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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-11-21 - Orange Coast Pilot_ .. . ORANGE CG\ST , MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1988 25 CE TS -.. NB Dlayo;r..' s .jo~ .hotly: contested Constltuen~s· campaign backs Strauss; most council members also want the job BJ PAUL A.8CR1PLEY °' .............. Behind-the-scenes politicking in Newport Beach sugests Councilman Don Strauss has a shot at becomin& mayor for the first time since he was ~lccted to thC council 10 years ago. Nearly every member of the coun- Richard Darman has been picked by Presi- dent-elect George Bush tp head the Office of Management and Budget./A4 Coast I cit admits an intcmt in being mayor, includina presiding Mayor John Coit who said he would like to serve another term.- But Strauss has been the beneficiary of a constituents' cam- paigd, with members of some home- owners' associations lobbyina coun- cil members to elect him. In faci, directors of the Ncwpon Heist.au Community Association unanimously cndoned Strauss in a letter to the council. loud ~ident Gail Demmer said the usociation believed Strauss' long tenure on the council, preceded by a dozen ycan as a trustee in the NewporJ-Mcsa U nified School Dis- trict, were evidence that he deserved the honor. ..Mr. Strauss. has represented this city with honesty," Demmer said. "He has bttn for1hngtn, intelh,ent. dedicated to has pnnciples. humble about his s~. aclmowledacs what he believes to have been his mistakes." Whether such outside suppon will help Strauss rem&tf\S to b( seen. Insiders say the coundl aencrally 1s ~lit philosophicallyJ.. with Strauss, Phil Sansone and Louncilwoman- elect Jcan Watt inonccamp,andCoit, .aa~nccTumcrand Ruthelyn Plum- mer in the other. Evelyn Han could 30 either way. For the record, Hart said she told Strauss sllc could readily suppon ham for vice mayor, but doesn't know af she could vote for him for mayor. She said an individual's umc on the council shouldn't be the only cntcrion. A term as vice mayor would provide valuabk upcriencc. Hart said. "We.take this very seriously. It takes a lotof eneJjy and $lamina to be mayor,'' w said. Ha.n· said .s!'e also would willingly take the posmon. • ............ _ ............ "J t.hink I could do a good job," she said. "I have before." . But she acknowled&cd that the poliucal wand suggests Strauss might have the votes. Others aren't so sure. "On tht one t\and, I hear Don docs (have the votes)," Councilman Turn- er said. "On the other hand, I bear he docsn·1.·· Turner, too, would like the job. • Cox said he has beien approached bS' many cncourqing him to scelt (Pleae eee IUWPOllT /A.2) Inmates . escape from OCJail Four men descend from roof; another injured, captured By BOB VAN EYK.EN °' .............. Orange County sheriffs deputies were scrambling this morning to try to find four inmates who broke out in the ICCOnd laJF$t escape on record from the counry's main jail isl Sant.a Ana. The Irvine Co. Is among a handful of wealthy people and businesses that con- tributed at least $100,000 to help get George Bush elected president. Mayor Larry Aeran ap~11111 patthade to 'NI-teen wbo refublabed fa.rmhOGM to ualat lntne'• lloaelw. A Santa Ana man accused of murder and a Long ~h man suspected in a Huntington Beach armed robbery were among four men wbo scaled down from the roofofthc jatl and escaped Sunday . The four reponedly were in lhc fifth-story rooftop rcaeational area when they cut a hole an the security fence. jumped down to a roof below and then k>WCRd themselves four SIOOCS to tht ground using a ro~ made of bed meets. Inda Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Entertainment Opinion People A3 A5-6 BS-7 Irvine thanks sheltervOlunteers Police log Public Notices Sports TV listing Weather A10 86 AS A7 A9 A3 B-4, 7-8 81-4 A9 A2 .BJ GREG llDll °' ............. Irvine's first home for the homeless was the site of an informal celebration Sunday honoring the residents and businesses who donated time, money and effort to the project. "We are thankful to all the or- ganizations who unselfishly helped us make this dream a reality," lrvinc Mayor Larry A&ran said at the site of the city's first fiomelcss shelter - a renovated farmhouse at the comer of Bun and Sand Canyon Roads at Old -'r~tmne . "The city of Irvine, as well as all of .&ht homeless families that will be helped by this project. arc very &rateful" Agran said. Two I 920s-era farmhouses are in the final stages of renovation for use asa temporary homefprcouples with children or homeles$ sin.lie parents with children. The lf'Vine Co. donated the farmhouses. which had been slated for demolition, and the City Council approved their renovation rn May. The proposed move-in date for residents 1s set for mid-DeClCmber. More than 400 building industry. business and community volunteers are responsible for the shelter. The Orange County Building Industry Association donaced nearly $80.000 worth of professional services, ma· terials, labor and money 10 the project. according to Charlene Turco. director of the PE>JCCt. The city of lrvi·ne put up SS~. .~ · Sixteen community groups each .. ado]>ted'' a room at the shelter and were responsible for decorating and furnishing. Sunday's event was called Volun- teer Recopillon Day and bepn wath tours of the farmhouses and reff'Hh. mcnt.s. An invocation 'Was 11vco by the Rev. Fred Plumer of the Irvine U nited Cbu~h ofCbnst. followed b) a v.elcomc from A&Tan. Volunteers v.ert presented with cen1ticates of recognition by Turco. Agran and Dr. John Dombrink. board chairman of Irvine Temporary Housing. which wall operate the shelter. When thc_project is completed later this month. Irvine Temporary Hous- (Pleue eee Sll&L TSR/ A2) A fi.ftb maa. ~ o(murder in a Ganicn Grove restaurant shootout. evidently slipped and fell duri:nc the attempt. breakmg his leg. H~ was apprehended by shenff's deputJes. Jail offiaals Y ) they do not know exactly when the breakout oc:currcd or how 11 escaped the notice of jail guards. It was not discovered until a Santa Ana rcsadent saw someone taking off an orange jail )Umpsuit and reported 1t to the police. Santa Ana police reported the incident to tht Shcriff s Department. School policy in molestation case criticized The n:crcational area is normally supervised by two Sheriffs deputies. said Shenff s Department spokesman Lt. Dick Olson. "That's all under investigation, .. Olson said today. ··All we can tell you at this moment 1s that wt still have four gu}'s outstanding." By PAUL ARCRJPLEY Ot ... 0.-,,... ..... A Newport Beach principal fol - lowed correct procedures in trying to deal with accusations oflcwd conduct apinst one of his teachers, officials in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District said today. If so those procedures need another iook, said a deputy dislnct attorney in response. Four fifth-grade girls at Mariners Elementary School alleged their teacher touched them in a lewd manner during separate incidents in the beginning of the school year. Frank TozzolinaJr. faces trial Nov. 29 on misdemeanor child annoyance and molestation charges for the alleged incidents. . Pa.rents of the alleged victims. as well asa wi~ said the t r,f the children since the re ed inci- dents has been worse tha ori&inal I actions. The parents said their children were isolated from their classmates without supervision. Tozzohna was allowed to continue teaching for a week before voluntarily taking a leave of abtencc. and the principaJ wrongly forced a face-to-face meeting between the teacher and children. Superintendent John Nicoll said he is investigating the case, but under- stands the facts dafferently. Nicoll said It was the students who asked-to be taken out ofTouolina's classroom. They studied in the media center where an advaser was present at all times. In addat1on. Nicoll said ht under- stood that school pnnc1pal .\hen Zeidman first heard the allcgat1ons on a Wednesday, began investigating them that Fnday. and Touolina·s last day in the classroom was the following Monda). County GOP chief gives religious fervor to job ' IJ BOB VAN EYUN .............. Tom Fuentes remembers what the bishop o( Oranae once said about his d«ision 13 years aec> not to enter the Roman Catholic priest· hood: ''Bishop Johnson was asked. pr&te • s words. A politically active sra<Suatc of C'haoinan Collclc. Fuentes decided in 1'973 to do a year of p-aduatc study in phiiolOpll~"and then entt'r St Patrick's Setn1nary i'\ Menlo Pitt. After a year at St. Pltrick's hoMver, Fuetnes diteovered IOmC- obedienct that a perish priest miJht have." he said. Fuentes dtd btocomc an cnerajzer. A Republican Party loyalist since before the llC of 12. he immersed himself in pany oolitics and in 1985 acceded to the chairmanship of the 0raftllC County GOP. a posttion he still hokh. Count¥, Republicans&ive Fuentes hiah mans for ~r advances in the ~s stttftllli in the county, especial amona Latino voters.. lncked. recent controversy over the plllCiftl of uniformed teeurity T-Ji. ... tuanh oubide polbftl places in .._ ''Ilwecaa•pe11d$90mllU011•• .... perfonidzuian.cater, treoaJI Cfa•a WHleed t5e liJUWJY Ill oar mlda" . ~unty'OOPChalnn&riTomFuentes Sota Ana rnatUd one of the onJy tilMI criticism ha bttn direc:1'd in to me is a _sreat d1rtct1on and F1nta' dirtttaoe. mollvator. There art so many And thouah still a devout Cath-liberals out there 1i1rho ca'l) and olic. FuentestransferftdlOmeofhls romplaan and call for ao~ernmet'lt ~ fervor ao the peny he propams to tnolve human need. =~both morally and politi-. ..The con.cn .. awe inpontt as do Alt .. mim ot Mother Terna of what YCM8 can~ for~ you come dai11mbcMat himletf'tMt~ hit Calcutta, F~n• abo namns tn conUIC1 . •nf:'. Thau •hy "?1 milld.,... o.c............ .-.. and ~mnt. The two Rcpubhc:antsm as so comfortable. ""To be u na• ii '*' 'f!ll.,..Cli ... uw 11ot nunually ex-fuenenutettht-ord"ltbft'al"•n ~ ~ .... I lilre ID Ct.i"9 M .._ the Nnner&Mt has become narrnt io ii__.. e.ief' to• a. a 11r ·1 iu11e:a• MMW T~·· •'"°"' contena11Ytt. .. ,r, 11 • penoa widto•I lite fari... • = DO ... 1W c.m clO tn ~ monl uarpitd. .. ., ... iii ............ fl ,.. ................. ,.... Pl 21 .. 00P/A.tt Nicoll said he would meet with Zctdman late toda) to dascus:s the case. but defended an~ face-to-face meeting that maght have occurred. ··11 was the ~nn1ng.s of an invesog.ation by a pnnC1 paJ tr)1ng to ascertain the facts.·· Nicoll said. ··1 don't know 1f there's an)1hang wronJ with that. Discussina It with the klds-and the teacher 1.s a Judgment can.·· (Pleue eee SCHOOL/ A2) The four esapccs arc all await.Ing tnal on felon) charges rang.ing from burglar) to murder. • Eleazar Gonzales.. a 20-ycar-old Latino from Santa l\na. is accused of murder and possession of dangerous drugs. He 1s descnbed as 5 feet 7 inches tall and 165 pounds. His bail as $:?50.000. • .\nthon) M1ch-ae1 Giancm. 35. of Long Beach was aJTCSted by (Pleue eee POUR/ A2) Scene of brutal beating labeled high crlm~ area Victim remains in critical con itton; police seek BJ GREG UEllX ... .._ ........ The owner of the bu1ld1n1 where a 19-ycar-old Hunt•naton Beach woman waucvcrdy beaten Saturday said the area has a k>na history of crime problems. -.Ut police down- ~yed such claims. &\If.fie Louitt Hoo9C remained an cntacal but stabk condition this morna.na at Hwn.na Hosp.ta! West-minster With a fractured skull. hospi- tal oft"tcials said. Hooee's ~tJCMI as vinually un· cha~ tince w was ~t to the hospital after a 4:l0a.m. aJUict an her mued bcdroonut 610 14th St. Acconliftl to Pobcc. ~ aaaalanl, a man bdit¥td IO bt an hil m•lOs.; was fi ~ by a lecond occupent in* . Tiiie Pft'IO' btlC wed '° bt iM tandledt. ~ wcnt to HOOIC's rooftt after .... lM toad Of' I .. •'! Md bMd lllt I FfkRl bcat1 ng Hoose W1 th an object. The suspect ran pasl the landlady and fled out the front door. Pohct dQ not believe the suspect stoic an)thln1 or sexually molested has v1ct1m. They do not know 1f Hoose knew her assaalant. Lt. Btll Mamclh satd there were no new leads an the case this momina. Sat. William Peterson\ lead in- vestt11lor an the case. said Saturday be was pursuing several feadi. He could not be reached for comment chts mornina. Po1K-e woWd not release inf«· malton about the victim's beet· around. but othcn saad w woman moved to Hunli9"1on 8c:9d\ &OM Aorida ibout tluu mon&h1 ..,_ Garland Pratt. owner of \be ,~ story duokx about a MU' mite frOiia the beach. satd the.,. hna ~ of Mmllar cnma. "h ~ all the lime. .. ~ who liWia .in tM dne •mti • ~ulil~--a.­ Middtisf90f1li --'"llln~•w 2 ... el fl '3 I • .,.. ............. ,.... hetapurt•mv au 1 r tO nelll .-..... .................... ., Bodies of pai in mountain ·car wreck being recovered By 8011 VAN EYIEN °' .............. Oransc County firefighters and California Highway Patrol officers have begun the arisly task of retriev- ing the bodies of man and woman ki0cd in a 700-foot plunge from Modie*a Peak late Sunday. Fire officials say three ~P~ were driving an off-road vehicle a1ona a fire road near Jamison Springs shonly before 8 p.m. when the vehicle went off the road and plummeted down a cliff. Retrieval of the wreckage and the bo<hcs of an undentified man and -' woman staricd shonly before I 0 a.m. today. said Patti Range. spokeswoman for the Oranae County Fire Department. One person survived the crash. crawled out of the vehicle, reached a road and was given a ride to a ranger station Range said. Firei'iahters scaled down to the wreck after n was spotted with the aid of a helicopter search light. Range said rescuers postponed efforts to remove the bodies until daylight because of the ruggedness of the terrain. The vehicle was either a Ford Bronco or a Chevrolet Blazer. she satd. ''The vehicle w15 so smashed up. we still don't know what make it is.'' she said. The California Hi&hway Patrol, which was in charac orthe operation, was withholding the names of the victims and survivor. A spokesman would not release any additional information. Range said the man who survived the crash was taken to Western' Medical Center in Santa Ana. Hospital officials there were unable to provide information this morning on the condition of the survivor. SCHOOL CRITICIZED IN MOLEST CASE •• , Prom A l ' School board member Jim de-of the District Attorney's office, we their alleged assailants. Boom also supported the school's don't do it in rape. we don't <to it in Maceachern said the case has actions, noting the principal was robbery, and we cenainly. don't do it turned into "a can of worms" because simply trying to sort out conflicting in child molestation cases." of the school district's actions. information. "We have much more serious cases "You don't go around making She said the state LcJislature of molestation," she said. "But in this accusations when you have ~n-spccificaJly passed laws designed to case, the response has been much tradictory evidence,' deBoom said. shield child victims in court from worse than generally." But Deputy District Attorney Kelly Maceachern said the district's hand- ling of the case is highly questionable. She said forcing the children to S h t. f • d d • fl ht confront their teacher could have 0 s ire u r1ng g been psychologically damaging to th~·i·don·t know what the school at CM weddi~g reception. district's procedures are. but in terms Falrriew freeway access to close Traffic signals on Fairview Road at the San · o Freeway overpass will be turned o uesday from 9 a. m. to S p.m. for repai , police said today. No left turns w II be allowed from Fairview onto he freeway during that time period. Costa Mesa police arc expecting heavy congestion and advising motorists to find alternate routes. A Costa Mesa wedding reception was interrupted by gunfire Saturday night after an argument between two groups led to a man pulling out a handgun and firing at the reception hall. No injuries were reported in the incident, and the suspect fled the 9CCne. police said. Although some reports indicate the shooting may have been gang-related. Costa Mesa police officials today are discounting such tics. ··Someone JU St pulled out a gun and cranked off a few rounds." Sgt. Richard Bell said. "It wasn't as though they drove by and tried to shoot someone." A wedding reception was being held at the .Veterans Memorial Hall on West 18th Street when three men standing outside the front door began arguing with several others at about IO:IS p.m .. police reported. "One of the guys then startc:d a fistfiaht, and that led to someone pulling ou·t a gun and firing four rounds at the front door." Bell said. The gunman then fled WJth two other men in a light-colored pickup truck.. GOP CHIEF URGES HELP FOR HUNGRY ••• "homAl He said he believed Ronald Re- apn 's call to voluntarism in the early 1980s was the correct response to poverty and other societal problems. That call was reissued. he noted, by president-elect George Bush dunng his campaifn, when he used the metaphor " .cb> poi~s of light" for voluntary charitable acuviues. The accumulauon of wealth and the atUlinment of prosrnty make possible the kinds o voluntary responses that Fuentes said were essential to the solution of society's problems. But wealth also has its pitfalls. Fuentes cautioned. "The danger of what I call con· sumpt1ve consumerism 1s the major obstacle to societal development. this feeling that I ha ve to have one of those and one of those and one of evcry- thmg to the extent that people do not pause to evaluate a balance within their hves to include involvement in those areas of human need around them." he said. "That attitude can penentrate our society JUSt as much as the drug problem." Fuentes' priorities include heavy mvolvement with the St. Vincent De Paul Society. a Catholic lay organiza- tion that operates Orange County's largest food bank. the Food Distribu- uon Center in Orange. That center serves as a clearing house for surplus food that would otherwise be thrown away. Fuentes estimated the amount of surplus food. such as day-old bread and dented canned goods. at more than 2 million pounds annually. And he 1s not above P.rodding his ·~ fellow Orange Coun11ans. who he said could do more to alleviate the plight of the estimated 340.000 families here who go hungry at least part of the month. ··1 f we can spend S90 million on a new performing arts center. we can damn well feed the hungry in our midst," he said. For all his political and social 1nvolvemen1. however. Fuentes said he is not interested in running for political office. although he once considered it a possibility. "With each passing year. the idea of elective political office becomes less and less attractive to me," he said. "It's a great place for energetic young folk or for those who have fulfilled a successful career in the pri vate stttor. lt'sdifferent for me. I have a wife, a 3· year-old daughter and a I ·year-old son. That is wnat is truly important to m'e now." Although he is a sixth generation Californian. Fuentes said his present political attitude owes more to the Rocky Mountain individualism he observed on a recent tnp to Wyom- ing. "Over there they have a state government that meets about two months a year,'' he said. "The rest of the time they're ranchers. teachers. lawyers and business people. That concept of citizen-based politics is what I would like to see adopted across this nation. "In fact. I'd like to stt a law that limits a person to no more than 10 years in elective political office. After that. you step do.wn and make room for someone else.·· Fuentes hinted strongly that he Lotto prize n ow $14 million SACRAMENTO (AP) -There were no winners among the 16.6 m1lhon tickets sold for the California Lottery's weekend lotto drawing. but a Buena Park woman hit the SI million slot in the lottery's "Big Spin" on Saturday. While there were no tickets with all six lotto numbers drawn Saturday night. the lottery computer reported that four tickets were sold with ft ve of the six winning numbers plus the bonus number. Those four tickets. sold since last Wednesda~ght in Sacramento. Tomnce. ndjdo and Rosamond. are worth $443,280 each. The winning numbers tclectcd Saturday night in Lotto 649 were: S. 11 . 12. 17. 32 and 43. The bonus ORANGE ........ COAST ·~·~· llA9" OF~IC£ l30 W. 11.y 14 C:-e MeN CA number. good only with five of the six winning numbers. was 35. Since there was no six-of-six win- ner. the S6.S7 million Saturday jackpot w1ll roll over to the next lotto drawing for an estimated Wednesday night jackpot of $14 million. said lottery spokesman John Schade. In the televised Big Spin among w1nners of the lottery's scratch-off ticket games, Betty Haugen, SO, of Buena Park was the top money winner. with a SI million prize to be paid in installments after taA withholding of$40,000 annually over the next 20 years. Anne Melvin, 69. a ret1n:d tclc. phone employee from Seal Beach. won SI 00.000 in the Big Spin. SHELTER ••• From Al ing will take over. Jn addition to providina shelter fbr up to 90 dayi, counseling services will also be avail- able to shelter tenants. A peotry stocked with food douted by com. munity .,oups and citizens will be offered IO residents as well as other homclns families throuahout the Irvine community. Donatjons to tbe shelter are we~ come. For information. call 91~50. °::I.::' . .... ..,_ eo. IMO C-• ...... CA t2e2t a.Miid .ot, 54t·H11. _,_ i ..i11orta. W-4lfl Ju•tCall 64~-6086 leG••••u• .......,...., ..... ,. ...... ,_,..., uo "'"' -......... , ........ .,...~ .. . ~ 1eu Ho-tt«-. lllu9tr111-.ec1t1or ... --tf edW!t--•lt ,_..,. ....., De,_~ ~ ...... ,.,.,,. II G I Of ~iglll - ._.~ ~,., .. C-• ~. e.-llMI CUl"t 1444Qllt. __ ...,.._ by _,.., 16 u "' .... ., ....... ,00__,, ""' °'91911 ~ Olllr ........ ~ by '"' .....,. ~ c. OI 0.-..... Inc fwo ...__ ....... .......,.,.....,"'*YA :.~ffL·.:..c:~~ •w ..,81.C:.... CA VGL tt,•.- , ...... ----~· "" ..... ,......,.. ...,.,, ...... ...... ..... ... ,_..,, .. .......... '* ...... 'J I s•11 11 -°'9119'~ ... Sunny skies-·f or now, anyway Sun~ •let •• fcncMt tot 8outMm CallfornMt todty through Tuetdey, bUt the NetJonel W...._ 8ervtoe Mkt a llOrm wu bfewlnQ off Ai.-a Ind might move In wtth ,..,, by T~. Some hlah clouds ere e11pected In the., .. Tuetdey, llWlth some fog ancJ low doudt elOnQ the COllt tonight end T ueedey Atong the Orange Coat It wll be fllif tonight end Tueedly. Slightly warmer. Patchy fog and low CIOud• elOng the cout Tueldey morning. 8Mc:tl k>wt tonlQht 44 to 62 with "'a,,. Tuetday ea to 72. Va.Hey lows t°"'Ght 3l to 46 wtth Nght T'*4lay 70 to 75. FrCfl"I Point Conception to the Me11lc:an Border -Over Inner waters. light and Vati.bte ..,_.tonight and T~ morning uoapt west to southwest 8 to 12 knot• wtth 1-foot .... Tuetdey afternoon. Swell west 2 feet. Fw lklet .. cept patchy fog and low cloodt lat• tonight and Tueedly momlog. Over outer waters, • tmait craft edY6eofy from Point Conception to San Nlco&M i.land. Swell northweat to 10 feet te>Nght and Tuesday from Point Conception to San Nlcolu Islands. ~I northwest 6 feet aooth of San Nlcolu ltland. ... 1 ........ .......,. U.S. Temps. M ..... M 3e 26 Calif. Tempe. Mpll-St Pu a IO Eztended = IOw lor 24 he....~ .. s-.. Nelllv.le • ,. .. Le ..... 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"°"°"""' 17 73 Houelon 51 31 '*'-" llMdlrd lndU ~ 0.50 tncliwc>oll 47 33 ~-100 modtf-10 ·11t 1#'1• '**-·""'-11 41 200-at ._.,~ aoo ~ .. 54 end M>olllt '-lb& F1nl tigura .. ~ .., 40 pr-~lineO pei, ~ .. 1(-Clly 41 21 LMYegme 51 33 lodlly'• pel - UttleAo«* 51 31 s.i 8Md\ to MKAt1IU lllvd . 50-42 L~ 17 3f IMM, Sadll'tllleli y,_,, .-..... 25-50 ='*llMcll ~7 31 L..-llelefi (lof-1). ....... _ ....... 42 16 7t Lo. ,.,,..... Airport--·-.. U-140 ~ 17 47 ~ 17 IO ~Cily .. ~ II l0fll8Ndt 73 LA. Airport t7 Olllatto 70 ~ 72 ,..,,.,... 71 ..... natdlno 72 -~ n Seftt•Ane 73 SenUlerNra IS a.nt.M4Wle 17 s.nt.MoNce 57 T .,_ Yf//#lt 41 Torr-71 ~ .. y--~ IO 34 11 31 ... ... 17 40 45 35 31 33 • 37 40 30 31 47 24 41 51 31 Tides TOOAY S.COOd low , 1:43 p.m. -4.9 s.cew.ci l\lgll I p.m 4 2 TUHOAY Fltat 10w 1.02 a.111. 1.1 :::o:::r'ir-72hm U ..,... 2 2tpm 1.2 ~l'llOll 8S3pm 4 1 Sun Mll locl.y •• 4:41 p Ill., ..... T~ .at 6.)0 a I'll• end eeta et 4_45 pm Moon""' at 3: 12 p.111 ..... lueedey It 4: It a.Ill end t1-""911111 3:61 p.m. NEWPORT MA YORRACE WIDE OPEN ••• .From A l another term. which he would gladly do. He said it takes time to get acclimated to the post. which is more than_just ceremonial. "There's a lot of us on the council who don't think it should be cer- emonial,'' he said. ··1 think ifs an important job and should be re- cognized as such." Cox left little doubt Strauss wouldn't win his vote. . "We have opposing parties on the council. and I don't find it very attractive supporting the opposing party for mayor," he said. Watt, agreeing the mayor's chair is an important position, said some consideration should be given to changing the selection J>r<>CeSS. "I'm wondering if it isn't ap- propriate for the people to elect the mayor," she said. Plummer. who said she too is interested in the job, thinks the outcome won't be known by anyone until the clerk counts the &allots at Tuesday's special sessfon begin1ing at 3:30 p.m. in the council chamb(rs · at City Hall. "Get your Ouija board out." she said. BEATING SITE CALLED CRIME AREA .•• From A l 14th Street is not considered a high- cnme area. .. The Crips and the Bloods aren't shooting at e3ch other. if that's what you mean:· Mamelli said. referring to two notorious Los An.seles-bascd street gangs. "There might ~ more crime there than other places (in H untington Beach). but it's not a lot." Mamelli said 14th Street. like other parts of downtown Huntington Beach, has its share of apartments and duplexes that are often rented en massc by "kids 18 to 25 )'Cars old ... The biggest problems pohcc usually face in that area are out-of-control panics. he said. Pratt also said that Hoose "wasn't supposed to"be li ving there" and was probably subletting her bedroom from another couple. He said he had seen the victim several times at the residence, but did not meet her. "I rented it to a man and woman and their 15-ycar-old daughter.'' Pratt said ... When I asked about her (Hoose), they'd say she was just visiting. .. Pratt said he has not been allowed into the home since the beating occurttd. There was no answer this morning at a p~one num~r listed for the residence. Police have released fliers with a photo of Hoose nexc to a composite drawing of the man believed to be Hoose's assailant. The suspect was seen near the home shortly before the assault. The composite shows a white man between the ages of 20 and 2S, about Sfcet I 0 inches to 6 fecttall and I 7 S to 180 pounds. He wore a kelly green hooded sweatshirt, dark blue or black sweatpants a(ld had short. dark hair combed straiJtit back. Anyone with mformation about the assault should call police at 969-2272. FOUR COUNTY JAIL ESCAPEES HUNTED ••• From Al The 19-ycar-old Jail, dubbed "es- cape-proof' by optimistic officials when it was inaugurated in 1968, bas had numerous escapes over the years. Sunday's escape is the second largest on record from the new jail, according to Daily Pilot records. Five anpllles escaped from the men's jail m 1980. Both escapes, howcver1 pale beside an escape that occurred JUSt months be(ore the new jail opened. On Feb. 20, 1968, 11 inmates broke out of the old Orange County Jail. All 11 were caught, althou&h one of th~ escapees remained at large for six months. B . . . ; ~ B iJ • ~ " ...J • ~ ( -, •"\ ' I Engineers slate talk on education at Irvine meeting Or. Richard J. Williams, dean oflhe School of EJllineerina at c.J State Lona Beach, will be the speaker 111 luncbeoo meet in& of the Orange Count)'. chaP.ler of the Consultin& En&ineers Association of Cahfomia Tuesday. Williams• talk is entitled "Can Our Local Universities Meet the Demands of the Engineering Profession r· The program is scheduled for 11 :30 a.m. wi1h lunch a1 noon event at Remick's, 18120 Von Karman, Irvine. Call Ban Patton at 259.7992 for further information. Cocteau tallr at UCI UCI drama professor Stephen Barker willgive a lecture on playwright Jean Cocteau at the UCI Fine Arts Forum Tuesday at noon in the Stewart Room of the Bren Events Center on the Irvine campus. Admission to the presentation is free. Call 856-8748 for addilional informa1io,n. HB newcomers to meet The Huntington Beach Newcomers will hold two get-acquainted mcctinss Tuesday and Dec. 27. Call 968-1907 or 969..()632 for information and reservations. · "f Slrl group convenlng The next meeting of the Irvine Ski Association wilJ be held Tuesday evening at !he Barn Restaurant at the comer of Red Hill and Edinger avenues in Tustin. The 7:30 p.m. program will include socializing and planning upcoming ski trips and club activities. Call Julie Palmer at 720-1522 for more information. Women 's breaJrfast set The second Enterprising Woman breakfast will be held Tuesday at the IR vine Marriott Hotel, 18000 Von Karman in Irvine. ,.,.. A training session will follow the breakfast from 9 to 11 :30 a.m. Judy McKee, president of McKee Motivations, wtll conduct the program. Call Edith Kirby at 85U 188 for details. Leadership seminar slated A seminar entitled "Leadership and Super- vision: Assessing and Improving Your Personal Style" will be presented Tuesday at the Volunteer Ccnterof0rangeCounty, 1440E. lstSt.,SantaAna. The program will be conducted from 9 a.m. to noon at a cost of $20. Call Janet Whitcomb at 953-5757 for registration and further information. UNICEF workers sought The UNICEF Shop at 111 2-BS. Coast Highway in Laguna Beach is in need of volunteers to staff the store from now until Christm as. The hours are I 0 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily, and more information is available by calling 494-5898 or 830.2647. Hotline needs volunteers The West Orange County Hotline is offering fret "creative hstenmg" training classes this month and is looking for volunteers who are able to offer some time to their community .. The Hotline 1s staffed by volunteers who have been trained m effective hstening skills. Volunteers and donations arc always needed. Call (213) 594--0960 for addll1onal information. Dinner for homeless The soup kitchen at Rea Community Center in Costa Mesa will offer a free Thanksgiving dinner to homeless people Thursday from noon to 3 p.m. ihe center is located at 661 Hamilton St. Everyone is welcome. Monday, Nov. 21 • 6:30 p.m. Costa Mesa City Co11ncll, council chambers, 99 Fair Dnve. • 1 p.m. H11ntin1ton Beach City Council. council chambers. 2000 Mam St. Tuesday, Nov . 22 • 3:30 p.m. Newport Beacb City Council, council chambers. 3300 Newport Bhd. • 4 p.m. Soutb Laaua Board Of Review, 31592 West St .. South Laguna. • 6:30 p.m. l rvint City Council, council chambers. 17200 Jamboree 81\d. • 7 j>.m. Laguna Btacla Sclaool Board, district office. 5SO Blumont St .. Laguna Beach. , r Onlnge Cout OAILY PILOT/~. HovtmOer 21, 1... Al Irvine Co. among top GOP supporters By RITA 8EAM1S8 ... Ill ........ WASHINGTON-The Irvine Co. was one of the wealthy Georsc Bush supponers who gave SI 00,000 or more to t~ Republican Pa11y, GOP records show. ln addition to the Republican "Team 100" roster of people who save at least SI 00,0001 a hst released by pany officials shows m)llions more collected from sup- porters who gave amounts ranging upward from SS,000. Th( Republican National· Committee made public a list of contributors who pve about S20 million to its so-called soft mopey account -money• that lecaJIY cannot be donated directly to a presiden- tial campaign but wbicb the pa11y can &pend on 1 vaMty of clect101Melaaed acuvities that end up btMfiuna the ~ntial andldate. The kq,ubl1cans had a banner year with their soft money Pfotram. the recotds show, allowina thent to more than double the $46 million 1n public funds that the pres1dcnhal nominees are allowed to spend themselves. That money comes from the SI voluntary checkoff on individ- ual income talC returns. The RNC list of heavy hitters includes such GOP stalwarts and lonatime Reqan loyalists as WaJte{ Anncnberg and Tram- mtU Crow, as well as corporate donors such as IU R Nabisco, Revlon, Occiden.,.I Petroleum and Coca Cola. New York real estate mogul Donald Life's a Circus for .uc1 ~·sSirToby, a dedicated clOwri By CLAUS HECHT Delly ...... Corr11pol'l4wll Paul Tobias Rechenmacher has been clowning around since he ca n remember. But now, he gets paid Loo. In fact. the senior drama major at UCJ said he gets paid enough that he only has to work four to six days a month clowning at children's parties. While children comprise the majority of his audiences, he has performed for large families where only a few children were presenL "When I perform for families, there 1s a communaon of laughter. h's a very warm environment," he said. Sir Toby. as he is known in costume , was encouraged by his sister to become a clown after he experienced the pitfalls of working for a large corpoflllOn. He said his expenence with the corporate world showed llim that .. people spoke numbers and weren't concerned with humans as much as w1th money." And Sir Toby. 27. said he 1s concerned about the human condition. a concern that leads him to welcome competition from other clowns. "More clowns would make this a better world for everyone," he said. "Life is a paradox. The most serious people are the biggest . fools. I want to help people understand that." When he isn't clowning. studying or rehearsing. Toby counsels young run· aways at a Laguna Beach family crisis center ... A lot of kids just need someone who will hsten to them." he said. Although Sir Toby has not attended clown school. he has collected a potpourri of routines and integrated them into his own performances. H1sact includes magic. balloon tying. mime. corned) and stol) telling. various parties throughout Orange Coun· ty. "People are preoccupied wnh the im· portance of their errands." said Toby of the weekend traffic."When they~ me driv· ing around, they try not to react. J can break the best of them. though." Sir Toby's rapport with children leads him to believe that children arc .. the answer to the world's problems" because. he said, children don't lie until they're taught to. Adults miss many profound insights from children's honesty. Sir Toby believes. When playing Santa Oaus one year for a large apanment complex . Sir Toby re- members the persistent tugs of a younggjr1. Finally. he looked down and she said nervously, "Santa. we don't have '8 chimney, but there'll be cookies and milk for you al the back door:· Much of Sir Toby's early inspiration came from the years he spent in Vienna. where he attended and worked at a clown fest. While livinJ 1n a room .. where ice grew on the inside of the window," he faced the choice of moving around or sleeping. It was then he deve loped his juggling skills. As Vienna warmed. he borrowed his friend's unicycle and practiced on the cobbled back streets until he was good enough to ride throughout the city. He eventually gamed a reputation for being the "guy on the unicycle ... As a result of the Viennese practice. Sir Toby finds unicycling in Orange Count> very easy. This gives him a chance to concentrate on his juggling while ato_p his six-foot unicycle. After graduaoon this spnng. Sir Tob> wants to attend ucrs 1each1ng credential program. and he plans to eventually teach learning disabled students. Tnamp p ve SI 00,000. The list the RNC save to rtpomrs may reveal only a ponaon of the amounu..,vcn contnbutor actually has donat~. RNC offictals said this hst. which tncludcs 78donorswhoga ve $ 100.000. dad not 1ndude all the contnbutors. and dad not 11ve a full accounong for the donauons because som~ople also gave money also to ~le ··victory '88 .. accounts that the pany set up m each state. Money given to these accounts, often at hi~.<follar fund-raisers attended b~ Bush wfiik he was on the campaign trail, was not ~oUS)lt into the RNC accounts fo Wash· 1n11on. Pany officials have refused 10 d1sclos.t those fu nds and are not requ1~d by law to doM>. Tht Dcl'l'IOCr'l(S also had ID active tOft money program and have disck>led ~ ceapts The soft money S)'Jtem is criticized by many as a blatant loophole that p around elec11on-law lim1u on poliucal s~ndina. ' It enables the parucs to 1ccep1 m<me)I that 01herw1se would be barred from preSLden11al c.mpa1jn~~ i.ncludin& corpor- ate money and 1nd1v1dual cfonations exceeding the S 1.000 cap set by election law. • The money was used for generic pany adverusma. get-out-the-vote efforts and s~ct1 &hinp as buuons and bumper suckers. Dressed in bnght purple bagg> pants. red polka dotted while shirt and a four- corner Jester hat with bells. Sir Tob)' dnvcs from his rts1dence on the UCI campus to With his clowning. Sir Tob) bche\eS he helpsptople take life less senously . .\kin to that belief, he said ... In all senousness. there is aelinousness:· UCJ'a S ir Toby 18 in the laacJlter bulne..~ • Illegal tactics causing immigrant worke!!s to lose pay; charges filed By The Assoelattd Press They came to the United States 1n search of higher wages and the American dream. but man} undocumented immigrants sa) the) ne\Cr see the pa~checks the)' have worked so hard to receive. "If we sav an;th1ng. they threaten 10 send us back:· said Jose Lopez. 26. who rarel} gcrs 0' cname pay for I ().hour work da;~ ... When }OU ha\e no cho1ct. }Ou do what )OU have to. e\en 1f;ou ha'e to do 1t on an empt) stomllch." Fa1hng to pa) workers 1s JUSt one illegal tactic used by emplo)ers to exploit immigrant workers. county and state offic1aJs said. Thousands of workers m the last two )Cars ha' e filed charges against emplo)ers m Orange Count). That ma} be a fracuon of lhe number of 1mm1grants who lose wages every month. said Barbara Con· sldme of the county's Communit)' Ser· vices Agenc). Nearly 200 cases of emplo)cr abuse against Latinos were recorded this )ear. tnple the number of three )ears ago m the count), Considi11c said. The Legal Aid Foundation of Los .\ngeles also noted a large increase m the number of wage claims m the past two years. from 110 10 377. staff anorne> Anthony Mischel said. The maJont~ of the new cases were from Spanish speakers. he said. State offictals also rcpo11 a nse tn the numberofwage-cla1m cases. as do 1mm1· gration attorneys in Chicago. Ne" York and Washin~. D.C. A recent Con· gress1onaJ st y fou nd lhe number of worker..abuse ses on lhe nsc. Cons1d1ne believes the increase 1s re- lated to the 1986 passage of a federal la" that made ll 11legaJ to hare foreigners w11hout work permits. While workers arc losing ~)checks. the} also arc beins cheated out 01 o' en1me pa). breaks, medical insurai:ice d1s.ab1ht) and vacauons. Considine said Ignacio Flores 1s one such 1mm1grant He said he "orked a month in an Orange Count) furniture factof"). but ""as ne'er paid. He tiled a claim m Januaf") ""h the state Department of lndustnal Relauons.. "h1ch ordered his emplo~er to pa~ him S.:uoo m back wages. But FloTeS has ~cHo Stt an' of11 State ollic1als said about I 5 percent 10 ~O percent of wage claims are ~h ed b~ making a phone call. "hill' thr rest 1a~e months 10 process. La st Spruce Goose crew member dies in Ne wport Beach Edward Lund. the last surviving crew member of Howard Hughes' rccord- setung au-plane flight around the world in 1938. died of natunil causes Sunday at Hoag Memonal Hospital. He was 82. Lund had been hv1ng at the Newpon Beach hospital for a )ear. bis daughter. Delorts T1ppo. said. He had been a.llsinc::e suffenng a stroke tv.o ~cars ago. she said. T1ppo said her father was welding model airplanes for Hughes' film "Hells Antds- when he fi rst met the rtelus1ve tycoon. Lund was co-pilot on the 1938 flight. Lund Jlso 1s survived b) his da~t.crs Edla Cafaro and Ethel Steinboff; his son Bnan Lund, thrtt grandchildren and one gre.a t-gra ndda ugh t~r Funeral SCf'\ ices were scheduled for 11 .~O a m. Wednesday at Fairhaven Memonal Parle m Santa ~na. Police seekin clues in kidnapping o young girl vam attempt to remo' e the stereo. • • • Someone threw a 'beer bootle at a 1988 Hyundai parked at a residence on the 18000 block of Brookhurst Strttt Saturday at 9 o.m. . . ~ A mot on st dn \ 1ng a 19 O.t\ ~ Mazda 626 Saturda) night pufled aloopide another dnHr and mo- tioned him to pull to the side of the road. He then assaulted the dnver for no apparent reason. H1gh"a) at Golden"e~t St~ct The gathenng tu med out to be a lratern1t\ mt11all0fl • • • Pov.er tools "ere 'itolen from a pickup trucl parked 1n th<' 18300 block of Patterson Om c around 1 ll p.m. unda)' hcnt's home is suspected of steaiing the chenc's handgun. which he kept under his tied p1llo" • • • >\ manger knocked on the vtct1m's door at has apartment at 863 Center t struclt. the occu~nt wnh his fist and rr1umed laterw1th a 2-foot length of chain v.h1ch he swung in a 1hrta1en1ng manner before deparuQ&. HAYWARD (AP) -Finaerprints taken from a scooter belonging to a kidnapped 9-year-old &irl arc the only firm lead in the child's abduction by a pock.mukcd stranacr. police said. .. The leads arc comm& in very slowly, and most of them are sketchy at best," police Lieutenant Paul Wallace said of the search for little Michaela Joy Gancht. Mich.ela, who i14 feet . 8 inches tall with blue eyes and blond hair worn in a pony tail, was kidnap~d Saturday momma from the parkina lot of a p-ocery store by a man who used her rtewport Beacla A Promot1tory Point residence of 1 ~let was buf'l.lanicd Thursday. with 1 total loss estimated at $42.S 70. AmOf'IS lhe items stoftn ~silver­ware. a rur coat. ca mera equipment. rin&s. ~lets. necklaces 1nd car· rinas. Poltc:t said the thicr entered b) uninown mnns. ••• A vlftdaf spra)cd black ~101 on the porch and utmor Y."llls of tt home on Terrapen Way_. the \'1et1m told pohc:lt S.turcM)'. The p11n1 was not ilnYtd in any IP9.1f'l'nt cksiin. Wu.di Of' sytaboll. pouce noctd. An nti•tcd la•'° cash ud a red scooter as bait. Sunday police and FBI m· vestigators. searched the hills and parks of southern Alameda Count~ with hclicop1ers and search planes Police also released a compo He sketch of the suspect that was based on the description given by Tnna Rodriquez. an 8-year-old friend of the victim who was with her 1n the parking lot. The man was descnbe-d as in his early twenties. 5 feet. 10 inthcs to 6 feet tall. 180 pounds W\th an acne- scarred face and dirt)'·blond. houlder-len1th hair. The car he forced' the lmle girl 1010 was thought to be a faded tan or beige sedan "1th cement or mud splatters on the sides. "' The two girls had ndden their 'iCOOters to the grocery store to bu) soda and candy. officers said. When the> emerged. Michaela's scooter was m1ssin~. Tnna 1old p0hce the man said Michaela lhe scooter "as in his rar When the child wen I to get 11. the fncnd said. he grabbed her b' the \\alst. forced her Into the car and sP'd 3\\8)'. • • • A burglar) on the I 000 block of Obsidian Coun Saturda> night re- sulted 1n the $379.80 thefi of a TV. videocassette recorder and the con- tents of a woman ·s purse. Hanttacton Beacb SomeOM CCJ>C?ned what he thought was a potenual pna fi&ht unda~ even1ngm,olvi n&about 20 )Outhson the beach sK.tc of Pacific Coast • • • ~ 1.ev.elf") bo'\ l'Onta1ning about S 1.500 "Orth of Jt'"el~ "as tolen from a home 1n the MOO blocl of Frttbom \\a~ around Q pm unda' • • • T"o cameras and sr'eral items ot Jev.~lr) _ v.ere stolen from a home an the 6300 block of .\nnada Dn'e around 5:40 p.m . unda~ Coeta llaa .\n auto repairman who had been slC"Cp1ng 1n his "chicle for st\eral mgh1s while v.orl.ang on 1 C'&r at a ,. man's gold bractlcl valued at s I. 700 Officers, hOWC\tr, could not locate s· u' it slash er stn•kes ag.a1·n was repon~ stolen Sa1urday from a his whereabout$. home on Baywood on ... c. Lapna Beic:ll The owner of a )'CllO'W BMW parked unday 1n the UIJP(r Olen· ne re Su>ttt lot told pohce someone slashed the urn on the H~htclc .. h1k he was away. • • • Offktt1 ~ndtd to rtj)ON ttrl> Saturday of I pro'Wfct attn ttl tbit balcony ol 1 home on ()-press !lift'. The ~ was report~ly 1 man about l3 )911 okt S-10. 180 pounds. wtanna I plaid stun 1nd btue JHft Foa.nta!n Valley A suit slashtt who hu cut up moiT man sattangon a block wall on the than ~.0001n men's cloth1n1 strud. I 000 block of La Hacienda venut •1n SUndl • slK'l"I two suit coeu at masturbltcd an front of a "oman a Robinson's ckpanmcnt s•~ it he pasxd him on tht ,.'IY 10 htr So•tb Coesi Plaza. apartment S«unt} 11tfU Patnr11 Gahndo Fulton Elcmc~u:r) School at 78 called poltet afttt a clerk d1tc0\.cmf El ~ ve. was pra)-cd ,.1th )l:llo" t~ ruined coe11 v.onh SI :22~ Ga.._ i-1n1 somct1mc o'er chc wukcnd. indo Mid lhc "8,.nnp ha'c be-en an • • • • OOl(Mnt pi'obkm It the "Ott. A window wu brokca in a l 981 · An unknowft iutpe'C1 bas bttn Honda c.~K' Sunday ... wtuat I\ """'I ruOJ blMlt Of s.m1.., IMtN- --DlliMd in a carpon °" the tCXK) rnt1't to~ wits at"'**"*""· bled of' LA Haritndl Avett\lt. in• mtnt scara ia Cos" MCll a!'d cwport Beach for mo~ than a car. Pohtt bchc"e the 'andah m ' l~ work of one ptMn. In a fc-. ofth< in\'1dcn1 •amen' loth1n "l\ iarstted. Ho~C\(r. the m-.ior1t) of targtt\ h:a'e hcc-n men·~ 'J)Ort COit\ .\ orona'dd Mar fariul~ iherapt\l ha\ t~omid IM 1U-.pttt coukl ~ a ~omin ku1ne out her hO\Uht) &plD\t I father f\lure. But pohtt t\a\;c said tht) hive no tnfonnu'°" to~ thM tht4M). • • • o\ man v.ho had ~n h\tng at the Oal Crttk Inn. 2645 Harbor Blvd.. s1nct Jul) and who~-as habttually late v. uh h1 pa)'ments disappeared OW'ln& rhe innlecper more than Sl ,900. Women hit by auto in Mesa ./ A.4 Otlngl COMt DAILY PILOT/ Monday, November 21. 1888 Bush will retain three in Cabinet; budget chief set WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent-elect Gcorse Bush announced today he will retain Attorney General Dick Thornburah and &lucation Secretary Lauro F. Cavazos, bringing to three the number of Reagan holdovers in his Cabinet. Bush also said h~ou.ld nominate Richard Oatman to the Office of Manaaement and Bu t. • Bush said that win all likelitiood" Thornburgh, Cavazot and previously announced Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady would be the only current Cabinet members he wou.ld ask to remain in their posts. AH were rtc::lCnt appointments to .President Reagan's Cabinet and took office with Bush's blessing. Bush emphasized the role that Thornbl.lt'gh would have in fighting drugs. "Drugs arc public enemy No. l ," said the president-elect. He went on to say tha\ Thornburgh ··will work with me to fight drugs with every tool at our disposal." Bush noted that Cavazos, a fonner president of Texas Tech University, is the first Latino to hold a Cabinet post but he added ... Overriding is Dr. Cavazos' commitment to excellence in education." Bush had promised Latino leaders that he would name a Latino to bis Cabinet Bush siid his choice of Darman underscores his detennination to cut the budget deficit. "Dick Darman understands the numbers," Bush said. "Dick Darman will l>lay a central role in that efTon, which will commence immediately when I assume office. Because he understands the government and the economy so well, Dick will make sure the Bush administration hits the Preeldent-elect Geoqe Baab With Richard Duman, Illa choice to head tile omce of lhn••ement and ... et. . . ground QJnning." ~·r want to do it, I don't want to The president-elect denied he have a lot of show business," he said. planned to meet Thanksgiving week-"I want to hold out my hand and say, end with his defeated Democntic 'the campaign is· behind us:" opponent, Gov. Michael Dukakis r~ Cavazos was named to succeed Massachusetts. But Bush said he di William Bennett last fal l. want to meet "at some point" wi Thornburgh, a former Pennsylvania Dukakis. governor. is a Bush ally. I South moppflalup from barrage of heavy storm• ., Tiie ........ Pntl . Tht National Guard s-trolled In Tuecaloosa. Ala.. whale the South deaned up today from a bemee of nearly two doien latt-seuoe IOnUldoa and ltOrml that killed at least two ~ople and dama,ed m<?te than 150 ~The same storm a~tem carried hiP wind and heavy rain to ~ o( Otuo and Pennsylvania Sunday, ri_ppinaofrthe roof ofan empty'!=~ in soutbwatnn Pennsylvania and topplana a 7S-foot Christmas. tree .•n Pit~. It la~ became the first bis snows10rm or the season to hn Mante. dum=eet •_Ila nearl_y a foot of snow that wu blamed for more than I 00 tta~ ti, ~th two fatalities. Caribou recorded I 0 inches of snow. I~ the Can~n. Tropical StOl'IJl Keith chumed off Mexaco·s Yucatan PenJnsula after.becoauna the 11th tropical storm of the season. Sn lpen •tmck Rio Grande River ralten LAJ IT AS. Texas -Snipers ambushed ~ raf\1!'1 s-ny on the Rio O~~. firing a hail of bullets from clifT~on the ~ex1can s.idc oft~ bo~r and kil~na a man as be tried to draa his wounded w1fe to safety, officials •id. The nver auidc accompanying the couple also wa~ ~ounded. H~ and the woman.were hospitalized 1n stable ~ndit1on. Au~ontaes ~re aeek1na u~. to .four .snapen. "There was no provocatton or ,anythina. It was Just ~n attack.. said ~ilte ,?>x. a spokesman for the Texas ~partme!"t . of Pubhc Safety .1n A~n. The wo.man says it was a nightm-.re. CC?" said It was the second tune this ~r ~t American tourists have reportcd-bcl1lg s~ot a\ from the bluffs on Melllco s side of the Rio Grande. Three 'skinheads' held Jn Port11UJd •l•Tlnl Judge says Iran-Contra cas e 's im pl~ frau d' PORTLAND, Ore. -Three members of a white s~premacist .. skin~d" gang have been arrested and charged in what pohcc say was a rlelally mouvated and unprovoked attack that killed a black man in front of his home. Muluaena Scraw a 27-year-old Ethiopian immiarant, was k.icked in the bead and beaten with~ baseball bat by his assailants, and died ~rtly ~er ~e Nov. 13 attack. The three men charged arc memben of East Side ~1.te Pride, the state's largest skinhead gana. said Multnomah County Distnct Anomey Michael D. Schrunk. Witnesses said Scraw's attackers had shaven heads and wore green military jackets with Americ:ian flags on the sleeve . WASHINGTON (AP) -The judge in the Iran-Contra case ~id today the maJor charges against former presidential aide Oliver L North and three co-defendants boiled down to simple allegations of fraud. "I am not trying anything else; it's a fraud trial," U.S. Distnct Judge Gerhard A. Gesell told one of North's lawyers, John D. Cline. during a hearing on defense motions to dis- miss the central conspiracy charge in the case. Onassis died of natural causes BUENOS AIRES. Argentina (AP) -The coroner's rcpon on Chnstina Onassis' death says the Greek heiress died of natural causes. the newspaper La Nacion reponed today. The 37-year-old daughter of Greek shipping tycoon Anstotle Onassis died Saturday of an apparent bean attack at the country club home of friends. Autopsy results on the cause of death are eitpected to be released today. The coroner's repon is key to the release of the body for burial in Greece, and might provide details of Onassis' death. !he repon was to be delivered today.;o Buenos Aires Judge Fernando~ino. In another development. three jars of medicine and other evidence found in Onassis' bedroom were taken by police Sunday for analysis. the pn- vate news agency Dianos y Noticias said today. Another bottle of pills rcponedly was missing.. One of three doctors who allegedly examined Onassis at the country club and pronounced her dead there was questioned by police and two judges who have Junsdiction in the case. OyN reported. Onassis frequently dieted to com- bat an obesity problem and was known to take diet pills. It was not known tf she was on diet pills at the time of her death. Judge Nino tentatively ruled the death suspicious because the bod) arrived dead at the hospital. The coroner's repon he ordered 1s based on an autopsy conducted Saturday "It is fraud in the sense that Chief Justice (William Howard) Tat\ and the Supreme Coun thereafter have consistently applied" to the con- spiracy statute, the judge said. The defense, supponed Friday by a Ju5tice Department brief, contends North and his three co-defendants could not be prosecuted for obstruct- ing Congress' foreign affairs authority by running a secret arms-supply network to the Nicargu.an rebels. The 1924 decision written by Tat\ Chrlatina Onuela night. Sunday a federal judge prohibited the removal of Onassis' body from ~entina without his authorization. citing procedural errors in transfering the body from his district to Buenos Aires. Onassis was the stepdaughter of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. the widow of President John F. Kennedy who married Aristotle Onassis in 1968. In Piraeus, Greece, a spokesman for the fami~y·s Sprin&field. Shit>ping company sa1d Miss Onassis wiU be buried on her family's island, Skorpios. off northwest Greece later this week. The spokesman said the Onassis fonune had been left to the dauahtcr born in 1985 to Onassis an<f her founh husband. Thierry Roussel. "The entire fonune goes to little Athena," the spokesman said, speak- ing on condition of anonymity. "Mr. Roussel will have custody of the child until she comes of age." Blue Cross of Callfomla . ~.... . Goo<t News From Blue Cross age single sub& sub& family sub& catagory sub spouse ch/Id 3+ children under30 37.00 68.00 65.00 94.00 89.00 30-39 53.00 101.00 95.00 130.00 123.00 40--49 59.00 111.00 106.00 137.00 130.00 50-59 99.00 170.00 163.00 195.00 184.00 60-64 133.00 228.00 228.00 261 .00 261 .00 1111 l'o: CelbmM ~~s.Mo91 • "'°"""""° °'" , . held that defendants did not have to violate a particular law in order to be guilty of obstructing government or de~nving it of honest service. Gesell also expressed· puzzlement over defense contentions that the diversion of arms-sale profits to the rebels, known as Contras, did not violate the so-called Boland Amen- dent restrictions on military aid. ··1 am having a difficult ume understanding wh)'. it is necessary to decide what the Boland Amendment means," the judge said. The defense contends that the ' Ma vor al electlon order ed In Chle1J6o senes of amendments enacted by " · • . Congress to ban direct military aid by SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -Chicago must hold a mayoral election next year to U.S. intelligence agencies did not fill the two years remaining of the tenn of the ~te Mayor HarolC:S Washi~aton, aP.ply to the National ~rity Coun-the Illinois Supreme Coun rul~ today. The high ,coun ruled without d1ue.nt c1l, where Nonh was an aide. It said a reading of state elccuon !aw, al~n1 with the state law aovemma "The indictment clearly depends municipalities, requires that a special election be held to fill a v~ncy that upon the application of the Boland occurs with more than 28 months left on a four-year term. \Yashinston, the Amendment to the National Security city's first black mayor. died of a hean a~tack N~v. 25, 1987, with 3'1J years left Council," Cline told Gesell. arguing of his second term. "The scheme recognizes t.he amponan~ of the voters not to that if it did then it was unconstitu-have a mayoral ~ppointee who. is not of their.own choos~na f<?r ~ore than 28 tional. months," Justice Joseph Cunningham wrote 1n the coun s opinion. Voters choosilig leaders in Canada TORONTO (AP) -Newfound- land voters cast the first ballots today in national elections Prime Minister Brian Mulroney hopes will give him a parliamentary majority to ratify the U.S.-Canada free trade agreement. The controversial trade pact, which has dominated the rancorous cam- paign, would phase out all remaining tariffs on trade between the two countries staning Jan. I. Polls opened at 9 a.m., bcgjnniog with the Atlantic coast province of Newfoundland, which is in a time zone 90 minutes ahead of eastern standard time. Polls close at 8 p.m. Canadian evening television cov-~ge was scheduled to stan at S p.m. PST. Canadian television is delaying its covenaae to western time zones so that voten can go the polls without knowing early results. British Columbia on the Pacific coast: where~llscloseat8p.m. PST. coula be decisive in any close race. Opposition leader John Turner has urged Canadians to vote for his Liberal Pany because he opposes the trade agreement and is seeking "to keep Canada Canadian." Turner revived his pany's chances during the 51-daycampaign by accus- ing Mulroney of selling out Canada. Mulroney, 49, 1n tum charged Turner with using"scare tactics," including allegations the pact would wreck social prosrams and cost many Canadians thear jobs. Mulroney brought out his mother to show his committment to retirement benefits. Polls in the campaign's final days showed Mulroney's Progressive Con· servative Pany had returned to favor after a two-month slide attributed to the effcctivenus of the 59--year-old Turner's attacks. The opinion surve¥5 showed the governing Conservatives in good position to win a slim majority of the 295 seats in the House of Commons. which would allow the Canadian parliamentarians to ratify the l~year trade pact. The leader who can muster a majority of at least 148 seats controls tbe government. The socialist New Democratic Pany, led by Ed Broadbent. 52, also opposes the free trade agreement and could play a decisive role in any close outcome. A poll Saturday by Gallup Canada indicated the Conservatives had the suppon of 40 percent of the decided respondents, the Liberals 3.S pen:ent and the New Democrats 22 percent. Turnout amona Canada's 17 . .S million eliaiblc voten was expected to be higher than the 1914 elections. when a6out one in four didn't show up. . \. . P I t . · t t g · · d Afghanplaae a es 1n1an s a e reco n1ze hltlnPakl•tan Py Egypt; China fallows suit ISLAMABAD. Pakistan (AP)-A Forei&n Ministry spokesman said today as many. as 30 people were kiUed when Pakistani forces downed an Af~n mjliW)' transpon plane over P"akistan1 temtory. CAIRO (A P) -Egypt, the only Arab country fonnaJJy at peace with Israel, has recognized the newly proclaimed Palestinian state and cxpl"CSSCd hope its declaration will contribute to peace and stability in the rqion. China also announced Sunday it had recognized the state declared last Tuesday by the PLO's partiament-in- exile1 making it the largest Com- murust country to back the Palesti- nian claim to a homeland. The Soviet Union has expressed support ~in essence" of a new Palestinian state, but has yet to issue formal recognition. e,ypt's statement came a few hours after Israel's ambassador, Moshe Shamir, called on Foreign Minister Esmatt AbdeJ..Meguid to briefhim on them Moslem, have recognized the the Israeli aovemment's position Palestinian state. regarding the newly proclaimed state. An F.gyptian government com- The Palestine National Council, munique said Sunday that "as qypt meeting in Algeria, proclaimed the blesses this construcuve step, it hopes state -in lsraeH-occupied territory that it (the proclamation) would serve with Jerusalem u its capital -and the cause of peace and stability in the also endorsed U.N. resolutions 242 region." and 338, implying recognition of the Israeli officials have aJJUed that state of Israel. f&ypt would violate the 1978 Camp Israel has rejected the move, saying David accords between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Orpniza-£aypt if it recosnized the Palestinian tion has neither explicitly recoanized state. Israel nor renounced terrorism. The U.S.-mediated Camp David In Jerusalem, Foreign Minister pact called for the final status of the Shimon Peres said Sunday he was occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, upset by ~pt's decision. "I rqret it • which Israel seized in the 1967 very much, he said without elabora-Middle East war, to be nesotiated in tion. peace talks amont panics to the More than 30 countries, mo~t of Middle East conflict. .. We're not sure how many people were on the plane, but the estimates beina reported were between 30 and JS people," the spokesman said . The plane was shot down Saturday everuns near the border town of Parach1nar, .everal miles from the A~n border, he said. The plane was asked to identify itself and it didn't." the spokesman said. "It was aoiq deeper into Pakistan's territory when it was shot down." He did not say bow contact had been made with the plane. An E~sh-lanauqe newspa~r. the Muslim! quoted local authonties as sa= al 34 l)Ule111tn and crew mem on the plane were killed. rJ1ie tnU! (iglit of Cliristmas is in. tk ~ of cliiftfrrn. aglow witli tk jOJS of tk lio¥w season. Gay· Catholics keep faith after SF ouster 1*fi tfiis in. miN{, fk .5vrst1rmi a invites !JOU antf !J"UT fr:urU1!J to OUT trad1tiona£ 'T~ Lfi"'i1'B Cmmorl!J at fJinun Cmic ~ on~' ~ 28tft at 6.·30 p.m. .- ~ an4 ftetu tk camfa:w of tk~ Jfrnri:an. 'Bo!JS Cftoru.s. .5« tk !f¥ of tlitStq:sti:'! ~up tk ttJWtrityj mr. ;a.rut liail tk tntrana ef Santa daus on ftiJ mttritst rowui. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Gay ebratina Mus elJewbm. QiplilY. and lesbian Catholics. despite bcina ~ who have received otren of told they can no lonter sponsor a spece from 1ever1J Protestant weekly Mass, remained unshaken in churches. expect to ftnd a new piece in their ~liaious faith and their commit-the next few weeb. ment to the church tome of them The San Franc:itc0 Bey area called cruel and unjust. . chapter it the luc oae in a ~city ··we have faith an the ~l and 10 spon.IOf Ma.a. accordins to what the church mcan110 UI,• Kevin ehurcb offtciah. Tbe poup bu been ~ri. a member of the PY boldi~ tcnica in various Cadlolk Catholic pyup Pianity, II.id Sunday churcbes fortbe .Pat 15 ,_....the ~t at St Borur.ce Cburdl. four at St. Bolaifila in &he Tenderloin "'We have a callina to bet~ reform district. lhtcbureb. Weareane;orcbanee. But San Fraacitco'1 AJ'dlbisbop, We love die dnlrdl , and wt Jobft Quin!!, .• ._. S......, tUt wan•'° Illy," Call9ri . . becaute or Dipity'• ndonemnt of Membenollbe.J50-member local PY tttuality. die loml l"CMIP would -eMpter Ibo pledled to keep eel-have 10 lave. 11~ , Multibillion dollar biddblg · ~= .: for RJR Nabisco Inc. rising !1~ : •• t~ 'j~ .,. l ~ t•! .~:~ R:: l~~ ~ . ._ NEW YORK (AP)-The &luaf'~t b1ddit\J for .,ant RJR Nab11e.o Inc. has JOne into utra 1nninp. with ennched offers from two exi.ii"4 bidders. a rteord propc:>sal from 1 new iu1tor and indicahons that the mul1ibillion~ollar frtt·for-all may ttt even w1ldrr. A special committtt of RJR Nabisco's directors announced the new prop<>sals late Sunday and said ii was cxtcnd101 thc deadline for receiving further offers to buy the food and tobacco con&)omera~. Not only did the newt.buyouJ plans top previous bids. which already were in e \!nprecedented S20 billion ranse, the committtt 1d ever, bidder could submit revtscd offers. sipalina t the hefty bids It had aonen so far m.aht not be aood tno&CIL Tht eommanee,hwbicb 11 oveneei• the auction of RJR. aJso has told 11.1 own ldviKTS to continue nP.onna .. all forms or tHl~unna" that could provide an altcmati vc to the cumn1 proposals. ~wtt1le no assuran~ can be &Jvcn that any transaction will occur. the Special Commirree cit~ its belief that that process which it i1 ovcnceang wiU benefit all shareholders," said Charles HUJtl, RJR N•bisco's ~ha1rman and nead of the five-member com mm~. The committee will accept bids throuah I p.m. PDT onNov.29. · Federal drug testing to quadruple In '89 WASHINGTON (APl -The federal employ~ drug-tesllnJ program instituted by President Reagan will qu~druple 1n s12e nut year unless stopped·tn its tracks by legal challenges. Aq estimated SO.OOOemplo)ees \\ere tested this year. mamly law enforcement officers. transponat1on inspec- tors and civiltans working for \h~ military But the program IS expected to test some 200,000 members or rhc 3. I million federal worlc force in 1989. according to the National Institute of Dru$ Abuse. About I S0.000 to 170.000 of those will be tested at random and come from a pool of some 500.000 workers i o pos1t1onsd~mcd sens1tave by their agency chiefs. The rema1~ will be tested after ICcidents or when superviiors believe the~'is reasonable suspicion of druc use. Those figures do not include untold numbers of federal JOb apph~nts Who will be tested if applying for stns1tivc positions. nor do they reflect the Transpona\ion Otpanment's far~hmJ requirement to test 4 million pnvate sector transponat1on workers -from truckttS to airhnc pilots. That program would begin late next year for businesses employmg more than SO workers. Those with fewer than SO would have two years to start tests. Most suns against testina. many filed by unions. an: in federal distnct or 1ppeals courts. 'IHE CHEcKING. ACCOUNf 'IDU NEED .. AT 45 ISNTTHE ONEIDU HAD AT 18. When you were 18 yeais old you probably oombed your hair a little differently. And chances are you didn,t pay much attention to Beethoven ordaVmci. You were living on cheese- burgers and falling in love every 48 hours. But people change. And so does the way we handle our money. So at Security Pacific, we offer four very different check- ing ,acrounts. If you're at the stage where you need something .P~ basic, we have something called the DiscountBanking"' Acmunt When you come to need more services, our Regular Checking Account may be just right But let's say you reach a point where you can keep a minimum balance and want to earn inter- est without J>aYll!g_monthly service charges. We have an account for that. It's called Premier Interest/Ch~. And we have the ValuAdded Banking"' Acmtmt. It rolls many of our services into one ronven- ient money management tool -·~-- DISCOL'NTBANKING• NXOl'NT --·-· ~ ... -- RECl'UR ClfECKTNC - •• - 0,1 -",,,, 1 lot of dl«k.; c. .. -.,,, • "*Odnt 1111ttt111•"' /lal411rf 111 _., 1CIJllM1tl' [),,-_,,, incb,.ur,d clltth . ril11f1 11111/t"' IH<lfftltq ""vu,,.,,r• Tlu1Hw.1· R~Jill' ClttttlJtl lrrotnf/ '"llltl ~ ~I !bf W)ll , .. - (Ii~-· PREMIER l~TERE.._q CHECK.I.We , fln -...,.1 tlar ,.,_,,,,,If• Rqt.i. C"-*uw llt"llflf -'~ '"tht,jf" ~ ~~ lrtw-.st CJitt*i'IK IOtiflJ h llf )'Ollr "'"' ksL --aar'----- •• ,~•th ..... Of course, we also provide - 24-hourtelephone acre$ to your aa::ountinfonnation,anetwork of 780 ReadyTeller• ATMs in Califonlla and 20,000 PLUS '-'..\Ll'AT>DE011,.NKTNG'"M."Co<'l•·T SYSTEM'ATMs ''ru-idwi.de n. ...... ,.,.,,,.,,.,rt",...,.,,,,,,,,.,.p.~,,,. • tTVl • "'""'~ ftt>oTNt) N'kl.-lMl"tllal. ~ ~ The point is, people change. --••'-' ..... Ill...,...,. And so do their financial needs.At Serurity ~we ~that ~into ~of our 575 offices er call m.1-~·5'53-SPNB-.os. SeCurity Pacific offers the statility of a 120-year-old bank and ~ part of SeCurity F-crific Corpcratiari with total~ of $74 billioo. ~ • I A8 * Or9n09 COllllt DAILY PtlOT/ Monday, Nowmber 21. 1~ 'NYS ~ COMP OSITE T RANS~CTIONS ,.. ----"-~ -- ' ,... . .... , , MONDAY'S CLOllNG'PRIC•8 WH AT AMEX Dio NEW YORK (AP) Nov. 21 1 AM EX LEADE RS NEW YORI( (AP) -Sales, • p,m, Mon0av prlct end net cN119e Of the 10 most acliYt Amerlon Stoclt E11cilan~ •H.¥:'• lntdlng natl~.IV at mort 1rttenl. Alla~ \l ~acN"sc11 • 11' ...... ~ angLabB , Vt + mda Is , I -llH~lrCp , II + Ye ·oanQJI H v. -2~ Aus I Pr ; ~ ubosMex • 6--lt GoLn QuoTEs MET ALS Quons NYSE UP s & DowN s I W HA l NYSE Dio NEW YORI< (AP) NOv. 21 I, NYSE L ~.1DERS -v. -v. -~ +--v. _.,.. -v. t t = 'Dow J o ~f s AuR~cEs NASDAQ S UMMARY OTC UP s & DowNs • • • I • ' f '' I 1 11 I 1 Cost of stopping takes a fortune . . ., out of pockets . There) a new exercise in frustration that hopefully will begin making the rounds here in Southern California. . Most newspaper rcaden ha 'tlC seen stories about how much mbney is lost to wastcdtime, gasoline and wear-and- tcar on .automobiles during the daily commute. The size of th~t .esumate depends orf who is making ii_ but it is always mdhonwf dollan a year. nte figtlre is an attention-getter, but it docsn 't have much effect on individual motorists because most of us have a hard time ~p~ng with .numben that large. . W~Uiam . Faubank, an agricultural engineer at UC. Rive~1d~. thinks the costs of traffic jams and bad traffic - planm!l& is better undentood if it is figured for the individual ~ motonst. . f'airbank ~ys motorists can come up with a rough est1m~te of their personal cost of stop-and-go driving &y counting the number of stops and multiplying that number by 10 to 25 cents. • The cost of stopping includes wear and tear on brakes and tires, deteri~~tion and mai~tenance of the vehicle's engine and transm1ss1of!, extra gasoline to a~lerate back to cruising speed and an esumated value of the dnver's lost time. Fairbank didn't pull those figures out of thin air. He says the Southern California Association of Governments uses a cost of 10 cents per stop for the average car, but some planners eitimatc 2S cents per stop is more realistic for bi&h technology and affluent communities where business and lifestyle arc more costly. Motorists here on the Orange Coast surely fit the 25- cents-per-stop cost profile for every stop sign and traffic signal. Those who drive streets like Harbor and Newport boulevards, Adams and Brookburst ·streets and Coast Hipway have a shock coming if they keep track of the esumated costs. It's often said that government waits for public sentiment for change before itacts on a tough or expensive problem, and nothing affects public sentiment like a pocketbook issue. If more eeople became aware of the money that bad traffic planrung is taking out of their pockets, city govemm~nts. might take a harder look .at traffic signal synchronizat10n and how and when m8)or street repair projects arc schedoled. Sub-minimum wage As a 'plain matter of state law, the California Supreme Coun bas ruled, a state commission cannot set a special . subminimum wage for waiters, waitresses, car washers and other eml>loyees who get tips. The state Industrial Welfare Commission had set a minimum wage of only $3.SO an hour for worlcen who receive at least $60 a month in tips, while settiJ!g the minimum wage at $4.25 an hour for everyone else. Smee the California Supreme Coun is the final authority on California law, the restaurant and hotel industry can hope to chanae things only by lobbying the Legislature. They're likely to do that. Legislators should resist any pressure to change the law. The effects of the two-tier minimum wage would hardly be devastating to those waiters and waitresses in luxury restaurants and l'C$0rt hotels who customarily get big tips. But a worker who is covered by the law because he or she gets $60 a month in tips would lose almost 10 percent of anual income because of the subminimum wage. An attorne~ for the California R,estaurant Association and the California Hotel and Motel Association says there is a "very real possibility" some emf.layers wiU be forced to lay off employees or close up. But a wel -run business ought to be able · to survive in a field where the competition has to play by the same rules. Whether at.a swank hotel or a comer coffee shop, the customen who provide the tips surely think of them not as a part of someone's wages but as a penonal reward for aood service. Inevitably, those tips do enable restaurants and other service businesses to bold down prices ... But customers will pay reasonable price increases. lMl6 Bact Prns-Telepul Insurance initiative Give state legislators credit for one thing: By being such la&&ards in dealing with the arcat issues of the day, they have lefrlawmakinf to othen and thereby fueled the &rowth of one of California s most buoyant industries, the initiative business .... the Fair Political Practices Commission reported that contributions forand apinst ballot measures on the Nov. 8 ballot bad reached S 130 million, with $76 million collected for the five insurance initiatives alone. Now, when S 130 million acts spent, that puts a lot of people to work. Those people buy food, clothin1t cars and shelter and that puts more people to work -all in the state of California. The problem with this wonderful economic machine is that it sometimes produces bad laws. Proposition l 03, the only insurance initiative to make it past.the voters ... promises relief from hi&h insurance rates but seems more likely to create lepl and economic confusion. Already the insurance companies have aone to court, as well they should, in Jn attempt to overturn it on constitutional grounds. A competent Leaislature could have done• much better job of inturanc:e reform. But as bad as Prop. I 03 is, we fully undentand why the voten approved it Most of them prot.bly knew thac the measure bad flaws, but they were frustrated and they apparently had no faith in their elected repre1tntati vcs ..• ' LM MpJn DtU.1¥ Nen ORANGE COAST ..., ..... ......,a.dlnan Publisher .,......-v dfl't °'the .... ill~ W ..... C... M.e CA Mdf9' • ,.,....., ..... '* c-a -.c-.-~ ,., .. (,_ .. ,.., ~c.. l•O..- "-CMlt ........ Cibt.. ..... c.... s..rts (Mw ....... , .... (. CMI .... ..... Yllr • .. ...... ~Dnttar ...... ...-~ ...... ....... .................. ci..w":!: ..... ........ c.-. ...... ~--.... _ ...... .......... •• .;..;,__'°°T • . ~.~21,1W • ., , Lr · : 1 r1 ·- 'Vitriolic' ed itorial answe red To the Edi\Or. Your vitriolic editorial of Nov. I. condemnina Newpon 2000, rc:quira . I ~:~Ou and y~ editorial -1 ~inly are entitled to espras )'OUr" ,··opinions rQaldi. ·1na the mail put out b)' Newport "2000duriQ& this dectiOft, ~ou slaouJd have acerWoed the r.c.. fint before btlsbiQa..Newpon 2:000'a name and reputation. Sublequent to Newport 2000'a mailer on John Cox. it was revealed ia your newspaper that John eo~ claimed his company. POSTV, lac.~ was incorporated in the state °' Delaware. The Daily Pilot then coocluded that N~rt 2000 bad lied about John Cox s business. Wrona! Your reporter Paul Archipley was ajven a Newport 2000 press release on Friday, Nov . .4, ia Legislators playing poli~cs at expense of constituents which I ~ealed the ~ nature of POSTV, Inc. '1 in<:orporation. I alto repelted the quesuoru raited in Newport 2000'1 mailer that remained unamwered. The pres rdeue was never printed by the Pilot IDl1ad of reponiaa facts, the Pilot illued their edi1oria1 hit OD Newpon 2000. Had the Daily Pilot editon doDe lbieir job • ~ Every California governor com- plains of vcat frustrations in his dealings Wlth the state Lqislature. Circumstances have compounded those frustrations for Gcorie Deu- kmejian. Not only is he 1 GOP governor dcaJiDJ wtth a Democratic· controlled Legislature, but some of his fellow Republicans often prove too flinty and unreasonable for even Deukmejian, as conservative and partisan as he is. The governor is said to have been on occasion almost as angry in private with some members ·of the Assembly Republican minority as he's been in public with most mem- bers of the Senate Democratic ma· jority. Assembly Democrats are a different story. After a rocky rela- tionship durina bis first year in office and despite -conflicting ideological outlooks.. Deukmejian feels able to rely more on commitments made to him by Democratic Assembly Speaker Willie Brown than on those by some lcey Asscmbiy Republican figures. Possibly that may change now that the GOP leadership in the lower house has passed into the hands of Assemblyman Ross Johnson. But the Assembly Republican Caucus still remains under the control of the ultraconservative faction that fre- quently has tied the Lcgjslature in knots during the last 10 years. These Assembly Repubhcans nave copccntrated so much on partisan ntaneuvcring that many of them h!lve forgotten the basic purpose for which they were elccte<i -writing sensible laws and.creating workable policies to benefit all Californians. Orie result has been the frequent paralysis of the Legislature when il tries to cope Wlth maJor policy issues. Any hopes that Johnson·s ac- cession to the minority leadership mi&ht signal th~ beginning of a ~ore coopcrauve era 1n Sicramento quick- ly dammed when the new GOP leader brusquely declared: .. Good government in my mind is electin& 41 Republicans to the As.- sembly.'' This politics-as-usual statement is in kecpina with the attitude of another member of the Orange Coun- ty Republican delegation to the A.sxmbly, Gil Ferguson. He warned MARTY SMITH constituents that actJon on many state problems would have to remain on hold until the next reapportion- ment of election districts. "There's a war going on in the Assembly over the state's future.·· Ferguson was quoted as sayi ng. "and until that war is over in 1990, the Assembly Republicans arc going to be preoccupied with the war rather than running the business of the state. What we're doing is so meaningful - turning back the Democrauc assault -that the people should under- stand." Undoubtedly, some voters -the most highly partisan ones -do understand. Others. howe ver. includ- ing the majority of Cahfom1ans who care much less about pol11ics than they do about the state's broader problems. are hlcely to have maJOr doubts about making partisan mat- ters the chief focus oflawmakers. Certainly. the Assembly Rc- pubhcan Cave Men arc not alone in bland partisanship. ahhou&h the) may be more brazen about a3mming it. A majority of state Senate Demo- crats earlier this year demonstrated their own extreme pan1sansh1p by defeating Deukmejian's nomina11 on of Republican Dan Lungren as s1a1e trrasurer chiefly ~use they did not want to give him what they 1hough1 would be a valuable stalewtdc poh11- cal base. An articulate conserva11,·e. Lungren was seen by parusan Demo- crats as lilcelv to bcco~c too for- midable a candidate for J.6vemor 1n some futurc election 1f he ever occupied the treasurer's office. Brown's Assembly Democrats went along with DcukmeJian 's nommauon of Lungren. only to set it defeated 1n the upper house. The Assembly Demoentts' acuon on Lungren '"'as more in kttping with what C':arlier generations · of Dcmocrauc la-w- makers would ha~ done. Panisanship has alwa)'s ~n high in 5acramento, and often properly so. fessional joumalists they Would' tia~ During the last 20 ycan., howevcrt it found out t.be followina fac:ts: has gradually increased to the point I) POSTV, Inc. was iDc::orpomed where it frequently hanutrinas state anonym~ in Delaware by a govemmcnL ~l. t.be COmpany Corp., on Oc:t. l. No singJe factor is responsible for f rWben coalacted by phone, tbe the change. but eittreme partisan Defaware teeretary of 9'1te bad 80 reapportionment -the aer-record of POSTV. 1ac.·s buliDCll rymandering of legjslltive and con-addrea.. its offioen or~ grcssionaJ districu for the majority J) N...-2000 _..___ .. .._ party's advantage -is at once 1 ... ~_.. --WY us symptom and a cause of today's ~t Company Corp. (302 S7~) ud ~upation with panisals politics they discloled that POSTV, Inc. bM in the state Capitol. When Ro-been penalized by Delaware for publican voters are crammed into as failina to file iu annual rqiort and few legislative districts as possible in failin& to pay iu francbix tu for order to create a maximum number 1987. of safe Dcmocrauc seats the individ-Newpon 2000 doca not~ t.be uals rcp~nting those GOP districts C1ist.cnce of an anonymous Ddaware arc likely to be especially con-c:orl)Or'&.tion \bat is ddinqueat iD scrvauve and especially partisan. filina iu annual ft'POI'\ and pa~ iu To bu credtl, DculancJWl tried to franChite tu answcn any ol 1bt r-. • questions~ by our mailer. rc1orm the reapportionment proccs$ Fact: It is i''--' for ~:r:-n: fo1,1r years ago when he sponsored an be doi ~ness in · · initiative to make redistricting a without°ftrst __.__._ to do buai-rcsponsib11ity of a bipartisan com-· ·~~ -.:. mission. A misleading but effective ness wnh the \..Aluonua teereUtY "' state. negative campaign sponsored by ~tion: If POSTV. Jnc. is a Dcmocrauc legislative leaders sue-legitimate business, why did it nol cccdcd in defcatinJ the measure by a · witb the California tccreCar)' 55 percent to 4S perocnt margin. =? Perhaps the governor. howevCT, Fact: On Form 721 filed Au. 10. ought lo reOoat the proposal apin a1 1988 J h c 1·-.-..1 ·L.-.._ ._. the 1990 elecuon. If one Democratic • 0 0 ox lau:u woi; ,,...111,,,. addm.s of POSTV, 1nc. as 19000 campajgn consultant. Richie Ross. is MacArthur Blvd. in Irvine. A careful correct voters have learned a 101 search of ~mites on Oct. s ud recc=tJ about nepuve camp&igns. N l f POSTV S in of this month's s-tacu-ov. re¥ no trace o , g --Inc. or John Cox. tar ailurc by the tobacco companies Question: If John Cox did OClalPY to defeat Propos1uon 99, a cigarette ffi · •-..:--b did ... _ •~v proposaJ.·'despite all the monev O tee Spece ID u •""'°• W Y m; DOI _,. , have a business licente in the city of the) poured into a campaign of Irvine? And. where is POS1V, Inc. masrep~ntataon. Ross commented: doina business now'? "One of the brproducu of so much Fact: Anyone sophisticated eaoUCh political advemsang in recent years is to incorporate in Delaware knows or that voters have developed an ability should have known about the stale to see through at. to sec it for wba.t it is. and local liccnsins requirements. Ten )'ears ago. the tobacco tax would Queltioo: Since POSTV, Inc. is noc have losl because voten wou~d have incorporated in CalifOmia. wily did seen all those scare comm.~aJs and John Cox not take meawa to been scared off. No more. protect the name POSTV Inc. &om That may ~a httle overoptimi~ic beina used by otben? ' a.bou~ the ab1hty of ~ot~ to dis-Fact: Most lqitimaie buliMSllea. trngu1s~ fact from ficuo~. 1n future even small sole-proprietonbipl bave campaigns. but DcukmeJ••n would .. Dun &. Bradstreet credit ~ do well to.thank about h1vmganother POSTV. Inc. bas 00 Dun A Bnd- U')' at taking rcapeortaonment out of street cn:dit littiJll. the hands of the l..eglslatw:c. yotcrs Question: Wby IS POSTV I.De. not may be I~ easily fooled this ume. listed. ' Mutla Smit.A is • •Yflllkaletl There is no evidence that POSTV, col1UDai•t. Inc. has &n)' customen or producu. There is no evidence that POSTV, State 's TV stat io ri s t u ning out news from S acram e nto Inc. is anythjna but a.a empty aladl. 1 The people of Newport leacb are entitled to real answers to lbele qucsttons -not vitriolic: ~ calla n& by the Daily Pilol. As for Ralph Rodheim, ~ bad 1 clear duty to disck>K his o,,....ip intttest in Rodbcim ~ Grou~. The niruuctioos to Schedu 4. on Form 721 are clear ... You m• rrport. ... 1ny finaocial intaat in or secunty mued by any "'wnc11 arti- ty .... located in or doana buliac11 ia your juriJdiction.~Evcry C11.ctidete and office holder from the IOvemcll' down toacitycounciJ c:andiclate mua dasclosc ~ny interest he owns ~ over S 1.000, in any businae that ha operations in the jwUdiction b which be teeks office. SACRAMENTO -One of the odder phenomena in California poli- tics has been the abandonment of coverage by the state's television stations. Once. most larger television sta- tions in Los Angeles and San Fran- ciSCQ maintained full-time political operations in the form of state Capitol bureaus 1n Sacramento. But bq,in- ning about a decade ago. out-of-town television stations bcpn pullina out of the C1p1tol. Local television news had become profitable. Consultants hired to hype ratinas uniformly condemned pohu- caJ news -especially of the Capitol variety -as dull and laddna the flashy pictu~ that already were oonvcn1n1 local newscasts into tabloid television full of crime. su, and mldc-foMelev1Sion fluff. Their Capitol bureaus were dOltd and their repo11cn and technicians diverted lnto what wu consi~ sexier forms of cov~. Fanally. only one non..s.cramen\O Mation. San Francitc0's KRONrTV, main· taaned a bureau an Sltcramcnto. The others were con1cnt 10 i&n~ s.na. mcnto, use occasional .. fttd.1" from S«ramcnto 1&1uons. rely on• etMrk a.pe ICf'Vi«. and/or dispatch crcw1 to 5Kramcn10 whenever sornethina pie. tonally in~:1 was O«Umna, KRON llofte.; ddlt~ in& 1tttlf tft I ftOft<'OmptUtivt tt- VU'Oftme9l. T1'f w\fe.b\lsband ~ Of'Oi--lb1dud and 0oa f"ttkil.. II\ on-amen 1eponcr and an olkam- DAN WALTERS era producer. cons1stcntl> produ~ hiah-level. cnt1aal coHragc ofSacra- mcntocvents. includ1ng tho~ such as Al OS Jegislat1on that were of pan1cu· lar interest to the Ba> Arca.. Last week. howe ver. the I\ fell KRON made a number of mone)- savinacutbatks. and onccasuah)' ~as the Slcrwnen10 bureau. Dunn& this decade-Iona tcleviSton pullout from the Capitol. the state's newspapen have movdl 1n JUSt the opposite direction. E.xJst1na burt.aus h•ve. for the most pan. connnucd to e pand. Scvcnal newspapen have opened new bureaus 1n the C'apnol N~pcr cove~ o(thc (.'ap1 tol is. in ~f. il an aU-umc lu&h. v.h1lc the. commitment of ttle\'as.on sta-11ons asatan all~umc low trontall)'1 the KRON pulk>ut "'' announced JUSl a few days bcf'ott 1 MW staidy on prttiStl) that po1n1 was rtttiQed. ~ st\Mt)~ cond\iaed under the 1u.spc:u of USC's Annenbcrs Schoof of Commun,at1ons. concluded ttult Cahfom.a tdcvas.on tat.ons dt'o~ .. sbodtiftaly linlt.. umt to '1ate go\emment and polt11cs. The stud) team monttorcd cov-era~ dunng the closing weeks of the I 987 lcg1slauvc session. when Capitol act1 Vll) was at its annual zenith. It found that on a"erage. the television nevrscasts devoted onl) I. 7 percent of their time -about one minute per hour -to the Capitol. More s1gn1ficant blocs ofume werr devoted to 1dvert1s1n1 (:!6.2 pef'l'Cnt). weather (7.2 peT'Ct'n1). promot1on1J spots (6 percent). and 1ntern111on1l ne9.S (2 percent) "One Los f\leles tataon ga"e morr air time to a national cockrOlch conttst and Jim and Tammy Bakker Hallowten masks than It spent on sagmficant JDS lq1slation p.sted that d.ty," the study team said. One m1aht conclude that the llCk of, covcrqc contnbulC1 to that lack- adaasacal 1n1tudc b les1sl1ton. by 1nsulaun1 them. 1n effect. from their consmuent The U tod1e11 are not beans conduacd 1n 1 \tcuum. Oct.en att promot•i\I the conetpl of pvd-to- p,·cl tcle\ 1 ion C'O' CTllllC Of the utt Capitol, ~m1lar to that from Wash- 1nston [) c. pr'O\lldcd b) C-SPAN on (hC nation's cable Mtworb. C,1\tn what's bttri ~pprn1"1 - inC'lud1n1 ~RON' d«is.on to dOit its lond) oulpiost in Sacftmento - it'saumcl> ~J OM trellan .. a O MLWW cat ' t. MARGARET OAltDNEa ~2000 BJ fta Aiudi ... Plw Toda} 11 Moildmy, Nov. 21, die 3.264.b day of 1911. Theft are 40 dlyt left in the~. Today'alrilbl.,ill~ On Nov. '"ll, 1922. aetiea:a L Fdton oCOeoqia ... swora ill•-. first woman to mve •a wmw G( the U.S. 5eMtc. (Mn.. fdtom•a-. --oe)y I dly. • W ... appoinlled '° ~ -... Fl I I l term ol IM ._ Sa. 1"- WallOll blfoN hii ... M I tootaftb.) On ihilcllllt: (ft 1719, Naftll C..tl' I ...... the •• -'° ..,, .. 0.S.: c----. •• \177, ...... n... ~ &tilM M I aM .. ill; l't fl ~]!·.~"'" •• ' \ A8 DAILY PILOT/ Monday. November 21. 1988 'Tis the season tO release new movies by the dozen By BOB THOMAS + I • 'U"'-.,,,._ HOLLYWOOD Christmas pack~es are arnv1n1 early at the nation s \heaters as movie companies try to lure holiday trade w11h ghosts. hip dogs, baby dinosaurs and Bill Murray romping about in yet another version of Charles Dickens' seasonal favorite, "A Chnstmas Carol." Industry sources estimate that the holiday season will bring S300 million dollars worth offilms. Why so many expensive films at year's end? "&cause the six wrcks from Thanksgiving throuJh New Years Day is the second biggest period of theater attendance, exceeded only by summer," said Art Murphy. Daily Variety's fi nancial expert. "Those six weeks amount to 14 percent of the year's business. "It's unusual because the period include~m: the second week in December. -rt.at's the worst week of the year because children are finishing school and others are Christmas shopping." 'Tis the season to be JOiiy. and the studios arc rnponding with a host of comedies. In "High Spirits." Peter O'Toolc attempts to pass off his rundown hotel as a haunted castle. and ghostJ. including..Oaryl Hannah, actually appear. · Dan Aykroyd jn "My Stepmother is ani:.Alien" 1s a widowed scientist who rails in love with spaceling Kim Basinger. Cybill Shepherd discovers in ''Chances Are" that her daughter's boyfriend, Robert Downey Jr., is th~ reincarnation of her late husband. Also in the comedy g.rabbag is another treatment of the Dickens' clafsic. "A Chnstmas Carol." In Warner Bros. ··Scrooted;' 8111 Mur· ray plays a crass TV executive who tnes to exploit the Christmas spirit but gets caught ue in his own scheme. There's also 'The Naked Gun: From the Files of Po Ike Squad!" with Lcshe Nielsen and Ricardo Mon- talban as opponents in a rcworkin& of the memorable but brief 1982 TV series .. Police Squad." ' , Michael Caine and Steve Manin team as cob men on the French ,Riviera in "Dirty Ronen Scoun- drels." apl)Hr dunna the hohdays. "Oliver and Company," a new twist on "Oliver Twist." with such voices as Bette Midler and Billy Joel. bears the Disney imprint. It's about a bunch of rather hip dogs and a cute liuJe kiuen who tangle with a loan shark and learn what friendship is all about. Steven Spiel~rgand Georae Lucas acted as ex.ecutive producers on the dinosaur epic, "The Land Before Time." •"Beaches" wJth Bette M1dlerand Barbara Hershey as Iona-time friends stnvina co survive marriages and careers. •"Mississippi Burning," with Gene Hackman and Willem Dafoe as FBI agents investigating the fT!Urder of three c;ivil rights workers tn the J 964 South. Based on an actual case. •"Talk Radio," 'Oliver Stone's Platoon") version of ·the Eric osian play about an abrasive o talk show host. Botosian stars. -------------------------------------------. Ivan Reitman ("Ghost Busters") would have us believe in "Twins" that Arnold Schwanenegger and Maybe 1t didn't happen this way but, with a HoneyBaked • brand ham at Thanks- giving your guests will aqree ti tastes The holidays are also a time for drama since the studios brina fonh their Academy Award hopefuls before 1he Dec. 31 deadline for , qualification. Herc arc some of the most promisiqg: •"Torch Song Tri fogy," with Harvey Fierstein, Anne Bancroft and Matthew Broderick in Fierstein's play about p y life in New York. great And since we smoke our hams up to 30 hours. then cover with a unique honey glaze and spiral shce for easy servmg it makes less work for you This year for Thanksg1v1ng try a HoneyBaked • brand ham. The results will speak for themselves • HoneyBaked-brand hama. hickory smoked up to 30 hours. honey g(Ued Md eplral alk:ed fOf euy Mrvlng • Freah ~ roasted or smoked turk•V-• Meat and ChMM party treys • Barbecued Beef or Pork Alba • Gift Certlflcatea ANAHEIM The Village Center 1222 So Brookhursl 92804 (at Ball Road) Phone (714) 635-2461 CORONA DEL MA" El TO"O 24601 R1ymond Way • 2 (Bell lower Plaza North 11 El Toro Road) 92630 Phone (714) 837'3822 HUNTINGTON HACH 19069 Beach Blvd 92648 LA HAIRA Sycamore Plaza 2428 W Wh1"9er Blvd 90631 (1 hght W ot Beach Blvd ) Phone (213) 694·2114 ORANGE 1419 N Tustin 3700 E Coast Hwy 92625 Phone {714) 673-9000 (Nexr lo Ralphs Market at Garfield) Phone (714) 848·8575 (al ICatella) 91667 Phone (714) 997 9960 HONEYBAKED T H E R E T u R N ill' ..., •,, • IA"'J r -.111 •. 1111•.r:»••c ... ~, ·~ • I f?-.. •""...,ii '4'""-~·U1hlfO\Tt\1'GUrU,,._,tc. .... "-._,, ..,." ••1", ~ I •. "l"' ~ •t" ,_. (\\jll. • •'lo •l'-.tt~t Atnfff W'l l(M • ..... ,.,.,,,, .~~f~.,A-#•IH{f, '"'r: ~ .. ~"°"-"'•JP",fAk lUl"""I() • -...... or" •r'f\..1 •• \A""''" """ t'lo \Hf'tf~ M\Mf"\ii ,., ., hUA.&f IH ,.~,., •••··• .... •·•..art,,(" ,,.~,..· .. ,t c HAI O • ..,,..,,.., ~.-.vtOll..,""" ""-11\ '"" 1"-..,IJ<• rw...,... -..n"'"' "T'J (:..•!"I ~ Tuesday, November 22-8:00pm SHARP EDWARDS HUNTINGTON TWIN • MAIN ST AT BEACH BL VD • LOEHMANN'I S POINTS PLAZA Pick up your complimentary tickets at one of these fine merchants , at Loehmann·s 5 Points Plaza on Main St; just off Beach Blvd. (2 TICll«a ·per P9f-'I l•adt D•fl-Tit• IOll Co. -Earr .... Plus-"""'World-Ou...,. •MJ S..,,, t .. ··TM Danny De Vito actually arc. · Parents will be pleased to learn that two new animated features will •-Kain Man." with Dustin Hoff- man and Tom Cruise aS brothers on a trip across the United States. • ... w orking Girt." with Harrison Ford. S11oumey Weaver and Melanie Griffith in a drama-<:omedy about corpdrate life and love. 'Glory of Chrlstp1as' ORenin~ More than 160,000 people will flock to the Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove this holiday season to witness the eighth a11.nual production of'"The Glory of Christmas." The P3JC1nt boasts the largest indoor set tn the world, with spectacu· lar special effects, a cast of over l 00 volunteers. live and taped music, dance and colorful costumes. The story line follows the biblical version of the birth of Jesus with historical and cultural authenticity. This year's production opens Fri· day and will run nightly through Dec. 23 with three performances nightly at 4:30. 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. The success of the pageant depends a great deal on the structure that houses it. Designed specifically for the aU-t)ass bwlding. the set is not confined to the floor, but literally soars. throughout the building. utiliz· ing the 200-Toot-high ceiling and 400- foot-wide base. Angels fly tghrough the air. special effects thunder over· bead and sounds of the season surround the audience with stereo- phonic quality. One of the highlights of the show DARYL HANNAH •.U UA-I •CllTI ~ • • Ml.a1lm ._..,_ (-T-C.. .WC'-1 s&.. n•..... • ... DJ!!'dWll;+ .... c....... 213151•55&1 -IT SftaOIWMl ldMl'f'S --· l ......... 11•"'4·14'1 remains the tender moment of the Shepherd Child's song. The grand entrance of the Three Kings, risina their camels down center and side aisles, also leaves a lasting im- pression. The hosts of eight angels flying 90 feet above the audience is a particu- larly dramatic moment. The special technology for the angels was de- veloped by Peter Foy. the leading e:itponent m U.S. theatrical flying. Foy "flew" Mary Martin in the original "Peter Pan" and later pcr- ·fonned the same service for Sandy Duncan. "The Glory of Christmas" is de· pendent on the volunteer support of almost 200 people who make up the cast of vH~ers. ~oman soldiers, a~els and kmg. Additionally, over 2 ushers and traffic controllers vo unteer their rime during the bu-sy Christmas rush. Tickets are priced at S 14. S 18 and $25 and can be purchased with a credit card by calling 54-GLORY. Checks or money orders can be written to "The Glory of Christmas." 12 I 41 Lewis St., Garden Grove 92640. STEVE GUTTENBERG ·-·---(--.,.Y ~Ylllfl• ..... aMITO •tA-·-""*•GmwltS ~C:-.. lol).1111 1)6.2!4) ~.._....,....,.,.. OLIVER & COMPANY (G) "'" '" ......... '"' ERNEST SAVES CHRISTMAS (PG) '''" lttT., Pww .. IPGI A FIStt CALLEO WANDA (R) "'" e..o... ... "'" CHILD'S PLAY (R) ... 1CeH11 ........ 1111 THEY LIVE (R) ""'u l lltnlo a "-"c u1 ALIEN NATION (Rl .... 0. ..... 1111 0111\fl HIS IPO ••eAYST Jtl W•lH SI N UHtll 11 'llU UlllUS HTl _,,,,.. ~....., OlMl I COWMIT .,,._ t!>S •·• .. u .... ti4S DOUJlnlllO llCIUf llWIOIWAU .._.,., OlMI I <WMT tG1 lt!Je t·• 4'11.,.. , .. , ~JJ nit Wll 19C111 Ml 191 11llt ,,. •:• ... .,. , .... UMAnU••l"'•ll ---------- 11.-1lJS Sill, .. f!M IOOlf fOSftlMIU Y -...us M ACWllD II.I llO&lY~ .,....llcUl1M., ... llOISIS ~·,. till,,. S'4S ... ltill lt-4J 1.ti llU 714.1 ..... ---------- Ml!f"Mi'* t1)1SI ..... • LMe l9Clll Ml iet 12:11111'4llt .... , ...... llOUYAlllO CllU1 P\AT flll ltl4J 1:nU Mt •·•t Mt IMJ llll'U ~eGUITT II. tlOll IMU. l"I h i S a:• S.U a.• l•IS ... '°""""'"' ....... ...~. l)llt , ...... , ... , .... I*•'•@ 111~---------t ..... .::= '""" fgJA tit) ,.,.,,_ ........ ?Mlllt-tllt MOUY ..... .....MMM ..... :" ..... .:: IKftASl..0 ""'O"lOCIUINln ......... -SMft (M-111 llll >-II Sl4J lM , .... r.:= ---... ......... t--------~'-.,_ ________ ... _ ....... --.. ·· -.... lln\ IU I & Ria# ' --.... I ---'= .... ---· _.__., ...... ._.. .. ........ .._ _____________ _ Veana Blabop m. In .. The Glory of Cbrlatmu." Come 10 Aldefts lot Ill ,ot11 Mr! 11oor.,. needs. Only Sjle(lallsts an sent you perletlly ~DEN·s 1663 PIK~~ A\ot Costa Mm CA (114) 6*"831 ·---·a-··llC·~­·--' -a1-n40 4t1 Oki New!"Wt lllVct. N.8 . Aero" from t.e 81amtz 11111 EAILE II . ·-... -;( _,_ -·-· -- ~ "''r-.-c ~ ..... _ .-11----·----1---..... -----· ---~ --· ;~&>--.• ,......,..,...~ NOW SHOWING • ftDPIE Oranoe Cout OAILV PILOT/Monday. November 21, 1111 Homeless lrVineY gets help BJ VIDA DEAN Of .. ~ ......... The Irvine YMCA is four years old and it serves 900 families. The • orpnization docs not have a b1.1ild1ng ofits own. but that doesn't stop the activities. ~ ....... _, ...... 6:00 ID tttw• 6:30 cas """ 7:00 7:30 E11i.1u n. fltlfl• y To,, !>I Ftud C1>1t ~ O<A. T11.1 8:00 ALI • C~MQ• Not'd :. :>a~ 8:30 9:00 9:30 S'.lll'*l FoolNil W~~ori .;~s-115 I' :.a• :-,a~~"'~ 4.e~ •• 11 lt??'ltJ T111 01y ..., I"• l"'1 on c~14 ®CBS ... on New, PU E"'•IU.D Nt··~n COi"! ~ w~·P"f I ~ll nt To• i°" c• •;• B•G•" lD" If 11, LOU Nt•t riO f"' 0 News ,Connkl n or Oriw S3.••tt Im y;.,.. t Fam11y M'li"S"_. C..rr.,,I Tt.t Gr3 :. ••• 1 Company Ti" Anu ~·· '"'' • :r :;~-~=· ft'\ Cesll!( G.mme • W~ffl ~I Jtc;ir~' !:nara·• t $ah,.; S.u n ;..; • ~ 9,.1& Fo~ .. ~, ~-~, .: . ··• •1 : - a.\ 811St111sa MacHt \.tM9f Ci ·=•'I a s-·"SO" Iii "C• 0 .n. A • -· Rt· 10:00 10:30 11 :0 0 11 :30 Tu RI·•--:• ~ • r "'-~., '3!ae!'Old :;. r-•~ lo .. COftllt<I,, C.rtt lll ,,. ... , thllWS t_,,. .. , ..... -i ll SHttl B.-s The Y has swim programs using community pools and il has 100 in the child care before and after school program that is conducted at a ~vate school. Tom and Marllyn Nlelaen with Icy rocketa. · ~ Rtpot1. NtwsHo.., S•o• H • 1-... r;• ~ ~ --•-!Je'IO . . er.'\ NBC US A W"-1 of JtoUtO'f' /i.t..F l'lo;,tn b .. lity :l1.;•.:~t$ P Ust • ~ N-s Tocl1Y Fort.;.ne f,.., y •.t v:i:.,--.··· ... : ,._. • .-'"· The board sets its sights high - even with fund-raisers such as t»e one Wednesday evening on the 12th floor of the Koll Center lrvine-NQnh building. The theme given the party was ··Take us to the Top.'' into a pany scene ... We worked for hooorary.ce><hairmen and they were two days putting ll together. Everv-there minglif'lg. Others on the guest thing. tables, chairs' and fOOd had io list wcr.c Tom Ba...Um, chairman of come up the elevators." said Marko. the board. and Mary Jue Bantbam. '-'f\ IUI llnCIJoe1 P'i!M ll'!t l~10 P•a M l~t l:>rO C•l'•S SU• t f JB!j ~ Too1y Ono CIV>ll a" Oo..9 L lfSly 1 C a11 Close to 350 anendeq the din- ner/auction chaired by Lee Holmes. ··one day we'll have a building," said Holmes who was assisted by Dr. Frueet Baale, who helped round up 93 silent auction items and seven live auction items: Bob Vermes, entertainment; Mlcbel Jeau, pub- lieity: and Jim Spear, ticket sales. Guests began to arrive at 6 to Tim Du., (executive director). P~I sample a variety of hors d'ocuvrcs Bdllq (he's with Koll). De9is and and get their bads on cards for dining. RJNa 1.8Boa1e, MUIJ Holmes. Rob.- beauty experiences. etc. Later they ertWermts,PauaWener,Dr.David helped themselves at the buffet -Browa, Gen. Art and Sae Bloomer, stuffed fish. mushroom chicken and Marlie and Jou Walkebln, Carol roast beef -before sining at floral and 1.arry Roffmu, Dori and Ed centered tables. Donuua, and Marie and David For the guests' entenainment, the Romero. r.r.\ Fund• 1HNall 1 ~ mtnt111 lssuu Bus.nus EaSl· Report Enat~ P11 ry Mason S11o!"~Or t1 GALA Notte•tro ECO l1 Josepn C&IT'pOt<I lo ll'lt Powtr ~I litvlll L..t••t llCt Wt• Ii ly•• Celi •Ill Tr t F~ga1~t ~NII or riNllll· liAoc•• !>Ht ' Nil.on str ts SrlorTSIOI •s _,,, C•1st 1r..t I Ta • h e 700 C,110 NOl1C •ro fco Si.SO.ct ii !-••• E .. ., r; WQ!I O.v s Biiiy Boom P'l • ::-e• :i•>r"' $ :;~ t:°' J< 1'10 l.n t • • ~ ... l(fa'C~ Also, on the comminet!lhd a board member is Jou Mariko, general manager of the nearby Holiday Inn. He was in charge of food and in charge of transforming the unoccupied floor spirited All American Boys Chorus When the party was all over. Dunn came on the scene 1n bright red called it ··an outstanding success ... blazers to perfonn with their equally The live auction (with a London trip spirited leader Father Coughlin. They bought by Vincent Haneu for took a break during desscn and were $2.600) brought in more than S 12.000 back to putthe YMCA supporters in a to put the total proceeds up to holiday mood. -$35,000. ··Last year we made UFE Co~11 Up E R. Euy St MarlJ)'D and Tom NielsH were SI 5,000," Dunn added. YOll ~I Aun Awty from II ·;o •• MAX •. ... A )"SC" -~ l t"""'O" SHOW Tiit P1es1d1nu A11a1ySt ~ • .. u WOR r~. Bounty SI Nu~ WTBS Th• Pos.odon Ao ... nlure 5 ~ WPIX ron I ,, S4 u A Ori. Z Ks'"'tl Sl' !15 •• ••~ n1 Complete t•vlalon llattnga In Sunday'• TV Piiot Sex education starts at home DEAR .\N"'ll L~NDERS: We re- centl) caught our 17-)ear-old daugh-Jobn Marko, Phil Belling ter an bed wtth her bo) fnend. the~ Cbalrman Lee Bolmea with Tom Ba.rnbam and Tim Dann. . and Franca Bennie. IA.ere upstairs in her bedroom. It "as an absolute nt~tmare. Tacsclay, November%! By SYDNEY OMA.RR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Information gleaned less than 24 hours ago will now be put to prac11cal use. Focus on money, music. luxury items. TAURUS(April 20-Ma\ 20): C')cle remains high. but someone wants something for no thing from \OU. Prote<:t valuables. be discreet concerning immediate plans. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Older individual attempts to act as .. censor:· Emphasis on responsib1lit~. pressure of deadline. abiht} to work under conditions less than ideal. Cancer. Capncom pla) kc) roles. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Let go o f sttuauon that drains money, energy. emotions. You deserve different environment chance to locate .. lost love .. LEO (July 23-Aug. 2-2): You get pro"erb1al -second chance." Attention centers around prestige. achievement. ambition. career. Member of oppositf sex as concerned. will prove 1t. Gemma. Vargo figure prominent!:,.. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Emphasis on tntu1uon. teachmg. teaming. adding to .. special collecuons.'' What had ~n far away. will be located. shipped. LIBRA(Sept. i3-0ct. 22): Hints. clues arc ub1qu1tous We talked with ··Ben) .. and .. Rick" for two hours aftel""'ards. The' said they weren't ha\lng se\ and had ne\,er gone be\ond necking. I don't belte'c It. "\Ve "ere tired and -direct questions hkely to bnng tonh vahd responses tn · h \\ connection with finances, trust fund. You'll be concerned resting" is the wa> t e) put tl e • wtth money relating to partner or mate. Gemini involved. ha' e srounded her and said she can't SCORPIO (Oct.13-Nov. 21 ): Define terms. be aware see Rick for t"'o "eeks. 0~ .. hidden assets:· Chec-k 1-.. 1 rights. nrotcct pubhc Could \Oug1' e us some suggestions ~eo-,. about what else "e ought to do'! image. reputation. Attention centers around cooperamc Should she ha' e coun~ll ng" hould effons. pannersh1p. mantal status Taurus pla's role. "'c? fhe bo\ is onh I 6. Plea!.t' help us S.AGIITARJUS (Nov. 21-Dcc. 2 1): Give (ult pla~ to deal "Ith this problem intelligentl~ 1ntellectualcunos1t}.Ans"'ersfoundb} re,1e"'1ng wntten _ PERPLEXED P~RE~T 1:--; material. Emphasis also on e mplo) ment, pets. K N s • A ~. CAPRICORN (Dec. :!:!-Jan. 19): Look be\ond the DEAR PARENTS: Wlten you catcb 1mmed1ate. rcahze fam1l) member ~ho reccntl) ·obtained a 17-year-old girl in bed wilb a 1'- loan wall repay 1t. Focus on home. securit). luxu~ uems. year-old boy, ilisa fairly safe bet tbat AQUARIUS (Jan. W-Feb. 18): Nothing occurs tlley an doing more tho. resting. halfway ~ ~ou'll learn secret by, ··peering backstage... Tiie best tblng to do now is make Define terms. be recepti,·e 'without being gullible certain tllat tbey uderstand it Is ·J\dd1t1onal tnformat1on bc:oomes a.i.allable conccrnang uwise, ansafe and unacceptable to home. propeny. iaclalge ill ttx11al intercourse. Mlle PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You'll SB). ··~t last. sure your daughter knows all about m1ss1on is successfully completed!" Emphasis on re-blrtlt control and inform Utt boy's spons1b1lit). pressure of deadline parents abounbe incident so lbey can IF NOVEMBER zt IS YOUR BIRTHDA y current stt &o it tllat lbeir son is pro~rly cycle highlights trave). creativity. marital status. possible informed ~lso. Trying to keep tbem addition to famih. apart wont work. It will. only make · t~eir clandestine meetings more RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. I dellclollS. • • • • -------------------------DEAR ~N :"o L..1t:-.:DER : M} prob- ...,. f• hi« c.ms lhrt! 1122 UIHl IUI •• COSTA MlSA-541-1156 NOTICE OF SCOPING MEETING Thie I$ to lnfo1'. •ll lnt•r••t•d peraona th•~ th• ~•trop ,, .... ~•t•r 01, trl"t of Snuth,.rn C4llforni4 la pl&nniog to llQ>LO\'f' th• qu.all tY o t th~ "·""r di trlbuted fro• thf' Sen Joequln ReatTVOlr through th• propn•td lmplemf'nf4 L.M . Bo vo A1111 Luaus lem 1s m~ 16-)ear-old daughter. who as stealing people blind. I kn~ nothing about this unul 1hrce v.eeks ago when t\\O ~omen she has been bab~ snung for shov.cd up at m\ door and told me that .. Lisa .. had stolen maO\ items from 1he1r homes I am talkin·g about e\pcns1,e things hke a Jade nng. a pearl bracelet. clothing. perfume and co ml'llC'i The~ said the} came 10 me instead of going to the police because th<'~ 111..t> Lisa and hated to see her get into senous troublt . I "as shocked and 1mmed1atel~ "'ent through her things I found most of the t1ems and g.a'c them bad. \\hen Lisa r ame home from school I told her about m' afternoon \'ISi tors. She denied C\ er: thing and s"'ore that she d1dn"t 1ake a thing Then I told her ~hat I had tound and that I had g1' en It all bacl.. ~he became' el') angr: ..... ent to her room and slammed the door I took her makeup. stereo and curhng iron a"' a) from her for one "eel I can't spank her hccause thl' last ume I dad that she ran to the neighbors and told them that my boyfnend was abusing her sexually .. The~ called the pohcc. We were investtg.ated and cleared rm wntmg for help. l\nn. r vc been a smgle mother for fi,e )cars and am finding It \Cr\ rough. 1 can't handle this girl. -~ESP£RA TE IN FON- T .\~A. C l\LIF. DEAR FONTANA: Y• ... JMr daagllter mast 1et couseUac at e.ce. If you cauot afford a dteraflat la private practice, ce11tact a family sen-ice a&CDCY or a meatal lliealm facility. Tky are lisk4 ia dte = book and offer St"rviefl oa a sl • scale fee basis. Get 1oia& ... 1eod l•ek. ••• DE.\R .\ ' LANDERS: We hear so much about rude salespeople that I roared "'hen I sa~ an ane'Cdote an a rcccnt issue of Reader's Dt,gest. r ve lost the magazane but here's the story . If \OU think it's funny. pnnt 1t. - ELKH~RT. I 0 . DEAR ELK: I do ud I skall. Here ·us. .i .\ "'oman ~ent to the post officr to bu' a stamp The person who waited on· her ~as unusualli-surl) He ho' cd the stamp at her ""'1th such force that 11 landed on the floor. about t"'o feet av.a~ W1th great aplomb the "'Oman tool the monc~ out of her purse. laid 1t carefull~ on the floor. picked up the stamp and walked out. ~~ IUTO FACTS tlo1 nf th• San Joaqulh R•t•rvolr 18Prove~nt Projr ct ' The San Joaquin Ra••rvolr ls an ••latlng l .000 acr• foo: •pproxl .. t •lv 1 billion gallon! ras•rvolr located In the San Joaquin Hill· ~! Or~ngf' Coun•v near Newport ll•ach Ca l ifornia Thf' proj•ct tit• le aho'-'TI h•l•w ln It• Tocal perap•ettv• Tll• reTilT"'/olr ts llll:ared aourh~••r ot frrrd !«rad. on t'- £eatern llow\darv of th" City of Nevport Beach San loaqutn Rrurvotr con· talna flltered water froe Ketropoliten •Robert II Ol•••r flltraclen Plant In YOTb• Linda Th• rt••rvotr eupplles thl• water. without Curth•r tr••t · IMnt other then chlorlnatlon. to reald•nt• of HuntJngton ll••ch Co•t• Meaa , N•"'Port Beach, IAguna Beach. end unincorporated er••• of Orang• Countv located ln trvlne Ranch Va ter Oletrlct and South Coast Wat•r Oletrlct (known u South IAfuna) German people are world-class kissers .• ,. vw ' S,1oilltt P-' Frech ~~ ........ BUYING BY NUMBERS Car manutacturers outhl their auto moblles w1lh tires that are matched to the car's suspension and handhna charac· lensbes. When advanced wur makes 11 necessary to replace the tires. car ow!lfrs should look tor hrtS of s1m1lar size and type. The first place to look tor this intormal!On 1s the tire Sidewall, whtre in atpha-numeflc form. is a dtscripllOll ot the bre molded into the rubber A typttal radial tire on the family sedan may carry a P195/75Rl4 desl&nation. for eiample. The "P" mtans that the hre is tor passen er use. The "195" IS amusure ot the width ot tM t1re through the cross·secbon m m1lh Meters (melnc) Ttie "75" indicates the aspect ratto. or a comparison of the life's hecfll to its width. '11" stands lor radlal flflllly. "14" 11ves the width of the rim 1n Inches. Fllldlftc the nctil size tire 1s easy, once ,ou underst1rid the code. r 1n<11na the riaht servtet for your car is easy. too. Rely on C&r We're your seoice hudquarlen lor VW •nd Audi Wt use only !*I Getman Pllb to repair your car We' re an olliclfl lftSptCbon tlld ldtustinc it1hon for ,;noa dlYICtS. latDpS. Ind bfa•t"l Wt II ii 2090 '11c1t1bl o,tn 8 6 T et 646 6910 USt N10f c11ds Wt are W 1119'0* lf#f· Sp«illl Ptffar!flJ?& 1 11111 oltttt sanllct trHd "'' lot rOld ··ftfl ·• .. • In the pan the re11ervolr ha• ••p•rl•nced peflod5 of r•duc"d ""t•r q"•I ltY euch •• ln.,r•a••d turbldlty, unaccepubla bact•rlologlcal count• ilM und•· slrabl• trlh•loa•than• (TH.~) level• Th• 10•1• of •h• ptoro••d projf'~t •r• to l aprov• th• quality of drlnlln1 wat•r ttored ~nd ~•rv•d tr~• ~an J<'•1ul• R•1'•rvolr and to bett•r lnt•grat • t h• re .. rvolr Into th• r•,.l<'n's dlstrlbt.i· tlon. ev•t•• Several alternat ives &r• p<'sslbl~ to ••lt •h• wet•r qu•ll•) gnatli of thf> propoud laprove ... nt project An F.nvl1nn111ental l,.p.,c-t Rt>port (£111 ) will h• ~r•p•r .. d to •1<a•ln1 th• pountlal lapac-ts nl •h• laplr11M'ol•· tlo1• of the S.•n Joaquin lt•aervolr laproveMnl Proj•<"t f• t al tf'CI Hl\'P togUht'r vtth th• no action alt rrnatlv• v lll be enatvird In •qual clt': •tl ln the Ellt INFORMATION P"urth•r tnloraatton r•a•rd1114 th• ,rojent -1 be obull••J by cont rllni ,r Thntl•• J llyen, tnvl rcm,..rllAl U&A, lf•tropolltan V•ttr Ol•lrl~t of ~nuth· •rn r.tuornta, ltll Sul'••t touhvu•. r o lkl" ~IH, Ln• Aovl.. Ca ll· fornla 4\>0$4, C)ll) l'-0·•1-0 SCOPING MEEltNO A ••·•11lna 11oth1&"" tM• ,njtl!t will° ba held II\ i.._h" ftulU•Pvt,. .. Re>-ef Ule 0.Jlh .. nler Cl t IUl\il Cenur ltKate.S ·~ tO\l !tar •rtt• In CM C:h1 Of •;,pert ... II. Tht•r•claJ'• O.u~r 1. t•U 'ftl• ... tnre wlll c-• ., , 00 p • ,,.. -.etlRJ viii Sltevl~ •P o~rtvnlty •• l•trn .Or• •~t th< pr•J••t ea wall•• atva all tlloat lnter••,•11 In 'h• ,tojeqt l._. oppetto.11'11 1 to ,r .. tde ~.,..nt• •• co the •~•~• •11111 c•ntenr of ~ otl'Vlt••--ntal lf\ror Mt fon to be lnc\uiU>d In th< tt• As for lus"SJng. Germans. h1ston call~ ha' e tx·en the k1ssingest Ger- man d1ct1onanes of the earl\ I ~01. had 30 k1ss1ng terms. Hello. goodtl) c love. passion. rr'an~ other;. plus ah:\' inappropriate tor pnnt an tran~la11on U nderstand the~ don"t u\e "nachkuessen·· aO\ rnore ThJt one meant "kiss to make up for l..1<,s~'> prcv1ousl) omitted."" What ume of da\ do \OU eat th<.' most food" tatt t1c1ans ·~) -\~ll'n· BRIDG E Q. l-As outh, 'ulnerablc. 'ou bold: • AKQ6 95 AKJ3 +J6J The bidding has proceeded Soulia w~ t orth h.,t l Pass I Ph• ? What do you bid no"" A.-lt's a difficult dec1s1on Rule O\ll two pade -)OU aren·1 quite good enough to guarantee gam~. That leaves-a slightly 1m~rfect t"'o no trump or an underbid of~e spade. We prefer one spade be(" u e we don't bclie\,e· game can be de unless partner can bid again. and "'c surely don ·1 want to b pas~ uch a crona four-card ma1or. Q .2-As South: \ulnerable, )OU hold: •K.NJ ~ Al06 AIU5 +17 Wba• is your open1na bad'! A.-Thc Slncturc that you needed at last Q x in your doubleton suit to open the biddana "'ith one no trump has Iona tone by the board . l f you don•t open this 16-poant hand wllb I NT, JOU 'II oe"cr be able to de. tcnbt h properly. Q.3-As South, vutncrab~. you bokt: • .:-an' gcnl.'rall' put J\\J\ P percent ot 11 aftertlp m To s :t '11amin p1ll tP .1 hllnJtold~ d 1n 1n alarge tani.. Thcp11l~1nl..s. The lph1n lind 11 11n tht' hottom prompt!~ Ho",, ~ome belt~\ e ea ... h J'tn'k'[l.llJI <..1gn antlucnccs J part ._,f H•U1 b,xh \nt'). tor e\ample. 1\ thought t1..1 :iffl>tl tht• .. hape of~ourhead L11'ra the(ontour ol 'our back orp1\l thl' g1nh of • KQ73 .\ 106 .\IU!i + 8'7 The bidding. has prO\:eeded: South \\Ht 'ilortb East I NT Pass 2 + P • What action do }OU take~ A.-While panner could be broke. he could also have ome 6-7 potnts. and that could be enough to give you play for aune. Tell panner )-OU have a maximum no trump wtth e"· ccllent spade support by raisina to three spades. That le.aves the dea· ion to bid aame to him. Q.4-Neathcr vulnerable. a South )'OU hold: • KQ73 .., A 116 AKJ5 • 17 The btddina ha$ pr~ed : Soutlt l NT • . North ) . What do ou bicJ no.,. .. .-You don't ._no~ "hcthcr part· n'--r IS 1ntttc:sttd 1n ga~ or lam. II you can do for 1he moment '' pa &Iona the &ood ntu that you have a mv.amum no trump opmc:r i1h t'-· cdknt ~urJX')(\ for hil uic. You k · comphsh that b makin1 you1 c:ht".Apcst cu~·bid·-four diamond..,. 'our v.a1st l hat orp10 has been a Ni"" one. u. hat'' t..,l In a fam11' that prac11ces fraternal pol) andr: -"here one wife 1 ma med to se' eral brothers -on "'hat tlas1 does a brother ha"e aC'C'ess "' lhl' "'111.' \ 'x'nlOrtl\ \.h nn<.'<.otan claim their st.ate 1s v.here "'ater;k11ng got started You bU\ that" Q.5-Both vulnerable, as South you hoJd • 9S KQ73 AIUS • AJ6 The bidding has proc~cd : ut1t We I North East 1 ST Pass 2 · + Pa ! \\.hat acuon do you take? A.-Evcn t hough you have a maxi- mum o ne no trump openina bid, there is a ,1anng naw-no suppon for part11er's swt. At no trump. panncr's hand m1ahc not produce much for you . Pass. Q.6-Both vulnerable, as South you hold •&3 AQ41 AK6.3 •* The b1dd1nJ nau proccedeel: ort• EM1 Sotlt• Wae l • 2 • ' What aruo n do you &akt? A.-Yoo could easily haw the best hand at the cable, Yd. ,our side ~t not bave a pa.yable ...-. JU IPiast tha•. we do not tee hOw Eall ma come 10 daht trlCU ill lilM ol partner's vulnmlble Cf s!.11 bid. We would cloat*. (lf we.,..~ i!'I~ ................ 10 tale tM W Miliia M I partMr miPt DOC M ..... IO S:-S-) • 0 AlO OrMge eo.t DAILY PILOT I Monday, Nowmber 21, 1988 by Bii Keane COU1'T&R CUL TUaE by Maratta & Maratta "Poor PJ . He should have one of those big tires to sit in like the babies on TV." llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson "Marmaduke! Get eway from that window ... Mrs. Vanderbutt doesn't want you even looking at Zsa Zsal" PEAl'RJTS ., .. r t J I ' ~ ~f\ '1 1~ Fo~~ ~t "W\T\.\ 'fO\J . - DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham fl·l l 11CouLD YA PUT THc HAIR 'nJ ClJT CFF IN A BAG? TM GONNA Mt«.£ A BEARD." . by Charles M. Schulz Dear Sweetheart, I think of you constaAtly. I think of you · constantl)' every other we'ek or so. S~OE JUDGE PARKER 'WHEN ABBEY TELLS SAM THAT MARIGENE IS MISSIN G, RICK INTERRUPTS TO SAY THAT HE MAY KNOW INHERE TO FIND HER' by Jeff M.:Nelly by Harotd Le Ooux GARFIELD by Jim Davis. ' TUllBLEWEEDS ISN'T I 1 A 5HAME "fHE.RE'S NO UNrT OF N\EA~ORE FOR ~ow vOOP FOOP TASTE!i? *', 111e CAIJIN 'bJ ~EW tJP IN HAV' t'IRf ~? DllABBLE-.. aoez 1s ROSE ~.I~ WW.ewt.IMS ., •. " Cll~.-.1 '{fl P. •• EJo '/, I I-IA~" ~t(W' 01\.11J4eM $(JC~~! by Tom K. Ryan by Pat Brady FUNKY •WINKERBEAN by Tom Batluk "-15i'EN UP I PEOPLE .' ~ AGAI~ rr·s 1iME I FO~ OUR ANNUAL 1URK£Q t-------, r-----t H~ ... '~_,j:::=::f:~c:JFp::;l DOOlUt&BURY by Garry Trudeau SlXNJ5 ItJ JU5T u~ 'lrX1 NMT.' • "10 MAJ<& 7He~ ~~a¥.­ ~. lal. llhftT fT MIWfT 70 'JQJ • .-.... -1 ··:=&:-· .......... --........ . ..... ... .... ,...... ..... ..., • a1u .---.-....,_...,_._ ., ... -·+• i • • .. ' • • . . ca.-, ......... .., .... ll-...., Rama ..tety Joluuale Joluuloa la tackled on kickoff retara by ClaarCen• Guy Plamber {50) and Kea Woodard (59). ·Rams lose third straight~ 3 .8-24 Chargers strike fast to leave t h em two back of Saints ByED ZINTEL .,..,NIMC.11 I I •s I Mickey Mouse dropped by anothCT fantasy land Sunday and the 60-year- old birthday boy didn't have to leave Anaheim to do 1\. A siPntic hot air balloon, in the form of Mickey's head, flew over Anaheim Stadium at about the time the Rams fell reality tum to fantasy du.tin& their 38-24 loss to the San Oieao Chargers. The balloon flew over the stadium midway throuah the third quancr. ilist after the Charaers had taken a 24-14 lead on a 7~yard touchdown frotn a returned fumble. Mickey didn't stay long. probably fiaurina he could get this .kind of cartoonish entertainment at home. Aftwerwards. the Rams were feel- ing a little goofy, trying to explain how they lost to the lowly Charters. Coach John Robinson seemed as shocked by tbe tum of events as anyone. He said be expected thC" Rams would play well after a bitter 14-10 loss to New Orleans here last week. "Our performance was a disgrace," Robinson said ... I can't remember when we played worse. We've gone from a team that I thou&ht was very dynamic, aggresive and exciting to one that 1s hesitant and stumbles and falls at every tum. We're in a slump. We ca.n't seem to get out of our own war.. · The slump is in every phase ofour pme. We better ~t rid of whatever it is that is causing 1t, or we're headed to oblivion." ' The Rams (7-5) have lost their last three and trail New Orleans by two games in the NFC West. San Fran- cisco can tie the Rams in the standings with a win over Washing- ton toru&bL Suddenly, with four games left in the rcaular season, the Rams find themselves struuJing to gain a playoff spot. Frustration was the S2 word in the Rams locker room Sunday evening. Though they outp.ined the Charaers in total yards, 363 to 297. tney allowed turnovers and outright strange plays to get the worst of them. To have that happen apinst a team such as the Chargers ( 4-8) seemed all the more insult. The Rams fell behind, 7-0. but Qllickly tied it. They quickly fell beb ind again, 14-7, and never re- covered. All of this against a team of vinual no-names, and. eventually, apiost a third.-stringquarterback named Mark Malone. "We gave them too many breaks Sunday's scores IWden , .. , to Falcons. 83. Chargers 38. Rama 24 Falcons 12. Ralden 6 Ltons 19, Packers 9 Vikings 12. Colts 3 Biils g, Jets 6 (ot) Saints 42. Broncos 0 Browns 27, Steelers 7 Bengals 38. Cowboys 24 Chtef s 27. Sea hawks 24 Patrtots 6. Dolphins 3 Bears 27. Buccaneers 15 .ouers 38. Cardinals 20 Eagles 23. Giants 1 7 (ot) today," said Rams quarterback Jim Everett who passed for 243 yards and two touchdowns. "I don't have any answers for us other than we better play better next week (at Denver). We have to st.art laking care of our business." Action in the first quaner was fast and furious. Three touchdowns wett scored in the first nine minutes. including two kickoff returns of 96 and 93 yards. San Diego took the lead as the Chargers. ranked (can you believe this?) next to last 10 the NFL in off cnsc, drove 39 yards for a touch- down. The Rams' Eagle defense made Gary Anderson, a lmlc-known 184- pound founh-ycar running back. look all-world in the first quancr. On the first drive. he ran 19 yards off tackle to. set up a 4-rard touchdown pasJ from Mark Vlas1c to Quinn Early. a rookie from Iowa. So 11 wasn't Fouts to Joiner. The Rams couldn't tcU the difference. On the ensuing kickoff, Ron Bro~n (speaking of speed) received the ball at the Rams' 4, and raced up the s1dehne before ~1ng pushed out of bounds at the 25 b) Roy Bennett. the last man who could catch him. The Rams scored tn 6 pla)'s. Everett throwing 4 yards 10 Pere Holohan. the former Charger. for the score. The cclcbrat1on was shon-hvcd. however, as the not-so legendary Anthony Miller returned the lock off 93 yards for a touchdown. That made it 14-7 and San Diego had already exceeded its scoring output of a week earlier. a I 0-7 win over i\tJanta. (Pleaee eee RA.118/BS) Contenders look for·edge in playoffs With tbeCIFplayoffs in full swing ifs a~nt there's very little to choose from in terms of a who's who in Southern California high school football. Yes, I know. we've already got the No. l team in the nation, supP<>SCdly. in the form ofLoyola Hiah'sCubs, whoarc l l-Oandrateda.sNo. I withinascopeofsome l0,000 football teams by USA Today. WeU, if Loyola is No. l, what docs that makeServite, which lost to Loyola, 21.221 On a smaller scope, Santa Barbara W.s l().()and No. l in CIF Division II aoina into the playoffs. Beverly Hills, a three-tame lo~r1 a~ntJy wasn't impressed. The Normans knocked Santa Barbara out in the first round. 29-21. Etiwanda was I ()-0 and the No. I seed in Division V. but four-time loser Coachella Valley, apparently wasn't impressed either. The Arabs posted a 6--0 victory and ,knocked Etiwanda out of the playoffs. ·By the same token. such No. J seeds as Loyola in Division I, Mission Viejo in Division Ill, Bell Gardens in Division IV, Valencia in Division VI, Sant.a Maria in Division Vil. Awcadero in Division VIII and VaQeyCbristian(69--6) in Division Rustlers earn (op seed in volleyball regional The Onnae Empire Conference champion Ooklen West Collcac women's volleyt.ll team, ranked NO. I in the state, wu awarded the No. •~ teed for the Southern California R~hSunday. The R.altlen were awarded 1 byt '°' die ftm round and will open play Tuaday. No\'. 29. at 7 p..m. Whrit they hOst the winner of Tuctday ~t'• fint round match betMen Ndfic Co.t Conftrtnce nmner.up NomarUMI South c.out Conrtrmce naner"41p EJ Camino. •1 lhiak we're playiftl by far \be bat VoUlnblll we hive all tcaton." .... 'GOfdcn Weit Coech Al ~iU a• tee:oed IUdi:d ~ tal. tM htifkCGIM cMmp. ~ •1•1•C'uelta.tMW1111na SIMlo.ferncrdaulp.• ....... .. ....,, to~ u.e JUsdril Met II* Grossmont. which eliminated the Rustlers from tbe ctlampionship bracket of the stale toumamcn! a year 110. is the only team to defeat Golden West. Grossmont won in three straijht pmcs at the San Dieao Mesa tourney, ahhouah the Rustlers topped the Griffins in a season- openina match and. twice at the Santa Barbara Tournament. In the 12-team format. the five th~ 12 seeds play Tuesday with the four winnen advancina to mttt \he top four 9CCds. The four second~ round winners bead to an eiaht·tam double elimination tournament Dec. 3-4 at Sen JOIC City Col&eee. Kinas River, Suaa Ro. and De Aa.ra are powers ia Nonhem Cahb'nia. Abo~.~ West OINldle bkdcn J~ a... and Sebrina Dennis wae voted IO the Al)..Saa1e and All--Southem Cahfomia first •ms. ('.oat. ·.:::::--tnnsln "°"' Nellrillb :l•..--olhunlain V'81eJH-....a.w-..withallA Wiii pa _. -....... 360 ---~(k.illt•inuscnon Cl.w.11 --•>••huec:ondin .... IX, rolled. Well, they should. Top-seeded teams arc supposed to roll 1 n the first round. The fact that two rolled ngh I out of the playoffs is indicative, however. of the very fine line between No. I and contender. Anothertcam which snapped that veryfinelincwasSaddleback Hi&b's Roadrunners, whoentcrcd the pfay. offs with a 3-6-l record. That 3-6-t record enabled the Roadrunners to obtain something every coach begs for-the psycho- l<>aical edge. "Even though we've played some ROGER C11tso11 SPORT S COLUMNIST tough people. six arc league cham- pions. there was the sttgma oft he . worst record 1n the confcrentt:· said Saddleback Coach Jen) Wme. AmongSaddteback's opposmon (PleueeeeSDGE/83) . M~Y. NOVEMBER 21, 1988 * m Milner happy Barons ·kept . . .. pressu:r;e -on . CdM finds offense els as p1ayo fs sconng 21 points 10 the first quarter was what we wanted to try to do. h it second week By ROGER CARLSON °' .. o.ly .... lbllt "And what 'Nt had failed to do in other games, after ta lung a command- ing first half lead, was to come back • and be etfccth,:e in the third quarter and conunue at the same tempo and 10tcns11y, and wr did that. T"'o victories separate them from a benh in the CIF football cham- pionship finals as five Orange Coast area teams remain in t~ hunt. Sunset League champion Fountain Valle High and Sea View Leafue charrip1on Corona del Mar. as wcl as Pacific Coast League co-champio n Woodbridge. Angelus League power Mater Dci and Saddleback ( 4-6-1) are still battJmg. Herc's how the coaches saw tl as they looked back at last week's success: F .. tahl Valley Coacll Mille Mil.Hr, following his team's 39-0 victory over St. Francis: "We felt very confident going into the game. After cva.luatini thefilm, ~lcarl) felt we were a better football team. "We think we played pretty well We wanted to start off fasL and ~ ' "In terms of injury and illness. we're better now than we've been in the last thrtt or four weeks. "Jeff Higbee had an exceptional game at free safety with two inter- ceptions and Rick Mock pla)'ed very well at the comer, as did Eric Sassenberg, Brent Hickman, Jim Garvisch and Drew Edborg." Coreu •el Mar ~ Dave Hollucl1 following a 44-0 rout of Troy: ''1t was another deal where we were able to get ahead em:fy, and we were free to do some th.inp they wcrcn 't able to stop. I'm sure psycho- logicaJly thinas piled up on them. "We were concerned over the reports we bad from ~who said they were the h.ardcst-6.ittina team they had played. They were OK., but I 1uc:ss we were ready to pin. "h seems that if teams make mistakes we can take advantqe. rve (Pleue .ee FIVE/St) Chargers. battled. through bad luck· White optimistic. about 1989 after bowing out at 9-2 _· By PAT LARKIJlot For Edison High footbaJI coach Da\c White. 1988" was kind of hkc drawing from a four-to-a-flush in a game of poker. If )OU get lucky. }'ou·n beat most hands. but 1fvou don t. ll'ls 11 me to fold. · ' The Chargers stancd out the season loolang hkc they'd ~ lutky indeed. They rebounded from last year's dismal 2-8 mark. the worst 1n the school'$ history. and st.atted 6-0 before mecung Fountarn Valle). Against the Barons. Edison not only lost the game. ~8·~ I. but their quanerback. Greg Angclov1c. "'1th a dislocated thumb. The Chargers also lost a bid for the Sunset League utJe which Fount.a.in Valle' claimed with 5--0 record. the &ron · s second straight Sunset crown. The Cbargcr .. s rebounded from the loss wnh a new quanerbad. .. Donnie Smith. and won their next thrtt to grab ~5CCOnd spot from the unset League and then the luck got really bad. At 9-1 . Whtte figured he'd get paired agamst a weaker team. but instead the Chargers dre"' Q. t Fon- tana ... at Fontana. ''I've never heard ofa Q.1 !('am on the-road." White said. "I 1h1nk the two teams were two of the top six 1n our division, but that's hfc ·· · Unbelievably. Wh1te0 '\ luck got worse. .\t Fontana Fnda). the Chargers and the Steelers pla)ed 11 close until the third quarter when'thc aw,er•s were whistled on a~ call. A bo6dina penalty against E.dison when Fontana mtSSCd a field pl anempt left the Steelers the t.D and pre9C1Vcd a 14-10 Steelers lead. On the next pby Fontana made it 21-JO and finished the CharJcrs' season. ··1 haven't seen that call in 10 years of coachulg.,. White said. ... Jnstad of us ~1ngdown J4-J0with the ball. the next minute we're·down 21-10. "But. despite everything. I'm proud of our program and the effort of our kids for the entire season. ln both of our losses we battled back. and our kids nev~ qutt against Fontana. I think everyone involved with the pr~m has a btt of an empty fcchng.·· WhJtt thinks maybe his luck wiU change next season and predicts the Chargtrs will once again battle for the Sunset League championship. ;·rm vcr) Ot>tim1stic about next year," White S8ld. We'll be returning four or five starters on t>otb offense and defense and we'll have some fine pla}'en coming.. up from the so~homorc team. The Chargers· sophomore team finished undefeated for the third stra1&ht season. "If next }'ear's team worn as bard as this )~rs team did. we'll be a fine team next )car," White said. "We'll have m1th back at quarterback and both of our guards, Jeff Aseltn and K.sp Winkler. We'll also nave back our second stnng tailbaclc. Shane herman. who gained over 400 yards rushing." In other directions: Estancia Coad! J• Llebea .... , following a 17-1 4 opening round loss to Kenned)' 111•hich saw the Eqlcs (Pleue .ee POUa/BS) CdM hopes to avenge season's Qnly def e·at Girls vie fo r 4-A team tennis title - aga in s t Miraleste _ By PAT LAR&IN ...,,...°"' zur•ri The Corona dcl Mar airl's leno1s team will try to aven~ its only k>SS of the season w~n the Sea Ku\&.' duel Miraleslc Tuesday momma at the Oarcmont Tennis C1ub 1n C"latt- monL Miralcstc ( l J..-0). enters the con rest as the No. l tcled IQ the 4-A d1vaseon and 1s led b) No. l 11nates p&aytt k1m Po. tbc dcfe~°'9A 1nd1Yldual champ. CdM. KCOnd wi1h a U-1 ~ countcn wtth ft'ahman SCMaUon 11\.CO Phtbus and her 47-l sinalcs record. nt onl)' bkmish Oft Phibus' n:colld bd°"P to PO 1M two tell'ftt twlvt elfeldy "* this teatOA WILia M~ _(l}.Ot dominatina CoroM 1 ~s .. ....._ 1tven of nutc ._._.-. .. I thtot that din~ tbe •vonee eo .-, n, •• CdM Coed9 Daw tkAi a iticl .· Former Aate Smith backs off iDegatlon of Sherrill paymenta IN THE BLEACHERS ~·-=s.=-- ~ COLLEGESTATION,Teus-For-r EiJ ~ mer Texas A&.M runnins back G~ • 9 ~ ~ Smith is beckins off statements that Coecb Jackie Sherrill ~d him to keep quiet about NCAA rules v1olations.·And that could fiaure io any possible NCAA investiptions, an official say~ The Dallas Mom1ns News had reported in a copyright story Friday by ~rter OOuc Bedell that in eight hours of taped interviews, Smith Slid Sherrill paid him $4,400 in cash and money orders since November 1986. At a news conference aftef Saturday's 18-0 victory over Texas Christian; Smith re-ad for about four minutes from a prepared text denying be was paid to keep silent. He then answered reporten' questions for about five minutes. , ''It certainly was not bush money. I put great emphasis on that. It was not hush money," Smith said. Smith said much of what he told the Morning News reporter was not true. It was to be used a.s a script for a movie, he said. " ... He aaya t hey Just not • new shipment of 'bash,' 'crush,' 'thump,";annlhllate,' and •wa,._ lop,' but he's fresh out of slaughter." "Bedell was to com~ a proposal for the book and send it to agents and give me a copy of the manuscript," Smith said. S 11 b W om.a-.. Smith said be recicived S 1,000 10 S 1,400 from yr&CU&e ro 8 J J --e Sherrill that be considered a loan, since at the time he received the money he was not a student-athlete at A&.M. He said he planned to return the money as soon as he was able to do so. -Quote of the day Ralpll C. WU.. Jr .. Buffalo Bills owner, on his team securing the AFC East Division title: "It feels great. because I remember when they (the fans) were throwing prosrams at me." " Eighth-ranked Syracuse overcame m Wyomina's pressure defense and roUed to an easy 107-81 victory Sunday over the Cowboys in the quarterfinals of the Bia Apple National Invitation Tournament behind SHrmu J>eecJa•' IS points and IS percent lbootina in the first half ... In other NIT action: ee.a ...._ scored 2S points and KeYla Nett• had 11 as No. 6 · North Carolina lcnocked otrGcorlia. 99-91 ... a,,_ Jntla scored 28 points and No. i 4 Missouri held off a 9CCOnd-halfXav1erofOhion.llyfora 83-71 win ... JaJ ~waNI scored l l of Indiana's first 20 points and tbc Hoosien forecd fi ve Stanford players to foul out in defeating the 20th-ranked Cardinal 84-73 . • . Jn an Elliott captures NASCAR title exhibition same: freshman suard AM11 ... ._. ICOred 20 points and soobomore forward ICMef • A•am-addcd ISas No. JO"NevMfa.LasV~handcd lluty Wallace won another race, but • thc-SOviet nationaJ team a 9'4--83 defeat. its first Joss in a Bill Elliott earned his first NASCAR nine-game swing across the United States. The Soviet Winston Cup championship with an 11 tb-team, comprised ~rimarily of the team that beat the pla~cc finish Sunday in the Atlanta Journal u ·eds · OJ · dro-__.. S-1 · 500. Elliott1 33, from Dawsonville, Ga., knew going into rut tates 10 t c ymptcs, ~ to on tts the ~miie race at Atlanta International Ra~way that tour. The Soviets defeated defending national cham- be needed only to finish l8th or better to clinch the pion Kansas in overtime Saturday night after earlier . . victories over North Carolina. Nonh Carolina State, $400,poo utle. Wa~la~ •. the hottest driver on t~ Ohio State and Vanderbilt The ~lub's 7-foot-2 center, premier. stock .car .cucutt 1n recent wec~s, ~ed fns AnN.u s.a..11, did not play. The Rebels jumped to a fourth vt~ory !n hts last five ,sta~ an~ bis ~th of the 28-7 lead with less than eiaht minutes gone in the first season, tying htm for the Y~ s blah with EUiott · · · Lee half. They then held on to beat back a challenge as the E.Mer, one y.ear after~ scnous heart attack threatened Soviets pulled to 82-77 with 2:54 remaining and the hJS future as a professional JOI fer, shot a final ~und of crowd of 14, lo 1 chanting: "U..S-A, U-S-A." Auamon, 1 6-undcr-par 65 Sun~y towintbe$3Q0,000~1or?Q~ ... wbo was a member of the U.S. team that lost to the Tour ,cv~nt at th~ Links .of Key Biscayne in M1am1. Soviets in the Olympics, opened the scoring and had Elder s victory, has first smcc I ~86, was by five shots • one of his best games as a Rebel. over Al ~iber5er, who closed with a course record 63 . . . Second-seed .... McEuee continued bis comeback Kersey, Drexler lift Portland Sunday by defeating third seed Aara Irlcbleta 7-5. 6-2 to win the singles final of the Little Caesars tennis toornament ... After spending two years in Steffi Graf'• shadow. 18-)'car-old A~ntinc Gabriela SO.tlal won her fi rst maJOr singles title with a 7-5, 6-2, 6-2 victory over Pam S.rtverat the Viflinia Slims Championships in New York ... The United States Olympic men's volleyball team continued its domination over Cuba with 15-8, 8-15. I S-3. I S-6 exhibition match victory between the two O lymp'ic teams. Joa It.Mt ~ccd the U.S. effort with 31 kills. Kar~ &JraJy contn buted 21 lolls and Steve Tim_... 17. Yzerman preserves streaks Steve YIUIDU scored on a pass from ~ Paal Mad.eu with 47 seconds left in ' ovptjme and the Detroit Red Winp won their seventh consecutive game Sunday . night with a 5-4 ' ry over the Boston Bruins. The streak is the Iona r the Red Wings since 1965. With time runni his personal eight-game scoring s t sand nine assists, Yzcnnan connected for his 19th goal of the season on Detroit's only shot in overtime ... In other games: Rkk Toedaet scored three goals and had two assists a.s the Philadelphia Flycn ended a six-game los~trcak by defeatina the New Jersey Devils 7-1 . . McBala and lala O.C.. rqistcred their tint~ pmes in the NHL as the WinnipeJ Jets extended iheir winning streak to four ~es With a 7-4 lriumpb over the Edmonton Oilers .. . Petri Skrlk• scored a pair of aoa1s as the Vancouver Canucks beat the Chicqo BlaQhawb 7-4. PORTLAND, Ore. -Jerome Kersey m 29 points and I 0 rebounds and Oydc Drexler added 12 of his 27 in the third quarter as the Portland Trail Blazers defeated the New Jersey Nets l ! 7-106 Sunday. Portland led SS-52 at halftime, then built a 92-84 edge by the end of the third period and a 97-86 margin with 9:54 left in the pme on a book shot by Steve Johnson and a layup by Craig Neal. PonJand's biggest lead came with 5:14 remaini04 when Kevin Duckwonh's layup and CaJdweU Jones j umper made it I 09-96. Telemlon, radlo TmL•YlllON 5 p.m. -YOLL.aYaALL: CIF olrl$ s~A ~­ Plonshlo -Irvine vs.. Mlr11 Costa (tape), Prime Tlcilat. '\ 6 p,m. -PltO FOOTBALL: Washlnoton al San Francisco, Channel 7. 6 P.m :-tell SKATING: Women's corncietlllon In Slt•t• America trom Portland. Maine Oaoe>. ESPN. I o.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: USC at UCLA (laoe), Prime Tldtat. Mldnl9tlt -COLLllGll BASKETaALL: Kantl.ICkv V$. Duka from S.WI~. !Mu. (laoa), ESPN. ltADIO ' p.m. -rttO l'OOTaALl.: Washlnoton at San Fral'ICllCO, KNX 0 070). 6;.30 o.m. -rtto •ASKaTaALL: Cll~ ., Utah. KRTH (9'JOJ. Mike McCarthy Balck .- SoCalCollegeouUook Five return tO -ialte fulbreak BJ JON l'ISllGUION ·--~ .... WbiJt the So1atbem Californla Collele men's bubtW tam ia short on hdaht. it•s Ubly the tbe Vaaauanll will rneawe up totk tm in NAIA District Ill Cirdle Ibis telSOD. Ten of l l olhers sund ~ 6-foot and 6-(oot:3, but it's tbe odaer three who ultimatdl bold-itae key to CoKb-Bill Reyno&d s uniL h returns five of its top six players fi'om l'P'OUP which went 17-13. tied for lkond in the Golden State Athletic Conference and qualified for the district playoffs for the seventh time io ReynOkh' 1evcn years as coecb. Mike Liabtfoot, the team's second leadina tcorer, leadins rebounder and No. l ~r (be set a \earn record by iakina JO c~aa fouls). is aone. and Reynolds is sull tcarebina for the ~veness in this poup that uetroot brouaht~~ . Ofliemivcl , we re yi real weU k'letf'er, l R ~ .. Jt's the reboundina area and the defense we•re conoemcd with. C'.olllidcring we·re not real bis, we have co be a~ inaeme and qpaaive IS a lealll. So fAr, we're not mainmining that in tcrimlDlltl-1 don't know if we have I.be IJCf'SODAJity for it ... Todd lmon, tbe team's shortest player at S-foot-10, mums for bis seruor campaisn. An Academic All· American All-District Ill and AU- GSAC selection, The point guard averqed 16.2 points. a team biah 6.8 assists and shot SO percent from the floor, includina . 4S percent of his three-pointers (60 of 134). The other k~y is the ability of 6- foot-7 so phomore center Jeff Bickmore (8.7 points, 5. l rebounds, 60 pen:ent shooting) to stay out of foul trouble. If he can't, 6-foot-6 junior Meu (Ariz.) College transfer Paul Wahlheim will have to provide adequate relief. If not, look for as many IS five ~rds in the lineup. ..lo terms of aper ience oe die swtina poup, we're in fOOd...,.." Reynolds said. ..We're ICUnyiDI around a lot with ~s and a post man. we·re even smaDer than last year wibtout Mike Lllbtloot. That's our real probaem, 6ecauae we're unable to mUc:le him wilh a •lesi"' imate fiont 1fae player." The best bo..e to pua a little fiR ha their pla~ is ~ortbern Arizona tnn• fer Kyle ~·a lllliot llU1ef who ReynOlds said• -.e _ .. kit pure shooter and .. men o! • ~ve type player." Said lleyDoldS: "He cOuld develop into our teCOnd lead-i, rebounder ... n addition to Dixon and ltickmcSre, key returners am IUllds John Mounce (8.4 points) and Jim Mansfield (8.9 P.<!ints., '4.0 rebounds} and forward Phtl Hill ( J 0.2 pointa, 56 percent shooting). Mansfield or Hill ~ts the nod at the remainina pos- ition, but all of the top six will produce equal time. • "We feel like we have a couple of consistent shooters," Reynolds said. ··All the kids returning shot SO peroent from the floor. From their own admission. they're not all great shooters, but they were very wise in shot selection." Other key substitutes will be Darryl sec women battling adversity After a tougll season with a winless slate in the Golden State Athletic Conference, Southern California Col- lege women's basketball coach Keith Atchley thou&ht be had performed the necessary recruiting to build a team. That was before three prospective point a~ards were lost pennancn~ly for vanous reasons before pracncc everbcpn. A potential returning starter in Paula Hale (I 0 points, 9 rebounds per pme) was lost until the second semester (Dec. 16) due to grades, current starter Nora Menken had knee surgery put off until August and is playing at about 70 percent, and another starter missed last weekend's opener with a concussion. Nobody said it would be easy, but Atchley had more than his share of misfortune. He has seven women practicing currently and 11 on the roster. "We're lookina toward league," Atchley said. "We're doing the best we can right now, and we'll build on what we have and go into lcaJUe better. We don't have much choice. Athletically. with everyone healthy, we're betttcr off now than last year (when they went 10-18). But we do have a much tougher schedule." The top returner is S\arting off guard Jennifer Hartigan (7.1 points. 6.5 rebounds) and the top newcomer will be freshman Lori Halliday of El Toro. Halliday is developing well as " * . .,,., .................... ) F Geft Brown CYM!r.0.1 F 'Christy Conklin (TetledlePll c PMlle Hale (lrlfltwood) G Lori HllllAY (El TOfo) G ~ Hettleen (Sal1 L.ak•I G Jovce uPolnle ISoonyvale) F Nore Mel*.en <Tucson, AL) c Vicki Jtofll (Dlf!Ytf', Co.• G Rox~ Trost (Orlnde) F Erik• Whlstltr CSfenlonl F Michele Woodruff (Bekenfleldl k:hecMa Ht. Yr. S-1 Jr. s-1 Fr. •-o So. S-f Fr. s-10 Jr. .S-1 So. 6'-2 Fr. .,_3 Fr. S-S Fr. s-10 Fr. s-1 Fr. Frl.-Set., NoY. 11·1t -et Cel Polv-S.n l ult ObiSPO Tourn.menl Tues., Nov. 22 -Pomone·Plllw (l!Omel. 7:30 Wed.. Nov. 23 -al Ce! Stele Sen Bernerdlno, 1:30 Wed.. Nov. JO -•I Lovole Mllrvmounl, 7:JO Frl-Sel., O.C. 2·l -el Soutlllnl Coloredo Tournament. TBA Tues.. O.C. 6 -Blolll (home), 7:30 Frl., O.C. t -wtlllller (home I, 7:30 Set •• DK. 17 -Concordle·Ann Artlor, Mk1\. (home), S:1S the team's point guard. Atchley said, although her natural position is the offauard. f Freshman Erik.a Whistler of Ocean View Hiah wiU put Sood reboundina. shootina and defensive talents to work as the starting small forward after missing the first two pines. * w.s .. Jen .• -., c.i Sl•I• Oomlllluet H ... 7::)0 Fri., Jell. 6 -UC lllVwMdll (llOmt), 7;JO Tues... ~ 10 -Cellfonlle a.otlst• (llOtne), S:IS Fri., Jen. ll -et Ocdcltflf ... 7:30 S.I .. -*'· 1• -et Cellfornle L.utNren•. S:IS Frl . Jen. 10 -et C!Yllt Coleee lfYiM•, 5:15 Set., Jell, 21 -TN Melter'• (home), 7:l0 Tun,, Jen. 24 -AIUM PKtfic• (J!Ome), StlS Fri .. Jen. 27 -al PKlflc ClYlllleft, TBA Set., Jen. 21 -el Fr-Peclflc Coleee• TUft., Jen. :n -et Point Lome N•JWWM' Tllur. Fet> 2 -'' The Meller'1, 7:30 Set., l:;.o. • -Cellfomle L.uftleren• (home), S:IS • Tun., FIO. 1 -el Callfornla 8eof1tt•, S:lS Sel., Ft!>. 11 -Christ Coleee Irvine• (home), 5:15 Tun., Feb. 14 -al tloll. 7:30 Set., Fe!». 11 -et Azusa Peclllc•, S:IS Tun., Feb. 21 -F~ Pedflt• (llOme), 5:15 Frt., Fa 24 -et UC Sen Oleeo. 6 Set., Feb. 2S -Point l ome Nu.-· lllOmel, S:1S •--.01es Golden Stile Alhletlc Contwenc. ..,.,. • GMC Dlecoant Center Get Acquainted Offer Bills clinch.AFC East in kickers' duel All Credit C.nle Acupced Mobil llKWM .. to (5) Q.ane Oii SPECIAL LUBE, OIL a FD.TEI $/895 n&Mnn~lf 'ur.awca 15550 Beach Blvd. Westminster, CA (71•) Sll·l•H (Ill) 61e .. 117 TUNE-UP SPECIAL 4CYL 2895 PLU8TAX One ouetomer per trlnUICtlOn. Preeent coupon at time of ...... up: &plrel Nowmber 30, 1918. Mtt8ul*N-"' ~/MltlUbllhf ..... Oltfy. NOt wild -"" ~ OU. ..,.. ..,.... Of coupon.~--=~ ...... 'he AINelllted Prat The AFC East race is over, sooner than it bas ever been. Scott Norwood's third field pl, from 30 yards at 3:47 of overtime, pvc the Buffalo Bills a 9-6 victory over the New York Jets on Sun<lay that clinched the division crown. Buffalo, at 11 -1 the best ~rd in the league, clinched earlier than any AFC team has won its division since the NFL went to a 16-jame tebedulc in 1978. It was the Bills first division crown since 1980. Norwood's winni .. kick wu let up by a fumble by New York's Roger Vick, who was stripped of the ball by ~k Burroughs at the Jets' 32. The Bills ran four plays before calling on Norwood to win the pme before Buffalo's seventh sellout crowd of the season. Many of those fans stonned the field and tore down the aoal.J><?Sts. ··The fans deserved It,•• star linebecktr Cornelius Bennett said. "They sat out in the cold and the rain with us and they pic.ked us up. This is I pal place with great people." Not all of the fans bad a Sood time, however -1eCUri1y worken said three fans may have suffered broken ~in the process of tcarinc down the S 4: ~':!:·won 1evcn s~ wtailc the Jets, 5-6-I, have dro dleir lat three. . Norwood's other field ~ came hen 25 and 26 yards, while Pat Leaby hit from 23 and 40 yards. Leabf• ..o.E attempt with 2, sobds lO y WU blocked by nate IKkle Fred erW. In other pmes: V.._. 11, Celta I: Al Min- neaDOlii. the Viki• held Eric Dicbnon to 72 yards and tot fletd goals from Chuck Nelson of 25, 26,. 30 and 49 yards. The Vikinp, &-4, haven't allowed a rusher tor.in 100 yards since Oct. 26, l 98 , when Oeveland's Curtis Dickey had l 06, a span of 38 pmcs. ~ II, GIUtl n: Philadel- phia's Qyde Simmons picked up a blocked field pJ and ran IS yards for the winnina touchdown at 6:10 of overtime. Luis Zendejas let up for a 31-yard field pl attempt, but Law- rence Taylor 6rokt in and aot a piece of the btil, sendina it into the air. Simmons picked ii up on the fi.nt bounce a yard tJetlind the line of scrimmaae and ran Lnto the end zone. SU.U 41, 8nM91 t: At New Orleans, ~Hebert compleied 20 of ll paMCS fOr 193 yardl and three toUChdowns IS the Saints recorded their most~ win ever. Palrteel I, Dtll H• J: In Miami, New Etwland's Juon S..uro\'lty kicbd rteld pis of 2l and 34 yan& while the DOID1lin1' Tony Fnntlin misted thnie fteld pis, iadudint a l~yarder with .even minuta left. ...... U, Cew1teJ1 M: Boomer Eliatoil dlrew tMee 10UChdown pu1a and Jama 8roob ICOled on a ~·~~ run wbile rutbina ror 141 yardl for the AFC Catnl '-len. 9-3. Dallas' 2-JO record is its worst in 29 years. Bnwat l'I, Sleelen 7: frank Min· nifield returned a blocked punt 11 r:;:: for a fint-haJf touchdown and jc Kosar threw a 77-yard scorina pass to Rqaie Langhorne on the SecoftcS play of the second half as Cleveland beat Pittsburah for the sixth straiaht time, droppina the Steelen to 2-10. U...11, Paden I: Wayne '"6ntcs' debut u Lions coach was a sucx:as because Eddie Murray kicked four field aoal• and Scott Williams tcored on a T ·yard run. ...,. 17, ... 1': Cbicaa<> beat Tampa for the 12th ~t time IS Neal Anderson ran for two touch- downs and Brad Musier turned a ecreen pua into a 40-yard touch- down. OUen U, OrilMl9 JI: At Hou• toa, Warren MOOG ~ for tbrce lOUCbdowns and ran fOr another, and linebldr• Robert _1:-ylel intercepted two~ for tbe Ui1en, M . Cllllla 11, 1111111"'8 It: At kanaas City. wMn: tbc Selbawb have &oat 1tven atraWn. N'd ~14().,anl fidd pl _With 46 teCODdt left boattod the Oliefa, Wbo went '1 yarda in 13 plays '° let up tbe kick. .. RAMS FALL, 38-24 ••• Prom Bl S.tve Del.me addCd1 l8-yard field aoal for the Chararrs early 1n the second quarter to cap a 60-yard dnvt'. That made 1t 17-7 and tht boo birds had returned to Anaheim Stadium. Tht' Rams got a brtak when C~rles White's apparrnt fumbtc at his own 3S was rrverwd on the instant replay which showed the around caused the fumble. The Rams took advantage of the sttuat1on. drivina 70 yards 1n five plays. Henry Ellard caught a 31 ~ard pass and Grt'& Bell ran 12 yards for the touchdown. On the next possession. Miller caught a pa5s at the Rams' 19. but it wu ruled he stepped out of bounds befofe malung the catch. It remained 17-14 until midway through the third quarter when a freak play turned into an important Charger touchdown. The Rams were drivini when ·White was hit af the San Diego 25. and fumbled. The ball was picked out of the air by Charger lincba~er Keith Browner who took off downfield. .After about 25 ~rds. and running out of gas. he alertryturnedand threw an ovec;hand pass to the trailinJ Sam Seale. a cornerback. Browner s pass was perfect and Seale raced 50 yards for the touchdown. . "I got hit right on the ball. and when I lost control of it. there was nothing more I could do." White said. An equally strange play pulled the Rams back in it a short time later. Vlas1c. hit by Rams defensive end Shawn Miller. was taken put of the game with torn ligaments. Vlas1c will miu the rest of the 1eason on a pla) that should ha\e nrver happened. The play was whistled dead before he was hit. but apparently none of the players heard the wh1stk and con- tinued playina throua,h it. The journeyman Malone replaced Vlas1c. His first pass was intercepted by LeRoy Irvin. who fumbled the ball nght away. But linebacker Fred Stnckland recovered for the Rams at the San Diego 27. and a personal foul on the Chargers moved the ball to the 12. The Rams managed a 20-yard field goal from Mike Lansford to make 11 24-17. Malone. always known as an im- pact player 10 one form or another, then drove San Diego 61 yards to gi vc the Chargers the game's most import· ant toudiown. The key play was a 49- yard pass over the middle to Miller on third down. The Rams responqed as Everett completed three straight passes. The firs1 2 were for 19 and 29 yards to ; Withe Anderson. Th~ third was a 2()... yarder foe a touchdown to Aaron Cox. That made 1t 31-24. . Malone then directed an 80-}ard· dnve for the game-clinching touch- down. He hit second-year man Rod Bernsune for a 39-yard .pass to the Rams I on third down"and Barry Redden. the former Ram. scored o n the next play to g1\C the Chargers a 38-24 lead w11h 5: 16 left. Redden finished with zero vards rushing and two touchdowns on '1hree cam es. FIVE IN SECOND ROUND. • • From Bl been concerned about our offense coming together and it has taken a long time. It appeared smooth. and we're happy about that. Ty Price played his best game. and he did it when it counted the most." Corona del Mar. with a'33-0 lead. punted on fourth-and-one at the Troy 40, did not throw a 1?3SS in the entire fourth quarter behind a freshman reserve quarterback (Chris Kehrh) and scored its final TD with reserve runl'ling back Rick Taketa. "We punted from their 40. because what was the point?" said Holland. "It was a good experience for them to be in the playoffs. I've been in situations where you had to hang on and worry about the other guy pouring 1t on. The) 're kids out there. they're not the enemy." Woodbridge Coacb Rick Gibson, following a 31-14 victory over Cabrillo: "We talked about going for the Jugular at halftime (Woodbndge led. 21-0). and we didn't do that (Cabnllo closed to 21-14). "We were concemed. We kne" the kids had a little letdown in the third quarter. But 1t wasn't a matter of Cabnllo manhandhng us. We re- gained our wits and went on to win the game. ~h was a matter of wanting that killer instinct. You get someone do""· \OU "ant to leep them do""· But wetre line." The v1ctol) helped soothe some of the ounds frorn a 17-13 loss 10 Trab o Hills. which forced Wood- bridge share he Pacific Coast League c nsh1p and' enter the CIF playoffs as the league·s No. 2 rcpresentati ve. "The week before we were mentalh not prepared:· continued Gibson. "We made a lot of mistakes against Trabuco Hills. But we had a great week of practice. We had reached one of our goals (lo share a league tttle). now the second is back-to-back Cl F cbamp1onsh1ps. And we started off all right. "Fred Schweer had a good game. Ryan Nash played well on defense. M well as Mike Yurkovich. The} did a stellar job. "We preuy much kne" the> 'd try to thro" as well as do a hule op11on. After their 1wo quickies (1n the third quarter). we shut them down the rest of the wa) ... Mater Dei Hi&b Coach Cback Gallo. following a 16-9 victory over Long Beach Jordan: "They're a fine foot· ball team. but 10 pla> them at their place: well. n 's a snakep11. ··A.II of their fans are right behind you because the bleachers arc on one side only. And it's a vel) outspoken section with all kinds of colorful comments. "It was a ver) hosttle place. a lot hke St. Paul "llh a 101 of foul Languagl' to int1m1date }'OU . .\fter the game. they were all gentlemen. but I guess that's their personality. tl)ing 10 1nt1m1date us before and dunng the game. "We felt our delcnse could control them. Johnn} Robinson go1 about 107 _}ards. but 50 came on one pla). "On the other hand we felt our offense should be conscnau,c. and we fumbled the ball four umcs. t\\ICl' in ~er) cn11cal s11uattons "hteh ._cpl us lrom ge111ngscon:s. h turned out tu be a fairly even game." T"o ofMatef Dc1's maJor mistakes were 12 men on the field. which 83' e Jordan a first down. and a safct) bh11 . which backfired into a Jordan touch- down. Jordan led. 9-7. and ha~ tt.c ball. FOUR TEAMS BOW OUT ... From Bl ahead 14-7 with three minutes left 1n the game: "Hey. football 1s football and hfe ts life. and 1tjust didn't go our way. "I figured Fullerton \\Ould win and I figured we would. but instead. Ke.nnedy 1s playing Fullenon and we re turning 10 our gear. "It's hard to believe that we gave up I 0 · points in two and one-half minutCSr We're up 14-7 and they'tt facing a fourth-and-20-something. and they hit on a long bomb. I saw them in the same situation against La Quinta with the same results. So now its tied and we'rejust trying to get the ball out of our end. and a pass goes off our running back into the hands of one of their players. They kick the field goal andsuddcnlY_it's over ... Despite the loss. l..1ebengood is proud of a team that turned into a, 7-3-1 club. the first winning season (above .500) since the 8-2-1 campaign of 1981. "We came through six weeks as underdogs and winning. and I feel lucky with what we've accomplished. We're all very proud of the elTort of this team." L1eben&ood said. The EaaJes now find themselves 1n a new situation with the prosp«t of bein& a better team next season. "We're really excited about foot- ball neitt year. We grew up a lot this season. and what we really need now is a aood off-season. We oC'Cd to work hard and get some size on these players." It's easy to understand wh} Liebengood is so excited. Estancia will return nearlv the entire starting team. including rune on defense and eiaht on offense. amona them the entire backfidd.. all linebackers and 1tlrec of four defen11ve becks. ''We've also got some aoodjuniors comina in and we luavc some freshmen that can make the team. h's also nice to know that most of the tehools in our leaaue fielded a lot of seniors this season. and the) 'tt goina 10 lose a lot of good pla)Ct'S. "But c\en thouah )ou'vc got aood players, they \till ha' c to produce anc.I th.at' whore the ofT-s,cason 1s the kr) We're ao1na to pound the Wft&hts and have CVCf)bod) work1n1 Out So rar. rd ~y we have dose to 70 kic.I\ 1n the off.~ason :prognun. ·· c .. aa Mesa C.-c• T•m 8aWwla, follo"•na a 4M-1 '-oJ)(n1n1 round lo \ to 8k>om1n1tun tn the< ff 1)1\.1 ion VIII P,.t .. off\ •· aturally mal>.1na the pb)Of'f ~-. JO(»d for U\ We lhoutht we m1a,ht ba\C bl'C'n ~ucr than t~ sco~ indicated. bul 1hc) 're a 'er) good football team .. Vel) good. indeed. Bloomington wascom1ngoffits ~7th .straight league win and fifth straight league mlc. Costa Mesa on the other hand "as making 11's first appearance 1n the playoffs since 1979. ··The) came 1n as 1he No. I seed 10 the playoffs and "e spotted them a 21-0 lead. but we almost came back. Wt' putred WJthrn a touchdown at 21-14. and we needed an excellent defcns1,e e ffon to stop 1hem and u; to tu: 11. but 11 d1dn 't happen ... Looking forward to next ~ason.' Baldwin fl'Cls that the Mustanss might hang around a httle longer in the plarolTs. ··we vc got some real good kids coming back next year. We've got three sophomores returning in the defensive backfield. and the>'ll also be our running backs:· Baldwin's tno includes To mmy Nguyen. Quoc Pham and Dubie Ospina. Ospina scored four ttmcs for the Mustanss this st"ason. three on long recepuons and another on a kickoff return. "Dubie is a particularly explosive player. fie scored those four touch- downs, nd I think he only touched the ball bout eight times this season. "We've also aot the core of our ofTensi\'e line back and I think a couple of them are going to be all- leaguc selections next year. 1 he onl) thin& we need 10 come up with is a quarterback. Usually the second stnna quarterback moves up to start. but unfortunate!} we don't have thnt situation thi5 year." Wt1tmla1ter Co-coacla Stu Clark. follow1 na the Lions· 30-10 loss lo Loyola: "I think we had the nght &amc plan IOlfll in. We had decided to foree tMm to throv. to beat us. and wt shut their~ game down almost ent1rel) 1n the first quaner. "The) Jtancd tfurt1na us a hulc on a counttr play that "C were o' cr- playina, but v.e threw the ball on them 5uccessfull} ~t of the pme. "It was a CO\tplc of bit plays ond that wH 1ht pmc. The btt pla) h3\ hurt us all yar lont -and our inab1hy to ~ta lria olay or our ov. n. "Gotna "•thout Van Tu1nc1 tde-.ftonte"~~nd-&eaMcnd) rall) "hurt us ~ TuiM1 did not u1l up btalult' c>hn off·thc--ftdd 1n\"1dcnt {h tr a ~ck aao v.hi<h kO him ptl\jl( II unahk to pla~. . M ,\nd Buhb' f:ll~m ne'er tutall\ m.-o~tft'd frnm 1n1urn.~ ,·1ttM:r " · Dell¥ ,... ....... "' ..... ·-.... , Ram• running bacll Gret Bell loou for Mme runnm, room u lrT Pankey trte. to lielp make room ln fourth qaarter. Otange Coalt OA.ILY PILOT/Mondey, ~ber 21, 1N8 • lJCl llnds itself in familiar spot Anteaters to play In NCAAs for 17th_ time in 20 seasons The l Cl "aler polo tt"am. v. h1ch faced dim prospects before the season ~taned when goalie Chris Duplant) Joined the 01~ mp1c team and "'as lost for tbe stason. ts back in the NCAA Champ1onsh1 ps for a record 17th 11m~ The A.nteaters Join seven other teams. 1ncludmg 17-ttme part1c1pant l (LA. '~ 1ng for the the 20th utle to be a~arded this "cekeTid al Belmont Plata . L ( l. led b) Tom Warde. T o n) Bell Sk\lar Putman and Kevin \\ ood 1s' ranked sixth 1n the nation and ~dcd sixth. Tbe Anteaters. ( 17-13). which host the tournament. "111 u pen "1th th1rd~rankcd use l~l-~1 a1bp m. Fnda). \'. arJe hjd s". goals 1n 1he regular ~awn linah.' Saturda\ to up h1) season total to 100. IU sh" of the s.chool s single-season sconn'j rl'l'o rd set b' Gal) "'Figueroa 1n 197 01~ m- p1an Mike bans 1s ne\t on the ltst 11 102. Cl 1s auaranteed three games in du v.ctkend's tournament. In other first round games. defend- ing champ and top-SC«led Cal (29-3) v.111 face e1ght-SC«led Arlansas-L1nk Rock ( 14-1) at 3 pm . No. 2 vCLA (17-41 faces ~\enth-sccded NaV) (26--6) at 4 30. and o. 4 Stanfoftt (2~ -10) tales on fifth-ranked ~ West Conference ch.amp Lon& Beacfi (18-9) a1 7 JO The Golden Bears ha\e won threr of the last fl\e NC A.A titles. includ1n& a 9-8 o'en1me "IO o'er SC in last )car's final It "'II be a record l 7tb NC AA tournament appearance fQr UCI and l..CLA * NCAA~ (•I ...... ~. L9111 a..dl) Fr•V'• P'lrsf llWIMI No I Ca11111rn1• l 29· ll vs No I /,rkansit· L111.e Roel< 114 I 3 o IT' "'o 1 UCLA 17·41 ~ No 1 Navv 12•·41 dO om No 3 use 121·11 vs No 6 uc1 111-131 • o~ No • S•antora 111-101 vs No s LOnll 8elK Stitlt II 91 7 lO om SaMIMV'l Samoflnlll Conso a Hon I •nc:I 2 JO om Cn•mo•OMn•~ • •na 7 30 o rn S41ftd9y's ~ ~Vf"ln N Ct . I 0 m F ltl\ Olace 1 JO om l"'ra Oleet o Pm F """ l>'Kt 1 .lO p m . ~-• Bruce introduces self to Raiders Gallo Milner but Mater De1 's detense forced a safet) and cn£ul n~ kick, and the Monarchs C\entuall} scored the "in- ning touchdown on a 49-)ard pass pla) trom Dann) O'Neil to Ton} Pena. "\\e were trying to"ork the middle of the tield for a possible field goa1:· said Gallo "But Dann) and Ton~ read 11 (the secondal'} l and \he) ·1urncd a crossing pattern into a pos1 and got the touchdown pass 10 "1 n 1t Our m1s1akes kept 11 close. but "c pulled 11 out. .. Atlanta rookie has best game to lead 12-6-ClefeaLof~A LO A GELES (..\Pl -Rookie hnebacker Aundra} Bruce has•made the adjustment from college 10 the NFL. and opponents of 1he A.tlanui Falcons are paying an expens1'c pncc · Bruce pla~ed "hat he called his bcs1 game since turning pro Sunda} as the Falcons beat Los Angeles I ~-6. pre\cnling the Raiders from 1ak1ng sole possession of first place 1n lhl· .\FC West. John Seulc's 1->ard 1ouchdo"n run with 4;07 remaining broke a 6-6 lie and snapped the Raiders' three- game winning streak. ··1 nouced he (Raiders· tackle Ror) Gra' es) "as bailing out quick.'' Brue<' said ··1 darted out and ga'e him an inside Jab. He "-ent for 11. I went back outside. the quarterback "as there and I made something pos111ve hai>--pen:-" The sack was the second of the game for Bruce. v. ho also intercepted a pass and otherwise plagued the Raiders all da\. ··Aundra) Bruce looked e~cellent roda} ... .\tlanta coach Manon Campbell said. ··He is progressing and feeling better about himself and hov. he fits in. He 1s going 10 be BOAT ING -- something pec1'a1:· The Falcons entettd the game ranked 27th 1n the NFL in defense. but the) 've hm1ted their las1 three opponent~ tOJust"l6 points. In the first 11 games, Atlanta hadn't kepJ a team under HXlrardsrusbing. but tit~ Falcons limited the Raiders to only~5 yards on the ground. After T1.m Brown's 33-yard k1ckofl return. the Raiders could p in on1)'•3 }atds on four plays, turning the bJ)I over on downs·at their 45-vard litle with 2:33 rcmainmg. The' Falcc:M)s then ran out all but the final l4 seconds of the game. :: ·: :: Askew wins Commodores race The Falcons needed to mo\C onh Saddleback Coacb Jerry Witte, 12 }ards in four pla~s for 1he 001; I 1b follow1ng~1steam's l 7-7v1ctor)o'er touchdown of the ~me. the first o..., ..... ._...r_ lt~asahghta1rraccv.h1ch1urned B~· ALMON LOCKABEY La Habra: "We staned off real "ell allo"cd b) the Raiders since the into a virtual dnft1ng match as •'- d K ,.. Da'c .\sh·"· commodore of Long .. t:" For one or th•' le" t1m•". our k1c' ··r secon quarter against ansas '-it} fleet took mo~ than three hours ..... ~ ~" "'~ Oc 30 &ach 'acht (tub. ~as the o'erall AV (Beto za, ala) didn't kid. the ball into on t. . "inner Saturda\ in Dana Po int Yacht complete a t"o-m1lc cou~ the enJ Lone It came no ht to the I· The Falcons got the ball at the Los . Runner-up was Tom Kenned'-of " ' 1-I, h B h 1· ( lub' Commodores C'halle n°e race ... ~ )ard hne and our gu}S aren't used 10 -.nge ,.., -"" en ruce. t e 1rst " n 1ndJammm Yacht Club sa1liqg putting on a return selecuo n 1n last spnng's NFL draft. Askcv. \\as at the helm of Broadside.a Fogg\ ~ollon. a Catahna-3i. Third "\\ c gut a gre<!t hii. and lhl'' ~eked Los .\ngcles quarterbad... Pcte~on-3~ sloop "a" Bill tcclc Cabnllo Beac h Yadtt fumbled thl' hall. \\ c m :twerl•d ti on 5 lC\ e Beuerle in and forted him IO ( ommodor~ .or nine uthland Club in Manshanna (Santana-JS). ihc IJ. and "e rnded up g.l'lllng a rumble. then made the rccOH'I), The )acht dub'> competed 10 the e'en1 and fourth v.as te'c Aske"A. Bah&a 1ouchdo\\n. I couldn't ha\l' J'>l...l·d for pla) originated at the Ra1dcri. -40-)31ling Pfrtormanu· H:1nd1cap Rae-Connth1an 'acht Club. sa1hng the a tx-11er ~tan 1han that Thl· l...1ds ,,e~l' )ard hnc. tn!l Flet·t 'a hb "1th ra11ngs of 11~ 10 Latahna-3~ L1cket) plit emot tonal all "cc._ \\ e had tncd to r==;;;;;;;;;;;;;--;=;;,;;;:;;:;;;-p;;:;;;;;;;;;;;--::====:--p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.---;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;---;;;:;=== stR''i\ 11 ~as a Ol'" sea:.on .. Saulo Hermosillo made the htl. and I M1gud "la'a recoH~red the fumble 10 set up tht• t1de-1Urning earl) touch- down. I "We ._ne" all along 11 "as an uphill 1'1 l'N 11 ·'\l battle Of course. scoring earl> le pt the kod• fired up.'' ~•d ~ Htc. , 1 I EDGE... ~-~ From Bl ....,....~,~ 1h1s season has been (arbbad. ·an1a j .\na. Dominguei. ( o ronadcl \lar L.1 ----- Habra and rrn. all 11tle·" inners 1n .,. their respern' e leagues. . Ne' en he less. the cold ligurcs sho"cd that 3-6-1 record. and ob- viousl) no one was impressed" 1th SaddJebac .. ·s sehedule. Now coml'S ihe edge· "The Times said 'It "as an 1mposs- 1ble task for us 10 beat La Habra.· ·· sa1d \\ tHC ... ..\nd the Re,1<;tcr made some errors 10 recappmg our pla> off h1stor\. The' had us lo)1ng 10 B{)I~ Grande laM )car( addkbac·k up~t the Matadors in a memorable ~6-33 dec1s1on)and 1he' had \!at.:r Dl.·1 beaung us last ~erirtSaddkback has ne\er pla)ed ~tater Dctl "I told o ur kids 11 \\as bad enough the} \\ere taking" ins J'' a~ from us. but the) ha' c tea1w. pl.1~ 1 ng u-; "t' don't e'en pla~ "So. thl' Ol"\\SP:l~1'.·rs hdJ')l'd U\ out a httle. too·· .\mong lht: lirst·wund game' 1n Ol\1s1on~I Fnda' "a"''l.'on·sot 21·1 . 17-14.24-~i and 19·1 4.as "l'll as 17-7 a nd I " -6 That«.'" ofc1gh1 games w11h results'' hirh 1. uukl ob' 1o us1) ha' c gone c1th1.•r ''a~ I l's prell) eas) to <,c,.-e ho" mu" h an edge 1Ho' e1ed. So here's an edge tor )Omeone "ho reall} doesn't need 11-unbeaten and unbeatable Lo\ol,11 n the econd round of the Di' 1s1on I pla,otTs. Frankl>. there arc peo ple " ho think Mater Dc1 con win this one F-1\ e·t1mc loser \fatcr Dc1" \\<<'II. ifs the match up Mjt1.•r Dc1 . h:isadefen 1\e hne "h1ch cun match an) runn1nggamc.anJ Lo~ola'<.~mc 1sa running game. Lo) Ola hasJu ubout hu1e,1.'I'}· one off defensive!\. but almost al"a~s apinst ruri-oncntcd team' .\nd Mater ~11 no1 J run-onerm'\I team. 't1rdoc·' Lo,ola ha'c thl' home lield ,,J,anta c CJ l\h\(m tltgh loot~ll "lJlh l>.1''" While 1san c\pcn on hQmc tkllt ad\antaacaftcr ~1nah1 t~am Ill~ in lhc liN round tu F-ont.in.l ~I · I ti t ht· kc> Hl\l hnra-:r"'-:'~".ilkll for lkf\'&al\~ hukhn.J ~ f 011ta~ m1\fif\"dooa tkld~l~m~·mrc Th\· rare 1.all J*h'J the \\J\ tnr tont.11\.1'<. c\entual din" htnJl tou~ hJ,•~n "h<.H I v.ould lt~c to ~no" '' Jll\I tuell) \\hat"~' Ed1'°n hotJina.' Thd.1d.inap8J! • ,. I >( )N 11 Al CHEVAOIET BUICK I ,. I 'C )"'4 11~(. . . 00. BEGI El [i1 MARK C. BLOOM? YES! ECONO-LUBE . & TUNE? YES! WE WILL HONOR ANYBODY'S K-MART? ADVERTISm SPECIALS* YES! ON SAT NOV 26 & DEC 3 FOR THE FOLLOWING : It!• will l'lonof •nybOdy s ad•trLsed s.pt\.J' Oii l~• t-.o S.turla•' tlPtet GM t~to1111'"'td ·ec~11ic~is a~ &t~11•'1f C>M oart~ IOI !hf~ ... , or t is '"" '''it' I• rs' • LUBE/OIL/Fil TEA •FRONT END ALIGNMENTS • WHEEL BALANCE •TIRE ROTATION •REPLACE DISC BRAKE PAO DRUM BRAKE SHOES SEARS? YES! • Ad'*11sed specials must be curr9ntly valid at ad\lef11sed sh.op and you must bring the eoupon chpp1ngs with you Must be GM car or l•QM d\Jty trucit; (Oldsmobile, Cad•Mec. Chevrolet Bwck. Pontlec. GMC or Ch4tvy 't-, l,. Hon pickup or van) A" work done by de.lersh.1p Of f,c:tory-tratned tech uSI~ Q9f1VIM GM parts [i] CHEVROlff l 1 llP\. ~AMIJ•IH ....... c ....... NewOrlMn,t .... SM F ranclsco Atlllnfa. Cl\kaeo Minnesota Detroit TamoaBav Gr~Ba't' .... W L T ' , 0 7 s 0 ' s 0 • • 0 c:..111 10 2 • 4 J ' 3 ' 2 10 .... 0 0 0 0 0 Pct. l'tf PA .750 270 116 .513 300 232 ..545 m JOS .333 20I 260 .tl3 253 1S2 .'67 * 115 .250 16' 242 .250 2l, -.167 112 246 N.Y. Glantl Phi~ Phoenix wu111noton OaUu 7 s 0 .513 253 246 7 s 0 .513 213 254 7 s 0 .513 212 274 ' s 0 • .545 257 270 2 10 o .167 196 m Am.kM C• t119ftClt Denver RMllrS Seattle San Ole9o KaMes City Cincinnati Houston Cleveland Plllst>urofl West W L T 6 ' 0 6 6 0 6 6 0 4 I 0 3 I 1 c ..... 9 3 I ' 7 s 2 10 •a1t 0 0 0 0 x-Butf•lo 11 I 0 New E"96and 7 S 0 lndlanapOlls 6 6 O N.Y.Jets S 6 1 Mi.ml S 7 0 x-dlnched dlvl1lon title S....Y'• s-o. SM D1e9o •· ll-24 Altll!R 12, 11.-n 6 ClllcetlO 27. Tampa en 15 Clnclnneli •· Oallu 24 f'd. PF PA .SOO 237 255 .500 219 n. .5oo 212 231 .333 167 230 .2f2 111 211 .750 360 240 .IA7 l01 2n .Sl3 2CM 193 .167 229 333 .917 2S2 154 .513 1'6 225 .500 266 211 .'51 239 2•S .'17 195 240 Detroit 1', G< .... aav t Mlnnelota 12, lndlena11olb 3 8uff91o t , New Yori!. Jet$ 6 loll ~ton •• ~· 20 ~17,Pl~7 1(-CllY '11. S..ttte M New~a.oenvwo PhlledllDflia 23, New Yori!. Giant• 17 lot) New Enellftd 6, Mleml l T..._...-aG.- Wallllnofon et s.n Francllco, 6 11.m .,...,...,.., ~ ~· .. Detroit, t-.JO 11.m. Hou$ton al Dain. 1 11.m. S..y, ..... 'D a-et Denvw I 11.m. lklffelo at Cll'dlnetl. 10 a.m. o.v.i.no et WMl!lnl!Of'I. IO e.m ~ aav ., Chieffo. 10 •.m- l(-CllY et Pltt.tiurvn. 10 e.m Miami at New Yori!. -'-''· 10 e.m ~·t~.IOe.m Temoe aav et Allal'I•. 10 Lm. San .FrllflCISCO a l $en Olffo, I II m. New Enelend at lndiaM!ldl•. I P m Hew Yori!. Glenf1 et New on.en., S 11.m M9Mllly, ...... ......... el S..ltle, 6 II m. a.arews 31, bins 24 ~ IW Olla,_. 14 3 7 ·-· 7 7 0 llr24 Finl~ So-Eerlv 4 pan from Va.ilc !OeL1ne tuck). S.Jl Rems~n 4 NU lrom Eve<•lt IL.ans'°'d kb). 1:33 SO-A.Mlllef t3 kldl.off r•IU'n (0.L•ne tuek). 1:50 ~Quanilr' SD-f'G 0.Line.)I. 1.13 ltetm-eel 12 n#I (l.anllot'O klCk). 3-59 TNrd QMf1'lr SO-S..t. SO r•turn of t•tenl from Browner !OeL-kl<AI. I.JI F_,..OUan.r R•m,-FG Lenslord 10, I S2 s~~ 1 run (Deline kk•I. SS2 R•mt-Aa CO• 10 NU lrom Eve<elt CUMlord kic11), 6 46 so-tteddefl I run (Deline kick). 9.34 .-...s."2 SD Finl CIOWns 17 Rulllft·Yereb 37· 101 Peulnll 196 lt..iurn Y¥0S 21 Comc>-AN·lnl 13·7'-I S.0.eel·Yareb LOii 1·12 '"""'' .... Fumolft·Loat 2·0 ~lft-Yareb IJ-'2 T 1me of ~M»lotl J 1.14 ltfDIVIOUAL STATISTICS llama 20 77· ISi 212 IS 17·34· I S-31 7·40 2-1 •·st 2';4' RUSHING-San Oleoo. G A-Mlft lt·SJ. ~ 1·40. MalofM •4. H011anC1 1·4. R.cioetl 3-0. Vluk 1-0, Eerlv 1·0 Rem\ a.~ 14-13, Wtllle 11-... Everett 2·24. PA$$1NG-San OMeCI. VIH IC t -20-0-IO, Ma10nt ..._1·12' It•~. Ever•n 17·34·1·1'3 RECEIVING-San °'"°· G.Alldenon 4-42, A. Ml...,. 3-... Bern•llne 2·70, ~ 2·19. Ar Co11 1·7, Earlv 1-4.. RWM, W An09t'MMI 4-t4. 1w Co• 3·SO, ~ 3·77, Ellerd 2·4'. Oetlllno 2·12. Bal 2·10, Holonan 1·4. F.-C.. 12. tt.a6dln 6 Scw9., ~ 0 J l t-12 0 0 l )-6 Sec.-Quel'W Al~G G.Oevtl 4', t:G7 ~o-tw A~G G Davi• 41, ~ L.A-FG 8elV 42. ,_.,. 1'-910Ml'ter L.A-FG a.hr 31, 2.11 Alt-Settle I rUfl (kick falledl, 10:S3 A-40,"7 TEAM ST Al'IST'KS A• LA Flr•t oowns 17 9 ltllSllel·vanb l9· 130 20-65 Pnllnt ISO 1'7 ltetuni Y ercss S2 J3 C-Att-lnl 11·2'·0 11·31·1 Seckecl·Y¥ds Lost 2·1S )-JS Purlb 6• 34 s-. Fumbla·Lost 2·2 2·2 Plnallla·Yeros 2·25 3·20 Time of Pouel•ion 37-0. 12:.5' INDtVIOUAL STATISTICS ltUSHtNG-Allanre Settle 19·7'. "'"' 13·31, L-t· 13. HHtrr 1·3 LOI An..-.. JackM>n t ·2S, Allefl 7·11. T &rown 3·17, 8euerletn 1 • s PASSING-A1a.n1• C Millw 1'•2'-'0-161 ~ Anoetn. a.uer ... n ll·3H·ll1. RECEIVING-A1a.nt•, LaM S·SS. Settle 4-1'. He\._ J-• l, wn1Mn11unt 2· 13, Wllllfls 1·6 RIHs l·S. HavnH 1-l, MltNng l·l l..OI A""4ei T er-n 4·'4. Allen l-30. Lofton 2""49, Jadl- 1·27. Fef'neftOel 1-12 COL~a .... ....... 6'"£w ( ........ , W...11 Mktlleln YL ,,_ $1., I II m, IESPH) TIA ,~,Dec.· HtMllY ..... c .. s-oeeee> Wvomlnl VJ. Clalehoma Slat•. S 11 m IESPN) s..-y, Dec. JI f'..o ..... (et Anente) low• vi. N«lll Cerollne Sl•le. 10 • m (MlzlOvl ,_.y,JIA.I Geter .... .... c1 .. --. ..... , c;.orol• "'· Mldl!Hn Stele, S 11.tn-IESPNl MIM!ly, JM. 2 ...... ,_ .... ( .. .,.,.... .... , Loulsi.N Stele or Autiurn Yl. SvracuM, 10 a m. (N8CI caw .... ( .. ~ .... , C*'IM>n "'· Olllahomll, 10-.30 e.m. (ABCI c:.... .... (al o.IM) Arhnws "'-UCLA. 10".JO •.m. (CISI , ......... ( .. T.,..,Al1L) Neu,_ 0-vs. Wetf VlrOlnla. 2 11.m. (N8CI ._ ..... ( .. Pl!.-) Mld'tloen YI. Soutflenl Cal. 2 Pft\. (A8CI s... .... ( ...... 0......) Loul.i-Slat• °' Auburn VI. Florida St•••· S;30 P.m. (A8CI Or9a .... (etMIM!ll NeoraP.e vs, Miami, Fla., S;30 Pft\. (NBC) s.M1111Y, .... 14 T8A TBA T8A TIA .,,.... ..... (etY•...,.,.._., ••st·W9't S1WW Olluk ... ~, ....... , ........... , $etW9y, JM 11 s.w .... latMIMM.AIL) , I COtM\UNrTY COLL:EGE STANDINGS MK.-c...,..we TOP "1VIE (Al.,......., .... , Ceflt 0-el Teem Wl T WL T Futl4tfton 9 0 0 10 0 0 Sael<lleC>eCk 7 2 0 • 2 0 Long BHCll 7 I I 7 2 I El Cem1no 7 2 I 7 2 I Ml San Antonio 6 3 0 1 l 0 CIENTltAL DfVISK>H l'IMll Teem Fu11tr1on Sadcllel>aCk ~Wnt RancN> Sant~ Or ..... c .. ,, Rlv.rslde Div. CM. OYere1 WLT WLT WLT soo 900 1000 4 10 720 120 230 44 1 S4 1 230 Sll 63 1 1 40 360 46 0 1 40 4S O SSO NOit TM IE• N El Cemlno Lono e .. cn Mt, San Antonio Pe~ Centi°' DfVIMOH J I 0 6 2 1 3 I 0 1 1 I 220 630 22 0 S40 O•O OtO SOUTWE•N DfVfStOfll 1 2 1 7 2 l 7) 0 s s 0 I 10 0 Soutllweslern 4 0 0 S 4 0 6 • 0 '"-!Omar 310 360 46 0 ~-· I ) 0 2 7 0 1 • 0 San °'"° 1 3 O I I O 2 I 0 San oi.oo Mel4 1 J o l 6 o J 7 o ''*Y'• ~ ~ Wnt 31, ltlverslde 24 SatllrfllY'• 0.-<>r.... CN•t 29, Rendlo Sanllego 16 Fullerton 47, ~ 37 El Camino 21, c.rr1tos 17 Petadlna IS, Ml San AntOl\lo 14 L.one 8Mc1I ao. s.n oi.oo cc o Sall Ol99o Mesa 24, Groumont 7 Soultlweltern l2. Palomar 2S ..... ,.... he OTHaa waaKaND $COlllS ........... ea••-c~ 1', LA Plwc:e 12 Santa MoNc:a Sl, West LA 0 Mooroerti SI, LA SoutltwHI 21 .....-~ 4', LA Vell'V 6 s.Me ~ 47, LA Hal"bor 27 Gleftdale 1, Vent\K1 0 , .... c:.•s-Anletooe Valrl 27. Mt. San Jacinto I• C11e1tey 17, Easl Ula Anee1H 1 Citrus 34, DeMr1 7 Rio Hondo '7, Vidor Vellev 6 0... V.., C••-RectwoodS ll. SbklYOUi Z• Bull• 3', Yuba 10 ... v.., ca•:www Contre CMI• S4. Marin 12 Solano 17. $1en'• • ~GaCsil ...u San JoM fl, OlaOlo Vettey 2' San Mateo 31, lAneY • San Francltco 30, Wnt v....,, 7 C.... C•il•-Her1nell 41, Foott\111 26 LOI Med41"°' 21, Monl..-.v Petllnsula 15 De An1e 4S, G4v!IM I 10WL SCHEDULI Dec. J ~y ..... ~ (1·21 "' Et C.mlno 17-2-ll. 7 om "°"y ..... 0.Hk Renc:N> Santia90 , ... 3·1) VI. MoorPerk (t-11, I 11m ........... Fullef'ton ( 10-0) YI. a.kef'lllelel 110·01, I pm ........ Cl# flUYW'PS ............... , ........... , DMllC* lX Olll ,,.,. 14. MllMCt9lt ,.,... 6 Trone 22, Ill._ tt ( .......... , Dl'll•IMt t ~ (ll-0) YI. ...., Del (6·5> ., 0r .... COQI Colse9, Saturcley (7:>0) ""*' AINI lt-21 et FOlll-(10-tl. \lie IN $«\Ille 19•2) vs. Cr"" ( .. Sl al 8'f"'· ln9Mnl Hlefl ltubldou• lt-2) "" , ..... v.., Ct·ll •I Orenet Coe•I OMllte . OMSION I Ptllrnclele 11•3) et .._.., Hlls (1•31, lltt 1111 An,_.. V ... v (,_2) el laulifttW ('91•l), site tM ._ ,,.2) "" ~ (1-l) .. ~ cc CenVCNI ('92) •I Hewttlorne (1-2-1), .... - OMllOM. Mluloft V1elo (11 .. ) vs. El OOredD 16'5) ti Vallllcle ltaramount (t-1) 11 Sent• AN 11•3>, (left• tetl.,..., SMta AM aowt s.1ur•v> II ModllMI <•·Sl et Oomln9'm 110-1), site .._ Sctvr (t-2> vs. Loa Aleml!Oi 110..0..u at ~ DMsaoN rv Claremont lt-21 et &ell Gatdin5 (11·0), Ille Ille Lo. Altos (10-1) et Workmen (1-2•11, IJte '" Nor1twlew (10-11 el El ltencho (t-2), site Ille ~ (10-1) ¥L Don LUeo (10--1) et CNflO DfVtMON " SM eernerdlno tt-21 at Colchell Vlllev (11·0), .... ltle ~ v...., (6-51 •• cw-(7·4), ., .. '" Arroyo 1'92) et Norco 11·3>. llte IM CllllVCNI Sprl1191 ( 10-1) et Celoft (1•31 DMMON VI VMande (10-0-11 vi. Sl.WIY Hiit ('921 et ~ Pw1l l(lf!MdV 11·2·1) et Fuhnon , .... 1), Ille Ille C..... ... MW <f·l •2) ¥L AMhllm 17·4) ., GIO¥Sr $t~ P9Clflc9 (,._1-1) vs. SI IA ' di (4°6-1) at Sant• Me 8owt. -OMSaON VII Chetnillede ( .. l ) et Santll Merle (10-ll, Ille ,.,. Serre IMI at TtmPle City (f-1-1), site 1t>e M«nlnelids (1•2) el Lompoc 15--6), tlte Ille SM Marino (t-0-1) •I V«1lul'OI Del 11·31. site Ille DIVISION VIII AleJCeCMfO (1 HI) el 9loclrnin9ton (ICH I Tratiuco Hilb (t-2) el Senle PalM (t-U, 1lt• Ille • AllOUt~ll .. P_lt..._(I·)), Illa.JN SM!• Clare 111-01 VJ. W11 • ,-.. (t·ll et !Nine DMSfON lX Vallev Ctvisllen (10-1) ., TeMChapl (tl-21. ille Ille Kern Vellev ('92l •I OM P9r1l (10-ll, site Iba Whllllw Cllrl1tllln 19·2> et On9f'1 (10-ll c.niln•ia (t-21 If Tr-IS-4-1), site Ille ....,.-MAN , ... u lMeS DMl6-P•MdeN Po1Y 110-0) el lrenlwood -It· 11 fftlll ~ 8ioomlnllton Owtlllllll (11-0) et Cout OWb· tleri ( 11>-0) Note: Al ..,.,_ F rldev, 7:>0 11.m.. unlela ottlerWIM noted.- NHL s.MllY'• SC-. Detroll s. Boston 4 (oil ~· 7, New Jerwl I Wlmkleo 7, Edmonton 4 Vencou~ 7, OlicMo 4 T__.1 GMMS Montre.i ., New Yon. RenMrs. 4.J~ II"' SI. Louis •• Toronto, 4::l5 11.m. T'IMNl't"I 0-KMia el Plllladelllhla, 05 1>.m. Wellllneton •t New Yori!. lilanelers, SOS 11 m 8uffel0 el VlllCOUY9f', 7:35 11.m S COUNTRY SCHEDULE ldleet beYs and tlft$ SATUllDAY si.1 CIF Finals., Woodwwd Park. Freuio, II e.m. ' .-a .....,.. ... Portland 111t 't{'; r:--' * ._. 0111111rt 11 Vi.ti. ~ NII. AllMte ti...._, ia NII. hlM!IY'l9-L.ann et New Yer'll, 5 •.m. ' C~ vs. ....._ .. ...,.._.., UI •..m. l"'tHi' IJhll af ~o. d """' °"'°" 11 CMftltte. d 11.m. MllWW• ......... d •.m. New WWI If ~. 6:lO e.rn ............ •t S...... 7 •.m. ClllceeO et $la""""°· 7:l0 ••"'- C..... .... .,. ......... ') Horill Caro!IM "· 0-0 ... •1 Svr.ane lt1, ~ 11 M1Mour1 a, ~. °""° 11 I~ 14, SlaMenl 7l ......... , llWll Ill < .. New Ystll) Palflnes end tlmft T8A ,,....... Clle:NIU- (•I New VOfk) $lmHlnal wjllner1, fin. TIA ••...moMS Nevedl·L•• ...... , !'4r Scwi.t· Union 13 Cudlollovellle n. Yt s.... Fulerton '3 ~ 77, PIMnie, Swedlll 71 0-0 ... '°""*" 1', o.tenuncs, Sweden 63 1-• 111. Athlelft 1r1 Ac:tton 107 RPI '6, Coa~e ltlca Nellonell '2 Wlctlll• st ... Austr.iie. Vld«le AM·S 71 YUOOl!evle ti, Lo"°'8. Md. 13 YU90$levlen Nallonel T_,, '2, LSU IM BASK•TaALL SCHEDULES c..... .... TUISOAY Soutf'le<n Ce.llfornla Colleoe et Ille Mast•r's Colle9e, 7:JO, Cal Tedi at Olrilt Colleee Irvine, 7:30. AtlOAY FraeCIOm Bowl Clenlc II UCI (Marvlanel "'- TCU, 6 11.m., UCI vi. Geor9'e St_,e. I 11..m.), Southern C.altlornia Colse9 •' Ctlallman Colle9e Toumemenl. SATUllDAY Freedom 1owt C11uk et UCI; Souttliwn c~ c°"'" etc~ Colleee T-· MtMnl. c.mm.., ale'9 ..... TODAY Orenee Coast •I Mt. San Jacinto T-- nemetl"l (flnf rouncr VI. Tctw-V....,, I 11.m.) TUESDAY Orenee Cont at Ml. San Jacinto Tour- nament . WIDN•SOAY Orange Coast el Mt. San Antonio, 7:30; San D1e9o Mew el Gotoen W..I, 4;JO. C..... wemen "lllOAY Unlvwslty Sall Francboo vi. Oregon Stele (FrMCIOm Bowl) at UCI, 3 11.m. SA TU.DAY Oregon Stet• YI. UCI (FrMdom 8owt) el UC1, l 11.m. SUteDAY Unlvef'lltv San Franc:lltO vs. UCI IFr.-dom 8owl) el UCI. I 11.m. Cemmuftlf¥ c ...... ...,,.. TUaSOAY Comr>lon •I Golden Wesl, 7:30, W9.,.._SDAY LOft9 8"cll cc ., Orenee c~"· 7:30 socc•• SCH•DUL•S CemmunlfY aieee Wtmlft TUISOAY LA Herbcw •• OrenM Coast. 2.JO. Ballef'sfielel et Golden West. 2:30 'lllDAY Communltv ColleOe Fine! Four et PelOmar, noon SATUltDAY Communllv Cotle9e Final F-et Petomar, noon ,. WlltESTLIMG SCHaDUU CemmuftltY celeee WSDNISOAY ( Peiorn.r et Goldln Wnl, 7:30 Pm. ""'" llAC& ' ) ~ ~lllr CYllllll lUt 7• 6• Trtlliul -19 Csi.lllel JIM II • ,, ... '-cv_,.-1 s.. u... ' 16.l tl llJIACTA CIM I Nl9 sal a 111"M •AC•. 6''> ~ NlJC fl)TIC( MASCAil .... AL STANDtNGS 1. ... ElllOll, OeWIOllVllle, Ga •• Ford TIMI• dertllrd, •••• ws.ooo. 2. ltusl'( Welllee, Ctlarlotte, N.C., Pontiac Grand Prl•, 4,_., 1375,000. 1 OM Eemtwlrdf, Ooolle, N.C., Chevrotet Monie c.no. 4,2S4. 1245,000. TaMNIS ~ ................ (It Delrllt) .... ,... Jofln McEnrw (U.S.l def. Avon Krlcttllelll IU.U , 7-S, •·2 . ..-a Pi.al ltlck LeKll·Jim P\1111 (U.S.) def. Kan Ftecll-lt~t 5"IM (U.S.), 6'-4, 4-1. w.,..., • ....,..,,._ , ...... Yft) G4W11611 Sabas:::rs(t:tlne) def. Pam Sllriver (U.S.), 7·S, •·2. 6·2 ... . I I I: . '. ...... lcMll ... TWSOAY CIF •·A flneD: Corri clsl Mar va. Mltlllelle at Tiie c111r...-1 CU>, Cter...-1. f e.m. .. 1 , ' : I : ! .... I I I t I : . I• , . • .. . . .. _ WAT•R POL.O SCHEDULES c..... , • ..,.v NCAA c~ •' e.non1 Plua. lone hid\ -Celfronla "'-ArMma1·Ullte ltoek, ); UCLA "'· Navv. 4:>0; use VI. UCI. 6; ~d V'-Lone IMCll $Ille, 7:30. SATUllOAY NCAA CllernlllcN~ et Belmont Pteu. Lone 8eecll -COMOlltlon Mlft\lffnM l end 2:.30; ClllmDlonshlP Mmflnels, 6 and 'foo. SUNDAY NCAA CllamolonlftlM et Betmonl Plate, Lono leach -MYelllh Piece, 1; flfttl PllCI, ~ 2:l0; ltlird Pleet, 6; ""' Piece. 7:311. • .... ldleet WIDMISDAY CIF 4·A flnea If IMlmont Plue, Lone 8Mch -Corone clsl MM n. SYnny Hilb, t:lO 11.m MUCllJ11C( Tilll ~ .. oon-. ducted by. en lld41.., . • • . • • • • • ~ • • ~ . ·: . • Orange COUt DAJLV PILOT/Mond8Y, ~ 21, 1111 • • CALL 642-5678 '\ Pr1v•t• P•fly only, No Real Estate, Commeu:1al Automotive 8oet1ng or Help Want.O .• ..,.,. -..n llltlC..ta1 .... ., 2122 Cftt1..., 2124 ••e•..... 1111 C... ._, ._ 1122 C.t1... MMC....... llM ..... ._. .. I ==ll'lr.DINDEX642-5671 , • -;;;-., ..... , •JONMi8RIWROU!i IOHLAl<tPARK28t28e.j 111-4112 .... _ ******** ........ ~o!!i·=--= ... llGRnt ..... CO. ...,. P9't:R'e 2matr8r.28aF/P,l14H/, ftplc, 2 cer p~ In-I l aaA 1'-'BA, Clo .. to • ,. .. 1\tfowMCluee,J:e paid P•tldl''Q & indty NUTN011Wco. • 1 111 . 2 :a;2C:..:.r:F.P,. .• .;f ~~9=~~· = \';'=-~~ .~~,~~LA1~~l ;:c~~~~~, 90°i vau.~.!'.ua, .. ftlll ~~~~: t ~·to.'::.:.::~ & IAP: Tiii DAILY MOT CHECK YOUR AD t comm pool & tenn • '"' , Ask f« ~ I ~. a-ege nice in-j J -2314 8AHTA ANA. Cl.AHWtlO °''ICI HOUM T ... FIRST DAV blk1 to beec:tl. '215.000 38R• 2BA· wuher/d'Y9f, I t.,lor MT51rno· VERY nic. UC)C* 2 Bdrm • 1111 TSl MGMT 142-1903 Sfudlol & lBA ept1 le00 & T~ ..,_ M-F ~the ltlnd. 541-eee4 or SM'tlo. deck, f/P, ~ 11275, 48Ft 2BA, '""rm,. •Cui.' 288 1iA io... Witt! encl gar .. view, up ell() Vacation llWt- •OO AM·S 30 ~M , ... O• • .... •" .... .,,. ... ~...... 1 ~9-0112, .u '°'Martt..(., a a r t 105 LI nch near all, trptc.-811', "'4051 duplex . new crptlbllnda.' 1875 mo 415~ POlnset-Rent.,, Apan,ment dur'.ng ' Ill! MWl m 111'1 '*·VILLAGE RENTALS S•l\it«lwf ·~·1 1 )(),"'"" :=-... ":';":;.:::;.. ..-:,-...:.; f21-0111 Grubb & Elllt I trwy. Reedy 11122 I ~ i.un.y. No pata·j tla. 241-1282 uw rnonth• of November 28A, 1BA. trpc, oM firs, •117-5'88 "=,,..so:,-,.~· • ~ ......... _ . ..,.,...t .. .., .... fllTmTI* 'FABULOUS New contem-11192 Peuta C t rel• Ina. Sl50/mo or o.e.mt>er & receive• nu erpt. evell now,t _______ ,.._..,.. M~• : ... °: ~,.•;:-;.,:::•.:... "':::"'.; FIXER UPPER 2BR 1~8A. PotllrY· 28R 3BA condo, I 818-579-0573 \ •3ltR 28A. PrtlOI• ~.I Cltta ... 1124 gift c:.rtlfleati f<>t • MSOl ino 115-04911 It±~ llld ... 0'\11<.oC•TIOOI 09AO<. ... ~ ......... .,.., ... -'" I =i.. your ehec:kboOk I P8n0r9mic.,.... oc:ell\ & !FREE RENT! ,... blecft· petlo/dedc ~ unit •rm mu V8Catlon for 2 •t the _....... .. M 1tt 1 'llR'Oft!lth L. on:~ -· i.. "Ju .. ,,_..,,...,..,_, .. ,__.._ ~to~I( t\atbOJ.131-140013,500 front condo, 29A 2'h8A.I S1350orio..tS1275 ar .. teutlide'loel FLAMINGOHILTO,..lnl.al ·~iejjes 128r~ ewey ftom und. 2 rM :=.,, :: :::: ::= .. ::' . ..:le:".: .. := NEWPORT~ R.E .................. frplc, wld. MC, ocw 1v1w IEITIUI 1 & 28ckm•. Gar. cable Vegu or th• HYATT :ns •18r , ... 1550 gar•g•. winter rlf\tel. T..,.... ~ .... ,...,, , ....... _ .... ,.. .... ''" Contac:tMenny ~ ll&Tm I vlewfrom2C)Mlos.S1550 evt.Gmbttw/880.lndry LAKE TAHOE (Kids er• 250..a002cwl50-St9' S725/mo. Cell~ ,....,, !• ,...,, • .., • ' I • M4-75eo/d 148-2111/e MST HWP lM lll5 rm. No pets 631-8'27 Ir• With perents!) •98-4329 _:; ,::::: ..... .,...,..... ... ....... ..... 8AYSHORES. 24 Hour DilUXE' 28R 1~BA 21 I .............. __ ..... EJSide28D 18Anewp•nl _W_A_lX~T-0-8EAC--M.--28r-•• _ ....... ,_.,. .... ... guer·ct.d community. Prl-etory, ger-oe. w/d hkup, , • .., ..,.. ~• -•• r-. Call our Leuft1Q Center tor & ~-lndry f11e no 181 upstairs. 2 aw clriYe-._._ ......... ,_ ·-I VIit• beecMtl, •BR 3BA. OeHnlld• of PCH. Reaonable rat• BALBOA 48', fp 11500 mleetiBllU Oita.ls on how to quallty P911. M75mo 271-<; E. .. ' ..... "' ................. -, M~ln cond. Owneq S1250 Agt 17S..912 536-3347 BAYFRON! Condo 2811 tor your vacetion 18th pl M4 0452 1:15~~;3};:= =..:..:=-::.:." :---.,.., ~:::::.~~~; IWHW•llHD•1 Huntlngton P-=z.ounct i~~ACovee2Br.dln. 1161tmn ''· cen1tie.11. E'SIOE 2BR l 'hBA 2 YEARLY ;.,, ... , Biil to I MM219 (818) 799-435el 2BA, oc:e.n. aorf & Jetty ftoot, on the 'be:" frl>6e. apa, Dodi. $2300 e.eutltully 1a,,d1caped. BRAND NEW .v>TS WILL story, petlo. g1rige, t>Mc:h. 28' 1S.. QMllQI. I --..... view from thlS 2BA H~BA ~V!_t~~~:C·2~ BAYFAONT C,on~ 28r. qulee, tatgoa, dean Apts BE AVAIL.ABE IN PHASE l)OCll .. gr .. S7~t~:· ti unory, lrple, $975 ........ ·-remodeled. Muter Jae -~... • • • t din. dodt for 80 boll. Pool & ape.~°" decit 111 FOR MOVE-IN ON flO pet•. .... 673-«)21 .,,., &pm. 4BR, 21hBA, Palermo tub, IQ tky11Qhta. frplc, St?50/rno, lit, '-l "~ Yearly 14750 Prime ~IJors DECEMBER 1ST AND EASTSIOE far~ condo model. luec:loua land· S111507mo. 21• Fernteaf. ::.::Ka :::...a:~~ u ... DA ISLE 2 story 58r, 1 Bedroom $970 FIRST MONTH'S RENT apt 2BR. 1'hBA. bu lt·in•. IU 11& ~ 1eaplng, SOll,000. Sheryl 87S-M27 belt OOCk. 110,000 2Bdrm IV.Ba $805 MOVES YOU IN! gar-oe. patio $795/mo On tt\e lend, W Newpor1 Owner/Broker GREAT DEAllll 1eo1NRTHEOCEAN-3BA2BA .• ...,., ............ ,., .... ,.AY &42-9795MM5-8227 I S1375/rno.8kr&42-?850 ............. houH 181 FR 8CH. anglety,approx2000slf. -••-Q11• COSTAMESA 8act1e1or,1.2&.38RAPTS.,,._, .. _ ......,. I 28A 28R 28A 2~ ,_,_ · tam rm frml din rm _,... • AVAl!..A8lE "...,..tr,.,..,., ar~. • · -...-· .... ltl8tt WatMl/Oryer ' Cable. grndr. ,·1aoo +tee. No LARGE elmott ..,.. 2Br I ....... IMMEDIATELY... VERY QUIET, new paint. fireplace, refrigerator. 1 JJl.1111 e7 s- 197e peta.Avl 12/15840-3102 csen.2Ba.2-sty,Obllgw;! 1BR.1BA.eundk,enc:gar, pat101·71~?· ;?~"3~0 1 =.~~-=~· JASMINE CREEK. 3Br frplc, micro, sunny patio. w/d hkup, close 10 So ..Y• IM.IYQ peta mo • · •WfllTIUilrl 2'.i\81,2atory.C/A,24hr IUlflAYIW $1585/mo * 721·11509 I Coalt Plaza. S6751mo. -a••-•fll DIUUlllJU 1 28R 2BA duplex near lllffALllJ 11e . S2•00/rno . GatldeJCec.2BD2BAfrpl, 540-0117 or962·9804 _, --bueh. Frple, gu. I ThlS •home has II 1150-t 150/0 after 7pm, d/w,w/d hookup1. enc:. NEAR 33RO & LAKE • Ol1Y. mfl... Small. quiet complex carport. Aveil now. y..,. j .,1. ~A formal din·' ~1474 1 gar. 2bak:.tennls eovrt1, 1BA 1BA. erptt. drp1, 1BR Apt. Cerpet, drapes, ~. ldry.t;om S575 ly. se.51mo 731•1230 1 · f 1iy 2 1 pool spe no pets. patio. CIOM to oceen. stove, ig f9flce patio, .... ftLLAll C.~NO)' M5'9 I 0":,,:;e, ~ ,:':mm~ MAJ6'~ilE~~~iiou~R s1ooomo+ s1100 sec..1 S7'9/mo. 213-258-~79 I elole to lhe>ppng. ava11 IPllJm'll 1wn1sneo aludlo 1495mo. 1 •~llll* pool, court yard, low 4 bike to bch Wood pan-998~13 NOOORT ISLAND 2BR now, 650-72~ 2500 Mwnmec Wey hut & water p1td. Frlg, dl~~·~ov. malnt~. AM theM .. led· 2BD/2BA + den. lnlM , Ztt4 1'A8A, gulet ngnb<hdl No 1 s R L o F r A p T 1 ... 1 i.aie• &4e-5330 ,..V9 mess. lnc;t. No pets amenlt'" In Newport Fr p 1 11 t •eh gar . Ofli p;; 3 BR 2~ Bl 2 pete. S 1100/mo. Av•ll w/flreptace & carport.•• & l<IOS REQUIREO!ll E/llde * * 28R. 28A, FIRE· BMcfl ror only $539,000.1 a 12o'omo ,... e111 v . .; 1950' aq ft pOoi 1211. 150-4749 S700/mo 2~ A~o. 380 1BA Yard & oar t PL.ACE. POOL. edutta Call Ann• MeC .. land 873-1734 ~ r:.g v'b et. nearby: ~ •BA 1~BA, 2 ear Agt ~7 I ******* HOO mo $500d•P $950/mo 644-4402. e31-12M NEW CUSTOM HOME S1350/mo1yrteuetokw. gareoe. amall petlo. 112 E'SIOE 18'upstalrl.cat>le * ........ ~1 _83_1_-02_1_1 ____ _ ..... , -< :. . . . . •,:,.'.• . 48A. 3'A8A. panoramiC, 1."M4-7220 « 754-n81 '4th St. $1850/mo yrty. TV '*"'!· •alk in CloMt, A emal. • . QU6et complex. Lg 18'. carport, pool. ':ii ••LIDO BAYFAOHT I OCMI' & hln 'llewa, lg =lllh 215' Avt now 213-597-4704 refs req d No pets. $575 Stuelio S55o & 1Br w}frpl, '"' & frig tne no 8peciow--1~ I Matrb<W/IUndeek,lgfam VERSAILLES 18r. 18a 352 Vletorl• S.Cs-8161 bldlyd, patio $685 mo $575/mo + SS50 -•S950fmo1t '------------------1--=:::::-=--=-~---rm w1~. 3 cer gar.I RoUSE'. 91t:i;;;, PenthouH Securi ty S2500FF2ndMOSRENT "l.At• new&. very ovt" awllnow&42-1.0t 1 435Soud.8c07~ I OPENOAllY 1-5PMon S35001mo873-m2 fff*:, 2 ear gar. yard. poo1,gym,11e.S800/rno. E'SIOE18ACottage,lrl)te, Poot ape.,~ lit -llY .. leal lltatl f• laM lalMa BALBOA PENINSULA Soulh of PCH 28D lBA grndf. LSe S::!o~... SMdl, 173-27'9 encf pitJo, 8JC10 st«age MC. HO PETS ~~2<W7 lltlmNWWll'I &EA;#~ 28a. tf:140tc* ";f 11...:;...a_ Ptaia1ala 1007 Cypress & Bay Aves 1-c.ar gatege. w/d hook· utlls. No pets rm. $665 -S765 sec. ,_ Ai IM I to be/. 2 cs •I d '* --I _,a LIFT ups. frpt. s1275 ............ fill ~.. S.CS-7234 * NO PETS! ........ 50 Redeeofat.O 2BFI 2BA. .... .:,_ ::~ ceil· Ii!!!! IM ... ~ IWl.D •NEW• 2 bid, 2'h bath 32 ....,. 28R 2BA. No P911. Sa 18R w/loft·3rd From -.... __.. ; _______ ...,,.-.. •48'/281 llPC* ' condos only1tep1to8ay 711-7 2 agent 1 1~ ILll TITllU. 2BD/2 1/2BA ... den. 2 st. Agt ~1-5880 c.11 PAM $950 No P8tS 631..e101 1n9.b*ony, $1115/mo ....,.. '•ser1281iower I a Oce9nrron1 beachel. ~...... 2124 yr1ys131s-verya..n3eRI W... 1111 ~~~1•:.;11~~~,,!:· MESA.VERDE. 2BR lBA.l rsu•~~E.BA:.2.1903 .... &..... $795,000 ,.. Frplc.2eargange.lovely 2BM.18X Eutilde, nu oak 28A. frple. di• .• rmcro, 28R tL yrty w/sun&a $950mo. 631·2093 q -......-...• n9 t "A* °'*"cul de tee. 180 PANORAMIC VIEW • tlll & carpet. 631" 1400· C9blnet kl1ch, diahw. lg w/d hkups, 2 ear gw9g1., Aemodel.O. 4 Ora to bey ~~ $995~ 2117 Hi<*OtY .... Tl-* expWIOed ntl'l'lodeMd & From $335,000 lattad rear yd. Privacy. Agt 722-3520/87s-4808 A'll now. $850 -S50 u11t OCEAN VU delult• 2BR •M-tt3e, 751•9483 I 38R 28a, elld. gw., trl d upgrlld.o, thll property I WATERFRO,..T HOMES, $975. 142-3171 ... EXCLUSIVE GUARD* NO PETS:* 973.4220 1"' bath, trple, deck, gar. llAIJmil I hk up, new ear.,.t • ...__ & dltt.f t from INC., REAL TORS . .. 2218 E. Pacific ept B _.. -$1295/mo 11 u,.._.. .,, 1 28R. modern. view, pool. 6, •GATED COMMUNITY* l&MW Ulttl ..,_ $890/mo. s.. tst. Cell Sp1rkllng clean, large1 II ... ,.... 208 LUGONIA ell OtMn In the Bluffs. At PENINSULA POINT mo-I '(f lse. s1300 +MC. • .. UIY• B 1n. &IV\+ •'f ,........ 75Q..lt04/E 6'-'-8722/0 Garden apts. BeeutlfUtty 11 l TSL unuT 142 • 1803 the time Of orlglnel con-I 8EAUTIFULL y remodeled Avell 1219 983 Arbor • BEAUTIFUL 2BA 2BA 2 r. .... """ ., .......... ry lend1e1p1d ground•. 2BR 281.. ftp, MW carpet, -,,....~-...,,.-...,.--==--=~ 1truc:tlon, 2 bdrm•&. bath I .... u..., 2 ltOf'Y 4 bdrm home with CM. appt 96•-60'7 . w/golf COUfM VIEW. Also fylCllltles117&rJ;~1r j 2BR. 1'A8A, patio. flr• l Pool & apa, patloa/dedl1. encl. oar ... , blt·ina, neat •Eatblufl lg 28A 28A were ~ below the 58R 48A, 2400 lq ft. 3 ear IMilly &. formal dining 1BR •van Frplt wet bar • ••rly . piece, dishwasher. quiet gwlrtge or carport. &hot>•. let5tmo. w/new dec:Of, ~. OIW. main level. Muter bdrm .,_2145 e.<>c:.nBlvd. rooms,den.sunnyp1t10 •28A 2BA, flrep1aee.r micro wi oh11:u'ps.2 c;a;1cuTE11T1•ll28AlBAyeer· complex, pet ok . Bachll°" .. $600 810CENTER pa\Jo.pool~No.,.._ at• on main i.vet hu an I &v OWNER. $585,000 L & 3 car gar9g1. Just steps W/O hook-up, garage., gar wi xtra stor9g1, oen-ly. Nie• patio. 2 car pant· S7•5t mo ~-5348 1 Bldr~ S6eO TSL MGMT &42-18031 '722-8011 Ev9a 722-11..0 • j='~ub,b~~~ it;~t!: (714) 873-0129 lo ~~-~&beaches. ~~ ~P~SA;:;.~1 t.-.1 .ir. All matnt. incl. Ing, $925 l~el. utll. 28R, l BA, prlv. yarO, encl ~~1\~{hB:I ... ~NEWPORT ACROSS THE •RJUm.111• Nf*'•t• snower & walk· CtnU Ml 1111 11221 "95•000 Sorry, no pets, 644-0509 673·30 9 i"· ut11 pefd, no pets --------STREET. 2eR frplc, oer· 11•"" In CIONI. Hlghly up-Es!~:A~~=~t~pf ••• ~ .. Ptaimnll "~:~1.:,•Ji~~-2Bdrm2Batwnl\le $865 ~~~~~ ll651Nine Beeut.2-38rate,a-.. •ICS greded throughout --··11191111T 1-\.\<\TIHllW'1 d/w fnc:dyard Pet Ok 1M•WITDYllW 2'17 825CenterSt &42·1'2• · '*~.MWeaf"P9(,tr.dl wllarge femlty rm, &.1 JASMINE CRK·Beet Buy I tfl l~I' t.c. 1825 Wlllf' pd ]60-8862 Enjoy bfeattlteklng views 280 LARGE 18' 18a $565/mo, BaeMlc>r immaculate lg NICI 2Br 18a.. pool, get· lgftta, cei1 WI, nr Holig apedoua dlnlng/IMng rm lOWEST PRICE 2 sty 38r RE"L ESTATE & sunMtl from this 38A $750mo yrly new 1400 Meurity. Availa.ble 8a • 0 I d It •g•. quiet eomplu.1 Heec>. S850toS1050fmo. aree. New kitchen ep-fam.rm2~Baguardgat•• 1tEASTSIDE LG 3BR 28A t>eeuty wlfealund 01e.M11ure adult/no Now C.11 '°' apptm 55~0 ~ncl~r~ll ••c• S725/mo + d1po111. 1 4101 Hl9ne pllanc:., lnalde launcky 1429,900.891-1702Agt 2''18A. 2-sly. gar, trplc, too numerous to,,.... pell81froc:.an&bay ct. 631-1879 642~12 HU0~'50-4287 TSLMGMT "'2·1903 .,.. & entrance to hOme .,__,,_ M~-it•• llllA....al patto ldry hkup Sml pet 110,, lmrned occp poss-gar 873-8224167~62U c from attached Q8rag1 . .,.. .. _ -111 flMT•fll ok S01250.87~912Agt lble.Chlldren&~lsOK BACHELOR "Cute & ~ST~E2S~~j8:o*-BACHELOR!!! SecluOed 111,.... ....,.., .... Thltlstrulyerar.beeutyt BY OWNERlU -·lllLI ••u H .. . .,.,..... no .,...1. ~tlfutl garden gar 2BR wl gar Cup•J•. lrg 18' w/patio. poot. $510,000 Fee OPEN HOUSE SUN. ~5 ~c::;-ly '.,...,..;:i:'-out •ftlY liM Sir 2~ ~~~~ 0t ~~bst ifo°toi:'o t~n~:"''~~= ~l~eal"' ~1ng. Prefer m1atukre ctr9P91 blt-1n1 Fenc90 Ou19t 1ocS125, 722~l 711-11M Ellide llmMI. 2BD 2'.llBA --.. 2·1tycondo. DeQ( olf mas-2 ... 50 BKR · n•-.,.... • ' ., wo'11ing '#Omln " am r '{aid wl patio Water p..o R HOAG CAsstom boOkahelltes In r•alocatlon .of spac.e In ler bdrm. dble gar. Ir~ ~ ~.A.V 64 .._ 28A 18A relurbllhed S550mo 1ncls u111 836-4120 Can 1·5PM WALK TO 8CM N ( 11-.< .. ~ ;1. I { l<J S F.A. !'<pl, MW carpets & this th<>tOUQ~!!_ c:uslom~ patio. E'slde 8ec:k Bey lo-~ / C.reu MJ llu 2'U Launory t11e111ttes 2250 646-92"0 6U 'ictort1 H' $720 • Lj lBR OM pct F/P I I p II & balen lz.O home g.,,.,,,.. mu ClllOn No pell Lse \'t"\\'1~-.ry1· l.U'\ ·11 c 8 $650/mo BR $72 • Lg 2BR 28a fe u.l\11'\'\.\ pan . ao . mum of 1fllc1eney & s12951rno *557.s78" , \\ '\.~ l l 1BLOCKFRBEACH'11 an~·4:s-9028 BEAl:JTIFUL28A&1 WestlkM2QRApt,peho, 1WMMm5.Poot"?' l!imilJ llHll lllt"• $ 1 80 · 0 0 0 • 11 um · elegance. For your per-REALTORS.., Ex1r• Lrg tum 1BO/frpl. Nope In Quiel complex Pool lndry fee, 2 0<ltng spae. CtYt sng. 1tl0'1 ~iOI' a.2-8404 son•I viewing. plM.M call 3BA 1BA house. lg tencecs deelc & vw L~ IV9il. 28A 2BA dllit washr, lg garage. eab41 TV. ,__ New paint llove' crpt AV'I. ~ 8838 .-... .. ~THE 1 CUSTOM HOME ROCKEllE. $710.71• yd. ger, nu pnl & drepes. 3;~;:.!_~~le.r/~,O~~-S1175mo. 331fSeaV19W patio. ~ry. 9ar9g1 & c:arpe~~~:,~:;UTIL· S750trno. 73t..Ma8 13BA 28A.. 1 block rrom SEARS ~NETWOM i •BR. 13 yr• old. C°'inlry Near IChOOIS No pets. graded. dbl,,;., .. garelnr. 675-87321998-9122 parking SPI C• $800 $725 & $615/Mo CALL --bw:h. io... unit COLD Well BANl(eRO Kitchen, S2•8.500 Agt $1000/rno * 8"2-2056 comm. pool, park, 1g yd I BR tBA. refrig, dlw. w/d 2137 Elden. 760-0138 722_1132 11a1 Put --1211 •2nd. St. $l350/mo. Pet Cobb s 7S-20t3 S7eo c...11 2Br h•. grey/ s21001mo. 647-7526 agt 1ne1. Lrg pvt o~ Grea1 2BR 2BA. gar9g1, new OCEAN VO. 9PeC-mOd. 831-0832/H 896-27118/W E'Slde, A-3 lol w/SFA, 257 wtlt anuttera wood nrs, I 10c quiet street Mull carpet & dflpes l1undry CUTE STUOIO. lar~ yard, redec l Br,gar,lndy,dec:k, ACROSS FR. BEACHll 19thPl.$279,000.0usty newcpt1bll~ds,gar .. sm1 2C,~~EJu1::Cn"':~ ~~~ M I S825 •721·923S raclllty. No ' pees no pets. "$"'7 ~~th & trig. oood area $695. 5100 Sulhore 2ern81 • 673·2810 Agt y.,d, 2218·8 Ptacenll•, 1 w/ ar Wblk fr sand 2Bl0Cl(S FROM BEACH 250-4220 or 754· 1~ Har b O ~g7...3~2 "'o '92-1699 or 831 ·92~ ,,_&.yard. tQOOmo.yrty l'..\l>l"\1tllelx--.l. SEA PROPERTIES LTD 1 llllT&laAlnnnl Nopeta.645-2566 'S1~wlnler. 721-81t3 Coz:y2B0 18Aforslng1eor 2BA 2BA UPSTAIRS. lut I 9«-S780/6'6--3llll 1111111W 1JM Petert-3BR 2'ABA. FR BACK BAY VIEW ~ 3 R couple W/O incl + $800/mo $500 security EASTSIDE Ouptex nr Or· ...... .. 1..... ' _.. Ul1ll1 t wlfrptc &. dine rm. 1•,; yra I 3Br 1Ba. frplc, lrg yard. DUPLEX·S oOOOlmo B gar.SIM>Omo 675-6215 Clep No P.11. Avail now. 9"Qe & 20th 1BR urns HUGE 1BR 4 blkl to bch. &•HI •-• new Sec gate POOi & I I remodeled 28A. 1 Y'" lse. Frplc. patio. C 111 appt 754-S«O pd Stove retrtg gar&99 207 Chicago. Stove &I ...... •111111 SWEEPING panoramic Thi• cozy 3BR 28A h°"': spa· 1499K Submit au ofl j~;951~ &41-064.5 1 1 car gar. Walk 10 ocean 2BA 1BA $995/mo 1BR • M • '• nc)pets sS15tmo -S30ci lrltJ No pets All utlts 2 BR 2BA.: 0e.N view of City & mountains,. la elOM to both schools 1 fera'. Agt aS.-9193 1-800-52~5281 M-F 9·5. $695. Art1s1 ·1 Studio -··-~llr MC. 54•·2 l.0 paJ<t $950/mo. 985-411~ 1 New carpet. gwage · W/D S..Utlful by day brleth· lhopplng. Hurry with your! BRIGHTON SPRINGS 1BR $200. Nr bch Nlsmkrs -• -N t peltl takl at night. 4 BR with ChlCk &. paintbrush! This •·-Jua Ca~ 10711 Condo. Secluded woods Attr 3BR. 1"'·BA hm, No pell. Yrly 675-3383 Ou11t bldg on E'S • cozy E/SIOE 180 Mobile Home B~ 5450. 5 bloC:l(s to hkuC>, yarO. ex to · ~ Ju 11 ' one won't tut II only _. !:: & lt~I-GrOYnd flOOf woodsy. trple. gar. no w lots of wood. Asslgne<S $575 rno gasl w•ter pd beach range, frig. no S 1075Jmo. ~~~.o·:..c:.;:!·001 $115,000. Call now... Wll•BI "'-levet WahrlDryr ltaek pets, gard/wlter pd, IM 2'.11 BLOCKS TO BEACH p1rklng & laundry taciff.. AdUlt P9rll new caipet pets. ulll pd, on S1r1 plt.g, 4t{)9 RIVER .l603 a"'.a.a__ • I.......... lllU llftn hoOk-up, micro. lrplc:.gar S 1,500/mo. 548-1366 lg 28R, Incl uttl. e•ble ll•s $530/Mo 1136..(1552 759-5590 or 67l· 7787 506 A 9th St 175-5733 TSL MGMT &42· ---•-•ffl -·-w/Of>nr + carport Ree •BEACH HOUSES• wl d, trp6e. 0.Ck, gM9QI ..... P&YmTt , ........ _ YMIU1 area, pool, 8'>a s750 + 2BA 2BA. 2 car gar Fp, $1025.673-1039 We'll g1W you tM dO'llln In rw! l./j.A...V ONl Y $3000dn!ll dep. VELMA 549-24'7 dlw. idt eond. $ 1050. BRAND NEW uetlg '°"a shat• of own· KU",..lla _, BIG 2B0/2BA CONDOll ---211 11& • teq 88Cf\el0< pad, hr• 38r 1 B• w/Vlf/W huo• wsNp You make the' \t"\\"l 'i."'l ')'I' JU ~ "I l 0 NL Y $ 1 • O 5 Omo I -·-l)laee. view $950 sundeek $ 1095 mo mthly PYnttl & WI ll\atl \\ • \.. t-... °' • '-I plllassoc:I Yard, p , ,_,., pnt & Q(pt. •2BR + Oen, Olw , lrplc. 2 AVlll now 646-06'5 • eppree. You receive REALTORS • ONLY $97 .OOOlplll * $925/mo * &46--0845 ear garatge $1295 GORGEOUS Comer Untt 100% tu benef11s. Must ,..EW PAINT 665-7~9 * Ul1lm Ill llA DOCKSIDE RE 722-9730 aer 281. w/d, plantlllon heve cleen credit. ~t 2BR. 2BA. 2 cer gar, frple, II bl I Huge yd, new painl & c:rpt BLUFFS shutters. Fr drs. deck frt 957..e<>020ys.Ev.W 1 tgyerdS t55,000~t Pat ...... 1114 $950/mo9&2-1539 3BR 2'.itBA. Av•1I 1mrned yd $1600/mo. 720-9966 I 122-7776. 760-175 IW -E...Slde 3Bf\ 2BA twnhM. 2·~ mo lse, $1000/mo or LM~. light, airy 1BR new WMa laa. RETIRED LOCAl wants lo ... SlllPl Y.,d g., quiet area XJnt Sl 200lmo Mn 760-838' palnl/eerpetlb llndl PtiliaaaJ. .. , buyCMTNB home. Pr9frl 38A-Pool home on lg lotl condi Sioao ee&-4019 BLUFFS ... M.--t. NEW & porch. frple mk:rowaV9. rtxer. Can lrade Npt. $219.000. Bkr 1152·1268 Oya 840-2428 Ev/Wknd PROF OECORATEO dbl lot. 6T5-66t1 n 1'11 IU I Cr•t condo. &41-8473 ht .. .... l condo nr bCh 2BR Avail lmmeel 2800sq It, IUl I •• Ull • • •BO 2 '.\BA 2 car Come He Come l!gll Come IY Tll i t. ..... lM I h!p!tf ISSO 21ABA, 2 sty, frplc, prv gar s27oomo. 63 f-0680 t>uy -1nctau1tied FabUlou• OCMI\ vlewS and --patio, w/d hkup, db gar ~;~·~======-=----========;-speclou1 11 the WOfd tor Ml Plllm Litt I 11M ..tt, 211. JU w/opnr s 1025 521.a.00 -; thll wonderfut Ouplell. A ••BR 2BA, RV 1cc11s. Only sd:oo(Cbenvar LUXURY 2Br 2Ba condo ttl'Mt 10 tlreet corner ~ 121g,900 Bkr 983-8377 1 foreclosure price. com-Obi ., frplc pool· cation. New« u.nlt and a ill •---II lMI pare to CA. 5•;. down, gi • • stoM'I throw to the •l!f!!! .._ -positive cash flow. $995/Mo. 11t & last aand. Two lar~ Income : 40%-80% of new price. •S300. 842-5290 producing unite. CALL: l "O""O"KING 4 ll007 Supet lnvestml. t hr 10 NEAR PLACENTIA BARBARA CHAMBERS Charming 3bdrm, cten. I Ski. 1-303-422-11011 Agt. 3BR. 2BA twnhm, grt for I GtOI THOMAS I Lovely patio, wlll ••Ch fQI( la L~ r cpl or IJCIC, I t009/mo ,..------------, dupl or trlpl In COM. ac ... , lnll +<Sep 213-2&a.5'79 I P• Jdt>nl .11 .. "~ R( A••' INfne, lag.Bell, or Lag. "'"9 Uts ---...,,...---Mtg PentrlOge Cove luxury CALL Carolyn Aosa ., 160 XeAE r1neh aite, NW1 2BA 2BA CONDO • • •84,) j 1. • • , . . -. . . ~ 87~7977 Arizona. $250/acre. ez,seulptured patio on M«tltl lynch Aeeity term•. Good water table. I rushing stream. Matr . . - :~·,...., Merrill Lynch Realty beaut trea & VieWI Hunl bdrml b•th IUlte. Fresh & tlah neerby. 675-85'11 I paint & nlW gray carpet thn.H>Ut. W~burnlng a.tlll ' frple, encl dbl gw-oe UIRllE Cl CUSSIC =9 s10501mo. 980-MtO 0t -~ I 751·2787 ,.....,...,....,_. .... 1~1a~ "'Llftll1112u 1•a•1•A•ai;i1Xiioiiiii•gouiiiiiio!t"'h .. i .. a""'Yi"'ron~i o.,. fncd ya. 1825 1911 o ~ In llvtng tind dlntno r~ Nrd· -.ood ftoon. toMd construcUon. 3 BR. 2 BA under towering~ 1349,500. lll-1100 WITH DOCK. Partl911y Wallece. ~5·5032 furnlahed. UOOO/mo SEE 1954 'A' a 1950 ·e 1 Avall l\O'#. 722-7022 1 Meyer 28' l81. $725 .. .,-.,, 1 BD/Sludy 28A ) No Peta. S.O«ity S700 remodeled & new carpets. l 549-3484 Ck>M to town. $ll50mo. SHARP E-lide 3BR 2BA. 873-5688 "' .,... completely remodeled. L.RG BEAUT FAMILY HM I Pet Ok $1000/m& Avail tat time rentel. 6BR 3BA. now 8'&-4902 I 2·cal' p , w/d. Avell•ble SHARP lrl·I•~ condo.1 1211. YHtly. 1~400; Win· Eut aide. 38R, 2BA. air. I ttlf, $1600. 721·119e nice erpt!palnl. 'll d •••I hk~. drw, 3 c:ar oer. no 2BR 2BA HOUSE I doQI BMtn ~lngt. brldt frplC. 19111 1111 let U1 II.a. YH s12001Mo een ~ALIUSPACtous 39, 2'•B• ....., 541-&SQ or 759·8600 ~t Hghts condo ~am remlly rm. p1110 tS13501mo S.S-7676 I . t I M«Tll lynch Aeal1y I ''"· ~ ..... bet s 1200 Sta v-,,.,.,.~ t RENTALS AVAIL.A8LE 544)397 0t 722~ A-11 a.......:1th....t Sl\ott = ~o ~!;, t ll ..,_ .,... n ... ' Wat.tron1 Hornet, tne &Od oc.-n :::. NA I ~.Ill_ •JI . 1 AiM1to<1 e13.4900 o.n ;r .. e>.. 1'40lf. a C9f ~ ~ :.t.,;.,t 11.. gar ·•toc:ww, a12SC1. C.it ,,,...., t·~"\. .,, '.'.fl_ Versatile I E sential W a rd robe., ~lnst•nt WlllOrot>e ~ aWeseparat to for information CM AN,.tl: fll!l!f .BA laaL.,. lltt s .. ~.l~cg->,;_"f ~Mm-.oPOUllO _ .. C<l"eet .1 .. w.-1•1 I & surpr.isingly 1 -i.:n~~··t~ •• ~ARP 1'" 1"" "'*'• Seodto Ofl+.W~tou.vN.or. I ... rtrcOt .... IM. 111ttH IH01mo-Ut1f Reader Mlill:Olpc.1S1'1. b 4000. NllM I t --pd StJOO ,...._ Ho • .. ,...,.-__._ '--------.-ii.oi;.w ..... .,.c_.o.,s_. ___ .. ..nu 1 ,.,. ~ .-eeo-aaa L.-......__...;....;_;;.;.::··:.....:.-~·~;......;..~---~_.;;;...;_, The D·aily Pilot has a new way to turn your Hi~en Treasures into CASH $ 1 O!t~epayment 4 Lines-7 Days s 10.80 NAME No en.rps In «iipy cw ancdatk>n. Prrvatt ~s only No COtlWnHt:Wll • ltul Es1-.tt "utomowe ~ung or Employmtnt Ads ~r~ Is no pnc~ l•m1t to What you c.tn ~tntSt' II you nttd to set ywr couch. hlgtl <~ OI' any unt.i~d merch.lnd•~-c .. t~ Dilly Pilot Ctus1t1~ staff°' ~ ~ <-.n b<~W llij'N.I Dally l'ftot. JJO W. 1.-y S COiia Meta. CA '2"2• 642-5678 PHONE ADOftESS CITY STATE ZIP . AD COPY~ 4 hnt min.mum. 1PPfopr1ate-ly 4 WOids per I~. • Or-. Coat DAILY PILOT/~. Howmb« 2( 1988 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE AC ROSI 1 Min IMM:tly 5 COlll 10 Equel pr..r 14 P.i 15 Elllt 18 Grend 17 SCOfl II Lana 19 C'-d\ ., .. 20 RNa'• Icon 21 UI( natlvt 22 l<oltted tn 11 wey 2• Serving 10 W81M 26 Thread 27 Evfsctrete 28 WOOd1m1n 31 Burdened 3• Star9d 35 Hurnm•ngbird 38 c~ ro\19r 37 Coote.cs 38 Pedltllk: one 39 Light type 40 ~ ., HM<fing •2 Stumbled 4• Mr frevlno •5 Yemerntn •8 Out front SO Snow otl S2 Oamt 53 Hegel! ... 5" Oetirous 2 3 .. 14 17 20 ( SS Pluna. S7 Laporld 58 Quebec's ~ 59 Of a WOOd 80 Hanota Fr 8 1 Wor11 unns 82 AeleaNo 63 Subfnonive DOWN 1 Mthetmas 2 Ar•'• _,her 3 LP Ml 4 Canaoi.n Wllllkey S Or-out 6 Wine 7 Letvlan 8 Tlme~ore 9 8r•tlled 10 Jewels 11 PU1ry 12 Thrr.e 13 COOied 21 Stupefy 23 Habituated 25 Fi.Id l at 26 Ra11 28 Pretended 29 '""'"' 30 Wrath 3t'M~- Aag" 32 City of India 33 Statltlg 6 7 ~ AmuMmenll 37 'The -- S...•lle" 38 Muttleolored 40 Me\al ' 1 Collations "3 Auto delllt .. My1h 48 Dill• 4 7 Footttl'I 8 •8 Scand<nav1an 411 Hellenic; SO A.duce 51 AYO<.K.tlf 52 Ont1t100 e g S6 Allat>tlOf'I 57 Bed 1C1or,. 11 12 13 ; f Delivery Drivers PART-TIME MOTOl IOUIEI AIMl..All.f • CALL 642-4333 betwe•n IAM & 7PM Orange Coast Dally Piiot Motor Roiltes . available in W11t11in1ter Huntinlfon l11oh Fountain Y1ll1r NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING Deliver One Day a Week - Must have dependable c.r and proof'of inturance. Ask tor Joanne Craney • .. •• •• . .. D OUR FAMOUS HAS RETURNED! Back by popular demand. Dimes-A -Line will run Friday. Satur· day and Sunday in Its own classification .in the Classified Ads. Since this is a special offer, we have a Thursday noon deadline and ask prepayment tor all ads. This Is open to all private party advertisers for merchandise not over SI SO (price must ~ listed in adJ and no abbreviations will~ accepted. All ads will run Friday, Saturday and Sunday. There is a 5-fine minimum at 20C per line ... So your tow cost Dimes-A -Line ad Is only •.. S3.00. DEADLINE: Thursday noon PRICE: 5-fine m1n1mum • 3 days • 20¢ per line..~ S3.00 • All ads are prepaid by coming into the Daily Pilot to place your ad or use the coupon below. • Private party merchandise only ads. No com- mercial ads, pets. livestock, produce or plants • Each item must ~ priced In the ad with no Items over SISO. MAIL TO: Dimes-A-Une Dally Pilot 330 West Bay Street. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Daily Plfoc hours Monday-Friday 8 00 AM to S·OO PM PHONE UHES .----------~--~·-------------~--------------T 1 • ...._ ______________ _._ ________________ -t-______________ ___,t-------------t 2.J.---------------+-----------------t-----------------r --------------t l . ...._~------------+----------------ti------------------...---------------.. 4 • ...._ ___________ _._ ______________ ......, ______ .__ ____ t--____ ~----1 s . ...._ ______ ~---.,.-------=----_,...-t----------...,..,,~~---------......t 6 . ...._ ______________ +-___________ --ti--------------+---------..,..... 1 . ....__;_ ____ ..._..__... _____________ _.,.. ______ ......., ___ ~t------------1 ··J.------------~t-...._ __________ _.,... _____________ -+------------f 9. UM additional paper If needed • $:! 00 MINIMUM 4 WORDS PEA LINE NO AB&AEVIATIOHS ------------------~-- $3 00 Min ...... ·-········--· .. $360 AZ-18. PUl:am MUC 11>11Cl MUC M>TICE fWJC ll)lJCE NlC llmCE 1500 Auto Mall Or. l'ICJ:.~.~N =~on~ 1• ~5~.i:'"'>' on *-•lbel 15· 1.., ,... Santa Ana The to11ow4ng pereons .•• John R. Poneea ,_ ~ ar.,. co.e doing~ ea: TNa ltlMment -ft'9d PutMleMd Of.nge C09M Deity Plot No•em«ler 21\ 28. 55 Fwy. at Edinger J l T AUTO, 2149 Ran-wlttl the County Clerir of Of-Delly Piiot ~ 21. 29, Dec1emt• 5, 12. , .. mtC 7 DAYS dolph. lktlt '" Coeta Mella. ... County on ~-DeolrnW 5. 12. ,... ......,., "'~"'--Hrs. M""'·Frl. c.itt. 92829 15' !Na ,_...,.. .....,.._ ""~ Anthony Seeaa II, 43e ,_,., ________ _ 7:00 em to 9:00 pm v11te Suerte, Newport PublllMd ()renge C09lt Beedl. Cellf. 82eeO Deity Piiot *-"°" 21, 21, _--.=-o-....-... ........ __ ~!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I Thia t>ulin... Is con-December 5, 12. 1988 ACT1TIOUe Ml n •• 8.ROWN •-'11111 ducted by:.,, lndMduel M-MMm ITA,_,. m1•=. .... The reglatrant com-The folawlnO per90na we R 0 YA L JAMES ,,... rnenclCI to tranaact t>usi-Pta.IC llOTIC( dolnO ~ea: BROWN. resident .of Automatic:, & cylinder.,.,... unctw the 1tc111ou1 c o s T A 11111 E s A Corona DeJ Mar. CA. PoW9f ~/brakes.~ Mme or narneal ..cnrlOiMWU MERCHANTS ASSOCIA-Pasaed away Nowm- 1 A/C.SU95(514TYN) lls1ed~~~noty«I U..STA~ TION. 2165 HerbOr IMS .• .._ 17. 1988 at u ....... E .... .. AnthOny ---II The ..... per90N -ca.a Mele. Celt 92t27 UICI ........ --n. at•...,_,, ... llled ~ ~a eo.a .._. MercMnU Memonal Hospital, I ---with the County Cler1l of Of-c H EC KM ATE p R 0 0 -Aeeodetlon. 21'5 HettKlt I N Beach CA 141.-,1 M09 County on ~ber \.JCTS, 41 .. Sllolec1• Ln •• ,8MS., eo.te ..._, c.lt BomewportSept. 17, l.;...3 ~ ..,.-----------------15, 1N8 Corona cMI .... c.11. 92625 tm7 ..... Conlldef .... ty. resale ~ ~ A. Mcf'el1ancl. Thie tM*MM I.a con-Canada. Belowd bus-- v.lle, wy eo month Publtfled Orange C09lt 4148 Shoi90i• Ln .• Cor-ducted by en unln-band of Denise purctlue llnenclng OMy Plklt ~ber 21. 28. one cMI ...,, Celf. 92f.25 lcorporeted esaocletlon Brown. loving father Compete Houle of Im-December$, 12, 1988 T'tW bu9ineM q CQn-otflW then. pertr•... Of ftova} J. D---m. -. & be •fe. M-789 dUaed-: en lndlllldulll Tiie reglatrent co"'-.; Dlv-n ttill1• •I l•S The 7eg11trant com-niencecl to treneect ..,. and Melanie Denia P\aJC fl>llCE menced to tnnuc1 bull-,_ U1'6W the nc:tttoue Brown. and brother Get~ dollar v.iue for ,,... Y'tder the fictltout ...,_ -or ,_.... of ~~ Brown. your pampe r e d '1Cnnou9~U ~ nerne or nemes ....,allo"8on~ber1, 'I:\., ___ , __ ...._ ••• m Mer~a-~z. Com-...-sTA,.....,. ltltedtibOWonD9cember l. 1t1S rw~ ""°' ·~ -u. HOUlle f Im""" & The folloWlng persons -1... Jllft l(ymla. T,....,...,. be held Tuesday No-f*"e 0 ........ CIOlng ~ -AlcherO A. Mc:Fen.nct Thie ~t ... fled __ ..__ 22 l(\QQ. 1:00 be aura. TWO X TWO LIMITED. Thie stetemenl ..,.. tiled wlOI tt. Cownty C ... oA Or· vauucr · '"'°• . 1111'11• l•S 1120 E. Gerry St. Su•t• 109, wftfl the County Qer1I of Or· enge C°'"Y on ~-P .M. at PKific View riiiiii'iiiiiiiiil;I j s.nta Ana. Celfl 92705 Memo r i a I Pa r k _. 'MllH• U 1 JoM R. PonM11. '09 w. Merchandise opportunities in O..pel, 3500 P«ific $ ~ mMUlll, CNIM. Bey St. H20t , Cos11 M.... I if" _. l'k b . • '"-· Dr N ... wnnrt power~. cuaette ceitt. e2121 c au 1eo -a e nnguag • -·• "' ..-• 15·=M=l ~!i ~~,,.,:~.,con-1 e•ery garage sale in town ~:;\~:=~ ....... The regl1tr1n1 oom· to your living room . aria.I Park. In lieu of '1 1 menced to trensect ~I i · I •--... --.. -,-.-,-Fl--:;,,:*~lleor'~=I &•2·5111 ~~~w:e::;':e Aut~Uc, 4 cylinder. made to the Arnerican ca ... tt. • 2 . 4 9 5 diabetes ~tJon ( 18WPU31t n.... IMl•llAll (714) 662-7940 n • ...,_ _ cilic View Monuray _,.... Direct.on. 644-2700 . . MMll1 ........ 5 ~ menuei. ~. power eteering/bralles, AM/FM, caeeef19, A/C, ti\. Sun roof. cuatom wheels . St .tee (1LPSIH) I 11£1-=--...... ' ' ........... c .. , ......... lllt" ; -Ci Sii M ,..., 1'111 llO .,..,,...._ ..... IO I rW1Y ~~ 111 • MIO l 001 .,_ ,_ ..- IC tfle ,.. .. 1111 """'0 tooa lll'J Clll I ' ---. .. .,,. ...... MJMlliMr ... ColtilMm.r-A ..... .· t J J • • er.,..Coetl OAtLY PILOT/ M~, NcMfnbei 21, 1• ~ Home ·of the . Serengeti-Blazer 41:11§1.iH• Call our friendly salesmen fof det811s 579-5100 1-800-228-7240 17071 E. Imperial ~wy.-Yorba l.•l)da. Californ~ a •• ,.,.,,,,, o . Simo.• I S.IHli•• THE OD.. ··ROBl~S THE , TORE , 2060 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa : ~2-0010 oSADDLmAcll · --Sales Leasing Service · Patts IRVlNE AUTO CENTER 1-soo-s31.33n 114-380-1200 . " . . ,, .... ~' • r ~ • ' '. • ' . ., I' -- (9~ I GMC:TRuci< "THE SMART STOP-" • (714) 540-9640 2850 HARBOA BLVD. COSTA MESA G) JIM SL:EMONS IMPORlS { AC URA *1o..llt. ... .,.,. ..... ~---94Ml •a.--. ~·,.. &s~~~Yl~&O 8 NEW LOCATION! SANTA ANA AUTO MALL 1,500 Avto ..... Dr ....... AM_ '. -835:3171 Newp,ort/55 Frwy. at Edinger ~ales Dept open 7 4'8)'S SeMce Hours: Mon.-Fri. 7am-1 Opl'I) ! i BUENA PARK STANTON PAClFJC OCEAN l . lftertiH II Tllil .... · -•,.I~~ .. ....... ~ • OLDSM081L£ • CADILLAC 142.4321 ... ·ALLEN CALL ONE OF THESE . . DEAl~RS FOR THE BEST ~y :. • GMC TRUCKS n•/Sa2~ 0800 . . ,. • . 11m. 0 SAN DIEGO FWY • AV!RV EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL 0 HOUSE of IMPORTS·: Inc. .· Mercedes-Ben z 6862 Manchester Boulevard Buena Park 8DVJCI 213 cw 714/)IEJtCEl>S8 I · M-F 7a-6p 'M·F 8a-6p Where 1·5 and 1-9 lmed.. SaL 8a·2p • Superior . ~VOLKSWAGEN-@ WlJ} IN WESTMINSTER ~ 7600 Westminster Blvd., Westminster (714)891-9378 (213)&30-28'3. ·~ G~~s Orange Coast Jeep Eagle c.a .... ~. Sales Ow ,, 1WMq .. Senice ••eon ·~a M Barbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • NISSAN/~~ • low Prete' • No G 1mm1cln • Greo t Selectto" • Friendly People • Eacellent Sen11ce ,.,, lilottl ~d ........ f9'0:. ~ (114) Mt-7111 (!lJ) ffS.1~ LINCOLN •RCURY •&EACH ---SALES -LEASING SERVICE ._ PARTS (714) 8'8-7739 lMOO BNcll m'fd. (71 4) 596-l008H~ 8-cb. CA 12147 •• • .. . .