said. · · Although Amel must pav S4.8 m11l1on for traffic improvements · at six inter- sec11ons almost rmmediatelv. another S milhon the company o~s tor road work would not become due until the project's compleuon. officials said. But 1fthe cit' decides to create a Mello- Roos assessment d1stnct to fund improve- ments . n could collect the mone\ earher under the agreement. ' The council has indicated an assessment d1stnct encompassin~ larR.e commerr1~t propert) ov.ners in nonh Costa Me~ ma) p~ov1de funding for road and O\her improvements. Lamm said corntruction may not start next week: but planmnJ can soon stan for improvements at Fairview Road and Baker Street. Bnstol Street and Sunflower A venue. Bear Street and Paulanno A,,_ enue. and Bear Street and Sunflower Avenue. The couple also are &«used ill tbr lcidnapping and sla>ina of Lynel Murray. 19, ofHuntin1ton Beach. who disappeared Nov. 5. two days before Novas vanished. Murray, who worked for a dry d eani, busa~ was found Main-in-the-be~ the Hunti~n 8cach Inn. Coffman s attorney said MMtow. ua a- convict. manipulated bis client and broR her spint Wednesday, Nov. 2 • 9:30 a.m. Oru1e Couty Board of Sa~r­ vlton, board hearing room. Hall of Administration. 10 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana. f Under previous approvals. the SC' en office buildin~ -1ncl ud1ng tv.o that reach 15 stones -and four parkmg structures had to be hutlt in 13 )ears. Hampel said that wasn't enough ume. "We think (20 yearsl is the out~de date of financing and ultimate build-out of the In arguing against the de\elopmcnt agreement. Wheeler contended tt ~ould only hurt the cit~ allowing Amel to pa' for .\ new off-ramp from the San Otego Freeway at South Coast Dnve and widen- ing of the Faini~ Road off-ramps arc also 1nclude<t in the prOJect. offietals sa.Jd. Further. Amel ~;u help pay for a fire station 1n north Costa Mesa. .. A..s she aot cauaht op more and~ in this thing called M arlow, she yielaea 10 (his) demands." said attorney Donald Jerctan Jr DA probinglimo shootings involving off-duty police By JOYCE BODLOVICH °' .. ~,... ..... An inves11ga11on into r<.'pon.., that shots werr fired along th<.' Orange Coast from a mo"ing limousine occuptt'd b> t"oolT-dut} Los .\ngelcs poltce offi cers and an .\trn1lc1m chiropractor has been turned over 10 the Orange County dist n et attorne) 's office. The shots reponedly were fired from the open roof of the car on Jul> l8asit cru1scd PactticC'oast H1ghwa} north of Laguna Bt'ach and on the Co\ta Mesa Freeway aOer a night of partying by the occupants. according Newport Beach ·Someone left a femalept tied to a post alone the sidewalk on Shipyard Way, nearby residents told police laSt week. The aoat was unattended and a~ntly the victim ofnesJect. City arumal-control officers took the animal to the Oran~ County Animal Shelter for treatment. • • • A purse containi"4 a checkbook. •unaJUses. pretaipuon aJasKi. a calculator and other items was re- ported JtOleft Saturday night a ner Its owntr left it nellt to her automated· telltt machlM on West Coast H11h- to the California H ighv.a~ Patrol "h1ch has turned !IS m'es11gn111rn OH'r the d1stnct attorne\ 's olliC'c ··w C' ha\t~ almost ail o f the' 1n- ' cs11ga11on completC'd hut thC're :m· :i couple of other itC'ms "e sttll need." Dcpul~ D1s1rict .\ttorne} Creighton Laz said. ".\s soon as "e ha'l' them. "e "ill be m a position to make a dcc1s1on (\'h<'ther to tile cnmin:il charges) 1n the next se"cral weeks .. Laz confirmed t" o Los .\ngele"' police office~ were In the car. but dt-clined to identtf} them or confirm the idcntit) of a third occupant. the ch 1ropractor. way. • • • Two cases of Rain Bird serinkler heads, two p)lons of ..PVC .aluc. sprinkler nozzles and olhCT" items were reported stolen Monday from the city yard on Superior A venue. The loss was estimated at $540. Ba.atlnpm 1IMell Younastcrs on bicycles reportedly tore up liallowccn decor1ttons and stole uick-or-treat candy from smJllcr 6:~pten 1n the 6200 btock of Tum Dnve. )t.1raud1na JUV· eniles also reportedly stoic candy 1n the S1lvcrado and Woodlands dnvcs On 1hr n1gh1 of the alleged sh0\1t- 1ng. ~\l'rJI IX'Ople contacted thr Julhllrtlll'' 111 rqXln gunfi~ from the l1~·n rnof nt the.· hmo. a C HP officer ...a1J Otlil 1al' "1th Fountain \'all<.''- has<.'d E\l·\·utl\ c L1mousinl' Sen ice told 1n\ l'\llg.ltors the hmo nJe r,tanc.·d 1n .\nahetm at tdO p.m and cmkd "l'll alll'r m1dm~ht 1n Santiago ( 30\0n The dnH·r of thl' hmnu<,1n<.'. "ho "l\hcd to remain an1)n' mous. said the men assured him the shl1011ng \\3S "all right becau~ the~ ''nc pohl'c officers." area. • • • Four or five boys reportedly stcal- ina ~mJ>kinp in t,he 7000 block of Betty Drive swuna a bascbaU bit an man who pursued them. Tho toublemakcn were last seen runn1na toward Ocean View H •gh School. • • • Juvcnilareponcdlydrovea yellow Toyota pickup rec.klcul)• in the 17000 block of Kristopher Lane. throwina pumplciM It IJ'OUOS of people. . .. . A ruidtnt in tlM I C)O()() block or Windwanl Lane said four 1uverut.es ran-throqb http.rden and had se~ 1n front oflhe ~1den<'e. • • • A ' resident of Huntington ShorechtTs park said that people. poss1bl)'JU'enilcs. threw rocks down on the tops of mobile homes from Frankfort .\' enue • • • A ca r reponcdh parked sideways at the H untington Ba) Condominium~ in the I 0000 block of Holbum Dnve and blocked about se,·en clirs from getting out into 1he street. ••• Two males and two females ~ portedl) broke things and terronzed emplo)eeS and customen at Norm's restaurant. 16556 Beach Bl vd. at 2·35 a.m. toda~. i.\n employee said he was struck 1n the face. • • • Two gold nngs valued at $800 reported!~ ha'e bttn stolen from a house 1n the 900 block of Olive Avenue. The ' 1ctim said she last saw the jewelry m her bathroom. Fountain Valley A briefcase contatn1ng $8,650 worth of cash and iewelry was stolen from a locked 1987 Toyota Mauma perked on the 11000 block ofSunene River Circle ear1v Monday morning. .... Someone cut lhrouah a lock and chaan at the Pace Oub. 17099 Brookhunt St. IDd took I SO wooden pallet1 valued .. , SI .SOO sometime over the weekend. • • • A 197• Dodie. DU'bd Oil the 17000 bk>c:k of Mt. Oiffwood Cirdc. bad two tires p1~ Monday ~n. • • • A resident on the 17000 block of Santa MarwSU'eftMd~eqwp. man valued at S 1,298 Udlft\ ft'orr\ a bedroom clow1 t0rnflitM Motlidly. • • • Stero equipment valued at S964 was stolen from a home on the I 0000 block of Falcon A venue Sunda) atOUlld noon when 'I burglal' entered through a rear btctml wtndow i.acuna Beacll Pol.cc .. -ere called to a South Coast Highwa) locallon Sunda) n1aht fol• lowina reports that a rnan who "~ refused adm).ss1on to the bar drop his trousers and expo!lcd tumscl t0 patrons. then fled. Officers.. howe' er. could not locate his ""hereabouts. ••• A tttn-age prl "-as apprehended at 3 a.m. today alona the 1000 block of So"'th Coast H1ghwa} Officers suspected sbe was a runawa., and subsequent contact \.\'Ith her raiher In Hemet confirmed tbat the 16-year- old indeed had run awa) from home oneWttk.,O. ••• Po h« ci~ Aluandt'r Anderson Harris. 40, a local transient. for . alleged 11Jegal lod11n& early today on Park '\.venue. • coma--.. .\n elderly woman~ out &om M1m1's Caft on Newport 8oulnft "i thout pl)1n& the S 11 bill fillr Mir salmon dmner. waitress mid die same •·oman did the same thins two monthsqo. • • • ._ woman rePQrted that she peid S2SO to South Seas Traders a a deposit for some patio fUmiture. but never aot the furn1tW"e or the delxlait. • • • A "fnend" IS JUSpecud in ···; .. S 1,6SO worth of IOOds from · u apanmeot on Giltnlw SVee\. Tools, cameras. a auiw ud vtdc<X'•ssctte recorder were WleD. • • • Talk about the one that paway, A woman reponed S700 wonts of fishint poles were llolea flom hcrc:w while it was perbd ar K-Man oa Harbor Boulevard. '" FVteen stabbed oil cam~ ·l ' Orang. COiet DAILY PILOT/ Tue9dey, Novemb« 1, 1988 .. 1 U.S. Hopes to ease I tensions between I North, South Korea • J WASHINGTON (AP) -The Re-J qan administration is listina five i areas in which it .says North Korea could respond constructively to a t series of unilateral U.S. measures • aimed at easing tensions on the : peninsula. I State Department spokesman : Charles Redman said Monday that : the United States is rclaxina some • trade, travel and diplomatic restric- : lions qainst North Korea in suppon • of effons by South Korea to promote sreater stability in the area. Ridman said the United States is lookin&" for a "positive, constructive response .. from the North Koreans. ' Specifically, he said, the United ; States is scckina signs of Nortn • Korean flexibility in the fledaling ' north-south dialogue and a willing-; ncss to provide more information on ' the thousands of American ser- vicemen still unaccounted for since the Korean War. Redman said at the end of the conflict there were 8~ 177 American soldiers listed as missins. althouah that figure also includes -servicemen whose remains were recovered br the . U.S. military but for whom positive identification was not possible. A year aao. North Korea said it had uncovered the remains of five U.S. servicemen. The spokesman said No~ Korea also could show good faJth by "eliminating vicious anti-American propaganda;" by cooperating in pon- fidencc-building measures in the demilitarized zone and by ending its alleged suppon for international ter- rorism. He said any discussion of the withdrawal of the 40,000 U.S. troops stationed in South Korea would be premature. The South Korean government welcomed the U.S. statement today, saying it hoped the moves would promote dialogue between the two Korea.s. I That's Dan all over Indlana~U. Colta fw ..... •••Ir• depict- .... ABC •Dan Dlerdorf llonday ntibt while " . $1. 6 inillion- awar.ded ov:erAI0S . transfusion A TI.ANT A (AP)-A hemophiliac bas been awarded St.6 million by a federal jury in a lawsuit in which be Mid be contncted AIDS from a blood-hued dn.11. Randy J. Jones. lS, sued Miles Laboratories, the Elkhan. Ind., maker of Koate, a blood-6ued clot- tina proctuct he took to control bleedina after minor 1µttery in Octo- ber'l 983. In a. similar case in south Aorida earlier this year, a jury ruled in favor of Miles Laboratories. Jones was diqnosed in l 98S u infected with the ATOS virus, and two yean later, doctors told him be had develo~ acquired immune defi- ciency syndrome. ! Defense policy oVerhaut Eco.noDlic forecast.shows signs of decline in future In his lawsuit. Jones contended that the product be took bad been contaminated with the AIDS virus from an unemployed Teus man who, on 40 occasions ~,lWeen No- vember 1982 and September 1983, sold plasma to a center in Austit), which-Supplied Miles. The Texas man died of AIDS less than six weeks after bis last plasmJ sale. A U.S. District Court jury awarded Jones SI.I million and bis wife $500,000 Wednnday. i terroris~ emphasis urged . . By Tlte Aueciatal Preas WASHINGTON -The government said today that its main forecasting pugc of future economic actiVity edged down 0.1c.PCrcent in September, its second decline in the last three months. The Commerce Dcpartll)ent'~ Index of Leadina lndjcators rose 0.5 percent in August and 1.5 percent in June but fell 0. 7 percent in July. Etonomists believe this roller coaster performance is a signal that the economy, which was expanding ata robust pace in the first 'six months of 1988, is slowing down. Indeed, overall economic growth as measured by the gross national product dropped to an annual rate of 2.2 perctnt from July through September and many anaJysts believe 1hat this modest pace will continue in the current quarter and fbr most·of next year. "This was a trqjc thing," Geo~ · H. Connell Jr., Jones' attorney, satd Monday. ··A man about.30 years old, just got married, in the prime of life .... and be gets struck down like this." : WASHINGTON (AP) -The : American defense establishment needs to be overhauled to take : account of a lessened threat frorp the Soviet Union and he1ghtened risks in : ot~ areas. says a study by a pnvate • research organi.zaoon. : Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's , internal reform etTons have some-! what lessened the military threat to • tbe United States at the same ome that threats from other sources. such : as terrorism and ccono·m1c-based : problems. have increased, concluded : the National Security Group repon. i "Due to Mr. Gorbachev's 1n- 1tiatives, that threat appears to have 1 decreased. At the same time. we find I ourselves increasingly threatened b> smaller. third-world countnes. ter-! rorism and unconvenuonal problems like drugs. envuonmental polluuon and instability." the study said. "In the face of this bonzontal , escalation, we find that our force structure, intelligence system and operating procedures are all geared to the large single threat. we do not have the flexibility required fbr these smalfcr, more diffuse hazards." it said. The Nauonal Security Group de- scribes itself as a non-partisan educa- tional organization. The five-year-old organization is based in Chicago and has previously sponsored studies on security-related issues such as arms c;ontrol. It board ofadvisors includes Donald · Rumsfeld, the former de- fense secretary. The report said .. a new ominous potential threat looms in the growmg influence of the drug cartels of Latin America over the legilimate govern- ments of that area." The solutions it proposed include a .. Marshall Plan" for Latin America. increased flexibility in the U.S. mili- tary structure and intelligence-gather- ing apparatus. and new anention to global environmental problems. T)\e repon also u'led the winner of next Tuesday's pres1dentJaJ election, either 0cf(locrat Michael Dukakis or Republican George Bush. to quickly call a "budget summit" with Capitol Newport Beach Candidates' Forum Wed. Nov. 2, at 8 p.m. Newport Shotts CJubhouse, 511 Canal, Newport Beach Hill leaders to deal with looming defense budget problems. The Pentagon budget will be a key concern of the new administration. Defense spendinJ rose sharply each year during President Reagan's first term. but has been essentially frozen during his ~ond term. The current defense budget is $300 billion and is not likely to rise much regardless of who is elected Nov. 8. "Overly optimistic projections of defense budget growt.h COUfled With relatively larger growth o internal fixed accounts and public pressure ~nst incrcasing defense spending will result in a decrease of$250 billion to $400 billion for de~nse in the next five years from whanhe militaf)'had assumed," it said. During Reagan's first term, the military services made down pay- ments on a larie number of new weapons systems. Some of those weapons may have to be canceled. The repon also said the Pentagon spending effort should be broadened to. keep pace with the new view. Imelda,MarcOll bail set at $6 mUllon NEW YORK-Wearing a regal gown, former Philippine first lady lmHda Marcos was fi~rprintcd, photographed and ordered to remain here until she can come up wttb SS million ~l to face a rackeaering trial. ·•rm not going to let the lady go back to the Hawaiian Islands until I'm cenain the bail is set." U.S. Distnct Judae John F. Keenan said after Mrs. Marcos pleaded innocent at an arraipment Monday. Mrs. Marcos, who lives in exile in Honolulu with her husband, former P-bilippine Presjdent Ferdinand Marcos. brushed away tears. Keenan ordtted her to return to court Thursday wtth her attorneys if the lawyers have not worked out a ball agreement with prosecutors by then. Mrs. Marcos, S:9, was then fingerpnnted and had her mug shot taken by federal marshals before--bemg-trleased temporarily without bail. Keenan instructed her not to leave the New York area. She blew a luss to a crowd outside the federaJ courthouse before depanmg for her midtown Manhattan hotel. The Marcoses wc:rc indicted J)cr. 21 on charges they plundered the Philippine treasury of $103 million. spirited the money out of their country and into foreign bank accounts. and used it to buy' prime Manhattan real estate and art. According to the national Centers for Disease Control, almost 800 cases of AIDS have been attributed to blood products such as that taken by Jones. Since early 1985, special beat treatment has been performed on clotting products to kill any"AJDS virus contamination. But many hemophilia patjents were infected before those precautions were used, accordjna to researchen. The Jones award was .. ade- quate .... in light of1he disease," Con- nell said. However. Miles denied Jones' claim of negligence on the oompany's Plf.1-we feel strongly that the verdict in the case is not supported by the facts, .. said Bud Modcnbacb •. the Berkeley. Calif., counsel for Cutter BiolQlicals. the Miles division that manufactures Koate. The company intends to appeal. he said. New r~port links JFK slaying tQIJU>b plOt WASHINGTON (AP) -A new Theshowairstoni.ahton New York tion. book and a TV repon are reviving the public television and elsewhere later The House panel concluded that ·emotional debate over the Jo.hn F. in the month. It recounts a potpourri Kennedy was probably the victim of a Kennedy a~ination and whether of evidence presented over the years conspiracy, break.inJ sharply with the reputed Louisiana mob chieftain by Kennedy authors. theorists and Warren Comrruss1on. The com-~~~~==============!!!!!~~C~ Carlos Marcello conspired to kill the investigators, plus some new mission, appointed by Lyndon John-prcsident. evidence unearthed by John H. son and beaded by then·-Chief Justice Jonathan Kwitny, a former in-Davis, a cousin of Jacqueline Ken-Earl Warren, concluded that there vestiptive reporter for the Wall nedy Onassis and author of a new was no conspiracy, and two com- Strect Journal, hosts an hour-long book on Marcello and the JFK "mission counsels who appeaF on the public television special that con-slayina. Kwitny Report reject the mob con- nedys for the 1961 deportation. A Las Yeps private investiptor tokl the House committee that Marcello in- dicajed to him a year before the slayina that be wan1Cd to kill the PresidenL .. You cut off' the bead, the tail dies," Ed Becker quoted Marcello as sayina. The tail allqedly ~ a reference to RFK. • Try Our Fresh Fruit Shakes & Juices • • • • Ask About Our Catering 20!8 Harbor Boulevard Costa MM& 642-S 161 GREAT The Beat Kept Secret In Town DINNERS from • Freah Fish, Pa &a, Prime Rib end More! . Reservations (714) 650-1750 428 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa cludes there was a mob conspiracy to Marcello, who was a prime target of spiracy theory as nonsense. kill Kennedy. then-Anomey GeneraJ Robert F. Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., who The evidence prtsentcd by mob consriracy theorists include that ()s. wald s uncle. who helped raise him, worked for the Ma.n:dlo orpniza- tion. and repons that Oswald at least several times met David Ferrie, who was Marcello's penonal piloL · The TV report points to eV1dencc Kennedy and was tem~~ly de· served as a commission counsel, said that both Kennedy assassin Lee ported by RFK. was. menttoned by evidence presented by the theorists Harvey Oswald and Oswald's killer, the House Select Committee on are "snatches of a little fact here and Jack Ruby, had connections to Assassinations as a possible con-therewbiehrcallyaddu(>-t&nothing." Marcello's crime syndicate. spiracy suspect in the JFK assassina-"The Warren Commission turned 1---------------------------~ over every stone and found no knew piece-of eviclcnce uncovered by Divis in bis book. titled ''Mafia Kinafish, .. ii an FBI report quotina a Georsia businessman who said sbonly after tbe uunination that be remembered seeiq Oswald earlier that _year IC!QePtina cash .from a man later identified as a top Marcello lieutenant •. The author said the Al never J~Uowed up on that lead. ~--------------~---~~­• Termites Are Now Swarming I Bugs Flying Around Your Home? FLEAS? ANTS? I I I FREE ESTIMATES t I I SAVI s s s I With This Utkl I AD I T•1mit• I 6 P.st Con trot, In<. I Licensed Contractor -#PR534 I Serving The Orange Coast I Since 1974, Wholesale Fumigation PRtCES! 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I . a.211 ,ert a. c... ... • •2n• .d c..-U:.., .......... .._. ... ..., EXPIB~ ll-S-88 -... -----------~------------------------"' .. _____________ _ 1 1' . Orange COMC DAILY PllOT/TuMday, No'Mnber-'1' 198e c I , -agtina eap~ain..:. named top officer Air Forte Capt. Jay A. Pr....... 1917 paduate of the Air Force SOD of Wayne and LaVeUe Froboese . Academy. of l.Apna .Beach bu been named • • • · compeny pade officer of the QWU1er Nayy Airman Recruit a.rt W. at Ra'ndOlpb Air Force Base, Tens. BMtJ., SOD of Robert Huty of He it an instructor e_ilot with the H~~. Balch, It.as completed~ .5.59th Flyina Trainina Squadron. buic iviabon struct~ mec~1c . • • • coune at the Naval Air Tecbrucal Enstan Jame. W. Manwl$. .son of Traqifta C.eatcr iDMillinaton, Tenn. lames Marlcwhb of Huntinpon • • • Beath. was desi&nated a naval aVJator Marine S.. n.... B. 8U1, son of and presented his aolden winas Jeanne anc1 Tbomu Hwt Jr. of following 18 months of fliaht train-Irvine, bu completed the basic iq. electrician's coune at the Marine M · 1 L • ""-.!...u G ,,__.,___ Corps Bue Cami> Uieune, N.C. anne st t.~ ·"'.....,.,-• • .~--son of Shirley Baker of Irvine, Airman 1st Clasl IUdmel D. n:oently zcponcd for du~ with the rra,_, IOll of Judith McLauablin of 3rd Marine Aircraft W1na at the Lapma Niauei._ bas arrived i>r duty Marj~ Corps Air Siation in El Toro. in West Germany. Frayer, a 1984 He is • 1979 graduate of Irvine Hiah sraduatc-of Dana Hills Hilb School, -School and a 1984 IJ'&duate of UC( as with the 7480th Aircraft Oener- Petty Officer in•d Cass AM.nelco ation Squadron• • • . . C. Cabuayaa, son ofAorentino and Ensian J• S. ,.._,,.,son of Ana Cabanayan of Costa Mesa, has Charles , and Toni Thompson of rcponcd for duty with the I st Force Huntiqton Beach. has been com- Scrvicc Suppon Group at Camp missioned in bis prescnt rank upon Pendleton. araduation from Officer Candidate • • • School at the Naval Education Train-Cadet Ray P. WoJcD, son of Ernie ing Center in Newport. R.I. He is a and Joanne Wojc1k of Irvine, re-l98I graduateofEdison High School: ceived practical work in military • • ·• leadcrsb1p at the Army ROTC a~ AirmanScottD.Evau,sonofJohn vanccd camp at Fon Riley, Kan. Evans of El Toro, has grduatcd from Wojcik is a student at Embry Riddle the aircraft armament systems Aeronautical University in Daytona specialist course at Lowry Air Force Beach, Aa. Base, Colo. He isa l 986graduateofEI Pety Officer •3;d •aass David A. i:-oro High Sch~l• • MerU.0, son of Don and Nina Seett A. Crall, son of George and Merlino of Huntington Beach, has Judy Crail of San Juan Capistrano, returned from a six-month deploy-bas completed training in fundamen- ment ta the Indian Ocean witn tal military skills at the Army ROTC Fi~ter Squadron 2.13 from the Camp Challenge at Fort Knox, Ky. Mitamar Naval Air Station in San. He is a student at Cal Poly Pomona. Diego. He is a 1985 graduate of Petty' Officer ·2~ •Class James R. Edison High Sc~~l.• Torres. whose wife is the former· Sgt. Mlclaael J . Yslas, son of Jess Vivienne D'Silva of Huntington and Margaret Yslas of San Juan Beach. bas reported for' duty with the Capistrano, frasl>cen decorated with 1st Marine Division at · Camp the Air Force Achievement Medal in Pendleton. West Germany. Ysla is a financial CadetoreMS.~se,sonof services specialist with the 50th Lee Applcptc of Fountain Valley, · Comptroller Sq~~~n. received practical work in military Taaya L. R.llaet. daughter of leadership at the Army ROTC ad- Delorcs Theiss of~una Niaucl, has vanced camp in Fort Lewis. Wash. He completed training tn fundamental i~a student at Boise State Universuy, military skills at \he Army ROTC Ohio. Camp ChaJlenge at Fon Knox, Ky. . • • • . She is a student at Cal State Fullenon. Navy Fireman Recruit Robia . L. • • • Stebblas, daughter ofRoben Stebbins · Pvt. AJeir A. Corvhlo of Mission of Huntington Beach. has reported Viejo has completed his training at . for duty aboard the destroyer tender the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in USS Samuel Gompers, based in San Diego. He is a 1987 graduate of Al&ll\cda. She is a t 976 graduate of Trabuco Hills High School. Sldd.Jcback High School. , • • • • • • Pael J. Foy, son of Char~s and Midshipman Erie N. Pflsser, son· Eileen Foy of Huntington Beach, has of Nelson and Andrea Pfister of been promoted to the rank oftechni-Ncwpon Beach. was one of many cal sergeant in Lhe Air Force. He as a Navy midshipmen who pao.icipatcd tactical aircraft maintenance special-in a summer training cruift aboard ist with the 31th Equipment Main ten-the dock landing ship USS Ponland. ancc Squadron at George Air forcr based in NoTfolk, Va.. \ Base, Calif., • • • Cadet Bra4Jrd•T~ J......_ son of · Navy Lt. Robb L P~ son Mr. and--Mrs. Tbonas Johnson of of Robert and Betty Pink.ington of Newpon Beach, bascompletcdan Air Irvine. has completed the basic Force ROTC field trairuna encamp- surfacc warfare officer's course in ment at McClellan Air Force Base, Ncwpon, R.I. He is a 1973 graduate Calif. He is a student at Oaremont ofUruversity High School. McKenna Collete. . . . ~ . . Second Lt. Derek R. Hoffm1. son Lance Cpl. Matdaew C. Parker, son of Wan:cn and F'rcyda Hoffnung of of Robert and Kathie Parker of Huntington Beach, has graduated Laauna Niguel, was promoted to has from pilot training and received his present rank while serving with the si!Yer-wings at Columbus Air Fo~ tst Marine -l>iv'Won r,at Camp · Base. 'Mi'4. Hoffnung 1s a t 980 Pendleton. He is a 1985 graduate of graduate of Edison High School and a Dana Hills Hi~SchooL I TliS~-·-·­lltliz9 .. _,. __ ------.. -. .......... two ..,, .. allslllelllcs "' ~ . 3023 E. Coast Hwy For FREE demonstration call ... Corona del Mar .. (Aero. Pertcl.ng Lot from AlbemOM) 675-1612HRS: M-F 9-9; SAT 10-4 ,.. CONVENTION CIEN~IER~ . . 800 W.est Katella Avenue, Anaheim, Galitornia . . . . . - NO\lEMB_EB . ~5 6; 1988 . BM~h w Prt)ductions PRESE TS .... . . 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BUO RMllLO STEAMERS SPORTS TIME MAGAZ NE ON-AIR BROAOCASf AT THE SHOW KfOX-FM 5 P .M ................................. STEVE lu.wc>NS U.S A. Ol YMPIC VOLLEYBALL 5 P .M ........................................ TEAM HARO BMX QUARTER-PIPE DEMO 7 P.M ............................ CELEBRITY JUDGES "QT POF'£CT BOOY 11 ~AlF<JtttllA CONTESr' SCHEDULE OF EVENTS SATURDAY 10-A. ........ SffeW-OPEMS- FIRST 200 PAID ADMISSIONS RECmE A FREE SPORTS WATCH 11 A.M.-3 P.M ........................................... . G NASTICS OEM STRATIONS 1 P.M .................. ~ ............. .JAY JOtltSTM MAIN STAGE AR[A f\ DODGER NOW TV-HOST BEST SE.LUNG AUTHOR 3 P.M ........................ , .... TERRY SC .. OED£R MAIN STAGE AREA CAPTAIN Of THEUS A Ol YMPIC WATER POLO TEAM 3:15 P.M ................. JOHN R08E.RT POWERS MODEL & FASHION SHOW 5 P.M .................................... 808 CTVRTLIK MAIN STAGE AREA t:l SA OL 'rMPIC VOLLEYBAH TEAM MEMBER SUfl>AY 10 A.M ............ SHOW <lPOCf-- FIRST 200 PAID ADMISSIONS RECEIVE A FR£E SPORTS WATCH 11 A.M ...................................... TEAM HMO BMX QUARTER-PIPE OCMO ' 1 p .M. .............. ~ ........•.........................••...•.• AUT CH£ERLEAOING CHALLENGE .. WITH stHOOlS FROM All OYER SOUTf£RN CAllf~ PARTICIPATWG 3 P.M ...................................... SltJll SllTH RAll>Y STOKLOS MAIN ST AGE ~REA PRO BEACH VOLLEYBALL 3:15 P.M .................. O. ROBERT POWOS MODEL ANO FASHION SHOW 5 P .M ................................ lll>A CtlSHOLM PRO VOLLEYBALL PLAYER Many other Events During The Show ,tltltd 'f 41J41lite4, at. 'DetaM9 ~ Jenny 1s Returning To The Oyster Bar ~ov. I CHARTER COUNSELING CENTER OF NEWPORT BE~CH A JOUIUfAL WORKSHOP POR SURVIVORS OP SBZUALa PHYSICAL ABUSE OCTOBSR 28tlk daroqla DltCEMBltR 7th ~~::--~ ~~ 11:30 -3:30 Alaskan Bay Shrimp Salad Monday -Saturday ALL CHOICES 93.95 Tureai of Delaney's famous dam chowder and 1/2 sandwich. • AD ULT COU NSELING AND THERAPY •PERSONALIZED RECOVERY PROGRAMS \ FREE ASSESSMENT Our specially trained and fully licensed staff will provide you with a freet COz:1fidential UMSSment. Then, oueo on your ...... ment. our countelon will rerom.mend a count of ectioft. taikwed ~ir.cally to your needs.; 548-6804 • C'HILO A:-.lO AOOLES ENT COLI NSEL l :'llG '• ONGOING COMM NITY BOUC'ATION . . 1501 SUPERIOR A V.E., SUITE 310, NEWPORT BEACH . plic IOOS1 • "''.ced 9'""'· boy ttlrlmo & Cl°"l()l\t • • VOVf cho<• ot 0\11' ~ ~ tOlod dfm•ne A.si.. vour 'ood wo;~r about t~soec•OI$ Fish & Chips Basket Served with Oelonev's hOme~ torter sauce. ar sotod or COP of • our own ctom choweltf. -1 '2 sandwich of vour choice • A8 OrflnQe Coeet DAILY PILOT/ Tuetday, November 1, 1988 CAMPAIGN '88 DUkakiS takes campaigil to Ollio; Bush goes to Indiana BJ TM AaMdatell Presa Michael Dukakis. shaking off GeOrse IJUsft•s ridicule of bis new taltc about li~sm1 campaianed amona union workers-10 the b.&rdhit 'teel rqjon of Ohio today, sayina Bush'~ absence from the ~ means be doesn't care about working people. Bush was to make a law-and-order speech later today at Notre Dame University in Indiana. "This is not my first visit to this valley," Du,kakis told his Young- stown audience today in the econ- omically troubled Mahonin4 Valley where most of the once thriving steel ·industry bas shut down. · '\ "To my knowledae, George Bush has never been 6ere,.. he said, conteridina . that that provides-··a~ · cleu a sense of the difference betwetn Mike Dukakis and the Republican ticket. ... " ''The vice president likes to talk about labels."l>ukak.is said, referring to Bush's repeated effons to portray him as too liberal for most voten. "You know the label I'm interested in?" Dukak.is told the workers, who have seen heavy inroads by foreign manufacturers into the steel business. "'Made in America' is the label I'm interested in." Qhio, with 23 electoral votes, is a u...--. 111.cbael Dakalda abailee handa and waTee to the crowd of mpporten at Cerrltoe Collece OD llonday. crucial clement in Dukakis' strateay for In upset over Bush in next Tuetday's election. Opinion "polls have•mowil the Democrat trailin1 in the state, b\U Dukakis' aides contend th~ mar&in j~ IW'Towina. • On Mo~y. Bush courted dis- enchanted Democrats, mockin& Duk.akis' recent description of tiimselfas a ti~ in the tradition of former Presidents Franklin Roose- velt. Harry Truman and John F. Kennedy. . "Miracle of miracles. Headline. Read all about it," Bush told an audience Mon~y in Louisville, Ky. "My q,pponent finally .._ called himself the bi& J... called himself a liberal." GOP runni~ mate Dan Quayle retuned Democratic opponent 1.loyd Bentsen's debate putdown line of "You're no Jack.. Kennedy" to poke fun at Dukakis. "Michael Dulcak.is is no Jack Ken- nedy," said the Indiana senator as he campai~ed jn Michigan and Ohio. DukaJris, seeking the support of women voters. said Monday the Democrats arc "on your side" on the issues .of abortioo, equal pay and parental leave. The Republican ticket. however, has been "on the wrona side of every iisue of special importanee to American women." He also was telling voters in a new five-minute ad scheduled to rup toni.Jht on NBC that the race for the White House is far from over. "In recent days our campaign has been 01) the move. Thousands of Americans are joinina our effort daily," Oqkakis says. "Next Tuesday, your one vote will be more powerful than all the p<>llsten and political commercials.• · Two new polls -a survey by Harris and another done by Gallup for the Times Mirror Corp. - showed Bush maintaining a strong lead among likely voters. ~ In the Harris survey of l ,250 voters questioned during the weekend, Bush led Dukak.is S2-4S percent, a slight APL•I .,.,., Vice Preel•t Oeoqe Buh .riYee a tbumb9 up to •apporten at a campalin rally llbnday In Loul•ville. narrowing from S3-44 percent in a similar poll done Oct. 14-17. ~ Tbc Times Mirror poll of 'l,505 likely voters conducted Oct. 23-26 found Bush ahead by 11 points, 52-41 percent. Both polls had margins of error ofplus or minus three points. The front-running Republican ticket was concentrating on the Midwest today. Bush was speaking about law and order this aftrnoon at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind., and cam~gning in Wisconsin after taping an interview this momin4 with David Frost. Quayle was stumping in Ohio and his home state of Indiana. Democrati.c candidate Bentsen was focusfog on his home state of Texas, Kentucky and Missouri. Fonner 0ell}ocratic contender Jesse Jackson'joined Bentsen Mon- day night at a rally in Fort Worth, Texas, where the jrcachcr-tumc<t- politician responde to Bush's "read my lips" refrain. "YoQ watch our hips.as we march," to the voting·booth, Jackson told the crowd at the Mount Olive Missionary Baptist Church. The Texas senator urge(l those in the audi~nce to get out and vote. "Don t tell me your vote doesn't <:ount-:--it does," he said. While Bentsen focuSed on Texas and its third-largest elcctQral prize of 29 votes, Pukakis sought support in California. P.-BC News polls taken over the weekend gave Bush the lead in both states, in surveys of about 500 likely -voters in each state. In Texas, it w~s 52 peroent fQr Bush to 45 percent for Dulcakis1 and in California it was 51-44, )Vitti polling margins of error of plus or minus five percentage points. Imbalance. In ttade a ti~ headache for new president W ASHINOTON (AP) -If tbe federaJ budeet deficit .ema invisible to mott Americans. the ppina U'lde deficit ia all too apP&l'.eftt. They tee its e~ e.very day in the can they drive, the televisions they watch, the shoes they wear. Now it will fall to either Oeorp B\lah or Michael Dulcakis to uy to remedy this other U.S. deficit, tbe trade imbatances that hit a suaerina S 170 billion last year and are runnina at a SI 38 billion pace for 1988. , Tbc American appetite for im- . ported aoods became voracious in the 1980s u a strona dollar produced ' flood ofbupins for U.S. consumers. Even when the dollar tqok a nosedive after intervention by· the United States '8nd its allies in l 98S, Ameri- cans retained their taste for impons. Japanese auto maken who estab- lished a beachhead in the U.S. market with cheap, fuel-efficient subcom- pacts earned a tarae.r and more expensive niche on the strc~ of their ~utos' quality and reliability. · · Th~ trade law signed by President Re•n in Auaust &ives the next president new tools to protect Ameri- can markets and retaliate apinst countries with unfair trading prac- tices. Dukakis's running mate, Sen. Uoyd Bentsen of Te~ was the leading conaressional champion of ..:.the tougher trade law. - "l want to be a prcsidellt who - stands up and fi.~ts for American companies, Amencan prOduets and· American workers," Dukak.is said at . a mc1'1 factory in Dayton, Ohio, lasJ. month. Bush says American exports ~ boomin& the trade deficit is already comina down, and free trade, not protectionism, is the way to restore America's competitiveness. The Re- publican dismisses Du.lca.kis' wam- 1015 <dlbOut foreign ownership as "protectionist demagoguery." BY THE SEA POOL SERVICE TV to project winners as polls close in state NEW YORK (AP):-The thn-c · :·we're not going to tell the ~ewer major networks will project a winner that she has to sit there with a in tl!c presidential ~ce state-by-state calculator and add .it up," . said serving as polls close, but refrain from Michael Gartner, the new preStdent th n.....--Cioast dcclarin& a winner ovcralJ until West of NBC News. e "" ... a&l&e Coast voters cast their ballots -ABC, CBS and NBC will pre-empt Re~ble, ......:.....~J.. c;, _ __:_ unless there is a landslide. entertainment programming on Etec, __ ... ___ .a·.1.~ ~~ If one candidate racks up·e·nough tion Ni~t, Nov. 8, and begin cov- Doug Hauswald BD,.Ytime (71., 8481366 electoral votes for victory, based Oil erago Wtth their 4 p.m. PST news-~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. projections in states ·where polls have casts. . • already closed, the networks will not CNN. which as a policy does not election ooverage from~ p.m. unul 5 a.m. PBS will have updates through-out the evening. _... - refrain from stating the obvious. project election winners, will run its Tbc controversy over network projections arose in 1980, when California residents reportedly walked off lines at polling places when they bcardJ.he networks project Ronald Reagan as the winner over Jimmy Carter. Theoretically,' the outcome ofcl6se state and local races could have bee·n a~ted. r----------------------------.. · In fatt, O!rteqco".lccded the elec- tion hours before polls closed on the West Coast. PASSWORD A good word passed around about a business is Invaluable. A bad word can be unfortunate. Our growifli success in the past 31 years has been due to the "good words" and referrals sent to us by our customers. • No amount of advertising can replace a personal' recommendation. We are nOt Infallible, t>ut we are working towards that goal by giving our customers the besf service and quality possible. cu ~TOM 0 "AP(A ICS L•CE o;u "° noon DEN'S 1663 Placentia St. Costa Mesa 646-4838 Roge-E's Gardens "Christmas Fantasy 1988" Rooms of decorated trees ... Ornaments from around the world .. . Roger's-ma~e decorating accents .. . ''EnctJ~ed Candlelit Walk" nightly ... ?. .- NEW ORT BEACH San Joaqufo Hills Road (at McArthur) Hours: 9 am to 9 pm Daily (714) 640-5800 Look w.here $10,000 in rare coins can get you·. Smee 1Q80. clients of Hannes Tulving Rare Coin Investments have en1oyed average profits of 24 percent annually af~er all commissions and fees. If our portfolios continue to appre- oate at th.is rate -and our extensive market research indicates that they will - a $10.000 invesonent will yield a net profit of $19.316 after just five years. In l O years. it will yield a net profit of $75.944. s 10,000 12,400 15,376 19,066 1988 1989 1990 1991 off er a superior selection of invesoneot and liquidation programs. Best of all. no HTRCI portfolio has euer failed to produce a profit of at least 11 percent after one year. For a free information packet detailing our managed rare coin investment . portfolios. call us toll-free or return the · coupon below. Sut the controversy prompted ·Congress to consider legislation set- ting a national unif6nn ppll-closing time. The heads of the nc~ divisions of ABC, CBS and NBC testified in l 98S in favor of the law and gave its sponsors a handshakC1lgrcement that they would not project winnen until polls closed. NBC reignited the controversy this year when it "characterized' the · outcome of the New Hamoshirc ; primary before th~ polls bad closed. Under Gartner, who JOOk over the qews division this-summer, NBC has the same policy u the other networks. .. A · common poll~losina time woul<s soive it because the only other way 10 do it is to Jay to a _news organization, 'What you , know you cannot report, what you"know as a fact you e&11not report,' and that's a bad thing," David Burke, CBS New$' new president said recently. , ..... Assume at 11 o'clock at night I have the whole eastern seaboard as a fact. It isn't a {>rojection. I can •t withhold it. even afl wanted to." .. I • In business smce 1976. HTRCI is today one of America's leading rare coin investment firms. We serve more than 2.900 clients . nationwide. actively ·manage portfouos with a combined sales value of more than $90 million and 23,642 29,316 1992 1993 In these uncertain finanoal times.. good information is your ve~ best Investment. to all our ·orthodontic patients with November birthdays 36,352 1994 -800-854-5179 1995 (inside Callfomia) . ·, 800-854-6016 55,895 1996 69,310 1997 , 85,944 1998 (outside Califomla) .-----------------------------------------------------------------------) I ~ Free Information Packet. Oft,,., ... I HANNES n.JlY1NG 16i000 Initial Mbt.lm11m ~t ! ! 1 cz::ca:::a:/ ' Nalllf' ----------------------1 ~ Addrtj& s.rvl"f lrt'>Ut""'6.Slnu 1916 ----------_-___________ .......;;....;;;.. i sooo 8ftctJ SC., S..lte 500 C11y ________ Sl.t.._ _____ Zip coct.._ ____ ,. Newport icat., CA 92660 Bus Phon(1 I _ .. _ __,. ____ Home Phoftel 1----...;;..;;........; TelepltoM (114) 851·8202 • latkk Callfonil (IOOJ '54·Sl79 • °"1IWe CiUfoml lao,ol 85f:.60l6 ! · \ ~ from Todd Schneider .............................. 11· 1 Oono Olol~ ............•..........•........... , 1 I 1 l1so AlSodi.. ...................................... 11·1 Jennifer s.on. ..................................... 11· l Don Udoll. -·-·····••H• ... " ....... " .. _ 11·1 Soto St p,.,,., .. . ............ " ............. 11·2 Cc>lfrtile)' Meuch .......... n ......... ,., •••• ,., 11 ·3 • •-c1o,ii •••••.•.•................. : ........•.• 11.3 J111n1fer °'9o00 ................................. 11 3 Sandy lonlts ........................ : •...•.•....... 11 ·' Kyle Hllfllphr.y~ ............................... 11 ·6 Kritfi Ke»t............................. .:....... 11 ·7 Ttt~ ~ ........... , ..... ,.,, ..... " .. " • 11 .. 7 "°'"° to• _ ............... ~. ·-·.... 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" ............... 11-17 ..... ~ltt0tft•H ·-titl•tOtUtotttH••Ot•Hf ···· ICONll ~ ................................ 11·• 0.,,.... ~ ............... : .......... 11·· A902 INIM c.nt.r Dr., Suite 1 l l ...... ' { • . Occupied lands at stake today as Israelis cast Yotes. JERUSALEM (AP) ~ Israelis, cutina ballots in an emotionally electric climate of Arab firebomb attleb and repriaal air raids, voted today in watenhed elections expected to determine the future of the oc- Cllpied laod' • More thaft 300 Arabs and 10 Jews have been killed in. the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strike in the nearly ll·montb-<>ld Palestinian uprising qainst2l yeanoflsraeli rule. 'Election officials reported a heavy voter turnout under clear skies. A mUaive security force protcctcdpoll- ina places. The army sealed off the occupied lands, where a Palestinian aeneral strike was takina place. Labo!. JecLbY~ Forci&n Minister Shimon Peres has been nurnina on a platform of olre'rin1 to aive up some occupied territory in exchal!JC for peace. Likud, led by Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, opposes any sJth withdrawal. Neither Labor or Likud has suc- ceeded in pinina a cnajority in the 120-mernber Parliament s~ the Jewish state was established in~.948. Polls indicated they would fail apin. The situation has forced L.Jbor and Llkud to form alliances with minor parties-that bave pined influence beyond their numbers. Twenty-seven parties were entered in the election. Likud and Labor formed a f rac- tious coalition aftet the 1984 cle<; tions, when neither party eould arranae a majority with the small • t . . APL 111hll Al its ~tizens voted, Israel raided Arab auerrilla taraets in Lebanon in apparent retaliation for a firebomb attack Sunday. The Palestine Libera- tion Oraanization said three people were killed and 1 S wounded. _ J_ In Arab east Jerusalem tooay, parties.. ffi ·al · h Election o 1c1 s satd t c turnout was heavy, indicating that 75 to 80 percent of eligible voters would cast ballots. In the 1984 election, voter turnout was 78. 7 percent. laraeli Prime Mlnlater Yltsbak Shamir (rtchtJ watebee Illa wife Sbalamlt caat ber •ote In today'• general elecd on. I ·assailants today th(Cw a firebomb ~ta car, injurina threc"peoplc, police sa'id. Witnesses said the car was plast~red with stickers for the right-wing U1cud bloc and was being used to transpon voters. Police reponcd 74 incidents rang- in• from fist-fights to unlawful carn- paaaning. near polling stations. Three people were reported arrested. vbted in a working class Jerusalem lands, which 70,000 settlers share neiahborhood. · uneasily with I .S million Palesti- "My family.~nd I v~te-for Liltud."-nians. Sunday a rabbi's daughter and her ~ sons -were killed in a firebomb atlick by Palestinians in the West Bank. The army sealed off the occupied territories for 48 hours, beiinning at 11 p.m . Monday, and imposed curfews on rerugee camps in Gaza. Journalists were barred wilhout army permission and csc.ort• from ent~ring the territories, where a Palestinian general strike.was uttder way. he said. "The people here don't want ln the elcctaoh; 2.9 million voters to rctu~ th~ tcmtoncs. We suffered were c1igible to cast ballots. Results thcsh~lhngan 1967 and we don't want were not expected until Wednesday. to seen again." . By midaftemoon, 41 pcTcent of the electorate, or about 1,090,000 voters, had cast ballots. Results were to be announced after polls closed Jl-10. p..m. (noon PST) .. He was rt:fcmng to ~hcllinj of .. ~ore than 13,000 pohcemen and settlements along the border before tival guar~smen ~ere deployed at the Israel captured the tcrritori6 f(-0m 4,800 polhn& stations. Jordan and Egypt an the 196 7 Middle Lilcud_planned to spend about S2.5 East War. ma aon, hiring taxicabs and buses and Bank employee Rahamim Fadi.kJer Shamir favors the ~trcngtheoing of using the services of 10,000 volunteer J~wish settlement in the occupied drivers to gef voters to the-poll 1• -. Soviet official ~a ys budget deficit has existed 10 years Sentences in Falklan<ls w~rupheld MOSCOW (AP) -finance Minister Boris Gostev said today that the Soviet national budget has been in the red for tJtc past decade, and that'the deficit was "critically la.rae .. in the mid-1980s before beginning to drop. threaten Soviet President Mikhaar S. Gorbachev's BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) reforms. · ' -Former president and army chi~f Gostev's revelation at a news conference came just days aftet' the Supreme Soviot passed It 494 billion ruble ($19S billion) 1989 budget with a 34 billion ruble ($'55 billion} deficit. · Jan Vanous, who develops models of the Soviet Gen. Leopoldo Galticri lost has CCOJ\Omy for the Washington firm PlanEcon, estimated appeal of a I~-ear sentence and the deficit at 6S billion rubles to 75 billion rubles (S 104 conviction of n igence in losing the 1982 Falklands ar with Britain. billion to S 120 billion) each an 1987 and 1988. A civilian coun upheld a military Jn presenting that budget, GosJev acknowledged for the first time that the Soviet Union had a budget deficit. .,.I'd say it'j been in existence for about 10 )'cars. It was extremely large, critically large, in the last years of the previous five-year plan period," Gostcv told reporters. Yuri Maslyukov, the chairman ofth_e State Plann!!lS coun's decision against Galticn and Committee and an alternate member of the ruhng the two other members of his former Politburo. told the news conference that the Soviet Junta, Adm. )o~e l&aac Anaya and economy has inflation of0.9 percent to 1.5 percent. Bng. Gen.· Basiho1 lam1 Dozo and Maslyukov said wages ha vc nsen faster than labor stripped them of their ranks Monday. productivity. The four-Judge federal appeals He said the deficit then was 37 billion rubles (SS9 billion). panel upheld the May 1986 convac· "We have ":'Ore-monc> than v.e ha.~e goods. That's uons·by the Supreme Council of the why the shelves an the stores are empty. he said. Antttd forces. .. For the fmt time we have clearly stated that a deficit exists," Gostcv said. "We cannot live with a budget deficit. So we'll tryto act lid of at dunng the year.·· Some economic analvsts sa)' cheap consumer goods It also adjusted the sentences for arc hard to find m the Soviet Union ~ause of the s}stem Anaya and· Lam1 Dozo to I~ )Cars. of scttang pnces. Sance producers ere not frtt lo-nuse-·reducing Ana) a's by t-.o )can and · prices gradually on thc1.r $oods. the) stop manufactunng ancreasang Lama Dozo's b> four He said economic managers would ti) 10 tnm S40 billion from the budget, cut down on adminastrauon and get money-losmg state businesses. 24.000 of which are them and replace lhem wnh mor~ expensive products on The rettred commanders·tn-<'.h1ef bankrupt, to tum a profit. · which they can make a profit. ..of Argenuna·s arm}, nav> and air Showing a profit hes become 1DcreasangJy important force have been ID jail sance 1984. as Gorbachev pushes reforms reqwnng local managers to their sentences run throu&h Fcbrual) account for profits and losses. 1996. Their pensions, wlule techni- cally denied to them. will be paid to Western analysts said Monday they thank the Soviet bud&et deficit is larger than officials have sa1d, and ma} Rhino po&.chers· shoot rarigers ~ --' - NAIROBI. Kenya (AP ) -Park rangers shot it out with poachers who gunned down at least five white rhinoceroses and made off with the animals' valuable horns, lcilling off the species in Kenya's public lands. authorities said. Kenyan wildlife source said of the rhinos ... The rangers we·re wounded trying to defend them." _ According to today's English-language newspaper the Standard. two rangers were senously IDJurcd an what 1t dcscnDed as a 4S minute attack. A newspaper reported today that two ran$ers were seriously wounded in the battle Sunday night with about 30 poachcn at MCT\I National Parle, 140 males nonhcast of the capital Nairobi Five rhinos were lc1llcd, said George Muhoho. minister of tourism and wtldhfe Several wildhfc ex pens. who spoke on condition ofanon)'m1ty. put the number at six. The poachcn escaped after hacldng off the rhinos' horns, which can sell for up to $24,000 each in the Far East. where they arc used to make traditional medicines. In the Middle East, the horns arc fashioned anto ornamental daaaer bandies. Thincen elephants also were gunned down m the last week in different areas, the wildhfe sources said. "People watched over them day and night," a The killings came despite increased anti-poaching efforts by the government since ~ugust. when :vtuhoho ~vealed the slaughter of 92 elephants m the pre,1ous three months. SAINT JOSEPH HOSPITAL Sep&ember 11 Lisa and Craia Thomas, Brea. boy October I OeAnne and Hugh Broesamlc, Costa Mesa, boy MISSION HOSPITAL Sef&ember 17 Deborah and Roben del Junco M.D .. Irvine. boy FOUNTAIN VALLEY REGIONAL HOSPITAL 0e.-r1 Barbara and David Mulhollam, Irvine, airl Odobert Patricia and Anthony Amora, Hunt- inaton Beac'h, Jirl Oet*r l Kim Np Pham and True Tran, Fountain Valley, boy Jncy and Olenn Brooks, Huntinaton Beecb. boy Carol~ and Georae Kosearas, Hunt- intton Beach airl Janice ud R:obcrt Parriott. Hunt-inau>n Beach, airl Kimbetty OuJT and John Minarcin, Huntinaton 8!-<:bl boy UC1teer• Tina and Mipael Viva.aco, Costa M -'.4 aa...... . Tent aDd Raymond Lee. Huntlnaton Bmch.pl1 Corina. and JOtC S.,.Stome, Costa Maa,boy Debra and Mario.Pee&, Costa Mesa. ington Beach, boy October t Allison and James Charleswonh. Costa MeSa. boy Mary and Philip Nisco, Fountain Valley, girl Oetober 10 Khuyen Thi Nguyen and Trung Dai Le, Irvine, boy Dana and Carl PoweU, Huntington Beach, girl October 11 Jessica Marie Velasquez, Costa Mesa. . I . r!1etui Sat and Khaleel Zamer, Hunt- inatoo Beach, boy .. Dawn Stephens and Rolando Sanc- hez, Hunhnaton Beacb, boy October lt Jessica Kintz and .Michael Peters. Huntinaton Beach, boy Linda and Dennis Wallace, Hunt· inaton Beach, boy Felipa and Crai& Ruddy, Huntington &aeb, airl M'arauerite and Cary Rosen, Hunt- inaton Beacbi Jirl Lilia and Sil v10 Alderete, Costa Mesa, boy . Oci&Mer It Usa Watterson and Jefftey Fried, Fountain Valley, boy Sherry and Hernando Gamd.iaz. Hunbnaton Beach boy Leticia and J0te on>Pcu, Fountain Valley, boy Oc:'*r li Prl Re>1emary and Ronald K.is.Una. Hunt· inst<>in Beach, airl Octthr 5 ~nthia a'"' Robert 8111ndefinc, .Dcnite Dutro and Wilham L.oveU, Costa Mesa. lirf COiia Me.. boy Gina Knack and Tahoe Ellis. Hi.DI· GettMr I i~ Beecll, boy ~ad Bachitw JuneJ&. FountllD Np Tbi Thu >fo and Qlinh K.hac YdlJ, boy •Npycn. Sea Ocmeott, prt OcMMr 7 SAN a.DISN'I'& llOSPIT Malla Md K.aloJo Luamanuv~ S.,••••• 17 foualain Va.Uej, airl .:::-Catri LaWIOft, San Clt_mente, bo) OtteMr. ... ... , ... QristiM·Od Em Joseph. Hun\· 8etiadl Wcxtey ud Jiro Spaanolini. San Juan Capistrano, llfl September to Chnsnna and Jonthan Limebrook. San Clemente!, boy • September U Tammy and Javier Arnon1. San Clemente. boy Sepsember n Kelly and Dean Paur, San Clemente. boy . Patti and Michael Hughes, San Oemcntc. boy September U Joann Fuene and Oav1d Wert.. San Ocmcnte, boy • September n Melinda and John Gt.Ibo Ill. San Clemente, boy GtnovefTa and Christopher Re- ynolds, San Clemente, girl September ti Tamara and Robert Zuetell, San Clemente, boy Kathleen and Jeffery Hale, San Oemente, airt Maria and"'M111n Baltran. San Juan Capistrano. girl September st Cheri •nd Jack Baker, Dana Point. boy ' Maria and Salva~or: Granados., San Juan Capistrano. firl Octehr l Kathleen and Nc1l Klnman. San Juan Capiwano,boy Diane and Lu1s Bustamante.. San Juan CaptStrano. iirl OcttMrl Catbetjne and Micbad CrolSeue. Dua Poinc.. boy Ottekr7 Maria &Dd hul Berumen, San Juan ~~ .. Lita SUh&a Ud Ronald ~o. San Ocmntc, Prl . OetlMr ll Carolyn and Grabam Doyle, Capistrano~. boy their wives. The three. all 1n uniform. sat impassively. arms crossed, through the 90-minutc heanng. Defense attorneys said final ap- peals may be lodat.d wnh the U· prcmc Coun. The coun also upheld the acquit- tals of three o ther retired offi~rs who were instrumcntaJ 1n carrytng out the 74-day South ·"tlanuc war -Gens. Mano BcnJamlD Menendez and Omar Parada, and Vice Adm J uan Jose Lombardo. On April 2, 1982. Argentina ID· vaded the Falkl&nd Islands. off its south coast. which have been ruled b} Britain since 1833 Argentina cla1ms . 1t inherited the archipelago. which at calls the Malvinas. upon asSC'rtmg andependcncc from pa an 1n I 810 HUMANA HOSPITAL HUNTINGTON BEACH October 1 Mr. and Mrs. David Pope. Hunt- angtbn Beach. boy October 4 Mr. and Mrs. Dean Bender. West- minster, boy Mr. and Mrs. Mark Wukawiu, West- minster. bo) • October It Mr. and Mrs Michael Lucar. Hunt- ington Beach. g>rl " Andrea and Nick Walker, Hunt- inaton Beach. boy October 11 Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wombles, Hunungton Beach. boy October lt Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hauptman. Huntan.aton Beach, ain Mr. and .Mrs. Tamorh)' Pitts, Hunt- iftllon Bcach.11rl · October U Mr. and Mr'$. David Raddle. Hunt· 1naton Beach, boy October 1• Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Tro"ell, Hun'· inaton Beach, prl .:. SAINT JOSEPH ff'OSPIT AL Colleen and Daniel Stenalean, Hunt· inaton Beach. boy SOUTH 00451' MEDICAL CENTIUl OcteMrl Dana ahd Lincoln Haye Dana Point. tirl Lori Hecker and Frank PhtnnC), San Clemente, boy Odehr1 Shanda and OetJtv Rothe, Lacuna Bnch, t'*ln 11rts Katen and Ptuhp Popipkr, Dana Point, boy Oc&eMrll Nada and Ha n ~hrua, Lacuna BQ(h,prt Oc ...... C11herine and Michael Kent. Lquna . - , , OrMgeCofilt DAILY PILOTIT~. ~-1, 1Na A?. LOS ANG~ (AP.) -Gov. Georw DeukmejWl doesn't under- stand the AJOS crisil, said a member of .the stale AIDS Advisory Commit- tee wbo quit in protest ov~ the IO"emor's eDdoncment of an AJDS- rcportina initiative. Proposition l 02, opposed by the California Medical Association, Cali- fornia Nunes Association and the American c.ncer Society. would require maQdatory ~rtina to state health officials of posaiive test results for those infected with the AIDS viru1. - Monday Dr. Michael S. Gottlieb, who first reported casn of what as now known as acqwred immune deficiency syndrome in 1911, an- nounced his R$ignation from the state panel at a City Hall news conference. .. His endorsement ignores the col- lective medical wisdom of the na- tional and international e.xpens whose strategics to fight this disease arc already workina." Gottlieb said. · "I can no longer constructively work within the administration," he said. • · , Committee members Dr. Richard Hamilton and Bruce Decker alt0 rniped, Gottlieb saidA>eckn con- firmed his resipation but Hamilton was unavailable for comment. Deu- kmejiao 's fowth appointee is alao a physician, Assemblyman WiUWD Filante, R-San Rafael All four were appointed in I 984. . The Republican governor releuied bis Sllnd on Proposition I 02 and 28 other statewide propositions on the Nov. 8 baUot Friday. U oder Prop 102, officials also would be required to track dO't''D an infected person's sexual panntls for the past decade and anfonn them they mar be at risk. Opponents say the measure would inhibit volun~ le$tin& and the te<>st would be exorbi- tant. "It's unfonunatc that individ~ls would rcsian based on a p0hcr, disagreement over a single issue, • said Tom Beermann. Deukmcjian's assistant secretary. • rip~ed workers must -receir e minimum·pay SAN FRANCISCO AP -The s c upremc niled that workers who receive tips must be patd the ~.2S minimum wage and said the oew"subminimum.waec"of$3.S0an hour violates a I 97S law declaring tips as the cmployee1 s property. .The court also ruled that tipped workers were-entitled to be paid the full minimum wage retroactive to July 1-adiffercncepf$6adayforan· eight-hour day. · Monday the court struck down California's four-month-old "sub- mmimum" wage for more than S00.000 restaurant workers and others workers who.receive tips. The coun ruled unanimously that all must be paid $4.25 an hour, the state minimum wage, and said a December decision by the.. state Industrial Welfare Commission that allowed a lower minimum wa~ to workers who_rr:aive at lean~ a ' month In tips violated the 1975 rulin& that tips arc the employee's sole" propcny. • -ne commission his attempted to .. do the very lhina the l.qislature has prohibited: under this system, the commission clearly purpons to allow an employer to ~l!0tipped ~mployee a waae lower be W-Ould be oblipted to pay if the employee did not rccieive t1ps." said the opinion by" Justice Stanley Mosk. Soon after the l 97S law was passed. the restaurant industry s<iuaht a lower minimum wqe for tipped workers. The IWC resisted, 5'ylfta a sub- minimum based on tips wu barred by law; in 1980. the Su~e Coun a.arced. sayina the commission's in- terpretation was reasonable and con- sistent with the app&rent intent of the law. • -----------------------------! Medical waste untracable despite ID on wristband SA:-.l DIEGO (AP) -A ~j_nt's whose name was on tbc wristband wnstband from an Occans1dc hbsp1-had been an emeriency room_peticnt tal was among items of medlcal waste Oct. 24, th:at v.ashed ashore in La Jolla. but Butshc wd Tn-City offjcials don't count) hcaltb officials snll don't beheve the med.teal waste which was kno" where most of the matcnaJ discovered with the identification came from. band last weekend came from the Tn-City Hospital spokeswoman hospital because record.s and1ca1e that Jennifer Velez confii:med Monday pauent wasn't given any blood prod· lhat the 21-year-old San Diego man ucts. •underwear bandit' ball $1 million LOS .\NGELES (AP) -B811 was to one count of robbery in Walnut set at ! t--rmllron-Monday for the He as believed to have. robbed 11 accused .. underwear bandll," chaflCd least 21 'busioessci in Los Angeles, with robbing women and forcing Ravcntde and San 8cmardino coun- the.m to 11vc ham lhcir under-ues between Sept_ 7 and Oct. 23. In garments. · about six of the heuts, he reponedJy Bruce Allen L)'on~ 3J. of Mo~no ordered women employea to sjve Valle) was held at County Jail on 30 ham their underwear. poboe said. felony charges. Has arraJanment. ong-Lyons was arrest~ Oct. 23 follow- inally scheduled Monday, was post· ang a robbery at an 1oe cream store . poned until Thorsda> Ten pun of women's underpants L)ons last week pleaded not gwh) were found an bis car. poltoe S11d. Niguel. 11rl October 17 Cath> and John Do~)'. Laguna Niaucl. boy - Nik.la and Doug Duphsea. Laguna Beach. gi.rl . October It Tncaa and Garrttt Jones. Dana P01nt. airl · ~tobeJ'H Jill and Uoyd Sicden, San Juan Capistrano. boy HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Oclabc.r. Mr and ~!"$. Thomas Calabro. Hunungton Beach. girl Mr and Mrs David Ohman. Irvine, a>rl October 7 Mr and Mrs. Mark Monettt. Costa Mcsa.11rl October I Mr and Mrs. Ja~ .\pplcbaum, Irvine, a>rl Mr. and Mrs. Grovtr Thomas. Hunt· maton Beach. a>rl October I Mr. and MI'S. Richard Lee. Costa Mesa. Jirl Mr. and Mn. Lance Richardson, Irvine. boy Octeber It Mr. and Mr'$. Bnan Carlson. Co ta Mesa, boy Oc'*rll Mr. and Mrs. PtlCf hutte, 11'\'lnt, boy M{. and Mrs. Onstopher Ta 1or, Ne~1>0n Beach. boy Mr. bd Mrs. O.vid Schwa.n.z.. Hwn- inatoo 8cach.. prt • ~ll Mr. and Mrs. JOT1 Dietz. 1rvine. sart Mr. aad Mrs. :Thoma Brown. F®ft. tain V&Jley. &irl Oc:---1• Mr. and Mrs.; Bract Gallowa • Of• ona &l Mar, p.rl Mr, and Mn. Kev.n Fanuna. n Clemente.. boy Mr. and Mrs. James Perciual, New- pon Beach, girl Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Operacz, Hunt- maton Beach, airl Ocieber lt Mr. and Mrs. Noble Warrum, Costa Mesa.11rl Mr. and Mrs. David Pilccki Huot-- 1ngton Beach.~> · Mr and Mrs. Cbarlt\,.Gchin-Scott. lrv1ne. boy ~r and Mrs Billy lnzer. Irvine. boy October U Mr and Mrs Michael Browe.11. Costa Mesa. 11rl Mr and Mrs Jon Strittmater, Irvine. boy Mr. and Mrs Jacob RabinoVlch, lf''lne. 11rl Mr and Mrs. David Downs.. Hunt .. inaton Beach, boy Oct*rll Mr. and Mn. Rober\ Coit., Hunt• lftllOD Beach, boy Mr. and Mrs. ~tcr Hc1frich, Costa. Mesa. boy Mr. and Mn. Robenson Miller, Costa Mesa. aarl Oc*-11 Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Pvdoni. Hu..nt• •QtiOft Beach, boy Mr. and Mn. Robert H indricbo Newport Beach, boy Mr and Mrs. William Btck, N,..,...~ Beach. p.rt ~1• Mr and Mrs. M1Cbad -\Uttler, Da°' Poun.prl M,r. and Mrs. Micbad ~ pon 8Cia\, 11'1 Mr. aftd Mf'l. =:':· lm_ne. bot Mr. ind Mn.; non.t ROl~~Ullmm dclMar,bciy Mr. &ftd M.t1. Stephen 1bolD C'om Maia. bay_~--~ Mr. aad Mn.. Keary Goma. Meli,Wy I .. Election 'BB Vote 'yes' on Proposition 82 California's voters have suppo~tatc bond issues to improve and build local water projects and to he!p P8>: for water conservation and ground water recharge projects since 1960. Propositjon 82 is a continuation of that commitment to improve the ways we rustribute and conserve our precious water supply. It would authorize the sale ofS60 mimon worth of general obligation bonds for two low-interest loan programs: • The first would be for $40 million to help pay for., projects to improve water conservation and to develop more ground water supplies. Conservation projects could include -thjngs like lining existing agricultural rutches and canals. •The second is a S20 million fund to help local w~ter agencies build additional supplies of water. Eligible projects would include water delivery and storage systems, such as canals, dams and reservoirs. Loans under this program are limited to $5 million per project and require approval of the Legislature. According to the state legislative analyst's background statement on Proposition 82, .. Water conservation projects include repair or replacement of leaky water lines and canals, or of inefficient agncultural irrigation systems. Ground water recharge facilities include ditches, pits, steam beds or wells, ·into which water is placed and seeps into the ground water supply. The water is pumped out when needed." The two loan progratlls authorized by Proposition 82 would help California u~ its limited water supply more efficiently and continue the ongo ing effort to improve water conservation. ·,. One of the most efficien( ways to keep up with the increasjng demand for water is by recharging our under- ground water supply because many areas of the state use ground water faster than nature can replenish it. -' Ground water recha;ge has been used in California f9 r 90 years and has proved its efficiency by putting surplus surface water from the annual runoff and Oood waters during wet years into natural underground storage so it can be pumped · .out during dry years. Coastal areas, Southern California and the Central Valley have proved the effectiveness of gro und water recharging. Proposition 82 would provide loans to cities, counties, water districts and other local govern mental agencies to repair leaking pipes. ditches and canals. capture and store floodwaters for later use and for small water storage facilities to help meet the water demand of growing a reas. Californians once made the m istake of accepting a simplistic theory that if no new roads were built growth would stop. They should not make that mistake with the need to continue improving water conservation. storage and deli very syste ms. Dunng the last 10 years California's population has increased by 6 malhon people and the growth 1s co'ntinuang. We are using JTlOre water and have to stretch our limited supply. Water conservauon a nd ground water recharge are cost effective and environmentally sound systems to keep u p with our short-term water needs. Proposition 82 is a loan progra m and repayments of those loans will be used to help repay the cost of retinng the bond debt. It 1s a sound investment to help meet the present and fut ure water demands of our state and sho uld be approved on Nov. 8. Religious liberty Although the last-mmute flurrv before the close o f a legislative session in Sacram ento always produces some monumentally bad laws. sometimes the process produces something constructive. One bill signed by Gov. Deu- kmejian, SB I , should provide a modicum ofadded protection for religious libeny. The bill lim its government power rather than bpands it. which is the best way to protect liberty. ~ .. I protects churches and religious organizations from bemg assessed excessive punitive damages in suits brought against members of the clergy or churches ... This bill is a small dem onstration that a government with separation o f powers can sometimes act on behalf of liberty o r md 1v1du~l ri~ts. The clergy n:talpr:actice crisis was created by Judges being Wll hng to entertain suits they probably shouldn't have, thus subtly extending the power of the Judiciary. But the Legislature still has the power to rein in the Judiciary in some insta nces. SB I is o ne responsible way to do so. Ifs not often we get a chance to congratulate the l.egJslature on stnkmga blow for h ben y. This u me the}' did 1t Turlock Jouraal Rape libel case lnnocent until proven guilty is a cornerstone of our Jud1c1al stytem. guarding agai nst anything that resembles vigilante justice. Santa Cruz County was reminded of this last month during a trial in which a jury found that Women ARainst Rape libeled a Scotts Valley man by circulating a flier falsely accusing him of assaulting and attempung to rape a woman co-worker. No matter how heinous a crime -and any sane person beheves rape to be heinous -there is no room for a person or a special interest group to take the law into its own hands, in any sense. Even though the woman in volved didn't testify and said in depositions she didn't really remember what bad happened during that evening four years ago, WAR refused to back off from its allegations and refused to apologize and print a retraction. The jury's decision therefore stands as a hollow victo. ry. At the same time, it should remind us of the dangers of taking the law into our own hands, and away from the coun process. Sui. Cn~ S..UHI ORANGE COAST ,_ flll ....... . Daily Pillt (dltor Ad'ttff!Sllll OllKIOI °"' ,..., n.lilll-. Assoc11t1 [dltoi Rtllll AdYtrllSI~ Man-cei f•CWI ,.., .... l'ttws [dtlOI ~Stiled~~ Rosemary Ctuchman Sine .... " ...... Publisher City C•tor Collf1ollr . .... c ..... c,,.w~ s,otls (dltor BuilllfSS Office ....,,, ~II.,...~ dey OI !Mt.,.., II• ))0 s.m.o ... , .... W lfY f4 Cott• Mttl CA Addf•t • f ttf'I [OIOI c.t~ Ollecltt CMtMO O ldel Oi to lo-. IMO C0t.1a c ...... ..., .... .._.CA~ ~(ditor Pr•t• Owettor J .. Tu.day, Nov.mber 1, 1Ne A8 Beek paints· canditlates accurately · To the Editor: Allan Beck's column in Jhe Oct. 24 issue of the Daily Pilot should be vcatly a.Ppreciated by your readers. He adnutted the powl>ility of some inaccuracies, but on the whol~1 I think he stated the positions of me can- didates very well. If you want to keep even a reasonable facsimile of the Newport Beach we have enjoyed livint in, you'd better go with the candidates who support Measure K. They will promote new develoi>ment on a limited scale when our streets • can handle the traffic such development would generate. Cox, Rodbeim and. Plummer are no\etedged to that. . . L. THOMPSON Corona dc:I Mar False issues- raise9 in CM Dukakis uses the 'L' word ToT:;~~rMesaRcsidcnt.-PoHt;-- cal Action Commiuee is a very small to Sway Reagan Democ•ats ~~n .. w~~c t~61~'!rg~~. ;!~ . & ~ . ~~ ~~~u~t~~~!~~ FA~~~~s 1n her • · · A 0yes~' vote on Measures H and I HANFORD -When political Democrats had hoped he would do assures planned, well-balanced · de- pundits talk about "Reagan Demo-weeks ago. go on the offensive against velopment. Only foar acres of the 20 crat.s," thctre describing the voters of °Bush and exploit the latent feelings acres will be built on. As for Gold- Califomia s Central Vafley. D that he's a son of privilege. bei'4er's assertion that there will be Democratslhave a paper advantage ., AN Dukakis bas been testing vari-bui dings (plural) of 20 stories, only among the. agricultural region's ·ations of the theme for the past week one is planned. voters but Republicans -especially WAlTERS or two and there Is some reason to "yes" on H and I will provide $30 those at the top of the ticket -have ., believe it's having an effect. The million for traffic solutions and fared well by painting tbcir Demo-contest with Bush appears to be reduce traffic thro ugh our city, as well cratic foes as tax-and-spend, son-on-tightening up in California and sev-as accommodate traffic created by the crime liberals. lt was a line that he repeated, with eraJ-other states. project. . Ronald Reagan. George Deu· fc~ variations, throughout the day as Dukakis himself. buoyed by the Approval ofH and I caps all growth lcjme)ian and other conservative Re-his specially chartered Amtrak train, size and enthusiasm of the crowds on in North Costa Mesa. Goldberger pubhcans have cleaned up in the load~ with cam~ign aides, sup-Sunday's whistle stop tour, appeared would· have you believe otherwise. Valley by ponching hot buttons such porters and reporter$, rattled through upbeat. Did Qetbel Towers (I 9 stories) stimu- as wes, crime and gun control. the valley from Bakersfield to Stock-"You cln feel it .• you can taste it, late more tall buildings in downtown And given the tendency of Re-too. _you can sense it," he said in Fresno;~·costa:· ~. Of course-not. The publican Southern California and the He altern1ttively evoked the images addin~, "Our message of standing by General Plan will not allow this. Democratic San Francisco Bay area ofTruman, who came from behind in the side of average Americans is The economics of the project arc to cancel each other out, the Central 1948 to win the presidency, and getting through." Jood. More than $3 million each year Valley and its conservative-voting Kennedy. who also cam8aigned in But it remains a high-risk strategy. 1s returned to our schools: S 1.3 Democrats are often the keys to the Valley via train in 196 • to fire up one more suited to a man whose million annually to the City (Measure .political victory in the state. the large. enthusiastic crowds that campaign was failing and needed I will return over $530,000) with $30 One might have thought, therefore. provided the media Wlth their day's punching up than to someone confi-million for local traffic solutions. ·As that when Michael Dukakis brought fix of telegenic images. dent of victory. lmplicitfy, it's a you can see, for Goldberger to ass.en bis ailing presidential campaign to After months ofportraymg himself recognition that shunning ideological that a "yes" on Hand 1 will generate the Valley for a 1lx-city train tour as a low-voltage manager and seeing labels was allowing the opposition to more annual costs for the city is Sunday, he would have put the more hfa once-large lead collapse under a sell its definition to voters. totally' fallacious. conservative facets of bis political barra&e of Republican attacks-that If he was going to be tagged as a Finally, Goldberger says "much personality on display. It's in the accused him of being a closet liberal. liberal anyway. Duk.a leis seems to be money will be spent by the developer Central Valley and othCf' suburban Dukakis has -taken a new tack in saying.he'll accept ifand redefine itto to conv'1tce voters." But wouldn't and rural areas that Republican hopes of pulling an upset. Zorba the his advantage, taking care to evoke you. if you were a homeowner, spend George Bush's hits on Oµkakis have Clerk, as some wags have tagged the images ofliberal winners, such as a proportionate share of dollars to been most effective. Dukakis, has transfonned himself, or Roosevelt. Truman and Kennedy, erotect your P.ropcrty'? What C'.J. But Dukakis. after months of at least he hopes. into a fighting and avoid identification wtlh liberal segerstrom wtll spend to inform shunning the dreaded "L-word,.. populist liberal in the Harry Truman losers of a more recent vintage. such Costa Mesa ciuzens of the benefits of chose the Valley to declare repeatedly mold, defending a beleaguertd as George McGovern ..and Walter One South Coast Place is consider- that he's a liberal and proud of it. middle class against the depredations Mondale. able; however, the 'information rep- "We need a president in the liberal of tho5e at the top of the economic As Dukakis puts it: 'Tm doin$ a resents a consensus supported after tradition of Ffanklin Roosevelt. ladder. better job of explaining who Mike many months of consideration by the Harry Truman and John Kennedy," "Mr. Bush is a guy who w_ants to Dukakis is:· - -oommlttl1ly·at·1~Clfntt hs many Dukakisdeclarcd to several thousand help the people who already have 1t . Will it work? !he od~ are against homeowners aro ups and associa- chccring supponers at Hanford's old made," he said in Bakersfield. "We hlm, and ~spcaally-so in .web key tions. ~ · Santa Fe train station, one of the want to help every family." areas ·as the Central Valley. But it's A ·•yes" vote on H and I clears the largest crowds ever brought together Thus, in dedanng himself a liberal making it a more interesting contest. way for Costa Mesans to enjoy a in this small Valley community (and taking a chance that it will DM Walters Is • 1yodJcatH beautiful and sensible project which southwest of Fresno. backfire) Dukakis is doing what many co/rumJJ1t. benefits all. Whales' plight brings out the humanity i~ 8.11 Of us Why do we feel such a kinsh ip to whales? Are you as glµed as I am to the plight of the two surviving grays trapped in the ice off Alaska? Re- member how we adopted Humphrey who refused to leave the inland channel he was stuck in, swim under a bridge and join the rest of the miaratinit herds? And bCforc that there was G igi. In 1972 Gigi was captured at two months of age and sent to lh e in a research tank at San Diego's Sea World. When she was a year old we11ll vicariously participated in the giant naval maneuver needed to return her to her destiny in the sea. So now we have the most unlikely scenario with the whales' traditional bunters. the Eskimos and the Russians. joinina forces with the "crazy Americans .. to cut an C1Ape route for the trapped whales. ru bet when we aee l1\0TC of the whales thin their skinned-up noses we will find out that ~ are ~ouna males who dilly daJJied fcedina 10 the northern waters imtad of beadina south as they arc 1uPPQSed to do. ft would really 1urpri1e me if a female whaJ~ got cauabt in such a l)fedica- menL They know they mUJt huny to the calm, secluded habitat or either Scammon'• l.alloon Ol' San lsnacio aJona the cout 1n Ba,ia California to ~ spot for 11vin1 'birth and So the prqnant females take off first from the summer fcedjna around.I in the A~ic. I ean uoder- ttand her ur,eocy. As she nears the 1 lth month. the baby ~haJc srowina inside her could bo up to 16 feet and weaah a ton. £""~ winter throuab the qei; ·California's wtest courists .have ~ • mauivo swim~ off our COISt. After the ptetnant females. led by an Okin' c:ow ·ID bY. die non-.,,...,t JACKIE HEATHER females and the older males follow. The male, or bull, will often keep a harem of cows. That is why I am guessing that it was immaturt males who got caught stoking up on those extra helpings of ltrilll>ecause this year, at least, there was no ~t uraency to aet south I don t know about you, but 1 am a dedicated whale watcher. On their journey south, the whales swim close to the coast particularly at the Dana Point promontory. From Dcc:ember throup March, up to l 00 whales a ~y have a>&raded by this.point. Lookina very mucb like their ancient anc:eston, lbe ITIY whales enact the lonaiest scheduled milJ"ltion of any mammalanywbere, swimmina ~II over 6,000 miles in eaeh direc- tion. They spend half their lifetime in transit. . Despite the plotic chanaes in our coutbne, despite the surveillance by people and bolts. despite their threat· ened exunction twice in the past century. the arays have remained constant in their course, their pace and their teason. Most remarkable of all -they interfere with no other species. I take that t.ck. When cqer bottert mi-.judac where and when a whale will surflClC they run the nsk of beina upended. Oray whales ate very slow swtm• men-2 to l knots with bunts of 6 to 1 knots when atanacd. Boeters ntch for ~ pveaway spo\St each ume 1t exhales. ll\11 beJecn (filttt-fecdi.111) whale ha I double blo'fthOlc. Wann llr of, the OUl.,._tb meeti• W91Cr that has settled on and in the blowholes creates a vapor spout in a slightly divided column up to 15 feet high and visible for miles. _ "Thar she blows!.. the whaler's watch would announce. The wl').ales spout about three to five times during the few minutes of each surfacing as it breathes and displays its enormous back. • After the final breath of the se- quence, a large araY will dive down beneath the surface for as long as 15 minutes. Often you will be able to see its magnificeot 10-foot-wide ta.iJ flukes as it disappears from sight. After a whale disapeears beneath the surface, its "footpnnt" is clearly visible in the water -a round, flat slick many feet in diameter. If the whale doesn't dive like this fot a longer period of time, it may be playina or sleep\ns. More ~ts have crashed into a whale dunna a nap ti roe. 1 love it when I see a whale .. spy hoppiDJ.." This happens when the py lifts its IS-foot Iona head completely out of the water u if to watch tbe watchers and tcemJ to be standint on iu tail. If you are reaUr, lucky you mi&ht see a whale "breach ' u it is JJ!Opcllc:d at biab speed by its powerful flukes. The arays do this for a number of reasons: co look around, to shake off their barnacles and other parasites, or to show off their pat sttenatb and size to impress matab.llC partners. The whale bas m8Clc a put imprnaion upon I.be world becaulC of the role it played in the Bible and alto bec:aute of'iu impraaive .ue. It has earned immonality. Ao:ofd· i"' to the lllamic faith. :n..!f 10 anunals will encer Pandile, oae of' dim ii tbe ........ twilcl .... Jonah. ....... ., ... ,,..,.... ..... I I,,,,_,.,.,..._,_.,.., iHj. JERRY ADAMS Costa Mesa Sign pollution lighting City To the Editor: Reference is made to the recent news item in the Daily Pilot relating to Mr. Rodheim's accusation that vandals were destroying bis signs. Mi&ht I sugest that perhaps others also feel that candidates are ir- responsible when they plaster our c1 ty with their si)ns and then leave them in place after the election is over. (Mr. Rosenberg's signs are still in evidence from the last election.) Apparently when bie bus1ness sponsors such candidates a s Rodheim and Cox, it give$ them the ri&ht to pollute our city with their sians. I think it is not only an attempt to buy an election, but shows lack of responsibility for where they arc placed and when they arc removed. J submit that perhaps the prolifera- tion of sians and where they are pla<led tells us quite a lot about the candidate. W, L THOMPSON Corona del Mar TooAv IN H1s10R v Today is T~y,. Nov. I, the 306tb day of 1988. There ~ 60 days leftinthc}'eal'. Tb1 sAllSainu'Day. Today's hiabliaht in history: In 19S2, the U nited Scates ex- ploded t.be fint l\ydroaen bomb. il'I 1 *' at Eruwetok in the MIJ"lball lslaodt. On this date: In IS 12, Miehda.io•s paiatinp on the ceili~ of the Sistine Chapel wett first exhibited IO the public. la 1604, Will.am Shakeepee.-e's tilledy-otbello" ... ftrst pmented at Wbhdtall Palace in LoDdoa: In 161.~Sbakapeate'• rom&DbC 'CQmed)' -1ne Tempest" waa ftnt praaned at Whiteb.:11. Five ,.n ~ Tbe U.S. Ha.. of JlePl-tadwa need 40).ll iD •¥Or ol'leai•doa to IODlY ... W• ,.,... ...... to :.a.e U.S. .... --ire· ~~~= lllllCDoa. ., ...... ~ ..... ,, . . ZOUTlt!fl>Tg-SIOTB Anoutdoorcercmonyin the garden at Mariners Church, Newport Beach, on Aui. 61inked in marriage Jenifer A. Smith of Newport Beach and David A. Zoutendy~enu:lhe couple grccted 500 guests at their reception in the courtyard of the church. Mr. and Mrs. Gary Smith of Ne~rt Beach arc the parents of the bride. She wore a full length gown of white silk orpnza over taffeta with lacE.&ndJ~earl beading on the bodice and hem of the skirt and train. Julie Smith, ~ster of the bride, was maid of honor, and bridesmaids were Melissa Lehman, sister of the bride- aroom, Jill Dufour, Aymi Phillips. Ti~mothers and Stacy Rusk. The bridegroom is the son of Dr. and Mrs. John Zoutendyk of La Crescenta. His father served as best man, and ushers were Todd Smith, broth~r of the bride, Lee Atkins, Rob Dixon, Tohn Lehman and Tom Cnbtree. . After a wedding trip to Kaui in the Hawaiian 1slands, the couple are residentsofRarotonga, Cook Islands. He is a marine biologist based on Rarotonp for the Cook Island Marine Fisheries Department. FRltPfCB-LUNSWA Y Huntington Beacb residents Nancy Lunsway and John French exchanged wedding vows in a Sept. 3 ceremony in the First United Methodist Church, Colondo Springs. Colo. They greeted I SO guests at their reception at the Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado Springs. Sam and Vera Lunsway of Colo- rado Sprinis arc the parents of the bride. She wore a gown of white satin with a cathedral-length train edged with imported lace and pearls. The bodice was satin overlaid with lace and beaded with pearls. Devon Hornung was maid of honor. and bridesmaids were Shari llr. and Mn. Donald Llney ........................ ...................... 1m em• PUii co 4111. n .. s •. e. ... 1 ... t.f..iet 1M ... llriiee ·~~~~~ ..... , ...... ,_ • ,.. r- • • r. , Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Tueedey, Novernb« 1, 1988 U Confused about the insurance initiatives? You're not alone. Each one claims to be the solution to· high auto insurance rates~ But when you look behind the promises, it all c9mes back to one fact: You can't cut the price of a produ£t or · service without also reducing the cost of providingil. Propositions 100 and 103 do nothing to lower-costs that cause high insurance rates. They are illusions leading to big-city subsidies. Prop 104, the No-Fault initiative: • Attacks the cost problems of false and exaggerated claims ... of costly and frivolous lawsuits. • Gets more claim dollars to injured peop1e-and fewer • to the legal system. • Pays victims faster. . Only-Prop 104 offers an honest chance for long-term price relief everyu1here in California not just big cities. Look behind the promises. Vote for the initiative that deals with price and costs. • ,. VOte re'YES · onl04 Vote~NO onl03 .Vote~NO onlOO .. If you have questions please contact your State. Farin agent. .., STATE FAIM . INSUIANCI State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company Home Office: Bloomington. Illinois • -· , - _, J \ .. ~ . . l l AlO DAILY PILOT/ Tueedey, No\lember 1. 1988 . 'Muslc&l Comedy Murders' cr•c-lingfarc~_in Laguna If you crossed Aptha Chnstlc wt lb Kaufman and Han, and threw in a little Jack Sharkey for scaso'nin&. the result mi&ht be something akin to "The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940.!. Toi TITUS t:1 ~ntly in its Orange County premiere at the Laauna Playhouse, John Bishop's sendup of two theatri- cal aenres -the whodunit and the backstllC comedy -is sheer delight under the stilled directorial hand of Joan McGillis. The play incorporates the most traditional clement of a murder mystery-a aroup of people trapped in a snowbound mansion with a killer on the loose -with a twist These particular individuals arc show busi- ness fotks ostensibly assembled for the readina of a new musical comedy (hence the title; it's nor a musical). of World War fl. there's a Nazi saboteur to deal with, aJong'Wlth the n_asty fellow who's ·cutting up cbonnes on Broadway. And, as you might imagine. few people arc actu- ally who~ they present themselves to be. Also, wiµi the country on the brink The show crackles with comedic spark, an ensemble exercise in lam- poonery. There are more secret passages than "real" entrances and exits on Steven Wolff Craig's attract- ive maiision drawing room set. and •IHCCA DI llOlllAY •FEDS (PG-13) ,,. .. ,. ... , .. 1 ••• JODUI fOST(R -r: ii/ r. t .... r l ( ' ~ ,.\).u11_ .... • THE A.CCUSED (fl ) U 30 1 SB IO 1 lot 4t . DOii AllfCHf THINGS CHANGE IPGI 12 U14t4 6S111t IS HEARllRUK HOTEL l'G-131 ,LUS COCUIUIL IRI A FISK CAl.LED WANDA (R) 'lUS llG 1,GI • PUNCH LINE (R) • GORILLAS IN. IZMZJUR'14t11M THE MIST (PG -13) i2152US•1UIOOI • OOfULLAS IN THI MIST (PG13) 70MM I TAACK DOUY 5 15·1-00.10 lO CLAM 'I •Mn ~ (PG13) M S •S-l:00-10-00 ' - *ALIEN NATION (fl ) ELVIRA (llG·1J) 'LUS llllGHlltARf 0111 lllll STREET IV I~ U Sil MS IS I Ht4S C•ll 6)4 9!>0~ OllAlllGI WHO FRAMED RO GER RA.HIT IPGI 'lUS llG IUSllllUS l'fll lillt uopo111 .... o. 111 [WIS Tf\1' CtT V \"000•""9 C•"'•' WITHOUT A CLUE (PG) 5 45-1:15-lO:lCI THINGS CHANGE (PG) 5 JCI. 7 JO.t:lO DOMHtlCK a EUGENE (PG13) ~ 5:4S:UO·l0:15 THE KIU (fl) 5:45-!:lO HALLOWEEN• 7-45 ALIEN NATION (RI 'l US DI( HARO IRI A FtSM CALLED 1t WANDA (") 5;15-l:lO·lO:lO T-APEHEAOS (R) ! 00 ~~':t1~":13) CLAJltA .. HEA'" 1t , .. , Hl-1'15-10-30 just about as many phony aOc:enu. MartbcUa Randall. the pande dame of Laguna theater, clepntly enacts the hostess with the tonpc- t w1 sting mon.ik~r (Elsa von Grosscnknucten) who arranaes ~ little get-together. Punk.in Trcssdt isa not as her even more Teutonic ma.id who miy be a victim or a lrilJer -or both. The obligatory romantic subplot is ni~ly filled by Jack Gallagbcr as a ghb Broadway comic only Slightly removed from vaudeville and Jen- rufer Erin Brown as a cJtorus girl whose attempts to ta.kc him seriously arc continually inttrrupted. Robert Kocol o~rbaps the most accomplished orma.nce of the night as a heavily brogucd Irish tenor, while Jeffiey B. Schlichter is equally impressive as the director of the audition. Michael Glover Leigh as •u-...,..,~._.. -l<QI •W&tWfM ---·-•c::GllOIY ·---......, -~{...,..... !• ...... ~---,,.,,... .. .. . ---•CIQllST• 91.A •Gt..-. ~ --.-er-......... WCI I W t• -....c: ....... >--.•• ... • ..,.... Uti Ml •&-'-..... .., --;;;;;;;::ii7.~iiiii':iiii-;:----'~"- QOM••S•TNE 'tf IDT (N13) S:l~lltl5 _.,. ALIEN NATIOll w (R) . 11:• THE ACCUSED (R) THE ACCUSED (A) 1 00·3 JCl..I 00.1.15-10 THE ACCUSED , .. , '15-l·JCl..1040 iriltiC '2ZA -tr '"> 5:4s.1!9'-10 00 A FILfCALLED -A-WANDA(") 5:1S.7:Jl.!.45 • MYSTIC PIZZA tf (A) 11 45-1-45- 4·00-i LS·UO 111'.40 ~WITHOUT A CLUE M (PG) 1t I 15-l'JO-S 45-100-0 U BJ llONNJE FEVERGEON duction. 11ir opresscd COOCttD m- ...,..,.. cca, s a • volves its approprialrDCU for an Swords cross, along with a few aucfitocr of YOUllC c:bildmL wira. in the Irvine Tbeatcrfairc for ~au. with Ad rs Sttnc 6. Cbiklren's production of .. Tbc Tbrtt flash and wu1iots ~ M~" at Irvine H.igb ScboOI. wounded" and die-as isasmtial to ThC" old expression .. You've got this wort.. AJ.SQ. jn the sccood act. a your wires crossed" finds new l)"lean-musketeer only a few fttt from the mg when applied to the Tbcatcrfairc first row of wnglina lis1ncrs cm<> and its choice of Aluandcr Dumas' tionally oarra1eS his talc of pcnooaJ classic as children's rcpenoilJ. _ ~>'.· indudina his wifr·s af&.tr Adapted for the stage by Frcdcnck wtth his b!"otbtt .•ho. when: found Gaines. there as no question as. to the . out. commsu swcidc b)• twicina qu.abty of the pace or. for that matter. Gradually a.ss:um1na a dna.nkco the quality of this parucular pro-stupOr brought on by tbr wmd be ll098Y llCFE ... N .......... Pl.EASUltES •10•• ~ 5'1-7645 1886 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA, CA. _,__ •IC ••1111 ,~ ...... ----........... _, ,... .... ·~~--..... -..... _ --~--·-.. ~ ........... .. --•D • ,... .. _ .. _ ------...... nta._ .. __ --~....., .. ~~--... - ----·--· • .._ .. 1_~ .. __..;;;..a_1.;;.;;·=-·=t=: ... -.. ----~--·-... .......... _ • Wlld. wacky comedy tbat11 keep you too busy cb&dling to do mucb fi&UriJll.. 1be Musical Comedy Murders of 1940" doesn't have mucb music. but it's p plenty of comedy and ~wda". It continues Tuesdays throulh Saiur- days at I p.m.. and Sundaysa t 2:30 until Nqv. 20 at tbc Ulpna Play~ Douse. 606 ~ )"OD Old. .i...cuna Beach. Call 494-0743 ro.- bc:h1 Information. \11' '.'·, T ,·.1 1 ~!!' ' • •I . \ . . . .. . \ • '\ I I ' ' ; , PFDPIE Hospit~l Qackers. ha v~ a real bci:ll . • ., uaDI 11. llBICD ..................... All *ilaa• aftlair it was mosJ ckf5 ., ,, IDilll co ~ llCconlina to ~ ..... c:o-cbairtwoman of tbe 1eu11a UDuel Wiancn Cin::k Ball lleld M die ~ HOid. And DOdiillllil W910¥atookedat tbeeveat. ..-. ,..., tome s~ooo fOr South a.. Mftljcel c.enter ift 1-ana. Nady JOO peopc paid SI SO ~ ~ to aajoy the eveoina. wb.icb Ope..t witb aJavisb a>dctail buffet on die IUtt-Carttoa ·s palio. GrMe ..,. and Gm 8-* took the time to Cbec* out tbe red 3IQSL Mercedes rGlildsaei: coavertibk o&l'Cd fOr silent aue1ioa ~ Frank's Moicw Cars. Tbe .,.._ oproi"' bid was SJ7,.SOO.. Allctioa item~ also iDctuded an oricinal paintias by oational1 ~ nowaedanist ........... ,t' ...... Sbc•d driven in fiom Palm Sprinp to attend ."the event with friends and W'umen Circle Ba,U comminee mem-bers IDDtaod NMI ....._ Guests were then swept into the Gn.nd Ballroom. wbett a neon sign pl'Odaimed the lhcme .. Mqical Mcmocies" and dance tunes from the Frank Ricci I S-piecr orohcstra filled I.be. air_ The Qocina bepn almost immectiatdy and ex>ntinuCd into the .ueL We want people to create their own IDllDcal memories tonight," added lticler. . 1k top bat and cane theme was carried tbroulh from the invitation and printed ma~ to ~ crystal ~ bat ceD11CipiCC)CS ~ by .l>Wilbt Goldblatt of Flowers of !.r8..J!~=~ blKk cane and a casually draped ••atove. brou&bt i!l a prcnr penny as Cacla one was auc:tJoocd off at the end of'tbe evening. Following a dinner of lobsttt and filct mipon. 0.. Bed r .. tp, Win- nm Ordc president (anending with fiucee Mud V• 1.--), prntnted a SI00,000 cbcck to T. MJebel MmnJ •. praident of SCMC. rep- Lyan and~ Rider. • rcsentulJ funds raised by the club over the past year. Winners Circle is made 'JP of more than 500 pro- fessional and business men and women who support the hospital through their fund-raising efforts. · :'The Winners Circle has made a ·thrce-Y\2f commitment to raise $250,000 for the hospital," explamed ball committee m ember Dr. Mark Brooke uul llerle Mlftlra wltb. llarcl Don Lee•en aDid Doa BeclleabaacJa. · • I Board cbalrman Forrest and Mary Lee Owen with Mark llontcomery. Moat1omery, a D.D.S ... Funds will finance lbc renovation of lhe founh flpor medical/surgical unit, and ihe money raised tonight will be put toward that endeavor." · "We're doing this for the hospital," attested event co-chair Larry R1der. "It's nice to know at 2 jn the morning when you have an emergency that your community hospital is right there, right down the road." Committee members also ass1sung in the planning were Dr. WUUam Beck, Carole Bowmu, Jolua 8 . Law· IOD, Forrest Owen. chairman of the SCMC board of directors, Eve Kasb, Teresa Leto, Cathy WUsoa and Karen Bro. . . Playing p i D.the tail on the-daddy -. • DEAR-ANN LANDER.S=.rm writ-!nt diis ~in the hope that you can bclp me. Y 00 ba'Ve access to the best docuJn and I am ashamed to talk to anybody I know. (just-bad a baby but I don't know wbo tbe &&bu is. She loob like me. I bad sa with Guy No. I on May 7. GvyNo.2ooMayl4and 15and Guy No. l on May 27. I had my last pcnod on MayJ. I ocva-bad any problem with my prepancy and the ._by came right on my d ue date. which was Feb. 7. She is I adonblc and I don't regret having ha'. bot I would sure like to know who tbe &tber is. M y friends tell me rm entitled•to support moocy but I can't bring a guy into court unless rm pretty sure I know what rm taltingabouL Tbank.s fOr J'O'll' bdp. Ann. -ON NEEDLES AND PINS IN TEXAS. DBAll NKEOl.BS: Attet ... tie -.. .., ... •"*~ ...... die ···L. ...... llftlllUCJ is !15 .. ~ ....... ~ .. • ..,. rn. die 8n1.., .. die last ....... . A....a,..cp CJeMM .. ner ...._ It ._,. tn. die exact ae . . •• l.UIDEis .. te. nae u-a it-ay .,... wMd me.us dlett's a 1--4 bit of leeway.. Alty el tMte . pJS!'. coeJd llave fadlerel yev ~ Ht die •e yo1' •ere .... • May H ucl 1$ ls tlle mest 11.kdy cuclklate. thumbtacks. I could not hear the vows. the Scriptures. the music or the pra)'ers because a small child was allowed to cry throughout the entire service It was not the child's fault. The' poor thing was probably hungr) or wet or maybe he had an earache or the colic. Lord knows. The parents who let the kid ruin the ceremon} should be hung up by their thumbs. Not long ago we attended another wedding where two small children seated next to us with their parents were allowed to run toy trucks back and forth on the pew throughout t~ entire ceremony. How can lhis son of thing be avoided. Ann? Our own daughter will be getting married in a few years and I , .. ...., llave ...... time cettiDg don't want this to happen to us. - Wm te ~lo be tested. • DES MOINES. Te atablJU patcraity, a blood test mat ~ pn11 to Ille baby ucl tile Gree ca .. iUtcs. U u y of these fellew1 bows U..t Ck otlaer two I ~ daat ,.._ are DOW weU DEAR DES MOINES: It's a to•cby Werme.-U..t Wrtli coatrol 10 t.llat oee b•t luJde die tavltatlon to JM wlD •t llan uotller uwu ted frt~d1 uci family witla yougsters. c:'' A.a please, DO more bed· yM coald slip a card with tbe · • • • metsace: .. A aanery atta clant wm DEAR ANN LAN DERS: J JUSt be Oii blid to entertain cblldttihllldt r returned from a beautiful church I yean of ace." wedding and I am so mad I could spit DEAR ANN LANDERS: The per· I SCOlJ f\J T S~L:ES i..n11ii".-. y<•u und you1t /'Li.end ,.. l o OUll (HxJS7f'IAJ iWEVJ{JJ -son who wrolCand complamed about how nasty people can be when )OU show up at work with a black e)C docsn-'t know the half of it. Just show up on crutches one day and you "Ill find out how rotten people can be. I broke m} leg a \l.h1le back and came to work "llh a cast. hobbh ng on crutches. The sick Jokes and nast~ remarks con' 1nced me that most foJks arc inherently sadistic and enJO}- the m1sfonunc of others I am - BROWNED OFF IN D.C DEAi( D.C.: Sorry, I dlsagl'ff. I believe tUt most people are iD· bereatly klad 1114 decent, u d if you gJve them balf a cbance tbey will prove it. L.M. Bovo -- -- Fourth-year itch crucial to marriages ., h 's dunni the fourth }car of marriage that a couple 1s most llltely to divorce, 1f ever. That matnmonial dissatisfaction long known as .. the four-year itch .. 1s well founded. say the statisticians. One Claude Yolbonne killed French Baron Roderm1re de Tarazone 1n 1872 Another Claude Volbonne -bear 1n mind, this was a different assassin ,-21 years earlier had killed the father of the baron. Investigators 1no;1st this was coin- cidence. Cenain :-.le" Guinea tnbcsmtn settle disputes wnh foot races wherein runners cart) Cassowary birds on thCJr t-:icks. FastMt runners don't neccssanl) win. though. Wmncrs are teammates who kill the most of their own birds at the end of the race. Evcrybod} eats the birds. Not yet an Olympic c' ent. this one. Designated on the Bachelor of Science diploma gJVen to Louis.. Pasteur was the French word for "mediocre." OrMg9 eo.M DAILY PfLOTITueectey, Nov9mbet 1, 1111 '* All · we•••1,,.,..._t·~~~~ 87 SYDNEY OMAll AIUES (March 21.ApriJ 19): Individual wbo threatened to "trap you .. ts' now williq to ad mh defeat. Focus on stten11b, -aility, confidence, personal mapdism. You11 rebuild on more solid, suitable structure. Scorpio featured. TAURUS (April 20-M.ay 20): Green li&ht fla5hes .ao-ahead on crcativ~ • project. Member of opposite sex reprewote<f. you'll be asked to preacnt notes. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What had been lost wtJI be recovered. Family member, recently in state of s~ is now readS' to seek rapprochement. Be diplQ~tic. l'eC!ePlive. Financial dispute wtll be amicably settled. Harmon~. CANCE& ~June 21-J uJy 22): Don't be in too much of a hurry to S1Jll aareement. You'll set more money by waiting -known, act accordingly. Focus on lepJ ri&bts, payments, collccuons, personal possessions. LEO (f"uly 2l-Aua. 22): Make lhis Y.OUr power-play day. Lunar, numerical aspccu emphasize authority, respons1bility1 intensu y, sex appeal. Focus on production, iddedftOO&DitJon. Capricorn _pays key roJe. VUlGO (A04-23-Scpt. 22): You11 finish project that had been "'kf\ b•nainc. '' Malerial. previously unavailable, is now presented. Focus on secreu, subtle clues, ability to reach tnore people. Romaoc.c prominent. u:illA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Stressjodependeoce, creativity. willingness LO make public a~oei. You'll win friends. votes, possibly contest. You'll also locate iodividual wbo proved "compatible" m recent pan. SCORPIO (OcL 23-Nov. 21 ): You're likely to say. "At last I've found my way.'! Means you recosnize your own style, you master techniques. Emphasis on career. achievement, promotion. Yotfll celebrate witbfovcd one. SAGITl'AJUUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 ): Stress creativity. vcrsauh1y. humor. You'll receive communication relating to social affair, possible trip. Check wardrobe, be aware of appearance, body image. Gemini figures prominentl>. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Go slow, read between luleS'. be aware of · subtle hints. An Aquarian knows plenty about finan~s and 1s willing to• provide information. Be receptive. anaJyucaJ. cooperative. You'll profit. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Feb. 18): You make tmponant contact, possibly wnh Capricorn. Focus on change, travel, variety, unique legal agreement. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Domesuc adjustment featured. m votvcs qrecment to sell or purchase an object, luxury item. Relative. recently returned from trip, talks about what might be "genuine bargain ... NOYEMBgJt-t-18 YOUR BIR'tilDAY current cycle acttnts travel.- popularity, partici~tion in charitable or political proJCCl. Forces tend to be scattered, but you 11 meet people and make significant contacts. Adhere to recent resolutions concerning diet, nuttinon, body image. IY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF Neither vuJnerable. South deals. NORTH t A 7 3 "'." 975 4 2 . 9 6 2 • Q s WEST EAST + K 10 8 6 2 + J 9 4 ? A Q 3 7 K 10 I 0 14 . s + K 9 7 + A 10 I 6 3 2 in the side ~uits. Panner can gamble • ; , • • it out wilh a smattering of cards, or he can bail out in four of the minQr. Herc, there's no question that he would have been wiser to run to four diamonds. but he was afraid that, if he showed weakness, he mighl invite the opponents into the , auction. SOUTH + Q 5. \I J 6 West made his normal lead of fourth-best trom his longest ~uit. Declarer had to decide ..-betber to take his eight fast tricks and settle for down ont, or whether to try for -his contract at' the risk of going down about six tricks. · Since the difference between · down SO and down 300 was not calamitous, declarer decided to go for broke. He called for a low spade from dummy, and when East did not produce the king, nine tricks were there. 0 A K Q J 10 7 3 · • J 4 The bidding: South WHt North East 3 NT Pass _ Pass Pass Opening lead: Sax of + Conventions come and convcn; tions go. Some years ago. the Gam- bling Three No Trump Convcnuon was very much an vogue with tour- nament bridge players. but today. m its original form, it has fallen on lean rimes. H owntT, it still crops-up- from time to time an.d. unless the cfefensc is on its toes. ii can "'reu havoc. -South's opeo(ng bid was t}'p1cal of th.e Gambling Three No.Trump, which shows a hand with a solid seven-card minor suit and not much When an opponent opens with a gambling three no t rump. you can- not afford to make a normal lead. You kno"' that he can run at least se\-en nicks against yoll. so you have to take yoUT tricks quickly. 1r · you have one, you should sclCCl an~· ace for youc openina lead, SO-that you could act a look at dummy. ~ Had West led his ace of hcans, . the club shift woufd have been ap- parent. That wouJd have pcrmirted the defenders, rather than declarer.; to collect the first nine tricks.. • -(ij;f,l{il,i.];J. ........ · --------- ACROSS 1 Hit 5. .Hocks 9 F<ollc 1• Child 15 Fish sauoe 16 Onward 17 Lugs 18 Fountain drink f9 "POker bet 20 --for news 22 Medl<Xn novel 2• Cigar type 26 Warble 27 Jib support 29 WOfil pref 30 ASlan fete 33 · G1vef'I treel.y 37 Tempo 38 OtscOl'd 39 PrlOf' to •O -firma 41 Batter 42 Unrestrained ••On in years "5 Pro 46 Short dnnks 47 Stationed •9 Parmg 1001 53 Lived'" 57 Battle 58 Envo1 59 Ru~an name 2 3 4 1• 17 20 61 "Come bactc to -" 62 l)K money 63 Adcuce 6' Right. pref 65 Gentleman 66 Swamp 6 7 Superlative ending p4 DOWN 1 f'ume 2 Climbing plant 3 OtllO City •Gloomy Gus 5 Owns 6 Lopsided 7 Frenc:A WINI 8 Unln1u<ed 9 Walstci<>th 10 Queue 11 Dtsplease 12 Atter inc or Int 13 Czech nver 21 Make gleeful 23 Verslfief 25 Hard wood 28 Specuta11ons 30 Pol source 31 Beige 32 AecepltOnS 33 Destroy 34 Hoflday song .. 35 ldle.WO<ds 36 Siik maker 37 KMp gOing 40 Lodge 42 Shrub genus 43 lcebefg part 45 Hesitate 47 Swindle '8 Hell.on 50 HousehOld 6 7 8 gods S1 Command 52 Tears 53 Soft foods ~ Mo1din9 55 Noted Ooeker 56 FNlt 60 Modem 10 11 12 13 7u~Aday and •.• CAllOL!/N /1t~ PHAJ.~ UUA7J()NS tL•d.L h m ou• llttdnvidQy--./I.op /,tclJll 11 :OOu. ~. to 1 :OOp. •· l o peA ~onaJ,u1_ goi..c g~u • • • nw~ .,, und •ul lM u."1~...L! ..Q. Isn't the heart beat alwa~s faster in acuvc animals than in ~lugg1sh 2• animals" ~-vlog ...... ~u/UIJ ········ 111_0M, I oolr. '-und do II 1 ( l.ij Lu l'f tdd I" I on, Pou_~ und flol"' ""'d~I ..• all 10S <i//. VJ.lug' Lt.gilt"> "' Jolin Hoplc m ;, ... quuUtl f.nglult rtol.lagv. ( ~U9" n/ lu"' A..c.<u<'an ~A.._,.,. loo) • • . ~ otl /,c/t/ up •. · JOI ofl· So.IAJlldUfl • • • • •• C\.«~ duOIC.UiWlt""' 4llYi ,....,.--.(_. (H-,ui U... 'k>/41 0.J ol I/II llO<Jd ~.,, CaA.OLutg /Utl~ ..L ~cit, m1cli .Olfl) • • • ult IOI of/ . .. . IN' w .e.eo.llfl 11.l(ullld al.ou( ou.c ,.., Aol.u/Ufl fl4./..• and duu1tul~°"" ..• ~ I.Jiu.A flvtl .-Ul C. (oo/ Come Ut --L'lClllMtl ••• """• u Cl/I ()/ l"u . • • ~' ti .,, ltw,.. l.Jial orc.llU.lt • ~~ ~ t o '-ujll\l.M .,_. N<>~illiUfl S"""On IAM 11w1tl l S,-c.t&l OIUS11MS M&lt.11 Sloq ~ • o,,_ 1ttt...., U... SoJMM.-." 10-,otM.-. (1,.__.,, IMlll. ,....., • t.i.l 1:00,. ••• J 1720 Santa Ana, Costa Mesa (lust off 11th Across from MICasat , 650:..5535 A. Not quite always. Heanbeat of the act we hare. 64 per minute Of the sluwsh rabbit. 200 ptr minute. You're in E&YJ>t and >Ou want to take the 1ra.in lTOm Cau"O to Lu>.or. 38 419 m iles. Rcte.rved seat 1n an air· conditioned «Mich runs SS.S4. That's • 1 only a httlemorethanonccent• mile. What do ou mean )'Ou can"t afford 10 trattJ? People who f\M\ for food a.re t.dtward. I d1dn"t SI) that. A fish· ma profhsor did. Fisher foUc, he claims. arc of two bnd1: bun ten and farmers. As tvtry Mu<knt of cvol· GbOn knows. hunltf"5 c:an1t first: :n. •nnm. :rhcy'd been bunkn: but tot lfMrt. 'Trout farmen ~ ldvanad. M sayi. but huntcn wbo put out to sea for bahbut art th~b to a more a.ncu~nt •· A12 OrMge Coat DAILY PILOT/ TuMday, November 1, 1988 b¥ 811 Keane COUNTER CULTURE by Maratta & Maratta • "Just don'~launt them. Daddy's on a diet." by Brad Anderson "No. you can't get a drink of water yet!" PEANUTS . , PANDORA'S Box PANDO~A'S CARRY-O N ' II I DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ' "",(._~~ 11·1 • ~ C™E YQJ OloNT TAKf. US fOR A RIOE ON TAATTHING LAST~l6HT~* I I I ! by Charles M. Schulz 50R:R'< SNOOP .. '1'0U CAN'T 60 WITH US . 0065 AREN'T ALLOWED ON THE SCHOOL BUS . WOOF ! ---.. --... -- GARFIELD [ KNEW A POCt WHO WA5 50 STUPID ,HE. C:MA!>E.P OONE~ AN'7 8UR1£D C.ARS.' TUMBLEWEEDS lk:tl\kS LJl\IAl't..E 10 L..aCA"fE ArN '<JFFAl..O OF\ 17e~R, WHlt._., At; YOO KNOW, Wm..Y MOS'f OF OUR CLO'Tfill\lb /\IE~ .•. DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE by Jim Davis by Pat Brady I t ARLQ AND JAMS ----- • by Jimmy Johnson J \-"Si READt~. -FOR BETTER-mt-POR WORSE by Lynn Johnston SHOE Two questioni:; Vie. must ask ~1¥es t~ eltc.tion year: FUNKY WINKERBEAN EtJ~A!! AF/?AJ() NOT. \ ~ SAIDlOSA'JE.~OFlHIS sru:F f~ ANOlH5R OOy' .... AN' lfilS \S ~DAY! 1. What man Wt)uld. m~thebe~ ... Pre&ident ?. .. ;abci ti !'VE BEEri.l l~VllED 10 MARCH IN' 1HE t<XJrl-4 AN~UAL IOOR~MEm­ Of R05£5 PARADE. I~ mSADEhlA ! by Garry Trudeau by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batiuk WHA-f ABOOf I fHE. ~ND z.. iHEM1 100. C l U P K I , I' I I I " T l P I I;. I I r I ---- .. ,.. ,. ii .. .. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1988 A~i~t place-kicker. give f~~-the ~bOet JYlerrelT'slucktakestuin CdM product t urns his s occer career around at Coast ~ ,. OCC freshman forward Pat Merrell is making up for a string of bad luck wbi_ch ~n twoyearsagoduringh i~ semor season on the boys soccer team atCoronadel MarHi&h. Merrell has scored 21 goals this season, includ1ngan incredible 16 in six Oranae Empire Conference ·games, to lead the Pirates to·a first nlace tic with RanchnSantiago with tour games remaining. He notched a season-high five goaJs against ~and three last Friday against Riverside. The Pirates and Dons arc both are 442, but OCC mustget by Rancho. Golden West and Fullenon. its top three challengers, over the next two weeks if a title is to become reality. In the Pirates' first meeting with Rancho, MerTCll scored three sccond- half aoals to rally OCCftom a 2-0 JON FE'RGUSON SPORTS COLUMNIST deficit fora J..3 tie. "He really wanted to play fullback for us. because he hadn't really pla)ed forward (fora while), .. said OCC Coach Laird Hafcs. "But sticking hinun the back.lincjustdidn.:tmak.e much sense, because he's such a talented offensive player. No one as cvencl0$C to him ingoats.ahhough there are no(area) stats kept." And before the season, Hayes had no ideahcwould havclbc player who has proved a key to the team's 12-4-3 overall mark. "Wewercjust lucky he decided to join us." Hayes said. "We got wind thissummcrthathewasplanningto cometoOrangeCoast. He-just showed up at the first team mcetmg. "He's a real talent, but be works harder than anybody on team. He gets better every practice and every game. Pat's havingjust a phenomenal offensive year." It'sbecnabigtul"}'I from two years ago. ··coach Hayes helped a lot with school and gave me a positive attitude." Merrell said. "I made a pact this year that I would do better in school. And it seemed the better I did in school, the better I would pla}.·· When Merrell came down with mononttelcos1s hissemorycarCdM. it not only slowed his socc~r c~recr but hindcredhjsacadem1~pro­ ductivityas the Illness lingered for aboutsix months. For a boy who enjoyed sports throughout the school year, football in tbe rall, soccer an the winter and baseballintbcs.prina. it.was tou&h. The results were some low grades in core classes which shot his hopes for a scholarship to play college soccer at San Diego State the following fall. "I couldn't do anything." MerTCll (Pleue eee llE1UlELL/B3) GrahaDl earns weekly honor Costa Mesa product th rows· for Long Beach yardage mark From 'ne A11oclated Preas SANT A ANA -Long Beach State quanerbad Jeff Graham and Fttsno State linebacker Tracy Rogers were named Big West players of the week Monday. school-record 580 completions, surpassing Ga} nor's 569. Rogers.. a senior from Taft earned the defensive honor after making 13 tack.Jes. including nine solo stops. and three quartCTback sacks for 27 yards an losses an Fresno State's 17-1 S v1ctorv over the San Jose State Spartans. The victory gave the Bulldogs the Big West lead Coqar receiver earn• Pac-J 0 honor WALNUT CREEK -Washmgton State wade receiver f 1m StaJlwonh, Anzona State comerback Enc Crawford and Cahfom1a kicker Robbie Keen on Monda' wett named Pacific-I 0 pla)'ers of the week. · Laguna's Cra bbe uses foot to R,Ut lits t eam in PCL race BJ l\ICBARD DUNN ..., .... C.c ISIR .... His kicking alone as deserving ofa full scholmh1p to a Division I school but l\.Js heart bas~1ust one school in mind -the UCLA Bruins. He's so good, he literally wins games for LaJuna Beach High. Jason Crabbe, a senior linebacltcT,tkicker whose parents and grandparents were all Brwns, booted Trabuco Hills into the ranks of upset vicums last v.eek. Hjs sensational footwork shocked the Mustangs, 9-7. to improve Laguna Beach's Pacific Coast League m:ord to 2-l. . "I'm pretty confident from anywhere inside 45 yards," Crabbe said "From 50 and over. I make abo~t two of three on average in practice." Tb~ are bag-time college figures. and Crabbe pu1 bas wented foot 10 work on Fnday night as he lucked three field(]goaJs -from 45~ S-2 aruUl..Yillib out -to_sulJ,lc- han edly boost Laguna Beach to a by league victor). All 18 of Laguna Beach ·s points in league this y&r have come from the field goal kicking of Crabbe. Who's votin~ for league MVP ifthe An1sts reach the playoffs, anyway. Laguna Beac6 (2-5-1 overall) wa$ a heavy underdog ~nst Trabuco Hills (6-2) last week, now the Artists are ued for second place with the-Mustangs in the Pacific Coast league standings behind unbeaten Woodbridge. Thanb to Crabbe. "It's good for me to kick field &_oals because' you need it in football. but I'd rather -6avc our team score touctidowns," said Crab~; whose 52-yardcr with thrtt seconds left in the first bau set a .schoof record, breaJong his own mark of 51 established last year against Woodbridge in the title game. .. We're not going to win many games 1fwedon'tscorc touchdowns.. just kicking field goals is not what football's all about,•• be said. So far, he'sjusubout all the Anists need. Just move the ball to the other side of the 50 and let him rip away Hopefully the defense will keep you in the game. Did somebody mention defense? Yes, Crabbe, the linebacker, intercepted a pass on the founh play of the pmcand returned it25 yards and recovered two fumbles (one disallowed because of a penalty). He did it all. and with it comes the Daily Pilot Player of the Wttk bonon for Crabbe. Game-baater C~bbc's-42-yard field goal with 4:31 to play in tbt pmc ~vided the winruna margm for Laguna Beach as the ArtiSU erased a 7-6 defiett. • .. I don't want to sound as if J have a big bead °' anYibing," said Crabbe:-t'"But an~ng inside the 4S 1 think I can make tt every time, tf 1fs a good snap." ' UCLA football boosters 'might be interested in knowina about Crabbe's strong des1re to be a Bruin. .. My parents and my grandparcntS went thac, and ,we go to all tbecr games," Crabbe said. ··They're my team, and I want to go there. I want to go there on a scbolanhip tboua.h. because rm not loo well-offfinanc1aUy. But I just Player of the Week want to get a scholarship to any school that wants me and 1 definitely want to play for a Dtv1s1on I school... ' He came from the soccer program, naturally. He's also a fine lennis player and be cames a GPA of J.7S, acco~nJ to Laguna Beach Coach L} man Olnc}. He s an excellent locker and h~ d~ an.oatstandi:DI, JO at linebacker." Olney said ... He's a good all-around student and jµst a good lud, the lund of player you like to have on your football team." · These field goals arc of no surpnsc. Crabbe lucks them regularly: He booted a 51-yard field goal last year to beat Costa Mesa. HP. with four seconds left 10 thepme. HIS 30-yarder this season ued the Dana Hills pmc, 3-3, to prevent a Laguna Beach loss and tµs 39-yardcr hel\)ed 1:-14una.Beacb defeat Laguna Halls, 6-2, to pve ~ Att.Jsts their other Pacific Coast league victory. Crabbe, a 6-0, 180-pounder. also lucked a 45-)arder m a loss to Orange. -·-so far, every nme this year that he bas bad the opponunity to kick a field goal with the pmc on t.bc line. he has," sa1d Olney. "He's missed a couple. but that was because of bad snaps, and one he massed was fror:n 58 yards out and it was wide to the left. · "He's a super athlete, and rm glad to have a player of that caliber OD my team... • Crabbe takes hts ktclong quite personally. excuses aren't something bc'IJ ever use. "It's m} responsibility tO make aoy field goal, .. Crabbe said. '"Ifs my posiuon. I sboukt make thcm. I( I c:ao•t, then I shouldn't be there.,. So 1s this guy some kind of magician, or what'? Doesn't he feel any pressure out there. all alone. the whole crowd watching With the PJl:cle on tho hoe? Let's face it. .. (Pleue .. CJL\BDJBS> KokOro • wms tourney Huntington Beach club volleyb all team tops Cariadtan field BJ JON FERGUSON Of_O.., .... - • ' Practice paid off for the-Kok<>ro 'VOifcybaIJUul> om uobngwo Beach last weekend. r The high school level team of pla)crs from LA and Oranaie countJes went to the Vancouver, British Col- umbt&-5Ubw:b of Surrey and captured a t 2-tcam club tournament with a championship match victory th.at included a strong comeback in pmr one. Kokoro won its pool and moved thtouab cbamptonsb1p round play to capture the final match, I >I~ 15-12, aftcT rallying from a 12-6 deficit m the iirstpme Ten Canadian teams. Korkoro and the Golden Bear Volleyball Oub from the Bay Area competed., the la~ of wtuch dJd not .make the playoffs. -Tbq represented thc United States and tbcil fam1li.es very well. .. __ _ said Coach Carlos. Pianetb. •'The Canadian people ycre the pema hosts 100. It "'-'&S really a great tnp. •• ' ...,, Graham won the offensive honor after throwing for a carecr·hiah and school-record 518 yards in a 34-31 loss at Hawaii Saturday. The senior from Estancia H igh in ·Costa Mes.a compJeted 33 o( 59 passes with two touchdowns and no in\erceptions. The 59 attempts tied the ~hool record set by Todd Dillon against Fresno State in 1982. Dillon also held the old sin&lc--game record of 453 yards. set against San Jose State in 1982. Stallwonh. a junior from Pacoima. made seven catches for 170 yards and two touchdowns as the Cougars beat top-ranked UCLA 34-30 in Saturday acuon. Crawford. a sophomore from Los Angeles. made s1it tackles.. blocked a field goal attempt. recovered a fumble and broke up three passes as the Sun Devils beat No. 19 Oregon 21·20. Ocean View :• Todd l'fonnan, a 6-f oot-5. 247-~ I dter-pard. broke tbe Sea- ...wb' pme opea wltb Banttnctcm Beecb wttb &D 87-,ant l'et1lm wltll an lntacepdon for a toacladcnra Jut week. Be and tbe reet of lut week'• pae-baMere ca.a be foand on 83. ~ f\CT six weeks of pracbCIC. the rune-man team, wtucb included six Ora.nee County playcn and three from LA County, made it a SUClt'eSSful tnp tncluding an ahibition win on Thursda} ru&ht over the Cutchlft club tum ol Earl Marriott before 1.500 spccatators at Earl Mamou Ht&h ., Kokoro~towm 18of1~20 pmes 1n match~ durina tbc <our- nament as Craig H1IJ. a scnipr lfttcr Graham also became the 49ers· all-time passing yatd.qe leader with 7, 118 yards. toppina Doug Gaynor's mark of 6, 793 set durina 1984-U. Graham now has a Keen. a sophomore from Orangevalc. hll a 47-yard field &oal and punted eight times for a 46.8-)ard average as t~ Golden Bears beat "nzona 1()..7 Rams' defensive front responds It provided for a s trong effort in stopping Saints' runne rs Coecb John Robinson hadn't been ptcated Wlth tbo Rams• defmte 1Pinst the run. and be let his playns know. about it Jasrweet: bms ddenden responded whth an ouullnding etron Sunday, limitiaa New Orleans to 33 yard Mh•na 1na 12-10viaoryo~tkSaanu. .. Tbe most liPiftcant thins about the pmc to me was tblt our line Md inside hnebacken pla)"ed so well ... Robinton laid Moindly at h11 wttkly mcetana Wlt.b ttpof1ilra. - "We vied to c:leel'"" mat mRa of our dcfct\te IHc Weet ud ~ fllll __, We PftUY moth ovef*Mfmed "Wc·rc at the bQd or the stretch nov.. u's • ti\~ horse race and we're OM of the honq." Robmson ~·~· allud1na co the ban~ bttwecn the ltatiis. Saints and San Francisco 49trs., who are a pmc behind at 6-3. Robinson said the team that wms tM West w1ll be the one that Clcvclops a .. rhythm.•• "Llke we bad bttn poor 1111.intl the run. then apinst New Ork.ans~ MTC ''CfY tc>Od apiMt t~ run ~nd -..~ had a lot of tumo,·cB w"Mft Wt' Iott to Sen Fn:ncu<'o.. and Wt' dtdn 'tiM~ my tumo-.as -...inst the Sam • he sa.id .Ra•• acdnle ,_.,,,,,_Brown New Ortmiil nm.nibl prate.-.... Tbe ~l COD_. ta Ne-0rteanJ was imoonlnt tor bOth Chabi. as \be blM' ~ pve them_-~~ a~alwf of I.be NFC Wnt leed With t~ S.ln&S with a 7-l reconL ' ~ayhaw punished by NCAA from Woodbndgc H\lh. earned t~ namC"nt Most Valuable Playn honors. .Pl.and.la wd H 1U banct1MhisQ.UJUC1---"-i-t in the tc:am•s S-l offcns1,,.e scheme vcn· well. AJ90, 20 percent of Hill's SCTYCS WCTe not sucxessfully returned. ,., •. Edison Miah JWuor Karl Van Rmna. an ou\Slde h1ner, camed an. tournament bonon after powna a bhnna pauntafC of ..367 foT the tournament. ~llt. who~ Kokoro lO tbc 14-ancl-wadc:r nuaner..up poll\100 at the JUDIOf naliOeaJ dwnptOMl\iSll this sum.mer, rcau1ted tbe -.m cb ftJMUCil~ •the Loi A.ftldes ua and went u.odtt the aamc of Team USA Kokoro. Other pla)a'I weft ~ So}lder ud Troy H.u o( Edi-. 'f rent Amdone ol fo9n'8d Valey ff .. Jot Woo Ol l p s: Hilk. tWO ~ . t.att.cirrdallt'l'11...to.hin MailMnell .... Deina:;-;: tz. '! ~ 0.'11 I .ID Cl $ k ia • ...,_ ~---···· .. Clil ..... -.. Mm*:• ........ c 72 .... l9CIC1ee+ "--. Orange C0Mt OAtLY PtLOT/ TUMday, Nowmber 1, 1988 . New York's newest GeOrge has sound mucti like original NEW YORk. -There are two Gtorac's at Yao)(ec S\adium now, ~ the new one sounds very much like the old one. Oeorac Dallas Green Jr., 17th man- qer in the rcian of George M. Steinbrenner III. was introduced to New York on Monday. Green bas the ieptuation ofa touch guy and sounded like it .. I really believe in some disciplines that are really necessary to bring a team toaether," said Green, who replaced Lou Piniella on Oct. 7. "I bad a slogan in Philadelphia, ·we, not rand l lbink that's the way it should be done ... his commands. But for the pas.I 16 years in Yankees Stadium, the slogan has been the same as the initials followinf the Yankee owners' name: .. , I. I." Steinbrenner has gone through 11 general man- agers, 17 managers, 30 pitching coaches and nine spokesmen. banishing all who disagreed with "I think the understanding Geofie and I have is that we're men and wc'regoing to tallc together as men," Green said. "We recognize there's going to be difficult times alo~ the line ... AdifficuJt time in Yankee Stadium is any period in which the home team is not in first place - comfortably. Dick Howser was fired in 1980 after the Yankees won 103 games and lost in the playoffs. Howser was fired partly because he objected to Stein~nner's attempt to dismiss third-t>ase coach Mike Ferraro. Howser thought the manager should determine his S1aff. With tfie Yankees, that hasn't happened all the time. "I'm confident I can handle those kinds of confrontations." Green said ... I think the respect factor -1 respect him and I think., ri&ht now, be respects me ... Stein~nner and Green bave much in common, from their desire to be in first place to their tempen. "I don't think George Steinbrcnner's worse than anybody else in baseball and he's better than most of them.'' Green said. "I want to win today-1 want to win tomorrow. I want to win next week and certainly in t 989." He doesn't beheve he's always as tough as his ~utation suggests. "I can be as hard as I have to be," Greco said. 'Tm not the ogre some people make me out to be. I like to thjnk I'm as compas.sionate as the next guy." On Steinbrenner's Yankees, managers frequently find out about trades and player promotions and demotions from reporters. As far as dugout nroves, Steinbrenner often makes suggestions -that must be followed. "He's the owner,'' Green said. "What the heck. it's his ballgame to a degree." Green wants his players to fear him. But he won't have a fear for Steinbrenner. At the start of Monday's discussion. Harvey Greene. the CWTCnt Yankees spokesman, told reporters to "Fire away." · ~is that a way to start?" Green asked with a laugh. "I haven't gotten fired yet."" . Quote of the day -Job Sclaerltolx, general ~nager at:-the Kansas Cny Royals. who has seen two pitchers ~e traded in the last year and a half -Danny Jacksonand David Cone -emerge as Cy Young Award contenders in the National League: .. I'll teU you one thmg. It'll talce a keg of dynamite unckr my behind to trade a pitcher next ume." Dodgers re-sign two players LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles • Dodgers on Monday·agree<S to tcnns of a one-yearcontrac\ withfeft-banderfema.n- do VaJcnruela and a thl"CC<'year deal with right-banded relievu Jay Howell. Finanetal terms were not disclosed. The moves leave the World Series champions with seven players stiJI eligible for free agenq. "We arc confident that Fernando wdl return to the form that established him as one of the outstandin~ pitchers in baseball," said Fred Claire, the DodgerS nccutive vice prcstdeot for player personnel. Howell's contract cans for two-years Wllh an option on the 199 r season. Gilmour keys Flames' 6-3 win CALGARY, Alberta -~ ~ Gilmour scored one goal and assisted on ' two others to lead the Calgary Aames to a 6-3 NHL victory over the Chicago Black- hawks Monday ni&hL Jiri Hnfo1a. Colin Patterson, Joe Mullen, Hakan l..oob and Jamie Macoun also scored for the Aames, who remained atop the Smythe Division with a record of6-3-3. -· Steve Larmer $Cored twice and Trent Yawney added another goal for the Blackhawb, who now have a record of 3-9-1. .IN THE BLEACBBRS Kings trade McGee·to Neta The Sacramento K.ings on Monday m traded high-scoring guard Mike McGee to · the New Jer$ey Nets in exchange for the Nets' second-round draft picki in 1991 and • t 996. McGee, who held the K.ings' recordlast season (or three-point goah, 48, averaged 12. 7 ~ints per game during prcseason. His departure bnngs the Kings' roster to t 3. The team must be down to 12 players by Thursday, a Kings spokesman said. The 6-foot-5, 207- pound McGee, frqm the University of Michigan, was a tint-round draft pick in 1981 by the Los Angeles Lakcrs and I 9th overall. The Kings acquired him· last December in a deal with the Atlanta Hawks for tbe Kings' second-round draft picks in 1991 aod 1995 ... The Los Angeles Oippers reduced their roster to to the NBA limit of t 2 players over the ~fend,. waiving rookie fr.ee~t guard Tracy Moere. NHL suspends Flyers• Tocchet Ri&ht wing Rick T~Mt of Phitadel-~ phia Ff ycrs was suspended for I 0 NHL ' games as a result of a match penalty he received for an eye-aouging incident on Oct. 27, the lcaguC1aonounced Monday. Tocchet was penalized for a deliberate attempt to injure defenseman Deaa C.J110we" of the New York Islanders. 'It l$ apparent that Tocchet did not show any restraint and used considerable force when grabbing at Chynoweth's facial area so as to cause a serious injury," NHL executive vice-p~ident Brtaa ~'Neill said in handjng down the suspension ... A player must be responsible for his actions., and in this case, he used methOds during fisticuffs· that are extremely dangerous . and totally unacceptable to the league." ... Quebec Nordiques president Marcel Aab9t a~ed to local interests on Monday to match a l>U(C offer for ~NHL club made by a mystery English-Canadian buyer. "The point 1s the team has been built by people from here." an emotional Aubut tofd a news conference ... It must remain here." Confirming rumors that have been circulating since last week, Aubut said the team'~ owners, CarU.1 O'lteefe, have agreed to sell the Nordiques. Breeden' Cup hits new site LOUISVILLE, Ky. -The Breeders· ~ Cu~ -which OTpni.zers caJJ "The World Series of Racing" -makes its first trip 10 LowsviUe this week after having been stqcd thtec times in the Los Angeles area and once in New York. · "Our objective is, at a minimum, to be included in that rotation," GeraJd Lawrence. general manager of Cburebill Downs, said. "At a median, it is to be in that rotation more than anybody else, and our maximum pl is that it stops rotating and stay~ right here." the Breeders• Cup was tentatJvely scheduled for Louisville last year but was withdrawn in favor of Hollywood Park in So\lthem California, whete it drew nearly 58,000 people who bet more than $I 0 million. Tel evis ion, radio TEl.EVISM)N 5 o.m. -900YautLDtNG: USA Men's Ch•m· olonst!IPS from Las v-.s (laoe), £SPN. 5:0S o.m. -EXHtarnc>N •ASKETSALL: caociers va. Detroit m .u.n of F•me Game •t Sorlno11ed Mau., TBS. ' ' o..m. -90~ Scbed4Aecl -Primo Remos ¥$. Vktorio hlcNr In l2"round ·~ bOUt at Monter.-,. ESPN. ' p.m. -HOCkEY: Klnos at Quebec (delliye0) Prime Tlcket. ' 10 P.m. -WOMaWS VOU.EYaALL: Tournament fllMIJs from UCLA Oaoe>. Prime Tlcket. llADtO 5 o.m. -EXHlalTION llASKET9ALL: Cllooers VS. Detroit In Hall of Fa,,_ Game at Sclrlnvfleld Mau KRTH ('30). ' I .. ., ' o.m. -HOCKEY: Klnet at Quebec {di...vtct> KLAC (511), ' B o~r1~c PRO FOOTBALL --- 1 7 yachts tum out forNOSA benefit race BJ ALMON LOCLUEY .,..., ............ Seventeen Perfonnanc::e Handicap RKine fleet yecbaa tllmed out S.tu,.. day and Sunday for the second edition of Newport Ocean Sailing Auoeiation's CHOC Reptta. ben-efittioa the Children's Hospital of Orus County. In Class A; Buttercup, skippered by John Cazier or Ba.JOO. Yacht Qub. took top honon; second was News Boy, sailed by Jack Baillie, BYC; and third was Carolyn Ndton•s MilCbief. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Oub. In Class 8: the win.Der was Antares, Alan Andrews. BYC; run.na-up WD Tllma, Gil Knudlon, South Yacht O ub; and third was Squeeze BY, skippered by Phil Richardson, Voy- a,m Yadlt Oub. Ill the ~Y department sailed in • Sabots: tbe wio.ner was Harvey Harvort00. Lido Isle Yadlt Oub; leCOlld wat Matty LOCbCY. UYC. and~ as Wally~. UYC. EMry fea for tJw ,..ua were ~IO tbe ClaildreD~I KOlllitAJ Of Orulr C.OU..ty. nil ... lk Jina yell' tbc rcptta ... IPO.QllO'ed by NOSA. -~- • • • • • Woolridg~ could. make Lakers better in 1989 'LA 's Riley warns at least 10 other · ·clubs are Improved llJ BILL BARNARD ... t ...... Kaitem Abdul.Jabbar was a frahman at UCLA the last time an NBA team put totetber as many as Lbree consecutive..cbampionsbips. s~ Friday at Dallas, Abdul- Jabbar will bqin his 20th and final NBA season, ind the Los Anaieles l..aken, the fint team to tt~ as clwnpiPn since 1969, will open their bid for~ thirJl sttaiabt title. That feat WU last acc&lplisbed by the Boston Celtics in 1966, when they won for the ae,th consecutive yeai:. . Last year spoke for itself," Coach Pat Riley said. ••1 feel stronaJy about the Laken this year, but there may be 10 teams with a chance to win it all. But thel..akersaren•t tired of winning, and the winnina will continue." Winning hardly will b:eJin in North C.arolina and Florida. wb1ch enter the NBA with expansion teams .. · The Charlotte Hornets are in the East and the Miami Heat will lead the league in frequent Oyer miles in the Midwest Division. . Also new to tho NBA will be a third pme official, a move designed to lDlprove court coveraac. especially away from the ball, where most on- court scuffles t>eF.n. Tbe Lakers will go into thc.~n _ as one of the few teams to take advantqe of a new rule allowina Yeteran players whose contracts have expired to change teams without their onainal teams being compensated. Unrestricted free agency enabled Moses Malone to sisn with Atlanta. WaheT Davis with Denver, T~m Chambers with Phoenix and Mil(e Woodson with Houston, while a half._ dozen others also changed 'teams. The La.ken quietly added Orlando Wool-ridaie. a taJcnted scorer who never had a reputation for team ptar, even before underaoing drug rehabilitation last season. Cblcaao Balla .-nt Mlcbael Jorda.D hen!me only tbe N'ftDDl celebrity atblete to be f•tarecl on tlae front of a bOz of Wlleatla cereal In an an.aJtn.a ceremon y llonday. But Riley said Woolridge already is benefining from being around team- oriented stars )ike Magic Johnson "There has to be an adjustment because we've always had five or six IU¥S wtio played extended minutes." Riley said. "There has to be a sacrifice on their part. but I think they are relieved that (general manager) Jerry West went out to get some help." New Golden State• coacli l>on Nelson was impressed with the 1988-89 version of the Lakers in prescason. \ "Wootrietge bas added a new dimension to the Lakers," Nelson said after the Lakcrs whipped 1he Warriors on consecutive nights. ··1 want to warn the leque bow good tbe La.kersuc." "We always emphasize team effort; that's what s kept us successful," Abdul-Jabbar said. "If he can fit rn, that's what we wanL There have been a lot of guys with drug problems and he's been one of the unfortunate ones. But if he•s a professional,· be won't have a problem at all." Abdul-Jabber, the all-time NBA leader in points, pmes. minutes. field aoals made and attempted and &locked shots, will be 42 by the time the rqular season ends in April. ---rm noT&oinstouse K.areennlast year as a psychological plor ~~ get the team motivated to win." Riley said. "The natural desire to win isn't enouch in the NBA because every player in the I~ wants to win. So wt have to find another reason tb win apip." Riley. who auarantced after win- nina in 1987 that the Wen would win another title in 1988, isn't going that routo apin. ..Thc~ntee did serve a purpose of ident1fyina a goal for us, but it removed alJ the euphoria of winning in l 987," Abdut-Jabbar said. .. As for this season. you never know how much you'tl want it," . Last season's breakup by Detroit of the Boston Celtics' stranglehold on the Eastern Conference has other teams who have fallen short of reaching the championship series tbinkin& they can do what the Pistons did. "I have a feeling we opened a Pandora's box of coache$ and general managers who look at us and say, 'We handled the Pistons last season. Why w.cren't we in the finals?'" Pistons.,. coach Chuck Daly said. "We had a breakthrough last year that was probably good for basketball. But there are so many great teams out ~tKatWs a tough road to get back to the fi.na1s. ·~ The Pistons have a strong nucleus in lsian Thomas. Adrian Dantleyand Bill Laimbecr, with a loaded bench _includiDA John Salley, Dennis Rod- man, James Edwards and Vinnie Johnson. But many believe that Atlanta. a SO-game winner last season, is ready to take over as th~ Eastern Con- ference powerhouse because of the additions of Malone, a three-time • Most Valuable Player, and Reggie Theus, a high-scoring iuard who has never had a supporting cast like Malon~ Domimque Wilkins and Glenn Kiven. Hawks coach Mike FrateUo, how- ever, is not buyina the favorite's role. "I have to chuck.le at some of the predictions before the season has even started," Ftatello said. ·•we lost Kevin WiUis with a broken foot. We hope to have him back in January." Even -without Willis at the power forward's spot, Fratello cao move Oiff Levingston or Antoine Carr into the starting lineup and still have a forward on the bench that also ifttludes John Banle, Jon Koncak and Spud Webb. Boston, with a new coach in Jimmy Rodgers, isn't ready to give up its status as a contender. The starting lineup of Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, Robert Parish, Den- nis Johnson and Danny Ainge is still formidable, but Rodgers will be looking for more help from the bench to bring the Celtics back from its disrpal playoff loss t9 the Pistons . "The responsibilities when you move 12 scats over on the bench are I greater, but l look.for it to be a smooth transition." Rod&en said. "The ~ tern we use will 6e similar because I was one of those who put in the system." The Celtics will benefit from play-in& lo '-weak Atlantic Division, while Atlibta, Detroit. Chi~o. Mil- waukee: Ocveland and Indiana belt.le for playoff berths in the Central. NCAA •.. From Bl visible transfer student-athlete." News reports have Hoked for- mer Memphis State guard Vinceot Askew to the probe althou&h the NCAA announcement identified no one. Askew was recruited by KU and spent one summer on campu.s but then returned to Memphis without playing for the Jayhawks. David Bent, assistant executive director for enforcement. con- firmed that no one who played on the 27-11 championship team at Kansas was involved in any serious violations. Kansas officials, who scbedulia a news conference this morning. complained earlier that the Infrac- tions Commiuce took too loq - more than a month -to band down a decision after conduct:ini its hearing. Bent said the delay was caused pertly by deliberations on whether to give KU the death penalty. .. rm sure tbcte was a lot o( discussion orrlhat lJC)int but no severe violations involved any of the playus who were on the team. It was a touch decision, .. be said. Larry Brown was·t11e Klh::olch when the violations ocx:uned. He resianed shortly after KU defeated Oklahoma 83-79 in the NCAA title game in April and is now bead coach of the NBA's San Antonio Spurs. He was replaced by North CaroHna assistant Roy Williams at KU. Dlclr.ersoa runs for four TDs Hegatns 159 ya rdsas Colts s hatter Denvei:for 55-23 win . . A 5-l 0. I 7S-pound 1eni0!1 he carried 13 times for 61 yank in Harbot's best come-mtOQ&b effort or I.be season. ----------· JSIUlOTT WILLARD CoroDa del llar A 190-pound junior linebacker, be bad one uck, a fumble recovery, r.-~-........ four unassisted and four assisted tackJes. -----------· llAJlCO V AZQUBZ zeteneta A comerback, be had an interception. I 0 tackles ·(two of the TD-saving var- iety). and kicked off into the--end zone twice. -----------· DA VE GOLDEN Lapila Beach I He had S receptions, 7 tackles, 2 tipped balls and 2 blocked passes in the An- ists' 9-7 PCL victory apinst T rabuco Hills. ____________ ,.. BILL ARllSTR01'G Coetalleu Playing both ways, Ile had three sacks from his linebacker· spot and made key blocks at center to lead Mesa's 29-21 win. .. PATLBE llaflna A 6-foot'..1, I SO-pound senior, be bad l I lead and 3 assisud tackles, ran an interception t.ck 30 yards and produced a .. Bia Hit." llJClt P ALLOW ~,.. _ _,_.llater Del The .Monarch's 240- pound center araded out at 94 pm:ent and drove 3 defendcn off their feet in 42-28 win over Crespi. D01'1'1tSIOTB Edi eon A 5-foot-11, 169-pound junior in his ftrst start at quarterback. he completed I 0 ofJ 3for I S3 yardund a TD, ran for a touchdown. TODD 1'0RllA!f Ocean View \..,,-: A ·~OOt·S, 247-pound .,, -senior, be h~d an 87-yard -interception return for a :~ TD, caused two fumbles., -bad 8 unassisted tackles. .. - A 6-foot.. I SQ-pound de- fensive end, he bad silt unassisted and five assi~ t.cldn. two from behind the line of scnmmqe. ----------· MIKE YlJlt)[OVICB WoOArlqe Yurkovioh, the senior linebacker, had three.sacks •and two blocked passes in the Wamor's 14-0 PCL victory apinst Oranp:. -----------· LLOYD UllALI Saddle back A S-foot-10, 185-pound junior outside linebacker. he had three unassisted and ~--rwo assistedJ.ickles, and a Auancrback sack. -----------· . KISOOLlll ~~ Lim. \lte third-year stan- ing linebacker<1>had twelve solo tackles and caused a · fumble in Irvine's 14-13 · loss to Massioal VrcJo -----~--------* lllJRSEtJL .'Weetmlnater A 6-fO"Ol, 260-pound two-way taekle. he stood out on both sides of the hne to win the honor for the ..second straisht week. ·.a Barons move to slzthlD Div. I Irvine climbs into I 0th spot · despttedefea~ HIGH SCHOOL Clfl , ....... -· ..... ~ 1 ~·Oii-i --..... 2 ~ 1oin.-• 1 L.w _. ..... ~·' ....... ,...,...., l ~(.A ........ I .. ,.-.. ,,...., ,_, J --,,,,_ <""-' ...... (....., t ~ IQINl ... I ---~I -· I S.O.. ..,_. C0--1 J~i....1 ,~_, __ , •C-C.C l~I S-V-IC0-1 , • ,_., I "9dlc.l '~'~' 10.-..(~I ' ......,. ll'9dllcl IO '-Me~, .. ,,, ~-I MIMleo Vleoo CS.... ~-'' 1La-(~j ) ...._is._. .. .,.. ·~(--Vtol l SI Tre !'°"" C--1 .. s.te ,,,,.. 1'-"1 ,...,_, .. _, IHwl Cli'-) t c..mo. ISM ~ Viv I " ........ l5-ft. e..illl ... "' ..... , ICI .. , ., 7·1 n •·2 .. •·2 SS ,., Q .,., n ... ,, Hll' ... ,,. ,., '1 •-7 " .. , , . ... , .. .. , S) 6·1 I 4' .. , ,. S-J II ... llC ,., .. 7 .... 1 I 41 S-2 SI S-> 45 .. , .. HJJ s-t-. u S-> I ... . ... I) ,., n 1 I Q 1 I 1' 1+1 D .., » 1·1 • .. , " .. J 1J L f 1~ , ... , . .. 1-1 .. 1+1 . .. "' 41 .... , . 5-) tS ~1-1 • 1-1 II t-2 If ,., u ,., . 7~-7·1 • 7·1 " .. , .. S-> .. .., 45 5-> J7 .. l 14 ~ 14 ,_, .... ,., ,., .. 5-1 ·Game-busters ... ~-Q High-school footb&.11 lOg Lut week'• plays of 41 yanb or more-J •89-Todd Norman (Ocean View), interception return for foochdown. •66-Mann¥ Bonilla (Costa Mesa), touchdown run. •SS-Dubie Ospina (Costa Mesa), touchdown pass from Rich Schones. •S3-Doug Cunningham (Huntington Beach). pass from Chris Will. • S2-Jason Crabbe (Laguna Beach), field goaJ. •49-Tony Pena (Mater Dci), touchdown pass from Dann} O'Neil. •4~h Wojtkicwicz (Estancia), touchdown run wuh lateral from Scott Boren. I •48-Doug Weaver (Fountain Valley).z pass from David Henigan. •46-Van Tunei (Westminster). pass rrom Bobby Ellion. •4S-Jason Crabbe (Laguna Beach), fielc;t goaJ. •44-Ryan Pence (Westminster), field goaJ. •44-Manny Bonilla (Costa McsaJ, touchdown run. •44--Chuck Mosley (Saddleback), pass from Jeff Blant o. •43-Jobn K.atovsich (Corona del Mar), pass from T) Pncc. •42-Jason Crabbe (Laguna Beach). field goaJ. • •41-Kcalii Oifford (Mater Dci). run. •40-AI Togonon (Westminster). pass from BObby Elhou. Last wffk'• n1~la1 leaden L Kealii Clitl'Ord (Mate Dci). 27-198· 2. Ma.!!.!!}' ~01lla ~Costa Me_?). 10-186; 3. Jim Roberson (Univcrsny). 23-d I ; 4. Josh.~OJlXtewtcz [Estancia). 17-97; 5. Gus Miranda (Edison), 17-9(; 6. Mike fllZgerald (Ocean Vtew). 18-88; 7. Scott Seymour (Woodbndgc). 20..8 1. 8. Kednc Po~e <Fountain Valley), 23-93; 9. Belle (Irvine), 20.92. · Lut •Hk'1 pas.slag luden I. David Henigan (Fountain Valley). I 5-25-1 . 279 )ards.2 TDs. 2-. Dann} O'Neil (Mata Oct). I 1-18-Q130yards. I TD; 3, Bobby Elliott IWestnunster). 9-24-3, 177 yards, I TD; 4. Donnte Smith (Edison). I 0-13..J. 153 yards, I TD; 5. Fred Schweer (Woodbridgef. I ~ig,.3, 146 yards. I TD; 6. Randy Karltner (Ocean View). 10..17-1 , t2S yards, 1 TD; 7. Chris Will (Hunungwn Beach ). I ()..23-1 , 123 yards, I TD: 8. JefTBlanco (Saddlcback):l 0-1 8-0. I :?O )ards. 0 TD. 9. Steve Scheck (Newpon Harbor), 11-15--0. I OS yards. 0 TD . Last wtt•'• rettlvtag luden I. Eric Crocker (Marina), 7-SI; 2. Tony Pena (Mater Oct). 6-143. 3. Jim Stanley (N'ewpon Harbor). 6-48; 4. Mike Cook (f ountain Valle)). 5-78: 5. Tommy l>hisayavong (Saddleback), S·S6; 6. David Golden (Laguna Beach). S-36; 7. Van Tuinei (Westminster), 4-131 ; 8. Doug Weaver (Fountain Valley). 4-11S;9.0Doug Cunningham (Huntingt{>n Beach). 4-89. Last wttk'• scorlag luden I. Kealii Oifford (Mata Dci); 18; 2. Manny Bonilla (Costa Mesa). Danny O'Neil (Mater Dci), Mike Belle (Irvine). Gus Miranda (Edison). Josh Wojtkicwia (Estancia), Tommy Walker (Newport Harbor). 12 each. ' on.nae County Jil«ti echoot ro0tba11 ·_ Dally Pilot .elections 1. MtMlon Vt~ (8-0) 2. Ftn. Valley (6-2) S . WoodbrldCe (8-0) 4. ltdlec>n (7 • l) 5. Senite (7-1) tL LCl9 AlmltOL('Z-0-1) 7. Valencia (7.0.1) 8. El Toro (5-S) 10 .... llater Del (4-4) , .............. ~, c:otlOllA .OtEL MAit (6 ... t ) (lee vi.. L.eetlM. 1·0-1) 7 Hllf!Hngton 8eech n * c..,._.. S2 Sanll'90 •. 1• U9une Hlb 21 Cnte Mfta l•~tv· ,. EM~· o~· Not-Twin" (11 OCCI 1'1111-1 NewlM)(l ...,._. COSU MaU CJ ... I) lhdk C:.st LAeWe. 1-2-0) ll Ell9nde 23 n ltMCtio AllmllCK IS :M Gerelen Gro,.. 7 71(.... 1 12 c~ Cl9I ,,,.,.. 11 7 Woocltlrt.ooe" • l• 12 r .. ._ H111s· 11 29 l~ H • 11 N>-<Jreneef (•I El Modenel 1'1110-.t l llllUN Bftc11" 17 ll 2• 7 .JS 0 11 10 MATUt 0.1 14·4-tl 1 ,....... LAe9lle. 1-1 .. 1 1 17 Founteln V...., 7 34~ 16 17 Settle AN 9 EdllOll )I i 1 Hunt!Nton 8eectl , ' 14 ._,_ .,,.,.,. TO 21 ..._Mon..,_.... 21 C2 er.... IO-St Peul (et OCCI NlG--$enllle (et SA 9ow4) u " 21 2' • " 21 41 ll •I I• ' 20 ,.. • 1• •DCSOM 17·1 .. ) • IS-. LM9M. 1· I ·01 •VIN• (S.-t·tl N•WPOaT M~ 12+41 waiiWJIU lJ.M) (s.-t L-. 2· 1-0) (lee"'-......... 1·2-0) 7 El Modene ( s.ei CeMt L..Mwe. 1-2-t) o 13 un1,,..11v 1 0 Senll ...,,. 21 Caol.rreno v enev 21 Lont llffClo WC1111 t i Mel• Del 14 21 VI .. PW1I I~ 10 <>c.n View , 14 13 Tustin 7 7 HU11t1"9l0fl 8Mctl ' 7 Woo0tlr'I099 n 10 u ...,., «2 SI. .IO"" ~· 0 14 FootNI tl 14 Wiiie hedl W"'°" 1 1• Se<Jr-...c:a• 21 H.Mllo!IOlon 8eecl'I" 2~~.~~· '1 Merine' • ' 17 s.n Clemenll a ~~-Vlllrt" 0 ll Mlwlon Vle;o" ' • Lffllwn'IY'" ~ .. ,. View" (I I H8) HlC>-et Westmlnstr • llSTANCl-' t6· l·ll (lee Vltw LMtiM. 1-1·1) • ' fl CCKll ~ 13 2f L.'9Ul\I Hiils °' 10 11 lo.-A .J 3S LA91.111a 8eecli 7 "Or.-• 1l T1n1.n• 1l 1 c~ cM1 ,,,.... 1• 1' UlllllWl!tv" 9 ,......._, Hewoort Har110<" Hll-Sedclltolcll" le t OCCl 14 17 TuUlft• - ,....._, 0-H • Mi l-El Ton" !el M V' LA4utiA e•ACH lt ·M) (~ CeMt LAeWe. J.1 .. 1 "l..e,aJ~ 42 0 ~Viti• t.t 0-~ .J 7E"ende U ' San c:i.n-·· 10 ,.___.... 2 3 0r.,,..· . 21 t Treouco H • 7 ,.._W~ION" <-> Nlo-<oste Mew" lt!omel H.....e1tMC11• (llome) Nl1-C-CMI M¥"' ('*"'-1 ocau ._...,. <•~ (s-.t ~ 1·2-tl 19 CvOt'ftl • 0 ..__, Hwoor ltSeftt9""~ I•~ 0 Tutttl\ t -f'ourrte111 VeleY" fl~· 21 Hufltlneton lllMch • ~di-" (et Min IMKJ't) NI~ (II Hlfl IMecfll 21 t Veiertle 0 JO Mia.In 10 12 E--.e ~ 7~ VelleY 21 6 MIMlofl Vlelo 21 16 NW1ne" 2• lt ex.ii v....· It TOF'~ ~ IO-et ~ e-cti• ~--·<·--~­ifODDell~( ..... ) 20 IS 1• lJ ,. • u • , .... c..t "'-' ,......, o 22 5M ci.n-t• • 10 23 F'OOINll 0 i l4 Ulll~ 12 0 t71NW 7 10 " CMVOI' 0 l;1 I• CMte Mal" 1 I~ at..--H • 6 6 I• 0r-etwe• 0 ...,._, ~ 11eea1· NlO-Tr.oua Hiii" lat ININI MERRELL LEADS oc.c·s ~ITLE-HOPES-•.. Prom Bl . said ... I couldn·t pla) soccer. and that kmdofhunme. ,. have to cinch up his belt a httle b1tand appl) him self. Socttr·s bttn a bl& partof1l .. be 11ven 1n etgbt events, includina men's and women's stnaJes ancl doubles competitions in ro'ffins and Poll sweetens Trojans-Irish game "I dJdn'tdo much o1anything for six months. A bunch of my classes got messed up. My SAT score was fine. but I needed some of the core classes.·· AtSMU.oneofthetop !Omen's soccer programs m the nauon. Mer- rell WlU likel) sh1f\ to midfielder or fullback. he said. A freshman team- mate ofh1s at OCC. Edison H1ghgrad .\ndy Strous. is also headed 10 SMU kayakina.. and an ei&bt-oared colleaiate row-in& competition featurina UCLA, Lona Beach State. UGI.~ UC San Dieao and OCC. For information. call ... Ga .... at 8S4-7204 ~ .. For the fint ume since early 10 the 1981 season. the Fiahung lrisb of Notre Dame arc on top of the c.oUcge f ootbaU world. And since Monday's Associated Prns poll finds Southern CahTomia riaht behind Notre Dame, it sets up what would be the 24th -meeting between No. I and No. 2 when they meet on Nov. 26 in the Los Angeles Coliseum. Befo~ that can happen, however. Notre Dame, 8--0, must defeat Rice on Saturday and Penn State on Nov. 19 while Southern Cal, 7--0, has to beat California, Arizona State and UCLA, the former No. I team, which slipped to sixth in the wake of Saturday's 34-30 upset at the bands of Washing- ton Ssate. Notre Dame, a 22-7 winner over Navy, received 44 of SS first-place votes and 1,1 44 of a possible 1,160 pointS from a nationwide panel of spons .-iten and sportscaster&. The Irish had been second behind UCLA the last two weeks. So\tthem Cal, a 41-:20 winner over Orqon State1 m:eivcd 11 fint-place votes ano l,097 points in climbing from third plaoc to second. Sinoc the AP poll began in 1936, Notre Dame bas won seven national championships. more than any other school. But the Irish haven•t won a national championship since 1977 anti were last ranked No. I after ·~ning the 1981 season and the Gerry Faust era with a 27-9 victory over LSU. Notre Dame lost to Michigan 25-7 lbe following week and haven't been higher than fourth until beating Miami two weeks ago. Notre Dame became the founh team to be ranked No. 1 .this season. . flonda State was No. I m the preseason poll but lost its opener to Miami 3+-6; Miami bccam~No::-rtor silt weeks before losin& at Nottt Dame 31-30. That made UCLA No. t for two weeks. Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz "'as something less than ecstatic to learn hts team was No. I, although be probably suspected as much after UCLA lost ••Being number one wasn't very aood luck for Florida State, Miami or UCLA.'' be said. Last year. he took some cl~s at lrv1ne YaUe1 CollCJe v.rhile pla),ng for the North H unllnl!.On Beach Untouc a cs. a Club team orp a)ers under 19 coached by Roger W)ett. The team made 1 t 10 the state championship game but lost 10 the la Jolla Nomads. Merrell. playing center halfback.. was the fourth-leading scorer on the team, and Southern Methodist lJ n1- vers1t) tn DaJlas took notJce. The , Mustangs offered him a scholanh1p, as soon as he cleared up his class requirements. CRABBE GETS KICKS. But he .. messed one class up .. at lrivine Valle', and on the ad Vice of some fnends. headed to Coast for academics and soccn- .. He·s as sman a soettr pla)er as you'll find an>"" here.·· Ha)cs said. ··He's in the nght place at the nght time He'si qtthat.andbe'stn• crcdibl) sk1llful. And he can bang u upwitbthebcstofthem. He·sarcal team-onented t) pc of a kid . From Bl with a 42-yard field aoaJ starinaat you when your team's down bX a point, how easy can that really be. .. I knew I had to make the (42- yardcr in the fourth quarter) if we ~&<>ins to win the pme," Crabbe said ofbis wiruti_na effon. ••Like I said. I'm pretty confident on those kicks. The only thina that was questionable was the snap gcttina there, because two snaps were bad ca,rly in the game. . "You shouldn't have to think about it (kicking a fieldaoaJ), you just aim and kick it. •• J try and do what's expected of me and a httlc bit more. I feel u ifl have to live up to expcctatioas." .. He's takinga toU&h load of class«. and I le.no~ bc·sgoina to classnand hu teacherssa)' he·s do1n& fine. I think he"so~ofthosc ladswbo decided at some point 1n hfe he would ILL IEW 'II LElllS. · Anet• centL ~tu. eo month doeed end....._ ,., .. ._. 11112.12. Toe.1 o1 peyment• s11n~. om. off 11275.17. On ..-O• cndlt. (13000/308132) So for Memll. who started playing YSOmer attheqcoffhe. next season will answer the goal of two )car5 struggle and one of rcJuvena- 11on. 0 COLLEGESCROLLS-OCC product Bart Redtawald ma~ not be getung the ball much tbts sca50n. but he brekealollf drought forthe '\nzona Wildcats ofTerfSt Satunh) Rcckten .. 'ald, ""ho has ~o rushes and two punt returns this season and 1scurrcnUylistcdutbc No. 2 halfback when tb~tsare an a threc- back fonnauon, w a 1.5-) ard • touchdo,.11 pus early in the founh quaner" tuch put Aruona ahead of Cal. 7-3. ItwasAruona·sfinlTD1n el&ht quarters. He took a pttchout from quartcrbadc BeMty Wattcn and threw a IS-)ardstnketol>erekBiU. But Cal !iCOrcd on a SS-yard pass pla\ su minutes later to W1nthe game. .\t the Ncwpon Aquatic Center Sunda), OCC and UCt will bold an Autumn Rowtn1 Fcsu,·al Wlth a thrtt-m1 le course Opel\ for an) rowus. no\'lCC or CJ.pert. A wards Will tlUEA STllEET lllaJ'M-Former OCC catcbcrGres~obit.377 last season in his on!¥ with the "Bua btfore sisrunt wt Illinois, bas bypassed his colleaiaie opponuoity to s1in a contract with the TOrc>llto Blue Ja ~ s. tic was assianed to the Jays• AA Knoxville team of the Southern 1..cque. O'Halloran told the Toronto Sun. "Mike-Ma~ (OCC COlldl) ts responS1ble for my bana wberc I am no• ·· O'Halloran. a native of Can- ada. hit .290 for the c:Anachan 01ymp1c team at the Summer Games 10 Seoul . Fonncr Gokim West dcfenswe back ll.-Ollftr, wbo earned All. Western Conference foot- ball honor's as a 1uruor last sea90ft at Cal Pol)' San Luis Obispo, leads the Mus~ 1d 1ntm:cpuons with four. tndudina one he tttumed S3-)ards for a touchdown. • .. 0rMge CoMt DAILY P1t.OT/ Tueed8Y, November l, 1988 Golden West NFL STANDINGS Na...., C• .... ence West llama NewOrtHns S.n Francisco Attenta Chlcaoo Minnesota Detroit G,_,. a.v Tampe !Mv N.Y."GIMh Wutllneton ~­Pt1flede+Pflla Oa-s W L T 7 2 0 7 2 0 6 J 0 2 7 0 Central 7 2 5 4 2 7 2 7 2 7 East 6 J 5 • 5 • 4 5 2 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pct. PF PA .711 242 150 .711 190 149 .667 199 1n .222 169 244 .711 164 113 .566 205 162 .222 112 166 . 222 160 117 .. 222 165 233 .667 190 17' .5S6 216 212 .556 214 196 .444 203 117 .m 1 ... 112 Ameran Ca1"4enc:e S..ttle ~ ......... S.n OleDo Kansas Cltv c1nc1nna11 Cle~nd Houston PlttM>urgh Buffalo N.Y.Jet1 Miami lndlanaPOlls New England West W L T s 4 0 4 s 0 4 5 0 2 7 0 I 7 1 CIMral 7 2 0 6 J 0 6 J 0 2 7 . 0 East I 1 5 3 5 4 4 5 4 s 0 1 0 0 0 ~.,,, kWft lllMN 12, New Of'IH~ 10 ltaldlln 17. K.e:.£.llv 10 Atlente 27. Pt.I e 2t Hew Envlend JO Chk.aoo 7 C~ 23, ClnclMell 16 t.uffeio 21. Gl'Mft Sev o MletN 17, Te,,_ a.v 1' ~· "· o.Ael 10 Pd. PF PA .SS6 151 17~ .444 190 195 .444 191 216 .m 116 116 .167 112 149 .771 252 171 .667 lSJ 132 .667 215 213 .m 189 241 .119 199 139 .611 206 114 SS6 176 112 ."44 205 179 ."44 lSS 199 New YOtt< Jet$ 2•. Plllltlul'V'\ ?0 .,.._ YOttl Glenh ll, Detroit 10 lotl S..ttlt 17, $en Oleeo 14 Sen FrMCbc;o i4. M!nnnote 21 MouslQn 41, WNtllnetOll 17 MIMlln Sc-. ·~· u. o.._. 2l S-.V"• Gemes ._ al ~. 10 e.m _....,. et San Oleoo. S om Delle• et ,..._ YOf11. Glents.. 10 • m Detroll et Mlnnnote, 10 a m G..-a.v et Atlente. 10 • m Miami et New Enoianel. 10 • m PIJllDUl'Ofl el Clnclnnetl, 10 e.m Tamoe Sey el Cr.lcaoo. 10 • m Sen FretlCIM:O el Ptloefllx. I o.m New Vot'll Jet$ e l lnolaneoolb. l o.m. New OrlHn• el We~lnvlOll, 1 om K.an1.. Cltv et 0enlf9!'. 1 o m Suffelo el S..ttle. 1 om M9M9Y'• ~ Clev94anel et Mou$I011, • om COLLEGE AP Tiet 20 ·--~ l"YI 1 No1reoe.,,.1u i a+o 1.1u 1 1 USC (11' 7-0-0 1,097 l l Miami. Fie I •· 1·0 1,041 4 • Wftt Vlro11lla 21 1·0-0 '50 7 S. F~~ S•ete 7· 1·0 116 6 6. UCLA 7· 1·0 "7 I 1 "'-•V-• 1·1-0 135 s I OoolaPIOma 7· 1·0 7l9 I t Auo...•r 7· l-0 71S t 10 Wvomil'IG 9-0-0 651 10 11.Ari.e~Ml 1-0-0 ~ 11 12 O-ianome Stele '·T-0 -nl7 17 ll LSU S-2·0 37' 1l 14. Mlc111oen S-2· l lS2 l• IS Soutn Ceroi.,.. 7· 1-0 lOI 11 16 SV1'KVU 6-1·0 2tl 16 17 ClemM>n 6-2·0 266 IS 11 Alebeme 6-1-0 216 19 lt ~011 6· 2-0 162 II ?0 Srlonem Youno 7·1·0 II Ille) tndi.na 6-1· 1 11 Othef •-lvfne votfl Tuu·E• Pa'° 26, Wellllnv!Ofl Stele It Soum..n Mlu lu too1 IS Or-1. Color.00 6, Not'!n Caroi1na S!•t• 6, Pitt '· Te11el A&.M •. Armv l, Wun1no100 2. Wft•n Mlcntoen 2. Houtto11 1 COMMUNfTY COLLEGE SeutNlftd .... llaM kM11. C. .. Mcll llec. l"b. LW I. FullWlOll, N\IUIOn Can. ( 11) 7-0-0 l1t 1 2 9krsfteld, Wft!Wft SI So (1) 7·0-0 102 1 l Gllndele. WMlern SI No 7-0-0 .. l 4. lt-"O Sent.. Mlulon Can 6·0-1 M ' s. JM•n*\ w11rn St No 1-0-0 n s 6. ~. Mlufofl Can 6-1-0 60 6 7 El Cemlfto. Minion No S-1-1 5' I &. Art ...... V...... F-111 7· 1-0 JO 9 9. Ml Sen M tonlo, Mun No S-2-0 25 7 14. LA v.-.,, Mlulon CM. S.-2-0 7 ,... 14. Lene e.cri. Mlulon No 4-2· 1 7 nr Ottw'I: Cltru&, •• ._ S. GoldM WesJ, 3·3· I. 2; ~. >-•, I; ~lenl. l-•, I L ... OtlAMGa COAST (1·4) (MllllM C•h-, 2·4) J9 Rio Hondo I• 9 El camlfto• 10 71 Mt. SM Mtonlo• 13 35 San Dle8o CC" 1S • Sen Dteeo Mey• 16 17 Sed llle4lec:k. 19 3 FullWtoft• 37 Setur•.,.....1~· Chomel Set .. Nov. 1,_.t GcMdell Welt• Set., Nov. lf-tlMdlo S.ntlffO • (PIC>ma) eoLDaN W9ST Cl·l· U UW.. CI 'a ·-· 2-1· I) 17 Lone 9MCll City 6 " PuMena cc S6 " Souttlw91ern. 10 11 El c:-itno• 31 2S PIMomw" " 17 F ullwton • 19 U Rendlo Senti...,• 21 Seturci....--t Sedlllellecll • s.r.. Nov. 1~ Coasl co111ee• (l'IC>me) s.t .. Nov.-l~'-slde cc• <home> • dllnOIJlll atutw.,.. -. • dlnOtft dMsloft ..,,,.. Al Mtnn et 1 unless noted. A• home Mtnn at aranea Coast c~ HOltSE llACING s..... ...... JOOCEY STANDINGS JedrllY ~ ht 2lld Jnl ~ lllM% Pal VeMlllJuale ISi 31 21 13 .24 ... Garv Stevem 103 23 21 • .n . ., E o Oelehou1save 116 20 1• ?O .17 .47 C"'I• Mc:CarrOll n ll " 6 11 .45 Frn. Velllnzuet. l• 1 13 11 n 09 .33 ltuUllll Beze 129 12 10 1• 09 .21 Martin Pedroie 96 10 1 21 10 tO ltalS!n Slbllle 103 9 10 15 09 l3 c-Sleek 126 I 13 1• 06 21 Alex SOiis 111 1 It 1 .06 2t Aaron Grvcw 100 7 1 9 07 2l Lelflt Plncav Jr S7 1 1 • 12 -31 TllAtNEll STANDINGS -r..... Jullo Cenanl 0 Wevne LullH Miiie Mitchell Cr.. Whltttftllllam Garv .i- Rlcllero ManOelle JoM Saow ~ FuttOll David Hofmens ., ltOOOlns ~~ NOOl9 TN-Ill Vledlmlr C•lll Victor Gercle Sh lit Jnd Jnl W% ~ 11 ' 0 1 sos '1 '2 • ' 3 I• 31 II 6 l ll3 .S6 " s 6 ' 10 •1 l3 5 6 2 IS 3t ?O S 1 l 2S .JS lt • • 6 12 ... 1 12 • 2 1 .33 .51 I • 2 0 50 .7S 12 .. 1 3 l3 67 It 4 I 3 .21 A2 14. 1 0 .40 .50 • • 0 2 .. .1.7 15 • 0 1 27 l3 ~In wl"nlll9 -cefll-lllM~llll -Cefllave ot limn In 1ne ,,_.,, WAT•R POLO """ ldltMf 01" llANICIMGS 4-A l S..IVIY Hlb. l. C..... ... Mar, l. VIie Pant, t F ooll\11, S LOllll 8Mcll Wlbofl, 6 Tuttln, 7 . .......,. ...,_., I Et OO'aclo. t Fullanon. 10_ Unlvenltv. l ·A I Et Toro. 2 Ceoo ve1111v. 3 S.n Clemente, t. ,.,_, S. Rlveolde Polv. 6. • .._ 7 Mlulon Vle;o. I Nollalft. 9 Sen Sernerdlno, 10. Fonte,,. Wit.STUNG .... SdlMf HALLOWaaN TOUllNAMaNT (et EC.... C-..l Wu • "ldll9 IWIMn 126-l, Tral Tluranv. 131-3. Mall Lanen 1St-1. HNtll Sims NaA • ....._ MIMllV"•SC.... Clev9lalld 100, CN notlll 17 ~·~ c:a..-a VI Detroit el S0rlll9flelc:t. MaH OJT\. aND~.- . ... ... . .. Community college players of the week GOLDltNn:sT For Rustlen' 2S.13 MiSlion Conference Central Division lou ioRa.ncbo~ ...... , ...... Tbe 6-foot-I. I 80·pound frabmao punter out of Wes1- min11er Hilb punted six times for a 44-ya.rd averqe, and conv~cd on extra point in relief of rqu.1ar · kick KC Satterthwaite who was out with an il1n • "' DUENSE Pat&Mwles The 6~foot-O, 22S-pound sophomore inside linebacker out o(Marina Hi&h bad nine primpy tackles. includina three for lol§es. six assists and provided ellcellenl pass covenae to win defensive honors for the second straight week: TIIMNIS ATP meney ._.,.. .......... 1. SI.tan E dllel'll 2. Mall Wllancler ). l«b lhck• 4. Andre AoauJ s. Ivan Lend! 6. Kenl Certuon 7. Tlnl Mavotte &. Emltlo Senchaz t. Henri Leconte 10.Arnos~ 11. JoM Fltuerald OllANGlt COAST For Piraaes' 37-3 Miaion Con-f~D<lC Central Divis.ion Joss 10 FWlenon. On'BNIB ,..,.p .. , The 6--foot-S,. 253-pound freshman offensive ~ out of EdilOn Hilb WU very physical throuahout the pme 10 IJ'lldiq ou\ at 90 percent on bis blockina •SSl&Jlmenll for the ball pme. DEJl'ENR c.rt.MallNJ The S-foot .. 11, 208-ipound sophomore ouwde linebKker out of Bolsa Grande ffiP. bad seven primary tackles, eiabt u- sists. one quanerblck sack, press- ured the qua.rtert.ck three times and recovered a fumble. .: NHL STANDINGS ~ C11t11..a ~~ C•lllaN '°"" Edmonton Vancouver WlnnloeG W LT .-.S ' 3 3 15 ' 5 0 12 5 •. 2 12 s s 2 12 3 • 2 • G~ GA 51 31 60 56 43 47 40 32 31 41 Toronto St. LOUIS Detroit Ollalgo MJnnnola ....,..DMlllft • • 1 5 3 1 4 • 3 3 ' 1 2 • 1 17 11 11 7 5 so 35 39 52 30 37 3' 43 65 46 12. Jimmy COMOn tl. Anders Jenvd l4. Alldiret-Gofnat IS. TllOmn Mull" 16. o.tten Car.Ill MIMY sm.212 117•,fl• '112. 191 "27,062 1591,931 "72,539 .MJl.lCJ MO:J.734 1327,42S 131'~17 SltUS7 mt.W 1294,Mt IVS;All 9210,"7 s:M4.6)t w... c ... rtRCI 17. JoM McEnroe 1&. MllPMev Meclr smm htrtdl DMlleft 19. Gulllemlo Pet'et·ROIO&n SMO,lot NYRanoen I 2 1 17 ~.331 Pl~ ] 4 .0 ... 2t 5' 5l .., -42 20. Y111nldl ~ _ ~ TI. Aa<Ofl lUfCii1iln" 22. 9tad Gllll«1 ---112~45~ ...... ~,. 6 s 0 1240,010 NY Islanders 4 5 1 12 9 9 1 32 35 21 MlltMI Pwnfon S231JIO New Jersey 4 ' 1 37 46 24. SloMden Zlllollnovlc ts. Jim Pull'I ms.m W•shlngton 3 7 1 S224MO Aclllma DM'*' 39 '5 1'. Anclral Cl\llvlolcov 27. ltobwt Sa9llSO ' m•.570 Boston 7 2 3 17 stl7M2 Buftelo S 6 2 12 31 5' 3' 56 21. Kevin Curren 2'. Jona1 S11enuon lO. Merit Woodforde ll. K1111 Fladl =~ Hartford S S 0 10 st00."s Quebec s 7 -0 10 l2. Jallob HlllHll 1195..511 "MonlrHI. ' 7 1 9 's XL Peul Annacone )4. Pel Caltl 3S. Guy Forget 3'. Sergio Cesat 37 Jorge Lozeno JI. Johan Krlell 39. Todd WllSken 40. Tom.1 Smid I WITA rnenev IMders ............ I. Steffi Gfef 2 M«llne N1vretltove l Getiri.le Saoallnl ._ Ctw'ls Ever1 S. Pam SMl¥er ' Zlne Gerrtson 7 Hllllne ~ove .. Hal ... z.,,..,..,,. t Lori McHllll 10. C1ltud1a KOl*-K.llldl 11. Manuele N\alee¥a 12. ..,.,.. Pot• ll. lllltetlne Maleev• . 14. Pettv FencJlck. 1S.~lt9'19 16. L¥11a S.velleMo 17. G191 F•nandez 11. Nlcolll Provis 19. ltOOln WTlll• 20. Natl\allll Tauzi.1 21. H.i.tl Kalnl 22. Arantxe Sanc:Mr 23 Jana Novolna 24. ltosalvn Falrbenll 25. Svtvi. Henlke 26. Etne ltelnadl 27. Sendra Ce<'.chlnl 21. Anna Mini• 29. Marv Joe Fernelldllt 30. e.ttlne Futc:o 31. Tarrv Ptlelol n .1t......_R ... 1 n. Jilt .......,lneton 3'. Katrine Adema JS. JudllPI Wlnnw 3'. IMOllll O«nontlllol » GretcMn Ma9ar1 31 htay Nellll!Mll Jt. Caterlne Llndqvltl 40.PftQlll~ """ ICM9-*" at" llANKllllGS 4·A Sl'Un 1191.C)'S SIM ,423 SIC.Jn s1n,761 SIS7.264 1152.262 S14'.0SI S14S.07S Melley Sl..346.t71 729,212 S76.4tf 509,02• Ul..Jn l12,702 217.392 21c.m 2'1.MO in.on ll0,'24 ·1 .... 105 157..161 154,.274 150,at L41Al2 131.964 111 ..... 1l0.7'1 ll0,643 12s,m 124,227 121,294 119.252 117.MO IOU39 103,430 103,212 n .1• '2.106 91,JCll 90,ltt •.730 17.411 17.12' ...... M,690 M,43.) n,m 71.21S I Mlralftte; 1 C..... .. Mlw1 3. PelOs Vll!'de, 4 S.nte awtlera; 5 R._ Hiii. 6. 9llVll!'tv H ... 7. ·~I. . ..., 9 ... ....._ V...,1 10 Wnllalte AQMlwny/LA. J·A I Sen ..... 1. C-)( ..... • l ~·; 4 Dane Hiii$, S. Leeuna Hit&; 6. Sou~O('­ rance, 1 Calabesa1; &. Westlake; 9. ~·; 10 Areedle YOLL•nALL """ lcMll --Ct .. aA-....s S..A I. """'91 2. S.nle aarwa; l. Mire Coale, t. Cww • Metrt S. Wn•,,_, '-......., ...,..,, 7. u.-...., .. Dot "'*"°'· •. 8llPIOCI Mon'-'-V. 11. --.,.. •·A 1 Gall<. 2. Newt1urv Pllt'k; l. Thousand Oa••· ._ Mervmoun11 S. • ...., 6. Mer!Cloroulh, 1 5111 Gabt1111; a. ESMr-.; '· LOU11vm.. 10. Lone leech 'Wlllon. SMALL SCHOOU 1 Mevfleld, 2. Cale; J. Owdwlca: 4. Mem· molPI; S. Vllaftova Pr•; 6. ~ Cllrtlt9MI 1. Mlulon PYw, I. LA SIWre AQdemv; 9. LlnfWd, 10. SI ~ MIMllV"•SC... CelHN 6, Clllcaoo .l T ...... tGWMS '°""' at Queollc, ~ o.tn. Vancouver a l PllllburOll. 4:35 o.m W11h11111ton e t Detroit, 4:35 p . .m. MorttrNI al H¥tfor0, 4:15 p .• m. f'tl~1-al New Jllr'Mv, 4-'45 PJl"L W1mlPlt "'II 'Mw Vorll tU.nclara, S.'°5 o.,,, w1•11•Y'•~ kllla at Mont,..., US Pm lolton 1t Toronto, 4:35 o.m. New Yor• •-• at 8uffeto, 4.35 o.m. SI Louis •• Ectmonton, "3S o.m NHL scerfne ....,., (~ S4IMllV"• 0.-) .. Lemleua. Plt1~1111 Nldle.K.._ .l'OWll. Pllltllur'gll ......,,Qla Severd.Ctllcato Coffey, Pllttbur9PI ........ Qla Sakic' QullOllc L..ar'mar, Chieffo Yt..--n, Detroit ~.Toronto Olcvlk, Toronto P .SIUlllY, QullOllc Tevtw,Qia Ctvlstlan, WUhlno1on Skrllto, Vencovvll!' Damclhouull, Tor"to Simoson, Edmonton LaFontalna, NY lllandllrt NlllllV, aotlon Tucker, Suffalo G A ~ " 22 31 l1 14 2S 10 14 24 It 14 ,. ' 17 23 -l " 21 . ,. " 10 1 17 I 9 I 17 I ' 17 6 11 17 ' 7 16 • 10 " s 11 " 10 S IS I 1 lS • 7 15 7 I IS 6 t IS S 10 JS 4 11 15 atOSS COUNTllY c.-... ~AC•ltCM~ ( ......... , ..... ,,.... ...... , """' 14 ' l3 • 20 31 17 0 I •• 29 2 2• 11 c ' " 6 0 22 10 Team tc:Me&: 1. °"90ft, ll; t. Stanford, 61; 1 UCLA. 1°'; 4. w..,..._, 106; S. Art-. -.m: * w•••••• ~ ~' 15'; a. use, 114; 9 . .t.rl1ona Slate, 237; 10. OfiiOft Stete, tft. tlldMdwel: l. 9tlld "'*°" (°"90ft), l0:•7. WOIMN ($ ........ ) Team ~ I. Oraeon. 43; 1. UCLA. 7S; 1 C.ilfonlla, n ; t. Wallllllelon Stale, 11•; S. Ar1JOlla 120; 6. WQN!leton, 1C3; l. Stanford. 1ss1 I. Art,_ State, 171; •· °""""' Stalll. in. lndlvldual: 1. Lil Wiiton IC>rwonl, 17:06. """ lcMel llleVI C.111 .. NIU,OS 4·A 1. Cemerlllo; 1 C... tllll Matr1 3. C•- nvon/C.C.; .. Sanl• Ana, s. AnlllloN Valtev1 '· TilollMlld Oeks; 1. VIiia Pwk; I. El Modine, 9. 0-Hllls; 11. ,....._. Yellw. H• ea. _.. Cltll u--.s 4-A 1. Pelot VarOtl; " ......, ...,..,, l. Vllle ,._,., 4.11 Two; s. ~" tt•••• 9-dll 7. Sell OlmMle; I. Seftla Ana V...,; 9. Tvatln; 10. CatlYoftl AnaNlm. l·A l • ...,,.; I. '#1 I. NiW ). Sou4fl Hiib; 4. 'Cuc.IN; S. An'o'l'o CH ... ; 6. CMxlco; 7. St. .,.._..,l.M. I. MMro hv; f. Sen L.vh OW-; 10.~ OnzJ.le Coa•t GOLi' NA....wlMdln l.CllltlBedl 2. Joey Slndller 15andVLvta 4. 14'1 Cranihew S. Curtta Strenee &.Ken~ 7. Merk C-.vecchle l.~WadklM '· ,._.. Allnllar 10.s ..... P.111 11. O.vld Froat • 12. Mw1l McCumllll!' 11 TOtn Kite 14. Gfw Honnen ls. Mlle ltllld 16. ,,.., SlwNt1 17. Peter JecoOMn ~.-- 20. ,.._ Siewert 21. Freel COUOIM 22. l.wTv NllllOn n. Scott Hodl 24. Joella Mudd 2S.DanPoN 2'. Gwv Kodl 27. Mint O'Maer• 21. Marll.WlllOll 29. 9ol>Twev· JO. sco11 varP1an11 31. Dave &arr 32. 81M Gletton 33. Gii Moroan . ~ 80I> LOllr JS. <>-. S.uer• 36. Crale Stadler 37. Oave-Rummells 3l. Tom Watwn 3t. Marti &rOOI!• 40. Nick Prk:ll •1.t>an Forvnen C2. John Melleftev ~Cl. OonntrMarnrnofld. "'AltOl'-IM9" •S. Morfll HatalU Y ... "St...,. Jones '1. Clartf!Cll Rose .. Doll Poole\' ... lllalftll McCallbl• 50. Coull Tewell Sl, Fvuv ZOllll9" 52. Tom Sledlmann SJ. Robert Wrenn 54. Corev Pevln SS. TlmSlmOIOll 5'. Tom Purtter ~&Ftori 51. ~Wacllll~ st. curt svrum 60. L.arrv Miu 61. Wevna Levi 62. Nici! FaldO '3.Jlmaer-64. Jim can.,. 65. Rav Floyd 66. O.A. Wlllbtlnv •1. Saw S.1111$19!'01 61. Eulton Allam 69. TOfl"l 8 'l'f'Ul'll 70. Jemet Hallet lJ. Helalfwln._ n. Davis Love 111 73. Kllf'\ny Knox 1.__ac ad E allO<l n •°"" Matltlla 76. ~Elkllwlon n. Oavkl Ectwern 71. Tommy Nallaltrne 7'. JoM Hvaton IO.eo.-Glldllr ILitldlard Zdlol 12. David Oerln 13. llusa Coehreif k Hal SUiton ts.CeM11 ,._.. M.JoMCoott 11. Jn Doll Slall• Ii. L-ltobllrtt 19. Mike HIAllrt to. L.arrt ltlnkar 91. Kannv P9rrv n llocco Mediate 9l.OldtMa1t ---$emit·· dOl•PI 95. MKO'Gractv N. Mike SVlllvan 97. Tommy Armour -~Gerdnllr ft. Wayne Gracllr lOO. Dave Elc:rlllbllroer 101. David Canipe 102. 9t9d Fetlal 1Gl Scott Slmt>tOn 10&. &rlan T llt'lnnon 105. Pflll Sledttnar 106. Mat1LL VII 107. IMO AOlll , .. David Grahe,,, 109.Hlrltton 110. J.C. 5-d 111 ... Sender 112. MIU o-!d 11l. llOlll!tll Sleek 114. ... Eulwoocl 1 IS. 9oCIClv ClalMlllt 114. ... ntwd LAllMr I 17. Geor911 ArCMI I I&. Tlnl Norris 119. Oen.....,_ ltG. T.C. Cl\1111 m . Klllltl cliW41er 121 LeMlll C'-'-11 111 lllY llav Brown IM. Jedi lt--lts. LllOllll'9 nion- - ~ . . ... . .,.. ........ DAYaY'S LOCKaa (...._. llllM:ll) -3 *"· 34 .,,..,._ 6 bonito, u roca COd. 71 callco lleu, 21 .. nc1 bHs, 35 mecllllt'94, 59 wlllle flltt. to blue' -di. 5 "'"9sllllad. MeMllY"I "91WtlllltS •AY•ALL ~L....,_ MINNESOTA TWINs.--flemeo Jev Roi>- ~'°" Nortllem Celftornle KOUI elld Kevin ¥alone Eel! CoHI ICOVl---'llM>< Promoteci Mike lteddlflll lrom e Mldwftl erN ICOUI lo Mldwftt .._,,,'°' end Clelr Rierson from ParHlrM ICOUI to fUl·tlmll ICOUI In ,,.,. South- -I. ,.:': Nll"9MILM9U9 CHICAGO CUSS-A~ INI IN COii· tract Of G«OOn Golcbbarrv. vk:ll ~t of tcOUtlnll. wlll not lie .. tended for IPlll 1919 ... '°" •ASKET'9ALL .............. AIMdllMll BOSTON CEL TICS.-Welved GerelO Paddio • (IUlrd•for#ard, end E1111l1 Whetlllv, _,d. HOUSTON ROCKE TS-Waived Ron Cav-M end Steve Hevea, centen. LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS-Welved Trecv '1N¥0f•. tuard. MILWAUKEE SUCKS-Welveo 9runo KonMwoln, totwarcs. NEW JERSEY NETS-ACGUlted Mltta ~. 9Ulll'd. lroen ii. s.cremenlo Kl119s for MCOnCJ-round clfeft dlOlcft In 19.fl •lld l"'. SEATTLE SUPERSONICS--Watved Oennv 'l'ount end Corey Galnet, ouercls. WASHINGTON 8ULl.E'TS-Welved Cadrk Maawel. forwarll.- Wllltd ........... L.ee9la CHICAGO EXPllESS-Announc9d Illa rnl9· natfofl ol David Kaplan, d1'act«. ol Pia.,., "'llOftnal. HOCK•Y ....... Hedley......,. NHL-Moendad lllck TOCCPllll, PMadalohla FIVWI rloflt wine, for 10 oamet for e l!'lllch Mnaltv Piii rac:.IVlld for en ..,.,..OOV91119 Incident on Oct. 11, and Men Messler. EdmonlOll Oiiers ce11tar'. tor six ~ for • slkll·s•lnel11t fllcldenl on Oct. n. OE TROIT ltEO WINGS-5enl John CNllOI, ~..,. 10 AdlrOllAdl ol IN A"-lc:an ~•v L.Meve. llac.elled Ooue Houd8. dalet1M1Y•11. from Adlrondadl. WASHINGTON CAPITALs-<:alllld uo Lou l'rancetcllllttl, left •Ifie. from 8altlmore Of IN American HocllaV Lllellua. P\BJC *>TICE fltllllC M>TICE P\&JC *>TICE NlJC NOTICE ,. . ,. • 0rMge C0Mt DAILY PILOTITUMdly. NoWlli'nher 1, 1811 • Cos~~ Mesa computer firm signs contract wit:li McDonnell Douglas CAM environmcnL" The PATRAN Softwatt Prod~ Division or POA E.(ialDCCTUll tri Cosu Mesa and McDonnell OoQ&las \){St. Louis. Monday announced the s$lina of ajo1nt deveJopmeot aaree- meol to produce an int.qrated CA().. CAM-MCAE product desianed UO\lnd McDonnell Douglas' UNI- GRAPHJCS and PDA Engineering's PA TRAN software. . e,apcttise aod capebility in the CAD- CAM martei. PDA En&ancerina brinp proven expenite and CJl- penen« an the analysis field 1.0ltther with an estabhsbed development team committed 'to maintaining POA's technical leadenbip. ''This joint devcl9~ent activlty will combine OW' iDdividual product c.1tpertisc to provide our customers with the v~ best intqrated desia.n and anafyus solution. More impon- antly we will toaetber address the enainecrina needs of users who are be&innina to demand an in1qrated MCAE appli<i&tioo within the CAO- POA Enafoecnna as a publicly owfted company that desips. do- velops aod markets mecharucal ~ netnna software and provides ad- v•nced technoloey products and speciah~ cQ11neerin1 services. The company as a market leader of MCAE desia.n and analysis software prod-ucts. Dr. Loujs Delmonico, ~sidcnt and chief operatina officer of PDA E~necrina. wd. ··we sought an alhance with a wcll-estabhshcd and hi&hly respected company. McDon- nell Doualas provides recognized· Mc[)pnnell Douglas lnfbrma~bn Systems Co .. wilh headquarie:n in St. Lows, is composed of a number of bi&h·tecbnology companies, most directed at sl)ecific market~ Rev- enues for 1981 were S 1.24 billion. \ NEW VORI< CA~ -~ ~wine "'' 10 FemOlrSt 1~ + ~ ~: 611 Al1""'"' = .~ :.~.,,IS~tlalSl~e ~ l,~ a:811o-;.-: ,v; I ~ Up 1· rF"1n':,,,j~r". the most •ncl down the most beMd on 3 /lo.Mi 9'ii \l'J uo is a. r:;c.nt 'of cnenoe rtQerdteu of volume " ~'''" Utll 29\la 1~ Uo ~ l!IC No~:; tredll'IO' ~w S2 .,. Incl-Ii R:.'li~n-:'', 1Ut ~ 8: 'I ' ~=:'c~kl -uoed. Net •no oercenteve ct\e119H ere the 17 WslUn pf8 11'9 th UP ,•._· 1 ~,,..ldH~ O~enc• between tn. previous dosing 11 Sl'llln. ofB -1~ ~1t.. UP 112 ll(n~l.!S:!'suc price •nd Moodlv's 2 o.m orlce. 1 Hiii Frtnk Up 3 .,..., • ~ Me<Sui.Cp n Uo •. !4 V1Uey Ina Name t'.'1 Pct Re~lnc + ~ e: '· S Wlncll1Jfi l Whlll•llr l 1v. I~' UP 1·t.• Couns·,aonoSF "''""' + '• '· I LomN n 2 A El ~ '" Allen(; 1.t'h + 'h ~: ~:. AM Intl 3 Ffcr:t"V>nt ec i 1': ~: 1~ ·~~=ne al,\ t ~ Uo ~ 5~~~ouo ' Munslnowr v. Uo 7.4 'llfL T'l Co t l<reftlnc 1 I 1 'Up 1.1 · DOWNS L.~ u ... Drwl1o'.,. Sl'llln ofO ~ Uo 1. Name Last °'-~d $en bCh Ve.co lV• UP 6. 1 Wedoe$1one 'VI --;Ii. :i2 1 1nt1Rec1 I MAI Basic 131'1 " Uo 6.1 2 GlbrflFln 2~ --~ 91.s AllsCnelm Df 9 Nevslr wtC 2 V. Up 6.7 .3 ECC lnll In -\ $ Pen Am We Interrupt This· Movie for An Important Announcement. 2)-16 --9-16 12~ = ¥: 'h -lh ~ -1"4 1 -3V. " -'h v.---'h 14 -~ 1 -Ve -, .. 3'h -h 5'4 -~ ~-1~ f -S-1' -~ -... •V. -Vi t· .. -1,i.- "· -14 1U 16.7 \U tH II !Iii . Introducing United Ait!lilles Silver Wings Plus~" Travel Clul>: -· It's-free with our i year CD and at least 60 bi.i:tlidays-. If" d once m -J!.-lifetime offer from P-• nur I ~ear CD. with a::, little a S5.000 m funds nt>w tu Paeth\ S;wmgs Bank and ym1'll be able to spend your tugh mtert'"it 1111 d1sC'ounted travt:>~all over the world Bt:>cau~P wh t>n·you OJWll d J · qualifyrng account. ynu·11 rece1\'e a free lnd1\ 1duaJ L1fetinw ~ten\ hn~h1p in L"nited Airlines .. ih·er \\"m~s Plu~ TrU\·eJ Club f Thi 1 year CD will gt\'.e you travel 111~ mone~· for years to l·unw. You'll saYt.> CURRENI' \\ llh di ·counts on airfart>s~ cruises. HJGH RATE IDGH YIELD' hott>ls. r~sorts. car rentcl ls-e\·en spe 8 25m /8 59m · r ial tnurs and exotic {'flll~t> packages. • 70 • -10 lwrause you'll be a Club nwmber. ONE YEAR CD Yuu must be at lC'ast no tu qualif) for membership in l'rntt>d .\irhnes S1h·er \\"m~~ Plu s Tra,Pl C'lub. But lf you're a little ~\)uri.ger. you can gJYe t lw nwmht"r-,h 1 p to a fam i I~· member or friend who dn~ qualify To open your CD. or t (i find out how you l·an qutthf~ fn t tln~ s~~cial offer with other Pacific ter·m accounts from 1x month::. to th·p years. JUSt call l-800-PACIFIC, or ~ top b) your neare t Pacific Sm u~s Bank office tod:iy. And get read~· to· spread your \\1ngs fo r all of >·our tomorrow · PACIFIC S'\VINGS BANK ln our own small way, we ma_ke a bis clifferenc:e . . In.the osta Mesa area call: (714) 631,0800; Co ta M~ Courtyard area caJI : (714) 631-?Ul .... M * Orange eo..t DAILY PtlOT/ TuMCSey, NoWlrnber 1, 1988 NYSE COMPOSITE T RANSACTIOHS --.. --- • Otv. l'I ~ I.An• O. ~~~ "U ·~ :: &JI 2H i~t~ s ,iti.~ I'~ .$fa,.'.~1· !:rt .: Mf t.llMC 2.50 • I • Mtll>ln I ., '• Ml>rtM 110 17. , ~ Si~" 3:8 '°'1' l ;:--.. ""-'t,u ... 2S ! 17, -I ~Lt,. 10..'••'i{ ~ Mnut 05e "f' '.-·' • e:~~ 114•1· 1ulli ~!U ~ Mc. '"'''' 4 ·-• IN, ol ' ' ----'• M< I 13~ •-1) M< I WI ll '- Ml: .20r1• • ~ '• ~ r~ '! :1;m irn:~ ~ 'f 1 s~ ...... ~ Mftr a ~ 1 n ·-... =.. t·f* I 1 ·-1; ~" s1.t • --140 '·-• Mellon P!f !2 11 ~..... ' ~ ... 2.11,.* ·m Jt. ':-1 -cSI IO 1 4 -• • ~ck , ue s s • =~L.;1:111 ~=~ ~Lvn 11719 + • AMMl.P 2 27 111 1ot MHLP oil 50 1170 I • MHltOf lS. .. I t ~ti ··~ )-• Mi~ ;lfl lJ 'tt.0 ':::tJ;: MetrFn .••11 I 79 2 > ~~c°nf\} 9 m d::+ '• ~kTu~ 1:11 ·~ II .: := ': M l<ISVI ~ fl29 1S1t+ '• MmA r 11 14' •-•1,-M l.S6 . 1 ff~+ 't Mjll Pre 3' 1 l '' M llnA U I 1 ~·, ~ 2 12 I '94 1"-It PLl721 ,+It et .. Mobft 2.40 9aS12S • '•+ • ~lC 191 16 11 >.-•• M'Oft?. 12 99 • ·-• =..t,,of ~ 'f 1l ~11,,; ~ ~n 1 21 • 1 • Mo<!Pw 2 1 I~ '•-• McHlr.a 1 ·rs i • ~y 1107' IS ~ I ~+ • ,.,_, ! 14 10 ~ .-• Mor-I 71 •1 >t Moroi! Pl ' > .. Morr.Gr > • Mo<lti!t 20 19 ... MoronP 11 1 !•1•+ • "'°'ISt I 1 l~ 1 -'• Mor n<ll~ 1 1• MIO fV 9 11'l+ '- Mot-Ion 12 SI 1 3' '•-• Molel ' I 21 11 • Mol<><'-... 12 S939 ~ -> MUlllrd 131 61 ~ l_..+ • Mun\"9 •->t Muro0 I '•-• MulOm 1 U IA >-• =~~ ... :~ r~-. -N-N -~F'CO u 7 1) I~ • NBD 1 Al 9 ll• 39'•+ • N~ 67 I'•-• N H 72e It 9 )t ... + '• N NB 1 I IH' ,, ) N ~ 1-14 I 1 7 S •+ • NI 0 60 13 I 41>• NL n<1 70 I '•-1 ~~~ol90162'1• I >~1~ NACCO n 1 ~ -'• Nal<O 1 I J I 4 • -.. ~;'l~4: "' •• ' • ,~ : NtlCltv I U 10 ' -, NllCllY 36 Ill 6 't + 'I NalEdV U I 2 •+ ' NIElll / NetFGl I.~ 11 37 11 NIHtrte 9 1417 •'• NII 12 ~9 lJ•..-• NII ol l ~•-I > NMfclE 11 .. • NMl.MS ll 1.-• NIPrt\1 I 27 14 1 3 '-• Nt~1 \2 ..._ • NI of • •• .- Nt wl llO ~ -NI yin 76 13 ~76 • NS•ano 20i 10 • I ,_ ~~~::, I Sit ' 1 .;+ Nlv wtA '•-+ Nev wlB • 1 Na• ,.re 41 I e N .. o!O 111 lt>o Na• DIG 6 S Sl1-+ Ne.mM 20 OJ ij • t tffrco ~ 7 I • N.,,Pw I 2 10 I• ,-NwAm n )l NwASI\ fl 70d I'-• NwB:el •a: 111 16 , + _... ~~rfi , h, 11 • 1i.:~ = NPm 1 t• 1 t rJ -• NY oG ~ 14 ~ • + • NY of 3 7 I • t 1 > NY Pl t I + 1 NY of 1 2 Ne weM ' 60 IS 4 -> NeweR llf).1 1 1•.-•, Nwl'l•U \I I! ·.~ .... + >t NwlllA\ I i. NwmtG<I IJ ~ ·, am:~'~ :J~H -~l~ ~ ~l.~l Tif ! ~ .;t j NI•~ 111 l u 1 ~~~r~210e ~ t'!l5-~ tt 'i . + • ij~I 1 ~ !. a 1'/i i ·: No•!lllll 9 71 ~ NIU.So 1l2 '23 'J-!-ar~ I ~. , lt~ : Nt)1$• H l .... ' NESv pf 1 > ~~ I I I~~ J ·~: • ~~~ ::: ! ij~, N~P..., Pit 11 > i.o<Ttl ll 1'1• 1 .__ • =~ 0 1,3 .. ~··~.: NwlP DI 7 1 1 '•-> N«!On 11 ~7 • •-• Norw1t 11 ~ I 1 97 •+ 1 No••"" u 'm'° .-. -i»l01 ~ .... NU(<>< 1S 4 U -t NvCMI n 1 I > + • NuvC I 6 e I I -o - TUE8DA Y'S CL081NG PRIC!8 1!'-- • -'• ~+ 4 ... i_.+ ,, •• ...... ... !\ -1\ -'• • ..,. "> -'i+ •• Oi\t " s-. ..... c... I~ "~ '[-. ~1r' iBa,,, ~~; ~ eliRY .lOIQl~ •-. •lwvo1 ··r i'9-'• •mod 1 °' ...,_ '• ~ r '••' ~v to •• _..,,., 15) JI lt ·1 ·ft1cn1 n• 12 s.l I -t ._ tf<IYn • \ Jtl.. ~ I·· ., "I 12· '·I "" T=, 1i ,_ .: TmoGI n I 1ot '• Tmo!VI n 1 feMCO 3 CW • \ot t 9(1C II' 7 40 -'- l wd11n , .._-. t\D<O . "-! '-le\OI' of S.I I > > Teato l 11 "/ir5i'• 'P. TllA c~ S· 6-1• Tu \I 1 10 d ,_ 1 Tetrl><I , 37 sef! •..-._ TtalMI 10 ,,. 1t TxP •1 •-• -l::W-1 11 • 1 l~ 1:+ • Tu1r11 i J S 1 + i. 1, .... of 7 °' ··-· . Thadc -• Thai n 11 I 1 .. + • T"""E' ... I " I ... TnmB•t 1a. 1• J .+ •· T11e>mln nt> 11 ' ThmMed 40 1' ~ h --T MAM n1 20 9 ~··+ Tl'IO<tlld ll fl I -, T"Orle< m \t+ • T1ow1r \ J.,-• 'f11tenv 20 '• +:=In I ~3 ij 1,~I ~ii~ TrnMir 92 l 1 1 T1m1o.n ' ,ao 3 + .. Titan 94 \t T1l•n pf I 9 •• ~fl~~ll ij ~ .._ t'J~<1,,.~ tn i"·-. ., Toi d oll 31 ~-•1> Toi <I DI t'•+ I• TOI d Df , TOI <I of • • / l~ie1:e11012 331 is. 2 l!!= ~: TOtllo.e 1'9 ,~.-'• TootRI 2~ 'I IS l ~ ) Trchm._ I 1 4 1 ~ -'• Toro 1 119 '•-'• TOKD ~ .. + t m~v12 ~ :-1 Tr•~ I ii • 9 •+ • TWA ol ?' I Ii~-• t Tren•m 1 ' l ~.,._ , {-~~~~ J I ff 1f":-• Trn.c•o S 7'• lre.llKO Ill 1 lll.o-1 rnK ot • l 41 .-• .. Tr•nE• 17$ t..!-• t~~~f~ .. 10 :.. r;:-• Trev~ 140 66 I~ ~ •+ '• Tr.Con • ff '• Tr,('" o4 1 11 TntluM n 16 119 ~.+ o T r1nlv SO f~ •l• ''t-• ~~:=t 6A ~.a sz:_ • TrttEno ll 1 1ft lt·.-Tr1tE ~ ~>+ • TuuEP l 11 216 do-• Tullt>. 11 S60 '• t • 1 • .,.,0, 1 I .--t TvcoLb l3 ii S61 S'•+ "' Tv~ ~ S 113 6lo Market closes mixed v~ er -u;-1~1~-97-.+ '• U D S 1 2f 1.. ; u 1 '0 i 11 I + " UI 2 14 2\T-'• UNCl"c I \~ 10 NEW YORK (AP) -The stock . market f1nisbed mixed today in slow activity after undulating in a narrow trading range. WH AT AMEX Om T1f -j 16 AME X LEADE RS Go Lo Quor Es ME TALS QuoTES WH AT NYSE DID NEW YORK (A~) Nov. 1 NYSE LEADERS .Sears to sell Chicago tower, real estate unit CHICAGO (AP) Scars, Roebuck and Co., the nation's laraest retailer, is sellina the world's lataest buildi91 and a real eslatc unit. shufflanajobs and buyina its stock in • move seen by . some u a defense apinst a pouible takeover. Edward A. Btenoan, chairman of the 102..year-old cornpeny, aid the plan is dnipcd to cnbaooe stock Value and put its raources on consu.mer.onented busi~ -re. taillnt. iftJutaMe, real · cs&ate and fioanCial services. Brennan said tbe timina of the announcement rmy Mve ~D af· fected by the roocnt wave of cakeovcn. '"Sean lw not been untc>Udled by tbe rwnor ud ll*Ulation I.bat \brives in the9e conditions, .. be II.id. · .. Jtvt inab DO m...., "; he added .. this ltr'llCJ>' ii DOC IOlely a reec:tion tO that enYif'OIUIM9L" Tbe •noaceman was P1ed ~OD W.U Scieet, II Sien IM>Ct llid SI.I 7S MOliidiY to dole at M 1. 7 5 o. tbr ~JW Yon 5'oct !• ...... ""11li rmbe'liMWif*--10 be ..... -liltiDnd lllilldY -...._... .... ..._ ... illiimN. 91nt111.·-· ...... ....,. wtdt 9midl ...,,.Hllfli u..-A Co., 10ld DeJfeWY.t Tbnel. s.. w blee a,.cted lO iU.e ... lei'-19 ... "" ......... al • CALL 642;.5678 ~'.'~ ~ .. ..,, ,.. .;, CHICK YOUR AfJ THe N8T DAY ,,,. 0.•• ~ , .......... ~ .. .,.. 9C(wfK ¥ ....... -.C..~ ... ,.,. • eAWI ...... : .. , .... •'*" t ,.., .. !• '•M "8Ca MO fN10 .,..., .. ~ -.... , ~·-.,.........~ • M2 Mlt ·n .. o... ..., KC.ileh .. ....... ...... . ,.,._,,,.......,....... ,.......,....04 "'-..... '~ •KHI .., .... CN ....... ...-. -""'* tc<-....e ., .. en er er ... (~ .............. ..,. ... ..," ·--Ar-,~--·-~-....-, ... ,....., ... ,, ................. . w.,w ·~~~......., . ,,, ............ ~ ..... .....,.. -~< ......... ~ ,. .. ,,.,..,... . ..., ...... ~ ... , .. . ;:.;,"': ' ~ ••Jiit _. 1• Celli ... llM ·~,.... .... Hit Cllti lliii 2114 C:..11 •t11 ZIH C....... •at ••emt 11ii11 .. ~..... ·Dll ., usnm . l /tWt ..... 1... 3BR. 2 SBA. Eastblull 1BR. lBA, sunelec:k. enc E.'STSID£ 1 Bdrm newly Sparkling C:lnn 2Bctrm hec;ut111• TownllOUH WW Duplex • 3BR 28A ... 2Br 1',AIBa, g« 1125. twnhM, 2 car oar. n8"!'Wly .aar, close lo So Coat deCOftted cornet unit 1n w.a. 1750 All "'* pd. 3BR. 21A. 2 c.r oar. Willy rn• now ...it. Welk to bctl, poote & ten· 2543 Otenge. 842-2520 upgrected, a11all now. PI a z a . S 7 l 0 I mo 4-pleJ.. 1575. 1St/IU1 • a.r9G9 Sorry. no peit9. O C E A N v I E w 1147 00 wit & up. 2274' nia. $339,000. Incl IMCS. LAAGE 3Br 2Ba condo. 2• '1-400/mo 759-7186 540-0117. or 962-9804 deposit 548-1065 19ec>Wellece 142-4'905 il1~ Nwpt &MS. CM 141-7""5 DOCKSIDE RE 722·.9730 car gwage. petlo, new 11l, 211 lYHa4e St. EASTSIDE 2BA. 1BA, at-TIE ftlTllJ" FURNISHED. 2 BA. 2 BA Htl I ti 11e NEWPORT BEACH kitc:Nn, pelnt I carpet. -111&11Y Pool 1495/mo 846-9'06 tractive, llQht, airy, ex~. 2BR wt gar Carpets. concto, ocew1 vtew, poet, alt IN terrllk: ~ 11100/mo. 5.4e-1765 F .. lurlng 4BR-2'~BA, pvt . --cond gar,lencecl pa11o, (Srapea. bft-lns. Fenced IK ~ 11100/mo ,_..1.,. ______ ""'"'!'P!• loeallon. c.ulc 3 bdlm. LUXURY 2Br 28a condo. profenionally land· ET~Dh~~:r ~~~~~se= $750/mo..-Clep 5.48-1709 yarctwlpetlo w ... peld ')'22-3545 or SS0-2522 f or 2 rm Wm ~bathcozycott9G9~ Dbl gar, lrplc, pool acaped. Patio & up-relsreq'd Nopet1 S57S EASTSIDE large 28.A l 636-4'120.~1-5PM ManytochoOMtrom 2& ~Pr~=".CdM . tireo&ace. frOf\t por l ff5/Mo. 111 & last gredet too num8'ous to 352 Victor•• 645-8 181 1'1BA Townnouse Ger· 667 Vle1ona H •• 1720 3 bedroome Gnat io-,_ .. _,.,. ________ ..,.....~,...-- patlo. Walk to beechea, +$300 842 5290 mention Tiiis Bluffs 80'9 patio $795/mo i St ti ........ -... Fetry, BalbOe ptiw, r... · • beauty will not last 1BRups1rs pool cable TV 27e CaorillO 845-7075 West~ 2BA Apt, patio ~~n 87~ It -- taurants• ~ NEWPOAT HEIGHTS. lmmed oc:cpy ~ss1ble &gUpd $575 Nopets lndf'yl.:.2prttngapecm "'S Nlc:e28r/1Ba$425/mo.n- S31·1400 2BR. 1BA. patio. •11a11 Children & pets OK Refs req d 147 FIC>Wef' EASTSIOE Sharp & Clean New pwnt, stow & crpt amk. Bob 87~7 • $330,000 11115.SSOO/mo,nopets, Sl'IOtt or tong term lse, -Calt NOw 64~161-2SR WasheflDryerl $750/mo 731-Mal •8'111..WIPTI Cozy Balboa Island Ne. - ~Tl RI HO' l 642-4011 · ~:~· ~ s'::,b~t 2BD 2 V2BA • deii'Tii ~':Psf:J1=·~99~ Int. IMc 1tWrfH BOAT SLIPS• .2~ lBA wfd, $475 .. HOMI ., '-c. Newpor1 Ulnding, unique °' • end unit 811 2/car gar.,. • 1 , L&oom J ™• to EXCLUSIVE BEACH la9t & dee>. avail now Kim REAL ESTATE MP•rat• condo. spa<: dk. ~ M...A..V Wld 11 .. ups A11a1I lmmed Eas1s1de 1Ba' Cottage beech Stolle & fng. No COMMUNITY 675-2335 28R. 28A. dbl gar. ,KE'l',...lltl\ ~950mo 631-2093 lrplc:, end patio. lndry. p-e1s Alf ut1ls pd Has bem.lttful 18R 1BA on '""M'"'A"'=T"""U,.,.R""E,..--no_n_amotc_-=--,ng- $1200/mo, 548-9909 "\I" "'"'I' I'! M__ -stOf.oe rm 1650 • $750 tM BAY' 1100 elf WID Rf.'L TORS \ t \X I ,.._, _. \ I I OCEAN Vll' deluxe 28A sec :&45-7234 NO PEiS• $650/mo. 985-4954 hlitup trplc mao Dtw .outt to"" towMc>uM in -ir•-lllf 11ft.D •Tl.... REALTOAS ' 1 t balll lrplc dl!Ck gat --•Lg 3BR 2',BA. dbl gar gar .'EntoyOUf p¥1 C>Cll' metro .,_. S450lmo -_. n 3BR 2BA . fireplace . 2218 E Pac1hc apt 8 Lg lBr caipon pool laun , wl laundry hllup, patio. no •Boat ~ps utra• 'Wtl1 s.11-8180 2:1~ ~O . 26~~.3~50 beautiful prvt yard 815-4912 $900/mo See 1st Call $~7t~ig :neS3~ ':: pets. nr .Pa1111lon Ctr Sofry.nopets NB M!Ftum2Br.1300slf Pr~tyHouMRltrs 1 12951'"0 Vac:ant. PENINSULA YEARLY .!_59-lt04!E 644•87221D I avail pow642-1401 S 1100/mo~7055 UU l .... 11 Fp ~.$leps~. TV Donald Pfaff 831"1266 •Cute 2BA 1BA lowerl2BA IBA 1-ear garage I HUNT Hart>outaru Avaol HBO cable wld. -wilt atll duplex.share laundry No lencedyard u111111es pa1d •&TlllYIEWWITI now LrgoetuxetBrown-~g~llO<~Brt~= '475 63l-5l6711690 ;i•Ml~~H patklng. $800 S85()Jmo • Clepos11 Avail Piil llTTlll ers unit trplc, dl w. w/CI dlw 1 blk. 10 beh Avall N B Noo smkr Mlf? to snr 1tLrg 3BR 2BA upper 11115 * 631-4999 Rede<:Otated 2BA 2BA, Ilk-up. pauo. $875/mo • 111 i $930/mo 550.3759 2Br l'~Ba. upstairs/own, JMI J ZJ• duplex, garage, hreptace "LARGE 2Br 1Ba $650/mo 1BR wlloft·3rd From $1025 sec. 84$-5824 . pool. $360/mo.-1200 ***28R • oen 111X SHARP trl·level condo. laundrl hook-up. 3 S400 security Avallfble $950 No pets 631-6107 lrria 1NEWPT SHORES Larr ~ Avail now_~ cottage 214 Apotena Eut side, 3BR. 28A. air. decks. 1300 Nov 2. Call for apptm f 13Br 2Ba wl gar St230 mo OCEAN & BAY VIEW Close tp town S13501mo nlee crptl punt. w/d VIL' a R£1JALS 631-1879 Orangetree Condo. tBR -1,!>~~.t.o ~~,2~ton NB condo er wlba. wlct. atl 673-5686** hkups. dlw, 3 cat gar. no I.a ' --loft. lenn1s. pool, .,.......t1 spa gym. Sflf w/prot-M ye y dogs BACHELOR PAD a1mos1128R Duplex 1Xlnt Nwpt streams newl OCEANVIEW•YEARLY NoSmtt prefllber&ssOO 4!~h •:!:kS~~i!~yl~~I & •'JI. Ifft oceanfront $950/mo ~~~~~!\~n r~~~~:~ carpetlpa1nt~%0';es. 2Br11Baelupleunci yard. ind utll.' 722·7110 $3P<)Olmo'. Avail Nov. 1: 11350/mo 1' 2BR w7V1..,...s1050tmo $8501mo 642-2807 a5~!~~~11 1 mo carport. s 11001mo OceanFrontinN.B &eel 72,.. 7022 3BR H'•BA gat frplc tn· 2BA ~ Oen $1350/mo --,. ~780 646-3189 .. "" ,. 'T '. ' DOCKSIDE RE 722-9730 * 1t 1 BR garage. new Vw Newc:wpetS. pre ~ LRG Bf.'UT FAM HM plex. XLN E side toc:, carpet drapes paint .. ,.n_.... 3'lt STEPS Tl IUCI I to 32 yrs. a..n. S525mo tst. hme ren18L 580138A ~r1~1~g.=mo. Wlll Tl W.. NA ISl. $6251~0 2,13-596-8902 . 28Cf.JP$1:1rs. 11 ,L patiO. 28Rt 1BA 11t•1st s1 I Ind utts 723-t424 2car~. w/d. Avail 1211 · 1BR & den, J'>Ba 2-sty •.111-2.BR lBA. private j 111tcflen dolllnstalrs Parllg $925/mo &82--048 t Srv l8R 2BA..bllyfl00Ulln yrly. $2400 I winter ut. ac 4 exec twnhme m Ba}'Slele patio biltins pool clean Cable ready. No pet• Yearty tower 2 BR 2 BA on Bal llt S500 mo -$.,.1~ 721· 1196 3 BR 21,., BX TwnllM X· Cove. Frplc, sundecils & Q1Jte1 5735 · I $695 mo. SEACLIFF frptc $900imo · utds' Call 71-Mi7'3-7403 · RENT A.LS AVAILABLE tra .g Mair BR 2-Qf g..r w/d, 2-e11 gll, • gated * 6'2· 1850 * MANOA ~2M2 on Neptune Wasl New-~ 213-926-6653 JIM Shon term & Winter lanced yd. F;pfe, WID: ~:1$2~:0 'fto~1~: *••ES& rt•H• * HUGE'' 2Br 2Ba S950 . pon 496-5157 ~ $850to11400 hkup, $995. 963-8956 r 1&. 18a S7SO '"t11111tt t -.------------,;,,m;,...;.._ ______ .tJ Waterfront Homes.Jnc 819 Canyon ConiJo. Tg 213R A sman ciu1e1 complex • • East Bluff, new c:wpet. n0 "• LI. •-•;;;-· Realtors 673-6900 3BR 2BA din rm. l·Sty. 2BA frplc sec entry & SludlO $550 OR $585 SQ n j!·LORE pets 640-19f1 &ean 111e11r Spacious ... t 'Y IHI latatt Fer Salt Ctrua ••I Jiu 1122 lrptc. nice yard. $/Slater. gar 'pooi, Si>a. 1en $1600 wilrple 1BR 5650 Like 8A ' modem redeC 280 Tn-La.I/ &t I E/S~ngdale. Avail now. 754-2373 Of 759--0928 new & very PY1 Frplc:. Ulll 1 2 311 IPTS ·~ llM* pto Oeek Lnoy gar Nf nF un/ .. " *UIEFI•* Ptaia••la 21fl 111 lease.894~8 BLUFFS =1N~~e~idi9!;~7 ~·.ABOUT Frig. d~snwastier. S1ovell bd'I S850m0 •92-1699 GliillJ lddz •-Plex with pa11oramlc §eA 2'/\ea fri>k 2-car 3BR 2BA. park·ttke Mt· 3BR 2• .... eA. end unat. pool ----Ind No P9tS S45-4855 Walk 10 beach 2 BR. mtalff lal m 111eWS 28drms with lire-ar patio' kitch · blt·ins hng. fabulous ciubhouM. mint cond garage •BACHELOR E'Sl<Se apt TM•• • •Sp ac-1ou s. 1 BA 1&•BA enctgw $725/mo Comer VIEW Suite 'X ACRE (nt), horse prop-places and balconies., ~~. 1309 w. eay: pool & m0<e! M.ust be 55. $1425/Mo. 7So-8384 Agil Kitchen. patio quiet, M Cllll1... Baytront, 1aun rm 225 La Paloma Apt e FULL SERVICE «ty, 3BR house. Newport $975,000 300/e Down. I S l600/mo yrty 650-4818 o.y., 8181962.07353" CONDO BR l b prkng. lndry rm No pets SPECIAL 1t$9501mo1t 837-7918 Westdlff & lnline, Npt 8c:ft Back Bay 11ea. Open Sat Damo". Agt 863-15001 · Eves. 2 t31723-2 1 1 ocean ay $595 incl ut 720-1565 Bob 723-0350 S.gn,apece 8111 on Wliatclff & Sun 12-5 20291 Dys 642-0342 Wknds WELL tumlsl\ed 3Br 2Ba view. lido Park Or Hl-1 •NewGEdlw Stove & 1 tab .... ,.1 Cypress. Sa~ta Ana • • oeeantronl, s 1600/mo. 4BR 3BA 2 sty llorne. ni<:e rise 4th llr, sec t>lelg. walk cm11•1 Ctn 11r Mle(owave &CllSI ,_ llACI ... Heights. 756·9162 Agt. .l&SlllE Cll-htt lly 2Br 2Ba close to ocean. :r::~ ~~~ •:.~~~· f°c'::; to Udo Village. S 1450 ise Qu1e1 bldg on E Side. cozy •New White Carpet & _ CLEAN 2BR. 1g lav rm.1 .... 1 11• •-.... ::-:.,=--1-,.-1-1-:-._-... -.,..,,,.-:-'s,...-*- LOWEST PRICE 2 sty 381 $900/mo. 8181448-9392 s'1sooi mo oS:.-2304 incl utll Sara 723-0697 or wllots of wood Assigned Drapes ! parking. ulils Ind. Nq MESA VERDE pQOISl&I • -------9-1&-.. UIEWAOfTHE -' tam. rm 21.\Baguard gate ~ gar. · ~ 2131665-429• T~·Th I parking & laundry lacOI~ •Close to3 Fwys pets. 11175. 723-1292 l cableTV n c:ook. n laun· & --- SUM ...,NCW.NfTWOMLJI, $429.900. 891 -1'02 Agt CtrtH ••I •11 21ZZ 5BR 3BA. family rm, open BALBOA 48, Ip St500 ties S5301Mo 938.0552 ("405,55.731andSouth dry Toempl M, iwmtt 30 Pm 81118. 1 2111U CIAl•I floor plan. neutral colors. BAYFAONT 'concso 2Br l •GREAT LOCATI0~1 Coe.st Plaza •II Tll UY• -S88wtt BenySAS-.156 $425/mo w/1 yr..._ COLDWC!l.L BAN~eRO .. l .. . dbl sided fireplace. • , •LargePool&DeckArea 3BR 2,~BA ctosetoshop-Pvtentry&r~~ ta u ,. N.W paint. garden, gar· sprlnklen eornerlot l'h $1650 Es1Cle 2Br 1 .. aa.wl dhk •lndrvleluallyControlled • &d S lllew 1aroo-buelneeamow10to.1 Ample~~ing lfUYERIE age.A11111/1. 720-1784 blks 10 K~8 acl'tl. 51600 IBALBOACoves28r,den, up, wet.bar DI W. gar .1 EntryAJarmSystems P"l!1oect~se~50Mo ,_ioeat1onlAnnouncet"9 Uti1ltlaa&lg19'1nd. 4BA 2BA. $214,900 Prin-2BR 18A Duplex. Wood mo prdnr 800-325-54~ Bt~~R~~T d~~n~~~Br, S9501mo 548-~797 :caole TV Ava~ab~toes ~Via Lido 675-9289 nlOVetnclelllMed lmmeCI poa M -~7 f:vnt>rt ~best: c1pals only 854-0759 decll. No pets. Walk to .. 0tocks lO t>eaeh 2Br den doek tor 80' bOat $525. dep 1 BA mobile• ~ Lau'£.'.l ac ~,.,.,.,.. · beach. $850/mo incl "' i • • • ' tiome Secure 1"'irure1•v•n-.1ecl .-.... 1"'0! 101111 VIEW Beaut1lullam1ty home on a water. 64().4090 ~::;1:;g ;_~~rs~~tio~~do Li~~ly 1~~~~ siory SBr. adults No pets 1991 ·~~~~~~ak:ony to llLLS ~!!e·~.~~~~gg~~ 3H 21& ICUIFlllT 536-1895. 213-453-2105 boat dock $10.000 Newport Bl11d 6•6-8373 •Elegant Atmost\pere 1 •• 1100 Margie. Agt 979-8280 $2000/mo & 2Br 2Ba AVAILABLE NOW' 3Br WaftrfrHf llt .. l IH. •Sorry No Pets , Nloel FrplC. Agt.67~·5354 ,..,Ba Hunt Bay Condo RULTllS Ul-1400 meStiBftU ,. .. SUI YOU can't ask lor anything CISTll .. a ~ ACUf . B WID stove/frig $800/mo 2881 Bear St Corner ol morel Best neigh· Undet constn1c11on SBA 28,~PECT_!>~u°LR 2vi'eV:. + d~ Nr BrOOkhurst & HIGHLY upgraded Ne;· -UUT11mS · BristOI coitaMesa bOfN)OCI, best toc:atton ;.,J.BA. over 3,000 sl l. Pool •. 2723 Ocean Blvd Adams 968-8253 P2?rt8 Nosr11~00c~o ~ 1~ Sparkling clean large l 1't Ul-1244-next to the park. lg pool-r ~ I I aere lot. $349.000 - -----' a mo I Gatden apts Beauhluily sized yard -a beautifully Margie. Agl 979-8280 $2800/mo 675-6900 RUSTIC 2 Bedroom House consider tease option ranelseaped grounds ~ MESA YERIE remodeled 4 BR home ---I *OCUIFllOIT* 1 ~:r.;;on1 & R•'ui.~ Pel 497-9918 -Pool& so• patl()S dec:ks 2BA 2BA. 81 $750 IU.1010 j !l•U~IC~ 104 I BeaolllU1 4Br.lurn l I S750 Mo·dep 631-4 147L~ !;':e14~,D2RlBtg 8~~or earport 5610 P~mS•&sLo"T;~I GOV'MT HOMES $1 oo (U SB 3BA tofl tam rm. unlufn S25001mo I .-21~4 patio 45 101 3 car gr 1 Bedroom S68o•McSA VERDE 2BR ·18A Repair) Foreclosures. Fantas1c V1ewt need~ Av~1L 11/1 to 7/ 1/88 n tat 1 $2750/'urlv 673-1767 28drm 1 .ea $815 uppei Quiet cut de sac.. T.-Delinquent Propet'1y TLC. $565,000 Agt Tara N.."f'.(9 14) 833.0280 a8R 38X Greenttee~ '7"L. -Hit E 181n $1 642-0856 Si'OO· 2867 i11Cl>.O<) 111ow .sethng This area• 494.0215. 497-5123 FABULOUS New eontem-Quiet. nr tile patk Many 1LIDO SANDS ttouse 2Br. ------_ •98-1936..151·948.3 Ca I I (Re I u n dab I e l New construction. 3BA. porary 2BR 3BA condo, upgrades Fruit trees den. furn yd. gar 0~: 2S-drm 2Ba twnnse S865 NEWPORT ACROSS THE 1·407-744-3220 E111 3BA lam rm t>eautilul Panoramic views oeean & assoc amens. $1500 mo I eomm. $1700 ~~·~'fgl9~1 825 Center St 642-1424 STREET 2BA trplC gar- K311 for llsllngs hofn9. great ~iewl Very harbor. $3500 D/75•·2110 Ev 559.7091 consider yrly ---age $825 mo 1665 Ir.one lfll HWI PUIHT1 upgraded $479.000 Agt Wattrfrtlt h•H IH. LEASE 2BR 2BA. new 1 Newport He1gh1s 3BR. ~.,_ fiield =2 720-9422 We'll~ve ou the down in Tara 494-0215, 497-5123 1111 IJl la condo 1n Westpark WID.1 3BA pool ~a rage. wwL"!!il: NPT HGTS area 28r I& 1 -exc ~o/a sh11re Of own· • central air Incl gar ~. $ 1 5 T 5 I mo ease Ba gar new carpel new ersnip. You make the It rt hac~ l New Beaut 3BD 2BA carport S97Sl mo Con-845-6968 °' 721-0865 -APUTIHTS pa1n1 nq pets $740 rno TODAY'S NEWS TODAY In newsracks by 3 p.m. \ mthly pymts & we share WfO double gar 4 blks. to tact Anne McCasla~d NWPT NORTH CONDOS Large a1tract1ve Apts 111 a -CleQ 642·5722 apprec You receive s221,• b ch . s 1 5 5 0 m 0 75 1•4330 or 756-9202 •2Br 1'1Ba, FI P, garage, beaui1lul garden ~lllng ---Co l N 100% tax benehlt. Must Steps to aanely t>each, ~0-7038~760--0909 Univ.Pk. 3 BR. 2' 2 BA. 2. wld~great location S1375 Pools. garages No pets SHARP & C~EAN 11 fBR mmUD ty CWI (714) 642·4S21 Ho•• Delivery have clean credit .~gt poola. oeean & tennis. ON tbe beach, Qvt rd, Cle· car gar. 1950 sq tt. pool, •2Br. 2Ba. Iott. 2-c;ar gar 1 Bedroom $650 ~~~.:~e'~rO:~ ~· Along ~· Coast 9~·6002~1 kWk~s ~R ·-~~2CMg81 ~u~p~.3~~~Ba. re· vb Cl nearby ~~w~$1700~~2 1~ U10~1 ~5:~:~~=~~=·~~=5-:~=1~~================~~======r WEITOLIFF ;~ ~ ~'sf ~ta:,~ v~s~: 1~~~~~~r,·~~~7m •• t.,... 11 COSTA M •• ESA • . •. l&.ISE Tl lllPS a DOCKSIDE RE 722-9730 673=-0421 or 963-3977 I •-L ~ 28A house Fireplace. _ _!42-1 0 l ·-.. ~, .. ac. ton~ patio, garage Walk to BEAUTIFUL 21l.R IBA .,, .---•HWPllT GIES . S aeicx:.s & contempor!'} WtOsiVE atlXRbl b .. c.hl IJ.f.l.~ p.a.t410ute1 ~u l>oo• gar· A besf Dft I~ Newpo~r 3 2BR 2''rBA condo wlview • 'BA 1 1BA 2 ~~· •GATED COMMUllll iY1r $900/mo 818-888-2253 age cable TV .,ew =~ ?' catng~~ic:::; Baautllul! 673-9384 ruoe :'A.~:rPcif 11111 CAllYH A rt•Hlt carPel parnl •ALL UTL· gar .. laundry rm 1ns1de UYCllHT NOL ... E $1300 Agt 67S-.912 BEAUTIFUL 2BA 2BA ,e S7251Mm~A~~~2~ 18J2 Big enough YMd '°'pool... HWLY 119111t11 YIUSS llLL wlgolt course VIEW Also i1M& o • a haven tor vegetable Cttarming 3.BO 2 112 BA SP 1~R a11a1t Frptc, wet Dar. lsl&u 2606 -CW IRHAH garden s~e today Home ottered by owner& Spacious 5Br 3Ba Lux m1eto. W/D hkups. 2 c11 2eR 1ea .,.. dk •OO MenimacW•~ DIMES*l $389,000 I I med Home Avail 1111 Oat wl xtr• SIOf&ge c:en-, .. y W•SUll • l BR $650 111·1100 ~=cy °'N;'ty pain~•:: S$7350so000o/mo631_~!!! opt ~ry•1~0 'i!i:':'!-o'= :w'J '~:.ea,·,,,~~sl•2BR $750 RE:[l:JJ · ~ · ·i KJ.N$-~land • · ......., • • -----9--9_,_9:-i-~~~~--~.,;~~~ · _ -..-_-...-.-""-"---1t--l~~-=.11rll'""r.:~'""L"'t ),...\ 0 11'\.'\\ b:ti~a ~oolk•~.:;,,(Si-.... fU 4 1uo W&Tfl mw CHARMING Cape coo 2Br I ~ Rl" T0tt.'-• uoneo New winesows & *29A bUP!ex. qulet. Gg En oy breathtaking 111ews Winter/fly N-pets Ftench Doors. New cop-yefel. front unit, garage. &' sunMIS from lhls 3BA 675-710 Thurs-Sat Ptaiaa•la 1007 i8ii FlllT llPUX •4Br12Ba upper •3Btl 2Ba lower 1795,000 associated .. . . ""' ~ ~ ,, .. •, ~· I '•~I ~ J.I' per plumbing Cozy FA QOOC1 area $780. 543-A 2BA beauty wlfeatures (818) 795-2965 Sun-Tues with tptc;. Great neigh· Bernard St. 647-7540 too nvmerous to men· al ti Ptaianla borhood & sell dtst .• •MESA VERDE 5BR. 2 lion. lmmed oecpy poss· UA7 Open Sun 12·5 20t5 mstr suites, 2400 all. Ible. Chlldren & pets OK _,, Commodore S435.000 pool, spa. great nghbrhdl $2650/mo Doug Hetbst tNEWlv FURNISHED• n • I e I I I R I c k $1700/mo. 54~98 720-3980 or 760-5000 OCUNFAONT 1 BORMS 646-81251646·1973. Rf/h9l( ~vallable Great loeatton •Clean Mesa Vetde lg I B 67S.-•606 Ill Clllll 3BR 2BA. dl w, 2 ear gar· " Must see! kr VERSAILLES age. pat lo. llreplaee \Jt"\\'n:l."Yf rr· \'I I 38R 2Ba steps to beach. Or Deauvtlle condo $1100 No pets 6"0-2495 · S • great cones• Carport, WANTED by pvt party. REAl.TOR balcony, apph, lnelry Goll eourse view pre! W~~ 1-1.11111 1900" slf townllome 3BR $1300/mo yrty 673-2880 72t-8508 1BA-• dining rm & rrp1e. 2 2• tBA. ram rm, wet bat. SlEPS TQ BEACH 2BR -=a •el lu 1112 'IPttlrs•ll""I Ttr... CJr ll•r~~'?.aioNot &.crpt. vaulted ce1hngs. bltlns. With garage Yearly --• ,. •· S800 Incl g ... .,r. pell. frpto. formal Cllri1ng rm SiOOOlmo 2 iloeks fo eEXcA 3Br 2 5Ba•larn. snutters Adults S<:otti 548-2301 117501mo 720-7400 Agt 722•7776 Even1rog DUPLEX. 2Br 2Ba-t 28r RogertGrdn!nct.cpdtgyd •LAG 3BR 21'tBA. 2-sty. 2BR • den untvrn/f\Jrn lr---;·""'C'"'=--~'1E'll 1'~8a. Newly ramodelect. Pvt quiet biers coop 2·5% gar, trptc;, patio, lndty htt· Condo 2'tBA 1860 sq It trna 1 I.I 1521.000 875-32141 ""25K PIP 854-3063 up. Small pet oti. I f300 pool. tennrs, s'16751mo. 4 2eR 1BX lrPI aeck. refrig .. , ... Merrill Lynch Realty P9T•NTIAL PLUS St to Strada on prestigious Lido lsJe. l BR/Den. new paint/new Berber carpet. SS95.000 675-4912 Agt mo• ~ 722-7007 splat garasi-Near t>eaell ELEGANT MW 28r. 28a, 2 -Rwt For 1 0< 2 people No earovage. ywd.d/Wetc •IUll IEW-... ..-.. pets $1075 673-1039 171 Monte Vista, $950 BR 2BA. 2 car fcar. lrptc * 2BR 1BA 995/mo NO pets. 642-3812 DIW. miero. w Cl "sk"f!; * 1BR lBA $695/mo lrul'I comp Y rty 1"""' BRIGHTON SPRINGS lBR Agt 675-4&061722·1520 ,..._ bMCh No im~ers Condo. Secluded woocts or pe11. 875-3383 & streams. Gtound 3BR 28A. freshly painted.i.-,~~~=-~-=-=--::=--- Fi let Favorite • 759-6600 leYel Wstlr/D<yr staelt Upgradad crpt & window llm ... 11a hOOk-up mco trptc gw treatment Frptc;. sec sys HugesundeCJt $1150/mo w/oipnr '+ cari>on. ·Ree tam. auto sprinklers Avail now * 64~5 area~ pool, spa. $750 + Great toe' Grnelr incl CUTE OCE.'N VIEW 1BA ctep. VELMA 549-24"7 Sl950/mo 760-5064 Brigtlt. newly decorated, .... ~,....!;;' CL~N 2Bf 18a dupM•. •HARBOR VIEW HOME large sundecll. Avail now ~, $725. Gar. smt yaro. no 3Br 38a• bonus room, Sl25/mo * 640-7584 531 : BasketofflowefS 1>9ts. 195<t. "A" M9¥« llp, upg.raded. gardnr. 18R-Oen 2BA w/leb adorns center of this Sell V•• p,.,.,trl Cal Cla1111W, 642-5671 for Information & surprisingly low cost. O<edlt c:hedl 54~ comm pool. park, IQ yd. llleW. ~ ctecJt. frptc. I~ 1.,,,.-18 ................. . S 1001mo. 647-7524 agt rm, dbl gar 111100. 213-"'""'-·-· .............. ......... WT191 MITI llU •MUST SEEJ• 928-t844 714J67S..71ft Crochet Qurci<ly1 using ~'\~:.,::--d~ HVH New upli:!dH [4 2 strands of ag4t. qu6et.,.. Uttra cri>ts. tMe, 4Br 2 lam bedspread cotton ":.n 2 atcwy S 1250/mo: rm S2275/mo 760-0715 OlrtetlOnS. cNlrtS for ~-11 Aobert 'MMen to •NEWPORT SHORES • 1 & 2 Bdnn aptS start • n.....t..1 .. r.-...., .. S6t5 o.. '8bte •"' Cll ~ ~-..,... '31· 12M tar 38& hJe on CMlil Lrg ----.-~"" -Pt.US $1 25 p H Mm a liV rms.,,... QlfpeC utm•.. I VV'of. ,£~ l pe1nt y..ny S21ao1mo S«ry · No peta &31 .!!_ FOR EACH PATI'E RN NEGOT\AIL£. 87~47 I ORDERED slCie 1 ~Jd •mTIU Atlll llWI •eate•A8 OffER GOOO lliROUGH F dr wld ,.;.p lltf'dfw• •HO CHAAGE• Agt MAAQt 31, 19119 ~t • ok. s n 501mci ...,,, F*V'*" ""2•77°' ....-rs .... • ~ betw ~ R 2' t&A Condo, 1•.., ml 8"ultfully !Hdec..,.CS. ....... ....... "°"' Mech. queet .... qulM.. ~. dlNrl ~ ... 0.. ._.... ~ Poot. Jl&Mnl :s 11so1mo .floo4 a..,., PllM• ._ ~0000 IDir .eooo. C..Jll. no-ot4• py~==tMS ....... 41120-4000- -~-DUPlEX •1"1* 2....,_ 1'"8a MOS ..,_ ........ AddNla. ~~~~~~ & pMto-On 9e1bOe BM lnl•lllM f ..,._........_..,...._ w.-~ .. ~to tne COSTA..-ESA ...... v, ....... . ~~~':..';:.; ... 1111 -...... , ' NAMI: \ CITI AMOUNT ENCLO~[O l . 3. •• ) .. !· B.actc o~ poo.,.ar Ot'mll"O O•~s-4'-l•nt' W' run Friday. Satur- a .. y .. ,,c, \unc:l-1)' n u ov.n c1au11tcatoon ,,.. tht' Cl.lsstf>ed Ads S•nce rrus s • spec!M otf~r Wf nave • Thvrsday noon <kdlne ancl ask pre~~nt for .i ads T"rs ts open ro .Ill pr1v•re pMty adVertast-rs for ~rcn~•u not ovet s I SO (pr ace must t>e listed 1n acll .and no .o«>rt-v1•t•oos wi• t>e accepted 1\1 ads wtll run Fr.oay Saturo~ .no Sunday There ts • 5-ltrwe minimum •t 20C pt-t to~ So yo4J1 low cost Dtlftft·A•Ufw ad b onfy .•• Sl.00. · DEADLINE: T .. .i•i.l ... "00" "ICE S "f' ......... "'V"' • , o.-ys • 20< Pt'' 11~ = SJ 00 • "'" MH ~·,. "'"°'' o o~ comonq nto thf' Da '} ~r ro p 1!Cf' \' "'llf :.<: e· ti~!' l°'f' ~~ l>f'iOW • Pro\ <'ll' p,> •, ..,,.., ""'"'" Sf' ON)' .JOs llio com- °"''{ io >CJ\ ;'f''S •"\l.:K~ l)•'.'<JvCl' Of pl4'nlS • EM:h lt'M l'"Ust bf proe~,., ~ .0 W>th no •tems ~ SI SO MAIL \P ~--"' r ~ ~ ~ ,..,: s..-, 't , .. , Cou; \'Its. C" 91626 ;),11 • r...:J.: '>OU~ ''C"O .. ~ f r C..•~ !"I A'..I tt' !> Pilw' STATf ZI,. _____ _ OATES TO lfUN .... ,. -Oninoe CoMt DAILY PtLOT/ Tueaday, Novem~ 1, 1988 MOTOR ROUTES IVlllllf • WEEKL y_ PAYMENT mil• AIM.Aal I I fll 1• 111111 UT M a .... ,. .... ,CAI_ .... _ .. .... CALL 642-4333 between IAM & 7PM Orange Coast Daily Piiot • I FUN AFTER SCH00h . WORK 11 YHra a Older Work Evenin91 & Sahuday YOU CAN A VIRAGE PER WEilt s7500 OR MOREi PHONE: 491-3321 Newspaper Delivery Drivers Neet1ed. Monday-Friday 2PM-5PM. Weekends & HoHdays 4~M-7 AM. Earn up to S6(,9/monttl. Must have reliable transportation, insurance & a good driving record. Call_] 14/642-4333 ext. 205 Between 8AM-7PM Ask For Rodger tor Route available in I I $400 per week to start Westminster Huntington Beach ~uni-in-Valley • NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING Ask for Joanne Craney For ..... you can adWrtlM your Getege Sale In .... Deity PllOt There le a 4 llne "*""-'"" end the prlca .. the Mme 'WMtMr you ........ 1 day Ol 3 daya. tra • or ... way to tum thOM l'Mddan tr..._. Into CMh. We ... Mio oftefing a ..... te ..... la 81 I ..... f0t ••·•· Ttn guide~ ldeel on howto .a.ti.. hOw to '*"· whet item• to MM. plus ~ for a better garage Ille; ... gerage ...... pridng ttk:tl ..... lnfONMtton on ctty ord!Mneee and Inventory IMet. Y® cen purdt ... YOUt Gatage SM Kit for $1 .00 "*1 you plllC9 your ed at. -. .. • ---#: . . Orengieeo.t DAILY ptLOT/T~, ~ 1, 1--I kb .... • ....... . ... .... .... 7111 ....... ~ ........ '• ~ L ... ~ llmCl Ml.IC mT1Cl .... ]ill!ll 1111 Hame ,...., (T• ~. "" c.n~ ConecMe 1~ '?:-~~= N••h• curec10y Mortf9 orTrld• "IJY!nOetOfl. F-20. M« rcnnouew .. ,,,...,,. =... .. , !oy & Min.) All aob'I.. VA0e"·11 . new UOHP . ..--.. ..-. lnleflOr ... l«lOr Deed on IN Property IO bouil. moec; lufn ..... eTA'-f ,......, ..._ a dotl't 12SQ..t700. 751-3416 Johnaon. 9alv1nlzed rr:'.~· l2000 oClo New tlr•, Medt .,.,.., I06d. Ten per Gent Of Wl'IOUfll M Mlnogve, H-51, bl<t. The tolOWll'O ,.._,,. _ CIOth•e. d l th & tr1ll•r . lo eded HOO CAl.l Oenn1t ~toO.~tec!Mtflbld mltc""n dOlnGbulintteM 0·1111., •• mled 3I07 , .,~t ' ~ v yovr ume.. (714)M3-&314 (YPM850J 1Mtorott..tob01wf1t• SN Comrriunicat1. H-11. FA'A EAST CONSULT· fntel Ille Or, off ... tronl<:t. Prlc:ed et ~ from 1H pr•vloutly 11'9 Ind .. be~ .C bike, mite furn, IMC bOUI ANTS, 24t15 V• htfte ...,._.. & Senocaat1e • I ..,._StOOO e n-13&1 owned ~C9CMe-Beni. 1 .... ...,.tit IM IN ~ ~ ., an, Pu~ °'"'Ot CoNt ~. V«t1t I.Inda. CA lV22 c;lllc:tltting Up(fOht ~ ~ of Im-<v lltM ltlt ,,,91 Plltlll Delly .. ...,. NcMrnt. 1, I , t2tM lftnlMtOftl) tNt a ........ to be .....,.. Pteytr Plano. ~·1:n;•g,~•n por1,, .. s.,..2131114 c,::,~l ~LEJd«aao. =~ .... ,..,., ano befOte 1taa 8'adlev o.oree Pott•.~•r.wW •~tobe ............. ot.N()A. Neb IOfM ""1ora.tlon ~ ---MEACEDE.8 --'""'• brown-t '1'331 24885 Vt.a Buena Suwi., l'fttde on,__,., p,~ "'8 a "'80CIATEai..:C-· S1700 080 640--1.. '• ENO C"'--8,_._ ~-ltattl«. 0...... 100, '4250. ~ ... ffwt ·ldll"Y.,of1.,,;.;,..'!;: VO<t>a l.lflda. CA t2tle Mlell..,._ O.Ulbed 4$70C.....O.W.. t , , ·---·~· • BMW •78 2002 842-4~0 (ESP519) • -" --· ~ MJJIC( Thia .bullMN It con· The "llN9 end ._,..,_ ~ ...,._, Calfs 11111 47 Sch .. ,,., & SOOa S.by Art 34' C....iocll. Ptlg jGateged fOt !-a. txc.1-111 n11 ef .. hUiee ef ducted by trt lndMdumil eddr 1••1 Of the ln'9nded tatlO .,.., NOi ........ n , GrWICI w/p!Mo conMr, de.I wl skipper. &75-'1100 i.nt cond1tfofi: $1900 lllYlafT 'II MM Du•.,.• MOTICa 0# Tiie ragtttrant com· trtntttrOl'I .,. T~L 1 ... mthogeny. Coat $11K, (18CA24&) 559~52• f'lllf l.any !"~~m~ 11UUC nwepp menctd to tranuc:t bu91· IMAGES, INC , 18422 ~· Thie tM* .,...., la .,.,. ~lllOOob0&7a.HOe ti CIT .. OEN • 3 fScytlodtf Racyredm.,.1t !,_~lllYt ............. ~--•.~ (UCClecia.tt01 ntN under Ille flc11lt0UtWOOd Line. Huntington ject ,to Ce1totn1e UnlfOml " II 2 CV (81 ia -.. ..,...., tr .,. • ...., ,,.._,, ._.,1 .. .,) bullneN 11at11e ot n.amee Bwn, C.ittomll t264tr. Commerdtl COde ..,._, •T' l1etf......... (Cherletton). orlg1nt1 144' ·•555 230. Santa Ane. CA 12701 To ereo11or1 bf !Nine Orug lltttd ~on 10/H/M Ttlt IOCMIOn W. Cellfornle tlot . ........ 11'1'! ............ ·""~til2P...§ .. p11e"tD-"'8 .. ik;E;S;1c,u11e equipped, MBZ D.&.11t Ch•11•1ux .• fully lllWllllTY... ~~~~ 1'ti' Inc •• CMfOl'nit COfPOI'· 8'ad 0 POfll the ct"9f eJteQl,ltfllf ofHce The,_ end ...... or NEW NeYef UMd one dltMI power. Exc*lent rtl:llstered, meet• all vt· • .... 711 ltN em • • ttk>n, Tranateror· Tni. 1t1tement wu fifed 0< Ol'lndoel ~ otta the pertot1 wttll wtaom meni & 1 ladlts ·,120 Hve-al>Owd. MOR tllp. Na.~. Total mfle. · IW3•0 Hottc.lahtret>y1i1vent"41 wittltNCoutlt~CletkotOr·ofthe1ntino.s1rtnt1et0<la.. Clslmla"-betlledla"°"" NCt1 pp a.&.41.f1 ASKtNGl100000 ageunder750011m.Vtty llEYlkfT'IJIULal ,,.,. TranafwOI', lrw1e Drug enoa CountyonOctooer~. umeuatiovt Al$ I -SSOCIAT~ .. · · · (213)305-o432 ftneeonoltlon. BIO. Tony, 6 cylin<Hr. AWFM, tllt. . Inc. lllbOUt to make• bl.Ill( 19118 All other bualneM neme. <l570 ~ DrM, t , 1,.,11., .... uas 973-3440 M.,,s (108292) S2 781 rtaJC NOTICE trenal• of or~ to the , .. and~ .... UMCI Dy die NtwPot'I 19eec:11, ~----~ • I ..., • ' underslgnl<I THRIFTY i>ublllhed Oraf'19' Cont lnttneled tr9nettf0f Wittlin 92MO end ttw '-I~ for nln1 ,. .. 'i........ CLASSIC lllftllln ~ MOTICI TO CORPORATION, Trina-Dtily Piiot NoYMllMw 1, 8, uv .. ~ i.t )'Ml'1 lat llltrlQ ..,,_Dy ""1 Cf9Clle« l•nlltt 1WR 72 K1rman G111a con'lt. 141-1711 CMDfTOH cw feree 15, 22. 19&8 Pitt ao 111 .. known 10 l)lt lflill be Nowww110ef tt, ,... lllFllAll 1' 11" 99tSiE§ Blkl Bllc Ofgln. mint cond ""'-" TMWl." Tiie ~ addr ..... of T332 Intended tran1ter.. tt•· et 5:00 PM wNOll It "'9 t!UM- TRl·FIN mlnl-noM rJder ~ll~T Pl~~T KO~,;~~ low mit.. must seelli Clm •u IAUll ( ..... tt01 .. 107 the lrlNferOI' Md ,,_ ·-ti' W\ftM' ~AA--' Ind ~ ~ ~ 32' PACE SF, Cat. eng. Uh 3 r1 am..: . &76-f5f10 Power & air needs pelnt U.C.C.) '-"are l"-.n. ""''~ ·-·-.•I bu'"--..... --new. It nger. I w1ter cooled. Rebull1 to otherwise ucellenl Notic. it l'lefaoy given 10 Transferor 9761 East· ....t ~ ... of tlle mtended llbOVe LOAOEO. S12K (N.B: mootfno 11ao evallt~). &73-9201 ~rt~ SWOO<I note & tell newt S 1850. 846-9000 DATSUN '93 280 ZX 2>12 $ 1 5 0 o ( 1 F W & 4 7) credit0f6 ol tha w11111n wood Clfde VIiia Peril. Call-'~An.wTU lranatwttea) we SK.AHA. OtlMd: October 20, 1NI oc · 250 Or1Qin11 owner Auter MS..5075 named tranalarOl'(sl Ula! a 10fntat2tl67 T 1 INC .• 110 Newi>ott Center lltAMA, l~C .. l'le mafic: Power. a/c. Fully bulll llM!tlar 11 abeul lo be f ranaferte THRIFTY ~bt ~ P"IOnl ate Orf\lf, Suite 200, Newpott ........ Ceol • , ....... ~Sic for B<lan lo.ded. $7800. 711().1781 --made on P9fwona1 l>f'OC*1Y CORPORATION. P 0 Qo11 J H NH y arJ ENEL l Btedl, CA 82680 .... . '"""'Ind.,.,.,..,~ For Rent 381 st co;; HONDA 78 cvcc Tiie n11mt11 and butlnMS lorr\la 90009 PROPERTIES 7111·AIB/C "'"' riw.to la 0Mcr1bed lrl Delly Pl6oC November 1. ~·Arid tt1Hqulp· 842· 1444 , f'llllt9inartar dffct"1bed 92333, Los Angetas Clll-I Thll the P'098"Y PW1l-~ ~ COMC lnC'111111ec:1 need---------H New ip,S. hi GOOd Cond1l10nl lddf ..... ot 111t i nttrtde0 The '°"t'°" ot the prop-Alabama St HunhllQIOll general• F'°*Snoc>ancl tNI -----------"---------! c:'s~rl K . $1000 080 franalerors ara Allton10 erty to be ltanlferred IS 8-cn, CA 926'8 t fl localed at 2540 W Mani T335 Call 73:J..8T2S 546-1200 Zuppttt1 and Barb&NI Zup. •e&o Irvine Boulevard .. ~'; :!: ~•bet H 191 .. _.,. Mf'ITw-t _,,. _. • 1 --•• lt2SH&rtier c pecta 3343 Fucllsia Str•t Irvine, Calitomia a I · un1.1-_.;...r~=;;;"'.;;..;""'=.;':.:.;:;:~:__ ...-..., ""'9'.c: UC. rau,.rta ta 1 -'12 AOOlll · .-a'MN! Costa ~ Cal1IOfnla · The Pf098"Y to be Jrans-'"':' BMchb CA 11~648 1--;...o.;;_,_;...;.;.--..;;;;.. __ Si!vtr, 4 door. air con-Fiii ,.,. llST~ -The location rn Ca11torrne terreo Is turnltwe. f11tt~ 11 1111,,.ss 11 con-REPORT OP CONDITION _.. 11 di=, Powet steering, -.... " of the cl'ltef executive otflGa equipment, INSetlold Im· ducted by "'llld•111dllll Hl41 5-• AMfFM, 66,000 At.itomauc:. 6 cy inder. °' pr1na~1 bullMU ottlce provements. supplies. The reg1strellt com. Coneolldetlng don'99ttca1nd tonllar'l 9Ubeklw._ W-'"PP.~111'1""',..~~ miles, cieln' In and out, radials, power steer· of the intanOed lrarostaror" marChlllO•se. inventory. mencecl ~ transa::' bull· of tbe PACIAC NATIONAL. BANi( Of ~ 1981 RotlbXY Rambl8r1 5'000. 720-5368 Days Ing/brakes. AM/FM, same uatxwe pr~1ion tllel and r• :!.' u the 1etrtiou1 8Mctl 1 the-"-~""'L~'"' _....._....__~ motor home 3 O • cassette, A/C, real cletn. All other buaonna 11ema CO<di of tl)at dNQ store ness natM or "IWI'* • n ·-·•"" v... • .-~ ... v,. -.... Levelers rear' bath. •••'II •c"••i Low . Io• m 11 es. and addresses uMCS by the busmen known es Dant>er 11s1ecs •l><MI on NIA bulinea on s.otember 30, 1"8 pu...._ In roof/dut1'a1r, lo•ded, e•:,5 ..-A-•1-nd (280R767) $4,895 Intended trensl.,or withlll OrUQs located at .aao lrvtne ~n:,:,!!.,~ war flied reeponee to eall mede by ~oler of the 11 1 $28 000/obo •.....-manua • fl ials, 11~• IEACI th'" years Int yearJ tas1 Boulevard, lnline. C1M<lf'Na Curtency, under tttJe 12, Untted Stete9 Code c:e en · • · cruise. power steer·1 11•-• past 90 far as known to the So flf as ts known to thew.th theCOYnty Clerk 01 Or· Section 1&1. Chertw NuMber 171M Cornptroi..; (1KSB742) 536-2509 I Ing/brakes, AM/FM. 142-0lll 111tende<1 tr11<1sleree tre Tr111ster ... the Tr1111f8(0< = CO\.lnly on Octob« 4• of the CurNney Founeen o.t~. -;::;========:::::::;;::;;::::::;;;::;;;;;;~FIBERGLASS camper cuaelte, A/C, tilt. Power , none. '8\ hai not used any business ~ &hell Stockland Co for windows/locks. (0.5355) Fiii 17 THIN The llame(s) an<I business name °' addresa other than ,__,. lmpQrt truck. 94\'f" .' xlntj $9,&89 AM/FMl, ca519tle. Ga! eddress of 1111 llltelldacl ,,.,. •boll• dUflng tl'le three 0,':~b~~ ~~~ 1 f~' AUTO IOUTI CAllllll cond. S250 080 (dial In lllTlllTM IUCI Sall'9f' (8~ 130) $5,999 translerle(s) .,_. Thomas A yeara last put, except lor 25 NOY9mt>er 1 1988 • • AauTa •)581--4328 aftr s. 1 ... 2-IOtl 11-111TY-• FrledrlC:h and Yoslltko Hef. Danber, I~ and Daniel · • U l• -nw; ...... ~Ill 10641 Crew Drive HOl'WtU. Earn UP, to $600 a month working Aatt Lf11ia1 HIO Ml-0711 n~m. Cahtom1a 92804 • T,.,. bulk tratistef is to be Pta.IC "°TICE CMh and blltMCM due Part·ti"me del1'ver1°ng newspapers. ORDER your '89 or in .!!!" .. 7 0,11 Sdli I , ... 'll TlllN ~~'r:e::C :=~~ ~=~~ 1rea OI' alter 14WO.I ~~~~ and M9fcedes-8enz and get ...,_.. manua • ra as. AM/FM, cassette, Gas geoeral as ee.uty Salon Tl'le bulk translet •S sub-(CITACiotf .IUCHC&Al) -..,.._ .. .,, ..,......_ -Monday· Friday 2P M -5P M . -Week-the Early B ird Lust ~ ... ttel>r. akSu~'rooA~. 'cFu~· S&Yerl 188130) S5.999 end 1s 1oea1ac1 11 3784 So ject 10 Sec1ion 6106 01 111$ NO'TICE TO DEFENDANT curr.ncy and coin................................ 12_, 711 Rate. Compere HOUM of """' .,.. llmllnT-. Bnstol. Santa Ana. Cali-Uniform Colpl:nerc141 eoa. (Amo a Aculldo) VICtflt• L lnt--·beerfno ~........................ 8,217 ends ond Holidays 4AM-7 AM. Must lmpcrts & Be Safe. tom wheels. 1°287651 ·-. lornta 92704 Claims may be filed with Villasenor, MICllHI E. s.curit ...................................................... 13,048 2131714 MERCEDES I $9.688 ' .....,}fl T1'14 Business r11me used Cltor MOfava Corporate Mathews. Donna M ~ "'"°' -*f ..................................... 13, 150 hove reliable tra~ortation, in-lllJlllT• IUCI by la.cl 1ra11slerors 11 Slld C'<M.!nsel, THRIFTY COR· Matllews Jesse Torre&, 8ecurttMe purcNlsed under su~ce and a good driving record~ ff~~M«~&'!: 142-1111 ~':" ~~~Nt!~~. ~~i.o!41.~w~~: ~-::--Domwc: o -o-wn••la to,...., ................ : .............. ., -0- and our resale leasing' trltended to be conaum· AngeiM Couoty. ifoma. you' ARE BflW SUED c.o.na.nct--."'-lcliig recetv~ Coll 714/642-4333 Ext 205. Ask for plan. Compare Hou• otl _.. 'll PlflUE SI rflatlld at tMottlQI ot NOR· Tiie lest dey '°' f111ng c:Wms BY PLAINTIFF (AUd le•t• Loens__. 6:;.• ot Imports & Be Safe. Autom1t1c redials crusle '!IS & ASSOCIATES. INC . a..::vember 18, 1988 <lemanoando ) FIRST uowned : ....................... 48,018 Rodger, Between 7 AM-7PM 2131714 MEACEDES bower sieerlngi br11tn' 4570 Campus Duve. Sulta9, 11..-... .. ~'1 1ybe f deemed AMERICAN TITLE IN-I LESS: .UOW.N» for io.rt 551 ~~===========~=~~~=::~:::~{I Au/p• . New?Of1 8each CalllOI'~ "'-',_,on 1 .ctualy SURAf'ilCE COMPANY a end ..... ~ ........................ . r OUR 60 MO Leaslng Pro-"" ..... c:essette, A/C 92660 anw Dec:emt>er 1 reoelved by Ille person des-Cat.torn•• COfPO'.'Uon LESS: Allocated trwwfw gram 1s a winner. Com· M oon rool A lloys t988 ignited aoove Defore th$ You""" 30 CALENDAR ,,_ relllfW •... ,.,_...................... -0- A.·I POSITIONS Work In the ever expanding Newspaper Promotion fletd. If you are Nit-motivated and like working wlth ·teenagera, this may be the opportunity you've been waiting for. $400 PER WEEK C't• Start) With Petentlel te $1,000 PER WEEK Insured Van, Wagon, or Large Sedan Is Required L•ta •f OttHrtunf!7 ... ,.. Wftlt u.r Werk I• Yeu~ Ow• Area; pare House ol Imports & (20XW509) $ 1',098 • Ttys bulk 1ranster is t41t>-!CIOM ot bulmess on No_,,. OAYI If* ... •••MaM Loene and ....... net or unetlf necf Be Safe. 21317 14 lllTillT•WCI iect 10 Cahtornia unororm btr 111, 1988 le...,.... 911 ,_ .... • .....___ -.u-... _... 7 ... MERCalES ••2.aaa1 UY FLAIElll Commercial Cooe Section DATED Oc;1ot>er 26. 1988 tn9wrfttet1 .....,_ .. at .,......,,,.,__.,ice._,.. ,...,.,. ............ 4 ,._7 -.._ I Unc:oln·Mercury Mertcur 6106. THllUf'fY C OR,.OR· tNa cowt . A.eMt9 hekl In tredlng tlCCOUnts............... -0-Aalts WHlttl 9020 Jaguar, Isuzu. Honda, • The neme ind .lddress of ATION. •r: Linde "-/4 ..._·°'..-..cal.. Pt•; 111• end ftlled ...... ( E f us b u 0 u r •IA 'II PllELllE Volkswagen Ille persoll w•tll whom f'ttrca, Vtc:. Preetdent I .not protect 1otl: ,_ .,.,.. (lndudlng eeptt*-d ...... )~................. 1,059 pampered M:rcfcsea-16 Speed manual. radials,, By Adcpt. Only Contact claims may bl Med is NOR·1~ .. ~edntt~ c trtlt\ell rnpalltt ,...... be Other rMI eat.ate owned-··-··----~····.:. 283 power steering/brakes L "'-11 ttl J RIS ' ASSOCIATES INC . ... .. .,.tSll ange oost '".,,... ........... If,... im..t"*1ts In unconlOfidated aubsldlanes Benz, you will get out-, AM/FM ........ 11• Ate ' p'" a ""' e830or 000tm 4570 Campus Dfove. Suite 9 Daily Ptlot November I, want tlle cowt M» Mer ,ow d ..aoda ,, right Calh. Compere S • ......... A i aimer! at ·7 Newp<YI Betch Cafllornll 1988 -In ted compeniM..................... ~ House ol Imports & Bel ll~p"s8{s°1 ~~ 888 Io Y s . Irvine Auto Oenter 92660 and the iast oay tor T338 If 1ou do Mt ,.. ,_ Customers' liability to tt1f9 ~ Safe. llmllTl.I lr*CI Monte Carlo SS 198•. Ming ctalms by any creo11or1 1 ,...,._ 911 tllM. ,_ ,_, on IOCept~ outatancffng.................. -0- "" loaded, new engine. new Shall be November 30. 1986 PlBllC "°TICE lote tlle oeee, Md tow tntangl~ UMts........................................ -0-rac I U2·00tl everyttiing, $6500 OBO lat 5'00 PM which IS the bull· . . • ..... lftOMJ alM9 Pf• Other u..ts ............................................. , 1,057 * * * I 759•9236 Jtm ( 1LEP500) I ness day belore the con-I NOTICE OF en, IMJ be e.-en wmi-t Tolal ....u ................................................. 96,912 CHEVROLET '88 Silver·' lllU 'II PIELllE I l:UC:,!;atoon date specitled • ~~ :C~~~~ turthet •amlrlt "'°"' "'9 LoeMS ~red pur9Uant to ado 1500, electric won· IS Speed menual. power Pt&.IC NOTICE Diiied ()(;lober 11, 1888 ... 107) .,court.. TileN.,.. otMr ..... ,.. r~!i=::n........................................... -0- dows & ctoor tocks. steeftng, c1uette, AIC.j t Thomae A. Friedrich,, To crtaJtonotJrvmeDr11g ~t.. You MeJ wMtj c:i.t.rred "'''W~ amtlm cassette. cruise tilt Power moon root NOTICE OF Yoeh!llo Hentln Inc a CaJ1tom•a eo<POf-to c.a aft MtCWfteJ ~t ,.... - controt, lilt wheel. auto-(981l6) Must 5"1 PUllUC SALE Of PubhstleO Orange Coast atoOll. Transfa<Of .. .,. " rou do not kMWlll 12 U.S.C 19230). .................................... 96.972 ma tic: tr1nsm1ss1on. air. 2 llfWEISITY Hiil I A9A~D "'°"ATV . Daity P1to1 November 1 Nouce is ner•b1 given 111a1 aft eetomeJ, roe m., ~aft! tone paint 16 800 mi Notice 1s hereby given that 1988 the 'fransta<Of Irvine Drug ettomey raterr• Nr1'tce • UARJT1Ea $1 3 , 500 · (In.elud e; l.a-0113 the un<lersigned will sell al T33• Inc. IS abOut to mike a bulk a ..... .w ofllc-. (llettd In Oepoeltr. C Sh II) (9661 •G) S ---publte a1.1C11on pursuant 10 transfer ol propeny to me IM ---boot~ In ____..... -----• .., .... .. __!!!.lper e . "' .MA EAATI 1987 Btlurbo,Sectoon 1988 of tile C1v11 · ullders lleO T H~IFTY · ... --d!t ,_ .. ..., ....,.,_,,.. ...,._ ....................................... ..... ~5=19$4 • sr S·speed, re<r 3500 Co6e or lhe Sfare CMITOna Pt&.IC NClUCl CORPO~ATfO'tt l'rans-ta ~....-::.. ,. NontnterM1-b-.ring ................... 36,502 * * * moles Must sell list the totlowtng m1sceUa"80l.ls K ~ feree diet!;~ tteM 1#1 ,.... lnf-..it~~ .......................... q;q1 SJ•.000. sell for $26,000 /Personal proerty 'O·w11 STATE•NT Of The buSlness aooressesot de 30 DtAI C~ANOI liedet8I funds purchaMd........................... -Go CllEYY 'll3/4Tll Fact ory warranty ldentotoeo by tenant name Ae.-NOOHMENTOF the 1ransletor and trMls-pare p rHenlar 111u Securit ... aotdunderegreements , Slf'verado Aulomatic:. V-8 (2131622·1856/w land stor~ uM numOer US.E Of FICTITIOUS ter• a<e ,.._ta eecrtt. a "'9-tor~·-·····························-·.. 4,600 cylinder. power door (714)646-2903/h 'Jhts sale will b4t by com· 8US#lfEIS HAME Trll\steror 11:6l E.uJ. qutM 9ft .... COf'te.-~ Qem.nd not• luued to the _. lock /windows. power 1111~116 ,.3 Ill -1petl1oW! bod'<11ng on the 15 The to11ow1n9 oersons wooo Circle. V111a Parl<. ~·· Uftl carte• Yna :=;i U.S. T~ ................................. /.... -0-steermg/brakes. AIC --·• l<lay of Nov 1938 ar 11-00 111.,. abandoned 1~ use 01 fornta 92667 ttteeoMce M .. Other bolt~ mon.y .:.::.:tt.... 4 (3509603) 5 Speed manual. power am on Ille oremoses whefe Ille Fitt•l•Ous Business Transferee Tr<~t FT'f ptoe.cdclft; au ,....,...... M= Indebted-Md---~····~ "-tt •L I t brakes. AM/FM. casset· sal<I prooeny •s stored and Name F 11 soor11me 3 CO~PORA TIOl>j PO Box eeerltl a~ dene que CALL MR. STEVENS --1---i--213)-417-3"3--••t -•fft 1 te A/C Sun rool wtucll •S locateo at l535 Mason 1rvone Ca1otorn1a 92333 Los Angeles Cat,. cumfllr con lea for· 0 t!ona under cepltllltzled • a...1200 (2FEM338) S5.995 New\)Orl Btv<I, in lhe Coty 01 92718 torn1a 90009 ma I dad• 1 1eIaIe1! ~ ................. ······---············· .. ·--·--·-·· 13 ---it=========, ==-----1fii~1•io--Cosl.I. M.esa • ..Cwntv or Dr-1 ~~~'°11$ ~ TMJ.Q.C&hon g! tne or<>Q-J..8PfotMedle a1 ualed .-.,. Bar* 1 Hat>My on acceptanoes FOii. ll PICl·IP •••11-•1111 '"" laf'19'. State ot Caht0<n•a Name referred 10 abo1oe was erty to be trans errii0fs1 que.,.--11 ~ au! •ecoted and outstw;d;rig .... =-=:::: .. :::7-__,,,.._ __ .._ .... ~.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-'l1~!1to~LT~~!n~~~-I Hl·OOtl j~.·~~= ~~~~~~;!,'~'8~~8cou11· t~:,:!n7i:'"'er Dove lfVllle ca;f' uee.d no,_,_,.. 111 ~!=~Uf9S9Ubordlnated t .. ,, .. ., t Llke new inside nd out UP TO 84 Montti Financing I Purchases must be m~e Sevenn Tome lid 3 J The propeny to be trails· ,........& a ~ puecte Ot labl ~~·-····-· .. -· ... ···-:--·· .. -,-..... ·.~ •• t 3K2 l l49 $ l I 9~ I op11ons on previously w1111 cash and pa1<1 tor al Ille MISOfl. l"'1ne, CA 92718. le<red 15 lur11tture. flAtures. ~el ceao, rte puedell her I lltlel ...................... -.... ,............... DG.c • ( ) • owned Mercedes-Benz. jtlfl'l8 ol purcllase This sale is CahlOfn•• corp0<•t•Of1 equipment. 1ease11o•o •m· quit• au~ • .., ~I Total llabllltlel .................................. _ ......... 91.521 SPREAD C-.111H Oltnreltt Comp1re House or 1m. subiect 10 P"°' c:anceltatoon This t>utlness was con-provements suop11es. r otraa cou1 de 1u Limited-life · · t •• 141· 1200 I p()(11 & Be Safe 2131714 on the _event Of settlement ducteo by a corporation merchandise 11lven1ory Pf~ lift l¥feo do pr.terred atocle .............................................. 4 t MERCEDES bet\lreen landlor<I and obh· This statement was file<! prescr1p11on files and r• doftel ~ perte de le corto. ! :r;HE t -Cltfn'ltPICl-IP -__. ~tedpart)' -1w1111cneCoun1y Clelt.010r.lcM<1s ol tnal <1rug store £Jrfaten otroe ~ 10UfTYCA"1'AL · , • t -6...cyJinde4 ~ man. llSW '13 2IO Zl. A22•. S ~unn1n~m ange County oo °'1ooer 13 business llnc>"'£!'1 as Da_nber ~ Puode ~~ ueted .PJICP9tual°preferred atodc......................... 4 NEWS t (2N9833•) $5,587 tock, ra.dtals. crutSe./boxes ·bleycle · Sevef~n ~me LIO ~•w1 s:::: as 1~n~'7o J.tie oce 1 ... -::;!";!:: Surplus. ............................................. ·-·-· 3.541 ual . exeelletu iab Automatic:, power doorir:~pes ch:::,s. ~';:~~ ~~~I 1988 ~~uos ~i::'..!' ;~.~.~~,=.,te;;:"'" • .. ~ Con'tmon stock ......................................... 2.5Q5 : • c. ..... Clttntltt ~~M Sl:::t:ebra!~t' A23S N PefklllS. Vacuum. ~~ •• , ott%m•" nie Transret'ee. !he TransferOf Nemer. un ~de,.... Undivided prorlts Ind ~tal . t • 141·1200 T t · 11 1· h guitar. stereo amp PubliShed Orange CoaSt has not uSed f"~ bus•~ ef9fte&a de abogedu o a ~ ................................................... (&02) . t 157~~~5) ~~:s 981 er lspeake<s. rec01d album.s Dally PtlOt October 18 25 na'™' Of address othlf tllan.1 una oftdna de •Juda .._.. Tote! equity cap1111 •..... -............................. 5,...,.. t W k I th di t 1983 FORD F-250 OteMI, · num bOJ&.es, b&OS ClolhlllQ No\'embef 1 8 l98& Ille abOve dunng Ille tnree..i ("41 el dlreclorlo 1ele-Louet deferred pu~t to 12 • or n e ever expan ng • •-speed. stereo, traile<,, lllTillTll we• I A2'4 M Burke Bo• T329 years last past except IOf fonk:o). u.s.c 1~3(j~ ................................................ -0-• N P ti Fl 'di bralles. 511'1 wl'leel 142.eoll spring. mattress. snow skos Danbef. Inc and Oanoet c-Ho.~ Total equl"' capl1al and loaea ewapaper romo on e • S7900tot>o 646-7335 be<I treme num bO•IS Honor1u TM neme ano IO<lres.s of Oef9t' ., s· t t TOYOTA 1983 CresSlda A367 M KOllUs bocycle flt&.IC NOTICE The bulk transte< os to be tr>e court 15 tEt nornt>re y red pur.uant to 12 U .. C. 1823(j)....... -0-t If YOU are &elf-mOflVated and • Ford F150 1985. power. wagon Dark b lue su11case.1amp num b01<es HOT-"~ consummate<! on OI' •tier dorecc;on oe ,._ GOf1e •l Total I ablHtles, llmfted·ll1e .. • wt h camper Shell. S5000 firm, loaded mint $7450 8 123 M Sussman goll "'"'...,... Novembet' 21 1988 OR.A~E COUN'rY ll.4UNICI· preferred stock, equity ~al. llk8 WOrklng t teenagers •• 722-99S4, 5•8·0 105 641·832• leave me3Sage beg Clubs. trunk num AIA=~:~~~:"T The bull! transfer tS sub-PAL COUFIT • CENTRAL and~ deferred pOrsuant to t th IS may be the Opportunity : (2N•6086) TOY OT 7 S -bOxes B G B Nolq,. "9feby g M lh!1 iec1 to Sect100 6106 ot tt>e 700 C1v•c Cente• Dr••• 12 U.S C 19~3(j). ............................ -.•.•... 96,972 t TO • A 198 upra. 812•. rullff o• • Uniform Comm.re.al Cooe Wesc Santa Ana CA 97201 YOT A 93 Truck. long 1 sorin . ma11ress couch Ille Undefs.Qlle<! "' sell at Claims may be Med Wll" Tl'le narne M)cl1eu an<I mires. tap condition Seti • .-o;~~-;::~~~~~~~~~~;::~~~~~·;--cxW;r9c~m~~~:;;;_;;t~:d~;;~~:.M~--• t f o r s 1 s ' 9 s B232. D Rovesi.. T1ti1es Sectton l988 ot me C.vtl Counsel THRIFTY COR· un 5 allor"8)' °' Pla1nr•lf • Thia Is a GUARANTEED IN-• (2)J)622· t8S6/w IChltrS. l)tCtures • CO<le oc Ill$ Stall' c,a .. torllta PORATION 342"4 Wt1sn1re Without .,, lllorney s 1Et llablllt ... We decHr9 thlt H hla be9I\ Uamlned by UI, and 10 the best Of our ltno...tedge and belief l\U beer'I prepared In contonnance with the I~ atructlons and Is true and correct. 714)646-2903/h 8308. D Joonson toot the lollow•llg m•Ke •aneous Boulevard Los A~ Los nomt>re •a direcc:oon '1 el nu-• COME r .... 00 per week to • ••• • I chests. hand lool$ macnine pe•S01l81 P'O'"' !O·w•I A~ County. CahfO<n•a mero Cle 1e1e1ono Oet : 0 .-. • , 1986 TOYOTA Camry LE tools. auto parts .. eignrs 10entolie<1 Dr tenant "a"'• Thi tut day f~ lihng claims abOgado oet oemand•nte o -art wfth potential earnings t NII( llf&I Metalhc blue loaded 81\dbars.tadder.metatcabo· andSIOt&ge uM"lum~ .1s November 18 •988 del o.triandente Qile ,,0 • ., 1 ton convers100. S 9 en· $8000 firm 36•-2782 net \. Tll1s sale ""''t :ie b~ com· Claims Sllall t>e <1eeme<1 tience at>Ogaoo 851 Miellaet f P t $1000 per Week t g1ne. automatic. pow.,. _ 8311 D JOflnson O.s•s petollve 01dd•n9 Col" ,,.e 15j11mely Meo 0111y ,, actuan\I w BtOWf'I La" Otllees 01 J • 0 U 0 · t door lock/wf ndo~s. TOYOTA '13 CELICl ITS tables. cnaors c11es1 num day oc No .. •988 .tr 9 00 received by the person OM· Cranor A cnre• ~ooo i . t power steerlng/braxes. 5 Speed manual radtals boxes am on '"" oremiw) .. nere 1gnate<1 aoo·1e before l"e MacArt,,u• 9, o10 West An Insured van, wagon, pick-• AIC, 4•4 Mileage only cruise power St eer:l 83811 B Dubose TV $8IO oro~rly ~ ~1~eo andctoseotbuSlness on Novem· Towei Su•tf S!-00 N~Po'' 351( (1Ml0337) SAVE l b ' k AM/FM dr11w1n9 ooaro eno lables wt11ch 1s 1ocal!'O ll llspace ~r 18 1988 Beach C• 92660 1 u . " -.. ... " . bo~es. CIOth1ng City ol Hun1m9tOI' 0<"8Cll. TH" If Ty c 0" p 0 R. D" TE 1Fec:hat Jul 10 .. Ml·12IO (IGHC775) $6.895 I C153, L Wilson Sola Coun,t> ot Or.1nge SratP 01 ATfOff, •r. Linde SrHn •988 Work In Your Own Area iC • lllTlllTI• IUCI tablet all<I cr>airs. ba• stools Cahlo•n1a 926A6 ll1t" ;inO· P~. Vice Prffldent • AoWt .. Ku.he! c i.rk Lerry L Luc:key Barney Whlt .... 1 Doneld L Solsby 1 JoAnn Jones, Senlot Vioe President/Cuhle!' of tile lbo\1'9'-named benk Ck> hereby declere ttiat this Report of Condition Is true and correct to the best of my ~nowtedge end belief. • up/ &hells are a MUST. i ,,·, .. ,.,AL--..... ~~~s:l~~A •c t•lt. box sprong, matrress num 8564 Ha"1•110~ .\.,.~ .. '~ the, DATED Oclooer 26 1988 9S5·3888 1Pht•fl, 142-0011 num boxes 1or<1 reM!"es 1ne ··9111 ro t11d AHi. S.CretMJ 1, Trlnldecl Oct\oe. 0.puty FOf More Information t Clinics 9045 Pubttsl'te<l Ota119e Coast at tne $ale Purcnases '""'' PubhSlleO O•anpe Coas1 Pub11sneo ori ,.99 C0Js1 J 1 0 01 A 2 n.." 1 t 8 ones • TIYITl ••• nllCEL Dally Polol November 1 8 ~ rnadt' ""''" cas11 .JnO Oa•01oa11y P<IOI November I Da•tv P1IOI October 18 ~~ .... C.11 Mr. Jim.. i966 T-BtRO ctxssic Casseue Wl'lal A Feel ""' 1988 tor at IN.' ''"'" .:>I Pu•c,,ase 19118 NovemDef ' 8 •S88 t Restored, new motor/ i .. ,, T336 TlllS u •e s sut11e<' •o o<•o• T339 ·319 (213)-_.77•3183 t trans/pa1nt/ltres (88 1•01 S4 988 ' cance •at O" .. "'t "''"'nt ot • .. DM-Oronge c-t ~ P'tlol __,_ 1 l* • ...... • $3450 6"'6-~ lllYHSln ..... I flt&.IC NOTICE settlt'mPf'I t:>i't ... ~ 8".ll()fO $2650 Sund "-•••011• an<1 001.g.Jted c.-a•h ......... _,,~......... ey ...,.,ty _. • IC f371f Greg Vt">e•s .c •0 m.sc CLASSIFIED ADVEBTISIN6 SALES We are ADDING to our sa'es statr. If you can type at least 45 wpm and have great telecommunication skills -We can off er you a base salary + commission AND a t;-1 place to work. ""1 n.e •P•rt 'l'l•e A f'•ll•Ale. Do yourself a f ••or -C.U us. P ~ B le\'I•• er 11• V e••ea• 842-4321 VW '14 COIY UlllT 1 Notte. ot Sale ot bO•f'S so::•ts l'<l.o•o m•sc 5 Speed manual AMIFM. ..... ~ ., tu~""" JO""SC" D· tO cassette. A C Sporty :~:~~ ctay s1J~u·40~ .., •in s••I>. eonv.,.lble. mag VWl'leels In 1119 Super>e>r Covrt 01 sc•Hn •a<:• .. a., ~nch ..,r (982 l 2) S7·117 tM State of Cal1t0<n1a IOI' bru5" "'~"·~ • ..wllstn •u '"° eoun11 o1 Otange c...ra eon~ ·o 19 m•$C ..... l 11 In the Mattet ot the Estare 11.11_n ______ __ _ ---ol SIMON H LEV\' Oe-flln ... 741 IU-CMMCI.--I PACIFIC v~w Automatic cruise C>o'lllltf Noeoce 1• llere«>y 9'"'° that MEMORIAL PA .. K ' ' M the unders.gned ..,,11 Mii at atttr109/bfakes. A /FM. ~ate sate. -to tile twgheal e e • • • t t • • A / C and best boOder sub)tcl to I (1MX.X&761 $11.598 contlr'1t1a11on 01' Mid Su· ..... Tll IUll pe<iOI' Cour1 on Ot • ., .. IN w.-1 l"h day or No11ember 1988 at I.he ott;ce Of LA~flY W llllWAllt'•• KIRSCHENBAUM, 615 Cllllc: -<Antat Orflle Wes1 Sult• IAllfT I 230, Santa Ana. CA 92701 5 lpted menuel. raCHats. County ol Otange, State ol powtf' brues, A-../fM. Catl!01n1a, aM Ille right. 1•ll•I eaSMttt. AIC Sun root. eild 1n1er .. c ot sa1<1 cs. tlloys (2FBY993) $4,995 OHH<I at 111e time Of <1eat11 lllWTll ._ ~:. '1'::1'~· ~~~ .. *:., 142..... Mod dec9aMcl l\U ~'° by OQ«etlOn.of ... Cl#°''*' "' ... • ~. ot• 111an °' in *I Runtlneed8 worti S500 dttion to \1'111 ot MrCS o. (2$7'1'fl) CAU Ctirr,. ~.at tha tlma ot dletfl. f MS-1958 '" end to tit ,,.,. Ctf'IM\ ,..., --property lllUIMCI tr1 ltie City VW 71 BUS Sharp 1n & OI ~ ,..._ ~ CIC out. Fee "' 89 tagt Or1ng11. s .... Of c.totn.e.. $2950 7~ ~ dalel'ICMIO M}f:'• _IQwa,t~ N•lllln_, ··'='v=--.. -= ....... = """ICUll,. S1cr1t1c• COSTA MESA CA~t 13960 ( tAOVt 10) FONAA t212t ' • 722·7191 Twmaot .... C-"tr1 ..... WANT(O 43 • le Milda "'!.. 1'IOfwy °' .. u...t Clrnot•f)' • Mortut ry C11ape1 • C.-.•lorf JSOO P•e•'< v,..... 0.,.41 Newport Beact1 64'·2700 HAi.80ft LAW,._ Ml OUVI MO<IWJ'f • C.me-ttfY CLe<nator, ,825 Goslef •YI Cos11 Mesa ~5$54 "'~t eftOllCRt llll 9'10 AOWAT Morturety • Cn~ 110 l!lto.o ... ey Coatar.Aeea 6'2·1150 STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? Tile Legal Department at the Dally Pilot is pleased to an- nounce a new servtce now avail • able to new businesses We will now SEARCH the name for you at no e11tra charge and save you the time and the trtp to the Court House 1n Santa Ana Then. ol course. after the search is completed we Will Me your flc11t.ous business name statement with the County Clerk publish once a week for four weeks as required by law and then · hie yout proof of pubh· cation w ith the County Clerk Please stop by to ftle your hct1t1ous business statement at the Daily Pilot Legal Depart- ment 330 West Bay. Costa ~esa California If you can not stop by please c all us at (714) 642-4321 Er.tension 315 or 316 and we will ma+te arrangements for you to handle this procedure by mail II you should have any further questions, please call us and we wilt be more than glad to aSStst you Good luck 1n )'0Uf new bus1nes~11 AX 7 R•1on1bl • ,.... Of\ OOitflliillD -:.!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~~~1 960.5930 ~..!!~m.J ... !!:.1...-'lii--mli!l-~Q.!~-~--~~~~:==~~~~~~-----........ ~=~~--.. \ .. l j .. 810 ()nangeCoMt DAILY PILOT/ T~, Novemb9f 1, 1988 • :---- (' .1- • .. ... Ii \ . . '• ~ . With all the hoopla about a fine old cigarett , we-thought you · might have missed some !ather important news about a slightly more, modern one. In a na~iot)wide test, a majority of smokers said Merit tas~es .. as good or be tter tha n Camel Filters, which has lOOo/o more tar! Enric~ed p!avor™ is the reason why. Only Merit has it. For a rich, ful ., satisfying taste, with onl y half the tar. Which may not make the Camel happy. But it's hi s party, he can cry if he wants to. . .. \ .. Enriched Aavor,M low-tar.-r-Solution-with-Merit. -· .,--' ·_ ·· I.OW TAR-'£NAICH£0 l'LAYOfl' S U AG E 0 N GE N E A AL'S WA A N I N G: Smok ing Causes lung Cancer , Heart Disease, 'Wlphysema. ,And May Complicate Pregnancy. , ,