HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-11-07 - Orange Coast PilotMONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1988 . . .
Voters won't have limit ill booth· .
prove correct.
says voters may e asked to hurry up
He expecu an 80 percent turnout as
voters taekle one ofthe loneest ballots
in state hi$t~. with 29 propositions
-Including five on auto insurance
reform -and choices for president.
U.S. senator, conpessmen, state~
did.ates and local races al)d iuucs.
Cox, Doinan among top spenders
BJ PAUL ARCHJPLEY
Of ...............
OrangeCountians won't be thrown
out of their voting booths iflhey wry
too loOf. despite a federal court ruling
that upheld a 10-minute time limit in
the booths.
But Reaistrar of Voters Don Tan-
ney said election officials have been
advised 10 keep the 97-year-<>ld state
law in mind should Iona lines form.
.. If there's nobody in line. there's
Soviet activist Andrei
Sakharov, on his first visit
to the West, calls for
International support for
the polltlcal restructuring
In his homeland./ A4
'Nation
George Bush and Michael
Dukakls are In the final
day of their presidential
campaigns./ Al
Supreme Court agrees to
decide whether the gov-
ernment may confiscate
from criminal defendants
money and property that
could be used to pay their
legal fees./ A4
World
Earthquake measuring
7 .6 on the Richter scale
has killed or Injured about
600 people In southern
China./A5
.Index
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Entertainment
In the Service
Opinion
People
Poflce Log
Public Notices
Sports
Weather
A3
85·6
87-9
A12
A10
A9
A8
A11
A3
84, 9-10
81-4
A2
.
no reason 10 enforce it. .. T~nncy said.
.. But if there isa line we'll try toaently
n~ge them along."
By PAUL AllClllPIZY 7\ Comml.SSlOn fl&W"S. °' ... ...,,...... The bulk of Cox's contributiafts aad e~ were.
.. Everybody says that's 100 b~;·
Tanney said of his pmliction. I'm
probably wrona. but rm an optimist.
.. If rm way off they can say be
doesn't predict too welt"
T Ora County con•~nonal candidates WCTt recorded "wipa the crowded Jlri~ whctl (M;t.lastCJd . . wo lDft . . ..v-· f·c.~ 13 cancbdites to WlD the nonunabOIL bstcd a!"lona poh~ who bave waged.some o ~ rT\0$1 , Ac:corda to campab spotnman Devid Mcintosh. But ~ vowed nobody would .be
forced 10 leave tbe booths before they
had completed their ballots. expcnsave ta!Rpaa&ns of the tlcct1~ y~r. . . Cox "1scd at!a SS96~700 and spent S123,400durina the ~ fi~ most.cxpenSJve congressional race 1s "'the primary, ln the tcneral dectlon. Cox raised anot.bcr
38th ~stnct . where Rep. Robert Doman, R-Oardcn $168.900 and spent SI 11 .000 . .. I'm not going to throw people out
of the voting booth riaht when they're in the middle of vdtima on Prop-
O!itfon X, Y or Z." Ta,nncy said.
Statewide, ScctetaryofStatc March
Foot Eu has predicted a 75.2 percent
turnout, a record 10.S million voters.
Grove, 1s ~kin& re<icct1on.. . Cox made use ofh1s extensive contaCts in Washina· ~~pubhcan nom1ntt Chns1optlcr CoA, heir a~nt ton O.C., where be worked 1n the White House as well as
to rt11n.na ~ep. Robert Badham, R-Ncwport Be:acb, in ~c throu&h tus former law firm by raisina 13 oen::ent of his 40tb Distnct ranked 13th. according to Fedecal Ek:ction (Pl•• w COX/A2) Lines are a possibility, too, should
Tanney's prediction of voter turnout
The predicted turnout, couolcd
Pleue Me VOTEllS/ A2)
• La una accident
kil s El Toro teen
Hydrant testing
Poantaln Valley fbeflabter lla.ady Anno tat. tlae water Oow ot a laydraat wlllle
Captain Gary Bottenfield look• on.
T~ tlae flnt of tile yeu. tlae depart·
meat 1rW be claec•rlnc all of the ctty••
laydranb to eDRre they are operattna
properly. City offlclaJa •Y tlaq laaft cal
back oa the amoaat of wats ued la tlae teetl~ tlda yeu became of the droq'.bt cond.I ona.. .
FOrmer FV basketball star . . .
killed in Hilwaii car cr&.sh
By GREG KLERKX
Of .. IWIJ,... .....
A fonner Fountain Valley High
School basketbaJI star was kmed and
five others injured Sunday in a one-
carcrash ih Hawaii. police said toda~.
Brent Martin1 a 22-ycar.ald Uni-
versity Oflfawaii-Hilo forward from
Fountain Valley, died at 10 p.m at
Hilo Hospital, police said.
Five other people were injured in
the crash. includina three teammates.
but authorities refused to release the
names of the injured.
However. university sourttS told
the Honolulu Advertiser that another
basketball player, junior Jim Farris,
was in Juarded condition with a collapse lung and injured neck.
Police said the crash occurred at
a.bout 4:30 p.m. Sunday when the car
went out ofcontrol, struck a guard rail
and flipped 25 feet into the lowccr end
of Laupahoehoe Gulch.
The group was apparently headed
for the Vulcans' intrasquad scnm-
mage. which was canceled.
Martin, a 6-foot-7. 20S-pound for-
ward. had just begun bis second
season at the university. He trans-
fcrred in May 1987 from Rancho
Santiago Community College, where
he averaged 13..S points and 6.8
rebounds a pme.
He was an All-Sunset League and
.\.11-0ranae Counl~ player at Foun-
tain Valley High School.
A Hilo Hospital nursingsupervtsor
said early today that only one of the
injured remained hospitalized. and
that he was 1n guarded cond1uon.
Players Jeff Hales and Kevm Patnck
wert treated and released Sund.a)
night. the Ad,en1ser reponcd.
Pleue eee ATHLETE/ A2)
Five people killed
in a two-day pericxl
on local htg ways
Sy-GREG l.LERll
Of ... 0.-, .......
An 18-}-car.ald El Toro man we
~ Sunday morning~ the car
he was a passenger in slammed bcad-
on anto another car on Pacific Coast
Highway near Emerald Bay an
Laguna Beach, police said.
The incident was one of three fatal
traffic accidents that occurred Sun-
day and early today on local road-
ways.
Richard Allen Shcim was ap-
parently killed answnly in the 2:43
a.m. crash. Laauoa Beach Police Lt.
William Cavena• said.
Shearn was ndlDJ an a 1967
Chevrolet Canwo driven by Fardad
V ahtd. 18. of EJ Toro when the car
~tly \'ccrai into oncomi111
traffic. Ca"enaugb saM1. The Camaro struck. a 1974 Rol~Ro~cc dnvcn by
Brent llartln
·Mesa mayor looks forward
to whatever' sin his future
Despite anger over city growth battles.
Hallhas no regrets as he ends tenure
By JONATHAN VOLUE
Of ................
Costa Mesa Mayor Donn Hall will
bang the P'el for the last time at a
C11y Council mcctina ton~t. essen-
ually ending a 14-year political career
that he bepn as president of a
homeowners' 1st0eiation.
He decided apinst teeltina re-
election, and his tenure as mayor is
over. The City Council meetina
tonipl is the last over which ht will
prn1de: neitt wuk he wiU open the
# mectina only to allow the city clerk to
swear in a new co-..ncil.
At one 11mc. Hall's ev.port Beach
electronics firm employed 15 people
and netted S200.000 a )cat'. This
month. Hall \I.as forced to close the
com pan)' 's doors.
Hall 1s going from tht top to what
some might consider the bonom
From ma )or of Costa Mesa and
p1'..'C5ident of his own bu.su~ss. Hall.
60. said he now wants to work in
manual labor.
then rn feel good .. Then. I can make a
dec1 ion on v.hat I want to do ··
Hall said he lost Omega. v.h1ch he
ran v. 1th his "1fc. Jean. because he
ignored 11 the last few )Cars v..-h1lt
1end1ng 10 council duties
Ftnall}. he said, his pos111on on the
council ··v.asn't fun anymore:· and
he knev. 11 "as ume to mo'e on He
male no bones about v.ho took the
fun OUI ofthtJOb.
Demck Caner. 39. of Corona del
Mar.
V ai,.id was taken to Mission Hospi·
t.al Rtaional M~ ~te:r w~ he was feponcd" an senous roqdiuon
with bead injuries. a broken ricbt arm
and two broken leas. Cavcnausb said.
Caner was also liken to Mission
and was llSted m fair condition with
head 1njunes. Caven.aup saKi ~ther driver was ~mtO'JtlCaled at the time of
the accident and neither was cited or
arresu:d. An 1nvestiption is continu-
ing.
Also on Sunday, a San Juan
Capistrano coupk was killed and
a,nother man seriously injured in
Riverside County when their pickup
truck was bit by a car travelina nearly
l 00 mph. accordinc to California
H1&hway Patrol~
M-auel and JustJna Sandoval. both
37. were killed insianlly whenAbeir
truck was rammed by a 1989 6Ford
Probe dnven by Ridwd Tirrdl, ll. a
Manne based at Camp PaM:Ueton.
CHP mvntiptors esnmate that Tir· ~u·s vetude was travdia& at 90 to
100 mlJh when It tut tile Sudovals'
~-ACClm! .. 8/A2J
It's big,
'Bad'
arid it's-
sold out
BJ ROBERT RYNbMAN °' .............
If frttway traffic through lrvane
seems C'SpcC1ally congested this eve--
nang.. blame 1t on the Moonwalk.
Po~mUSlC superstar Michael Jack·
son. whose trademart Moonwalk
dance step· and bcst-sdlin& 1uto-
b1ograph) of the same name have
fueled his worldWlde pOl>u.larit)'.
kicks off a nme-sbow Southern C..h-
fom1a concert $lint at 7:30 p.m. at lbc
Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre.
.\II nmc con~ru ~ some 135, I 92
uckcts -have been sold out. That
includes shows tonight. Tumay and
Wednesday at lrvanc Meadows -
which sold out the same day they
went on sale. May 16. Remaini!'I
loc.al shows art Nov. 13-1 Sand 2()..22
at the Los Anaeles Sports Arena.
The H,&hway Patrol says extra
1raffic congestion should be expected
and ufltd pauenct, among traffic
commuters and Jackson fans alike.
This year's tour 1s espcaally im-
portant for the )().year.old enter·
tamer, -.ho has never played an
C'ahfom11 as a solo artist.
His rcrord album "Bad" bas sold
18 m1lhon copies. with an un-
precedented five No I siftl)es: Has
autob1<>&r1ph) 1s a No. l bestselter on
both the New York Tunes and
London Times book lists. His world-
Wldc tour has attracted millions o(
fans aJrcady an Japan, Australia and
Europe.
And Forbes Mapzine said what
fans already bad suspected -Jeck·
son 1s the top-earning entcr1ainef in
the world.
..., ............. ...._ His 32-year-old business. Omep
...,_.,... llall ,_la freat olCltJllall.. Industries. also is aone.
"I want to ao di& ditches. be a hod
carrier or do somcth1n1 hke that."
Hall said last week. "I want to act
myscl(beck m shape. act my head
c!Qr. the blood pumpana. the muscles
beck up.
"I want to do that fora ftw months.
'Tm con' 1nccd there art a few v.ho pre s a point of, 1ew when they knov.
ifs 1ncorr«t l\rau1n1 against
nonsens1C3l pos111ons held b) people
v.ho knov.· t>tuer has become '·en·
11resomc:· Hall said an Jul). when he
announctd his dec1s1on not to apm
secl offi('(. ..we· "e caned these'
people slow-growthers. no-.&rowthcrs.
Mesa Acuon or Residents Tor this or
that. I call them ocople who know
bettet.." (P..._US IDaA/A.3) ,
Jackson's 5how is more than two
hours lont and features l 7 nwnben.
a.II enhanced by his sJl(k danans llld
hl&h·IC'Ch SUllJf\I.
. molestation cas.e relief to school
. .
It ehoald have looked wone
c... 11w omeer lllke Collen ta1b to ~ Lopes late 8aaday -~after
Lopes appanmtly loet eoatrol of Ida car near
tlae lateaectlon of 20tla Street and Placen-
tla AYea ae. Tla~b lt bardl.7 _,aowa lt. ~·car Dipped Oft!' bat 111Jlted it.elf
alter atrlklu power pole. Tbe drtYer wu
tlDlDjared anCl -probably -Yerf Jacki~
Judge orders specialist to p~ovide
patient with dialysis for a week
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -A
kidney specialist must provide
dialysis for another week to a woman
refused the life-givin& treatment by
more than a dozen other doctors.
But a j udge who issued the tempor-
ary restraining order on Friday also
said Jeanie Joshua of Ojai must go
ersewherc for treatment after the
order expires this Friday.
said Joshua. A friend now drives her
40 miles to Cottage Hospital.
Joshua, 38, claims kidney special-
ists from Santa Barbara to Simi
Valley have refused to treat her
because of her 1986 lawsuit against a
Santa Barbara specialist that con-
tends impure water was used in the
~lood-P.urifying procedure. The suit
IS pending.
specialist to sec her if he needed to
leave town.
Joshua described herself as an
assertive patient who sometimes
refuses to take tests.or treatments she
disagrees with. bu~ blamed her prob-
lems on the lawsuit.
Three medical groups representing
11 doctors in southern Sinta Barbara
and Ventura counties have refused to
see her, she said. .
In a letter, Doner told her be had
tried six local specialists without luck.
Night, morningfogalongcoast
· 'oeMCt•doudl-•=::eo...,.._totuMJ•• M lftll1IOOn......... Ml 8 ...... .......... ,-.......... = ............. 70.. .id M9rtl Md<Jnl9r tM H .. afllf W-leMce. The
~· IOwe .. drop dOM\ to,,.., .......... Ttieweellend'1f091Wenddoudy~ .... c--:.:: 1..-cotdfront11 • Pillled bough c..,or,., McKinley .
''Tht front .. ,.._,~ 90 PNCIPHMton II not In the °""'g. at ,,... potnt," Mid •
tNOOllMll ..... :l, eftemoon-"* WM fofec:Mt
wllh :'f: MCI momng tog OUQh T~. H1eM we to ,.,,.. om tM mid-'°"""* eoa ,,.., the ~to u. 10. lflllnd. LOW9 _.. fof-to tie In tM' 50a. ,
from f) «Mnt ~ to the~ lordat -Ouaef' • ..... : lmlll cnft . Nol1h ....... 11 .... toNght
AIOlftS • deerMling to 7 teet Tue.day. West to northwest wtnd9 10 to 15
knot• with guata to 20 knot• ,,.., the headlMda. S... to 3 feet.
_____ ......_~
Mostly doudy tonight and Tu.dey. e.. -___,,
U.S. Temps. ...._.. 72 ... Calif. Temps. ,,_,,.., 40 37
ic...City 53 • .. ... IMV..-15 .. .. Le ~.H Y: 13 42 Ultll~ 13 11 ......... 11 .. =::ciue 71 50 ~ • )$ lw9la M 45 75 50 =::.. .. • 41 ,_ 13 50 """""""'• " 2t 15 • ~ • ., ...,. 11,2 ... ........ 31 31 u IO A..,_Cil't IS ... .....Sl!>..,i 42 2t ,_~ 7• '2 ...._,,. .... .......... M 31 ......... 10 13 ·~ " " .... one-. 11 41 ~1a1dClly • M to 3$ ,._YOftiCCy ft 47 .. .. .._di ,. S3 Noftoll,VL • .. '--"o n 47 ... " 21 ~City 17 .. ...... • 45
lklsloll 17 .. OmlN 51 ., =~Im 17 to IMflelo 50 S4 ONndO ,. u .. 12 c...,., .. 2t Pl'll_.M • 42 ... .... 73 $1
QwtlMon,S C. .. 50 ..._... IO .. Sen LtAI Obi.po 11 45 ~WVe .. 35 ==:r .... 141 ~ 8'odlt0fl 71 50 ~c • 37 13 .. .... 16 • ~ &2 ,.. PotUllncl.O.. M • ~ .. 51 ~II ,. 31 ~owidenee • ~ ... ..., • 41
39 33 ="City .. " ~ .. SS ~ 45 33 6t S4 12 57 Coll.tmble,8 c .. ,. Aeno eo 36 e=-~ 11 .,
Columtlue. Ohio ., 33 AiChmONI IS 42 1t .. OellM•FI Worth ,. 59 St Loui. 52 35 = .. • Oeyton " 33 Slllt Lall• 01)' to a7 .. .,
o.n-.. 37 S..Atllonio 1t M 72 6S
O.Moll1M .. 21 S.. .iu.n.P.R. .. 74 ......... 14 ll Oelroll ,, 32 St Ste~ IO M MOIUhlla 11 Olilulh ,. 11 SMttle 12 41 =-=~ to 53
fJP-13 SI --··=· 11 .. ., = 1-11111e 43 ·33 s-a .. 41 31 ....... lleedl .. ,..,._.. 13 03 ---11 30 a..... 73 ..,
'""° " 30 ="';""WOO .. • "*"...,... II ., ::-r ... .. 32 1t II ,.....,.. 72 ..
57 32 T_.u S7 ~ .._.... 16 52 twttord .. ,. T-IO SI ..,...,_dlno 71 54 ....... • 17 Tulle 15 .. IMO.. 7t • ~ 11 II ..... 4'0fl.O.C. 13 .. ..... ""' • • ...... al. 31 30 Wkflila .. ... ......... .. •
Tides
n u 17 u 15 M
15 ..
11 .. a M ,. 47
Lawmakers want ad limits
for Chilc;Iren '·s TV programs The UCLA Medical Center has
accepted her for dialysis. but Joshua
said the 80-mile trip three days a week
would be impossible for her in her
weakened condition.
Her current physician, Dr. David
W. Doner Jr .• told the LOS Anaelcs
Times he was dropping Ms. Joshua
because she was too agressive in
directing her medical treatment and
because he could not find a nother
"Jeanie has been locked out." said WASHINGTON (AP) -Law-
her husband, Sholom: 1.. makers angered by President Re-
committee.
Rep. Matthew J. Rinaldo of New
Jersey, ranking Republican on the
subcommittee, said Reagan acted on
bad advice in killing the measure.
children's programs, "this bill simply
cannot be reconciled with the free-
dom of expression secured by our
Constitution ...
"This is going to be a slow death.
There's no way I can withstand it."
Doner has a l~l nJht to drop .the' agan's veto of a bill to limit advertis-
woman as a patient, his lawyer said. ing in children's TV proarams say
Congress will be back next year with
another, possibly tougher measure.
VOTERS WON'T HA VE TIME LIMIT ••.
P'romAl
with the long ballot. prompted the
spccial session of the 9th U.S. Coun
of Appeals on Sunday in which the
I 0-manute law was upheld.
Additional •l«:llon CONl'"f• on A3, ,_,
The coun overruled a lower coun's
temporary ~training order that
blocked at least three counties from
applying some measure of the law.
that ~ ttme hmat was a ck facto
literacy proficiency test, which is
outlawed by the federal Voting Rights
Act.
language sample baJlot mandated ...
certain level .. of literacy.
But Judie Stephen Reinhardt of
Los Angeles wrote Sunday that 1he
statute had not been "enforced rigidly
or in a manner that unduly restricts
the ability of language minority
&roups to vote."
U.S. Dist n et Coun Judge Roben P.
Aqwlar ruled 1n San Jose on Fnda)·
The restraining order was won by
civil rights groups that argued requir-
ing non-English speaking voters to
transfer baJlot choices from a second-
COX, DORNAN AMONG TOP SPENDERS •••
hom Al .
funds an the natio n's capital and other states.
Cox raised 12 percent of his funds in Orange County.
Mcintosh said.
Doman outspent all other congressional c,andidates
in Cahfomia. running up about Sl.3 million in expenses
despite that he has rettived only token opposition.
Democrat Jerry Yudelson had spent $202,000 by the
Oct. 15 fihng deadhnc an his bid to unseat the incumbent.
Dornan has spent hardly any time in the district,
having been on the campaign trail for Vic-c President
George Bush. The congressman has indicated he would
like a position an a Bush administration.
The most costly congressional rac-c in the nation took
place in California's 19th District between Rep. Roben
Lagomarsino, R-Santa Barbara. and Democratic
challen.1.er state Sen. Gary K. Han. Together. ·they spent a
total ofS2.3 million.
And California's U.S. Senate race between Sen. Pete
Wilson and Lt. Gov. Leo McCarthy ranked as the most
costly Senate race in the nation, with the incumbent
outspending his challenger by a better than two-to-one
margin.
Fipting to win a second term. Wilson spent about
SI 0. 9 million. more than any other senatorial candidate
by far.
McCarthy ranked a distant seventh, with expenses
totaling about $5.4 million.
ACCIDENTS KILL FIVE IN COUNTY.-..
homAl
truck. causma it to flip over twice.
Both veh1d~ were southbound on
Interstate IS near Rancho CaJifomia.
The third fatal accident occurred at
about 12: 1 S a.m. today on the
northbound San Diego Freeway in
Dana PoinL
Reagan kllled the bill late Saturday
night with a pocket veto. even though
the measure had overwhelming SU{>-
pon in Conj!"CSS. Critics likened his
action to "ideological child abuse"
and called his atimanistration .. mor-
ally bankrupt."
R~n said the bill to impose ad
limits and make children's infor-
mationaJ programming a condition
of station license renewaJs would
violate constitutional guarantees of
free speech and might discourage
commercial networks from financing
quality children's pf<>1!1mming.
But Rep. Edward J . Markey. D-
Mass .. co-author of the bill. said the
veto was another example of the
administration putting "commercial
considerations (nd ideological
precepts ahead of children's
interests."
"The president's actions represent
a victory for the toy and cereal
hucksters, but a m~or defeat for our
nation's children,' said Markey,
chairman of the House Energy and
Commerce telecommunications sub-
ATHLETE •••
From Al
Farris, 6-foot-8 from Covin~ re-
cmttyuansfe'J'm2 ftom a community
college. Patrick. 6-foot-7, is also a
recent California recruit while Hales
1s a 6-foot-6 guard who was the "sixth
man" on last year's team.
The 01her injured J)lssengcrs were
indentified as a girlfriend ofone of the
injured players and Mike McCoy. a
former student at the university.
The cause of the accident was not
known.
"It was a rather conservative piece
of legislation with a minimal
amount" of regulation, far less on-
erous than earlier proposals that were
considered but set aside in favor of
the bipartisan compromise, he said.
"Next year. whoever is president
wiJI be faced with a tougher bill and a
more determined Congress.."
The measure would have limited
advertising in children's shows to
101/J minutes per hour on weekends
and 12 minutes per hour on week-
days.
The Federal Communications
Commission had imposed similar
limit' on broadcasters but scrapped
them four ~cars ago in the belief that
self-regulauon by the industry would
determine what was best for children.
The bill also would have required
TV broadcasters 10 provide educa-
tional and informat1onaJ pr<>Jt1m-
ming for children as a condition of
license renewal.
The Senate approved the measure
on a voice vote last month. The
House passed it by a margin of328-78
in June.
Reagan said that while he su~ports
efforts to improve the quality of
He said, "the Constitution simply
docs not empower the fcderaJ aovem-
ment to oversee the proarammina
decisions of broadcasters in the
manner prescribed by this bill.''
Children's television advocates
had pushed for the bill because tl\ey
said that under the FCC"s \>hilosophy
of deregulation. children s TV has
become overcommcrcialized and the
quality of prosram,-has suffered. Peggy Charren, president of the
Cambri~, Mass.-based Action for
Children s Television. which has
worked 20 years for passage of lbe
measure, said she was ••nab-
berpsted" by the veto.
"Here was a bill that was not goina
to raise the deficit, not aoirfl to raise
taxes. was going to get ~ little bit of
education for children ... and what
Reagan said was you don't have to do
anything for children. I call it ideo-
logical child abuse," she said.
The measure was a bipartisan
compromise that had been stripped
of proposals to outlaw shows, called
"program-length commercials" by
critics, that feature toy manufac-
turers' products and to require broad-
casters to air an hour of educational
programminapa day.
GUlliTY PLEA A RELIEF •••
homAl •
molestation.
He maintained that he had not
molested any of the students and that
the cbaraes were the result of harm-
less locker room pranks and the
vindictiveness ofa few students.
His trial was to begin Friday.
Before the triaJ could begin how-
ever, Riaby'sattorney, Deputy Public
Defender WilHam Kelley, announced
that Risby had chanpd his pica to
auilty on charges that he molested 1 S
boys and two &iris.
Risby faced a possible 72-year
prison sentence if convicted on all 36
counts. The guilty plea was reportedly
entered in return for an assurance that
the former COICb would receive a
sentence of no more than 20 ycan.
Riaby is married and the father of a
10-year-old boy and an I I-month-old firl. . . The impact sent the Sandovals and
a passenacr, Beatiz Gallardo, 38. of
San Juan Capistrano. flying throu&h
the vehicle's windshield. Gallardo
was taken to Riverside General
Hospital for unidentified injuries and
was listed in serious conditton.
Tirrell was not tnJurcd, and told
authorities that the accident was
sparked by a third, unidentified
vehicle hittmg his truck. CHP Officer
John Jiacomo said Tirrell was not
intoxicated at the time of the acci-
dent. It was not known whether
Tirrell was cited or arrested.
A Ford Ranger pickup truck towing
a 1970Bu~k~Nedo~~control ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and into the center divider where it II
The CHP was continuing its in-
vestagataon.
Lotto jac kpot at $14 million
SACRAMENTO(AP)-The mid-
week jackpot climbs to an estimated S 14 million because no one picked the
six winnin1 numbers in the weekend
"Lotto ~9" drawing. state lottery
officials said.
weekly game were: 9, IS, 27, 40, 46, 47
and the bonus number, 29. The
jackpot had been $7.17 million.
A ticket with five corTCct numbers
without the bonus was worth $4, 771
each to 212 players. four correct
numbers paid S6S each to 14,066
players and three numbers earned SS
each to 27 S.2S8 players.
Four players chose five numbers
~lus the bonus to win $490.824 each.
The tickets were purchued in Fo~
csthill, San Francisco, and two in Los
Anaelcs.
The numbers picked in the twice--
Sales totalled SJ8.J9 million, with
S6.2S million aoina to lchools and
· SS.26 million aoil\I to players.
ORANGE .... .....
COAST ..... r•I
MAIN OFACa
HOW.. 1k¥ 11 Cotta ..... CA .... ...,_ lo'I IMO. Coeta ...... CA t Mlt ~ edll M2-1171 .....,_. I edttOflll
.. t-4)11 '
t
flip~1 according to CHP Officer
John Nicholson's rc9.0rt.
Killed in the acci<lent were Maria
Contreras Osuna, 38. of Lynwood.
who was thrown from the passenaer
scat. and ~year-old Yesen.11 V1raas.
also of Lynwood. who was ridina in
the back of the truck.
Injured in the accident were driver
Eduardo Siquero, 23; Patricia
Chav~ 7; Raymond Contreras{ 20,
and AClriana Osuna. 19, aJ of
Lynwood. Two other passenaen, 26-
ycar-old Silverio Ortiz and 26-year-
old Marcos Ontiverso, were not
injured.
Nicholson said the truck Wiii
towina the Buick sedan improperly,
with a tow ber and chain attached to a
spere-tire suppon. Whcl'I the car
sweNed, il pulled lhe lOlded pickup
truck into the center divider, causina
the crash.
......., ........ . ,. ........... ..... ...,.,, ....... ..... ........ ,... ... .. ......... •
.I •
. "
Party planned for
election ntgnt by .
cycles foundation
An election n1ah• perty will be held Tuesday
evenin&_at the Novembermcctinaoftbc Founda&ion
for the Stud)' of Cycles in Irvine.
FolloWina dinner and the annou~ment of the
rnults. Jhe aroup11 polttical anaJyst will di1CU11 the
newly elec.ed president'• economic advilen and the
imphcalions for &he economy over the next four
yean. The foundation hcadquarten are located at
3333 Michelson Drive, Su11c 210. Further infor-
mation on the event may be obtained by calling
261· 7261 ,
DlubUlty board to meet
A public meetinl of Area Board XJ on
Developmental Disabilities wiU be held Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the FairvieW Developmen~ Cen&er in
Costa Mesa.
The status of complaints ap1n1t the Orange
County Department of Education will be discussed.
Call 731-4787 for more information.
c.
BPW meeting In Mea
Rondee Winkler, president of an accoun&ing
company, will address Tuesday's meeting of the
South Coast Business and Professional Women at
the El Torito Grill. 633 Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Current legislative issues will be discussed at the
luncheon session, which bet.ins with registration at
11 :30 a.m. Admission is $2) for members and S 17
for non-members. Call Robin Ridell at 751-0991 for
reservations.
Silent auction slated
The South Orange County Christian Women's
Club will hold a silent auction at its meeting Tuesday
at the Holiday Inn in Laguna Hills.
The program will begin at 11 :30 a.m. instead of
the customary noon time. Miriam Conrad will be
the speaker. Call ·Marilyn Gore at 49.S-5252 for
deail~ ~
Goal-settJ.ng workshop
A two-part workshop focusinf on goal-setting
and decision-ma.king skills wil be presented
Wednesday and Nov. 16 in the Re-Entry Center at
Orange Coast College.
The program is free to the public and wilJ be
taulht by Dr. Pham Hue, an OCC psychology
professor. Call 432-5 162 for further information.
BO()k review scheduled
Lydia Hao of the University branch of the
Irvine library will review the book ''My Mother,
Myself' by Nancy Friday at Wednesday's meeting of
the Coastline chapter of B'nai B'rith Women.
The program is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the
Irvine Boys and Girl s O ub, 295 East Yale Loop,
Irvine. Call 544-4924 or 786-6i70 for transportation
or membership information.
Overeater•' program set
A workshop on help available for the com-
pulsive cater will be presented Wednesday from 6:30
to 9:30 p.m. by Orange_Coast College's Community
Services Office. Darlene Hoffman, a Huntington Beach thera-
~ist, will present the program, which is priced at SI 5.
Call 432-5880 for the location and registration
information. ·
Badham electlon talk
Rep. Robert Badham. R-Newport Beach. will
commend on the election and indications for the
future Wednesday at a meeting of the Balboa Bay
Republican Women, Federated.
The noon luncheon mceting·will be held in the
Monaco Room of the Airporter Inn in irvine.
Reservations may be made by calling 646-610 I .
Monday, Nov. 7
• 6:30 p.m. Costa Mesa City Coudl council
chambers, 99 Fair Drive. . '
• 7 p.m., HuU.itoa Beac• City CoucU council chambers, 2000 Main St. '
Tuesday, Nov. B
• 4 p.m. So111• Lapu Board of Review,
Recreation Department. 505 Forest Ave., Laguna
Beach.
• 7p,m. Lapa Bea~ ScltMI 8-nl, district
office. 550 Blumont St .. Laauna Beach.
Orange COMl OAILY PtLOT/Mondey, ~ 1, 1881 AS
TV, ·radio to cover local elections
BJ JOE BEL BRUNO wdl vote on whether to form a new aty. · ....,,...c.., ' • ' -Themainthmathat~aRconomtnt·
Oft 0.men$&0n Ca:t~lems The COlleie serve th( beit, Ind It IS up 10 US LO .. VC
1W10n can be up iil .south • tMm &hat 1nfonnauon.··
OranlC County radio and television inJ on is southern Ora,..e Coun&y," said
staLiona att plannlna election-niaht cov· Char101te Slater. producer of KSBR·FM's erase of local l"ICCS ind issues. clcctaon cove~. which will bqin at 9 p.m. "We can t be too concew ned on
When county voters head for the polls national a~d stale issues, ~llle that i1
Tuesday t,hey will not only help elect a not our niche. Vf c arc aoins to auPOIY
president and senator, bu& also con-9ranae Coun~y wnh the latest 1nfonnation
pessmcn, city counci~ membcn and ;1~ local racts.
e<>un&y, tOCh.ctina lbe beach cities. KOCE. '"""·-nel en. --u .;.. ......-.:.... Aochor Sandra Gotlzakz will ~ the .. nan ~ _, _. _..
KSBR team of 14 rcpe>nen Electson "Oranee County Speaal Ballot 1.._
reports will be filed from both Democratic Overview" 1tan1na at 11 p.m. Tuetdal.
and Rcpubljcan beadq~rten throupout Cooper wlll be JO•ned by eA-K.AllC
lhcniaht.endinasometimeaftnmidniaht. nponcr Jim Ryerson and u1tutt Vilioft "Orange County despera1ety needs local newMnan .Geotat Phelps to. wrap.up die ~overqe becaust the bi& t.;. stations just k>fal vote counts. The sbo~ If ex~ 10
school trustees. Three Oran1C Coast cities KSBR·FM 88:5. bro.dcasuni_ from
have arowth-control measures on the their sfudios at Saddleb9ck. Coneec in
ballot, and Saddlcback Valley residents Mission Vie10. will simulcast the coverqe
can•t do the job," uid Jim CooJ)er, end at m1dn11ht .
,e~(!CUt}ve pr<?duce.r of KOCE public telc-• Tbe Golden West Collcat statjon wiU air v1~on s dcctao'? oilhl c~v~. . PBS coverqe of the national dec1iops
The count)' s 1.2 . ma I hon people ~ pnor to that show, stanina at 9 p.m.
MESA MAYOR STEPPING DOWN, COUNTS REWARDS •••
hoJDAl
Despite his anger Jlnd the loss of his go1og on lors1x months," Hall said, "I had
business, Hall satd he doesn't regret a to speak bcfo~ the council at my first
moment of the last 14 yean. The tenure mcctirig, atfd my palms started sweatin1
came with many reward~. he said, the a.nd my knees wert shakins. the whole biL
grtatest being when tbe Estancta High • He spenl $3,000 to pin ~lect1on in
School band surprised him with a private 1980 and was ready to step down in 19M ~radc to thank him for his help in raising when he was attacked in a series of mailer$
130,000 for new uniforms. by a slow-growth cnizens aroup, Mesa
"They gave me a little parade. Thcrt was Act~on. The attack spurred him to run
no press., nobody there.just me," Hall said. agam.
Santa Ana, this etty would be broke."
That deal cstabl1sbed trust between the
city and the Sqrntroms, which continued
mto lunch meetinas between city and
Sqerstrom officials before cwreof Qpen-
ing-mceting laws prohibited them.
Hall said city Officials and Setentrom
officials would informally ditcull projects
for & year before ~came before even the
Planning Commiwon, eliminating poss-
ible problems at the onset.
the t>roducts an,d services on. the mart.ct
aren t even thou~t about now," be said ... , '
don't think any ofus know$ what all oflbe
modes of transportati<>n wilf be. The
an!_Wers att all ideas an{! dreams now:• -
lo reach that tuture, Hall thinks tbe
council needs to let the city take its own
course to a ccrtam extent, such as in the
housing-uidustry balance. Some chars
Costa Mesa is poorly planned because die
number of JObs far exceeds the amount of
available housing, but HaU disagrees_
"It was the nicest, most sincere prescn· Hall and formCT Councilman Eric
tation I've had." Johnson were targeted as pro-srowth by
He said Friday that he isn't sure what the Mesa Action candidates. Hall narrowly
career he'll begin next, but he isn't worried. -won, but Johnson lost. The fiaht was the
He never really planned his lengthy most expensive in city history.t as the pair
political career that spanned a period of spent $90,000. Johnson was len $20,000 in
great change in Costa Mesa. debt, while Hall borrowed nearly S 12,000
Hall had a hand in the binh of the from his company to hold onto his seat.
"When the projects came before the City
Council, they'd ao riaht throuah:' Hall
said. "So it appeared tbe council was just
rubber-stampin, them. but people didn't know we'd been oolcing at the pro1ect for a
long tame.
"If you keep government out of the
process. the free market will make it
work," he said. "As soon as you put
JOVemment in there, you·re going to saew
1t up bccau~ you have decisions based on
personal preferences." Performing Arts Center. The Courtyards Even after that costl y battle, Hall again
shopping center. The expansion of South factd a fight when he squeaked by Mesa
Coast Repertory. Crystal Coun. The Action candidate Patricia Aynes to hold
Beverly Heritage Hotel. Town Center. The bis seat on the Orange County Water
list goes on. thoulh he says no one.A.not
even himself-should talCe crcd1tf0r\ny
of the projects.
"But those times have chanJcd--A lot of
people now arc jealous of the Sqerstroms.
and Segerstrom has a bad name. If ifs
He admits he·s made mistakes in the
past. but says even the wrong action can be
better than inaction.
"I would rathCT make 100 decisions in 1
day and have five or 10 be wrong than
make·JUSt five and be sure they are all
nght." Hall said. -Bec:ausc I always have
tomorrow to fix the wrona ones. When he first appeared before the
council, it was in t 974 as a homeowner,
and he said he was scared stiff. When he .
bought his home on the city's W6t side. he
was told not to worry about an adjacent
vacant lot. even though it was zoned for
manufacturing.
Not long afterward, though. a com-
mercial project was proposed, for the
propeny. and Hall appeared before the.
council to protest. He lost. 3-2. and the
project-was built.
"I learned early to ask a lot of
questions:," Hall said. "I know what ifs
hke to be on the losing side."
Neighbors decided to form a home-
owners' association, and Hall said he had
no plans to become mvolved -until
members began talking about strict con-
trols. which fie vehemently opposed.
"I like to keep my house neat. but not
when somebody tells me how to do at."
Hall said. "So I guess I talked too much
and got myself elected president of the
association."
From there. Hall was appointed to a city
'task force studying cond1uons of the west
side. which houses the city's older homes.
In 197 S, the city created a redevelopment
agency. and agam Hall was appointed.
He decided to make a run at the council.
-My ego got the better of me. I was
beaten. badl y." he said. "But back then.
none of the candidates got mad at each
other 1n a race. and I was appointed to the
.Planning Commission by the candidates
who won."
In 1978. Counc1Jwoman Mary
Smallwood died. and Hall was appointed
to replace her.
He's come a long way since then.
"l don't consider myself dumb or slow
or anything, but I didn't know what was
Ml'm not afraid ofbeing wrong. I've been
·Mona lots ofumes. ..
One projeCt Hall terms a mistake is a
wcsi.sjdc apartment complex, where be -Mayor Donn Hall contends t.bccouncil became tOocauabt up
;;;:;;;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::~~;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;;; wJth ·•the numbers" of the project rather
than •hit would make a good project.
"Times change. If you can't change with the
times, you need to be out. There & a whole new
concept of how thlngs should be-done, and lneed
to be out.''
District.
It's not that Hall denies being in favor of
development. He admits that he loves
progress.
"Many people see something and sa y
'Oh. what a gorgeous old building.·
Gorgeous old buildings 10 me are junk,"
Hall said. "If it's old. let's_ tear it down and
build somethin& new to accommodate
peorie today. • " lik( progress. I hke change. It's
exciting."
But he denies frequent cnticism that
developer CJ . Segerstrom cl Sons runs
Costa Mesa or that the city 1s run by a
"good old boy" mentality. Th.osc attacks
arc rooted in history, he said.
"In the past, the Segerstroms to a certain
extent. an a broad sense of the term. did
control the city, .. Hall said. "They were the
ma1or contnbutor to the tax base.''
When the city incorporated. netah·
bonng Santa Ana tried to lure the
Segerstroms. so Santa Ana could chanae
the zoning on the bean fields and collect
more property taxes, Hall said. But
somebody made tl\e promise the zoning
would not be changed 1n Costa Mesa.
meanrng the Scgerstroms could enJOY the
lower taxes on agncullural land.
"There was nothing written, it was just a
'1andshake de.al. but ll was very astut~."
Hall said. "If all of the property nonh of
the San Diego Freeway wasannexed to
Segerstrom, it's got to be bad. That7s too
bad. because the best.quality projects 1n
the city arc Scgerstrom's." ·
He sa1d he respects the Segerstroms and
even admires Amel Development Co.
President George Argyros. who began his
career as a grocery-store box boy. But Hall
said he 1s angered by those who-charge he
-or any other council member -has
profited from developers.
"Every day on the way to work I come
over the hill and say. 'What an uafy
pr<>Jcct."' HaU sajd, .
But makina rapid decisions has ben-
efited Costa Mesa more than bu.rt, he said.
citing a number of innov.ative projects in
the city.
The Courtyards ~nter was built as a
redevelopment project and funded in such
a way that the developer paid baclc the city
nearly S3 million. and the financi~ of the
Victoria Street widening -in wb1cb the
strttt itself 1s collateral on an SI &-million
bond offer -1s a nauonal first. ,
Southern CaJifomia Edison Co. hualto
contracted with the city to install an
··1f all of this money as supposed to be experimental air conditioning unit in the
out there. where can I get some of 11-r· cny Pohcc Depanment that could dra-
"l don't bave any money. All of those
dollars supposedly from the developers.
tllty're reported." Hall said. "I can't think
of any council members in Costa Mesa
who have personally benefited.
The attacks and even the "progress .. he . mallca.lly cut its coohng costs.
supports arc also behind has decision 10 ··costa Mesa is more willing to be
step down. Hall said. innovauve than most ofics. .. Hall said.
.. Timeschangr.lfyoucan't changcwith -~c who have somethina new say,
the times. you need to bc out." he said. 'Where can we go that they're not JOinc '° "There 1s a whole new concept of how talk about ll for years.' and we say, ·Great.
thinp should be done. and I need to be let's'11vc 1t a try.'
out. "We could be rwn. we could be wronc.
Hall said the next 20 years will bona but what Qic hell \1/e can fix al ...
tremendous chanacs to Costa Mesa. once And while Hall is quick to point out that
the counctl begins to handle the traffic that many. man)' people had a J1C3t deal to do
plagues Southern California. Soluuons to with 1JI that IS good an Costa Mesa, be
that problem. he said. must bc hal')dled admits he would like to be remembered.
regionally. and answered with 1magma-"l'dlilceaparknamedafterme,"besaid.
tion. · "Whether 1t be a little one or ab' one, just
"Twentv vears from now. 60 percenl of something that sa)'s I was here.' .
Arena manager quits Titan missile.launched
VANDENBERG .\lR FORCE BASE (AP) -Mthtary officials wouldn't say
what '!VU aboard.-Titan 340 rocket that thundered rnto space dunng the weekend,
but one expert said ll l>robabl) earned a pair of military communication satdlites
to orbit.
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Ofllleo.lr .........
Steve Redfearn has resigned as general
manager of the Pacific Amphitheatre to
take a similar pos1tton with a planned
concen venue 1n Atlanta.
Redfearn. who has served as the
amphitheater's managtr since 1984. will
move to Atlanla afier the first of the year to
guide construction of a planned 22.()()().
seat Starplex Amphitheatre. The concert
facility is expected to open by June I.
The Pacific Amphitheatre management
and operators. Ned West Inc .• have been
involved in a lensthy dispute with Costa
Mesa residents hvang near the facility.
Residents ha ve complained that excessive
noise and parkms problems acnerated by
the 18.000-capactty venue have not been
addressed by Pacific o\mph1theatre oper·
a tors.
Costa Mesa residents have filed a
lawsuit against Ned West. which 1s still an
litigation.
The poWttful 16-stol') -tall booster blasted off Sunday under heavy cloud cover
from Space Launch Comple:ic. 4 at about 10-03 a.m PST. said Capt. John Sullivan, a
spokesman at this sprav.lang coastal m1lnal') base 140 miles northwest of Los
Angeles.
But Redfearn said his decision lO leave
was not prompted by those disputes.
Instead. the move 1s prompted by the
opportunity to work wnh construction of a
newamphllheater and to bc mvolved in all
aspects of 1ts opening. he said.
As usual for miht.ary space 01ghls. the Air Force didn't announce the launch an
advance and declined to 1dent1f) the classified payload.
However, the Titan 340 most llkely earned two Sa1elhte Data System
51tellites. although it also m1aht have earned either a KH-9 or KH-1 1
photoreconna1ssancc Sp) satellite. Jolin Pike, a space pohcy expert for lhc
Washington-based Federatron of ~mencan Sc1entJSts. said beforc the launch.
Ned West officials say Susan Ro~
nbluth will fill in for Redfearn. Ro~nbluth
is general manager of the Grttk Theater.
which also 1s run by Ned West
Pike. who knew about the launch 1n advance, said Friday the SOS satellites are
used for m1htal') communications. especlall) 1n the event the United States had to
launch a nuclear attack.
Lafuna Beach
A t 7.year-old re~1dcnt of Vista de
Catalina was reported missma Sun·
da)'. probably as a runaway. The male
teen-ager took a.II his clothes. and
typically Is dressed an a tank top,
shorts and thonas and usuaJly wears a
ware n«klace witt\ a rock on it. He
stands S feet 11 incbes, wciahs about ~S.S pounds and has hatU·brown hair;
blue eyes and an olive compkiuon. • • • A bicycle valuedatSIOOwasstolen
Saturda)' on Cypress Avenue. the
VlCllm told officers. • • • Pohce arrested Ronald Francis
McGrath. 48. of Monrovia on suspi-
cion of dnv1na under the anftuencc of
1Jcohol. McGrath WIS stOppcd early
Sunday on My~~le Street and was held
1n lieu ofSl.500 bail.
Miner Stf'ttt between 7 30 pm
Saturda) and 12:.45 p.m. Sund8' • • • .\ stert'<>. speakers and amplifier
were stolen from a Volkswagen Jena
parked on the Orange Count) Fa tr·
grounds Saturday afternoon.
l.rTine
Someone cut the scrttn on a home
in the 3000 block of Park' iev. Lane
Sunda) e\en1ng and stole 'anous
items of Jewell') and a \11deocassett~
recorder. • • • Four tires werr stolen off a Ma1da
R •. 7 parked in the 17800 block of
Sky Park Boul~vard sometime tur-
day. • • • A tnangle was used to cut o~n a
shd1na glass door 11 a Yale Loop
home Siturday .o\ v1dt'OCH$.Ctte re. co.ta 11-corder and several items of jewclr)
A female dancer was Qsaulted wctt stolen. • • •
Sunday afternoon u the pttpered to The lock to a Votkswqcn Jetta was
oerforro near the ~t'fom\1ne Ans punched and the car'1 terco stolen
Center u ~_pen of a black dance while the "chicle v.as parked 1n the
compeny. ~woman was chaftlina 120 block of Oran.F Blossom be-dothc's an • dreuiftl 1rnt near ~ tween 6 p.m turoa 1 ,and 8 Lm.
Dtrformance area otr Town Center • Sunde)'.
Dnvc ~a •hitc 1lfOIW w into * tent and onllltd lier out. The JIUll....._ a.c•
IUspc.ct the• .,_. ta1tu"' her and ----:-*>uu• ncilll iwi It die woman A "'°"'" 1ft the 22400 block of The kl~ led ad I.ht woman wai Harwick C1ttlt ttpOned that ~ not smOusly iniwecl. OM ta"l her doorbell shonty btf'orc I .__,_ • am. IOdl) and then appan:ntly hid'" A l~ler. TY -. .,_ ud a the bushes and fled .. _. lhe
~ir oflkiil Wft lloleli ft'MI a llfllt ~nswmd. A •fir .tl1tc man WM
aa thl 100 bloct 'o( Ot'a)'tiftl II ~· lf'Cft tn the bu1tta and 'cf\ Drive be'lwc:en 2 1 m Slturdly and the tcent tn a M\ite ln.ck. -
10 Lm. nda)'. • • • • . . • • • A man arabbtd a WOln&n's punt N111e1M1*!'·~Wt .... .._ • wl11ti1• ~ • * hmaaw,.... .. nieUOOW..ol __. ol ._. ~-Md
.\dams A venue Sunda) but dropped
the purse and OCd when confronted
b> its owner. The sujpcet was last
seen head1n1 cast on ... ms on foot. ••• Someone reponedly ~ped into a
~omans's bedroom WU)dow U\ the
16700 block of Viewpoint l.aM
unday ni&ht shon.ly after 11 p.m. • • • Tools of und1sc~ value were
taken from a prqc m the 9100 block
of Ells~orth Dnve betW'CCn 3 and 7
pm Su nday.
l\n undisclosed amount of ~
~ear was taken from the Mervyn1
depanment store at 7777 Edu•:r
"ve sh only before 5 p. m. on Sundiay.
A male Juvenile as suspected.. • • • Wheels and nms were taken from a
'-Chicle perked an the MOO bloct of
Oa.kstonc Onvc unday. The theft is
bcl1t"cd to have e>«umd at 1 :4$ p.1n.. •••• dark blue t 98S Totoya 4X4 Wida
a camper 1hell was st•n an the 1100
blockofHunt1naton Onvuomelime
between I p.m. and 2.30 p.m. s..dl)'.
Newport8Hell
A vlnd&I apray-pe1n..S a city
tra.flk s.p bhlt at tht ~ OI
lvaradO Street ud E.Ma ......
Boulevard, City em~ n1lf11d
Fridat· Tbt MP met. ..... T ..
Only. •••• Sttvawve YakMld aa $477 -..._ hm a lilomc• PL Dll IJllr • CoroM clet Mm-. IM ¥ft• 11M
potic:e Friday.
"Among the people
gener-ally cor:r:upt., iber:t¥
•
cannot 'ong exist"·
-Edr11Und ·aurke.
ACA·LL
··FOR
DEC·ENCY
•••••
Dear Fellow New~ort Beach Resident:
Our community has b~en _savage~ over the last week ~
by the most unprinqipled, vile and disgusting·political
mail campaign ever mounted in Newport Beach. We
and our families have been subjected to lies,
distortions and misrepre.sentations concerning the
private and public lives of John Cox, Ralph Rodheim
and Ruthelyn Plummer.
As these falsehoods have multiplied, our anger has
grown, for dishonesty and corruption have no place in
our city or in our politics. We feel it is time for us to
stand resolute against this corruption and to call it by
name.
Newport 2000 is a political action committee that is
fronting for three candidates, Paul Rykoff, Jean Watt
and Geneva Matlock, in a dishonest attempt to steal
an electibn from the people of Newport Beach. In a
virulent and negative campaign effort, they have
accuse"d Cox, Rodheim and Plummer of actions that
are blatantly false and potentially libelous. They seek
to control our city government for the benefit of a
disaffected minority.
We call upon our fellqw citizens to reject these politics
of distrust and to vote against those cynical and"
misleading individuals.
We urge our fellow neighbors to cast their vote against
this political group, whose interwoven action
committees, membership and fund raising leave nQ
doubt as to their hidden agenda.
Say no to Rykoff, Watt and Matlock. Say no to the
politics of distortion and innuendo.
Sincerely yours,
John Killefer Donald J. ~egan
Shorecliffs Balboa Pen·1nsula
L·ee&Ann
Bill Ficker
Balboa Peninsula ~
...
Spencer ~
Taylor Grant
Hart>or. View
Corona del Mar ..
PAID POUTICAL A~ISEMEHT
Orlft89 ca.t DAALV PILOT/ Mondey, NO'lembet 7. 1988 ----._...
NA TIO~
Sakharov asks U.S. support
of political restructuring
BOSTON (AP) -Soviet activist
Aftdrei Sakharov, on his fint \'isit to
the West, called today for inter-
batlonal su~rt for the ,political restructwinc occurrina in his bome-
land, uyina its failure could tb.aten all humanity.
"'I think that perestroika (restruc-
turin&) is an extremely serious ~ c:ess. Jbe pis ... arc not false,' he
uid. "This is not theJ1e:rforthe West,
this is a aemime real process .... The
West must not fear perestroika. "A areater ~nger 10 the world as a
whole would be .the failure of per-
estroika. Internal failure could be accoms;ani~ by external exP.naion.
For ~ pt;CStrvation of the ~ystem, ex.-nsaon~ould be a l)cccesslty .... If
would be cawtro'phe from which
WO\lld arise a peat threat to all
humanity,'' said the 1975 Nobel
Peace Prize winner.
.. For that reason I think the West
should be genuinely interested in the
success of perestroika and in support-
ing .it.'' •
Sakharov is scheduled to spend two
weeks. in the United States visiting
relatives, undergoing medical tests
and promoting a new international
oraanization. ' On his arrival Sunday, the 67-ycar-
old physicist declared himself a free
man but called attention to a sup-
porter jailed for a protest on his behalf
nearly eight ycan ago.
The human rights activist spoke
out for Vazif Meilanov, a 50-year-old
mathematician from the southern
Russian city of ,Makhachkala who
wore a sign around his neck saying
"free Sakharov'! two days after
Sakharov was sent into internal exile
in January 1980. ·•r feel it is my duty now, at lhis
moment, to remember this man and
many others who remain in prison,"
,1
SaJcharov said. . Meilanov served ~ se.ven-y~r
camp sentence for anu-So~tet 8111.1·
aion and pcopqanda and >•·.now in ~ile in the eastern Siberian valta. or
Nam1sy, according . 10 Joih~a
Rubenstein, a speciahst on. ~v1et
dissidents for Amnesty lnternataonal.
Meilanov was a cellmate of Natan
Sharansky, whowasde~rtedin 1986
for his human rights work.
Sharansky, who now liv~ in Israel,
said last May that Mealanov re-
. maincd in Siberia.
Sakharov's tripcbmes less than two
years af\erne was f~ from internal
exile in Gorkyh'.wherc he had bee~ sent because of as QUUpOken opposi-
tion to the Soviet inva'.sion of Af-
panistan.
He is traveling without•his wife,
Yelena Bonner, who saw hin:t 9ff'wi~h a kiss at Sheremetyevo Airport in
Moscow.
Sakharov was starting his trip with
a visit to her dau&hter by a previous
marriage. Mrs. Vankelevich, Mrs.
Yanltelevich's hOsband, Efrem, and
their two teen-age children in
suburban Newton. Sakharov is expected to visit Mrs.
Bonner's son Alexei Semyonov. Se-·
myonov's wife, Liza Alekseyeva. and
their 4-year-old daughter. Alexandra,
in the nearby town of y.'estw?Od· ~t
will be his first meeting with has
granddaughter.
Studenttded High court will rule
·to warn about . on property seizure virus.program t .., . l 1.., . in computers o pay 1 or ega 1 ees
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su-forfeit all proceeds from the drug
ITHACA. N. Y. (AP) - A st~dent prcme Court today agreed to d«"ide deals. The seizure of the money left
suspected of unleashing a "virus" whether the government may con-him without funds to pay Caplin &.
into an estimated 6,000 computers fiscate from criminal defendants Drysdale. ·
nationwide trie4 franti~llY. to~·~ money and property that could be the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of
operatorsaftcrd1scovenng ~1sex~n· used to pay their legal fees. Appeals ruled last January that
mcnt had gone a~. associates said. The co.urt a.nnounced it will review Rcckmcycr is not entitled to tise any
Robert T. Moms Jr., 23. a first-year cases stemming from federal pros.-of the money to reimburse the law
student in Cornell .University's d~-ccutio~s?(dru&dcaJers in New York firm.
torate computer sc.1encc program, 1s and V1rgan1a. Jn the second case, the Reapn
suspected of creating the computer The justices thus set the stage for an administration appealed a ruling that
virus that . last wee~. clogged the important ruling on the rights of the allows Peter Monsanto access to
computers tied to a mah~ry netw?rk. accused and the government's power asset$ worth $400,000 to help him pey
He has been .unavailable sin~ . to fight crime by seizing illicit his lawyers. . .
discovery of the virus Thui:sday. His criminal proceeds. Their decision is MQnsanto was convicted in New
father, Robert T. Moms . Sr.. a expected m· 1989. York City of charges he headed a
governf!1ent. computer-secu~ty ~x-In one case. the law firm of Caplin heroin-selling ring.
pert, said his SO!l left the university & Drysdale here was denied S 170,000 Thejury also ordered him to forfeit
Thursday ~o avoid r.eporters. . ' in legal fees . for representing to the government a house in Mount
The senior. Moms has refuse~ to Christopher Reckmeyer. He pleaded Vernon, N.Y., valued at S33S,000. a
say whether his ~n ~reated the virus. guilty i.n 1985 in Virginia to charg~s $30,000 COOJ>Crativ~ apartment in the
The electronic virus. so named stemming from what prosecutors sa1d Bronx and S35 000 an cash.
because it multiplies after invading a wa$ his role as kingpin of a multi· But the 2nd 'u.s. Circuit Court of
computer.jaf!lmed computers across"' million-dollar drug operation. Appeals ruled in Jul¥ he could use the
the country hnked to the Pentagc:>n· Reckmcyer was sentenced to 17 assets to pay leaitamate legal fees
supported Arpanet network. slowing years in prison and was ordered to incurred in his defense. computers by reproducing itself over
and over. But affected centers re-
ported the virus only took up mem-
ory space and did not destroy any
files. "It could have been a whole lot
worse." said Dexter Kozen, one of
Morris' instructors. "He could have
wreaked a lot more havoc. I can't
Cardinal, Mass honor Jews,
Bight of terror anniversary
believe it was malicious. Mis-NEW YORK (AP) -Cardinal the Eanb," O'Connor said during a
cbievous, yes.'' JohnO'ConnorhonoredJewsandthc Mass on Sunday at St. Patrick's
Friends of Morris quoted today in holy laws of the Torah in a Mass Cathedral.
The Washington Post said Morris marking the 50th anniversary of O'Connor has asked all 410
created the virus as an intellectual Kristallnacht, the night of shattered churches in the Archdiocese of New
challenge and that the virus was glass that ushered in the Nazi Holo-York to ring their bells Wednesday
supposed to lie dormant in computer causL and parishio~rs to light candles on
systems. • The Roman Cathotircardinatiaid the anniversary. He said be would
Morris reportedly went to dinner more than human decency demands light a memorial candle in the
after setting the program loose the world remember the Nazi wmdow of his residence that night.
Wednesday night and checked it atrocities. On Nov. 9-10. 1938, Nazis ram-
beforc going to bed. Discovering his .. Otherwise we will be destroyed by paaed apinst Jews in major cities as
mistake, Morris desperately worked the indifference that permits be-Well as those in small towJis in
to find a way to stop the virus' spread. tra rs and killers to stalk the face of Germany and Austria. 1.=::;;;;:;;:::::=:::::;;:;:======~===;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-~
A .NEW LOOK INTO
BEAUfIFUL EYFS.
Seit. ........ Allt.Acaanlc.Ann.-
9'111k111 pmc:edwe pcrmD ~
rcmonil of ...... dllrfl .a.dows
fftllD under lbr ~ wtdl no akin
lftdl6on Ind..,,....,. ftO dlilcomht.
Wllb6n boun llftu ...,, eye
lllllrc-111P_,.bc Mfdy 1ppHcd; and
one..,.~ CO,.Olhtr nonul
acttwldea.
IUdmdA. --.M.D. leoneol~
kw COllnC'tk: ..,.am who la .,
aao.dCatilal~.
!)a lft NI~-
• (lij Mic e,dAd and~ ......,.
• pa-amt qdlntt lpplk:adon
• pc.-lent ~brow
~
• ppptt kc lifts
• ~and t\llnlX ..._,.,
1*aMWlookat~~llul ~
cya. C. Mfr IO llCNduit a <'Offt•
pllmmlM f COMUlr.atiOn.
Loc*ma IOOCi bu nC'YCf
been m6cr.
.
Some aliens
can apply for
res-dency
' By Tiiie A.aoclated Prat
lllepl immigrants who took ad·
vantqtofthe&ovemment'samnesty 1 proeram can beain a~na for permanent residency y
lmmiarants who feeleive per-
manent resident 11atu1 tet a so-c:alled sreen card, wbicb allOws them to
leave and enter lbe country u they
wish and to eventually apply for
citizenship. The cards. '""" until 1976, ire now white: ·
Amnesty tecipiellta who wJek per-
manent residency mutt either cab a 60-bout eounc. pell an on1 and
writscn n.aminabOn similar to the
citizenship lat _ljven to lepl immi·
pantS, or qualify for an eaansMioca.
U.S. lmmipatioe and r-tatutal-iulion Service oftidah npect about
1.S million of tbe I .I millioa DOI\· ~uni amnesty IPPlic:ants 10 '""'9': permanent raidcncy. Molt are ith....ucnfrom M~ El s.l'ridor and othet Latin American
countries.
Many win have to attend ldaool to
become disible tor ~t resi-
dency. but IUtborida tlY IDll\C poeendaJ·IDDiaauc:ould ADd dlllln· letVll 1oc1ed Out of o~aaoa•d
cm.I.
'"They are lookine ia • YCrY
aenoOI •r'm lw I dill IO Ft
tmo."llid v .... Slnll*r.~
director for lite imm~tioll eot1~· '~ Mnfoao(DalJU Catbalic "'-,-lieiil.: • • ._.. •. w1ao..,.w-...-.~
IW llli com-.."'llld ~ 11e
....... tlae ..... Jid:od = IMO cdw:mllMlllYil._..to
moada
. .
..
Earthquak~ in China: leaves
-600 peOple Oea d or in jurea
. . BEUING (AP) -About 600 people were killed or
injured by an earthquake that shook a remote mountain
iuna9' felion of southern China, the sta}c-run Chi,..
lnsemational BrOldcastina Station sajd today.
Tbe station said it did not have a breakdown on how
g;iany of the 600 were dead and how many injured in
Yunnan authorities ordered an airlift off~ medicine
and other reliefsupplies. Yunnan Gov. He Zhiqiana f)ew
to the scene to direct rescue work.
Xinhua Mid most houses were destroyed 'in Lancana
and Men&lian counties, which were at the e{riccnter of the
quake. The population of the counbe, wa$ not
immediately available. but officials said the area is
sparsely inhabited.
Su~y's quake. ·
The hiahest previous count was from the official
Xinhua News Aaency..L.which reported at least 37 deaths
and Wei more t.6an l(Ju people were injured. Telephone
service was cut off to the affected region, in Yunnan
provjnce near the Burmese border.
The quake measured 7.6 on the Richter scale. and
was followed ovemipt and early today by 34 aftershocks
the stronaest measurina 7.2 on the Richter scale. '
Roads to the affected area were impassable and
Buildinp also were destroyed in 14 surroundina
counties, Xinhua said. Most homes in that part of China
arc simple mud and wood structures.
Crews were workjJ!g to repair roads. and radio
contact was estabbshed...Xinhua said.
lal')Clfll is home to the Lahu minority group, and the
Va minonty aroup al.lo lives in the rq.ion.
·&Viets m clrk· ·ne&tli of Haitlan mill~
Bolshevik -· ·officer called suspicious
R evolution By Tlte As~ •• ~ed Press
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet
Union today celebrated the 7 lst
anniversary of the Bolshevik Revol-
ution with a parade that proclaimed
"War on the Bureaucracy" rather'
than W~tem imperialism.
The tradi(ional display of Soviet
military might was followed by
throngs of civilians supporting Presi-
dent Mikhail S. Gorbachev·s cam-
paign for social and economic re-
forms. The parade also signalled an
increase in the power of Moscow
Communist Party leader Lev N.
Zaikov.
Zaikov strode o nto Lerun's
Mausoleum· behind Gorbachev.
Premier Nikolai I. Ryzhkov and
Yegor K. Ligachev. a conservative
who was formerly regarded as the No.
' 2 Krelin leader.
All 11 Moscow-based members of
the Politburo attended.
~
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -One of Haiti's most powerful men, a
colonel indicted on U.S. drug charges who until rccentl)C led the country's most
feared army unit, has died under su.s>icious circumstances, a family friend
says. Col. Jean-Claude Paul, who was forcibly retired Sept. 30as commander of
the De~lines Battalion, died about 3 p.m. Sunday of a hean attack in his
~ome in suburban Fermathe, Radio Haiti-Inter sai<1. He was 49. The
andependent station gave no other details, but a family friend said there was
speculation the 29-year army veteran was poisoned. Paul's maid and gardener
we~ de~incd by police for ~uestioning.. said the family friend. who would not
be idenuficd further. In addllion, the colonel's former wife, Mireille Delinois.
was taken to the Petionville police station for protection because of fear of
reprisals by Paul's relatives, the friend said.
Traln crash ln Francekllls 10
EPERNA Y ,. France - A Paris-bound upress train struck a maintenance
car 1oday in· a small viltage station in northeastern F.rancc, deraiti~ the
locomouve and nine passenger cars and k.illing 10 people. officials said. The
lraln, which originated in Luxembourg and was carrying about 400 passengers, ~shed as it wa~ passing through Ay, ~village just outside Epemay. about 8S
males east of Pans. Only two cars remained on the tracks. The maintenance car
was sitting on a service track, and it was not immediately clear why the
passengenrain was shunted that way, rather than kept on the main line through
the station.
PAID AOVERTISMENT
Responsible
Reliable and
Ready to Listen
Dear Residents: · -
You and I have the same goals for the city ot Newport Beach. We
want less congestion on our roads. a clean bay, and a reduction of
noise and pollution from the aircraft that fly over our homes. We want
to live in a city that is proficient in providing the services necessary for
our well being and safety.
Vote for Ralph Rodheim, and I promise to work tor you to achieve
these mutual goals and to insure that Newport Beach remains the best
place to live. work. play. and retire.
I am honored to have the endorsement of the Newport Beach Police
Employees association. Newport Beach Firefighters Assoctation.
Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce. and respected leaders
such ~s past Mayors Doreen Marshall. Jackie Heather. and retiring
City Councilman Phil Maurer. .
Sincerely.
.
Vote For ~alph Rodhelm
t •
Or9n09 CoeM DAILY PtLOT/Monday, November 7, t... All
EXPERIENCED LEADERSHIP
State Senator
Marian
·Bergeson·
· 3 7th· District .J
• •
.
10 Years of .
Service in
Sacramento
• 6 Years in the State Assembly
• 4 Years Representing You
in the California Senate
• • •
WE WANT MARIAN TO CONTINUE .
TO SERW.US FOR 4 MORE YEARS
LYNNE DOUTY. CHAIRMAN
Bettle Alice Mc6urney
Sandra McDaniel
Mr & Mrs. Owen Mclean
Malissa S McManus
John Macnab
Lucille-Martin Mr & Mrs Clifford A. Morcan
Mr & Mrs lohn J Murphy
Mr fr Mrs. Thomas H Nielsen
Lt Col. & Mrs. Alberto R. Pearson
Mr. & Mrs Nad A Peterson
Mr & Mrs. Richard Phebus
Sup & Mrs. Thomas F Riley
Mr & Mrs Jerry Shaw
Mr & Mrs Reed Sprinkel
FriU R. Stradhnc
Mr & Mrs Donald Swedlund
Ruth Hunter Taylor
Mr & Mrs M~I Watkins
Of Helmut WetSS
Mr & Mrs Robert W W1kox
Mr & Mrs Roeer H Schnapp
Robert M Grant
Mr & Mrs C. Edward Wolfe
Mr & Mrs Marshall A Beck
lerry Unton
Mr & Mrs Ray Davies Jr
Barbara I Dix.son
Ruth P eoidman
Mr & Mrs Ron lurcensen
Mr & Mrs DoN ld.R. Lawrenz Jr
Richard W Miiier Ir
Mr & Mrs DoN ld V M ontooth
FF Roeers
Suz.anne Samuellan
Frank Wrieht
Mr & Mrs G I Sissin&h
Mr & Mrs Bob Elchenberc
Mr & Mrs Robert E Swain
Mr & Mrs Stephen E. Askew
Mr & Mrs. Lyman C Farwell
Lynda 0 Moore •
Mr & Mrs John Caneer
Frances Taylor Williams
Hancock Bannlnc Ill
Marcaret J Corkett
Mr & Mrs Enc A E&ce
Mr & Mrs Wilham P Ficker
Mr & Mrs Charles H Hermann
Allen Farwell Trane
M r & Mrs John C V.allace
Ellz.abeth D Wrieht
E Laurence Parsons
Zelpha Brent
Cone & Mrs Robert E. Badham
Mr & Mrs loseph McCormtc:k
Mr & Mrs Floyd McKay
Mr & Mrs Paul McManlpl
Mr £ Mrs 'Wilham F Macinnes
Mr & Mrs Thomas S Maddock I W Mitchell Ir
Iona Mouron
Bernice E Needham
Wtlllam H Parker
Mr & Mrs llm Peters
Mr & Mrs Hank Pfister
Mr & Mrs Jack W Reinert
'Mr & Mrs Edward W Schumacher
Dr & Mrs lack Skinner
Mr & Mrs Richard I. Stoddard
Mr & Mrs Paul Sutton
Frances Thomas
Clarence I Turner
Mr & Mrs Carlyle Levinson
Mr & Mrs Ralph M. Rodhelm
Mr & Mrs Gary Bassett
Albert I Auer
Rae L Price
Of Douclas c ~hn
George 0 Griffin
Mr & Mrs Paul Could
P Sander Lauson
Mr & Mrs Douclas C Leichty
Mr & Mrs Anthony P Monte
Diane Coltrane
Mr & Mrs ~Gilmore •
Herbert N Samuels
Mr & Mrs Gree Scott
Mr. & Mrs Robert P &rbank
Wiiiiam A Steele
Mr & Mrs E.M Wecceland
Richard L O'Connor
Mary F Kiet •
Walter G Howald
Mr & Mrs 81\an Theriot
Mr & Mrs Don Adkl~
Mr & Mrs Tom Childs
Charles P Collon
Daniel W Elliott Ir
Warren E Freeman a lean Ptebk:ln Wt lard S Volt
Burr White
Noel K Tcqerson
It
Doris M. Francrs
Mr fl Mrs Eric &rton
David J. Neuman
Mr. & Mrs. Fred H BKe
Mr. & Mrs Dean Bottorf
Mr. & Mrs. C S Chapman
Mr & Mrs Guy K Claire
Mrs. R.T Durkee
Dr Elltabeth Eckhardt
Mr. & Mrs. Fredrick Forster
Robert C Fyke • •
Mr. & Mrs Richard Hess
Dorothy E. Hiimer
Mr & Mrs Michael Howard
Stephen lones
lerry A Kine
John D Lusk
Dr Dwayne Merry
William M Monroe
Velma O Bnen
Audrey S. Pashley
Col ~ A Robens
Mr & Mrs d anton Rygel
Betty Lou Soden
Mrs Richard H Spooner
EJvenla Summers
Holley W1Uttnson
Mr & Mrs Chns Woodwud
Rick John
Mr & fiArs Wayne Belhncer
Mr. & Mrs Harry 0 Memll
Memll &tier
Mr. & Mrs James R Johnson
Kristen Rentt Kemcan
Kathleen McClellan S.rbara B Allen
lean Privette
Diane Rosentreter
Ed Fourcher
Grant Howald
Mrs Bnan R Carter
Steven W, lohnson
Mr & Mrs I P Anderson
Janie Arnold
Mr & Mrs Alben L Baretll
Mr & Mrs Don Beckie)'
Mr & Mrs lohn F Bishop
Mr & Mrs S1anford L Bnmhall
Dr & Mrs David I Bunnell
Marcaret M Callaway
Mr & Mrs lohn Cash10n
Mr & Mrs M -. Colhson Ir
Mr & Mrs lames Crunenden
Mrs Alben \,I, Deund
1111 M Durktt
E.anos T E"ans
Mr & Mrs lad. Garnaus
Dr Renee Goldstt'1n
Jacke Haddox
Patnoa Harrican
Mr & Mrs Robert \,I, Hov.ard
Mrs Alfred V lorgt'nsen
Mr & Mrs lonn Linton
Mr & Mrs Robert S Barnes
lames R. Blakemore
Mr & Mrs. Charles "" Cannon
Mr & Mrs w Ltt Cheslt'r
Richard W Cornell
Ruth Dillon 1 ML & Mrs. 8iJl Edwards
Mt & Mrs. I H Frlsbit'
Mr & Mrs Wilham Hamilton
Mane Hlebsch
Dr & Mrs lames I Hodce
Mr & Mrs John lohnson
Mr & Mrs lohr1 K1lleler
Mr & Mrs Donald lact'
Dr & Mrs Sheldon l Mar-.hall
Courtne) M~
Mr & Mrs Co.Ison C Moms
MaNn Par-.s
Mr & Mrs Thomas I OulClc
Rachelle Robers
Of & Mrs Oa"ld T Smile)
Mrs W Ltt ~er
Mr & Mrs Edwin F Steen tr
Dr & Mrs Scott \lr'h1teh~
Wllllam Ross Woodburn
William 0 t,J,sk
Mr & Mrs William S.mncton
Harry M Boon Mr Et Mrs Zaveno Brenner
Ol&a 8 leffrey
William £ Kekey
WR Mlrams
Mr & Mrs lohn R Payne
Mr & Mrs lames w Porth
Joseph Prudhomme
PtllHp Sansone
Mr & Mrs Roy O Anderson
Farel Walker
Kemberl A Crawfofd
Mr & Mrs Arthur Y Strock
Mr & Mrs rt.ymond Wet9on
l<>e AmJdon
Barbara Aune
Dr & Mrs E.&... Beahm
Mr & Mrs Edward P. Benson.
Mr & Mrs Thomas R Boris
Oaken K Broadhe~
Mr & Mrs Kine E. Burstein
Pat Krone
Athalle C!.r\e
John C. Cox Ir
Mr & Mrs. llm De Boom
Marion H Devick
Mr & Mrs Kt'nneth £.ncjer
Mrs & Mrs R T· Forbes
Michael C Gerint
l E. Gnbble
Of & Mrs l<>hn K Hamel
Mr & Mrs C>Nal B Holman
Mr & Mrs. I C Humphries
Lou Krumptl0l1
O.vid~ni
Of StanfOf'd Green
Mr & Mrs Donald Slop6
<:arolyn Broe
Ra)' W Middauch
Mr & Mrs Richard Fercu:son
Mr & Mrs WilJiam C Adams
Mr & Mrs. Peter S.rrett
Mrs Charles G Boice
Mr & Mrs lrvm C Chapman
Bunster Creefy
Lyman H Farwell
Mr & Mrs Vincent Harris
Donald K Haworth
Mrs DC Hopper
Mr & Mrs W L Kell
Mr & Mr.s Donald Koll
Robert Lee
Jodi Pace
Thora Pru~e
Ronald L Rod&ers
Mr & Mrs Donald A Strauss
Of & Mrs William F Taylor
Norman Wyman
Mr & Mrs BNn Dou&herty
Of M Michael Gassel
Blurock Partnership
Thomas M Henderson
Mr & Mrs Challen F Landers
lohn D 0 Donnel
Louise M Hamblet
Doroth)' Ga~y
Dr Dore I G1l~n
Chnstopher P Krahck
Tom 8 Miller
Of Charles V Crowl
Dr Bre~ Ross
Geneva A Se"'IOS
Mrs Richard Steele
Mickey S.lley
Tracey Gust
Robert C.rt lenkens
Mr & Mrs <11arles F Hutchins
Mrs John H Scudder
Mr & Mrs Ptlilhp P Maurer
Marian C Crant
Derek Dunc.n
Charles H Rivkin
MAt';orle 8 Anderson
Mr & Mrs Karl 0 Bercheer
Mr & Mrs loseph l Carver
Bob Cooper
11m Dale
Patne1a C Hadden
&~ J Lynn Hart
Mary Hershe)'
Goldie loseph
"lane) Ktmble
lo)' !\ Kostlan
Poll)" Ober
Ruthel)'n Pfum~r
Dr Tom Robinson
Mr & Mrs Marlin Shttl)'
Mr & Mrs Robert l Taube
lean Tandowskly
Ralph Kiser
Dr Mal) Lou Zoclln
Mr & Mrs £art A Lewis
Dennis 8e«h
Paul BfOUI
R P Connally Ir
Mr & Mrs Old Enctand
Mr & Mrs William C Cnchlll
Mr 6 Mrs M~I Burton
Patncaa L tones
Mr £ Mrs Robert Ma~I
Dr John P Morey
Mr 6 Mrs c.o.don Redmon
Cathefine M CoYert
Wtlma I Sffttth
Ruth P Denllon
Mr & Mrs lllobett Br.dy
ChrlsliM L~nk
Gordon H West LeoNrd~
•
A8 OrlftOI C09ll DAILY PllOf/ Mondey, November 7, 1"8 •
. Both Dukakis, Bush predict vi~tory
By TM AIMdaw4 Prat
~rge Bush and Michael Duk.akis
voi~ confidence today as they
crossed l)!llhs in beUlwc>und .sta.leS on the final day of camp11gnmg
before Americans choose the· next
P"5idcnt .. Underd<>s Dukakis uree<f voten "to send a messqe lhat can be heard from California to Ken-nebunk~", while Bush declared he was _fjniJbin.& .. not in a power walk
but in a sprinCr
·The latest polls bolstered the vice
president's optimism as he followed
bis Democratic rival into Ohio and
roared toward St. Louis.
At a sunrise rally in a steelworkers
union hall outside Cleveland,
Dukakis was in biah spirits after
snatchin& a two-hour nap on an
ovemiaht fli&ht from the West Coast.
"GoOO Momins. Ohio," he said. "We took the ~ye to be with the-
Buckeyes."'
''.I don't need sleep. I'm cha"-na." he aid. " ... We're toint lo win. '
Bush belan hit day 1n the Detroit
suburb of SOut.hfield. Mich., and took
a jab at Dukakis' fononeu for excrcisina by Villkina rapidly while
carryina weiahts. • The vice president said the ~ in
Michipn was close and "it's a very
imponant place to be as we run riaht
WA ao lbc finishJi~AOl in a,powc
walk but in a sprint." Bush said that when American&
vote they should a&k themselves th_is
question: "Is the country headed in µi~ 'i&h' direction? The answer is, yes
It IS.
From Michi~n. Bush was h~ded
for rallies in Ohio, MiS$0uri and
Texas, where he maintains his voting
residence.
Dukalis preceded Bush into St.
Louts by a coupk ofliours and told
bis audience, "This is the 'show me'
state, and rm hett to show you how
mucn I want your suppon," he said.
Then, in a reference to Bush's
summer home in Maine, Dukakis
asked, ~Are you aoina ·to let the
pollstm and puni:lits decide this
election, or are you Joing to send a me~ that can be heard • from
Califomia to Kennebunkpon?" "Tbey'~FUing so wooicd Bush is,
followina me around -can you
believe 1t?"' Dukakis told a rallr in
Ponland, ~.. Sunday night. The Democratic nominee was on a non-
stop camgaign swing with no time to
see a bed" until he arrives home in
Massachusetts Election Day. President Reagan was spending the day campaigning for Bush in Cali-
fornia.
said the difference was niJ't points.
An NBC News.-WalJ Street Journal
poll and another by Louis Harris and
Associates said the maJ1in for the
vice president was five points with
cnouah people undecided or waver-ina to allow for dramatic last-minute
cha11aes. · . The . presidential dand1date1
weren't the only ones windfo& up
their campeians. • ' Tbere..Weri.JJ.Scnate IC&tS and the
entire House bein& fiUea l>n I uesdlY-and 12 states were electing aovernors.
Democratic control of the Senate
and House appeared secure and the
Democrats appeared likely to add to
the 27 to 23 edae they now have
amona aovernors.
Thousands of other off!~~ ~ere lllcbael Da'alrl• (left) camom.ned bl Oldo tlala mo1'DIDC and
beirt& filled and sco~ of 11:u~11lllv~ Geoqe Buh wu la Loe AJiief• on Sanday. also were on ballots, 1nclud1na 39 in • . Both camps ..bombarded voters
with 30-second commercials and the -----------------------------, two candidates were the stars of JO.
California onhawhsif/;o op~sin& sides sin&er An<ty Williams and comedians "w111 not have as ~uc~ as a m~ndate ~ptnt more t n mi 1thon. Joan Ri vers and Rich Little. as he dcscryes because ll ~s mfficuh Dukak1s bcpn a mara on ~cc · . to ge( the issues across wtth all the
ONE LESS'}Hg'dt~O WORRY
the cost of health care today Is serious
• even if the aliment isn't
Take the financial wor..ry out of being
sick with a Personal Prudent Buyerli P~an froin Blue Cross of Calif omia.
California Insurance Marketing Services can
show you howa~o.3::::::.v::•lve coverage
LOOK AT TffE§E LOW MQNTHLYBATES COcanqe CoJ
Plan 1000 .. . '
age sing le sub& sub& tamlly aub
catagory aub spouse chlld 3+ chlldre
under 30
3().39
40-49
50-59
60-64
37.00 68.00 65.00 94.00
53.00 101 .00 95.00 130.00
59.00 111 .00 106.00 137.00
99.00 170.00 163.00 195.00
133.00 226.00 226.00 261.00
call us today (714) 641-8689
or request by mall:
California Insurance Marketing Services
38 Brookhollow Dr Santa Ana, CA 92705
Blue Cross of Calltomla
Aa#a1Zlld ..
PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
89.
123.
130.
184.
261 .
minute prime time election eve
programs running back-to-back on
the three maior commercial networks
-ABC, CBS and NBC. A rush oflate national polls said the
Republican vice president was lead-
ing by margin~ ranging from five to 12
percentage potntS. . A SO-state, ABC News-Washington
Post poll of T,777 likely voters said
Bush was solidly favored orlcading in
states with enough electoral votes to
assure his election.
An Associated PreS& state-by-state
survey said Bush was leading in states
with 356 electoral v.otcs -86 more
than the 270 needed for a majority -
while Dukakis was ahead m .states
with a total of I 0 I electoral votes.
Another 81 were in tossup states that
included Pennsylvania, Illinois and
Missouri.
Among the new polls, Gallup put
Bush ahead by-12 pcrcen• points.
while USA Today-CNN made it 11.
ABC set the margin at 10 and CBS
around the country late Sunday flying .. Thi~ election. will be decided o~ clutter of negative advenisina." .
from Spokane, '!Vas~ .• to Cle~ela~d. the basis of the issues not the ads, Republican vice presidential nom1-
with a dawn amval m the Oh~o city. said Bush. nee Dan Quayle heatedly denied
From O~veland he was heading for In the closin weeks of the cam-·Sunday the suggestion that he b~ •
St. ~uis and then on to San pai&n, Dukakis failed aaainst the "lies light schedul~ de~igned to ~ecp him Fra~cisco. 'd · th and distortions" in Bush campaign out of the hmehght and in safely
f 000-A•d:i;e:Ct;~rnsfro~nL;n~ra;~ ads which attacked the Dukakis R~p,ublican a.rea~. r. tat r. th ' . . . Lo record as governor. ' Yeah, we ~n saie s . e~ ·~r e osco before ad.dressing a rally m s Interviewed on the ABC-T\llshow Republicans, hke West V1111ma and Anae~es. Then 1t was~n toa PM-d;awn "This Week with David Brinkl.ey •1 Maryland and states like that," be
Election Day rail>: m Des OlftCS, Bush campaign chairman James A. crac~~ sarcastica!ly. ··Th~'re very lo~. an~ a sto~.m Nhw Jersey.or Balcer Ill said "I don't think it's a · lrad1t1onalRepubhcan(temtory)and
Ohio be10~ en mg t e campaign dirty campaigr;, I think it's a tough that's why ~e ':Ve.nt thcr:e:" Maryland
back home 1n18osthon. Id be. campeign .... What we've been doing and West V1rgin1a trad1~1onally have ·W_hatever s eep egot ~ou 1!1 8 _ and we candidl admit it _ is been strongly Democ~t1c.
tounst class seat on his campaign pain tin& him (Dulcalis) for the liberal "We're very versatile, very flex-
pjane. . t hat be as " ible,' he said. "We go to good ones
. t,sh ~old ~·libn~r~~~t1fu1cr:~~ Texas ·Sen. Lloyd Bentsen. th.e (GQP strongholds), ~d ones (Demo-
m ut ~ 1 0~! last minute Democratic vice pr:csidential nom1-crauc strongholds)., m between ... was pu ng up • 1 ft · nee said on the NBC show "Meet the wherever they say. s~okes:creen ·:·~nowallthat s e .1s J>rcSs." that thc·Bush attacks have Quayle spent the day in safely
thas da.ily whDomm,gl~bout a hegat!ve , "bad an effect and they've hun and Republican Virginia, ~ucJ\ of . •t
camg:f;· ... " n '-~sten tot ecrymi ~ d.~ emcan the process... touring Be!kel~y ~lan.tauon, a p1c-
onSth e .ar le~. 1 tfi ·th Bush J>rcdicting in upset victory on turcsque hisfonc site m the eastern
were ~lt~: .fc:to~~h:clc Norris, Tuesday, Bentsen said that Dukakis part oflhc state .
Jk ~·Boo~~ Man With starter pistol
8rrested at Bush rally ·~ prourl to ho·• Blll '1ARTI:\. JR & JOH:\ ARCH.O IBAl'LT
-in1roducin1 their l•1n1 book LISTEN TO tHE RAI N
THURSDAY NOV IOTH
their program of
POETRY & SONG
will begin at 3:30PM
Autographing (ollowt Immediately until S:30PM
Brin1 in or mention this •d for •
free poet er from one of their books
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A spec-
tator who pulled a staner pistol from
his waistband SO _yards from where
Vice President George Bush was
delivering a campaign speech on Sunday was being held on a f4deral
charge, officials said.
government business, said Secret
Service spokesman Richard Adams
in Washington, D.C.
If convicted, Junot could be fined
SSOO and sentenced to a six months in
prison, Adams said.
Junot was questioned by police
detectives following his I p.m. arrest
atothe rally in suburban Woodland
Hills.
67~1424
The man dropped the pistol and
fled as frightened bystanders r,elled,
"There's a gun! There's a gun." and
police arrested him moments later.
authorities said and a witness said.
Junot was arrested without inci-
dent and the weapon, which re-
sembles-a handgun but fires only
blanks, was discovered to be a starter
pistol of the kind used at sponina
events, said Thompson.
PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEM ENT
John Arthur Junot, 40, ot Los
Angeles was held for violation of a
federal code thirt makes it unlawful
for anyone to impede or disrupt any
PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
Election to Costa Mesa City Council is. a pri.vilege
.
It should be earned thro~gh community service and experience
Two candidates are clearly qualified. They've earned our trust ... and our vote.
Wa!lr.,. and Stu-Nqjorlan
Dc14/4e Forth
Sam and ~I Strolch
Cr"!'I and Alld11 5'monoff
Km and l'hj/IX. ~
T'om and Ho41y UghlUMt
Nk'lc and Norma H411Hn
Tom and OoJI 9radJI
Kim and Kim K°"Hll
Pbul and Kanm Lamm
Oat 9ondaruk
/lanlc and Hilda HomJJUC!ld
Jlm Sdlq/~
Ho.I, and nwtma R«ld,
Undo and,_,~
Ran and Pat aaa-
Ran and ICot"4/ ~
"'~ arwJ u. DlMWI
Sandsl """""°" Jotlc and La.-Canrlt
Ln ... Jo ll"1lr
8'* and 8r:rflara Abbott
l'atandlla~
l:Nlond1WOUM
Jock and ,.,.,, Jo Hotrtrrwfl
Orvandl#o~
....
Bob and Jo MOll!r
~and Don MoWM
Joon.n Gani
Ml* Wll.lon
Al and San.I lit<nfll
Ron and 8arbom HaflUIO'd
Ertt and Chor John.eon
BUI and IC«Vlro JoeotJy
HCJ1Y11ond Ma~~
Phil and J!:llrr'I .ltUon•
L«Olbb8
Unlc litilf'"
1"'"11 and Doro O'Ndl
Dr. Honv ond #Mm Spwb
Jtm ond ,,...,. ... ..,,
• Lorttn ond Cbrol Wall
AM#cecuWd
.... and~~
fll*G'M*'
BlobMd...._..~
~and--~ DttW ond CN!Jt,.,.....
An """" AMrl ..,.., ... Liq~
Dr.~ .... -Dr. ,.,.. era.,
..
Endorsed by:
Costa Mesa Republican Assembly
Citizens for a Better Costa Mesa
Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce
Both of Costa Mesa's Former Police Chiefs
Please join us. In voting for. • • • •
.
Jim Ferry·man
and
.Ed Gl8$QOW . .
Pal and RWlfll Noon-
.Jim McMahoti
Jim and 8ru Mtaru
lMft ond VloAa Smith
Jem,JSmah •
9rlot1 and MWfi T1wrtot
Poul and SalJu Chadwrfl o-ve and Rotyt Gulbm
IMtil Bll«h«
Ride and Norma~
Pot8'or
"-'JI Montnn
~and Potttt RoWtt ni.ar....
-.~ ~.,..,,~ ... c.....,i.... °"'" ........... Hell .... _._,DI •Ill*'
MNdCJ1• ......... ......,, "*""" ......,, ,,,...........,
~~ AIWMI ,..,.,._.
c......~
Dfcff and La.Dunno ~II
AIAbrarrw
.Ft'l'd and Ofbno Ambutpe!J Garv"'"' e.rtha PallaMf
Jwwlfeflan
Kar.fl edftb«ul•
Befl)il °'-*'
"'-a..rt ~-~-• ~Mblol
fll*and.Jo~ ,,..,.. and,...,~
Ji:ritt09t ....
OIMWr:llaJ ... 0.. .,.,, .ltlfltrt NtAllU«"r ... ,.,.,
CIWtll MlOllrV , ...... ~
Qll .....
a.fl'C.•www ow..,.....
Ollrtr~
PNr~
~ """ ........ "'""' ODii\ .... ~ .....
Som!f Hf!CJLh
Don.Jacque•
HJllOH~
JolliPf and Rand.11 IJ<dJlna
Dorofht/ Ot!CHr 0.-Jo1v1 eutn
Dunton Golltlclwr.
&J and Ot Burl~
~hlit&r
#rand.,,. tloward ~
BdW!nabu
FmnlcC.~
Don 81..n•
~and a.ma llUla
~and l.-.w$Ndt
Colftr1 A""'*
Dow clnd MlrJI a.or.nm.
CW..ond~~ ,..,..,.,....,.,,.,.,.
-------~ """ ...... c::i.-a °""" ......... ,,,. ............... .. ,__ ......... """".,.,...,
Joj .,.,, ,...,,. "'""'
Arlrrw and Jfm ~
Bab Barton
Johll Bl'h.MndlM cu Ptf°'1tok
Dllr1 ond Lb'® DemlllQ
Kim and Jlf.I/ And«llon
Wanwn BoOfl\
I.aura l hwo
OrnUd ond Rubv l-tUl\I
L«lc~
Morie~
ftb'lha Olhfn
Nr. and Ah WQllM ~
Nancv ''"'"°" ..... ~
Norw!~ °""' O'Clnk PmlJ llrftfll
Nana Cr I ctwl
,,..,,~
--~ ..........
.....~ AllM...,
..... c.d'4llfl
1'IW ~ QN """-"
PaJd for by: Committee \o Elect Jim Fenyman, 1.0 .1881157 and Frtendl of Ed Glaigow, 1.0. 1881441
•
I ' -t •
•
Pttt atld Jw1r RkhoNUoti
MGlt and &t~ Adtfon
Mr and Mrs Jarrw• KaMoatn
l'tUIHUIJhn R°" Cormefll#'bua Tuwd and Ha.I Sfo;v
V~Reddlng
Rlclc()ww
lfobttt and Joan F'fnnfvon
OomRodlf
AoMt lfornlltt>
RoOrrl OrJmeU ""* lfouldfn ltoblrto and~ .Na
BllOWllQP
811 Hotftq/f
Stw\llf~
.,..Al¥w
TM~
&\tt9.,., 8*111 Hftitfrlt °"',,....... T"'V Clrlll Olrw 0 ',.,,. ,.._.Md TMI Connor
~,....... ..
1'11111 ..... 01.elllt\I
w.-..,IOKlt
,., ~ _:__ ~ ----~ --• . .1...1
Ofenge CoMt OAILV PILOT/MQndaY, ~ 1. 1... A7
Cocaine ep • d . i ro;sons and jails, and s:son re· our judicial •l'lem• and our penaJ conven idle military buesfoto state He cbarFf Bulb botcbed b1t • . -1 . em c 9 U~~and'L,~~~lA1ri~have~.t:!~ ~i~~~n~:!daR w:a~~ ~~r=r;=~1th~n~~~~~~ ~;:m~':~~c:rdt.!:r.!lr:=
incarceration rates than the United valve:· prison sta:ts" by-usina the confiscate<t · n Florida He also ridicules .,..,
the m is atUiQI wone. tion in his fir1& term. providina an construction. with P&nama leader ManuetNc::;:
• he bi& question is bow can we extra S2SO million a year. Dunk.ls promises to "fiaht a real now under U S indictment for dnta
gan~s make c· r1•me .. Sta~le:n ·sonsare·ovcmowdedand. fe:::r~~i~~i.:'so~0co~:~~ =~~t~:lpt~ctc:,npri:~ =~~.c::i~~~
a -n e ec ti 0 n issue rdeal===W1==.t=h=thi=e=v=o=lu=me==o=f=ca=sn==~ft~ood==i~na====~T~he----R-e_pu_bl_ica_n_a1_'° __ wa_n_t_s_•o __ wa_r._n_o_t_a_p_ho_n_y_w_a_r_, _aaa_jn_s_t _d_ruas_._ .. _t_ra_ffi_•_ck.i_._nJ. __ · _· ----· -----
87 CHRISTOPHER CONNELL constant attack bJ Bush on two
111 , 1 ,,,_.,.. , emotion-ladeQ cnme issues: the
WASHl'NGTON -.Crime would · death~ .penalty and ttle Honon
have been a big issue in the 19&8 . furtou&!t. • .
•
presidential race even-if convicted Bus6's adVOC?CY of th~ de_atb
murderer Willie Honon hadn't got-. 'J)Cnal~y for cop-k-illers, drug k1ngpu'~·
-ten out oh-Ma$sachusctts'"jatt on ~Q~lrt•tQrs~nd_~thers, and1__1hKafs ft~----iiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii!iiiiiiiiiii~!i!!i!!!~~~~~===~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::._4.,;.;;:,.~ weekend funough. f.11lorying of Dubkis . over t e
The cocaine ~pidemic, sang war~ urlough ptoUa~ won h1i:n the en-s ·T E. R L I PAIONPOLITlCAl..G w· 0 L F E fare and escalauna street violence in dorsemento"(p0hccgroups an Boston, _
bis cities all helped push the crime New Yor~ City and elsewhere.
issue onto center stage with an Dukak.is oeposcs the death pcna~ty
u,.ency unseen in a oresad~ntial race u~der any cm:~~n~s: Polls an-since Richard Ni~on~s law-and-order d1cated the publ~c viewed the Demo-campaign of.1968. crat as soft o~ come. . •
Both ·George Bush and Michael ,James Ly~ch\ an ass1s~a!)t
. Qulcalds vowed to "take·.back our professor_ of JUSt!~ . at A(!lmcan
streets" and promised new as$8ults Universtty, sa1c:t. Come often,~
against drug traffickers, hoodlums comes !l hght-ning . rod. for pc~ple s
.:J and white-collar criminals. . frustrations .... I than~ 1t s possibly a
Some criminologists expressed sur-code ~ord .for something else. It could
prise that crime commanded such be racism. . .
attention in the race. Crime rates As ReP.u~llcan 01ers ~nd ads ma~
have fallen during most of the 1980s ct.car, ~ilhe H~rton as black. Has
and, despite a rec~nt tum upward, v1ct1ms were wh.1te. ,
remain much lower than in the late .Honon, serving a hfe sen~ence 1970s. , · without parole for ~atally stabbu~g a "There~s just a ~idespread sense 17-ycar-old gas station attendant in a
among the publi~that people are I ?74 robbery, never return~ from
seriously at danger, even though they his I Olh weekend furlough m J.une
are at less danger than they were five 1986. Ten ~onths later, he broke u:uo
or eight years ago," said Alfred an. Oxon Hill, Md .• h~me. attacking Blumstein dean of the School of Clifford ~mes and his fiance: Later
Urban-and Public Affairs al Carnegie cap~rcdjD.-asboo~out~hen~w1sback
Mellon University. _ behmd bars ~rvmg two hfe . terms
DruJ use is off among teenagers, plus 85 Y?rs in a Maryland pnson,
accordin't>to.. government-sponsored Dukak1s so~g~t to blunt the Bush
h · d · attack by pomung out that every surveys, ut t e cocan~e an c_rack other state and the federal govem-trade bas spawned violence that h fl I gh shocked the nubtic like the assassina-me~t. as a ~r ou program. · la ('" ( N c· CatmJ cnme sprees by other -t10~ st spnng o a cw York tty furloughed 'prisoners includins one
police.man, Edward Byrne~, who ~as from a Houston halfWay house ttiat
guarding thc..hom~ of a.w11ncss. ma ·Bush once honored. Dukakis said: "I drug case. ,Byrn~ s f?ther ~ecently think when you use human tragedy ga~e Bus~ has sons shield. for political purposes. that's kind of
New . Dynamic ·'-eadershipl
Proven Experience &· c·om'mlt111ent.""". :
C"*"'-. end member, lllk• T,.... Commtttee, Newport Beech, 1112-84
• lnatrumental In completing the mapping of bike trans.
• Extended city bike tnllls by ~ 20%
• Completed the first bike trails 11eroes the Baci< Bay.
• Olweioped bike accident report procedures.
C"8itman Md rMmber, PARKS, BEACHES AND RECREATION.
COMMISSION, Newport 8wh, 1•4 •·
• lnereued recreation programs by as%
• lncreue'id open 8PllC8 by 20%
• lnatrumental In de\lefoplng new open space recreational element for the City of
Newport e,ect\.
~· Worked to develop• COMerVatlon-oriented tree repl8cement program for the
City to guarantee retentk>n of our older trees,
• ReaponaAble for eneurtng completion pf the West Newport Park, west of Pacific ~Hlghny. ... -
• Instrumental In getting the Grant HowaldYouth Center rebuilt In Corona Del Mar.·
Trwurer, NewpOrt YoUth Aaeocletl_on lloerd, 1117
• Instrumental In getting the Grant Howald Youth Center rebullt In Corona Del Mar.
-PM,t Preeldent of the WEST NEWPORT BEACH ASSOCIATION.
loeld ~r N9wport 811ch'IMCA lloerd-·ot OINotGra,---1111 •
STERLING W.OLFE
The violence ~,nd .the drug pro~ the ultimate cynical act in PQlitics." l~m run t~ther, said H~bert Wit-But Bush said the Massachusetts barras. president of the. Poh_ce Fou!\-furlough program. begun in the 1970s
datton and fo~er police director m by a Republican governor, Francis . N~~ark, t:J.J. Peopl~ hav~ fel!.Jhe Sargent, was the mosWibcral in th
stmg, T~ey sec a .~etenoratton. in !->"!~ natton and the only one that allowed society Jn our 1;b1bty to .deal . \Vath 1t. lifers not eligible-for parole out on . .
. ".I ~ that v1ol~nt 'tnme 1s a_gre~! passes.
CIVIi nallts quesuon of our. tam~. Dukakis vetoed a 1976 bill that
Bush tOld stude~ts at the University would have made first-degree ~fNot'~ Dame. An old woman who murderers ineligible for furloughs
1s a~1d to go <?Ut for a break after and defended the policy against ~.as cv~ry bit. as oppresse~ a~ a mounting criticism until it was
pohucal .~nsoner m some totahtaoan suspended by his state Department of
country. Corrcclion last December. Dukakis.
Dukakis, f<:>r his ~n. said, "I've l~d signed legislation last April revoking
the fight against cnme and drugs an furloughs for first-degree murderers.
my own state and I intend to do so as National crime statistics show
president." crime up 1.8 pc~cent last ycar;e~d.ing
But despite Dukakis' boast that a five-year d~h~e. _And 34. 7. m~lhon
crime in Massachusetts has dropped people were v1ct1m1zed by cnmmals. 14 percent in the past four years and More than 200.000 furlou~s were
the-state has a homicide rate SO granted last year (0.r 53_,000 inmates
percent below the national average, across the United Sta~es.
the governor found himself under There are 800.000 inmates an U.S.
Tl1e Residents' Cl1olce • • •
TOfl'I & KMHeen letnater
MkNef ShcMln Or, ltOfWd ,,..,,
D.wG .. 1p
Gene • ~· Kr.us John N. Olteftt-.p
J. ltldr IMz
ltuce . L.9an ~
,,.,. •. Sprltt
Maftc D. VM Slytce
~.,d \lloot«s
Ted a.ty
~ & Evonne CoOI> ·
Mk.NefConen
Stanton \II. Daovtn 11 Jade Schwartz Thoma L Henon
Kefttl & Sftwon Dawson Tom & Jane Peterson Mr. & Mn.~ E. Nott'
Dwtd GrllnOff Or. U & Christy~ Lom*M & ~ \llolle, St
8oO Hof*Jns Luc:9e lurgef Mr & Mrs StarlMy p . Pdeftln
a..c. McCM1n RkNrd ~Seber Vl.-d Munson
DWI Gr"'1 John VI. Kerr Ray • Ruet1 Kennon
Tim .JllN:· lln.Ke & N~ Harrington Bonny & HeMt Bonnett
Fr-* MdObbln Dk:k & Gall ~ EdwWd & li9lsy Mlnm.n
Mice ~ Boyd Stmnga Hetef't Dyer
Ron & Joanne CraM bwfio & CJyda ~ Otff & Oen 9udc
Vl.tter a .1owi s.m.... J«n a Amy Vietti .11m & P.cty McDoNlld
lemwd ~-lnnt & Peggy 09de'n Tom Of1lndo
Dwi Dwrow Edwin A..~ 0.,. & Joe~
A'-" rierry Qldc & Miity Abn Am Wood
Mice & PMI HowlN'd N~ INu ~ ~
PAID fOtt IY THE COMMrTTEE TO ELECT STERLING VIOtF£
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
It's frustrating.
•
• Traffic § a problem Measure 6 is nat a solut ion _. . .
VI, -'-Wood
Vk: lt*9hllnf
Mr & Mrs George Howland ' ,.. ... GUdll
0.-. lllrc:hNno
Earf & M.ry Deaur
T-~
, loll. & Jane P.titer
kM Cnndon. Pres.. .kltwl ~ ,._ ~
No. ........ .., vtew ADec:
·~•.acca.yc;..1rre•
Gr ... Ina Howlfd
• It's a traAspa ri ent attemRt to use . oul'1 frustration with traffic
-for personal, political pu r:po~es .
It's expensive. '
• to implement and defend the same measure, SM Clemente spent over
$1,100,000.00 In local tax dollars -$1.1 nt•a11.
Measure G will cost Costa Mesa taxpayers mud\ morel
..
• The backM'i of Measure G say. • it's written by Costa Mesans for Costa
Mesans• -not true. .
• Measure G reD the same as flOilrowth measures in Orange County. R1vers•de
County. Huntlngl6n Beach. Newport Beach. San Clemente and others. state wide.
They didn1 ~ bother to rewrite the parts about substandard police and fire
d~ Costa Mesa's public safety departments are among the best tn the nation.
It's illegal a~s1~· unconstitutional. ~__,-it makes traffic worse. · '
• Superior Court Judge Wooley issued his ruling on Sah Clement9'• ~owth ordinance.
commanding, " ... tfle City and City 'counciUo refrain from i,,..,,,.,,,.lfl lhll Initiative in anyway.·
• Measure G is just like San Clemente's law -identical language. ,
If Measure G passes it will require the city to def end it in court and W.-UIX dallira Oft ....,,
fees in a losing battle.
• We have the lljidng. the developer fees and the plans for traffic improvements.
• Measure O .-1111 .... away all the money for traffic solut1or,\s and si>end 1t on
URnea 1111 r IDod control and on non-emergency responses.
• Lift ID.,... wtth the solutions.
• lllfl buld new streets and traffic systems
• Ltll'I not build pohtlcal careers with expensive. ridiculous ballot measures.
~---..-....~----~ ~
TEN on
..
... .. •
~
There's .more to . .. -.
voting-than whe
Wins or loses ...
Election 1988 is almost history.
The last-minute campaigning is winding down. and the
focus is shiftins to what p0liticians call "getting out the vote."
It's also tlme, to take ~ look at a question traditionally
rekindled at this staJ,C of an election -"docs one person's
vote really make a difference." ·
The simplistic answer is no-one vote is like a rain drop
in a.n ocean. It is pan of the whole, but not significant enough
to alter the big picture. ,
However that simplistic answer is a reduction to the
ridiculous we hope voters on the Orange Coast will put behind
them.
When the polls open Tuesday morning there is much
more than a presidential race at stake, and each voter's
investment in the outcome increases dramatically as the
election is broken down to the local level.
Most observers agree the city council races and battles
over initaitives on the Orange Coast are close this year. If
several hundred voters are swayed to believe their votes won't
make a difference on Tuesday there's a better-than-even
chance those good people will help pass bad laws and elect
candidates they don't like by not voting.
It's been said that when a person votes for a candidate or
political cause the voter is makm3 an investment for his or her
principles. That one vote may not change the course of an
election, but it is an inaugural pan of whether a candidate or
cause f'C()Civcs a mandate. -
Politicians arc sensitive to mandates. even the Re-
publicans here on the Oranff Coast who sUtnd so little chance
of being beat~n that they could vinually sit out a campaign.
Voter registration totals show that a little more than half
of all the registered voters on the Orange Coast are
~epublicans. The only exception is Newpon Beach where the
GOP commands 71 percent of the registered voters.
How do you think a Republican elected without the
suppon of this lopsided voter registration would react?
Mandates are also imponant to those who watch voters'
reaction to local initiatives and poiitical causes. Will slow-
growth initiatives be defeated qr approved with a clear enough
mandate to set the course of the areas'public policy for the
next two years?
Voters will do two things during Tuesday's election. ~hey
will elect a president, senators, congressmen. representatives
to state government and city council members. They will also
send a message to their elected officials that shows the
strengths and weaknesses of suppon for initiatives and the
political philosophy of both th<; ~inners and losers. . .
It's imponant that the indiV1du<1I voter not lose faith m
the eower of his or her vote because that trip to the polls is an
investment in the future of our form of government.
As imperfect as it sometimes seems. it is still the marvel
of most of the world. and the individual's right and
responsibility to panicipate by voting is the cornerstone of
that system.
Pete Wilson
In the California Senate race, the incumbent, Pete
Wilson. stands ahead of his challenger. Lt. Gov. Leo
McCanhy. in the polls and also, we think. in the
measurements upon which vo1crs need to make their
decision.
Wilson. now completing his first term, must be given
high credit for efficiencf -for quickness and results in
responding to the needs that arise among his constituents. He
has been particularly responsive to the pressing needs of San
Francisco arn1theBayarea,11rifhewett'a1'"C!ident of this area
rather than Southern California... ,
His opponant, McCa~y. likcwise is energetic and has I
good record in his present office and as a member and speaker
of the Assembly beforehand. But McCanhy ... has not
managed to undercut Wilson's Senate achievements with
either valid criticisms or new proposals.
The state can ill afford to replace Pete Wilson.
So FrocJ1co EnmJaer
Governor's AIDS stand
Gov. Deukmejian's announcement that he supports
Proposition I 02, the initiative that would abolish confidential
AIDS testing in California. is as ~l~nishing as it is appalling.
He has decided that the John Birch" Society, Lyndon
LaRouche and William Dannemeyer know more about
proper AIDS policy than his own Depanment of Health
Services. his own AIDS Leadership. Council and the federal
Cen1"rs for Disease Control and the state's leading AIDS
researchers. What on earth made him do it? ...
.. The governor has threatened aJI progress made to date
m controlling the AIDS epidemic in California,'' says D~r.
Marcus Conant, one of the nation's leading AIDS researchers
and chairman of the governor's own AIDS council. "T
gov~r:nor ~fllored the evidence and made a frightenin&
dec1S1on ....
Deukmejian has thrown his lot in with the lunatic fringe.
With unsteady decisions such as this one. DCukmejian looks
Im and less like the governor who once prided himself on
caution, moderation and concern with making government
work and more like one of them. S.cnmeato Bee
.)
~
ORANGE COAST ,. , ..
[..., ... ,.., "'"" .. ._
~Dwtcltf ...... llilJPillt
.... , Cludlrian
Pubtisher
~~-oftM~.t330 W .., It . 0.. ...... CA Mldf-
0911 I JI ldlllQll IO lof IMO. Cotla ....._CAfaat
.._...r...,
l•a.lt Mlws [Mlf .........
Cley CllMt
.... c.... ~[*« ......... ,...._,..[...,
c..i .... ..... ( ...
Ret.i~-., ,., ...
~ ........... ...... c......
er,... .....
~Office-. , ....
C.t.-..Ontltf _, ....
"*· Dir••
. .
Republicans and Democrats
wori-y about vot ing drop-off
Imagine this happening during the
early evening rush-hour today:
As commuters creep homeward ·
over California's ever-more jammed
freeways, they tum on their car radios
for the elecuoo-rctums. Thef team
that the Republican nationa ticket
has swept most of the Eastern and
Southern states. Although polling
places in California and otner Pacific
states will 'remain open for more than
an hour. George Bush's victory
already appears assured.
There's still more news. Local
broadcasters repon that while state voters arc turning out at the lowest
rate in 40 years. pollinJ places remain
jammed as voters struggle: through
one of the lonsest and most com-
plicated ?allots in California history.
Long waits arc common. That settles it for tens of thousands
of Cahforn1a weary commuters who
were planning to vote after they got home. They see no sense now st.and-
ing around in long lines to vote in an
election that's already been decided.
They haven't cared that much for
either candidate, anyway. They go
home and staytherr.-The droJH)ff in the late voter
turnout could ~rove even more
pronounced than 1t was in 1980, when
television networks projected Re-
publican Ronald Reagan s landslide
victory and then Democratic Presi-
dent Jimmy Carter conceded defeat.
Both actions took place before voting on the West Coast had ended. The
resulting droJH)ff in voting made the
Democratic elecuon disasler eidll
years ago aU the greater. Historicafly,
the la1e turnout in American elections
has been heavily Democratic, as
working-class v.oters finally find the
time to cast their ballots.
While many workers would have voted for Reagan anyway that year,
th ey still considered themselves
Democrats and probably would have
given strong majorities to the party's
candidates for lower offices -if they had vote<I. Their failure to do so is
believed to have caused the ouster of
at least two veteran Western Demo-
cratic congressmen who lost eleclion
squeakers, James Corman in a
Southern California district and AJ
Ullman in eastern ~on. Corman
lost to Republican Bobbi Fiedler, and
Ullman to ReRublican Denny Smith. MARTY
SMITH It's no wonder, then, that the
~ibility that history may repeat
atself this year in an even more
extreme form causes nightmares for
California Democratic strategists and today. .
candidates for Congress and the What's even more significant is
Legislature. They particularly worry that to a much greater extenl than in
about 1he possible effect a late-voter t 980 or 1984 these you_ngcr voters arc
drop-off would have on Sacramento identifving with the GOP. Jn 1980,
Assemblyman Phil lsenbcrg's only 20 perccnl of voters between 18
chances of political survival. Another fnd 29 iden1ified themselves as
Democratic incumbent, Con-Republicans; 42 percent said they
gressman George Brown , could also were Democrats. A New York Times-
be hurt in his Riverside-San CBS News pall this fall of this same Bcrriardino area district, where long-age group -whose members are now
distance commuting is a way of life between 26 and 37 -found them
and where GOP registration con-almost evenly split in party idcntifi-
tinues to increase. cation, 33 percent calling themselves
But one sccnano for a droJH)ff in Republican and 35 percent Dcmo-lat~ voting 1s very different from wbat crats.
happened eight years ago. At least a That's a highly signifii:ant deve!op-
few Republtcan·· strategists believe ment, one that is very enco~raging for
that a droJH)ff might have a negative the Republicans over the long term. It
impact not on the-9cmocrats buH> suggests that-the GOP is moving-e GOP candidates in California and the of its status as the nation's minority
rest of thl' Far West. Basic to these party, which it has been since the
Republican fears 1s a dramatic shift in 1930s. But in politics. even more than
the partisan allegiance of one major in most callings. the emphasis is on
group during the 1980s, young vo1e~. the here-and-now. and there's a
The GOP worry-warts reason this "possible shon-run downside for Re-
way: publicans in 1heir surge among
Eight years ago. as Carter's popu-younger citizens.
larity plummeted. many Democrats They're not failhful voters. Getting
crossed party lines to vote for Reagan them to the polls to actually cast
and chanjC. Most of them continued ballots has always been difficult. This
10 1dcnt1ty themselves as Democrats. time the problem could be all the
Now, as memories of Ctrter fade. greater, especially since so many now older Democrats arc more likely to are commu1ers. living,in their first
recall, instead, the party's years of homes, often far from work. Most in
glory under Franklin Roosevelt, this group probably plan to vote, if
Harry Truman and John F. Kennedy. ·they vote at all, in the evening.
These older Democrats arc returning Getting them to the polling place to their partisan roots. will be morcofa Rc;pubhcan problem
It's much different story with than ever before. If early presidential
younger voters, however. They have returns from the East seem con-
no memories of successful Demo-elusive, the problem will be all the
cra1ic presidents. Just as they sup-greater.
Ported Ronald Reagan in large Marti• Smltlt 11 • 1yadlc•ted
numbers, they're supporting Bush col•maht.
emocrats push vot~r turnout
to make upfor sagglng totals
GOP turnout effort is not as lavish,
depends more on volunteers than staff
The Republican turnout effort is
not nearly as lavish. counting more
on volunteers than on paid staff
SACRAMENTO -A blurb in the
most recent e<lnion of .. Party Lines,''
a political propa~nd~ sheet publis~
cd by the Cahforma Democratic
Party, proclaims that in the battle of
the trenches this year, "Demos won
the first phase -voter reaistration." Party Lines goes on to claim that Democrats won the battle of voter
rcAJstration by addina 0 nearly
700.000 new voters to our ranks in
1988."
The facts. cfs it turns out, arc
another story.
The facts arc that when rqjstntion
for the Nov. 8 election closed on Oct.
11, the much-vaunted Democratic
voter registration drive hid left the
party relatively weaker than 1t has
been since 1932.
The Democrats did sign up more
than 700,000 voters this year. Since
January, in fact, 808,729 new Dcmo-cnus have been·rCJistcn:d, bringing to
pany's total to 7,C>S2,)68.
But that represented less 1han 48
pertent of all new vouri rqitttted
durina the period. so 1he Oemocntic
petttntaae of voters actually declin~
ed. Jt wu SO. 7 percent when the year
bepn: now 1t'1 Just un6er '°·_. percent. Reaistrauon in Calib'nia
has topped l 4 million for the first
time. Republicans ~ up 680,,.98
durina the sunc period -more than ~ pttctnt of tht toul -to irwc• WWW:
their overall share from 38 ... to 38.6
percent.
RcP.Ublicans are daimina , wnh
statisiics to supp()n their claim, that
while Democrats did better betMen
January and Scpctmber, tbc OOP
came alive durina the pest month,
and ou1reg1stered the Democrats to
win the overall battle of numbers.
It means that Democratic slrcngth
has declined more than 2 full per-
centage points since the last prcsiden-1ial election in 1984, while that of
Republicans has increased by a like
amount, con1inuin1 a trend tha1
began in 1he late 1970s. .
A once.enormous pp in voter registration has been cut in half since Democrats reached their peak of
voter registration in the mid-1970s.
Thal doesn'1 count "deadwood," the
names of hundreds of thousands of
voters who have died or moved bul
remain on the rolls because of quirks
in the rqjstration system.
The official "deadwood" count is 9
percent, which translates into more
than a million ~os&s. Some estimates
run over I .S million.
Whatever the number, elimination
of the deadwood would reduce
Democratic rqistra1ion to less than SO percent, and problbly raise that of
Republicans to m::Jhan 40 percent. To ldjutt for wood, pollner
Mervin f"idd utet a survey sample of
,.9 percent Democrats and 4 I percent
Republicans. for example.
The rta10ns for the Democratic
decline arc many, indudin-taina of
the electorate, and the pany s ttn• failure to ti"'1 up Alaana and Hit-panicl to rcP&ace Anab wbO hive
~vitated to the Rcpablican Party.
It's a phenommoa CIDCdlllJ evi-dent ia tM ._., -. .. ~· subu"9n CW.-With ti 1
teailU'ltjon cffont finished,
cnt1 ha~ now loll nwo fannct at~ Rivenidt 8ftd Sen ~rdiftO()C)Ufttia, '° RelNblic:ua. Ai a -. Southern C.Jilomia it vtry ~· Republican dolnlnuq;
M the If miipl8ced DailocratJC
DAN
WALTERS
claims of victory "in the voter regis-
tration skirmish im~icd, it was only
the "first-phase•• of the bettle for
California.
Leaden ofboth penies would aaru
with GOP orpmur Bill .Hu~y·s
sta1ement that "voter rqistrat1ons
don't count in elections."
What does count is turnout. Demo-
crats are hopina they have the edge in
that arena.
Inspired by the successes of grass-
roots tumou1 drives in several recent
campai&f\S, such as Sen. Alan
Cranston•, narrow re.election victory
in 1986, Democraas have Poured
unpteeedented amounts of money
inlo a compuaer~riven voter 1umout
network this year on behalf of
presidential candidate Michael Dukakit and U.S. Senate hopeful Lt. Gov. Leo McC.att.hy. .
There are 92 field offioet and 46S
f'ull-tune orpnizers directina the drive, aimed at muimwna the
Democratic voce on Nov. 8.
11 will work, the Democnu believe.
if Dukakis' own cam pa~ etroru can
bri .. him to within 4 or 5 pen:ltn~ Poifttt of Republican OCIOfJe BUlh an
the •te. The turnout can produce the
... h pen:n• poinu to win. tbc
Detnom& believe .
Tbe Republicaa turnou1 cft'on is
9* nC8rty • levilh. COUJtliftl more
on volun1em than on paid l\llr. Bu= whilt ocxurred durina the finl VCMef replU'IUon, tbc ~ icam alto uve 1a1 pound 10 11p. ...... ,, . ,, . ..,
c 7 'rl
l
I Lf 1 l f fl',
I
Was Ramstetn
.afr show really
·a tragedy?
•
To the f.ditor. · .
Is the Ramstein air lho~ ~·~er really a trqedy? Most "vtcums of this cawtrophc, no matter how b1.trt
they were, admit 1hat they We>uld aaam 10 to the next air show. Lust for
tt\e sensational makes bloodblths
ac:ceptable, to wit: instead of fleeing.
many spectators ran towards the
holocaust. · . . It is foolish to speak of vtctJms.
They are victims and perpetrJtC?rs ~~ the same time; the perpetratoru lt1s
own vic1im. Responsible for• the
disaster are the organizers of the show
as well as the spectators. Ramstcin is testimony for human
stupidity and ncgliaencc by the
Rambo-style military e~tabli~f!lcnt
1hat is trying to glonfy m1htary
apparatus. PETER WEISBROD
Laguna Beach
Steal from rich,
not poor.people
To the Edi1or: O~n lcuer to t~ieves. It s happened again. The battery for
my 14-year-old. car was stolen ~t
11ight. I am a single, self-supportmg
parent struggling to suppon myself
and my young son. I need the use of
my old car to get to work. Wl'.!en I get
ripped off. I have two cho1tes: 10
hungry or short the landlord who
wouJd probably fine me for beina late.
For God's sake i(you are too stupid
of lazy to work for a livinaand choose
to steal for food and drugs do it in the
more affluent areas where a missing batlcry and cut battery cables a.re no
more than a passing irritation or a
minor inconvenience. Leave us low
income people in Costa Mesa alone.
J.ARVALOS
Costa Mesa
Whales are free,
now help people
To the Editor:
The whales arc fret! Headline news
everywhere. A sto~ followed in detail
as whales, trapped m ice, arc released.
Now let's-Wm our 1ho1.tgbt1--to
children, young men and women and
the qcd. trapped outdoors in the cold
and rain because all doors are locked.
Imagine it. Think about it. And then
do something.
Seek out a mission or organization
thal is really helping the bomeless.
Support them with your money, used clothing, some food, even perhaps
some of your time. You will never
regret 11.
MARGARET CRlNGLE
,Laauna Beach
Chief liked
Pilot story
To the Editor:
I am writing this letter 10 express
my satisfaction with the story Paul
Archipley wrote about Officer Glen
Fisher sa viog the life of a five-day-old
infant on Oct. 7.
Although police officers do good
deeds on a regular basis1 it seems that normally the negative issues receive
the media's attention. The incident
with Officer Fisher 1ouchcs the lives
of many people and was an cvcnl
which many of them will remember
throu&)lout their lives. I feel this story
gave your readers -a more re:atistic
perspective of their Police Dcpan-
mellt.
I commend Paul Archipley for an
excellent acoount of this incident and
I look forward to more of this type of
positive news coverage.
ARB CAMPBELL
Chicfof Police
Newpon Beach
' TODA Y IN HI STORY
Today is Monday, Nov. 7, the
312th day of 1988. There are S4 days
left in the year.
Today's Hiahliaht in History:
On this date:
In 187 .. , the Republican Pany was
symboliud as an elephant for the first
ume in a cartoon drawn bX Thomas Nast in "Harper's Weekly.
In l 9 t 6J. Republican Jeannette
Rankin of Montana became the first
woman elected to Con~.
In 1940, the Tacoma Narrows Bfi41e in Wuhinaton state collaptecl
durif'.'I a windstorm that sen1 the
2,SOO:foot spen cratbin1 into f>utet
Sound. ...
In 194-41 Franklin D. Raotevelt
won a founh term i11 office, defeatina Republican Thomas E. ()ewey. rn 196; Richard M. Nilon1 havifta
lost California'• 1ubemal0rial race.
htl4 what he caJlcd bis "luc nreu
conkrenclc.'' .elJina ~ponenc-.ryc;u
won't have Nilon to kick around
anymore.'"
In 1972, Preaident R~ M.
Nixon wu ~~ in a ludllide
over Democnia Oeoree McOoWra.
Five~19D:A bombujloded in the U.S. Capuol, isUurill-9o aM;
Sovla llldlr Y•FV;~~ •iled to .,.. up few die .....
Revolutiolt Qay ... Pl 1 'tot ~ ... _..._.u.s.i!
ca1 :::rc" no w .._ • ilWDd o;_. at IM.._ fJI
U.S...W iaVllioa, ., n. 1d rr oil rof ftlill
Air Force honors
sonofFVman
s,t. T.,. M. O'Hnu, &on of
Thomu O'Hehir Jr. of Fountain
Va.Uey1 hu been decorated with the secono award of the .A:ir Force
Achievement Medal at George Air
fOl'Ce Base: Calif. He is an adminis-
tration supervisor with the 831st Supply Squadron. • • • Petty Officer 3rd Class Marca A. u ...... a 1986 araduatc of Edison
Hitb School~ recently made P.C?rt vi11ts in Sinppore and the Ph1Up-
pi~ while deployed in the western
Pacific aboard the aµided missile
destroyet USS Goldsborou&h, based
in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
• • ••• Second Lt. Ternee J. Glholi, son
Jack and Carol Noel of L.qul\a
Niaucl, has completed a six-month
dq>loyment to the western Pacific aboard the amphibious transport
dock USS Juneau, based in San
Dicao. ••• Suu D. ~l'Mk, dau&htcr of
James an<s Melva Ashbrook of
Laauna Hills, has completed training
in 1undamenta1 military skills at the
Army ROTC Camp Challenge: at Fort
Knox, Ky. She is a student at Cal P,oly San Loil Obispo.
• • •
Scaman Recruit Patrkt C. Clovea
of Laauna Niaucl has completed his
training, at the Recruit Traininl
Command in San Diego. fie i$ a 198
graduate of Dana Hills High School.
of retired Col., Robert and Judith
Gibson of Huntinaton Beach, has
sracfuated from Air Force pilot train-
ing and has received silver wings at • • •
Williams Air Fo~ Base, Ariz. He is a Lance Cpl. Kevia G. Jeut.ss, son
1982 paduate of Huntington Beach of .Qeorge Jennings of Hunt1nJton
Hi&h School and a 1987 graduate of Beach, participated in the combined
the Air Force Academy. arms exercjse 5-88. He is serving w1fh
• • • the lst Marine Division at Camp S&eve D. Tru, son of Duone Tran p di and Thu Ha Thi Vo of Huntington en eton. • • •
Beach, has completed training in Ensign R•1sell E. Perry, son of
fundamel1tal mihtar:y skills at the Kenneth and Laura Perry of New_port
Anny ROTC Camp Challenge.at Fort Beach, was designated a navaJ night Knox~ Ky. He is a student at Cal State officer upon completion of the tac-
Long ljC&Ch. tical naV1gation phase with Training
·Ens=· Ruaii j_ Lyacll son of Jay Squadron 86 at lhe Naval Air Station
and arcia Lynch of Huntington in Pensacola, Fla. He is a 1979 araduate of Newport Harbor Hi&h Beach, was commissioned in his School and-a 198-S graduate of Cal present rank upon gradualion from S f··"--the NROTCUnitatthe University of tate ~,on .• • •
San Dicao. He is a I 98S graduate of ey.~ C. Sawyer, daughter of
Marina Hi&h School. Arthur Sawyer of Laguna Ni1uel and
Lance Cpl. oie:. D. Bowe, whose Carole Allen of Laeuna Hills, has
wife is the former Kathy York of completc<rttaining in fundamental
Huntin""on Beach, has been awarded military skills a\ the Anny ROTC e• Camp Challenge at Fort Knox. Ky. the Marine Corps Good Conduct She is a student at UC Santa Barbara. M~. He is currently serving at the • • •
Manne Co~ Air Station New Ri ver Cadet Jay E. Lhlffmua: son of
in Jaclcsonv1lle, N.C. Mary Linneman of Huntington
Seaman Rec~ii*B;aclley fl. Hiwds, Beach, received practical work in
SOn of Barbara Hiwds of Huntington military leadership at the Anny ROTC advanced camp in Fort Lewis. Beach, has completed his training at Wash. He is a student at Cal State the Recruit training Center in Orlan-Long Beach.
do, Fla. • • • • • • Lance Cpl. Daa S. Erber, son of Cadet Glu J. Kim,. dauahte~ of George and Carmen Erber of Hunt-
Cbuck and Young Ja Kim of lrv11:1e, ington Beach, recently participated in ~as completed an ROTC field tnu~-the combined arms exercise S-88 . He
ing encampmC".'t at ~cClellan Air is currently serving with the I st
Force Base, Cahf. .She ~s a student at -Marine Division at Camp Pendleton. San Jose State University. • • • • • • Pre. David L. Recla, son of Chen
Scaman Apprentice David C. Reda of Huntington Beach. was
Upa.. a 1987 graduate of Edison meritoriously promoted to his prcs-
High School, has reported for duty ent rank upon Jraduation from aboard the frigate USS Knox. based training at the Manne Corps Recruit
in Lona Beach. Depot m San Diego. He is a 1987
• • • graduate of Ocean View High School. Cadet Kimberly A. Moor, daugh-
ter of Michael and Gina Manor of
Huntington Beach. received pracucal
work in military leadership at the
Anny ROTC advanced camp at Fon
Lcwts, Wash. She is a student at
Seattle University. • • • • Naval Lt (j.g.) Jack S. Noel, son of
• • • Cadet Andrew Stroa1, son of Dr.
John Strong of Corona del Mar.
received practical work in military
leadership at the Army ROTC ad-
vanced camp at Fort Lewis. Wash. He
is a student at San Diego State
University.
' I
•
... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Nowmber 7, 1M8 A8
Dear Fountain ,Valley Residents:
, ' '
During_ the past 24 years, George Scott bu .dectlcated
himself to the betterment of our community. As current
City Council member, former City Council Member, Mayor
and Fountain Valley Businessman, we strongly urge your vote
for MAYOR GEORGE JI. SCOTT for his nturn to the Fountain
· Valley City Council.
· George began working for . o~ city in 196• as a Ch~r Park and
Recreation Commissioner. Hew~ elected to the City touncii in 1969 and
served until 1978. George sened as our Mayor for two terms during these years. He retumed to the
Council in 1984 and is currentlr serving as our Mayor. George has worked very bard io make
Fountain_y alley _the Jovely residential city it is 1oday.
George's unmatched experience and knowledge of our city government, civic involvement and
personal commitment, promise to keep Fountain Valley the best place to live and work -for today
· and tomorrow.
Please remember to vote on November 8.
·• Endorsed by all four ctµTent incumbent city council members
FRED VOSS • BARBARA BROWN • LAURAN~. COOK • DR .. JIM NEAL
I love Fountain Valley ...
My goal is to take Fountain Valley into the next
decade as a financially sound city. But most
important, I intend to keep Fountain Valley the
best place to live and work -for today and
tomorrow.·
Mayor George B. Scott
PAIO POLITIC.&L ADVERTISEMENT PAID POLITICAL AOVERTISEME~ •
FREE MOVIE SCREENING A PROVEN LE AD E R
..
SPONSORED BY •
b @lle ry
bl us
SCREENING
Wednesday
November 9th
8:00 PM
Pick Up YoW'
Complimentary
Ticketa At
Pottery Plu
5015 V W. Ediqer
(at Euelid)
in the new
'/ALLEY C ENTER -
. '
Daily Pilat -
Inde pe ndent
•
~-Doi>~ 4::~ ... ..........
~,..,.,
.... A,,,.. ................... ..., ... a.....-v...,....,... ...... .......... s....,. ....
~ ... llillry .....
T ~ ...... ..,~.
fOf!I~
lllWC... e.-.c.. -.c:w~-.... ca.-91. .. OlfWI
Works hard to
• Maintain the quality of l1f e for resi dents
• Improve and balance traffic circulation
• Preserve the vHlage ident1t1es within
Newport Beach
• Provide parks. large and small
• Support a second airport
• Keep our harbor clean
Endorsed by.
(partial hst)
Newport Beach Pire Fighters Association
Newport Beach Police Department Employees Association
Newport Harbor Republican Assembly
Harbor Area Board of ,t1ealtors
Bae Pac -Newport Chamber of Commerce
. ....... ...
~ ... v-.w..
UlllNIWMI .... ~ ------...... ...
..
AlO Mond8y, Nowmber 7, 1888 / DAILY PILOT
ABC's 'War and Remembrance' a worthy spectacle
NEW YORK (AP)-Director Dan
Curtis had his work. cut out for him
with ABC's .. War and Remem-
brance," a ~uel to one of the most-
watched telev1s1on events of all time.
the 1983 epic he also directed, "The
Winds of War." / Based on the first 18-hour install-
menr of .. War and Remembrance "
Curtis bas himself a masterpiece of a
war movie, interrupted too of\en by
tedious subplots and silly romantic
interludes.
The $1 10 million budget bought a
heck of a production. The locations,
sets, costumes. cars and special effects
arc spectacular.
ABC rushed the first 18 hours of the
32-hour monster onto the screen this
month, three months ~rly1 because
of scheduling gaps causco by the
sumrper writers' strike. "War and
Remembrance" commences Sunday.
The rest will air in 1989.
Both miniseries were based on
]ierrnan Wouk's epic novels. "The
Winds of War" followed Victor
"Pug" Henry and his family throu&h
the events leading up to World War
II. "War and Remembrance" takes
them through the war.
Wouk. kept control ofhi~ork, co-
writing the ICT'CCnplay and restricting
the number and types of commercials
ABC could air. Woulc wisely felt it
would be inappropriate to juxtapose
powerfully paphic material with
pitches for burgers and fries.
There have been cast chanfes since
"The Winds of War... s your
scorecard handy?
R9ben Mitchum, nbw-70. is back
as Pug. He wanoo old for the role five
years ago, and although he doesn't
dodder, he 1s so profoundly taciturn,
you wish SO(Yleone would takt his
pulse -or at least offer him an
eyelif\. Now commander of a cruiser
in the Pacific fleet, he has broken off
bis almost-affair with plucky Pam,
played nicely again by Victona Ten-
nant. who is off on a world tour y.iith
her BBC oommcntator uncle, Alijtair
Tudsbury (Roben Morley).
Polly Bergen is also back as Rhoda.
Pug's ditsy wife. She has resumed her
inexplicable affair with the re-
markably dull Palmer Kirby (Peter
Graves). Their romantic seen~ qual-
ify as high camp. "Palmer, take me to
your apanment!" "Is that what you
really want?" "WhJt do you think.
OU fool!"
Y Steven Berkoff is a kitsclly. full-tilt
Hitler, .blood vessels popping. Ralph
Bellamy does his impression of
franklin Rooeeveltatcheerful nitwn.
It's hard io imuine pinil'_ll for the
1tteeachansma of Ali Mc:Graw, but
Jane X)'rnour is bonnl u Na&alie, the
Jewish older woman married to Pua's
son, Byron. Byron is now played by
the capable Hart Bochner, replacing
Jail-Michael Vincent Natalie an~ her
famouwuthor uncle -Sir John
Gielpd rcplacin1John Houseman-
traipse tecbously about Europe ~ing
to escape the Nazis. Bill Walhs is
wonderfully oily as the German
official who pases as their protector.
Michael Woods successfully re-
places Ben Murphy as son Warren.
Leslie Hope replaces Lisa Eilbacher as daughter Madeline, but doesn't
have much to do this time around.
David Dukes returns as Leslie Slote,
the Stat~ Dcpanment drone wh~
yearns to prove the rumors of Nazi
atrocities.
Ahhou,h the miniseries is fraulht
wath too many oomings and aoings
and so-nice-to-meet-yous, Curtis has manated io keep th1np apece with
1pcctaele in just about every episode.
The battle ~nes arc stunnina. The
fint episode Includes some of the best
submarine scenes since .. Das Boot."
Bal'!)' Bostwick &ives a fint-rate
performance as Byron's buddy and
commanding officer, cigar<homping
Caner .. Lady" Aster.
In the third episode: PuJ and
Warren fight in the battle of Midway.
Again1 the scenes are worthy of a
theatncal film, even in the roua.h cut
given to rcviewen. The.scenes snould
be even more s~tacular in the finaJ
version.
The concentration camp sccoes are
the most j>owerful such depictions
television has ever seen. They .arc .to
graphic, ABC will run adv1sor:ics
before episodes 2 and 7 warn.ma
viewers. Adding to the palpable ev1l l1
the. knowJed~ 1hat Cunis ~lmcd at
actual concentration camp sates.
Although they are rather rotund for
conoentration camp.iJlternees. Tos><>I
·and John Rhys-Davies are compell-
ing as Bercl and Sammy, relc_P,led to
a dwindJing w~rk deta~I that 1s forced
10 dig up <iccay1n1 bochcs from a mass ~vc so the Nazis can bum ~he
evia nce oflhe massacre. . ;ft the end of seven episodes,
viewers arc left in 1943 with Na~lie
and her uncle in peril, Pug rcu.ni~
with Pamela i11 Moscow, H1t~r s
generals considerina assassinauna
him Berel making a desperate escape.
and 'erron a reflective war hero.
Tune in next year. .
"Impressive musicianship (rom Fldr and Berlin Symphony
A majestically paced, nuance-filled
performance by East Germany's Ber-
lin Symphony Orchestra filled the
Orange County Performing Ans Sat-
urday.
Presented by the Orange County
Philharmonic SocieJY and conducted
by Claus Peter Flor the Berlin
orchestra proved itself for most of the
concert to be a welJ-oiled machine
that at the same time is capable of a
wide range of emotions, shadings and
moods.
Flor a young, shon, likable cbn·
ductor radiated energy from the
podium. His was no ostentatious
display of histrionics a la Leonard
Bernstein or Michael Tilson Thomas,
but a precise, anima1ed show offirst·
rate technique and musjciansh1p.
Conducting from memory, Aor
apeeared to know every phrase
intimately and molded each one
accordingly. Prone to huge strokes
that nonetheless differ in terms of
loud and soft dynamics, he demon-
strated expressive mastery with both
his left hand and the baton.
The primarily youttiful orchestra
responded with disciplined ensemble
MICHAEL
RYBZYISll
playing and a likewise thorough
knowledge of the music at hand. The
loudest dynamics were never over-
bearing, the softest effected with
pristine evenness. The stongs more
than made up for their occasional
harshne55 with controlled yet intense
drive and a clear tone that wenl with
and not against the hall's acoustics.
T he woodwind were at their best in
delicate passages and the brass when
not forcing their projection. while
percussion J•lmost exclusively tim-
pani") provi ed dramatic suppon and
comments.
Antonin Ovorak's Symphony No.
9 in E Minor, "from the New
World,"Op. 95 (1893), the program's
centerpiece, became the Berliners'
tour de force. Erom the very morose
opening emphasizing the score's
solitary amb1e._ace to the su?:~ly resel-v~ coda.of .sclf-ass~rcd vmlny,
the performance reveled in countless
touches that added immensely to the
overall picture.
Other highlights in the Dvorak
included the English horn solo in the
slow (second) movement that in its
poignancy brouBJlt out more of a
pastoral than spiritual quali.ty, and a
scherzo ~xpansavely and snajest!cally
stated without any trace of we1ght1-
ness. -
Soloist Michael Erxleben managed
to excel with Dmitri Shostakovich's
Violin Conceno No. I in A Minor,
Op. 99 ( 1948). A difficult work to
listen. t~. especially on first hearin~
the conccno was made more than
palatable through Erxleben's genuine
fervor m plumbing the depths of the
tonured Russian coml?Oser's soul .
Time and time again, ErxJeben's
technical expef'\,isc and very moving
phrasing -lingering sometimes and
proceeding in other pla~ made the
rather lensthy work heartfelt and
sympathetic.
The concert opened with a
tboroughly delightfully-inter-
pretation of Sergei Prokofiev's Sym-
phony No. I in D Major, "Oassc1al,"
Op. 25 (1916). Flor looked to have
been enjoying himself a great deal.
and that feeling of exuberance trans-
mitted to the orchestra and then to the
audience. ---
Radio stations to air rock concert for UNICEF , .
....... A-·M'Ca ClllOUl'-
A ....
i31-40 -
•1 Old Newpclf't atwd. N.a.
Across from L• B•arritr
Costa Mesa Chamber Of Commerce
Endorses The Following
For CITY COUNCIL
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Crosby,
Stills, Nash & Young, Jackson
Browne, Randy Newman and other
rock stars are joining forces for a four-
hour nationwide radio concen to
raise money for UNICEF and other
Comt £0 AWens lof II your myl "*"' needs
Only speclllists QI! sent you perlecUy'.
~DEN'S
16'S P'!Ktfttll Att.. Cost> 11N. CA (11•> 6*Cll
children's organizations.
More than 125 stations are ex-
pected to panicipate in Saturday's
broadcast, which will be hosted by
Graham Nash from the Palace
Theatre. The benefit concert hopes to
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
.... ,_.., c...i""'
1122 ..... ll"~ m ra •SA-S41-1151
raise SS00.000 through telephone _ Proceeds from the radiothon will
pledges for the U.S. Committee for be donated to the "Children of the
Hunger and World Hunger Year. Americas" fund and equally divided
Nash is the creative force behind between the U.S. Committee for
the "Children of the Americas" UNICEF and World Hunger Year to
radiothon, now in its second year. benefit children in the United States
which stems from his involvement and Central America.
with WNEW-FM's annual 24-hour Last year's broadcast raised
Hungenhon. $250,000, which was used for chil-
Hc explained that as an activist, he dren's immunization shots.
had to choose between countless "for SS, we could immunize a
benefits organized to ease the world's child against seven major diseases,"
troubles. said' Nash .
"I wanted to start with the basic Some of the radio stations partici-
JIM FERRYMAN
element -the children." he said in a pa ting arc co-anchors Kl.SX-FM in ~;;;;;;::::;;;;;;;;:=;:::=::;;::;;:,;;;;;:,J====;-;,,........,=====-====~ telephone interview. "You have to Los Angeles and WNEW-FM in New think what's important to you. I York, KROR-FM in San Francisco,
decided to concentrate on the ch1l-WBCN-FM in Boston, WCKG-FM
dren and improving their life from in Chicago and WCSX-FM in De· . .
ED GLASGOW
MARY HORNBUCKLE
Propositions
For Measure
H & I
G
Yes 0
No 0
•
I 11l Jll<ll1 Jll: ..
• U·2 lbttte & Hum 1"·13)
I 11l.H1:2' 1:2' ltlt
JO Dll 'OSTf II
*THE ACCUSED (R)
U:tl I a I • 1·a tt:•
•ALIEN NATION (R)
.. "1'111:11
THEY LIVE (A)
""'Ce<ltll ....._111111
A FISH CA&.LED WAMDA (R)
PlUS•I (Pll
U·2
Rattte & HwM ('0·13) ............ ,..,
ALIEN NAT10N IR)
PUI Dtf llAllD Clll
-111in-.1•H -........ , .. lllM Llt
HMll U fllll MUU HTtD
ELECT GENEVA MATLOCK ro NEWPORT BEACH CITY COUNCIL
ptAWrfAl. UST CW E.N.00.URS
.JoMlN.OIW
Joe Ac.OIW
Tom~cr~
11\/Ml V ""'1:1f f'WI, M 0
~...-
J-sld
Joan~
CrwNll.oN kt""" 0.wld~g.MO
Lynn~rg
~9otn
GMylrown
Judyll•own
MIK'J l'\l'V'I llrunlOfl
Tomllrumon
"" lrynl¥Slt• MMgf luti.t
I J flk>C>f 91Jtipr
MMY~' MMp-rt I C,..,....,,
AndnwCtrs.M 0
lrslle Ctrs
CMotyn Clue.ts
I H fOk-1 CluUs
JMW COOllr
l lchllrd C COOllr
W1llam F Copps. M 0
Souymy.t Cl\llUl'VMt•
ll<Nrd F CIVCr
0-CIVCtendrn
J.lmes C Ml""°""
lutll r DI CitUHpflt' c ntystel w Ooole'y J ~MO
l.oulW b-s:on
·~flmelotf
Vlrgonlol fngllSh
Mrs Nlrff f' rfUCM!Nn
,_,~
I' ICatllefWW F.tttOfl'*S M.wp~ G.w<!Mr
CyGofOon
Etalnt CiorOon
Loulw s Ci<retry
=~ ... JOwptll~ ~ ~ H""'""°"° Ootlg S H.,,
Youngl'Un
NCf'WIPH H¥ril
OonHarwy
'Mt.YH...-.y J_,~,M O a... Hollndlf. M 0
,_,'/AM~
Oorocrty Houghron vemt~ OOrotr,y~ ...,.,•"Y•t lructHNI
C J"ldlia HUI Myrl'tf .l«Olltol'I
Ott'°"'-' --. '°""'°" NM<yl{.-fU11f!W I l{CKPI. M 0
$4btt1H kom
THE RESIDENTS' FRIEND
Oppoaent #1: A Realtor -The Developers'
Friend_
Opponent #2: Lumber Company Owner -
The Developers' Friend
Opponent #3: The Incumbent -The
Developen' Friend who voted
fot: Super exean1ion of Newport
Center, 703 Bonua De111ity for
projed in west Newport'• hl1b
denaity 20ne.
The "growth at any price" philoeophy
baa created problems in Newport Beach
LET'S SOLVE T HEM!
VOTE F9R .GENEVA MATLOCK
day one. They are the future." troit.
-·-_..__ ·----..... ·--...-~-·· ~~-... -·--(--___ .. ··-.. _ ·~ -----· ·-.... --.,,._
............ rma1.-9"t'TIM~ ........ '2W11••.,.u1 11•2111""._-. .. n• ••..-O ...........
'""' "" .... ~ '* ...
ICUT AtllCMll&&T MleMllf ,.. ...
•Gmc-i
'"' ,. .... It, ... ""
IOI.If I U I l lt!N CMlllll _ _,, -·-.... , ........... .....
,.
-
"'''!>''"'''
~~ 1\I ~·,,, ~·· ,..,
·-.. ~ -----·"-----.. _
PRUDalVDY
(714) 848-1007
11612 ... Lene • Huntington IMd'I
... , Jt&l .-u.tlDll . .. _flll . ......... , ..
9(11.Ht-*MCA ~ .........
MmOl'f'S Ml.._. 1111
UJ• UI l1U 7:.tl lltU
llUI ..-•!lllOle IOllll
111Clllt ~ ll. ... lMStJl1o411M
Wlf MMOll _.
NDLM1111 IL ... >llt>U ...... M
....... ... _ . .......
IOllT~Ull9
-...u'f
WllllOlfAClll CNI
l1Ua:•lt11IMMtU
.,...,_
•'f1'KNJA .. ,,..ar.u11•r1tt ...
IOUT lft90L'W(CA.,._T/ ..,_
'"'WI HI 1.:'!r.'.~
~-~ .. , .. ·-= .. ,,.,..,._, ----... .......
\
ringing music to the youngsters
The 7~plus fashion viewers at
.. Rainbows of R.hythm," the .29th
annual ~t for t6e OraDIC Coun~
Philharmonic Society Women •
mitten. are still tllkina about tbe mow opener. •
Thineen children. aaes 4 to 12,
came marchina on the runway at the
Irvine Marriott carryina musical
instruments. They wore the latest
styles for the youna set and at the
same time represented what the
commiltees"are all about -children
and music.
"The instruments are from our
music mobile (a travelina van that
visits school to introduce the sym-
phony orchestra)," Slid Marda C'ey,
chairwoman ~of the fashion sho~.
"We reached 300,000 children each
year throuah free concerts and r.outh
Pf'!JVlmS. Some of these chtldren
mJlht not otherwise be exposed to aoOd music. Their eyes liaht up and it
fnakes our hearts light -what we do
worthwhile.••
Proceeds from the show are esti-
mated between $40,000 and $45,000.
BWv Walle~ fashion director,
for Saks Fifth A venue, South Coast
Plaza, coordinated the show of
fashions for men and women plus
those of the "youth band" members.
Seated at the head table were the
chairwoman with husband Wanea
C.1, Committees chairwoman Sara
MallarhJ and husband Ray...._
Lym GMpler, manager Sf A. Erldt
Vellmer, executive d irector of0CPS1 Na11e1 Peec•. OCPS president, ano
J.ek Cal41weU. OCPS board chair-
man.
Show committee members in-
cluded Je7ee ReaUle, Wuda Cobb,
Pat Peftlu, Lava MeKeever,
Marll,a Getdta, Marcia Hams, a..... .. a1r. J .... Halv& Gl•rla llaaeU. Jue Grier, Law-
raee, Nuey C.x, Betty .. weluer,
MJau O.tu11er, Norma Clapp,
8UrM Upp, Pegy Crosby and
CUtatel Sdar. • • • The following evening some of the
same OCPS supporters turned out for
a conoen at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center featuring
cello virtuoso Yo-Yo Ma with Andre
Previn conducting the Los Angeles
Pilhannonic Orchestra.
Afterwards the OCPS board of
directors hosted a reception at, the
Center Oyb. Welcomina guests were
BJ CllAIUJ!:S GOREN
u4I OMAR SllAIUP
Q.1-As South, vulnerable, you
bold:
• AQ91'731 'V J'4 <> ' + A3 The bidding bas proceeded:
Nordl Fat Sotttla Wat
I 0 P.. I+ Pus
1 0 Paa ?
Wllat do ou bid now?
A.-lf you play that a jump rebid in
your own suit is forcing, then you
can jump to three spades. In the
modern style, however, that would
be only invitational, so you would
have to jump to four spades.
Q.l-Ncither vulnerable, as South
you hold:
•07431 'VQ53 0 7' +QIJ
The bidding has proceeded:
Nortll East ScHlt11 West
l+ Paa t+ Pus
2NT Pall !
What action do you take? I A.-There is a common misconcep-
~
AUTO FACTS ,.
"' ., ...•. , .... '"°" .
Fiil FH TllNIT
MUI 1 tveHntection system. 1 computer
_.. how much fuel is needed and
IM(en out the proper amount into • SlfleS
of injlctof (IOUtes. The noz.ztes. on further
command from the computer. prowidt
indiwidull sprays for each cytindet, insttld
of 1 ctrburator's sincle spray tor all
cpndm at once. Ewery time the driver
sttps on the ps pedal, a new series of
CMCM!ltf calcullbons IS tJWerld. The
pedll opens a •lht that muuses ttlt
..,.. of air entwq the tfWM's ifttlkt
!Mftljold. The compilter instantly reacts bJ
~ w flow to -"" speed Md
'"" flqWttMnts IS wel IS tftCNlt lftd ilcOlllinc llr teftlptfltllfts. It thtcl ~
.. ttlt proper fuel Mlllrt Ind direch I
• ., of psoline toward ach cytinder. The
,.... IS tffUftt combusbon wtttl I INfli.
... of ...... '"'· = If row cal ha • fUI! ... systeM.,
• 1t delft by ~ 111 occlS90flll td of
• ~-"dltle1111t" ps. If ttlt cal ,...,
......,, die "'*"' .., be ih ti.
CllllJ ......... tM ...... b
.... Hirt It C&f ... --...
.... .... .. ,...., Oft vw ... w .
... ,. •••• ., llcMld .. -,...
11. o,. u 1or row co11:1n1111ce. 111. • .... o .... ,. --by AM. ...., __ ......
fir ""1 .... tf ... ClllU•I•, ............ ,... ...... ......
. ..... ... ..,,......
llellMa Brandl and Pe&a llartlD at Center Club. Jadltb lft7, Wanda Cobb.
Yo-Yo Ila, Pfancy.Poech and Andre Prnt.n. En Schneider. Ollle mu and llarcla Coy.
N~cy Posclt and her husband Frank, Hot and cold buffet selections and
Saaaa and Bob Beecnei; Jeff and bite-size desserts were being selected
Bmy Pero and the Mullarkeys. by guests including Alisoa Buer,
Other -board member there were MJml and Hal BlrUraiat, Patricia
Eva and Fred sqDelder, LH and and Bea DolSOD, Patricia Had'-
LeManl Joaes and Dick and Saady Jue Grier, Vtrp.aia and C•rtls
Scllw,n1telD. _ Herberts, Jue Lawsoa and duaghter
tion that North's jump to two no
trump is a game force. Not sol lt
shows a hand of 19-20 points, and
partner can bow out of the auction
if he does not think he has enough
for game. This hand surely quali-
fies: 6 soft points and no source of
.tricks. Pass.
Q.4-Both vulnerable, as South you
hold:
+A973 'V954 .. O Q64 +AQ5
The biddini has proceeded:
Nortb Eat io•~ Wat
I 'V Pa11 1 • Pus
2 + Pus 1
What do you bid now?
Liu Segrettl, S..roa McNally1 Grulella and Dould 0.tmau ano
Beuie and BRce Pate.
Also, Mary and Roe Rt~moecl,
Helaa Relascla and son Riclaard, Mel
and L1ada Cbmben, David an~
Peggy Martla aad M~lltta Brudl.
?
What do you bid now?
A.-You made a simple two-club
rebid at your first rum because or a
possible misfir. Now that partner's
jump preference has allayed your
fears on that score, it is time to
make your move. Ask for aces with
four no trump.
Q.3-Both vulnerable, as South you
hold:
A.-Don'l bid no trump with such a
poor diamond stopper.. especially
since partner has shown an unbal-Q.6-As South, vulnerable, you
anccd band. He must have five hold: +J 'V AKQJ109J OQ<t +ASl
The bidding has proceeded:
North East Soutll West
hearts on this auction, so you can + IU94J 'V A6 0 AJl6Sl •Vold
support his first suit. But you are The bidding has proceeded:
100 strorrg for a mere preference to Soutb Wttt North East 1 0 Pus 2 'V Pass
.. 3 0 Pua ? two hearts, and your Oat shape 1 ? Pass 1 + l •
makes four hearts unappealing. A ! What do you bid now? jump to thr~ hearts feels just right. What do you bid now'?
A.-Partncr's rebid should remove
any worry you might have about
two fast losers in the diamond suit.
Ask for aces and kings by using the
Blackwood Convention. If he shows
two aces and two kings, bid a grand
slam in hearts. Otherwise, a small
slam is enough.
Q.S-As South, vulnerable, you
hold:
+6 'V AKQ102 O A7 +K.11064
The bidding has proceeded:
Soatb West North Eat
1 'V Pass 1 + Pass
2 • Pass 3 \J Pass
ELECT DON CHANEY
FOUNTAIN VALLEY CITY COUN91L
,
Don Chaney
ll year restdent of Fountain Valley
"Action with· integrity"
As a retired peace officer, I understand our citizens' con-
fem5, and rleht to be safe from criminals. I will support our
:Jtollce Department's efft>rts to suppress crime and eliminate
the druc traffic In F'ountaln Valley.
I •lso believe that we need an agresslve traffic procram that
will enable trafflc to moYe tn an effldent manner throughout
Fountain Valley and wdl work toward these eoals.
• Qty of fOutitaln Val~ Tf•trk Commlnee .... ~. • Me.,_ Fountatn Valley Select Ad H« BudfRt Cc•eutttt., 1981
• Utde lAepe Umpke
"Vote November 8th for a
~who Jtstens and ts
n!lponslve to your concerns."
'
A.-A promlsing hand bas sudden-
ly become enormous. Not only do
you have a huge fit (or partner, the
overcall has made it clear that most
of partner's points are outside your
void suit and, therefore, working.
Convey the good news to partner
with a cue-bid of three dubs.
L.M. Bovo
'
"There·s a Oy m my soup." said the
genteel fellow to the waitress. And she
said. "What did )OU expect for a buck
-a hummingbird?" Nifty. Onginal
comeback was "What did you expect
for a quarter ... " But I didn•t want you
to know how old that joke is.
Here's the world's best potato
casserole: Max a two-pound package
of frozen hash brown potatoes.
southern style. with two cups of sour
cream. two cups of grated cheddar
cheese, one can of cttam of mush-
room soup. and one med1um-s1zed
diced onion. Bake 1n a 350-<teg.rtt
oven about 45 minutes. l.Jttle longer.
if you don't defrost the spuds first.
Q. Arc lemmings promiscuous?
A. Better be. They produce four
tames as man} females as males. .
O. If the Wlfc is older than the
husband or the husband is older than
the wafe. does this make a stat1st1cal
difference 1n the dh ortt rate?
A. Not 1f their ages are within four
)'Cars of each other.
A sea hont 1s in its fast mode 1f 1t
travels a foot a minute .
Will En•lish survive as the
·tanauaae of choice in F'londa? No
doubt. no doubt But th~ '4-ho
wonder mtaht consider what hap-
pened 10 South Afn~a. the onty cou~try to mcmonalue a hvma toneue. Atop a pan1te hill near the
town or Paarl stands a monument to
Afrikaan
_ ... q. Ask vC'o"!-r mdc1tary a1~ tfoq,cn wnmt tbt '\, 1n .., -47" Sta1n.n r ..
A.Ca,.o. ~ .. ave you ftOCi«d all thi tapes
for c --~ are the t'Olor-or tusr?
A. MteCt; T~ art-Just ~
"""' embedded with ... whc per-udcs. MOM Wldcl)' utcid meulltt
parttelt IS U'Oft oude. OtheiWitc
kftOYl'n u rust.
'
Ortinge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Monday,~ 1, 1911 All
,.....,, Newetmller.
81 SYDNEY OMAJUl
ARIES (March 21-ApriJ 19): You'll be Sl)'ll\I. ~So many mystenoUJ
coincidences, I can hardly believe iL" You'll set facts. f14u.res concmuna
money, possible inheritanoe. A "new love" could be on honzon. Leo f'lum
prominently. ·
TAURVS (April 20-May 20): Emphasis on public appearances, success in
deal in& with women, intuitive intellect. O&der f4Jnily membe,says, "Let's have
something very ~tTerent for d.Uincr." Can<ler Qative plays role.
GEMINI (May 21-June20): You'll be reminded of resolutionsconoe"mina
dependents. pets.diet, nutrition. K.cy is to diversify, to accept social inviwion,
to add lO wardrobe. Money comes from surprite source.
CANCER (June 21-JQJy 22): Lunar aspect coinades with setlSuality,
creauvity, sex appeal. Be ready for quick chanaes, surprise assignments,
senuine flattery from special~~ Scorpio is in picture.
LEO (July 23-Aua,. 22): Special messaee conoems news of relative. miabt
involve tnp or visiL Member of opposite sex fiaurn prominentJy, rnon.le
raised as result o("unique commcnL'. Gemini, Virao, Sqittarius play roles.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Excellent chance to renew usociation'Wilh one
who helped you in past. Focus also on relatives, rapprochement with one
"absent without leave.'' Emphasize diplomacy, avoid financial dispute. •
UBRA (~pt. 23-0ct. 22): Define tetq_ls, realize n)oney is invOlved and so
is basic secunty. Get commitments, piomi.ses in writina -whispered sW«t
nothings won't stand up in court. Pisces. Virgo figure prominently.
. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): This is your power-play day. Astroloeical~
numerical cycles biahli&ht authority, responsibility, deadline. intensified
relationship. Scenario pl.aces emphasis on achievement, money, PfUlile, love.
SAGITl'AJU\JS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Look beyond the immediate, cbec:k
travel amngements. know that you could be knoclona on door of••famc and
fortune.'' Emphasis on creativity, sensuality, sex appeal Aries in picture.
. ·c APRJCOllN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What appeared lost will be ruovcred.
You'll make fresh start in new direction. You'll be "rcvataJ:zcd" throuah
'5SOCiation with dynamic individual. You'll also have luck in matters of
speculation. .
AQUARl\JS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Promotion, previously withhel~ is now
"released." You P,t credit long overdue, superior says, "It's about ume and
you've earned it. Follow throuah on hunch. first impressions correct.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): F,avorable lunar aspect coincides with
creativity, va.nety, ability to impnnt style. Popularity soan upward, you'll be
invited to prestigjous social affair. Gemini figures prominently.
IF NOVEMBER I IS YOUR BIRTHDAY current cycle acccnt5 travel,
ability to broaden horiz-0As, chance to actively participate in political or
charitable campaign. Cancer, Capricorn people play imponant roles in your
life. During November. vitality makes comebeck. you1J be at right plaoe at
right time, a "lost love" is likely to return. Durinf DcclembeT1 you'll travel,
popularity will increase, thCt"C also is likely to be • financial wandfall." Most
memorable month of 1989 will be JuJy.
Don't ·force· child
to ·express grief
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I need to
know ifl have a problem with my 12-
year-old sorf s behavior.
In MM of 1985 my best friend died
from due.er. She had been ill for
about six months. Two days. before
she died I went to sec ber. She asked
me to bring my son. Shecouldn•t have
any children and was hke an aunt to
"George." When I asked him to~o.he
refused, saying he wanted to re-
member her 1he way she was. Soon
after l asked him to come with me to·
the funeral. Again he refused.
Now his grandmother is 111 and
gemngalong in age. A few months ago
she was put in intensive catt for .a
stroke. I told my son 1t might be the
last ume be could ktss has grand-
mother goodbye. He went to SCC' her.
She got better and was released. Soon
after that she was rushed bac~ to the
hospn.al. This tame he wouldn't vtsll
her or even call.
Is this normal? Whal Wlll l do whCn
she dies? -TERI IN SPRING-
FIELD. OHIO.
ACROSS
1 Arrived
5 WOO<ty fiber
9 Subside
14 Skimberlng
15 Czectl rMir
16 Melt drink
17 Current
18 Vigorous
19 Equine
20 Elysium
21 Altor.,.-y - -23 DeoeptloM
24 Uneasy
2e Trustworthy
28S~ed
29 Whitetail'•
klf'I
33 Body politic
36 Was anxious
37 Farm souna
36 Golt unit
39 ShOuts
40 Stalion
41 Be In hod!
42 Water bOdy
43 Sinks ·
44 Progressing
OK
46 Wrong: ~8'
4 7 0.sagreemef'lt
48 9-slOn
52 Wyatt -
55 Oetr0tt or
B C team
57 Not written
2 3 4
17
20
24
41
•
58 Errand
60 Timea
618r~
62 R9fuge
63 Desk:cated
6' Solar disk •
65 Heeds orders
66 Foot parts
67 In caM that
DOWN
1 Mlnlst•
2 Withstand
3 Old Aslans
4 Toothlesl
5 Act
6 Sm.it type
7 P9ddle
8 Muc:t'I valued
9 Tirol unit
10 UNd dlPJ*$
11 Hindu pod
12 Mal CS. -
heed ache
13 GIMk pod
22 UK area
25 Adherent
27 Nurtured
29 Soutl'I ot
Quebec
30 Btedt
31 Disburden
32 Scoundrels
33 "Awey1"
3-4 Community
35 Rah uuce
36Te.tlest
7
.4
DEAR TEBI: I~ .... Dr. BanNV....ay,~a9W_.dralr
maaef dtt ~ .C ,.JddatrJ
at NwGwetten u.a.enltJ. nb .. wMltleuW: .
.ne •• 11ter..w ... ,......,. ..
.. Ylltt ........u, m ~ mer .............................
r-ra.l lf lie..._,, feel Uh IL W....
Ille ...... * p1eftmc JlnC!ell -. Mm* ••erl••• dtt etre.aaa.
QlNrea ........... dtty cu
lau4lk. heaartllc Mm .. ucee4 *9e limJtl will erase feelillp .,
pi)t.. amblvalatt u4I auiety.
39 Red shade
40 Of shepMI ds 52 Relpoild 42 Dine 53 Moby D_!c:* •• 43 Humonat
45Ash~ ~·
46 Fail!,. 54 W81'lder
46 Pit se Mount•· 49 CholenC pref. 50 Monlkert
51 Fluh st~on
8 10 11 12 13 .
•
.-~
I
I
)
•
I I I I I
o I
..
.
A.12 Or-. Coat DAILY PILOT/ Monday, NcMmber 7, 1988
"Why ·does the man always hafta
smear our windshield?"
llARllADUKE f)y Brad Anderson
,
\
''No. dimer ien't ready ... need you ask vikry?"
PEANUTS
11·7 ---
GARFIELD
TUllBLEWEEDS
" ROSE 18 ROSE
. .~
COURT&K CULTUR& by Maratta & Maratta
t\1Til A. T~E H UN'5
"\)RAWE~ Q~6ANiZER. --
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
~ e 11·7 c::::::: ___ ~ ......
I l
I r
by Charles M . Schulz
FOR61YE TMEM SIR .. THIS 15 me
FIRST TIME TMEV'VE EVER SEEN
ANl<ONE EAT POPCOIU-I W'™ A FORK ..
by Jim Davis
HEY, 600&A! ANYTHING iN 'THE
TRAP iHI~ MORNING?
CHE.CK PLE.A~E
_by Tom K. Ryan
@ ·-· .. ·--.. --
by Pat Brady
~ .
POR BETTER OR POR WORSE
JUDGE PAR.KER
ANGIE 15
CON€ifAN11..4 °'3
rw.J MIND ...
. ·
DOONBsBURY • by Garry Trudeau
•
by Jimmy Johnson
~~w.Df;~~~A~.'
by Lynn Johnston
by Harold Le Ooux
by Tom Batluk
AOO AU. l~E. 1iME.5
IN 8E1WE£N ...
·--....... ef .... ...... ......w ...... "lllllf•*•"...,. ..... .... .. ...... '-....... -· . ..__,..._~Ill --
I RI L F 0 C ) .._,.,....._ ___ •
:1r1111
!·o F T ' I ~ L t I I . ~
UCCAT I!
r111.= .
_ _..
. . J
• ,
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7. 1988
·Sea View title.race
• reJDains 1nystery
Only CdM seals
CIF p ayoff berth
enterin last week
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ... ...., .......
Six becomes three this week. and
win or lose there has to be a sense of
relief for ah concerned. It'll be over
and three Sea View League represen-
tatives will go on to the CIF Division
VI playoffs Nov. 18. Unttl then. howe ver. all six mu~t
come to terms with what's happened
and what's in store.
Only Corona del Mar has wrapped
up a berth in the playoffs, and the rest
of the field remains in the hunt with
just Friday remaining. It's not an easy situation for
anyone. Corona del Mar, 'for instance.
may have ,,ualified for the playoffs,
but as what . No. I? No. 2? No. 3?
Saddleback can make it as No. I. 2.
3 or could be out of it
Newport Harbor can make it as No.
I or nothing, or with a tic. further
compliate things with the possiblity
of four teams finishing 2-2-ll>chind
Corona del Mar. Estancia. Tustin and University.
all can move into a 2-2-1 situation.
~uins up .a P!ayoff berth wi!h the
nght comb1nat1ons.
And if they all end up 1n ttes Friday
nil.ht? Then it would be (I) Corona
dcl Mar(2-0-3);2.Saddlcback(2-l-2);
3. Newport 1-farbor (2-2-1 ): and the
rest would be out in the cold at 1-2-2.
A tie, incidentally. counts as one-
half game won. one-half pme lost.
Thus. Harbor. with a victory over
CdM. would be 3-2. t~c equivalent to
2-1-2. and would enter the ptayoffs as
• the league's No. I team after winning
the head-to-head battle.
But aside from the fact Corona del
Mar is in, in one form or another. all
anyone knows for certain at this poi nt
is what transpired last week.
Here's what the coaches had to say
in reflectton on their games: .
Coroea clel Mar Coadl Dave
Hollud. following a 13-0 victory over
Tustin: "It was our fourth shutout
victory. and the defense played well.
The secondary came up with five
interceptions, and our defensive line
shut them down to 39 yards.
-Tustin threw the bell well, but it
also had those five interceptions."
Holland and many of his players
shaved their heads preparatory to the
Tustin game, but It wasn't the first
time.
"We did it in '72 when we beat
Edison," said Holland. "That was the
last-time.Jt W<lS a must-win for us. We
should've. and we would've against
Saddleba('k, ·and didn't. But we
bounced back and moved the ball
Defense Warde .
UCI'• Tom Warde (5) appllea preuure aaalnat Pacific'•
Cluta TbomP90n dartna tbe Anteaten' 12-6 Bl& Weat Con-
ference water polo Ylclory Sanday. Detalla, 83.
Rams' rally falls
short in 30-24 loss
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The
NFL's wont P-ISS defense turned into
somethina of a n11htmare for th~
leamle's IOP. passer. The Philadelphia Eagles. whose
defense it 28th and last qainst the
pass. interc:epted Jim Everett of the
Rams four times on Sunday in a 3()..24
• victO()'. ~ E~t came into th~ aamo with
five interceptions in nine aamcs. the ~in the~. and a Jc11uc-
lead1ns 64.6 comPletton pertentQr ..
Ht wound uf comp&cta"I 24 of 4~ ~ for 37 yanh. much of it duri~ a.. failed comd*k effon after
the ~J.. S.S. led 27-10 with 14
minu1CS kn 1n the pmc.
"Ph"8delphia plaY"d very IOOd
~It. T~ were on to our routn
P"'lf eood. Evttttt ~. :wl\lt· ever n was. 11 didn't "'*" (for us) uatil the founh quaner,' They put it
~hct' and we didn't unttL thc
• lbinll quaner:· .. Evmtt ts a arcat quanetblcl. but
Sunday's
scores
::·~·:: . . . :iii' ...
~
Eagles 30. Rams 24
Raiders 13. Chargers 3
Giants 29. CowbOys 21
VilUngs 44, Lions 17
Falcons 20. Packers O
Patriots ~ l , Dolphins lo ·
Bengals 42. Steelers 7
Bears 28. Buccaneera 10
Cardinals 24. 49era 23
Colts 38. Jet• 14
Redskins 27. Sain ta 24
BfOncos 17, Chtef a 11
Biiia 13. Seah&Wk• 3
well on offense. although we didn't
throw but nine t~mes ...
Newport Harbor. Coaclt Jeff
Briakley, following his team's 17-0
victory over Estancia: "I thought we
played excellent defense. Our dcfen$C
and the staff did a food job executing
the game plan. hey didn't have
much penetration all night.
"(Josh) Wojtkicwia is a good
running back. a tou~ kid who runs
. hard. But I felt we did a good job on
him. I don't believe they got inside
the 30on us.
"Tom Walker's big run {a 92-yard
kickoff return at the start of the game)
was a big spark. The kids executed
offensively. too. .
"We wercn~t going to open it up.
We wanted lo throw the ball under-
neath against University, but this
week we didn't plan on throwing.
'·we knew Estancia moved very
well laterally. and our game plan was
to run strai.&ht at them and not allow them to utifize their quickness ...
Ettaada Coack~ following a 17-0 loss to Newport
Harbor: "I tho1.1ght we could beat
(Plea.eaeeSEA VIEW/83)
Eatancla'• Joe.b WojtlrJewlcz and bta team·
matea moat defeat SaddlelMlck Jl'rlday
................. ._
n1-bt to remalD tn tla~ CD' playoff plctue.
A6'oTe, Harbof a Sean ltllla parwea. .
Sunset League makes i _t official
Fountain Valley. Edison. Westmins ter
clinc-h CIF berths with one week to play---
By ROGER CARLSON
OflMO.-,....... .
It went according to the book last
week.
Sunset League powers Fountain
Valk). Edison and Westminster
swept through 1he compeuuon to
make tt official. They. are fhe three
Sunset representatives for the Cl F
· D1vis1 on I playoff~. which begin next
week. Here's how the coaches sa~ Round
4:
Foutaln Valley Coacll Mike
Mil.Der, following his team's 36-20
victory over Marina: "I was a little
disappointed the way we started. a
little sluggish. We dtdn't do as we
wanted. as we had talked about earher
of executing. making things happen
and putt mg the ball in the end zone. It
took a little too long to get started.
.. Da, 1d Henigan. as usual. co~
unucs 10 pla5 flawlcssl) Glenn
Chnst) pla)cd spanngl) at center
because he was hurt. and (offensive
tackle) R)an O'l)Qnnell pla)ed prett}
well.
"Kcdnc Powe pla)cd c~tremel~
well. He ha~ I 05 )ards on 12 cames ...
Powe now has 474 yards on 81
camcs (5.8 average) in league play.
good for nine touchdowns in those
four games.
"Defensi vely. <\be Yap had an
1ntercept1on and Jeff Higbee. our
strong safety. and Brent Hickman
(defen51 vc hncman) played VCr)' well.
"But I'm a ltttle concerned over the
Bow Sunset League teams fared
past two games.\\ c haven't sho""n as
much marked 1mpro\cment as I
would like 10 have at this point. .. .
Edison Coacll Dave Wllltt, follow-ing a 16-0 victor) O\er Ocean View·
.. It was a satisfying win. We didn't ge1
some breaks and got a little frustrated
when we didn't score more:·
Patnck Rt'tlly's 90-~ard kickoff
return for an apparent touchdown
~as nulhlied by a penalty to stan the
game. among other d1sappo1ntmcnts
..We had a dead ball foul and
Tiiis ...... , -Htn. 8Md\ Cat OCCJ
•I Westm!Mter Edison(~)
MartM (a l Htn. Bch)
Fiii. Valev (et CCC> ec.n v ... , .. He>
stancd first-and-25. and we had two
mtcrttptions and two fumbles."
added White ·
"We mo'ed the ball and got quttea
btt of)a.rds. but wct11dn't punch tt in
as much as we'd like. But thC'} (Ocean
View) had something to do with that.
100.
"We were a little worried about
their offense. but we got our fourth
shutout of the ~car. and that ucs a
school rcrord. \\ e'rc holdrng teams to
(Pleue eee SVJfSET /83~
Strong defense pow~rs Monarchs
Mater Dei looks to
showdown in fina-1
~me with Servile
By PAT LARKIN
°""J "'9t Cwu p 1 ...,.,
With JUSt one week remaining 1n
league competitton. all of the Oranie
Coast area teams find themselves in
conlenuon for a CIF playoff berth. Mater Dei is coming off a 2S-I S win
over Scrv1te. the founh-ranked team
1n CIF Division I. With the win. the
Monarchs pulled into a tic for first
place in the Angelus League. setting
up Thu~ay's showdown with Ser-
\ 1te at the Santa Ana Bowl.
Irvine fought oock from their hard-
fought 14-13 loss to Mission Viejo by beating Dana Hills 28-14 and put
themselves back into a four-wa) tie
for second 1n the South Coast League
at 2-2. The Vaqueros ralhed from a
14-0 deficit to beat the Dolphins.
In the Pacific Coast League. Wood-
bndac clinched at least a share of the
league champ1onsh1p ~tth a 17-7 win
O\'Cr Laguna Bc<lch to avenge their
only loss last season. The "orst the
Wamors can do 1s grab the SC'Cond
place seed from the PCL wtth a loss to
Trabuco Hills
Both Laguna and Costa Mesa find
their backs to the wall after sphmng
1hc1rcontcsts Laguna fell out ofa first
place tie "11h Woodbndge. while
Mesa kept t~emselvcs in the hu nt
wuh a 14-13 'erd1c1 O\'cr Or:lngc
Herc·s what the Orange Coast area
coaches had to say about last "ed.·..,
compe1111on
Mater Oti Coaclt Clt•cli Gallo.
follo" tog a 2S-l 5 win 0' er Sen Ill'
that pulled the Monarch's into a first·
place 11c 1n the .\ngelus League ··1t's
reall) come together for us. \\c hJd
th~ goals coming into the game To
shut down their running bad ..
(Eugene) \ alde1 and their quar-
terbad .. (Gregl W1lltg and 10 get soml·
points on the board earl). We did all
three. and consequent!) we "'on the
game ··
trong defense was the kc) for tht'
Bow Orange Coast Area teams fared
TMm, t9COrd
Costa~(2-2l
L.a9UM 8"<n 2·2'
Woodbridge •·OI
Irvine (2·2l
Ma• Oet 12· 1 I
L..Ht w• oe4 oranoe. 14· 13
IO'llo WOOdbr~. 17·7
def La9una ee.cn. 17·7
Clef O•M Hills, 21· 1' oe4 SI P•ul 25· 1 S
T'Ms ....,, ....
•I L ffUl\a 8Rd'I
C<>1ra Mesa (home)
TrabucO Hills (ln11ne)
El Toro (at Minion)
Servile (al SA Bowl)
\lonarchs. Gallo adm111.:-d but h<'
had plenty to sa~ tor hi\ llfTcn~ as
\\Cll. .. \\e reall> domtnjted them
Jgainst the run. and the~ ap~ared
frustrated by our defense Offen •' <'·
I\. we threw the ball well aga1n~t them
e·arl} on. but got 3 httk con-.en at1' c
10 the fourth quaner tr) ing to w('lrL. on
the clock. Did Ma1C~r Dc1 j ust happen to tind
D1\1s1on l's founh-rankt'd
v.ordsmcn on an ofT night"
"~o. I don't thinl so Tht'' "ere reall~ up pnor to the game. l tallo.ed to
one of their coaches before the gamt'.
and he said the) were read~ to plil'
1ust lno~1ng that the would be at
least ro-chami>s 1f1he\ won We just
pla)'ed tough. and c),erall we did
so me vcr) good things 10 the con-
tt'st.''
lrvlne co-coaeb Terty Healpa. following the Vaquero·s 28-14 win
against Dana Hills that ~ept them in
the hunt for a C'lF pla)ofT berth from
the uth Coast League .. We nrcdcd
that '1cton to SUl} alt' c We co~ted
\Orne consistant offense wuh a tou~
defense to sta) 1n the race for a playoff' berth ..
The W1n pulled the Vaqs into a four-~a' ttc with Dana Hills. El Toro
and Capistrano Valle}. Top-ranked
(Pleue aee_oRA1'0S{BS)
'88 campaign successful on Orange Coast .
If qualifytn forCIF p layoff hunt ts yardstick.
then area teams' output marks stellar sea on
lftndccd the challenge of quahfy-
1na forthe hunt isa measu~nas11ck
for sU«Cn, ronsidor the l 988 prep
football camP1'1n here on the Orange
COl!t an unqualifltd banntutason.
Thcrc'sonlyoM 1cam with a
perfect record at th ..,,oint -9-0
Woodbndae. and Coroudt1 Marean
boast of an unbeaten 11ate(7.:0.2). buL n's noc too often that you can PQ4n' to
vinuallye,·eryentry.tonatbtOnl\lt
C'oa$1 area asa bonafidt t'Oftltftdtt.
The ultra~bala need St:a V ifw
Leaauc offers• ao<>d foundation ror
tht "unt Wllh evefl team saan OWft•"I
a ihot al the pla)'ofh when lhr fiul
nilht of the scuon ( f riaay)comes.
'4 'NcWl)On Hamor ma) bt l-6 over-
all. but the 1 lors havt 1 ~at ~unna the No. I se>e>t in tbt 1riiJiW
tOm "''alCoronackl Mar~itha ~ aftertotnt 2·2 i" Sa Vant •·
Leaaue pla)'.
Uot\Crs1ty ISJU ta ttck better
ovcrallatl-S-l.butt 1-2-1 aV1e~
slate keeps the TrOJlns m the hunt for
the pt.)ofTs 1fthe nght combinauon
opens up Fnda'
Estanda. v.1tlu 6-1-1 o' trail mar\..
1s1nthesamc l-~-1 boat1n1heSca v~.andC'lnJatnapla)ofTbcrth
w1th1w1n Fnda).
· Seddkt.ck has the "me 3-5-1 O~'ttlH ma_~ as dots Unt\Cf'Sll). and
cnttt1 the last round ofkaauc pla\ at
2-1· I. ndC"oronadtlMar. tr)ln to put
t•berlwck·to-bKkSn View Ltillpfrtlliftpeomhtp1"wns. hn
alrad_l locked upa pla)otlbcnh ~ith
a ?-0:2 r'ttOf'd
The Sa ~" ho~Hr. 1 n 't thc
ont)'bllanttd IC'llucaround. ~lttt0ct(2·1l•sino ~ ur..~ay lit
lllrlirst placc 1n the .\ngtlus Lt'agur
-.ind 11\Ju ta the-team kaguc
In inc ts 10 a tour-wa) tic for ~·u.\nd
pl3('(' 1n thc South ( oast League w11h
a 2-2 mark <6-3 o' crall)
.\nd Cmta Mc-sa and t..guna
Bcaclf. t1C'd for third bchmd WOOd· bridge and La.guna Hills. will settle a
pla,off <;pot on Thursday n1abt.
Ooh 1n the unset is their a marled
d1 pant) bl'\\\ecn tl\cront~and
pretenders. and 1fshardl> a shod.
Fountain V .tile . Ed1~f\ and W t·
min ter.~c~b1Uc~hobcthcpoWC'n
rn 1hc unset. end the> ha"cn't ltt
an)Oncdo~n
V.-h1 tt1all mcan\1 that of the 16
attuchoot -fhthavccarMd
ola,offbrrth alrt'ad' <C'oronadtl
M1i"r. Woodbrid,c. F0unain Vall~.
Edison and W~am1nsttt\. and ttaht
oihen ( e'*1'0f\ Harbof. £41atk'ta.
.. Ot\Cf'SU).s.ddkbeck. ln1nc. Ma~r 1°)(1 . ( 'O\ll Mria IM ~UM Beach)a~on the 'craeofqualtf)'1na.
nC'tdtnga ~m th1e, ttl to lttp 11
goina,. -.
RICEI
ClllSll
Miami Heat'• debut
from floor proves
cool a s Don Johnson '
Prem fte A1Mdate4 Prn1
MIAMI -In ceremonies before the m
Miami Heat's first game in the NBA, actor . .
Don Johnson braged to the crowd about
the TV shows. music and football
produced by th~ city. ·
.. Now we've JOl a world .class t>asketball team to ·
boot!" the ''Mianu Vice" star said Saturday,
Then, the Los Anaeles Clippers, 3-38 on the road
last year, beat the Heat 111 -91.
"We've got a long way to ao." Miami's Ron
Rothstein said after his first game as an NBA head
coach.
Miami fell behind 30-13 early in the second
quarter1 trailed 74-52 in the third penod and was never
closer uw1 14 points in the fourth quarter.
"What arc we going to do? Cut our throats?''
Rothstein said. "We're still trying to find a unit or units
that work welJ t<>ier:her. It'll take time."
Ten players played at least 14 minutes for tbe Heft.
Pearl Washington led Miami's scorinJ with 16 points.
Two rookies, SylvestCTGray and Kcvtn Edwards, were
next with 15 and 14 points. -
"The commissioner set us up," Clippers guard
Norm Nixon said with a smile. ··1 bet you the
commissioner sent us down here because they figure
this was a game Miami could win. Th~ didn't want to
send the Lakers down here, or Detroit '
The Oippers visit the NBA's other expansion
team, Charlotte, on Tuesdar.
Nixon, who scored I points apinst the Heat
without missin,a a shot. said Miami will struggle to be
com~titive this season. ·
•1t•sgoing to be tough, man. Young teams are not
aoing to win very many games in this league. If anybodY.
expects a~ything different, they're fooling themselves, •
NtXon said.
Quot e of t he day
s,.d Webb, 5-foot-7 guard for the Atlanta
Hawks, asked when to expect his sbost-written
autobiographr,. which was scheduled to come out
this season: 'I don't know. It might be out
already. I haven't read it."
'Little' Al whips field b y la p
IN THE BLEACHERS
l\wll:: .... , ...................... ,,~ ... --
"Well, I'm not going over after It. I know, let's
get Mikey ... Hey, Mikey!!"
Leon a rd fa vor ed over Lalonde
LAS VEGAS -Sugar Ray Leonard ml returns to the ring for only the third time in
nearly seven years Monday night, moving
up in weight once more to take on Canada's
Donny Lalonde for two different titles. ·
Leonard is a 3'h-I favorite to beat halonde in the
scheduled 12-round fight that has a contract limit oft 68
pounds but will be for both Lalonde's World Boxing
Council light heavyweight title and the WBC's newly
created super middleweight crown.
The fighters stand to make the biggest paydays of
their careers with Leonard expected to earn up to S 15
million and Lalonde some SS million in a fijht that has
attracted curiosit)' but lacks the excitement of
Leonard's April 1987 comeback against Marvelous
Marvin Hagler.
"People ask how much longer I can fight," Leonard
said. ··1 don't know. This may be in fact my farewell
performance, I don't know."
Frost c oasts p ast a iling Wiebe
•
Gretzky 1teorea 1, 700tb point
Wa,.e Grellly btt•me only the third '(ii player in NHL history to ttaeh the 1,70(). '
point plateau with two aoals and an auist
to lC*d tht Los Anaelct ICJngs to a 5-3
victory over the Chicqo Blackhawlcs. Gretzky. who is
the air-time assist leader with 1,104, assisted on Dave
Taylor'• first-period, power-play score for his I , 700th
s:arecr point. Gretzky's 59Sth career soal midway in the
Se<lond period and 12th of the year pve rookie goalie
Mart FIU,.&ricll a 4-2 cushion. Gretzky t;ampletcd.his
niaht's work with a SO-foot empty-net\er with nine
seconds remainin&, aivin1 him I , 702 ca.reer points. Gerile e,we is the all-time scoring leader with 1,850
PQints and ... rce,Dtoue of lhc.NCJU'.orkll.angers has J, 759 ... The Ph11ade)phi1 Ayen kepl the Pittsburgh
Penguins winless in 41 games in Philadelphia since
1974 with a 5-4 victory as Tim Kerr scored two powcr-
play goals ... Aacly Brickley scored the tie-brcakinuoal
on a breakaway early in the third period and added an
empty-net aoal, lifti111 the Boston BnNns to a 4-2
victory over the VancouverCanucks ... M'an ,...._
scored the final two pis to lead the New Jersey Devjls
to a 6-5 vic:tory ov~r the New York Rangers ... Gerari
Gallu& scored two aoals late in the third perio<lto lift
the Detroit Red Winp to a S-2 victory ..over the
Edmonton Otlcn. '
J ones, W aitz capture titles
NEW YORK -Steve Jones became fJI the first British man to win the New York
_ City Marathon on Sunday, while Grete
Waitz won the women·s division for a ·
record ninth time.
Joan Benoit.S.muelson ran the race for the first
time and finished third after two collisions and one
brief stop.
"I proved the point to those who wrote me off and
said I was finished," the 33-year-old Jones, of Wales,
said af\er winning in 2 hours, 8 minutes, 20 seconds -
only seven seconds off the course record. I don't·carc
about the record, l came hero.r.to win."
It was the first marathon victory in three years for
Jones, once the world's fasteJt marathoner who
redeemed himself after a series of-sub-par races,
including one that cost him a berth on this year's British
Olympic team.
Jones said that waving to the crowd and thrusting
his right fist into the air with about I 00 yards left might
have cost him the course record and a SI 0,000 bunous.
Tbe temperature at the start of ttre race was 60
degrees with the humidity al 80 percent. At the finish,
the tenmperature was 63.
Telev islon1 radio
TELEVISION MIAMI -Al Unser Jr. ran away with •
Sunday's Nissan Indy Challenge. winning
TUCSON, Ariz. -South African l!I David Frost, unchallenged by ailing Mark
Wiebe, compiled a 5-under-e!f 67 anJl_ _
coasted to a five-strolce victory on Sunday
6_o.m. -m FOOUAl I . C!evtiarui al .HouUoo~
Ctlannel 7. the season-ending Indy-car race at
Tamiam1 Park by nearly a full lap over -in the Tucson Open Golftoumam·ent. 6 p.m. -ICE SKATING: Pair. end Ice-dancing compellllon In Skate America from Portland, Maine
(tape), ESPN. Rick Mears.
Unser led 82 of the 112 laps in the 199.8-mile
event. including the final 70 trips around the twisting
road circuit.
Frost a~uired his second title of the season and of
a four-year PGA Tour Career with a 266 total, 22 shots
under par on the TPC course at StarPass.
The victory was worth $1 08,000 from the purse of
S600,000and lifted Frost into sixth place on the money-
winning list with $62 !.i,900 going into next week's
season-ending Nabisco Lhampionship.
6 p.m. -BOXING: Suoar Rev Leonerd vs. Oonnv
LelOnde In 12·round t>Out from Les Veges (pe'v-per-
vlew). Select.
7!30 o.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Cellfornla al USC (tape). Prim, Ticket. It was his fourth victory of the season, moving
Unser to second place behind series champion Danny
Sullivan, 1n the final CART-PPG Indy-car season
standings. That was worth $200,000 for the 26-year-old
Unser, who now has eight career Indy-car victories, all
of them on road courses.
The Nabisco tournament, which offers $3 million
in prize money, is open only to the top 30 players from
the season money-winnin_g list. There were no changes
in the makeup of that top 30 in this. the last tournament
lo qualify for eolfs richest event.
I o.m. -HORSE RACfNG: Oak Tree reolavs,
Channel 56 <Prime Ticket, 10:30 o.m.>.
RADIO
6 P.m. -NFL FOOTBALL: Cleveland al Hou,lon,
KNX (1070).
TUESDAY'S TELEVISION Mears, the Indianapolis 500 winner. was second,
53.046 seconds behind the leader's Chevrolet-powered
March. Frost, who entered the final round in a tie for the
lead with Wiebe, birdied the first three holes and wasn't
really threatened again.
10 a.m. -HORSE JUMPING: Grand Prix de Penn from Harrisburg, Pa. (tape), ESPN.
Noon -AUTO RACING: SCCA SI. "Petersburg
Grand Prix (tape), ESPN. Didier Theys of Belgium was third, one lap bchmd.
followed another lap back by Kevan Cogan.
~(!/a44/,(4
GOLF SHOP
GRAND
OPENING
uu,,_ .. .--ALE
....... ( __
... a.-c.... l....,"-' c.ie-a.r~ l-W "'*'-"' ........ , ... -""' ......... ,._ ·----c.91 ----. I R£.CRIP YOUR GOLF CLUBS I
I 11.-l .. $1 49 1 ... 1•0... I I ~ Ea r.c...-I
I ._ uin'• I
I I ..-----c.. ----'1
I I
IFREE =~I
II Wrth tMcMM o1 '"' lfOCld"' "Oii wt I
hl"n II 7l a I
RaiderSbreak out of doldrums
Beuerlein · s TD pass to Junkin lifts LA
from defensive struggle to 13-3 victory
.
Bcuerlein found Junkin near the
back of the end zone with 2:36 sone in
the final period after the tight end
shook ofT a San Diego def ender to
give Los Angeles a to.;3 lead.
From The A11oclated Pre11 coach Al Saunders said. "You could In other NFL action:
be like Mike Oitka layi ng in a Bean is, Buccueera H : Mike
For most of the game, the Chargers ho~pital. (The Chicago Bears coach Tomczak, who once again replaced
and Raiders beat upon each other tn a suffered a mild heart attack last an inu"ured Jim McMahon at q"'ar-defensivc struggle. week ) .,.. Then Los Angeles' Steve Bcuerlein "Either tou kill yourself or some-tcrback, completed 18 of26 passes for ,.
d T J k. b" ed d 1· 269 yards and upped his record to an rey un an com an to c 1ver body. else ills you. Coming out of I 2-2 as a replacement staner for
thedecidingblow. lt camecarly in the training camp and. preseason, we McMahon, including 5--0 against the
fourth quancr in the form ofa 7-yard thought we would have a more Bucs.
touchdown pass as the Raiders broke explosive olTe~~· It jus~ hasn't h~p-Tomczak. 's 20-yard touchdo~
a 3-3 tie and went on to a 13-3 victory pened. It h~.sn t Jelled. Its frust~ng~ McKinnon marked
over the Cliargers in NFL action to an of u~. . . the first time the Bears had scored in
Sunday. ~uerl~m said the win put the the third quarter this season. McKin-"PJaying San Diego 1s like fighting Raiders riaht where they want to be. non caught four passes for 87 yards.
the kid the next door; they're always But he added that they have. to get Two of them set up I-yard toucb-
tough," said a relieved Junkm after better 1f they hope to stay tn first down runs by Thomas Sanders and
the victory. which pulled Los An&elcs pl~~-. Neal Anderson.
into a three-way t1e for first place in . I~. w~sn t pretty but we had to BUI• U,Seabwb 3: Buffalo uru>ed
the AFC West with Seattle and win, said the R11ders quanerba~k. its league-best record to 9-l with a
Denver. All three clubs are S-S. who.was 13 ~f 28 for 182 yards with stingy defense that didn't allow a
Junkin slipped past defensive back on.~ interception. .. . _ toucndown for the second straight
""' RAMS FALL, ~24 •• 3 ........ ..
we made up our minds to coacmtrale OG our 111 ~11bilitin and be conli11eftt e~ dc_)wn... JJ ~ quar1CrbKk Randall C11nninaham Oww ,
three touchdown pa11e1, two 10 rookie tiaht end Keith t.
Jackson. the 1eatue'1 laldina_ receo ·~cr...:..i ... 6 C.4lt ·-• • .. _ The EMlel au~ a 10-1 tie W1UI :.-""" 1n ~~
third periocfto make II 17·10 on a 10.play, 84-yard drive
capped by Cunninaham'• founh4nd-<>ne, 37-yard scor-
ina pass to Keith Byan. • ; Cunniftaham said of the surprise pap, "the maan 11
thins wu to make a~ t.ke. I 11id ifl make•~~ r1
those linebecken are 101n1 to charae, so our rec:etven wdl L
be open in'¥ hole, and they (linebackers) won'& be able to ii
get back. . .. 1L "I saw Keith (Byars) was so wide open.. . ,
-.. Philadelphia went -011-10 score on Lu11 Zende.iu r carcer-tyina ~yard field pl, and a 2.yafd C"un-n
ninaham-to-Jackson touchdown pass for the 27-10 lead. IJ
Everett tried desper11ely to rally the Rams. 7-3
leadina drives that cut it to 27-17 on Greg Bell's 1-ya.:d "
score, and 27-24 on a 14-yard pass to Burord McGee with ~
4:45 left. . . b After Zendejas kicked a 40-yard field~ to make 1t
30-24, Everett completed' six passes in a drive that carricd11
the Rams--te>e fint down at the Eagles' 18 with 35seconds11 left. . ~ The drive ended when Everett was sacked for a 10-11 1•rd loss by Rea!e White, and then on third-and-20 was
intercepted at Jhe Eagles' 7-yard line by Frizzell with t611
seconds remainina. ~
"He just threw it up there," f rizzell said. "I Knew I
could get to it. The defense was dYing it had -to make thee
~~~.. ~ . Everett said the Rams."were trying to make the bid
one at the end, and it didn't work. r was tryinJ to thro~
intothecomerbut there was a miscommunication typeoA
thina. The play was sort of makeshift." l
ln a<td1tion to the four interceptions, one of which lcd2
to a field goal, the Ea&les' defense recovered a fumble thati l
turned into a toucfidown had three sacks and heldt1
running backs Greg Bell and Charles White lo a combincd1
38 yards.
"It's a areat win, especially after last week," said1
EaJles Coach Buddy Ryan, referring to the upset loss to
At~nta. I
Ryan said that on the Rams' last series. ··1 was hoping
somebody would make a big play." {
Rams' coach John Robinson said "we just let theO
game slip away from. us. We didn't play well enouah tolf
win it. We didn't get anything cheap from them. theyc
played good defense. I did think we were going to score at 1
the end."
Browns, Oilers match ~
hot defenses tonight
• -1---.__nQYS'rON (AP) -The-Houston-Oilers-and-,
' Cleveland Browns arc on defensive highs going into theic.1 Monday night game in the Astrodomc. ,1-
The Browns played tht>ir best defensive game of the 1 season last week m a 23-16 victory over Cincannati.
The Oilers, trying to make the playoffs for the second
straight year, also had their best performance in beatinSf
the defending Super Bowl champion Washington1
Redskins 41 -17. 1;
Game time is 6 p.m. on channel 7. 'I
Four times this season, the Browns defense has held1
thcopj>Ositon withouta touchdown. The Browns stopped,
four Cincinnati drives inside its 14-yard line and sacked
quarterback Boomer Esaison four times.
Oilers quarterback Warnn Moon knows the fcclin_g.
He's 0-7 against the Browns sin~ joining the Oilers ID
1984.
The Browns rank second in the NFL in total defcn·sc
and they arc first an the league in pass defense.
• ~? 'i ~~--CMPtt-----f Roy Bennett to catch the scori ng pass .. I was shaky, Bc~er1e1n said. week. Robb Riddick scored on a 1-
near the back of the end zone with J'h~y threw some things at u~ I yard run and Scott Norwood, the
2:36 gone in the final period. d1d~·c handle as well as I would hke NFL's leading scorer. kicked 23-and
Cudlnal•' place klcker Al Del Greco ~,. for Joy attmr ktckln& tbe 1ame-wtnntnc atra polnt for a 24-23-WiD.l
' 125°/o OFF :
I S.Cttd Min's & Women's Apparel I I . (Wrtll Couooll 1 ''"'"' 11 n a I l---~------_J
--18543 Brootthurat ..
Brookhurat et Hell
"As soon as I turned back to look. to .. I ve got to get a lot ~tter for us to 27-yard field aoals.
the ball went right by," said Bennett. win n~xt week and thats w~at I pl~n . Bl'OllCOI 17, ClllJefa l l : The Chiefs' ton, Chip Lohmiller kicked a 23-yard
"It was a good play on their part. We on. doing. As we get matunty, we re only points came on three Nick field goal with 47 seconds lef\,
played well but we gave up the g~'"'· to be a team to be reckoned Lowery field goals and 8 safety when capping a late rally. The Redskins
touchdown late. They did what they with. . . Tony Dorsett was tackled in the end trailed 24-17 before drivina 94 yards
had to do to win." ~tym~ed much of the ru~t, the zone 00 1 running play. John Elway fortheJyinatouchdown,a 1-yard pass
The Chargers, 2-8, went down to Raiders offen~ p~t totether its first threw a six-yard touchdown pass to from .ooua Williams to JUcky Sand-
t.heir sixth stra1ght defeat. For the touchdown d~vc ID the four:t.b quar-Vance Johnson and Sammy Winder en With 8:2S left.
down passes.l his fint in thmlpmcs.
Pacrlo&a 11 De.,._ It: John'
Stephens ciontlnued his 1trona run--
ning with I 04 yards, aivina him mo~
than 100 yards in three consccutive
pmcs. The last Patriot to do that was
fourth time this year. the San Diego ter as Beu~rlein .capped a nme-pl~y. add__. another_,... .. ~or Denver. l'l _ _..__,_ l•, •--U: Nci'l Lomu offense failed to score a touchdown. 58 ard d th 7 verd ~ ... .,, ... •~ _._ ........
Foun~~ Don Calhoun in 1976.
"It's a tough.business," San o; ... 0 -y J nkv_e WI a -,. sconna ~11,Sabltd•·AtWashin&· hit Roy Green with a 9-yard touch-
--------------1----------------•"f1Pliii15iiiiiitoiiiiiiuiiiniiiiiimiii.iiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ~pus with three seconds remain· , ina and Al Del Greco booted the
decisive extra point. The Cardinals.
who trailed 23--0 in &he third period,
scored 17 fourth~uarter poinu.
Gia&a H c..M1111: The Gian
won their lourth conteCUtive pm
apinst the drea,t of lbt NFL
staY.CC! in control of the NR: Eu
Phil Simms threw two touc~1>W1111
.~
TUNE-UP SPECIAL
4CYL
2895
PLUS TAX
One CUllomer per trWlWllon. Pwt coupon at ume ot --.up. Exptree ~-ao. 1eaa. M~ Ind Chtyller/Mttlubllhl wtUc1ee onty.
Not wild with etry other ... -rice tpeelal CK
ooupon.
...
DRUG Ind ALCOHOL
Referrals
1-800-322-3363
Monday-Friday 8:00am-1 O:OOpm · ..
The Resource Center
11 1 0 '.N 1>:.,~
2880H...._
(714)
•
'
c.111 H, .lell H: At Indianapolis.
the Colli took their fowtb con·
1eCUtive victory, thtir lonlett win·
nins ttrina in 11 ~by bftak.ina it open with three tJlinl.quaner touCh·
downs.
....... ti. 11111•1 1: At CJodn·
nati, F"Mic Iron aet a club record with~l6 NCeivint. inchadj~
an 16-ICOrina play on the bOlli ;::.... Lr~;:.:::::
passes to Stephen Baker and w
rtnce Taylor forced two tumove
before leavi• the pme with
shoulder if1iury. _ ~ f.4, U.. 17: At Ma
oeapolii, Antho~y Caner caup eilbt puees for Ill yuda and W Wibon pmed for a career-lailb 39
~ IDd &WO touchdowm.
Paa-ll,PMar1 t: nit Falco
lnlooed an eilh~me llide at ho ancf iecorded their fint .. ..,., la
~n. Cbria Miller hit '' ol2S
for 177 ~ indudihJ ·• 4 ya acorina aUib to Gene LUI.
•
SEAVIEW ••• Proa BJ them. Buic:ally they were more reldr
to play than we were. The kickoff
(Walker'• 92-yard mum for a IOUCh-
down) just broke our becks.
.. The dcfente didn't play that
badlylebut the otrense aot them in troub .
.. The defente was just on the field
too Iona. You can•t atay on the faeld
that Iona and expect to win. And you
have to aivc Newport credit. They •
didn't tum it over but one time.i.!_'!'1
they had the one aood drive. ~ ney
didn't/umble and executed.
''And you have to aive credit to
-lom-Wtlket':" H~ did have a 11ea
ni&ht. l said,before the pmc the key was to stop him, and we didn't do it.
"You can't tum it over thRle times
and throw an interception ri&ht to a
guy. It's happened all year long. I
don't have any answen for that. · ... I don't know why I put the ball in
the air 14 times. We should have just
t~ to pind it out, but thel) we bad a
. . good , drive and fumbled. NcWp<>rt
wanted it rn,Ore." ·
"We told the ki& we're com'ing out r
in 'full gear Monday. We're going to
work our butts off and do everything
BANNER •••
From Bl (116);6. Westminster(l 15); 7.
Sadcbeback ( l 02); 8. Laguna Beach
(88); 9. lrvin~(81); 10. Coronadel
Mar(8l); 11. CostaMesa(76); 12.
Estancia(68); 13. University(65).
Guess which four teams have the
best shot at doing weU in the playoffs?
As for the trio of non<ontendcrs in
the Sunset League:
Marina (0-9} was ave~ng 44
yards a game in t.hcairunt1I FriClay's
outbunt of24 I yards hiked itto 66 for
the seasonj Huntington Beach ( 1-8) is
at I 12yarasagame;and0cean View
(4-5)isat95.
0
Lookinjdown the line:
· The 1989 non-league season for
area teams won't be much removed
from this one, bµt there are some
changes coming.
•Ocean View has scheduled
Saddleback for its opener, replacing
-Cypmr.Saddleback;~ngit
opener with Carlsbad, is stall looking
to fill a spot in its third week
(Dominguez).
•Newport Harbor and l.a.Juna
Beach will hook up again, this time
it's the start of a home-and-home
~ment at season's outset. Laguna
w1llbeathomein '89. with Harborat
homein'90.
Harbor is dropping Santa Ana;
Laguna Beach is dropping Leuzinger.
• Echson 1s still tryin.J to get past the .. Esperanza Ruic," which keeps
teams from starting early in the
Hawaiian islands.
Esperanza, citing its idea of"un-
fairness" overteamsstartinga week
earlyinordertoplayin Hawaii n
taking a week offlater in the -
league season, convinced the IF.
But there arc theories that' it is t
going to hold water too much I er.
At any rate, if Edison can 'tge e
Hawaiian trip, then the Chargers will
stay with Lon& ~ch Jordan tn the
third week of non-league iftbe
Panthers are still open. ·
•Coronadel Marand Marinaare
on the verge of making it official, as
well.
Coronadel Maris giving upon San
Clemente and Marina is dropping
Servite.
Esperanza, which was so worried
about Marina playing in Hawaii a
couple years back, may not have to be
concerned about the Vikings, as well,
if Marina can find a rcp!acement.
Ot1ngt Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, NowmOer 7, 1981
~
The wild, wild Sea View League football race with one night left • • · ' Golnt In. . . · Win, and Joa're. . • Loee, and Joa're. . . Tle and you're ....
U... ~ U... OWrtll L.M9M OWt9I LMtue o..r ..
WLT WLT WLT WLT WLT WLT WLT WLT
2 0 2 7 0 2 CdM 3 0 2 I O 2 CCIM 2 I 2 7 1 2 CdM 2 0 3 7 O J
2 I 1 3 S 1 SaddleNQ 3 1 1 • S I ~ 2 2 I 3 6 1 Sedd.ieo.ck 2 I 2 3 S 2
f ~ ~ ! ~ ~ ~~~~ ~ ~ . ~ ; i ~ ~::~~ t l ~ : ~ ~ ~::.~~rt>or ? ~ J. : ~ ~
SUNSET ••• p,_91 __ ... . . seven poin111~-lbat •.-.DA &OOd teams... ~
fi.1.llblck Jim W11TCD went down
with a kntt illjW) ud 1ppea11
questionable for Tbunday's pme
with Westmanstef. If he's not ready.
Pete Schoeder will fiJI in .
CdM
s.ddlebeck Nett. Harbor Estencla
Urilvenllv
Tuttln 1 2 J 3 s I University 2 2 1 • s 1 University 1 3 I 3 ' 1 Urilvenltv 1 2 2 3 s 2
1 2 l 3 S I Tuttln 7 2 I • S 1 Tus1ln 1 3 1 3 6 1 Tu•llrt 1 2 2 3 s 2 Westmlaller c.-OMd S&u Qul. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••111• .. •••••••••••••r' following the Lions' 26-19 victory . over Hunllnaton Beach: "ltW8;S wild.
t .-• w ......._ · ...i " h' ..... 1· · · . · 30 I kn~ Geo~ Pascoe and h11 ._,, w.ecan OJt~ra~somel" ... ouon. e ~n assoc.tat"" wit • we '1m1ted mtucepW>n at the . e1tht mmutes to. 10 and down by a would have some tricks up their
. d~dn'thaveatap~natN~wport. I car'l't them next to n~in1 and were in "It wasn't like~ M:d to drive ttl 2f-J8count.and Witteadmits~s 'slttvcs. and ~sure enoUJh. they diet.
gave them a Make Ditb~~~-~kte..co~trol.. -- . ~idrtt. .. rnttlnervousas wdt. -You trave-tb'credit their innovation ~· They!llOUTa knowwhat son "At the u~e. wc couldn't have "We didri't "-veto drive the ball,t "Obviously we were concern ," ndpulling out all the stops. --•
e e. · pla>'.ed a better half of football. and we, made the bit play. And, we continued Witte. "But they were "The"(Dou ) Cunnin&ham k.id is a
"We only have 10 seniors and just ·A brand new half was coming up, started tacklina better. going to have to go quite a ways, and oodathletea~da ood ~d. He'sonJy
five.of them are starters. Right now and we knew we had to keep it going, "In the first half (Jim) Roberson as it turned out the penalties really !junior and he's :oing to be a~
w.e don't have the fire." buta couple of thi~gs went wrona and was running extremefy wcU. We'd hit killed them. one nex.i ear
· ba.na. !!1omentumJustchanged every-him and ex.pect him t~ fall down. "But I think af they would have "1 tho~ght. George and his staff
Ullive.nlty Coaela Mark Cu-.thtnJ. Every~ cite w1;1 watcb1na. and our scored, at probably would have been were right on puttina him back there.
lllaOam, following a. 28!18 loss to pu~~ut was temble. Everyone was th~. ball game,. . He can run and pass, and rm SW'C it Sacfdle~ck: ''In retrospect, consider-Saddlebact Coedl Jerr)t Wint, waiting for someone else to make the I told the kids at h~lfhme we were will cause us all some headaches next
ing we were up 16-0 at halftime, you f~llo~ng a 28-18 ~n over U~iver-tflckJe. . ~ ~ . gomg to go fo~ ttJe big. plays. If we year. "'-
have to know the Saddle~lc ~ches s1ty: ·We go~ .~he b1& ral~Y •. but It was ' .. Once we. started swarming m th.e fumble or Jet mtci:ceptcd, we~d JUSl "They're start in• 13 junion." were screaminJ at halftime. . our field position that did it for us~ ·.second half. they may have.Jost their havflo do 11. LiKkily. every bag~ · · · . • .
"'We-thought maybe we should "We got the .good .. kic~off retum po ix a little-. Y QU could tell they were we converted. We went in with a good oCeu View COad GlJ eur.a..
have lit a fire under them, but it was and then caught them in the bad gettiDJ neryous." , . . pl~ui; but you .can•t run a ga~c; plan foUowio his team's 16-0 Lou to
maybe the finest first half I've ever coverage on f<?Urth-and-one, then the Uruversny was tn possession wnh with IO plays an the fint half. Eda son: ·'They're 8-1 . and you can see
._ ............... --
Mater Del'• Rob Nlcboll, •cklne St. Paul quarterback Gree WUUC abo•e; bu bel_ped pat the lloaarcba In· contention.
' ORANGE COAST AREA TEAMS STAY ALIVE •••
From Bl Mission Viejo ftolds the top spot at
~.
"We made. a few mistakes but
overall we played w.ell anCi w.e knew
that they were a much improved team
from the beginning of the season. We
didn't throw a lot, but we hurt them
with some passing. On defense, we
took away the-ir running game early
{on, and that's their bread-and-but-
ter." lr\\inc has beeo plagued by inju[ies
this season, but seemed to have come
out of 1he Dana Hills game in good
~hape.
"They're very physic.al, and we had
quite a few bumps and bruises."
There was one bit of bad news for
the Vaqs. Leading rusher Mitch
Steinke will undergo surgery this
week for1igament damage in his knee
that occured two weeks ago.
Woodbridge Coad Rick Gibsoo,
following the Warrior's 17-7 win over
Laguna Beach that clinched a playoff
berth and a eo<hampionship in the
Pacific Coast League: "Despite the
Win, which we're always alad to get,
wc self-destructed again. We had 11
penalties that went for over I 00 yards
lost. we fumbled and threw inter-
ceptions. and those arc things we
can't allow to happen at this point in
the season_" Woodbridge dominated the Artists
in every facet of the game, but once
again most of the yardage for the
Warrior's came between the 20s and
allowed Laguna Beach to stay in the
game. "Our first drive, we go something
like 86 yards and don't make a
mistake. Then on the next possession.
we do the same . thing and get
inter,cep~ed ... ~e 've been doing that all
season long.
Despite Gibson's offensive con-
cerns, the defense once again led
Woodbridge to victory. In four league
contests. the defense has not given up
a point. Laguna Beach had their only
score on a kickoff return last week.
and Laguna Hills returned an inter-
ception· for a touchdown three weeks
ago.
"Our defense is really playing
stellar, I've got to give us credit for
that."
Costa Mna Coacla Tom Baldwlla,
following his team's 14-13 win over
Orange that kept the Mustang's
playoff hopes alive: .. Our defense
played just super in the second half.
We held them to just one first down in th~ second, and ·this win gives us a big
opportunity. You do that a couple of
umes and the kids start to expect tt.
The Mustangs used a fumble
recovery in the third quarter that
switched the momentum and enabled
Mesa to recover from a 13-point
deficit.
"When Al · Hill recovered that
fumble. it seemed to get us exctted.
We scofed after that and on the next
series. we forced them to punt from
their own two. We got the ball back
and scored again. Then we just held
on.
"I just can't stress enough the
defensive effort we made. Darryl
Oliver made two key sacks for us, and
Tommy Nguyen·bloc~ed the second
extra point that enabled us to win by
one."
The Mustangs came out of the
contest injury-free, and · Baldwin ex-
pects to Stt all-purpose back Huy
Kieu back thts week. ""
"The doctors have released him to
play. but we don't know the extent of
his abahty.-
La~ Bead• Coacla Lymu
O)Hy, following his team~~ 17-7 loss
against Woodbndge that dropped the
Artists into a third-place ue with
Costa Mesa: .. I thouJht we played
well and hard. but it JUSt wasn't our
tum to win. We needed that dnve m
the fourth quarter. I thought we
should haYe scored, but ~e had a
~:pie of penalties that killed 1t for
.Beside that drive, the Artists could
onl) muster offense. on one other
play. Jasoo Oarke's 93-yard kickoff
return with. only 31 seconds. remain-
ing an the game. Incredibly. that was
the first touchdown th~ Anists ha~c
scored m Pacific Coast League 11hiY
this scasma, and they were pla) ing for
a share of the PCL mle.
··we played some decent football.
but we had three staners out. We lost
Darren Webb a couple a weeks ago
and then we lost Don NcttJeman and
Chase Meade.We had some fine play
from Dave Goldtn at lmebacker and
especially Sean Mallet who filled Ul tn
the backfield for us.··
why lhey arc. .
"It was frustratin& for us. We
played welJ defensively and I was
happy with our pass protection. We
bad two of our regulars out fOr the
most pan up front and had only two
sacks against a pretty agressive
defensive fronL
'"But we had 1 I dropped balls and •
that makes it hard to get anythina
$Oing.
"Randy K.artiner had 163 yards
with the drops. If we would have hunc
on to the ball . . . " "Gr~ Johnston was in there for Scott~l.Ong. who injured his leg. and
gave up about 12 mcbes and a 100
pounds apinst Chris Lippincott. and
did a good job," said Carrozzo.
.. And Mike Burdick moved in for
Paul Solorzano and did a good job at
· strongside end. He only had about
three days of practic.e at tac.kJC ·and
. ~ad t9 block those bard-rush.in& e~ of Edison. We were pretty haePY with
our pus protection afl niahL
e .. -.... aeac1a Ceadl Geer,. • Pueee, following a 26-19 loss to
mtnsler:~~ have won,,---~'
but we gave at away. It's been a
problem all year. W~doa lot of things
you shouldn't do."
On the Oilers' "Surfer· formation.
a spread formation which puts Doug
Cunningham in the role of a shotaun
quarterback be.hind the center. with
two backs Wldc to one side. and five
linemen and passer Chris Will on the
other, Pascec said. "It gives you a lot
of mismatches. Pcop,Je have to put
linemen over there to'cover and when
you have someone like Doug Cun-
ningham ...
"lt's fun to practice, it's sort oflikc
street footbalt Throw it to the open
guy. Go down and get open, and if
you're not' open, ru keep it and run
with 1t."
Mattu Coadl Cllri• RamRJ, ·fol-
lowing a 36-20 loss to Fountain
Valle\ ·-we had a good effort and a
good plango1ng1n. Ct looked like we'd
move the ball cart". but we dropped a
pitch and got a satery earlyJ. and lben
had a bad punt after the sarety which
gave them the ball at midfield.
• "We ended up with one ~ouchdown
agaanst their first secondary, and our
two other scores were against their
backup luds. We apprcctated that
the) played some of their kids early
and gave us a ch~nce to get our kids
up.
"We had s0me success~ their
good people when most of their
starters were still in. and I liked our
attitude. we kept playing bard.
"We proved we could execute a fev.
things.'
~~.,,._@wns~I!ac-ifi-e-in -w-aterpolo, -1-2-6
Tom Warde and Skylar Putman $cored four goals
apiece to lead UCI to a 12-6 Bis West Conference water
1>5>lo victory over the University of Pacific Sunday at
Jieritqc Park. Warde, a Marina High product who has 80 goals this
)'car for the third highest sin~season mark in UCI
history, put UCI up 10-4 with S:40 left in the game. The
tixth-ranked Anteaters (14-11, 5-1) had cruised to a 5-1
halftime lead. Chris Thompson bad three. goals t0-lead Pacific_
(14-10, 3-6). Tb -loss snapped the Tigers' eight-game
winnina streak. UCI plays second-ranked UCL'). today and faces Big
West leader Long Beach State, ranked fourth, Thursday at
7 p.m. at Belmont P1aza for a possible share of the
conference lead. The 49ers won the first meeting, I 0-9.
In col~ soccer. Ne••·La• Vep1 t, UCI 1: The Rebels' Simon
Keith chapped a shot over diving UCI goahe Damon Elhs
seven minutes into the second half to provide Vegas walh
the win m the closing match ofBig West Conference play.
The match was marked by several shoving matches,
and Keith was ejected right after scoring his game-
winning goal for making an obscene gesture with one
finger.
UCI finishes with a league record of 3-7, and takes a
7-12 overall mark into its final game of the season agamst
USC at Crawford Field Wednesday at 3 p..m.. Vegas
finished at 11-5-2 overall and is runner-up to Fresno State
in the Big West.
Jeff Pene gave UCI a 1-0 lead 23:06 into the first half
on a 20-yard shot from the left side off assists by Jimmy
Malaver and Shawn Bullock. •
Nevada-La,s V cgas • Rack Davis evened the score on a
.. similar shot from the right side with 19 seconds remaining
in the first half.
/.
Don MacAllister
for
City (Council
..
15 Years of Service
~
• --•o a QC1or · Ml ..... e.ch
• .. u 19MI I ... HW'lltfltlOn
• .,.,..._, PubUc Cabte TV Authonly ~Cabte Syaem) • = • ....._..John Wayn~
• Pw -'oleat. Boy Scoula ol A~tlta Pa.ctnca Ot~trtct
• Dllnetw. Runllngfun lk.ach Chamber
of' Commerce ..... ""'°".School oe.trk.i eo.ns .,,....._
• C 2 I 1 w. Pa.rU and Reore9Uon
Atrport Oomn'tlelton
• Dia U , HunUJ!Clon Valley tJoyund Otrta.cluo • P1 lt1ac. Fourth o( JUI)' Parade A
Plre-.orkt Commttttt
DDn ~ 11 P1 2a 1 l '11 aee.td -.. a '°'*1 dflctn>nJca l'Olll(IUJ. and a Dtm:t.Or tJI Huntln(llon NatlONl Ba.nit
A Vote for Don MacAlllster ts a Vote fot Responsible Leadership.
Novembei' 8, 1988 .
U C I BASKETBALL
After reaching the finals of the conferent'e tournament last \'UT. l'Cl hasketball 1s beck and better than tver The
1988·89 !Chedult ia the touihest yet for ninth year head coach Bill Mulligan Invading the Bren this 11t1UK1n Maryland
and TCU !West.em Dirita.l freedom Bowl Classicl UCLA L'"''L\'. t'SF and more'
YOU CAN ORDER TICKETS SEVERAL WA 'i · UCI BASK-ETBALL u Through Ticlle1.r0n outleu or call 17141634-1300 BREN EVENTS CENTER 2) Stop by the B~N ~VENTS CE;o.;TER or~ (7141 SM-.')00(1 UC I .,
31 Fill out the application below and return wtlh
self-addreaaed, at.amped tn"-elopt to address at right. IRVINE, CA 92717
-------------------------------------
•
'Detach and maH this port1cm I
Name ~~~------~-~-~~~~~~-~~~--~~---
Add re••~---~~~~---~-~~~-~~--~
Daytime .l'hone
~--~~---
t;vening !'bone ______ _
Date
Nov. 8
Nov. 12
Nov. 25
Nov. 26
Nov. 30
Dec. 10
B::~
Jan. 19
Jan. 21
Feb.'
Feb. 9
Feb. 11
Feb. 23
Feb. 25
Mar.2
Mar.4
Opponent
Athlet.ea In Action
Cl:ech. National Ttam
Western Oigii.1 Freedom Bowl
W•tern Oigitlt-fi'Tffdom Bowl
USF
Pepperdine "
Ea.tern Wa. hington
UCLA
Fre.noSta~
Univ. of the Pacific
UNLV
San Joee State
Cal Stat.e Fullerton
Lons 8Mcb State
New Mt•ico ta~
Utah State
OCSB
Price
$9.00
$9.00
$9.00
$9.00
$9 00
$9.00
$900
$9.00
$9.00
$9.00
$9.00
$9.00
$9.00.
$9.00
:00
$9.00
t&.00
Total
Amount
$ ,-
'-s . ,-
$-$= s .-,-,-,-·= I . .-,-,-
, . •.-;oo GeHral Admla•loa S.ai. •••Hable at tile Brem ••••b Ceaser.
-.tOO Ge•eral Adml8eto• 8eata; for ~.Ii .claool ...._ .. A 7 .. -r.
••allable at t•• a ........ ,. C..ter.
Make Checka Payable to UC REGENTS
For More lnformatiollf call (714) 818-IOOO
..
..
j
0nnge COMl DAil. Y ptLOT I Monday. ~ber 7, 1888
f 1_1,. . ·•. R· I , ••
Ml'L STANClllS
....... Cl f WWW ....
W L T
1 3 0
1 3 0
' ' 0 3 1 0 ~
Pa.~ f'A
JOO H6 ''° .100 214 l16
AOOmlM .300 lit 244 .
ChlCAIOO
Minnesota
OetrOlt
Green Bav Tamoe Bay
• 2 0
6 ' 0 ~ • 0
.IOO 1'2 121 " MO 249 11t
.200 12' 210
N.Y. Gianls
PT!oenlx
Walhlngton
Pl'lli.de!Phla
Dallas
2 • 0
2 • 0
East
.JOO ''° 2fl7 .100 IJS 2'1
1 3 0 .100 21t 1"
6 ' 0 ·'°° 231 2'9 6 4 0 .400 2C 236 s s o .soo m 211
2 • 0 .200 169 211
Amerialft C• fa:_.
Denlle~
Raiden
Sffllle
Sen Oleoo
K1nws Cllv
Cincinnati
ClevMnd
Hous ton
P ittsburgh
W.-st
W L T s s 0 s s 0 s s 0
2 • 0
1 • 1 c..... • 2
6 3
6 3 2 •
East
0
0
0
0
f'cl. Pl' f' A .500 207 2Q6
.500 204 21•
.500 161· 117
.JOO llt "' .lSO 123 166
.IOO,,. 115
.'61 153 132
M1 215 213
.200 lM 219
8uffal0 9 1 0 .900 212 1'2 .sso no 222
.500 2C 193
.500 116 203
.500 176 209
N Y. Jet' S 4 1
lndlanaooti' S S 0
Miami S S 0
New England S S 0
~-~ Pftli.dt!CINa JO, ....... 2•
llaWln lJ. San Qie9o 3 New York GIMb 29, o. .. , 11
MJ~t• "· Detroit l1 A.Rant• 20. GrMn 9ay O
~w Enolllnd 21, Mleml 10
Clndnnatl t2, Pltnburllfl 1 Cnlcaeo 21, T.,.,.. 9aY 10
~ 24. San Frandaco 2l
I~ 31, New Yon Jet• 14 w~ v . New Orteens 2• OenV« 11, K-(:lty ll
94if!M ll, Seettle l
T ........ • C.-c ...... no •• Hou.ton. ' PJn s.Mrt •..... ll
New °""11$ el ...._. l p.m
ll..-n at San./::"• 1 P.m. Cl'tlcaoo et Wa , 10 a.m.
Cincinnati el KMMll Cttv. 10 a.m
lnolanaPolis al GrW\ 9ay. 10 •·"' New Enalano el New York Jets, tO • m
PT!llaOe!Phle •• Plltabut11f!, 10 •-"'
Sall Oleoo ., ... !lent•. 10 ..,,.,
T-Say et Detroit, 10 • m
New Yon. Glent• et ~a. I Pm
Cltvelaftd el Denver. l P.m
HOuilOll •• $Miiie, 1 p.m.
Mil'Msol• •• D .... ,. 5 p "'
... y,Nllw.H
8 utfel0 et Miami. • 11.m
E ..... 30, Ranu 24
San ~ ~ ) 1 0 lt-14
0 10 10 IO-lO
l'lntoi.a11otr R.,,,s~G Lenslofd 22, ~7.
SeC>elWQwwW
Pt*-FG Z~ 23, •· Ptlf-l(ellll JecttlOft 22 11u s trom Cvn·
n1Nt1em (l.anOe\u kick), IHI
ltamJ-EllVd 2S HU from Everett
( L.amfo(d kick>. 1.-.30
n.ir'd~ Prii-evan 31 11eu trom CUM1no11am
ll~' klCI<) t-ot. ~G lende!es SO. 9 S1 ,_..Qua,_
~•""' Jeckson 2 11au from Cunr>•non.m
(bndeiaJ kick). 51.
Remt-9elt l run (l.anJlorO l'..c•I H I •--McGee 14 11au trom E• ... •" (L-'Orlt lo.lck), 10.lS
Pt*-FG Zendeies .0, 12 13 A-.. ....
Ramt '°"' F Ir" CIOWl'I$ 71 71
llushes • varm 13 ·69 33 · 1 ?l PMs1nt l Y 313
ltetur11 Y.,.dS )A 0 c-••Hn• 14·45·4 n-.o-o
Sadled·Y.,.dS LMI 3· 19 I· 10 Punn 4·39 , ...
F""*"·Loal 2·1 l·O
PtneltlM·Y.,.dS 2·31 6·3'
Time of Pouftslon 21.Jt 3 I JI
•DfVIOCJAL STATISTIC.S
ltU~ING-Rarm. Bell 10-20, White 6· II. ~ f-14, Brown 1·9, McG.-1·1 Phlledel· Phla. CUMlnenam l ·S3. TOMY 11·44. e ven
1·74. PASSIN~em•. Everet• 74·45·4·377 ~la-CUMlnunam 77·39·0-323,
C.vaneuen. O·l·0-0. ltECEIVING-ftems . ~llarO 7· 1'6. OJoMM)fl •·60. Oet11lno •·31. Holillan 4·31,
A.nderlOll 2·61 .. McG" 1·14, Wnlte 1·7 Brown
1-6. PNladelc>fl... BY•" S·6'. Carler S·• I T-S·,S. It JOl\llSOll 3·13. Kelll'I Jeclo.M>n
3·$2, Haddla I· 14
"
MISSED FIELD GOA.LS-Rams Len•lo<O
Raiden 13, CN"91n l
Sc-W~
l'lnt Qua,.,., S~G A.DC>ott .0. 11:00 t\
S.C...Quar1K
LA.-FG aw 36, 1:3'
,_...~
0 3 0 lC>-lJ )00 C>-3
LA-Junkin 7 PaH trom 9..,.r1t1n
kick), 2.36
18•1'1•
LA-FG 8al'lr 19, 10-10
A-SS,114 so
17
10-'3 1$3
' 14·l0-1
3·7• 1·'3
2· I
S·:M
70 3
AUTO RACING
!MY Oult • , ........... ,
Results with •lerllnt POlltlon In _.eftfi'leSls, drl...,., l\Omalown or countrv, type of car, laPs
comt*lad, reason out, PflH money and win·
ner's avenge JPftd In mPI\:
1. (4) A.I Unser Jr., A~ciue. N.M ..
Marcl'l·Cl'levrOlet, 112 laol. W4.160, 101.471
mph
1 <•> Ito /!Mari, 8akeofield, Pens1r.e-
c nevro1e1, 112. UO,llO.
3 ( 121 Didier TheY•, Belolutn, LOla·Cos·
worll'I, 111, M0.'50.
' (13) Kevin Cotan. PelOS Vffctes Est•IH , Mercl'l·CMWO<lfl, 110 $)4,4'0
S. (I) DeMv Suliven, Loul•vllle, Kv ..
Penslr.e-Cnevrotet, IOI, US.340
6. (23) 8-111\ard .Jourdain, MaalGo, 1916
Marcn·Co•worlfl, IOI, 120,no
1 (Ill Ludwlo Helmrelh Jr , Ce nede, LOia·
Co•wortll, 106, U S, 100 I (201 Howdv HOlmei , Ann A.r!>Or, Mrcn ..
Marcn-Cosw0ttl'I, 106, 1n,4IO
9 12s1 Scoll Atcnl•on, 8ekeolleld, ltM
Marcl't-(OJWOl'll'I, 105. '14,'60
10 (ti) ll•111 LtwlJ Hllls!)Ol'OUl>fl, Lote· Co,W0'11'1, IOS, It .336
11 (22) Dennis VllOIO, F0tl Leude<O.le, Fie., 19'7 LOlll·Cosworth 103, S lS,574
11 (161 D... Coyne, Plalnfi91<1, Ill~ 19M
MarCft·Cl'le-nOiet Stock 810Ck, 6', enolnt tell·
ure, 113.SSO 13 (17) Roekv Mo<1111, A.re.die, Merell·
Cosworffl. 5', 91arooa, S lt,SSO 14. l 111 .._,,. Luvenctyk, Nell'tlflanels, Lote·
Coswortl'I Sl, tnorne !allure, SU,240
lS (21 MarlO Anc1re1ti, Nnerttn, fie .. LOia·
Cnevrollll, Q , luet •n•em, st7 .240
16 I 1') JOM J-. Canaoe, Marcn·COJ·
wortn. 31, mecf\anlcal, SIS. '30,
17 r3l M1cn .. 1 Andrtlll, Ne1ereth, f'a ..
Lllle·Coswr •tn 15. ctutet\, st5.27S.
II. (9) BooOv Renel. Dublin, Ohio, LOia·
Judd 20, en91ne felture, '15,27S
19. (1•1 Jan ~re Frev, Swlllfflend, 1917
L01e ·CMwor1n, I, off course, Sl,275 20 161 Emerton Flt11Paldi, llraiW, lt'7 LOl•-
Cl'ltvrolllt, o cretl'I, s 11,ns
t i (7) Teo Feb' na tv Marc.n·~. o.
er•-"'· 11 .620 n. (IJ Reul 8~ 8rei11, Lole·Cosworll'I,
0, cra VI. S14,620
23 (101 Oeret< De1y treland, Lote·Cosworlfl, o. crasn, s1u 20
2' I 15l Scoll 8nvton. COldwelaf'. Mlcft.,
Lote·Judd. o. creSll. SU,610,
7S ( 161 A..J FOYI. Houston, LOl•·Coswor1n,
0, craSll, 111,110
26 ( 19) llooerto Guerraf'o, Cotot'nbl•. LOI•·
COSW()l'lll, o. craJll. '1',620
RUNNflllG
New Yortr atv Mii,.."*'
M•N
1 S•t~ JonH, Welei. 2 "°"''· I minutes. 10 ..conO•, 2 S.1ve1ort 8elllOI, ltety, 2.11-41.
l Jonn Trtecv .• lrtland, 2 13 11. •. GIOemlJ
Shallano•. h na n\e, 2-13:50, S Juan Cerlos Mon1ero, Soaln, 2·1(.-00
WOMaN
I Gr••• Weill, NOl'Welf, 1 2107. 2 L•ur• F0911, llelv, 2Jl.16, 3 Joan Beno•• S.mueQoll.
Fraeoort, Maine, UNO. ' l(arOllna Saoo. HunNrv. 2.36 • .0, S. Klo lln ~. Wftt
Germanv. 2.37.JS. • Ai.v11ne Clleiove, Soviet Union, t:l7'.St, 1 GrH ..... Strlllll. lie!'/, 2~.12
CROSS COUNTRY
Communttv c ..... "*' and wemen
NIOAY
Southern C.llfornle CllatnPlonal'.llM a1 BP.ff,fl .. d
Hkltl """' bovs and tlrts SATURDAY
CIF Prellm• el Ml San Antonio C041toe. I e m
Ml.IC M>TICE
-·~. I ,'-J
VOLLEYBALL SCHEDULES (..... Wemeft
W•l*UOAY Cet Stelt FtAtfton el UCI, 7-.JO P.m.
'1tlDAY San Dleto Slate al UCI, 7:30 P.111
Cwnmull'9¥ C..... __...
W.ONHOAY
GOiden West e t SaddltOedl. S:30, ltlvff""9 cc at Onnee Cont. 1. ntU.SOAY Orange Coas1 et ll•nctlO Sanfla90, 7.
Hkltl scM9I 9lr'I
T\IHOAY
CIF wild card ~
WIONISOAY CIF tin t round ,,.A. )·A).
THUUOAY
CIF tint round lS-A.I
"UOAY CIF .acond round <•·A, l ·Al
SATVRDAY
CIF MICond round (S-Al.
0.... ... flsh6ne
DAVIY'S LOCKIR (Mtwller1 IMO) -S bOal•. 157 enei«s, 441 oonlto, 1' coo. ,,. calico
ban. 1 send bau, 41J blue -cl't, I w:ul11ln,
I "'"°"'"4. ' sereo. l •Pal\ISll ledt, 2
iacksmtll
N•~T 1.ANOtNG -• t>oats, 17 eftllfiffi. l 1J -di, 113 bOl\llO, t0 beU, 61
madlaf'e4, "' roca flJl'I, 207 W:Wln. 21 ~. I line tod, 1 wl'llle fi\11, • cow .COO
8ASICSTaAU SCH•DULH c..... ...
TUCIOAY Altlletei 111 Acllon et UCI ltahlbltlonl, 7:JO
'D.tn..
SATUaOAY ~Mllll Nltion.t 1eem at UCI le)IN·
llltlonl, 1:JO •.m. c..... ......
SATUaDAY AIUmnl at UCI, S P.m. c~ alt.-"*' ' flltlDAY
Or•net Coe•• et Soulllwnlffn, 7!30 p.m.,
Hanc;Cldl et GOiden Wftt, 7::30 DJn.
SATUaOAY Grournon1 vs. Goldtll Wftt et c., fllcK c ...... 'p.rn.
c:"emm:11nlflf c-... ...,..
TMUaSDAY
Gotdtrt Wftt •• Sen °"'° cc. 5 •.m. fltbDAY Ora1111t Coe•I el Cllna. 730 P.11'1.
WATaR POLO c.....
..... ST COMfl•••eec. ua n. '-* • P.cltlc t I 2 r ' UCI 2 3 3 t-12 P.clflc acorlne: 'OlomPson 3, ltOOlmon I,
$utNrtenc1 1, Stewen t Goelle S9Y9$: Della Mleekll'• 13.
UCI acorlnt: Wenlle •, Putman •· Moroan I, Lllllt 1, W 1, W004 1. Goellt .. .._.. ICnoll
7.
WATER POLO SCHEDUUS c.-...
TOOAY UCI el UCLA, J -.m.
TMUaSOAY
UCI "" Lone 8tlldl Stele •• e.tmonl P\eH,
7 P.m. '
SATURDAY • FrftllO Stele vs. UCI al Htrll ... Per11, noon.
SUM>AY
UCI el ,.._dine, -.
CllN'NINIV celeee
SATURDAY
Soutllafn CaHfornle F lnalS el Belmonl P\eta.
Hillt scM9I
THUltSOAY
CIF 7·A l)levofk (tint round). ,_toAY •
CIF •·A l)leyoffs (firll round).
SOCCIR
~""" ..... ST COMPH•MC• NwMl:US V..• 2. U(t 1 !Mvada·Les .., ... , acorlne: ltlck Devis,
Simon K .. 11'1. Goelle M'llU: DeMY Andlnon 1.
UCI ICOl'lnll: Jtff ~ I. Goalie MllH:
Damon Ells 1,
Helfllme: l ·I
SOCCER SCHIDULIS
~WWDNmSDAY
USC el UCI, l p.m SATURDAY
HAIA. Oblrlcf Ill flnels, 1 p.rn
SW. Allfta
WMIA Y'S •IM. T1
...... ~.~ ... )
Time l CU
l • CUii In New IMtllel _.,.,,_ o.-te..e1
I .. It 11 ..... - L .. _.,., U 11'ACTA IS.JI Mid Utl • Tin• UI
#{,
... sn. .... Cenco ..., ala9e
WW-IOAY Goldin Wtsl al Sen ler'IWdlno Valln, 7:30
P.ITI
PaeDAY Goldin West et Cal PolY Sen LulJ Olll-
lnvilalliltlll, 9 a.ro.
SATUaOAY Golden Wftl ef Cal Po1Y $en Lull C*-
lnvilellonal, ' •C\.
w.elleMI • a ill t*'•
MllCRMU. ......................... MJA.MI HEf.T-s.-t Anthony Teytot,
ouercL w~ Jamie Wf/ller, euvd. Co R I tll ....... Atw:tra.
WICHITA FAU.S TEXANS--Sllned INlll D111Pn, forwatd. LHlff F011vllle, C:tnltf, and
Oerrld TevlOr and Dion WtltOll, ouar1t1. POOTaAll
......... ..-..... Leeeue
A TLAN.T A F ALCOHS-Placed Svlveater
Stamoa, IP.kit rtlurnt(, Oii lniurtd reMNe.
Claimed Vlllton Smltn, ~ktf', off walvtf'l. MIA.Ml OOlPHINS-Acllvelad Larry KOik ,
llnebeckaf'. lfom lnlured rew-vt SEATTLE SEAHA.WKS-Actlvelad Rav llut-
..... wide receiver. from lniurad reserve. Plactd
Tommy Kii/it, wloe rtce!Ylf, on lnkll'ed re-
Mnte,
TAMPA BAY llUCCANEEltS-A.cllvelad
Ervin lt'Wldlt, Nnetleektt. ~ J-Wl!Otf, runnine OKt, Oii In.lured ,_.... Pieced .Joev
CllflkKeles, wldt receivaf', end Vic~ ~. ~"· on '"' lnacllvt 1111. c......., ..... u..e
CALGARY ST A.MPEDEIU-Acllvettd
David McC.rarv. COfntfbKk, from lht r-vt 11$1. •
EDMONTON ESKIMOS-A.ctlvetad Tracy Ham • ..ciuerterci.tk, trom 111a tnlurv llJI.
HA.MIL TOH TIGElt·CA TS-Acllveled lton
Ingram, wldt recelv«, end JOMnlt "-·
tunnlno NCll. ffom 1111 Pftefkt rosltf.
TO'tOHTO A.ltGONf.UTs-Acllvalael J-
Noote. wide recelvtt, lrom tne PfKlkt '°''ff· MOaC•Y ....... Hedr .. L...-HAllTFO'tD WHALEltS--Sent Scol K.._,.
donl, CltttnMmen. to 9ln1Mmlon el Ille
Amertan Hockey LNtUe on e iwo-..-
condillonlnt aul9nment.
... 1AO , ...
"'" ltACL 1 Ill• ..... Sofl>CaM 1v-1.-1 t• t.• ue •-v.., cv_,_, s.11 4.M """'-". <•1ee• S.Jt
~•ACS.•~ Mr. ~ IS.I 1'• lut IM C-. CV~) , • ._ .. I ~C~I ._.
19¥9.,,... llAC9. I 1116 nlllK ,_ Fr Accnv lMcCnll •• la Ti. 0... IV-.l UI _( .. ")
rw ... ''"' SICO.O IACI • ,..,_
ll""I Not'°" IMt1a1 IMO UO t.Jt Go FOf ilfoN••• 1111'\tlal 19 J ...
lltCfl T• IOltvlftl s.Jt T...,. l'Of I U DAILY DOl.llLI 1,,_11 H 141 MS.20
TMaD llACI I I ll MftK,
Pet-Cl'edrotu 1'AO f • UO 11.llletlNI• IOlev-nl , fO UO
Tllftl 1 IO I
PWTM •AC.a.~ u..........-....
""" _, (~I 11• 1UO t•
HAI C-1a.rat lttO It 40 L1ti.aie. l111eMr1 neo TifM. l.IU a.t •JC.ACTA IMt MJo tl, .. 50.
MXTM llAC•. I ...
let•!e -15,....,,, uo >• 190
MUC fl>TIC(
-
,_-IA
.U l..cTA IH I -llll.• 119NTM llAQ. ,.,,, ......... """ ow.tr IA ... , IMC'C-r11I IS Jt 7a UI
NMl .... ~I 21•"'9
Ho ......... !Metal 1A Time: 2Mt IJ DAILY lWfttl ll·t-11 Mill llnM.
~14 •A<•-t 1114 ...... It I *-Doll INP'tel '1 .. 11 .. S•
Y:achts
putter
toward
•
·Mexico
By ALMON LOCIABE!_ .............. --
• (
' ' ' ! .. '.
.. How slow is sJow?
Consider the fact that the 36 ~bts in Los Aneelea Yacht Ctub~s Cabo
San Lucas race bad coveted as~
60 miles in the fint l 6 hours ohadina
and~ still in U.S. watcn.
At the 6 a.m. Sunday roUcall. the lead yacht, Harold Ward's N~
Marek 68 Cheval out 'of Califonlif
Yacht Club>. was still aroPina pat S.o
Diqo1 58.n miles• from the noo•
Saturoay start off Los ANelea
Harbor. Cheval was four miles ahead of LeL Croucb's NM-68 Maverick (San
Diego). and six miles ahead of ll~y
Disney's NM-70 Pyewack.et (LA YC).
Think that's sloVI?
How about the IOR Class 8 and
PHRF boats, many of whom were
still off Oceanside. l.t&ht to non-existent southerly
winos and continued foe left offacials estimating the slowest start of an
oc~n race in history.
Total distance of the race is 876
nautical miles.
Handicap standings with distances
from start: 101t ·A-1. Cl\eval, HarOld Wwd, calfar1'la Yedll CIUll,51.1 mllts;, Mrlerlc:k, Let Cnudl,
K-Ket YC, 54.A; 3. Pvewedlet. ltoY Ohllrt,
La. An1tteS YC. S1. ~-a-1. Wlllterflewtl, .... Dey lleNA cortntnlen vc. 50; 2. Jeno. ROlltrt a MkMel Kah/I, Ca41fornla YC, 41, l. ltembundlOut. Mlle
CatnPbell. Lone llffcl'I YC, 41.
PHltF·A-1. ~. JoM Grlldrl,
CN11tr-Say YC. '9; 2 lleclt SllYW. Al A.41WM· Sieve Stelnet. L&YC, "; 3. Jou, Didi OMIM,
LBYC, 40. PHllF-8-1.Hene Ho, • .,.,. Croket, St.
Franc!' YC. 47. 2 lte!Pl\lt, Dev~ PllUlury.
NewDOl't Harbor YC, '4; 3. SaltY Dot, OeMlt
D'A.ldlo, eve. 41.
PHRF-C-1 Mornlnntar, Lr#rtflel DoeN, SIFYC. 42, 2. 9IMt Orurwler, MkNel SHeM,
Kine HerllOr VC. «I; 3. Git-. Ron Ridler, Soutl't Say YKlll RK:lne Clue • ._
Sanon ~tber .-.
Light wind and chilly foe failed to
keep contenders on the ~h for the
first race of Balboa Yacht Oub's
Sunkist Series Saturday and Su~y.
The race drew five·ctasses on 1n11de
the bay races on Saturday, and five
clases of large boats on ocean courses
Sunday. The series continues on the
first weekend of each month through
February.
..... an.. THISTLE-I. (tie) JudVGonkl, avc,Meteoe
Ven'TrMI, llYC, 1 en.c. c.-. Saft!• Clef•
Recine AWi.
LI00-1'4-1. (lie) Tim Mu/Nwrtrr, 9ellle c°'1111111en vc. •lld PU..,., ave; 1 ttowllnd Loman.eve.
LI00-1'.-1. Wiiiiam 91,tnMY. ave: 2. Peu1 wm1ams. ave: 3. w111 T~. eve.
A.DUL T SAM>T-1. (tit) Ernat VllUCCI, •vc.
eno COllnt GltlboM, ave. 3. Elelnt UMoff, •vc
LASEil-i. David MtlodY. •YC; t Tom
WlllOft, ave: 1 • ......, "'-loft· ave. o.ea.. aa-PHltF·A-1. SllldoO, PW Slwo, a.Na
CorW!llefl YC; 2. autwcw. JoM Cuter. •YC; 1 CllrislOClftltr ROiiin, 9NCe HlftMll, VOYl!Mn YC.
PHRF·9-1. FOUflOO, o.of'lrev ,...._, IYC;
t "'*'· 01c:k lrOWft. KYC; 3. Wwa Mol 111, Monie HoMll, 50IMI Sflor't YC. PHRF·C-1. lrft Goroo. Tom ~. IYC; t Puuvcat. JOllO St•Y. VYC: l S--.. Ive. ,
ltlcherdlon<ollOI, VYC.
SHIELOS-1. Mildred, Joe Pwtllton, UCI Sa4ne A.WI; 2. MMKY, Harrv•Y ... Yllll, UCISA.; >
Wind, Skaredlv~Gcwoon, UCtSA.
SOLING-I. •* Martine, •vc: J. Jim
MaMflev, •vc. J, •• Hetttrnen. vvc.
Nel.an "111• nwatta
CORPUS CHRISTI Tex. -
Annie Nelson of San Dieao sailed
away with the Hobie-16 Y'Omen•s
national championship in a nine-race
reptta •iled Nov. l lhrouah 5.
Other trophy winners= 2. Jutic
Renfro-Drysdale, Daytona Beach.
Fla.; 3. Terri Dautel. Brisbane, Aus-
tralia; 4. Belinda KJaasse, Cape
Town, South Africa; S. Judy Popejoy.
Corpus Christi. Tex.
BackbJ6um wtu tJtle
Jim Buckinaham or Newport Harbor Harbor V acht Club oullCOred
18 rivals Saturday and Sunday &o win
the Barney Lehman champjont.bip
for Lehman~ 12 dinghies. .
Other troPhy winners: 2. Nick
Madipn1 NHYC; 3. Jack Jakosky.
NHYC; 4 . Chuck Lewsadder, NHYC;
S. Chuck Beek, NHYC.
l
OrangeCout DAILY PILOT/Mondey, H<Mmbtr 7, 1988 M
Irvine ftnD changing division name
IAttt PredlMe Ctirp. bas announced the I rvinc· facturer of 1nlecrated •mate and data proc:atina •YAem1 bast<l company is c:hu~'= the name of its Analect with Workflo man•mcnt soft.aft, has reponcct
lnstru.ments Division to r Precision Analytical. revenue! for the third qu.arttr endi~ Sept. lO, ofSll.6
The name change. cllpected to be completed by year. million compared with revenues of Sl •.S million for \he
end 1s intended to bet,Jer ,1epresient the corporate strateiy third quarter of 1987 and a net loss of $2.2 million, or 22
of havina complementary electro-optics businesses wnh cents per share, on 10.1 miJhon weipted ave~ shares
related technolQSy and overlapplna markets. outstanding compared with net incomeofS2.2 million, or
Laser Pttcis1QD Analytical uses proprietary FTI R 23 cents per share. on 9. 7 million weiJhted averqe shares
technolOfY in developing instruments and systems that • outstanding for the like qu.aner last year. ·
are used in the analytical laboratory and process The third quancr results indwkd a tax benefit of
monitoring marketS" wh~ infta·fcd spectroscopy of' $342,000; or 3 ~nts-pcrsnarc. ~flccting-a-combination of
quantitative analysis is ~uimt. FASB 9o. "Accounting for Income Taies:· and an.
The company's Radiometric and Fiber Optic adjustment to tbe 19&8.Cffectiv~ tax rate;-·
DWisiolHn Utica, N. Y .. providcs1nstrumcrns for optical Excluding the impact of implementint FASB 96.
radiation measurements . third quaner net loss and net loss per share were SI. 9
• • • • mill ion, or 19 cents per-share, comP.8red to net income of
Costa Mesa-based PlleNet Corp., the leading ma nu· Sl.4. or 1 Scents per share, in the hkc '87 quarter.
NEW ~ORK !AP> -TM folk>wing ,list 5hows the • New York Stock Exehen~e s~s and warran.ts IMI nave oone up the most ~nd dowl) the most. t>1~ on percent of ct11nge regardlen of vofume for Frklay. • l'l<i S4Kur11ies 1rac:t1ng t>elOw s2 are Incl· ·Y,c:ted. Net and oercent1oe changes ere the c:t1tf.,enu belwMn ~ Previoue closing priee and 'Frldav's rp.m. orlce.
UPS'
Njll'M LI~ Che 1 FloatPnt le + lli 2 vjAlgln 2.19pr · f '• 3 MCoro cvof •~ l9
l ICN· Ptlarm 6~• .,, WabRR pf 691"3 S FinSt8ar 3~ + '•
NavJtr wtC j t ''• I Wstn Union 11 9 HorizooCo l9 •
Pct. UP 15.0 Up 9.1 8f u ua-'1.1 Up 7.1 lJp 6.7 Up 6.7
Uo S.6
10 Mall~ Inc l S1nDte Gas 12 Ryland 13 Pan Am · 14 M~nville n 1s v1Tooc:1sno 16 NObleAl1I 17 Varity I~ vi..ystCoNA of I Anrnem l Crown.Crk. s Gen Devi ~ r:1~nlt1 n c eoson S S 111Des1gn
NMne l WstnSL 2 FurrsBishp 3 CountryMto
.6 :S
-111111mn~---------
b -~ -..,, -~ -...,
1 -21/a J:V. -l/i 7'1'1 -l 3~ -V:i 3~ -112 I~ -3,io
l ~-1~. -'I• 2 -v .. 1 -~ s -~ .~,.. -,..
l lJ'.I -l 4114 -\"> JO -3!.'t-6112 -~ 13Ma -1V'l 211• -'I•
"NA 1Y lJTll.E MEASCRE ... "
I 06 '' an l"'Jmpk of '{lltl rn acti<ln a n.oa.'>t\ littlt" mca,.;uf't" h~ rn'llrcr. \X oukJ Ot)I reJuo:
'""'Jr.tnlt" r.un l);rn~1.·r fut" 11tfloun ;int.'-' for mtddk 1ocvmt.· <..aliforruan~
\ oh: nu 110 l 06 ·
t.\ 11\n' llllll>Rl\I '°'' H IWOI
.. A.r\J 18-KARAT TI llKEY ... " ·
..... f'Of)\Nt11in 1116 ".ltl l~·br.it rurt..n Jn<l \lltJ d ht-'1 not huy rt
t..(I\'" '"'lot···~
'-
"A REAL OISASTI1L ...
·Ill<' ".L' v. rlttl·n h\ .mJ tor m~.i.ncc.: t.'timp.um' h ~ l11v. l'r m~r.tnlT rat<."!-
h "111 l"'.u~ m'ur.ltl\.'(.' t:nmp.tn\ pnitih h 'J rc.:JI l.11'-l'IC'r •
~ •ltu /dfl\.in I t 1\1 \I\'' < \I •I
"NOO 106. .··
"Tht.> "'or.It in,ur.tnt. c l '>mpany miuatf\1:'
ofall. Wrecks "'um:nt ~'Stt"m auo'\\'I~
Amert\: Jn~ to p J\ l:tw\ t.'r.< only if they
"in . No ttStriction.s on lnsurancc
Company la1''}·~n. OoJ) the <.."Onsumer
f;j~•~t.'"-.trt.' rc'tnuc:d ·
* ln."Ul'2nt-.: sptt6.t"'"1.m
t.~~ I()() "ill nttt
:.. rtdlltt ... ~
~ 01('fto t n1on (1 .? 'AA
* l()6 lc;-.t\'(' th( itNtr
a:ncc' U'ldu." f'\ ft«
10 do "'ha.lt"\tt lht"\ want
lO. ~hik ii~ )'OUI'
~
RALPH "IA.DER
FACTS
* Hft•t.'1h't'I\' rot\~
<.'Qft"llmcrr. Jnd small
hu-.1nc.· ~n m pa) h•
hourly rato me,· "-an't affutd-
* Prop 1(>6.tttlt'ktt
onl\ ~ ~ or IO'\.
111 (.tlifo m1.i la._)"en "1UtflR
lt> Uk ~"tlfllt~l'K."\ ftt C<iL'JC'S.
0oc,.~·t"WlM:h .tht-lnsuran<..-c
(o In~"
* CoMumtt :anJ
~~tall.a~
~•h ,,,1u.1ll\ C'hmin~lt•d
IS.
1r:·· l .
l . l i' 11 11. 1 .1
lil:l 1 .s 1 .5
' :i
' j
.. * Orenge CMIC DAtlV PILOT/ M~ay. NOYetnber 7, 1988
NYSE CoMPos11 E TRANSACTIONS
••
\ MONDAY'S CLOSING PRICll
WHA T A~u x Dio
NEW YORK (AP) Nov. 7
1
AMEX LEADERS
Go LD QuoH s
MET ALS Ou oHs
WASHIN'&ION (AP) -Ameri·
ca's wealthiest families are keepina
ahead of inflaHon. the poorest are
losina around, and many of &he rest are boldina even only bec:aute more
family members are Wort.in&, llCOOrd-ina_ to a new economic study.
The study conducted for the Econ-. omk Policy Institute showi 1 widen·
lna PJ> between rich and poor sin<le
Praident R~ took office, with
the topomint 20 percent makina
nine timesu much money in 191611
the poorest 20 percent, c:ompared
with 1even times u much in 1979.
Institute Dftlident Jeff f au Mid
lJte nspc)r1 slJows IYCfl9C Amerlcan
families have been uiMlcr pater
economic pretaUrc duri1t1 the put
decade I.ban at any time lince World warn.
.. Without new cc,,ol>Omic policies it
ii dc9r that funalia CU DO lofteet
count oa aadily iaaeui1t1 iDCOmet
and thlt tbe Dttt __.tioM cannot
expect to liw: be!1er than &beiJ ~ts, ... faux aid.
5'epbe:a Roee. a Selttle ecoeomitt
who wrote die report ... witt.
econom•11 0.Yid Fuarat o( LouilVillc. llid .... widmh11 ..
bMw_ricilt .. =i11NWllllOI ........... ~
Tk llldy ............. iidllOiilt bis iacn E I ill die I ••Of'wci •ID
WOfti ... _, • ·"' ..... ill
•
W H~T NYSE Dio
i NYSE Lf AlH RS
. .
! . .
I I
Do\\ JoNES AvER~GES
NASDAQ S uMM~R'
American families -thole eamina
less than ~.ooo a year in 1986 -
would have been.. unable ta keep up
with inflation between 1979 and
1986, the latnt year for which complete data is available.
1be repon 11ys the number of wortina wives incrcued from SS.4
pcn::ent in 1979 to 66.1 pm:ent in
1986.
4"his is an important tint step in
mcaauriQI the real economic baiefit of bavins a wife wcwt." Roee Mid an a
tdephofte interview Sunday. But he
cautioned that men ttud7 i• needed
to determine the additional COIU
families incur When tbe wife worb, IUCb as ~ter need for child care. The inttitute. formed in 1986. i1 a
DOD-..,U.n, no.profit ~i.ra· lion Whidt ha oftn beelt critical of
ROllU'• CODla'Vatlve economic
policies.
It met tbat with more women ill dllie
wotk. force. ·~ ~meed Mily income iea •d 7.3 ~t hm
s31.492;. 1979'°,..,m1. '"'· n. ~ lfttllli..&.1-1979 .....
by I .Q '° ..._:;;; •• ::-.., .. ,, lboWed .... t&eGP,; ..
lo-.rtwo-llliloldll ....... --~1111111rm.-• tlif.::.:rn:=(ll I , ~ .-1c..-.n:.z: ... co••,-.OIMlllilJlnH•I
• ' ,
' ' • • • I
• • . .
•
CALL-642-5678
.,,,, ..................... ,.~ ......................... ........ ___ _ ., .... _-..._ -·-----
........... lllllc.iila... llM ·~ ... 1111 1 ..... 11• C....... -MM C.u... MM C.U... 1111 ......... ..
•EAITitOE TO'M\ftofMI \#MUN 8UXNJI • ~... t.lMl 28r 1a. A/mo. EASTSIOE BACHELOR •La. a., W (ij ..
Stepe to beh, poole, 3lt 2be: OW1 )Id 11100. •GATED COWWHtTY• Clean ,.._port hecll me8lillllB $400 9'C:Uftty. AV111911te awn.._, '"*' yent w/19undfy,:=· no
OCMl'I & lennl9. 2eA+IO •2BA 1be. JK, get,~ •• .,.. towMome, 21R 1'MIA. • Hew. i . C.. tor ~. pM ok. lot851mo. AWlll peta, nr Ctt daln. 2 cer oer. Open &un1 .... ooen.aetl&Yn 12·3 BEAUTIFUL. 28A 28A high Olllf9. ......... 131-1111 now 71CMM2 S1100/lfto a.10M
1·5 at 2l5 l11t St. 20MFuier1on. 111 lllO ~/aotfOOWMV~Aaeo ettactiect......._teltcNn ·wa1•11 ** ... ,_** EASTSIDE iatge 28R •~ii p OOCKSIOEAE722-t7301*EASTSIOE LO 38A 1~~.Fi:.weew, le loeded wlupgr...._ 1w1tl1Uiii landec:ap.d. A llMll QUl9' compltl(. 1,MIA T~. 0.-1-::!'-~liliiliti-=lll=I:::--~•
2 Sty 38A 2'ABA ~._, 2'MSA 2-ety, ear frplc mlcto, W/D ""'· 2 cet 0.-.. OOI..., .._ _,...!.large. deal\ ~ Studio ' t650 OA 1515 -a-S*k> 1115/mo 1 · * ~
fVlll1° ~· w!Wht patlc?. '!dry hk~ Sm. pet fr: ~xtr:_ •:z· :t" optton.•~ =: ::.::.0 °'deck. w/trptc. 1BA M50. "l.J(• 211 C-.0. 145-1016 Fno. , aeove
...,. crpt, penor*"6c ate. 11250. t7 112 Aot --. no -au' OIOi , I .. . ......... new ' .,.,., pi.It". Ftptc. UIT--.. -Ind . ..., ........ . vt.w of ocaen & MtbOt iG """'' 7' .--_.., oom --pool lndtY. 1at + ·~
from llv rm & matr aun..·~e:= ~ = ~··'•'.41a•••ll05••t MC. ·~PETS. s.4 ... 2447 2801~. frpl. patio& gw. *~·111'11.f* C...~~~\1!:!1tM1'rm,trptc,:..Cw~ 1•Wt18.. TAMUA •BAYTIMiEAS• · 1~~~ec0 • ~aa •• .':.~,
MM63_1 • a!~~ old~ MW 'j':,,....~'t1:..= •• ... 1~ ":: =---~ EISide280 tBAMWpelnt * 'WU11*
LI® ISLE-Charming J*nt ~ ywd .dul.., 2BA .beeuty wn.tur. NWP 1.., 1BR. 18A. __. enc Get 'w aaY St. *5 t60-e357 & c:arp9t. lndry fee,. no a..n.. 248r a1C: ... w/d 3bdrm, den. Lov.ty petlo, no ... '31 ~on too nutnerOUI to ~ WUl ---w/d hkup, cto9. to sO PtU, 1875mo. 271-c E. '*~ ,,.. cerp9l nm
wll axc:n tor dupl °' ttlPI tl7Stno ·,~ 173-7W tlon. tmmed cicq,y ,,_. BALBOA 48r, tp 11900 COMlt Pica. 1110/mo •Cleln Mw Verde IQ 1W\ pl. 644-0452 . iwa.' Oii .., ,..· H-.
:. ~~· Lag.Bc:h. 8RtoHTON Sf»AtNQS 18R =:soc::-' ~<:a 8:~ Condo.
2
8t 5*0117• °' M2·M04 ·. ::. 2
8:.'tt:"' ~::1:~ E-etde 2BA 1BA, pr. trptc, • ~-= ::.!,,.10e0/mo .
. 1-5 COndo. Sdtded woods 720-3M00t7 I BAL80AC0¥9128t,den, 1anu ......... lf100NopetaM0-24H bWn cell, 17404750 + TSLMGMT 142-1IOS
CALL 2JZ,~ ~ at ~'*:v~ ,'::: R£AW I ~~~ d~. Pool S4l5Jmo. 149408 WHCTI ... 1. :: .!5:.':ac~,~-•YeARl.Y::()M; tfOfll
873-71n hook~. mlcto, frptc, get • .. den, dodl fOt eo· boet. 18A Apt. Carpet. drapea, ~ btdg on E'Sic1e. oory EASTSIOE large eondo 28r 1Ba. C#POf'l, .-
Men111 Lyndl Realty w/opnt + carpott. Rae \Jf.Wl::X]Jf rt'\.11 Yeat1y. 14750 atOYe. lg fenc. patio, wlklel or wood. Aeltaned lpt 28R, 1'~. bultt-inl, *"' l1Ge5/mo •
...... pool, IPL 1150 + AEALTORs.e LINDA ISLE 2 ltcwy Ar. cloee lo lhoppllig. aV1lll S*itlna I leundry fd.. getage. Plltlo. 1115/mo NEWPORT PACIAC LIDO ISLE dep VELMA 54 ... 2447 boat dodl. 110,000 now, 850-7244 ta S530/Mo. t3l-0552 142 l7t5 or 645-3221 Dewe M6--*3 ~~Rt!,~'~C:,~ CL~N· 2ar 1a. duptex,
1~.J~fr~ ~ Wllllir ........... 2BD 1 3/4BA ClMn & *mTllT •* EASTS1oe SNwp a CIMn ACAOSS FR BEACHn ·
80' on the water Into a 1725. Ger. aml yafd. no vaulted celllnga. bttlnl, IUl.lm U1·t• ~ wtth frpi. V«'( LG 28r 11.4BA TownhOule. 28R. WHhar/Oryer YEARLY 28r/1h dupt9x,
tabuloulaet•t•. Prtmeto. !)9t1. 1154 "A" Meyer. trptc, rormal dlnlna tm UDO ISLE 4BA. 2'MSA. Ptlvtte, Gar. Incl. E'tldtt. garaoe. patio. hkuc>, pvt 8Undedt. encl ~~·I=~
C9tlon on tip or IMand Credit cMdt. 54e..:MM 11150/mo. 720-7400 MW Clll1*. FA/DR Lo 1796mo lmmed Occ. laundty room, l850/mo. get. 1140/mo. 546-9950 'ill•liiiiiiiiil with wide llarb<>f & nit• R tu patio. 45' IOt a cM gt Kevtn,Brolitet 851~24 2e2t ORANGE . I ..... ,_ .. light~ 1400 W/~~z~ 2~.~A~~=~~ S27s01yrfyt73-1781 • 28012 l /2BA +den. 2 It. T$LMGMT &42-1803 E~E '~~.cr~~~·~r.i: CLEAH 28R. ••• ""·
sas0oooo atrMt.1yri...11450mo. poo1,tenn11,11e1s1mo,4uwer 4aA '"°BA. 2 '* ~:'"· •i~'C:n:· •LARGE1BRdupeelcunit, st. /:50 + s1so MC. ~·11-:*n;s.."':'mNo
-
' ' AM Agt 751·5000 mo+ olt 722-7007 gatllgl amall petto 112 .; 1419. 2093 · MW cairpef & paint. NO &45-7234 NO PETSI · ·
\A.ATIHIHllNl ,,,...;..,. __ 111UL ........... 44ttl St. l1e&0/mo'yrty. SOmo.931• ~~/mo&2~ Lo18r,c=-port.pool,laun, 111111 ... _ HOMI., lee. SA91-...... Avt now. 213-597-47()4 -.. .,_,...,...,. _ ... ., ltV & frig Inc no petl •1• "'1
REAL ESTATE 28R 2'MSA twnhme, de-Lo~! >~t YUN. ~N 8 OCEAN vu deluxe 2BR •NEWPORT HEIGHTS• S515/mo + $350 "'--38A aA La.. Untt • .a-kltdlen, IQ pvt•yd, Cfl).. -·. , . • • 1'n bath. frplc. dede. Get· .,, _ _.. .. ......_._.. ..... d .._ . 2t.T,.., 11450 548-0131 Tennta Oub & lhopp&ng. II 2218 E. PllCtftc as>t B. .-.-.....,_,,_ ,.. .. yw • av.it "°"' 142· 140l New cwptit, OSlill WIO REALTORS -$2000/mo 1 yr-No p«a. -l900/mo See 111 Cal MW c:arp9t. S520/mo. + hllup, ysd . .._. to JW1c. 111&9m1 IWLO E'lide3BR. 1BA. tencdyd. SHATZEN RE 159--.,234 1st-.11o41E 844-872210 depoelt. 541 3t32 1111 ,_ $750 11100/mo.
I 2 8 R 2 8 A 0 Fr dt, w/d hkuc>. ardnt. -•-.. -_. ...... Mii 3BR 28A amatl yard, 2~R 2~sr:,rrWMe 4408 AIVER-1789.~ge. 842-38~ pet ok, 1 1150/mo ·-_...,..HA 1L ;;t; .;m. 2BR 18A, 1-car geraoe. C#POf'l, i785/mo. 2522 .,,, TSL "°'" "'2·1IOS
PropertyHouaeRltn 850-3te2i.tw9-59m 3g~~cw1:'t.frptc. Remodlled,4dntob9v .• r.nc.dywd,utlltleepeld. s.nta Ana AWi. AYWI MESA VERDE. 28R 1BA. AVAILABLE YEA.ALY 1
•--------E-Side 3BR 2BA twnhle. traeh o, ~ •1'::; Avt now. S150 +150 utl. 1825/mo + ~ AV911 Nov. 18. M&-3112 upper. Quiet Qlf de MC. btoc:k from OCl99' l beJ,
Y•d.QIW.quletW.._XJnt ._,.. 87~ni.is20 NO PETS.* 873-4220 11115. * 831-4919 i525+ o.p. 1BR moble $700+. 2887 Hid«Wy 29A. n9My deool-.d. "~~~;~sm! condl $1080. SM-4019 ,,,. home. Sec:ute ... tuf. 418-1938. 751-1463 on!y"'6'50-IOll Dyl ~2428 Ev/Wknd 3BR 28A, freaNy pelnted. U~ lJlle...... 2BR 28A. gatege. new edulta. No ... 1191 .., • Executive TownhOUH ·.----------------~ E'Side,38R or2+1gfarn =·~=2~~= ~t~~'f::"~ PMwpoft~.MM313 28R2BA,f/p,NW~. ~E~2 ~/':i
1111 lltall r. Salt a.a. iii28A + &n. 1BX C"'w "~-~i,:a: tem, auto tprlnkler1. Yeerly 11100. en.8171 250-4220 ot 754-1&M =:I;::, btt.ft. nw 818 u1 1113
/cmM fehwla 1117 ~~o t~ 1~ * 722-1881. 54&-n45 ~~;-s:,,,:::11:_~ inci Ll,11 fulu•l• ** * me8till.llll 910 ~ FUANISHED. 2 BR. 2 BA ii---""""' ... -.--.. ~ia ... &fwww _... ..... M17 TSL MGMT 142-1803 condo,oce111*9,= ~ 1111 •°48'/28auppet )'W1V873-SIM•• l /.W.hlluT •HARBORVIEWHOME IPlllM I mTIBI ~ CMlc $1100/mo flll\•xe.,..Ml~{~n"'it.,.m~~Pl!"!!C>P-~ •38r/28a lower ·~ 1BA:_.rrp1c, dlw, 2rskin~ ~~2520 4::,. !~ rtp,d!pgr~, OCEANFRONT 1 BDRMS l'DAMI\ nDnmlt' sc=g clean~ IA:ru• 1M.. ..... 22-3546 °' eeo.2122 q 38R "°'* NIWpof1 17" ooo .....,_ to .,.,ty, mo-mo · ~~ • · .... _..._..._ Gru Ion \JI\ 1111 ur tnll1\J 1p1a. a..utlfully Many to ~ from. 2 & a.c*a.y.,...,O.,.,,s.t ' 1815. 2133 Miramar. LARGE38r28acondo.2· pool,;;;,~·& *Y:al':;d, ""-· t ~-lan~P9d-9rCJ\ln4•. 28t..tlP • .-WW'PllL 3-~ ._---~I
& lJun 12·. 20211 Bal/ll P•87.S-5030• '* gar11ge. patlO, new '2t00mo.&47-5 aQ1 Muet .... IMt,17 PHASE Ill Pool&apa.perioeldedt1. enc:e.gar .... btt .... nw cation. st:~ at associated =·· Santa An• 4BR 4BA ~th Bayfront kltc:Mn, paint & ~. *IOIPllTllDT* Attractive bachalo r HARBOR VILLAGE APTS gar11ge0tcarport. lhope. 18860 CE/~EA $850/mo. 17 156-1182Agt. WITH DOCK Partlally $1100/mo.•54&-1785 2BR2'M5Acond0wfvlew -w/Hparate kitchen, e.cNb' MOO 81 Newty remocs.led 28A
furnl1hed. S3000/mo. Lux condo nr bch. 28A, Beautlf\MI 873-9334 S575/mo. Ind utllt. Quiet Talelng r....-vatlon1 for 1 Bedroom S&aO TSL MGMT 142•1803 18A. O/W, ,.ao. enc:e
I • , , i •t •
'' I '"' I J
Avail now. 722-7022 2~BA, 2 1ty. ftplc, ptV •NEWPORT SHORES• nlamoker 873-5580 Bachelor. 1, 2 & 3 28drm 1V.Ba S815 NEWPORT ACROSS THE ~ No piia. Quiel
MJ llu llU LAG. BEAUT. FAM. HM. !'tlo, ;-•1~~u~1~ 48r 38a hM on canal. Ltg SMALL 18' yrty I houMI Bedroom Aptl. 131~ 18ttl 51__64&-Mll ST~S/= 1':'~ nghbrM 1125 t 75-4eOI COLDWeU
BAN~eRLI ~;;;..;5!-imrm 11t. time rental. 580138A LUXC::Y 2B 28a condo tarn & ltv rm1, new carpet from wat«. 1550 In· New Apartments w(ll be 2Bdrm 2Ba twnhM S8e5 :r. 72CMM2i •• 19 Mf • Br 2 car gar. w/d. Avail. 1211 r · . & paint. YMl'IY $2150/mo dudea utll. 1 peraon. No ~ '°' Decamber 825 c.nw S1 142-1424 • 38R, 2'Ai&A. «*-to tllop-OUPLEX. 28r 28a+ 2 yrly. 12400 I winter Obi gar. frplc. pool. N£GOTIABL.£. 87~5447 gar. AvWI now. 17~9229 1 t 1911 Spattellng dMl1 28drm i:' dlNnQ. 8up1r *9 1~ Newty remodeled. $1800 721-11te 1995/Mo. 11t & IHI . ~ • • . All MW 28' 2Ba. bak:ony. w.a. (750 All ""' pd. ... Yrlle S22MMO It"~ \re be&: 1521.000. 17$-3288 +$300. 642-5290 *lllTIU IYll. 11Wt l1IPI Tl.-.. Ill trpac. wel-to-wall. xtr• Gar11ge. Sony, no pMa. "'-.Udo 17Mnl ~ MllllDI ...... .. RENTALS AVAILABLE NEAR PLACENTIA •NO CHARGE• A.gt. W/gw. YrtYSl~/mo .... mPLllll trg, and gar. MOO/mo. 1te0 Welace 142....0S
......... LOWESTPAICE2 -. ShOrt=~or,i:, 3BR. 2BA twnhm,~ '°' Mart1Ferguaon&42-7708 Agt122-7178Evenlng ..aT•uum• No~•l42.o433 MfthlUI' , ••• ~ ......
1111.m fem. rm2'h8aguar':gate Walwfl'ont Homea, Inc. c~21~r:sa-ll19 Imo 3BR 28A DUPLEX /frplcjWEEKLY. Snowblr~· In-9"• BEAUTIFUL 2BR 18A In 2BR w/gar. Carpet•. s:=~ FA 8 UL 0 ifg--fr 11 e va I 29,too. 891· f102 AQt ~on 17M900 +.._ On w laWI., vecaUonerL 1BR mf I ml* Quiet compa_ Pool. Get· dt8paa btt.ft. F...s ' towmome~7ynold. NERJAG!Oup6ax.MW WTnt• 2BR +Oen 28A NEWPORT HEIGHTS. ~=:; dlst~to~l 1BA, ful~ furnl•h•d. age, cable TV. new yen:twipdo.W ... pakl.~==~==~= Spedcu28A2BAAJC, 28r 28&. rernodeted 38r w/laland c:harml F~ 1 2BR. tBA. patio, avail bW:f\ $1100/mo 1M ..-$350/wtl. 559-5'5~ •Mtn!Bllndt ~~~:::;UTIL· 136-4120Cal 1-5PM IWUa175 lfll ::"' ,,:emmO!, i;': 28•. Good financing gangupece s11oo n'.io. 11~Ui,~Jmo. nopeta. MC. Jeck 818-914-2484 I~ LJ Li BB :Celllng Fan• 1725/Mo. CAU.122_1832 le7Vlctot'8 'H'-1720 •wmt 90AT ._...
complex w/pool & ape. 1525.000. 72().9445 ev9 Avt nn. 873-4062 Agt 14 lllll .. 112 fetbCK Fit BEXeAill ·=~ .... •'"" Weat91de 28R Ape. paUo, EXCl.~
Exe 111tlocedon. 111'11 ttewPot1 ~· u~ ~ Extra Ltg. tum. 180/frpl, •P•tJoe/881coniM C:-Mwr1macw-lndryfec.2pnmg..,._. HMbMI_,. 18" 1BAon ...... II., MPW•t• • apec · PENINSULA YEARLY dedC & vw. L .... avail. •Covered Pattllng _, New paint.~ & crpt. the BAY1 1100 ..._ ft. fnianla •• 28R, 28A, dbl gar. •Cute 1BR 18A upper' $1175mo. 3311 S.VW •New Fadhlel indude: :J:~ = 1750/mo, 131-1488 W.._70ryet ~~.
ll200/mo,54&-9909 clUplex. gar11ge, nice ln-1e1s-t732Jt98.9122 2Poola/2Spu Gal paid 97e-1911 W/1lda: TwnhH Apt. flrapt.c., microwave.
Lo t. Famlly rm, 111 SHARP 3BR Vacant & tetlot, M75/mo. 2BR lBA frpl deck, r.trlg, PlaygroundlTot Lota 28011 112BA. 2 per90n1 D/W, Qlr'llll9. ~ow
Magaine,Hlhomeu-M ...a.. .._9794280 amenlt. lea. double QW· Reedyf Pv1y8fd&db11t· •Cut• 2BA 1BA lowerl lf)lltgw'11ge.'NMtbMdl. B*el'rall EASTIOE LOCATION onty.nopetl.755W.18ttl ~.,..,.,11tl6/mo. ~ lndMduallty and .,_.., ..,.. age. bay view. Mutt ... 1 teched gwage 11300 mo. duplex. "*-laundry. No FOf t. or 2 peopte NO v~ 280/1BA twnhm. ltyte It, 146-9501. S700mo. •BoM Sipe Eldra•
uOllent taN In dacot-~ -815-4808 Bkr Margie. Agt i7M280 ~Ing. $IOO/mo. pet• 11015. 873-to31 Gal 880'1 frpl & aundeek. 1750mo Sony, no,.... ~::..C,andon ~~ IPll'Tllall ,. __ a .t-• llu II"" SHARP E·tlde 3BR 28A. YIW IEITAUI '*~BA 1BA S995/mo. •Chlklren Welcome Kevin.Bkt.85 1~2(. I t •---L -.aa llU. -..11 d.w It on.r.5 bd 3 3BR 3BA. ,.,..,.._ & 2 car .,.._ w AA completely remodeled. '* 1BR 1BA $895/mo 2500 MERRIMAC WAY EASTSIOE 1 Bdrm n9Wty U • ..,._ ~ NWPT HGTS CMrmfna
be,=roomandp(,oi gar.Topcond&loc.Pool ;WIM't* Pet o1it.s1o50imo.Avail WILITIULllAllL NearbMdl.Noamoke,1 COSTA MESA d«:Ormedcomerunl1 1n HUGE 1BA .-btoCkl to 18Agu111upctrtD19tt1
In 14 garden Mt-l tennil tool PM yetd. .......,. ....... 48r tum I now 648-4902. 18R & den, 1~ 2-aty or pett. YMrty. 875-3383 4-pteX. 1515, 111/last + bW:t\ SICM & frig No yr r... 181 cJ /mo
ting. ~ and ,. 1BR 1BA down1talr1. ~~""12so01m0 SHARP trl-level condo. exec twnhme In 8aY9lde C T OCEAN VIEW 1BR ........... 2 ~. 543-1885 =·.All ulll1 paid. 21~ .
modltlligrnakathllhome Only ll79,000. Ex· Avail. 1111to711/Sa East l&de. 3BR, 2BA, air. Cove. Ftplc, aundedet, B U h~ deeorated • •• Imo.* 98~954 I:= M:=:=ll ,W
truly 11)ec:191, complete clu1lv•. Donald Pfaff NY (914) 833-0280 nice crptlpalnt, wld w/d, 2-car get. gated r1g ·~ AYWI ' l&Tlll fllW WITI -.,_ -••
with OC8M and mountain 831-1286 Ot &42-9797 s' :._._,_ 3BR 2BA 2 hkup1, d/'11, 3 cw g81, no com12~i~ ~::'a ~gyt =/mo'* &.o-1sa..n<1'#. Cd our leulng Center Piil UllM 2BR 2BA Apt, enclollld wa to m . 2 ii( vtewa. Cal fot othet de-p ... ......, • • doge · tod9Y for an 11P9t. to Redee:Or•ted 28R 28A, garage. carpeu & 1"-BA.enc:lgar,$725/rno
talla and 'MWtnQ of thll ded(1, FIP, $1515 avail 1llllT111J BRANO NEW BERBER llft. IMI preview your MW home. 1BR w/loft-3td. From drapea. 8*• to l>W:t\I 225 La P9loma Apt 8, ~ famlY home of· now. Lind• 121-0111 l1350/mol45-1878 CAAPETING.Speeloul2 2BR HiBA, CIOH to ******* $950.Nopeta831~107 1n5/mo.M&-11&4 831-7118 fwed at 1780,000. Grubb & EIMI 1tory 38r 2.Ba Newport beae:h. $150/mo. 900 1--------llf.11M E'Sldi. A"31ot w1SFR: 257 UIYll .aT aTlll Y1LU11 IUD... Shor• 114001mo yrty. s.a Lane. &U-2111 c;cArirE El KJNS 18th Pl. 1271.000. Duety Sunny SBr 1 tarn rm. Fam.1lzed 28012BA 65G-&145 1BR+ Oen. 2BA wlfab
,, .• ~ • 873-2810 Agt 2'Mla. frplc: patio 2-car Twnhm, view lg dedC rrpc tarn t= Cl~ll}\l'J'i SEA PROPERTIES LTD gar Gated' comm with 1700 aq.f1.+ with 1tt. 2-c:at Newport Hatghts. 3BR. dbf sitoo 2l).
,_. llE\LTOIL.,. Home on large R-2 comer tannl• pool & •P•· gar.Nut to s.c. Piua. 3BA. pool, garage. 9~1144~4/17~nec lot on 1lth St 1 blodc 11700,moAgt M0-1212 ctays:281-9151 11575/mo leau.1....--..,.,..----.nrrT .• I-..., of -.;,,. Blvd • evea: 542~15 64s-eeeeor 121-0MS tMtt LU BM
-·-·--~~ . FABUL Nw contem-1-liiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-1-~f;;i'!Ai';t;:l<l:"IOCr-' mt••• A9tlng 1235.000 porary 2BA 3BA condo, lut. ltacla 2141 1 .. ,Ill..,. I • t o.-175-1141 hnote.. ._. ocaan ~ 6N txke PXAk 2er 2L: 2aR. 21MSA. HlgNy up-1 & 2 Bdrm aptt .,.,, Ull.IM t.tlOr S3500 trp1c: 2 c=-gwage 1n-greded, ..... °' ..... $815. Get. cable avl -:r.""~~ ~ mfU11111 Wdarfs ....... IM. ~ Q9fdener. Aduh1. optionl1800417-t918 Gmbtt.:,~·~·
Pll*ll thll 3BD/2BA, Thia e«y 38A 28A home IUL'lmU1·1• n·pett. $1350. 640-0020 NWPT er.at lwnhm, 4BR Sony, pet LR. OR. FR/fplc:. r... 19 doee to botll achoola & Alk for Chuck 2'h8A. v.m1 to bctl. Pool. E'SIOE 18r upltairs, cable :::.~~!\al ::r,io~~ ....... ·~..:B~B~'8:~5 r,~~.~r,t. ~'!:.ei.~~.~5
. • one won't i.t at onty ·18111. •HllLllT frwl. R8.dy 1'1122 NWPT NORTH CONDOS 52 vtctona ecS-1191
_ ... Pllm!I 1115,000. Cell.~ JEHNlfEAENCAANACAO 8982 P1ul1 Clrcle •28r 1'h8a. F/P, gwage. 1BRupstrt. pool, cable TV w.·n gM you tM down In • I.... -HARBOR REAL TY 818-578-0573 w/d, 're:' location $1375 & gal pd. $575. No peta. :=.'°'v:Unr.ma:! o:; lM 1111 • MMlll ~~ =~~= 3BR 2B• hM. enc1 peuo. •;,i:·.:S~oo ~=2~2 ~ ~ ... ,1:1~-
mtNy pymtl & we lhlire ~ M.A.V Hf M11lna HI. nice •r ... , __ • ------•--------appr•c You teoelve ~ ~/ MA.TURE SINGLE OR Refrlg, w/d, d/w. $1150,
100% tu benefltl. Muet ~t :\\ 1 V"'l 'f j' rt'\. ·11 COUPLE WANTEDllll S500 MC. 631 -8351
haW dMll credit. AQt · • '\... ~ 4 bike. to bet\, Wood pan-3BR twnhM on cul-d•uc. 167-«1002 Dye Ev Wllncfl REALTORS etted 280/2BA + den. newly redone wld nr __, ____ ...__• _. __ f ... illi Frpl, attach gar. Golden W•t l W.;n«.
...... Y="= 1••4 s12oomo IH. c.all St90843-070484&-7321 ......... 1117 ~ .. 873-1734...0nly pertone l=:-::::~:--:...-----:-:-:"'."I ................... _____ By owner 31R 2BX m with good ref. nffd 5BR 38A. family rm, open
Beautlful upgraded lg 28A NmOdll Ilk• new In/out applyllf ftoor plan. neutral oolorl.
28A, *-tolb-v. Faehlon OrMt ICfK>olal S2st.ooo: New a.eut. ~BO 2BA :;in~~·~ '°ctJ~
llland,etc.Securitybldg. 17391Wlllnut.113-1334 double gar. 4 bike. to 80~·325-541.3 Dy ~000partilna. boat, .. _.,. "°°""' ~-. hofnee ~~11103l/7· 1.!!.!J m 0 714-892-1541 EWllWtlnd -· · f'a· ..,_ °' · cl 1111rled can MtllfY )'IOI" _,... __,,. t7M1MOwnr/AQt ,,..... •• , .... _ e Blodc• to l>W:t\, 2Bt • ... ,.. 28A. ~ cet gar, w/d, lllT• conlkter pee, ll200/mo
FOA LEASE 53&-1895. 213-453-2105 "= decorated, large FREE RENTI Nw beach-off~.::;s = front condo, 2BR 2'h&A.
ir-a.. ..-... ....._ ,..--.,: frplc, w/d. full MC:Uf1ty •
... -.. - -..._. -""' ocaat\ vtew from 2 petloa.
D1ilyPUat
OUR FAMOUS
HAS RETURNEDI
BM~ t>y popular del'l\¥ld 01mes-A·l1rw W'll run Fnd.Jy. s.ittur·
day ano Sunoay on 1u own ctais1t1cat1on 1n trw Ctan<fi~ Ads
since this is' JPK•"' ot'ltr. wt~ a ThUnda)I noon ~adllnt aoo ask p1e~ymen1 for all .cis This 1s ~n to al prtvatt party
ACNert1sers IOf merch.Jndtse not ovrr SI SQ jprke must be fist~
In ~I ¥ld no abbrev1a1tons W'lll be KC~ted AJ ~l Wil run
Friday. Saturday Mid Sund.y TMre IS a 5-ltrw minimum•< 20C
(>er llne So your low <Ott Olmft-.A..U.W ad II orrflt/ ...
S3.00.
DEADLINE: T"ur)day N>On
l"tttef: S·l•ne minimum • ) days • 10f ~r ltne • S3 00
• AJt ads 111t prtP••d t>y com•no •nto lt\e 0.Jil)' Piiot 10
plcJ<e yow 11d o• use tht coupon below
• Pr111•1t o.1ttv "lt'tCht1ncJ•St only Mls No com-
merc1'1l 41dS pet\ ~"t\tO<ll produce Of plants
• E~h uem must t>e pnctd 1n t~ _, witn no items OYe'r
SISO
MAIL TO: Dinws·A·~
0• ty PtlC>l
])() WtU 8Av \trttl Con11 Mtw CA ~2626
O.t1'y P•IOt "Ours
Monc111v·f ••dt1y 8 00 .-.~to s 00 PM
VERY NEWPORT ~.::*den~ "4-1580/d. 146-21881• NAME 'f
frteftdly e.o... ncntty rwmodeled a •tltlea. 28R. llA -loeded wtth •Md IMtds, allutte,., papen a c.he,., $515.000.
759.,, ••
let u.,... r .. ,
Sell y .. ,,.,.,.,,
Cal CleeaiW,
64t-S671
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
Qv to beech. GREAT AAEAllVACANTll ~ 8er1*t IS1·2113. " NA MEADOWLARK Gon not aveltable, Cattyn, 38Dlt 3 /48A. New
IM-t4eo. 11300/mo. c • r p • t • & a;:; & oeilnt.S1400mo. No Peta.
UI COf'ltempof r/ 'r o01n Realty &48-131 t , 'MIA 2 9'0ry. frplc:. .
n10e C*I*· o.... LG SEA SiW9Y condo 2ar 2a..
' dlcll. 00-lalderAPCtf. gar. 111e~pool. ten-•1300 Agt 11Mt12 nla, ..,._ Avt 1215. . .. "°°'"'°· 13/430-t3tl c...... 1111 1ufax:..,..m
C on fl dent ioolcs ,,,, dtl'(
4114; Cerehe.
cuuel and oom-fof1able. This no
Wllilt..,,, cir..
<*\ be l'Nldl In
a few hours.
Look• great In
cap or three· ~---· Milee9Srz91S 12 '° Z>. =--~m .... .._
tt10UIOlrl. ..,
tlUrt. .... CIZlld
waist and obi
... h ........
Sil9I t2 '° 2$. '
•
AOORESS
CITY
AMOUNT ENCLOSED
UNIS
••
J.
l.
•
s.
STATE z~-----
·r DATU TO ltUN
ISOO....,
~.._ _____ ..::.-.+-------+-----~ SHIO
1.
.. ..
642-5678
'
'
Onng9 CoMI DAILY PILOT/ Monday, N<Mfnb« 7, 1918
I .Motor Routls
. available in
W,11tmin1t1r ·
Huntinlft)n l11oh ,,,.1.11 1111.,
NO COlLE~TING
NO SOLICITING , . .
Deliver One Day a Week .:
Must'have Hependable car
and proof of ln..ance.
EARN
$400-$1000/WK
1 4.80 For M.H you can advertise
your Garage Sale In the Dally
Pilot. There Is a 4 line minimum
and the price is the sa111e
whether you advertise 1 day or 3
deys. It's a great way to turn
thote hidden treasures Into can.
We are alao offering a S W• te ••H•• ••••• ..... for t l".M. Thia guide Includes tdMa on how to adver11se.
h<>* to ptan. what Items to _.,. plu1 Ideas for a betf4tr
garage aale: also a garege ..,. llgn, pricing sticker$,
lnformlltlon on city ordinances and Inventory sheet.
You can purch ... your Ger• Sale Kit for $1.00 when
you pl9oe your ad at:
6~2-1678
t
•
...
...
Holy Se~ Cem-etery. lieu of
flowers emor ial
CODU"lbutiona may be
rmde to Cystinomia
FoundabOn. 477 ~th
St.11200, Oakland,
CA. 94612. P ierce
Bro&. Bell Broadway
Mortuary. I>irfdon. Cc.ta Mesa. 642-9-150
HAM<>fl LAWN-
MT. OLIVE
Mortuary • Cernetllf)'
Cremat()()'
1615 Gllllef Ave
Coste Mese
5'0-5554
~RCE POTHERS
Kll 8't0ADWAY
Mortu< rt . O\apel
110 Bta.a-y
C091a Mesa
6'2-1115()
DO-IT-YOURSELF IDEAS
A READER SERVICE OF THJS NEWSPAPER
SPIRIT OF CHRISTMAS PAST
W1111 1 ftw 111oodtn t1t1011no do•1l1 11aint. and b&alc
111nc1 10011 you "" recaplure lht merry a111nl of
C11r1a1mu put T111s 24-<oagt gurclffOOlt ot tulH'D
traCtlDlt pauu"s co101 1lh1111111on1, ind ·~
by·tltP tntllllCl•OOI will lltlp VO\I '1• tllt tll!lflii llMllty of l!Wt ntturll wood Nattw1ty tceftt. MN i.
ctucled art II d rtt1111t trM clee«alJOlll IQCludlnt 1
ITl•n •no•'· tiow n ttdcly 11111 ln4 tockino "°'"
-----~ -... --------
...
aao ....
LOCATIOM: •
~:
··~HEVROLET Home of the
Serengeti Blazer
li:th+fnw Call our trtendly-satesmen-4er-(letatls
579-5100 1-800-228-7240
17071 E Imperial Hwy -Yorba Linda. California
2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
642-0010
o-SADDLEBACK
Sales
leasing
Service
Parts
IRVINE AUTO CENTER
1-aoo-a31.33n 714-380-1200
"~I c:iMC:TRUC:K
"THE SMART STOP"
• (714) 540-9640
2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA
G) JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
ACUAA
1•1 at111 at.
Newport....,. .........
lervtoii• ....
7s.AQMA 1114111
& SA~BlY.IL~&
0 NEW LOCATION!
SANTA ANA AUTO MALL
1500 Auto Mell Dr., 8enta AM 835-3171
Newport/SS Frwy. at Edi119er
Sa.les Dept open 7 da SeMce Hours: Mon.-Frl. 7am-10pm
i
§ BUENA
PAAK
STANTON
GARO N GROVE
PACIFIC
OCEAN
1-1 0 N I> /\.. ;j{!t.•t4?Nu.
"OM.I-oowrrra Gl.-r LIADIR M THE IM..oRTS''
Huntineton Beach
Chrysler .. Plymouth
~~Mi.Wo
lllMCI -PARTS
142-41131
••
SAA Customer Satisfaction
Excellence Award Winne<
770-7001
23663 Rockfleld Blvd.
Lake Forest, Irvine Aut o Center
HUNTINGTON
••ACM ACUAA •·
.... Jat., ;;·-~~ • OLDSMOllLE
··CADILLAC .
ALLEN • GMCTRUCKS
m/582-0800
SAN DIEGO FWY • AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL
0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc.
Mercedes-·Benz
686:2 Manchester Boulevard
Buena Park
J~ 213 or 71•/MERCEDES M·F 8a-6p
~ 1-5 and 1-Glmect. Sat-8a-2p
~ Garden City _
&]':..VOLKSWAGEN@ W IN WESTMINSTER W
7600 Westminster Blvd., Westminster
(71C)891-9378 (2ll)C30-2M3
·~ G,.o.~s. Orange Coast
Jeep Eagle
c.te.er s.dlt~ • Sales
Ollr #I rrlori(1 • Service
Mt I02I • Leulag
, .
l&M Harbor Blvd.• Coeta Meaa
• t C QWfflEI I
NISSAN/~ r£'Oi
• low ''it•• • No G1mm1tli• • Great Selection
• Fuendly 'eople • h cellent Service
1113Sa..cti~d
(7'4) 142-71'1
LINCOLN WURY ..........
SALES -tEASING
SERVICE -PARTS
(714) 848.7739 lUOO Beach JlYd.
(714) 996-1008 HUD~ &Meat, CA 92147
• •
tfl
#l BORDA HALD Ill oaAllOS CO.