HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-11-09 - Orange Coast Pilotwill bell
GOP vtctbr launches transit ion period,
will name Jim Baker secretary of state
~:.:~~~= ~°'::'..::::S~ ~ '!!-' .. J don't think it wu overly 'Jbey Picked upaa ... w-• lk
--. Senale wt wee~ fDr....., He received ~-percent o( the -iD F1ondl -wbici" wo.ldtit; PoPUler V9te. .. wbidt ~ think m~ them 1 56-44 edp. Tbey Md 1 · ~ . would CODlider a bi& pickup oL five m me llOUle for a
wm. ... bil. ~support "9m many, 262-173 ldvaa• tbere. -x=.. SO, I would samply ay In addibOe to clesiv'!•i'll laket II lM people have ~ft o(R..._,.._ iMvmlidwuclear," Bush llid '. sucu.,,aoSecreury!' ~~~~
W .. tb 99.~ percent 9f.the naUOn'I Sb~ 8mb dine his dsief el..atf
)llrccinct1 reponina. Bush had ~ Fuller'~--=
47,601,312 votes. Dukaki1 bail litioe. ;.-.. Tate, bis campeian
40176?t I 21 O! ~percent . preu leC'l'dary. wu liven the same
Ul me cnt.ical . tally of e&ectoral role for the traDutioa.
voca, Buds won 40 sia.tes for 426 The vice president ~ .. a dectoral votes. Oubkis won I 0 · __,,. · _ _. from
atates and the District of Columbia major tumov!R . •.D ~DIR. .
for 112 electoral votes. the Reapn admtlUIUabOD wbidl be
(PleMe .. .,..,AlO) Prnl6illlt-electo.or,e .... andlal8wtfe, llu'llUa
WEDNESDAY, NOVE~BER 9, 1988
'
ELECTION .
*FINAL**
* 25 CENTS
. r
-o~~wth measure$ split .~n Co•~f
Controls backed in Mesa, Capistrano,
___ rejecte_d tn Newport. Huntington Beach_
trend in which more than half tbe two velopmenl
dozen alow-trowth measures on Cali-In San Juan Capistrano, voters
fornia'a t.llots met defeat But even approved Measure X by a slight
"'oppoDC1WW11-0ffts,.-n19f~th~,_,imnftibaHl'tmi •"'-CS~sat:91'rtd--nmntat:ng,~· nn1 wwith-about1"2 percent in &•01
solutiool must "1ilJ be found to cope oflimitina powt.b.
BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN
_.LANCE IGNON °' .............
Slow-growth initiatives, rising
from the ashes of last J une's unsuc-
A police pursuit ends In
suicide on the Costa
Mesa Freeway./A3
Entertainment
The witches rule.the stage
In Orange Coast Cot-
lege'i .. Macbeth." /C10
Inda ·
BulletJn Board
Bulkleu ~
Coma .
Entertainment
Mlnd&Body
()P'nlon
People·
Police Log
Public Notices
=~
A3
C8-9
85-7
C12
C10
C7
88
C11
A3 a., 7
81_.
A2
cessful Measure A campai&n, were
apprQved by voten in Costa Mesa and San Juan Capistrano, but were
defeated in Huntinaton Beach and
Newport Beach.
The split mirrored a statewide
with urban sprawl In effeCf, tbe measures require
In Costa Mesa. voten barcl)'. ap-developentoDlcct.emoneyforstreet,
proved Measutt G: The unofficial highway, park aod Oooc:k:ontrol im-
final tally this morning showed provements before they receive per-
IS,286 votes in favor and IS, 147 mits for t.beir projects.
against ~ proposed limit on de· MifY HombuckJe, who narrowly
. .... ......... -. ........ Rohrabacher, Coz win congreuioaAI eeata
DuallollrabMber(leftj•...,..tctorywttla Ta•e&J atat. Botla were elected to ft.nt
frlead and fellow ==-OD&l caaclldate tmaa tD tbe-U.8. Bow ol RepreeentatlYea.
Cbrla Cos at tbe Ima Hotel on Story OD AlO.
. . ..
Silva, Green, MacAllister BB ~ctors
BJ ROBERT BAllUR °' .............
Newcomer Jim Silva, incumbent
Peter Green and fonner Mayor Don
MllcAllister were elec:te(S Tuesday to
the Huntinaton Beach City Council
in a fierocfy fouaht t.ttle between
pro-developers and moderate-srowth rorta.
When the final sun sounded. the
scoreboard read. Developen 2 (Silva
and MacAllister), Slow Growtbcn I
(Green.)
Geri Ortctat Dl'Clident of the Hunt-
i naton Beach Tomorrow, barely fin-
ished out of the money in founb place
and Tom Livengood ran fifth. Ortcp
·costa Mesa's voters topple
~egerstrom tower f)roject
Counctl obscrveB. however, say
the election is not likely to chantc the
composition of the counal, u Genis
replaces sJow-crowth advocate Dave
Wheeatr and Glasgow fills the spot
being vacated by Mayor Donn Hal~
teen u a friend of development
.. It's kind of the same." Glasgow
said.
The victors credited their elections
to puttOOt effort such as walkina the citt• nti&bborhoods: I walked a lo(," Oen is said. "It will
be i~ bow well 1 did in lhc . that I walked."
Oft&*> Clldited her occupation
listeclOll tbe billot -city planner-
and Ma& lbc caUed .. the woman
(1'11W-IDL\/A8)
and LiveQIOOd. who said today be
would never run for the council ap.in.
were alto slow-srowth cudidmtes.
In other Huntington 8acb races,
CitV Oertc Connie Brockway c:ap-
(Pl9ue ... BU1n'IJllOTOlll/A2)
gained rwlectJon to the Costa Mesa Hornbuckle and otbeR are .-r.
City Council over "'I slow-powtb nnatotbeoutcomeofSuC1anea1e'1
cballen,er, said pa.ssqt of the slo~ measure in wbidl S.-measUtt Will liiC1y 5td\illCnFI:-· ---~penor coun T-.e~JC>P c WOCJlleY
... think we will see a liwsuit f\led ~ apinst Masure E on me
rather quickly by tb,e opponents or &rounds that it iHep!!Y ~ M~ G, with t'1c opponents t.ryinL' developers to pay fOr traftic problam
to aiet it. overturned on the Sl.Jne not.caused by their projects. irounds~tbcone 1n San Ckmente," But Jay Hum]Jllref, wbo WIOWfy Jf ombuciJe said. .. And the otx lost to an inc:umbent in llil COllS -.
would be forced todefend 1tincourt.' • (Plwn woaow 18/AS)
'
Pltl.m ·mer, ·cox
·h(1ld NB seats;
.. Watt 'elected.
8 1 ROBOT HYNDMAN •
... -OllEG n.ERU ..............
lt was a wild aod Woolly mcii for the
Newport Beach City Co~l, but
.-hen the smoke cleared this momt.nf.
two incumbents .be.Id tiaht to their
jobs and a staunch slow-tt0wth
advocate captured a third seat.
--HAaJ--¥0~1 ... lies todl showed
incilmbents Rutbelyn Plummer and
John Cox ~Jected to their seats.
while Jean Watt edged challen,ser
• Ralph Rodbe1m for the position
'1&eated by rctinng Councilman Phil
Maurer.
The three will join Evelyn Han.
Don Strauss. Phil Sansone and
Clarence Turner on the seven-mem-
ber council. Council memben arc
elected at large but represent distncts
in the CJ~.
Verbal mud-shn1.1ng. stin&in&
mailen and even theft were amona
me ~ts in this year's raucous
counciJ race, wbicb pitted the llow· ~ fiction aeaiml DR ll'OMb-
orieMed CIW ll4I HIS. •
Tbe first bartl 1l'ere tb'°"8 ~
Newport 2000. a s&ow1fOWdl politi:
cal action conun..inee. wtUdl .illued
three bit pilas in the fiDa.I weets .
before the e1ectioo. The mai1en l1lDaL . is Jk ~-= ~J Plummer. Cox and Rodbeim,.wbo wn t.Ulina
Watt for the distnct that a~nts Balboa lslandUd Newport let .
The pieoes tafleted at Plummer
·and Cox accused them of beina at the
beck and call of local boslneumen,
and one held them responsible for
.. feces floatina in the bay ... The anti-
Rodheim mailer alkled that some of
bis volunteer work was fu.nded by
tupaym and that he lied on cam-
paap ctuciosure ,ia:s;n,.i.
{Pl9ue 9!19 . T/M )
Qounty's vote
~for Bush was ~ . .. .
··jCing on cake
. By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' ...............
Gcorgt Bush probably dtdn•t need~ Couty10
Mn Cahforma a.nd. u 1t rumed out.. defirutely did not
need Cahfomta to Wln the presidency.
· Even so. Cahfomia voters went witb INlil.=
his staff boast to .. break \be t.ck ol ·
.. by carT)lt\l lbc Goklen Stase.
narrow tnumpb early today muted tM a1nth
tune 11 nee 19 S,2 -lO presidential . dections -th.at
Cahfomia has &one to the GOP. But. 11 in mo.t CM.bet
piaidenual contests. Califom11'1 choice 11111U vv..aty
1rrdevant. mcrd)' addina a cushioe to ta.t victoly 8ueft
achieved even before the state's polls bid Cloled.
Seate voten pve Bulb a SI perWM edit _.. the
nation favored him over Dubtia with• '4 peww ..ec.
But Oral\IC County·s 7l ~ ~ , .... -159,025 ballots cast amona the l,ltl.16' r lint ed
.... -offered even IU"Oftltf IUPIMlft. Abailil .. of ~three county voten-67.S penimt-~ ...-. for .
Qecqe Bush. Dubki.s won 31 .-nt OI IM ~
COURCY V04n
..
Amport offic.tals, ar,cbit~Gts
reach settlement on terminal
Ofticiall 1t John Wayne Airport
have rtaebed I lettJemeot with lft
mdaiaectural firm that submitted lite deep tOr a new 1tt1nioa1 and uaderdtlml&ed the cost of the project
by S 17 million.
not return .-,_ calls and ...., not
available fOt commeoL
Airpon maDIF' Georte ltebeUI
and the project's ma~. Alan
Murphy dedioed to discusa terms of
the tettlement.
.. There's still a ·couple of loose
ends," Mun>hy taid ... We're havina
discussions beet and forth."
~~aad eliminate tome of the terminal's cxtru.
Marble on floors and walls WU =bu'ie.==-=r~i: IUllllC area were elimiaa~ ud an
elal>oratc concrete-aDd-tl roor ...
reolaced b)'. a ct.per, liatl• delip. Leaon Pomeroy alto tubmined
some drawi-. more than thnie
Terms of the te!tJement, to be
announced lite today, were noL But it was expected to end the threat of
litiption between Oranle County
and the architectural company,
Leuon Pomeroy and Aaociatea.
A Leason Pomeroy spokesman did
The company estimated the new
terminal wouJd cosi S.0.8 million,
but the lowest bid was S 17 million biaber. promptina officiaJs to 'V)lkc
months late, officials said. ·
The count)' _can fine the firm u ·
much as SS,000 a day for eecll day it
missed the deadline.
... . COUNTY VOTERS GO BIG FOR BUSH •••
Prom Al
In the U.S. Senate race, Oran~ ounty voters
mirrored the penisan solit, fa~orina bl.ican incum-
bent Pete Wilson over l.eO McCar:lhy, percent to 29
pe~:ihe election appr:oached, political experu believed
California's ivotes miAht be crucial to a presidential
victory. And Thomas l"uentes, chairman o( the Orange
County Republican Party, said be belieY~ the .county
could play a pivotal role in deciding the outcome in
California.
But for nearly six weeks during the late summer, his cam~ failed to respond to Bush. t'We'vc a<>l to aiet
Boston s approval for everything, and it never seems io ·
come,:• said a staffer at Duk.akis. ~ Angeles head. quarters.
In contrast, Bush's campaign staff included key
advisers of Gov. George Deukmejian and President
-Reagan, well versed in CAiifornia politics.
But the state•s most-in-the-nation prize of 47
· electonl votes proved unnecessary for Bush and
' unattainable for Dukak.is, both of whom spent more time
: caml»ignina in California thin in any other state.
· BuSh jumped to a double-digit lead in early returns
· and he maintained a steadily dwindlina edJC throu&h the
: eveninaand into the mornina. But his m&f'IJn solidified as
. more than four-fifths of the vote was tallied.
Bush stressed the same theme that Oeultmejian his
found successful -crime. Bush attacked Dukak1s as soft
on crime, and criticized him for a prison inmate furlouah
program in Massachusetts that, ironically, was estab-
lished by [)ubkjs' Republican pi:cdecessor.
Duk.akis. meanwhile, hit hard at Bush's selection of
Indiana Sen. Dan Quayle for vice president. and said
Bush was a captive of wealthy interests. But despite a
survey by pollster Mervin field that showed Quayle was
·•a tremendous drq" to the Republican ticket. Dubk.is
was unable' to seize the initiative. · Dukakis' campaign even according to its own
: supporters, ran a curiously inconsistent and disorpnized
election effort in California. agressively ~tins the
· state the day after getting his party's nomination in July
: and building up momentum in the final weeks before
' Election Day.
President Reapn, who has a mountaintop ranch near Santa Barbara, camJ)&ianed on Bush's behalf, but
was in Washington, D.C. on election night to watch
televised returns.
JlmSUn
HUNTINGTON BEACH PICKS WINNERS •••
Prom Al
turCd 46 peccnt of the vote to easily
win election to a four-year term.
Brockway, with 28,827 votes,
swamped her nearest rival Irene
Butter by mon "than 13,000 votes.
Treasurer Don Watson, who was
unopposed, was elected with 50,432
or 98 percent of the votes. Both
· Brockway and Watson were making
their first run at elected office. They
were appointed to their jobs when
predecessors stepped down in mid-
term.
Final unofficial tallies showed
Silva, 44. a planning commissioner
whose name was fortuitously placed
on the top of the ballot, receiving
28,3 19 votes (14.2 percent). Green
had 27,574 votes ( 13.8 percent) and
MacAJlister. 26.346 votes or 13.2
percent
Othe~ results: Orte&a. 26,093;
Livengood, 23A605j Linda Moulton-Patterson, h,76:>; Henry Yee,
18,049; Robert Biddle, 6, 11 7:
Anthony Passannante, 4,852; John F.
Valentino 4,238; Georsc E. Arnold,
3,842; Jeffrey R. Bums, 3,665; Clem
Doming~ez, 3,314i}oseph A. Nappa,
1,856; Mitchell T. 1 racy, 1,302.
Livengood said today a critical
mailer directed at Ortega over the
weekend by the Southern California
Caucus, headquartered in Costa
Mesa. "ruined the election for him,"
He called the material "a hit piece."
Linked co theffif ntrnifonBeacn co ..
the city's largest lano developer, the
mailer probably cost Ortega the
election, he said.
Liven'ood also threatened "to go
to coun ' if MacAllister and Silva
vote on Huntington Beach Co. issues
because of donations that poured into
their campaigns, he said.
"It may not be illegal but it's not
morally nght." he said.
Ortega was not as bitter in defeat.
"We did out best and the voters
have spoken," Ortega said today.
"But it will become a true bloc vote on
the City Council and they (d~
velopers) mi&ht set all seven (City
Council mem"berl) the next electlon.
"Being a beach town it his a lot to
lose. Also, I feel that BOlsa Chica is
threatened," she said.
Silva said, though, that he's defi-
nitely opposed to a proposed navi-
gable channel cut to the sea at Bolsa
Chica, the most oontroversial item in
prol>OScd development plans of Sia-
na! landmark Co.
The channel will cause loss of sand
because of erosion, Silva said. He also
Wd he favors methods to ltl clean
fresh water to preserve the wet.lands.
Silva said he'll also~vetop prione· t
to traffic=tion w ich also is hi
on the for MacAllimr, w o
envious y served two terms on the
City Council before sittina out two
years as required by the City Chaner.
MacAllister said he will work
towards casing traffic at Beach
Boulevard, Golden West Street and
other congested througbfares by
widening roads and synchronizjng
tnffic signals. ·
MacAJlister, who said he has a
position of"pro-control growth" said
he will push ahead with downtown
redevelopment and repair of the pier.
Green, an ecology professor at
Golden West ColJcle, said he be-
lieved the campaian p:nerally was
"clean and refreshing..' He will oon-
ti nue to push for preservation of
1,290 acres of wetlands in the Bolsa
Chica and work against a navigable
channel, he said.
Green was elected to his second full
term. Jack Kelly and Rut)l Finley arc
stepping down after serving two
terms as required by the City Charter.
.
MESA TOWER PROJECT REJECTED •• ;.
Jl'romAl
million square feet of offitt and retail
space. The project also would have
included a health club, 400-room
hotel and child care center.
Measure I was yet another com-
promite plan offered by the devel~
of South Coast Piiz.a. The measure
would hive reduced the hotel to 300 rooms~t the amount of retail space
by 10,wu square feet and eliminated
the health club. In all. the project
would have been reduced to two
million square feet.
But membcn of Costa Mesa Resi-
dents for Responsible Growth and
Mesa Action opposed both versions.
The buildint of Home Ranch was
' fint announced in 1982. Some 2. 7
million square feet of retail and
ORANGE .... llH.f
COAST 1.,_, rHUI
llAJN OfflC!
»OW..hy .. eo.ta.._. CA
commercial offices as well u two 400-
room hotels were sleted to rise on a
Lima bean field bounded by Harbor
Boulevard, Sunflower A venueJ.air-
view Road and the San uieto
freeway. --1~~ In I 98S, plans ~~~a 32-story
tower, the lal'ge$t bulldina in <>ranee
County. At the same time, opposition
bepn to form and over the Dal th~
years the residents lfOUP' wouJd drq
their eraser over the blueprints,
pressuring Seaemrom to tenp the
aingle tower and adopt tbe twin tower
venion.
In 1987, Costa Mesa Resident& for
Responsible Growth filed suit lpinst
the city on two lf'9\lnds:
• Building and population limits
for the area, as well as adequate
transportation im~vements. were
miasma from the caty's teneraJ plan.
• Environmental documents
prepared for the development weR ~lepdly faulty.
A jucfee eventuaDy iided with the
citizens poup and t.bc city complied
with the suit
At the same time. in Marcb of this
year, ~identa were collecti111 &iana·
tures for what would eveatually be
called Measure H.
Lat summer, s.r-rom off'~ the ICaled-down venion, ~ pve
rite to Measure I, but ta.e citizlas alto
rallied a referendum apilllt that
project, alto forcina it to the ballot.
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GROWTH MEASURES SP~IT ON COAST~ ••
Prom Al
Mesa City Council bid, said' he is
confident Measure G will stand up in
court .
"If you look at the San Oemente
measure, the judae found it required buildenutec:ue otprio-r problems, ..
Humphrey said. "In Measure G, he
only has to clean up the problem he
creates.
"I have no real fean it won't
uJtimately stand the tests of oourts. Of coune, 'the best thina to'do is just wait
and 1ee."
While city officials await the out-
come in coun, voten in Huntjnaton Beach and Newport ee.ch avened
similar suspen• by defeatina slow-
P'Owth measures in those two cities.
In Huntinst:on Beach, voters nar-
rowll'. rejected Measure J with an
unofficill ~Uy sbowiDJ 33,4S9 in
favor and 34,329 ap1nst the in-
itiative. I
Shirley Commons Lons. chair-woman oft.be bcavjly ~Hunt
int1on Beach Citizens Apinst
Measure J, taid today ibe was very
pleated wrth the measure'& defeat, even tbousb it wu by a narrow ~~es it mOre importlht than
ever for the (city's) powtb-~e
rnent team to l)alS on the recommen-
dations to the City Council," she said.
Lo"&'~ committee spent at least
$2SO,OOO fi<ting ·the slow-srowth·
measure while opponents spent about
$2,200.
Long also heads the J!'Owth m1n-
aaement stud_y which identifies ex-
penditures of about $77 million to
bring traffic, poli~ fire services and
flood control facilities up to standard.
She said her committee, which re-
oeived a lion's share of contributions
from developers, bad to spend the
money it did .. to educate the voters
tblt the measure was the same as
Measure A that was defeated by
Oranae County voten in June."
Gen Oncp, president of the Hunt-
inston Beach Tomorrow Group that
spearheaded the campeiP.1 for the
slow-trowth measure, saad she was
"thril1ed" by the closeness of the vote.
"It showed that the voters were
obviously very sensitive to the
growth issue. We would have won if
FALL CLASSIC
Camel Hair Blazer •
Wool Pattemed
Trousers Coupled
"
with Cole-Haan Oil
Tanned Penny
Loaf er and • Robert
Talbott Tie.
we bad more money to spend," said
Ortega, who was narrowly defeated in
her campaign for a City Council seat.
In Newport Beach, voters turned
down a referendum that would have limi~the-Gity-Council'~di9Cfetion
to approve new develo_pment. Unof-
ficial tallies showed 13,886 votes in
favor of Measure Kand 16, l 58 votes
lpil)St it
Measure K would have amended
the city's traffic manqement ordi-
nance m a way that proponents said
would have eliminated important
loopholes. Specifically, beckers said it
would have limited the City Council's di~tion in &eJ>rovina 'projects and
granting exceptions.
Ttte Orange County arowth in-
itiallves were among 24 slow-srowth
initiatives in the state. 21 of them in
Southern California. The ref er-
endums were seen as a backlash to
what many believe is an inability on
the pan of elected officials to regulate
development that has oome with the
state's burgeoning population.
OJ>POnents said the measures
would cost taxpayers millions to
implement and would stifle develop-
ment, tbesamedevelopment that has
provided jobs and made Orange
County a financial powerhouse.
Those opposed to the measures
amassed hefty war chests along the
way, as did the opj)Onents of last
June's countywide effort, Measure A.
who-tpent a whoppinc--S,H millien.
All told, the opposition in Newpon
Beach, Huntington Beach and Cost.a
Mesa raised more tfian $4SO,OOO.
Not surprisingly, the most. gen-
erous donors were companies with
stakes in local development Villa
Capri Pannership was the top sinaJe
donor with a $75,000 contribution to
Huntington Beach Citizens Apinst
Measure J, according to financial
disclosure papers. Chevron Corp. and
its subsidiary, Huntingt,Qn Beach Co .•
each forked over sso.oro to the same .
organization.
By Oct. 28, Huntington Beach
Citizens A&ainst Measure J reporicd
raising $230,738. By com~son.
Mesa Action. which orpruzcd ~
suppon for Costa Mesa's Measure G,
had spent $6,310.
Newport Beach Residents for Traf-
fic Solutions had spent S 111 . 700 by
Ocl 28, according to campaiJn
disclosure statements. The Koll Co.
was the single largest donor with
$30,000. The lryine Co. was second.
Galas, ·Novak victorious ID
FV school board election
By JOYCE BODLOVJCH
Of ... OlllJ ........
Voters returned incumbent Aon
Galas to the fountain Valley School
District board of trustees and elected
Michael Novak to fill a second seat on
the five-member board.
A third candidate, Laurie Mayo,
finished just 736 votes behind Novak.
Galas, 47, who bas served as a
school trustee since 1983, ran on the
philosophy of providing an education
based on .. individual abilities and
learning styles.."
She was the top vote getter in a close three-way race for two seats,
capturina 37 percent of the vote.
Novak, 41, a projects manager for
an engfoeering company, bas two
children at Newland Elementary
School. He earned 32 percent of the
vote. Durina the campaign, be cited
bis main concern as drawiRf of new
school boundaries follow101 the
closure last February of Arevalos
Element.ary School, located in Hunt·
ington Beach.
Mayo, 36, a mother of four, ran a
cam~ian that stressed the need to
rebuild trust between the school
board and teachers and plcdled to
restore cutbacks in district music
programs .
Back Bay charity
race set Sunday
in Newport Beach
Preoarations are under way for Sunday's fourth
annual Back Ba_y 5-10 Kcharity race sponsored by
the Klwanis Club of Newport Beach and the
Newport.Costa M~ YMCA.
The swtina point for the event will be the .
Marion Suites Hotel, SOO Bayview CircleA Newport
Beach, near the intetseetion of Bristol ::>trcct and
Jamboree Road. Stanina timesarc 8 a.m. forthe5 K,
8:45 for the lOK-and 9 a.m. for a special Kiddie K
nan.
The entry fee is SI 0, which i~ludes an at)\J~c
bq, or S6 without the bq. All proceeds wih
toward proarams for the underprivileaed and more
information is available at the YMCA, 642-9990.
Rush-hour suicide OD eM Freeway.
By JOIU1'8AJlt VOUSB .,_ ...........
A 4S.yeu-old Redlaftda man &ed police from two cities on a punuit Tuesday that
ended when be turned a rifle on haml(lf
and fired, even u his car oonti.,ucd forward OD the Costa Meta freeway.
The bullet pemd throuah the man's chest and out his b9ck.-and he later died at
Fountain Valley ReDoul Hosptial follow-•
in& the 4 ~.m. shootiq. Costa Mesa Police Sst. Sam Corderio said.
The man was identified today as LOuie
Guillent 4S, of Redlands, according to a coroner 1 deputy.
The incident shut down the Costa Mesa
reeway's northbound lanes durin1 rush
ur as j*amedics treated the man and
police officers scoured the car for evidence.
.........................
untd tevual nwted palrOI can_. C..
Meu'1 pobcc helicopter~ die cMle.
Newport Btach SsL llichatd 1..aam md N~n otfictts rectiVcd a cal lionly
before the chaJe bepft abou1 ** beilll fired at the Bouzy Route Cafe at 31 tt ~ and Newport Boulev&rd, bul authorities
were unsure whether the incidents were
linked. · ~n employee of the resuu.ra.nt Mid •
someone, believed to be drivi"I a· four.
wheel drive vehic&c, a~ntly1iied a lhCM
at four children walk.ins by the ratawant
about 3:40 p.m.
But the employee, who declioed to live
has name, wd authonties told him a lbeU
casina left behind by that swunan ap-
peared to be from a .38-aHber weapon.
which LS a common handaun shell.
Cordcno said authorities found just the
rifle ID the Honda after the man MM>t
htmsclf. ~ dona(lon• "'"J6bt
lbanksgivina donations of food and cash will
be made in support of the Share Our Selves
orpnization by the Thursday Morning Oub. of
Newport Beach at Thursday's luncheon meeting at ·
the AirportC1' Inn in Irvine.
"fl!c punuit ~n when an off-duty
Santa Ana police officer, apperently driv-in& his own truck equipped with a police
radio, notified Newport and Costa Mesa
authorities that a man in a red Honda had
brandished 1 rifle OD Ne~rt Boulevard.
Apollceomcerez•ml.,.tbecar•bered.rl~er•bothtmeelftodeatla
Pohcc were unsure why the man shot
himself. Cordcno said.
• "He <kijn1tcly was not sbootiQC at tops
or tnnoctnt people," Corderio said. "But
whether he meant to shoot him~ we
don't know It could have ~ an
accident." The women's aroup supports civic,
philanthropi<::hural and educational activities on the Orange st. Further information may be
obtained by calling 831-0283. 1
Senior programs planned
Two events are scheduled for Huntington beach
senior ci\izens at the Rodgers Senior. Center
Thursday, beginning with an instructional program
in cards and checkers from 9 to I 0 a.m.
Seniors can learn methods on protecting
themselves from crime during the "Senior Power"
program from 10 to 11 a.m. The center is located at
1706 Orange Ave. and ·additional information is
available at 536-9387.
Financial aid workshop
A-two-part WQ1kshop explaining how to appy
for financial aid wtll be offered Thursday and Dec. 8
by Orange Coast College's Re-Entry Center.
Kem Lo~ of OCC's Extended Opportunity
l>rograms and Services office, Kathryn Ponce of the
Financial Ajd Office and Margeret Harkey of the Re-
Entry Center will conduct the program, which is free
to the public. Sessions are scheduled for noon to I
p.m. both days and additional information is
avajlable at 432-5162.
-Bloodmobile at.plaza.!
A Red Cross bloodmobile will visit South Coast
Plaza Village Thursday from 9 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. for
a shopping ~nter-sponsored blood drive.
The ce nter 1s located at 3840 South Cdast Plaza
Drive. just across Sunflower A venue from South
·Coast Plaza. Call 241-1700. ext. 351 for apppoint-
ments and information.
Fa111Jlon program ln HB
Fashion coordinator Kitty Barton will be 1he
1uest speaker at Thursday's luncheon meeting of the
Simcha chapter of B'nai B'rith Women at the
Huntington Landmark. on Atlanta A venue at
Magnolia Street. Huntington Beach.
Barton will discuss the use of ac~soncs at 1hc
11 a.m. session. Call Florence Waldman at 960-4566
for more information and reservations.
Trade women to convene
Members and &_ucsts of Women in World Trade
will hear John Correz. prograip manager of
McDonnell Douglas Aircraft Co .. al their breakfast
meeting Thursday at the Holiday Inn. 3131 Bnstol
St .• Costa Mesa. •
Correz will speak on Douglas' experiencc ·1n
doing business with China. The breakfast price is S 15, and reservations are being taken at 968-3868.
April Hester, 21. of Jiuntiniton Beach
and Art Hendrickson'-26, said they were in
their car on Newport DOulevard near Hoag
Memorial Hospital when the.)' saw the
man point a rifle out his drivers window.
"We knew he did something wrong, but
OJl tbe Coata _Maa P'teeway.
we dJdn 't know what." Hendnckson said.
:·He looked real excited about somcthana."
The pair stayed behind the man, who
was parked on the side of Newport
Boulevard when they first saw him. They
3 Newport Officers
earn recognltion
.for jobs well done
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of .. Oelr .... ...,,
In barely mo~ than a month, Officer
Glen Fisher was involved in two highly
publicized events while patrolling the
strctts of Newport Beach. One was a tragic
death: the other. new life.
Since 1980, Officer Richard Bradley has
been working with community youths
with little fanfare. An adviser with the
Police Exs>lorcr Scouts and 2_rcsident of the
ollce Aav1sory COuncal fOfCar u s. c
has helped young people team and grow in
· a healthy environment. ·
And for the past four years Detective
David Byington has been nabbing drug
dealers and confiscating their merchandise
with no publicity whatsoever. Assigned to
the narcotics section. he has by necessity
maintained a low profile.
AU thrct police officers earned their
moment in the spotlight last week when
they were honored at the 18th Annual
Pohce Awards Luncheon at the Four
Seasons ~otel. ,.
Sponsored by the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce and the I 0-4 Oub.
the annual banquet gives the community
an opportunity to fctc the men and 'A-Omen
who put their hves on the hne.
More than 300 family members. fnends
and fellow officers filled 1he banquet hall
where Chief Arb Campbell led the saJute to
this year's honortts.
Noting the average c1t1zen's encounter
with a-porice officer is. usually an un-
pleasant one -either because he has
broken the law or been a lawbreaker's
victim -Campbell said those in law
enforcement accept that they aren't going
to win many populanty contests.
Y ct, the people who choose .careers in
pohcc work do so out of a desire to help
others. They take on one of the most
difficult jobs and. for their efforts, receive
little recognition and rare thanks.
"Police otliccrs are human, believe It or
not." CampbelJ said. ..Police officers
deliveT lectures. babies and bad news.
"Police officers see {TIO~ misery. blood-
shed and ·efthan a~onc clsc.i'
Glen F1Sber saw htS-s harf' on Sept I
when he responded to a hit and run call on
Balboa Pcmnsula. He found Debbie
Killelea dying of massive injuries when an
alleged-drunken d~ver plowed into her as
she walked along the alley behind her
home.
Fisher cradled the dying woman in his
arms. reassuring her in her final moments.
He later ran down and captured the
suspect.
Then. on Oct. 7. Fisher responded to a
dis1resscall across the slrttt from Ncwpon
Elementary School.
He found a franuc mother and father
outside their home with their newborn girl.
She wasn't breathing.
Fisher scooped up the infant and
performed CPlt W1th1n seconds the child
was breathing on her own again.
It was an cxc1t1ng month for 1hc )oung
officer who bad JOtncd the Newport Beach
Pohce Department JUSt one year earlier
after servmg a year wtth the Orange
County Shenffs Department.
Born and raised in Downe). Fisher. 27.
will soon be moving into the home he and
his wife Becky purchased in M 1ss1on VicJo.
Had Fisher been hvmg in the Newpon
•.
motioned to the off-duty offiocr, although
they didn't know he was a police officer.
The off-duty officer. who Sta)ed behind
the Honda in his truck. kept authorities
informed of the Honda's whereabouts
The sergeant said authorities were
unrure wh~ the man was in Newport Beach
Wlth the nfle
Newport Beach OfDcen Glen PWaer (I;:~ •to.rd lln.a.j were tbepeataofbonorattbe 18~m.al A ...... Lsocll11•-
wtt6 Detectl.e DaYicl llJiaatoa, 1'1l.e pletue wu DOt PllPll .. tlll....ai.lllllli became of tbe nature of la.la Cmreat a-tp•eat.
Beach area eight years ago, he might have
been dtrectca mto a law enforcement
carter by Richard Bradley_. who has been
working with the Police Explorer Scouts
since 1980.
Bradlcv. 34. also bas served as coordi-
nator oftne annual Youth Safety Run and
is a two-term president of the Polacc
Advisory Council for Car Oubs.
Hts efforts on behalf of young people
CJVDed 1hc h1ghcs1 praise from Campbell,
who said Bradlc.) "has hcl~ develop our
program into one of the nat1on·s best
ExplortT programs."
Bra~lc) said his ~ork has shown him \he
nat101) s ~outh are not the dan~rous. lazy
kids they re too often depicted to be.
"Our countn 1s reaUy tn fine shape.··
Bnidlc) said. "fhe problems on the strttts
arc a small percentage."
Born and raised in Gardena. Bradley
himself staned ou1 as a police Explorer -
with lhe Los Angeles Sheriff's Depart-
ment. .
Since coming to Newport in 1980. be bas
1erved asa J)atrol off acer, beat coordinator.
field tRinma officxr, accident invcstiptor
and cnme scene investiptor.
David Byington has sunilarty ~cid in
several pos1t1ons since comin1 to Newport
ln 1981.
But u is bis work m the narcotics section
that has earned hLm the rc:spect of bis peers
and su~ors. .,..
A Wiied LDVCSllptor. Byi.naloo has
obtained more than 7S tearch wanuts
while working narcou
He has betn involved 1n mort than JOO
arrests and helped seire more than $7
m1lhon in drugs.
Recognized as an expert on narcotics
cases. Byington. 30. 1s regularly called
upo~by the courts to testify. 8) ngton 1s e to S~I An-
drea sen and lives ~ss1on Viejo.
Wednesday, Nov. 9
Baby waiting for heart on life support
mfant. S400. De Francisco said. uon
• 7 p.m. Lapna Buel• Plauiaa-Commbsioll,
council chambers, 505 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach.
• 7:30 p.m. Fouataia Valley PlanalDg Com-
ml11tea, council chambers. 10200 Slater Ave ..
Fountain Valley
ByJONATHAN VOLZKE
OftflelWtr~ ....
Paige W-atts will 1um 2 month$ old on
Thursday. if she lives tha1 long.
The uny Costa Mesa girl wen1 on hfe
support systems Tuesday at Fountain
Valley Re&ional Medical Center. where
she has suffered wnh a malformed heart
since birth.
Pai'~ge~·~s=ufYi,..,e·-=rs~r=::o:=m=-truncus anenos1s
TypcJl. wh.ti:tJ~o anencs that normall y
carry blood to the heart arc fused into one
large artef). forcing the organ to work
harder than normal and often beyond its
limit.
.\!though the monthh btll from Foun-
tain Valle) Regional • HospnaJ. about
$65.000, 1s co-.ered b\ insurance. the
operauon 1s considered C\penmcntal and
IS not CO\ered
In an errori HJ hel p witlr the costs. a
foundation "'as organized at the Costa
Mesa Pohce Department. The Costa Mesa
Pohce Assoc1a11on. the officers' union. has
air-cad) donated S 1.000 and plans 10 g1H
more. assoc1a11on president Detect I\ e
Jerry Hollo"'a~ said.
"We're not domg this for att.cnt1on,"
Holloway said. "ThJS kmd of thing puts the
da)·to-day 1h1ngs we think ~ important
into pcrspecuvc. This 1s much more
important than the da·)'-lo-day th~ "W~ ha""~ a--pretty JOOd -poliU; nily
Thursday, Nov. 10
• 4 p.m. La~ Buda AJds Edecation Task
Force, Community Center. 384 ~on St .. Laguna
Beach.
around here:·
Defrancisco said has daughter was
estauc about the pohce fund. but she was
too upset about Pa~ge·s tum for the ~
to discuss 1t.
• 6:30 p.m. l..a1Ua Beacla Board Of Adjast-
mnt, council chambers. 505 Forest Ave., Laguna
Beac~. .
But even as her parents. Peggy and Bruce
Watt51 received that bad news. Peggy
Watts father. vete ran Costa Mesa Pohce
Sgt. Richard DcFrancasco. gathered with
his colleagues to raise money to treat the
The only hope for the bab> is a hean
transplant. She 1s on th e last at Loma Linda
Medical Center and will rttel\ e the
S 150.000 opcra11on as soon as a donor
he.art is found from an infant of the same
age. weight and blood type. her grandfather
said.
Bui even the soluuon bnngs problems.
Paige's parents cannot afford 1he operation
nor the estimated monthh medicine bill of
Traffic SgL John Fttzpatnci.. said the
Orange Count\ Traffic Officers .\ssoc1a·
lion. an orpniza11on of the count} 's ts:affic
offi cers. also plans a .. substantial" dona-
Contribuuons to the foundauon can be
made to DcFranc1sco at the Cost.a Mesa
Police Department. 88 Fair Drive. Costa
Mesa. 92626. For mo~ anfonnatton. caJI
DcFranmro at {71 4) 754-S280.
El TOto tribunal sentences
Marine.to death for slaying
BJ Tiie Aateelattd Pren
A Marine Corps seraeant pleaded
with a court martial panel at the EJ
Toro Marine Corps Air Station
Tuesday to spen his life shonly
before he was sentenced to death for
mutderina his pregnant 24-year-old
wife.
.. I realize you have returned a
auilty verdict ... for the most serious
oTcrimes," stt. Joseph L. Thomas.
28i,.said in a courtroom at the station.
1tut he added, "I have worked hard
all,my life. I ask that you spare my life
for the sake of my children and my
family. Thank you."
NeVenhetal, the father of two
children was 1en1enctd to death for
beatina hi1 wife to death on Jan. 9.
1917, and nwkina the murder by
llllilll • faeqt car ac:ddent
so inhufiin that the only adeQuate
response 1s death," McBride said.
The execution of Seracant Joseph
L Thomas is to be carried out by
lethal injection, Marine Corps
spokesman Staff Sat. St.eve Shon
said.
The sentence will be rcvieWed
automatically by the command1n1
general of El Toro's Third Marine
Aircraft Wina and forwarded to the
corps' coun of military review and
the Coun of Military Appeals.
Thomas also can appeal his
scnteJlce to the l ' .S. Supreme Court,
Sb<M1 said. Thomas joined the
Marines in 1983 and was Worll"f asa
telel>h<>ne and radio wiri~ aptt\IJist
witti a SU,PPC>t.! P'OUP of tbe Third
Marine Aircraft w-....
the couple's uzuk1 Samunu.
The prosecutor. Capt Bradley N.
Garber. ponra)ed Thomas u a
calculating killer who faked his wife's
murder so he could collect SS0,000
from her hfe insurance policy.
The body was discovered on Dec.
10, 1987. and th<' R1vers1de Countr.
Coroner at first ruled Mrs. Thomas'
death as a su1c1de. Thomas later
remarried and his cumnt wife is nine
months preanant.
However. Thomas began to con-
tradict himself months later in rou-
tine follow-up interviews with Nav)
officials.
HantJneton Beach
The general manager of Plantano
Restaurant said someone slashed the
tires of his Volkswagen van m' the
parking lot • • • Th1e,es s1olc a tclev1s1on set. a
~yycwnter and tools for a total los of ~8.000 while a mident an the 3000
block of Easter Cu'Clc was away on
vacauon. ••• A man clllmed that his 15-year-old
son was uuured 1n an "unprovoked"
attack by another student at Manna
High Sthool
Tr~dcruh vie re.cued
Firefighters used the JaW$ofl.ifc to
remove a man w._o was trapped in a
pickup truclc after the truck rut a din
shou&dtt and rolled over twice on
Alton venue an Irvine ~y.
• • • .\ "oman allegedl) slabbed
another female in the chest 1n a fight
at Huntington West apanments.
6 1 \\amer <\\e. , ...
C ulpnts broke mto the grounds at
1he ScachfTCounlr) Club. 6501 Palm
.\' t . and damaged some golf cans
1ha1 the) took out for a JO) ndc
Coata lileea
~ '1ct1m who was offered an
opportuntt) to ··play in the part .. lo 1
his shons and his wallet af\er a
v.oman he gave ciprettcs to lured
hi m into Manna View Part where a
man armed wnh a ~n1feJumped him.
• • • Fonner tenants att believed ~
spons1blc for vandalizmg a home on
the QOO block of Senate Street where the~ broke windows, splanCT'Cd paint
on the patio and stoic a d1mna room
table • • • ~ burglar smashed the driver's "1 ndo~ ofa locked Corvette~
on the 1800 bloc.le of Monrovia and
tole the stereo and car phone ~ued
al S 1.500 • • •
.\ burtlar stoic thrtt chlnlt boxes
from C'"ost.a Mesa Country Oub
Catcnn.J. 1701 Golf Courx Drive.
taking SSOt 1n cash.
Bail reduction asked
for drug king suspect
AN FRANC'lSCO (AP) -A Lyons S&Jd thlt acconSins to the
fe<kral d1stn« j\Mlle as conlldcnoa coavenataons of Prada'• ~ u-
whctherto rt\IOlcca SI mtlhoa t.il on 10C11ics an cocaine tnlfick.ina. Pl'9da al~ dnc ... na J.T. Prada. wbo rteetWd ID lftnual lllary of Sl
~ .
'"The crime committed by the
1ccnMd &Uo pvous. IO moowoua.
Thomas was convicted on Nov. l
in •be beatina death of his wife
Melinda Jean Thomas. whole body
Mt fovftd in iM bumed WNCk• of
He has been held in a Camp
Ptndleton bngs1nct his Apnl 5arrcsL
He will eventually be transfermf to
the U.S. Army Dctenuon Fatihty at
Fort Leaven~orth, Kan.. pend1n1
compleuon of the m1htary rtv1cw
pnXllll.
Jon Roben Jordan, 27. ofMumet·
ta wu liken to Western Mtd~I
Centtt whctt he was treated for a
broken dl~ide and ICl'lpes on hu
arm1111d~
No other can~ aa\iol~ in the
ICX'ideot. dich ocamed at appro~
imaldy l0:40a.m .
couI4CUll} lltt and h ve abfoed wtth mallioft from me c:Wtel. the help of fottip contaCU. a Pi-=----------------J--...-iM
ecvtor chafFd. ..... ......
Som1w ~ 19'olt under the
........ 0/1 l9M .. vw Jetta ..W . ·om tllC 600 bloclt of
M•llliertee AWMI Oft T.-y at 9
........... ..,. equiP'l'Cftt Yllllld•S64j. • • •
ACcordi~to ~....,., Jordu blld ... ., .. a 1918Jeftt~
#Cllllaunit • Ahoa, ~ .. ol ~.... 11111 car lril I din
.Tht ..... ~
wtnt outol~ :faso~ tWlClt
and ...... ~~ ... Mleeta ,. I.he
e.astboOnd ~ -Alton .
.. Has tta tot~ c:ommnity arc onty
-~Mht(Pncll)wa•tbem'° be... tlid AllllW\t U.S. Anciney
,-.. LJMI. addll'f tMI ,._. _,
~ .... QlmlJvt litlb '° * coc:aiae Canel •ilid 111 moMY .at hr
could ca~ rtambune n~ wtlo bas 10 It thttt ~ 1f ht
~
. ...
Or-. COMt DAILY PtLOT/ W9dneeday, ~ t. 19N
I
..
Polish shipyaril wor1'ers
. return after Walesa plea
GDANSK. Poland (AP) -Em-
eloyecs at two small shipyards in
Gdansk called off strikes today after
Solidarity leader Lech Walesa urae<t
workers to end protests apinst a
government plan to close the L.enin
Shipyard.
Several hundred workers gave up
their strike and took down bannen at
the Wisla Shipyard after rec::eivina
assurances that SOOle workers fired
after a strike in August would be
rehired. a strike leader said.
At the Repair Shipyard. workers
held a morning rally. then ended their
strike af\er several ap~ls by Walesa,
strike part1c1pants said. ,
The strikes began Tuesday at the
Wasta and Repair yards in this Baltic
• port to protest the government's plan
to close the nearby Lenin Shipyard,
bithplace of Solldanty. the outlawed
free trade union movement.
Tuesday night workers at both
yards defied an earlier appeal by
Walesa to end their strikes .. nd sta~
put ovemiaht in near-freezana
weather.
Last weetr. communist ~uthorities
said they *ere closing the lenjn
Shipyatd Dec. I because it is losina
money. Solidarity leaden said the
plan to close the shipyard was an
attempt to cripple Solidarity at a time
the a.ovemment sayt it wants to
ncaouate.
W~ after meetina with the
Lenin Shipyard manqement Tues-
day, indicated he would not insist on
an immediate revenal of the closure
plan before talks open with the
government. He said he was told at
the meeting it could take two years or
more to.close the yard.
"At first we had one month. Now
we have two years." said Walesa. an
electrician at the yard and winner of
the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize.
"We wiJI fiaht for it (the unin
Shipyard) and we will save it," he
said. "But the blade is not at our
throats .... Wc hive time and we can
talk about the shipyard later."
Strike leaden said Tuesday that
they were protcstina both the closure
order and the delay of 1ovemment·
opposition talks on Solidarity•1 fu-
ture. Leiden of the movement arc
dcmandint its lcpl reinstatement.
"This as a warning to the
authoridci that we want the 1ovcm-
ment to set about talks right away,"
said Jan Stanecki, a protest leader at
the Wisla yard. which has about 1,000
workers who make yachts and river
craft.
He said 400 to SOO Wisla workers
supported the strike. Some of the
stokers at the plant's gates huddled
over fires roasting sausages Tuesday
night as police vans were posted at the
entrances.
KHARTOUM. Sudan (AP) -A
lone aunman 11ormcd into the em-
busy of the United Arab Emirates
• today and held the ambellador, thrft
other 1enior diplomats and a prdcner
.hom,e,.a released captive and police
IOUrcel said. •
Tbe attacker demanded lo speak by
telcphof\e to United Arab Emirates
Preliderit Sheik Zayed Bin Sul&an Al
Nahyan and said he would not re&ease
his host.IFS untjl four people be
described as "collcques" held in the
Emirates are freed, tbe tources said.
Dozens ofSudanete I01dien .-med
with automatic rines surrounded the
two-story, IJ'IY and white embassy
buil<ling1n the residential district of
Amarat.
A senior police official went inside
the embassy to negotiate with the
sunrtian, police sources said, but he
insisted on speaking to Sheik Zayed.
Rage high as Jews mark Kristallnacht
FRANKFURT. West Germany
(AP) -West German Jews led their
fellow c1u2ens in a day of atonemenl
today on the 50th anniversary of
Kristallnacht. and hecklers jeered
Chancellor Helmut Kohl during a
solemn ceremony.
In Austna, Parliament observed a
minute of .silence for Kristallnacht
victims. a'\d Amencan Jewish ac-
tivists re-enacted the Nazi practice of
forcing Vienna Jews to wash caty
streets w1th toothbrushes.
Israel's ercsidcnt. Chaim Herz<>s,
said Knstallnacht laid the
..;groundwork for "the tragedy of t~
Jew1sh people." and he urged Israelis
to work together to avoid a repeat of
the tragedy.
On the night of Nov. 9-10, 1938,
Nazi thugs beat and murdered Jews,
ransacked their homes and busi-
nesses, and destroyed synagogues.
The rampage left city streets littered
with &lass -hence the name
Kristallnacbt, which means Crysta!
Ni&htin~. -·~0n tlie-·eve·of K.rstallnacht cer-
emonies, rigbt-wingex~mists spray-
painte<! swastika$ and pro-Nazi
slogans on a synqo&ue in a small
Bavarian villqc, j>olicc said. The
incident occurred early Tuesday in
Binswangen. in southern West Ger-
many.
Jews objected to Kohl's presence at
the Frankfun ceremony, citing his
1985 visit to the Bitburg cemetery
where 49 Nazi SS officers arc buried,
and his alleged insensitivity to Jewish
concerns.
"Mr. Chancellor, what about Bit·
burg?" one of two heckjers in the
balcony of Frankfun's West End
synagogue shouted as Kohl spoke.
"Mr. Chancellor, why arc you
lying? We want our rightsf' both men
shouted.
"Let me finish," Kohl interjected.
Other voices were heard from the
main noor of lhc-1ynegoguc, but it
was not clear what they were shout-
ing.
_"Even today. the wouJlds of this
conflagration arc not fully healed,"
said West Germany's Jewish com-
munity leader Heinz Galinski. ·
Galinski, a Js-year-old survivor of
the Auschwitz death camp, delivered
the main address in a servjce tele-
vised nationwide from West End, the
only synaaoaue in Frankfun that was
not destroyed on Kristallnacht.
The synqoauc was badly damaged
but has been completely refurbished,
with its stone walls, majestic pillars
and sweeping arches returned to their
former splendor.
West German police surrounded
the building to guard •P,inst possible
attacks on the poJit1cians. church ~presenlatives and other guests in-
side.
"The younger generation -just as
we ourselves -arc always on guard
a_sainst a return of the indescribable,"
Galinski said.
"Remembering -not forgetting
-must be our command, the
command for all," he said.
ResCUers seek thous~nds of quilke victims
BEIJJNG (AP) -Rescue workers
still have not been able to reach
thousands of vicums of an earth·
quake that left more than I 00.000
people homeless three days ago.
officials told aid agencies today.
More than a m1U1on people hve in
the affected area and hundreds arc
seriously inJured. the Ministry ol
Civil Affairs told the U.N Develop-
ment Program and World Food
Program.
Chinese offiaals told the agencies
they do not know whether many
people are trapped ali~e in wreckage
in the mountainous, Jungle-covered
region, said Trevor Page. the World
Food Program representative in Beij-
ing.
The Yunnan provincial govern-
ment said the injured were being
treated at the scene because there was
no way to trans~rt them to Kunm-
ing. the provincial capital 240 miles
to the northeast.
Sunday's quake struck 16 square
miles of a remote southern· region
along the border with Burma.
Helicopters were ferrying medical
teams and supplies into the area
today, accordin.a to official reports.
Page said the ministry rcponed some
roads had been reopened but others
remai ned cut. •
Page said officials did not raise the
death toll from Tuesday's 938, but
said 607 of the dead were at the
epicenter. The official China News-
Service issued a new count of 1,986
injured.
The ministry officials told the aid
agencies China would welcome food
and medicine for the victjms, mainly
farmers of the Lahu, Dai and Ya
minorities. • -
Accordih& to Page, offers of plastic
sheeting. medical supe_lies and food
would be welcome. Pate said bis
agency could not help because it was
committed to other emcrsencies
worldwide.
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LOS ANGELES (AP) -The number of people seekiO( treatment
for cocaine abutc at hospital emcra·
ency . roomt. countywidc has oearJy
doubled since 1985; althouah the
number of overall drua abuse cases
has declined, officials say. ~y room physicians saw
an 83 pm:ent increase in cocainc-
abulc cases durina the past three ~ bcalth officials said Tuesday. For the same period, however,
cues involvina the use of halluci-
notmic PCP fell dramatically and
heroin.abuse cases rose at a much slow rate, contributing to an overall
6.6 pefccnt decrease in drug-related
emeracncy room visits.
..Cocaine has been skyrocketing
everywhere,·· said Dr. Irma Strantz.
drug-abuse program administrator
for the Depal)ment of Health Ser-
vices.
.. We sec more than double the cases
we did five years ago," saici Cheri
Allmond, emergency room super-
vising nur5e at Manin Luther King
Hospital in South-Central Los An·
,cles. "We see a lot o( Y.CNDI OCIOM
comin& in with chestpe1n1 and beiari
attaeks." •
Health officil111tU'ibuted ~mp
in cocaine~· to tbepopu,rity
in recent yeanofthe cbcapUd biahly
potent amokablc form or the 0 ....
known as crack.
"Cocaine, R9!1iculatly the end
form, is plenuful and cheap," Strantz
said. .
Strantz•s department provided
statistics from county emc•ncy
rooms for a national report on drul
abuse. The report, by tbe National
lostit'4te of Dru1 Abu1e, alto lbowed
emcracncy room treatment for ~
caine abuse rising sharpl)' in other
major cities across the nauon.
Such uatmcnt was up I SS pcrt:eftt
in Philadelphia, 108 percent in
Phoenix and 148 percent in BuffaJo,
N.Y,:: the rcpon said.
t'\..P-related ca5H dropped more
than 22 percent between I 98S and
1981, Strantz said, while cases involv-
ing amphetamines, heroin and
morphine increased sliahtly.
Gay marc hers in SF
rally against the GOP
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Hun-
dreds of people marched from a rally
.in the mostly homosexual Castro
District Wednesday lo Republrcan
campaign headquarters where thex
chanted "Geo~ Bush has got to go ·
and "Bush and Quayle belong in jail."
Police Chieffrank Jordan said the
rally drew at least 1,500 people to hear
San Francisco Supervisor Harry Britt
~isc the city's homose:tuals for
'takinf. on the Governor of Cali-
fornia.·
Brit!t, who is openly gay. referred to
Gov. veorJe Dcukmejian's baeking
of Proposition I 02, which was sound-
ly defeated in Tuesday's voting. The
measure would have forced doctors
to repon AIDS patients and required
health professionals to trace others
who might have infected.
A $Criond AIDS measure. Prop-
osition 96, wasapproved. It will allow
AIDS testin& of people aJTested for
ccrtafo crimes .
The marchers, estimated by police
at 800. walked behind a banner
readinf "Victory! Thank You, Cali-
fornia' and first stopped at the State
BuildinJ where they chanted "Act
Up! Fight Back! Fi~t AIDS."
The march, which took up. two
blocks, then went on to the Re-
publican headquarters which was
closed.
Fourteen officers in riot gear escort-
ed the· marchers. who were led by a
police van and car. No incidents were
rcponed. · .
In Southern California, about 30
people angry over the passqe of
Proposition 96 marched from a hotel
down Santa Monica Boulevard in
West Hollywood shoutina their di~
approval, but causing few problems.
Mom. who dressed son as
a pig will get counseling
By fte Atsociated Preti
HAYWARD - A child endangerment charge apinst a woman who
dressed her son in a makeshift pig costume will be dropped if she completes 1
counseling program, her lawyer says. "We aa.rced with the district attorney's
office to have the child endangerment cna~ dismissed after she has
completed a divcrlion program of counseling.· said Kevin McLean, who
represents Mary Bergamasco. The woman was placed in a prosram where she
will ''undergo counseling and supervision and receive possible drug testina."
Alameda County Deputy District Attorney Angela Backers said on Tuesday.
The child endangerment eharge was filed June 28 after Bergamasc-0 put a ptg
nose made from an egg canon on the 7-year-old's face as punishment for lying
and stealing.
Flre for ces L Ajal l e vacwatlon
LOS ANGELES-About 1,800 county jail inmates were evacuated when
a fire started by a welder's torch erupted in a seventh-floor narcotics evidence
room. No one was seriously injured but 30 firefiJtlters and six sheriffs
employees were sent to hospitals Tuesday for precautionary exams bec.ause of
exposure to the smoke. said Fire Def?1rtment spokesman Dean Kathey. Sheriff
Sherman Block said narcotics. particularly cocaine. burned ih the blaze.
Hospltal nre, baby'• death unrela ted
LOS ANGELES -A nash fire that killed an infant underaoina heart
surgery at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center was not linked to the fact the operation
took place outside an opcratina room, health officials ruled ... There is no
rcas0n to believe that this incident would have been any different had it taken
place ... in an operating room.'' said Roben Karp, procram manager for health
facilities at the county Dcpanmcnt of Health. Ho~vcr, Karp said health
officials are studying whether such future surgeries should be limited only to
approved operating rooms. The Oct. 6 fire at Ccdan-Sinai, in which the IS-
da>:-old son of Alberto and Maria Rivera was fatally burned, took place in a
patient care room .
))'
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-.
Welcome home
·Sakharov
may receive
pacemaker
BOSTON (AP) -Follow1n$ his wife'~ eump~, Soviet human n&hts
IC'tivist Andrei Sakharov underwent
a hean examination as part of his first
trip 10 tbe West. · .
The 6?·year-old Nobel Peace Prize
winner, who was oamioed Tuesday,
mt&ht receive.a pacemaker to regulate
his heartbeat before returning to
Moscow, a family member said.
Sakharov suffers from chronic
anaina. or chest pam.
His wife, Yelena Bonner. came to
the same hospital. Massachusetts General, for hean bypass surgery in
1986.
The hospitaJ ~1d 1t would not
release test ~sultS or prov ide any
other medical informauon for the
next tO to 14 days. at the requ-est of
Sakharov's family.
H is son-in-l a w Efre m
Yankelev1ch. says 1f doctors decide a
pacemaker is needed. Sakharov will
undergo surge ry before return ing to
1he Soviet UOJon later thi s month.
The phys1c1st 1s scheduled to fly
home Nov. 18. but relauves and
colleagues have said his visa is
nexibfe and could be ex tended.
I ,
l
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wednnday, ~bet 9, 1MI
Pilot's maneuve.-incrasli
saves crew, citizens~ lives
ABILENE. Texas (AP) -An Air
Force bomber pilot v.as hailed as a
hero for maoeu11enna ,h11 bumina
B-1 8 away from hou'ses and traJler
parks ahd into the cow .~tu re where n ~mhed after all. four c~wm~
bailed out.
, The crash 10 west Jex.as on Tues-
day afterno9n was tht'th1rd smce 8-1
aircraft began flying four years ago as America's first Iona-range bomber in
more than 2S years. Four crewmen
died in the eartier accidents.
The $204 m1lhon aircraft crashed shonly after takeoff for a rouune
training flight from D)'ess Air Foret
Base. where 29 8-1 Bs are J>aKCI. Air
Force officials. said. Three crewmen bailed out. then·
Capt. George f.1. Go•er turned the
smoking four-engine aircraft toward
an unpopulated area and flew about a
half-mile before eJCCllng. said Walter
Gilstrap. who drove a pickup truck
through fields to rescue the men
"In my mind. what that pilot did
as not only save the lives ofh 1scre"
but the lives of civilians in the area ...
Gilstrap said.
The pilot avoided a spalsely popu-
tated area of farm houses and trailer parks e1&ht miles -.est of Ab1lei\e
"He rode it out for as long as he
could at1d set n down where no one
would be hun." said Gil strap .. The> ou&ht to gi ve that man a D1s-
un1u1shed Flying Cross."
The Air Force set up a roadblocl to
seal off the site and "Ould no1 speculate on the cause of the crash
Military investigators intended to
examine the wreckage today. said Air
Force spokeswoman Beverly Foster
The wreckage was scattered over an
ar'ca se"en miles b) t\\o miles said Al
Dostal. another Air Force spokes-
man
Gover and his crew ma tes -(apt
Michael .E. \,Vat~ri. a1rcraft rom-mander. ·Capt Charles ~1 Zaria
offensive S) stCJns operator and I st
Lt. <\nton Eret Jr. defens1,~s\S1ems
operator-"ere all in good cond111on toda)' at the base hospnal said o\1r
Force spokes"oman Linda Gellnere
The plane \\BS fl~ ing about (\\0
m1les·north of Interstate 20 near T}e
"hen smoke spe"ed from 11s left engine. said "11ness Lou Paulsen
"l\t fi rst there was JUl>t a putT ot
smoke. then fire," Paulsen said ... It
looked hke 11 started to go out, then it
flared up big." .
Gilstrap satd he was ne.ar the Tye
Truck Stop. where he has a knife·
sharpening stand, when people ·
ar<>und him staned yelling abow a
plane on fire.
"'I looked out the wmdow and saw
th ree parachutes and I knew what was happening." he sa1<t ··So I aot in the
truck and drove -I kind of had the
coordinates fiJured out -I drove to
where I thought they would be." <J1ls1rap fou nd the three crewmen
scattered about one field and the pilot ,
a half-mtk awa) rn a different
pa!>ture
"The' "ere all in shock.." Gilstrap
said "lhe~ hugged me an<l I huged
them and two of them asked me to
call their "1' es ··
Gilstrap said there were flames in
the field "here he found the crewmen.
but not close enou~ to bum them.
Other w11nesses said flames fmm the
crash rose I 0 stones into the air. and
smoke "as seen :w miles away.
In all. IOOa1rcraft in the 8-1 series
ha' e been built.
Imelda llarcoe ldMH ber huaband, former Pblllpplne •
Presldeat Ferdinand llarcoe, upon her return home from
New York, where ahe pleaded innocent to federal racketeer--. ma cbaraea. llarcoe· •rratanment on the Ame cbar&ea ...
.,_.ponid after hla docton aald be wa .. to frail to travel.
. .
Massachusetts' sales ,
law challenged in suit
BOSTON (AP)-It started quietl y
w\th a few cans of sweet com illegal!)
sold on Sunday. But before long. the
contraband bought from Cape Cod
retailers grew to include carrots and green beans. and the cast wound up in
Massachusetts' highest court.
"I knew which items to buy because
I checked with the D.A.," state
Trooper James Paith ~1d with a
wink.
The case went before the Massa-
chusetts Supreme Court on Tuesday.
Several plainclothes officers. in-cluding Paith. caught a number of
retail stores in the act of violating the
state's blue laws. which were imposed
by the Puritans about 1650 and
restrict retail sales on Sunday. th e
l~1slated day of rest. 'In some towns we found no
violations. but some stores chose to
stay open and were taken to court."
Paith said. Most violators resolved
the issue in district court by paying a
$40 fine. he said.
But the Great Atlantic & Pacifi c
Tea Co., whose A&P stores allegedly
violated the blue laws. took exception
to the code.
"A lot of people might want to buy
their canned carrots on Sunda)" and that's fine." said Thomas Yonce.
assistant district attorney 1n the Cape
Cod city of Barnstable. "Prosecutors
in the case were basically JUSt looking
for guidance from the highest court in
the state as to the meanin~ of the
particular clause in question. ·
At issue is the interpretation of a
blue laws amendment. whic h was
adopted in 1982 and. A&P attorneys
argue. liberalized restrictions placed
on Sunday retail sales.
Attorneys for the supermarket
chain maintain stores that are
authorized to sell one exem_pt item,
such as a newspaper or film . are
authorized to sell any and all items
.... without restnct1on.
"If that's the caseJhenan)onethat
sells film ts now exempt.'' .\ssoc1ate
Justice Paul L1acos on Tucsda> told
attorne) £1,an T. Lawson. "ho pres-ented the defendants' briefs. -0o )'OU
thank that's wha t the Leg.islature had
1n m1od?"
Attorneys agree the amendment 1s
vague. It specifies onl> that "any store
or shop which qualifies for exemption
under this clause but docs not qualify
for exemption under any other clause
in this section shan not open for business on Sunday prior to the hour
of noon."
The Supreme Coun took the mat·
ter under ad visement, and plans to
issue a ruling later.
The case puts the state in a win-win
slluauon. Yonce said. "The com-
monwealth can't lose in this case," he
said. "It will clarify the legal issues."
Attorney Euge11e Ri chards. who
helped prepare the case for law firm
Lawson & Wayne in Boston. said
more was at stake for his cli ent.
"II 1s humorous in a way, but it's an
important issue to the A&P in that n's
a big service for the stores to be open
on Sunday morning. particularly in
summer when people want to shop before going to the beach." he said.
"They do a tremendous amount of
business in the mornings and on the
weekends.··
Lt. John Symington of the Dennis
Police Depanmcnt on the cape said
his officers were duty bound to
enforce the law when th e) received a
complaint.
However. Symington said that 1n at least one case retail competitors
upped authorities off to the blue law
violation.
"There's always been a great
amount of controversy over the blue
laws," he said. "Retail establishments
feel they shouldn't be 1n place."
,
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M Orenge Coelt DAILY PILOT I W9dneed9Y. November 9, 1988
s10
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47• ll48'" 11 IS:"
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BUINA PARK
8341 La 'Palma Ave .
directly ICt'OSS from the
Buen1 Part Mall
Mon.-Fri. IOAM-9PM.
Sat. IOAM -7:30PM.
Sun I IAM-6PM.
(714) 739--4663
f-rom 1he Ancsla Frwy (91), uit \ol.llh on
Be.ch BMI. Turn lefl on La Palma and pro-
ceed 4 blockt r·rom the Santa Ana Frwy, (5).
nit west on u Pllma, 11ppro1un1a1ely I mile
I
YNEWSTORE
TUSTIN
1-5 (Santa Ana f~eway) and Myfocd
Mon.-Fri. IOAM-9PM .
Sat. JOAM-7:30PM.
Sun. 10:30AM·6PM .
(714) 730-2100
Take the Myford e•lt east rrom l·S 10
El Camino R.I. Oo leA (north) ~="~~
6 c5J cO .r Less. Every Day.
..
LAD lllJER GLASS
how off your colorful )Alad in Toscany·,
assy pass 9l/•~ 'llllad ~I Comes with tv.-o
"r)'lic scrvcn at an unbch" iblc price
. '
THANKSGJVltG PLAffiRS
W11h all the hol1da) fca~ts coming up. ,ou·n h.1,c 11\dO\ occ.i"°"'
fOf serving d1 ~ Our Jllracu•c ..clccuon fcatu~ "'h11c 'cr<1m"
1urk.cy. ~al and rcc111ngular plaucr'
REVERE WHISTLER
Re\crc·~ 21n qt wh1sthn1 tea kcuk "one o( lhose
kitchen cla\~1c~ that'~ h.trd 10 rc"''· e'pcc1all) 111 1h"
price Sta ink ~ ~tccl v. 1th a copper bottom fOf fa,1
bo1hng.
NI TURE & ORG ,ANIZATION •
' Id ywr pla lie aroccry b.I~ 10 10
.Ste. Ti'Mh Bla·h WU IC ba k.el l.S \pc<:1.ill)
iped •1th notchc~ 10 hold the h.1ndle~ o(
f pit tic bap Plper bllS n1 11 niceh 100
\
• •
\to11ch1n1 \-shelf unib arc ...:n11ch-
rc.~1\1An1 mc~m1nc v. 11h 'iOl1d
wood trim
WlfllSOR DtAIR
Tilt W1ndQ ch.m v.11h "'
spindle bJc~ mnd hJ~ood 'on-
~1ruc11on "on wr 11,1 01 ~11-
timc fa•llfllC\ The dc'11!n "
equal!) ,11 home 1n urbJn 'ur·
rounding'> J' 11 1, in J 1:oun1n
'1lla1e Pol"hrd 10 po:rlccuon
with J dcJr lucqucr fini,h
PIJl1BITTillTI TRAIX $19
tr \ou'rc ttrcd o( 'huffi1n1 throoth
vour '>lltC~ u(11~ tn our uc \Jltt f 11•
1101 Cl\ll) onto an) C~I rod II 'J llC
c.irou~f 1ha1 hold~ .\o uc~ °' ~ll' '\1m-
pl). pre~ • bunoo llnd 11 l1ghh up .ind
rotate~ 10 brin1 each of the uc ur lrom.
1n10 "iCW. 1n ~ond'
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Edinaer and Gothard
ncxl lo Golden \\e l Colle
Mon -Fn. IOAM·9PM.
Sal. IOAM·8:30PM.
Sun llAM·6PM.
(714) 892·2592
f mm the San Dqo ff'W), ("40Sl. e:~1l toulh
on Beach Bl"d Turn r11h1 on Ed1"10f' 1nd
protecd JU l Pl~ Gothlrd, on the ritht•
THE ROMANCE OF EYELET
W •th •n old 11.ald ch.tcm. rcm1C1prelc:d for tocb' ·, l.a•h-
1on. lhe<.e c~cle1 >heel !>Cl' 11dd • romJnllc mood 10 \OUr
bedroom The l80·1hrc.id tounl perc.ilc ,11ec1~ hJ•c Jn
C\elc1-a11.ichtd hem on 1hc Oat >heel Jnd CJ~' In \to<h1te.
l\Or). ro;,c .md pc.ich. ~~ co11on/5-0'I. pol)e\tcr Machine
v.a,hable/dr)able Full Stt 5'2 29. Queen Set SJQQ'
CJl-King Set $49.86
FlUffY PILLOWS
AT A PHENOMENAL PRICE
Sleep' hc4d • LJ\ 11 Jov. n n .:1'11'\lorl on th" <upcr
<Qf1 p1llov.• "'"h D..:mn II r<>l>C,IC' till lhpo
allergenic.-v.11h a .:oH '" l"''"~'ltr Cll\Cf \1.1 .. h1nc
v.J,luble/dnablc Qut'cn S t... n11 S IO
Wrap \'OUf'Clf 1n a C(\t\ blanket th,,,.. 10 liaht ·~~
F.ill chill< \1.t<lc ol • hJ\UrtOU\h ~ ..:nhc Piie '"""'
arc machine 11.a<haMc .snd il\1111.tb\c m ;a lar~ tiliOl'l·
mcn1 ol ~1cmror•n dc"gn'> ti() ',
Of~ CoMt DAILY PILOT/WedMldey, Ncwember 9, 1NI A"t
FLANNEL SHEETS FOR
WINTER WARMTH
This winter. dnft off to leep
between these soft, warm pure· •
cotton nannel heets. Made in
Belgium. the woven plaids come
in d variety of rich, ya rn·dyed
color!.. Machine washable/
dryable. Choose from several
tyle<>. Full $20, Queen $24,
King $28. Std. Cases $16. King
Cases SIS.
EYWT a>MFORTER SETS
Our nele1 comforter sch come "' th bed ruffic and
•ham(s) in .,..hilt !1f ttTu O.i•bcd ~1 1"'1'ltle onl)I
S9' FuU SIOO 011ttn Sf2Q. t...1n1 S14'1
FlOOff SITTING
Folio.. IM pull ol gr•HI\ in th~ ~ltf i.:tl'l' fkoor
t11~h1onS. The 2" t11'h11>n' h.i•C purt •<'14100 I>•
1rin1tcd CO\m. "'Ith roh lin '''""'cJ •l' 1
lfa local compehlor ld\'etli Ule •me
item IOr ~M'U m1tch the pnce If
•ifn1n 30 di,, after ru~hlte lhe .. me
item advertilled k>call) for len, we wtll
refund lhe chff'erenc •'!'Pb· we want
)'OU to be •t~ied.
T
..
.•
'.
-.
I
•
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ti
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)
f e
i
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Orenge CoMt DAILY PILOT I Wedneeday, November 0, 1088
FitzpatriCk, ·Gollison win in LB
BJ UfJUJE EAANEST aM BOB VAN EYKEN °' ..............
Two incumbents won ~lection to
the Lquna Beach City Council in
Tuesday's votina. ridinaearly leads to victory by comfortable marains.
Neil Fitzpatrick, elected to his third
fol,\f-year term, and Martha Collison.
wbcr will serve her second, have both
served as mayor of the city. In the city clerk's race, Verna Rolhnacr won a
third-imn.ovcr her loM cMI~.
Collison and Fi~trick placed
first and second in a field of seven
candidates, pollina 23 and 21 percent, respectively.
Ann Christoph, a candidate from
newly. annexed South ~una, was
third an contest, prnenna about 19
percent of the vote and finish.ins
slightly more than SOO ballots behind
Fitzpatrick. To win, Fitzpatrick, 54, general
manager of a cellular telephone
company, had to o~ercome <?Ppo~i
tion of a pro-business facuon an
Lquna that unsuccessfully at-
tempted to recall Mayor Dan Kenney
and council memben Bob Gentry
and Lida Lenncy earlier this year.
In appeaUna to local artists to help
fund his campaian, Fitzpatrick
amassed the laracst war chest in the ~m~ian..: raising$48,272 and spend-Inf. $28,5.tO. . · . . 'I'm &lad tbe cam~iJ!l is over and I'm gla<f to be back; sa1(fFitipatrick.
Now that the election is over, the
real strugle will bc&in-AUiQ~ see myself as an environmen-
talist, and I see some additional
strualcs ahead," he said. "It's always
a hOfding action with the environ-
ment. I think we're going to sec a
drive for more open space, expccially
since we have a commitment from
the city to use more of the general
fund to acquire some additional green belL"
Collison. office manager for a
Laguna Beach reaJ estate firm, was
next in fund raising with $44, I 24. She
spent S 17 ,682.
Havin1 won re-election. Collison
said she looked forward to tacldina
the problem of traffic circulation in
~unaBeach. • I would also like to see us emphasize unity in the community,"
she said. "I see a community that's
split itself alona business vs. resident
hncs. I don't think we need 1hat. I
think residents and businesses have
an interst In working out their
problems together.'' .
Christoph and Mary Reynolds,
another candidate from South
Laguna, lin1shCd thir<I and fif\h
respectively. It was the first time the
small community of 5,SOO has par·
ticipated in a city election.
Christoph, an architect and long-
time member of the South l...a&.una
Specific Plan Board of Rcveiw, said
she was disappointed her community
did not win representation on th~
council.
"I feel bad that it's going to be
another twQ years bcfo~ South
Laguna has a chanct to gain some
representation." she said.
Christoph said she would remain
active with the Board of Review, but ·
has not decided whether she would
run for council apin.
Don Black, the only candidate to
receive a contribution from the
powerful Buildina Industry Auocla-
tion, which also clonated to orpniza-
tions that tried to defeat slow..,.,,..ih
iniHativts in three Qran,e Coast
'cities. ran as a friend of business.
. The S6-year-old lawyer was presi-
dent of the La&una Beach Chamber of
Commerce wfien it backed the failed
council recall effort. Blaclk linishc<I
fourth in council contest.
Both Black and Paul Munoz, an
insurance salesman, have previously
made runs for tne council, but
without success. Munoz finished last
in Tuesday's vote.
Rickey Slater, a shoppina center custodian making his founh bid to get
on the council, finished 11 votes
•held of Munoz. /
The victories of the two incum ...
bents were interpreted by some as a
vote of confidence for the current
council and the direction it has
charted.
Jn -the city clerk race, Verna
Rollinger, who h'H held the ~ition
for 12 years, handily defeated
chaJlen_gcr Dorothy J. "Sunny"
Rhodes. Rhodes, a controller for a
Lquna buildingsupplycom{>IDY~ ~r of her own consultU\1-buSJ-tl~ iJso ran ul$ucces5fully against
Rollinger four years aao. City treasurer Susan Morse ran
unopj>osed.
Scott retained; Petrikin wins in close FV Council race
Geoqe B. Scott , J lmPetrW.n
MESA COUNCIL RACE ••.
From Al
factor:'
But Genas added that she was
confused by the split in her slate. She
ran with businessman Jay Humphrey
and attorney Scott Williams.
"l thought either none of us would
win or at feast two of us_" Genas said.
"I never thought 1t would be just one
of us -cspcc1allr me.··
Humphrey finished founh in the
baJlotang. With 12. 7 pcTCCnt of the
vote. while Williams finished 1ifth
with I 1.9 percent of the vote.
"We have no real answer as to what
happened." Humphrey said today.
"We had our own distinct suppon
and it just spht."
Humphrey said he was disap-pointed with the loss, but planned
another council run in the co ming
years.
Real estate aient Jim Ferryman.
who led all candidates in fund-raising
with a war chest of more than
$40,000, said has poht1cal days ended
with his sixth-place finish .
"lkforc I committed to this. J told
them they had one shot at me and
that's 1t. I'm not going to go through
this again." Ferryman said. "I feel
comfortable with the campaign we
ran. We gave 1t our best and I have
nothing to be ashamed or:·
The Costa Mesa campaigns were
relati vely clean, although legal action
might re.suit from a last-minute stunt
in which the names of the slow-
growth slate were reproduced on a
state Republican leaflet. Candidates
relied mainly on their positions on
ballot measures against the CJ . Scgerstrom & Sons Home Ranch
project in their discussion of the
issues.
Of the nine candidates. only the
slow-growth slate op~sed Home
Ranch. ·
"The1 pro-growth candidates got
more votes tfian the slow-growthers,
but we just split our vote up," Ferryman said. "This is a tough one
to figure out." ·
Another surprise was the strong
showing from first-time candidate
Dan Worthington, a photographer.
Wonhington, unavailable for com~
ment today.garnered 7,610 votes. but
kept his spending below $2,000 and
did not accept any outside donations.
Wonhington relied on hundreds of
signs and also got some help when his
name was drawn to be first on the
ballot. But politicaJ observers said the
8. 9 pcn:cnt of the vote he prnercd 1s
.
By LFSLIE EARNEST
ud JOYCE BODLOVICH
OflMO.., .........
Fountain Valley voters re-elected
Mayor George 8. Scott to the City
Council and narrowly gave the nod
for the second scat to Jim Pctrikin.
Petrik:in, a chiropractor and plan-
ning commissioner, squcaJced out a
win over businessman John Collins
by a mere 205 votes.
Scott received almost 28 percent of
thc-vote1 01 16,674 votes. Pel.I ikin
(Petrikin'~st. Sure, it's tough to Petrikin said he mistakenly printed rose. But,)' ~n accept it because WC the letter on the association's sta-
did the best we could have done. I tionery. Petrikin reponedly received
probably walked more precincts than the letterhead stationery when he and
anyone. · other candidates received invitations
"Life goes on and I have no regrets. to attend a Green Valley candidate
I ran a g'Ood race and am proud of the forum.
people who supported me, said Smith said he bdieved the matter
Collins, who is president of the was closed with Petrikin sending a
Chamber of Commerce. follow-up letter of clarifianion to the In the last week of the campaign, homeowners and agreeing to pay the
Petrikin. 48, stirred up contro.versy $500 mailing cost of tbc letter.
when Green YalJey.rrsidcnts received Petrikin, couldn'& be Feachea-thi
campaign literature on stationery morning for comment on his council had 7,?07 votes_(l9.5~!T'!o beanng the letterhead of Gretll victory. w -------
Colffns 7.JOT.. or r9 ~rcent. The Valley Homeowners Recreation As-Scott. howcYer, who barely beat
other ~our candidates trailed ba~ly. socia'tion. Petrikin in the 1984 election, said he Col!an~. 45, who took ~tt . for . The letter, which arrived in homes looks forward to wCJTking with him. estabhshang man~ of the gu1dehnes Nov. 2, was glowing in its praise for "The first thing we have to do is
for th.c controversial South~r~ com-Petri kin for his South park stand. break in the new guy," he said. "We
merc1al development, said tt was Petrikin, who ran unsuccessfully will work with Jim and get him used
tough to lose such a close ra~. for coun ·1 four.,Ycars ago....AP:Qlogized to the council "
"\\le-were calfing-a1Hlitnight long, (or creating the 1mpress1on the hom=c"---__..,.._Seo~-,_.tt°", -an"""!-"in_s_u-rancc agent who was
and ~c !. was ~hca~ fo.~ most of the owne~s association had endorsed his the only incumbent in the race, was
, evening, Colhns ~ad. The last fo~r candidacy, according to Scott Smith, first elected in 1969 and had taken
and five precincts were has general manager of the association. time off between council terms.
Mary Hornbuckle
amazing.
Community activist Jan Kausen
followed Wonhington with 6.4 per-
cent of the vote. She said she plans
another council run, and could be
mor~ successful with more money.
''Because of my budJet, I could
only distribute I 0,000 fliers-," Kauscn
said. "To get half that number of
Ed GIUffOW
votes is great. It docs my hcan good to see people can fare well with a little
amount of money."
But another financial experiment
failed in the race.
Charles Markel, at one time con-
sidered among the front-runners in
the race. finjshed last among the
active candidates. He accepted no
Sandy Oen.la
more than $100 from any donor, and
garnered just 6.2 percent of the vote.
Attorney Howard Gensler. who
withdrew tn the second week of the
race. managed to accrue 2. 7 percent of
the vote.
SW/ writer G~ Klerb coe-
t:rlHtH lo til1 report.
NEWPORT VOTERS RETAIN PLUMMER, COX, ELECT WATT TO COUNCIL ••
From Al The mailers indicated suppon for
candidates Watt. Paul Ryckoff and
Geneva Matlock, all of whom have
been active an Stop Polluting Our
Newpon (SPON).
Newpon 2000 origmall_y was
created as the political arm ofSPON.
but all three candidates denied any
connection with the mailers.
Cox, seeking his third term as a
councilman, defeated RyckofT. a for-
mer mayor, by a healthy marg1n.
Unofficial tallies this morning show-
ed Cox had nabbed about 55 percent
of the vote to Ryckoff s 45 percent in
the battle for Oistnct 7. which
includes Harbor Ridge, pan of
Harbor View Hills. Harbor View
Homes, Jasmaoe Creek. Jasmine Pa rte
and~p sJass Hill. S na early this morning. Cox
sai he was alad the race was over,
callins it one of the most vicious
councll races in recent memory.
"Jn put races you attacked people's
voting records or their 1><>5it1on, but
not their personal tife," Cox said.
In the hottest distnct contest. Watt ~ Rodbeim for the District 5 seat,
which covers Balboa Island, Bay
Ridae, Big Canyon"-Newpon Ccntcr1 Newportcr North, nrk Ncwpon ana
Promontory Point.
Aocordina to unofficial vote tallies,
Watt prneted about 57 percent ofthe vote to Rodbeim•s 43 pcrcenL
Earlier in the camp9ip, sevcnl
Rodheim elect.ion sips mysteriously
disappeared from theu posuna spots,
prompting Rodheim to issues a
public pica for a clean campeian.
Rod&eim was cordial 1n defeat,
sayina that the campaign was a
"positive experience" and vowina
that be will continue volunteer work
in the community. Without attackina
Watt or Ryck.ofT. he did concede the
mailen may have done him some
damqc.
··we will never know whether the
hit pieces did us in, whether it was
Jean's P.hilosophy or the negative
attacks. • Rodhe1m said. "In our
telephone polling, people asked us
'Did you really do those thinp?'
"I hope there is some election
reform." he added. "J'd be happy to
serve on a committee."
Cox was more pointed in his
criticism of Wau, ~her "a r,wn o( Ryckoft' and (Allan Beek.• Cox
&a.id he could work ..Wvely with
heron the council, butquationcd her
ability \0 answer to the entire com-
I
munaty rather than a specific interest
group.
"I see more problems with Jean
working with the council, because she
has to face up to the positions she
takes," Cox said." A city council has a
responsibility of approvina the poli-
cies of the community. They have to
do it in a way that•s beoefiaal to the
whole community... 1
Watt said eatty this momint that
there likely will be IOtne di1eu111on or
campeian ordinances in Jisht of the
heavy mud-slingina m this council race.
"I wasn't too happy with it and I
sul?posc there will be a lot of people
philosophizing about what should
. have happened and what shouldn't
have happened," Watt said.
"As far as my campaign was
concerned, I felt it went very well and
it was carried out the way I hoped it
would be," she said.
The race for District 2, which
includes Balboa Coves, Lido Sands,
Newport Shores, Ncwpon Island,
Park Lido, Villa Balboa and West N~rt, went much u expected
with incumbent Plummer winnina by a handy margin.
Plummer brought in 40' percent of
the votes, with the next-dosest fin-
isher. slow-growth advocate Geneva
Matlock, pmcrina about 29 ptrcent.
Sterling Wolfe Jr., a former Parks,
Beaches and Recreation com·
missioner, fini$hed with about 2S
percent of the vote, while busi-
nesswoman Ninfa O'Brien captured 6
percent
"I was bothered bysomethinas that
went on in the campaisn~" Plummer said today. "That kind 01 poison has
no place here."
Plummer, who will serve her third
consecutive four-year term, said ahc
is lookina forward to continued
redevelopinent efforts in her West
Newpon district u well as other older
areas of they city.
Calif or~i ans u p s et that TV calls diminish t heir v otes
this practice revoltina. •• said Loi Antcles voter Rip Ren1e after hcari QI ftttWort==· · · 90 minuteS before the dosed bad declared
Oeols 8' tbc winner. .. I lllintitiuca1eofTV joumalisu bei~ i~bk bcaute ol nit· ...... Reftte iildCCt. ... ou.en Mid athet Coapa or the
'
on TV and saJd her vote woutdn't name said network ~ictions
count ... said Howard Friedland of the ahould be outlewed until aft.a all the
Los Anlelet auburb of ShennaD pohdolc. 0.b. ..We hive 100 muy damn polls
After .-earina wt.en told of the and ~ and it'• ICl'IWins acws 11 he came out of a voth• bootb dliftM ap." he .US. "Wc1l bave IO l'l
et Alameda City Hill •n NOi1birn rid o( Ill the politicians ud cbuieC c.&lifomil a man toO uPKt 10 live bit iL"
' -
"Of oourse it is always excitina
when you get to the ballot boll and see
your name .. . but this re-electi~n
means the citizens have confidence 1n
me," he said.
Scott. who has served 13 ycan on
tbc council and three terms as mayor,
will step down as the city's mayor in
December and hand the pvel to
Councilman Fred Voss.
In all, seven residents had at-
cmpted to claim the two seats. The
se@nd seat bccame__anilable '1itJL
Barban Brown dtcided"nono run for
another term.
Petrik.in was the lead fund-raiser as
of Oct. 22, which is the last day
covered by disclosure statements.
Scou was second. Petrik.in raised
$16J.il 1nd s~nt $14_,89t whil~ _
Scott reportedly railed s 13,0 { wrulc
spending S8,899, Collins contribu-
tions tallied m at $5,241 with expen-
ditures ofS3.433.
Saddle back
city hood
defe ated
87 BOB VAN EYKEN °' .. ....,,... ...
The movement to form a sprawlin&
new city in south Orange County
failed to pin the support of residents,
who rejccied the proposal by a
lopsided margjn Tuesday night.
The county•s 29th city would
pf(>bably have been called Lquna
Hills, the name favored by a majority
of the voters in an advisory vote.
Saddleback City was the SC<lOnd
choice, with Rancho Viejo comina in a distant third.
But the clear choice was apinst
incorporation with 64 percent of the
voters rcjectin1 citybood.
The ciiy would have encompassed
the communities of Lake Forest, El
Toro, Aegean Hills, Portola Hills,
Nellie Gail Ranch and most of
Lqu na Hills. Its 16 square miles
would have had a population of about
77,000.
Activisu in Laguna Hills vowed
before the election to sink the ci~
proposal, arguing that Laguna Hills
was a maintenance community and
shouldn't be linked with a city
wrestlina 'Nith the problems of rapid
development.
Crai& Scott, a Laguna Hills anorney
who favors separate cityhood tar~ community, hailed the results.\--·-'
Scott bad run as a candidate for city
council in the vallcywide city, but
used his candidacy as a forum for
opr.?sition to the proposal. • We're absolutely thrilled by this
victory," he said. "We're pleased that
residents of the Saddlcblick Valley
blcked us in our effort to prevent a
minoritr from cramm1n1 this proposa down our throlu." .
Laauna Hills residents turned out
in mass at public hcarinp earlier tbis
year to lobby before the county l...ocal
Aatncy Formation Commission for
their own city.
Residents also cut ballots for a
five-member city_ CCMlncil that will
never be teated. Eiabteen candidates
souaht election to the council. The
five top votc-tettcn were Qaia Sc:ocs.,
Helen Wilson, Mama l:udolr,
Norma Graves and Mart Foster. 1...aJuna Hills raidents will wwe
no lime in renewing their tepante
citxhood effort, Scott aid.
'We have a meeti!'-with LAFCO
ill December, and we re hopina for a
June ballot." he said.
LAolldore~
propoe•l del•fed
..
QC voters
--~-wtllelect .
school chief
B1Dnm UDnwtN .......... -Ora• Coa1nt)'. voters o yer-
.,., ... re;.cted a meuure Tues-*' daat .ould qve turned the couay aaperintendent of schools job
into u appointed post.
MellUf'C A on the county ballot wu
Dl'OID~ 'ft ~My Onncl Jury · report recommendinc.
daal the county's elected board of
cnattees be empowered 10 appoint or
fire the 1Uperinaendent.
•
.
Election mood~ as diverse.as parties
BJ PAUL ARC11JPLSY Danocralic eels in districi voter · clOIC,"' be ilid of &be praideaiial
., .. ...,,...... ~bOll would predudc a Pnr"" electioA.
Contrutin• moods marked elcc--victory and 1 Republican sweep an Republicans had voluntecn for
• · -· ,...__Co Ora..,eCounty. every precinct in the county ... We :m~.!.'*!:10 i&Jr...,.su~ .. If we all 10te, we'll. be in bad really did our bat JOb pollib6e in
waicbed VOie tallies wile in shape," Balmaees lllid. Oranae County," Fuentes aaicl.
tbroulhout the evenina. John Hanna. preparina to address And, even thouah it no loaeer
In Anaheim, the spirit was several huDdred quiet Democrats. mattered, President-elect Bulb wu
dampened even befoce the party Aid even wit.bout •,victory in Oranae still interested in Wbetber ~
belaa. 'Democratic praidefttial can-County, me· puty c0uld claim sue-County carried California foi' bim
diclate Mic:bael OUkakia codCeCled cess. · . Tuesday ni&ht, Rep. Robert Dornan
sbortl after the California polls "There's more activity (by the said.
c=at 8 p.m .•. eodin&any hope the Democrau} in Oranae Coupty tlian.. -Doman R~sovc, ttlW Golden tale milJll aemmifte 'ltie bel'e'Sbeen an 2 years,'' Hanna said. by telephone with Bush, Wbo WU iil
winner. "We had 2,SOO volunteers today.1 Teus.
ID.lte8d, Democrats ptbmd at the .. Our job was to make the Re-.. He saitt ·Are \we JC?nna take
lno at the Park hotel were left 10 eublicans spend their resources in Califomiar,· Do~ said. .. •ts Or-
concentrate on ~ raca. They Orante County so they wouldn't be angc County gonna put us over the
hoped to pick up an Alaem~J.eat in available for other areas, so we had a toP.'r · ara.. County and break me Re-'victory there." 'I assured him we were pna take
publican stran&JehO&d on leaillativc • But a more palpable victory was in Califom~ becaute of <>ranee eoun.
.eats. . the air at the Doubletree Inn where ty," OOman'told a~ tbroal.
Su~tenden~ Robert Peterson arpaect durina the campaian that the measure would transform his post
hno that of beina a "lackey"· for
• school board membeB. , Mike Balm~ Mlonn an admiJ:. · hundftlds ofReputilican fatthful Were A little bit of both pana' ~
··tcdly futile ·race apinst sta~ ~p. celebrating win$ by Yice President infeCted the more than 100 Ncwpon
John 'Seymour in the ·3Sth Distrtct; Georat-Sush, U.S. Sen. Pete Wllson Beach celebrants wbQ pl&ered Tucs-
said a win in the hotly contested 72nd and a host of other GOP candidates. day night at the Villa Nova restaurant
\
With 2,09S of ~374 precincti
counted this morning. more than 73
percent of the voters favored keeping ·
the J)Olition an elected post
If the measure had pused, it would
have been the first time in California
history that a county's voters changed
ab elected post into an appointed
posn!:__ .d . . . nadson saa an a recent antervaew
Assembly . District by Christian County GOP Chairman Thomas on West Coast l!fipway.
"Rick" Tbierbach would be a fitst Fuentes served as master of cer-With eyes focused on local races.
step toward re~stablisb'in' the emonies at the gala that featured candidates and their suppoiUn en-
Dcmocratic Party's viability an Or-appearances by most county legi~ joyed food and drink while ~
ange County. J lators. came in on the latest tallies. .
Critical of Republican Curt ·-rm absolutelr overjoyed by the Eventually, as the numben bepn
Prinale's negative campaign in the national picture,' Fuentes said. to tell the tales, the winners and loeers
that "the appointment process turns.1
public servant into a bureaucra.t."
The Oranae County Department of . ..... ....... ., ......
Education tlas a $50 million annual"' Jim and Greteben Dale pQ9t election renlta at Vllla KoYa
72nd Assemblr, ·District race, With the vote count delayed in adopted the moods that fit the
Balmages said, 'If ·Pringle wins, it catifomia b¥ a Northem California outcomes of their particular nca.
means the Republicans can take any federaljudgc sorderandalongballot. Perhaps the one tnood that per-
lightwcight in 0rante County and f uentes admitted he was nervous meated all of the parties was one of
stiove him down our throau." -anywa -. ··---·«lief,.....Another-election wu finally operating budget. reetaraant la Newport 8-cb. But Balmages was hopeful the .. The polling last night had it very over. · ·
County returns GOP illcumbentsto State LegislatuFe
~ -aM-DIXJEllEDFEARN ---............ The Republican Party retained its
hold over Orange County on Tues-
day, returning all incumbent as-
semblymen and senators to Sacra-
mento. But iu tactics in capturinJ an
open seat drew sharp criticism from
Demoerats,..._.s weH-u-en-investiga·
tion by the FBI.
By landslide marains, Marian
BcfFSC?n, R-Newport Beach, ' and
John Seymour, R-Anaheim; were
returned to the state Senate.
Gil Ferguson, R-'Newport Beach;
Nolan FrizzeUe, R-Fountain Valley;
and Dennis Brown, R-Lona Beach, all
easily won re-election to the As-
sembly.
. ferJUSOn was elected to a third
tenn m the 70th District that encom-passes much of the Orange Coast He
trounced Democratic challenger
Michael GaUues in the heavily Re-
publican distnct, capturing more
than 70 percent of the vote.
Ferguson said he hoped Re-
publicans would gain some seats in
the Assembly to ensure the ouster of
Preeldent
Oru•e Coaty a.tal
(I ()()IM,of preet nets rcJ?Ortmg)
Michael Dukakis, (D) 254,888 Georac Bush, (R) 555,511
U.S. Senate
(97% of precincts reporting)
Pete Wilson• (R) 4,681,518
Leo McCarthy, (0) 3,984,845
CongreN
(I ()()IM,of prccincu reporting)
~Dlltrlct
1 Robert Doman• (R)
Jerry Yudelson (C>)
Bruce McKay (L)
Frank German (PF)
S9tb Dlltrlct
71,968
43,625
3,175
3,120
William Dannemeyer• (R)
161 ,568
Don Marquis (0) 49,895
Lee Connelly (l..) 7, 174
4oaDlltrlct
Chrittopber Cox (R)
Lida Lenney (0 }
Roaer Bloxham.(L)
Gretchen Farsaa (Pf)
42-d Dlltrlct
Dana Rohrabacher (R)
Guy K.imbrouah (0)
Richard Rose (PF)
43rd Dllb1et
Ron Parlwd• CR)
Howard Greenbaum (0)
Daniel Muhe (L)
State Senate
170,640
76,367
4,317
3,549
. 68;179
34,412
3,299
64,173
20,140
2,097
( lOOIWlof ~incu reportiJll)
Slit Dlltrlct
William C.ampbcn• (R) 104,809
Janice Graham (0) 41,028
.. Dlltrict
John Seymou,..W~ Mike Bllmqes
Maxine Quirk (
177,0S6
53,360
7,944
11*Dllllkt
Marian Bc1P-_On• (R) 129,876
Pat McCabe (0) 44,264 ,
A•emblJ
(t~f predncu ~rt•na>
IMDlllrlet l>IDDil 1rowa• (R)
Andrew Kincaid (0)
=:r~(PF}
92,026
ll,W
l 16-3S9 ~617
.. If we pick up a seat or two there
-wiU 1:Je-a battle immedi~tety OVC1"
who's goif18 to be the speaker,"
Ferguson saad. Fe~uson said a member of the so-
called 'Gang of Five" -the renegade
group of five Democrats who have
challenged Brown's power -called
him· eartier'fuesdart01ailnlbout
forming a coalition in the Assembly.
Should Brown be toppled~
Ferguson was optimistic Republicans
could move forward with the Demo-
crats on such issues as tort reform,
education, family values and crime.
If Republicans lost seats and
Brown retained his post, ,needed
legislation and programs would re-
main bottled up, Ferguson warned.
"If he drops us down, be will
continue to rule California,"
fer:guson said. •
Also hoping to challenge Demo-
cratic control of the lower house was
Assemblyman Nolan FrineUe, R-
Fountain Valley. Frizzelle, who won
bis fifth term with an easy win over
Democrat Marie Fennell, bad more
than 70 percent of the vote.
• s . a. cc aon o tea even y po ang ces an an ots.
Marian Be~-R-New:po~b,--remeved the guards, but nol-beforc-.. l'm--0utraged. Tim is tbe kind of
turned-beck Democrat Pat Mee.be heir presen~charges they thins thaf-bappcned in-the-'60s,
by capturing more than 70 percent of had· influenced the ootcome. Hanna 51!id.
the vote in the 37th District, while Pringle, of Garden Grove, waged Hanna Slid there had been no
Sen.John Seymour, R-Anaheim, won an expensive and sometidles nasty allegatioJU of voter fraud before
re-election over Democrat Mike battle with Democrat nominee Chris-Tuesday.
Balmages. tian Thierbach for the· seat that At least two laws may have been
Seymour, whose district ihcludes opened after the death of Richard violated, Hanna said. Even if there
~m ot COsta Mesa and Fountain lOngshore. ' --werc-aques aon aoout a voters
auey, wassoconfidentofre-elcction CalHng the guards "observers." registration, state law say~ no one
he gave large sums from his campaign Republican Party Chairman Thomas other than a . polling official can
war chest to other causes, including f uentes said the party decided to post challcnae a J>CT50n ·s riptto vote, and
$50,000 for the Republican Party's them because of concerns of voter then only if the person s name doesn't
"Get Out the Vote" drive. He fraud. He said there bad been reports appear on voter roJJs.
captured more than 74 percent of the in recent months of ~o-door The Republicans also may have
vote. solicitors registering illcptl]iens. violated federal voting rights laws
Seymour said President-elect With the simple postcard-type because they were W'geUng only
George Bush's victosy eosur~d registration proccs$, illegals could Latino voters.
Ronald Reagan's legacy would live obtain absentee ballots and drop ·•They were obviously trying to
on. them in ~lot bdxcson Eleetion Day, intimidate Hispanics," Hanna said.
"Republican views aTC mainstream Fuentes said. "Some of these were high crime areas.
America," Sexmour said. "And that's The observers were watching for and when people sec these security
why we won. • vans or busloads of voters. a tip-off guards they felt there was some kind
There will be questions about the fraud might be under way, fuen~ of trouble. so t,4cy wouldn't go in to
way Republican Cun Pringle won in said. vote.
the 72n~mbly District after But Democratic Party Chairman "I've never seen anything like it."
uniformed security guards hired by John Hanna said -the guards were Hanna said.
the county Republican Party were Intimidating Latino~voters. And, The FBf was investigating the
posted at 20 polling places in Santa some of the gu_ards reportedly entered brouhaha because of similar in-
Election results
. 72Dd Dlltriet Bradley foreman
Curt Prin.ale{R) 31 ,919 Mark Foster
6,095 C&platrano Bay
8• 15 7 Park Dlatrlct Christian Tbierbach (0) 31,248 Norma Graves
Herbert Heyes Jr. 7,818 I • tvV>L-f . . 4,666 • ( I uv'lVU precincts reporting)
Citwcouncll R~bert Kaitschuk ·~ Ball Kogcrman
3 262 vote for 2
6' 846 Harry Otsubo• 3,367
3,598
2,520
1.798
(I ()()IM,of precincts reporting) Michael Martinez 4'106 Mike Reed•
4:252 W.F. ··Scotty" Smith
vote for J
Jim fer:ryman
Sandy Genis
Howard Gensler
Ed Glasgow
Mary Hornbuckle•
Jay Humphrey
Jan Kausen
Charles Markel
Scott Williams
Dan Worthington
routalD ValleJ
vote for 2
George B. Scott•
Jim Petri.kin
John Collins
Donald Chaney
Douglas Hu&hcs
Robert M. Hoxsie
Pam Halpern
ButiaptD Bead
vote for J
George Arnold
Bob Biddle
Jeffrey Bums
Peter Green•
Tom· Li veDJood
Clem Dommguez
Don MacAllister
Jo5eph Nappa
GcnOrtcp
Anthony Passannante
Linda Moulton-Patterson
Jim Silva
Mitchell Tracy
John Valentino
Henry Yee
LICU&Bed vote for l
Don Black
Ann Cfiristoph h
Manha Collison•
Neil Fitzpatrick•
Paul Munoz
Mary Reynolds
\Rickey Slater
Newpwt~
vote for J
Sterlin& Wolfe ,r.
Ninfa o •Brien
• Rulhetyn Plummer9
0eneva Matlock
Jean Watt ~J\=hn
JohnCoa• . ......... ,~,...,
vote for J
~AadellOG ~ci:::. W'"alimlQManor
8,097
12,544
2,349
11 .922
I l, 129
10,916
5,457
~ 5,317
10,190
7,610
10,674
7,507
7,302
3,334
3,661
3.060 2,859
3,842
6.117
3,665
27,574
23,605
3,314
26.346
l ,8S6
26,093
4,852
19,765
i8,319
1,302
4,238
18.049
3 .. 3S3 :f,646
4,541
4,171
7S3
2.354 764
7,826
l,879
12,S24 8,867 17,684
1).125
13.848
17,0IS
s.111 NH 2,272
Vernon McKenney
William Millan
Marcia Rudolph
Sol Schweitzer
Craig Scott
3,019 Evelyn Rapozo
G. Ann Van Haun
Helen Wilson
9,311
6.025
9,151
6.153
10.226
Saddleback
College Dlatrlct
(I 00%of precincts reporting)
Anal
Donald Smith
.. Harriett W~lther9
Area3
Lawrence Taylor
Shirley Gellatl~
Ana8
Robert Moore•
Jean Hoban
Ana?
84,782
94,473
77,157
98.685
96,37.3
77,600
John Williams 53.309
John Connon~ 80,562
Todd Henry 40,559
Capl•trano Unlfled
School Dlatrlct
(I 00%of precincts reporting)
Anal
Gil Morales
E.G. ··Ted" K6pp•
John Hunt .#-
Rick Heil
Area2
Charles Ward•
Marlene Draper
Robert Hows
AnaS
A. Edwacd Wes.tberg•
Edward Kwcslun
Ana4
JobnSmitb
S&acyann Strauss
Irene Fuc1'1er
Bob Moore 9'Y11al K.ochendorf~r Richard Ovenon
David Colville
Brian Dcmaer I
Dennis H.ehn
I
13.117
19.742
17,599
7,177
19,916
31,673
3,536
31.258
22.246
6.584
3.803
8,739
9.13S
11 ,596
6.850
7,547
.28.954
l3,S10
Capistrano Beach
S&Ditary Dlatrlct
(I 00%of precincts reporting)
vote for 3
Don Simpkin•
Ray Benedicktus•
Kenneth Lawrence•
Mike Schadegg
Julianne Quirk-Kipper
Basil Rose
Irvine Ranch
Water Diatrlct
(I 00%of precincts reporting)
vore for)
BobS.Pillar
Mary Matheis
Charles McGee
-Darryl Miller
Albert Nasser
Edward Nash .
1.564
l:&T~
1,374
705
1,00$
3,750
I 5.518
12,634
2l,610
1,588
8,994
Moulton Nlpel
Water Dlatnct
(I 00%of frecincts reporting)
vote for
Steven Feldman• · 3.283
Paul Berkery 1,654
Caplatrano B•cb
Water Dl8trlct
( l 00%of precincts reporting)
vot~for J
Elmer Kuhn•
Robert Hill•
Briann Stuan
Sam Lentine -
Martha Rottman
Propoeltlona
(974MI of amt•ncts ~ponina)
2,478
2.478
1,529
2,338
2,llS
71------tt. ... Yes ~934,941
No 3,609,972 • 11-.....uie .......... Yes • S,207,718
No l,286.614
-Pitiii.liiiMI
Yes S,140.739
No l.282.108
11 -Ddlllslill ........
Yes 6,100,63S
No 2.«)7.177
88 -hldatrlal loua Yes S.977.058
No 2.044.102
89 -Parole rnGCatiOD Yes 4,530.143
No 3.721,000
90 -Home tu aemodoo Yes S.581.036
No 1.S I S.696
91 -Jutk:e covt ~dLee Yes 5.~7.605
No 2.290.885
92 -Jadidal performance
Yes 5,752.327
No 2,018.817
93 -Veten.M' ~tu
Yes S,7)4,8QQ
No 2.380.18•
M-J.qe.utmcMIW
Yes 5,259,975
No 2.826.101
96 -auier. bome1-fudl
YC'$ 3.177.55•
No 4.554,311
96 -Police AID8 baldatlft Yes S.275,487
No ·~-r• 3.215.803
97~-0lllA
Yes 4,420.0SS
No .l, 769.980 •-8cMol,...... Yes •.IU.604
No 4.llS,606 •-a,u....• 5.US,247 3,7~.467
..
stances in put ciectiom of voter
intimidation in ot.bef--lta1a,-Hanna
said.
Prinale. who worbjn bis family's
drapery busiDCSSt bad 50.4 peroent or
3 l ,63S votes to 49.2 peroent or 30, 927
votes for Tb~ a Riveni4e
County deputy district attorney who
lives in Anaheim... with all of the 21}
pfeCincts counted tbia rnorniDl-
Elsewhcre in the state, two
freshman Assembly Rq>ublicans
were defea~, casualties of the ex-
pensive barue between Soeakcr
Brown and Minority Leader Palrick
Nolan. · Tbrtt other nlCe5 in the ~t for
supremacy in the lower house re-
mained close early today.
In the state· Senate, incumbent
Sens. John Doolittle, R-Roctlin, and·
Cecil Green, D-Norwalk, •pP!l'CDtlY
survived well-financed ~
although Green's lead was tiny:
The incumbenu who lost Were
As,,cmblymen Bill Duplissea, R-San
Carlos, and Paul Zeltner, R-
Lalccwood.
-Tk Aa.eUted Pre.a r. .... fal
,. W.•i.ty ••
..
--I
' AlO ·or..eo.t DAILY PtLOl/Wedneeday, ~bert, 1N8
BUSH T RANSITION •••
homAl
said would "reinviaortte the pro-
cea."
With a bow to the man he has
terved for tj&ht ~an, Bush said, ••1
note the obvious. Pres1dent Reqan is
still the P.!C'ident of the United States
and l will not be usioa the transition
to. tn to make or unduly influence
decis1ons that arc properly the presi·
dent's.··
After a cam~isit in which man.Y
voten expressed dismay over their
choice between Bush and Michael
Dukakis, the i;>resident~Ject vowed
as soon as bis victory \vas clear
Tuesday niaht to wor~ for tbe respect
of those who opposed him and moved
to s~ll out some of his plans for his
p~1dency.
Bush was up early today, despite latc-q.~t celebratina, and went to St.
Martin s Episcopal Church in Hous-
ton with family and friends. Leaving
his hotel, he called out that be felt
"just fine."
When a questioner sµggcsted he
would face problems in the -senate,
now more firmly in Democratic
hands, he replied simply, "A few
problems everywhere."
Later today, he was returning to
Washington to talk over the election
-and the future -with Reagan in
the Oval Office. ·
Bush won the election convinc-
ingly-the third straight Republican
presidential victory -but he fell
short of the 49-state sweep by Reagan
four yean aao.
That was little consolation for the
Democrats, who now have lost five of
the last si~ presidential elections.
.. He will be our president and we'll
wotk with him," Dukakis said Tues-day night in a gracious yet unbowed
concession speech.
"God knows, there's lots of work to
do,•• said ~e Republican president-
·~n.e people have •Pokent': he told
cbeerins aupporten 1 in nous ton.
"And with a ruu hean and with put ho~ I thank all of the people
throupout America who have Jivcn
us th11 areat victory. To those who
suJ)ported me, I will try to be wonhy
of your trust. And to those that did
not, I will try to earn it.••
Bush bec:&me the first sittina vice
PttSidcnt to win the presidency since
Democrat Manin Van Buren iri l 836.
An ominou1 note for Busb: Van
Buren was defeatea for re-election.
Accordina to surveys of voters as
they left 90lljna places. .a ~ factor
workin& for Bush was the continued
popularity ofhjs boss.
Dukakis closed out his campaign
with an exhaustin14S-hour race from
state to state with no break for sleep.
All the same, he was out powcr-
walking on Election Day an~ when he
appeand before supporters for his
concession speech they chanted, "92,
92, 92, 92."
The weary candidate loolced not
quite ready to plunge into the next
presidential campaign. ·
Bush and Dukakis ended their
campaip_l, noteworthy for its bitter-
ness, wttb words of conciliation and
cooperation.
Bush said he had received a call
from Dukakis "and I want you to
know he was most gracious. His call
was personal, it was genuinely friend-
ly and it was in the great tradition of
American politics."
Dukakis also refel'TCd to the con-
versation and told bis supporters,
"This nation faces major challen,es
ahead and we must work together. ·
Dukakis returns to the Massachu-
setts statehouse, where he has two
years remaining on his term as
overnor. His running !?late. Lloyd
NOj oyi n Greece as
Dukaki s str ikes out
PELOPI Greece (AP) -Only a
handful of people sat through the
night in a cafe in this mountain villaJe
that calls itself Michael Dukak1s'
home town, listening to news of the
Democratic candidate's defeat.
Huddled in overcoats around a
wood-burning stove in the
"Nukterida" cafe, they drowned their
disappointment in glasses of ouzo
and cognac as the radio broadcast
results. ·
they decided to go home. A Dukakis
victory, the viJlqers believed, would
have brouaht them prosperity.
The 700-odd villagers, mostly
sheep and goat breeders who make
around $1 ,500 a year. had i;>inned
their hopes on a Dulcakis presidency
to develop tourism in Pelopi.
"We're disappointed, we thought
Michalis would make it. But I hope
(President-elect GeorJe) Bush
doesn't ~e a . d e ~inst <;Jrcec:e
when he wi succeed Reagan after election to his Sen~te scat from the clear the Massachusctts_governor had K.amiris, vice president of the village
eight yeanas loyal understudy. Lone Star state. lost his bid for the U.S. presidency, council..
Cox , Rohrabachermake D.C . Plans
By PAUL ARCBIPLEY
... 808 VAN EYKEN °' .. ..,,... ....
Orange County will send two
freshmen con.gressmen to Washing-
ton D.C: in January, both Re-
publicans in a Democratic house.
But Christopher Cox and Dana
Rohrabacher plan to hit the ground
running as representatives of the 40th
and 42nd districts, which in,::lude
nearly all the Orange Coast.
Cox, a Newport Beach resident
who is replacing retiring Rep. Robert
Badham, said he will work to help
President-elect George Bush keep his
promise not to raise taxes.
"The bloodiest battle is going to be
over taxes," Cox said. He warned that
Democrats will pressure Bush to
resort to some kind of tax increase to
reduce the deficit.
"I'm worried it could lead us into
another rccnsion," he sajd. "I will be
part of the party's veto strength to
make his no taxes promise stick.
"It's unwise economic policy to
derail the longest economic ex·
pansion in hist<;>ry."
Cox. who defeated Democrat Lida
Lenney and Libertarian Roger Blox-
ham in his first attempt at elective
office. 'said Republican policies can
solve the problems the Democrats
turned into campaign issues.
"We're gonna take care of the
homeless," he said. "We're gonna
gJ ve them jobs.··
Cox said he would work with
Badham during the coming months
to ensure a smooth transition.
He plans to split 'his staff between
offices in Orange County and the
nation's capital. Cox said he will put
his local office in Costa Mesa because
it is centrally located in the 40th
District.
Although he'll be a freshmen. Cox
is no stranger to Washington. having
worked in the Reagan White House.
Likewise, Dana Rohrabacher. who
succeeds Republican Dan Lungren in
the 42nd District, knows the nation's
capital. He was a speech writer for
Reagan for seven years before return-
ing to Southern California to run in
the GOP primary.
"Now that George Bush has been
elected president. I'll have a large
number of contacts in powerful
positions,'' he said.
Rohrabacher said he'll be equally.
comfortable in the 42nd. which spans
the Orange and Los Angeles county
lines and includ~s most of Hunt·
ington Beach.
"The Democrats have created a
district that reflects Ronald Reagan's
and Dana Rohrabacher's fundamen-
tal beliefs," Rohrabacher said. "I
have to thank the Democrats for
gerrymandering this district the way
they did. They decided that Demo-
crats and Republicans should be in
safe districts, and that this one was for
Republicans."
The real fill.ht. Rohrabacher said,
was for the l{epublican nomination
last spring. He fought a sometimes
bitter battle with powerful Orange
County supervisor Hamett Wieder,
who was initially favored in the race.
But Roharabacher also credited
Guy Kimbrou&h. his Democratic
opponent in tfiis fall's racet with
putting together a good campaign. "It was a gentleman's campaign,"
be said. "My opponent ran an honest
and clean campaip and he is a good
representative of where the Demo·
cratic Party stands right now."
Kimbrough, a Huntington Beach
resident. said be had no regrets about
the campaign, agreed it had been a
clean fight on both sides.
"l would like to offer him my
congratulations," Kimbrough sa1d.
"We fought a clean fight. Tfiere was
no mud at all.''
Kimbrough said his loss reflected
the widespread impression in the
district that these are good economic
times.
But he said he was concerned that -
voters had not heeded his warnings
concerning the fiuse deficit run up by
the ~cagan Administration and he
said he was worried Robrabachcr and
t he Bush Administration would not
be able to do anything about it.
Roharabacher said he hoped to
offer creative solutions to some of the
nation's problems. particularly the
deficit.
Among his proposals is a plan to
tum the United Postal Service over to
its employees. making it the nation's
la'lest employee-owned corporation.
• Overnight we'd have more dedi-
cated employees, better service. It
will increase productivity and take
away some of the budget deficit
pressure."
Rohrabacher also will seek rcf orm
of federal aid to college students,
suggesting they be guaranteed an
education but Jive some kind of
national service in return. ·
Rep. Robert Dornan is expected to
win some kind of national service
himself -as a member of the Bush
Administration -following his re-
election in the 38th District.
The sometimes controversial con-
gressman popularly known as "S..I
Bob" turned back a challenge by
Democrat Jerry Yudelson. ·
Doman is known to covet some
k.ind of position, perhaps as the U.S.
Ambassador to the Vnited Nations.
He proudly boasted Tuesday niJht
that Bush called him at the
Ooubletree Inn in Orange where
county Republicans were celebrating
and thanked him for his woTk in the
campaign.
OOman said Bush told him, "B-1.
nobody in the United States has done .
more for me than you have, pal."
Also winning rp-clection easily was
Rep. Ron Packard in the 43rd
District. He turned back a spirited but
underfunded challenge-by Democrat
Howard G~nbaum.
Ensuring Orange County would
send an all-Republican deleption to
Congress, Rep. William Dannemeyer
also won re-election in the 39th
District. crushing Don Marquis, who
had been rejected by the Democratic
Party because of his ties to to political
maverick Lyndon LaRo uche.
..
GUD, abortion
foes corein
national vote .
.,.,,.~ .........
Mat)'IJnd ul)held 1 landmark ben on cheap pna Tuesday and abdnion
foes won ~9" victoriajn Micbipn, Colonido and Arbn111.
Mamcbutetts and Nebrub mi-
dmll pve votes or .cooftdenc:e to .
nuclear power; the lax revolt suffered
setbecks in ColondO and U1ab.
Oreaonians ~jected wbarwould have
been the nation's touahea anti·
amokinc law, while Florida, Colonde
and Anzoqa made EnslUb their
official state la~. New Yorken approved a·recoro S3 billion borrow· i, to rep1ir ro1d1. ·
n 11_11 voters in 41 states faced 238
statewioe bellot questions.
In Maryland, the state's six-month·
old law that bans c~p hanclJuns
known as ... Sat\lrday niaht specials" won by SS-42 percent despite a more
than S4 million media campaip by
the National Rifle Association. whiQlt feared it will encourace gun control
elsewhere.
In Michigan, voters approved a
ban on state-financed abortions for
poor women except to save the life of
the mother. With 84 percent of the
precincts. re.ng. the ban won by
S8..42 percen.
Coloradans likewise voted against
state-funded abortions, by 60-40 per-
cent. An.Arkansas amendment that
· · · at conce tion
and forbids state-ma a ions
was approved by a 52-48 percent
matJin. with .96 ~nt of the
pRancts reportmg.
In Massachusetts, voters rejected
an initiative that would have shut the
state's two nuclear power plants.
With 79 percent of the precincts
reporting. 68 percent voted against
the plan that was opposed' by GoY.
Michael Dukakis.
Nebr'askans decided against be-
coming the first state to withdraw
from an int~rstate nuclear waste
compact..
Among the more stringent tax-
cutting mca5ures, South Dakotans
rejected Proposition II, which would
have rolled back property taxes and
limit future increases, by 61-39 per·
cent.
Coloradans defeated a "Taxpayers
Bill of Rights Amendment." which
~ould have cut income taxes about
10 percent, limit property taxes and
require voter approval on future
hikes except in emergencies. The
measure lost, 58 percent to 42
percent.
1.n Utah. voters overwhelmingly
rejected three tax initiatives that
together would ha.ve lowered state
and local revenues by $329 miUion.
The measures would have limited
property taxes. rolled back income,
sales,psoline and cigarette taxes1 and
granted tax credits for private eouca-
tiQ,n.
Nevadans overwhelmingly ap-
proved a constitutional prohibition
on income taxes. The measure,
backed by the casino industry, was
approved 83 percent to 17 percent.
A "fair Tax Amendment" that
would have made it easier for the
Arkansas legislature to raise certain
taxes failed 62-38 percent with 96
percent ofthe precincts reporting.
Qreac>n voten.· rejected an onli·
nance that woykl have benned amok·
Ina in most public pieces. The
measure wu defeated by 61-39 per.
cent. ,
In Florida, 84 percent of v.oc.n
decided to declare EnaJish lhc oftkiaJ
Slate lanauaae. Colorldans endoned
a similar amendmen( by • 61-39 ~nt marain with 99 percent of the
precincts reponina. Tbe vote -.
oloter iq Arizona, where it was
approved S 1-49 percent with 97
.percent of the prcancts,counted.
Qreaonian' overturned GOv. Neil
GOldsthmidt's or<ier pro*tin1
homosexual state workers from dis.-
crimination .by a 53-47 percent
marajn. Fort Collins.. Colo., vo\efl ~j«.ted a proP<>Sed py tjgbts in·
1t11t1ve by 56-43 percent. WJth 67 of
164 precincts counted.
State lotteries were approved in
Kentucky, Indiana, Idaho and
Minnesota.
South Dakota voten approved a
measure legalizinftgambling in Dead-
wood, a Black Hi s town where Wild
Bill Hickok died pllyioa poker and
where townspeople are n.ow easer for
money to preserve wild-west
architecture. The measure won 64-36
percent:
A Massachusetts initiative aimed
at protecting farm animals from
cruelty was . trou.nced by a 71-29 . precincts reJ>Orting.
South Oalcotans were endorsing a
ban on corporate hog farmin1 by a
62-38 percent margin.
In other major contests:
•Florida residents rejected an
amendment limitinJ liability claims
for bodily injury to S l 00.000 for non-
economic losses such as pain and
suffering.
•A South Dakota measure requir-
ini strip miners to restore land to
onJinaf contours where possible was
defeated by a 59-41 percent maf'lin.
Kentucky residents strongly en-
dorsed a measure restrictin& strip-
mining rights. With 99 percent of
precincts repOrtina, the vote was
868.634 yes. 192.240 against.
•Montanans rejected a repeal of
the state's year-old seat belt law, while
Of9on voters re)ecttd a new seat belt
ordinance.
Montana rejected a measure· that
would have made the state the 10th to
enact a ••bottle bill" requirin1 return
deposits on beverage containers. .
•Washington voters chose be·
tween two rival measures deaJina
with hazardous waste disposal.
Voters approved a toxic waste in·
itiative drafted by environmentalists
over one drafted by big business and
favored by state leaders. The marlin
was 55 percent to 45 percent, with 18
percent of the precincts repo~na.
Jn local contests, residents of Cape
Cod. Mass., approved limits on
development, and two dozen Cali-
fornia communities considered simi-
lar curbs.
Cambridge, Mass.. approved a
referendum supporting Palestinian
riJl)ts and demanding Israeli
Withdrawal from the West Bank and
Gaza Strip.
Prop. 103 a cliffhanger ,.others lose V.oters split
on twoAIDS
propositions LOS ANGELES (AP) -Voters.
were so e venly split over one measure
in the record $75 million auio
insurance war that Californians ap-
parently won't know for days to
weeks if rates were slashed.
With 95 percent of the precincts
reporting today, Proposition 103 was
ahead by S 1.1 percent yes votes to
48.9 percent agamst. The percentages
translated to a difference of only
186,600 votes, with maJor blocs of
absentee votes among the ballots left
to be tallied.
A spokeswoman for the Secretary
of State's Office. Caren Daniels.-
Meade, said today. "It wouldn't
surprise me if we know the outcome
within a couple of days as counties
rc{>C?n absentee votes" on PrOJ>-
os1tion 103, which was backed by
consumer advocate Ralph Nader.
··But if the vote remains clo5!.1 we
might not know until the omcial
election canvass that is not legally due
until Dec. 6." she said.
Voters defeated four other in-
surance-related measures, including
the industry's no-fault insurance
proposal, Proposition I 04. and the
ansuren' c.ompanion measure. Prop-
osition 106, which would have cut
fees charged by tnal lawyers rep-
resenting people suing insurers.
Voters also rejected Proposition
100 by consumer groups and trial
lawyers, which would have granted
good dnversa 20 percent rate cut; and
Propositio.n I 0 I. sponsored by a
Democratic state assemblyman and
an independent insurance company
to cul insurance costs for bodily
injury coverage.
1f it turns out that voters approved
Nader-backed PrQposition t03, in·
surers would have to lower almost all
insurance rates. including auto, home
and business coverage. by an immedi-
atc20 pctUntbelow Novembet.1987
rates. It would require an additional
20 perc.ent cut in auto insurance rates
for Jood drivers.
The measure also would put con·
trol over future rate increa~ in the
hands of an elected insurance com-
missioner. suictJy limit use of terri-
torial rating to set auto insurance
premiums and subject the industry to
state antitrust and unfair business
practice laws.
The approval would deal a stun-
ninJ defeat to insurance companies.
which poured at least $60 million into
campaigns for their two measures and
against the rate-cuttioa initiatives by
consumers and trial lawyers.
Insurers threatened to file lawsuits
challenging Pro.POSition 103 as un·
constitutional if the measure passed.
Some com.,.nies have said the deep,
broad rate cuts would force them out
of businea in California.
Geileration of non-smokers in
state seen as tax hike approved
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Antt·
smolina advocates predicted Cafr·
fornia will raise a ,eneration of non-
smokers aft.er voters apProved a 2S
cent·per-pidc increase 1n the state
ciprette~. PropoiS!tion 99. the first tobacco tax
bike in 22 yeatS; puled by nearly SS
pm.'ltftt despite a multimillion dollar =~ campaip by the tob&cco
With U .I pen:ent of California'•
2S,321 ~·nets f'C'J)Ortina, the
mcasute recci~ 4,4'6,53S yes vota
to l,.24S,760 ~ Critlc:a, ...0 imect the Wl unfair-
ly ~ius wortui&dm~ob:rl IO tadlt tbe llMdical prohton, pre..
dkled jg p. ..... will lead to in.-
~in McobOI and other "sin"
talCS. ' • .. '9ople W8llt ~to .. Y their own ..,. ud mp kids &om ,ntinc
'
hooked. That's what ~ docs in a biJ
way," Jack Nicholl, director of the
pro ca.mpeip, said at the American
Luna Association office in Los An·
seJes.
The tu, which takes effect Jan. l,
will raite an estimated S600 mmion a
year to finance anti1mokina pro-
.,_ma in the 9'hooll. wildlife proiec-
uon. cancer ~ and health ca.re
for the uninswid.
Jeff' Raimundo, spokesman for tbe tobacco andustry-b1cked Cali·
fomians Alaintt Unfiir Tu ln-creaea. 11icl he beUeves voten ap-pm~~ tbe tu hikt becaute of the
._....ture'1 &Jlure 10 dt.81 with the
beaJth care crisis. .. I lhink became this,_,,, bellot is
one of tbe I~ aad IDCl9t com-
plicated in the ....... hillorY. a lo• of
voten cou.ldn't ll!l 1!91t ·~ cluncr out
there and miteOi* ~lion 99 for
a health ini1iativ~ ... Rain)undo said
in a telephone interview from 'his
Sacramento office.
But ~ Coa.litio-n for a Healthy
Callfomia, the FOUP of doClon..
den ti~ ""!~ieducaton and health
care ~niuuons that spontoted ~tton 99. aaid the intent of the
hbt.aative is "not lO collect a si.ftlle
ctn\." -
A D0ft1'9rti11n Jc:si&lati~ anal~s
0.ft tbe statewide VOlilt ~pltlrt aid
s .. te revmua ~kt decthte a Ille
bishef lall ditccMaflllld tobecco --
Nicholl said lludia indicate the
hither price will~ IS.000 ~nptm a year hm lllnitla so
amokt. The ca would m.e SllO
million aoually ao a.:11 ICllool
chiktttn the danacn of amokin&. be
Mid.
On the other hand, if voters
defeated Proposition I 03, the in-
surance industry would score a viv
tory after mountina the nation's most
expensive state political campaip.
Although losing its measures, the
insurers also would have defeated all
rival measures.
The issue of 1kyrocketin1 in-
surance rates would be thrown baek
to the Legjslaturc, which has been
unable to deal with matter. or onto
some future ballot.
Pro~itlon 103 author Harvcx
RQSenfield said, "This isn't over yet. •
"The fact the insurance and trial
lawyers' measures failed is an indica-
tion that people arc sick and tired of
special inteTCSts meddlina with the
initiative process. lt'-s just a question
now of whether the confusion •ner-
aled by thdr camPtian• also killed
our meuurc," he said.
With 9S pert.ent8f precincts report·
ing, the indu5try's no-fault initiative,
Proposition I 04, was trounced. get·
&inajust 2S.4 percent yes votes to 74.6
percent apinst.
Proposition 100. the initiative
sponsored by consumer groups and
trial la~ers that would have ajven
good drivers a 20 percent car in·
surance discount, WIS soundly re-
jected with ..0.9 percent yes votes to
S9. J percent no.
Proposition IOI , a measure spon-
sored by a .Democratic assemblyman
and an independent insurance com-
~ny to cut the bodily injury J>Qrtion
of auto insure.nee rates, was defeated
in a landslide with t 3.3 percent yes
votes to 86. 7 percent no votes.
Insurers' Proposition 106. wbtcb
would have limited trial lawyers'
cootinacncy fees, had 46.8 percent yes
votes to S3.2 percent no.
'Gangtax' measures
divided in LA County
•
Wilson returned;
Democrats hold . ...
Senate majority
ly TIM Anodaad Preti
· Frahm•n California Sen. Pc~ Wil10n beat "the jinx" and won re-
election 10a U.S. Senate sait tha\ has
eluded Incumbents for a Fncration,
beatina c:ballenaer Leo McCarthy in a S2 l million televised sluafcst.
At the OOP'1 election niaht hcad-
quar1erl, Gov. Ocorae Oeukmejian
presented Wilson with a "Jinx
Buster" T-shirt, wh ile a bend played the ••Ghost Busters" theme sona.
With 83. 7 percent of California's
2S,32J precincts rcportina. Wilson
bad S2.3 percent, or 4,006,2S4, to
McCarthy's 44.4 percent, or
3,398,022 votes.
pin if Democrats bold on to Florida.
Several races were decided by
narrow tallies, and the c:on1elt in
Aorida remained extremely tiaht and
too close to call. By midmomi~
Democratic Reo. Buddy MacKay •
8,000-vote leid over comervativc
Republican Rep. Connie Mack had
drOpped to about S,300 with 100,000
absentee ballots to be counted later in
the day.
.. We ~t have a cou~ of
recounts before we're done, said
Tom Mason, a spokesman for the RcpubliCJD Senatorial Campeip
Committee.
c>r.,. COMt DAILY fttlOTIWedl--. Now ..... • I. 119 All
-lLscz;l 1t1
Amatlllorace
goestodead
candldate
AMARILLO, Tnu (~ - A
Republican candidale for Poew
County commiaaoaer wbo died wilJI
bd name still on tbe t.Uot WOG
ovcrwbeJmina election over botll bis
Democratic opponenll, one ot wtMMra races vote fraud dw'lel. .
Republican PauJ Robena died ln ~tembcr after the dwl'iM b'
removal of names from the ballot Md ~ssed. He received 4,076 voea 1 .~!c>t~h~ja~~"U::
Harold Clivcr received S21 VOlel.
• County Judie Elisha Demenon
will decide who must fill die dmd man's seat, which had been VKated
by a rctinna Republican.
Asked how he felt about finitbiDI ' •
second to a dead rnan.i Kirkman
rci>lied. "I'm not clissatidied. 1 thiak it'~a trend down the whole ballot
from the national ticket. Everybody
voted straiaht Republican." ~
The rest of the vote was spread
inconclu1ivcly among the three other
candidates in the Senate race -
American Independent Merton
Short, Libertarian Jack Dean and
M.E. Munoz of the Peace and
Freedom Party. Short and Dean
received less than I percent of the
vote each, while Munoz tallied 1.7
percent.
lbc OOP's wins came in Monl&DI
where.former farm b(oldcUter Con-
rad Bums ed&ed out Democratic Sen.
John Melcbcr1 who was seek.in& a
third term, ana in Mississippi. where
Rep. Trent Lott, the deputy Hou11e
Republican leader, de(eated Rep.
Wayne Dowdy for the 1e1t beina
vacated by Sen. John Stennis, the
Senate'tsenior Democrat.
Sen. Uoyd Bentsen, 0-Tc~ who
went down to defeat with Michael
Dukakis as the Democratic vice
presidential candidate, did not end
Election Day empty-handed. He won
re-election to a fourth Senate t,enn.
Actor CllarltoD Beeton bold8 ap tlae arm ol
Sea. Pete WU.On, R-caut., at ID Cellta17
P1&a Hotel, momenta after Wu.on wu re-
elected to. MCODcl term ~y ~t.
Six days betoTe ·the electioft,
Kirkman was indicted by a county
pnd jury on characs offorlery and
1llcpl acceJ>!lnce and spendiftl of
campaign funds.
Immediately after his winninJ
trend became apparent, Wilson criti-
cized McCarthy sharply, saying the
San Francisco Democrat engaged in
personal attacks and "ran a real
strange campaign," and that a na-
tional television show had awarded
him "an award for the sleaziest
campaign of 1988."
McCarthy, conceding defeat, said
onl that he was repared to "acce t,
gracious y, c ea ... ex en o c
victor, Mr. Pete Wilson, my best
wishes."
Wilson, SS beat "the jinx~ at-
tached to his Senate scat. Since I 9S2,
when William Knowland was re-
elected, each of Wilson's predecessors
bq cnioyed only one term, or less -
Clair Engle, Pierre Salinger Gcorsc
Murphy, John Tunney and S.I. Hay-
akawa. Dubbed the "battle of the blands"
for the contenders' lack of flam -
boyance and charisma. both can-
didates relied Ofl television for Ilic thrust of their campaigns, generally
preferrini packaJC<l commercials to
spontaneous ralhcs. Elsewhere in the nation, Demo-
crats bolstered their majority control
of the Senate by oustina three-term
OOP maverick Lowell Weicker of
Connecticut, who refused to concede
defeat, and by capturing Republican
seats in Virginia, Nevada and Ne-
braska.
Democrats won four scats·
previously held by Republicans and
the GOP captured two seats held by
Democrats, raising the Democratic
margin of control to S6-44. a two-seat
'
The election decisions aive Presi-
dent-elect George Bush the prospect
of opening bis administration with
Congrc5s solidly in Democratic
hands.
·"It's going to be tou&her," said
Senate Minorit leader 80b Dole of
Lieberman ponrayed him in tele-
vision commercials as a sleeping bear
who missed important votes. The
attack undermine'd Weicker's win-
nina coalition of moderate Re-
publicans and Democrats.
The Senate race in Aorida re-
mained too close to call, and Re-
publicans had high hopes of pickina
up the seat of retiring Democrat
LawtottChiles. -
nsas, The race was so tJ t t a ectsion numbers in the natc would be ... ;.h · th · f
Shaved i·n the IOI st Con__... "We're u....,t rest in c counting o an -...~ cstJmated 100,000 absentee ballots. goin~ to hJvc fewer than we bad last The Mack campaign said tliey ex-
year. • · -pectcd to do better thin Mac:Kay
But Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-since traclitionally a large number of
Mass., said he believes that Bush will such ballots arc cast by military
find a cooperative spirit on Capitol personnel, a &fOUp that Macie con-
1ffll because "the problems ~ too siden among his constituency.
important for Coors not to work Mack's strat-•sts said they would with the president. -.-Connecticut Attorney General request an automatic recount of the
J h L. berm AA-A w · le :'J_ ballots. a process to which they are osep ie an""~ eic er entitled under Aorida law if the a paper-thin margin after a ha -fought campaian in which he accused winner and loser are separated by half
the senator of pursuing his own brand a percentage point or less. .
ofliberaJ politics while ign.oring home Dole, w.bo lost. to ~rge ~ush. 10
state concerns. the ~".'Y s pres1denual . pnm~nes,
Wciclcer, who first gained national was cn~1cal of the. Republican winner
attention as a gruff. outspoken mem-for dqina t.oo little to help GOP
ber-of the Senate Watergate Commit-Senate candidates.
tee and who became one of the "We could h•vc used a little help
Senate's most liberal and indepen-. from the vice president in some of the
dent members, refused to concede. states -Aorida." Dole said. "We
"I wish I wcrt here to declare a pleaded with them to go to Aorida."
victory or defeat," Wcickcr told In WashinJton, former Republican
supporters. "Unfortunately, I'm not Sen. Slade Gorton succeeded in his
in a position to do either riaht now." ' comet.ck try despite strong opposi-
But he added: .. No matter how all lion from Rg>. Mike Lowry, a liberal
this turns out, I don't have one single Democrat Gorton will succeed Sen.
gripe." Daniel Evans, who is retiring.
.For 35th consecutive year,
Democrats dominate House
WASHINGTON (AP) -Voters threw out a pair of congressmen
entangled in ethics problems, but
returned a hauntingly familiar House
of Representatives that for the 3Sth straight year will be dominated by
Democrats.
As the last votes were being
counted early today. the same voters
who chose Republican presidential
candidate George Bush were on the
verse of paddina a Democratic
margin in the House that had stood at
2SS-177 in the IOOt h Congress with
three vacancies.
It would belhe lint time in 28 years
that the party losinJ the presidency
still managed to gain ground in the
House. By early today. Democrats
bad won 257 scats and led for five
others, compared to 172 Republican
victones and one GOP lead.
The enormous financial and other
advantaaes that incumbents possess
proved the key dynamic in Tuesday's
voting. Ninety-nine percent of the
408 representatives seeking new
terms were on their way to re-election
early today, surpassing the 1986 high-
water mark for electoral success by
House officeholders of 98 percent.
Democrats claimed the results
proved that voters atreferred their
policies, with Democratic Con-
gressional Campaig.n Committee
chairman Rep. Beryl Anthony, 0-Ark., sayina. "They gave us their vote
of confidence ...
Republicans contested that. House
Minority Leader Bob Michel said the
amount of money incumbents raise
has become "incredible."
Whatever caused the incumbent
tide, it was not enoUfh to pull at least
three legislators to victory.
fourteen-term Rep. femand St
GermainJ... 0-R.I., chairman of the House Dan.king Committee, was
beaten by GOP attorney Ronald
Machtley. Just two weeks before
Elect.ion Day, a S-montb-old Justice ~t letter had been unsealed,
referring to "substantial evidence of
serious and sustained misconduct ...
by St Germain for allcaedJy accepting
favors from lobbyists.
The department bas referred its
findings to the House ethics commit-
tee, which has yet to say what it will
do.
"Believe me, I wanted \o be re-
elected, but I am looking forward to
au of a sudden spending a little time with my wife and mytwodauahtcrs,"
said St Germain. 60.
The last chairman of a House panel
to be defeated was Oregon Rep. Al
Ullman who headed the Ways and Means Committee until his 1980 loss.
Rep. Henry Gonzales. 0-Tcxas. is
likel y to succeed St Germain as
banking chairman.
In suburban Atlanta. Ben Jones. a
Democrat who portrayed Cooter on
television's "The Duk.cs of Hazzard ...
ousted two-term Republican Rep. Pat
Swindall in one of the country's most
bitter campaigns.
The campe1gn centered on Jones'
past a.rrcsts and alcohol problems ..
and Swindall's election-eve perjury
indictment in a drug money launder-
ing case. Swindall took his defeat with
a smile. whrlc Jones led his supponers
in a rendition of "Amazing Grace."
· Democrats had much lo smile
about in Texas. On the Gulf Coast.
Republican Rep. Mac Sweeney, a
two-term incumbent. lost to Demo-
cratic lawyer Grq Laughlin, and state
Sen. Bill Sarpalius was leading GOP
hopeful Larry Milner for a vacant
Panhandle seat.
Dcmj1ts also scooped up a vacant t prevously held by a
Republi n in Nebraska.
·Democrats g~in one seat
·in 12 gubernatorial races
IJ 'he AIMClatd Prn,
Voters ended 2().year control over
• the a<>vemor's office by Republica".'s
iA lndiana and b~ Democrats 10 Montana. rejected OOP Gov. Arch
Moore's bid for a fourth term in Wes~
Virainia and narrowly rc-dected em-bMtkd Republicans in Utah and
IUlodellland. ·
'l The bottom line Tuesday: the
Democrats rqistered a net pin of one sat and hold 28 of the SO
ll)vemonhips. Indiana's Evan Bayh was elected
1M mtion'• y<NQICSC 90vcmor at• »., Md Moore was tic only 1ncum-
1 llliat ..,.ted u 12 11a1e1 elected penon. nae ltcpublican• moot
• Montaftl. a teat beina vacated bfaDemocnL GOW. f.dW8Rt Dirrete ovcrc:ame
of uncdtical ~ ia • ~~ '° ddml a De•acntic ~ tor tbe ..,.. .... i•
1---. nilc .......... bl-..... ._ re1l1cW hi
... liailitla bJ wide~ in 11l1iae pOlls lat w Oltlae
J ...
.
GOP incumbents won mote easdy in Ddaware, Miaouri and North
Carolina; Democratic incumbents were retumcd by wide marPPI in
North DUo~ Vcnnont and Wub· inaton. and a new Republican ~ pliclcd an old one an New Hamptbire.
The aovernor•s reMalts in 101ne
catn teemed 10 bear lilt» relation to
the ~tial oulCOme. 8ayb won
dcsoitt a OOP landslide f'or Geoqe 8usls and Sen. Richard Ula! in vice
orcsidcntial c:andidaee Din Quayle's home state. A Republican won 1n
Rhode I~ wt.ere Dcmocnt
Michlel OukaUs prevailed. ne .... o1.....,11a:.,.. &.
.,. became ...... -... Demo-cnCic ~vemor ia lO ~ h .._._
ins Lt. Gov. Joba M. M.a. Wida 99 ,__. o1 m. wiee ,,,.,....~..,.. ,_ved l,107.Jl7 ,__ or'Sl '*'"
ceat to Muta.'• "9.699 .-. or 47 peraat.: ..
. llYIL.l .......... ,.,o1-.
mled M YtclGry --..... fl I Hhn." ..
1'e .JOO'CIP!W?I ·-~..,~-· dlle ii a.,w....Otllillillllllll .... _
not up for re-election. He 1s 40.
In financially arlrna West V!rJjnia.
Democratic newcomer Gaston
Capenon, an insurance c•ccutive,
denied Moore E unprecedented
fourth term. Ca rton called the outcome "t ~& ictory for those of us wbo want chanat ...
Witb all precincts rcponina.
Capenon won with 382.639 votes or S9 ~t to 267.943 votes or 41
percnt for Moore.
-rhc ~of West Virginia have
ben ~ kind over the years to the
Moote family in our public servtce.
We bdicw 11 a family we p~ them ow....,. ..t *61 aecl all &.be yean ot ow ~ .. Moore ...., ift COftClCd. i,.• MoetaM. f<>tlMf GOP Slate
!ea: 9188 Slet*m WftCbd • ~ *' 1111 r pe ~ one-time Gov. 1"'-a ,,.,... W1th91~ofthc ...._..~ • ..._ Slepkfts re-._ I .oees Of S3 perttnl IO
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I
-WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1988
Coache~ ta~e different paths to big game
Pi~ates' Workman trying to
build winners on field, in Hf e
By JON FERGUSON •
Of ...............
There are many J)layen who have followed football
coach Bill Workman from Edison High to Oranae Coast
Collep over the past three years, making the move
because years under him at Edison prompted the desire
for' more.
The No. I priority for Workman's. program in a
footbaJl sense is simple -win more prnes than it loses.
He pro\)ably has as distinct a taste for winnina as any
~oach. .
"I tell my players and firmly believe that you should
never accept defeat to the point where it becomes just ~n·
everyday thing." Workman ~id ... I can never get used to
It.
.. If it doesn't motivate 1 OCC VS. G WC you to work harder, if it doesn't hurt you to work SO
hours toward winning that week. if you don't get the
prize and feel OK after-
ward, you're a loser.
"Even if you're 0-10,
you can never lose the
feeling. the frustration of it.
It takes the willinaness to
bounce back by Monday or JCXnI Tuesday and rechafF your
battery. If you can do that,
you're a vnnner."
After registering a 109-33-S record in 12 years at
Edison, Workman enters this week's district rivalry with
Golden West with a 16-12 career mark in his third year at
Ora~ge Coast.
second year at C with a 8-2 mark, but this season has
been a test in patience for a man who's never bad a losing
season as head coach. The Pirates' 3-S ~rd and four
strai~t losses arc personal lows for Workman. ·am is a very, very positive person." said OCC
defensive coordinator Barry Waters. "I've been proud of
the fact that he's been able tO'handle this season to date,
that is the worst season for him in terms of wins and lo~
While players at many schools look at what he
accomplished at Edison and seek the opportunity to play
for a winner, to say Workman simply approaches the
game from that standpoint only wouJd be a travesty.
There's a scnuine personal side too.
................ .,1'111110.P' .....
. Since 1966, S~ackle ord has
Ji eatGWC ulfHling
By JON FERGUSON
Of .. .., ........
There was never any doubt in Ray ShackJcford's
mind what he wanted to do. where he wanted to go and
how be wanted to live. He found his life's calling at a
relatively young age ind has been content. · .
"I never had any intent to leave when I came here."
said Shackleford, who arrived in 1966 after two years as
an assistant at the University of Arizona. "This was never
a stepping stone (o aet myself to another.level. From the
very first da)', I never worried about where f'd be nut.··
Shackleford played football and baseball at Para-
mount High, Compton College and Arizona, and at one
time felt a professional baseball career would be his
calling.
OCCvs: GWC
~I
XJUH
But football coaching
aJways appealed to 'him.
and his first ta.Ste was as a
graduate assistant while
earning his master's in
educatronal adminis-
tration. He made the move
to Golden West in five
shon years. and be knew
what he wanted.
ShackJcford, now 50,
became the bead football
coach at Golden West Col-
lege at age 27 with long-
time successful baseball
coaches Fred Hoover and Don Rowe as his assistants.
··1 always wanted to be a coach and anyone wants 10
be in the best working conditions," ShackJcford said. "Ifs
bard to find a better JOb than the community colleges.
respectable, but the only pressure you have ere to wtn 1s
self-imposed pressures. At four-year schools. it's a
di~nt job. I enjoyed the coach in~ experience the least
of all at the four-year college level·
In 23 years as the school's only head coach,
ShackJeford hasn't wavered, and bis firm hand whipPcd
the Rustlers into respectability from the start, winnin,g his
first three games at Golden West. •
"There really was never a growing stage wb~rc we
were someone's doormat." Shackleford said. -1 always
bld a good wte as far as the competitiveness of the
program, where it might be easy 10 focus on kJds gamms
scholarships and just feel Jood about their success.
"Bill is blessed with the kind of personality that he is
able to communicate with anybody," said Waters, who
also coached under Workman at Edison from 1983-79
before taking a bead coaching job at Westminster for
(Pleaee eee BVILDDf0/84)
OCC bead coacll Bill Workman h.u re-
Tttaltwct the Pl.rates' football Protnm·
"We didn't come in wttb any preconceived notion we
would whip the world ... I don't like to lose. I can't
remember the last game we went into\hinking we're going
to lose. We may be the underdog ... but that's wt-•t makes
sports so good4f there's no chance of losing, what have
(Pl..-e 1ee LIFE/Ml
.................... ~
Ray Sback.leford flJada c:om•..itJ coll•
coaclalDC to be tlae perfect lnel for Ida.
Unfinished business for Barons
Peif ect Sunset season at stake for FV:
Sea "V.tewracegotngdo~n to the wire
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ... ...., ..... t ...
Th~ arc a few formalities to wrap
up this week for Sunset ln&uc
football teams as they prepare for the
CIF Division I playoffs, and thinp
remain in an unstable-condition an
the Sea View League as that circuit
tries to unravel on the last night of the
regular season.
Fountain VaJley is going for a
second straiJht perfect Sunset season:
Edison is eying a potentiaJ 9-1 regular
season; and Westminster would like
to forget about the prospect of being
No. 3.
And in the Sea View, aside from the
Back Bay Battle, involving host
Newport Harbor and arch-rivaJ Cor-
ona del Mar. there arc still some
issues to be settled between Estancia
and Saddlcback, and Tustin and
University.
Herc's a look at Sunset League
finales., as well as the Estancia-
Saddleback and Tustin-University
duels:
Fountain Valley is on the verge of
its first-ever back-to-back unbeaten
campaigns in the Sunset Leaaue, but
in order to get to 5-0, the Barons must
first deal with Huntington Beach and
its newly-acquired "Surfer offense."
"We call it the 'Duck' because the
Univenity of~~ ~sed it a ~ear IJO
when several tnJunes cut mto its
offense line," said Fountain Valley
Coach Mike Milner.
"You go out and strategically place
people and play a passing lcgue
pmc. It bas been used before. They
called it the 'Duck,• and we're callina
it the 'Duck.'
"We're 3utt1ng in the Uzi, Rem-
ington an Winchester defenses to
combat it. There arc a bunch of
options and everyone comes up with
different ways on playing it.
"Ifs a time-consuming thing and
you have to make sure 10 make the
adjustments. LL'uomelhing you can't
earn a living with, but when injuries
d~ple~e yo'1 or. possibly you're not
effective onens1vcly, you can try a
bunch of thinp."
The atfcnStve -pr~em for Hunt-
ington Beach Coach George Pascoe
and hisOilen may be just as complex
-because it beg.ins with trying to
contain the 1-2 punch of passer David
Henigan and runner Kcdric Powe,
which hasn't been accomplished too
often.
"fountain VaJlcy is no different
than last year," said Pascoe. who is a
product of the Barons' coachina
system. "They're just a very good
football team. But, we should have
beaten them last year.··
The Barons rallied a year aao
behind Hcni~n·s arm and audibles,
and it proved to be the tumina point
in terms of the l~ue championship,
as well as a berth m the CIF Bia Five
Conference finals.
On his "Surfer offense." Pascoe
said: .. I don't know how much you can
rely on it. Westminsterdidarealaood
job adjusting to it. They did some
things that made it not so effective.
But we have some o ther wrinkles.
.. Mainly you're not mixing it up
and not knocking on bodies."
Holding the key in the "'Surfer
offense" 1s Doug Cunningham. a m ulti-talentcd jun 1or.
The Oilcn. who start 13 juniors. can ill-afford any more injuncs after
(Pl .... eee SUJllB&T /BS)
This week's prep games, odds . .
Tllusday
Edison. 3-1 at Westminster, 3-1 Edison by 4
Huntington Beach. 1-3 vs. Fount.am Valley. 4-0 (at OCC) FY by 8 Man~\ 0-4 vs. Ocean View (at Hunungton Beach) Ocean View by 3
Costa McSa. 2-2 at Laguna Beach. 2-2 Costa Mesa by 3
Trabuco Hills. 3-1 vs. Woodbridge, 4-0 (at Irvine) Woodbridge by 6
Mater Dci. 2-1 vs. Scrvite. 2-1 (at Santa Ana Bowl) Scrvitc by 4
Friday
Corona del Mar, 2..()..2 at Newpon Harbor. 2-2-0
Saddlcback. 2-1 ·I vs. Estancia. 1-2-1 (at OCC)
Tustin, 1-2· I vs. University, 1-2-1 (at Irvine) r\'10~2-2 vs. El Toro, 2-2 (at Mission~icJO)
CdM by 3
Saddlcback by 3
Even
El Toro by l
..., ......................
Lapna Beacb•1 Aaron Scllel4 la panaed by Woodbrtdee'•
Stne Muten (39) and Ke.tn O'Connell lD receat ......
...., ..... ,.... ., a.Miii ......
UCI'• Kerin Floyd drlTel to the bu'et dartn; Tuelday
nJ.&bt'• uhlbltion game acaJnat Atllleta lD Action .
Anteaters edged
by AJA in shootout
Scoggtn asks for
leave of absence Mesa, Artists ta.Ice shot at CIF ~=~~::::: .. r..an, cam• ~~,~~i1°r~~:~~.~? ~
true Tuesday mght. But Mullipn's auards, guys hke In the wake of the University
Hiah boyi buketbaU team's best
record ever, tcbool athletic direc-
tor and vanity basketball COICh
Steve Scogin requested a one ~r leave of absence Tuetday
aftttnoon.
An emotional principal Dr: Roben Bruce called the Uni
coechel totether for, meetina at
2:1S p.m. Tuetday to rmd SCot· pn•s written statement. .. Due to pmonal consider-
ations. I'm requaliM a one yetr ave of ablence 60nt all my
addctic duties b * remaiadcr o('ll-'89 tcfiool year," the letter
rad. \ Scaain, who has coecbed the
tea8' iface 1914. WU not ptaent
it ... Meat'91 ... could -be tWIMd for l'unhcr commcnL 1..-,..,., ~.. kid lbe
Tlllljlm to a 17JJ ~ -llttir '9ii ..--aod into die CIF .,...
PCL title match up
BJ PAT LAftlllN
........ 0. 11J f I
..
Season-finales are on tap this week
for Onnee Coast area football teams.
but no one's p1ekina anythina away
yet.
Woodbridlt-Hi&h's Warriors. in addilion to a chlnrphJtrlhil> slfow.
down with Trabuco Hills. have ~ts about defendina their CIF
Deleft·Mountain Coafcttnce cbam· plomhi_A~ it ii now known as the OF Dtvitloa VIII.
COiia Mal and ~M lclch. w~ ICI"'" Off wiLILlk will": ner advancins M> the playofft. the
loler PKtina 1t in. ni 1UD1 _.... trw b the Irvine-
El Toro duel 1n the South Coast
League. although the loser would
appear to be11 solid candidate for wild
card cons1derat1on in C IF Division
Ill play.
Mater De1 . meanwhile, has a date
with arch-nval Servile. The wtnner
sha~ the Angelus League title w1lh
the winner of the St Paul-Bishop
Amataame. .
Herc's a look attach of this week's
rqular-scason finales:
.
Bod\ Lamana Beach Coach LY_!!lan
Olney ancf Coat.a Mesa Coach Tom
Baktwin know that their matchup
Thunday as lhe most important of the
tealOO.
With Wood\M'tdlc and Trabuco
Hilla mured of ok)Offbcnhs 1n the
CIF DiV11icMa VTII .-101& as rep. .mrnuu~ from me Pacafk Cout
lelpe. both coecha know that this p~ ~kn tbt difference bctWftn
tllircl-pleClr and fouN ucl jlalt hlte a
horse race. fourth place doesn't Pl)'·
'"Therc will be no problem aemna
the klds up for this one. .. Olncr said
"Thcy'rc a really solid footbal team
and we're looluna forward to play1na
them."
Baldwin echoed his colleague's
sentiments.
"Our ~ids have to focus on this
footbllJ team," Baldwin said. "They
o4ay real aood. hard-nosed defense.
They stamd out a httlc slowl) and
pcthaps they lost 1 couple of pm~
they shouldn't have, but none ohhat
makes any da~ at ttus potn,. ••
For COlta Mesa. this could be a
pmc of many COftteQutnm. The
Mu1tanp have had a Iona dry spell as
far as playoff pines to-Mesa ha.sn 't
been II\ I.he .. yof& SlnQC 1979 pnor
to wblCh •-tbe MUlla• 1n the
playoffs three of the PRYious for
~h1nk this .-ne.~ mean~ a lot to our ~-1 . _. .....m said.
"If we can w\a ud lnell maytlt ID on
(fhlll -PCl./81)
..
o\dvcrt1std as •he biggest run-and· Kevin Floyd and Rod Palmer. had to
gun shootou\ 1n the West UCI and deal wnb the sl¥=k pas in& and fancy
.\tbletcs In ~ction hooked up m a footwork of Romar. tbe last cut on the
wild •nd en\crta1n1ng cxh1b1t1on Houston Rockets last week., ud
game to "''" the hearts and 'otes of Foster, the former UCLA and 1.248. fans 11 the Bren Center Phocm~ Suns guard.
AIA. behind Rod Foster and "Hopefull). it'll make us a bettc,!
Lorenzo Romar. two bnlh•nt guards team by playin& against those guys.
who danetd around defcnden as 1f Mulhpn said. "But we know ~
they were at Geo~ Bush's ttl-broke down. We broke down 1n a lot
ebrat1on pany. ran past UCI m a of ways. hk:e on our press ~ brolte
I H-131 '1ctof) dov.'TI. The Anteaters. who led b nine ••But wecamcblaOand 'riechowin
(S 1-4. 2) la&e 10 the first half after Elain 1l We ran our fast break rally well,
Roten sJammed one home. had wcshot~U(S3for9S)andwePl-,.ed
nolluna but problems .,.1th tht-' hW. •· former NBA guards as lA ca~ It was a nice tuneup andeed b 1bc
beck sttoOJ an tht second hair -Antatcrs.1f you COfttider it ... dleir
sperked by an 11·2 run to unt.te a h.ahest IC(Jf'lftll OUtpUt na, 19!Jlll •
108-lOlpmc iaa thcir nwt or ·1u ••" •'•d ··we won't play an) bcittt tuafdi ••mt vu.a-Miht.Wy-:a. ·oau n.
th11 }Ur than Fosttr and Lomuo," Mattilan•s,.. ~ aflJCI.
•id UCl Co.ch Bill Mulhpn. taan· onfylllil~didn'lco.M.
i,.hisatttth ,,_.., 1M helm. "A.Dd---!.'l&'j~-~-•1 llDll'D•1 ll'• .......... ~ doll like Zact (Jones)." pmes, 11111 ....... IWt---:~who tcOled l• po.nts; s&M
1; • 0nnge COMt DAJL Y PILOT I Wednelday. NoYember 9, 19N
..
.i:
/'/IF H< >H I IAR1\/( >.\·
. .
PRO .'GAMES
The Bob Harmon Pro Forecast
fll SllllY I IOIDIY 11-13114
**.ATWTL.. .............. 11 Ull 11111 ............... 11
Two t.me~unfortunately gbfng nowhete In 1M8, meet for only third time
. . . Charger on.. hu averaged 13 points per gatM. Falcon defenM hu
gtwn up O¥W 27 pb per game.
11111•n .............. 21 *'*IAllUS cm ............ 11
One of AFC'• hott9St teems, Centr.i-leedlng Bengals. "shouldn't have
ptoblem8" with AFC Weet'a baMment-dwelllng Chiefs ... however, last
Y9W? -Clncy nudg«I KC In OT. 30-27
Ami.Ill •••••••••••••. 2~ ~EftEI .................... 11
Two NFL powers thet were reduced to strugglet's When QBx were lost ...
Bf'oncoe have won 9 atratght from Browns Including last year's h•lr·
·~ 38-33 victory In AFC" title g•me. •
•••tlllT ................... 11 TAMPl llY ............... 1J
NFC <Ant{el'a al8o-rant each won last year. Bucs beating Uons In Detroit
during attlka 31-27, Lions winning In TB 20-10 ... teams tied for
buement In '87 with 4-11 records.
**llEEI 111-......... 21 llllWPIUS ........... 21
Cotb, Padt.,. have met just twtc:e In last 1 '4 years ... Colts down to just
two o-m-remaining et home In final slx with chenc:ee of repeating In
playoffs elmOSt ~ant,
11m• ..... _ ....... 21 *:A'lom1 .................. 21
Two more teems aware or what happens when OBs are knociled out ... Oilers nipped SMhawka In OT In playoffs last season. 23-20. teems led by
08e Wen.n Moon end D9Ya Krieg. ............
s.lnt8 ho9ted R.wnl jWt two ..-a ago, LA. wtnnlng .wtth four FGt,
12· 10, to keep NFC Waat r-=e ..a knotted up ... MCh team has game left
with 4hra ... Ren'8 hope few aweap.
llllEUTL ............ 2J **IAl.W--............. 11 Vlk•. COWboyl ptayied wffd Thenbglvtng o.y game last MUOft, Vlk•
wtlWng In OT 44-38. Minn. led 38-2'4 In '4th quarter. Danny White rellylng 0.... with two TD,,_ to tie.
•• ., .... 1 ---... .1111 .. u .. 24 IEW EllLAll .... -... 21
Patriots stormed o...... .,.., In the rain In opening getM of '88 aeuon In
Foxboro 28-3, QB Steve Grogan paSllng tor 249 yards, N.E. defense
Nd(lng K.an O'Brien nve tlmea.
PllUIELPlll. ......... 21 ..,ITTllllll ............ 24
Flrat revtv., of Bettle of Penn. In 9 )'Mrs, Eagles leading aertea that started
In 1933, 42-25-3 ... Steelers out of playoffs for '4th straight )'Mr, Eagles bwaty In contention.
••PIMllL .................. 23 IEW Ylll llUTS ... 21
Glenta. Cerda apllt meetings tut aeaaon. NY winning et home 30-7, St L
winning at home 27-24, nrat C•rd victory over NY efnce ·a.. ... PhOentx
fecee 3 roed o-m-efter Sundey.
**SAi FIAllllCI ....... 21 U. 1111111. ........... 1 l
49era' battle with S.lnt1, Rems In NFC West took big jolt wtth raoent 10-9
Monday nlta lole to Beers ... don't count Railders out In tight AFC W•t race -.-iybody' a divllk>nt
' **WllWTll.-....... 20 ••••---n a..r.. RedatllM hew met In NFC pe.yoffs three times In pest four yeara,
MCh wtnnlng twice . Skins rllllied to beat Bears 21-17 lut )'Mr after
trWlfng 14-0 In 2nd quarter.
llff 11.1 •••••••••••••••••• 21 ... 01 ..... " ............... 21
_, -Billa edged Dolphins In second gwne of MUOn M . Scott
Norwood klciclng thr .. FG1 for Buffalo ... Miami needs victory •t home to
Illy cloM to Billa In AFC Eaat rece .•• Biiis.
COLLEGE
Sat., Nov. 12 -Major Colleges-Otv. 1-A
'Alabama 24 SW Louisiana 14 •Arizona 23 Oregon 21 •Manses 2'4 Texas A & M 23
•Army 28 Vanderbift 27
•Auburn 20 Georgia 10 Ban State 28 'Ohio u. 10 Baytor 27 °Rice 20
Brigham Young 34 ·Air Force 21
Central Michigan 33 "T<>Mdo 21
·c1ncinnat1 24 lndiMa State 22
Clemson 33 'Maryland 17
Colorado State 35 °New Metlc:o 7
Eastern Mtchlgan 27 •eowting Green 14
Flonda 21 'Kentucky 20
"Florida State 28 V.P.I. 7
Fresno State 30 ·Nevada · las Vegas 10
• 1nc11ana 28 Mid'liQen State 23
'Iowa 24 Ohio St.le 13
Iowa State 26 ·Kansas Slate 10
Kent State 28 "Miami, OH 14
L. S. U '40 'Mississippi State 14
'Louisville 28 Weetem Kentucky 16
'Memphis State 31 Tutu 30
'Mict11gan 31 Illinois 10
Minnesota 28 'Wl9oon9in 15
'Mlsalsslppt 27 Tennessee 24
'Nebraska 31 Colorado 1'4
'New Mexico State 22 Long Beactt State 20
'North Carolina State 27 Duke 17
Oklahoma 33 •MiMoon 1 O
00klahoma State 49 Kanau 7
Pittsburgh 28 'Penn State 17
Purdue 26 'Nof1hwestem 21
San Jose State 23 *Fullerton State 1 '4
·South Caroline 24 NeyY 7
South 'n MiNissippl 31 'Lou4slana T ecn 13
Southern C.lftorT»a 34 ·Arizona State 1 o
Syracuse 30 'Boston College 1'4
Tempt. 24 'Nuon 20
Texu 24 "T.C.U 21
"Taxu Tech 23 Lamar 10
'Tex• -El Peeo 33 s.n Diego State 14
·u.c .LA. 30 Stantord" 20 Ut8h 30 'Utah State 21
Vlralnia 24 'North Carotina 15 ·vr-.. Forest 22 Georgia Tac:tl 21
"WMhlngeon 23 CelfOmia 13
"WMNI~ ~ 31 ()fegon State 24
Weet Virginie 38 Autgets 14 w..-m Michigan 28 ·Northern 1111nota 13
Wyoming 26 'Houston 20
·SPONSORED BY
CITill CREEi
7148 Edinger, Huntington Beach 141-1427
.I. C. loUIS
18121 Beach Blvd., Hun11ngt9" Beech 141-1417
ClllUES
8041 Boau, Huntington Beactt 114-1111
' I
1
First 4~40 1nan
Canseco is AP
Player of Year
rr.. Tiie A1Mdate4! Presa
NEW YORK -Jose Canseco, the Ill first major IUJuer to hit 40 hOmen and
steal 40 bases 1n one season. was selected
IN THE BLEACHERS
The Associated~ Player.of the Year on •
Tuesday in a landslide. ,.
The Oakland riabt fielder m:eivcd 1411'2 votes
from a panel of sl)Ortswriters and broadcasters. Los
Angeles riaht-hander Orel Henhiser was runner-up
with 13 votes followed by Minnesota's Kirby Puckett
with five votes and Boston's Mike GiunweU with 4'h.
"h means a lot because it shows the improvement
I've made between 1986 and 1988," said Canseco, who
was married earlier this month.
Not that 1986 and '87 were all that bad.
~nscco hit .240 in 1986 with 33 bomen and 117
runs batted in en route to the American Leaaue Rookie
of the Year award. In 1987, be! had 31 homen and 113
RBI .
This season, it all came totcther 1$ Cankeoicd the
·majors with 42 homers and 1'24 RBI while hittina .307.
The American t.e.gue charts 17 different offensive
categories and Canseco ranked in the top 10 in 12 of
them. . "I don't think I had a bad drou&ht except for an O-
for-20. And even when l was 0 for :fO, I was hitting the
ball well. so the key was staying consistent," said
CanS«o, who led the Athletics to their first AL pennant
since 1974.
Canseco has homered more times in his fITTt th~
full seasons( 106)thananyone but Eddie Mathews(l 12)
and Joe DiMaggio (107). ·
His 11 1 career homers, including fi ve after a late-
season call up in 1985, arc the I 0th-highest total for a
player at the end oft.he year in which he turned 24_ The
other nine players arc in the Hall of Fame.
Mel Ou. who already played eight seasons. had 176
at Canseco's age. All-time leader Henry Aaron had 140
en route to his record 755.
Quote of the day
om n1e, e s coac)'i: "I guess I feel
there isn't too much excitement anymore in our
stadium unless we're an underdoe, and that
doc_sn't hap~n very of\~!1· We'd be favored
q&lnst the Chicago Bears.
Kalambay knock-a-out DeWitt
MONTE CARLO. Monaco-Sumbu = .Kalambay of Italy knocked out American
Doug DeWitt in the seventh round to
retain his World Boxing Association
middleweight title Tuesday ni.&ht.
. It was the third defense ror .Kalambay, who was
born in Zaire. Hs..t~k command at the;tart and scored
frequently with •sand rights.
In the seventh round. he stunned Dewitt with a left,
then quickly ended i\ at I : I 0 with another left and right.
DcWm. of Yonkers, N.Y .. went down on his face and
tried to get up, but he staggered back as the referee
counted him out
Kalambay raised his record to 46-3-1 while
DeWitt, ranked fifth among middleweights by the
WBA, dropped to 30-S-4.
Oilers turn back Pittsburgh
Jari Kurt scored three goals, includ-Eil
ing two in a five-coal second period '
Tuesday ni&ht that carried the Edmonton
Oilers to a 1-3 victory over the Penguins in
Pittsburgh ... In Quebec. Dale Hawerdau scored th~
times and added two assists and .bllrew MeBala had
two goals and three assists, leading Winnipca to an M
victory over the Nordiqucs ... ln Uniondale, Grea
Giibert scored with 2:26 left to give the New York
Islanders a 4-3 victory over the New York Rangers in
the first game of the season between the Patrick
Division nvals ... In off-the-ice news, Detroit Red
Wings forward Mtroslav Fryeer was suspended for 10
games Tu~y for injunng Philadelphia forward
M1rray Cravea in yet another stick-swinging incident
in the NHL last week.
The Newport -..Ch
KIW~NIS CLUB
• • •
When sports cartoonists use steroids
Sweeney to start for Cowboy•
DaJlas Coach T .. LaMry, who had Eil
the only vote that counted, on Tuesday •II•
elected Kevl8 Sweney to be the starting
quarterback for the Cowboys -.ainst the
Minnesota Vikings Sunday night. "Kevin earned the
start, but the worst thini that can happen is for people to
expect him to be a miracle worker against the Vikings,"
Landry said. Sweeney threw three touchdown passes in
the second half of Sunday's 29-21 loss to the New York
Giants as he came off the bench to replace Steve
PeH11er. Dallas has lost its last six games in a row and is
2-8 for the season with Pellucr as a starter ... Trying to
QUll out of a six-game losing streak, the San Diego
Chargers announced that second-year pro Martt Vlalk
will start at quarterback, replacing Mart MaleH.
Vlasic, who bcaan the season as the club's No. 3
guanerback, wilJ make his first NFL start at Atlanta on
Sunday, when the Chargers, 2-8, meet the Falcons, 3-7.
Garagiola resign• at NBC
athletes to become a star sportscaster, is •
Joe Garagtola, one of the first former •
leaving NBC after 27 years because the
network delayed negotiations on a new -
contract and left the impression he was no lonacr
-wanted:--tnivas--an-unfortunat~ ~where dlndnaff
turned into cancer," his business mana~r. Pellx sup.a, said Tuesday. Garagfola, 62, sent a resignation
letter to NBC Sports president Armw WatlOl last week.
Watson received the letter Monday. "NBC and Joe
Garagiola have enjoyed a terrific relationship during
his 27 years with the network," Watson said in a
prepared statement ... Jack Nlckl81t, suffering from a
degenerative back condition, said Tuesday he will seek
further medical advice before he decides whether he can
play fOlf in tournaments again. "I can't play the way I
am. I vc got to make up my mind what I'm going to do."
Nicklaus said. A Magnetic Resonance lmqinaexamin-
ation conducted by Dr. Bhtce Wumu at St. Mary's
.Hospital in West Palm Beach, Aa., on Monday
confirmed a disc problem in Nicklaus' lower back .
Television_. radio Tl!Ll!VISIOH
S p.m. -VOLLEYBALL: T .. m Cup competition
from the Forum (lesie), Prime Ticket. 6:)0' p.m. -M>WUNG: TrHwre Coast Senior
()pen from Fort Pierce, Fla. (delayed), ESPN.
7:30 p.m. -NBA BASKETBALL: Denver et
Lekers, Prime Ticket. I p.m. -HORSE RACtNG: Holtvwood Peril r"'8n (Prime Tldlet, 10-.30 P.m.>.
RADIO
\:30 P.m. -NBA IASKETBALL.: Clle>oeri et
Cleveland (delayt'd), KRTH (930). ~ 7:30 p.m. -NIA BASKETBALL: Denver at
Lakeri, KLAC (S70).
THUltSDAY TELEVISION
Noon -GOLF: Euroe1e•n PGA Masters from
Sotoorande, SHln (tape). ESPN. 1 11.m. -GOLF: Men's tournament from Pebble
IMch, ESPN.
~ . ............. -......... ...
The 4th Annual Back Bay 5-10K
(All proceeda wtl go to tPOfMIOr PfOQrlMt fOr tN undetprivlteged)
PMMNnD aY: Klwanl9 Ctub of Newport .. OMIATION: Call us at &42-9"0, or drop
8Mdl and Newport-Coeta M ... YMCA by the YMCA at 2300 Untveratty Drive, off
WHIM: Sunday, November 13, 1988
WHmll: Newport a.ch BaGk Bay -The
Marriott Suttee Hotel, 500 Bayvtew Circle (neer
the Wlt.-..ctlon of Brtatol and Jamboree, on
the 8Kk Bay)
TIME: 8:00 (5K) 8:.S (10K) 9:00 (KJdd•K)
AWARDe: W1I be gtwn to the top male and ~ In both r.cea In all 1ge categortee.
~Avenue In Newport BMch.
PM-MQlalllATION: The fee of $10 Inductee
a dlltlncttve athletic bag wtth • eeparate water-
proof compwtnwnt. Pr..,egl9tratlon wtthout
the athletic bag la onty te. The Kldd•K pr-.
r9glatretton fM 11 S2 wtthOut the athtetlc bag
and se wtth u. ethtettc bag.
LATI MGlaTllA'TIOM: For entrlel reoefved or
postmned after NOYember 4. 1981 Md rec.
day Nglatratlon, add 13 to the above,_.,
Aegl9tratlon mey be done In per*>n at the ttnport-co.ta MeM YMCA, 2300 UnMwalty
Ortw In Newport 8eldl or on r11ee day ~ '*'Cl 11t 7:00 A.M.
DOOR ,.,.. All ore-regtaterect runner9 wtll recetve a ''Goodier' Beg plu8 eHgfbHtty for
"'MY excttlng door prtne.
-------------------------------------~---OnlCAL DiiiY fOllll °"' ...... ,., ............
,
Lake rs
thuiilp , ·
Warriors
ott, ~cspar
t all to Cliarlotte
From Tk'1110t'late4! Pres•
Byron Scott scored 23 po~nts aftd
Mqic Johnson scored 22 poaou and
18 assists as the Los.Anaelcs Lakm
beat Gorden State, 114-102, "'f uesday
nipt in Oakland for .their 10th
straiaht ~ular-season v1ctO('Y over
the Wamors. • .
Chris Mullin had a pmc-hiah 26 poin~ 20 in the first half, for the
Wamors.
Johnson and James Worthy each
bad IO points, in~luding a pa~r of
three-point plays, 1n a seven-minute
stretch of the third period as the
Lakers used tt.eir running game in a
27-11 streak that broke open a close
contest.
Jn other NBA games:
Htraeta 111, CU,,en 115: In
Charlotte, the Hornets got their first
victory as Kelly Tri_p.ucb's 24 points
led them over the Cbppen.
The expansion Hornets, who. lost
their tint two games by a combined
49 points, expanded a two-point lead
at halftime into a 90-79 advantage
after three quarters. A crowd of
18,865 saw the victory.
&.,erSemes t'1, 1Uap 75: Dale Ellis
scored 28 points ana Seattle beat
Sacramento to spoil the K.inp' ~-
Arena. A crowd of 16,51 7 marked the
I 28th consecutive NBA sellout in
Sacramento.
Platea• 111, 'lien lH: Joe Dumars
scored 30 points and Detroit held off
a late Philadelphia rally to defeat the
76crs at the ·Spectrum. Adrian
Dantley added 23 points and James
Edwards came off the bench to score
• poifftr,miling eiift offilne Sboti:" Rawu uz, Paeen 111: Domi-
nique Wilk.ins scored 32 points and
Moses Malone added 18 points and
22 rebounds as Atlanta held off a late
surge by lndiana in the Hawks' home
opener. The Hawks, playing front of a
sellout crowd of 16,371. led. 88-74,
early in the final period before the
Pacers put on a late rush to close
within 101-99 wi th 2:37 left.
Nell IH, Billets ltl: Joe Barry
Carroll had 19 points and New Jeney
outscored Washin1ton1 20-2, to end
the pme and beat the •1siling Bullets.
~ n1. Bills 111: Johnny
Newman scored a career-high 35
point.s, including 13 during a decisive
22-6 spurt, to spark New Y ()rk past
Cbicaao at Madison Square Garden.
!\dell Ut, Sperl ltz: In Hous-
ton Mike Woodson scored 27 points..
including thiu straight. baskets that
brunted a late San Antonio come-
back, leading the Rockets to the
victory.
M1verlek1 tz, Heat II: In Dallas,
Brad Davis scored eight consecutive
fourth-eeriod points, including a
four-pomt play, and Rolando Black-
man hit a ~ir of free throws with 10
seconds left as the Mavericks beat
Miami. ...
• OCCwraps
up woinen 's
soccer title
Freshman Kim Dutton headed in a
comer kick from Debbie Bon~ to
lift the Oran~ Coast womeft's IOCX'CT
team to a 1-0 victory over Golden
West Tuesday, clinching the South
Coast Conf~nce title for the Pirates:
The winnin1 goal came with ap-
proximately 20 minutes remaining sn
the match at Golden West.
OCC improved to 9-0 in the
conference and 17-0 overall with the
victory. The Pirates. who have one sec game to play on Thursday at
Palomar, own a two-pme lead over
El Camino.
In &iris tennis:
Freshmen Jeannette Fyleu ofUni-
versity Hiah and Ken Phebus of
Corona dcfMar reached today's final
of the Sea View l...equc Individual
Tournament.
f ~lpu topped CdM's Christie
McChntock, 6-2. 6-2, in the quar-
terfinals at Mesa ·Verde Country
Oub, then aot by Estancia 's Dina
Birch, 6-3, 7-5, in the semifinals.
..
.. .
'
SUNSET, SEA VIEWLEA:GUE·FINALES ONT AP •••
hmla1 ·
tbe -or quanetbeck Eric Pettinato Elbon) bu bad • lor or touchdown
{bee). Cornett.ck Tub Febo is the pa1etoverthelastyearandahalf. He la1nt c:uualtY.. He's out with burned us IOOd last year.''
stretched knee Jitaments. Westminster C<>-<:oach Stan Clark
Abo ift the Sunset: said the Lions enter in a wary state
despite the fact Edison 1pin enters
Valley, and the Vwnp an hopctul they can maintain the momentum
ap1nstOoean V1ew,1 team wb~h has
sflu1 out three foes.
1t•s at Huntincton Beach' Thursday
nil.ht.
Meanwhile, in the Sea View:
Everyone on their dtftote is a hitter.
And No 2S (Kevin Tho.mu). we have
to stop him from pess-nashin1r
"We anllcipmtc they'll to with two
ught ends quite a bit. It spreads your
defenst out and with any crack at all
their (Josh) Wojtk..iew1cz can JO.
Ca Do San Lucas race
at virtual standstill
' By ALMON LOCL4.BEY C.,.en n. Lloa• without fint-line quarterback Otta
Aneelovic who has been sidelined TbeY're both 3-1 and beaded for the with a brolen left thumb on the next Ba61et1 n. Roadrunnen
CIF Division I playoffs, but what a to last play of the Fountain Valley
"We have to get them in long-
yardage situations ...
With what has been a decided lack
of an aenal game arul an expected
run..anepted attack. it would appear
the only long-yardage plays Saddle-
back can count on are when and ifthe
Ea&les self-destruct with penahies.
Dellr ........... """"
The slowest boat-for-boat race an
the history of a Cabo San Lucas race
-or any other ocean race -was
developing Tuesday as the 36 boats in
Los Angeles Yacht Club's Cabo San
Lucas vaa Guadalupe Island were stJll
stalled tn ligh m and aJasn .seas
Class handicap standanp with dit-
tanccs from start after 64 houn of
sa1hna:
diffaence this decision will have for ~me.
the ~~noet mqves on' as No. 2 (rom . ''Even withollt him tfley seem to be
the Suosell..eaJu~ with a chance at a very efficien~" said Clark. "And they
home pme in its opener, as well as-an are playing tnCHame type of defense
opponent or the same relativestatus. since. they started-in 1969, an aa-
Tbe loter is on the road, qainst a gressave, come-and-get-you defense.
team with No. I status from its ·•1 know Edison will be fired up. We
leque,anduidefrom the potential of beat them pretty badly last year and
sbarina the leaaue championship they'll be preaching that to rbeir kids.
should Fountain~ alley be upset by So it's going to be a real tough night. ..
Huntinaton Beach, it's a m-.jor prize Ifs at Westminster Friday.
to be won. .. If we win we'll be 9-1 and we'll get
a home pme, I'm sure, .. said Edison
Coach Deve White. "But West-
minster has always played us touah. I
stroncJy believe inyone who plays
aood defense is in every game and
Westminster gave Fountain Valley a
beckuva shol "I know the last four meetings
we've split and we've P.robably split
the last eiabt meetings. '
Actually1 Edison has won five of
the last e1aht. Westminster's only
victories in a 14-year series have
come in '82 (14-13), '8S(24-14)and a
year 110 (32-7). .
"They have two good running
backs," continued White. "They're
not the kind who are going to get 80-
yard runs, but they can run over your
face. The scary thing is the bia play
potential. Their quarterback's per-
centage is not real hot, but he (Bobby
Sea"-•b n. Vlkl"6•
. Ocean View is shooting for. its fifth
VlctOry -a .500 record and the
second best-ever season; Marin~ is
just shooting for a victory and trying
to avoid its first~ver winless cam-
paign.
"I've been telling everyo·ne Marina
plays preny good defense; the offense
has been one play away on many
occasions; and I've been predicting
they would _put it together," said Ocean View Coach G uy Carrozzo. ··1
jusj hope I'm wrong."
·Obviously for our seniors. it's our
last game," said Marina Coach Chris
Ranisey. ··we'd like some redemp-
tion. And, ifs the first game of the
season for nexr year's seniors."
Marina got its offense moving to
the tune of three S«ond-half touch-
downs last week against Fountain
PCL, IRVINE, MATER DE
E!;tancia 'High· Coach J ohn
L1ebenso00 1s certain if his team can
win this one -even is his Eagles
eventually m,ust settle for No. 4 in the · final standings, it'lhnean a-berth in
the CIF Division Vl playoffs by
virtue ofa 7-2-1 overall record. "Th~t should get you in," said
Liebengood. "But we can't look at
anything. We just have to play good
foorball ri&ht from the start' against
Saddlebact
.. We haven't made l)le tur;naround
to win in the Sea View League yet, but
I guarantee we will be ready to play.
rm sure they will, too.
"lerry Watte is a great coach and
he'll have them ready to play. ·
"It's at our stadium (Orange Coast
College) and ifs t~c first time in CAght
or nine years ( 1981) that we've got a
shot 10 get an the playoffs.''
Witte noted Estancia's obvious
letdown during its 17-0 loss to
Newpon Harbor last week. but dis-
collnls it as an ovemding issue.
"It was a game letdown, but not a
letdown for the next game," said
Witte. "They lost some spark and
never got it .back (against Harbor).
But rhey have a shot at the playoffs
andachancefora 7-2-1 season. I wish
1 was 7-2-1. They have a lot to play
for."
Witte secs the matchup on equal
footing in terms of team speed and
defense, but noted:-~Estancia is
probably quicker on defense than we
are.
"I
ft's at OCC Friday night.
Trojan• n. TUlen
Win or else, then hope some
combinations come up right in other
games. That's the only approach for
thesctwo,eachat 1-2-1 inleagueplay .
··Both teams play similar football
and Tusun is fairly physical, .. said
Un1vcrs1ty Coach Mark Cun-
rtingham. who stated before. the
season that this was the galne he was
· pointing for.
In addition to the natural nvaJry. a
possibility of gaining a CIF playoffs
berth is at stake, and the Trojans are
well aware of the potential awards.
"Every year 1h1s as a hitting game
and a ~ood game." said Cunningham.
..They re very well-coached and ifs
certainly not go1ns to be easy "
Tustin enters with a cloud over its
offense because of the 1enta11 ve
satuauon revolving around quar-
terback Monte Jones, who massed the
CdM game and may be out of1h1s one
as well.
Tustin went to the air 35 tames last
week with Jones absent and was
intercepted five times.
'"Anyone with brains knows
Saddleback couldn't run the ball on
us ... said c~.nningham, "'so It may be
after three diys of sailing.
The big ultra-light 70-raters were an
a virtual seesaw battle as to who could
dnft the fastest.
Takin_g over the elapsed tame and
handicap lead 1n the International
Offshore Rule (IOR) fleet was
Cheetah, a Peterson-66 U LDB co-
skippcrcd by Dick Pennington and
Phil Murra)'. Long Beach Yacht Club.
with a position 349 males frol]'I the
start after 64 hours of sailing.
Iott-A-I C'-lan." Pldl ....... IOlt·l"llll
Murrev. l.0!!9 h•cn YC. s.. mllft; 2. IMollClle. Pal Farrllll, L8YC. l47;'l . Orumbeel, Don A-.
.... _, HM1IOr YC, )42, ~ Ml/Ill u11e. PW
Simonton, SI Francis YC. >421 s. CltM ...
Wll$0n, LA YC, 33S.
IC>tt • 8-1 WOllHdt. JOM c:,.nGll, c.ilf9rllla VG.-Jil, 2 Wloternawtt HAI Cll!y, ....
Cor"1nthla11 YC, 32l, 3 •9mb1Jftcfl0ul, Mike C~ll09ll. L8YC. 291, • "-• •oo.rt llllCI Micl\MI 1(9ftn, CYC, 213, S. Liquid Sky, W9lrl'I
8roclll'IOH, *'• Crui VC, 260.
UCI to host tennis tourney
UCI hosts the Rolex-ITCA University of San Di~'s [)avid
Southern Cahfornaa Men's Tennn Stewan and Pepperdine's-David
Championships this weekend on the Wells-Roth arc placed fifth throush
Anteater couns. featunng man) of eighth,
the top players 1n the region In doubles. UCl's Martt K.anian
Acuon begins at 7 a.m. Thursday and Lubner arc seeded fint. The-duo
and 7:30 a.m. Frida~ and Saturday. a·s ran""ed na'nth i·n the nau·on i·n the The singles final as at 10 a.m., " followed b y the doubles final Sunday. preseason coaches' poll. USC's Orea
UCl's Trevor Kronemann as seed-Failla and Andy Olyphant are seeded
ed fi t · · gl d ked 20 h second. USD's Jose-Luis Noriep and irs an sin es an as ran t in David Stewan are t.hird and Arizona
the prescason rankings. Long Beach State's Gy-""o __ ... J-us n 0,u,. ... S~te!s Pu Crow 111Ceded second, '""' auv ...,. -A "J--~
ucrs Richard Lubner IS third and seeded fourth.
Peppcrdine's Grant Saacks is seeded Thesinglesanddoublcscbamei<>ns
fe~ qualify for the 1989 Ro&ell National
It's niversity's Homecoming Arizona State's Bnan (Jyetko. New Indoor Colle&iatc Oiampionships in
hard game Friday night at l.rvane. Mellico State's Par Sandquist, the Minneapolis reb. 9-12. ~win•co~le~~yoffgamesit ~~m~BTuro inawMthisriiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~······••iiif could set us up for a few years." week. if we hope to make the I
Laguna, on the other hand, has playoffs."
been to the playoffs the last three Irvine needs a win at El Toro to
years. but the Artists weren't even assure a C IF Division Ill playoff
picked to fiJW'C in the PCL race, berth. With Capistrano fa vored to
especially considering their 0-4-1 ~t San Clemente and Mission
prexason mark. favored to beat Dana Hills, Irvine and
"It wo.14--be a ~t win-for uiu&.,_,•_• _...E.._I ...... Toin,.becoll1CS-.thc..pmc for the
Olney said. "I don t think too many third-place spot. The loser of the ~pie had figured us to finish over contest will probably get strong
firui. We've played some tough teams consideration for a wild card benh,
and J think we ve played them well, especially the Chargers, considering
but we didn't win a lot of games." that they re back.Jo-back Division Ill
Baldwin says that turnovers will be' champs.
the key to the pme and Olney tends "Our two league losses have been
to qree. by a total of seven point~." "!.cnigan
"If either team turns the ball over a said. "El Toro. however, 1s de1ending
.lot. it will be the difference," Baldwin champ and they'll be ready to play.
said. "I think we can run on them, but They've been here before and I'm
it won't work if we fumble. "they have surt they'll be at the top of their
an excellent kicker (Jason ~rabbe) game."
and be can score if they get th~ ball · It's at Mission Viejo Fnday.
inside the 3S ...
"We .need to {>lay error-free foot-ball." Olney satd. "We're a very
youna team but we're starting to play
well lotetber-We need to get some thi'-9 bouncin& our way." Its at Lquna Beach Thursday.
Wa.rrlol'll n. lfutmJI•
Besides Mike Rush aJ Mission
Viejo, Rick Gibson is the only coach
in Orange Count}' who's undefeated
in bis can:er. Granted, Gibson's
streak is only nine games long. since
takina over for Gene Noji, but those
nine wins have added up to at worst a
share of the Pacific Coast title.
The next goal for the Warriors is
their fint undefeated regular season
in history and Trabuco Hills is the
only team standing in the way.
"The kids have been fired up all pr for this game," Gibson said. "We
figured it would probably be a
sliowdown between us and Trabuco
Hills al the beginnin8-'. We know we
win the title outri&ht 1f we beat them
and if we lose we'lf still be co-champs.
but we won't be happy with 9-l."
Despite being the third-ranked
team in Oraoae County, Gibson said
bc'sstill beiftg piqued by some minor
ltloaarcb• n. Frlan
The Monarchs tind themselves an
nearly the.same position this year as
they had last year. Last ~r. Mater
Oct needed a win in the nan th game of
rhe season to become the Angelus
League champion for the first ume
since 1979.
This year they n~ a win in the
I 0th game of the season to reach the
same goal.
To make matters worse. a loss to
Servite this week could mean the
Monarchs won't even make the
playoffs even though rhey'd be tie for
second in the league.
Consider this: If Mater Dci beats
Servite, the worst that can happen is
they'll be co-champs of the Angelus
Lcag_ue. But. if they lose the
possibilities seem endless.
We know that if we win. we'll be
champions of the league," Gallo said.
"We'd rather win and not consider
the possibilities."
But before anything can be hashed
out, the Monarchs must face Servile
and Derck Brown. the Friars' stand·
out running back.
It's at the Santa Ana Bowl Thurs-
day. problems with his offense.
"We need to develop a killer---------------
attitude." Gibson said. ··we need to
be able to put away a team at a certain
point and so far this season. we
haven't been able to do that. You can
work on mental mistakes in practice tbrou,ah drills and repetition. but at
this ttme oflhe year, we shouldn't be
doina that. We really need to realize
just how aood we are."
rrabucO tt1lls as known for a fine
eessing attack and that's where
Gibson said the game will be won or
lost.
"We need to stop their quarterback
David Lowery b~lutting pressure on him1" Gibson sa1 "We also need to
worx on his fine receiver Tim
Mannina." It's at Irvine High Thursday.
Vaqaero9 n. C_,.en
Irvine Co-coach Terry Henipn
says lhat perity has reached Orantc COunty foott.11 this ~ and case tn
point is his own South Coast leque.
NOY9 mJA ..U 730 •. c .... Al'flCllTBI
-... t00&9l0 __ ... twm
i.m ...
The South Coast bas the top.
ranked team in Orange County
Mission Viejo, on top with a W
kllpcnwtand 9-0overall, while the
bottom has San Oemente at 1-7 and
()..4. But in between, Irvine,
Cal)lstrano Valley, El Toro and Dina
Hilll are all knotted at 2-2 and except for Dana. all have at least five wins VIM
TllllG lW.1'111 1aat30
ov.~~ms that each week we have a ~:'-tlfl ~. :=...! t9'1P .. me." Henipn says. ••There TICllMI ~ .. tl'tll llOll ~
doeln't teem to be one don\1nant .. _.,_ ~
team this fC!r, but all the teams play ~~~ °'~ ~
very well. Riaht now we need to l~~~~~~~~~~~~LJ
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Portt9nd 2 0 1.000
&.Men 2 1 M7
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~ 1 2 .333
Ptloenlx 0 2 .000
s.erarnento 0 2 000
Midwest DMiJeft
Detle1 t 1 .667
Denver 1 1 .soo
S.n AntOtllo I 1 • SCIO
Houston I 2 .JJJ
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Miami 0 2 .000
Eestem c...., .. ic•
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Pr.lledele>tlla 2 I .6'17
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Washington O 2 .000 1 'h
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TWMa'l's Scetft
Utllen 114, Golden State 102 CharlOlle 117, Cllll9Wi lOS
New Janev 1°', Wuninelon 101 Oelrolt 11'. Pflfladelolll• 109 Atlante 112, lndlen. 107 New York 126, Cl'tlc•llO 117 Houston 120, Sen "ntonlo 102 Dallas 92, Mleml 18 Seallle 97, Secramento 7S T.-rs Garnet [)envtf' et ul111n. 7:30 P.m ~ at Cleveland, •:JO Pm crwc.oo •• Boston. uo pm
New Y()(tl el WasfllnQton, 4.30 Pm Atlent• et Detroit, •:JO Pm ~ et Mllwaullff, S-30 om
Mleml et S.11 Antonio. S:JO o m Secemenlo et Uteh, 6.lO om
Oellls al '"'-"''•· 6:30 Pm ~ Stele et Suttle. 1 om
T1wfMly'S ~ Utel't at Houston, S.Jt om Ponlend el Oenver. 6:JO P m
ulrers 114, Warrlon 102 LAKalU (114) -GrMn 3·S t·2 1, Worthy
I · 13 S·6 11, Abdul· J1t10tr 3·1 0-0 6. JOMM>ll 10-16 1·2 22, Scott 9· IS 4·4 23. TllOmPson 3·S
1·4 I, WOOlrlclee 6· 14 6·6 II, c-2·9 3·4
1, CampDea H 0-0 2. Lamp 0-1 0-0 0,
McNetnlrt 0-l 0-0 0 TotalS 45-18 23·2' 114
GOl.DaN STATE llf2> -Muftln 10-19 6·6 26, L Smith 3·6 0-0 6, Semos.on •·9 6·7 14,
Gerland .-is 1-> 14. llldv'noncl •· 16 2-2 n. o Smltll S-12 l ·l 12. &It 2·~ 0-0 '-H~s H 1-2 1, T ..... 3·11 Ir~ 6. ~.D-U 1·1 1 Tot.is M>-tt 21·24 102.
Sc-. w °""""' Lel<ers 29 21 J1 25-114
Golden State 23 32 23 2-102 ThrM·P'Olnl -IS-Scott, ltlCllmOnd F"OUieCS out-None. RtOC>uncls-t.all..-s Sol (Green, JOfln· son. TllOmPIOn 71, Golden Stalt SS (BOI 9) Aulsh-L•ktf's 2t (JoMson 11), GOIOen Stett 16 (Mullin S, Garland SI. Total tools-Laltefl 19,
Golden Slate 21 TedlnlcelS-l.OS Anoete' Coecil
ltlltv, Golden Siii• ltleveJ defense All~15,025.
H91"Mts 117 I ao..en lOS CL....r•s (105) -No"n•n 6·1S 3·7 IS, Smlll't 6· 10 1·4 ll, hniemln 7· 12 J·S 17. Nlaon 4-t 4·6 12, Wlllleml 6·1S 2·2 IS. Grent 1·2 0-0 2, Oellev I· ll 2·S 11, Gondreilctt 2·1 •·6 I wott H 1·2 3, 1rne 0-1 2·2 2 Totet' •1-1s
22·Jt IOS. CHARLOTTE (117) -TrlPUCl<e 1-16 10·11 24, ltem«>ls 7·9 3·7 17, Hol>Pen 2·3 2·2 •·Hotton
2·1 2·2 6, Reid 6·17 •·S 16, Cllaoman t·20 0·0 "· BOQUft S-1 4·6 14. ltowsom 1·) l·• s. Ktm11ton 3·3 3·S 9, CUteton 1·3 o-o 2 Totets
43-fO 31-42 117
~ ""0v9,., c"~ 2• 2' 2• 76-105 CWIOtte 27 JO l3 27-117 TllrH·Poln1 11oet-Wllllams F"ouleo OU~ Reoounctt-<l~s S7 (Norman IS), Cl'lerlOtt• 6' (ltamcls 141 "ul111-<llooen 21 (Hlaon, O.llev 4), CharlOtte 11 (HOiton •> Totel loul$-Cllocien :M. Charlotte l l
All~ll,MS.
COLLEGE MEN
A....,. In Aden 1l3, UCI U1 <• nm 1
A ...... 111~
Smllll
EdMr
Hln1 Romar .,_
WelM>n Fotler McK1111le ""'-''"'
.. ft ....
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3 1 1 7 12 1 2 2S
t ' 3 24 10 2 2 22 • 4 4 12
1 0 4 4
) 0 1 4
UCI .. ...... LAOat 10 l 0 ,.
HerdtNn 7 0 4 I• Butler l 0 l 6
Pltlm..-10 1 • 2• Flovd 9 7 l 26
P'loetl 2 0 I 6 Doktorc1y1< 1 o l 2
Wiiii.to 1 2 o 4 MCOoSllev 7 2 4 16 "'-v 0000 ltooen 3 o 2 1 Tolets ~ IS 2• Ill
NHL
~c:.-~ 5mvtM OMsien w L T "" G, GA
C.!Nrv 9 3 3 21
K•1 9 6 0 11
EdmOnton • s 2 11
v~v•r 1 7 2 16
Wlnrtlpeg s s 3
Nom1 DMsien
13
Toronto • 6 1 17
SI. Loul' 6 s 2 u Dif10if-5" s 4 1'
Chlcaoo ' 10 2 10
MlnMsola 7 9 2 6
Wales Centennc•
Petrktl OMslon
NY Renoers • s 1
Prilladele>nla • 7 0 Pll15bul'9'1 • 1 0
N•w Jersev 6 6 2
'NY Islander~ 6 1 ' wa1hlngton 4 • 2
Adami DIVlllon
Bo, Ion 9 3 3
Montreal 1 7 7
Buffalo 6 10 0
Hartford 6 • 0
Quebec 6 10 0
T-8'1's Seer•' Edmonton 1. Pllllbur1111 3
Wlnnlpeo I, Quebec 4
17
16
16
" 13 10
21
16
12
12
12
NY l.i.nder' 4, NY Ran9an J TMllllt's~
C.19erY et Bulfeto, 4'.lS P m
72 42
77 69
64 62
S3 4S
S2 56
S6 so .. S2
50 51
64 76
36 SS
60 4S
62 57
73 72
49 S6
43 SJ 49 S4
61 40
60 S6
S6 74
S4 S6
S6 ,.
~ et New York R•lll>e" •JS om Edmonton at H-Wsav. • d Pm MonlrHI et Cl\keoo, 5.3S Pm Detroit .. MllV':tSOt•. S:3S D m Heriford al ~ver, 7.lS Pm
VOLLllYBALL
H._ KM11 tlrts
CIF S·A l"LAYM,S
TUIMl'l'l WIN Cerd S<WH Dana Hilts de!. Tret>uco Hla\, IS·6. IS· 10 IS·9 Dos Puet>!Os oef. St. JOMOll, I S·I, 1 S·I . I S·I
''"' ·---Tlwndav, 7:JO PJn. T~t1n et lnttN I 14·01 Hueneme C 11·31 at Bllhoc> Montgomerv (12-11
Redc>ndo (17 ·2) at LatiUM ... di Dert• Hiits C9·7l •I c.-.. Mer Cl1·ll Dos PueOlo\ I 13·4) et Mira Coste-C 19·0)
Matw Del ll·Sl at W11 • !'1d9e I 11·21 Ce&>t\treno Vat .. v Cll·SI el fMw-1 He~
(11·4) Soulh Torrence 19·11 •' Sent• BerDere 116-0> CIF 4-A ~LAYOF.'5
'"' ._,,.. T9lllttlt, 7:ll -.m. LOI Alemllos ( 11·6) •• G•l'tr ( 14·0) Royel (12·0 at Arc..dla 112·01 MertM (7·7l e1 Torrance IU-Ol LB Joroan (12·•> at Mer!Oofowl't c tJ· 11 BU1r0U9hl ( 1~·4) ., H•WbufY Per-. ( >S· ll
Glendale (1-7) et Loulsvllle 11·1)
Schurr !1·11 al Loera ( 10·6) Peremount (I· 7l et l!llMn llJ.21 Simi llelteY (9· 1) et Sen Gel>rlef l 16·0> Beverly Hin, Cl3·SI et LB Wiison ( 11·31 Pasadena ( 12·3) •• Sent• Monie• fl1·4l Notre Deme. SO 11·11 et Marvmovrtt l 12·31 LB f>oly (7·7) et E~enH 117· II Ctf'rltos ( 12·4) at ,euft111lft Vlllln ( 11· 14) Notre Deme Acedlmv (1·41 et Chemonade
Cl l·S) Alhambra 110-6) ., Tllouonct O.k\ c IS· II
SOCCER cemmunnv , .... women
SOUTH C.OAST c:oft'altl'.NCE OrMet C..d 1. ~ West I Orenee Coest scorlno Oulton I Goelle saves Cer tt1er11 l. Golden West ooe~ saves East 6 Helftlmr. 0-0.
DMp ... ttsNM
NEWl"OaT U.C*llG -2 boa"· 16
aftCller' 6S sand t>en. • cellco t>eu, 1 half· moon. 4 roca ""'· I• sculc>ln, 4 "--•d. 1 Cll>elon DAV.Y'S lOCKElt I"-"" a.di) -4
boltts, '2 •neters. 16 Oonlto, 11 rock fllh, 11•
calico oan, 25 Mnd 11111. 10 ,,,_kertl, 2St blue
percl\, 1 scutoln, 26 "-OSllMd, 1 •11111 SM bess, 2 wtlltafl\h
-1
OdllS N,L S--Y •s.n FreJIC.lsco 6~ OV« lt9*n •Remt JVI ovec New Orleenl
Pn41e011Pt'tla JY't over •P<tttbur9'1
·New York Jto 2 over Ht• fnolend •oetrolt 3 o•« Temoa 8•v •wes11111o1on 4 O'Ver Chieffo cm<1noall ' 0111r •KentH Cltv 1ncll1nePOlll 4 over •Green Bev 'Atlante •lh over S..n Dla90 'Prioenl• 1 over N-York Glents cievtle"Ct t -~OtfWv --'Selll.. 1 "2 OVtf' Ho\llfOft Ml,_so•• ) OVtf' 'D ... , ~· BuHato Vl 'Mleml, even
COLL.GI'. TOft 10
I Notre O.me '' Idle
2 USG 11 ovtr • Arl1one Sl•t•
3 Mleml. Fie. Is Idle 4 WHI Virginia II over 'Rull)ers S. 'Florkle Statt 3"4 over Virginie Tech
6. 'UCLA 20 ovtr $tenford 7. 'Nebr•ill• lt ov•r ColOr•do I. Oklal'toma h over 'Miu-I 9. 'Auburn I over Gtorvl• 10 Wvomlng 1 over 'Hou,ton
II. 'ArllenMI Wt over TeaH A&M 12 LSU 16 ovtr •MJsslulppl State
13 "MldliQan 16111 over lltlnols 14 •()kfel'toma State 40'1'» over Kanses 1 S. Svr awse I Ovtf' '8o\ton Colle9e 16. CltMson 11 over "Mer'flend 17 Georgia I under •Auburn 11 'Ale«>eme 16 over Soutll•estern Louisl· ena 19 Cotored<I It unoer •Ne«>rask•
20. •welhlnoton St11• I ~ Or-.on S•••• •-o.no1e1 roome team ''*"' Herrel't's •-ltec• & s.erts ....,
TENNIS women's teumament (el Ctllcffe)
''"' Reul'ld S.....
. ,
Helene S\ikOVI CC1ec:l\O,love1tle) ~. Carrie Cunn1nQl\am (US.), 6·2, 6· I, Netelte Zvtf'eve (Soviet Union> def. Angelle• GaveldOn (U.S.). 6-1, 6·0, l ine Garrison (U.S.I def. Helle Cloffi (U.S.), 6·3, 6·3, Lori McNeil (U.S) def. Cleuclle Kol'tde·Kllscl't cwe1t Gtf'manvl. 6·4, 6·1; tCethy ltlnaldl (U.S) def. °'91 Fernande1 (Puerto Rico), 6·2, 6·3
Hklll school glt1s SEA Vl«W LEAGUE TOURNEY (et Mna Verde Ceut*Y OUbl
~~ Ke Pnellvs ICdMl def. O.C:arlo IEslenclel. 6·0. 6·0, Aci.tne (CdM) def S.lrd (HHl 6·7. 6·2. 6·2 Fvll>ee (U) def. McCMnlocl< CCdMl. 6·2, 6·2 BlrCfl IEI def McF1rlend ICdMI, 7·S.
HI ~~ Ke Phebus oaf Ademt, .-1. 6·0. FYIPH clef Birch. 6·3, 7·S
Oll•'*111Ml ~ Kr Phet>us·Beln CCdMI def. MallChftter· Francis tCdM), 6·2. 6·3, Colllns·Romm (El clef Bene<llcl·Bunneit (NH). 6·3, 6·2. Straun· McFerlend ICdM) def. Smltl't·CrerY CNH I. Deutsch·Su1uto.I (El def Hovff·Rl\tau CCdMl. 6·4. 7·6 SernHINll Oeubles Kr Pnet1v\·Be1n def C~tn\·Romm 6·2. 6-1 Straun·McF"artend def Oeutscl't·Su1ulti, 7-S.
6-2
All-Pacific
Coast League
1108T VALUABLE
8te.e Kaut, Coeta 11 .... Sr.
P'Dt8T T&All
Scott TaJlor, Coeta 11-. 8r.
Corey Delalaant. Coeta ...... ao. JetfMoa~omery, i..a. 8cll, 8r.
Erle W..U. ~ 9eacla.. 8r.
Joel Stewart.~. Jr .
Jared JolauoD, WOodbrtd,ie, Se.
8W LlDU, Trabaco Hilla, So. Roa 8attJe, Woodbrld.fe, Sr.
UCOND T&.ot Bret Dieball, Coeta 11 .... Jr. Dane1 &aallt, Co.ta lleM, Jr. Pat~. a...oaa-a..caa. ar. ~-~Mela. TrU. lllll8. 8r. Nlod l'tftld'f, ,......._ llllle, eo. ee..e Caldwell. a.., .... ar. W~ Llfelllt:a. W~e. 8r.
Qda ... ,....... Oraaee· ...
BUILDING WINNERS IN LIFE •••
Prom81
three yearsand 1Jli1dn••t Goldm Wm CollcJC for three.
.. lie n:ally relates well. rr I had to 1um at up, he's a
players' coach. He'i. very thouatuful and considente of
the people he coachej. Ptayers rffl that since~ c~ncem as a person."
Workman bypassed other occupational des11U once
because of his love for a job which is fun and later for
situauonal reasons, but to this day has .. never ~t up in
the morning and said. 'Rats. why am J doina this. There's thin~ about it, thiugs that happen durin& the day that I
don t like, but it's never a drudaery."
Af\er attending East LA Coll* and playina football1 Workman went to Whinier Colleae. where he playco
football and studied accountinl!
"By the'timc I got my AA from Ean LA I figured I
miaht be able to eek out a livina and st11{ have fll~
Halfway ttrrougtr1mcount~ ~aliz puSti1na·a pencil
in an air conditioned office was not for me. rd have been
more happy in a lifeguard towereamina minimum wage •
I assessed myself and it didn't seem like my goal."
After college, Workman had coaching stints at Cal
Hip. Whinier College and East LA before assistina at
Edison and assuming the head post in 1973. While
teaching at East LA Junior Hi&h and coach ins at Whittier,
he pondered "re-tooling" an<fattending medical school to
become an orthopedic surgeon.
An onhopcdic surgeon, the father of one of
Workman's ,students he taught in class, offered to loan-
him the money for mcd'school. ·
"But by that time I had two kids and probably would
have had to go to Mexico to do it," Workman said.
Despite the frustrations of being turned down for
several coaching jobs at LA community colleges for
reverse-discrimination, he stuck with coaching and
eventually assisted at East LA before going to Edison.
His involvement in doing more than winning
football games came through in 1ns1ances like his drua-
tcstmg pr0jl'8m at Edison. innovative at the level but as of
ye t unattamablc at OCC.
.. A lot of people strike one note and play another
one," Waters said. "Through Bill's family life 111d bis
commitment to the drug program throughout the years-
he~'s a auy who's been invated to the White Ho°' on the
issue -he'a liken a auand whtte sc,>me peo~ t~ ~.,
beck on a social issue. He doeln 't mind speak.ins h1.1 muld
to the people around him:· • •
Workman arew up and attended hi&h tdlool 1n Be.II, whe~ it ··was easy to slip. Youlutt had" to know ho_ to
operate. I was involved in some fiaht.s. l ~verJOt throwo
in1•1l. It wasalways in the beck of my mind. I knew when
to ae•out of there." . Athletics and his father combined lO ket{> him OUl o(
trouble his father providina the main incenuve. "H'e had a couple ohules. 'lfyou sea thn>wa in jail
call home. Your mother will be worried.' An,d the ~Dd
was 'Have a nice day. When I act off work , 111aee1fl can
come down and t' you·out.' He ma~c me pay for fo~ t~o
wfcckcd cau an 111 1hcm_1cicelher aoto one, and~~· 1f
you'reeverdrink.ing in that caroraet in trouble, J wtl sell
the car and take the money.'.. . He learned, he arew a.nd he's got I few Slmplc
requirements for his players now. "My requirements are they ao to class, come to
practice be a aood citi~eo and college studenL If they do
those tb'ina.s. ihey'll be a success. They won't all-b;e AJl-
Amcrican on the football field, but they Will be
successful. I want my players to tnd up with a aood job
and nice family." .
But for football players, there are f oothall desuu .. "W~n they leave. I want ~hc(Jl to, ~eel llke lheY. aot
fair shot to play, develop to their potet\t11I and continue their education. They find out at this level what level of
football ,hey'rc c:.1* out to play.
"Our job is~to ma.kc them the best they can be, and
also offer the guidance and education to take advantaare of
their futures-to know the coaches will bust their fannies
to get them what they want. either to continue to play or
get their education or both."
And develop a winning attitude, the ability to
overcome adversity. ·
"I have never taken losses easily," Workman said.
"You have to be able to acoept it, that some people arc
better than you sometimes. Hopefully overall. there's not
many."
LIFE AT GOLDEN WEST FULFILLING •••
From Bl
you accomplished when you wm?
"Sometimes. in some leagues. teams know they're
going to win. A team goes 8-2. goes to a bowl game. but
whiit have they accomplished. I think if we win this
league, we've definitely accomplished something."
His two major goals an: competitiveness and
preparing athletes for the next level.
Golden West has gone 129-87-9 in its history and
won two bowls. Twenty-three former Rustlers arc playing
at the four-year level currently, 12 in NCAA Division 1-A
programs. And he's sent IS to 17 the past two years. most
notably offensive linemen. "A lot of football players don't ~lize how
compctiti11e the next level is," Shackleford said. "If they
don't work hard here, they're not going to realized what \he next level as like."
One of the first was former Jets o ffensi ve lineman
Mark Lomas, a youth who began playing football by
warming the bench at Garden Grove High, then playing
offense and defensive line at Golden West in I 966and '6 7
respecti vcly.
") was just figuring out what it was all about," Lomas
said. "It was really my chanc.c to play. because I didn't
play that much as a senior. When I went to Northern
Anzona. the practices were a lot easier. things were a long
different.
"We did things I 00 percent all of the tame at Golden
West. E vcn when I went to the Jets, it was judged by what
Golden West did. We'd have 3'h-hour practices. We
didn't have two-a-days, we had threc·a-days," Lomas said
of the early years.
"We didn't have a lot of talent. He got the most out of
everything we had. Evcrythina we did. we maximized it.
It paid off."
Shackleford is regarded a strict disciplinariart He's
honest, fair, chaJlcng.ing and demands his R)aycrs' best on
the field and in the classroom.
Mike Shaughnessy, who played under Shackleford as
a wide receiver in 1970-71 and has coached the wide
receivers now for 10 years, reprds his decision to attend
Golden West instead of Ora~ Coast out of Costa Mesa
High one of his best because of Shackleford.
Shaughnessy. who said he was an "averaae .. student
(2. 7 GPA) coming out of high school, was imrrcssed
when he heard Shackleford had graduated No. in his
class at Arizona.
"It was like a switch had gone off in me, and I ended
up doing extremely well at Golden West," uid
Shauahnessy, who ended up with scholanhip offers from
StanfOrd and alma mater Cal after two years. "I could not
have done that had I been the same student I was in h.iah
school."
Shall&hncssy said the timina of reinforcement be
received lrom Shackleford as a player sometimes left him
scratching his head.
"He expects a lot -he did then and he still does,"
Shau&hncssy said ... Hc'sa perfectionist in many ways. He
is in fiis personal life."
Defensive coordinator Pua Picrct, who played the
firsrtwo years of Golden West and has coached there 14,
said, "He demands the most of himself. He leads by his
example. He stays in very good condition, works out
every morning at 6:30. That's amazing discipline during
fool ball season, to go in at 6:30 and he's there all day for
the kids. You can't ask for more than that."
Shackleford doesn't look at 23 years as havina chan~ him much.
• I've had players that have come back and told me
I've calmed down a lot, but I ~rsonally feel I'm not as
tolerant as I used to be," Shackleford said
~hackJetord said he's never adhered to the
philosophy that a ooac}\ and player are on different levels.
"That's one of the rut food thini$ as a job " he said.
"You develop loyalties and like the players. I'd never act
to the point where I'm aloof. J would like for my ~layers to
like me. Not th.at my ego l)eeds that, but I feel hke we've beCll more successful when that's there."
And Shackleford's had his share of successes.
Ml.IC M>TICl P\BJC NOTIC£ Ml.IC M>l1CE NlJC fl>llC( Ml.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICl • MUC•TICE lWUC M>TICl
'1CTTTIOUI .,..... I(... l.Mewood, CA 90715 locetlon.la:.THE.SHO&-OOC-Cllll Code S«:llon tMa wNct'I II the ~r------C-OM_IOl_UDAnD MPORT °' cNJ.;;;;;-;°';-----PACSFIC VIEW
•MOftl.AL PARK c.m.tery • Mortuery
Ctwlpel • Creme1ory
3500 Pectflc V-Or111e
Newport 8Mcrl 844-2700
HA~LAWN
lllT. OLIVIE
Mort~. <Amete<y Cremetory 1&25 Giiiet AYe
Colt• ....... 540-555•
N.-C:l MOTHE"I MLLMOADWAY MOt'lurary • Chapel 110 Broeoway
Coll• M..a 6'2·9150 ... ,.,.. ,., . .,.
2983 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa. CA
141-1111
llAm STA~ NOTICI TO Thet ttte-prop1111y PWU· TOR. 810t. dey IMitofe the coneumm•· THI .._ M 09'ANCll COUNTY
TN folowtno per90n1 -~Otte M ner1t hereto le deectlbed In That Aki bulk treneter le The name and ltdd,.... of tlon dat9 ~ .WV.. Conaolldated ~ of Condition of "The 8Mtc of Orange County" of
doing bulll'9le u : MAJ(~ generel a : leMetlOtcl Im-Intended to be coneum-the pereon wltl't whom o.Md: ~ 28. 1M8 "'-·-t-'-y.aa-. 0r.-and Oomettki None-&lbeldlar ... at the ctoee Of D E V E l 0 P E R S (a.o... lt01'4107 pr-t. llllture, equip-mated 11 the omc. ol: clalm1 m1y be tiled 11 HSUNO ... IUH, -rvuu -· _..,, _,,..., FINANCIAL NETWORK. U.C.C.) ment, lumltute.goodWlll and LUCKY ESCROW CO. INC .. LUCKY ESCROW CO. INC .. 1UM 1UM. ........ T..-bualMM on Sept*1\ber 30.1
1::· ... No. 127I
22984 El Toro Ad . El Toro, Nota 19 llet90y given 10 ,,..,. and la located et: 440 0AR0£N OROVE. Celltomla -..2 Oatden Orow 81 ...... Celltornle e2130 creditor• of the within E. 17th Strwt. eo.ta Meaa, 92-... on or after HovMlber 81Jtt• 207, Gwderl Grow, PvtlhMd Orange CoMt Dol9I' A•••la Mld\MI P Flynn, 15e6 nemed lrwtaf~I) tt\el • CA 92827. 29. tNa. CA 92$44 end the 1Ut Oey OeHy Piiot November e, ,) AINTS In 1'tt811•Pndil Certbt>e•n way. Leoun• ~ ~ I• •bOut to be The 8ullneel name uMd Thl9 bulk 11aneter 1e aul> tot Ming dalme b'f _,.., ~d-tHA Caal\ and due from't>Mkt.................................................................... 4.278
BMch, CA t2t5t med9 on pertonal property by Mkl trenlferors at MIO Ject to Cellf0tnla Unlfonn tor ehell be NoWmber 29, W'l27 lnwttment MCUrlt9'(Martlet V81w 13,359) ......................................... 3,167
Thie buelneee I• con· '*91naft• Oeec:flbed r-=::::-:::-::::=:::=---ir"--::-:'.":"":'.:-:-:~~-~f--~::-::==-:-:=~-...J-~=~~==-~ ....... A ducMd Dv: en lndMduel Tiie n*MI end 11u11,,... rtatc NOTICE Pt8JC fl>TICE rtate NOTICE -..C ~"*t eecurr--..................................................................... -v-~~ ... flled ::r.=.:.'3J'~O'm HPORTOFCONDfTION ~==:'°~-::'~rltieii·~·undef'............................ -0-
wtth Iha County a.ti Oii Ot· LEE. 895 Darrell SlrMI, ftOrMrl*ltl to, ..... In dornettlc omo. ......................................... 7, 100
=County on Oct~ ~ =~~:~:,r,or 11 Consolidating domestic and foreign aubtldlarlM federal funds purchued........................... -0-Loent, Total (exctudf !.'!,~1~ !~) ...................... 18,22883 • n of the MARINE NATIONAL BANK of Santa Ana. In Securltlet aold ur tr agreementt L .. : Alowanot Ot' __..,.. ... n ...-......................... 1 ~~ ~= ,r:, : ~: :,e:,u,,:: = the •late Of CALIFORNIA, •t the CIOM of bu.ineu to repurch..... .................................... .(). ~~k·~ ... F ... F .... , ... E ............. ( .. ,::.::.;.:::;,··· .. ···;."·;::.·~·t·., ................. ) ................... t1.o,!57 ~-2. t . tNI W212 of the lnt..o.c:t trensferor rs· on Sep1ember 30, 1988 publllhed In reeponM to Demand not .. leeued to the _., ~-·-• · · · c. '"""" ng rv--... .................. " PWlJC M>llCE ..,,,. .. •bov9 call mad9 by Comptrolt« of the ~r.ncy. undet U.S. Trtwy.......................................... .(). RMI= o:*' ot~ bank ~and................................... 7&4 All other bullneu na.,.,,. title 12, United Stat" COO.. S.Ctlon 111. Chart« Oth« l>Ortowed money............................ 302 In~~-"""" eu _A_ ii6fiCi OI end ad<Sr.._ uMO by the NumtHw 17052 Comptroller Of the Curr.ncy Mort.09. lndebtedneU and WMCWU ...,.,._,-..................................................................... -v-AYM.A8UTY f# Intended lranefetor wltl'tln Southwestern Dtttrlct. Obllga11ona under capltallUd Cuatomer't M1bMY to thll bank on 9C01Ptanoet outltandlng............ .().
MeaMi&. ~ thr .. Y'M'I l .. t Y'MfS IU1 ....._.. , .. n Other M=lla lndudlng l-0-lntanglblee)............................................... 21& .......... _ .... ~ fJlf tM PM't eo fw u k"'°"""' to tM ~ .................................................. ,,,,,. ~ TOT'"' I 33 -1 ~;;;;;, ·w. foun. Intended lren1ferM .,.. • •• ...,...of~ and l I '19ltee Bank'a llabflty on ecceptancea l"L ..................................................................................... .~
dM6ot'I 11 ~ tot in-none. eQOuted end outt1andtng...................... .(). O L ~POSITS IN OOMESTIC~ESI -·-llMCtlOn 11t 121 ~ The neme(1) and bu'"-AlalTI Not• and debent~ tubordlna1ed T TA ~ vrr"" .................... ,.,,.,...,
Ave. Mt>oe lelend. upon 9dct,_ °' the •n1ended to ~ta ..................................... -....... .o-TT~~ dtPOlltm•·= .............................................. '154·!0'2 WW:..,,-·t , ~-tt-'«ee(•l we HEUNG ,._,,_ __ ..... _, __ d·-~ ..... ,,... ..... -. .,.,_ •-a................................. ,v 1 ~ ,..,_, .., .... ,-80• 8HIK SUH & MEE SUN SUH. v.s1 • .., ..._.._ -"'"-..,,, .......................... ................. -8 ...., --from -.-it,,,., lnatltut•~· Total t'-... llt'--... 7"7 TOT AL DEPOllT8 IN F RE N OFFICE ......................................... .. o.ye';;t;'"'it. 'publleetiOn. t2t3t E. Lemming Street. _,..... -, ""'"· ,."" ,_ ............................................. '"• " TOTAL OIPOlfT8 IN OOME.STIC AND ~.S~1~1w242 °' ~11er you· .... io.t1r1ng,• N=~~=~ .. ~-~~~ ......... 1,3-41 Umlted--Hft prtt.rred •tock ......................... .o-~~"=~'iind'liiQ'.rttiei'·ietd·~ ............................. 21.121
. ~ ~~. :.':..:/-~~·~en1e1,,_:..•1t lnt...i•beering balenoee ........................ 8,147 pl~ .. ~~AL, ...... a·t-........................... ·" ~•ti to~ In dofwtlc ofttc. ............. .-.. .,............ ~ r...,. ,_.....,,._ • ..., ....,, ,_,, -9ecurttlte .............. , ........... ,. ....... ,............... 3,170 --·-,.., .,,.. ...., ......,_ _. -r -============' =======~·~=::=====a !~~_.!*S~·:~...................... t,800 Common ttoctc ..................... , ...................... 3,000 ~~ '°' == ~· 11oo _ .. __ ... _......... Surp!Ua ..... s;.:o;ns·.::.=.·.::~., ........................ 2.e12 ~ .. ~ n-1....r....:.1c~~·~;. ................. .. agr...,...,..ta to,..................................... .(). UndNlded •ou -· ~~ .,Y;;;':coount of ,. ..................... . STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? L.oent end ..... ftnandng recefvat>tes: ,....11'99..................................................... (975) ......._ ...__., _... __ _ Loer'9 end ...... net of Total --c:aipttal !S 001 u--.. ----,. ............................................................. . .().
70 ........ ......._.. 41 """'"' I ----d ... '., ...... _;,;;,;,;:;:;:;·,·0 .... , .. 2................... I Ottler ................. A ............................................................................ . uneet·--......... -............. .... .... ·-' ..._ ~---__ .. UA8ILITll8 LESS: AllowMce tot loen U.8.C. 1123(j). ............................................ NIA TOT~ ~)(uducllnQ IUbotdtneMd not.a _ -end ..... io-......................... 8" Total equity c:aiptt9 and to-. .................................... _ ......................................... """·
LESS: AJloctttd tr_,., deftrred purwt to 12 U.8.C. 11p(J) .... 15.001 lubcwdlrleeed ~and ~·lcun............................ -0-
rlak .....w............................... ~ Total ....,..... llmltecMtfe Pr••ed 9'00k t..oene end leeaea, net of unearMd prelferred atock, equity cepttal, No .._.. _ _._
tncomt. llOwMOI, Ind rtlerW~ .. -41.,.283 and loeMt dlNlred PUrWt to · ...... _ ..... ,.
All9ta hekl In tradlnO acoountt............... -0-12 U.8.C. '1813(J) ...................................... •.764 ~Moc* __ __... 000 Pr•t IHI end ft...t-. No • .._.. .nrtOflWU 2,
(lncadno OIPfU'll1 d ...... )................... t ,Ol 1 w.. the underelgned dlrectot9. __. to .,. No . .,..,.. outetandln8 1.112 Amount a. 111 ott.,... ..... OM'll9d -0-. oorrec;tl-°' .,...: ~ (IJf ~ llirtd .,,..._l••••••••••••••~•-.._. ... --•••••••••••••••1•••••t••tl•U•tttttftll•ttttto•1to 1.411 '"'-"*a In unoor.aidli'i'd·iiU~-Mlbllllte. W. dedere IMt It,_ .............. by TOf AL. COHTNIUTID CAPfTAL ........................................................ _ 4,111
Ind ..acl11ld OO!ftl*-. ................. m ~ ue, end to ... .,_ of ow lu1a t'lill• and..., :n~ • ::i:i!m?m ....................... ;:;::;a~··· .............................. m ..... ,1.443)
C>J1tamei1' ~to 1N1 be'* hm bw't JM"lll I ed In oo.1111,_• wt1t the !ft. -~ _ _....,•!•and°"* -•---.. ............ '"""""' .0. , onM~-~ ....... m ... -...... .o. *""6onlandlltrueand_.,.., TOTALIH -IQUITY ...................... ~ ........................ " .. _ 1.1•
11• glble--. .................................. ww .o. TOTAL LIAalT8 'AND IHAMHOlmM IOUITY ..... ~ ................... aa.ol7 09*' ......_" ......................................... ,_ 717 ~AHOIY.LITTIM OP~ ........................................................ ·.. m
Totll -.. ................................................. •.714 ..,.. --=· ""';, Wj.:::c::::.•1 1t'°'611 I' 11 • re CMl.-lnd ~A. VIDli ......... "_... ..... ~:.-~~.~~ .................... ". NIA ~""J~,,;.:111[;-..JI"" n-~ . ...,. Toe.I ..... Md 1oeMt d1f1t11ed....,..to
..... .... ...................... ~ ...... ,... ... 1u::;:• ..... --. ...... "' 1111 ...... • 1 .......... ...
12 U.8.C. 1UJ(J) ..................................... et,764 .... -"' .... "'°"II Ina ....... "' ...... .., ...... _ ............ --.... ...._ .. ,.., ............ Ill ............ I 11 «1f•Olllll 9'.._.,_.,__, CICl•tS .. ;,;itlitl·---..._,W,,,_ ...... A.-. ~
'q·•--Ofe.ltO.-~ .... No·•·• '·,.. -' • '•
CALL 842-5878 FROM NORTH ORANGE
FROM SOUTH ORANGE
540-1220
496-6800
.
You can now c811 the D•llJ Piiot Cl•••I~ O.pt. on SeturdaJ morning from 1:00.to 11:30 e.m. to pl.ce rour Sunder and MondaJ ecla.
BMaTA ...... ,,_.,. 117' ----~ tlllO MISC. llNYALS aa••••••••n -·-~ ..... ::=-T. ... c,,_. 172' , ... ~fl-1702 ..... ,..,. _.._ IOU .......... -"" ..... c..-11 .. ~· 1100 '-'-,..,, -·°"-..,,.
HOUlll/CONDOS i.. ..... HOO -'-21• -170e ~ lOOt ~ -CM OI C. ,,_.,. IS2J ,_ 21f0 _.._. 1711 _..._ 100t S.--0... _,
o-.t. 1002 CM OI ,._ ,,_.,. '"° --1771 ~·-JOU "'-----..... ~ , .. ~Jo--.,,, APAl'JMINTS .... , ....... m•
,_ ., . ..... ....-1007 ..... .._., ,. -w-,,,. CNWC.. JOI& GOA8SAUS c..i--..... 1011 n.o--. ,_
a.-. ttOJ 0..-'--77.0 0.-. JOll ion
,_ ..... ~ 2.0. ,.,., c;.-..1 •102 '-..,_ ... ::::r. --· o.-.i 7011 c..-IOllA u . . -. I.,, ..... -. )f/117 --274A l ..... YWI-..... ~ ••C» 10l2 ~ .... __ ,.,. • 11W -0.. ..... 1020 ---• A , •illiit..-Wit 101• "'-·· . IOI» •rnau c.-..,.,., ,.,, COIUllMIAL , __ .. '° c..-... _ •1:n . ~, ... 1016 .......i..-., '°" c..-,.,. p...._...,. __ SICIO <.--. .,. ....... 1011 ~ ...... I-HOU Ill/CONDOS 0.-'-" ,.,. •.I.SM.I/_., ......., ,.°' --.. ,. S..-ll--·~ -~-led "&T..-,.,, Cliioc4iJOHicio MOO ~ .. ,. ~-,,__ _, -IOI' ~ 1101 ,,.....__, ~ 4-17to , ...... ,,_ ''°' ''"° '-.... 10.• ..... _. 210. .-....-1..0 -=:ls.a. 2701 ~ m: .. ., MISC.· '--'°'° .......... 2101 !J'' ........ ,..,
"'-1 -v .. a...1--..--. ...
'-....... ion c....,..._ .... 2111 i.... ~,,_.,. 171' 0.-W UJO . ..__ •"• --11110
~-'°'" c-.. _ 21:n "--'2'il ~,_ ,,.. ~-U» ~-OUO c_.1 ... 1-. ••• ,,........,.. 1061 c--111• "--1~ 11'1 ~ ....... .,,,. -;c...,-0011 "'-' ..... 10tt --7120 '-...... )..SJ _..._.,, 1790 _,...... . . ., -a--1070 llT.,.. nn ..... -20SS ----.... AUTOMOTIVI --a.--1079 ~y..., JIM _.,.... ,.., .......... .._ MllO -...... ••to ._._ 1oeo ~-71'0 "'-'-, ... ... ,..._.. Mill --........ .. ,, ""!'"'-fOIO ___ .......,. , .. ..._.,... __ , .. , -~ ,.,. ... llCIAI.
.. _
MIU .. _s-..._,_ tOU -c..-IOM -· ,. .. --~ 1'1' -MIU -w-tOJO s.-'-·-'-...... 11 .. --,..., _,_ .. 1tOO -.01' ·--·---,_
'°'° '--JISO
__ ,...... , ... .._auos -"°' C-.&f_.. Ml1' / ,_ tO» '-....... nn -c--,_ --·· 1'C» '-' .OJI _,,.. ·--MISC. I .I. .......... ,,,, -l-, .. -Quo 7 ,_ ,.. 1.1 .. 0022 "'-!~ ~ _,.._ 2101 ,,_ ,_ --2911 _,.,._, ...... '°'' ...CTMY i----............. , ... _,, . ..__ 29U ...... -OOJO _......,.. ttcll ...._ -a--,., . _,_ 291• ~at....-•00 ~ ......... -... --..., ....... ~ ........ --c...,.._ . 217' ...._.,.o .. 2911 .007 -·-._
,.
CLASSIFIED INDEX
842-5878
M0-122o •Hoo
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Monday ........... Sat. 11:30 AM
Tueedey ........... Mon. 5:30 PM
Wtldneed.., ..... "row. 5:30 PM
Thuraday .......... Wed. 5:30 PM
Frlday ............. Thura. 5:30 PM
Saturdey ............. Fri. 5:30 PM
Sundey ............ Sat. 11:30 AM
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS
T~SeMce ~-Friday 1'00 AM-5-30 PM
Seturdey 1.00 AM-11 30 AM
Bull,_ Counter
Monday-Frldl!y
8:00 AM·5·00 PM
M2-5e78
.
CHECK YOUR AD THE FIRST DAY
TM Dally Piiot strlwe '°' eftkaucy end ecc:utacy
HOW9\'9r, ocx:aa6oMlty emn do occ:ur P-..
listen wher'I YOUI ad la read I>-* end ch-* your
ad dally. Report erron Immediately 10 &42-"5178.
The Delly Piiot ecciepta no U.bllty f°' any error In
an ad"9rt1Mfnent f« wNch It may be reeponatbte
elloept for tM coet of tM apace actually oocupied
by the error. Cf«tl1 C*" onty be allowed tor the ftnt
lnMrtlon
IMl litatt f• Wt c.t. JllM 1114 l!!J!!! IMcla 1Mt Cttt1 •na 2124 lut. IMcla 21M ~~hid 2111 lewrrt hula 2119 IMcla Zllt 111~11 Ptaianla .... ~c-..e E'L ,R-31otw'8FA.257 By Owner: Slngle•lamlty •2BR 2BA, fireplace, oRUkePXRk2S:28a.:Sclbs1vedOXRB• Ill .. 112 WtsTNWP18R,$895 . mtF.,jft!f;n:;;il.,..a:IOCl ..... r
18th Pl, 1279,000, Duaty 2Br. 2Ba. prlv.yd, W/O l'loOk-up, garage. lrplc. 2 car garage In· •GATED COMMUNllY* ·~ BALBOA 4Br. IP $1500 •NEWLY FURNISHED* 1J15~ 9dnn Gil IM 873-21110 Agt 1359,000. Exe. Loe., 275 M ... Or. Avail now. eludes gardener. Adults, m MUITll PENINSULA YEARLY 8AYFRONT Condo 2Br OCEANFRONT 1 BDRMS Ger. cetlte ::· • iiX( iEXoH; SEA PROPERTIES LTD gated commuolty In $950 NO PETS 722-8011 n-peta. $1350. ll40--0020 BEAUTIFUL 2BR 2BA •Cute 1BR 1BA upper $1850 AvWlable. GrMt location. =' :=·~27· et..___ Ir lot 3Br BAYVIEW TERRACE *2BR Du....,ll. quiet lrg Alk for Chuck w/golf courw VIEW. Alao duplex. garage, nlce in-I BALBOA CoY912Br. den.
1
Muet Mel etcr 1175-4P • ..,..,_,.._on g · 9PPt. only: WMkenclll "'"' • t8R avail. Frplc, wet bar. tenor, $675/mo trplc, ~. dOdl S2300 2'.Mae. F/R. lop qual In/ mf LS1lll nlQhtl 11~746. yard. front untt, gwage, $1275, 4BR, 2BA: fam rm, ler W/O hk . 2 car •Cute 2BR lBA IOwer BAVFRONT Condo 2Br Attractive bachelor out. Oceen w from dedc. Thia oozy 3BR 2BA home &4 f.211211 Wkdays° good atee. S7llO. 543-A near alt, lrplc, air. nr 405 m., :i xtra stor"pa, can-duplex. "'8l'e laundry No def\, dOdl lor 80• boet' w/aepar ate k ltchen, •N'eB"8
AQt.8M(213)594-t«7 ladoMtobothachoola& 9-netdSt &47-7540 trwy Reedy11/22 1 e .. alt' All m:· Incl perltlng.seoC>/mo VMrly $4750 $575/mo lndutl6a.Outlit
ahopplng. Hunywlthyour IAM•, fuaa ••MESA VERDE 5BR. 2 8:18a357:.:5u7~a C rcte Sony, no pets. 644--0509 VJW IEITILS LINDA ISLE 2 1t0ty SBr, nlamot!er lln-5580 W I ii
c:tledl & paintbNahl Thia .... 1571 matr autt•. 2400 sJf, . boet dodl 110,000 -SMALL 18t yrty II houMe 8-utltu;;' lencleemped one won't !Mt at only pool tP&, great nghbrhdl 3BR 2Ba hM encl patio .................... trom water $550 In-~ .__ dW'I /ll/(jta,
11115,000. Cell now... 180 ACRE ranch Itta, NW $1700/mo. S4~98 Nr Marina H
0
I. nice erM. 1M0 W&mftlW •a---a•-•H111• ck*'9 utll 1 peraot\. No Poott;r'Petto«dec*.
........... Arizona. $250/acnt, EZ Refrlt, w/d, d/w. $1150, EnJoy breathtaking views -•r-• --·--• gar. Avail now 1175-9229 Prtmetocatton ·
terma. Good wat8f table, IUTlml-Ul 111 S500 MC 1131-433511 & auneets from thla 3BR Immaculate bayfront lJOO ISLE 48R, 2'nBA, -Tt .... m · 1M ·-If ..... 111 beeut tr ... l vlewa. Hunt 1BA + dining rm & frplc;. 2 . . 2BA t>Muty w/featur• condo In NII aecurlty new C:WP9\, FRIDR. Lg •111r• ,YS,00() 1 Bedloom 1165
E""cpect •'-'-~. r!lir MA..V & ftth nMtby. 1175-llS49 car gar. MW paint & crpt. 3BR twnhM on all-de-aec. too numetoua to men-bldg. NewlY painted and patio, 4$' lot. 3 car gr, W/gar Y~l1 /mo 29drm 1"'8e ll06.
-"' us:~ ~ .. / laaab 1795 Ind gmdr No P9t• newty redone. wld. nr llon lmmed OCCC>Y pop. with new carpeting $2750 1173-n87 Ag1722· II E-q HllMllW f L91.. \t°'Vl -'i -vr iu· v .11 Adutta. Scotti S48-2301 ~~~CM& a:.~ll Ible. Children & pell OK 2Bdrmsand 2 Balht Ter-NWPT Cra.1 twnhm, •BR C..... Ml.. Mii COSTA MESA . I y. ~"'I ~ \. ~em •EASTSIOE Towntiomes $2650/mo. Doug Hert>st rlflc ec:tQI view Just 2~BA. 'I.ml to bdl Pool •• 11• C~~~=1; ::~C:!.'wentatobuy m itfi ~8~~·ir.'~~g~~~ F~~t=.'==~ ~3~AV°°; Us~;:.MRn rr...:;;r;~.~r,t" ea~:-~:::.~~=.~
BR OWf100jta cOurtyard. CM/NB hOITle Pref nur. NEAR SUI ~· 38R, $850. Open Sat/Sun 12·3 frplc:, w/d, luff ~:~ KU'~~. 11,_... ~ti I 1175mo. 3311 s..vt.w · _., petlo, flrepleCe
Every BR Nia a p<lvate Can t1ede ~pt Creal f g~i . w~~:~r, 2~~~: 2038 Fullerton. 968-8380 c::::;;:,t>;;&.f1se1e \t\\ 1 \.°'0 f t't.\ 11 *l&YW ""* iiiGI 1175-117321996-9122 M5 Nol*a 940-2._ ~~!~F~b~ condo M&-34 3 tam/din rm, lrpto, ·~ASTSIOE LG 3BR GREAT AREAllVACANTll REALTORS • 18R & den, ntBa 2·1ty ._, __ .a --28R 1BA. trpl, dedl. reMg, 19A, 19A, .... enc giar.
,....,..,._, tlo f ... tala 14509/f, 4 pooll. ape. 2 ~BA, 2·lty, gar, frplc:, NA MEADOWLARK Gotf 1900 1/1 townhome 3BR exec twMme Frplc. wet -.... aptlt gar. Nw beech. w/d !*up, doee 10 8o
tolet9iffil;i · Yall!t 1134 w.ine. tennll.1194-31148 :t~,1~~ ~~~~·,r: 380/ 1 3 /4BA. New 2'-'iBA. tam rm. '#91 bat I bar,w/d,2-cargar.gated 2BR 1L ;T1Y w/m For 1 or 2 peopte_ No =11~~fft0. ________ ,..,,. -lalMa bMM HM · · g c a r p e t s & 118Ulled ceillnOS. bltina. comm. pool & ~on bey Remodeled. 4 dra to bey '*' 11075 1173-1039 • or
GOVMT HOMESI 11.00 By CIWr* 3BR 2BA beeut •NEWPORT HEIGHTS• paint $14-00mo. No Peta lrplc;. formal dining rm Welk to BalbOe lslan9-Avl now $950 • MOuttl * 28R 1BA MS/mo t9A ~ ~.ctr-.
(U Aepelr) Forecloeuree, remodel IM!e new In/out. **•CHARMIN<i 28R + Lux. lg condo 3Br 2'1.Ba Tobin RMlty Ma.f371 $1750/mo. 720-7400 $2250/mo Agt M 0-1212 NO PETS * 173-4220 I * 18R 1BA M95/mo 9'0'le. 1g fence petlo. ~ °::::"'~1~~i = ~! =· 2?1\1:;.:."Ti~ .. to '-S,~·. trp1c;, "~~f.J;~ ~C:ng:i:.~r'= NE~~:sP B~u:' J:."~n= 2F~~ 2e,1,!!oce..~ry ~ ~..:. e~ :.' :O.~· 1111911
Cell (Refundable) ~lwla lllt towrill73-568e** 3BR 1BAhouse,lglenced vtew' ol boatdWalk. nul2Br/1'n8a, gar. 2-aty In· Laundry Rm, Gar, Lg fadlitlee,nopeta/garage. CUTE OCEAN VIEW 1BR E'SIOE 18ruptt .... 090'9
1-518-ilH-35411 EXT· 18t8Cks TO 8EXcif •Sunny Studio, f/p, $565 yd. gar, nu pnt & dra.pes. palnt/crpt•. W•BA, 2BR aide ldry, $850 ONL V Patio -Bale Comm pool v..ny 11100 117J..ee711 8'1ght. r.-ty decorated, TV Niue>, wall In dc..c,
H2t12 tor Nsttnga. S 2 a1 3Br or mo-mo. 3BR 1BA cfos&. Neer ac:hOOls. No pets. 11750/mo, 191, last •!fmo GOOD REFS need ap9tyl 759-9089 l1750mo M/f to lhat• 3BR ~BA large tundedc Avell now. ,..,_ req'd No P9t*-$575
..... PlMIT1 f:iderl ~Msed. nu ~~ip2..:::s-~~;•r. 110001mo•M2-2056 MC dep M7-8(µ1 M-~ AHAgt.9911-3l95 BRANO NEW BERBER duplex YHrly .$450 182SJmo•&40-75&4 WVlictotte MS-1111
We'I ~you the down In crpt, comm pool/tennla. 3BR 1BA, Old l'IOUte. new 984-69811 eves & wknda I *IUll llW .u1J CARPETING Spacious 2 w/prv BA Nr *">' Beth mn. -18A "'*"pool, cMle TV
'1CChg for a ahareof own-Ownr-S3'9K. For Appt. 4BR 49A ~th Bayfronl paint, h\ige yerd, edulla, OPEN HSE·REHTILSE 3BR 2BA. 2 ear get, lfplc: ste>ty 3Br 2Ba NC'WPOl1 or Kay 1173-70111 28R t•~BA, cloae to & gee pd. $515. No peta.
... Vou make the 548-0271. OPEN Fri-Sal. WITH DOCK Par1lally no peta. 43e Hamilton. SAT & SUN 1_. OIW. micro, w/d hlcups. Shoree $1400/mo yrty ll1'H Ptalanla t>Mch, $950/mo, 900 Alla raiq"d. 147 Rower
mthty pymta & we ahere 1_.:30. 332 Colton St. furnished $3000/mo. $i75mo 1st/last 1173-7353 72111 Havenrock trun comp. Vrty $1400 650-8145 s.. Lane 644-2811 -Celt t-K>W 4M5-11111 -
apprec. Vou receive 2 Sty 3BR 2'nBA bMutl-Avail now 722-7022 BRIGHTONSPRINGS 1BR BEACHWALK uec: tnhm Agl 1175.,.6061722-11520 •WNllT•TI Mrf 1BR-Den 2BA wlfab 28R 1BA. 1-cer ::= 100% tu beneflta. Mutt ' ' ' RENTALS AVAILABLE 3Br 2'h8e $1400 +MC m -.-' have clearl credit. Agt fulty rem~ed w /wht Short term & Winter Condo. S.C:lud4td WOOdt 2 13).545-9888 39R 2BA. freshly painted. 2BR, 2"'8A. Highly up-••w• Tl-view. lg deck. frplc, lam '-'cedyard\utlllt._ H7-ll002 0ya Ev Wltnda 8erbet crpt, panoramic 1850 to 11400 & atreems. Ground ftOOf I j Upgraded crpt & wtn<'ow graded ..... or lease 29R 18A, $950/mo yrty. rm. dbl gat $1900 213-11125/mo + ct.poelt. AWlll
-----·--· --view ol ooeen & harbor W lerfr t HOl'n9S Inc level. Wthr/Dryr atack lniat lH treatment. Frplc. MC aya 0e>t1on'11eoo 497-99111 0y M5-ll3IO E 1173-2430 92&-1~ 714/e7S-nM 11115 * 1131_.119 ~~rm&~~-t:uw•· ~~~~~-.,t~.~~ln~~~~~~~~~~;t~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ prv balc:onlee on both .. ora w/optte + carport~ UNIVERSITY pARI(_ 48t Greet loci Orndr Incl •
lfietaS315,000tlyOW\'18f Wlnt8f 2BR • Den. 2BA .,.., pool, 998. $750 • 29a, comm. pool, $1950/mo. 760-5064
MM531 w/laland cnerml Frplc. t dep. VELMA S49-2447 l $1295/mo. AO pets. •HAR80R view HOME garage~ $1 too mo NEWPORT PACIFlC 8 3B I eded OPEN DAILY 1-5 PM on Avl l l/7 873...c>ll2 Agt ' CLEAN 28r 1Be duplex, Daw &45-36113 4 r a, Ip, upgr . BALBOA PENINSULA · $725. Gar, aml yard, no
1
dbt gar . gardnr, comm
Cypreu & Bay Ava peta. 1854 ·•A" Meyer Elagant, 3BR. 2'1.BA. pool. pa"<. large yatd,
., I un ·-·--· 2117 Credit chec:tt. 549-34114 condo, end unit, gar. lam $2100/mo &47-15211 egt I
*NEW* ..., ..._.,, 2,L ... t.. ..... rm, taun, Woodbridge _,WwT ••tST*
« .,..,, "'.,." ~ v Cozy 18R houM frig & $1250 1157-8008 I *-' rrww -i°"8:e,,<7,~t-=::i iro~.'~~z~;~R.ti atove. Mature 'r;r•o~ Univ Pie. 3 BR, 2'A BA. 2 2~~~~~~~~-Mw ·
Frplc:,2cargarage,lowly amenltlee, double gar-r:;,d:~ts21 50 car gar. 1950 aq.n, pool.--------
associated
.. . ,._. •e I
'...-... 1. -tNe & c:.erp9t. 1131-1400. age. bay view. Muat Mel Jae. vb ct. nearby *lmW HAIL •W1
,,,--......,.,..-,----:-:-:--:=I From S3S5,000 1175-480e Bkr UITW DllPTllUL S 1350/mo 1 yr leaM Nov *NO CHARGE* Agt ':::':. "":~F~ WATERFRONT HOMES. cer.. Ml... 1112 28R 2"'BA twnt'llne. de-I 1 &44-7220 or 1s.-n111 Mar11 Ferguson &42-7706
• ..... ,, ......., INC., REAL TORS a a1gner kitchen IQ pvt yd, r • •111. •1 lelMd, etc. Security""""' Spac1oua 3BR, 2BA. 2 2cargar11450 543--0737 -~U ..,,.. • 3BR 2BA DUPLEX w/lrplc: 2 c=-pwklng, boet allp, Open Houae Sat/Sun deck• F'/P lg gar 11595 l!f'l I & patio-On Balboa Blvd ISff,000. &42-1339 or 12·5, 75e Tustin Ave, avaii now Lin da E'alde38R, 1BA,fenc:dyd. 39 2BA HOUSE. Blt-lna. Walking distance to ll'le
875-111911 Ownr/A.gt Newport Helahta. 2BR, 721-01111 Grubb & Elita Fr dr, w/d hkup, 8rdnr, trp~. t:S1~1~!'d; beech St 100/mo IM " 2~BA, model condition pet o k S 115 I mo gr r. I MC Jaclc 8 18-98'·2'8' "-· ... ... 102 towrihome. $235,000 Catt l&ITll mlt man e50-3ge2' betw 9•5pm utt11. No P9t• &42-01311
.,.._ Kathleen, Bin. &42.:s&a1 Sunny 3Br & fem rm 1Wt1yc:t1ueallov.townto Upper 'BR W·BA. 2 ~r 2 ILOCki to BEXoA or 1183-1500 2,-'Be frplc tlo 2~ E-Slde 3BR 2BA twnhle. tuudventageotaelee? gatege sman patio 1 'l DUPLEX. 28r 28e+ 2Br get Gated' :!nn, with Verd,gar,qutetatee.Xlnt ThebMlbuysfnmerdlan· I '4th St $1650/mo yrty ,"'!--_ .... oooty ~2111 . PROF~~~o~L._Et~A dee:· tan'n1a. pool & apa. ~~~~ E~~~9 dlM OCCUf d!!!y In daiMlfted Avl f\OW 213-597-A 104
.,_.,, • u•~ . 11700/mo Agt. 840-1212 orated penthoulie condo ,_LA_RG_E"""3"'Br,.._.,,2-=B-a_co_n_d~o--=--2-... Tll mlfT with 2 bdrma. den & Ian-FABULOUS New contem-car garage patio 11-
JASMINE CRK-a.t Buy taatlc ocean vlewa. porary. 28R 3BA condo, kitchen paint & carpet
LOWEST PRICE 2 aty 38r Vaulted c:.lltnga & large Panoramic vtewa ocean & S l100/~ * 546-1765
tam. rm 2'n8e guatcf gate patio In MCUrlty complex, harbor. $3500 I,----,-·--:-...,--=:= 1421.toO. 891-f702 Agt bike to beec:h. • ................... LuJC condo nr bCl'I. 2BR.
1131-1400 -a.a-••11• 2'.tBA, 2 aty. lrplc:, prv
131111.000 -•--• petlo, w/d hkup, db gar
-
w/opnr S 1095 52 1-6AOO y.H~~~~l..,H~~ Ill• -.. LUXURY 28r 2Ba condo
REAL ESTAlE UITIL •HULllT Obi gar, frptc, pool
JENNIFER ENCARNACAO $995/Mo lat & laat
REAf.. TORS HARBOR REAL TY +S300. &42-5290
l91flll.UIE
Big rooms. big lot. blQ sun deck and
big anxiety to lease this 4 BR. 3 BA
on big Udo Isle for $2700 mo. Now
vacant!
Let U1 Melt Y"
Sell Y.., Prifttt~I
Cal ........
Mt-5671
for information
& surprtsi ngly
low cost.
~ 1173-4<t00 MESA VERDE 49R 2BA on
Aa.-S.nce 111$-2111111 quiet atr .. t. Lg fenced
yard w/grdnr. No peta
llllM•• plHH. 11450/mo
HOM£wtth 2 Min)' 1157-2523 or 751-271111
petl09 and 2 cer garage. NEAR PLACENTIA
11300 per mo. 38R. 28A twnhm, gr1 for
111111 llALn c:p1 or ••ec. 110091mo ~ 213-256-5-479 11~ NEWPORT H!tGHTS .
JASMINE CREEK. 38r 28A. 1BA. petlo, avetl
2\.\8&. 2 1t0ty, C/A., 24 hf 11115, NOO/mo, no peta,
a e o . $ 2 4 0 0 I m O . 842-4011
IS0-1150/0 lft8f 7pm. l=.,..,..,,=-~:i::-~--=-"':" -..0-1474 SttAAP 38R Vacant I
AMdyt Pv1 yard & db4 •t-i.It• & •rv 2aR "" w11g .__, oeraoe 11300 mo Y'l'd. dbl oareoe. Fum Mlr"8 Ao' 1n-.e2eo 11700/mo, ~ & llte1=..,..,.,,=-'-:-:-:-~-:-::---=-:-28R 2BA w/h'ptc. V1ft of SHARP trt·iev.I condo,
NI .. & cloM to bch. E•t tide. 38R, 28A, alf.
11200/mo. 18drm '°' nice crptlpalnt, w/d
"Quiet ~eraon ." Nlupe.d/w,3cargar.no
1173-53&4 AOT do9a ,...,.
South of PCH. 290 18A l1SIO/mo 14t-7t78 1-<* 09'eg9, W/d l"loe*· 1 _ __........., ____ ,...-..,...,.....,...-
upa. flrpt. 11271 ----7 .... 1SU aoent F'am .11110 2•012•A
9oero1o1.-I 001•••'90f•Y T'MWft. i8A 1'AIA 2 atory. !rpto, 1100 aq.ft.+ wttlutt. 2-cat ,.. oef'Pl't, 0cnae. l.G gat.N11111 to a.c. Ptaza
dedl. ODelll 110. of~. -.,.: H1 .. 151
' .,. ,,,.. tn-.tl12 ' ~ Mt..f411
...... 1111 ••um,.,= ...... ...... .... " lllnl'*'..::.r!·~ •n.. ' 1---------.,,....,,.......-
ff 1ou•re loolllftf for• ........
c .. 111t1H Ml newa fOr JOU.
'
Daily Pilat
!•~JY\h ~8~~:°" ~ R cozy occent to JIN bed, sofo or ~ cor Crochet ~ E ttl1s eosy·to·
R moke ofgtion
""" using 4 colors of worsted
weight Oirec
l•OOS & color
schemas for afr:J:"a1, .C.Si64.
70751 Use
scraps IO make
colorful ~11ten
~lt'o(JI
store ono~
bosbt~con
hong ne•t to
• your rb;e Di·
redions, Irons·
fen
OUR FAMOUS
DIMESJ\~LINE
NAME
AODRUS
CITY
AMOUNT ENCLOSED
llNU
2
HAS RETURNEDI
Bi'Ck O) popu'"' o"m.tncl O m"S A·L•nf' w ill run F ••Clay Satur·
oay ~nt.I \uno.>, " t\ own c 11H•f,c .. von 'n :nt C '"'s1f1tO Act1
S•nct tn•s •S a sptoaJ oNtr we nave a Thursday noon Otitdh~
and iUll P'"PayMt,.,t tor .. ~ ads Tl"us 1s ~n to .. ~ pt1vatt' party
.Ovt rt1sers ror me•criand•St' not over s I SO Jpnct must t>t ftst~
1n adf .... o '°IC aoo•tv•at•ons w• t>t Ketptt'd AN M1s wt• run
Frt0<1y »iu•cu~ .t'ld Sunday Tttere fa S·llnf' m1n11num at 20C
P'' ••nf' So yrxH low cost D•mu·A·Une ad ls of'tt'J .•
DEADLINE •
PRICE '>
A c>'1<. ,....
fxti Ut"mtn
SI 'iO
SJ.00.
~r\ 1 '"' ,..,.......')"'
-r. "' • 1;:o~ ~ • ZOC Pt'' l1nf' :: P
m "9 n•o '"" 0,.1~ 1''1cr to ,,. .,.,,. o .pon 0 .. 10 .....
MAIL TO: Olm«'s l'I L•n«>
D '
4"11 )l PM
PHONE
STATE ZIP
DATE~ TO RUN
MZ-5678
,.
-orange Coat DAILY PILOT/ Wed~ay, November 9. 1988
! ._ ._ 1111 c.. me: llM ..... CM•• •••11 c1-11rW
--....... IMl-llUlll .. ~IAlfilbitiufl'Ux HiDliM. frpf..-0&99". tiM up1i&ira. Tennl1,
~ '""-...-. 91r, nu f I t 5 m o . pool, _,., IYMl._~ =ClfPt/llPl*a. w/d llCMOOZ/UCM1"4 91ted. No~ ..zllmo. !-_____ ..,......,
Of ... ~ HtMOOt Lt 181=. cwpon. pool, l.un, llW-G21 .,, ......... .
t80l2 1128A + din. 2 It. :1~.::0 +N'3= '= I"-llllli
end unit. att. 2JClll 99" ..,.. now 6-U-1401 m fiW .. 91 Tl• ' ... e...,,. eny tWOft .==1:t_:, 1rnme0.' Mtm .. wm iiN Ni631SAitu ,.::',;': ~ ~. (714) HM114 ,_a • ea.ca M9ea home. AmM gueec P*illnG Clrt3) 426-11511
0CEAH VU delwte 28R A9deoot'af.0 :&R 2BA .~~t-n pr~& Utlllti. & lg tlQn tna: l1•1rllll lllfllle 114 NU\, ffple, dee*, OW· 'BA wtlott-3rd. From mo. * lmmed J'C*• "42•9S47 ...... 811
22'8 E. Pectflc llPt B. St50 Hopetle31--1107 CM., ... nMr Newp Blvd -li~===~;;•11iiii~::::iiiiii llOO/mo. See 111. C.il · andW Be.yS1 Room for W1111UPfl•l•I iN6 wXNiib ---....... 1DO ...._ It ...... 759-1104/E&44-112210 ...... rent, Own.,..,,. Poot, FULLSERvtcE cutiom~~.2 .11112u ---••1 IB Colle ..... MODIOO • --F'uldmu••ted,..., ~~2~~~ .. '~ 2~~28A. ~--~ ~:r: ~ =~= ::·==~:.= ~~~n! c:.r-'~ .~g::1::SRHO amn11111 ~;,.,,-.:·~ _.,.,......,.._. .. ......, 1ee-.. r· .... ..,. -.. 5't8-5880197 111 I 1 · & "'-.. ·•1' ••--•111 .o.~ ,..;,,.7311 NOWI •AIP •M-• ~ 217· M7 &. P.7 ~ l>HIC, hOUMkMPtttg, Hew. 2. Cell kw 9'>Ptm. MESA vuoe. 2BR 18A. ~. 1it ~ &;2:•3~1. -._.....vi...-Utven"Y needed. ex~ .-.. .. 11•11 11fMt "*""' ,,..... lplf, -.
l3Ma79 upper. OUlet cul de uc:. ut 318 da~• or ·111.a1..111111n II tlonal~. ._,.,. · ~~=1•&:•*'·
28A 1BA. PoOI. no 1)9'9. ":~1::11~'f\.'b ~1917eYenlnga f8-17'wistCL1FF DAIVE lr1•11••tl .. Tert;IPt. tg~~ TN O.ily Piiot Me Imo GMATOUTOOORWOA~ ·~~ :re .... • ... .:::. :!:°~ + wu~ • • ...-Jieiilli Jfili Nwpt Bdl. Agt 541 -5032 HOn (cu WWW) &Cl "'*' O.L ·wtAVEA mediate open1n91 tor Cofttect "°" 13,:fMO · ~ °' )lllftDftlf .... r::::r'1 8111 Mi -800 aq. ft. of otnce ~ 11/5/11 IMm«• & IOYI TEMPOMlffS ...... Mt eelnP"~· W. ._.~tor IOO C! 9Md ,..._ _. eeilry
28R 2BA, ~.new 1111~_., .. Wk~~~vlli. at'6s~':e~tn 11won.oo.ao . .io. M7..o550 100%FREE :=:=,'~=;,_.:=:..,!-..=,..·==~~MAU..
cwpet & dr11p•, laundry 2:!~ ":;:.Wine:'~ 1147.00 wtc & up. 227-4 Call 842-0018 .... , If.... BU tton •• Cell P9oaY "'9 ......,~'°'°'* I d9V wellc. a..ta •· 21000 Crown VaU•t
facility. No pet•. lhoP-sees/mo • Nwpt IMYd, CM 848-7-445. FbORB 2 kMw 1 Q:at ........... ~842·4'11 tn u. ---COUf1ty ........... 17~ff00 ~..1 ~ *lo.
250-42200t 754-H198 S10CENTER ' tl I t l uw.t••llll & Mlg9r 11rtpe.'FrM tO AIR & rec eoent acat• ... wottiyourevllllebl9 --····· CA ., •• ,. AttenUon ******** TSLMGMT 542.1eoo au •• ••nu ~~':(~=11'.:;:.'::i goocu1orne1~1 ::'':.Ci:'~ lllLYPILIT ::t:.:=-=:~rwMnD.P"P M ........ ....,...
--NEWPORT ACROSS THE 200 alt eeperate ofc S800 Lori 7U.1180 330 W_, Bey St. or lltM true tie aro l eencinO of Hldlory MAT\JAE per9C1ft ~ flM'fm•UlftUI S.TREET. 28A lrplc, gat· PtlMkSf)ffnghA.._t1~er:, & $2000/mo. 873-7273 ASSEMBLERS E Co«aMeae. CA neect.d. VaHd dffl9r1 ,.,,.~No_., nee, "°'"'la.,,........,.
.. Ull • ._ age S825tmo. 1ee5 lrvlne .... ........ .....,... · fnl Ill\ ADS · ar n ~ ~. For m-.. tNln. PWi «Ml'*"-k 1_... t hOM• 1..-s #2. 7zo."422 Nov. 1S.25 .. $100 pet CORONA DEL MAR \M1U moMy aeeetnbllng Mu.I-, rnedtMe 11191...,..,.. fo6. ~In penon, W..-now tie..!,_ ...
·-· • night. Debra. 548-3981• •258/l private omoe w1tt1 • c:a1 Teddy ...,... M• •n~UL torWlng a lhOft tflilnlnO ....., t'htt & IMM. NI. deoOf. --......_nu . 111 MTllUI 1~si-window & lltytlaht. ARE FREE terl ... IUpplted. No NII-ceati eouncer. lltht typing •• ..-on. ~ M ,,,. 1o-• beNd ct" .-P• ~ Rant1nApaftmeritduflng28R wlgar. C1rP•ls. tat&h tt -•111 Only$550/mo.64~5 • Ing. Write: ,Jo ~E I flllng,P/T.Applylnper· ~ton....._ YG'I at: HAJN>RE881RWANTEO
themontheofNoYembef dr.-. bit-Ina. Fenced 1724 UITSm-.TAlllA C I Enterprl .... P.O. Box IOfl, NNport Landing 1:30 AM. 10:30 AM °' Tlredofblgleton?hyour MAT(JAE SAllSPEMON
orOeoember&recelwa ysdw/patlo.W1t•pald. O r I a: 2203, Klaalmm ... Fl RHt1urant, 503 E. 1:30PM.Dlllybegllw1l11g: owr\bOelln..,31tMton PARTTIME
gift certlflc:ete for a .,,. ca-~ 120 .~ 1-SPM THE WATER, BACK BAY ;~,;oo:ew o ~ar w r~ MJ-llll 32742·2203. Edgewti19r. t75-2373 MIOn. ,_,.... at-2115 tot ~:--'gift.,._ ~::Go'°' H~l;h:'9 1~LA~ 187 Vlc:torta H ... s720 E11Cblutt. Share 3Br paint. All utlla ~Also AUTOMOTIVE producll ·-· TUESDAY NOV. aTH . • ... , ,_ 11s-n
Vegaa or the HYATT W•t91de 28R Apt, P1tlo, l'lofM. {714) 721-0-400 other llz. .. avail. $170 & IT\Mufec:tuter ,,.. open-o.po.it ce.tt for growing 327 w. Coltlne ~v. Orange Earn taltra money duflng ••Hm••
LAKE TAHOE (Kida ere lndrytec:, 2 prtcng f:· 4BR on Balboa Penlnsule Up. Scotti s.48-2301 ~~~wt':=~ ln1ur1nco •g•ncy In (Cofner of lemon) the holtdaye. Immediate Newport ""'°"' i. Imo rr .. with parent11) Nft e.·· Move crpt. Potnt, $380/mo + utll. FOR LEASE C<me M ... F~UNC?, Sf'lllll older male mum 1 ~ In Laguna Hiiis. No ~p noc:. • openlnOa. PIT Of FIT. exp ,,....,. ~ for •
S750 mo. 73 l-84N SMiiing Pror. wtret1. Call 2400 1r otflcetretall. & T:c10 ~B ~~et pat90n _r G~ty,ing Inc. COnteet Lori, 7U.11IO 1410 8. Aceda St. Unit not nee. wll 1rllln. Af/flt'/ ~ ot1 ,,....,... 8'16-
Call our leaaing Centtw for W/elde: Twnh•• Apt. Aenee,675-7419 "°"" °" Herbor Blvd, t an • 1seo-e Superior ;...,. •W A&O,F\Merton In pereon, WHtcllrr ceeef\.f.,.._MtflCMd
delalll on hOw to qualify 28011 1/28A. 2 per.one ANAHEIM Roommate compet. r1te. 756-0S35 LOST DOG, teme1e Aus Coltl t.hH betwM~ ~-...-i.v. c.e: needed (b91ow OrWIQettw0"9) Plea. 17th & IMM, NB. ._.~~=
ror your vacation onty.nopotl.75SW.1ath ,. ef ed crallen Shepard mix 9arn--'pmMon-Frl u ........... ~.. ontore1Qn8"Cfdoft~ oertlflcate. 11•84&-flOT. s1oomo. ma Pf err , to stir NEW OFFICE FOR RENT "Molly" vcty of W New: · tor growing lnauranc9 12'00 Weotrnkmer A\1'8, HOATICULTURAL TECH can MC)~ hold a h MW 28R 28A condo. Jae. 1711'1 at., C:O.ta W...... 854).4858 · IQ9nCY In Laguna Hk Unit D&E Gwden Grewe wotti w4UI lni.ttor e>W\tl & CUT9nt 1oen9e. For
BRANO NEW APART·......... -· ss75+ dep. 220-9145/E 64&-4330 port Accur1t• & efficient. No (ent.rottCtititon) ~ Wll trlltn. Au e/POdlftl= cell o.1111
MENTSWILLBEAVAIL· onm 2BR. 2BX.eteenrespon.Mtosl'lr3Br LOST DOG GokMn Re-llLlllllY ••P nee. CIT~ Lori, hn,lClnt l .850-300e Adem,722-415'.
ABE IN PHASE Ill FOR lerge • ..deen, near nu dynuty, fully rum .. W/D. C-.erclal '"""' Crlever M, name " Jake, 7aa-2117 So. Anne St., Meet -eel ~fT ~~:E;1~T o:N~,f.~~T =~d~:P ?::~d~ ~..e1~~~~~;~ 1771 ~2~~~2~~ua. CLll •lstPUUI 8;'.:.,~sJ:)' rrom NMd~~~~N.a. ~'*:..W:: for9IGln
MONTH'S RENT MOVES S735t 4H 1411' •RETXIL SPACE• OST 0 & w s .... cterk• needed lot ,....,,. *5.00/tw At>tJty C# ,..,., boll. WOf\. YOU INI 493-7~o • ' MDA~ ~~ quiet NB Approx 1200 •1'. xlnt lo-lltrlped r~ mile ~~~ •HOST/HO.STESS counter & phOne :derl-2535 Vie PWma, AneM1m at El Renctllto, 2800 Ing oond. Mlk9141..el07 ._,~ ...... ""'l"'• +~1rage cation near Newport City declawed d f t Ii •FOOD S.ERVERS Cell RObert IC &919f !off ~·La Palma ~ 8tlld. N.8. IBI -Bachelor,1,2&3BRAPTS lut.IMc• 2l4f & pool. $675/mo. Hell.Agt673-53s.4 bent 8-42'..oe~a o a D1yShlft Only Blueprint & &.ipply .Co.._.n
AVAILABLE IMMEDI· 28f\ 28X API rm. 844-2807 ULlll--. •LADIES SPA ATTNOT 540-llG73 111111 -To.::.::::--~
ATELY... garage, carp•C• & ~u::~:,ei:_-::,a.rc'~ OfficeorShop.4carpatk· ......... 3112 ~:r:~~~~·ATTNDT -·--•fll lmlll1U!m ~~~T71M22 = ~Ult h::gts::orough .
• ·Y04Jr employer must be drec>es. Bike to t>Mct\! •can<» LI;'ht houM-Ing. $1300/mo. 4S73-3039 fRXIQJNd PARTNEA FT days PT week~ -~ Gourmee Foodl & ~ ------• k...owt1dge of IMd6cel b~ ~n Che city of Costa $775/mo. 848-1184 keeping.' Exch. for room COMMERCIAL BUILDING N::1~i. F:ed~::~d .B~ •STOREROOM CLERK F:ua~h~~ ~IT~ ~~ •••• Um' ~=·~
M.. c:;:o ~o-:.'dl :::u~~~ ~K 977~3~11de lob "°"· x 60ft. S.70tq.tt. •topped training tor •yr. •~T~u'::iE~~':>°T er'• 11c. Call 84&-9093 (213)470-220e/M2-87"4 Aetlabi.. Own tr•n•p :=,,.., 111
Ul.11 _1 aH S 135o/mo e...-2807 ,x · Behind Wright hardware. Starting ~aln now. Typing 50Wpm Mon Fri ~ EqulprMnt ~r. prel'd. Jenny &48-0821
____ ,.....,._ 540-0513 MIF1olhrepecioulhome Sultlble for Mflllce orean(714)9M-05118 7~pm • • mTILIMT. -··-........ " APMIMlll wl mut• bdrm & bath dlltflbutlon co. 722-1661 .. ~ Pref ROA but WlllnO l Ceil for-'• .... 7441 2500 Merrimac Way HUNT. H~ ., ... Avail Avell lmmed $500/mo: or 54S.7745. t FOf tmenl plMM ... • aem train Newpof1 C..t«o WE HAVE OPE,.OS LLOYD'I NUMERV Ml Mel now. Ltg deluxe 18r own-752·7500 Ted. j 1 illl call ~sOOo ex1 521 lmmedl1to Op•nlng1I 940-; 122 · e ~ T,..,._ ... Pit
-er• unit. frplc, dtw, w/d lactat PrtJtrtJ SMlonal & Career ~ • ~ ~ .. hk-up Piiio M75/mo + NWPT MESA area. room & . UXTORE coOPLE OR ptyl. Xlnl PIY Wond e a.. ce.tlt" Newpor1 ..... ... tlrm
******* $ l02S sec. M&-582-4 bath, F/pref, N/S Ntdrugs IHI SINOLE. Live In your own 1&1• II.DI TrlMlll Call (RefUndable) mflL llldJlllllJ Some exp. MlpfUI. Gen-.-a Pert tlrM oMcie
Ill l'IOUM prlv. $450 Incl -28R 11ou .. ·In CdM plu1 1·51&-458'-3535 x P311 'Mwt MYe recient dental efOUI employM di•· dertl frOm 2-tpm. luo-**lllAPml** PRIVATE 18r, frplc, patio, utff. 54a..8784 Iv meg lllf lllAIF11-• aataty to care tor elderly Full-Time. Mutt type exp•rlonce. Newport countl, & ttex. houri. ceeef\,f C*ICldlito IM'9t
A lmall, quiet comptex. 1ctchgar,bdrmaoceato / lllLD ooupMi next door. Must 40wpm+; AccounUng mllllllftlMP c.nter840-1122 ~et HOUM of F• ~owr\~.
Stud'o SSS<! l 18r wtfrpl, ~=7:,7cari>et & ~~~·:~ .:.i::~F~~ 4BR Up. 38R Down. lpeak Engllah. Hl\1'8 ear, •xp prr.::75~~ Jane full-Time poel\kln e\l8ill-rtct. 2200 Herbor BIYd., Cell Jene .. 121..-10,.
'**Yd. patio $685 mo. · or untum. Prof llb. seoo S775,000. Bkr &42-3350 lncludu 1hopplng. able Sam-5pm Mon-Fri. lllPIJlllU ea.ta Meee. 842·23-40 OFFICE MGR PlA8TIC
"Uke new l Yet'/ pvt". Wtw INc• BJ4i + MC, Incl 'utll. 722-7110 meel9, laundry & Ille II""•. RY<* Syetem1 Inc at Exp Good P9Y benefttt L.andoc8lpe Co. needl ex· 8UAGEOH ::.'N~Er~9~;~; Vla'XBdl 1BR, oce1n PROF M/FCorlarQe&\19rf luiat11 I fiaudil ~:e~:::~~:.gmao~all UlmlUll =~~~':'h:~ tncf. vecetlon i med6c:al. pertenco.peoptetotlnteo-&per nee, WW IN..._
vt.w, parkihQ, clM to nice Newport Height• IULl111 Need• M~Hraln· Debbie 841-3045 Hou,.. open. Calt be-tton, pllintlng & meaon-Ing, lootdnG tor•....._, •~TIM~M* ~&~~~hou1e evall 1211. ~l ~~ HH .. for~TI~~.l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~n~e-.~S~.~~~~~~~~2~4~1 ~~~.~~~~~~~~~·~~~1~po~~~.~~~1~13~•~~~ 1eA.1orrp1c, Nocable, poo13...,,: dec:Ora1ec1. 499-1•eo S525tmo + s200 dep. ~·" ~ ~·*i•i• Pay neootteb6e. eonteet r ~t . ~'"5~57 • Iii 631-80901ft6:30pm -.mY•llDIT PER HOUR Yvette497~777 DATA ENTRY
Bey • ..,.. INc ' YOUNG Prof, a.lboe Pen. FAST AND COMPLETE 111111an111n ... *......_.* *W 11•* 1 h• from bch. bay vu Estiblllhmen1 A Repair GrMt )ob-El tiou,.., flex For Marine Store In New· s , cyp191 tor RMI e. CMen 1BR & 2BA w/pvt Frig, dtstlwhtlef, 1to.,,. M/F non·amkr. $550 Incl 80()...367-5599 tb6e ~ule. Part-Time. port Beech. Ask tor John :a~utomotlve ll'PPOf1
garage. dthwthr, di•· Incl. No pat1 545-<4855 utll. Nu crpt/pnlfdrps. Yllllll lllTI Evening"''· Wiii train on or Tony 845-1711 J)08tlon In rut grOWlng
poeal, reedy cable, pool, ** 28A 2BA FIRE-Yrly. 921•1141 974-0904 E1tabllshed route (for Job. 8aM + commllalon. • ......... -Sa* Oeclt of THE DAILY
epa, BBQ & ~ry llC. PLACE, 0POOL.' adults =... t fid Hie). Part time. No ex-Mu•t be neat & penon--_. PILOT. &Swpm nMnlmum. Goodlocatlon ..... 1oap-5950/mo 844_,402 1ble .. New office location. Help wtintecl In all [)eclta. G,..t oPPOftUnlty rorad·
preclaM. 177 E. 22nd St. 631-0211 'avail Jmtned rorrec-~~~45 HatbOr BMI. CM. Cati Wiii train. Mul1 be eva#-Wll'oCWMnt. Call PEGGY
*631-7378* rM Uonal vehlde. boat or B I , b Ir I b I w n able IOme .venlngs & BLEVINS For lnteN!ow MH Ollen 1• *mAllLATI* IPl'e car In 8act1 Bay ... ., Te LMa Hl4 10am-8pm, 755-115S ~ends. FT/PT. Greet eppointrMl•t. °'"' on E'Sta.. cozy .,...... 1rea, CM 752-7500 Bob -benefits. Apply In penon Ml-Gl1 lllM1
wltota ~wood. Mllgned 8Mu1. 2-38r ate, gat., w/d dOe1a end blli•end * WIDOW HAS S$$ HI RE 111 Ni IPf IW perking & laundry tacitl· hk-up, new carpet, trac:tl. ceniperuodoott.--ell fOf TO.I 510,000/up Ho 1212.S. COAST H.WY. ~tlnd1Mequlp-
U... $530/Mo. tse-0552 i19hCt,,oell ten, nr Hoeg the t~ t~ ~8., tum· er~ . ...-/no pen. Call De-LAGUNA BEACH ment end~ tti.y need
•EASTSIDE Hosp.S850 to S10501mo. mer ..... can.,. • ...,...,1n ni.onAsaoc.873-7311 * through classified tn~.
4101 HUarle 1BR, nu crpt/pelnt. TSL MGMT 842-1603
1550/mo 250-8002. ---------850-51114* •YEARLY-OcMn front
*-UT•* 2Br 1Ba. carport, great _,, vt.w S1085/mo.
l<J 28r 1'MIA Townhoule, NEWPORT PACIFIC
E'alcM, garage. patio, Dave 845-3883
lau~~=/mo. WALK TO BCH NR HOAG
TSL MGMT 842·1603 8 lg 18A Q9I pd. F/P $750. • "t.Q 28A 28a
*LARGE 1BR duplex unl1, twnhM $925. POOi, spa, new carpet & paint. No cov. prkg. 1-401 Superior
patt S500tmo 2-40-2299d Ave. 846-e83a
496-7308 9119 & wtcnd ACROSS FR. BEACHU
•NEWPORT HEIGHTS• YEARLY 2&11Ba duPeX.ILlt-.t&.-. Carpnby -.... -~--··-=~~,:~ ~.e~· '=~I;];;;;;;;~;;;;-Li'c."'GEN.'CONTRACTOR 608# .. M. Oualt)' &;: 4iWSh8fiXN6iR§ AXIN80WC4ACl.EMelnt.
depoel1. 5-46-3932 H•lll ._ -•-$2 66 per day Finish carpentry-Int/Ext 11ellltlon. Entry, Fntnen HOMEIMPAOVEMENT & INT.IE8T. QVAUlY ss25+ dep. 18 R mobile -·--r--, Wlndows-doora. a.46-7587 & lnterlol' Ooort. Richard AEMODELINO. MASON-PAJNT1NO. EXP.13&-1758 ~. S.C:Vre. Mature 11• Ifft That'I ALL you P•Y fOf •HOME IMPROVEMENT llc.#5iteea 557•8484 ARY. 7eo-7333 TOP QUAUTY PAINTING
edufta. Ho peta. 1991 3BA 28A lower Unit. 3 llnes, 30 day minimum Conctete& Carpentry DOOR SPECIALIST. La ...... ,... Prompt.~Aw..
N9wpott Bfvd. 84M373 ~up~:~~~ SERln vthelCE ~~~5=3185 NwpC 8ctl =·~!ir ~~= •......,. 11~o.c.139-, ..
S 11001mo. -.,,.. CIM•I., fr• est Rob 9e&-90-48 CXNOSCXPiNdaMENf VESCO PAINTING AHO _...~•JIB W>ll RIVER '= hmcn WORK. W~t. & WALLPAPERING. Qualfty ~~ TSL MGMT 842-1603 DIR CTO ~altimf ctMn upe. lJ . F,.. &1. 999-6349 E Ry Cl••n nti· y.ino·R•paJra ~~~-~~!:~~~-iii~;~;~I APAl1'Mi11 HIHI,..... Odors&. oth41f earl)9t ..,.. om home9. AddHlone. LAWN MAINT. Tr .. Trim &
Sp•tkllng ci.an, l1r~e CLEAN 28R, lg ltv rm, INCREASE YOUR REACH vlciel. Pacific Co 751-6339 =· ~~~7 C ... n-up. RMa.. FrM
Garden apta. 8MM1ftulty parttlng, utlll Ind. No GET IN OUR IMPROVED t/C...ntt . · . eett. VllenUn 548->elot . HANOIN018TNPPING
CLASSIFIED ADt'EllTISEN6
SALES
We are ADDING to our sales stall.
If you can type at least 45 wpm and have
great telecommunication skills -We can
off er you a base salary + commi&&ion AND
a (jUllt place to work. ·
hH Tl•e • P•rt Tl•e '41'.U•llle.
Do you.neH a I ayor -Call 111.
P efO' B levl•s er J I• V e••e••
842·4321
330 Weat Bay St.
Cost.MeN,CA
Delivery Drivers
PART-TIME
land1ceped ground1. pets. S 1175. 723-1292 n ... I.. -lrJwll DUSTY'S ~ V'8A-MC
Pool' IP•. Pl''°''d«:tc•. •YEARLY -sPAc 1ous 1 • _ _.H .._ Dr1c::.11. P11kMI. P91,,., 1l>fWWAtt txPINd· Main. s.rv. Wkly/montt\/ liiii;iiiiii;p]ij;;;;Jr;---Newspaper Delivery Drivers Needed. ~ « cerport. S800 block from ocean & bay, _,_ wHter, ttc. No lot> too small. T9)Ctur•Acoultlc & Pelnt ~1~tl~"'9~·~F~r .. ~eet~.~24~1~·~1e40~.f"'iii'ii!~"1ifltllm-
2
18drm9edroom1,,, ... _
58
saao
1
s ~1yR·s=.'lso-~a•ed. For":!!~~!on eRA .. ic'K·,Mco1cNk•cYA·ET536-0E ~ F,.. .... KeYtn 122-en4 LAAAv·s LANDSCAPE P8fl:Me.-Teictut-.AepMI Monday-Friday 2PM-SPM . Weekends
,.<HI ""'"· C1e&nup•-•P<lnkle11-new Im/ht Ff'99 .... 722·1921 131E11th St 646-6816 Executive TownhouH CALL TOOAYll Prof. rellable, r•. ,.. i.wn.. malnt~t.-.. ~ & Holidays 4AM 7 AM E t --------3BA, 28A, 2 car ~. Ill Fii Liii FREE-· 841-3263 IAN . . trim I .,.. remov.. lnt./Ext. P9tcfl P'M*"IG. -• arn ~p 0 :::~,~ :"~2-~ ~,Llt~ v 1 E w Servlc;c:;:;ec•""' T.J. Pe11o eoncnt• eon.t. •481~~=::1~18 541-3833 °' 557.oeot ~=:.:.to~ S600/month. Must have reliable
-·1 Conc.·Brlcil-Bloct{. UC & · TIDI lemll #32tl84 654-7A1
All new 2Br 2Ba, balcOny, FURNISHED. 2 BA, 2 BA ••2::~...nJ1 ttaJttlv
1
e•1a ~~~'mtsJ~-~0:-.... 11.111'111 Tapped/remove. Cleanup transportation, insurance & a good
rrplc, wall-10-well, •1r• condo, oceen ~. pool, .. .. • L.lc9Me Contr. 846-3e&e nu lawri/lpflnklr 751·3479 PJw•M91 ~· ~ ra.t2:mo. ~2-~::,:~~ -· .. --udc lit •1=·• .. -iL:i:: l!::a•=-=.:m., ..... -..-_,1111! __ .I d · · d ,..... . r-... -·-;suXtlW duar1nte:ci••· --·-_.... • •-riving rec or · ~ 17' Monte Vilt• Many co chooee from. 2 & The Cant Publie UtlNtlel Custom Tlte & B lea Wortt Fut! 8eNlce. Aee./Comm. IT ..... 1111•... HEATtNG PLUMBtNO ( ff 7 l 4/64 2 4 3 3 3 205 83, lmmec, lg BA. laund, 3 bedroom-. Greet lo-Commlstlon. REQUIRES p n r llc.·Bond·lnaured .._. """'INS c• r•A fr S1• a -ext
ysd, etc. no peta S550 cation. Sc1rt1ng 11 that all ueed, llOUMhold ( x1;,1 =Ni..';_C::.T. 975-1353 818/H0-2420 * •1·1• * Fauciet·c;...,::...,v· '
Incl u11111 ... 842-3812 $850/mo. 875-iSOe good• mo~•-ptlnt their . • REID'S ELECTRIC Nft trvcka. T165"7 000 * 846-t218 Anytime Between SAM-? p M
8EAUTIFUL2BR 18A ln 2 P.UC. Ci l T number, QJWcan Ho...._ ~-"..,.. Wedon'twantyourmor,.y -----_,....,----N-ly remodeled BR llmo'1 & chauffeur's ptlnt JV.,. too.,,_,,"" yMrS t your ,.,_,., J&M PLUMBING 2. 4 HA k Quiet~· Pool. gar-18A, O/W. 1)911o, encl their Tc p number In all eAftfstiXA GRAND· e.p. UC./bond 193-1'702 we WI . NftCoMtructlonl..... As For Rodger ~~~ .~rl~~~ gat~ ~pet-. Quiet edY«tt..m9nts. ir y04J MOTHER haa opening f!'f .... llai •&-1 ..... r91'nOd91. rooter ...... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ rTIES PAID* ngtlbrtld 5 875-teoe have • question ebou1 1 1nr1nt, birth 10 3 mo•· 730-1'53 Ucl531M7. fr5-7214 ~
$725/Mo. CALL 722-1832 •• Ill UY• the leglllty Of I rno\1'8f, Lie .• TLC 5-46-233& •EntWa your property CL!AN& EXPERT --------ISBR 2,L.... .............. .......... llmo or chauffeur, Call: *Qualty wood fendno, Uc CelT·1511A2 ..... ___.___
•a•a •l'l'I ..;. &-di '--. A.~z Public U111tle1 Com-C~;•1ilerftn . dedllf~ 241-7320 ' ~ -... n1na. "'-......... 1-·· 114 s"'• .. 1"'1 ---1-Jgu.iiiiillii•filiiiil -IRYXUTll' P&Sl IERO. 400 Mernm.ci Way deet(. YrlM S2250Mo m -on. -~ 'I ; r . FREE eet1. r....... -• 1 Cell~ All a.Mot,
• 1~. "50 Via Udo US..9219 1 dya Wit, ~ yruxp. ref. f1MiW666. *111-1411• repmtr. !net .. 775-2t25 ::"~50 979-111 11 1• • m UY Aeetu.... UC. Ins. 842•5053* Euc. Orange wet. frM dltlv Hon..., Movw.
EAiTSfDE 1 Bdrm 8ec:\K9 bldg."' Lido Pma •HOUSECLEANING'* f42-t28f °' 84&-3177 Uc. C.T1MCM8 11•=dht=·ra.IPlll'lm"""_.-1
deCOl•ted comer~ 173Sl mo.Mtr87&-9289 *l'I· ~~~~T~ SpltClc,,_S,50corc1Euc. lllTmtBI .. 1.JIAdOIAlXW
...... '675, 19'./\M\ + Pm'ISWodUc1a. .~heir ly $170+del, Oak Avl (2=a 2138UT. T77221 ~.1.._All
depoett. 54a-1M5 .... , _..,. "lftoe boll" Of $Ub "S" •VACUUM VISITORS• 4te-elM, 413-874e ~. ,,.. .... .,,,.. ~ 4~
E'Aii'iiOi BACHELOA •WlTH &OAT SUPS• Call: Pwlon & Alaoc'I ~:~r ~=-d .... ........... L lo \.ono Dlatenoe ~ 8HINGLI M.PAIA ~ ciellr'le. lfNI yerd, !XCLUSIVE BEACH Newport IMdl 175-7523 831-313" M 197 .. 7753 . :Jli''; ~=~ ~ .. u..upe tor .. typee. pee ok. .. M/mo. Avel COMMUNITY ON ACCOUNT OF CLARE -·----Ptompt "'**· 455-3002 now 780-IN2 H• ~ 18R 1BA on Boolckeeplna 8eMce C•W.'I c.rwl ~ '* eANDEAlll .... ~ "···
EISIDE 190 Mo«*Home, =..:~00ttc!l·.U:: H&1-*3• EJQ>er;2~•t1oue c:.,-=.~=== ~:1:;w l1a1t1 rW ....
'611 ~gee/Weter pd. flreplac•. mlorowav•, HOVSECl.EANINO From end_.. 71().?m •PAJNTINO•ttyn ~:=. ~wocifm.;;rc· g:~-:v1e:~.°"' or W~ ·r YN IUh·~~ = 1tMCnll*, '*'· = pu,.:-..... IOIS EJiidi iiO 1BA new petnt •eo.t ~ ExVe• ~P8'Clhtn0-Teicture -.p, R«I. Kim 845-5223 ==-a ;;;;;;:' p;;;t ..... TOftl 112-7471• me
& ~. lndty fee, no lony,nopeta. Uo.U1'7'3 ~7203 TK'SCL!ANINGHfMCE ~-*Y 'M&Jiff•iflAiifiii&u , ..
S*t. 1111mo. an-c E. 111.L -..11 l!li= we••Jl'1detnowWOf1l drywel-.o.y~n • w......, . .....,. -..1 .... ,,...ED ..... t-•z•llllliill••
11tti 144 °'62 'D.'__.....Xll 644123 Ot 540-3918 •HAHDriliAH* -· ...... Uc. -"'410, Tie ..... ,., athti
6"1M.ger,trsl'C. ~.:r HGT& ~ eom...flrof.8:!,.. fiSiDllm -~ .... -.work.-. illfOUALifYiMCU '714>1',.._
--:, :;.,s14N:IO ~ .,, r.':'Te~mo. fll'..S1•.H7·1222 XdMWid6"66Ni'f C'el'"-Mf-0110 INPAMM.Good"*' '-.... .=.. .......... ~i= 21M8-IOM '*"ad= ... =" -Nidll IAllt ,.,. """ "°"" ... .. ..._..----CotlWI ....... 9"11111 ... ~"""" C.M.IN... liMI UT .... ,... .. .. IA8T8'Df lltoe condO .,.... -wu..u~•'"°· nyrw--.11c. Ml 1514 w.•~'42·7tol tlClbt • ..._ a ""-,.,.,.-..,. ....... a .. •• ..... ,'6&4 ............. 1W. ~ ...... oond .......... .,.. •-MM-~ .. .... ........ ,..,.,.
..,.... Plllto. tnetmo ''°71~11$all07 .--.ccwwm-1120 ~=--hiff'MWWWW r.:t;!;E!!!:~I -tct..naor 14M127 ~ WWW .,..,..._ ..... ..--.
flill 1Meon.... iPiD: --., llelcanlee. ..... O.IYd °"""" Trw .,,. ... ..._ .....-? 1 a in~...., :'91:/:'."'ri •.:: tw.mc1111r.''7lll Ou1My..-.112..a711 • MM111 iiC5itaC50iiNll!M ......... ... ,.. "°,.,. -La ,.,.... AfA ... ,,. ... .,.,-.-1 •t11ttt + IMIS au
.,.,.. • •• , ...... ~ ....... Ill .,..... -.™' ..... 'Orr-a':' ...-J.~ ..... .,.. ...... ~
•
Motor Routes
available in
W11t•in1t1r
lu1tillf1n l11ch
.Founfli1 V1ll•J
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Deliver .One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
and proof of lnaurance .
l
FUN
A-f"l-'ER SCHOOL
WORK
11 Years & Older
Work Eveninqs & Saturday
YOU CAN AVERAGE PER WEEK s7500
OR MOREi
PHONE: 498-3321
All Tranaportatior; Provided
By An Adult Supel'VUor
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Old~boy style
politics still
strong in CM
Costa Mesa City Councilman Orv (\mburgey de!11o~
strated one of the things he does best dunng Monday nights
City Council meeting.
He threw'.J)Olitical caution and sensjtivity to the win'1 and
steamrolled his point of view over the objections of'a group of
city residents.
This latest demonstration of Amburgey·s political
demeanor came over his support for a proposed apartment
complex at Wilson Street and Harbor Boulevard. The
complex is opposed by nearby homeowners, and the land for
the development is owned by Amburgey·s son, Ron.
However, the controversy over the apanment COf!1J?lex is
taking second billing to Amburgey's refusal to abstain from
voting on rezoning the property.
Opponents argued Monday nigh.t that Amburgey should
not vote because he has a conflict of interest.
Amburgey's response was, "At some point in time, you
can find reasons for all members of the council not to vote
because of some sort of a conA~ct." He turned his back on the
re.quests to abstain from voting, declared "there is no conflict
of interest" and voted with Mayor Donn Hall and Peter Buffa
to rezone his son's property.
Amburgey should be commended for the streng_th of hi s
convictions, but in this case It's hard to excuse his short-
sightenesss and calloused approach to the art of government.
His arrogant an<1 insensitive reaction to the concerns of
the people opposed to his son' project. and the perception that
he has a conflict of interest on the project, is the
personification of the good-old-,boy ~tyle ~f steamroller
politics that has split Costa Mesa s residents into camps of
warring factions.
A city leader with the best long-term interest of the city at
heart would have erred on the side of caution and abstained
from voting on the project.
But that's not Amburgey's style. and unfortunately his
style has convinced many residents that their city government
is unyielding and uncaring.
Costa Mesa has grand opp0rtunit1es to mold itself into
one of the jewels of Orange County. but it will be difficult to
take advantage of those opportunities unless the City Coun~il
begins to demonstrate a less heavy-handed approach to city
government.
Honorariums
The decision by two major defense contractors.
McDonnell Douglas and General Dynamics, to suspend
temporarily their practice of paying honorariums to
congressmen for speeches is a welcome reaction to the current
investigation of Pentagon fraud. It's not enough , ~owever.
Paying members of Congress for speeches 1s at best a
fraud. A congressman shows up at a function sponsored by a
military contractor .. ., makes a brief speech. and pockets
upwards ofS2.000. True. the House and Senate have imposed
some limits, but that doesn't make it right.
Usually the honorariums are paid to congressmen who
serve on committees considering legislation in which the
companies or organizations have an interest. The likelih~
of a conflict of interest on the part of a congressman 1s
obvious.
At first 1t sounds plausible to argue that the limitation
makes It unlikel> a congressman will be influenced. But many
congressmen recei ve up to $2.000 fro m each of several
companies.
When members of Congress take money from companies
that do business with the government. they are at least gi ving
the impression that th eir votes are for sale. The people deserve
better.
Cbattaaooga (TeDD.) Times
U.N.peacekeeping
It has been a remarkable year for peace and the United
Nations. We have witnessed considerable progress in the
Persian Gulf. Angola. Cambodia and elsewhere -in large
part because of U.N. efforts.
But as U.N. Secretary·General Javier Perez de Cuellar
reminds us. "The recent achievements of the United Nations
have neither been sudden nor fortuitous but are the hard·won
results of persistence and dedication oi.-er many years,
epitomized by the peacekeeping activities of the organiza·
uon."
And so It 1s most fitting that this year's Nobel Peace Prize
has been awarded to U.N. pcacekce~ing forces. It is, as Perez
de Cuellar so eloquently put it, a tnbute to "idealism, valor
and Sacri ijcc ...
RccE>Jnition 1s long overdue for the 500,000 troops from
58 countnes, including 800 killed in the line of d\Jty, who have
hcloed keep peace and case tensions in world hot spots since
1948.
For 40 years, the world has owed them a debt of gratitude.
Flbll (Mlc6.J Jor1rul
ORANGE COAST , .... .. ,_
Daily Pilat (dltOI ~Onctof °"'.., n.a.-
Assowte Ediloc !let-'~ ..... ,_a. ........
Hews ldltoc ~ _..Sain .....
llOMNrY Cluchman Stew ... a....i'C1 .... Publisher Cltr Cdl4ol
.... c.-~ ...
SIMtl r.tOt c.ar. ......... , ..... ,._._..._,*"!Of .... ,... .. aJO rtatwraC*« CirQMell Ondor ...... e.. ...... ~~
•• O I --IO 9mi IMO C-e c.. .... -· .... ...._CA.,.. .... c.. ,,..........,
I
....
Important era of reform
ahead for the Legis ature
After one of the most disp~ting
~litical campaigns in ~nt h!st~ry. it's time for a little pos111ve thinking
.about the mess in which representa-
uvc sovcmment finds itse.Jf todar. espcbally in the state ~pitol. ~~re s
one upbcat~post-clect1on prediction:
The California Legislature is entering
an important era of reform. True. pan of that belief is based on
the fact that it's always darkest before
the dawn. We can hope that dallight of reform may not be far off. i on ly
because -excluding all parti~!' considerations -the current poht1-
cal landscape is so dark and dreary.
Jn Caltfornia. as across the nation,
political campaigns degenerated t~is year into very nasty mud-wrestling
contests . The chief goal of 1988's
candidates was not to show them-
sel ves off at their best but their opponents at their worst. Negative
campaigning has sunk to new depths
-m legislative politicking just as in
the White House race.
The r.ublic's present low esteem for the po atical process in California is
Jikefy to decline more when the U.S.
Justice Department issu~ a series of
criminal mdictments agamst several
sitting state legislators and some key
staffers. both Republicans and
Democrats. The first indictments are
expected shortly after the election.
Voters will ht alienated further during the next few weeks as mem-
bers of a sorely divided Asscm~ly
engage in cloakroom dcal-makmg
and mutual back-scratching as part of
the process for selecting a s~ker for
the upcoming session. This kind of
maneuvering usually makes law-
makers appear e~en crasser in the eyes of their constituents. . .
speakership go to another Democrat.)
Regardless of whether Brown keeps
his speakership, ~cramen~o is mov-
ing in the d1rcct1on of 1mportan1 rcfonn. Something like reform has
already started in the form of last
June's voter approval of Proposition
73. While •that flawed •initiative
measure does not offer the same hope
of a cleansing of the state lawmaking
process that the more far-reaching
Proposition 68 did, it will result in
change for the better. That's true if
only because Proposition 73 at least
disrupts the brokerin.a system that has
permitted some legislators to ,build
power within t~e institu~ion . by
amassing camP.81gn contnbuuon~
and then redistnbuting them to other
lawmakers.
That won't solve the terribJe prob
lem of raising the money to pay ever
increasing campaign costs. Prop osition 68 would have done tha
througti ~ c~mbination ~f ex~n diture llm1tat1ons and publtc fundm1 of campaigns.. A majority of the
electorate approved Proposition 68
but because its majority was smalle1
than Proposition 73's. the public·
funding provision won't go intc
effect.
Nevertheless, public funding is no1
a dead issue. Even Repµblicans, whc
previously w~re almost unanimou.sl)
against the idea, now arc shown.lf
interest in such a system, both in Sacramento and in Washington. Pub-
lic financing still may have its day a
year or two from now.
MARTY
SMITH
lc~slative members sincerel y want to
sec their institution clean up its act.
They're more disgusted by what has
happened to the Legislature than is
the general public. The more famili-
arity with the process. the greater the
nausea.
It's not only the Legislature's
corruption that sickens them. but its paralysis as well. The best -or worst
-example is the complicated issue
of automobile insurance. a problem
that should have been handled in the
Legislature through compromise but
was not, mostly because the way that
the members preoccupation with
campaign fund-raising interfered
with tbe proper operation of the two
houses.
By turning to the initiative process
and putting rival mea~ures on t~e
state ballot, competing special
interests involved in controversy -chiefly the trial lawyers and ·~surance
companies -sh~~ed their recog-
nition of the fuuhty of seeking a
solution through a corrupted and
paralyzed Legislature.
Note. please. that all tha.t is being predicted here is the beginning of
reform. It took more than a decade to
get the Legislature into its current
mess; it will take considerable time
for it to return to anything like the
lofty status it enjoyed a quancr-
ccntury ago, when it was widely
acclaimed as the most effective body
of state lawmakers in the nation.
Californians just should be grateful
that the stage 1s set for the start of
reform -and be prepared to punish
any of their representatives who
stand in its way.
-Arne
WELLS
Political , ·
aerobics-
forevery
occasion
It'~ finally over. Some of us
• haJjpy about tne eliction, s<>me o_f
are not. Some of us nad no fceh
one way or the other about who w
All of us arc relieved that it is scttJ
For those of you who rooted for
winning side there is an add
advantage. It will improve yo r
health. According to Norm n
Cousins, when you laugh your wh e
body benefits. . You burn 78 timesasmanycalo s
laughing as you would in a resti . state. SO if you sat in front of the
munching. .nibbling and ~arli g
while watchmg your man wm. ~ w
you can laugh, laugh laugh about l
Laulthingst1mulates your heart a d.
lungs. ihis makes you breathe dee r
and oxygenate more blood. Y r
body releases its own natural n
killer -endorphin -and
produce more immune cens.
Your diaphram, internal o s
a11d facial muscles all get boun
around in a massage. Cousins call it
"internal jogging." This internal j
ging relaxes your muscles and arte
and lowers your blood prcssu
· Some researchers think this a
digestion. so yo'! don't have to
guilty about pigging out. . .
But if you really overd1~ 11, e
researchers have come up with so
afier-clection exercises that will
you back in shape. The first one bu s up 350 calorics. They call it "Thr -
ing your weight aroµnd." The 3~0
calories is a ballpark figure; .it wo~ld depend on how much weight you
have to throw around.
There are a couple more exercist's
the winners can do -like smirking
and gloating-but they only bum up
I 0 calones each and you run the chance of irnJating friends on the
losing side.
If you laughed enough over the
returns and do these exercises, you
will be in good shape and healthier
than you've been sin~ the campaign
started.
Now for those of you whose
candidate lost. don't worry about all the Hagen Daz ice cream and choc-
olate chip cookies you consumed -
or the beer or whatever you drank to
drown your sorrow. These re-
searchers have worked out a table to
help you lose weight too.
Banging your head against the wall
bums up 120 calorics. Climbing the
walls 1s less painful. but r:nort di.ffic.ult
so it burns up 250 calones. Wnngmg
your hands only uses up 95 calories,
but Jnaybe you cou!d combi~ that
with another exercise of theirs -
running around 1n circles. Running
around in circles bums up 3~0
calories. Wringii:ig y~ur h~nds while
running around in circles 1s ec:rfectly acceptable behavior if your side rost.
Dragging your heel~ burns up 1.00
calories and swallowing your pnde
takes care of another 150 calories.
Pride 1s full offiber.
(Don't betagainst Democrat Wilhc
Brown continuing his already record
tenure 10 the leadership post. His
f nend s include some closet sup-
porters among Republicans as well as
the overwhelming majority of Demo-
crats. Has GOP allies include con-
servati ves who regularly inveigh
agamst him in public but. as long as no Republican has the votes for the
JOb, will look for ways of kccpin1
Brown m power rather than see the
The fact that both ballot meas um won majority support -despite th(
public's long-.held rcl~ctance to ~( tax money diverted into campaign
finance -is an important indication
th.ai voters not o~ recoanize th( problem of corruption in Sacramentc
but finally are detennif!ed tha~ SO'!fe·
thing be done about 1t. Legislauve
corruption has been a problem that
has been long discussed m Sacramen·
to, and reform has had its lip service.
But now tnat voters have demon·
strated strong conccm.1. lip scry~ce should not be enough. uood poltt1cs
will require real reform.
More than that, though, a lot of
M•rtl• Sm/It
col•m.Ist.
Another acti vity you can indulge in 1f you're on the losing side is eating
crow. That uses~ 225 calorics. Crow
1s also full of fiber like pride and I• • •radlc•ted celery. More calones arc required to
diJeSt high-fiber foods than are con -
tained in them.
Time for symbolism past,
Bush confronts challenge
By WALTER MEARS
WASHINGTON -His resume
crowned with a surpassing entry,
George Bush now confronts the
challenge of matcbin1 it with per-
formance as 41 st President of the
United States.
After a bitter campaian. the ~i
dent-clcct must take command of a
divided government so bu.rden;ed
with debt that optionsa.re scarce, with
a long agenda of ~s that cannot
wait. and with little pidanc:e from the
voters because they lddom were
consulted on the issues ofaovemina.
And Bush, the multi·job Re-
publican appoin~ who became an
eight-year understudy, must pr:ove
that his resume of aovemment JObs has pre~red him for the ~idency
as President Reapn 11id 1t had. for
the fir1t time since he left Consras 18
years ago, Bush is beholden to no boss
except the voters. He hasn't told them
a lot about what he intends to do, but
he must tell theft\ soon.
Symbolism, sfoP-n1 and Lip rad·
inp won't suffice. They belonJ to a
campaian that never <Sid tum kinder,
aientler or very instructive about
either candidate'• blueprint for the
future. . Bu.sh won a hefty ~ty of T~s popular vote~ ind that
translated into an dectonl vote
landsljde, With at, ~ omume what
he ·d jokinaJy called me curw of
Martan Van Buren, the 111t sinl• vice pmident elected pcaidene. 152
yeaflllO. o( Bush captured about S4 ~' the popular votet ~ad 426 OI &be Slt
eledOnl vo4cl tat ICIUallY elect a
•.
AN ALYSIS
president.
Conccd101 defeat in Boston, Gov.
Michael Dukakis promised to coop-
erate with Bush. "This nation faces
major challenaes ahead and we must wort tCJIC'lher," he .saitt. Al the same
time, he noted po1~tcdly that Go.n-
gress remained sohdJy Democratic,
on both sides of the Capitol.
Bush is well aware of that. "I'll do
my level best to reach out and work
constructively with the United States
Conaress." he said.
He'll have to do without the kind of
political clout Reapn carried durina
his first term. Reqan's 1980 election
helped fuhion Republican pins in
Conpas -and produced a GOP ~n1te m~ority that lasted six years.
Bush showed no such coattails. While
his Republican ticket was winnina.
the !Amocnts were strenathenlna
their conpessional m-.(oritics a bit.
Cleatly, the flnt m1uion for the
president-elect was to buty the hatch·
et he'd been uaina on Duukis all fall,
1in a campaip that concentrated on
ncptives -on showina that the OCher candidlte didn't detetve the
job.
DtmocntJc IJ"\Mlllel won't be for-~ soon. so ihe •sh peacemakin& Cfl'on is not ~"I lO be easy. He
WU1ed DO lime in 1t1tina IW1ed. His
clection-ttiPt c:debntion was a raUy witha..,...,
.. A cam..-is1d•eemc11t and
cti...,eements divide.,. be told IUP-
Portert in Houiloa. "lut 111 election
ii • decision JDd dlCitiOll dliilr ...
--. '
way for harmony and peace. And I
mean ~ be president of all the
people." <
He said he would seek to be worthy
of the trust of his supporters and to
cam the trust of his opponents. "My
hand is out to you," he said. "I want to
be your president, too."
The policy proposals so lacking an
the campaign fare will have to follow
quickly. Bush must fill in the blanks
in his oxymoronic "flexible freac" of
the fedenl budget. He stilJ has some
persuadina to do to convince even
Republicans that the deficit can be
curbed with -"read my lips" -no
new taxes.
One campaian s~ifi~ was his ~II for a cut in the capital piris tax which
Duk.akis denounced as a tax break for
the rich. Bush said it would spur
investment and create jobs. Now he
will have to make that case to Co~ and'-in partkulat1 to Chair-man Lloyd acntacn of tne Senate
Finance Com mittee. While losin1 as
Democntic vice presidential nomi-nee, Bentsen was overwhclmin&Jy re. elected to the Senate in Teu.s.
Candidate Bush promised to m11n-
tlin the foreisn ~~ and economic ac:bjevements he atc!d to Raaa!''I
ladenlup. Reapn said the new OOP
ldmini.nntion hu • mandm1e to
"continue the chal\ltl that create
jobl, ~ty and PQ<% for all
Amencans.".
Plai41ent-elea Bull\ mua deftne
the dWps t.e Will 1Ddeed coatiaue
-ud mo. he wtU chalc. ..................... ., n. ......... , ,,_, ....... ,,. ,, .. .... . ..,,.,.
'
Eating sour grapes is also a help. It's
not a calorie burner, but it does take your ap{>Ctite away and keeps you
from eating the high-caloric foods.
Those of you who didn't vote -
shame on you -but watched Wheel
of Fortune instead of the returns
while you were snacking. aren't going
to be !Ht out. If you would like to lose
a pound or two. there is one exercise
you can do.
It burns up 200 calories and it's
called "Jumping on the band wagon."
Col•m•/11 Ao11 Well• ll"e• la
Llpu Nlpel.
I TO DAY IN His TORY
Today 1s Wednesday, Nov. 9, the
3 I 4th day of 1988. The.re arc S2 days Jen in the year.
Today's flighlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on Nov. 9, 1938.
bands of Nazis bepn roaming the
streets of Germany, lootinJ and
b11mina syna&oaues as welJ as Jewish-
owned stores and houses. The po-
a.r om became known as r:Kristallnachf' ("Crystal Night") be·
cause of the'broken "ass that ended
up litterina the streets.
On this C111e:
In 193Sj United Mine WoTkcrs
president ohn L. Lewis and other
labor leaders formed the Commiuee
for JnduStrial Orpniiation as pan of
the American Fe<kration of Labor.
In 19S3. the U.S. Supmne Court
upheld a 1922 rulint that ~
leque beseb&ll did not come within
the scope offederal antitrust laws.
Ten years aJQ: President Jimmy Caner saped into law the National fnetlY Act of 1978, whteh contained
a controvenial, provision tO cte.
ttplate natural pa.
,, Birthdlya: Fonner Vice Preudeat
SDiro,T. ~is~ rcr Charbe Jona aJ SI. -arr Whi~ Henot it 57. ~r Cart Slpn is ~ . •1••11•d•~~
)
.· _ ...... WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 9. 1988 [ii
:I
R l~ottoentrees: Notvthat'sltalian
Cookbooks ideal
for e n tertaining ,
Christmas gifts
Published in time for holiday
entenaining or Christm;y gift.giv-
ing arc four diverse ccto kbooks.
focusing on such topics as apricots.
holiday baking. Mexican cuisine
and favorite recipes from
celebrities. In preparation for the upcoming
festive season. Sunset Books has
iust released a new .. Holiday Cook
Book." a colorful edition offering
recipes and menus that provide a
wealth of ideas for every occasion
from Thanksg1vana d,inner to New
Year's Day brunch. as well as an
array of edible gifts t~at come from
your kitchen and your hean.
The first chapter features tempt-
ing ideas for cookies. br~ds. cakes.
pies and candies -for giving as
gifts or serving to family and guests.
A spc<:ial feature shows how to
packaae and send cookies to
faraway places.
The 96-page soft-cover book sells
for $6. 9S, and is available an
bookstores. For more informati on.
call Linda Berkerat(4 I 5) 324.5586.
You can be sure your hohda)
foods att nutritious as ~ell as tast).'
if you cook and bake with dried
apricots. KCOrdin& to Rita Gennis
who compiled '"Lots of 'Cots." an
all-apricot cookbook. Tiie boot 11 a small treasury of
recipes mat call for dried apnrots.
which. unhkc thc1t fresh rountcr-
pans. are available all )car. In·
ddded are reapcs for bcvcrqt"S.
brads. ckurrts. candin.Jams and
preserves. side d1shc). maan dashes
and soup.
The book sells for S6.95 plus 42
cents sales ta and S 1.13. postage
and handling. Order from Ben Ah
Books. P. 0 . Bo' 173. Carmichael.
CA 95609-01 73.
.. Mexican food is an aphrodisiac
that excites the passion for hvmg. ..
says best-selling novehst Richard
Condon. who. with his daughter
Wendy. have written ··01c Mok ...
The writing team provide sensual
and evocauve notes on the ""orld's
oldest cuisine, along with matchless
methods for the cooking and eating it. •
Condon. author of "The Man-
churian Candidate'' and "Praai'
Honor," begins with the unique
v1nues ofrcal Mexican cooking: 11s
history, science and the appeal that
so many have found 1rrcs1st1blc.
Drawint on years of personal
experience, Wend) has pthcred
and tested more than I 25 classic
rccipcs, including Vera Cruz Red
Snapper. P1cad1llo con Ron (Rum
H-ash). Came Asada and Pork
Mole. All are supplemented b)'
soups, 'egetablcs. salads. nee and
beans. qg d1 he'>. ~l~s and tks-
scns.
Published b> Ta)IOr Publ1 han1
Co .. tht book setts for $9 9S 1n ~'
book tores. For mor~ inform¥ion.
tall Carol R0tdcr at (2 I 4)
637-2800.
Some of the he t rcc1pcs m the
......... BOOU/CS)
. .o\mcrica's new-found ap·petite for t'cg1onal Italian cuisine has plac~
·risotto in t~e spotlight. A favorite rcsta~rant en tree oraccompaniment, ·
this classic rice creation is rarely served at home bccauseofitspainstaking
prcpartion. •
Enter American risotto. A culinary hybrid. 1t redefines its Italian
her·Hage--us1ng Rad1lya vailable ingredients. l.t is the.answcuo..dc.m.aruh]nt
American home cooks forfuss-frcepreparat1on. In placeofimponed rice.
American risotto relies on converted rice or nee to an instant that
streamlineS>reparation to suit today's lifestyles.
Ame_l].Cjrn risottos are readily adaptable en her as mam dishes or side
dishes wiftrth.e addiuon of vegetables. herbs. meat. poultry and seafood.
Wh.en a creamy quality 1sdes1red. a bat of cream or cheese may be added at
the end ofthecookmg time. •
. SMOKEDSAUSAGERISO'M'O
% tablespoonsoUnoU .
I large onjon, c.t iato tllia wedges
1 cup converted rice (
l cu (about 14 onces) beef or ebicken brotb
'11 cup vermoatJa or dry wllite wine :s, poancl smoked sausage, cut into "'2 ·inch preces
1 bay leaf
3 small bell peppers, cut into% x '•-inch strips (preferably l red, I
yellow and 1 1reen)
11'.J cup fresllly 1rated Parmesan cbeese
Will te pepper (option a I )
Heat oil in 10..inch skillet. Add onion. Cook over medium heat,
surringconstantly. 2 mi nutes. Add nee and continue to cook. stirring. 2
minutes. Add broth. vermouth. sausage and bay leaf. Bring toa boil.
Reduce heat. Cover ugh ti~ and s1mmer20 m1nutes.
Top with pepperstnps. Remove from heat. Cover and let stand until
all liquid is absorbed. about 5 minutes. Remove bay lea~ st~r in~
Serve with pepper. 1f desired. Makes 4 to 5 servings.
CREAMY HERBED RISOTTO
1 "'a caps cltiekea brotb
% teaspoons b•tter or mar1arine
I~ CllpS ri~ in an instaDt
'4 c•p cHppe4 watercress or ltaUu parsley
14 cspcHppedclaives
•;.esp fresllJy grated Parmnu dteese
•;. c., sosr cream, at room temperate.re
FresllJy groancl ltlack pepper
Combine broth and butter in medium saucepan. Bnngtoa boil. Stir
tn nee. watercress and chives. Cover and remove from heat. Lctstand 5
minutcs.oruntll all liquid is absorbed. Starin cheese and sour cream.
Serve with pepper. Makes 4 servings. · ..
·countY chefs showcase their best
23 restaurants
represented in
l --annual benefit
By CHERYL WALKER
Dlltr ..... C-•••• ......
Down-home regional to exotic
international fare graced the tables
when the ··best of the besf.'Chefs of
Orange Count)" whipped up thefr
specialties for a crowd of 600,
attending a benefit at the Dana
Point Reson Hotel.
Twenty-three premiere res·
taurants. offering hors d'oeuvres.
entrees and desserts, and I 4 Cali·
fomia wineries were represented at
ttre Great Ch.efs of Orange ... County.
an annual fund-raiser for the Na-
tional Kidney Foundation.
The event easily raised the foun-
dation's goal of $45.000. and an
addition. the generous crowd added
another $8.000 to the coffers with
bids on 75 silent auctaon items.
including original an. vacations.
jewelry. gift certificates, a sailing
course. Rams and Lakers tickets.
and an 9pponunity to have one of
four great chefs prepare a gourmet
meal an the_pnvacy ofone's home.
a a
Chefs offering their services on the auction block were Chez Cary's ....,,...,..._.,...,..~
Murat Oayioglu. Prego's Tam Dana Resort chef Peter StrlUollno (left) and Morell'• Paalo Kaata wttla tlletr apecialtlee.
Dobravolsk1s. Savannah's Grilrs
Jeff Duggar. and Peter Striffolino.
chef at the host hotel's Watercolors
Restaurant.
Striffolino. the chef coordinator
who prepared an American anti·
pasto for the benefit. said that two-
thirds of the chefs had participated
in previous galas.
.. Almost every chef we asked said
he would pan1c1pate:· said Stnf·
foltno. "because it's a great op·
portuntty fo r a httle friendl ) com·
petition while contribuung to -a
good cause."
While the hotel provided the
factlittcs. the rcstaruants. chefs and
wineries. donated all the rest.
Stnffolino pomted out. adding that
the average cost per chef is about
S 1.200. although some chefs. lake
Morell's Paulo Kautz. s~n1 closer
to $3.000 for 1ngrcd1ents alone.
Kautz prepared a tn-colored lobster
ravioli and veal dashes that took
two days to prepare.
Kautz said he spent so much time
and money becuase "the K1dnC)
Foundation 1s close. to my hean. t
beheve we should all try to do
something to gave someone a Stt· ,
ond chance at life." . Chef ,.t.ruk "Luck)" Teacharon1 VUla Non c•ef &nHlllt f!lerlentbaler eenee Arlene Baaee of Loe~
of Banakok 4. who had ·orchids
flown an from Thailand to decorate Pri:go' chef Tim Dobra' o1stos. )Ou." gave only a small pccunU!le ohhe ha~ \\cctbttfd1 h.shnagt'doffthe who creatl'd a t1ram1 u (la)cred Mi chael hater, chef of procttdstothecaux.11iketMidca
added t\pcn . ake) and rotoh dt fi rmagg1 (chtt Ooubk-Utt Hotel' Do\.trs R th.at the Kidney Fovndation sivts-+-lll
"I hke to do something for the roll) for the c' ent. s~ud he also taurant and a.okf and bronze medaf more than 90 percent eo where ifs
foundauon I feel hono~ that they . apprttiat~ the opponunlt) to v.ap v.1nncr at the Culinary 01)-mptc 1n suDPc>ted 1011>-totbe people with
keep asking me back Its my third tcchniqucs, rec1pc.-s and idea v. 1th frankfun. pttpartd 1nllcd chicken kiclMy ditcac. ••
)Car. and I fttl th C\.Cnt 1s • aood rollcaaun. He at~ pra19td foun-"'1th a candied pt"ICh Yhi aftd a Mike ~ .._.. chairMln
chance for me to showcase m) dauon mcmbc~ for their appn:c1a-basket of "natun-chorolaec clup and mcmbn" ohllt Oraaee COU9ty
work. tton of the chtfs •ho take pen. roolttn.: For the c~t. he donftod R111wl ..,.. ti * M•lillll
"Also there'\ not many cunces "E\:crybOdy rcall chips 1n to his foot·hilh toque bttau" "I Kid~ FCMlndatioll of SauO r11 to~ alt the Sttlt talent, all thtattat http and C\:Cr)OM at the· foun· bchc"c 1n it.s authcnltctty." Cahf'onUa. aid M was 1iddld 9lt ~~.;:.~:r:of:.U.".:Je~~-~ ~t1:.:C~:·~~~ ;,~~ ~°ftt::l'!1.~~ft:==!~~: ~::,~-:'::.::-"_.
they do bnt. throuah. no ont (\:en ~ • thank uon that approach a c~f. T find. whclmt... "'
iGolorful -seafOod -anG ~each
com biricition sensational
For fam ilies on the go. an casy-to-
fix dinner is a must.
Gold Country Baked Fish. a feast
of color and flavor. is the answer.
Tender. flak y fish is topped with
crisp bell pe pper stri ps and capers.
The sweet and juicy flaxor of
Californ ia cling peach slices
enhances the tangy. mustard-dill
sauce. Fish never tasted so good.
ta rd
1 teupooa grated llme peel
1 teHpooa dill weed
1 1111all clove garlic, minced
Sall, to taste
1 mediam· red bell pepper, cut
iato strip• •1, cup tlllnly sliced grffn onions
t teHp0on1 capers, drained
Hot cooked bulgar wbeat or rice
Lime wedges, for garnllb
But, perhaps best of all.-Geld-
Country Baked Fish may be as-
sembled ahead of time.'
Drain peaches. reserving 1/4 cup
liquid; save remai nder for other
uses. Set peaches aside. Cut fo ur 12
x 12-inch pieces of parchment
paper. Fold parch ment squares in
half. Divide fish into 4 equal
pqrtions. approximately 6 oun ces
each: Place one portion of fish on .
each parchment sq uare.
GOLD COUNTRY
BAKED FISH
1 cu (11 OUCH) California
ell•& ~acla slices in jaice or
extra Ugltt 1yn1p Mix together reserved 1/4 cup
peach liquid. mustard. lime peel.
dill weed and garlic. Brush sauce
1 ~ poud1 red supper fillets
% tablespoons Dijon-style mas-
Maybe rt didn't happen this way but. with
a HoneyBaked-brand ham at Thanks·
giving your guests will agree it tastes
great. And since we smoke our hams
up to 30 hours. then cover with a
unique honey glaze and spiral slice
for easy serving It makes less work
for you. •
This year for Thanksgiving
try a HoneyBaked~ brand
ham. The results will
speak for themselves
evenl y over fish. Sprinkle with salt
to taste.
Toss together red pepper strips.
green onions and capers: arrange
evenl y over fish fillets. Top with
reserved peach slices. Fold parch-
ment in half and pinch edgC$ to
seal.
To bake in microwave oven:
Place packets on larac microwave-
safe plate. Microwave on Hip
power. 5 to 6 minutes, rotating <!iJh
half tum a er each minute. lo
serve, spoon bulgar or rice onto
plates and top with contents of
packets. Garnish with lime wedp.
To bake in a conventional oven:
Place packets on a bakinc sheet.
Bake at 400 degrees. 8 to 10
minutes. until fish jost cooked
through. To serv'"e. spoon bolpr or
rice onto· pla\CS and top . wi\b
contents of packets. Garnish with
lime wedges. Makes 4 sel"Vings.
• Honeytleked-brand heme, hk:kofy emoked up to 30 howa, honey gland and .....
alk:ed tor ... Y MIVlng • FJHh own routed or emc*ed tuftleys • Me.t end CheeM
perty trep • Berbecued Beef or PoR Alb9 • Gift CertJflcet ..
MAHElll fl TOltO LA MAIRA
Sycamore Plaza
! z
I The Vill1ge Center
1222 So Brookhurst
92804 (It Ball Ro1d)
Phone (714) 635-2461
24001 Raymond Way •2
(Bell Towei Plau
North at El Toro Rold) 92630
Phone (714) 837·3822
2428 W Wh1tt1er Blvd ~31
(1 lfght W of Beach Blvd )
Phone (213) 694·2114
-I
I CORONA DU llAll
3700 E Coast Hwy 92625
P Phone (714) 673-9000
A6401 2
" ' •.
HIHfTllllTON lfAat
1~9 Beach Blvd. 9264'!
(Next kl Ralphs Markel at Garfretd)
Phone (714) 848-8575
,
OltAlt&f
14t9 N Tustin
(at Katella) 92667
Phone ( 714) 997-9960
I
. ..
0
HONE YBAK ED
•TM
Spj.Cy soup a real winiler·
A savory1spicy soup with lively
Tex-Mex taste appeal has been
awarded top honors and the $3.000
grand prize in the 1988 Pace l>icante
Sauce l'ick Up the Pace .Recipe
Contest. •
Picante Onion Soup. ·~"""'ttt1'""""~
combrnatton of everyday ingre-
dients, was inspired by an all-time
favorite -French onion soup.
Fragrant and richly flavored, it
combines onions cooked to a rich ·
golden brown with tomato juice,
bccfbroth and picante sauce for just
the right amount ofjalapeno pepper
"punch."
Each spicy serving takes a last-
minute topping of croutons and
Monterey Jack cheese.
PICANTE ONION SOUP
3 caps ~ly 11Jced onions
l 1arllc ~love. mlDced
•;, c•p batter or margarine
t caps tomato jalce
1 call (10~ ounces) condensed
beef brotb•
1 can water
~ cup plcante sauce
1 cup uflavored croutons
1 cup ( 4 ounces) shredded
Monterey Jack cheese
In 3-quart saucepan over me-
dium -low heat. cook onions and
garlic in butter until tender and
golden brown. about 20 minu tes.
stirring frequently. Stir in tomato
j uice. broth. water and picante
sauce. Bring to a boi l. Reduce heat;
simmer uncovered 20 minutes.
Ladle into so up bowls: sprinkle
with croutons and cheese. Serve
with additional picante sauce.
Makes 4 servings. about .5 cups
soup.
•Note: 2'r'J cups single-strength
beef broth may be substituted for
condensed beef broth and water.
Party designer focuses
on easy entertalnl~g
NEW YORK (AP) -No time to entertain?
Renny Reynolds. a New York City party designer. has pared
down everything from .. basics" t<> "elcctricf ' in an 88-minute
"how-to" guide to entertaining. His minute-by-minute schedule
takes you from the refrigerator to the doorbell with sman and
stylish ideas.
Reynolds offers the foll owing ground rules for hosts and
hostesses:
-Do as much in advance as possible. Routine chores like
cleaning and making ice cubes are the last things you want to worry
about the day of the party. Chill wines and wine coolers the night
before. - Keep the focus on your guests -rather than yourself. Too
often hosts and hostesses worry about how their guests will feel
about them. Put all your :nergy into planning what will make your
guests most rela xed and comfortable.
-Found objects: Be on the lookout for items that are different
or whimsical to help enhance the decor or table setting. These are
items yo u don't intentio nally seek out. rather. they happen to catch
your eye.
- Nature's bounty: The most beautiful centerpieces are an
arrangement of seasonal fruits. flowers and vegetables.
-Set a theme: Have your table decor and accessories carry the
message.
. What to serve? Try a spicy dip for crudites. a cold rice saJad,
baked bric. or a wild cherry frost. (Recipes for these dishes. and
other summer delipts. are included in the guide. which is free by
writmg to: California Cooler, 88-Minute Guide. Box 1080,
Louisville. Ky. 40201.)
SPICY DIP
1-cwp .O.r cream
Piac• to '4 teaspoon cayeue pepper
t to 4 da1MI of l.Ml11au Mt NKe
1 acallJN very fblely ~eed ( epdoul)
In a bowl blend all of the inarcdients togetherthorouply. lfit
is too hot. add more sour cream. ·
A delicious dip for crudites and chips. For an·extra bite of
spice. dip in a jalapcno potato chip!
BAUD BRIE
1 wbole brle, ••Y 1l1e. ~eraMy •ri,e
Sbved almolld1 -neep M ~ver Ute brle
V qetable oil
' Preheat oven to 300 dqrces F.
Place bne on a cookte sheet and aprinkle a couple of drops of
vqeiable oil on &op. Brush oil evenly on the cheese surface.
Sprinkle almonds on iop.
Bake I 0.20 minuta ck'pcncti• on ripeness of bne. When it is
soft and .,._ to dli '°"'*' itil ....,.
Servi• QI ldoir. ... • frncb bread or sourdouah
FIWll...... -
I • . '
J\11 '?urt>ose
. ~nriched 5FJour
Pill~u~
All PuJ])OSe
~~~r . •-
UM/J 2 Bagi p,,. Family
Bordens 149 . American Singles
Wrtl#fd 0-FooJ
t20W.VP ...
Vons,
Crescent Rolls
I 0...-P""'4t or
C"-W 9.1 o.a.tt PO.
Vivid
Liquid Bleach
AILFJW.Jl,,/f C4'o. 8ollk R,,,,i. Prict>f«
.69
89
n:rs11 11or B \f\nn
" I I \ " I" \ II.
I
•
·Blue Bonnet ·
Margarine
Sl}!~!!S.Soo
J ·Pound Packa~ •••
11. ree T~ .Frozen 79 Aople juice .
trx:tl P1m • 12o.o.rc ....
l ,4'00Ways to SAVE 1~ or More at Vons.
Look for the RED MORE BUY TAGS!
Ftd-./Wr--v-.Um .... J,400 NOR£ aUYs ~ .... ,...,-,_. foo'J. NOR.£ aUYs
-• 10'5 SAVl~S OR NOR.£""~ 11n1 ~_..•RED TAG. Tttst ~ m.h r--~ rm -...., -nwJ fn-.,., ,.,,,wn_ n... v-~ .. _,,"",. .. , _,,,.,, ill .... /<wM e/ NOR£ a UY S
19
z Fanns -399· '[;Jlf; !ttan u
Freda ~ Sliced Ham 399 ~,... u.
SulS5e Delk2 ClleeSe . 399l sa.1 r,.tr n.. u.. I
Honey T~on 179 Potato Salad r,:..,, I u..
Knudsen
Sour Cream
or Nia 'H 1.4/it S-c_,.
'' o-:r coni-
Land 0 Lakes
Butter
~or UrrubtJ t/la-Jp~
Vons
Cut Yams
190omcr c ..
105 .
1_99
11r \I .I'll~ 1a \l '' \If)'
Vons Natural
Vitamin "E''
Vons O\'Ster Shell Cak:ium 239
J(X) ""''" t:c .... ,,IJorwt
Vons Multi Vitamins 3 79 HJ P~JJ()c_, ._,
.Vons 4c.19 Acero la J
SOO Mt;::,.~_..,_ 1V-IJOC-. .lasw 2."J
UNLIMITED
· DOlJBLI
COUPONS ....... _
------------------------IAVE'2.50
''•lrM9AlUAN1?.,. ....-rD 8Rlu UOn1
flt·;\\.!' - -
Sr3u 1,1y;~,'.• < ,. , \_ '"'-..,' .~ t,<-• ,,j ' ~ ~ ~.,,.,, f •
·~ M MCI( lllE'UNO MAIL-IN <;EATIFI~ --·--=--=--------"'!«--· -------==--==-"':'·Cl"' ----.... -·-"'--'-' ---.......... =:-=:: =-=-------_....,. .. .............. ::::::::..-------...... --.. e =-..:.:=."':...-=--=== r>O ... ..,,., .... ., .......... .,_._...._._....~._... :-~ . "=-"' =:.=.-:::...-_ ... a ......, . .. .. . ................... .
"'-&. -.. - - - - -- - -- - - - -~~.::-~· _-:::-:.·.... • •
e
Ill
OPEN
legulai Hours
Veteran's Day ·
,....,, No¥. 11. 1988
~ •.
Cappucino flavor takes the cake
Chooolateandcoffeehavealwaya almonds and a thick fudae froatina, 'tla e.,............ bUe at JSO dqrees. 9·11 minutes,
been perfect putncn. In the famous it is perfect for an afternoon snack, l 'tla ""'Hpr stirrina occsionally, unlit a<>ldcn
Italian drink called Cappuccino, anelcpntooffeepanyorananyday s brown. Cool. Cream shonenina
thick, dark espteSSO coffee and hot, dessert. 1 esp __ ... _ nnd with aupr, CUS. vanilla and
be.Aten milk are liberally topped Almonds add more than nutty tea•••••-• almond eltracts until ftuffy.
with rich, dark chocolate. ·The texture and flavor. They are bi&h in '4 teal,.. ...._. e~t Combine flour with cocoa pow.
combination creates the most c.aJcium and iron, rich in the B 1 ""'n.r lie der, coffee crystals, bekinf soda,
mellow of flavon! vitamins, vitamin E, mqncsium ~ C!9' NCee,... r bakina powder and salt, mix well.
Jn fact, Cappuccino gets its name and cops>er. So when you add them· !r,:"':9 ......... eeffee Btcnd dry inpedients into creamed
from the chocolate--coffee color of to thJS chocolate-coffee blend, 1 teuMM ............ .... mixture alsemately with milk. Stir
the blend. It is reminiscent of the 'you're addina food nu\rition in ~ ......--..... ~.-lier in lfJ cup touted almonds. PQur
color of the robeS worn by the addition to a thll'd perfect-panner ~ •••n• ;;;--~ into peased and floured 9 x 13 x 2-
Capuchin monks in Padua. flavor. · 11:1. ta inch b&kina pen.
Here. the two classic flavors ,. ~ m ' Bake at 350 d~s. 40-45
come together in a rich, yeleasy·to-CAPPUCCINO Clt••celM r.qe ldaC 1-minutes or until pick. insened in
make cake. Enhanced with the FUDGE CA.IE Spread almonds in. sing)c layer center ~mes out clean. Cool pn
mellow, nutty flavor o( toasted 1 np .Uvere4 almHd1 on baking sheet. Place m cold oven;, wire rack. Frost with Cappuccino
---~...;._---------------~-----------;..._ _______ ._..;.... _______________ _,, Ft(dae Icing and sprinkle with
remaining lfJ cup toasted almonds.
No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Eve Wins With Sta
FRESH
Meat Dept. Savings
Beef Backribs OEFAOllm
Canned Ham ~
Chuck Steak ::::
Meat Franks .o<N..-u.
Pork Loin Roast :::::::c~
Turkey Drumettes ~
Skinless Catfish :OELTAPM>f
Compare these Low Prices
BEEF BONELESS
Cbuck
1-AOLL
Frozen Food Favorites
Grocery Specials
Dish Liquid NUIHf .. • ft« •1 11
All Fabric Bleach ::: ••-OZ •1 •
Bath Tissue ~~"""" ~ADU •1 09
Orange Juice ::~ ..ai'221
Citrus Punch=.,~ MOZ'1°'
Cheese ~~~(XU\' .or'1 79
Crush Soda •'MMTD ..,,« •1 • Bread ~'-UY _ a.oiW
Dressing ~ .ar89' Cottage Cheese =A~ ,.az•1 08
PopCorn.==AYI· -M)l•1• Yogurt :::=oo•U YMI~ .ar53•
LB
We•on
Corn·ou·
48-0Z
Garden Fresh Produce
Brussel Sprouts -Fl#CYTINID'OlllBI la 29'
Potatoes u ... c,,IUKT-la 29-
0nions u.NO.•IWUT~ la 23'
Carlo Rossi ::.~
Kamchatka Vodka
Scoresby Scotch
Miller Beer ::=m~Oll
spaghetti Sauce :::cc..~,_.,.agg. Coke :::a:-~M)Z'1 4' Noodles =:-.::: _ Mll45• ..-----------~..::......_ _________ _
Pancake Mix ~~ 19GZ•1•
Reaay Crust ~lTOll ~89' -..... = -=""-""= ST ARTS Si.~'=Z THUA80AY If?"~ 13141518
10l'I ADYEAT1SED ITEM
OUARANT'EE
w. ..,,,.. to ,...,. on '*'° ~ *"* of
_,.,W llWd•JdiM "' Clue lo oandllOnl ~our oonlrol. .. nin Olll Of"'......, IP'dll, a AA'" CHEQ( ... OI __, ......
~ lo Duy .. *"' ... .,....., Pflce.
IOOll ... beooltl9 ...... cw .-.i JD dllfa.
Grffee Jam :::-.:, _ ·-*-• Co ee IMllWli ~ •1 79 W( MSEM 'fHE AIOHT tO LIMIT Ofl AEP'Ulf
A.OC t..ar SALO TO OOMlotl..:W. DEM.EN Oft WHOL.EIALlM ...._......_ _______________ _,;. __ ..;....;;;;;.;.....;...;;..;..._.;....;;....;;..;~.;;;..;;;..;.;_;,.:..;..;;,;;;::..::;;.;:__~~-~-~---':._:_~ ... .. --
: I •• ~ 4 "' • ' ... • t 1, •
',' : : • • j I • ~ : • •• ,·_· ..... ··-~ . . .... · .
f . . .
\.
Makes 16 servings. ·
CAPPUCCINO
FUDGE ICING
• 14' cap batter ' •
.
14 ct1p cocoa powder
1 tea1pooa ID1taat coffee
cry1tal1
I tableapoou Upt corn 1ynp
I tablea,..U mllll
I npa powdered H&ar, sifted
1 tea1pon nailla eztract
14 teupoH almoad eztract
Melt butter in small saucepan.
Blend in cocoa powder and coffee
crystals to dissolve. Stir in com
syrup, milk, powdered sugar, van-
illa and almond extracts; beat until
smooth. Spread over cooled Cap-
puccino fudge Cake.
California
sparklers
pleasant.
By MlltE DUNNE
lllCl&l lj ...... ~
SACRAMENTO -For the mo-
ment, let's shove to the back of the
closet that tiresome debate about
whether California's winemakers
ever will be able to produce a
sparkling wine that is the equal of
French champagne.
Let's just sit <town with a rep-
resentative sampling of recent Cali-
fornia sparklers.. to see if we can
figure out where things are headed.
I did that with a group of Bruts
the other day and was pleasantly
surprised by the results. No. t~y
weren't as deep, complex and
yeasty as fine champagne. Nor were
they as shallow, fruity and simple as
Cahfomia sparklers have tended to
be in the not-too-distant past. As a
aroup, they were toastier and drier,
and more crisp, refined, refreshing -
and interesting than that.
I had difficulty choosing one that
appealed to me more than the
others, but the one I settled on
turned out to be the Gloria Ferrer
1984 Royal Cuvee Brut (SIS). I
liked the persistence of its tiny
vibrant beads, the longevity of its
dense and froth}' mousse, the
crispness of its finish, and the
suggestion of tan apples and sunny
stone in its flavor and feel.
In build it's more austere than
plump, and in texture more tangy
than soft, but it still has that up-
front fruitiness that tends to set
California sparklen apan from the
imports, but not so much that it is
the wine's only captivating facet.
The Royal Cuvce was released
earlier this year in tribute to the fint
visit to California of Kina Juan
Carlos I and Queen Sofia of Spain.
(The Gloria Ferrer Champagne
Caves. an $1 LS-million facility in
the Cameros region at the southern
reaches of Sonoma County, is a
branch of f rcixenet, an inter-
national wine company owned and
operated by the Ferrer family of San
Sandumi de Noya, Spain.)
The wine, a blend of 62 percent
Pinot No1r and 38 percent
Chardonnay, was produced by the
traditional and labor-intensive
.. methode champenoise." It isn't
champqne. but It also isn't typical
of what we have come to expect in a
California sparkling wine.
It isn't IS dry and austere IS the
former, Or IS f8t and pnaly IS the
latter. It strikes a refieshina be1anoc
between earthiness and fruit,
which, while not oew for the state,
could help define what eventually
may emerge as a dominate and
11istinct California style.
Food 1....UOns: Winery per-
sonnel recommend that the wine be
served wilt\ pme. shellfish. red
meats and paella.
TURUYGRILL
Callforni>srown turkey breast
steaks or tenderloins can be &rilled
on the berbecue without any ad-
ditional faL
Just paint breasts on all sides
with Dijon-style mustard, sprinkJe
heavily with lemon juice and
liahtly with Won:estenhire sauce.
Marinaic for about one hour
before pillina. Season with salt and
pepper just before servina.
1
..
.
Plan on leftover for speedy-ineals
As a speedy supper staner, lef-tover cooked turkey can't be beat. 1-lan pieces Ladle into. bowls. top wnh nee. 1 na (%.25 ouces) sliced ripe
Infinitely adaptable, it takes kindly l co ti oucH) •llole kernel Spnnkle wnh cilantro, if desired, olives, clralae4
to all manner of quick and easy, cora, clralHd and serve with additional picante "' 1a1pooe aaU
great-tasting preparations. 14 np ptcute uace sauce. Makes 4 to 6 servings. about l nps (I oaaces} 11lredded Jac:k
Colorful and creative combina-l teaspOolt 1roud camlD 6 cups stew. elaffse
tions of readil~ available inare-"' teaspon salt Cut peppers in half length.wise:
dients, botb fam1ly-plea\Sing recipes ! nps llot cooked rice STUFFED PEPPERS remove seeds and stems. Parboil 4
rely on versatile picante sauce for Cllopped cilutro (optional) 4 me4lam bell peppers (red, minutes. Drain well 4nd place in 11
their livelr. .• garden-fresh flavor. ~oorc-oni,on in oil in JO-inch yellow, 1reea or .any combiaa-x 7 x 2-inch baking dish. Combine
Choo!( mild, medium or hot, as sk~llot unut . tender, about . 3 tloa) turi<J=.y, picante sauce. nee. corn.
you prefer, for just the desired minutes. ;Add t<?matoes, breaking l capt claopped cooked turkey onions, olives and salt; m ix well.
degree of rongue-tingl in~ jalapeno-,. upJa.rge..p1eces wath w~~ spoon. l C1IP plcH&e aa.ace.. Stir an cbeesc.....Spoon 10to ~p_per
pepper .. heat." S!ir in turkey, g~een pepper, corn, l c•p cooked wlllte rice halves. Bake at 35(}degrees for 20 to
Turkey Skillet Stew teams turkey P.tcante sauc~. cumm an.d salt; l caa (I oucH) wllole kernel 25 minutes or until heated t~rough.
with colorful veaetables and simmer. I 0 !"tnlJtes or unul green ~om, drained Strve with additional saure. Makes
savory/spicy seasonings for a fiesta-pepper is crisp-tender. 'i'.J cap sliced green onions 4 servings.
flavored one-dish dinner that's 1--------------:----------------=----------======================~:::~
ready to serV'e in about IS minutes.
Topll with rice and serve with a loaf
ot crusty bread, com bread or a
basket of warn} tortillas.
Stuffed Peppers fills. the cook's
choice of red, yellow or green bell
'peppers with a mix of turkey. rice.
veggies. cheese and picante sauce
for a spicy entree with serape-bright
colors. As easy as can be, this savory
.supper takes only about 10 minutes
to prepare for a short stint in the
oven.
TURKEY SKILLET STEW.
1 medlam onion, cut Into 'fa·lncb
wedges
l tablespoon vegetable oil
l can (14 Ya ounces) stewed
tomatoes
3 caps diced cooked turkey
l medium 1reen pepper, cat Into
RISOTTO ••.
From Cl
GARDEN RISOTTO
l can (aboat 14 oaJtces) cbicken
brotll
3 tablespoons oUve oil
l cap coavened rice
l medi•m onion, cllopped
% 1arllc cloves, minced
Yt teaspoon groud red pepper
"' pound f resb l"ffn beans, cat
diagonally Into 1-IDcb pieces
(about% caps)
% teaspoon• cbopped f re1b
tbyme or 31, teaspoon dried
l small red bell pepper, diced •1, cup (l once) fresllly grated
Romano or Parmesan clleese
Add water to broth to make 21/•
cups liquid: set aside. Heat oil in
large saucepan over medium heat.
Add rice, onion and garlic. Cook.
stirring constantly. 3 to 4 minutes.
Add liquid and ground red pepper.
Bring to a boll. Reduce heat. Cover
tightly and simmer 13 minutes.
Stir in beans: cover and continue
tosrmmcr 7 m inutes.. Sur in thyme:
remove from heat. Cover and let
stand until all hqu1d is absorbed.
about 5 minutes. Sur in red pepper
and cheese. Makes 6 servings.
FRESH TOMATO RISOTTO
l ~ caps cblckea brotJ1
'i'.J cap jalJenne salami
% teaspoons olive oil
l"' cups rice in an instant
'4 cup dopped f resb basil or l
teaspoon dried
% plam tomatoes, coarsley
cbopped
"' cup (2 ODDCet) shredded
mozarella claeese Fresbly
ground black pepper
Combine broth. salami and oil in
saurepan. Bnng to a boil. Sur in
rice and basil. Cover and let stand
until all liquid 1s absorbed. about S
minutes. Stir in tomatoes and
cheese. Serve with black pepper.
Makes 4 .servings.
BOOKS ...
From Cl
world -many from celcbnt1es and
world leaders -wind up in the
private collections of socially
prominent women who live in the
famous spa of Palm Springs.
Tiempo de las Ninos. Desert
Hospital's auxiliary. has compiled
hundreds of these gastronomic
~ems in its second cookbook.
'Another Taste of Palm Springs"
that features the best recipes culled
from more than 2.000 submitted.
Among those sharing their
favorites are President Ronald Re-
agan. macaroni and cheese: Nancy
Reagan, pumpkin pecan pie: Gene
Autry, apple crunchbars: Red But-
tons. fettucini; author Judith
Krantz. creme caramel; and
cookbook author and entertainer
Dinah Shore. moldep baked
chicken with rice. 4
Recipes range trom appetizers
and salads to one-dish international
dishes and desserts. There are seven
sections on Palm Springs potpourri,
speedy cuisine and recipes. from the
area's famous resorts. restaurants
and country clubs.
To order. send a check for$ 14.95
plus S 1.50 for postage, made pay-
able to Tiempo de los Ninos. P.O.
Box 195. Palm Springs 92263.
CALIFORNIA PO'BOY
Make a California version of this
Louisiana specialty with lices of
CaJifomia-.rown turkey ham, tur-
key bologna. turkey salami and
turkey pastrami on Iona pht loaves
of sweet French bread.
Top with shccd tomatoes.. lettuce
and a tuty Pnto Sauce made by
combinina chopped fresh basil
with manced prhc. ohve oil and
p'lted PanMYn cheese.
I· e
OPEN VOERANS DAY
WE ACCEPT C~UPONS FROM OTHER SUPERMARKETS PLUS UNLIMITED DOUBLES
Kll•LIR
CllACKmS " IROltlCAllA
._ __ 1TO16-0Z I 29
ASSORTED •
iii .. ,., ORA ... JUICI
.... '!;'.;..,~·_.t_I • ~~~ 1.69
l·lb. Pkg.
CREAMETIES SPAGHETII
11 Oz Cons Reg. O r 01e1 .79 6-PACK PEPSI, SLICE OR MOUNTAIN DEW
EA.
·-·-·· Wf 11
390Z 5 79 All GRINDS •
1.49
I ·LB. SLICED BACON
llOlnUSSSKI•••• ~ICKIN THIGHS
PILGRIMS
PRIDE La.2.39
,HIN L~ RICH =~~ TURK.:' WINGS .
ll . 2.29 O R DRUMS 79• FRESH L8 ••
Wilson Tender Cul Pon Reody
PORK LOIN CHOP ....... , ... LB 3.99 FRESH IOAHO RAINBOW TROUT
BEH
RIB
l B 1.69
c
32-0t
CRISCO VEGH ABLE Oil .
Fresh Smoll Sue
PORK SPARERIBS
8.C. All Purpose
MclNTOSH APPLES LB .69 Delic10us
LARGE PERSIMMONS
Solid
FRESH CA BBAGE
f e~h
LB • 19 SPINACH
(
.........
.•• LB. I.a•
EA .39
)
• pACIC KAMCHATKA
LA•An·s •ll• 1.7 5-LITlll VODKA MIYAKO
GfNMAl·CHA
HINOICHI
TOfU 9.1NCH eAK ING
OUP Ptl Ol~H
181NCH ... R
OVAL •OASTa
I ~l~~(C, 3.69 J 80-PROOF 7. 99 \l -...: I •s ... """ W ITH LIO 7. 99 IA'JOZ 69 .. . 2.89.J
lo Forer 750 M l
CHARDONNAY OR PINOT NOIR
750-MI Red Or White
MOUTON CADET WINE
S.H
4.H
Miyoko Sn,.rol.e I 0 1
DRIED MUSHROOMS
1601
ASAHI AJI MSG)
PlllLADRPlllA
.ClllAM CH• ... -.__...,. B·OZ RH; OR ••
--• l lTE BOX ft
loke To·loke 12-0. Pkg
SHREDDED CHEDDAR
8 0.
GALLO SALAME CHUB
8 oz
SLICED
1.H
2.s• . .
...
1.as·
, -·~ -
1.49
2 PACI<
IA·OZ
Stouff9' ~ S.lect.d Vortett~
FRENCH BREAD PIZZA
CKe-ldo 3 .S 0%
MICROWAVE HASH BROWN S
1 Ouort
OBLONG BAKING DISH
·s Inch 11~•.:>..,qu
ENAMEL ROAS lER WI TH LIO
.......
T ......
.39~
··"
.. ···"
NICO .,PKTIVI 8 A.M. !MUft., NOY. 10 TMMI WID., NOV. 1•, 1 .... LIMIT lttOffn llsnvtD. NO IAl.010 DIALIM Ott WHOUSAUft. NO CA• IMICOUIJll OM UUAI I • r
TACKLE THE HUNGER P BLEM
. r
SALE TODAY THAU SATURDAY. NOV. 12th
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
.. (iJ
fJJA
"°°' .._ .. .....c
"'°'"" \>'4'4P00
Rf\10 '\
Rf'\<10
SENIOR·
CITIZENS
10'/o S#llNGS •AU ,...,....
~ ...... -
DEPEND SUDAFED
NASAL DECONGESTANT
CLOSE-UP OR
AIM TOOTHPASTE
NIVEA
SKIN CARE
REVLON FLEX
HAIR CARE
L'OREAL
• EXCELLENCE
M&M MARS
ASSORTED
CANOY
S.le Puce
Mfr ·s M•~·ln
Ret>ete
14.69
-2.00
Fl..l~~':,ST 1269 1~~ 133 1~c~ F~R;300 3ss ~J88¢
Our Regular 2.99-3.33 Our Regular 1 .89-1 .99
4.5 oz. -4.6 oz. pump or
6.4 oz. -6.6 oz. tube,
all types
Our Regular 2.99 Our Regular 1.79-2.49
15 oz. Shampoo or Cond ..
8 oz. Spritz, 7 oz. -JJ oz.
Our Regular 5.19
S)lampoo-ln Haircolor
assorted shades.
Our Regular 40' ea
Snickers. ~ & M's. Our Regular 16.99 8 ounce Lotion or Skin Oil;
4 ·ounce Creme, all types. Disposable undergarments:
36 count regular or 30 count
extra absorbency.
24 Tablets, 10 12-Hour
Capsules or 4 ounce
Cough Syrup. Hairspray. 5 oz Mousse or
3 25 oz. Gel, all types
Milky Way, 3 Musketeers
or Twix.
sets of
color prints
for the price of
Bring a roll of 110 126. disc. 35mm Koda-
color. Fu11 or other C-•1 process ftlm for
developing and prtnllng at our everyday low
prtce and we II give you an extra set of color
prints for tree• Applies to standard size pnnts
only
Otter Ends 11/12188
OllE DAY RltYICE IS llOT •UIU • TlttS OFflll
VICKS
NYOUIL OR
DAYCARE
319
Our Reg. 3.93-4.13
6 oz. cold medicine,
all types.
CORRECTOL
LAXATIVE
TABLETS
23~
Our Regular 3 17
30 count. the
woman's gentle
la>eatlve
CLEAR EYES
OR MURINE
149
cw.
.__--i t-'S.l~H Our Reg. 2 75-2.83
0.5 ounce eye drops,
...... alt types.
• SENIOR
CITIZENS
10¥.MVINGS ONAU. ~ 0......lft...,. •
HUMIDIFIER
OR VAPORIZER 999
Our Regular 13.99-16.35
By DeVilbiss. 1-1/2 gal.
capacity Humidifier,
#2500 or 2-1/4 gal.
capacity Vaporizer,
#1800,
CVS ASPIRIN
TABLETS
149
BASIS DIGIT AL
THERMOMETER
499
Our Regular 6 37
Model BTM-2. With
plastic case & memory.
•Disposable Probe Covers
25 count .......•..... 1.n
100 count. Buffered ~=~
REVLON EUROPEAN
COUAGEN COMPLEX
499
11.28 VALUE
0 5 oz. Cream, 1 oz.
Lotion and 2.5 oz.
Cleanser.
Sorry, no.ralnctleekl.
NEUTROGENA
HAIR CARE
3~~
Our Regular 4.99 or Super Strength.
COMPARE TO:
Butterin or
Excedrin at 5 1S-5 99
~-.-. 6 oz. bottle or 5.5 oz. ...._ __ __, tube Shampoo: 6 oz.
CVS MENTHOL
EUCALYPTUS
COUGH DROPS
~i99¢
BONUS SIZE
30 count with 6
FREE: asst. flavors.
COMPARE TO·
Halls at 218
bottle Conditioner
SURE
ANTI--PERSPIRANT
1!c~
Oyr Reg. 2.09-2. 79
2 oz.. Wide Solid or
1.25 oz. Roll-on:
alt types.
SCHICK GYNOL 11,
ORTHO-GYNOL
OR OROOCREME
r--------. INJECTOR
599
Our Reg. 7 .09-8.49
Contraceptive:
3.45 oz. -3.8 oz.
refill.
COSTA MIM FOUNTAIN YA& 1 IY
The ~.,. Shopping c.nter Cornet 01 8toollh11tel St &
Hetbof fJlliod tnwa.ction Of Hltt>ot Eft11 A.e (Nltlll To Lucllyll a N1wpor1 Blvd 122· mo 913-01162 •
HUNTINGTON BEACH . LAGUNA HILi.a
loetl'"-nl'l°I 5 Poinl1I Plan 2e53t Mo\lllOll P1tllw1y
1•1-e ~l'I Sc "BNch 8MI et L1Pu AoM
(Nall To TrldtrM'•I W-352$ loG-1551
BLADES
247
Our Regular 3.47
7 count, plut
platinum
Pennsylvania
Dutchman
Mushrooms
4 ounce. stems & pieces
Our Regular 74' ea . . .•
REVLON
UNFORGET ABLE
LASHES
Hiiis Bros~ Coffee ·199
13 ounce. for all coffee makers
Our Regular 2 76 . . ............... .
Peppertdge Farm 99 Coollles, s 25 oz • 1 25 oz . ¢
distinctive collection
Our Regular1.43 ............. .. 299
9.50VALUE
Big Brush black with
FREE Fashion Color
Mascara.
Lay's Potato Chips 8 8 ¢
7 ounce bag
Our Regular 1.29 ................ .
Sorry, no re1ncheck1
--. .., ........ "
----100-
DIXIE
COLD CUPS OR
PAPER Pl.A TES
133
Our Reg 1.89-2 09
100 count.
7 oz. capacity Cold
Cups or 48 count.
9 inch Paper Plates.
CVS
ALCOHOL
PREP SWABS
149
100 count
COMPARE TO· 8-0
Aloohol Swabe at 2 29
V1DAL SASSOON
CRIMPING IRON
Sele Pric. 8.88
Mfr '• MaH·ln -1.aa At~
YOUR 3aa '1NALC:OIT
Our Reguter 12.99
Model 1142.
NON-PHARMACY STORES
.
W( llCX:.1'1
UQ'*AHIUS
L:1vna Htltt Me" 1c• I (I OfOAold cc 770-4387
MIUIONVIEJO ~ 321 M1Ht0fl V•tfQ Mo811
3eol·1593
ORANGE 211• Hol'll'I Ofengt Mall OUOl!'n•l'W lllOMtt ...... 0 8374355
BEER
NUTS
166
Our Regular 2 49 •
BONUS SIZE
12 ounce with
2.4 ounce FREE
SUNBEAM
MOIST HEAT
1299
Our Regular 19.49
Heating Pad.
model #749.
WOO LITE
LIQUID
169
Our Regular 2.39
16 ounce cold
water wash.
..
The selling
of .alcohol . . . . ' ..
Or~ Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, November 9, 1988
Creative think[.ng filad€ easy
Edward De Bono. the author of 2 S book~ has been rank.Ii,. the collec-
tive d1sciphncs of ~yc:holOJY. educa-
tion and the politK:al ICleocet (to
name a few) by usertina that we all
can learn to think m~ creatively.
His techni~U« arc simple. and this
has immediately brouaht him 11nder
JULIAN
WHITAKER
remarkable _physical and cbemical
exple»1on of lau&hier. Accordins 10
De Bono, the fateral thinlcif!l re-
quired for all humor is closely UU\ to ~reauve think1n&. Howevei:. humqr is
ignored by all the gr~t plnlolopbers
and thinkers of history, perhaps
because it 1s so inexplicable. "
~_,, .... pe.aket_sa_ys adso;__ ... ti ... on'""'ing t~e validi~ and_i_nt_entions of
harmful to Society The answer is yes. accordina to Dr.
Jean Kilbourne, a wcll-knowrt cxpen
. fire.
You see. to be taken seriously, it is
often bell. 'o be complicatCd;~cty
will always proyide expcn•. to .de-
cipher and explain your contnbuuon.
In addition, laugnter rcleales en-
dorphins> reduces tension and cream Bono. uses "lateral thought.. by a sense or well beina thal is conducive ~hc-differcnt:-J'OO's -<>f ~ltV?lh~opens
informalion, thus multiplyma poss-the lateral channels. Why don't we
ible solutions to a problem. The use It more often to stimulate
spontaneous process of connecting creativity?
It
By ELLEN CAMPBELL
Dlllr .... Cel. ' •• ,.
A sultry brunette leans over the
pool table linina up her shot. Seven
great-looking l~YS . arc hudd!~
around her, sm1hng in eager anuc1-
pation. An open bottle of tequila-$its
in the middle Q{the felt expense.
This is the set-up for another
provocative liquor ad, one of the
Kirstie Alley series of Cuervo print
ads. A beautiful woman surrounded
by a multitude of adoring hunks. The
mcssqe? LoOsen up with a couple of
tequilas and such a good time could
be yours.
on the relationship bet~n alcohol
and advertising. She says ads that
.alamorize drinking have definite
actrimental effects. .i
"Ten petcent of consomers buy 60
percent of all alcohQI," Kilbourne
says. "This 10 percent is the heavy.
user or alcoholic. Q( course the
industry targets this groop in their ads
-they arc communiating to the
alcoholic and everyone else that 1t is
OK to drink."
Kilbourne, who has a doctorate in
education from Boston University,
has made a career of circling the
nation and addressing this topic in a
lecture/slide presentation. She hopes
to alcn her audience to what she says
is a constant barrage of misleading
advertising messages.
major chanteS occur in public policy
toWard alcohol advertising. The first
chanae, warning labels on bottles, is
already beinJ mstitutcd. She also
advocatef higher excise taxes ·on
liquor, making it harder for children
in penicular to procure alcohol. The
billions of dollars that would result
from higher taxes could then be used
to launch "counter advertising," the
third major change she says is needed.
Kilbourne suggests one com-
mercial that warns of the dangers of
drinking should be shown for every t~ree or four that promote drinking..
And she doesn't trust the alcohol
industry to provide that opposing
De Bono wntes that creative think-
ing, like any other skHl. can be
improved with certain exercises. One
exercise, fQr instance, is to subject any
new idea to a PM I teSSiQn. List aU the
P1use1, M inuses, and Interesting
aspects of the idea. If this is done an a
group, just 1mqine the ~aterial that
~µJd 'urfacc for d1scuss1on.
Jn "The Mechanism of the Mind"
( l 969)1 De Bono described the mmd
as an information soner, taking the
trillions of bits of information pres-
ented daily and funneling them into
"boxes" containinJ similar material.
This process is akin to rain running
down a mountainside and being
funneled into pools that usually do
not connect with each other.
Creative thinking, according to De
the brain's information storage bins Finally, aooorchna to De Bono, one
oeturs wt th both insi&ht and laughter. of the biuest stumblina blocks to
Often. with lateraf thi~~ing. the understanding creative thouabt is the
solution toa pro~lem w1JIJUf!\P OUt as, fact that any creative idea is f<>sical in
a connection 1s made. Caugh1cr hindsight. Therefore, many mis-
rcsults from. the surpnse connection takenly assume tt\jt we sho~ld \eACb
of informauo_n pools not normally log>c more vigorously to stimulate
connected! . • · •cteauvny. However crcatlve ideas
An a1rhne pilot undergoing his arc never l~cal in forcsiaht. but~
ph)'stcal exam was found to be aJmost born from illog>cal connections of
bhnd. When the shocked physician information stored in the the brain.
asked how ~e was ab.le to land has De Bono says that, like everythjna
plane, the pilot explau~ed his Jesus else '4C do. we can improve the lateral
Chnst method: "I point the nose •
down and when the co-pilot screams Jallan ~ltaker, M.D., a8tMr el
•Jesus Christ!' I level off." · "ReveniD1 Heart Dtseue" ... '')le.
The language of a joke connects venla1 Dtabe&es," 11 "reeler el die
dissimilar bins of stored mformataon Wltltner WellDes .. lllltlhlte bl New-
and for some reason causes the port Beacll. The Hquor industry spends
millions of dollars a year to convince
consumers that drinking is normal,
enloyable and even beneficial.
"People tell me that after hearing
my lccturc,1hey will never look at ads
in the same way," she says.
view. "Right now their service messages r;:::============--r-----------:-------11--------~----
arc centered exclusively around safe C... lo Aldtlls tor II'°" Wllfl tloolll'I needs
Should the general public be ques-Ultimately, Kilbourne hopes three (Pleue .ee ALCOHOL /C 11) °"'1 SC*Jlllsb "" ';""ft JOI pdctly.
CIAloEN'S
16'3 Plac..O. A.._ Cis&. ._ CA (114) ......... Speeding up the mating ga.me
wasahttleharder-oneshouldscem Bad Feet Karen, who is sin.ale. was waiting in
a local restaurant Tor her ajrlfriend
Debby, who is married, to arrive. A
World Series game was on the-big
screen TV in the restaurant's bar.
"What's the score?" she asked a
man who was sitting alone.
"I don't know, but the Dodgers are
ahead," he smiled. She smiled back.
It wasn't until Karen and Debby
• were seated in the dining room that 1t
occurred to the single-but-looking
woman that she may have just passed
up a terrific guy.
Karen turned to Debby (whose
husband is a self-described spons
nut) and asked, "What do you think
about A man who sits at a bar
watching the last game of the World
Series and doesn't know the score?"
"I think I could love a man like that
... " said Debby.
Debby recently married Peter, the'
"man of her dreams" -someone she
met throu&h one of those professional matchma~ing clubs. No kiddina.
LINDA .
Aa.W1
At first Karen was apoalled. "l
could NEVER do anything like that ...
she had said. "I believe in old-
fashioned serendipity."
Debby and Peter convinced Karen
that they also believed in serendipity
... that they were no l~s romantic
than she ... that the mate-search was a
numbers game ... that they had just
chosen to speed up the process a bit ...
and that she should do the same.
Karen hacLfinally relented and ac-
cepted her friend's generous gif\.
At the moment she was in the
process of filling out the membership
profile which she discovered was
actually an opportunity to do a httlc
self-search.
interested in specific things ... but C
flexible, the women decided.) "I.play a use
tennis as often as possible ·'· work in K nee Pain
thegarden ... goforbikendes ... swim. w 8 .,_ 1,.,_
An afternoon in the movies is a r. · · .neyno .u
special treat ... so 1s quiet time with a Particularly 1n runoins aporu. such
roaring fire. an old movie and some u tennis. buketball and marathons. · ddl" S • the lower ntttmitln are plettd senous cu ing. unscts.' under peat aueu. When the foot hu
WHO AM I: "A woman with poor po1ture, t he knff is caused to
traditional values who has a mis· rotate beck and forth with each sup.
chievous little girl inside who likes to Thia eaceu mouon can aoften and
come out and play." erode the carulqe on the under aur·
It was when they came to the face of the kneecap. chrondromelecie
WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR t>ln of 1>91.ellae. Thia vtry painful cond1uon
the questionnaire that the subject of can end an athletic career and result
the man-at-the-bar-who-didn't-in the early onset of arthritia. After diegnoeia hu been confirmed know-the-score came up. "What I by test.I. such u erthroecopy. and
don't want is a Sunday couch ~tato. 111umina theeroeion 1a not tooaevere.
"This as your opportunity,' said the condition frequently responds
Debby. "What else don't you want." dramatically to correcting the •lien·
"I don't want somebody whose ment of the feet. This 11 done by •
idea of comfon 1s keeping all the pqdietnk by means of• device called
wmdows open in the middle of the en orthouc. which 11 cuatom made winter." and pieced 1n the ahoe. Later the
"That doesn't make you sound 1>9tient can be trained to good foot
very flexible at all... posture and the orthollc can be eliminated ~oK. OK" said Karen. 'Tm
ofel Your :J.);~/anl Parent Uhnl~r Wu/a Us
JJoliJa'I Wala '/jo ...
-.. Do you worry abOut your
relative living alone dur-
ing the long cold winter?
~ Can they manage the
furnace. shopping, doc-
tor's appointments?
Why not bring them to
\
• Huntington Beach for the
winter months. We offer
a lovely, home-like set-
ting, delicious meals and
·,· personal assistance. Our
activ i ty program
provides daily enjoyment and new friendships.
Your family prov1des the special family moments. Share the
Thanksgiving dinner. trip to Disneyland. the grandchild's
Christmas program. the quiet time of sharing together. the joy
of the holiday season. ·
'!Jo maL. Jt .A Special W;nt.,. '!J.1,plton• ...
THE HUNTINGTON SENIOR RESIDENCE
11151 Flortda St., Huntlilgtoft B1ach
(714) ~-7711 Just two years earlier she had
bought a lifetime membership, which
she understood would become trans-
ferable if the computerized-cupid
FAC TS ABOUT MYSELF:
.. Karen ... l4 years old ... 5 foot 2
LOOKJNG for a man who shares my W. 8 . Reynolds, D.P.M. 1831 Oraa1e A Ve. •E values, who wants to have children Coeta Mesa. CA 84~·1021 Pmr ... .-... '1• ...a prtw ... -"'' :• t1.
and has a Uttle bo) mside of him that 1 ~============~~==~===:::::::::::::=::::~~~~~:========~ hkes to come out and play ... with ~ .succeeded in doing his thing..
Now that she is happily mated.
Debby has gifted her fnend with the
datina club membership.
inches ... reddish-brown hair ... some
college ... employed as an office
manager."
WHAT I LIKE TO DO: (This part
myt~ou'rc a smgle man, write to me
and I'll pass along your resume.
Calico Comers:
We've Got
Your Home Covered
With Waverly.
C9 OrMQe Coul OAILY PILOT/ Wednetlday, NOV9mbe< 9, 1888
·New prostheses
geared to serve .
.~ctive. a~putees
BJ ILENE SCHNEIDER
........ C.1 J 01 ct '
Flex-Foot loc. a l..quna HilJs. based supplier of dynamic-response
artificial lower limbs. has announced
the introducton of two pros1heses to
meet the n~s of most lower-
extremity ampuiees. from com-
petitive athletes to J.h~ seeking to
return to nonnal functiOI"\ at home or
at work: ·
Founded in I 984, the company
designs and manufactures prostheses
that simulate the actions o( natural
limbs. Representing the latest advance-ments in the design and fabrication of
energy-storing prostheses. the new
Flex-Walk and Modular 11 Flex-Foot
are made of 100 percent carbon
graphite composite for comfort, light·
ness and durability. By storing and
releasing energy, Flex-Foot
prostheses recreate normal hccl-to-
toe action for wearers, whether they
arc below or above-the-knee am-
putees.
Flex-Walk is a bolt-on foot de-
signed for amputees of all a~es
seeking to return to normal function in their everyday 'life. Flex-Walk
features nine foot-modules based
upon the weight and desiiied activity
level of each patient. Heel heights
·range from Y• to 2 inches. Indepen-
dent of other prosthetic components.
Aex·Wallc. ranges m weight from 8 to
12 ounces. depending on size.
'
"Flex-Walk isextrernely versatile,n
said Van Phillips. Aex-Foot Inc .
research. prosthctist and inventor.
.. It's ideal for new am purees, -as-well
as those who have already worn other
lower-limb prostheses."
"Wearin& a Flex-Walk requires far
less physical exenion and oxygen
consumption, because it utilizes the
fuJJ ·1enngth of the foot to store ~nergy," said Phillips. "It actualJy
puts·'spri.nJ in your step,' which can make.walking inclines much easier."
Designed for supet-active am·
puteeS who compete or pafti.c!patlin
rigorous. hi&h-energy acuv1ues, the
Modular I Flex-Foot is made of 100
percent carbon graphite composite
and ··offers the most action of all
dynamic-response prosthe~ avail·
able," said Maynard Ca~huff. Aex-
Foot's director of markettng.
"Intensive testing and research of
long-term performance make this the
Jegofcboice for amputees involved in
such sports as runninJ. basketball or
volleyball," said Philhps. "The Mod·
ular II is at the leading edge of
technological advances in
prosthetics, offering advantages to
the amputee and the proslhetist."
"Its heel·tO-P.ylon connection at
the inste_(>contnbutes to natural anJde
motion, Phillips explained. "The
modular attachment system shortens
the standard alignment process by as
, •
Modular II Flex· F oot de.lgned for acth •e amp uteee.
much as 30 percent.
Waterproof and virtually un·
breakable, the Modular JI Flex-Foot
is adaptable for nearly every lower·
extremity amputee in all age ranges.
,
All sizes weigh less than a pound. Its
pylon co11nector allows post-lami·
nation alignment chan.ses as often as
needed due to changes in the patient's
weight or activity level.
Pacifi c Financial
Plaz<:t purchased
The twin-tower Pact(lc rtauclal
Plau office complex in the NcwpOn
Center mixed-use development has
been acquired by ' Equitable Real
Estate Investment Manqement Inc.
on behalf of the Callf•nla Seate
Tadtn Retlre1Dt9t 819 .. m.
The S83 million cash purchase was
announced by James S. Carlson, senior vice president of EQuitable Real Estate's Southem California
fef}on.
•&istinJ, well-lealed office slruc-
tures of that caliber are hi&hly sought ·~in today's marke&," commented 'Carlson. whose operation is located
in nearby Irvine.
The 268,887-squarc-foot complex
is comprised of twin scven~story
towers and a sinale-story office build·
ing located above the Ratz, a four-star
restaurant considercd¥)ne of OranJ.C
County's finest eateries. All were built
in 1982. •
The California State Teachers Re-
tirement System is the nation's
eighth-largest pension fund, (as
ranked by Pensions & Investment
Age, January 1988)1 with total assets
of approximatelv $.l4 billion. • • • • Parker Haulfla Corp. in Irvine has
won a $3, 119,094 contract from the
U.S. Navy to supply engine air starter
cul switch assemblies for use-in P-3
aircraft. • • • A group ofinvestors led by investor
Randall D. Smith has acquired con·
trol of 12 percent of Care Eaterprllff
IDc.'1 class B stock and I 7 .1 percent
co·ntrol of its class A shares.
According to a filing with the
Securities and Exchange Com·
mission, the group owns 1 73, 700
class A shares, 78,800 class B shares
and $9.4 million in convertible
debentures. The group bolds the
shares .in the Laguna Hills.-based
provider ofinpatient nursing services
as an investment. • • • A group of Caribbean investors acquired a 8.6 percent stake in Tllree
D Department• lac. oflrvine accord-
ing to filings wit~ t~e Securities and
Exchange Comm1ss1on.
The group of investors including
American Values II and American
Values Ill bought 10,100 common
shares between Alli-8 and Oct. 19 for
prices ranging from $3.30 to $3.SS apiece. Three D Departments is a dry
goods retailer based in Irvine. . ' . Silicon System• •~ .• in Tustin a
NYSE UPs & DowNs
'
leldina manufacturer of ln~led
circuits for the telecommun1cation1
and computer industries. is expectina an increase in net income of 160
percent in the fourth guaner. . . The net income for the Tulltn·
based company is expected to equal
$3.9 million, or SO cents per share, on
a primary basis (44 cents per abare
fully diluted~ up from the Sl.S
mill ion, or 2.l cents ~ share pri-
mary, oftbe like period wt year.. .
For the year ended Oti.. I, revenues
are expected to totaJ $120.8 million,
up 48 percc:nt from the $81.8 minion ,
of the previous vear. • • • Armor All Prellecb Corp., the
world's leading supplier of auto.-
motive appearance products. re-
ported a 46 percent rise in re~enues
and a S2 percent mcrease an net
income for the second fiscal quarter
ended Sept. 30.
Both arc new highs for the Irvine·
based firm.
Revenues for the quarter were
$27,627,000, up 46 percent from the
$18, 926,000 reported for the like
period last year. Net income rose S2
percent to $4,37 I ,000 from
Sl,867 000. Eaminp per share in-~to21ccntsasbare,upfrom14
cents. 1 SO percent increase.
Sherman attiibUtecr tJle record
second quarter results to strong ules
of Armor All Protcctant and excellent
continued consumer reception for its
new Armor All Car Wa.x and Armor
All Car Wash products. • • • Prtatroa.lx be., a manufacturer of
computerfrinters, has reported a net
income o $2SS,000 or 6 cents per
share, on sales of s36.362,000 for the
quarter ended Sepl 23.
This comparn with a net income of
SS I S,000 or U cents per share, on
. sales of S30.98S.OOO for the second
quarter of the previous year and net
income ofS 1,419,000. or 31 cents per
share, for the quarter ended June 24.
For the six months, the Irvine.
based company reported a profit of
$1 ,6 7 4,000, or 36 cents per share, on
revenues of $71 81 S,000 competed
with a loss ofS 1.033,000.i.. or 23 cents
per share. on revenue ohS8,474,000
for the first six months of fiscal 1987.
Released backJog as of Sept. 23 was
$23,811 ,000 compared with
$30,097,000attheendoftbe previous
quarter and $28.126,000 at the end of
the second quarter of the previous
fiscal year.
~ .
OTC UPS & DOWNS
·,,
Orang9 Coest DAJLY Pl.lOT/WedMed8y, ~ 8, 1 ... 1r 09
••
1
Stock market lower
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices clOICd
lower after fliptlopptng most of the day, pressured
by a weaker dollar and coO(lCfDs abou1 the
economy under a new administration.
l Some analysts said they were Jurprised by the
sclJing actlVlty that erupted at the openina bell I They said the ~er dollar was only c:mtlY to
blaale. ~
WHAT AMEX Dio
AM[X LE~OER S
: Dow J o~Es A\E R~CES
M cr~Ls QuoT[S
--
Banks' role in takeover
lending raises concerns
\\ .\ Hl~GTO\; (.\P) -Fcdcnl
regulators art growing 1ncrcasmJ))
concerned about the vulncrabiht) of
banks pan1c1patmg 1n .. levcrqcd
bu~outs:· or corporate ta.k~vcn m
Yrh1ch the buH'r u~ . mostl)' bor-
rowed iund to male the acC(u1siuon. A ~lc,\l,oman for the Office of
the ('omptrollcr of the C'umnq.
which regulate 4.450 n1t1on&ll)
chartcrt'd banh . ..a1,d T~ay that
the a enc} 's e\amtntrs wtll rttcive
new 1u1dchnc "1th1n the next sc:v-
cnl \\ttls rcqu1nng them to evaJuate
financial m 111u11ons' nsk from mak-1nf. loans m lc,eragcd buyoua. •we -.·ant 10 make sure benks att
do•na a '"" careful analysts of cxacth v.hit the risks are:· &pok~v.oman l..tt Cross said
~vcrqed buyout ha\·f btto~
i~\1naty ~mmon in rtttnt ~ars
1mld an ~xplo on of corpotatt
takcovtts..
Two "1ttb qo. Fcdttal Rnc"'c Bolrd C'ha1m1An Alan Greenspan. wt.c. •M> tqu.latcs bank IM*iiQI
comp&nJCS. told the Scn.1~ Bukma
Coma1uee tw has war.eel blnu mak•na icvC'f'lltd bu)'OUt kins to COMidtt bonoMn• "'::f",, .. ,ft a
~ o( t'COnOm\c 6.nanciaJ cittumaanca. ..
L William Stidman. cbainnan of
lbe ~ [)rpolia I .......... c~.
which in urcs commcmal bank ck--
posit has said the prohfcrauon of
leveraged bu)outs is ancreasina the
nsk to the finanaal system.
In a lcveraarct bU)'OUt. sucb as
Kohlbcr& Kra \ 1s Robcns A Co:s
S20.6 b1lhon bid for RJR Nabitco
lnc .. an mvcnmentgroupu.tcsmast.ly
borrowed monq to purchase a eotn·
pan). The dtbt 1s ttpald enher wWI
the acQUlttd company's c:uh flow or ~th mone) ra1Sied by the sale Of IOIM
of its as~b..'
Often \he 1 n vcston arc tbc *Jtt
comp&n) s manaae:rs. who arc ICtan&
lO lb'"1t I lhrtaltned &abo"S b)'
ouu.ders.
The P9SJUlanly of' IQ de.a. and
the r6UIDQI mu.Utroomi11 ol dd>c
bas led to coooem about IM .-.i'Y of
4kbt·l>urdcncd co•paaies to .,,,twand an cconomte dDWntW'1t.
Cnucs Of the fifti~ trnd •Y most of the deall •~ beCll ,..,
l<JFtbft' ·~ 1912. ... tM .,... omy bella uputirl\ Md._._.,.
bteft ~ ~ 11eu tt •
·If• ~ msiillliDd ca I'>' IUffen •••a; 1M ftllle ill ltodt ... ...... ... , I lllillllt ~Clllll HIJ BJ a.Id 1111 ..... iluo~lftlr•~•Jlr m:diton.
•
ClO Wedneeday, ~bet t, 1988 I DAIL V PILOT
Eerie 'Macbeth'
at Orange Co~st
~ fire burns and the cauldron
bubbles to a fe,eT pitch in Orange
Coast College's haunting production of Shakespeare's .. Macbeth," which
dostS us brief engagement this week-
end in the school's Drama Lab
Theater.
Director Jon Sidoli embcllishn his
intcrpTCtataon with some well-chosen
audio-visual effects and transforms
the thru witches into a ·ubiquitous
feline chorus. meowing and hissing
overhead as Macbeth immerses
himself deeper and. d('Cpcr into
murderous mire.
Toi
Tnus
The polittcal overtones of the
classic tragedy are emphas1~ed in the
OCC production. which d~~ls on the
corrupting magnetism of absolute
power. Goaded on by his ev n-more-
ambitious wife. Macbeth slays ever)·
one who stands in his way of the
crown, then resorts to more murder to
cover up his deeds until the final clotsh
wuh the good soldier Macduff l-
wh1ch, in the OCC vers1on. 1s particu-
larly graphic. even though the battle is
finished offstage.
spellbinding queen than. a petula~t
princess. her charaqer s arc~~vtl
shadings neutraJJzed by a basically
benign approach. Conscque.ntly. her
breakdown 1n the slcepv.alk1ng scene
is Less gripping than 11 might~· Mo~
impressive in her single scene 1s Toni
Cafaro as Lad) Macduff. beautif~lly
dealing with the threat which
envelops htr and her fam1l).
~Bentley llantU la crowned bl: wttchee DeAl8e Konat (left) and Alma Perrera-Grand ID • Macbeth .. at OCC.
Craig Bentle~· Hamil. in the title
role of the Sootttsh warrior consumed
by ambition. renders a powerful
interpretation of a man 1n monal
psychological conflict '¥ith the fort:C'S
of evil. Hamil. aided by Lonnie
Alcaraz's Jrim l•&htina effects. fights
both physical and mental adversaries
with a splendid sense o( persisten~.
'4tlile readily capitulating to the
witches' spell.
lad) Macbeth. as enacted by
~bbie Korkunis. is less of a
The thrtt witches -Amy Von
Freymann. Alma Ferrera-Gra~d and
Denise Ho" at -are magnificent
apparitions. e'en 1fthe~ do resemble
a road com pan) of .. Cat_s." The thrtt
act in well-staged unison to lure
Macbeth deeper into their thrall. and
their physical cro" ning of Macbeth 1s
an inspired touch.
Ponzer Bcrkman's Macduff 1s a
fine piece of simmering rage "hich
culminates in tht famous "La~ on.
Macduff' duel to tht death. Paul
Klees contnbutes a mesmerizing
performantt as the noble Banquo.
whose bloody spirit appears to only
Macbeth as the feast. sending the
ruler completely around the bend.
David Scaglione. who doubles on·
stage as the gentle King Duncan. has
-crafted a superb sctti ng for the tragedy
-which 1s played in full round.
emphasizing the conOict in
Macbeth's mind. Steven Shults gives
a fine,, account of Malcolm. the
rightful heir, while Kara Greene
makes the most of her comic relief
sequentt as a drunken porter.
"Macbeth" is a dark and dreary
tale. but one given scope and power
by Sidoli's imaginative production.
Performances conclude Thursday
through Saturday at 8 p.m. and
Sunday at 4 p.m. 1n the Drama Lab
Theater on the Costa Mesa campus.
Call 432-5880 for tick.et information.
BACKSTAGE -The Coast Ballet
Theater will perform a "fairy Tale
Wedding" Saturday at 3 p.m. in
Jazz fusion band T-Square earns
cheers in C~pistrano appearance
By BRADFORD RABBm
T-Square. for the man) unfam1har
with the name. 1s the latest band from
Japan to make II to our shores '-'Ith a
cult following al reach eagerl) wa111ng.
Following in the musical lootsteps
of the band Hirostuma. T-Square
brought its ellc1tmg blend of moving
instrumental ballads and hard-dnv-
ingJatz fUS1on to the Coach House in
San Juan Capistrano.for a solid two-sounds akin to a ke)board syn-
hour set Friday night in a show thesizer.
presented bY KSBR radio.
Fusion 1s defin11ely the word to u~
in descnb1ng not only the band's
music. but also the instruments used.
In addition to the traditional lineup
of drums. guttar. saxophone. bass and :
piano. T-~uare also employs key-·
board synthesizers and an EWI
(elect-ronic wind instrument).
When Takeshl ltoh was not playing
his saxophone. he woul~ sw1t~h 10 the,
inventive EWI. which 1s similar to a
saxophone. The keys are arranged in a
traditional Boehm layout. but it produces decidedly non-tradirtonal
The band ltoh. gu11a i'lst
Masah1ro Andoh. keyboardist
H1rotaka Izumi . drummer Hiroyulo
Nontake and bassist Mitsuru Sutoh
-was very warmly received b> an
aud1entt which was on its feet during
three encor~.
T-Square's current U.S. tour ended
this week in San Diego. While
awaiting its ncllt appearance locall).
do yourself a favor and pick up the
band's album. titled "Truth. • on
Portrait Records. Or listen to KSBR
88.5 FM, which has been generous in
airing T -Square's music and sponsor-
ing the band's local shows.
Orang~ Loast Collc.ac's Robert 8.
Moore Theater .... Hans Christian
Anderson's fairy tak characters
populating the production will in-
clude the lovers from .. The Princess
and the Pea" along with the Emperor
with no clothes. the Ugly Duckling.
the Little Mermaid and Thumb-
elina .... call 432-5880 for reservations.
CALLBOARD -The Laguna Play-
house will hold auditions for James
Kirkwood's "Legends" Sunday at 7
p.m. in thr theater. 606 Laguna
Canyon Road, Laguna Bcach .... the
leading roles are two over-the-hill
movie queens who wage a wild.
physical conflict. along with three
men and a woman (one man and one
woman black) .... call thc playhouse at
494-0743 for further information.
Battle scars
TV talk •how hoet Geraldo
·Rivera wean the reaultaOf a
broken noee from a chair
thrown by a white •u-
premacl•t group during a
brawl at-a recent taping.
RUFFELt'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
.... ,_ .... CMrs .. 'They Live' top draw
-------Ul-Ull .... ,, ·-•'-"-=.a..-'' ~~ .... ... ,.., ._....... ·--·-·---------··-.. .-.. -·~ --... --· ·----"'~ --·--·---r.....ow.c.. eor.... WWW1Wt•
.. , --au -•::;-:: ~-, -..1 ..::.:-..:_
1122 -1u1 .. cesra 1U1-su.1rw HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Exh1b1tor
Relations Co. says "They Live." a
campy horror movie depicting the
Reapn revolution as an alien hoax.
was No. I in national ticket sales 1ast
weekend.
With box office revenue of S4.8
miUion, "They Live," where special
sunglasses reveal half of the U.S.
population to be mind-control ell·
perts from another world. finished
ahead of "U2 Raule and Hum:· a
congratulatory documentary on the
lnsfl rock n' roll band.
"U2 Rattle and Hum," a cel-
ebration of U2's on and off-stage
performances.. collected $3.8 million --::::;~;;;;;;;:::;;;:;;=====::!:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:-i to firush in second place in its first week of release. "Everybody's All
American," starrina Dennis Quaid as
a fading football hero and Jessica
Lange as his high school sweethean. o~ned at No. 3 with a rcponcd gross
ofS3.4 million.
"The Accused:' starring Kell)
McGilhs as an attornc) representing
a rape v1ct1m played ~Y Jodtc Foster.
finished in fo urth Wlth recei pts of
$2.6 m1ll1on. "Hallo"'cen 4,'' fcatur·
ing the latest spree by murder fiend
Michael Myers. fell to fifth place with
sales ofS2.3 m1lhon.
Director Leonard Nimoy's "The
Good Mother." starring Diane
Keaton as a single parent in a custody
baule. opened to d isappointing re-
views and poor box-office re venues.
finishing No. 6 w11h S 1.8 million.
"Mystic Pizza.'' the independently
produced romantic comedy. con-
tinued to do steady business. with
returns of S 1.408 million in seventh
place. "Punchline.'' the withering
Sall> Field-Tom Hanks black com·
ed). fell to No. 8. with S 1.407 million
in tickets sold.
"Gorillas in the Mist." a chronicle
of the hfe and death of animal
researcher Dian Fossey. finished in
ninth with $1.37 million.
.•
uneven chamber
concert at SCR ..
Tht Orange C'ounty' Chamber ~ •
chcstra pve new mean ins to the term .. outdoor concert .. whtn at opened rts
sixth season on the "At Lona Last
Leo" hilly backyard set onstaac at
South Coast Repertory Monday evc-MIClllEL .
ntna. • The orchestra tried its best under RYDlYISll
the circumstances: concertmistrcss ••Iii••••• Diana Halenn risked topplina over
the bumpy terrain a couple of times,
while piano soloist Peter Vinoarade
took a divot just prior to the Mourt
conccno.
But whether the conditions proved
too daunting to overcome or the
choice of material considered partial·
ly inconaruous, the players never
mana,ed to jell.
The curious erogram bcpn with
Vinograde playing a solo without
orchntra. His selection. J.S. Bach's
"Toccata in E Minor," merely
rambled on. its sections too separated
from each other and his performance
too cut and dried, let alone stylistical-
ly and historically inaccurate (on the
piano). Why not a 20th-century neo-
classic piece wri11en for the piano?
The orchestra then finally came on
-many very slowly, so as not to fall
off the set's incline -and joined
Vinogradt for Mozart's 27th Piano
Concerto. Notice. they joined him.
not played together with h~m. The
performan~ sounded very tnsccurc
(perhaps underrehearsed?). with tut~i
passages not always clean and coordi-
nation between orchestral entrances
with soloist's finishes and vice versa
never secure.
Vinograde's prime asset that night
was his pianissimo touch. properly
affecting a more chamber-like sound
than one nom)ally encounters in
Mozart's concertos. (His fingerwork.
unfortunately, couldn't be observed.
as this reviewer was placed on the
wrong side of the hall.) HQwevcr,
evel't that guality sometimes wave~
when his fingers missed a few kc~ 1n
his antmpt to play C1tlrl softly.
For the Sttond half of the ptQll'lm.
conduct.or · ~icah Lev y miHh<>K
Ralph Vaughan Williams' "fantasia
on a Theme by Thomas Tallis." For a
work Vaughan Williams scored f~r a
solo string quartcl. a small Stnng
ensemble and a large string orchestra,
Levy presented a string quartet and
an ensemble of eight violins and two
each of violas. cellos and basses.
Thus, it was inevitable that the darkly
rich. opulent sound the composer
sou_ght was totally absent here.
Finally. Stravinsky's "Pulcine.lla"
Suite was ushered out. It fared hule
better, its many movements lacking
cohesion between them and sounding
more like a collection of mainly short
pieces instead of related parts of a
whole.
Halprin proved the evening's
brightest saving 1racc. She played
witli the polished professionalism of her craft, producina a strong, steady
tone and exuding wannth and vitality
in her solos in both the· Vaughan
Williams and Stravinsky. Her superb
musicianship and ~qually outstand-
in_s disposiuon -Sht k:ept smiling
wide. dtspite her unsuitable sur-
roundings and her rickety chair -
made her a standout.
Falcon Crest put
to torch by Mellssa -By LYNDA HIRSCH
DAUAS: llnablc to deal wuh the poss1b1hty 1ha1 he will never Stt Pamfla
again, Cliff offers t<' sell Barnes-
Wen1"onh to Bobb). Clayton, having take!) control ofSouthfork. asks Bobby 10 buy all h1i. 011 refineries. Believing he may
have a chance of pining custody of John Ross. J.R. moves back to the ranch even though 11 mea ns g1v1ng in to Clayton's
authority. Sue Ellen moves with John
Roil as far from Southfork as possibk. Although the area 1s still plagued by
droutht. McKa) decides to buy Ray's
ranctl. Lucy's estranged husband. Mitch. comes 10 Texas 10 fetch Lucy. Ahhough
she carrs for him. she 1s reluctant to mum
to Atlanta. Rcah?ing he perfers to live at Southfork. Sue Ellen allows John Ross to return - bu1 1ns1sts on retai ning legal
custod). • • •
DYNASTY: Blake learns from the children that Krystk had a stran~ look on
her face ogh1 before she lcfi the house. A maid in forms Blake 1hat several weeks ago. she found Krystle. clad 1n a n11ht· gown. by the pond. Concerned. Blake calls
her doctor. who trlls him that Krystle must
be found immediately as there 1s no tellin& what she might do. JefT wants a ~ount of
the aubcmatonal election results. While Sammy Joe is telhngJefTshe'll marry him. Fallon 1s in Jeffs bedroom. Fallon sneaks
out of the house and rings the doorbtll. makin& 11appear1ha1 she Just stopped by for a visit. Fallon trcau Sammy Joe
disdainful!). Going 10 the cabin. Sammy Joe discovers a body Oo.llnJ in the pond and Krystle's diary ncarb). Dell kills Sean
before Sean can harm Alexis. Alexis and Dell share a day of romance. Continuin& to pursue custod y of the child he had by a
surropte mother. Adam reahzes that without Dana's help. he will have no
chance. Adam and Dana share a ni&hl of lovemakina. but Dana shps out of the house while Adam 1s aslej:p. •• •..1. FALCON CREST: K1charcfs return
in volved. although Richard believes Eric
was brainwashed into doJn& his homd acts. Carl) dec ides to leave the valley. A psychotic Melissa creates havoc for th~ tround her and eventual!) sets fire to
Falcon Crest. t • • . &NOTS LANDING: Regaining con·
sciousncss. Val insists that her drug overdose was a murdenuempt by Jill. not a suicide attempt. When .none of her
fnends believes her. Val tells her story to the police. Fcari na she will lose custody of the twins 1f she continues 10 insist that Jill
tned to kill her. Val chan~s her story. now
claiming that she took an a«1dcntal overdOK. Val sends the twins to Lu1c Mac. Unaware tha1.Manny is dead. bts bcncb-
mcn prepare to kill Pa1sc ~nd M~~I when they do not hear from him. Amvtna on the scene. Johnny rescues Paiac and
Michael. F1ndmaa van 1ranspon1n& illepl altcns into the States from Mexico. Pai~. Johnny and Michael climb into the van. Manny's tienchmen find the van just as it's
hcadin& across the border. Ftthng he has been out of the public eye 100 lo"f-betwccn Laura's death and Peter s
murder. Grq him pubhc1st Tad Melcher.
• • • LA. LAW: To Arnie's d1sappoin tmen1.
!EP"'*i1311;8 ,....,. .... ~ ~ 11'/SU·1111
DOUf~~
from the dead stuns Magic. Ansel• dcetdes to fiaht for her nght to Tuscany Valley. Richard reports that he has
manqtd to destroy most of"lhc u ;· the iiiiiij;jijiif;ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-1 undervound iroup that was 1hought to have i1lled him. Maule 1s resentful that
Richard let her think he was dead. Peter
sllll cannot believe that his ~n Enc was
Rounnt marries David. lhc kind but boonsh businessman. althouah she
doesn't love him. Amie 1s concerned
about the lack of passion in Rounne's marriagr. although it doesn't Sttm to bother David. It's also obvious that Amie
is concerned that Rounne's loyalty to him will be comprom1~. Graee prosecutes a man who c:an't mist putuna his tonauc
into the can of btauuful stran~rs. He
apologizes and 1s put on t>robation. but he soon docs h ap1n. Cunous.. Grace asks
Michael to do 1t to her. and she seems to
enJOY it. Abby isanary and hurt when she's told by Doug and Annt that she's not on
the "pannersh1p track ... A couple sues a
home-protccllon firm whose aacnt did nothin& to stop a rapist from assaultina the wife. Victor wins a S2.3 million award
from the Jury. but the wife 1s ul)KI when the Jury does not condemn the protection
firm. Bcrtny wants to vote in the cltttion
but is preventioi from fillillJ out the rt&tstra11on form because he u thouaflt
incompetent. Mic.had gets •Judie to aartt that Benny 1s competent and can vote which Benny cues &Jttfully.
~1tsll
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Movies,
OCmark
.1ooyears
9JVIDAD&AN ...............
Which movie star spent I 0 days in an~ County jail for a speedina
violation? Which U.S. president
swred in a movie fllmed in 1942 at Garden Grove.
· Tbe answers and other film trivia were revealed in "An American
Celebration" Saturday evenina as
Chapman Collete saluted Oranae
County and the movie indu~, both
• in their l OOlb year. ' The dinina and entertainment ex-tra~ at the Anaheim Marriott
ballroom drew a crowd of 8SO school
su~81 the school has sponsor-
ed a celebration series to honor
distinauished raidents whose lives
have enriched Orange County. This
year the salute paid tribute to the late
Dr. John Davis, who was president
from 1967-71 and Nellie Gail
Moulton, who died irt 1972 and left Cba~n with a sift of 2SO acres of South Oranae County property, and
to all memben of the board of
trustees.. (Under the stewarship of the
trustees the Moulton property rose in
value from S l million to S 18 million
in 1987.)_
goin& to be big and ft1itzy." It was.
:'Fantastic show •. said RnlJ 8 ....
of ~ewport Beach, -whose husbsand
Bilfbas,,been a trustee for lOyears.
"Very professional," commented
Pat llnlle, also of NB, who recently
became the first female _president Of
the Orange County Chamber of
Commerce.
"An incredible show," remarked
Joue Stewart. "All that practice for
just one show .... too bad they can't do
several performances." ·
"The idea when we started the
celebrations in 1981 was to raise
money for Chapman and to bring
people together to let them act
acquainted with the school. We th~ught this would be a good way,'
said trustee Robert Elliott of New-
port Beach, who with wife f}ebbl, was
chairman of the party.
Past honorees keep comiTICbadc to
tne celebrations and seem to enjoy
them -seen were Dr. AnoW
Beekmu, Rldlanl Benea, members
of the CUpmu and hottl family, .
Frucb Grlset, Warra Hucoct and
Carl Karner.
A really bis lbow, multi-media
show. involvina about 200 students
in sons, music and dance, highlighted
the evenina. For two days around the
clock. students bad worked to set up a
100-(oot tona and 32-foot ·deep
liahted staae to showcase the pro-
duction of the Chapman Sym'!~~~ Others there and serving on the orchestra direc1Cd by J• Kc planning·committee included chair-
and the concert choir dfrected by man of the board of trustees Geor1e
WIWam Ball. Chapman music and JHJe Aroros, Hyla Bertea,
professor and Master Chorale direc-l>'yllll and Vera C.rtil, Twyla and
tor. Quiet Marda, Dlue and Barry
Prior to the show, Communica-· NMer,
tions professor a.. Tkroluea, who Guests d ining on smoked trout,
has pnxluced and directed all seven cobb salad. broiled filetand white and
celebration shows, said, ··The show is dark chocolate dessert at the mirrored
--------------------------------------~------------.
Now, fbr a Umlted time. )'OU can lakil home a Happy Holld-.v Mug FRU (a $&.00 value) with &l"(f HlclrDry Farms
gift purcha9es IDtdng $25 or more.
Melt Away Mints . ..,. ... As.oo Tsa .. .c111
eese Balls
and Logs
Any 2 ft>r $7.00
l$.l 1111 -=til
and silver-covered tables also in-
chided Mary and Jamet RMlevelt,
Elbma Jue and Tom Riley, a.
Gagellltelm, Dori and Jack .. &nlf,
Gretdea and Jim Dale, TiDa and
Mall SeUfalta, M•raloa and Jerry
Harna,toa and Gary Barrill.
HOttipS
prevent ·I
fire death
Proceeds from the celebrauon are
expected to brini in $250.000 for
student scholarships.
(Speeding around OC in 1921. pur Beebe Daniels behind bars, and
Ronald Reagan was m the movie
.. Juke Girl .. filmed in 1942.)
.
All
-IMDEIS
...
Sleep wldl yow bffroom ...,.
DEAR ·ANN LANDERS: More closed at aiglu. A closed door will
than 65,000 people are killed or Mlp slow. tlle spread of flre. 1mete
injured in fires each year in this ud .. eat. Wllea1foijowlag you escape
country. because most of us don't ro1te,besas::HodosealldoonbelllH
know what to do. yoa.
Did you know that when you arc n.e smoke detector will soud tlle
asleep you lose your sense of smell · alarm to ,._kt 1rp yoa ud yoer
;md no matter how bad the smoke is. famUy. W•u yoa bear it, roll o.t of
you won't wake up unless there's bed to tlte noor. Get down oa yow
noise? buds ud taees, crawl to yoar door
Did you know that a fire as dark and ud ope.DJL Don't stop to get clothes,
not light? In a real fire. you-won"t be papers orJe•elry.
able to sec your hand in front of your U the oor feels cool. ope1 it a
face. crack to clleck for smote. U dlere Is
Ple.ase tell your readers· what they none, leave by your pluoed escape
can do to plan to get out alive. -route. Remember to crawl lo• ud
STE V E N L . D U ES B U R Y . keep yoar .. ead dowa. Clea11er air t.
Golan/HarrisCommun1cations. Chi-nearer to die irood.
cago. If lite door feels llot wlleo yoa ioacll
DEAR READERS: McDould's it, do not open it. DO NOT PANIC.
~.J:~ed tlle United States Flre Escape oat tlle window or ase you
A stratioll u4 First Alert, a altenate exit.
maafactuer of smoke alarms, to If yoa cu't leave yoer room or
tnn people llow '° 1et oet of a nre apartment, seal cracks aroud doors
aJlYe. Here are some lips: and vents as best yoa cu, astag wet
lutall smoke detectors near eacll towels lf possible. Opell a wtHow at
sleeplaJ area. Most fire deatlls occar botll top u4 bottom. Stay low by die
al al<, often wlalle ~le are window to breatllefres.'9 air. U dlere's
asleep. a phone, call lite fire department ud
Draw a noor plu of yoer llome. tell tllem exactly wllere yoeare la die
SH• all possible exits from eacll building. WESTCUFF PUZI room. If yoar clotllles catcll on fire, stop
NEXT TO HUGtlS a HED'S Dt1ca11 tlle escape roates wltb wbere yoa are. Drop to tlle groucl ucl
17th a. IAYINE OPEN you family. Make sue everyone roll over ud over to put .. , die • DAILY ..... die teleplto.ne aamber for die flame. DO NOT RUN. RUllilll fus Newport Be8ch ft fire departmeat or die local emerg-tbt flames. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Jeec=~y~n=a=m=be=r·----------------. teach small cllildren never to Iliff
FREE CHRISTMAS
ORNAMENT
with a purchase of $12.50 or more
Good Thru U-16-88
under beds or in closets ID case of fire.
Gather at a predetermlff4 meet-
ing place oatslde you llome, weU
away from die baJldin& u4 tale a
bead coot. O.ce oetslde, ST A Y Otrr.
Once yoe've sketded you escape
plan ud ditnssed It witlt yMr f...Oy
alld •el1•bors, practice.
ALCOHOL •••
FromC7
,,.,....,,Ne9 .... , ••
By SYDNEY OMAIUl
Cll
~ (March 21-ApriJ 19): Ea~ honzons, dine OU'-accept IOCial
inv1t1tJon. What bad been a mild relationship could "beat up ... Be temitive to
moods, protect self in emotiooal diacha. Gemini playi role.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): 1t•1 time to replace outworn machinery, to
check safety devices, smoke detec1on. Tendency is to mitl appointments d•
to "stopped watches." Be aware o(aepl requirements, ri&hts and perl!liaic>Ds.
. GDUNI (May 21-Ju.oe lO): Examine .. evicknce ... Di& deep for
1n.fonnation, discern motives, open lines of communication. 1k ~tive
c:oacernina references. Source ma~al plays s-ramount role. Virso wilJ flpre
prominently.
CANCER (June-it-July 22): Rwaioll takes place. features fami~-=• ~u1:nina pr~ settlement o( financial dilemma. Suddenly 11
opt1m1sm, return of v11or. Y ouna person wants to please and you'll know it.
LEq (July 23-b.ua, 22): What had been hidden will be rcyealed -to your
advanta;c. Focus ab property, real estate, romantic interlude. LepJ questions
can be amicably settled if others know you are alert_ aware, ~tive.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Scenario hi~li&ht1 deadline, testins
procedure. responsibility, intensified love relationship. You'll .,et credit
prtv1ously withtield. Older individual is in your comer.
LIBl\A (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Stress independence, willingness to break from
trasJition. Personal horizons broaden, project will be completed, you could .
rcct1vc unique t\onor in connection with publishing. Aries plays role.
SCO&PIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2J)! EmpbasiS on independence, creativity.,.
ab1hty to be a self-starter. Some will comment on your inventiveness.,
originality, daring. Member of opposite sex will say. "f)am yours for the
asking,"
SAGmAIUVS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Focus on moods, sense of pcroeptil>n,
possible partnership, marital status. You'll learn secret, you'll actually have
backstage view. Opportunity exists to take greater charge of OWE destiny.
CAPRJCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on popularity, ability to win.
friends and influence people. Social invitation extended by one you admire.
Ch"eck legal papers, wardrobe. written.material.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO-Feb. 18): Gain indicated via written material. Focus
on self <xpression, uni9uc contacts, appointments with those who arc capable
of swaying public opinion. Gemini. Virgo. Sagittarius peopk play roles.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): What previously was taken tor pantCd will
require ~second look. .. Spotlight on travel, advertisin& public relations,
completiorrof searc:h. Scenario highli&h1tchange, motives, variety, sex appeal.
IF NOVEMBER 11 IS YOUR BdlTBDA Y you are dynamic, mdependeot,
creative, sensual. NothiDJ Occurs halfway for you -it is bot or cold. all or
forget it. i:urrcnt cydclJC)mts to pertnenfi1p, marital status, publicity, dealinp
with women. Leo, Aquarius people play important roles in your life.
•1 CBA•1a GOBEN ... OlllAJt llL\AIF
Both vulnerable. Ea.st deals.
NORTH
•I 6
Q " 11 7' 0 J s 3
+A Q 9 4
WEST EAST
•J973 1 •KQS4
Q I 9 QJU1
0 961 O AQI
• 10. 7 l • 3
SOUTH •A 11
Q A J 3
0 " 11 7 ..
+KJ6S
The bidding:
Eut Sotltlt Wea N~
1 9 lNT P .. 3NT ,.. ,_ ...
Openina lead: Three or •
Even looting-It-all fourhands, it
is not easy to see bow, after a apade
lead, South can fulfill bis contract
of three no trump. Yet the solution
was found at the table.
The bidding was direct and to the
pomt. South's no trump overcal.I
showed the eqwvalmt of a no wmp
opening bid, and Nortbobad enouih
to raise to game.
West gave some thoua.bt to the
opening lead. With a four-Ql'd
ACROSS
1 Recess
5 Hit twd
10 Wrandl
14 KM\19
15 Ent.uin«
16 Matody
17 Actually
20 Agt.
21 Thing
22 Partot p..:e
23 Coaster
24 Hand tool
25 Moored
28 Draw out
32 Angered
33 Birds
~ C.lamlty
35 Hit --blow
36 Smalt Cf\anga
37 Chafe
38 Contacted
39 Slngsoog
40 Noel
41 Follower
43 Overiays
44 BahOf<ts
45 En)Oy
... Beetle
49 ~tu•t•
50 Golf pt'Ot>lem
53 Bk1hs, ate
56 Emend
57 Arc:Mngel
SI At the~
59 Halt• eo Medldne
61 GllinMY
DOWN
1 '"the dlstence
2 Be. model
3 Cleaner
4 Tree
5 Str~ed
6 Behaved
7 ~t part
8 "High -··
g Deteri-
oration•
10 HOUM member
1 , He was: Lat
12 Elegtlnt
13 FMt
18 Sutt..,
19 Fabric:a
23 Tum aside
24 Facade
25 Play
26 Lubricated
27 Tweed. a g
28 eu.,
29 Informed
30 8lust't
31 Ralat•
33 BMkdMla
spadyuit: South misbt have dou-
bled one heart radaer dam bid one
no trump. And Ncxth. with roar or
· more lplldea. would have probed for
a major-suit pme. So he cbolc to
lead a k>• ......... ma bis
sinptoo bean, and llruct aold.
Since bis weakDaa was Qpoeed
riabt from the ~ dedmer bid to
take nine tricb without tiviq 1IP
the lead. Tberdorc. be c:ould-eot uy-
for even one trick from ct;unonds.
With four club tricb aad only one
spade on top. be would bave to de-
velop four bean tricks to succeed.
Thal could be accomplilbed only
if West held specifically either a lin-
g)elon eiabt or nine. Jn addition, tbc
.dub suit would have to f@JDsb three
entries to dW1UDy.
Declarer WOil the opaUq Jad,
c:ubed tbc kin& or clubs ad over-
took tllie jKk of clubs. with tbc
queen. -The fact that Eut lhowed
out on the second di.lb made DO
difference.
The ten of be-arts was led from lk
table, and Eaa did u well u be
.could by coveriq. Declarer woa tbc
~ took tbe marked rmaee ot tbe
Dine of dubs ud ran the teYat of
beans. ~ lJlal WOil, it WU a
limple matter to dear tbc bean ace.
croa to the ace of dubs and cake tbc
tin& of hearts roe Dine tricb.
36 Gladdens
37 A.-ded
39 ~Ing gear
40 Inlets
42 Wlllword
43 Pettifogs
45 HOStalrt
46 Always
47 Venice bMctl
41 On tiptoe
49 ~algerb
50 Rodl: "'"· 51 Image
52 o.tect
S4 nw..: pr.t.
55 Young one
A CHRISTMAS
AND DECORATIVE
ACCESSORIES
driving." she says. '"That 1s only one
of the problems associated with
dnnking. What about drunkenness? 1
That is not addressed and is a major,
2 3 7 8 9 11 12 13
·SHOWROOM
Open to the Public
Ftne Ceramic
Ware
Table Center
Pieces
Christmas
Trtmmlnga . . ~
Wall Decor
One·of-.-Ktnd
Designs
(714) 894-6105 .
ncpuve conscquen~... 14
Kilbourne. who hves in Boston.
started out as an educator apd ~-+---+-~~~
frequ.entJy used commercials as 17
teachina tQOls.. Her interest in al-~-+---+-~
coholism developed when w no-
ticed the amount of money that the
akohol 1ndumy was pounn1 rnto the
collctt campuses.
She SI}~ lhal like many other
peook she has known and lo\--ed
ikolw>lia.
She has been a au-est on "The Today
Show" and "Hour Ma&Uine,'' and
has been interviewtd by Time. N~ week and Forbes MtpZiael. Lut
yeer K.llbourne won tM Lecturer of
tbr Year award from tbt Nauonal
Astoaation for Campus ActiYtties.
She was • finali$t su. umes bctft. IOlins out to lec'turcn such u ltYlh Weltbrimer aftd E. OonSon Udd.y.
KJlbournt wtJI ~ at l :lO p.m.
Tin•nda)' at t.he optfti .. ol a new
'*Omeft0S ako"°' and dnll uatmctn
unit at S..nina Poiint, 350"W. lay St.
in Costa Maa. The mner is hOldiQI
an opm ho'-hm 2 to 6 p.•.
KalbcMame wdl ditcuss how womea
art ponra~ ill. tttebrity a-
doltements and the subliminal U1C of
tel lft alcohol ...
16
\
I
Orenge Coast DAILY PILOT I Wednesday, November 9, 1988
by 811 Kea~e COUNTSR CULTURlt by Maratta & Maratta
"Can we 'God bless' dogs, too.
or just people?"
MARMADUKE
I 'M POSiTivf Hf SAiO
WOMEN AND BlfNI>fRS FiRST
0 0
0
DENNIS THE MENACE
. .
by Hank Ketcham -
by Brad Anderson
"'DONT EVER ... I FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
l I ' <~'
"jump on the waterbed!" II-~ ! I
DoNT &t UP ! JUST WRITf 00WM T~E ~BfR(;
PHOHE NUMBER ~· 60 BACK TO SLEEP ! "
PEANUTS
YES MAAM . Tl-IE AHSWe.R
IS 06YIOUS ..
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
l CAN'T TAKE ~DVANTA6E
OF YOU Bl( 61VIN6 AN
ANSWER THAT 15 SO 08VIOUS ... .
I 14A\IE TOO MUCH INTE6RIT't' .. .
by Charles M. Schulz
II· 9
e
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
SHOE
..
JUDGE PARKER
-
YOU SAID SAM'S ANNOYED WITH ME I ABBEY I HE'S ORE THAN' ANNOYED ..
HE'S REAL MAD '
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DOONESBURY
I MEAN ... 1('6 ONE
!HING 10 FAU... FOR
$CME.ON£ ...
by Garry Trudeau
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk
................. ~ .... ;:.t1~1 IS .. ..,,... a -................ _., ... ...y ........... ... ...... ._, ..... ....,._. c ·· .......... .. I NA H E E p I ,,.._ .. _ ..
111rr _
kMRJO I: I r I' I •
s u 0 ll l J; I I r (